Train firms allowed to hit commuters with fare increases of 3% on top of the retail price index figure Rail passengers will be hit by an 8% fare increase next year, after the retail prices index remained unchanged. July’s RPI figure stayed at 5%, the Office for National Statistics announced. Under the government’s austerity drive rail prices will rise by the RPI figure plus 3% until 2014, meaning sharp price increases for passengers. The 8% rise can be used by rail companies as an average increase, meaning some journeys could face even larger increases. Rail minister Theresa Villiers told BBC Breakfast on Tuesday that longer trains would be provided in the future and that if costs could be reduced then above-inflation fees would end. Passengers were unimpressed by the impending increase in ticket prices. “This could drive people off the railways,” said Sharmaine Mackin, 25, who travelled from Bracknell, in Berkshire, to London Waterloo on Tuesday morning. “An 8% rise is not good news. I think the fares are already too high.” Her sentiments were echoed by other rail users. One woman, a secretary in her 40s who commutes between London and Farnborough in Hampshire, described the 8% rise as “disgusting”. She added: “I’m already paying more than £2,000 a year for my season ticket. That’s a lot of money.” A 60-year-old commuter from Farnham in Surrey, who uses South West Trains’ services, said a rise to his season ticket would make it “absurdly expensive”. “We already pay far more than rail travellers do in Europe,” he said. “My journey has improved over the years but this rise is not justified.” A 28-year-old woman engineer from Gravesend in Kent said: “Trains are so overcrowded that I can’t see how they can put up the fares.” Villiers told BBC Breakfast she could guarantee that longer trains would be provided in future, as part of a national upgrade that includes 2,700 new rail carriages. “We’re guaranteeing that there will be longer trains, we’re guaranteeing that into our major cities there’s going to be more space and more seats for passengers,” she said. The rail minister added that if costs could come down, then above-inflation fare increases would end. Passengers face the average rise of 3% above inflation for the next three years. The transport secretary, Philip Hammond, said: “We are now embarked on one of the biggest programmes of rail investment for 100 years, delivering more than 2,700 new rail carriages, a £900m programme to electrify more lines and the vital Crossrail and Thameslink projects in London. “Due to the scale of the deficit, these investments would simply have not been possible without the difficult decision we have made to increase rail fares. I know this decision has not been popular, but I hope passengers will appreciate the improvements it allows us to make.” He went on: “However, it’s absolutely clear that in the longer term the only solution is to bring the overall cost of the railways down. We have already begun work on this with the [Sir Roy] McNulty Review [of rail costs] and we are determined to succeed. “Better value for money on the railway will deliver a better deal for taxpayers and farepayers alike and will allow us to put the era of above inflation rises in regulated fares behind us.” On Monday Villiers said: “The scale of the deficit means that the government has had to take some very difficult decisions on future rail fares, but the long-term solution is to get the cost of running the railways down.” While the RPI remained at the same figure, the wider consumer prices index rate of inflation increased to 4.4% in July, from 4.2% in June, triggering a letter of explanation from the Bank of England governor, Sir Mervyn King, to the chancellor, George Osborne. Rail transport Transport Rail travel London Consumer affairs Theresa Villiers Adam Gabbatt guardian.co.uk
Continue reading …Home secretary says it is time to consider whether police need power ‘to impose a general curfew in a particular area’ in the aftermath of last week’s riots New police powers to clear the streets and create “no-go” areas for the public are being considered, the home secretary, Theresa May says. She said it was now time to consider whether the police needed a power “to impose a general curfew in a particular area” in the aftermath of last week’s riots. The home secretary said the government was also considering tougher powers to impose curfews on individual teenagers under the age of 16. In a speech in London May said the power to declare a general curfew was needed because existing dispersal powers only allow the police to declare a “no go” area with advance notification. “In the fast-moving situation we have seen in the last week we need to make sure the police have all the powers that are necessary,” said May. The home secretary also defended her decision not to delay the appointment of the new Metropolitan police commissioner to enable a foreign national such as Bill Bratton to apply for the job. May is also writing to Sir Denis O’Connor, the chief inspector of constabulary, saying that forces should be given clearer guidance on tactics, pre-emptive action, the number of officers trained in public order policing, the need for forces to assist others, and the appropriate arrest policy. O’Connor warned earlier this year that more than two in five forces were unprepared to help police major protests. May rejected calls from senior officers to reconsider the government’s 20% cuts to police budgets in the wake of the riots, saying the disturbances of the past 10 days showed the reforms were now more urgent than ever. “I am clear that, even at the end of this spending period, forces will still have the resources to deploy officers in the same numbers we have seen in the last week,” she said. “It’s clear to me that we can improve the visibility and availability of the police to the public. “It’s more important than ever that we do so, because we are asking the police to fight crime on a tighter budget.” UK riots Theresa May Police Metropolitan police London Crime Alan Travis guardian.co.uk
Continue reading …Anti-corruption activist Anna Hazare held by police after announcing plans to go on indefinite hunger strike Indian police have detained the country’s most prominent anti-corruption campaigner, hours before he was due to begin an indefinite hunger strike to demand tough new laws against graft. The arrest of 74-year-old Anna Hazare prompted outrage, with opposition politicians accusing Prime Minister Manmohan Singh’s beleaguered administration, currently in the middle of its second term, of repeating draconian crackdowns of the 1970s. A series of impromptu demonstrations were organised across the country in support of Hazare. More than 250 campaigners associated with him, including other well-known anti-corruption activists, were also detained by police. There were reports of protests in western Punjab, in eastern Orissa, in the far south, in northern Himachel Pradesh and in Ralegan Siddhi, Hazare’s home village in central Maharashtra state. Singh’s government has been on the defensive in recent months after a series of corruption scams which, combined with rampant food inflation, have sparked public anger and sent poll ratings plummeting. The campaign of Hazare, a controversial but respected figure , has rattled officials and politicians. Negotiations had been continuing over his 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. “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,” argued 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 independence leader Mahatma Gandhi, Hazare was driven away in a white car by plainclothes police, waving to hundreds of supporters. A police spokesman said the veteran campaigner and four others had been placed under “preventive arrest”. No charges have yet been filed. Hazare recently called for a “second freedom struggle” in India, which threw off British imperial rule in 1947. “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 in a message broadcast on YouTube . Both houses of parliament were adjourned after the opposition protested at the arrests. Though politicians from all political parties have been implicated in corruption scams, many figures associated with the biggest and most high-profile cases of graft are from the ruling Congress party. Opposition figures likened the crackdown to the 1975 “Emergency”, when Prime Minister Indira Gandhi arrested thousands of opposition members in order to stay in power. Manish Tewari, a Congress party spokesman, said Hazare was surrounded by “armchair fascists, overground Maoists, closet anarchists”. A crackdown earlier this year on a fasting yoga guru who had rallied tens of thousands of people in the capital managed to break up his anti-corruption protests successfully. Hazare’s first hunger strike in April won concessions from the government that 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. India Jason Burke guardian.co.uk
Continue reading …Culture secretary says fund will ensure that 90% of hard-to-reach communities could have superfast broadband by 2015 Millions of Britons living in rural areas are set to benefit from faster internet speeds after the government allocated £362m to improve broadband connections in England, Scotland and Wales. Jeremy Hunt, the culture secretary, said on Tuesday that the fund would ensure that 90% of hard-to-reach communities with “painfully slow” internet speeds could have access to superfast broadband by 2015. Remote villages in areas of regions such as Cumbria and the Scottish Highlands where it is currently hard to load a simple web page, should be able to download or stream high-quality movies within four years. English counties will get £294m and Scotland £68.8m to bring high-speed internet to areas not catered for by the private sector. The allocations come out of the £530m “digital Britain” fund commitment by the chancellor, George Osborne, earlier this year. “I am absolutely determined that the UK will have the best superfast broadband network in Europe by 2015 – one that we all benefit from,” Hunt said. “Fast broadband is absolutely vital to our economic growth, to delivering public services effectively, and to conducting our everyday lives. “But some areas of the UK are missing out, with many rural and hard-to-reach communities suffering painfully slow internet connections or no coverage at all. We are not prepared to let some parts of our country get left behind in the digital age.” English councils and private enterprises will be put in charge of delivering the broadband rollout, with delivery plans and match-funding expected to be drawn up to set timetables. The Scottish government will determine how to allocate the money in Scotland. Hunt added: “The government is investing £530m of public money to help bring broadband to every home and business in the UK. We are doing our part – it is now up to local authorities and the Scottish government to do their bit, to get on board and work with us to secure the social and economic future of their communities.” “I urge all those suffering the frustration of slow internet connections to make it clear to your local elected representatives that you expect them to do what is needed to access this investment and to deliver broadband to your community.” Funding allocated by county in England Bedfordshire (Bedford, Central Bedfordshire, Luton): £1,060,000 Berkshire (Bracknell Forest, Reading, Slough, West Berkshire, Windsor and Maidenhead, Wokingham): £1,430,000 Buckinghamshire (Buckinghamshire, Milton Keynes): £2,100,000 Cambridgeshire (Cambridgeshire, Peterborough): £6,750,000 Cheshire (Cheshire East, Cheshire West and Chester, Halton, Warrington): £3,240,000 Cumbria (Cumbria): £17,130,000 Derbyshire (Derbyshire, Derby): £7,390,000 Devon and Somerset (Devon, Plymouth, Torbay, Somerset, North Somerset): £31,320,000 Dorset (Dorset, Bournemouth, Poole): £9,440,000 Durham (County Durham, Gateshead): £7,790,000 East Sussex (East Sussex, Brighton and Hove): £10,640,000 Essex (Essex, Southend-on-Sea, Thurrock): £6,460,000 Gloucestershire (Gloucestershire): £8,070,000 Greater Manchester (Bolton, Bury, Manchester, Oldham, Rochdale, Salford, Stockport, Tameside, Trafford, Wigan): £990,000 Hampshire and the Isle of Wight (Hampshire, Isle of Wight, Portsmouth, Southampton): £8,420,000 Herefordshire (County of Herefordshire): £6,350,000 Hertfordshire (Hertfordshire): £1,110,000 Humber (City Of Kingston upon Hull, East Riding of Yorkshire, North East Lincolnshire, North Lincolnshire): £8,540,000 (subject to revision) Kent (Kent, Medway): £9,870,000 Lancashire (Lancashire, Blackburn with Darwen, Blackpool): £10,830,000 Leicestershire and Rutland (Leicestershire, Leicester, Rutland): £3,880,000 Lincolnshire (Lincolnshire): £14,310,000 Merseyside (Knowsley, Liverpool, St Helens, Sefton, Wirral): £5,460,000 Norfolk (Norfolk): £15,440,000 Northamptonshire (Northamptonshire): £4,080,000 Northumberland (Northumberland): £7,030,000 North Yorkshire (North Yorkshire, York): £17,840,000 Nottinghamshire (Nottinghamshire, Nottingham): £4,250,000 Oxfordshire (Oxfordshire): £3,860,000 Shropshire (Shropshire, Telford and Wrekin): £8,210,000 Staffordshire (Staffordshire, Stoke-on-Trent): £7,440,000 Suffolk (Suffolk): £11,680,000 Surrey (Surrey): £1,310,000 Tees Valley (Darlington, Hartlepool, Middlesbrough, Redcar and Cleveland, Stockton-on-Tees): £770,000 Tyne and Wear (Newcastle upon Tyne, North Tyneside, South Tyneside, Sunderland): £3,420,000 Warwickshire (Warwickshire, Coventry, Solihull): £4,070,000 West of England (Bath and North East Somerset, City of Bristol, South Gloucestershire): £1,430,000 West Midlands (Birmingham, Dudley, Sandwell, Walsall, Wolverhampton): £630,000 West Sussex (West Sussex): £6,260,000 West Yorkshire (Bradford, Calderdale, Kirklees, Leeds, Wakefield): £6,340,000 Wiltshire (Wiltshire, Swindon): £4,900,000 Worcestershire (Worcestershire): £3,350,000 •
Continue reading …• Rail passengers face 8% increase • Bank charges add to cost of living • High-street bargains harder to find • RPI stuck at 5% Rail passengers in Britain will face inflation-busting fare increases of 8% on average next year after the latest figures for the cost of living showed upward pressure on prices despite the weakness in the economy. Data from the Office for National Statistics showed that the government’s preferred measure of inflation – the Consumer Prices Index – rose from 4.2% to 4.4% in July as banks increased charges on their customers and bargains in the summer sales were harder to find. Many shops were forced to slash prices in June in a response to the weakness in consumer demand, resulting in much smaller price falls for clothing and footwear and furniture in July than usual. Clothing and footwear prices were 3.1% higher in July than a year earlier – the highest rate since the current series of figures began in 1997. The Retail Prices Index – an alternative measure of the cost of living that acts as the benchmark for rail fare increases – was unchanged last month at 5%. Under the formula used by the government, train operating companies can increase fares by three percentage points above the July RPI inflation rate. The news on the cost of living came as a mild shock to the City, which had been expecting a more modest increase in CPI inflation to 4.3%. The failure of the Bank of England to meet the government’s 2% inflation target for more than 18 months means that Sir Mervyn King has to write an explanatory letter to the chancellor, George Osborne. James Knightley, economist at ING, said: “UK inflation numbers have come in a little higher than expected due to the fact summer discounting started earlier this year than normal – presumably down to the weakness in the economy. “This lead June’s inflation numbers to undershoot expectations, but we get a corresponding bounce back for July. Clothing and footwear inflation jumped from 1.5% to 3.1%YoY, which is the fastest rate since the series started back in January 1997. Furniture rose for similar reasons while there were also increases for financial services.” King said last week that the Bank expects inflation to climb further over the coming months as consumers are hit by rising domestic energy bills, but the Bank then expects price pressures to ease over the winter. City analysts see no possibility that Threadneedle Street will raise interest rates in response to the pick-up in inflation, and believe official borrowing costs are on hold until deep into 2012. Chris Williamson, economist at Markit, said: “The latest uptick in inflation is unlikely to add significantly to the case for higher interest rates among MPC members. Instead, policymakers are likely to continue to focus on the activity data, which are showing worrying signs of weakness.” Inflation Economics Bank of England Mervyn King Rail transport Interest rates Larry Elliott guardian.co.uk
Continue reading …Rolling coverage as Nick Clegg and Theresa May set out their plans in the aftermath of last week’s riots 9.08am: Clegg is now making a series of announcements. • The Cabinet Office will commission research into the riots and the their causes. (Clegg actually mentioned this in his speech on Saturday – see 8.48am – but no one noticed.) • An inquiry will be set up. Clegg did not actually call it an inquiry – he said it was a communites and victims panel – but that that’s what it is. It will be chaired by someone independent and it will be able to make recommendations. It will sit for about six to nine months and it will report to all three party leaders. But it won’t be set up under the Public Inquiries Act, which means it won’t have the power to force witnesses to give evidence. • A community payback scheme will be set up in every area affected by the riots. See 8.38am for more. • Extra money will be provided to ensure that all victims who want the chance to confront the offenders who attacked them will get the chance to do so. • From March 2012 every offender who leaves jail will go straight into the work programme, the government scheme designed to find work for the unemployed. They will be met at the prison gates, Clegg says. 9.04am: Nick Clegg is speaking at his press conference now. He says he has visited areas affected by the rioting. Some of the response has been “heroic”, he says. Among the optimism, he cites Manchester, where more people were involved in the clean-up operation than in the rioting. Hope and optimism and more powerful than fear and pessimism, he says. Clegg says that as more information comes out about the court cases, some myths are being dispelled. For example, the news coverage suggested many rioters were very young. But only 21% of those in court are under 18. And the papers suggested many women were involved. But more than 90% of those in court have been male. 8.57am: My colleague Alan Travis has sent me a line about what we can expect from Theresa May’s police reform speech at 10am. May has written to Sir Denis O’Connor, Her Majesty’s Chief Inspector of Constabulary asking him to provide clearer guidance to forces on handling riots and public disorder. This is expected to include an massive expansion in police riot training as well as clear guidance on robust tactics to restore order. The home secretary will say that public order policing is becoming more unpredictable and faster moving and police tactics have to be as adaptable as possible to the circumstances to keep the peace for all. She will also argue that the last 10 days make the case for police reform even more urgent than ever and she will reject demands for a pause or U-turn on police budgets. She will describe policing as a noble profession and say that we owe all police officers a debt of gratitude for returning order to the streets last week. “So when we ask questions about the success of a policing operation or ask how we can make the police more effective, more efficient or more accountable to the public – this is not an attack on the men and women of the police,” she will say. “One thing is clear: the experience of the last 10 days makes the case for police reform more urgent than ever,” she is to argue, adding that the introdcution of police and crime commissioners is even more important when the police are being asked to fight crime on a tighter budget. May will make clear that taking Britain out of the economic danger zone by reducing the budget deficit however still remains a higher priority and scaling back police cuts is not an option. 8.48am: Yesterday, in my blog about the Cameron and Miliband speeches, I said that Nick Clegg had failed, so far, to say anything particularly distinctive on the riots. That is true in the sense that he hasn’t said anything that has fully grabbed the attention of the media. But that doesn’t mean he has been silent. He made a speech on the subject on Saturday that is on the Lib Dem website. Mostly it was very sensible. Clegg made a liberal case for a tough stance on law and order (“As a liberal, I see violence and disorder of this kind as an attack on liberty, on the freedom for individuals to live and trade in peace in their own communities”), he said the government was commissioning independent research into the riots because it was important to understand what happened, and he said it was important for the government to give everyone opportunities and a stake in society. But there’s one line in the speech that Clegg may regret. While of course we have had to act swiftly and decisively, we have resisted the temptation to engage in overnight policy or instant announcements. With Cameron banging on about water cannon and rubber bullets, Grant Shapps suggesting that it should be easier to evict tenants from social housing if they have been involved in rioting and Iain Duncan Smith floating the idea of taking benefits away from convicted rioters who do not go to jail, this is probably a line that Clegg will not want to repeat today. 8.38am: Yesterday D avid Cameron and Ed Miliband delivered lengthy speeches about the riots and their causes . Today we’re going to hear from Nick Clegg, the deputy prime minister, and Theresa May, the home secretary. I’ll be blogging both events live, as well as covering any reaction. Clegg is up first, at 9am. As Polly Curtis reports in the Guardian today , he will announce plans for a “riot payback scheme”. He is giving a press conference, rather than a full speech, but the Cabinet Office have already released some of his comments in advance. Crime and lawlessness deprive ordinary, decent people of their freedom. Violence and disorder are an attack on liberty, on the freedom of individuals to live and work in peace in their own communities. I am passionately convinced that swift, strong justice needs to be done when people break the laws and moral rules of society. I want offenders to be punished – and to change their ways.Victims of crime are only truly protected if punishment leads to criminals not committing crime again. Criminals must be punished and then made to change their ways. That’s why those people who behaved so despicably last week should have to look their victims in the eye. They should have to see for themselves the consequences of their actions and they should be put to work cleaning up the damage and destruction they have caused so they don’t do it again. We want people to be punished for their wrongdoing. We also want them to stop doing wrong. We want their future behaviour to change. We need punishment that sticks And then May is speaking at 10am. She is giving a speech on police reform, and then taking questions. As Alan Travis and Allegra Stratton report , she will give details of the government’s “security fightback”, including plans for thousands more police officers to undergo riot training. UK riots Theresa May Nick Clegg Crime Police UK criminal justice Andrew Sparrow guardian.co.uk
Continue reading …• German growth at 0.1% for last quarter • First quarter growth revised down to 1.3% • Full eurozone figures due later on Tuesday The German economy has come to a near-standstill in the last quarter as the global slowdown hit Europe’s biggest player. In the latest blow to the eurozone, Germany grew by just 0.1% between April and June. Economists had expected growth of 0.5% during the quarter. Germany’s Federal Statistics also revised down the growth in the first quarter of 2011, to 1.3% from its initial estimate of 1.5%. With France’s economy failing to grow during the quarter , Germany’s GDP data shows that the eurozone economy has worsened as its debt crisis entered a new, dangerous phase. The German slowdown was blamed on a fall in domestic consumption and construction work during the quarter. It is a blow to Angela Merkel as she prepares to meet France’s Nicolas Sarkozy to discuss the euro debt crisis . Spanish GDP grew by 0.2% during the quarter, down from 0.3% in the first three months of 2011. GDP data for the whole eurozone will be released later on Tuesday, and City analysts warned that the region could have stagnated, or even contracted. Carsten Brzeski of ING said that the data was a “growth normalisation” rather than a “disappointment” on its own, as Germany should still grow by at least 3% this year. He warned, though, that the German economic recovery is clearly slowing. “Looking ahead, the million-dollar question is whether a solid second quarter is the beginning of the end of the German Wirtschaftswunder [economic miracle] and whether recent market turmoil could push the economy back into recession,” said Brzeski. “While German politicians are currently racking their brains on the pros and cons of common eurobonds, the luxury of having an economy running at ‘wonder’ speed is fading away.” Stock markets across Europe fell in early trading, with the FTSE 100 dropping 43 points to 5307. The euro lost ground against the dollar, as traders reacted to the news that Europe’s core had reached near-stagnation. “Following on the back of weak GDP data announced by France this will further undermine any efforts to resolve the eurozone debt crisis,” said Max Johnson, a broker at forex specialist, Currency Solutions. But he added: “Looking around the global economy, at least there will be few, if any, cases of schadenfreude.” Europe Germany Europe European debt crisis Graeme Wearden guardian.co.uk
Continue reading …Clegg to say people convicted of rioting crimes should have to ‘look their victims in the eye’, while No 10 plans a ‘public engagement exercise’ to establish causes of disturbances Nick Clegg is announcing separate plans for a “riot payback scheme”, which would see people convicted of looting or violence in last week’s disturbances being made to do community service or take part in restorative justice programmes in the areas where crimes were committed. He will say that people convicted of crimes last week should have to “look their victims in the eye”. Clegg could also give details of plans for a commission of inquiry into the causes of the riots after it emerged that No 10 has conceded to Labour demands for a formal commission to investigate the causes of last week’s riots after behind-the-scenes cross-party talks co-ordinated by the Liberal Democrats. The Ministry of Justice is to ask the probation service to instigate the schemes in the cities where the riots took place. Offenders would take part in activities to help repair the damage done or to face their victims and apologise under the restorative justice principle. The deputy PM will tell a press conference in London: “I want offenders to be punished – and to change their ways. Victims of crime are only truly protected if punishment leads to criminals not committing crime again. Criminals must be punished and then made to change their ways. “That’s why those people who behaved so despicably last week should have to look their victims in the eye. They should have to see for themselves the consequences of their actions and they should be put to work cleaning up the damage and destruction they have caused so they don’t do it again. “We want people to be punished for their wrongdoing. We also want them to stop doing wrong. We want their future behaviour to change. We need punishment that sticks.” Clegg is said to be close to “brokering” a deal between the Conservatives and Labour into setting up a commission that would go into every neighbourhood affected by the disturbances to ask community members why the outbursts of violence occurred. David Cameron had previously ruled out a full public inquiry in the short term, claiming that the parliamentary select committee inquiries were adequate but the government has now signalled its intention for a “public engagement exercise”, with an independent chair, to establish the causes of the riots and looting. A Downing Street source said: “We are coming to the view that there is a case for community engagement about what happened and why. It would involve getting someone to go into the communities and find out why this all happened. It would be likely that it would be chaired by someone outside government. We’re coming to the view that some sort of engagement exercise would be useful.” The No10 source said it would not operate under the Inquiries Act and its precise nature had not been confirmed. Labour sources confirmed they were in talks with ministers about the plans and a Liberal Democrat source said Clegg was “brokering” the deal on how the commission would be established. Clegg has been privately considering such an inquiry since last week and his party has already commissioned its own research into the problems. On Monday Ed Miliband set out his demands for a commission of inquiry in a speech at Haverstock school, the comprehensive he attended in north London, which is situated close to some of the scenes of last week’s violence. He argued against an inquiry run by MPs, civil servants or the judiciary calling for the prime minister to “have the humility” to listen to the communities affected. “You should have nothing to fear from the truth,” he said. He added that if the government didn’t move to establish such an inquiry, the Labour party would. UK riots Nick Clegg Crime Police Polly Curtis guardian.co.uk
Continue reading …• Fares allowed to rise by inflation plus 3% • RPI expected to touch 5% for July • Bank of England governor to write to chancellor Hard-hit rail commuters face more misery as inflation figures on Tuesday reveal how much more they will have to pay for their season tickets in the new year. The July retail prices index rate is used to determine the following January’s annual rise for regulated rail fares, which include season and saver tickets. The formula used to calculate the new fares is RPI plus 3%. The rate is expected to come in at 5%, meaning fares will increase by 8%. Elsewhere, the wider consumer prices index (CPI) rate of inflation is expected to increase to 4.4% from 4.2% in June, underlying the pressure on household budgets and triggering an explanation letter from Bank of England governor Sir Mervyn King to George Osborne. And a quarterly survey from Saga revealed a sharp fall in the standard of living for older generations. For the third quarter in a row, Saga’s Quality of Life Index has fallen, as soaring price levels continue to erode living standards for over 50s. The government changed the fare-rise formula for 2012, with the formula previously being RPI plus 1%. As train companies are allowed to make the increase an average figure, some season tickets could go up by much more than that. The rise in rail fares comes as utility groups announce future electricity and gas bills, all of which are expected to push the CPI rate of inflation to 5% by the end of the year. But with the UK facing a period of continued sluggish growth, the Bank expects inflation to fall below the 2% target to 1.8% in two years’ time, particularly as the impact of this year’s VAT increase falls out. Victoria Cadman, an economist at Investec Securities, said lower food and petrol prices will limit the rise this month, with recent data from the British Retail Consortium showing prices fell by 0.6% in July from June. Oil prices have also fallen, with some of the main supermarkets cutting their forecourt prices , while motoring organisation the AA indicated prices of both petrol and diesel had eased a little. If the figures come in as expected, July will be the 20th month running that CPI will have missed the Bank of England’s target of 2%. Sir Mervyn is required to write to the chancellor when the rate of inflation has been above target for more than three months – this will be his seventh successive letter and his 12th in total. Fair Fares Now campaigners, led by the Campaign for Better Transport, will be at London’s Waterloo station to demonstrate against the hike before the RPI rate is revealed by the Office for National Statistics. The campaign is also supported by the RMT transport union which on Tuesday published a report saying rail privatisation had “bled £6.6bn out of the rail industry since 1997″. The RMT-commissioned report by research company Just Economics also said that the future “bleed” would amount to around £6.7bn over the next 10 years. RMT general secretary Bob Crow said the government was “forcing through inflation-busting fare increases and savage cuts to maximise private train company profits”. Campaign for Better Transport’s public transport campaigner Alexandra Woodsworth said: “Affordable rail travel is vital for passengers, for the environment and for our workforce. These massive fare rises will be a disaster for people already struggling with rising costs, and risk pricing those on lower incomes out of jobs in our major cities. “Our demonstration is sending a clear message to government that the country simply can’t afford fare rises on such a punitive scale. It’s time to burst the bubble on inflation-busting fare hikes.” Shadow transport secretary Maria Eagle will meet commuters at Waterloo and call on the government to rethink the rail fare increases planned for each of the next three years. She said: “The Tory-led government is totally out of touch with the cost of living crisis facing commuters and fails to understand how these eye-watering rail fare rises will add to the burden on families. The cost of getting to work is for many people the biggest single item in the monthly budget, bigger than mortgage payments and bigger than rent.” Inflation Rail transport Transport Economics Travel & leisure guardian.co.uk
Continue reading …It is home to 30,000 people, has its own airport, fire station and police force – and in six years has grown to a city the size of Reading. Nick Hopkins visits Britain’s vast military base in the Afghanistan desert The planes tend to arrive at night, and if the sky is clear, the moon bathes the airport with an ethereal, ghostly light. A film of dust and sand covers the tarmac and shimmers silver in the dark, conjuring familiar images of lunar walks made by astronauts a generation ago. This place, though, is not some other world, but Afghanistan. And the surroundings are not beautiful or charismatic. It is Camp Bastion: a brutal, functional, military city built from nothing in the desert, from which the UK has orchestrated its conflict against the Taliban for the past six years. There is probably no place like it on earth. It has grown so much that the perimeter wall is now almost 40km long – making it roughly the size of Reading; and its airport is busier than any other in the UK, apart from Gatwick and Heathrow. The Afghans will inherit it one day, should they wish. Otherwise it could turn into a vast, derelict Atlantis in the desert – no better monument, perhaps, to the west’s invasion of a country that has been an enduring battleground over the past 30 years. Nobody ever imagined this eight years ago when the British started looking for a safe place to fly supplies for the troops who were to be sent to the southern province of Helmand. The British didn’t want to set up camp too close to any fighting, and they wanted somewhere flat, to build a landing strip for aircraft. They chose a place in the plains of north-west Helmand, where the Soviets had once had a small base, and dug a trench. The Soviets had recognised the area’s strategic importance. “It used to be a trading crossroads. And we can see everything around us,” says Commodore Clive Walker, the Royal Navy officer who is currently in charge of the entire camp. Though the land is arid, it also has boreholes filled with fresh water that has taken years to flow hundreds of miles from the peaks of the Hindu Kush to the underground aquifers in the middle of the desert. The British decided to call the new camp Bastion – a reference to the huge earth-filled bags that have been used to define its boundaries. The bomb-proof bags are made by a UK company called Hesco Bastion, which was set up by a British inventor, Jimi Heselden. Heselden, who died last year, made a fortune selling his invention to the British military, and thousands of the bags now line the roads around this camp, and almost every other in the country. The other ubiquitous building block of the city is the Iso freight container, the sort you see on lorries or the decks of ships at ports around the world. There are now 10,000 Iso containers at Bastion, almost all of them brought in by road through Pakistan, after being shipped from Europe or America to Karachi. By some estimates, it would take a decade to remove them all from Helmand, though many of them are likely to stay put. Rather than bringing in water supplies from elsewhere, the British set up a water-bottling plant on site, drawing the water from the two existing boreholes. The plastic bottles are made at the plant, which provides one million litres a week for Bastion, as well as many of the other smaller bases and checkpoints across the province. Most of the fresh food is flown in, with the rest coming by road. There is a central warehouse where most of it is stored – it is thought to be the second-biggest building in the whole of Afghanistan. With between 20,000 and 30,000 people on the base at any one time, the quantities needed to feed them are vast; 27 tonnes of salad and fruit come in every week alone. Convoys of lorries, with armoured support, thunder out of the camp most days to supply other bases, often leaving in the middle of the night to minimise the disruption to the villages and towns that they rumble through. The base has become so big that it has eight incinerators and a burn pit to get rid of the rubbish. The camp also has its own bus service, fire station and police force. There are on-site laws and regulations too. One of them is the speed limit – 24kph (15mph). It is enforced by officers with speed cameras, who can leap out from behind containers, or from inside ditches, to catch anyone flouting the rules. Anyone caught speeding more than three times is banned from driving on the base. Though the limit is quite low, many of the military vehicles are so big, and the dust they churn up so blinding, that it is dangerous for them to be going any faster. There aren’t any pavements at Bastion, or street lights, so walking around at night can be perilous without a torch. The airport is busy day and night. It dealt with 2,980,000 pieces of freight in June alone, including 73,000 pallets of mail. There isn’t much in the way of nightlife – but there is a Pizza Hut takeaway restaurant that trades from inside a converted Iso. Customers can sit outside on pub-style benches. There is also a bar next door called Heroes, which has giant TV screens showing news channels from the UK. For thousands of staff here, their lives revolve around huge air-conditioned gymnasiums. Bodybuilding has become a near obsession for many of the soldiers who live on site, who have little else to do once they have finished work. The gyms are busy from 5am. There are no weekends at Camp Bastion. While the airport is the hub for flights in and out of the country, the heliport is busier. Every day, RAF Chinook, Sea King and Merlin helicopters run like buses, ferrying troops to and from the base. They are responsible for the bulk of the 600 movements undertaken across Helmand every day. “We can take things by road, fly them in by helicopter, or throw it out of a back of a plane,” says Commodore Walker. “It all depends what is being transported and where it is going. We used to have 60 or 70 vehicles leave the camp in convoys. But that was not good for relations with the local population. We try to go out first thing in the morning so the convoys don’t disrupt the bazaars. We try to time them carefully.” Above all else, though, the camp is a military base. The US Marines, and the Afghan security forces, have their own areas now, but the core of the base remains – and is run by – the British. Soldiers arriving from the UK for a six-month tour will stay at the camp for about a week before being deployed elsewhere. In that time, they will spend five days acclimatising to the heat or the cold. In summer the temperatures reach up to 55C. In winter, it will freeze. One of the most surreal sights in the city is its Afghan village, a replica built by the British. It even has a small number of local residents who tend to a bread oven, riding motorbikes and selling food at a market. It is supposed to give the soldiers a better feel for what to expect when they go on patrol. There is also a training area designed to help them identify the improvised explosive devices (IEDs) that have been used to such deadly effect by insurgents. There are tell-tale clues the soldiers need to learn; they can be taught about the different techniques used by the insurgents for planting IEDs, and how the villagers might be trying to warn them of their whereabouts. If an Afghan has stopped using a bridge to cross a stream or a river, there is often a reason. Elsewhere in the camp, there is a kennel for the dozens of dogs that are used on patrols, and for sniffing out drugs and explosive material. One of them is called Charm – a german shepherd so big that he rarely has to raise growl to deter potential troublemakers. The medical facilities at Camp Bastion rely on a taskforce of helicopters, which are controlled by Colonel Peter Eadie, the commander of the UK joint aviation group. In the past, patients were brought into the trauma unit at Bastion before major surgery could begin. Now, consultants fly out in specially adapted Black Hawk and Chinook helicopters to any emergency, so they can start work on the injured as soon as they set eyes on them. “The system is one that has evolved over the years,” says Eadie. “Countless lives have probably been saved this way. We take the hospital to the patient.” He can hope to get a helicopter from Bastion to an injured soldier in less than 19 minutes. And the most serious cases can be back in the UK in less than 24 hours. All of this is beyond the capabilities of the Afghan security forces, and that situation is unlikely to change before the end of 2014, when Nato forces will have ended all frontline combat operations against the Taliban. “The Afghans are starting to get themselves into a position to support their own troops but they cannot leap up to our level of technology overnight,” says Walker. How much of this remains when the British and Americans leave has yet to be decided. Even though the drawdown of British forces will be modest this year and next, Walker is already thinking about what equipment will be left in the desert, and what will be carted back home, to be put in storage. “It took us eight years to get to this stage and now we have to start thinking about what to bring back,” he says. The huge canvas tents in which most people live will be repaired, folded up and returned to warehouses in the UK. Some of them sleep up to 32 people on bunk beds. Only VIPs and some of the pilots have better “tier 2″ accommodation, which means they sleep in a prefabricated metal pod with has a hard roof rather than a soft one. “The tents can be refurbished and put back on the shelf in the UK for the next time,” he says. How many of the 3,000 British military vehicles will return is less clear. Though bomb-damaged trucks and armoured cars can be entirely rebuilt at the workshops in Bastion, some of them are likely to remain in Helmand – they will have taken too much punishment to be of value again. Walker is trying to look ahead without losing grip on the day to day, which remains the priority. Providing British forces with the right equipment, food, and first aid is a juggling act he performs every day. “If I don’t get it right, we’re in a bad place. We can’t fail.” Military Afghanistan Defence policy Nick Hopkins guardian.co.uk
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