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Dear Jeremy: careers questions

• How can I resolve a very personal work relationship? • I’m being excluded from management meetings At the start of each week, we publish the problems that will feature in this Saturday’s Dear Jeremy advice column in the Guardian Work supplement, so readers can offer their own advice and suggestions. We then print the best of your comments alongside Jeremy’s own insights. Here are this week’s dilemmas – what are your thoughts? Problem one: How can I resolve a very personal work relationship? Several years ago we hired an employee. I thought we worked well together and we became friends. Over the course of five years I loaned him a large sum of money, he lived with us, and I arranged for him to take a two-year sabbatical while he finished his professional qualifications. He is 10 years younger than me and I viewed him like a younger brother who I worked with. I have always made it clear that if he needed anything he should ask me and, if I could, I would help him out. I admit I have done several things that, in hindsight, were poorly judged. I tried to take a step back, but at that point he had another major personal issue and I stepped forward again. The issue affected his mental state and his work suffered badly. I was very much out of my depth and I was becoming depressed about my inability to help him. We knew he was tight for money after being a student and gave him a large pay rise and a long holiday. However, when he returned he was still clearly depressed, very distant and, on several occasions, snide and insulting. I then found out he had also started to do work for a former employee of mine. When we discuss any of this it brings out new grudges, including him telling me that he never liked me and only went along with all this because I was his boss. I feel deceived and, increasingly, very angry. However, the more antagonistic things become between us the better focused he is at his work. My business partners have offered to mediate, but given the personal nature of this I am reluctant to take them up. Can you offer any advice? Problem two: I’m being excluded from management meetings I recently started a new role having spent the past few years as a successful self-employed consultant. A key part of this role is membership of the management team, confirmed to me in writing prior to my joining. However, for the eight weeks since joining I have not been invited into any weekly management meetings, despite reminding the MD (it is always “come in next week”). I have also had no participation in our merger with a sister company, something which will certainly affect me, my team and my part of the business. Throughout my boss has told me that he wants me as part of the management team, that I will be participating in planning the merger and that I would lead part of the merged business. However nothing has happened. What should I do? Every time I raise the issue I get more promises but no action. It does feel as if I’ve been recruited under false pretences. What are your thoughts? • For Jeremy’s and readers’ advice on a work issue, send a brief email to dear.jeremy@guardian.co.uk . Please note that he is unable to answer questions of a legal nature or reply personally Work & careers guardian.co.uk

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Lady Gaga album art upsets fans

Singer tweets new album cover, featuring her head built into a motorbike, and causes a stir among her Little Monsters When historians look back on the rise and fall of Lady Gaga, they may pin the beginning of her descent to the day she morphed into a motorbike and made it her album cover. The fashion-forward singer has unveiled the artwork for her third LP – and it looks more like a cheap Photoshop job than the most anticipated album of the year. “Can’t believe it’s here!” Gaga announced on Saturday. “So happy+free to finally share this w you.” But when the Poker Face singer finally revealed the cover for Born This Way , it provoked more horror than adulation. Gone are the futurist sunglasses , the asymmetrical haircuts , even Gaga’s newly touted magic horns ; instead, a mutant motorbike with Gaga’s arms and head, plus a cheesy chrome typeface. The special-edition version zooms in on her face, evoking a crazed Barbie doll – or perhaps an Irvine Welsh dust jacket. Gaga’s Little Monsters were not happy. “WTF NO,” wrote one fan on the singer’s official message board . “[SHE'S] A FUCKING MOTORCYCLE,” shrieked another. “This better be fake. Because I’m not OK with it.” Others devised convoluted explanations for why the cover could not be real . But over the weekend, Gaga’s tweets confirmed the artwork is genuine. “It’s here to stay,” said one fan . “Now stare at it and cry.” Until now, Gaga’s Born This Way aesthetic seemed to involve eggs , space opera and 80s glam. But road hogs are apparently at the heart of the forthcoming album, due on 23 May. On Twitter, the singer quoted from one of her new songs, whose title suggests a Charlie Sheen outburst: “Get your hot rods ready to rumble, cause’ were gonna fall in love tonight,” runs Highway Unicorn (Road to Love). “Get your hot rods ready to rumble, cause’ we’re gonna drink until we die.” Lady Gaga’s Born This Way single was the fastest-selling track in iTunes history. Lady Gaga Pop and rock Twitter Sean Michaels guardian.co.uk

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Lady Gaga album art upsets fans

Singer tweets new album cover, featuring her head built into a motorbike, and causes a stir among her Little Monsters When historians look back on the rise and fall of Lady Gaga, they may pin the beginning of her descent to the day she morphed into a motorbike and made it her album cover. The fashion-forward singer has unveiled the artwork for her third LP – and it looks more like a cheap Photoshop job than the most anticipated album of the year. “Can’t believe it’s here!” Gaga announced on Saturday. “So happy+free to finally share this w you.” But when the Poker Face singer finally revealed the cover for Born This Way , it provoked more horror than adulation. Gone are the futurist sunglasses , the asymmetrical haircuts , even Gaga’s newly touted magic horns ; instead, a mutant motorbike with Gaga’s arms and head, plus a cheesy chrome typeface. The special-edition version zooms in on her face, evoking a crazed Barbie doll – or perhaps an Irvine Welsh dust jacket. Gaga’s Little Monsters were not happy. “WTF NO,” wrote one fan on the singer’s official message board . “[SHE'S] A FUCKING MOTORCYCLE,” shrieked another. “This better be fake. Because I’m not OK with it.” Others devised convoluted explanations for why the cover could not be real . But over the weekend, Gaga’s tweets confirmed the artwork is genuine. “It’s here to stay,” said one fan . “Now stare at it and cry.” Until now, Gaga’s Born This Way aesthetic seemed to involve eggs , space opera and 80s glam. But road hogs are apparently at the heart of the forthcoming album, due on 23 May. On Twitter, the singer quoted from one of her new songs, whose title suggests a Charlie Sheen outburst: “Get your hot rods ready to rumble, cause’ were gonna fall in love tonight,” runs Highway Unicorn (Road to Love). “Get your hot rods ready to rumble, cause’ we’re gonna drink until we die.” Lady Gaga’s Born This Way single was the fastest-selling track in iTunes history. Lady Gaga Pop and rock Twitter Sean Michaels guardian.co.uk

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Culture Kalash in Pakistan

The Kalash tribe is said to descend from Alexander the Great’s army, but now it is fighting to preserve its traditions in a Taliban stronghold I am standing on a roof in the mountains of the Kalash valleys. Below me hundreds of men are screaming and shouting as two small wooden balls are hit up the slopes by opposing teams of players. Women in intricately designed, brightly coloured dresses are looking on, talking and laughing. One player draws back his long wooden club and hammers the ball onward. Cries of joy fill the air. “What just happened?” I ask the player. “We cheated,” he laughs. “The ball was lost in the snow so I took a

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DPP invites coal protesters to appeal

Keir Starmer says Ratcliffe-on-Soar demonstrators must appeal in the light of involvement of undercover police officer Mark Stone The 20 protesters convicted of conspiracy to commit aggravated trespass after a demonstration at the Ratcliffe-on-Soar power station have been invited to appeal against their convictions by the director of public prosecutions . Keir Starmer QC ordered a review of the convictions three months ago after revelations in the Guardian about the role played by PC Mark Kennedy , who was allegedly at the centre of a £250,000-a-year undercover operation within the climate change movement. Using the name Mark Stone, the former Metropolitan police officer spent seven years infiltrating environmental groups across Europe. The 20 protesters were among more than 100 people arrested when police raided the Iona school in Sneinton, Nottingham, on the morning of Easter Monday, 13 April 2009. Although they were convicted and given a mixture of community orders and conditional discharges, the cases against six of their fellow demonstrators collapsed because Kennedy offered to give evidence on their behalf. The trial led to claims that police had withheld significant, secretly recorded tapes from the defence and the court. Starmer said inviting the demonstrators’ legal representatives to appeal was “the only proper course of action”. In a statement, he said: “I instructed Clare Montgomery QC to review the safety of the convictions of the individuals convicted at Nottingham crown court on 14 December 2010 in light of non-disclosure of material relating to the activities of an undercover police officer. “Ms Montgomery has now completed her review and, having carefully considered her conclusions, I believe that the safety of the convictions should be considered by the court of appeal as soon as possible.” The DPP said that as the prosecution had been unable to lodge an appeal to the court of appeal, he had invited the defence to lodge one – “and to include the issue of non-disclosure of material relating to the activities of an undercover police officer in any grounds of appeal”. He added: “I have also indicated that the CPS will assist in any steps necessary to expedite the appeal. “The safety of the convictions is a matter that can only be dealt with by the court of appeal. “I am satisfied that, despite the ongoing reviews into what happened in this case, this is the only proper course of action. It would be wrong if, having reached this conclusion, I waited until the reviews were completed before contacting the defence about a possible appeal. “As reviews into the handling of this case have yet to report, it would not be appropriate for me to comment further on any issues involving the undercover officer.” In February this year, the head of the Association of Chief Police Officers (Acpo) said undercover policing operations should have to be authorised in advance by a judge. Sir Hugh Orde, the Acpo president, said the change was needed to restore public confidence amid concerns about the role played by Kennedy. Police Protest Keir Starmer Sam Jones guardian.co.uk

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TV preview: Game Of Thrones

Don’t listen to the naysayers – George RR Martin’s Game Of Thrones gets better and better with each episode This preview blog steers clear of big spoilers, but it does contain some information you might not know. If you want to come to Game of Thrones cold, then here’s the short version: it’s great. For those undecided or just wanting to know a little more, here’s a slightly more in-depth appraisal … Like a great many others, I’d never even heard of George RR Martin’s epic A Song Of Fire And Ice series of fantasy books until a few weeks ago. All I knew of the TV version was that it was a fantasy drama, it stars Sean Bean and it was from HBO. I should point out that I’m not in thrall to that channel: often its output ends up overhyped so that perfectly enjoyable shows like Boardwalk Empire are criticised for merely being very good and not mindblowing. Thus I approached it with middling expectations; six hours later I was completely hooked. The first thing that impresses is how good it all looks: it really does feel like a movie. Shot on location in Malta and Ireland as well as on colossal sets in Belfast’s shipyards, it looks like it cost a lot more than it actually did. It’s reminiscent of something legendary production designer Ron Cobb said of his work on Conan The Barbarian : he wanted to make that film 100% historically accurate despite it being set in a time and place that never existed. Production designer Gemma Jackson strikes a similarly authentic note here. They get the dirt levels right too, something very important in sword and sorcery tales. I did read some criticism that the Dothraki (who are cut from very much the same cloth as the Klingons) looked too clean. Well, they look fine to me and just because they’re a nomadic warrior tribe it doesn’t mean they have to be caked in dirt. The camerawork and lighting is superb, never drawing attention to itself and offering an impressive variety of moods from candlelit interiors to snow covered woodlands. The Hellboy-ish title sequence should also get a mention; keep an eye on how the map of the land changes from episode to episode as we explore more of Westeros and its surrounds. Next, the cast. Sean Bean, Mark Addy, Lena Headey, Iain Glen are all familiar, reliable faces. The actors seem to have been chosen not just as safe pairs of hands but as those who deserve meatier roles than we’re used to seeing them in. As the drama progresses we also meet Aidan Gillen, Roy Dotrice, Julian Glover and many more. After a while barely a scene goes by without some familiar and welcome face appearing. I think I saw Peter Vaughan in there somewhere and fans of swordplay movies shall be relieved to hear James Cosmo (Highlander, Troy, Braveheart) does, of course, make an appearance. What’s great is how the actors bring no baggage with them to their roles; it took me several episodes before I even recognised Jerome Flynn and I’m happy to report he kicks serious ass here. No one really gets a standout big dramatic scene in episode one, but Peter Dinklage as The Imp (the Queen’s dwarf brother) comes closest. The same care is brought to casting the younger roles. Harry Lloyd makes a great, villainous deposed king; Kit Harrington makes a convincing bastard. Even younger are Isaac Hempstead as Bran and the revelation that is Maisie Williams as Arya – Williams doesn’t have much to do in episode one, but keep an eye on her. At a recent Bafta screeing her fellow cast members were full of stories of how she brought the readthrough to a halt with an early emotional scene or how she, naturally right-handed, learned her swordplay left-handed with no prompting because “that’s how it is in the books”. Now for the storytelling, which some reviewers have found problematic. It’s easy to see why Boardwalk Empire, Battlestar Galactica and so on go for feature-length episodes to start things off. Game Of Thrones isn’t allowed such a luxury; instead the opening instalment, Winter is Coming, has to introduce more than two dozen speaking roles and several locations in under an hour. This clearly proved problematic and what you’re seeing tonight is a largely reshot version, with director Tim Van Patten paving over the work done by Thomas McCarthy (Scott Templeton from The Wire). Having seen the first half dozen episodes, I can’t think of a single character introduced in part one who isn’t later part of some significant event or meaningful exchange. We may not get the full background of the characters, I assume there are pages and pages of this sort of thing in the book, so many expecting a favourite line or scene may come away disappointed. The pilot is a little different in tempo and pacing than what follows, but it does do a bang-up job of setting up the drama. The high density of the pilot may be the reason some of the early reviews were a little lukewarm, but Game of Thrones gets better and better with each episode. I suppose it’s somehow fitting that a show about iron-age people would draw out critics with an axe to grind, but it would be a shame if the fantasy setting put people off. From what I’ve seen so far, it’s all sword and very little sorcery. It’s been called fantasy for people who don’t like fantasy, but Mark Addy put it better: “It’s fantasy about people who don’t believe in fantasy.” Besides, to us here in the UK, aren’t the mean streets of Baltimore in The Wire just as much a fantastical place? I’d go as far as to say the show is a triumph; it’d be a shame to miss out on it due to a deficiency in imagination. • Sarah Hughes’s series blog starts tonight Game of Thrones Fantasy Television Phelim O’Neill guardian.co.uk

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End of communist rule in Kolkata

Victory in West Bengal for the maverick railway minister Mamata Banerjee would give her more influence over the government Voters are streaming into polling stations in India’s West Bengal state in a local election that could see a populist maverick unseat the world’s longest-serving democratically elected communist government. After 34 years of communist rule, the federal railway minister, Mamata Banerjee, a firebrand orator known as Didi or elder sister, looks set to overthrow the party blamed for leaving West Bengal and its capital Kolkata in a timewarp of Soviet-era state control . “I promise to turn north Bengal into Switzerland” she told supporters with characteristic populist rhetoric at the weekend, referring to a plan to transform the area’s railway network. The remote northern part of the state goes to the polls on Monday. Results for the month-long staggered election will be known on 13 May. Banerjee’s Trinamool party is allied to India’s ruling Congress party and her victory would give the national coalition a morale boost at a time when it has been battered by rising food prices and graft scandals. A victory for the 56-year-old would also seal her position as one of India’s most powerful regional politicians with the ability to influence the government, which is dependent on her party’s 19 seats in the 545-member national parliament. Banerjee would join a group of often fickle state chiefs – including the “untouchables” leader Mayawati in Uttar Pradesh – that often demand concessions such as extra infrastructure and social spending as a condition for support. While her victory would strengthen the coalition of the prime minister, Manmohan Singh, it would also make it more vulnerable to pressure from her. “Her attentions will be focused on West Bengal, as it is in a state of economic decline,” said Ramachandra Guha, a fellow at the Indian Institute of Management in Kolkata. “But she will certainly have an eye on the centre, and she will want to make sure she can still extract concessions for her state.” Singh’s ability to revive stalled economic reforms even after a victory for Banerjee is seen as limited because the coalition remains preoccupied with fighting off an opposition onslaught on the graft charges. Congress has 207 seats and depends on regional allies such as Trinamool to reach the 272 halfway mark in parliament. Banerjee, with her trademark white sari and bathroom slippers and spartan lifestyle, has won support with firebrand speeches and aggressive leadership against the communists that saw her once severely beaten up by a communist mob. She shares her home in Kolkata with her mother in a poor neighbourhood close to a crematorium. She is widely seen as honest in contrast to perceptions that most politicians are corrupt. Her statement on Switzerland was the kind of rhetoric that her critics say highlights her lack of real policy beyond criticising the communists. She is also seen as a fickle government ally, often refusing to attend cabinet meetings to protest against fuel price hikes and high food prices. She is also criticised for what many see as an autocratic style and for discouraging the development of new leaders in her party. As dawn broke on Monday, scores of voters formed queues outside one unopened booth, excitedly showing their identity cards to security personnel in Siliguri, 370 miles (600km) north of Kolkata. “There are no predictable results in India’s politics, but if there were, then this would be the most predictable of them all,” the Indian Express said in an editorial on Monday. Once one of the richest cities in Asia and the capital of the British empire in India, Kolkata has become a byword for poverty that has stumbled behind the new modern India of IT cities such as Bengaluru and Hyderabad. West Bengal has reflected wider issues in India. Banerjee’s popularity soared after she overcame communist plans to develop a Tata car plant on farmland – a battle reflecting a wider conflict between farmers and industry that has cost at least 14 lives in the state. Her party has also benefited from millions of disaffected urban voters who feel the communists have largely helped farmers at the expense of city dwellers who are demanding new jobs and better services. The communists won praise for raising the living standards of poor farmers, their voter base, when they came to power in 1977. They have a strong grassroots organisation that could upset predictions of a sweeping victory by Banerjee. Banerjee is criticised for standing more against the communists than standing for anything. She has called for industrialisation and better infrastructure in West Bengal. As railway minister, Banerjee refused to raise fares despite criticism that the network’s finances were shaky. Banerjee has also been criticised for introducing new passenger trains even though such crowd-pleasing measures strain the railways’ finances and derail freight growth. “She has promised so much to so many that following through on any of it will be problematic,” the Indian Express said. India Communism guardian.co.uk

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Poem of the week: John Davidson

This unsentimental portrait of an urban district combines an exacting rationalism with lyric feeling His poetry was admired by Virginia Woolf, TS Eliot and, intermittently, WB Yeats, who knew him from Rhymers’ Club meetings, and complained of his “Scottish roughness and exasperation”. Hugh MacDiarmid paid him the sincerest tribute as “the only Scottish poet to whom I owe anything at all or to whom I would be pleased to admit any debt”. John Davidson was a rationalist – perhaps an extreme rationalist – who made lyric poetry confront ungainly stuff like science and technology and urban poverty. He’s another of those underrated Victorian poets whose innovations were fated to be obscured by the blazing sunrise of modernism – the very movement they foreshadowed. A philosopher, novelist, playwright, translator and journalist, like many writers of the period he wrote too much, and is consequently remembered for too little. Born in Renfrewshire in 1857, he first became a schoolteacher; then, aged 30, he set out with his wife and sons for London, and toiled in Grub Street for the rest of his working life. After being diagnosed with cancer, he sought refuge in Penzance: he drowned himself in 1909. In The Testament of John Davidson, published the year before his death, he anticipated, and defended, his suicide: “None should outlive his power … Who kills /Himself subdues the conqueror of kings; /Exempt from death is he who takes his life; /My time has come.” “The newspaper is one of the most important factors moulding the character of contemporary poetry,” Davidson boldly claimed, and a number of his poems germinated from reading and writing press reports. His most popular work is the magnificently angry ballad, “Thirty Bob a Week” (“I couldn’t touch a stop and turn a screw, And set the blooming world a-work for me … “). Its 16 six-lined stanzas make it a little too long for Poem of the week (although, as a poem, it earns every line) so I’ve chosen the lesser-known ballad, “A Northern Suburb”. Almost mellow in tone compared with “Thirty Bob”, “A Northern Suburb” begins by taking the long, Darwinian view. From romancing the lost rural idyll in the second verse, it progresses to a concise, unsentimental depiction of the hardships of working-class existence. Somehow, there’s life even in the poem’s shorthand – those near-clichés which might easily have been lifted straight from a press report. Davidson compares the workers’ ill-designed houses with “ice-chests” in winter and “ovens” in summer. The metaphors are not unusual – but they get our senses working. “A Northern Suburb” seems likely to have been set in the heavily industrialised north of England. But, particularly in the description of the narrow little houses, it could portray the effects of rapid expansion on any rural area, even London’s suburbs. Nature, evoked as a contrastingly slow-moving force at first, is allowed to be part of the process (“whetted fangs of change”) and, interestingly, the close-packed houses are seen as organic growths, with their bright brickwork and “rooting pipes.” Davidson always gives the impression of understanding how a building, street or city works. He also knows about the political mechanisms (“the fee’d policeman”) underlying the systems. The poem’s understated conclusion is especially poignant: to be downtrodden is miserable enough, but to have internalised the oppression and lost every spark of rebellion is pathology. We all still know such people – “Whose prize for unremitting care/ Is only not to be disgraced.” As a condition-of-England poem, “A Northern Suburb” rings bells louder than a Royal wedding, even today. A Northern Suburb Nature selects the longest way,  And winds about in tortuous grooves; A thousand years the oaks decay;  The wrinkled glacier hardly moves. But here the whetted fangs of change  Daily devour the old demesne – The busy farm, the quiet grange,  The wayside inn, the village green. In gaudy yellow brick and red,  With rooting pipes, like creepers rank, The shoddy terraces o’erspread  Meadow, and garth, and daisied bank. With shelves for rooms the houses crowd,  Like draughty cupboards in a row – Ice-chests when wintry winds are loud,  Ovens when summer breezes blow. Roused by the fee’d policeman’s knock,  And sad that day should come again, Under the stars the workmen flock  In haste to reach the workmen’s train. For here dwell those who must fulfil  Dull tasks in uncongenial spheres, Who toil through dread of coming ill,  And not with hope of happier years – The lowly folk who scarcely dare  Conceive themselves perhaps misplaced, Whose prize for unremitting care  Is only not to be disgraced. Poetry Carol Rumens guardian.co.uk

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Tomlinson ‘didn’t die of heart attack’

Day 14 of the inquest into the death of the newspaper seller after he was struck by police during the G20 protests in London in 2009 12.32pm: Gibbs has challenged Cary over whether this kind of damage to the liver would have allowed a sufficient bleed into the abdomen to cause his death. Cary has reasserted his evidence that he does not know whether the liver was the cause of the bleeding, but that it could have been. Cary: Could the liver ooze sufficiently to produce the sort of volume of blood that we see in the abdomen … I think that is a possibility. Gibbs. Really? Really, doctor? Cary: Yes. Really. Gibbs counters that there is “a problem” with Cary’s evidence because fatal internal bleeding could not have come from Tomlinson’s damaged liver. Cary: I’m not sure where the blood in the abdomen came from. What I do know is there is a contused liver, and it is possible that there is bleeding from a contused liver, but I am not saying that it must have done. 12.19pm: Gibbs said the CPR treatment would have been “rigorous” and lasted 30 minutes. He showed the pathologist more photographs from the examination. Gibbs: Do you still say that you can see no connection at all, even as a possibility, between the site of the damage to the liver and the chest compressions? Cary: For all the reasons I have already stated, yes … in my view, there is no connection between resuscitation and what was observed on the liver. 12.07pm: The break is over. Gibbs is asking Cary about his evidence that Tomlinson’s arm became trapped under his body after he was pushed by PC Harwood. Cary said he believed this could have caused the injury to Tomlinson’s abdomen. A screen grab from the video (below) shows this. Cary confirmed his assessment of the video was that of a “normal person” rather than that of a pathologist. Gibbs cited Patel’s evidence that ribs and liver could have been damaged by CPR treatment. Gibbs: Do you not agree that the part of the liver damaged is closer to the site of the CPR damage? Cary: No. 11.38am: The inquest is now taking a quick break. 11.37am: More on the extent of blood in the fluid found in Tomlinson’s abdomen. Patel said, in his updated view , that he believed there was more ascites (bodily fluid) than blood, but could not say more than that. A sample of the fluid was inadvertently discarded, so a lot of this is guesswork. Gibbs: Dr Patel has given an estimate, based upon texture and colour, an estimate of proportion; is that an assessment that you now accept? Cary: I think it is very difficult to make an assessment of texture … when you look at the picture, it looks to me heavily bloodstained, at the very least. 11.31am: Gibbs is asking about the extent of blood in Tomlinson’s abdomen. We have heard before how “the extent of blood” in Tomlinson’s abdomen is a point of controversy. A year after his initial report, after discovering other pathologists had concluded that Tomlinson died of internal bleeding, Patel altered his description of the level of blood in the newspaper seller’s’s abdomen in a second report. It was not three litres of blood, Patel said, but three litres of “fluid with blood” . In his report, Cary said he was “reliant” on the original findings of blood in Tomlinson’s abdomen. Gibbs: Do you now realise that that belief about three litres was wrong? Cary: I think it is more likely that this was blood and ascites [bodily fluid], yes. The pathologist went on to say he believed that there was, nonetheless, substantial bleeding. 11.27am: Ryder has finished his questioning of Cary. Patrick Gibbs QC , the counsel for PC Simon Harwood, has taken over. 11.25am: Cary is being asked by Ryder about the potential connection between Tomlinson being pushed over and any subsequent heart attack. Patel said there was a “compelling association” between the shove and the heart attack he believed Tomlinson died from, but said there could be no physical evidence of any causal link. Cary, who does not believe Tomlinson died of a heart attack, said the time link between the two (Tomlinson collapsed 150 seconds after being pushed) was as “compelling as I have ever seen”. Only members of the jury can put themselves in the shoes of the person who has the stress, if you like, to determine whether or not that stress would be the sort of thing that could stress them enough to cause a heart attack. It is useful to recap here that Ryder, the counsel for Tomlinson’s family, appears to have two arguments running concurrently: first, that Tomlinson died of internal bleeding, but second, if it is found that he did die of a heart attack, it would have been triggered by his encounter with Harwood. 11.18am: Again, when Patel found puncture wounds on Tomlinson’s legs, police asked him whether it could be a dog bite and told him there was broken glass in the area. Patel decided the injury was inconsistent with a dog bite and was likely to have been caused by broken glass. Cary has given his view: I thought it was likely to be a dog bite. You don’t get puncture wounds quite circular and deep like that, and it immediately makes you think of the canine tooth of a fairly large dog. 11.07am: Ryder is questioning other aspects of Patel’s findings. Last Tuesday, Patel said he concluded that a linear bruise on Tomlinson’s thigh was “more likely” to have been caused by falling onto an elongated object than by a baton strike. Ryder: When you saw the mark, what was your view, and we are talking about the linear mark, 14cm by 6cm on the left thigh? Cary: I thought it was a classic baton strike … indeed, I am an examiner for the Royal College of Pathologists and it is the sort of thing I would show to a pathologist taking an exam [and] I would expect them to come up with a spot diagnosis: “looks like a baton strike.” Cary said the nature of the injury was inconsistent with falling onto a linear object. 10.55am: According to Cary, this new expert report is crucial. He said it constituted new “clinical” evidence that the newspaper seller did not die of a heart attack. Cary: This is the case where there is really only one realistic possibility. Ryder: Which is internal bleeding? Cary: Which is internal bleeding. 10.52am: Cary: It doesn’t matter how you look at this case, whether you look at the heart and the coronary arteries or heart, you look at the ECG traces and clinical status, you come to the same view: Mr Tomlinson did not die due to a so-called heart attack, or arrhythmic heart attack, due to coronary artery disease. 10.49am: Judge Peter Thornton QC has asked Cary to clarify what this expert evidence now shows. Thornton: Is Dr Channer saying that a person who has had ventricular fibrillation, the wobbling of the heart [the kind of heart attack that Patel said Tomlinson died from], he will not have this kind of ECG reading? Cary: In essence, yes. 10.46am: Ryder opened with something new and potentially extremely significant. When Tomlinson collapsed, paramedics and, later, an ambulance worker, connected him to a defibrillator . This gave ECG (electrocardiogram) readings (picture the zigzag lines you see on a beeping heartbeat screen). Patel’s view was that Tomlinson died of an spontaneous arrhythmic heart attack, caused by “ventricular fibrillation” (a fast, irregular wobble of the heart). Patel conceded that he was not an expert, but said the ECG readings showed at times “chaotic” activity in the heart, which he said supported his theory. The paramedic ECG charts showed Tomlinson had something called “pulseless electrical activity” – meaning electrical activity in the heart, with no pulse and no beating heart. Another expert, Professor Kevin Channer , from the Royal Hallam Hospital in Sheffield, has produced a report on Tomlinson’s ECG chart readings. He found the ECG readings showed normal activity. Crucially though, Channer said that pulseless electrical activity was inconsistent with ventricular fibrillation (the type of heart attack Tomlinson was said to have died from) . 10.25am: We’re about to begin. Dr Nat Cary is on the witness stand. We are starting where we left off on Friday – he is being questioned by Matthew Ryder QC . 10.18am: There are some delays here this morning – legal issues that will become apparent soon. I guess we’ll be another five minutes or so. 10.14am: Day 14 of the Ian Tomlinson inquest is about to start. We have about four days of evidence left. Last week came down to two divergent medical opinions on the cause of Tomlinson’s death at the G20 protests on 1 April 2009. 1. Dr Freddy Patel, the first to conduct a post mortem on Tomlinson’s body, said the 47-year-old died of a spontaneous arrhythmic heart attack. Patel reached that conclusion through a “process of elimination” after being unable to find the source of internal bleeding into Tomlinson’s abdomen. Patel’s credibility was brought into question when it emerged that he had twice been suspended by the General Medical Council for professional misconduct and dishonesty. You can read his evidence over the last three days here , here and here . 2. Dr Nat Cary, the second pathologist to examine Tomlinson’s body, said he had died of internal bleeding as the result of a “blunt force trauma to the abdomen”. He said the way Tomlinson fell to the ground after being shoved by police officer Simon Harwood would account for that injury. A heart specialist, he dismissed Patel’s heart attack theory. Two other forensic pathologists who examined Tomlinson’s body, Dr Kenneth Shorrock and Dr Ben Swift , also found the newspaper seller died of internal bleeding. You can catch up on Cary’s evidence here and here . Ian Tomlinson Police London Protest G20 Paul Lewis guardian.co.uk

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Decision looms on Mekong dam

Xayaburi dam decision time for the guardians of south-east Asia’s ‘mother of all rivers’ I’ve just arrived in Bangkok for a report on tiger conservation, (more on that later), but the big environment story in south-east Asia this week is without doubt the upcoming decision on the proposed Xayaburi dam in Laos . I reported last year on the dispute surrounding this project, which poses a risk to some of the world’s biggest freshwater fish. Conservationists warn that the 820m barrier threatens catfish the length of cars and stingrays that weigh more than tigers. The Laotian government counters that economic benefits outweigh the environmental impact. The Mekong River Commission gathers in Vientiane tomorrow to consider the Xayaburi (also spelled Sayabouly) dam. On Friday, they are expected to make a final recommendation to the four member states: Thailand, Laos, Cambodia and Vietnam. It will be the biggest decision ever taken by the commission, which was set up in 1995 to share the resources of south-east Asia’s most important river. But approval already seems to have been taken for granted. In the past two days, the Bangkok Post and New York Times have reported that residents are being moved out of the area and preparatory work on the dam is already underway. In an editorial headed “Shame on the dam builders”, the Post said the approval process had hit an “abysmal low”. “The sham promise to consult and then to decide whether to build Xayaburi should stand as an example of how not to proceed with huge public projects. Authorities involved should be ashamed of misleading their people and civil society.” Serious doubts about the plan persist. The Mekong River Commission’s technical reports on the dam admits there is a strong possibility that the giant catfish could become extinct and that fish ladders and other measures were unlikely to prevent risks to the migration patterns of up to 100 species. “There are no obvious design modifications beyond those proposed that can further mitigate these issues…The potential disruption of downstream migration and drift could have serious ramifications for maintaining the fishery production for this region.” Scientists and environment groups have united to condemn the project. WWF warned the environmental impact assessment was flawed and scientific advice had been ignored. “WWF fears a much larger scale repeat of the environmental damage of the dam on the Mun River in Thailand, a key Mekong tributary. After similar bland assurances of only low level impacts on fisheries prior to construction, the first decade of the dam’s operation saw damaging impacts on 85 per cent of fish species present before the dam’s construction, with 56 species disappearing entirely and reduced catches for a further 169 species, according to a World Commission on Dams study.” The potential impact on food security is enormous, warns Aviva Imhof of International Rivers in this opinion piece : “The Mekong River – known locally as the “Mother of all Rivers” – is the world’s largest inland fishery. This fishery constitutes the primary source of protein for the majority of the basin’s 60 million inhabitants, many of whom are subsistence farmers. To harm the fishery is to harm the food security of the region’s poor.” A coalition of 263 NGOs sent a joint letter to the prime minister of Laos Thongsing Thammavong urging him to reject the plan, but received no response. They might have been better off addressing it to the premier of Thailand , the country which has most to gain from the project. A Thai construction firm – Ch. Karnchang – will build the hydropower plant. The Thai utility EGAT will buy almost all of the electricity. No surprise then that the Thai government are backing the project on the international stage. Officials from Cambodia and Vietnam have objected to the plan, which could reduce the water flow needed by their fishermen and paddy farmers. But they too want to build hydropower plants in their own countries. For Laos, this is just the start. The government wants revenues from hydropower to develop an impoverished nation. If the 1,285 MW plant at Xayaburi goes ahead, it wants to build a cascade of 10 more dams on the Mekong. China – which has refused to even join the Mekong River Commission – has pressed still further ahead with four huge hydropower projects upstream. It seems the “Mother of all rivers” is increasingly being milked for power instead of nutrition. Given how much cropland is also now being turned over to biofuels, is it any wonder that the world faces a food crisis. Water Rivers Wave, tidal and hydropower Conservation Endangered habitats Endangered species WWF Fishing Laos Thailand Jonathan Watts guardian.co.uk

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