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Israel and Hamas call for Gaza calm

Ehud Barak plays down talk of ground offensive after missile attack on Israeli school bus and retaliatory air strikes Israel and Hamas have signalled they are looking to end a flare-up in violence that began four days ago with a missile attack on an Israeli school bus and has claimed the lives of 19 Palestinians. The fighting stoked fears of a larger escalation that could include an Israeli ground incursion into the Gaza Strip. But Ehud Barak, the Israeli defence minister, said Hamas had been hit hard in recent days and there may be a ceasefire. “If they stop firing on our communities, we will stop firing. If they stop firing in general, it will be quiet, it will be good,” Barak said on Israel Radio. Asked whether Israel was considering a ground offensive similar to that two years ago into Gaza, Barak said: “If it will be necessary, we will act, but when it’s not necessary, we don’t need to. Restraint is also a form of strength.” Hamas said it did not want a further escalation. “If the Israeli aggression stopped, it would be natural for calm to be restored,” said a spokesman, Sami Abu Zuhri. “Calm will be met with calm.” Israeli police said another eight rockets were fired at Israel on Sunday. The Israeli prime minister, Binyamin Netanyahu, said: “Our policy is clear, if the attacks continue on Israel’s citizens and soldiers, the response will be much harsher.” Violence erupted along the Israel-Gaza border on Thursday when Hamas gunmen fired an anti-tank missile at an Israeli school bus, critically wounding a teenager and injuring its driver. Israel launched a series of air strikes at targets throughout the Gaza Strip, killing 19 Palestinian militants and civilians. Gaza militant groups have fired at least 120 rockets and mortars at southern Israel in that time, the Israeli army said, several of which were shot down in midair by the newly deployed Iron Dome interceptor. The United Nations and the European Union have called for an end to the violence. One Palestinian source said Egypt was leading efforts to arrange a ceasefire. Analysts say Hamas is trying to divert attention from demands fuelled by pro-democracy unrest in the Arab world for an end to its split with the western-backed Fatah movement in the West Bank. Israel launched a military offensive into Gaza in December 2008 in an effort to end the cross-border rocket fire. About 1,400 Palestinians and 13 Israelis were killed in the fighting. Gaza Hamas Israel Palestinian territories Middle East guardian.co.uk

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Not So Much in the News: Our ‘Bizarro World Military Operation’ in Libya

If you haven't seen Gen. Barry McCaffrey on NBC trashing the president for a military action, it's probably because the president isn't named Bush. On Monday's Diane Rehm show on NPR, McCaffrey didn't hold back on Libya: “And then the rebellion, of course, doesn't know how they're going to break into Tripoli if NATO has announced, for God's sakes, that they intend to bomb the rebels also if they so-call 'threaten' civilian populations. One of the more Bizarro World military operations I've ever observed.”

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Gbagbo’s forces attack Ouattara hotel

US accuses incumbent president’s attempt at negotiation as delaying tactic as his forces step up assault in Abidjan Forces loyal to Ivory Coast incumbent leader Laurent Gbagbo have stepped up a counter-attack on president-elect Alassane Ouattara by firing on his hotel headquarters in Abidjan. Rebel forces seeking to install Ouattara, who won an election last November according to results certified by the United Nations, swept from the north to the economic capital Abidjan almost unopposed more than a week ago. But despite a fierce rebel onslaught, Gbagbo’s soldiers have held onto swathes of the city, and are now growing bolder. The US condemned the attack on Ouattara’s hotel and said Gbagbo’s attempts at negotiation last week were nothing more than a ruse to regroup and rearm. “Gbagbo’s continued attempt to force a result that he could not obtain at the ballot box reveals his callous disregard for the welfare of the Ivorian people, who will again suffer amid renewed heavy fighting in Abidjan,” the state department statement said. The UN said Saturday’s attack on the Golf Hotel, which Ouattara has made his base since the election , involved heavy weapons that appeared to have been fired from Gbagbo’s heavily defended residence. “This was not a fight, but a direct attack by Gbagbo’s forces, who fired RPGs and mortar rounds, from positions near Gbagbo’s residence, at the Golf Hotel,” said spokesman Hamadoun Toure, in Abidjan. Toure said one UN peacekeeper was hurt, and that UN forces had responded by firing on those positions. Gbagbo’s spokesman Ahoua Don Mello denied Gbagbo’s forces had attacked Ouattara’s headquarters and said the incumbent president was calling on his supporters to mount a resistance against French forces. “President Gbagbo called for resistance against the bombing and the actions of the French army in Ivory Coast, because ultimately it is the French army that attacked us,” said Don Mello. Mariam Konate, a resident of the area near the hotel, said: “There was fierce fighting with heavy weapons and our houses shook, even some windows shattered. We’re all locked in our homes, but things quietened down about an hour ago.” Pro-Gbagbo forces seem to be determined to strike fast, a sign that they want to gain momentum before more troops desert and/or that they may be desperate, said Lydie Boka, an analyst at StrategiCo consultancy. “The attack on Ouattara’s headquarters have won Gbagbo praise among his supporters but will probably attract more sanctions on him,” Boka said. French soldiers supporting the UN mission in Ivory Coast and backing Ouattara’s claim to the presidency secured Abidjan’s port on Saturday, but said the central neighbourhoods of Cocody and Plateau were still being contested. “[Gbagbo's forces] won some positions overnight that they lost again this morning,” said Frederick Daguillon, a spokesman for the French force in Ivory Coast, Licorne. He said Gbagbo’s fighters had “become more confident”. French helicopters clashed with Gbagbo’s defenders early on Saturday during a failed attempt to rescue diplomatic staff trapped by the fighting in Cocody. British and other diplomats were later evacuated, a Foreign Office spokesman said. The BBC said bullets had hit the British embassy and a mortar round had landed in the garden. Reuters witnesses said a fragile calm had returned to many parts of the city on Saturday, allowing shell-shocked residents to leave their homes in search of food and water amid the debris of war, or to try to escape to safer areas . “Yesterday, militiamen came to our house, we were threatened,” said Jean Kima, a Burkinabe fleeing with his family in the northern district of Gesco. “The militia could come back at any moment and perhaps the worst will happen next time.” Gbagbo is believed to be isolated in the bunker under his residence in Cocody, where he has sought refuge from a concerted assault by Ouattara’s troops while his elite presidential guard and militiamen do battle. Only three days ago, his defeat had appeared imminent and talks took place between the two sides. The United States accused Gbagbo of “a callous disregard for the welfare of the Ivorian people” and urged him to step down. “It is clear that Gbagbo’s attempts at negotiation this week were nothing more than a ruse to regroup and rearm,” a state department statement said. A senior commander of Ouattara’s forces near the northern entrance to Abidjan, Zacharia Kone, said his soldiers were prepared for any counter-attack. Gbagbo, who has ruled Ivory Coast since 2000, is defended by around 1,000 men. November’s election was meant to draw a line under a 2002-3 civil war that split the world’s top cocoa producer in two, but instead re-ignited it. Burnt vehicles and looted shops with wares spilling out of smashed windows were evidence of recent fighting in the south of Abidjan, as a French military convoy wound its way to the port handling the bulk of Ivory Coast’s cocoa shipments. “It was at the request of incoming president Ouattara that we have come to secure the port zone,” said Captain Roland Giammei, who said the forces were working alongside Ivorian gendarmes loyal to Ouattara. Ivory Coast’s cocoa industry, the world’s largest, has been paralysed since January, when Ouattara announced a ban on exports and the EU imposed shipping restrictions in order to squeeze Gbagbo’s finances. Ouattara is now seeking to revive the country’s economy as fast as possible. On Friday, the EU lifted restrictions on the ports of Abidjan and San Pedro at his request. On Saturday, the first Air France passenger flight since April 1 landed in Abidjan. But even if Gbagbo leaves, Ouattara’s ability to unify the country may be undermined by reports of atrocities since his forces, a collection of former rebels from the north, swept into Abidjan more than a week ago. Ouattara’s camp has denied involvement. Ivory Coast United Nations guardian.co.uk

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Iceland rejects Icesave debt plan

Referendum results show 60% of voters against repayment plan for Britain and Netherlands, sending dispute to European court Icelanders have rejected the latest government-approved plan to repay the £3bn owed to Britain and the Netherlands from the crash of the country’s banking system in 2008, prompting the prime minister to warn of economic and political chaos. Final results from five of six constituencies, including the capital, Reykjavik, showed the “no” side taking just under 60% of the vote, meaning the dispute will end up in a European court. “The worst option was chosen,” said the prime minister, Jóhanna Sigurðardóttir. “The vote has split the nation in two . We must do all we can to prevent political and economic chaos as a result of this outcome.” The debt was incurred when Britain and the Netherlands compensated their nationals who lost savings in online Icesave accounts owned by Landsbanki, one of three Icelandic banks that collapsed in late 2008. Icelandic politicians in February backed a repayment plan agreed with creditors, but the president refused to sign the bill, triggering the vote. In March 2010, Iceland rejected an earlier Icesave repayment blueprint in a referendum . Economists say uncertainty over the payback deal is hurting efforts to drag Iceland out of recession, end currency controls and boost investment. Many voters cited opposition to taxpayers footing the bill for irresponsible bankers as their reason for voting against the plan. “I know this will probably hurt us internationally, but it is worth taking a stance,” Thorgerdun Ásgeirsdóttir, a 28-year-old barista, said after casting a “no” vote. Svanhvit Ingibergs, 33, who works at a rest home, said: “I had no part in causing those debts, and I don’t want our children to risk having to pay them. It would be better to settle this in a court.” Sigurðardóttir said Iceland would now defend its case before the court of the European trade body overseeing Iceland’s cooperation with the EU, the Efta Surveillance Authority (ESA). Economists have said this route could be much costlier. Iceland is still pulling itself out of a deep recession. Politicians and economists believe solving the Icesave issue would help the country get back into international financial markets. Getting such funding is also part of a plan to end the controls on capital flows it imposed in 2008 to stabilise a tumbling currency. The controls have left an estimated equivalent to a quarter of Iceland’s gross domestic product in the hands of foreign investors, many of whom are expected to want to pull out. Ratings agencies will have followed the vote closely, with Moody’s having said it may lower its credit rating on Iceland after a “no” vote. Iceland Icesave Banking Global economy Economics Europe guardian.co.uk

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Open Thread with The Professional Left Weekly Podcast: Can you hear the GOP dogwhistle now?

enlarge Credit: The Professional Left Time for your weekly podcast with The Professional Left, otherwise known as our own Driftglass and Bluegal. Have a great weekend and enjoy the podcast everyone. Links for this episode below the cut, and it’s an open thread: Ronald Reagan’s state’s rights dog whistle in Mississippi Poll of Mississippi Republicans on interracial marriage And if you think we’re overreaching on the fundamentalist Christian / Racist link, read this. And here’s Melissa Harris Perry on The Rachel Maddow Show: You can listen to the archives or make a donation to help keep these podcasts going at http://professionalleft.blogspot.com/ .

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The World Shrugged On April 8, 1951

enlarge Credit: Life Magazine Gen. Matthew Ridgeway – portrait of a man about the enter the shark tank. Click here to view this media The week ending April 8, 1951 was something of a calm before the storm. Three days after this broadcast (Voices and Events from NBC Radio), President Truman would make the stunning announcement that he was firing General Douglas MacArthur from his command of the Far East and replacing him with Gen. Matthew Ridgeway . There is mention of what would be the last straw in the broadcast as MacArthur is quoted as favoring the Nationalist Chinese opening up a second front in the Korean conflict during an overseas visit. But for all the controversy there was still a war going on with no real end in sight. Other news that week had a lot to do with the upcoming Presidential election for 1952. Speculation was rife that the hands-down candidate would be General Eisenhower, but it was unclear as to which party ticket he would run under. No one, it seems asked him what his party affiliation was. Meanwhile, the playing field was pretty much open as it appeared there were no candidates willing to take on the grueling campaign and the overwhelming responsibility. Senator Paul Douglas probably said it best that week: Sen. Paul Douglas: “The job is really an impossible job. And it calls for the brooding qualities of Lincoln, the philosophic depth of Jefferson, the sturdiness of Cleveland, the daring of Franklin D. Roosevelt, and the popular leadership qualities of Theodore Roosevelt. In addition he must be a spiritual leader. He needs the patience of Job. And must have the physique of either a Sandow, a Samson or a Charles Atlas. Any man who wants to be President of the United States needs to have his head examined.” No doubt sage words of advice, even sixty years later.

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Who you gonna call? Room service

Royal Court; Bermondsey Square hotel; Young Vic; New Diorama, all London Fasten your seat-belts, as we are about to experience turbulence. Simon Stephens’s new play, Wastwater , uses air travel as a metaphor for human restlessness. It is about three potentially life-changing decisions: leaving the country, having an affair (in an airport hotel), adopting a child from overseas. Three flight paths, you could say. It is an idea that has wings. But the opening piece, a conversation between a woman (Linda Bassett) and her departing foster son (Tom Sturridge), is pointlessly mannered. They stand like sentries outside a battered conservatory (their idleness, at this juncture, implausible) with low-flying planes overhead. Their intonation is artificial. She is too high-pitched, he unvaryingly flat. I didn’t believe in their dialogue at all. The second encounter is between an art teacher and an ex-porn actress in an airport hotel. This act is better: tense, alarming and funny. Jo McInnes, in figure-hugging black cocktail dress, sustains a sexy, control-freaky vibe. Paul Ready is entertainingly unready. Together, they give a masterclass in uneasy body language. The third piece – gripping but unconvincing – is about a middle-class man from Islington (Angus Wright) illegally adopting a child. The scene takes place in a deserted warehouse near Heathrow where he is interrogated by sadistic Sian (Amanda Hale), who, it turns out, grew up in the foster family of the first act. This play, with its open-ended menace, could not have existed if Pinter had never drawn breath. And Katie Mitchell has done it proud, directing to a high-gloss finish (the versatile design is Lizzie Clachan’s). But the irony is that “finish” is what this play lacks. Stephens has tremendous facility but Wastwater does not cohere: the links between the stories are too weak to hold. Serendipitously, last week’s theatre was dominated by strange encounters in hotels. The Bermondsey Square hotel is characterlessly trendy – it has the atmosphere of a building that does not quite know what it is doing. Anouke Brook, in association with Southwark Playhouse, has persuaded management to let her direct two half-hour plays – Hotel Confessions – to audiences of 10 in room 509. As we wait, a hectic man walks into reception, his cheap suitcase sprinkled with snow. Before long, we follow him in the lift up to his room on the fifth floor, where he will find a sleeping stranger in one of the beds. What follows is a powerful, subtle and engrossing reworking of Siegfried Lenz’s short story “The Night in the Hotel”. This is followed by Nessah Aisha Muthy’s beautifully written companion piece “Freya and Mr Mushroom”, about a travelling salesman and a little girl. Both pieces are about trust, strangeness and the nature of theatre itself – in which one may move from the unknown to intimacy at speed. A memorable evening – great fun too. Two Irish plays – each associated with the Abbey theatre in Dublin – made up the rest of the week. Mark O’Rowe’s Terminus was first staged there in 2007. It is a dark, potent, rhyming brew about falls from disgrace in which O’Rowe shows there never was, in the violent Dublin lives he describes, a paradise to lose. The structure is alternating monologues – characters spotlit against darkness, as separate as the glass shards that make up Jon Bausor’s set. Olwen Fouéré is arresting as a middle-aged Samaritan. Catherine Walker is tremendous as her daughter who falls from a construction crane (an idea taken from Joyce) into the arms of a wormy demon. And Declan Conlon is terrifying as a spivvy serial killer who looks as if he is attending a cheap wedding. What thrills is O’Rowe’s metaphysical virtuosity. But the violence is hard to bear – I longed for more light. In 1937, the Abbey theatre – who staged a number of Teresa Deevy’s plays – rejected Wife to James Whelan . The play was thought unconventional. Now, it is hard to imagine how this charming, involving, garrulous story could ever have offended. The characters – sympathetically directed by Gavin McAlinden – come from an Irish village and talk so much there is not much time for action. But a sad love story between James Whelan (Mark Hesketh) and Nan Bowers (Ailish Symons) squeezes into the conversational gaps. Apparently, Deevy had strong feelings about women’s rights. She also had a keen understanding of men. Whelan is adroitly drawn: in love with his power and good looks, bound to make himself and others unhappy. “I never knew so uppish a feller,” says Nan. But that does not stop her loving him. Theatre Kate Kellaway guardian.co.uk

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Making sense of the information age

Acclaimed science writer James Gleick talks about data, meaning and knowledge – and his new book, The Information Here’s a paradox: we live in an “information age” and yet information is a maddeningly elusive concept. We habitually confuse it with data, on the one hand, and with knowledge on the other. And yet it’s neither. There’s an arcane mathematical discipline called “information theory” that underpins all digital communications nowadays and yet resolutely disdains to make any connection between information and meaning. It would take a brave author to pursue such an elusive quarry. Or a foolhardy one. James Gleick is an accomplished stalker of mysterious ideas. His first book, Chaos (1987), provided a compelling introduction to a new science of disorder, unpredictability and complex systems. His new book, The Information , is in the same tradition. It’s a learned, discursive, sometimes wayward exploration of a very complicated subject. The subtitle, A History, A Theory, A Flood , gives the game away. This is really three books: one is about the history of information from earliest times to the present day. It opens with a memorable, beautifully written chapter about the “talking drums” of the Congo and explains how a drum with just two tones was used to communicate complex information quickly over large distances. After that we embark on a journey through the history of writing, the rise of the dictionary, the growth of English, the origins of programming and the arrival of Samuel Morse and his amazing electric telegraph. The second part centres on the work of Claude Shannon, the American mathematical genius who in 1948 proposed a general theory of information. Shannon was the guy who coined the term “bit” for the primary unit of information, and provided a secure theoretical underpinning for electronic communications (so in a way he’s the godfather of the modern world). The trouble was that Shannon’s conceptual clarity depended on divorcing information from meaning, a proposition that to this day baffles everyone who is not an engineer. But the most startling insights in the book come when Gleick moves to explore the role of information in biology and particle physics. From the moment when James Watson and Francis Crick cracked the structure of DNA, molecular biology effectively became a branch of computer science. For the replication of DNA is the copying of information and the manufacture of proteins is a transfer of information – the sending of a message. And then there’s quantum mechanics, the most incomprehensible part of physics, some of whose most eminent practitioners – such as the late John Archibald Wheeler – have begun to wonder if their field might not be, after all, just about information. “It from bit” was Wheeler’s way of putting it. “Every it – every particle, every field of force, even the space-time continuum itself – derives its function, its meaning, its very existence… from bits.” Finally, Gleick surveys the “flood” – the torrent of data and information that now engulfs us. In this section Gleick switches from history to speculation, which means that he is now in the same boat as the rest of us. This writer welcomes him aboard. John Naughton: The book has an astonishing range and I’ve learned a lot from it. It takes one into dozens of specialised fields – some of which (like quantum mechanics) are very arcane. How did you manage to do it? How many years did it take? And did you realise what you were taking on? James Gleick: I knew it was going to be a sprawling, amorphous project; I knew it would send shoots and tendrils every which way, and I didn’t know exactly how I was going to find a shape. In the end it took seven years, but I’d been thinking about it one way or another for a long time. I first heard about this baffling thing, “information theory”, from chaos scientists. In the 1990s I spent some time gathering material for a projected cultural history of the telephone – in other words, looking at the subject the wrong way round. And then, when I was immersed in my last book, about Isaac Newton, I started to feel that I was already writing about information more than, say, physics. JN: I found your account of the life and achievements of Ada Lovelace very moving. She has a pretty good claim to be recognised as the first computer programmer, and yet her story is a classic case-study in how brilliant women can be airbrushed from history, much as Rosalind Franklin was in the double helix story. It was good to see her being given her due. JG: I think of all the people who come and go in my book, she is my favourite. Worse than being airbrushed from history, she was never written in. She had a brief flash of celebrity as Byron’s daughter, but no one, with the lone exception of Charles Babbage, had a chance to glimpse her formidable mathematical powers. We can see it now in retrospect. She could never publish under her name; never belong to a professional society; never even attend university. Yet, working with Babbage as an anonymous younger sidekick, she surpassed his vision of what his proposed computing machines could do and could be. “First programmer” is apt. She was a genius. JN: The chapters I found hardest-going were the ones on randomness and particle physics – though I was much cheered up to discover that the great Richard Feynman said that nobody understands quantum mechanics. Were these the chapters that were the most difficult to write? JG: They were the most fun to write. Finally I had reached the scientific frontier; the point where the people of interest are alive and working and available for conversation. I spent time with Gregory Chaitin [an Argentine-American prodigy in both mathematics and computer science], who has a new idea every hour, and Charles Bennett [an IBM researcher famous for applying quantum physics to the process of information exchange], who showed me “Aunt Martha’s coffin” – his quantum teleportation device – buried under a pile of books and papers in a corner of his office. Hard going is OK. I take the view that we all have permission to be a little baffled by quantum information science and algorithmic information theory. JN: Claude Shannon plays a central role in the book and your portrayal of him is very vivid. One thing I hadn’t known was that Shannon’s PhD was on genetics viewed in terms of symbolic logic. Was that a surprise to you? JG: A complete surprise. I knew he had written an astounding master’s thesis applying Boolean logic to electrical circuits, but I had no idea about the genetics work. I was thrilled to learn about it, because I knew the connection between information and genetics was going to be a big topic for me. And then it turned out that Shannon’s work had not the slightest influence on modern genetics – he was in a world of his own, and the thesis vanished into academic oblivion. Yet it’s a kind of intellectual story I just love. On its idiosyncratic terms Shannon’s genetics work was apparently quite brilliant. This was long before anyone had any notion of DNA. “Genes” were as mysterious and hypothetical as atoms were to the ancient Greeks. Shannon said he would “speak as though the genes actually exist”, and invented a bunch of arbitrary symbols and proceeded to work out rules for recombination and cross-breeding that we can see, in hindsight, were right on the money. Yet he never published it. JN: There’s an interesting coincidence in the fact that the two defining breakthroughs in modern communications – the transistor and Shannon’s mathematical theory of information – should have emerged from the same lab at the same time. JG: I think you know I don’t consider that a coincidence. The place was right: the research laboratory run by the world’s great communications empire [Bell Labs, the formidable R&D arm of the AT&T telephone monopoly], where all sorts of oddballs were allowed to pursue loose ends with no obvious application to the bottom line. The time was right. The first lumbering computers were walking the earth, with their big hot vacuum tubes and their Boolean circuits. Shannon had a special genius – he was obsessed with just the right motley collection of ideas needed to spawn information theory – and the transistor guys were surely special in their own ways. But these inventions were due, and willy-nilly they arrived. JN: Although Shannon’s theory was a great breakthrough, his insistence on separating information from meaning must have alienated many people. Was a desire to bridge the two one of the reasons you embarked on the project? JG: Actually, that hadn’t occurred to me at first. My plan from the outset was to look at the origins and the influence of what we now call information theory, believing, as I do, that it underpins so much of our information hardware and our information networks and, yes, our information age. But as you note, information is not knowledge. We are more painfully aware of that now than ever. In explaining Shannon’s work I kept having to emphasise his point about the irrelevance of meaning; yet we know full well that meaning is what we really care about. This loomed larger and larger. There’s a hilarious moment in 1950 in a New York hotel meeting room when Shannon tries to explain “information” to anthropologists and psychologists such as Margaret Mead and Lawrence Frank, and they’re a little outraged. Where are the humans in this picture? Where are our brains? If it’s just wires and transistors, who cares? And surely this is precisely our problem, now that information is cheap and plentiful and ubiquitous. I was heartened when I came across a comment by philosopher and historian Jean-Pierre Dupuy: “It was inevitable that meaning would force its way back in.” I made that the epigraph for my final chapter. This is our challenge, surely. JN: Is it not the case that every shift in our communications environment has provoked “overload anxiety”? I can imagine folks in Venice in 1560 complaining about the torrent of print. Or is there something different about the present? JG: I think you’re unusually empathic to imagine ancient complaints about information overload, but of course you’re right. There was Leibniz bemoaning “that horrible mass of books – which keeps on growing…” When we complain that things have never been like this, it’s good to have some perspective. And yet, things have never been like this. Information has never been so cheap; our choices have never been so numerous; the cacophony has never been quite so grand. Everyone knows this, and everyone is right. It’s why we’re fascinated, if not obsessed, with Google and Twitter and all the rest of their oddly named species. We know that information poses as many challenges as opportunities. Computing Mathematics Physics John Naughton guardian.co.uk

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Just watch where you’re treading

Two new stingrays found in the Amazon are not only revealing much about the species but are also proving great indicators of ecological change Crocodile hunter Steve Irwin’s well-publicised death in 2006 from a stingray attack only heightened public fascination with the animals. Their stings, located on the tail, are sharp, with backward-pointing serrations and venom from mucous secretions at their bases. Most human stings result from bathers stepping on an unsuspecting stingray, innocently resting on the sea bottom, which produces a defensive reflex of the tail forward. But stingrays are not limited to saltwater. Although the Potamotrygonidae family of freshwater stingrays has been known since 1843, two remarkable new species from South America were recently described. Both are nearly circular in shape, the most round disc of any of the current tally of approximately 200 known species of stingrays. The genus was named Heliotrygon , a combination of helio – sun – and trygon, which means ray. Although the two species are new to science, specimens of the genus have shown up in the aquarium fish trade under common names such as “round” or “pancake” rays. These species have tiny eyes and live in murky waters of the central channel areas of Amazonian rivers, coming closer to shore mostly at night to feed. Even though they have reduced mouths that are located away from their snouts, they eat fish almost exclusively. You may be asking how a flat ray, with a tiny mouth located on the underside of its body, could catch fish. Using their “lateral line system”, sense organs that can detect movements and pressure changes in surrounding water, they spot their prey, thrust upward, lift the snouts and quickly open their small but very strong mouths to swallow a fish almost whole. One specimen examined by x-ray had a large catfish in its gut, spines and all. Although these rays are the last thing seen by many fish, they present no danger to us. The stings of Heliotrygon gomesi are among the smallest of all stingrays. A specimen 70cm across has a sting only about as long as the fingernail of your pinky and only one-tenth as wide, incapable of inflicting much damage. Dr Marcelo de Carvalho of the Universidade de São Paulo, one of the scientists who discovered the new species, says that the discovery highlights two important aspects of modern biodiversity science: “That we still have much to discover and that there are too few researchers devoting themselves to this type of research.” De Carvalho says that fieldwork over the past decade has led to the discovery of 15 new species in this specific stingray family. He stresses: “We’re talking here of large stingrays, up to one metre wide. There are a mere 10 research groups working on the taxonomy and diversity of sharks and rays worldwide, even though much collecting and fieldwork is needed to understand the diversity of the group. Part of the challenge is remarkable genetic diversity: no two specimens, even those collected side by side and of the same gender, size, and species, are entirely alike. This great variation has to be properly understood before we can know the true diversity of the group.” Ecologically, because stingrays have internal fertilisation and reproduce slowly compared to many freshwater fishes, they are more easily threatened by environmental degradation or illegal harvesting by the aquarium industry. “They may be good indicators of general environmental health, as top predators usually are,” says de Carvalho. “And all that rests of the shoulders of good descriptive taxonomy and biodiversity science.” Quentin Wheeler is director of the International Institute for Species Exploration, Arizona State University Zoology Wildlife Marine life Animals Quentin Wheeler guardian.co.uk

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Britain’s changing ethnic map

Migrant communities are on the move, driven by rising affluence and aspirations, a new analysis for the Observer concludes ahead of the census results. Now other arrivals are beginning the process of establishing themselves Every day, shortly before noon, the holy men in saffron robes perform the same ceremony. Watched by scores of people sitting cross-legged on pristine marble floors, they bang small cymbals and wave candles while chanting incantations to statues of Hindu gods. Any visitor to their temple, one of the largest in the world, could not fail to be awed by the spectacle. But the Shri Swaminarayan Mandir is a temple built on superlatives. Everyone from Princess Diana to Jimmy Carter has paid a visit. On 27 October 2000 it broke a world record by serving 1,247 vegetarian dishes to mark the start of the Hindu new year. The temple, however, is not in Bengal or Kerala. It is in suburban north-west London, in Neasden, where it nestles incongruously near rows of Edwardian terraces. The site was chosen partly because of the region’s large number of Hindus, many of whom arrived from Uganda after being expelled by Idi Amin in the 1970s. As Yogesh Patel, a spokesman for the temple, acknowledges, the suburb was attractive to Hindu migrants because of “better employment prospects … the choice of good schools and business opportunities”. The temple, which has a highly successful independent school, is testimony to something significant happening in Britain, a shift that has been occurring largely without notice. Second- and third-generation migrant communities are on the move, driven by increasing affluence and aspiration. “We are seeing an emerging segment of dynamic young professionals, successful entrepreneurs and ambitious, resourceful wealth creators, all giving back to our country, enriching it economically, socially, culturally,” Patel said. Increasingly, younger generations believe their futures lie in the suburbs. The extent of this trend will emerge with greater clarity once the results of this year’s census are published. But an exhaustive analysis of Britain’s ethnic minorities, carried out for the Observer by Experian, the data-mining company, paints a vivid picture of the impact they are having on regions where once they were notably absent. Experian’s Mosaic database tracks almost 50 million people in Britain via their surnames. The names are then matched to postcodes, allowing the social mobility of immigrant groups to be tracked. “In the old days you would see these groups conspicuously settling in inner-city areas,” said Professor Richard Webber, who developed the database, “but you can now see how most groups have suburbanised themselves.” Experian’s data confirms the hypothesis. In London suburbs of the sort that are dominated by 1930s-built semi-detached housing, there can now be found high concentrations of Sri Lankans in the south (New Malden, Mitcham), Sikhs in the west (Southall, Hounslow), Hindu Indians in the north-west (Wembley, Harrow) and Greek Cypriots in the north (Southgate, Palmers Green). According to Webber, these are minority groups who have traditionally sought to acquire their own homes. As their economic circumstances have improved, they have moved outwards. Contrary to common stereotypes, the data suggests that many members of immigrant communities live in relatively prestigious neighbourhoods. Mosaic found that, if you live in the highest-status neighbourhoods, your chances of having a Jewish or Armenian name are five times the national average. Many other groups – notably Greek Cypriots, Iranians and Japanese – are also over-represented in these neighbourhoods. Almost one in four people in Harrow now have a Hindu Indian surname. By contrast, people of Pakistani and Bangladeshi origins are far more likely to live in poorer neighbourhoods, as are Albanians, black Africans and Vietnamese. The findings suggest that Britain is also becoming more diverse. The fastest growth has been among minorities who in 2006 were small in number, with the proportion of Slovakians rising by 977% and Lithuanians by 582%. There has also been rapid growth of black South Africans and Zimbabweans and of people from the former French west African colonies, such as Ivory Coast and Mali. The number of adults with Nigerian and Ghanaian names has doubled. By contrast, the growth in the number of adults from traditional centres of UK immigration, such as the West Indies, India and Pakistan, has been much lower. Some immigrant streams, from countries such as Vietnam, Laos and Mauritius, have almost ceased. Areas that have seen the greatest rise in the number of people with Mandarin Chinese names are around universities, reflecting the surge in students from mainland China. Over the same period, there was a 13.5% fall in the number of adults with Anglo-Saxon names living in smarter, private flats and a decline of 12.5% in the same group living in council flats. Conversely, there were increases in the proportion of people from eastern Europe and Africa and of the Hindu and Muslim religions in both types of housing. Tim Butler, professor of geography at King’s College London, and co-author with Chris Hamnett of Ethnicity, Class and Aspiration: Understanding London’s New East End , recently carried out studies in five regions in the east of the capital. “Among Asian groups, and particularly Indians, there was a desire to move out from inner London boroughs to outer London boroughs, particularly Redbridge. There were two main reasons for that: one was the attraction of suburban housing and the other was the high-quality schooling that met their aspirations. Many had been settled in the East End of London for possibly two to three generations and had themselves been to a local university and were keen for their children to get into one of the professions.” The trend has had some unusual consequences. New Malden in south London, with an adult population of 23,000, now has the largest expatriate community of South Koreans in Europe. Some estimates suggest that there are as many as 8,000 South Koreans living in the district, whose high street boasts at least 20 Korean businesses. Tesco has said it sells more fruit and vegetables in New Malden per head of population than anywhere else in Britain, and attributes this to local enthusiasm for healthy food. “When the embassy came over here [to nearby Wimbledon] in the 1970s, many followed suit,” said one South Korean shopkeeper. “They found houses in New Malden because suburban areas had cheaper properties and good travel opportunities into London. Gradually, their friends and families came over and gathered here.” But it was in the early 1990s that things really took off. “Many bankers and financiers came to New Malden, attracted to the area for the same reason,” the shopkeeper said. “Around 2,000 South Korean students came here because the education is very good.” A minister at the local Methodist church acknowledged that the presence of a large ethnic minority had created tensions. But, she said, the World Cup of 2002 had provided an unlikely opportunity for greater harmony. “South Korea was playing and there were massive celebrations. They were parading up and down the street, singing and shouting, everything. “But then, later on, in the early hours of the morning, they came down and cleaned the streets, even picking up the tiniest cigarette butt. And that so impressed the rest of the community. Not only do they celebrate politely, they clean up after themselves.” New Malden is also home to a large Sri Lankan community, with many working in local care homes. Almost 6% of New Malden’s population now has a Sri Lankan surname. The Methodist minister said while both groups were very different, they were united in their hopes for the next generation. “They put more effort into transforming their communities and enabling their children to aspire to the positions that they had in their home countries, but haven’t had here.” Admittedly the migrant aspiration to escape the inner city is nothing new. “Think about Brick Lane,” said Sarah Mulley, associate director of the IPPR thinktank. “You’ve had successive migrant groups moving into the inner city and then, when they are established, moving out to be replaced by another migrant group. You’ve had French Huguenots, Jews, Bangladeshis. They arrive and then disperse.” But changes to immigration policy suggest that the shift to more affluent suburbs will become more pronounced. “Restricted immigration regimes mean migrant workers entering the UK are more likely to be highly paid and highly skilled,” Mulley said. “People are now coming to do a specific, professional job, which means they are concentrated in particular areas that are increasingly outside London. The profiles of those communities are changing.” Immigration and asylum Jamie Doward guardian.co.uk

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