Julia Gillard urged ‘plankers’ to consider safety implications of their pastime which involves lying face down in unusual locations The Australian prime minister has called for an end to the internet phenomenon of “planking” after a man died when he fell from a seventh-floor balcony while having his picture taken. Planking entails people lying face down on their stomach in various locations – be they unusual or dangerous – and posting photographs of themselves on social media websites. Julia Gillard described the death of Acton Beale, 20, as “really tragic”, and urged plankers to consider the safety implications of their pastime. The planking Facebook page is liked by over 116,000 people – though there is a separate “planking Australia” page – with images showing planking being carried out on a basketball hoop, a chair and on top of a television. Queensland state police deputy commissioner Ross Barnett told reporters that Beale fell from a balcony railing while a friend photographed him on Sunday morning in Brisbane. The railing is believed to have been two inches wide. “There’s a difference between a harmless bit of fun done somewhere that’s really safe and taking a risk with your life,” Gillard told reporters on Sunday. “Everybody likes a bit of fun, but focus has to be on keeping yourself safe first.” Beale’s death comes less than a week after another Australian man was charged with being found on police establishment without lawful excuse, after he allegedly indulged his passion for the craze by planking over a police car . The activity first came to prominence at the end of the last decade, when it was most commonly known as the lying down game . Planking is believed to be the more Australia-specific term, where it has gained particular popularity. The Planking Australia Facebook page has over 100,000 fans, although some were using the page on Monday morning to express dissatisfaction with the entire planking culture. “Planking is so STUPID!!,” posted Ammy Louiisee. Samie Musawi was of the opinion that: “You guys look like idiots doing this.” However others came out to show their support for planking, with Alison Schrader writing: “Bahahahahaha. I had never heard of planking til it was on the news. I thinks its gold. Some pics r just too funny.” Schrader added: “This just proves that aussie r the funniest mob.” For the moment planking does not appear to be in any sort of decline. Plankers were continuing to upload pictures of their exploits on Monday, with one man appearing on top of a bandstand, another atop a bush, while one woman was photographed perched precariously upon an open fridge. Australia Julia Gillard Social networking Adam Gabbatt guardian.co.uk
Continue reading …Arab Sultana, 63, and Kainet Bibi, 27, appeared in court over the deaths of two men whose bodies were found by a country lane Two women have appeared in court accused of murdering two men whose bodies were found by the side of a country lane in Bradford. Shahbzada Muhammed Imran, 27, of Bradford, and Ahmedin Sayed Khyel, 35, of London, were found dead on New Lane, Tong, in Bradford, last Tuesday night. Both had suffered serious head injuries. Arab Sultana, 63, and Kainet Bibi, 27, both of Heath Terrace, Bradford, appeared at Bradford magistrates court accused of the men’s murder. The women – who are mother-in-law and daughter-in-law – are also charged with destroying or concealing forensic evidence. Both were remanded in custody and will appear before Bradford crown court on Tuesday. Crime guardian.co.uk
Continue reading …The standup comedian and silent film aficionado talks about the relationship between class and comedy, his love of improvisation and why he still believes the old jokes are the best In my experience there are two types of comedian who, no matter how funny they may be on stage, you wouldn’t really want to meet in real life. There’s the cliche of the curmudgeonly comic – grouchy, aloof, a bit passive aggressive – and there’s the one who can’t switch off, and craves laughter like you or I
Continue reading …It’s a big day for the NHS. The prime minister is answering mounting questions on the health bill this morning, and Steve Field GP will be with us in the afternoon. We’ll be live blogging all the news right here. 11.34am: The prime minister is moving on to the second half of his speech: we need NHS reform to make sure we deal with the extra demand from an ageing population and the cost of new technology. 11.33am: “We’re approaching the European average spending on health. I just think it’s time we had the confidence to say we should have some of the best health outcomes in Europe too. Saying this doesn’t make you anti-NHS……it makes you pro-NHS – because you want to make things better for everyone.” 11.32am: The prime minister acknowledges that “we are getting better, and we are closing the gap with our European neighbours” in terms of outcomes from the NHS, but we still have some way to go. 11.30am: Cameron has sat in on Prof Steve Field’s surgery. “sat in a surgery in Birmingham last week, listening to the doctor explain that he has world-class physiotherapists in the same building…but he can’t refer his patients to them because the current system stopped it. This is frustrating enough, but add to it to the lack of co-ordination and integration. Modern healthcare needs to be joined up. 11.29am: Cameron takes a pop at vested interests. ” “Last year, the Health Select Committee said “Primary Care Trust commissioning is widely regarded as the weakest link in the English NHS”, citing their “lack of clinical knowledge” in particular. This is what top-down control is doing to our NHS – and I believe it should change. Then there’s the inflexibility of the NHS – and this is what frustrates so many patients, and indeed nurses and doctors.” 11.27am: David Cameron is saying that it’s “because I love the NHS that we need to change it” and denies that he’s talking down the NHS. It’s a classic Whiggish “reform in order to preserve” line. 11.25am: David Cameron is preparing to rally support for his government’s NHS reforms to health professionals in Ealing hospital West London. The speech has been widely trailed in the media, and we’ll be live blogging it here. 11.00am: A spirited exchange between Roy Lilley and Labour’s health policy wonk Joe Farrington Douglas gets to the point: AbetterNHS’s call for the NHS reforms to answer the challenge posed by Non-Communicable Diseases gets immediate backing from the global health community In an email we receive entitled Health Professions Unite to Issue Warning on Global Epidemic of Non-Communicable Diseases we read that Global leaders of nurses, pharmacists, physical therapists, dentists and physicians, said what is needed is a single strategy to prevent and manage non-communicable diseases. NCDs – including cardiovascular disease, some cancers, chronic respiratory diseases, diabetes, mental disorders and oral disease – accounted for more than 60 percent of global deaths, killing 36 million people in 2008, many prematurely. 10.10am: The blogosphere has cranked up the pressure on the government: Paul Corrigan , the widely-respected health analyst who was in a previous life Blair’s health guru, writes a perceptive piece unpacking the propaganda in the NHS debate. He pointed out that a few weeks ago Stephen Dorrell MP, said that the Government had lost control of its health policy. But what if the only alternative you have to losing control is to plough on with a disastrous policy? Isn’t it really rather neat under those circumstances to completely lose control? Just allow a cacophony of dissent to build and then, after a little while, come in and say, “This all sounds pretty bad, and riven by disagreement – let’s start all over again.” That way people see not a Government carrying out a U turn, but one moving forward from arguments between different people with different opinions and coming out with a few very small changes to the existing status quo. So perhaps I have been wrong all along and losing control of a policy is a lot better than being in control of a disaster? The Jobbing Doctor, a GP outside London, blogs that “change is needed, to be sure. But not the grandiose and fundamental change proposed by the Government.” He says the answer is: • Firstly, abandon the vastly expensive and futile project that is “Connecting for Health”. This has cost billions, so far, and is pretty useless to most clinicians. • Redesign the process of “Choose and book” – an appointments booking system, so that it is fit for purpose. • Abandon the internal market in health care where every admission and procedure is costed by the providers (the hospitals) and paid for by the purchaser (the Primary Care Trusts – soon to be commissioning consortia). This only makes sense if the final outcome is complete marketisation of the NHS. • Reduce the level of bureaucracy at all levels of the service Witchdoctor combs through the conference programme at which Mark Britnell, Cameron’s advsior and KPMG’s head of global health, to find this ge: Ruben Toral CEO, Medinet asks: Medical tourism is like buying a holiday on Expedia and the options are no longer local, they are global. Is healthcare inherently different to buying a car or vacation online? Witchdoctor sums it up: “So, it seems we are consumers, not patients, and global companies are poised to opportunistically take their place in the global health marketplace.” A forenzic look by a AbetterNHS at one of the big drivers of future cost in the NHS at non-communicable diseases concludes, rather depressingly, “Patients will have to start paying for their care”. As recommended by the World Health Organisation and highlighted in the BMJ this week, the most cost-effective way to prevent many NCDs is to act ‘upstream’ on the social determinants of health rather than downstream at the level of individuals. This will involve serious and concerted efforts to tackle the effects of food markets globally, and the food and alcohol industry nationally. Sadly our government have shown no interest at all, instead opting for meaningless partnerships with industry and emphaising individual responsibility. 9.35am: Here is a round up of news on the health reforms over the weekend: David Cameron’s spin machine has been whirring away over the weekend – trailing his speech today in which the PM comes out for his cabinet minister, Andrew Lansley. We know this because it’s in all the papers. The FT has Cameron arguing that without reform the NHS will be left with a £20bn hole. Intriguingly it outs Andrew Cooper, Cameron’s new head of political strategy, as a Lansley-sceptic. A “listening phase” was initiated to see how the reforms could be improved, but some advisers – including Andrew Cooper, the new Downing Street director of political strategy – are thought to have advised the whole bill be dropped. The Lib Dem peer Lady Williams is calling on Cameron to dismiss his senior adviser Mark Britnell after he told a conference that the NHS could be improved by charging patients and could be transformed into a “state insurance provider, not a state deliverer” of care. You can read how we liveblogged the Britnell comments here , here , here and here . The BBC’s Today programme had the British Medical Association’s Hamish Meldrum and Jennifer Dixon of the Nuffield Trust. The tone’s pretty sceptical of the bill. Our colleague Denis Campbell led the front page of Saturday’s paper with news that the head of the government’s listening exercise Steve Field GP – who incidentally will be appearing in our offices later today for a live Q&A – said that the government’s health reforms were potentially “destabilising”. On Sunday Andrew Lansley popped up in the Sunday Times where he spent an hour with features writer Margaret Driscoll in pleasant conversation – only to leave without saying goodbye. The blog would say that among the shortcomings of the health secretary brusqueness in departure is not one of them. Driscoll did unearth two important points 1) Lansley knows it’s the speed and size of his bill that worries people. What’s intimidating about it is we’re trying to fulfil all the reform needs in one go. 2) The health secretary’s being backed by David (Cameron): David and I go back 20 years and every step of the way we’ve worked together on this. I’ve seen nothing in the past few weeks that’s undermined my confidence that we have collectively engaged in reforming the NHS in a way that is evolutionary, not revolutionary. Most of the problems and things I have to put up with — saving your Grace’s presence — is to do with media and comment. Over at the Spectator they ask pertinently: The real question, though, is whether this defiance is merely a front, or whether Lansley’s NHS reforms will actually be spared from the “substantive changes” that Nick Clegg has in mind. The Chair of the Liberal Democrat Parliamentary Policy Committee for Health and Social Care John Pugh picked up on Denis Cambell’s story on Saturday saying that his government’s health reforms should be abandoned. Pugh has had the thankless task of collecting Lib Dem opposition to the proposed bill, and this is what he has concluded: He (Lansley) needs to stop tinkering with the existing Bill and start again. Some would say it would be a humiliation. I wouldn’t. I’d say it was the act of a wise man. Listening but is anyone being consulted? Two thirds of people demand that David Cameron rethink the NHS reforms, according to a poll published by the Sunday Mirror. The COMRES poll surveyed 2,004 US adults online this month, emphasing particularly strong opposition to GP control. The BBC reports that private providers are unlikely to swamp the NHS in the wake of the reforms , reporting comments from the NHS Partners Network, which represents health firms, who point out that the 3.5% of NHS operations that are currently conducted by private firms was unlikely to even double over the next decade. 9.00am: With the NHS speeding to the top of the political agenda, we’ve got quite a line up today: 11:30am: David Cameron answers questions on the health service – we’ll be live blogging the whole event 1pm – 3pm: Steve Field GP, head of the government’s listening exercise, will be in the Guardian offices to hear your thoughts. See how he responds to questions from our audience. If you have any questions for us or Steve Field, please do post them in the sections below, email randeep.ramesh@guardian.co.uk or rowenna.davis@guardian.co.uk or contact us on twitter @tianran or @rowenna_davis. And if that wasn’t enough multimedia options for you, you can also post your thoughts in our flickr account . Cool. NHS Health David Cameron Andrew Lansley Health policy Steve Field Rowenna Davis Randeep Ramesh guardian.co.uk
Continue reading …• 24-year-old believed to jumped from balcony, police say • Wanjiru won in Beijing in 2008 in Olympic record time The Kenyan Olympic marathon champion, Sammy Wanjiru, died early on Monday, police have said. John Mbijiwe, the police chief in Kenya’s Central Province, said initial information indicated the 24-year-old died after jumping from a balcony at his Rift Valley home, but the death is subject to further investigation. In the 2008 Beijing Olympics, Wanjiru became the first Kenyan to win a gold medal in the marathon, finishing in an Olympic record time of two hours, six minutes and 32 seconds. Wanjiru has had a history of domestic problems. Last December he was charged with wounding his security guard with a rifle and threatening to kill his wife and maid. He denied all charges and was released on bail. Wanjiru made an early start to his career, moving to Japan aged 15 where he attended school in Sendai – a city hard hit by this year’s tsunami – where he won some major cross country events while also competing in track competitions. Moving to Europe to advance his promising career, Wanjiru won the Rotterdam half marathon in 2005 in a world record time. He twice improved on that record before stepping up to the full marathon in 2007, back in Japan, winning the Fukuoka marathon. The following year he finished second in the London marathon, and then claimed the biggest prize of his career by taking Olympic gold in Beijing. Wanjiru became the youngest runner to win four major marathons. In addition to the Olympics, he won in London in 2009 and in Chicago in 2009 and 2010, in the process running the fastest ever time recorded in a marathon in the United States. Athletics Kenya Africa guardian.co.uk
Continue reading …Shooting comes two days after grenade attack on consulate in Karachi as tensions rise between Sunni and Shia populations Gunmen on a motorbike shot and killed a Saudi diplomat as he was driving in Pakistan’s largest city on Monday, just days after two hand grenades were thrown at the consulate building, police in Karachi said. The motive for the attack was not clear, but it comes against a backdrop of tensions between Islam’s Sunni and Shia branches, both in the Middle East and in Pakistan. Saudi Arabia has funded hardline Sunni groups in Pakistan for years, angering its minority Shia population. Meanwhile, Iran has channelled money to Shia groups, and in the 1980 and 90s the country was the scene of an effective proxy war between the two countries, with Karachi an especially bloody battleground. Monday’s attack took place not far from the consulate building. It is thought that the diplomat, who was alone in his vehicle, was on his way to work, according to police officer Zameer Husain Abbasi. He said a 9mm pistol was used in the assault. The victim was a member of the security staff at the consulate, said Iqbal Mehmood, Karachi’s deputy inspector of police. He said the shooting appeared to be linked to last week’s grenade attack on the mission, which caused some damage to the building but no injuries. Officials at the Saudi mission were not available for comment. Pakistan’s alliance with Sunni rulers in the Middle East has come under the spotlight since uprisings this year. A company with strong links to the country’s army announced it was sending 1,000 Pakistanis to Sunni-led Bahrain to help its security forces put down an uprising by its majority Shia, angering Pakistani Shia. The attacks on the consulate and its staff also follow the 2 May US raid in north-west Pakistan that killed Osama bin Laden, the Saudi-born chief of the al-Qaida terrorist network. Saudi Arabia stripped Bin Laden of citizenship and has fought al-Qaida, but money from some of its citizens is believed to help bankroll the terrorist network, which has carried out scores of attacks inside Pakistan over the past decade. Pakistan Saudi Arabia Arab and Middle East unrest Global terrorism Middle East guardian.co.uk
Continue reading …Israel accuses Syria of provoking deadly confrontations with pro-Palestinian protesters to divert attention from internal unrest Potential new flashpoints in the Middle East unrest have opened after Israel shot at pro-Palestinian protesters on its borders with Syria and Lebanon, killing at least 13 people and drawing furious condemnation from the Syrian regime. Protests erupted in the West Bank, Gaza and East Jerusalem as well as on Israel’s geopolitically sensitive northern borders, as Palestinians clashed with Israeli troops and police and hundreds were injured. Demonstrators commemorating Nakba day, marking the 1948 war in which hundreds of thousands of people became refugees after being forced out of their homes, were met with live gunfire, rubber bullets, stun grenades and teargas. Israel accused Syria of provoking the confrontations to divert attention from internal unrest, and said attempts to breach its borders were a provocation intended to exploit Palestinian nationalism in the wake of regional unrest. An Israeli military spokesman said the protests bore “Iran’s fingerprints”. “We hope the calm and quiet will quickly return,” said the Israeli prime minister, Binyamin Netanyahu. “But let nobody be misled: we are determined to defend our borders and sovereignty.” The defence minister, Ehud Barak, warned “we are just at the start of this matter and it could be that we’ll face far more complex challenges”. Syria condemned Israel’s “criminal activities”. The foreign ministry called on the international community to hold Israel responsible for the deadly confrontation, Syria’s state news agency, Sana, said. Although Israel had been braced for violent protests, the clashes on its borders were largely unexpected. Israeli politicians, already deeply alarmed about uprisings in neighbouring Arab countries, now face heightened tensions with Syria and Lebanon. Thousands of Palestinian refugees from Syria marched towards the village of Majdal Shams in the Golan Heights, which Israel captured from Syria in 1967. According to the Israeli military, “hundreds of Syrian rioters infiltrated the Israeli-Syrian border … and violently rioted against [Israeli] forces”. It said its troops “fired selectively towards rioters”. Two people were confirmed killed, but there were reports of up to 10 deaths. “The Israeli army warned [the protesters] not to cross but they didn’t listen,” Shefa Abu Jabal, 25, a resident of Majdal Shams, said. “When the crowd started to come over … soldiers started shooting. “Around 200 have managed to get across. I’ve heard there are four people dead on this side and there are many more injured. People in the village are really scared. The Israel soldiers looked shocked. No one thought there would be trouble at this border.” Another resident, Hamad Awidat, said: “There are thousands and thousands of people on the Syrian border who are trying to cross. There has been a lot of fighting, and of course people are scared.” At Maroun al-Ras, on the border with Lebanon, witnesses said Israeli troops had fired at protesters throwing stones from within Lebanon, a move that could have serious repercussions and prompt further cross-border incidents. At least two people were killed after hundreds of protesters broke through Lebanese army barricades to throw rocks across the border. One man, apparently shot in the chest, was doused with water as protesters tried to revive him but shouts of “Allah Akhbar” broke out as his dead body was lifted over the crowd. One protester, his clothes soaked in blood, screamed: “Murderers, cowards, is a rock any match for a bullet?” Hezbollah, which controls Lebanon’s southern villages, had given tacit support for the protest but the crowd was dispersed by Lebanese troops firing into the air. Yassir Ali, one of the protest organisers, said the deaths were not unexpected. “Palestinian people are used to paying with their lives. It’s a big price, but one we are prepared to pay to prove our right to return to the motherland.” Brigadier General Yoav Mordechai, an Israeli military spokesman, said soldiers fired when demonstrators began vandalising the border fence. The army was aware of casualties, he said. Confrontations were reported after about 600 people marched from the West Bank’s principal city, Ramallah, towards the Qalandia checkpoint into Jerusalem. There were clashes in other areas of the West Bank. In Gaza, at least 80 people were injured when Israeli troops opened fire on demonstrators approaching the Erez border crossing, Palestinian medical sources said. The Israeli military said it shot dead a man trying to plant a bomb near the border. In Tel Aviv, an Israeli man was killed and 17 people were injured when a truck ran into vehicles and pedestrians. It was not clear whether it was an accident or a deliberate attack. The truck’s 22-year-old Israeli-Arab driver said he lost control of the vehicle due to faulty brakes. The Israeli authorities had expected trouble on the first Nakba day following the Middle East uprisings and had deployed 10,000 soldiers and police. • Additional reporting: Phoebe Greenwood Israel Syria Palestinian territories Lebanon Arab and Middle East unrest Middle East Harriet Sherwood guardian.co.uk
Continue reading …High pay commission forecasts top earners’ slice of national income will rise from current 5% to 14% by 2030 Wage disparity between the UK’s top earners and the rest of the working population will soon return to the levels of the Victorian era unless action is taken to curb executive pay, a new report by the high pay commission claims. At the same time a new ICM poll shows that 72% of the public think high pay makes Britain a grossly unequal place to live, while 73% say they have no faith in government or business to tackle excessive pay. The high pay commission was set up last November to scrutinise the rising pay of those at the top of the public and private sectors. Its research suggests that if current trends continue, the top 0.1% of UK earners will see their pay rise from 5% to an estimated 14% of national income by 2030, a level not previously seen in the UK since the start of the 20th century. At present, top earners in this group take as big a slice of national income as they did in the 1940s, the report says. Deborah Hargreaves , chair of the high pay commission and a former business editor at Guardian News & Media, said that the report provided evidence that the pay gap between the corporate elite and the general public was widening beyond control. “Set against the tough spending measures and mixed company performance, we have to ask ourselves whether we are paying more and getting less,” she said. In 2010, the average annual salary of FTSE 100 chief executives was more than £3,747,000, 145 times greater than the national median full-time wage of £25,800. Executive pay dipped slightly during the recession, but the report predicts that by 2020 the ratio will have spiralled up to 214:1. Nicola Smith, chief economist with the TUC, said that the report raised concerns about the wider workings of the economy: “Average pay growth was slowing before the recession, wages took a real hit during the recession and we’re now seeing very slow wage growth coupled with high consumer inflation. There are real issues of fairness at a point when workers are facing the greatest squeeze in living standards for decades.” Separate figures released by the Institute for Fiscal Studies last week confirmed that income among the top 1-2% of earners grew much faster than for the majority of workers during the Labour government years, a factor the report blames for an increase in social inequality since 1997. The ICM poll shows that, from a range of options, the majority of the public (57%) wants top pay linked clearly to company performance, while half (50%) want shareholders to have a direct say on senior pay and bonus packages. Robert Talbut, chief investment officer of Royal London Asset Management and a member of the high pay commission, said that the ICM poll showed a clear public interest in tackling excessive pay. “Increasingly there is a clear business interest in doing so too, in part because companies depend on public support but also because the ever more complicated pay packages designed to incentivise performance for top executives – which have contributed to a ballooning in pay at the top – do not appear to have worked,” Talbut said. “The clear link between executive pay and company performance appears tenuous at best.” The Institute for Public Policy Research (IPPR), a left-leaning thinktank, said that recent research showed the public was ready for politicians to tackle income inequality. Nick Pearce, director of the IPPR, said a YouGov poll revealed that two-thirds of people believe the pay gap in their workplace is too wide. “It is vital that the government use this public support to act and start to narrow unjustified inequalities in pay and reward,” he said. In an interview with the Guardian last month, John Cridland, the new director-general of the employers’ organisation the CBI, admitted it was an issue that needed to be addressed. “Business has to show high levels of remuneration are payment for results,” he said. “It’s not payment separate from the achievement of senior executives.” The high pay commission was formed last year and is due to make its final report in November. Executive pay and bonuses Pay Family finances Economics Work & careers Economic policy Poverty Graham Snowdon guardian.co.uk
Continue reading …• Cathay Pacific plane suffers engine trouble on flight to Jakarta • Firefighters douse jet, with no reporters of injuries The engine on a Cathay Pacific Airbus A330-300 has caught fire in mid-air, forcing the plane to make an emergency landing in Singapore. No one was injured in the incident. Flight CX715 took off from Singapore heading to the Indonesian capital, Jakarta, at 1:12am on Monday, but soon turned around after engine trouble and landed at 1:57am, Singapore’s Changi Airport said in a statement. Firefighters extinguished the fire and normal flight operations resumed on the runway about an hour later, the airport said. It was the second time in six months an Airbus had to make an emergency landing in Singapore because of engine problems. A Qantas A380 turned around shortly after takeoff on 4 November when one of its Rolls-Royce Trent 900 engines disintegrated. The airport would not say how many passengers were on board the flight or what kind of engines the plane used. A spokesman for Hong Kong-based Cathay Pacific was not available for comment. Airbus Air transport Singapore Indonesia Airline industry guardian.co.uk
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