When the writer joined the social network three years ago, she used it to share random thoughts about TV and life. Since then, she has become a Twitter addict. In an extract from her new book, she explains what she loves – and hates – about it 1. My name is @gracedent . 2. I joined Twitter on 4 June 2008. 3. @febake was the first person to tell me about Twitter. It took him several months of preaching about its wonders until I cracked. 4. My first ever tweet was: “looking puzzled at twitter.” No one replied. I mooched off into cyberspace, humiliated. 5. I returned in early 2009 because my friend @heawood joined. 6. We swapped twitpics of bears in Victorian bonnets and insults about body hair issues. I dumped all my surplus silly thoughts there about EastEnders, Big Brother and columns I couldn’t be bothered to write. 7. By July 2009 I had about 5,987 followers. 8. Back then I said pretty much whatever I wanted on Twitter. It was like spraying rude words on a fence in neon, foot-high letters and never, ever getting detention for it. 9. Today on Twitter I feel like a slightly feral village elder. My teeth itch when people tweet me to tell me what I’m not allowed to say. 10. When @heawood moved to LA to interview movie stars, we kept in touch mainly via Twitter. I missed her so much I tweeted her YouTube links of sad songs. 11. Maudlin soft-rock ballad So Far Away by Dire Straits was most effective. @heawood now lives back in London. 12 . I check Twitter on my iPhone each day within five minutes of opening my eyes. 13 . I have woken myself up in the middle of the night checking Twitter in my sleep. 14. I think I can tell if you are fibbing about being on Twitter within one minute of talking to you. 15. I think I can tell if a person has enough “voice” to write a whole novel by simply reading a few tweets. 16. My most retweeted tweet was a profound quotation by Albert Camus rallying against nihilism. 17. That is a lie. It was a screen-grab of X-Factor boyband member Harry Styles looking like he had a massive erection. 18. My second most RT’d tweet was a scan of the undercarriage of a white cat with pink paws who had sat on a scanner machine. 19. I know people who monitor the success of every thought by its RT tally. I am not one of those people. 20. But if a tweet gets NO replies at all, it makes me edgy. 21. As I type this list I’ve got 54,851 followers. 22. As I type this list I’ve tweeted 27,325 times. 23. As I type this list I’m telling myself 90% of those 27,325 tweets were probably quick @replies to people and NOT actual posts in my timeline , because this makes it less of “a problem”. 24. I use Twitter clients and apps like TweetDeck or Echofon . I suspect they give me migraines but I just take codeine and carry on, for how can I monitor the universe in real time without multiple columns? 25. Twitter definitely made me more well known. I’m not sure if it made me more well liked. 26. I once said on an ITV2 show that X-Factor contestant Stacey Solomon was “not a terribly good singer” and had to leave Twitter for two weeks due to an angry twitchfork mob chasing me around cyberspace. 27. Grace Dent has been a “trending topic” on a few occasions. It’s not very nice really. It just opens you up to a global level of maniac. 28. Twitter led to me watching two weeks of all-night Olympic curling with @emmak67 and hundreds of other tweeters. I still do not understand curling. It looks like Olympic-grade housework. 29. I’ve spent New Year’s Eve on Twitter. It was better than going out. 30. Twitter led to me to keeping an emergency picture of a member of the rock band Kiss sneaking to a festival Portaloo just to cheer Twitter buddies up. 31. Twitter led to @gracedent being close personal chums with the pop star Will Young. 32. After several direct-message exchanges it turned out not to be Will Young, just a man pretending to be him while pulling furiously at his own penis. @gracedent was disappointed. 33. I often see that @gracedent has blocked someone “for absolutely no reason”. There has ALWAYS been a reason. 34. I sometimes block tweeters who demand I retweet them without even saying hello first. 35. I sometimes unfollow tweeters for RTing praise about themselves. 36. I still class it as RTing praise if they’ve cunningly added “THIS PERSON MUST BE MAD TO SAY THIS!!” on to the end of the tweet. 37. I once blocked @emmak67 during a row over politics to make a point that she was getting on my tits. Then, due to technical malfunction, I couldn’t unblock her for a week, which led to a month-long row. 38. I think the most boring tweets in the world are DJs’ “I’m at an airport” tweets. 39. Although any “I have jet lag. Boo-hoo, I’ll just order room service then” tweets are fractionally worse. 40. I would love to punch the person in the throat who thinks it’s a worthwhile task to set up a “sausage” bot . Or a “radiator” bot. 41. I love tweets featuring talking cats, snoring cats, cats jumping in boxes, cats jumping out of boxes etc. 42. I think there’s a strong pro-cat propaganda unit working on Twitter. 43. I think there’s either a worldwide dearth of clips of dogs being idiots, or the pro-dog lobby needs to up its Twitter game. 44. I suck at Twitter hashtags games. I tend to sit those games out. 45. I bloody love Twitter “pun” games. I’ll play them until the bitter end, when my puns need brackets to explain and no one replies. 46. I get arsey when non-Twitter people say Twitter is just people discussing their breakfasts. Only an idiot tweets their breakfast. 47. I do sometimes tweet about lunch. 48 . Twitter has made me seriously wonder if chronic pedantry is a social illness. People are crucified by their need to correct commas. 49. I think if you cancel an appointment with me due to being busy or ill you should have the common sense to stop fucking tweeting. 50. I believe 3,000 followers is the point at which lots of tweeters start behaving like utter maniacs. “3,000 follower syndrome” is a worrying medical condition. 51. The first sign of “3,000 follower syndrome” is apologising for not checking in on Twitter until later than usual, believing that Twitter must have felt so empty without you. 52. The second sign is placing tweets in your timeline answering the question you say “everyone” is asking you. If you check this person’s @ column it almost invariably turns out no one is speaking to them. 53. It gets even worse after that. 54. Twitter led to me chatting to Curt Smith from Tears for Fears . Me being the 11-year-old @gracedent who has Smash Hits on order from the newsagent and thinks this is very cool. 55. @simonjclebon once tweeted @gracedent but she was too shy to tweet back . @gracedent left him hanging. 56. I’ve left Twitter several times in a massive strop. 57. But I always, always come back. 58. I worry that I can never leave Twitter as normal life feels like wading through treacle. 59. I worry that I’m missing out if I don’t check Twitter. 60. I worry that Twitter has killed my ability to focus on one thought for more than 10 seconds. 61. I love it when other tweeters drastically announce they are leaving Twitter in a dramatic way. I call this “dumbass digital suicide”. 62. I make rude noises at my screen when tweeters @ me to say they’re unfollowing me. I’m not Moses, we weren’t going to the Promised Land. Follow whoever you want. 63. I unfollow my friends all the time. I think life’s too short to have someone pissing you off in your timeline. It’s like radio interference in your brain on a lovely day. 64. I’m freaked out by people who use “have you unfollowed me?” software to monitor who has digitally dumped them. Is there not enough pain in the world already? 65. I dread receiving the “very terrible oh-why-have-you-unfollowed-me boo-hoo email of doom”. 66. I think we focus too much on celebrities’ contribution to Twitter. Celebrities aren’t the tweeters providing interesting content. I discard them and their third-rate Twitter jibber-jabber all the time. 67. I unfollowed @piersmorgan for reading out his follower account figures all the time and begging for more like a telethon. 68. I unfollowed @Lord_Sugar for RTing questions asking where we could buy his book. 69. I unfollowed @ladygaga as she drones on all day about her “little monsters” like a saleswoman flogging U-bend germ-killer detergent. 70. I unfollowed @KimKardashian out of sheer pettiness because I like to believe I corner the market in “brunettes with big arses who contribute very little to the world of entertainment”. 71. I unfollowed @rustyrockets after his stag do ended up in Stringfellows. I was on a militant feminist tip that day, someone was going to get it. 72. I unfollowed @50cent because the poor man is almost entirely fixated on the daily happenings of his own penis. 73. I unfollowed @BarackObama because it turns out being Mr President is a whole lot of paperwork. Mate, there’s a reason I don’t tweet my VAT return. 74. I send 10 tweets a month to pop star Peter Andre giving him feedback about his career but he never replies. 75. I hate the terms “tweet-up” and “twunk” . 76. I love the term “twitchfork mob”. 77. When twitchfork mobs are circling some poor tweeter for crimes of thought I often add the rumour “I heard he bummed a puffin” simply to cheer myself up. 78. I love the term “twanking” (wanking while tweeting). 79. I get tweeted quite a lot of pictures of penises and offers of sex. “I fink we should make a play date 4 our GENITILZ!” one man wrote this very morning. 80. I get at least one unsolicited tweet a week from a stranger pointing out that in my current state of vast ugliness they’d never fuck me. 81. I think if one morning everyone’s direct-message box was suddenly, accidentally posted in the public timeline there would be rioting in international cities by lunch time. Most of this would be warring couples chucking bin-bags of clothes at each other. 82. I think most people don’t realise that posting a photo on DM means EVERYONE who looks at your photo account can still see it. It’s not private. I’ve seen two photos of my friends I wish I hadn’t. 83. One of them was in the bath. 84. The other one was indescribable but it scarred my retinas. 85. I’ve seen perfectly good marriages go down the pan because of Twitter. 86. I genuinely cringe at my friends publicly arse-kissing each other on Twitter. 87. I find the way some people blatantly social climb on Twitter vomit-making. 88. The phrase “let’s have a tweet-up” makes me nervous. I don’t think meeting people off Twitter is necessary to be friends with them. 89. I never like Twitter “tribute” sites where someone pretends to be someone else. I think they’re usually one joke stretched very, very thinly in search of a toilet book deal. 90. I know Twitter is the only place I can make jokes about my family, because, as of yet, they’re not on Twitter. Once they join, it’s all over. 91. I think the future of social networking lies in tackling the need for an individual to have “multiple personalities” living easily on one social networking platform. We are not one person all of the time, not even minute-to-minute. 92. I think there should be a meta-Twitter for gossiping about what we think other people are up to on Twitter. 93. At the moment I sometimes flip to Skype to chat face-to-face with friends about what we think the story is “behind the tweets”. It’s like Minority Report, but in pyjamas. 94. I get emails once a week from TV companies who say they want to “harness the power of Twitter but ON TELEVISION”. They then fart around with meeting for 10 weeks and realise it’s impossible. 95. This book is just a whole lot of my own personal thoughts, feelings and experiences of Twitter. I’m pretty certain you’ll disagree with most of it. 96. I chatted to scores of people about Twitter as I was writing the book. Absolutely nobody agreed with anyone else’s view on anything. 97. Everybody brought fresh angles and topics I’d never even thought of. I love this. Twitter is a totally different animal to everyone riding it. 98. I agreed to write How to Leave Twitter after a publishing meeting about a different book turned into an extended rant about RTs and Follow Fridays. 99. I showed some parts of the manuscript to good friends as I worked who went slightly ashen and said, “Grace, you’re going to break Twitter, you do know that, don’t you?” In a way, this is brilliant. Killing Twitter is my only real chance of leaving. 100. I’d have delivered How to Leave Twitter a lot earlier to the publishing house and avoided a lot of stress and shouting matches, but in all honesty, I was too busy dicking about on the internet. How to Leave Twitter by Grace Dent is available for £5 (RRP £7.99) with free p&p from the Guardian Bookshop . Call 0330 333 6846 or visit guardianbooks.co.uk . An ebook version is also available. Twitter Social networking Grace Dent guardian.co.uk
Continue reading …About 4,000 chain-store shops shut in first five months of 2011, new study reveals The gravity of the high street downturn is spelled out in new research published on Friday which shows UK retail chains have been closing stores this year at a rate of about 20 a day. The alarming statistic comes as closing down sales at TJ Hughes’s 57 department stores get under way. The Liverpool-based chain went into administration last week, putting more than 4,000 jobs at risk. The administrators, Ernst & Young, said they were holding talks with more than 30
Continue reading …About 4,000 chain-store shops shut in first five months of 2011, new study reveals The gravity of the high street downturn is spelled out in new research published on Friday which shows UK retail chains have been closing stores this year at a rate of about 20 a day. The alarming statistic comes as closing down sales at TJ Hughes’s 57 department stores get under way. The Liverpool-based chain went into administration last week, putting more than 4,000 jobs at risk. The administrators, Ernst & Young, said they were holding talks with more than 30
Continue reading …Islamabad hits back at claim by Admiral Mike Mullen over murder of Syed Saleem Shahzad Pakistan “sanctioned” the killing of a journalist who wrote about the country’s powerful security establishment, the top military commander in the US Admiral Mike Mullen, has said. The death of the journalist, Syed Saleem Shahzad, prompted intense speculation about the possible involvement of the Pakistan military’s powerful spy agency, Inter Services Intelligence (ISI), but Mullen said on Thursday he could not confirm its involvement. The remarks by Mullen, chairman of the joint chiefs of staff, are likely to place new strains on Pakistan-US ties, which were seriously damaged by the killing of Osama bin Laden by US forces in Pakistan in May. The Pakistan government hit back at Mullen’s claims. “If it is true, then the statement is extremely irresponsible,” a Pakistani government spokesman said. “It will not help in investigating the issue.” Shahzad, 40, who worked for the Hong Kong-based Asia Times Online, disappeared from Islamabad on 29 May. His body was found in a canal two days later, bearing what police said were signs of torture. Before his death Shahzad told friends he’d been threatened by the ISI, which is notorious for harassing reporters in a country considered one of the deadliest in the world for journalists. The ISI has denied it had anything to do with killing Shahzad, but suspicions have persisted and prompted unusual levels of public criticism of the spy agency. Mullen said that the reported abuse of journalists in Pakistan was not a good road for the government in Islamabad. “It’s a way to continue to, quite frankly, spiral in the wrong direction,” said Mullen, who has devoted time in the past four years to trying to improve relations with Pakistani leaders. Pakistan Journalist safety US military United States guardian.co.uk
Continue reading …British Gas announces 18% and 16% rises to its gas and electricity prices, as Scottish & Southern Energy suspends all doorstep sales with the loss of 900 jobs British Gas has stunned households across the UK by announcing a rise in gas and electricity prices of 18% and 16%, just eight months after it raised its prices by 7%. The increase, which will affect 9 million customers and be effective from 18 August, provoked energy minister Chris Huhne to today demand change in the UK electricity market. At a time when households are struggling with soaring food bills amid persistently high inflation, the price rise will add £192 to the average annual dual fuel bill, which will increase from £1,096 to £1,288 as a result. Mike O’Connor, chief executive of Consumer Focus , said: “This price rise will send a shock wave across the country. The impact on customers will be severe, piling more pressure on severely stretched household budgets and pushing hundreds of thousands more households into fuel poverty.” The news comes on the same day Scottish & Southern Energy (SSE) announced it is suspending all its doorstep sales activity in Great Britain with immediate effect, leading to 900 job losses. Two months ago the utility giant was found guilty of misleading potential customers when doorstepping them in a bid to get them to switch gas and electricity supplier, following a successful prosecution by trading standards. SSE said commission-based doorstep selling is “no longer an effective way to gain customers for the long term”, because consumer confidence in the way companies sell on doorsteps, and the way in which salespeople are remunerated, is low. It also said it was closing its doorstep sales arm because the sales process “rightly requires increasingly significant customer safeguards”. Alistair Phillips-Davies of SSE said: “The world has moved on. We understand that fewer people are willing to engage with traditional doorstep sellers.” Richard Lloyd, executive director at Which? , welcomed SSE’s move: “Very few people think energy suppliers are trustworthy, so it’s good news that SSE is listening to consumers and trying to restore its reputation. As energy suppliers consider their policies on doorstep selling, it is important they don’t simply shift their efforts to other forms of cold calling. “We found that almost half (44%) of people have been phoned by an energy company in the past 12 months, and six in 10 felt pressured to switch, so suppliers should be focusing on better value products and customer service, rather than hard selling.” ‘Unwelcome but unsurprising announcement’ British Gas last increased its prices in December by 6.9% (or £43) for gas and 6.7% (£28) for electricity. In total, within a year its customers will have seen their bills rise by £258 or 25%. This compares with the £239 or 21% increase seen by Scottish Power customers last month . British Gas blamed steep rises in wholesale costs, which have increased 30% since last winter because of a higher global demand for gas, driven by increased consumption in Asia and the impact on supply of unrest in the Middle East and north Africa. It said customers could benefit from free loft and wall cavity insulation, free energy use monitoring, and flexible payment terms. British Gas managing director Phil Bentley said: “We know there is never a good time to raise prices, but we are buying in a global energy market and have to pay the market rate.” But consumer groups were outraged. Which?’s Lloyd said: “This is an unwelcome but unsurprising announcement for British Gas’s millions of customers. Many people are already having to cut back on essentials because of the rising cost of living, and with energy bills rising further this could be a cold winter for many.” Ann Robinson of uSwitch.com said there was a danger the move could lead the remaining four major suppliers to follow suit with price increases – the first round of rises which ended in March hit almost 28 million customers and added £630m on to household energy bills. Robinson said: “The impact on family budgets will be huge, but it will be particularly hard on those living on fixed incomes, and I would urge both suppliers and the government to start thinking now of how they can provide some support. “It may seem a long way ahead, but winter will be coming too quickly for those who cannot afford their fuel bills.” Earlier this week, energy secretary Chris Huhne held a summit with small energy suppliers to find out what help they need to break the dominance of the big six gas and electricity companies and help keep domestic energy prices down. His plan is to cut the red tape that makes it difficult for smaller energy companies to compete with the big six providers. Huhne said today: “Britain’s consumers are being buffeted by the violent and unpredictable winds of global fossil fuel prices. I refuse to stand by and watch this happen. I’m pushing the big six suppliers to help their customers overhaul their draughty homes and understand the best tariffs on offer, and I’m backing new entrants to bring more competition to the market. “The UK electricity market has to change so that we escape the cycle of fossil fuel addiction. Alternatives like renewables and nuclear power must be allowed to become the dominant component of our energy mix.” Shadow energy secretary Meg Hillier said: “Today’s announcement is bad news for bill-payers across Britain. Just as their belts cannot get any tighter, a whopping increase in energy bills will be landing on their doormats. It’s unfair, and many will feel they are being ripped off. “Enough is enough. David Cameron is sitting on his hands whilst our gas and electricity bills soar. It is time for the Competition Commission to launch an investigation into the stranglehold the big six energy suppliers have on the market. The Tory-led government have failed to act on behalf of the public. Customers’ household budgets are at breaking point, and this unfair British Gas price hike is the last straw.” The British Gas managing director of services and commercial, Chris Jansen, said on Sky News this morning that he is happy for customers to email him at chris.jansen@britishgas.co.uk and he will respond personally. Energy bills Household bills Consumer affairs Centrica Energy industry Utilities Scottish and Southern Energy Social exclusion Mark King guardian.co.uk
Continue reading …James Taranto at The Wall Street Journal just demolished a scare piece by Newsweek reporter Eve Conant (posted on July 4) with the overwrought headline “White Supremacist Stampede : A startling number of white-power candidates are seeking public office.” If we're being warned of dangerous new wave of white racist extremists, it naturally is another product of the leftist Southern Poverty Law Center, which warns daily of a radical-racist-right takeover of America. Taranto asked: How startling is this wave of white-power candidates from sea to shining sea? Potok’s group tracked 23 candidates in 2010 with radical right-wing views, nine of whom they described as white supremacists or white nationalists. (The others had extreme immigration and world-conspiracy views but did not specifically have links to white organizations.) One candidate, the neo-Confederate Loy Mauch, won a seat in the Arkansas House of Representatives… Taranto's rebuttal of the Newsweek reporter, whose article appeared on the Daily Beast website: Now, the SPLC has been known to exaggerate the prevalence of white supremacy and to smear people by falsely claiming they have white-supremacist sympathies. But even if you take these numbers at face value, they are quite unimpressive. In a country of 300 million, what does the Daily Beast call nine state legislative candidates, eight of whom lose? A stampede! In Conant's defense, she also tried to scare people that David Duke might run again for president in the 2012 Republican primaries: “A Duke candidacy could have a galvanizing effect. He has been living in Europe in recent years, but maintains a high profile—and stokes his fan base–online.” Perhaps Duke can run a front-porch campaign from Europe. Can't you smell the “stampede”? Naturally, Conant must also connect the white-power fringe to the Tea Party movement. The article's pull quote comes from Don Black of the racist group Stormfront (it's the part in bold type): Stormfront founder and radio host Don Black tells The Daily Beast the strategy is to start from the ground up, “where we have a chance of winning. It's impossible to get into the Senate or Congress but state legislatures or smaller offices can work.” Black says the Tea Party's influence spurred hopes among his ideological soulmates-but that the initial excitement has given way to a realpolitik sense that the Stormfront crowd will have to go it alone. “Many of our people are involved in the Tea Party,” says Black. “But much of their leadership is skittish when it comes to talking about racial realities. The Tea Party is a healthy movement but many are too conditioned to run like scared rabbits when called racists.” No office is too small to be scary to Conant when you're trying to find a “stampede.”
Continue reading …As the final mission of the space shuttle programme approaches, we will feature here the very best articles, audio and video marking this historic occasion Please email links for inclusion to science@guardian.co.uk , tweet @GuardianScience , or share your thoughts in the comments field below. Newest updates will be added to the top of the blog 8.58am: Alok Jha on his way to Kennedy Space Centre says that the launch team for STS-135 have begun filling the main fuel tanks of Atlantis. That doesn’t mean the launch is definitely going ahead though. Because of bad weather and the risk of lightening strikes there is still only a 30% chance that the final shuttle fight will go up today. The flight could still be called off right up to 9 minutes before the scheduled launch time of 11.26 EDT . Here’s Alok’s full story on the launch delay . This is the CBS take from this morning on the decision to refuel and the “dismal forecast” . 7.24pm: Update from Alok Jha at Cape Canaveral: Nasa has announced that it is investigating the effects of a possible lightning strike which occurred a third of a mile from the launch pad. Engineers will review data, the agency said in a statement, and inspect the rotating service structure, which provides access to the orbiter on the launchpad and has to be rolled back before launch. It is not yet clear whether this will impact the launch time. . 7.09pm: Richard Luscombe has written this piece on the economic meltdown faced by the Forida “space coast”. As landlord of the nearest pub to the Kennedy Space Centre, Bill Grillo is proud of his highbrow crowd of regulars. For three decades, astronauts, rocket scientists, engineers, technicians and mission managers have kept the till at Shuttles sports bar and grill ringing. Every American who has blasted into space from a nearby launchpad has taken a meal there, and had his or her framed picture placed prominently on a wall. But all that will change this month when the time bell rings for Nasa’s iconic space shuttle programme. Also in the Guardian tomorrow: • Space shuttle retirement leaves ‘yawning gap’ in human spaceflight • Soyuz lacks shuttle’s ability to repair space station, warn space experts 7.04pm: Latest update from a drenched Alok Jha at Cape Canaveral: Tropical downpours and thunderstorms around Cape Canaveral in Florida are reducing the likelihood of Nasa’s final space shuttle launching on schedule on Friday. Mission STS-135 is due to launch at 11:26am (EDT), bound for the International Space Station. But meteorologists at Nasa have warned that storm fronts will continue to hit the launchpad throughout the weekend. At a briefing on Thursday, as lightning hit the launch pad, the shuttle launch weather officer Kathy Winters said that there was a 30% chance of favourable weather for the scheduled launch time. Winters told Spaceflight Now that the weather “is not looking good for launch. As you can see outside, the clouds have rolled in, we’re starting to see some showers, we even had a thunderstorm show up this morning along Cocoa Beach. We are expecting more of this the next couple of days.” If Atlantis misses its launch window on Friday, there are additional opportunities to launch on Saturday and Sunday mornings, when the chances for favourable weather increase to around 40% and 60% respectively. If the delay continues after that, the next window for launch is likely to be on July 16th. A launch opportunity could also be opened up between July 8th to 10th if Nasa officials can negotiate a delay in the planned Delta IV rocket launch from Cape Canaveral next week. This rocket is scheduled to launch a GPS satellite. 6.18pm: The Washington Post has put together a spectacular collection of shuttle images taken by photographer Philip Scott Andrews . Andrews writes: We have spent the past three years securing access and photographing scenes few people have ever witnessed. It has been quite a bit of work, but I have felt humbled and privileged every minute… In the simplest terms, these photographs tell a story of the work of men and women who showed up every day and launched spaceships. By doing their jobs well, these workers — from much-hailed astronauts to Harley-riding technicians — have made the extraordinary task of spaceflight seem mundane. Elsewhere: Nasa will base its new crew module – for missions beyond low Earth orbit – on the Orion capsule that was developed for the now defunct Constellation programme. They have footage of the spacecraft, along with film inside a mock-up of the shuttle – over at Sky News. 5.53pm: If you’re in the right part of the world at the right time, you can see the shuttle in orbit. National Geographic points out this is the last opportunity to see the orbiting shuttle with naked eyes, and gives some tips on how to spot Atlantis . Will the shuttle fly over your location? The prospects for a final shuttle flight on Friday look rather bleak as storms gather over the space coast. The AP press agency is reporting a senior manager as saying NASA will try for an on-time launch of Atlantis despite a 70 percent chance bad weather would stop the liftoff. Launch time is scheduled for 11:26 a.m. Flordida time (BST-5 hours). More here, including weather maps, from the Washington Post . Meanwhile: Channel 4 News in the UK has put together a fascinating retrospective on the shuttle programme. I couldn’t help but find these comments arresting, from Dr Jonathan Clark, a Nasa surgeon who lost his wife Laurel when she was killed in the Columbia disaster. “It cost my wife’s life and my son no longer had a mother, and for me it was a truly personal cost. But despite the loss that we felt personally, both my son and I feel that the loss was worth it,” Dr Clark said. “Think of what the early explorers had to encounter. If they had to turn back every time they lost somebody, just think of what we’d be doing now: we would be a pitiful species if we didn’t expand beyond our horizons.” See the full package here . 8.27am: Good morning. Ian Sample, the Guardian’s science correspondent, interviewed shuttle astronauts Piers Sellers and Scott Altman for the cover feature of today’s G2 section . Each describes in detail what it’s like to ride the shuttle into space and back. Here’s a flavour. Sellers on take-off: You see the power come up on the indicators in the cockpit, you see the thrust go up from zero to 100% on three engines and then you feel the whole stack sway forwards towards your feet, and that is because the thrust of the engines is so great that it bends the shuttle and stack on its hold-down bolts, and pushes it to one side. They call that the twang. The twang goes all the way, about 4ft, and then the whole stack bounces back. And at exactly the right moment, zero, the solid rocket boosters light and the hold-down bolts explode and off you go. It feels as if someone lit a bomb underneath your back. Altman: The vehicle is shaking incredibly. You can get to switches – you have to take your time and focus on what you’re doing and make sure you get to the right switch. Sellers on reaching orbit: We have a plan to get us through the first day in orbit. You get out of your suit, hang it up, then convert the shuttle from being a rocket into being a spacecraft. You’re putting out computers, moving bags around, stuff like that, and that takes longer than you’d think, about four or five hours. Sellers on re-entry: You don’t see much to start with, but after a while you get this beautiful cherry-red glow all round the shuttle and you can see it snapping over the tail. It kind of pulses, but over the forward cockpit windows it’s just a beautiful cherry red that you can see through. In daylight you can see through this red haze and see the world. Altman on the Columbia, which was destroyed on entry in 2003: Six of the seven astronauts on Columbia were very close friends of mine. Three were my classmates, the other three were in the class right after me. Dave Brown had been my flight surgeon in the navy. It was a shock to me to realise that basically we did almost the same thing again, in that we missed the warning signs: foam falling off the vehicle was a threat and we hadn’t learned from that mistake. Thursday _ 5.40pm: There is now a 70% chance that bad weather will delay the launch on Friday, Nasa told a press conference this afternoon. Among panellists answering questions were Mike Moses , launch integration manager, and weather officer Kathy Winters . “The vehicle is in fantastic shape,” said Moses, but went on, “Before we go load the propellants into the tank we’ll take a look at the weather and make sure it’s really a good day to try that, and so at that point we’ll be making a decision.” “We have a tropical wave that’s out in the Caribbean,” explained Winters. “That wave is actually going to come into Florida along with a lot of tropical moisture that’s down to the south, and it’s all going to roll into Florida in the next couple of days.” Winters gave an 80% chance of bad weather disrupting “tanking operations”, and a 70% chance it would prevent launch on Friday. 3.37pm: NASASpaceFlight.com provides a useful rundown of launch windows available for Atlantis should weather or anything else delay the flight. The first window is 11.21–11.31 EDT (16.21-16.31 BST) to rendezvous with the International Space Station on day three of the mission, with an option to extend to 11.35 EDT to rendezvous on day four. There will be further opportunities on Saturday and Sunday. The next is not until the following Saturday. Launch opportunities exist from July 8 to July 10, prior to the current plan to standdown for the Delta IV GPS launch, as the range undergoes reconfiguration for the Cape Canaveral launch, resulting in a constraint which stretches from July 11 to July 15. The next earliest launch opportunity is 16 July, per the current plan, which can be – if required – negotiated with the the United Launch Alliance (ULA) to potentially juggle the range priority back to Atlantis. The same website has an excellent piece summing up Atlantis’s career . It opens rather like a speech at a retirement party: For Atlantis, the last decade of her career would be marked with many more triumphs as she joined her sisters in the most ambitious project in space to date: construction of the International Space Station. This would mean dodging the order for retirement a whooping two times to become the only Space Shuttle orbiter with three penultimate flights and two “final” flights. Thanks once again to @Violetta73 who emailed these links to science@guardian.co.uk . 1.28pm: In the comments @Violetta73 recommends a good place to watch launch coverage on Nasa HD-TV : “Click the link for the pop-out version for a bigger screen.” 12.58pm: Nasa administrator Charlie Bolden was online for an hour-long web chat on Tuesday answering questions about Nasa’s future. The full transcript is now available online , but here’s a flavour. Q: After the last launch. What’s next for Nasa? A: Immediately following the successful flight of STS-135, and close-out of the shuttle era, attention will turn to facilitating the success of US commercial spacecraft for cargo and crew transportation to low-Earth orbit. At the same time, Nasa will focus on the design and development of a heavy lift rocket with a multipurpose crew vehicle to enable us to at long last embark on deep-space exploration with humans. Q: Why was the shuttle-like concept of a re-useable spacecraft that could take off and land abandoned in favour of Apollo-era capsules? A: For deep-space exploration, re-entry vehicles require the ability to withstand much greater pressure and temperature than present-day winged vehicles can take. We expect that for low-Earth orbit operations such as transportation to the ISS, at least two of the perspective competitors, Orbital Sciences and Sierra Nevada, have proposed winged vehicles for their designs. Q: Will the astronauts still be Nasa astronauts or will they be employed by a private contractor such as Space X? Seems like the only thing changing is the contractor and the equipment. Is that an accurate assessment administrator Bolden? Thanks! A: As the president has promised, Nasa and the nation will continue our leadership in human spaceflight. In doing so, we will continue to maintain a vibrant and involved astronaut corps headquartered at the Johnson Space Center. We currently have several astronauts in the training pipeline, and at the appropriate time we will open up the process for more. Q: What is meant on the Nasa website when it says that Nasa will be “fostering a commercial industry”? Will projects previously done by Nasa be given by the government to private contractors to carry out? A: As we have always done, Nasa is partnering with the aerospace industry to produce vehicles to provide safe, reliable access to low-Earth orbit for astronauts and cargo. Our role now, compared to the shuttle era, is to be a purchaser of service as opposed to the owner and operator. Q: What do you see as the biggest impact Nasa aeronautics research will have on the future of aviation? A: While it is always difficult to predict the future, we are very hopeful that some of our plans with blended wing body aircraft currently being discussed with industry, academia and other federal agencies will one day revolutionise air travel for passenger, cargo and even military use. 12.13pm: The blog Dearlove on Space – blogging from the Nasa tweetup – tries to rain on the shuttle’s parade: I believe the end of the space shuttle is a good thing, allow me a few words to tell you why. 1. The Space Shuttle has had its day … 2. The Soyuz is reliable enough …. 3. The private craft look amazing … Wednesday _ 8.38pm: That’s all for today folks. We hope to provide more frequent updates in the coming days. 8.34pm: Nasa provided a mission update earlier this evening: After flying to NASA’s Kennedy Space Center in Florida yesterday, the STS-135 astronauts today are reviewing their flight data file and conducting checks of their launch and entry suits. At Kennedy’s Launch Pad 39A, technicians have completed space shuttle Atlantis’ aft confidence checks and final preparations of the main propulsion system. Despite storms in the area over the extended weekend, there were no reports of adverse weather or lightning strikes inside the launch pad. 8.31pm: Spaceflight Now is providing live coverage of the mission. Text updates will appear automatically: there’s no need to reload the page. 8.26pm: Who better to sum up the story of Nasa’s bold adventurers and their spaceship than William Shatner? 8.16pm: BBC news helps to lower expectations in the light of a slightly dodgy weather forecast for Friday. “I wish I had a better briefing for you,” Nasa’s shuttle weather officer Kathy Winters told reporters. “Right now we are going with a 60% chance of KSC weather prohibiting launch due to the potential for showers and isolated thunderstorms in the area.” Huge crowds are expected on the Space Coast to watch the 1126 local time (1526 GMT) lift-off. The forecast is going to make for some tough decisions on their part. Do they endure the jammed roads and long queues on Friday to get into the best viewing positions, only for the launch to be postponed? Or do they stay away, hoping for a 24-hour delay and much better weather prospects. 6pm: The countdown has started! We are T-43 hours (or thereabouts) and counting. Add in some pre-planned “holds” in the countdown over the next few days and that leads to the 11:26am (EDT) liftoff plan for Friday. There is a live feed of the countdown clock at Spaceflight Now . The only slight cloud on the horizon for Atlantis is a 60% chance of showers and thunderstorms on Friday, according to Kathy Winters, shuttle weather officer. According to Spaceflight Now, there are no hardware worries being worked as the count starts and “activities planned during the early portion of the countdown for shuttle workers include buttoning up launch pad equipment and removing platforms inside the orbiter’s crew module, reviewing flight software stored in Atlantis’ mass memory units, loading backup software into the general purpose computers and testing navigation systems. Loading of cryogenic reactants into the orbiter’s power-generating fuel cells will occur tomorrow.” 4.38pm: Flight engineer Ron Garan is on the International Space Station preparing for the arrival of Atlantis and is tweeting as @Astro_Ron . Thanks to @Violetta73 for providing a link to his fascinating blog , which has posts both from space and during training. For anyone following all the action on Twitter, Nasa has this list of tweeps attending its launch Tweetup . 12.30pm: Television coverage of shuttle launches rarely does justice to the deafening roar of a shuttle lifting off, even when you’re standing 3 miles away at the press viewing site. The delay between the sight of the shuttle rising into the air and the first sound of the engines also comes as a surprise. Fortunately, for those of us who will now never get the chance to watch a shuttle launch live, this video captures the experience pretty well. Our thanks to @ErrorGorilla for bringing this to our attention. At 3pm BST (10am EDT) Nasa will give its pre-countdown status briefing. Test director Jeremy Graeber, payload manager Joe Delai, and shuttle weather officer Kathy Winters will update the assembled press on the latest developments. You can watch the briefing live on Nasa TV . At 6pm BST the countdown will officially start. Tuesday _ Monday 7.23pm: Nasa provides a brief explanation of the symbolism in the crew patch , which is reproduced at the head of this article: The STS-135 patch represents the space shuttle Atlantis embarking on its mission to resupply the International Space Station. Atlantis is centered over elements of the NASA emblem depicting how the space shuttle has been at the heart of NASA for the last 30 years. It also pays tribute to the entire NASA and contractor team that made possible all the incredible accomplishments of the space shuttle. Omega, the last letter in the Greek alphabet, recognizes this mission as the last flight of the Space Shuttle Program Ferguson, Hurley, Magnus and Walheim are the four crew members . 6.35pm: AP has produced a handy interactive feature detailing every space shuttle mission to date, hosted here on msnbc.com 5.54pm: A fascinating Nasa video explains the role of the shuttle’s closeout crew in preparing the vehicle and the astronauts for launch. STS-135 closeout crew lead Travis Thompson opens the film with this modest line: Closeout crew is not special. There’s thousands of people out here that have thousands of jobs. You know, and each one’s equally important. The only unique thing about us is we have the last hands-on job before the bird flies. Read a transcript here . 5.21pm: Nasa reveals that Atlantis will take an iPhone into space : There is at least one first involved with space shuttle Atlantis’ STS-135 mission, a flight notable for its lasts: the crew is taking the first iPhone into space to help with experiments aboard the International Space Station. A Houston company called Odyssey Space Research developed an application for the Apple smartphone that is meant to help the astronauts track their scientific results and perhaps one day aid navigation. The device will be housed inside a small research platform built by NanoRacks. The platform will be placed inside the station. The app, called SpaceLab for iOS, is even available to Earthbound smartphone users to perform the same experiments with the software simulating microgravity. According to the company, the software was designed with the iPhone’s unique attributes in mind, such as the gyro, accelerometer, cameras and chip. 5.01pm: Karen James of the HMS Beagle Project and @ErrorGorilla recommend The Atlantic’s wonderful photo essay charting the history of the shuttle from the drawing board onwards, which includes an image of Star Trek actors attending the first public appearance of the first shuttle, Enterprise, in Palmdale, California on 17 September 1976. 4.52pm: Our friends at the Daily Telegraph have drawn our attention to their excellent “infographic video history of the Nasa space shuttle” . 4.49pm: You can follow each of the crew members on Twitter: Mission specialists Rex Walheim and Sandy Magnus , pilot Doug Hurley and commander Chris Ferguson . Monday 1.49pm: At 11.26am (EDT) on Friday, the space shuttle Atlantis will begin its final mission into space. It will be the 135th and last mission of the shuttle programme, known formally in Nasa circles as the Space Transportation System (STS). The first mission was launched in April 1981 and, just over 30 years later, the bright dream of having a reusable spacecraft to ferry people and goods into space and back will finally fade away. In addition to regular features from the Guardian throughout the week, this blog will bring you the best of the shuttle-related articles, pictures, audio and video from elsewhere on the web. Do share any thoughts and links with us in the comments below and we will include the best here for everyone to read. If all goes to plan, on Friday Atlantis will embark on a 12-day mission to the International Space Station, carrying commander Chris Ferguson, pilot Doug Hurley and mission specialists Sandy Magnus and Rex Walheim on what will be the last American-controlled flight into space for the foreseeable future. In the shuttle’s cargo bay will be the Raffaello multipurpose logistics module, which contains supplies and spare parts for the space station and its crew. For anyone interested in the nuts and bolts of what happens in the next few days, Nasa’s guide to the countdown is a useful starter. The famous countdown clock for the mission will begin ticking around 43 hours before the scheduled launch time and you can also see it in action here and also access up-to-the-minute status reports of the entire mission. Magazines, newspapers and websites have been filled with pre-emptive shuttle eulogies in the past week, and the mood is bittersweet. Tim Radford’s essay on the highs and lows of the shuttle programme is a good place to begin: “The space shuttle broke all records,” he says. “But in the end it all but broke Nasa.” Over at the Observer, science editor Robin McKie examines the compromises in structure and design that Nasa had to make in order to get the shuttle programme approved and on budget. The Economist talks of the launch of Atlantis as the end of the Apollo era dreams and “the heroic phase of space exploration, with chiselled-jawed astronauts venturing where no man has gone before, inspiring schoolchildren and defending democracy (or socialism)”. Ever wondered what it feels like to be thrown around as the shuttle falls to the ground from space? Reuters correspondent Irene Klotz describes her recent trip aboard a Shuttle Training Aircraft (STA) . Shuttle pilots have to practise hundreds of landings before they are allowed to land the orbiter itself: As we careened toward ground, coming in seven times steeper than a commercial airliner, the runway looked impossibly small and surrealistic, a dollhouse version of real life. Shuttle landings occur at about 230 miles per hour and it took us less than 30 seconds to reach that point after the STA started to dive. An article in the Los Angeles Times examines the kind of people who volunteer for this sort of mission, the 358 people who became shuttle astronauts. Lacking the “star power” of their predecessors in the Mercury, Gemini and Apollo programmes, writes Ralph Vartabedian, the shuttle astronauts’ biggest headlines came in tragedy, when seven died in the 1986 explosion of Challenger and seven more perished in the fiery reentry breakup of Columbia in 2003. But in many ways, what they accomplished before they walked into Nasa, during their flights and in their careers afterward, was a leap forward. They were well-educated, physically fit, intellectually curious and diverse – men, women, blacks, Latinos and Asian Americans mingled in what before was an exclusive club. The shuttle pilots flew orbiters above Earth with their hands on the thruster controls, delicately docking with the International Space Station and making no-second-chance landings on Earth. They walked in space scores of times, repairing the Hubble telescope and methodically assembling the space station from bits and pieces flown up in the shuttle’s big trunk. And their stories became much more a part of the common American fabric, even as they achieved something rarer than winning a lottery. The shuttle astronauts came from every corner of the nation and every background, and scattered in every direction when their space days ended. The New York Times examines the uncertain future of the scientists and engineers who have devoted themselves to the shuttle programme. Nasa already seems worried about a “brain drain” of talent once the shuttle has been mothballed. Space experts say the best and brightest often head for the doors when rocket lines get marked for extinction, dampening morale and creating hidden threats. They call it the “Team B” effect. “The good guys see the end coming and leave,” said Albert D. Wheelon, a former aerospace executive and Central Intelligence Agency official. “You’re left with the B students.” Nasa acknowledges the effect and its attendant dangers. It has taken hundreds of steps, including retention bonuses for skilled employees, new perks like travel benefits and more safety drills. Through cuts and attrition in recent years, the shuttle workforce has declined to 7,000 workers from about 17,000. As the programme draws to a close, it is worth keeping in mind the design and engineering accomplishment of the people who brought us the shuttle. This set of images on Space.com, taken from the archives of Nasa, show how handmade and delicate each shuttle is, a testament to the ingenuity of the engineers, scientists and designers who crafted these extraordinary space vehicles. Final space shuttle mission The space shuttle Nasa Space United States Alok Jha James Kingsland guardian.co.uk
Continue reading …• Andy Coulson to be arrested today • David Cameron to give press conference • Pressure on Rebekah Brooks to quit • NOTW staff angry at Murdoch’s decision to close paper 8.49am: Andy Coulson has arrived at West End Central Police Station, on Saville Row, to answer questions that he knew about, or had direct involvement in, phone hacking, according to the Times (paywall) . 8.33am: Milband has just finished speaking. Here are some key quotes. On politicians’ relationship with the press : For too long, political leaders have been too concerned about what people in the press would think and too fearful of speaking out about these issues. If one section of the media is allowed to grow so powerful that it becomes insulated from political criticism a nd scrutiny of its behaviour, the proper system of checks and balances breaks down and abuses of power are likely to follow. We must all bear responsibility for that. My party has not been immune from it. Nor has the current government and Prime Minister. All of this is difficult because of his personal relationships and the powerful forces here. On David Cameron’s relationship with Andy Coulson : Putting it right for the prime minister means starting by the appalling error of judgement he made in hiring Andy Coulson. Apologising for bringing him in to the centre of the government machine. Coming clean about what conversations he had with Andy Coulson before and after his appointment about phone-hacking. On the need for a judge-led inquiry : We need a judge-led inquiry to shine a light on the culture and practices which need to change. This should be established immediately with terms of reference agreed before the summer. The inquiry should cover the culture and unlawful practices of some parts of the newspaper industry, the relationship between the police and media, and the nature of regulation. On the BSkyB deal : Most immediately, the decision on BskyB has significant implications for media ownership in Britain. The public must have confidence that the right decisions are being made. That is why we have consistently said there should be a reference to the Competition Commission, the proper regulatory body. The government has chosen a different path which relies on assurances from executives at News Corporation. Given the doubts hanging over the assurances about phone hacking by News international executives, I cannot see, and the public will not understand, how this can provide the fair dealing that is necessary. On the culpability of News International executives : I welcome James Murdoch’s admission of serious errors. But closing the News of the World, possibly to re-open as the Sunday Sun, is not the answer. Instead those who were in charge must take responsibility for what happened. On Media regulation and the Press Complaints Commission : The PCC was established to be a watchdog. But it has been exposed as a toothless poodle. Wherever blame lies for this, the PCC cannot restore trust in self-regulation. It is time to put the PCC out of its misery. We need a new watchdog. There needs to be fundamental change. My instincts continue to be that a form of self-regulation would be the best way forward. That is a debate we should have. But it would need to be very different to work. Let me make some initial suggestions, drawing on many of the debates about the inadequacies of the system. A new body should have: far greater independence of its Board members from those it regulates; proper investigative powers; and an ability to enforce corrections. 8.23am: Ed Milband is giving a speech at Reuters. He says it “has been a tumultuous week for British journalism with allegations that have shocked the British public’s sense of decency”. 8.17am: Good morning. Welcome to the Guardian’s continued live coverage of the News of the World phone hacking scandal. • David Cameron’s former director of communications Andy Coulson has been told by police that he will be arrested this morning over suspicions that he knew about, or had direct involvement in, the hacking of mobile phones during his editorship of the News of the World. The Guardian understands that a second arrest is also to be made in the next few days of a former senior journalist at the paper. The Guardian knows the identity of the second suspect but is withholding the name to avoid prejudicing the police investigation. • The prime minister will hold a press conference at 9.30am at which he will be under pressure over the government’s handling of the phone hacking scandal and the BSkyB takeover deal, his hiring of Andy Coulson, who resigned in January, his friendship with Rebekah Brooks and his close links with the Murdochs. Phone hacking News of the World News International Rupert Murdoch Rebekah Brooks Andy Coulson James Murdoch David Cameron Ed Miliband Haroon Siddique guardian.co.uk
Continue reading …• Andy Coulson to be arrested today • David Cameron to give press conference • Pressure on Rebekah Brooks to quit • NOTW staff angry at Murdoch’s decision to close paper 8.49am: Andy Coulson has arrived at West End Central Police Station, on Saville Row, to answer questions that he knew about, or had direct involvement in, phone hacking, according to the Times (paywall) . 8.33am: Milband has just finished speaking. Here are some key quotes. On politicians’ relationship with the press : For too long, political leaders have been too concerned about what people in the press would think and too fearful of speaking out about these issues. If one section of the media is allowed to grow so powerful that it becomes insulated from political criticism a nd scrutiny of its behaviour, the proper system of checks and balances breaks down and abuses of power are likely to follow. We must all bear responsibility for that. My party has not been immune from it. Nor has the current government and Prime Minister. All of this is difficult because of his personal relationships and the powerful forces here. On David Cameron’s relationship with Andy Coulson : Putting it right for the prime minister means starting by the appalling error of judgement he made in hiring Andy Coulson. Apologising for bringing him in to the centre of the government machine. Coming clean about what conversations he had with Andy Coulson before and after his appointment about phone-hacking. On the need for a judge-led inquiry : We need a judge-led inquiry to shine a light on the culture and practices which need to change. This should be established immediately with terms of reference agreed before the summer. The inquiry should cover the culture and unlawful practices of some parts of the newspaper industry, the relationship between the police and media, and the nature of regulation. On the BSkyB deal : Most immediately, the decision on BskyB has significant implications for media ownership in Britain. The public must have confidence that the right decisions are being made. That is why we have consistently said there should be a reference to the Competition Commission, the proper regulatory body. The government has chosen a different path which relies on assurances from executives at News Corporation. Given the doubts hanging over the assurances about phone hacking by News international executives, I cannot see, and the public will not understand, how this can provide the fair dealing that is necessary. On the culpability of News International executives : I welcome James Murdoch’s admission of serious errors. But closing the News of the World, possibly to re-open as the Sunday Sun, is not the answer. Instead those who were in charge must take responsibility for what happened. On Media regulation and the Press Complaints Commission : The PCC was established to be a watchdog. But it has been exposed as a toothless poodle. Wherever blame lies for this, the PCC cannot restore trust in self-regulation. It is time to put the PCC out of its misery. We need a new watchdog. There needs to be fundamental change. My instincts continue to be that a form of self-regulation would be the best way forward. That is a debate we should have. But it would need to be very different to work. Let me make some initial suggestions, drawing on many of the debates about the inadequacies of the system. A new body should have: far greater independence of its Board members from those it regulates; proper investigative powers; and an ability to enforce corrections. 8.23am: Ed Milband is giving a speech at Reuters. He says it “has been a tumultuous week for British journalism with allegations that have shocked the British public’s sense of decency”. 8.17am: Good morning. Welcome to the Guardian’s continued live coverage of the News of the World phone hacking scandal. • David Cameron’s former director of communications Andy Coulson has been told by police that he will be arrested this morning over suspicions that he knew about, or had direct involvement in, the hacking of mobile phones during his editorship of the News of the World. The Guardian understands that a second arrest is also to be made in the next few days of a former senior journalist at the paper. The Guardian knows the identity of the second suspect but is withholding the name to avoid prejudicing the police investigation. • The prime minister will hold a press conference at 9.30am at which he will be under pressure over the government’s handling of the phone hacking scandal and the BSkyB takeover deal, his hiring of Andy Coulson, who resigned in January, his friendship with Rebekah Brooks and his close links with the Murdochs. Phone hacking News of the World News International Rupert Murdoch Rebekah Brooks Andy Coulson James Murdoch David Cameron Ed Miliband Haroon Siddique guardian.co.uk
Continue reading …Three men will appear in court charged with the murder of two teenagers shot in an alleyway in Milton Keynes Three men will appear in court charged with the murder of two teenagers shot in an alleyway. Yahya Harun, 20, Sharmake Abdulkadir, 20 and Fuad Awale, 23, are due at Milton Keynes magistrates court on Friday. The men, who are all from Milton Keynes, are charged in connection with the fatal shooting of Mohammed Abdi Farah, 19, and Amin Ahmed Ismail, 18, on the town’s Fishermead council estate on 26 May. Abdulkadir has also been charged with possession of a firearm with intent to endanger life. A 17-year-old boy has been released without charge. Both victims were from the Somali community and were known to police for involvement in low-level crime. Superintendent Rob Mason said: “I still believe there are people who have crucial information, but who have not yet come forward and spoken about it. “I hope that the fact we have charged three people with this offence will encourage anyone who has been previously too afraid to come forward to find the courage to speak to the police. “It is still really important that anyone who has any evidence contacts us.” Anyone with information in connection with the incident should contact 0845 8505 505 or Crimestoppers, where information can be given anonymously, on 0800 555 111. Crime guardian.co.uk
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