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Easter set for sizzling weather

With high temperatures set to last until royal wedding, April looks certain to join string of recent weather record-breakers Easter week sunshine is continuing to push up temperatures across the UK, with April now almost certain to join a string of recent weather record-breakers, as the warmest on record. Forecasters say that averages are heading for well over 10% above the normal 14-15C (57-59F) for April, with the year’s high of 25.4C (77F) in central London on Tuesday leaving Rome and Athens in the shade. The fine, dry spell is expected to last well into the week after Easter and almost certainly promises shirtsleeve weather on the day of the royal wedding. Michael Dukes of MeteoGroup said: “It’s not a done deal that it will be fine because it’s still a way off and the run-up to the day looks a little bit more unsettled. “But it would be extremely unlucky if Prince William and Kate Middleton managed to get married on a day that wasn’t good. As things stand, it looks as though it will be a fine, bright day with warm, sunny spells.” The south-east of England is likely to have even warmer temperatures before Good Friday and only the risk of isolated showers and some thicker cloud in the north and west detracts from a generally benign and calm national picture over the bank holiday. Parks and beaches are already busy and supermarkets say that barbecue sales are brisk. The Meteorological Office described the weather as “really unseasonable”. Hay fever numbers are expected to rise as the fine, dry weather persists, with almost twice as many people reporting symptoms than was the case 20 years ago. The early warmth has also ended one of the UK’s spectacular spring sites – the multi-coloured fields of tulip bulbs grown commercially at Narborough in Norfolk. Some 20m flower heads have been cut off in their prime to allow energy to return to the bulbs at the Belmont nursery run by Janet and Peter Ward. The best blooms will not be wasted, but sent to decorate floats at the Spalding Flower Parade on 30 April in neighbouring Lincolnshire, which uses 300,000 tulip heads. Weather Easter Royal wedding Martin Wainwright guardian.co.uk

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ISPs fail in filesharing appeal

Internet service providers’ claim that new law infringes web users’ ‘basic rights and freedoms’ rejected by high court Government plans to curb illegal filesharing received a significant boost on Wednesday, as a judicial review of the controversial Digital Economy Act failed to halt the legislation. The UK’s two largest internet service providers, BT and TalkTalk, were dealt a blow as their judicial review of the DEA was thrown out of London’s high court on all but one of the legal grounds they had raised. BT and TalkTalk argued the act infringed internet users’ “basic rights and freedoms” and received insufficient parliamentary scrutiny. Plans to send thousands of warning letters to alleged illegal downloaders should now go ahead in the first half of next year. However, the ISPs immediately signalled they could appeal against the high court ruling. A spokesman for TalkTalk said: “We’re disappointed that we were unsuccessful on most of the judicial review. On the question of the proportionality of the act, we’re pleased the judge identified issues but disappointed that he felt that the evidence of the futility of the measures imposed by the act, and the cost and harm they will cause, is not sufficiently definitive enough at this stage to uphold our claim. “We are reviewing this long and complex judgment and considering our options, which may include an appeal to the court of appeal, or a request that the court of appeal make a reference to European court of justice. Though we may have lost this particular battle, we will continue fighting to defend our customers’ rights against this ill-judged legislation.” Under the act, rights holders will collect data about people believed to be illegally downloading film and music from filesharing sites. ISPs will then match the rights holders’ data against their customer database and send warning letters to those accused. Repeat copyright infringers could have their internet access slowed or even blocked under secondary measures in the act. However, this second phase is understood to be about 18 months away from being considered as part of the measures. Rights holders, including music and film industry companies and the Premier League, assert that illegal filesharing is costing UK businesses £400m a year in lost sales. The chief executive of the industry music trade body the BPI, Geoff Taylor, said: “This judgment gives the green light for action to tackle illegal downloading in the UK. “It confirms that the DEA is proportionate and consistent with European law. Shareholders and customers of BT and TalkTalk might ask why so much time and money has been spent challenging the act to help reduce the illegal traffic on their networks. “It is now time for BT and TalkTalk to work constructively with government and rights holders to implement the Digital Economy Act.” The high court judge, Mr Justic Parker, dismissed the ISPs’ argument that the previous Labour government, which rushed through the DEA in the dying days of the last parliament in April 2010, should have notified the European Commission; that it makes ISPs liable in damages for copyright infringement on their network; that it breaches data protection laws; and that it is a disproportionate response to copyright infringement. However, the ISPs’ contention that the DEA is unlawful because it forces them to foot 25% of the bill of the “mass notification system” and its appeals process was upheld. The ISPs will now no longer have to pay 25% of the costs of establishing an appeals body. But they will still have to foot 25% the cost of mass letter sending to internet users, with rights holders paying the remaining 75%. Parker said: “From the point of view of both copyright owner and subscriber, the DEA represents a more efficient, focused and fair system than the current arrangements. “Although it is difficult to predict the effect of measures such as those contemplated by the DEA, there are reasons for believing that such measures may well have a positive effect [on reducing illegal filesharing].” Filesharing Digital Economy Act Internet Computing Digital media Music industry BT Telecommunications industry Josh Halliday guardian.co.uk

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Beryl Bainbridge was never robbed

Bainbridge’s repeated disappointments as a shortlisted author resulted from bad luck, not conspiracy It’s easy to see the latest people’s jury Booker vote as a publicity stunt . Not least because (to a certain extent) it is. Yet I’d be surprised if many people object to Beryl Bainbrbidge being the subject of this posthumous attention. It must have been agony to turn up for the award ceremonies in 1973, 1974, 1990, 1996 and 1998 and clap and smile for the cameras when different names were called. It may be too late for her to enjoy the honour but still it feels like some balance has been restored. Her daughter Jojo Davies says: “Beryl did want to win the Booker very much despite her protests to the contrary. We are glad she is finally able to become the bride, no longer the bridesmaid.” I’m not about to argue with that. More contentious, though, is the question of whether Bainbridge ought to have won the prize when she was alive – and why she didn’t. Many think she was robbed. No less an authority than Ion Trewin, the literary director of the Man Booker prizes, says: “Beryl Bainbridge was the greatest novelist of her generation who didn’t win the Man Booker prize, and quite underservedly so.” Some are even more forthright. Paul Bailey, her friend and fellow author said when she died: “She should have won it three or four times – because hers were better than the junk that did win.” Considering that she lost out to books as good as JG Farrell’s The Siege of Krishnapur , AS Byatt’s Possession and Stanley Middleton’s neglected but wonderful Holiday , all that seems excessive. So too do most of the suggestions I’ve read about why she might not have won. These are neatly summed up in an essay the Booker authorities have placed on their website, written by Alvaro Ribeiro . Like all the best conspiracy theories, these sound very convincing until you actually know anything at all about the subject. The most notable suggestion is that Beryl Bainbridge’s origins in Liverpool disqualify her from being able to “censure British ways” in the eyes of right-on judges: “In this perceived betrayal from within, we confront that striking characteristic of the Booker prize best described as ‘the Empire strikes back’. This phenomenon allows novelists from the Commonwealth and overseas the privilege to write, as Salman Rushdie (1981), Kazuo Ishiguro (1989), or Michael Ondaatje (1992) do, with impunity as they sharply critique British culture, playing on Britain’s massive sense of postcolonial guilt. But for Bainbridge, a native of Liverpool, to do so quite so insistently makes her into an internal threat. Thus do Booker judges marginalise her, and down she goes at the last hurdle.” I’d go along with that if it weren’t deeply insulting to suggest that – say – a book as good as Midnight’s Children won the award out of some sense of “guilt” rather than its own merit – and if every single person who won in the years Bainbridge was shortlisted weren’t Caucasian. Indeed, when she was first shortlisted in 1973, the winner was JG Farrell’s The Siege of Krishnapur. That was a book written by an, erm, Liverpudlian and it provided just the kind of critique that poor Dame Beryl supposedly wasn’t allowed to make. The more simple truth is that she was unlucky. Plenty of people consider The Dressmaker her best book, but as Hilary Mantel says in a fond tribute to Bainbridge , that still doesn’t mean it deserved to beat The Siege of Krishnapur. Ribeiro’s other big idea is that Bainbridge’s books were too short. “Booker Prize judges, faced with the gravity of their decision, naturally lean towards the gravitational pull of a big complicated book: Midnight’s Children (1981); Possession (1990); Sacred Hunger (1992); The Blind Assassin (2000).” Hopefully, if you’re a stats nerd like me, you’ll already have noticed that only one of those books ran against Bainbridge – Possession. Once again, it’s an extraordinary book that took on Bainbridge’s novel that year, An Awfully Big Adventure, and won. What’s more, when Bainbridge was in the first stage of her career and writing the kind of short book that Ribeiro claims the judges don’t like, she lost out to two short books: Holiday and The Conservationist. Again, those are both fine novels. So much for providing a coherent explanation for Bainbridge’s misfortune. The more prosaic truth is that there are no real patterns that explain why books win the Booker (beyond the fact that the judges tend to come from the media establishment and don’t like SF unless it’s written by Margaret Atwood). Each year is a lottery. Beryl Bainbridge also had the bad luck to be up against some excellent competitors. Most of the time. Sadly, it was later on in her career, when the Booker bridesmaid jokes must have really begun to sting, that her books were beaten by two singularly unpopular winners: Graham Swift’s Last Orders and Ian McEwan’s Amsterdam. “There was only one time that I cared, I think about the fourth time, when I began to kid myself that I would win; everybody said so, all the bets and everything. And that was quite a bit of a shock,” said Bainbridge during an interview for Desert Island Discs in 2008. Ouch! It might not necessarily right any wrongs, but it’s nice to know that she couldn’t lose this time around. Beryl Bainbridge Booker prize Fiction Awards and prizes Sam Jordison guardian.co.uk

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Royal wedding: Knit your own corgi

The Queen has loved corgis since receiving one for her 18th birthday. They’ll surely be putting in an appearance at the wedding of the year – but can you emulate this famously hardworking breed and produce a knitted version to match? Extracted from Fiona Goble’s Knit Your Own Royal Wedding (£9.99 – or £7.99 at the Guardian bookshop ) The Queen has owned Pembroke Welsh corgis since she was given her first pet, named Susan, for her eighteenth birthday in 1944. The breed is well known for being hardworking – though if the truth be told, the Queen’s own corgis have not had to work that hard. They live in wicker baskets in a box room in the palace and are fed from silver bowls. They are used to journeys in chauffeur-driven limousines and private planes. You will need For the dog 10g (1/4oz) or approx 10m/11yds of ochre DK yarn Small amount of cream DK yarn Very small amounts of black and purple DK yarn A small star-shaped purple button for the collar 5g (1/8oz) polyester toy-stuffing Use size 3mm (US 2 or 3) knitting needles throughout unless stated otherwise, and a size 3.25mm (US D-3) crochet hook. Pattern Body and head Side 1: • Cast on 15 sts in ochre. • Next row: K2, inc1, K6 then turn, leaving rem sts on needle. • Work on 10 sts just knitted only. • Next row: P to end. • Next row: K2, m1, K8 then turn, leaving rem sts on needle. • Work on 11 sts just knitted only. • Next row: P. • Next row: K2, m1, K to end (across all sts on needle). [18 sts] • Next row: P. • Next row: K2, m1, K to end. [19 sts] • Work 3 rows in st st beg with a P row. • Next row: K17, k2tog. [18 sts] • Next row: Cast (bind) off 10 sts pwise, P to end. [8 sts] • Next row: Cast on 5 sts, K to end. [13 sts] • Next row: p2tog, P to end. [12 sts] • Next row: K. • Next row: p2tog, P to end. [11 sts] • Next row: Cast (bind) off 2 sts, K to end. [9 sts] • Next row: p2tog, P to end. [8 sts] • Next row: k2tog, K to end. [7 sts] • Next row: p2tog, P to end. [6 sts] • Next row: K. • Next row: p2tog, P to end. [5 sts] • Cast (bind) off. Side 2: • Cast on 15 sts in ochre. • 1st row: P2, inc1 pwise, K6 then turn, leaving rem sts on needle. • Work on 10 sts just knitted only. • Next row: K to end. • Next row: P2, m1 pwise, P8 then turn, leaving rem sts on needle. • Work on 11 sts just knitted only. • Next row: K. • Next row: P2, m1 pwise, P to end (across all sts on needle). [18 sts] • Next row: K. • Next row: P2, m1 pwise, P to end. [19 sts] • Work 3 rows in st st beg with a K row. • Next row: P17, p2tog. [18 sts] • Next row: Cast (bind) off 10 sts, K to end. [8 sts] • Next row: Cast on 5 sts, P to end. [13 sts] • Next row: k2tog, K to end. [12 sts] • Next row: P. • Next row: k2tog, K to end. [11 sts] • Next row: Cast off 2 sts pwise, P to end. [9 sts] • Next row: k2tog, K to end. [8 sts] • Next row: p2tog, P to end. [7 sts] • Next row: k2tog, K to end. [6 sts] • Next row: P. • Next row: k2tog, K to end. [5 sts] • Cast (bind) off pwise. Front bib – make 1 The bib is knitted from the bottom to the top. • Cast on 4 sts in cream. • Work 2 rows in st st beg with a K row. • Next row: K1, m1, K2, m1, K1. [6 sts] • Next row: P. • Next row: K1, m1, K4, m1, K1. [8 sts] • Work 9 rows in st st beg with a P row. • Cast (bind) off loosely. Back legs – make 2 • Cast on 6 sts in cream. • Work 2 rows in st st beg with a K row. • Break yarn and join ochre yarn. • Work 2 rows in st st beg with a K row. • Next row: K1, m1, K4, m1, K1. [8 sts] • Next row: P. • Next row: K1, m1, K6, m1, K1. [10 sts] • Next row: P. • Cast (bind) off. Front legs – make 2 • Cast on 6 sts in cream. • Work 2 rows in st st beg with a K row. • Cast (bind) off. Ears – make 2 • Using size 2.75 mm (US 2) needles, cast on 4 sts in ochre. • K 3 rows. • Next row: (k2tog) twice. [2 sts] • Next row: k2tog. • Break yarn and pull it through rem st. Collar Work a 6.5cm (2 1/2-inch) crochet chain in purple DK yarn. Making up Sew the two body and head sides together, leaving a small gap for stuffing. Stuff the dog and close the gap. Seam and stuff the legs and oversew them in position. Oversew the ears in position. Oversew the bib to the front of the dog. Using black yarn, work a small circle of chain stitch for the nose and two French knots for the eyes. To stop the French knots disappearing or looking uneven, you may want to work a ring of small chain stitches round the eyes using ochre yarn. Work a row of cream chain stitch round the nose, then down to the top of the bib. Work a row of chain stitch from the top of the nose up the centre of the face and half way back down the face. Separate a short length of black yarn lengthwise so you have two thinner lengths of yarn. Use one of these to make a single straight stitch for the mouth. Place the collar round the dog’s neck and join the two short ends. Stitch the star button in place. • Knit Your Own Royal Wedding is published by Ivy Press , £9.99, ISBN: 978-1-907332-79-1. For more hints and tips – including how to knit the archbishop of Canterbury – see the book. Knitting Craft Craft and hobbies Royal wedding Prince William Kate Middleton The Queen Pets guardian.co.uk

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The Lady Gaga backlash begins

The self-appointed queen of gay culture has offended fans she claims to represent. Is it a sign that her star is on the wane? Have we reached a tipping point in the Lady Gaga saga? In the week that the singer graces the cover of NME for the first time, a backlash has already gathered steam in the gay community. Among her supposed heartland of gay men, there’s growing evidence of fans starting to turn on her – many of whom feel she has no right to declare herself as the ambassador of “queer culture”. Gaga, to be fair, didn’t have to try hard to be accepted as a “gay icon”. There’s a certain mainstream gay sensibility that tends to adopt blonde female pop stars as their own, and her relentless tweeting about gay rights, the impassioned stance against Don’t Ask Don’t Tell in the US military and yes, I suppose the dresses too, earned her a place as a credible advocate. But recently, the wheels seem to be falling off, and sadly not from that ridiculous motorbike . It started with the release of Born This Way. Any song built up with such a torrent of pre-publicity (my favourite tweet from that week: “Can’t wait for tomorrow’s exclusive reveal of the barcode!”) has to be pretty incredible to not get crushed under the weight of its own expectation. And it misfired on all levels. The gay blogosphere soon exploded into a flurry of backlash and counter-backlash , based mainly on a sense of disappointment with the song. At least that’s how it started. But as the world lived with Born This Way, a deeper disquiet began to emerge, and the heavy-handed way that the song assumed stewardship of an entire portion of humanity began to breed real resentment, from the forums to the dancefloor to the word on the street. Fact of matter: most gay people don’t consider themselves to be freaks and outsiders, as is suggested in the lyrics , but perfectly normal people whose sexual preferences just happen to be wired a certain way. And they won’t thank you for attempting to lead a Pied Piper march back into the ghetto with all the subtlety of a diamond-encrusted sledgehammer. Of course, when there are still gay teen suicides, same-sex couples being ejected from the John Snow , and Proposition 8 then we clearly haven’t won all of the battles against homophobia. But we’re a lot closer to the dream where sexual orientation doesn’t define a person, but is a quality of their personality no more or less significant than their political affiliation or the colour of their hair. As we march towards true equality, the whole idea of a “gay culture” becomes more and more meaningless as the world accepts the truth that gay people aren’t all the same. In the face of that, Born This Way was at best a backward step, in the middle a touch cynical and, at worst, downright offensive. It’s a shame because it was the first real misstep in an otherwise faultlessly judged career. But if Gaga really has alienated her most loyal fans, she may yet have more to worry about than a few religious zealots picketing her shows . Lady Gaga Pop and rock Gay rights Dan Martin guardian.co.uk

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FSA wins PPI battle in high court

Britain’s banks fail in challenge to overturn regulations regarding the mis-selling of payment protection insurance (PPI) policies Britain’s banks will be forced to re-open thousands of claims over the mis-selling of payment protection insurance (PPI) and pay up to £3bn in compensation following a high court ruling. PPI is insurance typically sold to consumers at the point of sale of personal loans, credit cards and other forms of debt, which is designed to meet their repayments in the event of accident, sickness or unemployment. Many customers have discovered after paying for PPI policies that they would never qualify for a payout due to exclusions in the terms and conditions, while others didn’t even realise they had signed up to buy the insurance. In December the Financial Services Authority introduced rules to stop mis-selling, which required providers to talk customers through the key features of a policy rather than assuming they will read any relevant documentation, and make it clear that the cover is optional. But the banks, represented by trade body the British Bankers’ Association, compained that the rules were unfair because they would be applied retrospectively. In January the BBA launched a high court challenge against the FSA and the Financial Ombudsman – but today’s ruling found against them. The high court judgment endorsed the approach taken by the ombudsman and the FSA, and the banks now have 21 days to appeal. Several banks had put PPI complaints on hold until the outcome of the judicial review was known. However, the FSA made it clear they should still be dealing with complaints, and anyone whose bank has not dealt with their complaint within eight weeks is entitled to take it to the Financial Ombudsman Service . The ombudsman service said the lack of cooperation from some financial businesses has made it difficult to progress PPI cases over this period. “However, the clear-cut judgment means that banks and other financial businesses should now be in the position to deal promptly, efficiently and fairly with their customers’ PPI complaints,” a statement said. The ombudsman continues to handle large volumes of PPI complaints from consumers. Since the BBA launched its legal challenge in October 2010 it has been receiving up to 5,000 PPI complaints a week , while complaints surged by 63% between the first and second half of 2010 from 266,685 to 434,596. Martin Lewis of MoneySavingExpert.com said: “The banks have behaved abominably. They’ve deliberately mis-led reclaimers by telling them everything is on hold and used the memory of the bank charges hold to make it seem legitimate. “The hold has not been agreed by the FSA or the ombudsman, who have both lambasted it, and has potentially left hundreds of thousands of people – each trying to reclaim thousands of pounds – wrongly in limbo and the ombudsman over-stretched. “If this goes to appeal, as expected, they cannot be allowed to continue. I believe they should be fined for the way they have tried to manipulate the system to consumers’ detriment. “It is time we had a system of collective consumer redress. The fact the banks can deliberately reject claims to put people off taking it further, even though the vast majority who go to the ombudsman win, is against natural justice and needs to stop.” Payment protection insurance Banks and building societies Insurance Consumer affairs Banking Mark King guardian.co.uk

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Radioactive waste spilled in UK

Leaked report documents incidents at three plants during February considered serious enough to be reported to ministers There have been two spillages of radioactive waste and a breakdown in an emergency cooling system at Britain’s nuclear plants in the last three months, according to a report to ministers leaked to the Guardian. A brown puddle containing plutonium five times the legal safety limit leaked from an old ventilation duct at the Sellafield nuclear complex in Cumbria . This exposed “a number of shortfalls in the design”, says the report. Groundwater at the Torness nuclear power station near Edinburgh was contaminated with radioactive tritium (a form of hydrogen) leaking from two pipelines. At Hartlepool nuclear station on the north-east coast of England, the back-up cooling system was put out of action by a faulty valve. All three incidents occurred in February this year and are still under investigation by the Office for Nuclear Regulation (ONR) , the government’s newly created nuclear safety watchdog. They were sufficiently serious to be reported to ministers under safety guidelines agreed in the wake of the Chernobyl accident in Ukraine 25 years ago. Disclosure of the incidents could further delay the government’s plans for a new programme of nuclear power stations, already being held up by a safety review prompted by the Fukushima accident in Japan. Critics will press for the incidents to be included in the review , being led by the executive head of the ONR, Mike Weightman. The Guardian has been provided with a copy of a report on the incidents sent to ministers on 18 April by Weightman. It was circulated to the energy secretary, Chris Huhne : the business secretary, Vince Cable ; the environment secretary, Caroline Spelman ; the employment minister, Chris Grayling ; the Scottish secretary, Michael Moore ; and the Scottish first minister, Alex Salmond . In a covering letter, Weightman says that a fourth incident involving contaminated ground at an unnamed nuclear site is still under investigation, and may be reported to ministers in the future. The criteria for reporting nuclear incidents, which takes place every three months , include leakages, breaches of safety limits and events where “safe operation may be significantly affected”. According to the ONR, the response to the incidents from the companies that run the three plants was “appropriate”. The plutonium spillage at Sellafield has been cleaned up, use of the leaking pipelines at Torness was suspended, and the faulty valve at Hartlepool was fixed. But the ONR is continuing to quiz the operators and monitor the plants, to try and make sure that similar mishaps do not occur again. A spokesman for the ONR told the Guardian that the report to ministers on the incidents is due to be posted online later today. The chair of the nuclear-free group of local authorities , George Regan, said that it was unusual for three incidents to be reported to ministers in one three-month period. There was only one incident in each quarter of 2010, three of them at Sellafield and one at Dungeness nuclear station in Kent. “With Fukushima very much in the public’s mind, we are particularly concerned to hear of a coolant incident at Hartlepool,” Regan said. “We will be urgently seeking clarification from the ONR on why these incidents occurred and whether they are of any relevance to the current safety review.” Nuclear power Energy Nuclear waste Rob Edwards guardian.co.uk

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Angry Daily Mail readers should not define criminal justice policy. Further punishment for already abused troubled youngsters will only lead to more problems, says Mark Johnson Last week, this newspaper profiled the new head of the London probation service, Heather Munro . She expressed a new approach to managing offenders. It can be summarised in one word: respect. Over a lifetime of probation work, Munro has come to believe that listening to offenders when they express needs and treating them with the same respect businesses show their customers can help to change behaviour and reduce reoffending. The Daily Mail was not impressed and neither were its readers. Online, there were many calls for Munro’s immediate sacking and insults were hurled. Offenders were “little bastards” who need much tougher treatment, not this politically-correct nonsense. Those readers think they want punishment, but in fact they are baying for vengeance. Frontline workers such as Munro and Metropolitan police officers, who are trying a talking approach with gangs, recognise that the UK’s criminal justice system should not be built on vengeance. But look out of the window and you will see another line of lads in humiliating jackets, sent out in the name of community payback. This might make the public feel good, but it does nothing to cut crime because it isn’t about helping bad boys address their behaviour and change: it’s simply a piece of theatre to satisfy the audience’s desire for vengeance. The public is appeased but short-changed all through the system. Funding for the high security estate has hardly been trimmed, so prisoners are inside for life on expensive violence reduction programmes, while interventions that might help younger offenders are slashed. Offenders whose crimes are the result of drugs, alcohol or mental health problems still remain untreated. And where there are programmes, these are too often run by the cheapest bidder and too often staffed by volunteers instead of the paid professional therapists who can help bring about change. The public’s desire for vengeance comes as no surprise to offenders. It simply reflects back at them their own behaviour. Many have wrestled with punishment, shame and consequent rage since birth. People from loveless, punishing backgrounds are without self-esteem. They do not have the capacity to love others because they cannot risk rejection without the protection of self-esteem. Inside a loveless void it is possible to commit crimes against others. It is, after all, easier to define yourself as a bad boy than a needy boy. Munro has recognised that current services do not meet needs. Too many providers are distanced by their own professionalism. The media-appeasing programmes they offer are defined by cost-cutting and streamlined business practice, not by recognising what can bring about change. One childhood experience that we know leads to later criminal activity is abuse – physical, emotional or sexual. But we do little about it, even for those on the at-risk list. If we want to cut crime then vengeance, disguised as public protection, can no longer remain the cornerstone of the criminal justice system. We should stop reinforcing the loveless, disrespectful world offenders know so well and instead subject them to the tough love that has been denied them at home. We need individual, person-centred programmes to help them change because change is possible in anyone who has the capacity to be honest. Second, if we want to help victims, we should start by helping the child victims who will grow up enraged, seeking vengeance through crime. If we looked behind more closed doors we would find many children who are frightened, abused and neglected. They are tomorrow’s offenders and we must intervene effectively today, training parents and setting up alternative healthy attachments for damaged young people. Our attitude to the most vulnerable shows how civilised we are. Angry Mail readers should not define policy. A punishing childhood is the bedrock of crime and if our response is based on more vengeance and punishment there can be no solutions. Just more problems. • Mark Johnson, a rehabilitated offender and former drug user, is an author and the founder of the charity User Voice. Prisons and probation Youth justice Young people UK criminal justice Mark Johnson guardian.co.uk

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House of Lords too full, report warns

David Cameron, who has created more peers more quickly than any postwar PM, told increase threatens upper chamber’s ability to do job David Cameron has been told he could “unwittingly destroy” the House of Lords because the rate of new peers appointed to the upper chamber is threatening its ability to do its job, a report has warned . The warning on the volume of House of Lords appointments and their impact on a functional parliament has been raised by the independent Constitution Unit at University College London. The unit’s report, entitled House Full, reports “huge concern” among peers. Cameron has created more peers more quickly since becoming prime minister than any of his postwar predecessors, having ennobled 117 people in less than a year. The Lords now has 792 members who are entitled to attend and vote. Written with the support of 18 senior parliamentarians and independent experts, the report said the arrival of so many new peers in such a short space of time has had a “negative impact” on the culture of the upper chamber which, in the past, has seen new members added more gradually. It warned that the Lords is now overcrowded, with members competing for seats in the chamber and office space outside, creating a “fractious” atmosphere because many peers feel frustrated at their inability to take part in debates. The report said the rapid influx of new peers – which includes many former MPs – has had a negative impact on the Lords’ non-partisan ethos and courteous atmosphere. It warned that any further increase “risks the House being unable to do its job” and called for an “immediate moratorium” on appointments, to be lifted only when the figure drops below a suggested cap of 750. It noted that, although a draft Lords reform bill is expected shortly after 5 May, it will be four years before reform happens if the legislation makes its way through parliament. The report also called for peers to be allowed to retire and for future appointments to be put on a “more transparent and sustainable basis”, with the independent House of Lords Appointments Commission determining how many vacancies exists. The report is endorsed by the former cabinet secretary Lord Butler, the former Speaker Baroness Boothroyd, the convenor of the independent crossbenchers, Baroness De Souza, the former Labour leader of the Lords Baroness Jay, the former Tory Cabinet ministers Lord Forsyth and Lord Mackay of Clashfern, the former Labour cabinet minister Lord Adonis, the former Liberal leader Lord Steel of Aikwood and the former Master of the Rolls Lord Woolf. The Constitution Unit deputy director, Meg Russell, said: “It is unusual for a group of such senior figures to come together on a cross-party basis to call for change, but there is huge concern in the House of Lords about this issue. “The fear is that David Cameron may unwittingly destroy the Lords through this volume of appointments. “We await Lords reform, but in the meantime we must maintain a functional parliament. The risk is that reform fails – as it often has before – but that, meanwhile, the Lords has become bloated and dysfunctional”. House of Lords David Cameron Hélène Mulholland guardian.co.uk

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Capercaillies ‘in perilous state’

Iconic Scottish bird struggling to survive due to habitat loss, climate and forestry fencing Conservationists have warned that one of Scotland’s largest and most iconic birds, the capercaillie , is in a perilous state after a new survey found its population is shrinking. The study has found that the capercaillie, the largest and heaviest member of the grouse family, is struggling to survive in many areas of the Highlands and its numbers are still worryingly low. In some parts of Scotland, around Loch Lomond and Glen Affric in the west, the capercaillie has now effectively disappeared thanks to a combination of habitat loss, forestry fencing and unsuitable climate. Its population is dramatically thinning out in Perthshire to the south and Deeside, Moray and Nairn to the east. The Royal Society for the Protection of Birds (RSPB) and Scottish Natural Heritage (SNH) estimate that over the winter of 2009-10 there were only 1228 individual birds remaining, down from an estimated (but unconfirmed) peak of up to 20,000 in the early 1970s. Its core territory has shrunk dramatically, with about 75% of the entire UK capercaillie population now living in a small but carefully-managed area of the Cairngorms around Badenoch and Strathspey. The capercaillie is one of the UK’s most distinctive birds, boasting a large fan-like tail and a throaty call. A member of the grouse family, adult males are roughly the size of a turkey and, unlike the bullet-like speed of its smaller cousin the red grouse, it has a slower, more ungainly style of flight. It is also notoriously reclusive, sheltering in native pinewood forests of the Highlands and venturing out to court, at large “leks”, or groups, in sheltered areas of the forest, only at dawn. As a result, the SNH surveyors were unable to do an accurate headcount, so conservationists are cautious about warning that its population is in sharp decline. The last survey, in 2004, puts its population at an estimated 1,980 birds. Yet the most worrying survey, in 1988-89, suggested there were just 1,073, triggering a concerted conservation campaign funded with £5m by the European Union. Pete Mayhew, of RSPB Scotland , said the study suggested the major concern was about the erosion of the birds’ most favoured habitat. Its shrinking range meant it was even more vulnerable. “We know we can manage a population in a fairly robust state if we get the management right,” he said. “But if you get it wrong, the population can be in a much more perilous state and even disappear.” RSPB Birds Wildlife Scotland Severin Carrell guardian.co.uk

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