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Apple denies iPhone tracking claims

Apple says it has never tracked the locations of iPhones and iPads, but admits a software fault means data is still sent to the company Apple has admitted that a bug in its software has allowed iPhones and iPads to collect data related to their location even when users turn off permission to collect it – but says it will soon remedy this oversight. The admission follows a storm of controversy after the Guardian’s exclusive revelation last week that the devices stored a file containing details from which a user’s movements could be reconstructed . In a statement on its website , the company says that: “Apple is not tracking the location of your iPhone. Apple has never done so and has no plans ever to do so.” It says that the file discovered by researchers and described in the Guardian is not used for tracking of the phone or its owner. “The location data that researchers are seeing on the iPhone is not the past or present location of the iPhone, but rather the locations of Wi-Fi hotspots and [mobile network] cell towers surrounding the iPhone’s location, which can be more than 100 miles away from the iPhone.” It adds: “We plan to cease backing up this cache in a software update coming soon.” That will cut the amount of data stored from as much as a year’s worth of location information to just seven days, the company says. That is likely to be roughly comparable with the store used on Android phones, which record the past 50 cell towers and 200 Wi-Fi networks that the phone has “seen”. That data is uploaded to Apple in an “encrypted and anonymous” form, it says. It admits that a software fault means that if users turn off Location Services – which should prevent the upload – the data is still sent. “It shouldn’t. This is a bug, which we plan to fix shortly,” the company says. Future versions of the file will be encrypted on the phone. That will allay fears that law enforcement and security services could copy the file and analyse it without a valid warrant. Apple accepts some of the blame for the concern over the revelations, which have seen it threatened with lawsuits and put under focus from US lawmakers and potentially by European governments . “Providing mobile users with fast and accurate location information while preserving their security and privacy has raised some very complex technical issues which are hard to communicate in a soundbite. Users are confused, partly because the creators of this new technology (including Apple) have not provided enough education about these issues to date,” the company says in its statement. The data is stored because it helps the iPhone to calculate its location, Apple says. “Calculating a phone’s location using just GPS satellite data can take up to several minutes. iPhone can reduce this time to just a few seconds by using Wi-Fi hotspot and cell tower data to quickly find GPS satellites, and even triangulate its location using just Wi-Fi hotspot and cell tower data when GPS is not available (such as indoors or in basements). These calculations are performed live on the iPhone using a crowd-sourced database of Wi-Fi hotspot and cell tower data that is generated by tens of millions of iPhones sending the geo-tagged locations of nearby Wi-Fi hotspots and cell towers in an anonymous and encrypted form to Apple.” Apple also insists that it cannot identify individuals from the data because the data about networks and Wi-Fi – which is reported to the company’s servers – is anonymised and encrypted. The Guardian approached Apple ahead of publication last week of its article detailing the findings by the researchers, but the company declined to comment at the time. Repeated requests for comment received no response until now. Since then Apple has found itself under fire, with the US Democratic senator Al Franken writing directly to Apple chief executive Steve Jobs demanding to know why the phones retained the data, and attempts to file a class action lawsuit against the company. Jobs himself was curtly emphatic in an email earlier this week in which he insisted “we don’t track anyone” and that “the info circulating around is false”. Apple iPhone iPad Data protection Wi-Fi Smartphones Charles Arthur guardian.co.uk

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Gaddafi arming Libyan teenagers

Regime in Libya trains civilians in use of AK-47s in attempt to build resistance to Nato and eastern rebels Muammar Gaddafi is arming Libyan 17-year-olds to build a “home front” against Nato military intervention and the possibility of rebels from the east of the country reaching largely loyalist towns and cities in the west. As part of the drive towards an unofficial civilian army, the government is releasing thousands of AK-47 assault rifles into communities and is organising classes in the use of weapons. At a women’s training centre in the town of Sbia, 30 miles south of Tripoli, young women crowded round a trestle table as a soldier wearing camouflage fatigues and thick red lipstick demonstrated how to field-strip and reassemble the guns. Officials said the minimum age for weapons training was 17, although the centre was crowded with girls as young as seven who were schooled in loyalist chants and waving portraits of Gaddafi. Salmeen Faroun, 18, said she had come to the training school because, “I want to defend my country from the crusader enemy.” She said she had never fired a gun before, but “now I have a goal”. Asked if she was frightened at the idea of taking part in a gun battle, she said: “No. I have the right to kill, to fight against Nato and the rats [opposition rebels].” Against the background noise of bullets being fired into the air, Ebtihaj Enbess, 17, said she had also come to the centre to learn how to defend her country. “We are nothing without Gaddafi. I am not scared.” Their instructor, regular soldier Zohrah Mohamed, 35, said she was proud to be training women to defend their country. Gaddafi “did a lot of things for women”, she said, without elaboration. The training had started about a month ago, she said. Asked if it was acceptable to train children to use weapons, she said: “All the Libyan people must be armed.” Most Libyan families own guns, which are normally stored in town depots. But since the anti-Gaddafi uprisings began, in mid-February, the authorities have opened the arms dumps. Government spokesman Moussa Ibrahim told reporters last week up to 1m weapons were being distributed . At a men’s training centre nearby, little instruction appeared to be under way, but almost all the several hundred adult men present were carrying AK-47s, and many were firing into the air. Muhammad Mabruk, 65, said all Libyans over the age of 17 should be armed and ready to fight to defend their country. “I am waiting for anyone coming from Nato. I have my gun and I will shoot him,” he said. A Nato missile had struck a field nearby recently, according to locals. “I don’t believe Nato is protecting civilians,” said Mabruk. Journalists were taken to the training centres on a government-organised trip, accompanied by minders. A team of UN investigators arrived in Tripoli on Wednesday to examine allegations of human rights violations by Gaddafi’s forces. The three-member commission of inquiry said it would press for access to prisons, hospitals and areas of the country where abuses were suspected to be taking place. Libya Muammar Gaddafi Arab and Middle East unrest Middle East Harriet Sherwood guardian.co.uk

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Hamas and Fatah agree to form caretaker government

Egyptian-brokered deal paves way towards resolution of four-year rift between West Bank and Gaza Palestinian officials from the rival Fatah and Hamas movements say they have reached an initial agreement on ending a four-year rift that has left them with rival governments in the West Bank and the Gaza Strip. The officials say the plan calls for the formation of a single caretaker government in the coming days, and preparations to hold presidential and legislative elections a year from now. The agreement was reached through Egyptian mediation, they say. They spoke on condition of anonymity before a formal announcement in Cairo. Despite the agreement, key questions remain about who will control the rival security forces. Disagreements over security control erupted into the June 2007 civil war, in which Hamas seized control of Gaza. Palestinian territories Hamas Fatah Gaza Egypt Israel Middle East guardian.co.uk

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Did minority arts lose out the most?

Arts Council funding cuts hit many theatre organisations hard – but did black and minority ethnic companies lose out disproportionately? Last month, as over 1,300 arts organisations nervously waited for Arts Council England emails to arrive in their inboxes, containing news about whether they would have funding from next year , the Daily Mail’s theatre critic made a bold prediction : it would be “temples to middle-class taste and artistic excellence” that would suffer disproportionately. “Fringier outfits,” he speculated, “particularly those of an inner-city, multicultural kidney, may do rather better.” Companies such as the RSC and English National Ballet (in receipt of over £16m and £6m respectively in the current financial year), would lose out, thanks to “corduroyed luvvies” and “left-wing breast beating about ‘broadening access’”. The reality, as we now know, was somewhat different: just 57 of 650 black or minority ethnic (BME) organisations were welcomed into the Arts Council’s national portfolio (NPO) roster , down from the 74 that previously existed as regularly funded organisations (RFOs). Indeed, inner-city arts centres specifically targeting multi-ethnic audiences faced some of the biggest cuts: London’s Rich Mix , Watermans and Yaa Asantewaa saw their funding slashed by more than half. Meanwhile, Greenroom , a performing arts venue in Manchester led by the country’s only black British artistic director, saw its entire £295,000 grant vanish; 25 years after it opened, the space is set to close at the end of next month. Elsewhere, the casualties began to mount up. Nitro , Britain’s oldest black theatre company, lost all its annual funding (£273,000), as did south Asian storytelling company Vayu Naidu (£63,000). Five carnival arts organisations were shed from the new portfolio; as well as street arts company Xtrax , the Osun Arts Foundation , dance companies Henri Oguike and Chitraleka , Collective Artistes – the list goes on. Perhaps most surprising of all, though, was the 100% cut to Yellow Earth – the country’s only east Asian theatre company. Kumiko Mendl, who arrived as artistic director just three months ago, says the decision “felt like a slap in the face”. “They talk about the need for a balanced portfolio, but it doesn’t feel it. It’s difficult to take.” The company still has a £150,000 grant from ACE, which will carry them through to next year – but it’s not much, she says. “That funds two full-time posts and a few freelancers to stage at least one touring production a year – which can account for £70,000 on its own.” Yellow Earth also runs plenty of initiatives to encourage east Asian artists, including free drama school training, a playwriting scheme, a playreading festival and a director’s training project. Ambitious stuff, but it clearly wasn’t enough to have secured them a financial lifeline. Understandably wearied by the fallout of managing 700 or so rejected applicants, an Arts Council England spokesperson told me: “We had to make some very difficult decisions and were not able to fund many organisations that we would have liked [and] with limited funds available, there were other theatre applicants that could deliver more strongly against our goals and priorities.” They are, she admitted, “very aware that there is no theatre company in our national portfolio that focuses solely on east Asian work”, and promises that the funding body will be looking at “other options and models available”. For David Tse Ka-Shing, who founded and led Yellow Earth for 13 successful years before becoming creative director of Chinatown Arts Space , however, the decision is simply “a very big mistake”. “It will diminish the British east Asian voice, which is already the most under-represented and least visible in the arts,” he argues. “We are off the radar already. [The decision is] short-sighted and institutionally racist.” It’s a charge the Arts Council, perhaps unsurprisingly, rejects: “The same criteria were used to assess every single application.” Despite a tumultuous year for Yellow Earth under a brief joint artistic directorship in 2010, the last show the company saw reviewed in the national press won several solid reviews in the national press. And Tse Ka-Shing rejects the accusation that they – like other companies who faced the axe – were underperforming. “Artistically, you can’t fault them,” he insists. “I go to the theatre all the time and I’ve seen plenty of stuff that isn’t consistently ‘excellent’. Most quality venues will have artistic highs, and then sometimes good, average, mediocre or poor work. That doesn’t mean the organisation folds, it’s simply given chances to take risks. But small BME companies, which are funded to do one show per year, are somehow expected to be excellent every single time. Is that equitable?” It is an open question. Although ACE have welcomed some new blood into the funding mix – the likes of Eclipse theatre company, ADAD (Association of Dance of the African Diaspora), Dash Arts and 20 Stories High all won NPO status – their combined funding adds up to just £391,000 for 2012/2013, roughly half the £738,000 shaved off the grant for a single company, the RSC, that same year. As the Daily Mail foresaw, RSC and English National Ballet did take a hit (6.6%) in cash terms over three years, but Arts Council spend on organisations of “a multicultural kidney” accounts for just 3% of the total £400m NPO budget. Moreover, while 261 existing RFOs lost some funding in the transition to become NPOs, 321 were actually given more money, and a further 110 new organisations were also welcomed into the new system. So, while some progress has been made, it’s clear that sizeable inequities remain. Over the last decades, the Arts Council have made significant steps to foster cultural diversity within the arts. Following Naseem Khan ‘s landmark 1976 report, The Art Britain Ignores, other consultation documents – notably the Eclipse , Whose Theatre? and McMaster reports – have all called for a broader range of work to be funded. Yet there is still some way to go: as work currently being done on the upcoming publication (and Decibel-hosted symposium) entitled Beyond Cultural Diversity : the case for creativity, reveals. Intended as a flagship debate on multicultural arts policy, the report’s aim is to move beyond the idea that art should be defined and categorised by ethnicity; instead, its proponents argue, the emphasis is on promoting an equality of opportunity – greater investment in multiple artistic voices and perspectives, as well as recognising the role diversity in art has in driving innovation in the industry overall. It has to be said that one upshot of changes in the arts is that more mainstream venues and companies are producing broader, more inclusive work; it’s a little less unusual to see a majority black cast on a London stage, or seasons with at least one play staged from a non-white perspective. In recent months, we’ve seen Fela! at the National and Mogadishu at the Lyric Hammersmith. Given that 40% of the capital’s population is of non-white British heritage, this should be expected as well as encouraged. Outside London, the National Rural Touring Forum reports, anecdotally at least, that it’s often works by black, Asian, or minority ethnic artists that the biggest hits in smaller towns and villages. The consensus suggests that despite a minimum of funding, the BME arts sector has traditionally punched well above its weight. And its influence is felt far beyond. Mike Leigh, for instance, told Kwame Kwei-Armah that he had been inspired to write Two Thousand Years – his first play in 12 years – after seeing Elmina’s Kitchen at the National. Meanwhile, the first play David Hare ever saw at the Royal Court was the 1963 play Skyvers by British Jamaican playwright Barry Reckord , a devastating account of working-class kids in what would now be called a bog-standard London comp. “I simply hadn’t seen teenage lives represented so warmly and recognisably on a British stage,” he told me. “It was a ground-breaker, all on its own.” Reckord, who now barely registers as a footnote in British theatre history, is one of many artists from the west Indian, African, south and east Asian diaspora whose impact seems to outweigh his recognition. Mendl thinks this is part of the problem: “How are we supposed to inspire and build that next generation of artists when the ones before them aren’t even known?” She is insistent, however, that Yellow Earth will continue to survive beyond next year. “No other company is doing this work, and it leaves a big hole, so it’s imperative that we go on.” Her determination is matched by Felix Cross, artistic director of Nitro. “We have lost our funding,” he says. “Not our creativity, nor our business, nor our spirit.” Theatre Arts funding Public sector cuts Arts policy Equality Race issues Nosheen Iqbal guardian.co.uk

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Thor v Almighty Thor face off

Which version of the Norse mythical adventure wins out, Branagh’s star-studded epic or The Asylum’s cheapo effort? Kenneth Branagh’s Thor might have received some surprisingly positive early reviews, but that doesn’t necessarily mean it’s worth watching. Branagh might be able to live with Thor not being the best film of the year, but what if it isn’t even the best film about Thor this year? That might just be the case. By complete coincidence – and not, say, because it has a consistent policy of knocking out tawdry low-budget versions of almost every single big new film that’s ever released – The Asylum happens to be releasing a film called Almighty Thor next month. Only one of these Thor films can reign supreme, but which? It’s time for a head-to-head trailer face-off … Best Asgard Thor An otherworldly, shimmering citadel, surrounded by thousands of monuments to the uncontested might of the Norse gods, in a land where the weather is always perfect. Almighty Thor A sort of run-down 16-bit depiction of a minor National Trust property. In a pond. In a land where the weather is always controlled by the Microsoft Paint airbrush tool and the colour beige. Winner: Clearly, Almighty Thor comes out on top here. Shimmering citadels are all well and good, but this isn’t an episode of Cribs, you know. Best Loki Thor It’s Tom Hiddleston, most famous for playing Martinsson alongside Kenneth Branagh in the critically acclaimed Wallander remake. Almighty Thor It’s Richard Grieco, most famous for the terrible film from 20 years ago where he played a teenage superspy who could disable his enemies by shooting steam out of his nipples . Winner: Almighty Thor again. Which would you rather have – a baddie with quietly impressive acting credentials, or a baddie who can shoot steam out of his own nipples? Exactly. Best giant monster Thor This looks like it could be Fafnir, a super-intelligent Norse dragon, as big as a building, armed with remarkable strength and ferocity. As you can see from this image, the power and fury in its roar alone would be enough to strike terror deep in the heart of any opponent. Almighty Thor A couple of lizards, slightly bigger than a van, who go around peering through apartment windows and barking at the sky. Winner: Almighty Thor yet again. Although Fafnir’s size and strength will obviously work in his favour, at least he doesn’t peer through anybody’s windows. Casual voyeurism is not a joke. Best sequence of Thor landing on Earth Thor An elegant, heavenly sequence that captures the raw power and beauty of nature while invoking memories of the effects that Kubrick employed for the Jupiter and Beyond the Infinite portion of 2001: A Space Odyssey. Almighty Thor An orange stripe and some dodgy-looking lightning bolts that invoke memories of the bit from the start of The Terminator that really hasn’t aged very well at all. Oh, and a motorway bridge. Winner: Almighty Thor snatches it again. Kubrick? Elegance? This is a summer blockbuster we’re talking about here, you dummy. It’s supposed to be rubbish. Best weapon Thor Mjöllnir, the legendary mountain-destroying hammer made by dwarves Sindri and Brokkr. Perhaps the most formidable weapon in Norse mythology, it will never break, never miss its target and always return to Thor’s hand. It’s hard to conceive that Almighty Thor will feature a more potent symbol of godly destruction. Almighty Thor Oh, hang on a minute, he’s got an Uzi. Winner: Are you kidding? It’s an Uzi. An UZI. Almighty Thor wins this entire contest hands down. See that one instead. Science fiction and fantasy Stuart Heritage guardian.co.uk

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Nicole Sandler Arrested At Allen West’s Town Hall

Click here to view this media Radio personality and C&L friend Nicole Sandler attended Allen West’s town hall today and was led away in handcuffs. Palm Beach Post : Inside the meeting, West was less than a minute into his remarks tonight when two or three men began shouting from the audience. “How about our Medicare that you’re stealing?” shouted one. “How about allowing questions from the audience?” shouted another man, apparently dissatisfied with West’s decision to answer written questions submitted by audience members before the meeting. At West’s previous town halls, members of the public lined up to ask him questions in person, sometimes waiting 30 minutes or more to do so. “What you have seen happen previously is you get such a line of people and a lot of folks want to come up and proseletyze for six or seven minutes and you’re really not getting to the questions that people want to have answered,” West said after the meeting. West, who has gone back and forth with critics at his previous meetings, said the written format was not an effort to avoid tough questions. “I don’t duck,” West said. During the meeting, West had responded to a question about Medicare when Nicole Sandler of Coral Springs, a former radio host on the liberal Air America network, began shouting from the audience. Other audience members began shouting at her and a police officer led her out. “This is supposed to be a town hall meeting. That means back-and-forth,” Sandler said as she exited. Sandler argued with a Fort Lauderdale police officer in the lobby who told her to leave the building. After she yelled at the officer for placing his hand on her, she was arrested for “trespassing after warning” and led away in handcuffs. Funny. I don’t recall the 2009 town hall meetings as having the heavy police presence at every single one, or people being arrested for asking questions. And I certainly don’t view Nicole Sandler as someone who is threatening in the least, but evidently those policemen did. Nicole Sandler lives in Allen West’s district. She is entitled to receive answers to her questions even if he doesn’t like her politics. She is entitled to attend town hall meetings and ask those questions. She’s even entitled to record those meetings. Having her arrested for insisting on answers to her questions is just another indication of the totalitarian state people like Allen West, wingnut loony man, think of when they think of “liberty.” (ps – If you want a taste of what conservatives in Sandler’s district want our country to look like, read the comments on that Palm Beach Post article) Here’s the video of her being ejected:

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Petraeus to become head of CIA

David Petraeus, already an American national hero, is to replace Leon Panetta – in Barack Obama’s first major reshuffle Barack Obama is planning to conduct the first major reshuffle of his administration that would see General David Petraeus, the US commander in Afghanistan , take over as head of the CIA and Leon Panetta, the CIA director, become defence secretary. The Associated Press, which broke the story, reported that Obama would make the announcement on Thursday. It marks a huge advancement for Petraeus amid speculation that he will stand as Republican candidate for the presidency in 2016. He is already seen as a national hero in the US, credited with turning around the war in Iraq. That military background plus the CIA job will provide him with a good platform should be opt to run for the White House. The shifts have been prompted by the long planned retirement of the defence secretary, Robert Gates, who served in the post under George W Bush and was asked by Obama to stay on. Petraeus was due to leave his post in Afghanistan at the end of the year, having completed his term, and there has been speculation about his next job. AP, quoting administration and other sources, said the reshuffle would take place in the summer. The changes will come at an important juncture in the Afghanistan war. US and British forces fought on through the winter for the first time, taking Taliban positions, and they will see how much damage this has done when the Taliban resumes fighting over the spring and summer. In the near future, Petraeus is scheduled to provide Obama with proposals for a limited number of troop cuts, while Obama is due to announce in July how many US troops will begin to return from Afghanistan. Panetta, a Democrat, was initially greeted with caution by the CIA but, according to former CIA officials, he has won them over. In other changes, Ryan Crocker is to become the new ambassador to Afghanistan and Lieutentant-General John Allen will replace Petraeus, according to AP. David Petraeus United States CIA Barack Obama Afghanistan Ewen MacAskill guardian.co.uk

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Rumor has it that CBS News is going to name Scott Pelley as Couric's successor. But what's the rush? You've been in last place for well over a decade. Another few days won't matter. Do not make (another) rash, premature, impulsive decision. Vet all your options – especially when the MRC’s 500,000 members are coming to the rescue. I'm pleased to announce that the Media Research Center has launched a national search committee and is soliciting recommendations for the next CBS Evening News anchor. CBS likes people with charisma – like Charlie Sheen, maybe? He too is looking for work. Or someone with “CBS depth” – so how about Britney Spears? Or maybe someone who is sweet, perky and – oh wait a minute, you tried that already. Instead of making any rash decisions, we urge you to postpone your decision and give us a chance to weigh in. And after the committee convenes, I will return to announce our recommendation. Let the search begin! But don't wait too, too long. The ratings footsteps you hear are Al Gore's Current TV gaining.

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MSNBC’s Bashir: Britain’s National Health Service ‘A Wonderful Idea’

Martin Bashir has dared to go where even most congressional Dems won't: praising Britain's National Health Service and by implication the socialization of medicine it represents. On today's Morning Joe, the British-born Bashir said the National Health Service is “a wonderful idea.”

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Where does the aid money go?

Public spending on education in Africa has been increasing annually according to a new report, but how is the money distributed? • Get the data Over the last decade public spending on education in Africa has increased by more than 6% each year, according to a report released on Wednesday by the UN educational, scientific and cultural organisation (Unesco) . “The increase in investments has been accompanied by some spectacular results,” says the report. “Between 2000 and 2008, the number of children in primary schooling increased by 48% – from 87 million to 129 million. Enrolment in pre-primary, secondary and tertiary education has also grown by more than 60% during the same period.” Published by the UN agency’s Montreal-based Institute for Statistics , the report details government spending on education in each of the 45 sub-Saharan African countries. It presents the most up-to-date data on how much is spent on different levels of education, and digs out historical data to track trends over the last 10 years. The report also presents figures on the qualifications and salaries of teachers, the running costs of schools, and the provision of textbooks. Some key findings are: • In Burundi and Mozambique , education spending rose by an average of 12% annually over the last decade • Out of the 26 countries with comprehensive data, only one – the Central African Republic – reduced education spending since 2000 • Overall, sub-Saharan Africa spends 5% of its gross domestic product on education, which is second only to North America and Europe at 5.3% but in one-third of the region’s countries, half of all children still do not complete primary education • A total of 32 million children remain out of school • In some countries, such as Guinea , Mali, Rwanda and Zambia , development aid accounts for about 50% of government education budgets. But in the region as a whole, aid accounts for a much smaller fraction (5.6%) Wedged between the recent economic crises and looming population growth , most African governments will need to make strategic decisions on how to budget for education, says Unesco . The population of sub-Saharan Africa’s five to 14-year-olds is expected to grow by more than 34% over the next 20 years, and the region will need to respond to the demands of 77 million new students. And as neither domestic resources nor donor funding are likely to increase rapidly enough over the coming years, governments will need to make difficult decisions. If you had limited resources, which would you fund first: Primary or secondary schools? Textbooks or teacher salaries? And what do you care more about, expanding access or improving the quality of education? Currently, most countries in sub-Saharan Africa spend at least 10 times more on a university student than on a primary school pupil, says the report. And on average, eight out of every $10 spent on university education in Africa is subsidised by country governments. These figures raise “a serious question of equity”. “Should a country that cannot provide every child with a primary education cover almost 80% of the costs for tertiary students, who tend to come from wealthier backgrounds?” asks Unesco. “By shifting more resources to lower levels of education, governments might stimulate more household spending for higher education, without threatening the growth of the tertiary sector.” Unesco highlights the recent experience of Burundi , which brought the number of out-of-school children down from 723,000 in 1999 to just 10,000 in 2009. Over the same period, Burundi increased its investment in education from 3.2% of GDP to 8.3%. But what made the real difference, says the report, was the decision to dedicate a much larger chunk of the budget to primary education, effectively moving public money away from secondary schools and universities. Below, we’ve pulled out some of the figures from the report, looking at public investments across the different levels of education. The spreadsheet also contains additional data on total population and population under the age of 15. Let us know what you can do with the data. Data summary Download the data • DATA: download the full spreadsheet More open data Data journalism and data visualisations from the Guardian World government data • Search the world’s government data with our gateway Development and aid data • Search the world’s global development data with our gateway Can you do something with this data? • Flickr Please post your visualisations and mash-ups on our Flickr group • Contact us at data@guardian.co.uk • Get the A-Z of data • More at the Datastore directory • Follow us on Twitter • Like us on Facebook Development data Aid United Nations Mozambique Burundi Mali Zambia Guinea Rwanda Universal primary education International education news Claire Provost guardian.co.uk

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