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Good morning, NBers. After a restful week off, Jodi is back with an all-new episode of NewsBusted! Quite a bit happened over the past week. Check below the break for Tuesday's epsiode, and make sure you subscribe to our YouTube channel . Topics in today's show: — Osama's dead — Romney: my first presidential action would be Obamacare removal — Al Qaeda rapper dead? — Eight-year-old gets botox injections — Woman wakes from surger with British accent — Ashton Kutcher replacing Sheen on 'Two and a Half Men' Starring: Jodi Miller Director: Bruce Roundtower Executive Producer: Dialog New Media

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UK government to set emissions targets

Coalition expected to adopt plans to cut UK emissions by 50% on 1990 levels by 2025 following row over carbon budget • Damian Carrington: Victory gained and disaster averted The government is expected to announce today that it has agreed the world’s most ambitious targets for emissions cuts into the 2020s, following a cabinet rift on the issue. The climate and energy secretary, Chris Huhne – currently at the centre of claims he persuaded someone else to take speeding penalty points on his behalf – will announce in parliament at 4.30pm that the UK is to adopt plans to cut emissions by 50% on 1990 levels by 2025. Fears that ministers would reject the Committee on Climate Change’s proposals for pollution limits in the fourth “carbon budget” have prompted an outcry from environmentalist groups . The carbon budget runs from 2023 to 2027, part of efforts to meet legally binding emissions cuts of 80% by 2050, and will put the UK on target for 60% cuts by 2030. A letter leaked last week appeared to expose a row between ministers. Business secretary, Vince Cable, apparently argued for less ambitious reductions in the 2020s because the targets could limit economic growth. After the letter emerged, a coalition of environmental bodies issued a warning to the prime minister David Cameron that he risked seriously undermining his pledge to lead the “greenest government ever” if he did not back the targets. The Labour leader, Ed Miliband, had also seized on the evidence of internal disagreement, writing to Cameron to warn that failing to agree the budget would send “a terrible signal” to business and the rest of the world. But over the weekend Cameron was reported to have stepped in to resolve the fraught battle within the cabinet , with a decision to support the targets. Before today’s expected announcement, Keith Allott, WWF-UK’s head of climate change, said: “No other country has set legally binding emission-reduction targets going into the 2020s, and so with this decision the UK is demonstrating genuine leadership on climate change. “The Climate Change Act remains a groundbreaking piece of legislation that, with support, will underpin the UK’s transition to a low-carbon economy.” But he said the Committee on Climate Change had made clear that the proposed fourth carbon budget was the “absolute minimum” necessary. He added: “The unwillingness of government to accept this recommendation suggests that some Whitehall departments are more committed to action than others.” Carbon emissions Climate change Liberal-Conservative coalition Green politics Chris Huhne guardian.co.uk

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Exploding watermelons put spotlight on Chinese farming practices

New food scandal as fields of watermelons are destroyed after farmers mistakenly apply growth accelerator The flying pips, shattered shells and fleshy shrapnel still haunt farmer Liu Mingsuo after an effort to chemically boost his fruit crop went spectacularly wrong. Field after field of watermelons exploded when he and other agricultural workers in eastern China mistakenly applied forchlorfenuron, a growth accelerator. The incident has become a focus of a domestic media drive to expose the lax farm practices, shortcuts and excessive use of fertiliser behind a rash of food safety scandals in China. It follows discoveries of the heavy metal cadmium in rice, toxic melamine in milk, arsenic in soy sauce, bleach in mushrooms and the detergent borax in pork (to make it look like beef). Compared to such cases of dangerous contamination, Liu’s transgression was minor, but it has gained notoriety after being picked up by the state broadcaster CCTV. The broadcaster blamed the bursting of the fruit on the legal chemical forchlorfenuron, which stimulates cell separation but often leaves the melons misshapen and turns the seeds white. The report said the farmers sprayed the fruit too late in the season and during wet conditions, which caused the melons to explode like “landmines”. After losing three hectares (eight acres), Liu told reporters he was unable to sleep because he could not shake the image of the fruit bursting. “On 7 May, I came out and counted 80 (bursting watermelons) but by the afternoon it was 100,” he said. “Two days later I didn’t bother to count any more.” About 20 farmers and 45 hectares around Danyang were affected. The fruit could not be sold but was instead fed to fish and pigs. Agricultural experts say forchlorfenuron has been widely used in China since the 1980s. Farmers say it can bring the harvest forward by two weeks and increase the size and price of the fruit by more than 20%. Environment groups said the overuse of agricultural chemicals was a growing problem that went beyond growth stimulants. Pan Jing of Greenpeace said farmers depended on fertiliser because many double as migrant workers, which means they have less time for their crops. This dependency is promoted by state subsidies that keep fertilisers cheap. “The government is aware of the environmental problems caused by chemical fertiliser, but they are also concerned about food output.” Many farmers now grow their own food separately from the chemically-raised crops they sell at the market. “I feel there is nothing safe I can eat now because people are in too much of a hurry to make money,” said Huang Zhanliang, a farmer in Hebei. Concerns about food safety have lingered despite government promises to deal with the problem after six babies died and thousands of others became ill as a result of melamine-tainted milk in 2008 . The authorities appear to have mixed feelings about the role of the media and public opinion in naming and shaming culprits. In the wake of the melamine scandal, police jailed one of the parents, Zhao Lianhai , who had set up a website to expose the problem and appeal for justice. Recently, however, officials have encouraged coverage of food safety issues. Zhang Yong, the head of a new cabinet-level food safety commission, praised the media’s “important watchdog role”. In the past week, the People’s Daily website has run stories of human birth control chemicals being used on cucumber plants in Xian, China Daily has reported Sichuan peppers releasing red dye when soaked in water and the Sina news portal revealed that barite powder had been injected into chickens in Guizhou to increase their weight. China Food Farming Jonathan Watts guardian.co.uk

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Overseas aid targets ‘will be made law’, insists government

No 10 says Liam Fox’s attack on government plans to enshrine funding for developing countries will not derail its plans Downing Street has insisted the government is committed to enshrining its overseas aid spending targets in law, despite objections by the defence secretary, Liam Fox . No 10 condemned the leak of a private letter from Fox to David Cameron warning that he could not support the plans in their current form. “Clearly we condemn leaks in all forms,” the prime minister’s official spokesman said, adding that it would be for senior officials to decide whether to mount a leak inquiry. The spokesman stressed that Fox’s concerns would not affect the government’s plan to create a statutory requirement for 0.7% of gross national income (GNI) to be spent on overseas aid. “It is coalition policy, it is government policy, it will be made law,” the spokesman said. “There is no question that it is the government’s policy to have the 0.7% of GNI target for international aid. We will introduce a bill in due course to make that law.” In his letter, obtained by the Times, Fox – who made clear he had discussed the issue with the international development secretary, Andrew Mitchell, and the foreign secretary, William Hague – argued that establishing a specific statutory target would open up the government to future legal challenges. Instead, he suggested that the target should simply be recognised in legislation, along with a commitment to produce an annual report on whether it was being met. “I have considered the issue carefully, and discussed it with Andrew and William Hague, but I cannot support the proposal in its current form,” he wrote. A source close to Fox insisted that he was not opposed to the government’s plan to increase spending on aid, saying: “The defence secretary fully supports the principle of a 0.7% target on international aid. “The issue is simply how best to reflect this in law.” However, the leak once again highlighted the uneasy relationship between Cameron and Fox, who were rivals for the Tory leadership in 2005. Last year another private letter from Fox to the prime minister – this time warning of the impact of planned defence cuts – was leaked to the press. Fox strongly denied any responsibility and ordered an inquiry by the Ministry of Defence police. The latest leak, however, again chimes with the concerns of many Tory backbenchers who believe that the government is spending too much on overseas aid at a time of economic austerity. In contrast, Cameron is strongly committed to the statutory target, which he regards as emblematic of the way the Conservative party has changed under his leadership. The shadow international development secretary, Harriet Harman, said: “The commitment to increase overseas aid spending to 0.7% of GNI by 2013 was a manifesto commitment by the Tories and the Lib Dems and was repeated in the coalition agreement. It must not be the next broken promise. “Britain’s overseas aid saves lives in the developing world, but it is also in our national interest to tackle the underdevelopment which can cause conflict. “This Tory manifesto promise has been reiterated by the prime minister at international forums. He must show that Britain keeps its word. “The way to show they are not going to break this manifesto commitment is to bring in the promised legislation now. The government must keep the promise.” Aid Liam Fox Liberal-Conservative coalition Conservatives David Cameron guardian.co.uk

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If you live in Pittsburgh, you have the option of voting for a real live activist in today’s election. I’m sure you remember Dana Dolney — you just didn’t know her name. Now you do. If you can, write in her name today for Allegheny County Chief Executive: In the Democratic race for Allegheny County Chief Executive, drilling for natural gas in the Marcellus Shale has become a bigger issue than either candidate probably wanted it to be. County Controller Mark Patrick Flaherty and former Allegheny County Council President Rich Fitzgerald have been fighting over which candidate is more in bed with the industry. They’ve sniped about plans to divvy up gas-drilling royalties , and Flaherty has embarrassed Fitzgerald by circulating an e-mail Fitzgerald sent earlier this year, begging the gas industry for campaign contributions. No surprise, then, that as we first reported early this month , anti-drilling environmentalists see little difference bewteen the two Democrats.That’s where Dana Dolney comes in. In recent days, anti-drilling activists have been seeking to conduct a write-in effort to put one of their own on the ballot. And thanks largely to an internet video gone viral, Dolney is their pick . “This has literally all happened in the past week,” Dolney said by phone this morning. “A lot of people didn’t even know my name, but they knew me from this viral video of me telling of an official at a public hearing and said, ‘We want her for county executive.’” [....] Dolney, a 38-year-old waitress “proudly” from Polish Hill, says she spends about 30 hours or more a week as a community organizer, activist and protester in the fight against natural-gas drilling. Nor was her encounter with Sailor the first time she’s squared off with public officials. Dolney, who is working toward forming a “league of activist women,” says she’s spent quite a bit of time confronting political leaders.

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Against Jon Stewart, O’Reilly’s lame defense of Fox’s fake ‘Common controversy’ has no chance

Click here to view this media We’re kind of accustomed to seeing Jon Stewart pretty much mop the floor with Bill O’Reilly every time he goes up against him on Fox — even when O’Reilly tries to carefully edit the tapes . And of course, it was no different last night when Stewart took up O’Reilly’s challenge to debate him over the latest fake controversy ginned up by the network’s smear-scandal mills. As Ari Melber observes : In two short segments, O’Reilly walked through his case, responded to factual charges of hypocrisy with some fairly sad parsing and then, when desperate, with rank “pettifogging,” to use a term bandied by both men. Meanwhile, the “Daily Show” anchor’s rebuttals were striking because, even in this casual mode on a minor item, he was more persuasive than the vast majority of people who are called on to represent a progressive view on TV. The highlight came when O’Reilly, the past master of the Wurlitzer propaganda organ, accused Stewart of “pettifogging” the issue — and then found himself promptly busted for pettifogging himself. Stewart basically reiterated the points he’d already raised in The Daily Show’s own rebuttals of the Fox fakery — namely, Fox is hypocritical in its criteria for denouncing White House guests, especially given the network’s own predilection for hosting people with violent backgrounds. STEWART: It sounds like what you’re saying — and correct me if I’m wrong because I don’t want to be wrong when I’m with you, ‘cuz you know I got mad love for you — that’s a rap phrase… O’REILLY: I got it. STEWART: Correct me if I’m wrong. What you’re saying is, if an artist supports someone that has been convicted of killing a cop, they should not be allowed to go to the White House. Is that a reasonable paraphrase? O’REILLY: No, it’s a little bit more than that. STEWART: OK, say it. O’REILLY: I am saying that when a president invites someone, in this case, the First Lady invites someone, the resume has to be put in front of them. And they have to select people who are almost unimpeachable, all right? Because they are getting that honor, to go to the White House. This guy is controversial all day long with this stuff. Not only did he support this cop killer, or celebrate the cop killer, he celebrated another one in Philadelphia! STEWART: Again, he’s celebrating someone he thinks was unjustly — he’s not celebrating — O’REILLY: Is this Perry Mason we’re talking about now? Is this the most brilliant lawyer of all time? STEWART: Who? O’REILLY: This Common. STEWART: Oh. Common. Let me ask you a question. Are you familiar with Leonard Peltier ? O’REILLY: Yes. STEWART: OK. Leonard Peltier was convicted of killing two FBI agents. O’REILLY: OK, now we’re going out to Wounded Knee. STEWART: It’s similar. O’REILLY: Oh huh. No it’s not. STEWART: Well, why is it not? O’REILLY: Because you’re pettifogging the issue. STEWART: It’s the exact same thing. It’s a guy convicted of killing a law-enforcement official, no? Guess who wrote a song about Leonard Peltier. Bono. O’REILLY: OK. STEWART: Guess where he was! [whispers] The White House! [shouts] Boo-yah! O’REILLY: All right. STEWART: That’s a rap word. O’REILLY: Did Bono — ? STEWART: Yes. O’REILLY: Did he actually come out and say that he was innocent? STEWART: I think that’s the crux of the song. O’REILLY: No. I think he was raising questions about it. And, and, the basic theme — STEWART: Now who’s pettifogging? Now I can’t even see you! Here you pettifog. No — that’s exactly same! O’REILLY: OK. STEWART: Bob Dylan wrote a song about a convicted killer named Hurricane Carter — he’s been to the White House. Why are you drawing a line at Common? There is a collective outrage machine here at Fox that pettifogs only when it suits the narrative that suits them. This guy is in the crosshairs in a way he shouldn’t be. Whether you agree with him or not, or you may think he’s ignorant in believing Assadah Shakur is innocent. You may think he’s ignorant in believing that Mumia is. But then guess what? Bono can’t go to the White House, Springsteen can’t go to the White House, Bob Dylan can’t go to the White House. You got a lot of people that aren’t allowed to sit in the White House because they’ve written songs about people convicted of murder. There were also some delicious exchanges in the second half of the interview, particularly when Stewart brought up G. Gordon Liddy: Click here to view this media O’REILLY: OK. So you say, that because Bono, Springsteen, and Bob Dylan wrote songs defending people who were accused of heinous things, that I have to give Common a pass because he did the same thing. STEWART: No. You have to be consistent with your outrage. … STEWART: G. Gordon Liddy, in the Randy Weaver case, after the ATF stormed that facility, right? When he was talking about the ATF, you know what he said on his radio show? He said, if they break down your doors, don’t shoot them here [indicates torso], because they’re wearing protective gear, shoot for the head. O’REILLY: Was that before or after Liddy made the gold commercial? STEWART: [laughs] O’REILLY: OK, you see, your craziness — you bring this stuff in. O’Reilly obviously had no response to that one, because he obviously deflected the point and changed the subject there. I wonder what would have happened if Stewart had managed to bring up Richard Poplawski — an actual cop killer who was inspired by, among other people, Fox’s own Glenn Beck. Bet that would have wound up on the editing floor for sure.

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Arnold Schwarzenegger had child with employee

Former California governor confirms in a statement that he fathered a child with a member of his household staff Arnold Schwarzenegger, the former actor and recently retired governor of California, has admitted that he fathered a child 10

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Syrian mass grave found near Deraa, residents say

Human rights groups report 13 bodies unearthed from field in southern city at centre of protest movement Thirteen bodies have been pulled from a mass grave in Deraa, the hub of Syria’s protest movement, according to residents cited by rights organisations. People from the southern city say hundreds are unaccounted for since a crackdown on protests began on 18 March and intensified when the army moved in on 25 April to try to quash unrest against Bashar al-Assad’s 11-year rule. Radwan Ziadeh, the US-based head of the Damascus Centre for Human Rights, said so far seven bodies had been identified by residents. Five of the dead were reportedly from the same family – Abdulrazaq Abdulaziz Abazied and his four children; Samer, Samir, Suleiman and Mohamed. The National Organisation for Human Rights in Syria also reported a grave being found on Monday. “Authorities immediately cordoned off the area to prevent residents from recovering the bodies,” it said. Several videos purporting to show the unearthing of bodies from a field close to the town have been posted. The government said reports of a mass grave were “completely untrue”, state TV reported on Tuesday. The official Syrian news agency, Sana, said Assad met a delegation from Deraa and they discussed the “positive atmosphere there as a result of co-operation between the residents and the army”. Residents report that landlines have been restored, the curfew shortened and tanks have withdrawn to the outskirts, but the town remains under tight control. Accounts of the mass grave could not be independently verified, although the pro-regime newspaper al-Watan acknowledged on Tuesday that five bodies had been found. “Given that Syria’s officials have demonstrated time and time again that they are incapable of launching an independent investigation, it should be the UN-mandated international inquiry that looks into these killings,” Nadim Houry, the Beirut-based senior researcher at Human Right Watch, told the Guardian. Meanwhile, the protests and crackdown have continued as the US condemned Syria’s role in the breaching of the Israeli border by protesters on Nakba Day , and the EU and US this week consider further moves, including sanctions on Assad himself. Referring to the fatal Nakba Day protests on Sunday the White House press secretary Jay Carney said: “It seems apparent to us that is an effort to distract attention from the legitimate expression of protest by the Syrian people.” Thousands of protesters marched through the town of Saqba close to Damascus on Monday night for the funeral of Ahmed Ataya who died from wounds sustained at a protest last month, while at least 15 tanks were deployed around Arida, near the border town of Tel Kelak. Activists said at least seven civilians were killed in Tel Kelak on Sunday when troops shelled the town, and one was killed on Monday, raising the death toll since troops entered on Saturday to 12. Syrian officials say five soldiers were killed by armed gangs in the town. Veteran dissidents who have met with government officials say that officials acknowledge the protests in private. But in public, authorities have blamed most of the violence on armed groups backed by extremists and foreign powers. “Syria’s leaders talk about a war against terrorists, but what we see on the ground is a war against ordinary Syrians,” Sarah Leah Whitson, Middle East director of Human Rights Watch said in a statement on Sunday. • Nidaa Hassan is a pseudonym for a journalist in Syria Syria Human rights Arab and Middle East unrest Middle East guardian.co.uk

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Queen’s visit to Ireland – live updates

• The Queen will arrive in Ireland later today • Irish army has made safe a bomb near Dublin • Foreign Office confirms Queen will still visit • First British monarch to do so for 100 years • Follow live updates below and tweet me @AdamGabbatt 12.35pm: Henry McDonald is out on the streets with dissident republicans who are protesting against the Queen’s arrival: Around 60 supporters of the hardline Republican Sinn Fein have gathered at a security barrier in the last few minutes north of Parnell Square. They are being kept away from the Garden of Remembrance where the Queen will visit later this afternoon. So far the protest is looking peaceful. RSF’s founder Rory O’Bradoidh has denied that the turnout is disappointing for the republican dissident cause. 12.10pm: The Queen’s plane has landed at Baldonnel, by the way. A long red carpet gushes from the open aircraft door, with a black Range Rover at one end and soldiers lined either side. And… she’s out. The first reigning British monarch to visit the Republic of Ireland. Appropriately enough, the Queen is wearing green – hat and overcoat matching. She stops to collect a bouquet from a young girl, hops into the waiting car, and off they go. Next stop Áras an Uachtaráin – the official residence of the President of Ireland – where she will meet President Mary McAleese. 12.03pm: Below the line shimrod responds to DMCCUSKER12′s inference that the Queen’s visit is generally not welcome, claiming that the “vast majority of Irish citizens are either positive or mildly indifferent to the visit of the Head of State of the UK to the Republic”. A small number of people are objecting either because they object to Monarchy in general, (or the British one in particular) and are having peaceful demonstrations (as is their right), but lets be clear that this, in no way, respresents the majority view of the population. Also, this visit comes because of a request made by the Irish President and the previous Government, not a request by the British Monarchy. I preume you are an Irish Citizen like me. In which case, you do accept the sovereign right of the Irish Government to invite whoever they want to Visit the Republic of Ireland don’t you? 11.50am: Morrissey has marked her majesty’s impending arrival in Ireland by writing about the monarchy for the music magazine Hot Press . The singer used the piece to describe the Queen’s existence as “entirely against any notion of democracy”, and by claiming there is little difference between the monarch and dictators like Muammar Gaddafi and Hosni Mubarak. The full meaning of the Monarchy is, like the Queen herself, a complete mystery to most people. It is protected from any investigations by ridiculous stories of trivia and wedding dresses and on-again-off-again soap-drama romances. The most revealing statement came from Commander Christine Jones of the Metropolitan Police last month, when she warned that any British people carrying anti-royal placards who are “seen in the vicinity of the royal wedding would be removed under the Public Order Act.” This means that any political dissent in England is silenced in order to protect the royals, which in itself goes against every principle of democracy. The very existence of the Queen and her now enormous family – all supported by the British taxpayer whether the British taxpayer likes it or not – is entirely against any notion of democracy, and is against freedom of speech. For a broad historical view of what the Queen is and how she “rules”, examine Gaddafi or Mubarak, and see if you can spot any difference. You won’t be able to. The Queen also has the power to give back the six counties to the Irish people, allowing Ireland to be a nation once again. The fact that she has not done so is Fascism in full flow. What else could it be? Name one other European country that is controlled by its neighbour? 11.15am: Henry McDonald is out and about, and nearly getting arrested, in central Dublin: At Parnell Square North the Garda Síochána are getting increasingly nervous and ultra security conscious. When I arrived at a crush barrier at the junction with Dorset Street a Garda sergeant in a yellow hi-vis jacket asked me to leave the area. On asking why I was then threatened with arrest if I didn’t move on. All the main routes from north Dublin into Parnell Square leading to the Garden of Remembrance – where the Queen will later lay a wreath on the spot dedicated to Irish republicans who once fought the British – are sealed off. Overhead a Garda helicopter is hovering around Dublin’s north inner city. Meanwhile Republican Sinn Féin has shifted their protest to the “Black Church” in nearby Mountjoy Street. It is a famous Dublin landmark which is mentioned in James Joyce’s Ulysses, and according to local legend if you walk anti-clockwise around it three times with your eyes closed when you open them again you are meant to see the Devil. The dissident republicans will march from the church after a noon time rally towards the Garda lines at Parnell Square North. Further down that same street is the headquarters of the mainstream Sinn Féin whose response to the royal visit this morning has been the blaring of Irish republican ballads from a speaker system from one of their offices. 10.30am: On Twitter, #queensvisit is the most discussed topic in Ireland at the moment (it doesn’t even breach the top ten in the UK, where tweeters are more concerned with #ignoredtextmessages). – 10.09am: PA has some more information on the bomb that was found on a coach last night, and made safe this morning. The device was a pipe bomb, and was discovered in a holdall in the luggage compartment of a “crowded bus”, according to the agency. The bus, which was carrying 30 passengers and was on its way to Dublin, was stopped outside an hotel, apparently after a tip-off. Army bomb experts carried out a controlled explosion during a three hour operation. The bus was operated by the state owned Bus Eireann company and had set off from Ballina, Co Mayo, on the west coast of Ireland. 9.41am: Below the line Cudds writes : The vast majority of people, aside from a few on the lunatic fringes, wish to welcome the Queen to Ireland. The reason? It is long overdue as a sign of the maturity of relations between the two countries. Just remember, there are more people of Irish descent in the UK than live in Ireland and you will see the interdependence that exists. Ignore the comments from Sinn Fein on how the visit is premature. They were brought into the peace process at a time when most people thought it premature. Noone would argue with that step now. Therefore, yes, there might be some risk but to cancel such a visit concedes to the extremists – something England did not do in 1972 (in the midst of the troubles) when they came to Dublin to play a rugby international when other teams would not travel. 9.15am: Henry McDonald has more on the political backdrop to the monarch’s visit to Ireland. Taoiseach Enda Kenny said this morning that Ireland would welcome the Queen and the symbolism speaks for itself” of her presence in the Republic. “We are now focussed on the future, two modern countries working together in a spirit of co-operation,” the Irish premier said. Former Irish Foreign Minister David Andrews spoke fondly of the Queen remembering a dinner he had with her at Buckingham Palace when he was in government. “She was talking about her family and her Annus Horribilis. I described her at the dinner as a fine woman..she is a very normal mother, very normal person with all the difficulty that family has. ” 9.08am: The Queen is due to land at the Baldonnel military base, 10 miles south west of Dublin, at 12 noon. No firm timings have been given for the itinerary, but here’s a list of where Elizabeth is going and what she’ll do there, beginning with a chance to show off her green fingers: Áras an Uachtaráin • Ceremonial welcome • Meeting with President and Dr. McAleese • Tree Planting Ceremony Garden of Remembrance • Wreath Laying Ceremony Trinity College • View Book of Kells • Reception in the Long Room 8.48am: A second device was found in a suburb of Dublin this morning, Gardai have confirmed to the Guardian, however the Irish army have declared it a hoax. The device was found at 6am at the Black Horse tram stop in Inchicore, around two miles west of the centre of Dublin. “The area was sealed off and the army EOD (bomb disposal team) were notified. The army EOD declared it a hoax, and the area was declared safe at approximately 8am this morning,” a Gardai spokeswoman said. She said the tram line is running again, and a road which was closed off has been reopened. 8.37am: The Guardian’s Ireland correspondent, has more on the bomb found in County Killdare this morning. An army engineering unit had been deployed to a bus stop on the outskirts of Maynooth in response to a request by the Garda Siochana. An Irish military spokesman said viable IED which was located in the luggage compartment of a bus was made safe. A controlled explosion was carried out close to a local hotel. The team arrived on scene at 11.10pm last night, the scene was declared safe at 1.55am. The remains of the device were handed over to the Gardai for their investigations. At present the Irish Defence Forces are dealing with a bus alert on the LUAS tram line in Dublin. Meanwhile due to the massive security operation in Dublin aimed at protecting the Queen and the Duke of Edinburgh the Irish capital’s main thoroughfare, O’Connell Street has been closed to traffic. 8.30am: The Queen’s arrival in Dublin later today has been overshadowed this morning by the news that the Irish army has made safe a bomb near Ireland’s capital. The “viable” improvised explosive device was discovered in the luggage compartment of a bus on the outskirts of Maynooth, Co Kildare, late on Monday night. A controlled explosion was carried out and the device made safe by the Irish army in the early hours of this morning. “An army bomb disposal team made safe a viable improvised explosive device overnight in Maynooth, Co Kildare,” an army spokesman said. The Foreign Office has said the Queen will still go ahead with her planned four-day visit to Ireland. The discovery of the bomb comes amid an unprecedented security operation in the country, costing an estimated 30 million euro (£26.2m). The operation includes land, air and sea patrols and a huge number of police deployed around the centre of the Irish capital. The trip will be the first time a British monarch has set foot on Irish soil for 100 years, and is the first visit by a monarch since the country became a republic. King George V was the last to visit in 1911. The Queen’s itinerary will take in Croke Park, the home of Gaelic football where 14 people were slaughtered by British troops in 1920. We’ll have more on the bomb and live updates as the Queen arrives in Ireland. The Queen Monarchy Ireland Adam Gabbatt guardian.co.uk

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Nato helicopter hits Pakistan troops

Intrusion into North Waziristan on Afghan border prompts exchange of fire and raises tensions with west A Nato helicopter based in Afghanistan intruded into Pakistan’s North Waziristan region on Tuesday, wounding two troops, local intelligence officials said, adding to tensions between Islamabad and the west. “It happened early morning,” a Pakistani intelligence official in the region, who declined to be identified, told Reuters. “The helicopter hit a Pakistani checkpost on the border in the Datta Khel area.” Another intelligence official said several Pakistani helicopters took off from Miranshah, the main town in North Waziristan, towards the site of the attack. The purpose of the Pakistani mobilisation was unclear. The Pakistani military was unavailable for immediate comment. Lieutenant Commander Colette Murphy, a spokeswoman for the Nato-led International Security Assistance Force (Isaf), said in Kabul that the coalition was aware of the reports and was looking into them. North Waziristan is the base of the Haqqani network blamed for the insurgency in eastern Afghanistan. US-led drone aircraft have repeatedly targeted the area over the past year. Many militants, including foreign fighters loyal to al-Qaida, are based in Datta Khel. It is a stronghold of fighters loyal to Hafiz Gul Bahadur and has been a frequent target of US drone strikes . Pakistan’s Express 24/7 television channel said the checkpost was right on the border between Afghanistan and Pakistan. It quoted officials as saying that the helicopters were just about to intrude into Pakistani territory when aerial gunshots were fired. They subsequently moved back but fired a retaliatory shot which released rubble from the nearby mountains and wounded the security personnel. The reported incursion came a day after unmanned US drone aircraft fired missiles in Datta Khel, killing 12 militants, Pakistani officials said. An intelligence official said that one of the dead militants, an Arab, was the son of an al-Qaida operative identified as Abu Kashif. There was no way to verify the death toll. Militants often dispute official accounts of drone attacks. Relations between the US and Pakistan have been pushed almost to breaking point after the secret 2 May raid on Abbottabad that killed Osama bin Laden , embarrassing and humiliating the powerful Pakistani army and intelligence service. In late January the undercover CIA contractor Raymond Davis killed two Pakistanis in Lahore, resulting in a six-week standoff over diplomatic immunity. While on 30 September two Pakistani soldiers were killed and four wounded when Nato helicopters crossed the border while pursing insurgents. Pakistan retaliated by shutting down the supply route for Nato troops in Afghanistan. Washington sees the rugged border region between Afghanistan and Pakistan as a critical battleground against al-Qaida and the Taliban. Pakistan Nato Afghanistan guardian.co.uk

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