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npower raises gas and electricity prices – the fifth of ‘big six’ firms to do so

German-owned company increases prices by 15.7% and 7.2% respectively, adding £134 a year to the average bill Millions of Britons face substantially higher energy bills after npower became the fifth of the “big six” providers to raise gas and electricity prices in the past two months, blaming the “volatile global wholesale market” for the increase. The company, owned by Germany’s RWE, said it will increase average gas prices by 15.7% and electricity by 7.2% from 1 October, adding 37p a day or £134 a year to the average bill. This will mean an average energy bill of £1,188 a year for npower’s 6.5 million UK customers. Kevin Miles, chief commercial officer at RWE npower, said: “I know it hurts everyone when we put up prices and I wish we didn’t have to. With reduced quantities of North Sea gas, we are now forced to buy energy on the volatile global wholesale market. World events have pushed up prices and we believe this trend will continue.” The company follows Scottish Power, British Gas, Scottish & Southern Energy and E.ON in announcing price hikes, blaming wholesale price increases and pointing to the nuclear crisis in Japan, the Arab spring uprisings and the nuclear shutdown in Germany as the reason. EDF is the only one of the big six – which between them provide 99% of the energy used in UK households – not to have raised its prices. Miles pointed out that npower’s price increases were significantly below the tariff increases of between 10% and 19% on gas and electricity introduced by its rivals . Although wholesale energy prices have risen significantly this year, they are still down about a third from their peak in 2008, while average domestic energy bills have risen to record levels. Miles said: “Although our half year profits were better than last year, they do not begin to match the billions of pounds we are investing in energy for the future.” Energy bills Consumer affairs Household bills Family finances Utilities Gas Tom Bawden guardian.co.uk

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Bill Clinton Makes Fun of Rick Perry’s Anti-Washington Sentiment

Bill Clinton’s comments about Rick Perry yesterday were classic. Via TalkingPointsMemo : The former president elaborated: “And he’s saying ‘Oh, I’m going to Washington to make sure that the federal government stays as far away from you as possible — while I ride on Air Force One and that Marine One helicopter and go to Camp David and travel around the world and have a good time.’ I mean, this is crazy.” Bill Clinton seems to underestimate our nation’s capacity for crazy, I think. I watched this right before hearing The Five on Fox News extol Perry’s virtues as religious (but not too religious) and a “job creator.” Click here to view this media If I may take a moment to point out that those wonderful jobs Rick Perry “created” are largely minimum wage, no-benefit jobs . And just out of curiosity, how does this sudden swoon for Perry’s claim to be Governor Jobs square with the TeaPublican claim that “government doesn’t create jobs.” Can he have it both ways? Well, IOKIYAR ( It’s okay if you’re a republican ), right?

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Gunmen kill four members of government-backed Iraqi militia

Killings follow bombings across country in which at least 68 people died in apparently co-ordinated attacks Gunmen dressed in Iraqi army uniforms have killed four members of the government-backed Sunni Sahwa militia after dragging them from a mosque near Baghdad after Monday night prayers, security sources said. The killings followed bombings across the country in which at least 68 people died in apparently co-ordinated attacks . The authorities blamed Sunni Islamist al-Qaida affiliates intent on a show of force before the withdrawal of US troops by the end of year. “Individuals from the Islamic State of Iraq (ISI), wearing army uniforms, entered al-Tawab mosque and called names of people from a list. They took worshippers and shot them,” Qasim al-Hamdani, a former Sahwa militia member, said. An interior ministry source said the gunmen left a note near the bodies in which they claimed to belong to the ISI The killing happened in Sayafiya, 12 miles (20km) south of Baghdad. Evening prayers are particularly associated with the holy month of Ramadan, which began two weeks ago. “The army brought us four bodies of Sahwa members and three wounded. At the beginning we thought the three wounded were also killed because they were badly injured,” a policeman who works in a hospital in a nearby town said. The Sahwa militia, or Awakening Council, is made up of former insurgents from the Sunni minority who turned against al-Qaida. It was formed in late 2006 – mostly by Sunni tribal sheikhs, with the help of the US military – during sectarian bloodshed in which tens of thousands of people were killed. Al-Qaida managed to regroup forces in the southern parts of Baghdad, forcing many Sahwa fighters to leave amid fears of reprisals, Hamdani said. “We sacrifice our lives and put our families in danger, but we’ve got nothing in return from the government,” he added. “Leaving Sahwa was my best choice to spare myself a bullet in the head.” Sahwa militia members work with Iraqi forces in manning security checkpoints in the mainly Sunni areas across the country. The integration of former Sahwa fighters into the government is widely considered a key to stabilising Iraq amid concerns that the new Shia-led government is not carrying out a promise to hire them. Last week, ISI warned members of Sahwa to rejoin the insurgent ranks or face consequences. Al-Qaida in Iraq has suffered severe blows to its leadership, but Monday’s attacks showed it is still resilient. Iraq al-Qaida Global terrorism Middle East guardian.co.uk

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Anna Hazare: anti-corruption activist’s arrest sparks protests across India

Thousands take to the streets after police detain Anna Hazare, who was due to begin hunger strike against graft Thousands of people have taken to the streets after police detained India’s most prominent anti-corruption campaigner, hours before he was due to begin an indefinite hunger strike to demand tough new laws against graft. More than 1,300 people had been arrested in Delhi by mid-afternoon on Tuesday, local media said. The detention of 74-year-old Anna Hazare and many of his followers prompted an outcry, with opposition politicians accusing the beleaguered administration of the prime minister, Manmohan Singh, of repeating draconian crackdowns of the 1970s or the actions of British former imperial rulers. “This is murder of democracy,” said Arun Jaitley, a senior leader of the opposition Bharatiya Janata party. As news of Hazare’s detention spread, hundreds of impromptu demonstrations broke out across India as protesters, some wearing masks of Hazare or carrying banners bearing anti-corruption slogans, poured on to the streets. Some carried placards calling for a “revolution against corruption”; others waved signs reading “please arrest me”. Hazare was reported to have started his hunger strike in police custody. There were reports of protest in western Punjab, in eastern Orissa, in the far south, in northern Himachal Pradesh and in Ralegan Siddhi, Hazare’s home village in central Maharashtra state, where cattle were used to block traffic. Many senior activists were being held on Monday night. Kiran Bedi, one of India’s first female police officers who is widely respected for her anti-corruption campaigns, tweeted from detention that she had refused an offer of bail. Singh’s government has been on the defensive in recent months following a series of huge corruption scandals which, combined with rampant food inflation, have sparked deep public anger and sent poll ratings plummeting. The prime minister, 78, has been accused of being out of touch with public opinion. Certainly, Hazare appears to have tapped deep popular anger. Negotiations had been continuing over the activist’s planned public “fast unto death” for several weeks. Thousands of demonstrators were expected to converge on the capital to join the former army soldier and activist on Tuesday. “When you have a crowd of 10,000 people, can anyone guarantee there will be no disruption? The police is doing its duty. We should allow them to do it,” said the information and broadcasting minister, Ambika Soni, in an interview with CNN-IBN television. Dressed in his trademark plain white shirt, white cap and spectacles in the style of the independence leader Mahatma Gandhi, Hazare waved to hundreds of supporters as he was driven away on Tuesday morning in a white car by plainclothes police. He had earlier recorded a video to be released if he was arrested in which he called for a “second freedom struggle” in India , which threw off British rule in 1947. “The second freedom struggle has started … This is a fight for change. Unless there is change, there is no freedom, there is no actual democracy, there is no true republic, there is no true people’s rule. The protests should not stop. The time has come for no jail in the country to have a free space,” he said. Both houses of parliament were adjourned after the opposition protested against the arrests. Though politicians from all political parties have been implicated in corruption, many figures associated with the biggest and most high-profile cases of graft are from the ruling Congress party. The biggest, which investigators believed involved senior figures from a main coalition ally of Congress, may have cost the country up to £25bn. Other charges focus on the high-profile Commonwealth Games in Delhi last year. Opposition figures likened the crackdown on the campaigners to the 1975 “Emergency” when the then prime minister, Indira Gandhi, arrested thousands of opposition members to stay in power. Manish Tewari, a Congress party spokesman, said Hazare was surrounded by “armchair fascists, overground Maoists, closet anarchists”. A crackdown this year successfully broke up demonstrations by tens of thousands of followers of a fasting yoga guru protesting against graft. However, Hazare’s first hunger strike in April successfully won concessions from the government, which promised a parliamentary bill creating a special ombudsman with power to investigate and punish corrupt politicians, bureaucrats and judges. But the changes proposed by the legislation presented in early August were criticised by activists as insufficient. They accused the government of backtracking. An old-school social activist Anna Hazare, whose real name is Kisan Baburao, is a former soldier with a long history of campaigning. He is an old-style Indian social activist – evidenced by his spotless white clothes, the white cap, or topi, popularised by activists including Mohandas “Mahatma” Gandhi, and the pen in his top pocket as a marker of literacy. Hazare’s vision of India is both deeply conservative and reforming. A strictly teetotal Hindu, he has banned tobacco, meat and cable TV from the village where he lives and has campaigned against caste prejudice. Hazare also played a part in setting up India’s revolutionary right to information laws. He does not have a mobile phone. Earlier this year, his topi briefly became a sartorial icon with supporters wearing similar caps bearing the slogan “I am Anna Hazare” in English and Hindi. He is popular among the middle classes, the liberal elite and in the bigger cities. India Protest Jason Burke guardian.co.uk

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Police accessed BlackBerry messages to thwart planned riots

Detectives made breakthrough hours ahead of planned attacks in capital after scouring mobile phones of arrested people Scotland Yard stopped planned attacks by rioters on iconic sites across London hours before they were to take place after they managed to “break into” encrypted social messaging sites, it has emerged. Attacks on the Olympics site, upmarket stores in Oxford circus and the two Westfield shopping centres in east and west London were plotted using BlackBerry Messenger. Detectives made the breakthrough hours before the planned attacks after scouring the mobile phones of people who had been arrested during the riots. It gave them access to the messages planning riots and looting, which were bouncing around the heavily encrypted BlackBerry Messenger service. In effect by last Monday afternoon they were able to monitor BlackBerry messaging, and send extra officers to disrupt attacks on the high profile sites in the capital – attacks that would have heightened the sense of threat and danger felt by Londoners. On Tuesday morning police revealed they had considered switching off social messaging sites, including BlackBerry Messenger and Twitter. Testifying before MPs on the home affairs committee, the acting Metropolitan police commissioner, Tim Godwin, said police discovered they did not have the legal powers to do so: “We did consider seeking the legal authority to switch it off. The legality is questionable, very questionable.” He added that as well as social messaging sites being used to plan riots, it was a useful “intelligence asset” for police who were able to monitor it. Police chiefs last Monday sent officers to thwart the planned attacks on the Olympic site in Stratford, east London. Shops in the area also closed after “intelligence” obtained from social messaging sites, namely BlackBerry Messenger and Twitter, of conspiracies to riot. Godwin revealed that police were not “at this moment of time” asking the government for new powers to turn off social messaging sites during outbreaks of extreme disorder. On Monday the Guardian revealed that the government had drafted in the security service MI5 and the eavesdropping centre at GCHQ to join the hunt for those using social messaging to plot riots, and to work out how the heavily encrypted BlackBerry messaging could be “cracked” in future, in real time if need be. Godwin told MPs beginning their investigation into the riots that David Cameron had been wrong to tell the House of Commons last week that his officers had been too timid when faced with rioters and looters. Godwin, who confirmed he would apply to be the next commissioner of the Met, said: “I do not believe that the men and the women of the Met were timid, which is an accusation that has been levelled at us.” Also testifying was Sir Hugh Orde, president of the Association of Chief Police Officers, who said police had no inkling the riots would erupt. “What we saw, fundamentally different in my assessment, was almost nonexistent pre-intelligence. This was spontaneous rather than organised,” he said. The police chiefs again rejected the government’s claims that it had quelled the rioting by ordering a massive surge of officers on to the street. Godwin said he took the decision last Monday evening, after it became clear police were still being overrun as riots hit 22 out of 32 boroughs in London. The Met, Britain’s biggest force, needed help from 30 other forces. Orde told politicians they legally had no role in setting tactics. “If politicians want to make tactical decisions, they must take the responsibility and change the law to make that happen,” he said. UK riots BlackBerry Police Crime Mobile phones Metropolitan police London Vikram Dodd guardian.co.uk

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David Gregory Compares Perry’s Talk of Secession to Obama’s Health Care Law

Click here to view this media From this weekend’s coverage of the Ames Straw Poll in Iowa on MSNBC, another classic example of Villager, “both sides”, false equivalencies. From AmericaBlog — NBC’s David Gregory equates Perry’s secession talk to Obama’s push for national health care : Yesterday, we saw a stunning example of how the traditional media types equate the views of Democrats and Republicans, even when the GOP idea is so extreme it would undermine the stability of the United States. NBC’s David Gregory equated Rick Perry’s treasonous call for secession with Obama’s effort to provide national health care. Perry first talked secession back in April of 2009. Gregory seems to think they’re equally extreme. This conversation occurred yesterday on MSNBC following the announcements that Michele Bachmann won the Ames Straw Poll and Rick Perry had entered the race. It’s painful enough to watch Chuck Todd and David Gregory. But, this analysis from Gregory really shows how warped the media is: Chuck Todd: Perry-Obama would be a picture of sharp contrasts. David Gregory: You know, Perry talked about potentially seceding from the union. You think that’s extreme. Well people on the other side think that introducing health care reform for the whole country is akin to European Socialism. And as they noted, beyond just the ridiculous false equivalency, David Gregory just legitimized Perry’s wingnuttery and secession talk. Thanks Greggers. h/t Digby

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Are you thinking what I’m thinking – namely, that this British approach to last week’s London rioters might apply here? I wonder what would happen if Jamie Dimond and the rest of the boys had to sit down with the people whose lives they destroyed through their toxic financial games : People convicted of last week’s rioting and looting who are not sent to prison will be forced to do community work in the areas affected by their behaviour , Nick Clegg will announce today. The Ministry of Justice is to order the Probation Service to arrange for Community Payback orders to take place on projects associated with the damage caused in the disorder or in the places where it took place. Many will also be forced to meet the shopkeepers, homeowners and businessmen whose property was destroyed in the rioting in an attempt to bring home the consequences of their actions. Mr Clegg will today become the last major party leader to contribute to the debate on the causes and consequences of the rioting and will attempt to stamp a Liberal Democrat identity on the Government’s overall response. Aides said the idea was to ensure that first-time offenders did not get “sucked into” repeat offending as a result of taking part in the riots, but had a chance of rehabilitation. “Clearly some people are going to go to prison, but this is about ensuring that those who don’t, contribute to the areas where they’ve caused the damage and those communities can see that they’re doing that,” said one senior Liberal Democrat aide. “We also don’t want to create repeat offenders. Meeting victims has proved to be a very effective way of ensuring that people face up to the consequences of their actions and that’s what we want to see happening.”

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Donald Trump: Bachmann ‘Was So Unfairly Treated’ on ‘Meet the Press’ – ‘I Don’t Think I’ve Seen Anything Like It’

As NewsBusters reported , Congresswoman Michele Bachmann (R-Minn.) got quite a grilling from David Gregory on Sunday's “Meet the Press.” This caught the eye of real estate tycoon Donald Trump who told Fox News's Greta Van Susteren Monday, “Michele was so unfairly treated…I don't think I've seen anything like it” (video follows with transcript and commentary): GRETA VAN SUSTEREN, HOST: Obviously, you don't think that President Obama is being a leader. Take a look at the Republican — at least right now, the group that are running for president or still in the run. What — who's got the leadership that you like, admire? DONALD TRUMP: Well, I know a lot of them. I know Michele Bachmann. She came to Trump Tower about a month ago. She was great. She was a wonderful person. I mean, we had a great time. I don't know if Sarah Palin's running. I really like her a lot. I mean, I think she's a very good woman. We had the famous pizza incident, where we had pizza and I was using a fork and… VAN SUSTEREN: What's the difference between the two for you? TRUMP: There's not that much difference. They're strong. They get unfairly maligned by the media. And I was watching this weekend on “Meet the Press” — I watched Michele just get absolutely — she was so badly treated on “Meet the Press.” I watched that. VAN SUSTEREN: In what way? TRUMP: Just unfairly. I mean, the way the group went after her, it was so unfair. Michele was so unfairly treated. I've never seen — I don't think I've seen anything like it. And that's what happens to Sarah Palin also. So… VAN SUSTEREN: And did Hillary Clinton… (CROSSTALK) TRUMP: I think Bachmann has done well. I don't think Hillary's treated the same way. I like Hillary, too. She's a friend of mine. I think that the way Ms. Bachmann's been treated, the way Ms. Palin's been treated — I think they've been treated very, very unfairly by the press. VAN SUSTEREN: Why? TRUMP: I don't know. I mean, you ask me. They're conservative women. And I think that's probably why. Evidence suggests that's definitely why. Just ask New York Times columnist Maureen Dowd who last October included Bachmann and Palin in her list of “Republican Mean Girls, grown-up versions of those teenage tormentors who would steal your boyfriend, spray-paint your locker and, just for good measure, spread rumors that you were pregnant.” Any questions?

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Phone hacking: News of the World reporter’s letter reveals cover-up

Disgraced royal correspondent Clive Goodman’s letter says phone hacking was ‘widely discussed’ at NoW meetings Rupert Murdoch, James Murdoch and their former editor Andy Coulson all face embarrassing new allegations of dishonesty and cover-up after the publication of an explosive letter written by the News of the World’s disgraced royal correspondent, Clive Goodman. In the letter, which was written four years ago but published only on Tuesday, Goodman claims that phone hacking was “widely discussed” at editorial meetings at the paper until Coulson himself banned further references to it; that Coulson offered to let him keep his job if he agreed not to implicate the paper in hacking when he came to court; and that his own hacking was carried out with “the full knowledge and support” of other senior journalists, whom he named. The claims are acutely troubling for the prime minister, David Cameron, who hired Coulson as his media adviser on the basis that he knew nothing about phone hacking. And they confront Rupert and James Murdoch with the humiliating prospect of being recalled to parliament to justify the evidence which they gave last month on the aftermath of Goodman’s allegations. In a separate letter, one of the Murdochs’ own law firms claim that parts of that evidence were variously “hard to credit”, “self-serving” and “inaccurate and misleading”. Goodman’s claims also raise serious questions about Rupert Murdoch’s close friend and adviser, Les Hinton, who was sent a copy of the letter but failed to pass it to police and who then led a cast of senior Murdoch personnel in telling parliament that they believed Andy Coulson knew nothing about the interception of the voicemail of public figures and that Goodman was the only journalist involved. The letters from Goodman and from the leading London law firm Harbottle and Lewis are among a cache of paperwork published by the House of Commons culture, media and sport select committee. One committee member, the Labour MP Tom Watson, said Goodman’s letter was “absolutely devastating”. He said: “Clive Goodman’s letter is the most significant piece of evidence that has been revealed so far. It completely removes News International’s defence. This is one of the largest cover-ups I have seen in my lifetime.” Goodman’s letter is dated 2 March 2007, soon after he was released from a four-month prison sentence. It is addressed to News International’s director of human resources, Daniel Cloke, and registers his appeal against the decision of the company’s then chairman, Les Hinton, to sack him for gross misconduct after he admitted intercepting the voicemail of three members of the royal household. Goodman lists five grounds for his appeal. He argues that the decision is perverse because he acted “with the full knowledge and support” of named senior journalists and that payments for the private investigator who assisted him, Glenn Mulcaire, were arranged by another senior journalist. The names of the journalists have been redacted from the published letter at the request of Scotland Yard, who are investigating the affair. Goodman then claims that other members of staff at the News of the World were also hacking phones. Crucially, he adds: “This practice was widely discussed in the daily editorial conference, until explicit reference to it was banned by the editor.” He reveals that the paper continued to consult him on stories even though they knew he was going to plead guilty to phone hacking and that the paper’s then lawyer, Tom Crone, knew all the details of the case against him. In a particularly embarrassing allegation, he adds: “Tom Crone and the editor promised on many occasions that I could come back to a job at the newspaper if I did not implicate the paper or any of its staff in my mitigation plea. I did not, and I expect the paper to honour its promise to me.” In the event, he lost his appeal. But the claim that the paper induced him to mislead the court is one that may cause further problems for News International. Two versions of Goodman’s letter were provided to the committee. One which was supplied by Harbottle and Lewis has been redacted to remove the names of journalists, at the request of police. The other, which was supplied by News International, has been redacted to remove not only the names but also all references to hacking being discussed in Coulson’s editorial meetings and to Coulson’s offer to keep Goodman on staff if he agreed not to implicate the paper. The company also faces a new claim that it misled parliament. In earlier evidence to the select committee, in answer to questions about whether it had bought Goodman’s silence, it had said he was paid off with a period of notice plus compensation of no more than £60,000. The new paperwork, however, reveals that Goodman was paid a full year’s salary, worth £90,502.08, plus a further £140,000 in compensation, plus £13,000 to cover his lawyer’s bill. Tom Watson said: “It’s hush money. I think they tried to buy his silence.” Murdoch’s executives have always denied this. When Goodman’s letter reached News International four years ago, it set off a chain reaction which now threatens embarrassment for Rupert and James Murdoch personally. The company resisted Goodman’s appeal, and he requested disclosure of emails sent to and from six named senior journalists on the paper. The company collected 2,500 emails and sent them to Harbottle and Lewis, a leading media law firm, and asked them to examine them. Harbottle and Lewis then produced a letter, which has previously been published by the select committee in unredacted form: “I can confirm that we did not find anything in those emails which appeared to us to be reasonable evidence that Clive Goodman’s illegal actions were known about and supported by both or either of Andy Coulson, the editor, and Neil Wallis, the deputy editor, and/or that Ian Edmondson, the news editor, and others were carrying out similar illegal procedures.” In their evidence to the select committee last month, the Murdochs presented this letter as evidence that the company had been given a clean bill of health. However, the Metropolitan police have since said that the emails contained evidence of “alleged payments by corrupt journalists to corrupt police officers”. And the former director of public prosecutions, Ken Macdonald, who examined a small sample of the emails, said they contained evidence of indirect hacking, breaches of national security and serious crime. In a lengthy reply, Harbottle and Lewis say they were never asked to investigate whether crimes generally had been committed at the News of the World but had been instructed only to say whether the emails contained evidence that Goodman had hacked phones with “the full knowledge and support” of the named senior journalists. They reveals that their letter was the result of a detailed negotiation with News International’s senior lawyer, Jon Chapman, and they refused to include a line which he suggested, that, having seen a copy of Goodman’s letter of 2 March, “we did not find anything that we consider to be directly relevant to the grounds of appeal put forward by him”. In a lengthy criticism of the Murdochs’ evidence to the select committee last month, Harbottle and Lewis say they find it “hard to credit” James Murdoch’s repeated claim that News International “rested on” their letter as part of their grounds for believing that Clive Goodman was a “rogue reporter”. They say News International’s view of their role is “self-serving” and that Rupert Murdoch’s claim that they were hired “to find out what the hell was going on” was “inaccurate and misleading”, although they add that he may have been confused or misinformed about their role. They write: “There was absolutely no question of the firm being asked to provide News International with a clean bill of health which it could deploy years later in wholly different contexts for wholly different purposes … The firm was not being asked to provide some sort of “good conduct certificate” which News International could show to parliament … Nor was it being given a general retainer, as Mr Rupert Murdoch asserted it was, ‘to find out what the hell was going on’.” The law firm’s challenge to the Murdochs’ evidence follows an earlier claim made jointly by the paper’s former editor and former lawyer that a different element of James Murdoch’s evidence to the committee was “mistaken”. He had told the committee that he had paid more than £1m to settle a legal action brought by Gordon Taylor of the Professional Footballers Association without knowing that Taylor’s lawyers had obtained an email from a junior reporter to the paper’s chief reporter, Neville Thurlbeck, containing 35 transcripts of voicemail messages. The News of the World’s former lawyer, Tom Crone, and the former editor, Colin Myler, last month challenged this. In letters published by the committee, Crone repeats his position. He says this email was “the sole reason” for settling Gordon Taylor’s case. He says he took it with him to a meeting with James Murdoch in June 2008 when he explained the need to settle: “I have no doubt that I informed Mr Murdoch of its existence, of what it was and where it came from.” Colin Myler, in a separate letter also published on Tuesday, endorses Crone’s account. Their evidence raises questions about James Murdoch’s failure to tell the police or his shareholders about the evidence of crime contained in the email. Tom Watson said that both Murdochs should be recalled to the committee to explain their evidence. The former chairman of News International, Les Hinton, who resigned last month, may join them. Four days after Clive Goodman sent his letter, Hinton gave evidence to the select committee in which he made no reference to any of the allegations contained in the letter but told MPs that “I believe absolutely that Andy (Coulson) did not have knowledge of what was going on” and that he had carried out a full, rigorous internal inquiry and that he believed Clive Goodman was the only person involved. Phone hacking Clive Goodman News of the World Rupert Murdoch Andy Coulson James Murdoch Newspapers & magazines National newspapers Newspapers Nick Davies guardian.co.uk

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Too much television may shorten your life

Six hours of TV a day can cut life expectancy by nearly five years, research shows Watching too much television could shorten your life, a study suggests. Research carried out in Australia, and published in the British Journal of Sports Medicine, showed that every hour of TV watched after the age of 25 may shorten lifespan by 22 minutes. According to one of the report’s authors, Dr Lennert Veerman, from the School of Population Health at the University of Queensland, it puts long hours spent in front of the box “in the same ballpark as smoking and obesity”. “While smoking rates are declining, watching TV is not, which has implications at a population level,” he said. Last year, another Australian study found an hour of TV a day led to an 8% increase in the risk of premature death. “We’ve taken that study and translated it into what it means for life expectancy in Australia given how much TV we watch,” said Veerman. Australians watch about two hours of TV a day. As a result their life expectancy at birth is reduced by 1.8 years for men and 1.5 years for women, according to the study. Britons watch more than three hours of TV a day, according to the Broadcasters’ Audience Research Board. Too much sitting, as distinct from too little exercise, is associated with higher mortality risk, particularly from cardiovascular disease. “Logically we know that physical activity is good for health and so it’s not so strange that the reverse is not so good,” said Veerman. The report was based on an observational survey conducted in 1999-2000 with more than 11,000 participants aged 25 and over. Participants reported the amount of time they spent watching TV or videos in the previous week, when it was their main activity (ie, not doing the cooking or the ironing at the same time). The report also showed that a person who watches an average of six hours of TV a day would live on average 4.8 years less than someone who watches none. Television Television Australia Television industry Health guardian.co.uk

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