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Japan hit by unemployment rise and credit rating threat

Moody’s places Japan’s Aa2 rating under review while jobless rate rises for first time in six months Japan’s hopes of bouncing back from the economic turmoil caused by March’s earthquake and tsunami have been knocked by the threat of a credit rating downgrade from Moody’s, and a rise in unemployment. Moody’s warned on Tuesday that the devastation that struck Japan seven weeks ago is making it even harder for the country to recover from the financial crisis. It put Japan’s Aa2 rating – the rating agency’s third-highest rating – on review for a possible downgrade, adding that there was a “low chance” of a multi-notch downgrade. “The much larger than initially expected economic and fiscal costs of the 11 March earthquake are magnifying the adverse effects imparted by the global financial crisis from which Japan’s economy has not completely recovered,” Moody’s said. Tom Byrne, the ratings agency’s senior vice president and regional credit officer, added that a downgrade was likely even if Japan’s government manages to agree a new fiscal plan. The move was greeted pragmatically by the Japanese government. Economy minister Kaoru Yosano said Moody’s move was “not a happy story to hear”, admitting that it piled more pressure on Japan to improve its finances. “This should be interpreted to mean the market is urging the Japanese government to bring its fiscal condition back to health,” said Yosano. Moody’s credit review was announced just hours after the Japan’s unemployment rate rose for the first time in six months, to 4.7%. This data excluded the three areas most badly affected by the earthquake, suggesting that the actual increase in joblessness could be higher. Japan has already been dragged back into recession by March’s earthquake , with GDP shrinking by 0.9% in the first quarter of 2011. Economists had hoped that the country would stage a V-shaped recovery, but other data released on Tuesday cast doubt on this. Factory output rose by 1% in April, half the 2% increase predicted after the 15.5% plunge in output recorded in March. Exporters have been badly hit, with shipments of new vehicles down by 67% last month. Tax reforms awaited The earthquake reconstruction bill was last estimated at 15tr yen (£111bn), which could add to a national debt that is already double Japan’s GDP. Prime minister Naoto Kan is attempting to persuade Japan’s parliament to approve budget measures to pay for the rebuilding work. However, Kan is facing a no-confidence vote on Wednesday, with some members of his own party calling for a new leader who could push the necessary measures though. Japan is due to announce an overhaul of its tax and social security systems in June. The International Monetary Fund has urged the country to raise its sales tax, currently pegged at 5%, while other bodies have warned that spending on medical care and pensions must be cut back. Under its existing fiscal consolidation plan, Japan was aiming to eliminate its annual budget deficit by 2020. Rating agency Fitch criticised this plan last Friday , calling it “too leisurely”, as it lowered its outlook on Japan from stable to negative. On Tuesday the yen fell against other major currencies to a three-week low. But Moody’s threatened downgrade had no obvious impact on the cost of insuring Japan’s debt, which was unchanged. The five-year credit default swap on Japanese debt remained at 86 basis points, according to Markit. Japan’s debt-to-GDP ratio is widely seen as sustainable, at least in the short-term, as so much of its bonds are bought up by domestic investors. Global economy Ratings agencies Financial sector Economics Japan disaster Japan Graeme Wearden guardian.co.uk

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Ugandan woman branded by iron over sexuality faces deportation from UK

Asylum claim of Ugandan lesbian attacked by three men in her home country has been refused by UK immigration authority A Ugandan woman who was branded with a hot iron in her home country as a punishment for her sexuality, is facing forced removal from the UK. Last week, the deputy prime minister, Nick Clegg, said that the coalition had ended the practice of deporting people to countries where they face persecution because of their sexual orientation. But Betty Tibikawa, 22, who is detained in Yarl’s Wood immigration removal centre in Bedford, is awaiting removal directions after her asylum claim was refused. Human rights organisations have consistently documented abuses against gay men and lesbians in Uganda and say that it’s one of the most dangerous countries in the world for gay people. Tibikawa had just finished high school and was due to go to university in Kampala when she was attacked by three men who taunted her about her sexuality. They pinned her down in a disused building and branded her on her inner thighs with a hot iron. They left her unconscious and when she finally managed to get home she was confined to bed for two months. An independent medical report has confirmed that her scars are consistent with being branded with a hot iron. “I can’t sleep and I’m having terrible nightmares about what will happen to me if I’m sent back to Uganda. My family have disowned me because I’m a lesbian and I’m convinced I’d be killed if I’m sent home. “I was ‘outed’ in a Ugandan magazine called Red Pepper in February of this year saying that I’m wanted for being a lesbian,” she said. “This has put my life at increased risk.” Another Ugandan lesbian, BN, was due to be removed from the UK in January but her removal was halted following intervention by her lawyers. Her case is due to be heard in the court of appeal in July. David Kato, a gay Ugandan activist, was murdered earlier this year . Homosexuality is illegal in Uganda. An anti-homosexuality bill calling for more punitive measures against gay people was due to be voted on by the Ugandan parliament last week but was not discussed. It could be brought before parliament again later in the year. Emma Ginn, co-ordinator of Medical Justice, said: “Despite compelling medical evidence, the UK Border Agency disbelieves Ms Tibikawa’s story. UKBA do not dispute that Ms Tibikawa has scars caused by a hot flat iron, but conclude that she did not suffer any ill-treatment in Uganda. We condemn the fact that they intend to deport Ms Tibakawa to a country where being gay is illegal and puts your life at risk.” Human Rights Watch spokeswoman Gauri van Gulik said: “Our research has shown that many cases of women like Betty are not taken seriously by the UK Border Agency. Unfortunately women who suffer this kind of violence have serious difficulty claiming asylum.” A UK Border Agency spokesperson said: “The government has made it clear that it is committed to stopping the removal of asylum seekers who have genuinely had to leave particular countries because of their sexual orientation or gender identification. “However, when someone is found not to have a genuine claim we expect them to leave voluntarily.” A 34-year-old gay man from Uganda was due to be removed from the UK on 17 May. UKBA did not confirm whether or not the removal went ahead. Immigration and asylum Gay rights Uganda Nick Clegg Crime Human rights Diane Taylor guardian.co.uk

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New Twitter user publishes claims over privacy injunctions

Claims about 14 gagging orders follow UK and US court battles to unmask anonymous tweeters Another Twitter user has published claims about 14 privacy injunctions allegedly obtained by high-profile performers, sportsmen and politicians. The new Twitter account launched on Monday and has almost 800 followers at the time of publication. On Monday evening, the anonymous user began posting a series of hitherto unpublished claims about the alleged gagging orders, including links to news articles and court documents. Earlier this month, a Twitter user amplified pressure to reveal the identities of celebrities said to have taken out privacy injunctions with a string of claims about the alleged indiscretions of six prominent personalities. The account quickly gained more than 100,000 followers, with many more forwarding the claims across the internet. Ryan Giggs, the Manchester United footballer named by an MP in the Commons as being behind a gagging order preventing reporting of an alleged affair with a reality TV star, is attempting to unmask Twitter users accused of revealing details of the privacy injunction. Giggs brought the lawsuit at the high court in London and Twitter is understood to have successfully resisted handing over the users’ private information. However, Twitter was forced to hand over the personal details of a British user earlier this month in a separate case involving south Tyneside council. The local authority brought the legal challenge in a Californian court – a move which could spark a change of tack for UK authorities attempting to unmask anonymous Twitter users. The original Twitter claims – some of which were rejected as false by their subjects – prompted the lord chief justice, Lord Judge, to describe modern technology as being completely out of control following the publication of Lord Neuberger’s report on privacy injunctions. Judge said: “I’m not giving up on the possibility that people who peddle lies about others through using technology may one day be brought under control, maybe through damages, very substantial damages, maybe even injunctions to stop them peddling lies. It will take quite an effort for parliament to get a grip on this.” Twitter says it removes “illegal tweets and spam” but that it “strive[s] not to remove tweets on the basis of their content”. •

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China tried to pay off Tiananmen Square family, activists claim

Tiananmen Mothers group says unofficial cash offer rejected and demands public recognition of 1989 massacre by military Chinese authorities have proposed an unofficial payoff to a family bereaved by the military crackdown that followed the 1989 Tiananmen Square protests, according to a group representing the victims. In a statement released just before the 22nd anniversary of the deadly crackdown on 4 June, the Tiananmen Mothers said security forces had privately approached one of their members to discuss an individual payoff. But the member rejected the proposal – discussed during two visits in February and April – because it was secretive and made no mention of an investigation, apology or public accounting for what happened. “This year, the silence was finally broken. This should have been welcome. But what in fact does this belated response mean?” asked the 127 members of the group who signed the statement. “The visitors did not speak of making the truth public, carrying out judicial investigations, or providing an explanation for the case of each victim. Instead, they only raised the question of how much to pay, emphasising that this was meant for that individual case and not for the families in the group as a whole.” The group said they had documented the cases of 203 people who were shot, beaten or crushed to death by People’s Liberation Army tanks in the wake of the 1989 protests. Many other victims remained unidentified, they said. The government tightly restricts discussion of the demonstrations – which spread to several cities – or the murderous crackdown that followed, except occasionally to justify the actions as necessary to prevent political turmoil. Given the government’s stance, direct public compensation for victims’ families is highly unlikely, but several senior cadres have called for a re-evaluation of the protests and a recognition that the students and workers were not involved in a counter-revolutionary plot. There have been reports of unofficial payoffs. In 2005, Tang Deying – the mother of a student killed in police custody in Chengdu soon after the 1989 protests – was given 70,000 yuan (£6,850) in “hardship assistance” by local officials, according to a local activist, Huang Qi. Overseas lawyers and human rights activists said the government’s latest approach to the Tiananmen Mothers was unlikely to signal a change of policy. “We know the communist party has tried to get people to remain silent on this issue by using carrots as well as sticks,” said Nicholas Bequelin of Human Rights Watch. “I doubt that this will lead to acknowledgement of government responsibility, though the fact that the Tiananmen Mothers are not in jail is an unspoken recognition of the legitimacy of their case.” Others expressed surprised that the approach came while China is in the midst of the tightest clampdown on dissent since 1989. “Why now?” asked Joshua Rosenzweig of the Dui Hua foundation, which supports political prisoners. “It seems an unlikely moment for the state – even in this limited way – to address this legacy.” Tiananmen Square protests 1989 China Protest Human rights Jonathan Watts guardian.co.uk

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Fifa in crisis live: FA calls for Fifa elections to be postponed

• Click refresh for latest updates and post below the line • Fifa must postpone election, says FA chairman • Matt Scott: ‘Blatter: Crisis? What Is a Crisis?’ 11.12am More from Matt Scott in Zurich: Fifa has refused to respond to the FA’s call for Sepp Blatter to postpone Wednesday’s elections beyond pointing out the process. Fully 75% of all national associations (that is 154 of the 205 who have a vote at Wednesday’s congress) calling for a change to the agenda. Naturally Fifa do not believe this will happen. 11.05am Emirates has joined Adidas and Coca Cola in criticising the recent goings-on at Fifa, although its choice of verb – ‘disappointment’ – and the gruel-like blandness of its statement suggests that the organisation is not going to be first charging the barricades of Fifa HQ. Anyway, here’s their statement: Emirates, like all football fans around the world, is disappointed with the issues that are currently surrounding the administration of the sport. We hope that these issues will be resolved as soon as possible and the outcome will be in the interest of the game and sport in general. 10.50am: Looking below the line, avidfan writes: Can someone tell me what happened with the sworn testimony in the Sunday Times from some FIFA whistleblower??? I saw Sepp’s press conference yesterday and he suggested that no such person existed?! Think I’m right in saying that the Sunday Times’ whistleblower was advised by his/her lawyers not to attend Fifa’s ethics committee hearing. However, most of the UK reporters in Zurich are going to press conference this afternoon from someone promising further whistleblowing revelations. We’ll see what that throws up … 10.42am More reaction from Matt Scott: “The Football Association has taken the initiative by calling for the immediate postponement of Sepp Blatter’s coronation as president,” he writes. “It is an incendiary move that will incense Blatter, who thought he would serenely assume the role for his fourth term after the challenger, Mohamed Bin Hammam, was suspended amid renewed corruption allegations at the heart of Fifa.” The question now is, is the FA a lone voice, whistling in the corridors of Zurich? Or is the organisation reflecting a wider view among the individual associations? 10.32am Here’s Matt Scott in Zurich’s reaction to the FA’s statement: Naturally this will be a futile measure from #theFA but is bold. Bravo chairman David Bernstein for having courage to confront @seppblatter Of course, as Paul Kelso on Twitter notes, Bernstein is part of “the same FA facing a Parliamentary review of its own corporate governance…”. Still, at least the FA is taking a lead for a change …. 10.25am The FA has released a statement calling for the Fifa presidential election to be postponed – and called for a ‘genuinely independent’ external party to look into how to improve Fifa. Here’s the full statement: The Football Association Chairman David Bernstein said: “On 19 May 2011 The Football Association announced it would be abstaining in the forthcoming election for the Fifa Presidency. “There were two main reasons for this decision. First, a concern, that a series of allegations relating to Fifa ExCo Members made it difficult to support either candidate. Secondly, a concern about the lack of transparency and accountability within the organisation, contributing to the current unsatisfactory situation. “Events of the last few days have reinforced our views, and we call on FIFA and ask other national associations to support us with two initiatives. First, to postpone the election and give credibility to this process, so any alternative reforming candidate could have the opportunity to stand for President. Secondly, to appoint a genuinely independent external party to make recommendations regarding improved governance and compliance procedures and structures throughout the Fifa decision making processes for consideration by the full membership. “This has been a very damaging time for the reputation of Fifa and therefore the whole of football. To improve confidence in the way the game is governed at the very top, we believe these requests would be a positive step forward and the minimum that should take place.” Good morning and welcome to day three of our Fifa in crisis live blog. Over the next 10 hours or so we will bring you the latest news and reaction ahead of tomorrow’s Fifa presidential election, with our reporters David Conn and Matt Scott scurrying around the corridors of Fifa HQ in Zurich to assess the fallout from Sepp Blatter’s extraordinary press conference yesterday. Yes, the “Crisis? What is a Crisis? one. There’s plenty else to go at, of course, including: • Will Jack Warner add to his so-called “tsunami” of claims?” • Will any other Football Associations join the English FA’s lead and abstain from backing Blatter? • Coca Cola and Adidas have already expressed their disquiet at the shabby revelations of the past few days; will the other Fifa partners (Hyundai, Emirates, Sony and Visa follow suit? Fifa Sepp Blatter The FA Jamie Jackson Sean Ingle guardian.co.uk

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Timeless taboos: why 19th-century novels appeal to film-makers

With lavish new movie adaptations of Dickens, Brontë and Tolstoy in the pipeline, Mark Lawson wonders what keeps drawing film-makers to the same 19th-century novels At press previews, to which movie critics are lured on weekday mornings by platters of complimentary croissants and fruit segments, a special mood of resentment greets the unspooling of a franchise in its later instalments: the ninth Nightmare on Elm Street, say, or the 12th Friday the 13th. Relentless repetition of the same characters or set-up is viewed as proof of imaginative poverty and commercial opportunism. But recycling of storylines is not necessarily evidence of low artistic ambitions. Three films currently in production from admired directors – Mike Newell, Andrea Arnold and Joe Wright – might be billed, in line with Hollywood’s numerical tendency, as Great Expectations 16, Wuthering Heights 17 and Anna Karenina 25, if we include even a rough estimate of the previous significant film and TV versions of these novels. It’s true that – with some exceptions, such as a 1998 Great Expectations , updated to modern New York – these remakes tend to tell exactly the same story each time. What a relief it is to the reader that the literary franchises do not follow the Elm Street/Friday the 13th habit of moving the action slightly on. Thus we have been spared Wuthering Heights XI: Great-Great-Grandson of Heathcliff or Anna Karenina XIV: The Train-Driver’s Trial. Yet the fact that the basic narratives have been told so often makes it even more striking that these 19th-century fictions should be the stories that some of the 21st century’s leading cinematic talents want to tell next. Few admirers of the dark contemporary dramas of Andrea Arnold – Fish Tank and Red Road – would have bet on a future project being the Emily Brontë story of ghostly romance made musically famous by Kate Bush. (Although this transition has an interesting precedent: Peter Kosminsky, best known for political and topical dramas and documentaries, also made a movie of Cathy and Heathcliff’s story.) And, while Mike Newell has often worked on dramatisations of novels, these have been first takes on tales by contemporary writers (Gabriel García Márquez, JK Rowling, Timothy Mo) rather than an engagement with characters as familiar as Dickens’ Pip and Magwitch (Newell has cast Ralph Fiennes), who pop up in TV adaptations about as often as the Olympics. Joe Wright’s desire to direct Keira Knightley as Tolstoy’s adulterous heroine is possibly less surprising – director and star have period and mock-period form in Pride and Prejudice and Atonement – but, in choosing this project, they are only a decade away from a high-profile, award-winning Channel 4/PBS mini-series. This surge of versions is also odd because, in one crucial and possibly ruinous sense, none of these 19th-century classics is well suited to cinema. In a standard edition, Wuthering Heights runs to around 300 pages, Great Expectations to more than 400 and Anna Karenina to almost 900. And yet a truly faithful movie can only be produced from a novella of around 100 pages. Filming a Victorian blockbuster automatically demands filleting, omission and simplification, which is why Dickens, Brontë, Austen and Tolstoy have traditionally been better served by television, which routinely offers multi-episode slots of between four and six hours, although even this medium is now becoming keener on the one-off film. Despite this starting disadvantage, cinema keeps coming back to these same yarns. And the reasons for these frequent remakes reveal much about both the novels themselves and the culture of movie-making. The negative way of looking at this repetition of familiar fictions would be that it exposes cinema’s creative conservatism. And, certainly, the visual endurance of these three novels is merely an extreme example of a general tendency among film-makers to take a small number of agreed classics out of the library several times. There have, for example, been 10 major Pride and Prejudices on small and big screens, while Baz Lurhman is currently preparing the fifth look at The Great Gatsby. And it is now a routine weekly complaint from reviewers and more eclectic film-goers that almost everything on offer in multiplexes is either a remake or a continuation of a franchise. It’s also a proven rule of the entertainment industry that familiar material becomes even more appealing during economic difficulties: for obvious and understandable reasons, both producers and consumers prefer, when cash is tight, to risk it on projects that have already shown they can give value for money. In this respect, an additional advantage for producers in hard times is that a play by Shakespeare or a book by Dickens or Brontë will be out of copyright, avoiding an often expensive tussle for the rights. This canny and cautious commissioning is by no means restricted to film. Of the 45 shows listed in newspapers by the Official London Theatre Guide , almost everything is a revival or an adaptation of a famous movie or literary property: only three productions (In a Forest, Dark and Deep; Ghost Stories and The Holy Rosenbergs) are original scripts that have no connection with a previously existing project. In the case, though, of the latest Wuthering Heights, Great Expectations and Anna Karenina, there is a more charitable analysis than the benefits of selling established brands. All of the performing artforms have rapidly established the concept of a canon: an agreed list of stories that merit re-telling. In theatre, this trove contains Shakespeare, Ibsen, Chekhov and, latterly, Arthur Miller and Harold Pinter. In television, the works of Dickens and Jane Austen have become the reflex refuge of both the BBC and ITV, especially at times when the networks’ cultural credentials are being questioned by regulators or at Westminster. The cinematic canon is most apparent in the populist characters who have been reanimated by successive generations of film-makers – Frankenstein, Dracula, Sherlock, King Kong, Batman, Superman and so on – but there was also, from very early on, a clear shelf of literary set-texts that would periodically be offered for examination. Many of these overlap with the favourites of theatre and TV: Shakespeare, Dickens, Austen and the various Brontës, with the addition of Tolstoy as a pet foreign-language novelist. Apart from the many Anna Kareninas, War and Peace has also been filmed and there has even been a biopic about the novelist: The Last Station. But the movie industry can also be seen to have copied from theatre the idea of canonical works as a benchmark against which new generations of directors and actors must be measured. In playhouses, it is not considered unimaginative programming for Zoë Wanamaker to portray Madame Ranyevskaya in Chekhov’s The Cherry Orchard, when the role has already been played with distinction by Judie Dench, Joanna Lumley and others, nor is a director accused of running out of ideas when announcing that Simon Russell Beale’s or Jonathan Pryce’s King Lear will closely follow those of Sir Derek Jacobi and Sir Ian McKellen. These are landmark parts that a theatrical career must properly contain. So, in this context, it’s necessary and even inevitable that Knightley should commit to film her interpretation of a Russian heroine previously played by Greta Garbo and Vivien Leigh, while the young northern newcomer James Howson, Arnold’s choice for her Wuthering Heights, follows Laurence Olivier, Ralph Fiennes and Timothy Dalton into the part of Heathcliff, just as younger theatre actors subsequently took over their roles as Shakespearean princes and kings. The directors of the new films can also reasonably argue that they can bring to these stories advantages denied to their predecessors: whether the digital possibilities for convincingly depicting the supernatural in Wuthering Heights or the greater availability of genuinely Russian locations in a post-Soviet Anna Karenina. But the fundamental reason that fiction from a pre-cinematic period has proved so attractive to the cameras is that these are compelling narratives filled with fascinating characters. It also helps that each of the books fits neatly into at least one genre that has become standard in Hollywood. Brontë’s gothic Yorkshire chiller is both a story of thwarted love and a ghost story, forms that occupy well-filled portions of the DVD store. The romantic element of that book – involving sexual attraction that is prevented or restricted by class or social conformity – overlaps with Tolstoy’s novel, which, with a heroine who places her sexual fulfilment ahead of community approval, also contains a prototype for what has become a recurrent figure in films. Magwitch and Pip are also archetypes – the vulnerable child, the crook on the run – who have numerous celluloid echoes, while Miss Havisham, the sinister spinster Pip encounters in her nerve-racking mansion, is a striking instance of Dickens’s ability to create people who demand to be seen as well as read. Prophetically, the writer even pays close attention to the lighting effects in the Havisham house as, in another easily filmic scene, Pip plays an alarming game of cards with Estella, the strange lady’s ward. However, beyond the narrative satisfaction of the stories, I think there’s another reason why these 19th-century classics are so regularly revisited; and one that holds a warning for contemporary film-making and fiction. At their simplest level, each of these books features a couple whose union is impossible or dangerous: Cathy and Heathcliff face the bar of class and propriety, Anna and Vronsky challenge the adultery taboo, and Pip and Estella are thwarted not only by their starkly different social backgrounds but by her bizarre guardian. That 1998 contemporary rewriting of Great Expectations tried to pretend that social barriers still exist – Pip becomes a poor artist called Finn who is looked down on by wealthy socialite Estella – but the jeopardy never felt real. In the modern world, there is little reason for an heiress not to marry a penniless artisan and, in fact, a cursory reading of Heat and Tatler suggest regular hitchings between Pips and Estellas and Cathys and Heathcliffs. Equally, a modern Anna Karenina could take Vronsky as her second husband with no more trouble than a decent divorce lawyer. Fiction is driven by friction and taboo but, in most parts of contemporary society, we have created a society in which there are few obstacles to people doing what they want or being with the person they desire. Numerous traditional narrative triggers – a sexual secret, the threat of bankruptcy, a spell in prison – now result in no more than a few months’ embarrassment, an expensively maintained anonymity injunction or a tearfully confessional TV interview. This generally more tolerant society has usefully reduced the prevalence of suicide and blackmail but is problematic for modern storytellers trying to construct a plot. Lionel Shriver recently wrote in these pages of her surprised delight at locating a new taboo – a mother who struggles to love her son in We Need to Talk About Kevin – but it is very hard in a modern novel to create an occasion of disgrace or ostracism, the engines of much great Victorian fiction. Only in certain very strict religious communities do the old plotlines of forbidden relationships still apply and such subject-matter often brings off-putting sensitivities for mainstream movies. At a time when there are public discussions over differing severities in rape cases, the only broadly agreed social no-no is paedophilia: which is why, with such depressing regularity, child abuse turns out to be the solution to so many crime novels and TV dramas. This problem of achieving genuine moral hazard in a contemporary setting is the reason that so many high-profile novels and films are either historical stories or biopics: the past is more dramatic and morally complex. And, for the same reason, the classic novels become increasingly attractive to film-makers and actors seeking meaty material. Out of copyright, containing presciently camera-ready narratives and characters who may face social or actual death in pursuit of what they want, Wuthering Heights, Anna Karenina and Great Expectations give modern cinematic talent access to a world that is, in many ways, more appealing than their own. Drama Film adaptations Classics Emily Brontë Leo Tolstoy Drama Charles Dickens Mark Lawson guardian.co.uk

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Paul Scholes retires and takes Manchester United coaching role

• 36-year-old will join Old Trafford coaching staff next season • Scholes: A video appreciation of his career The Manchester United midfielder Paul Scholes has announced his retirement from football with immediate effect. There had been speculation about the 36-year-old’s future in the past few weeks after he became increasingly dissatisfied with his bit-part role at Old Trafford. “This was not a decision I have taken lightly but I feel now is the right time for me to stop playing,” said Scholes, who will join the United coaching staff from next season. “I am not a man of many words but I can honestly say that playing football is all I have ever wanted to do. To have had such a long and successful career at Manchester United has been a real honour. To have been part of the team that helped the club reach a record 19th title is a great privilege. “I would like to thank the fans for their tremendous support throughout my career, I would also like to thank all the coaches and players that I have worked with over the years. But most of all I would like to thank Sir Alex [Ferguson] for being such a great manager. From the day I joined the club his door has always been open and I know this team will go on to win many more trophies under his leadership.” Scholes’s role within the United coaching setup has still to be outlined, although there could be an opening available with the reserves, where Warren Joyce has been acting alone since the departure of Ole Gunnar Solskjaer. The former England international will also be granted a testimonial, which will take place in August. “What more can I say about Paul Scholes that I haven’t said before?” Ferguson said. “We are going to miss a truly unbelievable player. Paul has always been fully committed to this club and I am delighted he will be joining the coaching staff. Paul has always been inspirational to players of all ages and we know that will continue.” Paul Scholes Manchester United guardian.co.uk

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Mladic visits daughter’s grave while waiting for extradition

Former general makes trip to cemetery to pay respects to daughter Ana, who killed herself in 1994 with her father’s gun Ratko Mladic has been allowed to visit the grave of his daughter who committed suicide during the Bosnia war of the 1990s. Mladic, who is is awaiting extradition to a UN tribunal, made the visit early on Tuesday morning under tight security, said Serbia’s deputy war crimes prosecutor, Bruno Vekaric. Mladic is expected to be extradited to the tribunal in The Haguelate Tuesday or early Wednesday. “We didn’t announce his visit to the grave because it is his private thing and because it represented a security risk,” Vekaric said. “The operation lasted for 20 minutes and passed without a glitch.” Europe’s most wanted war crimes fugitive was arrested on Thursday in a village north of Belgrade after 16 years on the run. Mladic is charged by the tribunal for atrocities committed by his Serb troops during Bosnia’s 1992-95 war. His 23-year-old daughter Ana killed herself in 1994 with her father’s pistol. Media reports at the time said she did it because of depression caused by her father’s role in the war. Mladic has always claimed she was killed by his wartime enemies. Mladic visited the red marble grave with a cross at a graveyard on a hill in a Belgrade suburb. There, he left a lit candle and a small white bouquet of flowers with a red rose in the middle. Mladic’s lawyer said on Monday that he has formally filed an appeal against the former general’s extradition – a move that will likely delay his handover to The Hague until Tuesday night or early Wednesday. Milos Saljic also has asked for several doctors to examine the 69-year-old Mladic, who is said to have suffered at least two strokes. Saljic said he mailed his appeal from an unidentified post office in Belgrade on Monday. Court officials will now need to wait for it to arrive and review it before ruling on the appeal. Vekaric accused Mladic of using delaying tactics and said nothing should prevent his extradition to the tribunal. The prosecutor said no one will be informed when Mladic will be transported from his prison and flown to the Netherlands “because of security risks”. On Monday, the Serbian president, Boris Tadic, rejected speculation that authorities had known of Mladic’s hiding place and delayed his arrest to coincide with a visit by EU foreign policy chief Catherine Ashton. The rumours have persisted because Mladic was found living not far from the capital, Belgrade, with relatives who share his last name. “Any such comment makes no sense,” Tadic said in an interview with The Associated Press. “The truth is that we arrested Ratko Mladic the moment we discovered him.” The president also said it’s time for the European Union to do its part by boosting his nation’s efforts to join the bloc, arguing the arrest of Mladic proves it is serious about rejoining the international fold. “I simply ask the EU to fulfill its part,” he said. “We fulfilled our part and we will continue to do so.” The EU had repeatedly said that Serbia could begin pre-membership talks only after it arrested the wartime Bosnian Serb commander. Some EU nations have already said Serbia needs to do more, including arresting its last fugitive, Goran Hadzic, who led Croatian Serb rebels during the 1991-1995 war. Tadic said Hadzic will be arrested as soon as possible. Ratko Mladic War crimes Serbia Bosnia and Herzegovina European Union United Nations guardian.co.uk

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National Trust’s talking benches to use voices of celebrities

Visitors will be able to listen to Stephen Fry, Miranda Hart and John Sergeant while touring historic homes and gardens A beautiful day out, a tramp round a stately home, a walk in the gardens, and then relax to take in the view from a handy bench. But what’s this? The sound of Stephen Fry coming from the woodwork? The National Trust is ambushing visitors to its tranquil properties with “talking benches”, which are meant to widen the appeal of its historic gardens and homes. Gambling on the lure of celebrity status, the trust has commissioned Fry, Strictly Come Dancing’s John Sergeant and other luminaries to temporarily add to the punter’s “visitor experience”. Flopping on to one of the benches will activate either Fry’s languid drawl or a range of other reminiscences through speakers hidden in the woodwork. The five-minute recordings will “keep the listener entertained”, says the trust. Those who prefer to eat their sandwiches undisturbed can wander off to an ordinary seat instead. The idea draws on variable experience overseas including eroding concrete benches in the Estonian resort of Haapsalu, where Tchaikovsky composed his Pathétique symphony. Gazing out over forlorn reedbeds and marsh, the visitor is briefly serenaded by mournful passages from the work. The trust is aiming at a more cheerful effect, with cricketer David Gower chatting about Calke Abbey in Derbyshire and the TV comedian Miranda Hart extolling the grandeur of Northumberland’s Cragside. Hart said the notion of “being someone’s benchmate and chatting to them while they admire Lord Armstrong’s mighty pile is a lovely, nay tremendous idea”. Piles of a different sort were evoked by Fry, who said he hoped that his bench at Felbrigg Hall in Norfolk would provide “comfort, balm and solace for many a weary bottom”. The trust hopes that the famous voices will make inroads into the half of the UK’s population that doesn’t currently visit, without being a pain in the bottom for its established clientele. The benches have been individually carved to reflect their voice’s career and personality and will be joined by others, in the manner of celebrity TV shows, if the first eight catch on. Other stars in the trial run are TV presenter Claudia Winkleman at Quarry Bank mill in Styal, Cheshire, and naturalist Nick Baker at Cotehele in Cornwall. A second naturalist and broadcaster, Iolo Williams, takes on Dinefwr park in Carmarthenshire while philosopher Alain de Botton meditates at Castle Ward in Northern Ireland. The curious mansion in County Down symbolises the trust’s hope of being all things to all men: Viscount Bangor and his wife could not agree on architectural styles, so the front facade is classical Georgian and the rear Strawberry Hill Gothic. Heritage Homes Gardens Martin Wainwright guardian.co.uk

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Nato air strikes can no longer target houses in Afghanistan, says Karzai

President furious after recent attack killed civilians, though questions arise about his authority over coalition tactics Angered by civilian casualties, the Afghan president, Hamid Karzai, has said he will no longer allow Nato air strikes on houses, issuing his strongest statement yet against methods that the military alliance says are key to its war on Taliban insurgents. The president’s remarks follow a recent strike that mistakenly killed a group of children and women in southern Helmand province. He said it would be the last. “From this moment, air strikes on the houses of people are not allowed,” Karzai told reporters in Kabul. Nato says it never conducts such strikes without Afghan government coordination and approval. A spokesman for Nato forces in Afghanistan said they will review their procedures for air strikes given Karzai’s statement but did not say that it would force any immediate change in tactics. “In the days and weeks ahead we will co-ordinate very closely with President Karzai to ensure that his intent is met,” spokeswoman Major Sunset Belinsky said. If Karzai holds to what sounds like an order to international troops to abandon strikes, it could bring the Afghan government in direct conflict with its international allies. “Coalition forces constantly strive to reduce the chance of civilian casualties and damage to structures, but when the insurgents use civilians as a shield and put our forces in a position where their only option is to use air strikes, then they will take that option,” Belinsky said. It is unclear if Karzai has the power to order an end to such strikes. Nato and US forces are in Afghanistan under a United Nations mandate that expires in October. The US is negotiating an agreement with the Afghan government on the presence of its forces in the country going forward, but this has already become contentious, with Karzai declaring that he will put strict controls on how US troops conduct themselves in his country. “The Afghan people can no longer tolerate these attacks,” Karzai told reporters at the presidential palace. He issued a veiled threat: “The Afghan people will be forced to take action.” He did not, however, say what this action would be. “We want it to be clear that they are working in a sovereign nation,” Karzai said. Afghanistan Nato Hamid Karzai guardian.co.uk

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