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Few women running for assemblies

Equalities campaigners predict number of women elected to Holyrood and Welsh assembly on 5 May will be the lowest on record Leading political reform campaigners have demanded tough action to improve equality in Britain’s devolved parliaments after a steep decline in the number of women candidates in the Welsh and Scottish elections. Equalities campaigners predict that the number of women elected to Holyrood and the Welsh assembly on 5 May will be the lowest on record, after an investigation by the Guardian found less than 30% of the major parties’ candidates will be women. Dr Ruth Fox, director of parliament and government at the Hansard Society , said these figures strengthened the case for new measures to force parties to introduce equal representation, such as women-only shortlists or “gender balancing” in seats and regional lists, in both Edinburgh and Cardiff. “They’ve both held themselves up as beacons around the world on women’s representation, but since 2003 that has been in decline,” she said. Equal representation had been one of the “big energising factors” that led to their foundation in 1999. “In a sense, the parties are betraying these principles, the principle of a new form of politics, a new culture,” she said. Nan Sloan, director of the Centre for Women and Democracy , said the decline was regrettable. “If we want to change the gender balance in legislatures it takes a sustained effort from all parties for a long time,” she said. “There should be compulsory mechanisms to ensure that all political parties play their part in making sure that women are properly represented.” Katie Ghose, chief executive of the Electoral Reform Society , said: “This research shows that if you take your eye off the ball for one minute, you see this bitterly disappointing trend. You just can’t rest on your laurels: It’s sad to see parties sit back. It was leaps ahead and now we’ve put ourselves back by decades.” In 2003, Wales became the first legislature in the world to have an equal number of men and women assembly members (AMs), with 30 out of its 60 AMs female. But the figures then declined: in 2007, there were 28 women elected. With election campaigning now started for both legislatures, the number of women candidates for the main five parties in Wales this year stands at 29.9% of the 261 candidates so far declared. The Institute of Welsh Affairs predicts the number of women AMs will fall close to 30% this year. “This is perilously close to the critical mass of female membership generally regarded as needed in organisations to ensure that their culture is reasonably feminised,” said Kirsty Davies, its deputy director. Both legislatures use a form of proportional representation in which a majority of seats are constituency seats, elected using first past the post. The rest are from regional lists using proportional representation. In Wales, 40 of the 60 assembly seats are from constituencies; in Scotland, 73 of the 129 seats are from constituencies. In both places, 75% of constituency candidates are men. The Tories and Liberal Democrats refuse to have positive action policies and insist their candidates are selected on merit regardless of gender or ethnicity. Plaid Cymru reserves top places on its regional lists for women and also uses “zipping” on its regional lists, so women and men alternate to create “gender balanced” lists; the Scottish National party has no similar policy. Labour has one of the strongest records on getting women elected to both legislatures but has watered down its positive action policies. It has no positive action in constituencies but uses zipping on its regional lists. In most regions, the top list place is taken by a woman or ethnic minority candidate. The Greens have similar policies. In Scotland, five women Labour MSPs who held constituency seats have stood down, including its former leader, Wendy Alexander, and all have been replaced by men. This will have a significant impact on the number of women Labour MSPs elected on 5 May. This year, after 51 women were among the 129 MSPs elected in 2003, and 43 in 2007, only 28% of Holyrood candidates are women. The Hansard Society and Centre for Women and Democracy predict this will mean even fewer female MSPs elected. An analysis of all 835 candidates for the five main parties by the Guardian has also found the parties are failing to ensure that Britain’s ethnic minorities are properly represented, although the rates of representation are slowly improving. There are only 21 non-white candidates, although some parties, such as the Welsh Tories have yet to announce their full candidate lists. In Scotland, where about 4% of the 5.2 million population are from ethnic minorities, there are 17 ethnic minority candidates standing, 2.86% of the total. Only one is a woman. And of those 17 only one, a Muslim Scottish National party candidate in Glasgow, Humza Yousaf, is very likely to be elected. In Wales, where 3% of the 3 million population are from ethnic minorities, only 1.7% of candidates so far declared are non-white. Of those, three are women, but only one or two of all the five ethnic minority candidates are likely to win seats. There are several candidates in Scotland with disabilities, including Mike Pringle from the Liberal Democrats, Dennis Robertson, a blind SNP candidate in West Aberdeenshire, and a Labour candidate on the Central Scotland list, Siobhan McMahon, who is disabled. Chris Oswald, head of policy and parliamentary affairs at the Equality and Human Rights Commission Scotland , said: “A parliament which reflects the demography of the nation it represents will result in better legislation and a higher degree of public confidence in the democratic process. We would be concerned if the Scottish election results in a parliament which is less diverse than it was in 1999, 2003 or 2007.” Scottish politics Scotland Welsh politics Wales Women Women in politics Gender Severin Carrell guardian.co.uk

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Hague defends dealings with Koussa

• Libyan envoy in Greece with message from Muammar Gaddafi • RAF air chief tells Guardian Libya op could last months • One Al-Jazeera reporter released by pro-Gaddafi forces • Follow live updates 4.49pm: New video has emerged of Abdul Fattah Younes , the former Libyan Interior Minister and now nominal rebel army leader, urging the rebels to obey orders and become more organised. Mona Mahmood provides a translated extract of his address delivered from the passenger seat of a car. You are defending your country against these filthy monsters. Before you used to say, ‘this man is my cousin, or someone else is my relative’. Now, the most important thing is that he is a Libyan fighter. We do not care whether he is from Obaidi tribe or any other tribe in Libya. This crisis has unified us. Please, my young men who are fighting independently, the stage needs organisation and order. When the armed forces tell you to stop, you have to stop. You are so precious to us and we do not want to lose you to the enemy’s fire. The army is opening a space for you to fight, but in an organised way, so that we do not go back to Ajdabiya and Benghazi. I envy you, you have guns with you and are fighting, I will be fighting with you too. Long live free Libya. _ 4.42pm: Here is an afternoon summary taking in William Hague’s update to MPs. • The British government is supplying telecommunications equipment to Libya’s opposition Transitional National Council but is not providing arms to rebel forces , said the Foreign Secretary. Moussa Koussa, the defecting Libyan foreign minister, is being urged to cooperate with all requests for interviews in relation to Lockerbie as well as other issues stemming from Libya’s past sponsorship of terrorism. Koussa is not in detention. • The Guardian has been told that in Misrata, some businesses are unable to open for fear of being shot by snipers . “[A] market, close to main street, is full of snipers and any shop keeper who tries to open his shop will be shot immediately,” Misrata resident Mahmood Sawissi said. Yesterday hundreds of injured and ill people from Misrata were evacuated by sea – the Turkish ship Ankara carrying around 250 and charity Medicins Sans Frontieres transporting 71. • Italy has recognised the opponents of Libyan leader Muammar Gaddafi as the country’s only legitimate voice . Italy is only the third country, after France and Qatar, to recognize the rebel-led Libyan National Transitional Council as Libya’s only legitimate governing body. After speaking with the council’s foreign envoy, Ali al-Essawi, Italian foreign minister Franco Frattini announced the decision and reiterated that the only way to resolve the conflict in the former Italian colony is for Gaddafi to leave along with his sons. • The head of the RAF has told the Guardian that the air force is planning to continue operations in Libya for at least six months. Air Chief Marshal Sir Stephen Dalton said the service will need “genuine increases” in its budget over the coming years if it is to continue running the range of operations ministers demand. Dalton said his assumption is that planes will be needed “for a number of months rather than a number of days or weeks”. 4.20pm: Hague is asked whether it’s time to send a UN envoy to Yemen, where more protesters were killed today. The Foreign Secretary says there’s been a lot of mediation efforts already and he won’t dismiss the idea of an envoy. There are a lot of questions on Koussa, questioning why Britain is “supping with the devil”. Hague says it’s right to deal with someone who can provide information about the Gaddafi regime. The Foreign Secretary declines to give any time frame for British involvement . 4.16pm: Some laughs as Hague admits there are precedents for doing deals in the interest of saving lives but he says once again there is no deal with Koussa. 4.12pm: Hague says there is no viable future for Libya until Gaddafi goes and says other top officials to follow Koussa’s example and defect. Interestingly, Hague does not think the conflict is a civil war when asked whether there is a risk of Britain siding with the rebels. He reiterates that Britain is upholding UN resolutions. 4.09pm: Hague thanks the opposition for its support on Libya. He says he is not aware of any British military support for the rebels to help upgrade their weapons. On diplomatic discussions in Greece, Hague says any Libyan pledge of ceasefire will be judged on actions not words. He’s clearly sceptical, pointing out previous ceasefire pledges that were not followed through. 4.03pm: Douglas Alexander, the shadow foreign secretary, starts off with with questions on the Ivory Coast and other countries before moving on to Libya. He wants to know whether opposition military forces are receiving any materiel from Britain and is asking about contacts between the west and Libyan officials. 3.58pm: Hague calls on President Saleh of Yemen to engage with the protesters and expresses concern at the situation in Bahrain and Syria. Again he calls on the authorities to engage in reform. 3.56pm: The Libyan regime is under pressure, what is required is a ceasefire, Hague continues. He insists that Gaddafi must go . Discussions are going on at the UN about further sanctions. 3.54pm: We are not engaged in arming the opposition, but we will supply non-lethal aid, says Hague. He reasserts that the defecting Libyan foreign minister, Moussa Koussa, will not be given immunity. He says his officials are talking to Scottish officials about questioning Koussa about the Lockerbie bombing. 3.51pm: The coalition has all but eliminated Gaddafi’s air force, he says. We have prevented a huge loss of life, but Gaddafi is deliberately attacking civilian populations, says Hague. 3.50pm: The Foreign Secretary, William Hague, is giving an update on Libya. He begins by condemning the violence in Afghanistan that led to the death of several UN personnel. He also expresses concern over the situation in the Ivory Coast. 3pm: Here’s a summary of events so far today: • The Guardian has been told that in Misrata, some businesses are unable to open for fear of being shot by snipers . “[A] market, close to main street, is full of snipers and any shop keeper who tries to open his shop will be shot immediately,” Misrata resident Mahmood Sawissi said. Yesterday hundreds of injured and ill people from Misrata were evacuated by sea – the Turkish ship Ankara carrying around 250 and charity Medicins Sans Frontieres transporting 71. • Italy has recognized the opponents of Libyan leader Muammar Gaddafi as the country’s only legitimate voice . Italy is only the third country, after France and Qatar, to recognize the rebel-led Libyan National Transitional Council as Libya’s only legitimate governing body. After speaking with the council’s foreign envoy, Ali al-Essawi, Italian foreign minister Franco Frattini announced the decision and reiterated that the only way to resolve the conflict in the former Italian colony is for Gaddafi to leave along with his sons. • The head of the RAF has told the Guardian that the air force is planning to continue operations in Libya for at least six months. Air Chief Marshal Sir Stephen Dalton said the service will need “genuine increases” in its budget over the coming years if it is to continue running the range of operations ministers demand. Dalton said his assumption is that planes will be needed “for a number of months rather than a number of days or weeks”. 2.43pm: Mona Mahmood, our Arabic-speaking colleague has been speaking to Mahmood Sawissi, a 46-year-old father of three, who is in Misrata. Misrata is quieter today though we hear sporadic shelling from time to time, Sawissi says. My eldest son is only 3-years-old and he was terrified by the fighting. So I have sent my family to their uncle’s house in Al-Ramila. It is a remote area faraway from the fighting and bombing. Nothing is working in Misrata: schools are shut down, teachers and students are at home; factories are closed and governmental buildings are not working either. People are concerned only for their security now. I run a electrical goods store in Misrata which has been shut since the war broke out. I used to import my goods from Egypt but now, the route is blocked. I have not sold anything for two months now, so I depend on my savings. Some fellow shop keepers have suffered big losses because their stories have been damaged in the fighting. My friend’s sugar store was completely destroyed. The main commercial market in the city is in ruins, and no one can open his shop. Another market, close to main street, is full of snipers and any shop keeper who tries to open his shop will be shot immediately. Gaddafi’s forces do not want to see any scenes of normal life in Misrata. Misrata’s Radio Broadcasting house has been a target of the government, but they haven’t managed to destroy it. The broadcasters are playing a good role in directing people and helping them through their daily problems. All the entrances to Misrata are blocked apart from the northern one, so we have to rely on stores of food supplies. Nothing is coming in but, our food stores are big enough to last for another three months. The main problem in Misrata is water but people are helping each other out. Wherever possible they are digging wells. No one likes war, but it is our fate. No revolution led by people can be defeated, it might be aborted, or looted, but it can not be defeated. We feel we are winners and will keep going till we liberate Libya. 2.17pm: More from Medecins Sans Frontieres on their evacuation of 71 Misrata patients by boat yesterday. “We managed to dock at Misrata on Sunday afternoon, despite intense fighting in the city over the past few days,” said Helmy Mekaoui, an MSF doctor who coordinated the medical evacuation. The violence caused an influx of wounded people and it was fortunate we could be there and get them onboard.” MSF said that among the evacuated patients were three people on life support, 11 people suffering from major trauma, and many others with abdominal wounds and open fractures. 1.51pm: Italy has recognized the opponents of Libyan leader Muammar Gaddafi as the country’s only legitimate voice. Italy is only the third country, after France and Qatar, to recognize the rebel-led Libyan National Transitional Council as Libya’s only legitimate governing body. After speaking with the council’s foreign envoy, Ali al-Essawi, Italian foreign minister Franco Frattini announced the decision and reiterated that the only way to resolve the conflict in the former Italian colony is for Gaddafi to leave along with his sons. “Any solution for the future of Libya has a precondition: that Gaddafi’s regime leaves … That Gaddafi himself and the family leave the country,” Frattini said. 1.35pm: Below the line, reader usini is keeping us up to date with the evacuation of refugees from Libya to Lampedusa, a small Italian island over 100m south of Sicily. The sea has calmed down now and about another 1,300 refugees have arrived in Lampedusa. 25 even crossed to Sardinia and were disembarked among the subathers on a beach near Cagliari yesterday. usini, who works teaching English as a foreign language, earlier wrote : I teach quite a lot of Libyan teenagers in the summer. They are really nice kids. Most of them are quite rich so many of them probably come from the ruling elite close to Ghadaffi. Whatever I think about him personally, I am really worried about them and their families. 1.21pm: Twelve people were killed today in the second day of protests in the southern Yemeni city of Taiz, Tom Finn reports . The deaths have triggered other protests around the country in solidarity, he says. In the western city of Hudaydah there are clashes ongoing at the moment. It seems that the demonstrations in cities across the country are now more co-ordintated Taiz is a lynchpin. People say if that city goes it will trigger mass protests across the country. It is an incredibly important place. [But] there is less press there, so it gets less attention. Taiz is still overrun by loyal Yemeni military, but it definitely one of the most volatile cities in the country Each time there is violence like this it sets off an escalating pattern. Almost 100 people have been killed now in these protests in Yemen, according to Amnesty. The more deaths, the more violence then the bigger the protests get. 1.09pm: Reuters has filed a sobering report on conditions in the besieged city of Misrata. The news agency has spoken to evacuees from the city who have been transported to the Tunisian port of Sfax by charity Medecins Sans Frontieres. One of the 71 shipped to Tunisia by MSF told of bodies lying in the streets of Misrata, while its hospital overflows with injured people. Many of the 71 had bullet wounds and broken limbs, while one person’s face was “completely disfigured by burns”, Reuters said. “You have to visit Misrata to see the massacre by Gaddafi,” said Omar Boubaker, a 40-year-old engineer who was shot in the leg. “Corpses in the street… the hospital overflowing. Doctors taking care of people in the street. There’s no space left in the hospital,” he said. It is impossible to verify independent accounts from Misrata as Libyan authorities are not allowing journalists to report freely from the city. The port of Sfax “echoed to the sound of sirens as a stream of ambulances ferried the wounded to hospital”, Reuters said. Abdullah Lacheeb, who has serious injuries to his pelvis and stomach and a bullet wound in his leg, cried as he said: “Look what Gaddafi and his sons have done, just because we protested peacefully.” “I could live or die but I am thinking of my family and friends who are stranded in the hell of Misrata,” he said. “Imagine, they use tanks against civilians. [Gaddafi] is prepared to kill everyone there.” Libyan officials have previously denied attacking civilians in Misrata. 11.54am: In Tripoli, there is little evidence of the civil war that is raging further to the east, Harriet Sherwood writes . On the drive from the Tunisian border to the capital on Sunday, there were numerous Libyan army checkpoints manned by soldiers wearing the ubiquitous loyalist green bandanas and scarves, but almost nothing in the way of bomb-damaged buildings. Most striking were huge queues at gas stations, often stretching back several hundred metres, sometimes two or three cars wide. As well as motorists, Libyans are queuing on foot with jerry cans and plastic containers. The country has long been awash with fuel; now many gas stations are closed. Tripoli itself seems relatively normal, although foreign journalists are highly restricted in their movements it is hard to get a full picture. Yesterday a group was taken to visit the command centre of the Great Man-Made River Project (GMMRP), Libya’s 4,000-km underground network of water pipelines, which supplies 70% of the population with water for consumption and agriculture. Abdel Majid Ghaud, the chairman of the People’s Committee for the GMMRP, warned of a potential humanitarian and environmental catastrophe if the pipeline was hit by coalition airstrikes. But there has been no damage so far, and there is no indication that the coalition would target civilian water supplies. Asked if the pipelines were also at risk from Libyan military shelling, Ghaud insisted that only coalition attacks presented a danger. There have been no government briefings at the Rixos Hotel, the main base for the foreign media in Tripoli, since Friday. Journalists have been told to present their visas for inspection amid speculation that the authorities are keen to reduce the media presence in the capital. It’s almost impossible to leave the Rixos without a government minder, information is scarce, and the atmosphere is one of frustration fuelled by rumour and speculation. 11.40am: More on Italy’s foreign minister, Franco Frattini. He said proposals by a Libyan envoy to end the crisis in Libya are “not credible” because nothing was said about the departure of Muammar Gaddafi. Abdul Ati al-Obeidi, an envoy of Gaddafi, told Greece’s prime minister on Sunday that the Libyan leader was seeking a way out of the crisis. But Frattini said this afternoon that the proposals were not credible because the departure of Gadhafi is a “pre-condition” to any settlement. 11.16am: The New York Times has an interesting piece today on how the rebel leadership in Libya is “showing strain” after the series of reverses they suffered last week. With the rebels’ battlefield fortunes sagging, the three men in charge of the Libyan opposition forces were summoned late last week by the ad-hoc leadership of their movement to a series of meetings here in the rebel capital. The rebel army’s nominal leader, Abdul Fattah Younes, a former interior minister and friend of Col. Muammar el-Qaddafi whom many rebel leaders distrusted, could offer little explanation for the recent military stumbles, two people with knowledge of the meetings said. Making matters worse, the men could hardly stand one another. They included Khalifa Heftar, a former general who returned recently from exile in the United States and appointed himself as the rebel field commander, the movement’s leaders said, and Omar el-Hariri, a former political prisoner who occupied the largely ceremonial role of defense minister. “They behaved like children,” said Fathi Baja, a political science professor who heads the rebel political committee. Little was accomplished in the meetings, the participants said. When they concluded late last week, Mr. Younes was still the head of the army and Mr. Hariri remained as the defense minister. Only Mr. Heftar, who reportedly refused to work with Mr. Younes, was forced out. On Sunday, though, in a sign that divisions persisted, Mr. Heftar’s son said his father was still an army leader. 10.40am: The Italian foreign minister Franco Frattini, speaking at a press conference, has said the proposals made by Gaddafi’s envoy, Abdul Ati al-Obeidi, in Greece are “not credible”. We’ll have his full comments shortly. 10.09am: Will Gaddafi be ousted by a palace coup? asks Middle East analyst Daniel Serwer, from the US Institute of Peace, and Eric Davis from Rutgers University. Davis tells Bloggingheads TV : “We are looking at a very long drawn out conflict … The air power is not really going to be able put an end to Gaddafi’s armed forces. And the rebels aren’t going to be able to do that, so we are going to have stalemate for some time and that could lead to some messy problems.” Serwer, a former US envoy to Bosnia, says: “What we need is for the non-Gaddafi part of the regime, that is the non-Gaddifi family, to read him the riot act and tell him to get the hell out of there so they can save their own skins. That is actually preferable, it seems to me, to what they have been doing which is defecting here and there. Much better that they sort out the situation while they are still in the country.” 9.56am: Libyan rebels have pushed into the strategic oil town of Brega, Associated Press reports. Brega has been the site of fighting during weeks of back-and-forth battling along Libya’s eastern coast. “The rebels, backed by airstrikes, have been making incremental advances. On Monday, the town was under rebel control,” AP said. 9.27am: Here’s an image of injured Libyans on board the Turkish ship Ankara, which collected 250 wounded people from Misrata yesterday. 9.05am: Greece foreign minister Dimitris Droutsas’s full statement following Libyan envoy Abdulati Al-Obeidi’s arrival has been posted onto the Greek foreign ministry website . Here it is in full: We have had a series of meetings in recent days on the developments in Libya. Among other things, the Prime Minister spoke to his Libyan counterpart, and out of that conversation came the sending of a special envoy here to Athens, whom we received today within this framework, which we have stressed, as Greece, from the very outset: the efforts toward a political, diplomatic solution in Libya must be continued. This envoy, as I have been informed, will continue his meetings tomorrow in Turkey and then in Malta. We stressed – reiterated – the international community’s clear message: full respect for the implementation of the UN Resolutions, an immediate ceasefire and an end to the violence and hostilities, particularly against the civilian population in Libya. From what the Libyan envoy said, it appears that the regime is also seeking a solution. There needs to be a serious effort for peace and stability in the region. Greece will continue in this effort to offer its good offices. We are in contact with all our partners and allies and we will brief them on today’s meetings and on Greece’s thoughts and proposals. Thank you. 8.44am: LibyaFeb17.com has posted some photographs from inside the ship carrying Misrata wounded to Turkey. 8.28am: A Turkish ship rescued 250 wounded from the besieged Libyan city of Misrata on Sunday, but left behind thousands of people pleading to be evacuated, Reuters reports. Misrata is the last major rebel-held city in western Libya, and is surrounded by government troops after rising up against Gaddafi in mid-February. “It is very, very bad. In my street, Gaddafi bombed us,” Ibrahim al-Aradi, 26, who had wounds in his groin, told the press agency. “We have no water, no electricity. We don’t have medicine. There are snipers everywhere,” he said. Others spoke of Gaddafi’s forces bombing mosques and houses. “When Gaddafi’s men hear the NATO planes they hide in houses and mosques. When the planes are gone they destroy them,” said Mustafa Suleiman, a 30-year-old computer engineer. “Even the big supermarket was destroyed. Some of my friends were killed. We have no vegetables, no fruit, only bread. Gaddafi wants to kill Misrata by fighting and starvation,” Suleiman said. Guarded by heavily armed Turkish police special forces, wounded men of all ages lay on mattresses on one of the car decks of the ship, a white car ferry called the Ankara chartered by the Turkish government. They had wounds in all parts of their bodies, and were being attended by Turkish medics. Hamen, a Libyan doctor who was accompanying the men, said: “Misrata is terrible. I have seen terrible things. Thirty people killed in one day. These are my patients. I must stay with them but I want to go back.” 8.15am: Good morning, welcome to the Guardian’s live coverage of the ongoing situation in Libya. • Harriet Sherwood, Ian Black and Patrick Wintour: Libya’s deputy foreign minister, Abdul Ati al-Obeidi, flew to Greece yesterday, apparently with a message from the Libyan government seeking a way out of the crisis . After meeting Obeidi Greece’s foreign minister, Dimitris Droustas said: “From the Libyan envoy’s comments it appears that the regime is seeking a solution.” Droustas added that Greek officials had underlined the international community’s call for Gaddafi to end hostilities. The message, Droustas said, was: “Full respect and implementation of United Nations decisions, an immediate ceasefire, an end to violence and hostilities, particularly against the civilian population of Libya.” • Nick Hopkins: The head of the RAF has issued a blunt warning that the service will need “genuine increases” in its budget over the coming years if it is to continue running the range of operations ministers demand . In an interview with the Guardian, Air Chief Marshal Sir Stephen Dalton also said the RAF was planning to continue operations over Libya for at least six months. His assumption is that planes will be needed “for a number of months rather than a number of days or weeks”. • The Arabic news channel Al-Jazeera says one of the network’s four reporters who were captured in Libya last month by pro-Gaddafi forces has been released . Three others remain held. In a statement emailed to Associated Press on Monday, al-Jazeera says the journalist who has been released is Lotfi al-Massoudi of Tunisia. The four journalists from the Qatar-based network were captured in the western Libya 27 days ago, the statement says. Libya Arab and Middle East unrest Middle East Muammar Gaddafi Defence policy Adam Gabbatt Matthew Weaver guardian.co.uk

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Lansley updates MPs on under-fire NHS reforms

Rolling coverage of all the day’s political developments as they happen 4.46pm: Lansley indicates some areas where he may change the bill. Choice will only be a means to a better service, not an end in itself, he says. There will be no cherry picking by private providers. Under Labour, cherry picking did happen, he says. Private providers were paid £250m for operations that were not carried out. Lansley says local government should be in the lead on public health issues. No change is not an option, he says. The cost of administration must be cut, he says. Lansley says MPs know his personal commitment to the NHS. The NHS is in “a healthy financial position”. Waiting times are at a historic low, he says. The coalition is increasing NHS funding by £11.5bn over the course of this parliament, he says. The government wants to provide “the best healthcare service anywhere in the world”. 4.41pm: Andrew Lansley is making his statement now. 4.37pm: Here’s a short health bill reading list. • David Cameron’s speech from January on the need for NHS reform. • Tory MP Sarah Wollaston, a former GP, on why the plans are dangerous. • Norman Tebbit in the Daily Mirror today on why the government is moving too quickly on NHS reform. • Alan Milburn in the Guardian on the flaws in the government’s plans, and on why Labour should not concede the reform territory. 4.25pm: Andrew Lansley, the health secretary, will be making his statement to the Commons soon. As Downing Street said this morning, he will be setting out “the next steps” now that the health bill has finished its committee stage in the Commons. We’ve already been told that David Cameron is planning a “listening exercise” that will attempt to reassure voters about the plans. But we don’t know yet whether ministers are willing to make substantial changes to the bill. On this, Lansley should be able to provide a bit of clarity. 4.14pm: Greg Barker has issued a statement explaining his “cuts that Margaret Thatcher could only have dreamt of” comment. (See 2.39pm.) I was making the point that thanks to the mess we inherited from Labour, we are having to make very difficult decisions, much tougher than would have been imagined in the 1980s. Even Alistair Darling himself admitted that Labour overspending meant that they would have been forced to make tougher and deeper cuts than Margaret Thatcher. The fact is that if we don’t take steps now to live within our means we’ll end up paying higher taxes or making deeper spending cuts just to pay off our debt. Barker is not disputing the quote, but, according to a Tory source, he accepts that he did not express himself very well because he wrongly implied that the government was enthusiastic about the cuts. Labour, of course, believe that the phrase is telling precisely because it does reveal what ministers feel about slashing state spending. 4.11pm: William Hague, the foreign secretary, has just told MPs that the government has decided to communications equipment to the rebels in Libya. He also confirmed that Moussa Koussa, the former Libyan foreign minister who defected to the UK, won’t be granted immunity from prosecution. 4.01pm: Here’s an afternoon reading list. • Steven Fielding at Ballots & Bullets says Ed Miliband was wrong to suggest last week that Ramsay MacDonald’s second government favoured the alternative vote. The minority MacDonald administration certainly established the Ullswater committee to look into electoral reform. But it did so only because it was a minority government, one dependent on Liberal support. Having looked at the evidence held at the National Archive I can tell you that by this point most in the party believed Labour could proposer under First Past The Post. Many also believed, like the minister Frederick Pethick-Lawrence that AV ‘would postpone an absolute Labour majority – perhaps for a generation’ fearing Liberal and Conservative second preferences would go to each other, not Labour and ‘encourage weak-kneed electors who are anti-conservative (and to-day vote Labour because they see Liberals have no chance) to give first choice to Liberals and second to Labour’. • Paul Waugh on his PoliticsHome blog suggests the Police Federation is running an advert about the government’s police cuts that would be too hard-hitting for Labour. • John Redwood on his blog praises Andrew Lansley. Some critics cry foul at the thought that the private sector might do what it can do best and at lower cost. Taken to extremes, that judgement would end all private contractors currently working within the NHS. Some argue that the Lansley reforms are back door privatisation, whereas the PFI/PPP/private sector contract regime of Labour was somehow not privatisation. These criticism are not thought through. Healthcare in the UK is under the umbrella of free care at the point of use and will remain so. Beneath that umbrella there has always been a lot of mixed working between public and private sectors. Instead of being ideological about it, why not let patients decide where and how they want to be treated with the advice of their GPs. Haven’t we got beyond the yah boo of public/private, in a service which has many interactions and hybrids between the two? 3.43pm: Andrew Robathan, the defence minister, has told MPs that some servicemen and women who have served in Afghanistan will be made redundant. That was inevitable because 55% of all soldiers in the army have now served in Afghanistan, he said. Robathan made his comment when he was responding to an urgent question tabled by Labour’s Jim Murphy about the Ministry of Defence redundancy programme being announced this afternoon. Ministers have already said that people won’t be made redundant while they are on active service in Afghanistan, but Murphy wanted to know if any of them could lose their jobs after their return to the UK. Robathan also condemned the fact that information about the redundancy programme was leaked to the Daily Telegraph. 3.17pm: The Unite union has issued a statement condemning the military operation in Libya. The full text is on the union’s website. Here’s an extract. Unite the union believes the attack on Libya by British, French and US forces is wrong and should be halted. While holding no brief for Colonel Gaddafi and his regime, and strongly supporting the movements now developing for democracy and freedom across the Arab world, Unite believes the present military intervention is a mistake … We urge the British government to think again, call a halt to the military action and urge a general ceasefire to be followed by international mediation. 2.39pm: The Labour party has put out a press release about a comment apparently made by Greg Barker, the Tory energy minister. According to The Daily Gamecock, an American online student newspaper, Barker told a meeting: We are making cuts that Margaret Thatcher in the 1980s could only have dreamt of. It does not seem a particularly reliable news report – it says that the UK spends £150bn a year paying debt interest, when according to the Office for Budget Responsibility the 2011-12 figure is £48.6bn, and it says spending is being cut by 75%, which is also untrue – but Labour’s Angela Eagle has issued a statement anyway. While Conservatives might dream about deep cuts, for millions of families it’s more like a nightmare. From this week millions will see cuts to their tax credits and childcare support as well as cuts to services they rely on like children’s centres and libraries. I’ve called the Tories to see what they have to say about this. Someone is meant to be getting back to me. I’ll post the comment when I get it. 2.32pm: No to AV have already released the names of more than 150 Labour MPs and peers who are supporting their campaign to keep first past the post. Today they’ve named eight more Labour parliamentarians who are supporting them, including Rosie Winterton, Labour’s chief whip. The others are David Hanson, Michael Dugher, Louise Ellman, Steve Rotheram, Bridget Phillipson, Geoffrey Robinson and Lady Dean. 1.20pm: Here’s a lunchtime summary. • Andrew Lansley is preparing to make a statement to MPs about the government’s health bill. Although ministers have ruled out a U-turn, the government needs to announce some changes to prevent a Lib Dem revolt and mayhem when the bill arrives in the Lords. The statement coincides with the publication of a report from Policy Exchang e, a centre-right thinktank, saying the reforms are being introduced too quickly. Lord Tebbit has also joined the chorus of criticism, saying that he is worried about “the difficulty of organising fair competition between the state-owned hospitals and those in the private sector”. (See 10.14am, 11.10am and 11.26am.) • Ed Miliband has insisted that he is committed to NHS reform. In a speech highly critical of David Cameron’s reform proposals, Miliband said that the status quo was not an option. “It is particularly incumbent on those who believe in the role of public services in our society to be always seeking to make them better,” he said. (See 12.12pm.) • Peter Robinson and Martin McGuinness have strongly condemned those responsible for the death of Ronan Kerr, the police officer. Northern Ireland’s first minster and deputy first minister put on a moving display of unity as they spoke at a joint news conference this morning. As the BBC reports , McGuiness said the dissident republicans responsible for Kerr’s death were “involved in a useless war against peace”. Robinson said the killing had “strengthened institutions, united our community and brought politicians closer together.” • Michael Gove, the education secretary, has claimed that some schools hide their naughtiest pupils and worst teachers from inspectors. He made the comment as he launched new guidance on school discipline . 1.16pm: It’s SDP reunion time. As I write, Shirley Williams is on the World at One criticising the government’s NHS plans. And David Owen is on Boulton & Co on Sky putting the boot into the NHS bill too. 1.04pm: Today the government and the Speaker seem to be keen to break the record for Commons statements and urgent questions. We’ve got five of them, in total. Here’s the running order. 1. Urgent questions on armed forced redundancies. 2. Statement from William Hague on Libya and the Ivory Coast. 3. Statement from Andrew Lansley on the NHS. 4. Statement from Owen Paterson on Northern Ireland. 5. Statement from Steve Webb on pensions. 12.12pm: At the end of last week we were told that today’s speech by Ed Miliband would be entitled “Public Services and the Promise of Britain”. But by the time Miliband delivered the speech this morning, its title was “The Future of the NHS”. Miliband said at the start that he was focusing on the NHS because it “should demand the full attention of leaders”. That seemed to be a polite way of saying “because the health bill is in the news and I want to have my say.” That’s fair enough. That’s what being in opposition is all about. We’ll hear what Miliband thinks about education and other public services another time, he said. As for the speech itself, it contained four key elements: 1) an assessment of Labour’s record on health; 2) a critique of David Cameron’s plans; 3) a mischievous offer to Cameron; and 4) a statement about his own ideas about NHS reform. The most powerful part was probably 2). On 4) Miliband combined a bold statement about the need for reform with very limited detail about what this might actually mean. The full text is available on Labour’s website. Here are the main points. • Milband insisted that the NHS had to change. In a passage at the beginning of the speech, he even adopted wholesale the argument used by Cameron: that reform is essential, because without it, the NHS will not be able to keep pace with demand. Let me say at the outset that this is a debate I come to as a reformer. A reformer of the state as well as the market. It is particularly incumbent on those who believe in the role of public services in our society to be always seeking to make them better … An accountable public sector, just like an accountable private sector, is integral to creating a fairer Britain. My argument today is that to do that, to create an ever better health service, change will be essential. The new pressures on the NHS are too great, the new challenges too large for us to think that preserving the status quo will be enough. • Miliband said that, as a result of Labour’s reforms, public satisfaction with the NHS was now at the highest level ever. • But he said that some of Labour’s health reforms were “badly executed”. The GP contract changes, for example, failed precisely because they reduced, rather than enhanced, the accountability of GPs to their patients for evening and weekend opening – although later reforms made up much of the ground … The frequent reorganisation of the size and shape of primary care trusts frankly did not take sufficient account of the costs and problems they caused. • He described the health bill as “a bad bill, built on bad assumptions and dangerous ideology”. At the heart of the speech Miliband set out a lengthy critique of Cameron’s plans. “On grounds that it doesn’t meet the challenges of the future, that it weakens rather than strengthens accountability and that it threatens the ethos of the health service, these changes are simply wrong,” he said. He was particularly critical of the impact the bill could have on collaboration in the NHS. The government’s plan risks fragmenting services into hundreds of GP consortia each with an uncertain financial future. Everything we know from around the world suggests free markets don’t work in planning efficient healthcare systems. Demand for services is less well managed and cost pressures rise … The defenders of David Cameron’s reorganisation plans will say that if NHS hospitals can prove that collaboration is in the interests of the patients, they will be allowed to do it. But frankly that is not a sensible way to run the NHS—an organisation of 1.3 million people. The value of collaboration is too important to our NHS for it to be reduced to something you have to prove is sensible to a bureaucrat in the regulatory authority. • He offered to cooperate with Cameron on an alternative policy. Urging Cameron to drop the bill, he said: “If there is a genuine attempt to address the weaknesses of the Tory reorganisation proposal then my party will enter into a debate about a new plan with an open mind, accepting that any NHS plan must be delivered within a tight spending settlement.” (I described this earlier as mischievous because it’s pure politics, designed to make Miliband sound more reasonable than Cameron. I think it’s safe to assume that it’s not an offer the government will accept.) • He suggested Labour would improve the NHS by strengthening national guarantees and entitlements. The passage about how Labour would reform the NHS was very thin. “Rather than being eroded, we should look at how we can strengthen national guarantees and entitlements,” he said. He suggested that there should be greater use of individual budgets for people with chronic conditions. And he said there be more emphasis on preventative medicine, on mental health and on the elderly. Perhaps what was significant was what he left out. He did not say anything about greater use of private provision or extending choice. 11.45am: I’ve got the text of Ed Milband’s speech on my desk now. I’ll post a summary shortly. 11.26am: Andrew Lansley is making a statement in the Commons about the health reforms this afternoon, according to the BBC. As Patrick Wintour and Denis Campbell report in the Guardian today, it is still not entirely clear whether the government’s concessions on the bill are mostly cosmetic, or whether they will amount to a substantial re-write. We should learn more this afternoon. 11.19am: Ed Miliband is delivering his speech on the public services at the moment. BBC News carried it live for about five minutes, but then abandoned him. I’ll post a full summary once I’ve read the text. 11.10am: You can read all today’s Guardian politics stories here. And all the politics stories filed yesterday, including some in today’s paper, are here. As for the rest of the papers, here are some articles worth noting. • Norman Tebbit in an article in the Daily Mirror says that the government should not press ahead with NHS reform too quickly and that there are problems with introducing competition into the NHS. What worries me about the reforms however is the difficulty of organising fair competition between the state-owned hospitals and those in the private sector. In my time I have seen many efforts to create competition between state-owned airlines, car factories and steel makers. They all came unstuck. The unfairnesses were not all one way and they spring from the fact that state-owned and financed businesses and private sector ones are different animals. I have long been a customer of the NHS and although I’ve never worked in it, for 15 years I was chairman of a charity which supported an NHS teaching hospital (to the tune of £14million) and saw it go through the agony of a PFI scheme … One problem is that within the NHS there are teaching hospitals, often centres of excellence, which apart from treating patients, also have the responsibility of training doctors and nurses. That all takes time and costs money. Private hospitals are under no obligation to do training and do not have to carry those costs. Even worse for the teaching hospitals, if the private hospitals can hoover up all the straightforward routine surgery, like hip joint replacement, where can the young surgeons gain the experience which would allow them to move on to more difficult surgery? • Jason Groves in the Daily Mail says that Iain Duncan Smith’s claim that most people want to keep working beyond the age of 65 has been rubbished by critics. Ros Altmann, of Saga, said all the research showed most over-50s wanted to retire as soon as was practical. ‘There are terrible consequences for many people if you increase the state pension age too quickly,’ she added. Labour MP Stephen Pound said: ‘I do not see people queueing up to work until they drop – there is a strong element of wishful thinking on Iain Duncan Smith’s part. ‘Forcing people to work on indefinitely condemns young unemployed people to the dole and destroys the life chances of older people who have spent 30 or 40 years working for a productive retirement – it is pretty cruel.’ • Tim Shipman in the Daily Mail says that Chris Huhne has attacked politicians behaving like headless chickens over nuclear power and that this appears to be a reference to Nick Clegg. The [energy secretary], who is said to be privately plotting to replace Mr Clegg as Liberal Democrat leader, ridiculed his suggestion that the meltdown at the Fukushima reactor could lead to soaring costs of nuclear power stations in the UK … In what appeared to be a calculated attempt to undermine the man who beat him to the party leadership, Mr Huhne told Radio 5′s Pienaar’s Politics: ‘I think that those countries which are running around at the moment with their politicians like chickens without heads, that’s not a sensible approach. ‘What we don’t know yet, because obviously it’s very recent, is what the full implications are going to be of Fukushima. ‘I don’t think it’s helpful at this stage to rush to judgements or to jump to conclusions.’ • Roland Watson in the Times (paywall) says elected peers will serve single terms of 15 years in a slimmed-down chamber of 300 under Nick Clegg’s plans for Lords reform. Instead of a fully elected chamber that was promised in the Liberal Democrat manifesto in the event that party took sole power, Nick Clegg will soon present plans for one that is 80 per cent elected and 20 per cent appointed. He has also bowed to pressure from the Church of England and reserved places for some Anglican Bishops, although many fewer than the 26 who sit on the red benches now. Mr Clegg’s blueprint for a transformed Lords was promised last year. It is now expected next month. • Mary Ann Seighart in the Independent says that Ed Miliband oscillates between being useless and being excellent. But at least he treats colleagues well. Take the example of Alan Johnson. The former home secretary had supported David Miliband for leader, but was called in by Ed the day after the leadership election. Johnson didn’t shake his hand or congratulate him, but instead told him everything he was angry about and warned him not to appoint Nick Brown, one of the Gordon mafia, to be Labour Chief Whip. Johnson was pleasantly surprised when Ed said, “I know you supported David, but you must come in and tell me frankly when you’re worried about how things are going.” Johnson was then amazed to be appointed shadow Chancellor, a job he hadn’t even wanted. (Ed Balls, the man who did want it, desperately, sat next to Johnson in the Shadow Cabinet and, for the first few meetings, refused to speak to him.) Miliband followed Johnson’s advice and insisted that Nick Brown stand down as Chief Whip, a brave and sensible move, as the alternative would have been to endure a rival powerbase in the parliamentary party. He also sounded out James Purnell and Charlie Falconer – clever, Blairite former cabinet ministers who had supported David for leader – to be his chief of staff. Unfortunately for him, both said no. • Boris Johnson in his Daily Telegraph column reports on an encounter at a London tennis court with Tom Baldwin, Ed Miliband’s new communications director. Now I want you to know that I didn’t intend to earwig on the private conversation of Labour’s chief spin doctor. I just happened to be near the path on which he happened to be walking, and though I don’t think he had spotted me, I could not help hearing what he said. “OK, OK,” said the top Labour press man, “the Line is…” I tensed. I fumbled for the ball. The LINE! … “From our point of view,” said Baldwin, as I boggled with excitement, “the key message today has got to be …” Here it came, I thought. This is what he is paid for. This is the thought that will tee up critical journalists across the country, give them their agenda, help them mount their attacks on the Government. “… that it’s all a complete mess,” said Tom Baldwin. 10.14am: Policy Exchange, the centre-right thinktank, has published a report today urging the government to slow the pace of its NHS reforms (pdf). Here’s the key passage. In recent years, GP involvement in commissioning has received widespread support from politicians of all parties and across the NHS. It would be a loss to everyone if it were discredited and the emerging consensus destroyed through overly rapid implementation. The changes that are planned are a natural next step from trials in the 1990s and from Labour’s practice-based commissioning programme. However, the government has lost many potential supporters, both inside and outside the NHS, through pressing ahead with them so quickly. If these issues are simply swept under the carpet then patient care may suffer in the transfer to the new system and further undermine confidence in the proposals. On the other hand, if the hard work is done to slow things down, to bring sceptics back on board and to lay a solid evidence base for the scheme, then its potential to deliver real and lasting transformation in the NHS is enormous. 9.55am: Oliver Letwin’s penchant for blunt talk has got him into trouble again. Boris Johnson told a People’s Question Time event recently that he was “absolutely scandalised the other day to hear a government minister tell me he did not want to see more families in Sheffield able to afford cheap holidays”. At the weekend, in his new Daily Mail column, Iain Martin identified the minister as Letwin. (Letwin’s aides aren’t commenting on the story, but they haven’t issued a denial.) Today Denis MacShane, the Labour MP for Rotherham, has issued an open letter to the Cabinet Office minister about his remarks. Here’s an extract. I was saddened to read the remarks attributed to you that “We don’t want more people from ­Sheffield flying away on cheap holidays.” This is pure snobbery that is unworthy of someone with your wealth and privileged upbringing. It will confirm the view of many in South Yorkshire that this cabinet has the same contempt for the region that Margaret Thatcher and John Major showed as they targeted South Yorkshire industries and the culture of the working people of the region in the 1980s and 1990s. What is about Conservatives that they dislike Sheffield so much? Can I say these rmarks are profoundly offensive to all the people of South Yorkshire who has much right to enjoy a holiday as the millionaires in the cabinet. It is also an insult to the many people who work in the travel business and to the EU’s single market which has allowed low-cost airlines to fly from Doncaster, Leeds-Bradford, Manchester and the East Midlands and transport thousands of my constituents to holidays they can afford. 9.18am: David Ford, the justice minister in Northern Ireland, told Radio 5 Live this morning that the Police Service of Northern Ireland no longer needed a 50/50 Protestant/Catholic recruitment policy. According to PoliticsHome, this is what he said: The 50/50 recruitment policy was a short term policy to increase the number of Catholics in the police service faster than would otherwise have happened. It has come to an end because the need for it has reached an end. We see in recent interviews that the police service, approximately 37% or 38% of those who come in are perceived at Catholics. That is a very significant recruitment figure. It’s clearly a sign that the vast majority – Catholic, Protestant or neither – see the police service as their police service and in many cases want to be part of. 8.53am: Steve Webb, the pensions minister, is publishing a green paper on state pension reform. Jill Insley and Patrick Wintour have got a story about his plans in the paper today, and it’s the subject of Jackie Ashley’s column. Webb has been giving a series of interviews about his plans this morning. According to the Press Association and PoliticsHome, these are the main points he’s been making. • Webb said the current system was “utterly baffling”. He went on: “No one understands how the system works.” • He said the new system – involving a flat-rate, universal pension – would cost much the same as the current system. “It won’t be a king’s ransom,” Webb said. “We’re broadly talking about sending the same money but spending it in a simpler way. What we’re saying is, we take the complicated system, the state pension, the means-tested [element and] roll them into a single payment.” • He said that people who had built up entitlements under the current system would not lose what they had already paid for. • He said higher earners would lose out under the new arrangements. “The people who are the highest earners will still get the flat-rate amount instead of a larger state pension, so we will be spending less on the highest earners, but they will save while they are at work,” he said. • But women who have taken time off work to look after children would gain under the new system, he said. One of the groups who lose out at the moment through pensions are women, particularly those who have spent time out of work looking after children. They very often find they get a lower state pension. This new system will change that. It will mean that time at home, bringing up a family, caring for an elderly relative will be just as valuable as a paid job and I think that is the right way to go. • He said the government would consult on creating a mechanism that would automatically increase the state pension age as life expectancy increases. 8.41am: We’ll be focusing on welfare and the public services today. With David Cameron on a mission to rescue the health bill , Ed Miliband will be setting out his own thoughts on the future of the public services. And Steve Webb will be publishing details of the government’s plans for the future of the state pensions . Webb has already been giving a series of interviews this morning; I’ll post the highlights shortly. Here’s the full diary for the day. 8.30am: Michael Gove , the education secretary, visits a school in London to publicise new guidance saying headteachers will be able to press criminal charges against pupils who make false allegations against teachers in England. 11am: Ed Miliband delivers a speech on the future of public services . He will use it to urge David Cameron to shelve his plans to NHS reform and to convene cross-party talks on the NHS’s future instead. 3.30pm: Steve Webb , the pensions minister, is expected to make a statement in the Commons about the government’s plans for a universal state pension . 4pm: The Ministry of Defence is to announce details of its army and navy redundancy programme . As usual, I’ll be covering all the breaking political news, as well as looking at the papers and bringing you the best politics from the web. I’ll post a lunchtime summary at around 1pm, and an afternoon one at about 4pm. Andrew Sparrow guardian.co.uk

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Ivory Coast’s violent outburst: U.N. Warns of bloodbath; Hillary Clinton responds

Click here to view this media Here’s an overview explaining the past few decades of the situation in the Ivory Coast from the BBC , just to catch you up on some past events and what’s led to the present humanitarian disaster. Things are falling apart in a big way in as the news comes pouring in. Because democratically defeated President Laurent Gbagbo refuses to leave, the violence has hit a crescendo with as many as 1,000 people reportedly being killed in a frenzied spate of violence. 04/04 The United Nations is warning of a possible bloodbath: Philippe Hugon, a professor at the Institute for International and Strategic Relations, said the international response to the crisis in Ivory Coast had been weak and contrasted unfavourably with the UN Security Council’s actions in Libya. The United Nations has started to evacuate its staff from Abidjan ahead of a bloody final battle for Ivory Coast’s commercial capital that is expected to start today. Laurent Gbagbo, who has refused international appeals to stand down after losing an election last year, has ordered his supporters into the streets to form a “human shield” around him while the forces of Alassane Ouattara, the President-elect, have been massing on the outskirts of the city.”We are in the last kilometre of a marathon, the last step, which is always the toughest,” UN spokesman Hamadun Touré told The Independent by telephone from Abidjan. Oatarra’s forces need to be held accountable for any bloodshed they spill. He denies any role : Ouattara denies all responsibility for massacre, at this point. Ten thousand UN peacekeepers have been deployed in the West African nation and hundreds more French troops landed yesterday at Abidjan’s airport, which has been under French control since Saturday. Some 1,500 foreigners were under French protection and were being evacuated. Professor Hugon said that Mr Gbagbo’s attempts to incite violence against foreigners in Abidjan risked igniting an intercommunal bloodbath in the rest of the country: “The problem in Ivory Coast is not an ethnic problem, or a religious one. The problem is abuse of power and the way that ethnic issues are being exploited.” Since I questioned Ben Rhodes last week about the Ivory Coast situation it appears that the Obama administration is becoming more active. I’m not saying I’m responsible, but it helps to push. Hillary Clinton released this strong statement over the weekend: Violence in Cote d’Ivoire We are deeply concerned by the dangerous and deteriorating situation in Cote d’Ivoire, including recent reports of gross human rights abuses and potential massacres in the west. The United States calls on former President Laurent Gbagbo to step down immediately. His continuing refusal to cede power to the rightful winner of the November 2010 elections, Alassane Ouattara, has led to open violence in the streets, chaos in Abidjan and throughout the country, and serious human rights violations. Gbagbo is pushing Cote d’Ivoire into lawlessness. The path forward is clear. He must leave now so the conflict may end. Both parties bear responsibility to respect the rights and ensure the safety of the citizens of Cote d’Ivoire. We also call on the forces of President Ouattara to respect the rules of war and stop attacks on civilians. President Ouattara’s troops must live up to the ideals and vision articulated by their elected leader. At the same time, we call on the UN peacekeeping mission to aggressively enforce its mandate to protect civilians. As President Ouattara takes the reins of government, he must prevent his troops from carrying out reprisals and revenge attacks against their former foes. The people of Cote d’Ivoire await and deserve the peace, security, and prosperity he has promised, and that they have for so long been denied. I’m calling on the administration to get more involved and send aid to Liberia, where thousands of refugees are fleeing to. They desperately need supplies since that country can barely take care of their own population, This influx of Ivorians is a real hardship and they need our help .And if humanitarian reasons are a key to the president’s foreign policy then he should see what he can do to curtail the spread of violence ASAP. Here’s what’s been happening. Mr Gbagbo has been holed up in Abidjan as he refuses to give up power after he lost the election and that’s fueling what’s beginning to turn into a very bad situation. 4/03 Battle for Abidjan intensifies Heavy artillery fire has been heard as the troops fight for key sites including the presidential palace. Four UN soldiers were seriously wounded by Mr Gbagbo’s forces on Saturday. Further details have meanwhile emerged about the deaths of as many as 1,000 civilians in the west of the country. Catholic charity Caritas said they had been shot or hacked to death with machetes in a part of Duekoue, controlled by troops loyal to Mr Ouattara. There has been fierce fighting outside the presidential palace, the headquarters of state television and the Agban military base on Saturday, with artillery and machine-gun fire echoing throughout the southern city. Wounded soldiers loyal to Mr Ouattara were seen being rushed to a hospital outside the city, while confident-looking reinforcements headed the other way. Special forces troops loyal to Mr Gbagbo fired a rocket-propelled grenade at a UN armoured personnel carrier, seriously wounding four peacekeepers carrying out a humanitarian mission, the UN said. — The BBC’s Andrew Harding in the capital, Yamoussoukro, say the ferocity of the fighting makes it hard to gauge the ebb and flow of the battle. Tens of thousands of women, men and children have fled fighting in Duekoue since Monday Mr Ouattara’s forces say they are preparing for a final push, but they are clearly encountering stronger resistance than expected. UN Secretary General Ban Ki-moon told the BBC: “At this time, I strongly urge Mr Gbagbo to step down and transfer power to the legitimately elected president… Mr Ouattara.” Once Mr Gbagbo had gone, Mr Ban said he expected Mr Ouattara to begin the process of reconciliation and restore the rule of law. Here’s what scares me. The west of Ivory Coast has also seen vicious battles between rival militias and ethnic groups. On Saturday, Caritas said its staff had found the bodies of hundreds of people in Duekoue, and estimated that 1,000 may have died. The killings occurred between 27 March and 29 March in the Carrefour district, which was controlled at the time by fighters loyal to Mr Ouattara, spokesman Patrick Nicholson told the Associated Press. “Caritas does not know who was responsible for the killing, but says a proper investigation must take place to establish the truth,” he said. Most of the 1,000 peacekeepers based in Duekoue had been protecting about 15,000 refugees at a Catholic mission there, Mr Nicholson added. The International Committee of the Red Cross put the death toll at about 800, while the UN said more than 330 people were killed as Mr Ouattara’s forces took over Duekoue, most of them at the hands of the rebels. However, more than 100 of them were killed by Mr Gbagbo’s troops, it added. Tens of thousands of women, men and children have fled the fighting. The United Nations human rights office says it has received reports of major human rights violations committed by both sides in the conflict. The UN Dispatch reports: This terrible massacre, and the gains made by pro-Ouattara forces – who are now in Abidjan, trying to get Gbagbo to surrender – have suddenly caused mainstream, international media to turn their attention to the conflict. Many – including UN Dispatch managing editor Mark Goldberg – believe that this is Ggabgo’s “end game.” While pro-Ouattara forces swiftly took over key positions in the country, they are now encountering resistance from security forces loyal to Gbagbo. He retains control of the official TV station and radio, which continue to send the message that all is well and that Gbagbo has no intention of leaving his post. The presidential palaces are also under Gbagbo’s forces control. I’ll keep you posted.

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Nudity on stage – but how about off?

A ‘clothing-optional’ performance in Toronto suggests theatres should reach out to non-traditional audiences – naturists included You’ve probably heard this piece of advice dished out to a nervous performer before: to relax, picture the audience naked. Last week, however, actors Maev Beaty and Erin Shields went one step further – and actually performed in front of a naked audience. In what may be a theatrical first, they held a special clothing-optional performance of their play Montparnasse at Toronto’s Theatre Passe Muraille. “I would say the advice should probably be rewritten,” Beaty joked to me over the weekend, confessing that, rather than relaxing her, all the naked flesh reflecting the footlights briefly made her self-conscious. “It was like a whitey-pink wall facing us. It was incredible.” Since the end of the 1960s, nudity has been a fairly common sight on stage, from Hair to Ian McKellen’s King Lear. Nudity in the audience, however, has remained the kind of thing that gets you arrested – as Pee Wee Herman learned . Thursday night’s groundbreaking performance of Beaty and Shields’s acclaimed two-woman show about nude life-models in 1920s Paris was the result of some creative thinking about how to get bums in seats – literally, as it turned out. Wanting to reach out beyond Toronto’s usual theatre-going crowd, Groundwater Productions and Theatre Passe Muraille targeted all sorts of niche audiences: models, art students and, by programming two performances with American Sign Language interpretation, the city’s deaf community. But the most unconventional idea was the brainchild of producer Gideon Arthurs: since Montparnasse is such a flesh-friendly show – the two actors are frequently nude as their characters pose for the likes of Picasso, Chagall, Pascin and Soutine – why not invite naturists to a private performance? Bare Oaks Family Naturist Park helped the theatre company out by creating a Facebook group , and soon naturists were buying tickets from as far afield as Ottawa, Ontario, and across the border in Buffalo, New York. Eventually news of the clothing-optional performance leaked out to the general public on Twitter, where many mistook it for an early April Fool’s joke. “Seriously? Who’s paying to steam-clean the chairs afterwards?” tweeted local dramaturge Toby Mallone aka @shksprn. (It turns out that naturists don’t want to sit their naked bottoms down on dirty, public theatre seats either. “It was a BYOT event – bring your own towel,” Beaty explained to me.) Judging by the comments made to the actors and online, Thursday’s naturist spectators – atypical not only because they were nude, but because they were 80% male and not regular theatregoers – really appreciated being made to feel at home. And that’s ultimately the lesson others independent theatre companies may want to take from Montparnasse’s experiment. As the near-capacity crowd proved, reaching out to non-traditional theatregoers – nudists or not – is a smart move. What other untapped, if not necessarily undressed, groups are out there just waiting to be welcomed into the theatre? Theatre Naturism Kelly Nestruck guardian.co.uk

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Arnold Schwarzenegger launches  Governator cartoon

Star says cartoon, loosely based on his recent political career, will move from TV to film eventually Arnold Schwarzenegger on cinema screens? Inevitably, he’ll be back. While his first post-politics project is a TV cartoon series for kids called The Governator, Schwarzenegger told a press conference at the MipTV conference in Cannes today that the show will spawn comic books, digital content and ultimately a 3D movie. The star also said he is planning a return to the big screen in non-animated form. “I will also be in front of the camera, and I’m looking at many different scripts,” he said. “We have somewhat held off with that because we really wanted to pay full attention to The Governator.” The project is a collaboration between Schwarzenegger, branded entertainment firm A Squared Entertainment, comic books publisher Archie Comics and POW! Entertainment – the company headed by former Marvel Comics creator Stan Lee. The show is loosely based on Schwarzenegger’s recent political career, with an animated post-governor Arnie fighting crime and natural disasters while trying to “make it home for dinner every night”. “You will see more action in this series than you have ever seen before, but combined with comedy,” he said today. “This will not be a violent show. If you look at my movies, a lot of heads come off! That is not what this is.” Schwarzenegger denied that he felt pressure about returning to entertainment following his stint as governor of the (non-animated) California. “I was looking for, when I am finished with politics, to come up with something that would be a big surprise,” he said. “Everyone has been ‘Wow, I didn’t expect that at all’.” Schwarzenegger has been ever-present at Cannes already this week, with a blizzard of photocalls, interviews and even the acceptance of a prestigious Legion d’Honneur award. You might wonder why he needs to be so personally involved in the promotion of the new project, but it seems the location was a key draw. “Coming to Cannes for me is like going home,” he said, explaining that his break into the movies came at the 1977 Cannes film festival. “At a time when everyone was negative when I wanted to go from being a bodybuilding champion into movies, Cannes was different.” He affected unconcern over the financial prospects for The Governator, which is being touted to broadcasters around the world at MipTV. “None of us looks at this as a money-making thing – if it is successful, the money will come anyway,” he said, before stressing that the series is aimed at a global audience. “I think the people in Africa ought to be entertained, as much as the people in America, Australia or Europe.” •

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UK flight diverts in bomb scare

Fighter jets scrambled after apparent bomb threat to Thomson Airways flight from Bristol to Sharm el-Sheikh Fighter jets were scrambled to escort a British passenger plane to Athens airport following a security alert. The Thomson Airways Boeing 757, with more than 200 passengers on board, landed safely at Athens having taken off from Bristol bound for the Egyptian resort of Sharm el-Sheikh. Greek state television reported a bomb threat was made to a holiday company in Britain. However, the BBC said the threat was received by an Egyptian news agency and passed on to the plane’s crew. Security forces searched the plane at Athens airport. Thomson said the crew took the decision to divert to Athens “as a precaution and in the interest of safety”. A spokesman added: “The plane landed safely and there were no injuries. A full inspection of the aircraft is being carried out.” The incident, involving flight TOM226, occurred at around 1pm UK time. The Greek air force said two F-16 jets and a Super Puma helicopter escorted the plane to Athens International airport. Air transport Greece Europe UK security and terrorism Steven Morris guardian.co.uk

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UK flight diverts in bomb scare

Fighter jets scrambled after apparent bomb threat to Thomson Airways flight from Bristol to Sharm el-Sheikh Fighter jets were scrambled to escort a British passenger plane to Athens airport following a security alert. The Thomson Airways Boeing 757, with more than 200 passengers on board, landed safely at Athens having taken off from Bristol bound for the Egyptian resort of Sharm el-Sheikh. Greek state television reported a bomb threat was made to a holiday company in Britain. However, the BBC said the threat was received by an Egyptian news agency and passed on to the plane’s crew. Security forces searched the plane at Athens airport. Thomson said the crew took the decision to divert to Athens “as a precaution and in the interest of safety”. A spokesman added: “The plane landed safely and there were no injuries. A full inspection of the aircraft is being carried out.” The incident, involving flight TOM226, occurred at around 1pm UK time. The Greek air force said two F-16 jets and a Super Puma helicopter escorted the plane to Athens International airport. Air transport Greece Europe UK security and terrorism Steven Morris guardian.co.uk

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‘Porter poisoned school soup’

Trainee chef says drain cleaner was poured into the soup by Maxwell Cook, who denies administering poison A trainee chef has told of her shock at seeing a kitchen porter at a top public school allegedly try to poison a pot of carrot and coriander soup. Louise Samples, 21, was so stunned to see Maxwell Cook pour a cleaning product into the soup at Stowe school that she did not at first tell anyone, a court heard. Cook, 58, denies attempting to administer poison with intent to injure, aggrieve or annoy. On the first day of his trial, Samples told Aylesbury crown court she had seen him in the kitchen pouring a product used to unblock drains into the soup pot. She said: “I was extremely shocked at what I saw and I carried on walking. I didn’t feel comfortable enough to approach him.” Cook’s defence barrister, Henry James, asked Samples whether in fact it was she had who poisoned the soup to discredit the chef, with whom she was competing for a job. But the trainee denied this, telling the court in a shaky voice: “Everyone I work with is like a second family to me.” The presence of the cleaning product in the soup on 11 March last year was detected during a routine tasting, the court heard, and no pupils or staff at the £27,000-a-year school in Buckinghamshire were hurt. If ingested, the toxic liquid can cause irritation, vomiting and swelling of the throat. School meals Private schools Schools Crime Steven Morris guardian.co.uk

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‘Porter poisoned school soup’

Trainee chef says drain cleaner was poured into the soup by Maxwell Cook, who denies administering poison A trainee chef has told of her shock at seeing a kitchen porter at a top public school allegedly try to poison a pot of carrot and coriander soup. Louise Samples, 21, was so stunned to see Maxwell Cook pour a cleaning product into the soup at Stowe school that she did not at first tell anyone, a court heard. Cook, 58, denies attempting to administer poison with intent to injure, aggrieve or annoy. On the first day of his trial, Samples told Aylesbury crown court she had seen him in the kitchen pouring a product used to unblock drains into the soup pot. She said: “I was extremely shocked at what I saw and I carried on walking. I didn’t feel comfortable enough to approach him.” Cook’s defence barrister, Henry James, asked Samples whether in fact it was she had who poisoned the soup to discredit the chef, with whom she was competing for a job. But the trainee denied this, telling the court in a shaky voice: “Everyone I work with is like a second family to me.” The presence of the cleaning product in the soup on 11 March last year was detected during a routine tasting, the court heard, and no pupils or staff at the £27,000-a-year school in Buckinghamshire were hurt. If ingested, the toxic liquid can cause irritation, vomiting and swelling of the throat. School meals Private schools Schools Crime Steven Morris guardian.co.uk

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