Police announce they have arrested a man and have him in custody after appealing for sightings of taxi A man has been arrested on suspicion of kidnapping Sian O’Callaghan, who disappeared after leaving a nightclub in Swindon on Saturday. Area commander Chief Superintendent Steve Hedley announced the news after police searching for the woman appealed for sightings of a taxi. “A short time ago a man was arrested on suspicion of the kidnap of Sian O’Callaghan and is on route to a police custody centre. Sian’s family have been informed,” he said. “Further information will be released in due course but it is not appropriate for me to make any further comment at this time.” The taxi, a green Toyota Avensis estate, was seen between Swindon and the Savernake forest near Marlborough, Wiltshire, shortly after O’Callaghan was last seen early on Saturday morning. Detective Superintendent Steve Fulcher, who is leading the inquiry, said: “I am urgently appealing for any witness sightings of a green Toyota Avensis estate with taxi markings seen between 3am-4am and 12pm-9pm on Saturday 19 March 2011 between Swindon and Savernake.” Police issued a further appeal over items they believe were in O’Callaghan’s handbag. A spokeswoman said: “Her handbag is described as a large dark-coloured bag with a beige flower on the side. “In her handbag she is likely to have had items very similar to the following: a distinctively patterned front door key; a black car key with yellow insulation tape; a Tesco Clubcard key fob; a plastic yellow Kinder egg casing containing a small animal with a furry belly; and lip gloss. “Sian is also believed to have been wearing or have with her a DKNY watch with fake diamonds.” Police released images of examples of some of the items. Hundreds of members of the public had been helping police search the forest but are now being asked to stay away. Specialist dog teams have been called in. Fulcher said: “We have made good progress in narrowing the search using a number of technologies and techniques and I believe we are getting very close to identifying Sian’s whereabouts. “While I still want anyone with information to contact police I am not asking for any more public assistance with searches at this time.” O’Callaghan’s family thanked the public for their help in the search for “our beautiful girl”. In a statement released by police they said: “We have been so touched by the support shown by the community that we wanted to express our thanks. “The sheer numbers of people who have given up their time to help search for Sian and distribute appeal posters are overwhelming and we couldn’t ask for better support from the public, police and media.” A reward of £40,000 has been offered for information leading to the discovery of O’Callaghan. The family said they were grateful for the reward and hoped it might help to encourage someone to come forward with information. “This is an extremely difficult time for us and we continue to hope and pray that our beautiful girl is found soon.” O’Callaghan, an office administrator, disappeared after leaving Suju nightclub at about 2.50am to walk the half mile to the flat she shared with her boyfriend, Kevin Reape. Analysis of her mobile phone records suggests that about 30 minutes after she left the club, her phone was somewhere in the 1,800-hectare (4,500-acre) Savernake forest, near Marlborough. Chief Superintendent Steve Hedley, area commander for Swindon, said further analysis of the records had produced several “hot spots” that specialist search teams were examining. “We have got a better idea of where we could be searching,” he said. “That doesn’t mean we are going to find anything specific but we have got more of an idea from the technology where to look first.” Crime Police Steven Morris guardian.co.uk
Continue reading …• Fifth night of air strikes on Libya as Gaddafi clings on • Air strikes break siege of Misrata but battle continues • Stalemate continues in Ajdabiya despite attacks Follow live updates 1.11pm: Rebel fighters ride in vehicles as they drive in the desert along the Benghazi-Ajdabiyah Road. 1.07pm: Tweet from ABC News . #BREAKING ABC’s Martha Raddatz: #Gadhafi sends up first warplane violating no fly zone — plane is shot down by French fighter jets. #Libya 1.03pm: Asked about the arms embargo, which affects both sides, Hague says the situation is under review and whatever decision is taken must be in accordance with UN security council resolutions. He waffles a bit about whether the African Union will have a role. The former Lib Dem leader, Menzies Campbell, presses Hague on the command and control issue. Hague points out that current discussions have not impaired operations. He can only reiterate that he is hopeful that the issue will be resolved soon. 12.58pm: Back on Libya, Hague insists that the operations enjoys strong international support, although some commentators, including the Guardian’s Simon Tisdall, dispute this . 12.55pm: Hague says there are contingency plans to get British citizens out of Yemen, but there is no guarantee that everyone can be taken out. Hague came under fire for Britain’s tardiness in getting British citizens out of Libya at the beginning of the crisis. 12.46pm: Hague says sanctions are being tightened and today Libya’s national oil corporation is being targeted, cutting off Libya’s oil revenues. Moving on to Syria, he calls on the government to respect the right of civilians to protest. On Yemen, the foreign secretary calls for dialogue between the government and the opposition. He says he has temporarily withdraw UK embassy staff from Yemen leaving a small core in Sana’a and is urging all British citizens to leave Yemen without delay . 12.41pm: We are taking the utmost care to minimise civilian casualties, Hague continues, with Britain having carried out 59 aerial missions and missile strikes. On the vexed issue of who should be in charge of the operation – currently under US command – he says expects an agreement soon on command transfer to Nato. 12.38pm: William Hague, the foreign secretary, is giving the parliament an update on Libya. We continue to take robust action, he says. The case for action is “utterly compelling” he tells MPs, citing shelling of Misrata and the continuing attacks on Ajdabiya. 12.26pm: The people of Zintan, 90 miles southwest of Tripoli, have begun returning from the caves where they sought refuge from government shelling in the last few days, Reuters reports. Gaetan Vannay, a reporter for Radio Television Suisse, told the news agency: “The people have started moving back from the caves where they were for three or four days. Life is starting back a little bit. A few shops are open. People are still careful. A lot of men are watching outside the city. It is still a city under military siege. But the mood has changed since Friday.” Eight rebel fighters have died in fighting around Zintan in recent days. 12.13pm: The Quilliam Foundation, a counter-extremism thinktank in London, has rubbished Gaddafi’s claims that al-Qaida is behind the protests – with some caveats. In a briefing paper released today (pdf) , it says: Since the start of the Libyan uprising, the Gaddafi regime has tried to portray its enemies as being part of al-Qaida or as seeking to establish an ‘Islamic emirate’ or a caliphate in Libya or in Benghazi. In reality these claims are without any real foundation. That said, the breakdown in Libyan government control over much of Libya, combined with the ongoing fighting in many parts of the country, clearly gives jihadists and extreme Islamists more scope than ever before to operate in Libya. In addition, international military intervention in Libya gives groups like al-Qaida new opportunities to present themselves as defending Muslims against western aggression. These two reasons alone show why the international community should remain alert to the threat of jihadist activities in Libya. 12.06pm: A French Rafale jet fighter takes off from the aircraft carrier Charles de Gaulle. French aircraft s struck an air base in central Libya early today in a fifth night of bombardments. A French spokesman, Thierry Burkhard, told a news briefing that around 15 French planes were deployed on Wednesday and a dozen overnight, leading to missile strikes on an air base some 155 miles (250 km) inland. The French foreign minister, Alain Juppe, defended the pace of the air operation, which has been led by France. He said five days was not long enough to achieve its goal of protecting civilians by stopping Gaddafi’s counter-offensive against rebel forces. 11.54am – Syria: AFP is reporting that around 20,000 people have gathered in Daraa, south Syria, for the burial of victims shot dead on Wednesday . 11.48am – Yemen: Presidential guards loyal to President Ali Abdullah Saleh clashed in the town of Mukalla with army units backing opposition groups, AP reports. The confrontation wounded one person. Protesters are planning a “day of departure” rally in the capital, Sana’a, tomorrow after prayers that could bring hundreds of thousands on to the streets. Around 10,000 people gathered this morning, chanting slogans such as “Go, go, you coward; you are an American agent”. The International Crisis Group thinktank says the political tide has turned decisively against President Saleh. His choices are limited: he can fight his own military or negotiate a rapid and dignified transfer of power. By choosing the latter path now, he has a chance of ensuring an honourable departure and, most importantly, of sparing his country a brutal and bloody civil war. ICG warns, however, that the most powerful current backers of the protest movement – Ali Mohsen al-Ahmar, Sheikh Sadiq al-Ahmar’s brothers and salafi leaders such as Sheikh Abd-al-Majid al-Zindani – are long-time regime insiders and symbols of the status quo. Over time, Ali Mohsen and the older generation in the president’s tribe, the Sanhan, as well as the al-Ahmar brothers, have felt increasingly marginalised by the concentration of power around the president’s son and nephews. Today, this rivalry within the Hashid tribal confederation is playing out in the context of the protest movement. 11.23am – Syria: Snippets of news are dribbling out of the country following yesterday’s protests in the southern city of Deraa . An official in the main hospital in Deraa has told Reuters that it has received the bodies of at least 25 protesters who died in in yesterday’s clashes. “We received them at 5 pm yesterday (1500 GMT). They all had bullet holes,” the official said. AP says that dozens of people held a sit-in in al-Mahata neighbourhood near the city centre. An activist in contact with residents in Deraa says the situation is still tense, with a heavy armed presence in the streets. 11.15am: The excellent Colum Lynch at Turtle Bay on the Foreign Policy website points out a little-noticed fact about the UN sanctions against Libya that could come back to haunt the international community. Like similar sanctions imposed on Iran, the move to cut off Gaddafi’s chief sources of revenue has the potential to inflict collateral economic harm on ordinary people. It marks a shift from the UN security council’s efforts over the past decade to develop highly targeted sanctions that punish a rogue government’s elite while shielding ordinary people from harsh economic pain. “If a stalemate continues and there is no regime change, these measures will starve the economy,” David Cortright, a scholar at the Kroc Institute for International Peace Studies at Notre Dame University and one of the country’s leading experts on UN sanctions, told Turtle Bay. “Sooner or later, and probably sooner, Libya will begin to face internal economic difficulties, and therefore, humanitarian difficulties.” 10.53am: Ian Black reports that Libya’s state run Jamahiriya TV is quoting a military source as reporting attacks against military and civilian targets in Tajoura, near Tripoli, at the moment. Tajoura was hit three times during the night. If confirmed these would be the first daytime raids in or near the capital since the coalition campaign began five days ago. 10.36am: And here’s a video showing what Libyan TV described as a military base in Tripoli which was hit overnight. 10.28am: Ian Black is in Tripoli, where he reports that Libyan TV has been showing images of civilian victims of the overnight bombing in Tajoura, east of Tripoli, which was apparently hit in an attack on a military base in the town. The official Jana news agency said it was struck three times, the third strike hitting rescue teams who were on the scene after the first two bombings. In the small hours of the morning foreign news agency reporters were taken to a hospital and shown 18 charred corpses, which were said be casualties of the latest attacks After five nights of allied raids, a certain routine has been established, with the action usually beginning around 9pm local time. But the latest action continued until much later, with sustained and wildly erratic anti-aircraft fire from batteries in central Tripoli as dawn was breaking. It is striking that the Libyan authorities have not announced any new casualty figures since the announcement on Sunday that 48 people had been killed and 150 injured. Nor has there been any breakdown of civilian and military casualties. 9.41am: Despite air strikes, Gaddafi’s tanks rolled back into Misrata under the cover of darkness and began shelling the area near the main hospital, residents and rebels told Reuters. Government snipers in the city, Libya’s third largest, were undeterred by the bombing raids though and had carried on firing indiscriminately throughout, residents said. A rebel spokesman said the snipers had killed 16 people. “Government tanks are closing in on Misrata hospital and shelling the area,” said a doctor in Misrata who was briefly reached by phone before the line was cut off. It was impossible to independently verify the reports. 9.30am: The Libyan state run Jana news agency reported overnight that several civilians were killed in a night-time raid in Tajura, east of Tripoli. The agency claimed Tajura was hit three times – with the third strike injuring rescue workers who were on the scene to aid those impacted by the first two strikes. 9.14am: France’s foreign minister has said the international military operation against Libyan leader Muammar Gaddafi’s forces may last days or weeks but not months, AP reports. Alain Juppe also said that he hopes the campaign in Libya serves as a warning to autocratic regimes elsewhere, including in Syria and Saudi Arabia. Juppe spoke to reporters Thursday, ahead of EU and NATO meetings expected to discuss how to better coordinate the campaign of airstrikes on Libya. 9am: Good morning, welcome to the Guardian’s live coverage of the continuing crisis in Libya. • Western air strikes hit targets in Libya again on Wednesday night, after the commander of British aircraft operating over the country said that Muammar Gaddafi’s air force “no longer exists as a fighting force”. However attempts at a Nato show of unity in policing a UN arms embargo was undermined by a third day of squabbling over who should be in charge of the air campaign . Amid arguments over the scope and command of the air campaaign against Tripoli, Turkey both blocked Nato planning on the no-fly zone and insisted that Nato be put in control of it, in order to be granted a veto over its operations, senior Nato officials said. • Nearly 12 hours of allied air strikes yesterday finally broke the Libyan regime’s five-day bloody assault on the key rebel-held town of Misrata. Residents said the aerial bombardment destroyed tanks and artillery and sent many of Muammar Gaddafi’s forces fleeing from Misrata, ending a siege and attack by the regime that cost nearly 100 lives from random shelling, snipers and bitter street fighting. • Despite the strikes, stalemate is reportedly continuing outside Ajdabiya, while fears are growing that more of Gaddafi’s forces are heading for Zintan, south west of Tripoli. The Libyan government denies its army is conducting any offensive operations and says troops are only defending themselves when they come under attack, but a resident in Zintan said Gaddafi forces were bringing up more troops and tanks to bombard the rebel-held town. Rebels forces in the east meanwhile are still pinned down outside Ajdabiya after more than three days of trying to recapture it. • The US chief of staff for the mission in Libya has said there have been no reports of civilian casualties as a result of the coalition’s action, the BBC reported . Gaddafi’s government has repeatedly claimed civilians have been killed by what it calls “crusader, colonial” attacks. Libya Arab and Middle East unrest Middle East Muammar Gaddafi Defence policy Nato Adam Gabbatt Mark Tran guardian.co.uk
Continue reading …Keith is not back on the air yet, but he is back on the web with his first Special Comment since leaving MSNBC. From his blog The FOK News Channel — Special Comment: Libya, Obama and the Five-Second Rule .
Continue reading …In pictures: The world’s biggest refugee complex, set up at the start of Somalia’s civil war, is home to more than 300,000
Continue reading …When asked where my books come from and what they are about, I’m often at a loss – the impulses are from the deep unconscious Following the publication of Tolkien’s Gown , in 2004, I was occasionally asked to give a public account of it, and by implication of myself. I found this rather difficult. Not for reasons of shyness – I love being in front of an audience – but because I didn’t, from the outset, know how to begin. I couldn’t do it. I still can’t, not without stumbling about, not in a nutshell. Give me 10 minutes, or better yet an hour, and I can tell you. But ask any publicist – and I did – and they will recommend that you give a quick and accurate précis of your subject. Can you, in one sentence, give a clear indication of what your book is about? Does this sound stringent, and unnecessarily taxing? It isn’t. “A bored bourgeois French doctor’s wife embarks on an affair, which doesn’t work out, so she kills herself.” If you change the integers just slightly, and make the husband a minor Russian functionary, you will have quickly defined the plot difference between Madame Bovary and Anna Karenina. Oh, but surely the differences and the details are what is important, not the summary of the plot? Of course. There’s something wrong with the question, if a publicist can frame it so blithely. Asking an author what his novel is about is likely to elicit a ferocious scowl, and the suggestion that if you are so interested, read it. You wouldn’t ask a painter what a painting is about, would you? Nevertheless, if you invited Flaubert to talk at the Bournemouth Writer’s Circle, or fancied having that bushy Mr Tolstoy to a literary lunch, you would expect them to sing for their suppers, and tell you, however ungraciously, what their books were about. “The morals of provincial life,” Flaubert might mutter. But when I finish a book, I am at a loss, and clam up (relatively speaking) because I cannot quite understand what I did, and why. They sneak up on me, books, and the impulses are often unconscious. Why was I so identified with my poor local Coventry City football club, so devastated by their repeated failure and bedazzled by their occasional success? Why did it matter so much? My book Staying Up: A Fan Behind the Scenes in the Premiership (1998) was catalysed by a story in the Sun, sometime in the summer of 1997, suggesting that Gary McAllister (remember him? Lovely, cultured player) was about to sign for Coventry. What? Surely that couldn’t happen. It did. And it left me feeling raw, as well as overjoyed. A few weeks later I made an appointment with Bryan Richardson, club chairman, and asked permission to write a behind the scenes account of the coming season. “What sort of book?” he asked. “I am,” I said, “a university teacher as well as a season ticket holder. I am trained in habits of analysis. But trying to understand what is happening at a Premiership football club by watching from the stands is like trying to infer the principle of locomotion by watching a train go by … ” (He nodded, and didn’t throw me out.) “I find this maddening. What I would love to do, for this coming season, is to be in on things, talk to you and to [manager] Gordon Strachan, be on the training ground, in the bus, the hotels, the dugout. To understand. And then to write a book about it.” To my surprise, and to his credit, he gave me the go-ahead, and by the time the season had ended I knew how a football club worked. Curiously, the effect of this was to diminish my engagement with the team, as if part of the appeal had been the aura of mystery that surrounded the progress of a football season, and imbued the players with their mystique. Tolkien’s Gown had a similar body of underlying frustration at its core. How can I reconcile a lifelong fascination with literature, with philosophy, with psychology, with the content and inwardness of literature, and at the same time be so compelled by rare book dealing and collecting – by the fetishisation of objects that had previously appealed to me only for their contents? This kindling was ignited, unwittingly, by the wife of a colleague of mine when I taught at Warwick University, to whom I (foolishly) showed a copy of my first catalogue as a rare book dealer, in 1982. She leafed through it. “How disgusting!” she said, and pushed it away as if it were child pornography. It took 20 years for that one to mature, but I got a book out of it, so I suppose it was worth the insult. With Outside of a Dog (2009) the genesis was more direct, and brutal. In my divorce some years ago, part of the messy settlement ended up with me losing all of my books, thousands of them, which apparently went with the furnishings of the house I also gave up. It had a powerful symbolic effect on me. I was devastated, nauseous, dizzy with anxiety. Why such a silly over-reaction? I am lost without something to read. I hate thinking, it makes me feel alone, and anxious. Reading deflects this, redirects the energy, allows me to lose myself in a story, a person, a narrative. So my ultimate terror, in this respect, is to have nothing to read. To lose my books, as it were. What, I had to ask myself, is the role that reading – not serious reading, just plain bloody reading – plays in my life? Why am I addicted to it? Because, in some inchoate way, it has made me who I am. So my most recent book was both generated by the loss of my books, and is a long reflection of what they had meant to me. I once heard that excellent Australian novelist Sonya Hartnett answer the question “Where do you get your ideas?” with an exasperated: “Where do you think I get them? I make them up.” I was consumed by admiration, and envy. Lucky her. I wait for ideas to come, and then they don’t. So, in the meantime what do I do? Fiddle and faddle about at the bottom of the garden at my writing desk, doing the sorts of things men do in their sheds. Every now and again a book happens to me. I neither let it nor impede it. It has a relentless quality that makes me pay that sort of fitful heed that I call attentiveness. The driver, it seems – and I have only recently recognised this – is that there is some unresolved and unconscious anger at the foundation of each of my books, which result when some set of internal contradictions is ignited. But if this is necessary it is certainly not sufficient. Loads of things, more and more things, irritate me. It’s one of the symptoms and pleasures of getting old. But just because my soul is filling with grit does not mean it is producing many pearls. Anyway, I don’t write about what irritates me – why bother? – I write about my enthusiasms. About football, rare book dealing, reading. Things I love. I just need the right gritty catalyst. I am now starting work, fitfully, on a new book, and having made myself aware of the unconscious motivation of my previous ones, cannot seem to locate the impulse that compels composition. Making a book, it appears, involves resolving something about which I am angry. I rather wish I hadn’t come to understand this. Making the unconscious conscious can be dangerous, and strip you of the power not so much of inspiration as of composition itself. This is why some creative people are anxious about entering psychotherapy, for even if it helps to resolve some issues it may depotentiate whatever it is that simmers in the darkness. But there’s always something that impedes the onset of a new book. And if there is nothing to be irritated by at the heart of this one – which is about lost works of art – I suspect that’s because I haven’t located it yet. Or it hasn’t located me. It’ll come. Rick Gekoski guardian.co.uk
Continue reading …The much-heralded ‘hydrogen economy’ never appears to get out of first gear. Are our politicians failing us by not pushing harder for hydrogen-powered cars? Why don’t governments push for more use of hydrogen-powered vehicles? Ashraf Abdo, via Facebook We seem to have been talking about the “hydrogen economy” for well over a decade now, but, like so many other saviour technologies, its arrival never seems to get any closer. Yes, there have been the showcasing examples of the Honda FCX Clarity and the CUTE (Clean Urban Transport for Europe) bus trials in London. But without the infrastructure to produce and distribute hydrogen as a fuel, these vehicles are little more than curios. It is significant, too, that talk of hydrogen seems to have dampened down in the US. After President Bush announced in 2003 that hydrogen-powered cars would be at heart of how America weaned itself off oil, the Obama administration has pulled back from promoting the technology with energy secretary Steven Chu stating in 2009 that support for research programmes would be curtailed because the government was “moving away from funding vehicular hydrogen fuel cells to technologies with more immediate promise”. Are our governments making a mistake by not investing much further in hydrogen? Or are there too many problems with the technology to see it becoming a genuine rival to oil as a transportation fuel? This column is an experiment in crowd-sourcing a reader’s question, so please let us know your views and experiences below (as opposed to emailing them) and I will join in with some of my own thoughts and reactions as the debate progresses. I will also be inviting various interested parties to join the debate too. • Please send your own environment question to ask.leo.and.lucy@guardian.co.uk . Or, alternatively, message me on Twitter @LeoHickman Hydrogen power Energy Renewable energy Ethical and green living Motoring Leo Hickman guardian.co.uk
Continue reading …Leprosy has officially been eradicated in India, yet 130,000 new cases are diagnosed every year. Richard Cookson and Seyi Rhodes report on the plight of the patients shunned by society Narsappa was just 10 years old when he was told he had leprosy, but the news changed the course of his life forever. People in his Indian village immediately began to shun him and told his parents that he had to leave. He says his mother started grieving for him “as if I was already dead”. Shortly afterwards, his father took him to a hospital two hours away from home and left him there. No one ever came to visit him and Narsappa never went home again. Now 42, he now lives in a leprosy colony on the outskirts of Hyderabad and campaigns on behalf of people affected by the disease. “I lie awake at night thinking about how I was treated and how I can stop others from going through the same thing,” he says. India may have one of the fastest growing economies in the world, but 130,000 Indians are diagnosed with leprosy every year – more than every other country put together. It’s partly because the country’s population is so huge but also, campaigners say, because the Indian government and some international donors are neglecting the fight against the disease. Hundreds of thousands of Indians suffer from leprosy and its debilitating after-effects. Given the number of new cases, it may come as some surprise that India announced it had eliminated the leprosy in 2005. According to a target set by the World Health Organisation, countries can announce ‘elimination’ when there are fewer than one case for every 10,000 people. Since then, the government has channelled funding previously dedicated to leprosy back into the general health system. Leprosy charities say that donations have also fallen significantly and some projects have had to close. Leprosy attacks nerve endings, destroying the ability to feel pain and injury, which makes patients susceptible to ulcers and infections. Over time, these infections can lead to the loss of fingers, hands, toes and feet if they are not treated properly. It can also cause blindness, facial disfigurement, and the ‘clawing’ of hands and feet. Many also face lifelong rejection, stigma and discrimination. There’s a widespread fear that the disease is highly contagious. In reality, 95% of humans are naturally immune, which is why campaigners call it the world’s “least contagious communicable disease”. While doctors are still unsure exactly how leprosy is spread (it’s probably by airborne droplet infection such as coughing and sneezing), it is easily treated with highly effective drugs available for free under a collaboration between the WHO and the pharmaceutical company Novartis. Nevertheless, even those who have been cured and are no longer contagious are shunned by society and forced to live as outcasts. India has an estimated 1,000 leprosy colonies that are home to hundreds of thousands people living their lives in the disease’s long dark shadow. Conditions in the colonies vary enormously: even though Shantinagar, where Narsappa lived, has no running water or toilets, the residents at least have brick houses and electricity. Other colonies are not so lucky. A leaked copy obtained by Channel 4′s Unreported World of a recent unpublished government study of the number of new leprosy cases in India suggests that the official figures don’t show the true scale, and it may be much higher. This was the first time in six years health workers have carried out extensive surveys. In one Indian state, health workers found the number of people infected was five times the official estimate. Dr Premal Das, the senior surgeon at India’s busiest leprosy hospital, which is run by UK-based charity the Leprosy Mission, says: “We have no idea what is the leprosy situation at the moment because for the last 10 years no NGO has been doing any active case detection work.” But he adds that his hospital saw 3,000 new leprosy cases last year – a record high. His hospital provides a wide range of leprosy services, from wound-cleaning to surgery. Das himself carries out 500 reconstructive operations a year, mostly correcting deformities to hands and feet. One of his patients is 16-year-old Pooja, who comes from Baripur village in Uttar Pradesh and was diagnosed with the disease just a few months ago. It caused the fingers on her right hand to claw. Thirty years after Narsappa was driven out of his village, she tells a remarkably similar story about what happened when she found out she had the disease. Through her tears, she explains how her neighbours tried to drive her out of the village. They verbally abused her and her mother, and told her parents she had to go. But Pooja was lucky – her parents stuck by her and the surgery will correct the deformity in her hand. Dr Das says that because the disease has been officially ‘eradicated’, the hospital is struggling for funding. “Because they’ve said leprosy is no longer a public health problem in India we are struggling with budgets,” he says. “It’s very difficult to convince a donor that the funds are actually for leprosy because they don’t think leprosy is a problem.” • Unreported World: India’s Leprosy Heroes is broadcast on Friday 25 March at 7.30pm on Channel 4. It can also be watched at channel4.com Health & wellbeing India Health guardian.co.uk
Continue reading …Guards clash with army units backing opposition groups in Mukalla, as anti-Saleh movement plans ‘day of departure’ Presidential guards loyal to Yemen’s president, Ali Abdullah Saleh, clashed in the town of Mukalla on Thursday with army units backing opposition groups who are demanding his removal. The clash wounded one person and highlighted the tension in Yemen, where top generals, diplomats and tribal chiefs defected this week to the side of democracy protesters who have been camped out in central Sana’a for six weeks. Army and presidential guards – a force headed by Saleh’s son Ahmed – clashed earlier this week in Mukalla, a coastal city in the Hadramout region, leaving one dead on each side. Saleh and opposition groups have both made proposals for reform. On Wednesday Saleh offered new presidential elections by January 2012 instead of when his term ends in September 2013. An umbrella group of civil society organisations called for a transitional council of nine figures “not involved with the corruption of the old regime” to draw up a new constitution over a six-month period ahead of elections. But the issue of what would happen to Saleh, who outlasted a civil war in 1994, a recent rebellion by northern Shias and separatist discontent in the south, was left untouched in the proposal from the group, called the Civil Bloc. Opposition parties said on Thursday they were tired of the drip-feed of concessions. “This talk is aimed at delaying the announcement of the death of the regime. The opposition does not need to respond,” said spokesman Muhammad al-Sabry. Saleh, in power since 1978, made the offer in a letter sent not only to the opposition but also to General Ali Mohsen, commander of the north-western zone. Mohsen said this week he was now supporting protesters in a blow to Saleh that has helped turn the tide against him. Mohsen and others defectors made their move after 52 protesters were shot dead in Sana’a last week. “The political tide in Yemen has turned decisively against President Ali Abdullah Saleh,” the International Crisis Group (ICG) said in a report. “His choices are limited: he can fight his own military or negotiate a rapid and dignified transfer of power.” Saleh reacted to the loss of his ally Mohsen, seen as Yemen’s second most powerful figure, with a series of meetings with military and tribal leaders where he warned against a “coup” that would lead to civil war. Saleh also has intelligence services on his side and security sources say he has beefed up his personal security for fear of an assassination attempt. Western countries and Arab allies, such as Saudi Arabia, are still worried about a power vacuum if Saleh goes that could embolden al-Qaida, which has entrenched itself in the mountainous Arabian Peninsula state. “We’ve had a good working relationship with President Saleh. He’s been an important ally in the counter-terrorism arena,” the US defence secretary, Robert Gates, said on Wednesday. “I think we will basically just continue to watch the situation. We haven’t done any post-Saleh planning,” he said. Protesters who have been encamped in their thousands outside Sana’a University for six weeks have hardened in their attitude towards Saleh, rejecting any idea of his remaining. They are planning a “day of departure” this Friday after prayers that could bring hundreds of thousands on to the streets. Around 10,000 people gathered on Thursday morning, chanting slogans such as “Go, go, you coward; you are an American agent.” Authorities have withdrawn the licences of al-Jazeera correspondents and ordered them to stop work, the Qatari channel said. Yemeni state media accuse the network of bias. Protesters are divided over what they think of Mohsen, an Islamist from the same Hashed tribal confederation as Saleh who was popularly regarded as the second most powerful man in the country before he abandoned his old comrade. “The country risks replacing the current regime with one bearing striking similarities, dominated by tribal elites from Hashed and powerful Islamists,” the ICG report said. Some protesters display the general’s picture on their tents in the protest encampment in Sana’a, but opposition leaders regard his motives with suspicion, and few would want him to have a role in any future transitional government. Yemen Arab and Middle East unrest Middle East Protest guardian.co.uk
Continue reading …Thousands of staff at up to 500 universities and colleges stage walkout in protest at changes to pension scheme and pay cuts Tens of thousands of university lecturers are staginga mass walkout over their pay and pensions. The strike by staff at up to 500 universities and colleges comes after a wave of action this week and last week. Some of the lecturers are protesting against plans to end final salary pensions for new members of their pension scheme, the Universities Superannuation Scheme. They argue the change would create a two-tier scheme in which new academics would pay the same as their older colleagues, but have a lesser pension. The lecturers are striking over what they say is a growing sense of insecurity over their jobs and what has been a real-term pay cut over the last two years. Universities say academics have had a 0.4% pay rise this academic year. Sally Hunt, general secretary of the University and College Union, which represents lecturers, said changes to pay and pensions had created “real anger” and the strike was a last resort. “Staff are sick to the back teeth of being told that their pay and pensions need to be cut to pay for an economic crisis created by others,” said Hunt. Professor Keith Burnett, chair of the Universities and Colleges Employers Association, said employers wanted to work with lecturers. “There is much uncertainty in higher education at present and this course of action will have the potential to cause further difficulties for students and institutions,” he said. The National Union of Students said it stood in solidarity with the lecturers’ strike. It comes as Aston University announced its intention to charge £9,000 tuition fees – the maximum possible – from autumn next year, while Bishop Grosseteste University College Lincoln said it planned to charge £7,500. Meanwhile, lecturers who teach English to immigrants are protesting against changes to the cost of their classes. From autumn, the government will only pay for lessons in English for non-native speakers if they are on jobseekers’ allowance or employability skills allowance benefits. The government will pay half the cost of the lessons for some others. Lecturers said some of their pupils would not be able to afford the lessons and this would mean classes would stop in some areas and teachers would be made redundant. Official figures show universities’ endowment income dropped by 39% in 2009-10, compared with the year before. The fees of international students from outside the European Union made up 9.6% of universities’ income last year, compared with 8.7% the year before. Lecturers Colleges Further education University teaching University funding Higher education Students Protest Jessica Shepherd guardian.co.uk
Continue reading …The physicist and presenter of the BBC’s Wonders of the Universe will be answering your questions, 1-2pm Thursday The final instalment of BBC Two’s visually spectacular and spectacularly popular Wonders of the Universe airs on Sunday. Six million people watched the opening episode and it was the first BBC factual show to top the iTunes chart. There have been grumbles, however – about dumbing down, deafening music and an excessive use of soaring scenic shots – which the presenter, Brian Cox, addresses in an interview in Thursday’s G2: “I may have been standing on a mountaintop, but what I was saying was about electro-weak symmetry breaking. Some people can’t see the content for the style.” Nobody would dispute his passion for science and his belief in the importance of passing some of that enthusiasm on to the next generation of young scientists. “Britain is squandering its lead in science and engineering,” he says. “We once led the world, and we can again.” When he’s not presenting television documentaries, Cox works on the Atlas experiment at the Large Hadron Collider . He is a member of the particle physics group at the University of Manchester and a Royal Society University Research Fellow. The professor will be answering your questions about astronomy, particle physics and the Wonders of the Universe between 1 and 2pm on Thursday. Brian Cox Astronomy Particle physics Physics Cern Physics Television guardian.co.uk
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