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Danish firm Lundbeck to stop US jails using drug for lethal injections

Lundbeck will make distributors sign deal banning them from selling its pentobarbital to US prisons for executing prisoners A Danish company has moved to prevent one of its drugs being used to execute prisoners in the US. Lundbeck will demand that US distributors sign an agreement stating that they will not make pentobarbital, which is a sedative with a wide range of uses, available for prisons using it for lethal injections. The move comes after the UK banned the export to the US of pentobarbital and two other pharmaceutical drugs used to execute prisoners on death row in April this year. “Lundbeck will have to approve each order and everyone buying the product must sign a paper stating they will not sell it on to prisons,” said Ulf Wiinberg, chief executive of Lundbeck. He said US prisons had been able to buy the drug indirectly through stores and wholesalers. “We are confident that our new distribution programme will play a substantial role in restricting prisons’ access,” he said, promising to take action against any distributor selling the drug to a prison. Pentobarbital has been used to execute prisoners in Georgia, Alabama, Ohio and Oklahoma. The drug, which is produced by Lundbeck’s plant in Kansas, is used in the treatment of epileptic seizures, but has also become a key element in US executions. Wiinberg said the company discussed the issue with its shareholders and human rights organisations. “I have not experienced any pressure from our shareholders,” he said. “My understanding is that they have felt that we did the right thing.” In April the UK business secretary, Vince Cable, announced a ban on the export to the US of three pharmaceutical drugs used to execute prisoners on death row, including pentobarbital. The move came after a parliamentary inquiry heard that enough pharmaceutical drugs had been sold to the US by licensed British wholesalers since last summer to execute 100 death row inmates. Reprieve, the London-based rights group that sought the ban, welcomed the news. “Lundbeck has proven that manufacturers can control the use and distribution of their drugs. Any company manufacturing execution drugs who refuses to take such steps will be directly complicit in executions,” Reprieve investigator Maya Foa said in a statement. “Other pharmaceutical companies should now follow Lundbeck’s example.” Denmark Pharmaceuticals industry Capital punishment United States Europe Adam Gabbatt David Batty guardian.co.uk

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WI Supreme Court Justice Prosser Grabs Fox Reporter’s Microphone

Click here to view this media Wisconsin Supreme Court Justice David Prosser didn’t do himself any favors with this interview by Fox6 in Madison Wisconsin today. Reporter Mike Lowe attempted to ask Prosser about the allegations that he grabbed fellow Supreme Court Justice Ann Walsh Bradley around the neck . Here’s more from Fox6 — EXCLUSIVE: FOX6 talks to four of the seven Wisconsin Supreme Court Justices : Grabbing the microphone – and the spotlight. Wisconsin Supreme Court Justice David Prosser did both when FOX6′s Mike Lowe attempted to speak with him about the serious allegations of a physical altercation with Justice Anne Walsh Bradley on Thursday. Six of Wisconsin’s Supreme Court Justices witnessed an alleged physical altercation between Prosser and Bradley in Bradley’s chambers on June 13th. On Thursday, when FOX’s Mike Lowe asked Justice Prosser about the alleged incident, he grabbed the FOX6 microphone and then gave it back. Prosser did not answer any of Mike Lowe’s questions. FOX6 News could not find Justice Bradley and she hasn’t responded to requests for an interview. But Mike Lowe did speak with Chief Justice Shirley Abrahamson, who witnessed the altercation. Justice Abrahamson said, “This matter is under investigation by the sheriff’s department and the judicial commission and let’s wait and see how that turn out.” Justice Annette Ziegler did not answer questions Thursday either. She only told Mike Lowe, “I really don’t have a comment so thank you very much. I hope you have a nice day.” The Dane County Sheriff’s Department is conducting a criminal investigation and the Wisconsin Judicial Commission has opened an investigation to see if the Code of Judicial Conduct was violated.

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Chinese president Hu Jintao’s warning as Communist party celebrates 90 years

Hu Jintao says party will lose support if corruption is not dealt with effectively The Chinese president, Hu Jintao, warned that the Communist party was still suffering from corruption and other “growing pains” as the 90-year-old organisation celebrated its anniversary in lavish style at the Great Hall of the People in Beijing. In a highly choreographed event that was broadcast live across the nation, Hu lauded the achievements of the venerable and vast political party but emphasised the need for greater internal discipline. His message was partly overshadowed by the mysterious absence of his predecessor, Jiang Zemin, from the lineup of senior cadres. “If corruption does not get solved effectively, the party will lose the people’s trust and support. The entire party should stay alert and fully appreciate the long-term complexity and arduousness of the fight against corruption, and make more efforts in fighting corruption and building a clean government,” Hu said. Corruption is endemic. Revelations of bribery, influence peddling and misuse of public funds are a regular staple of the domestic media. Among the most recent cases was the sacking of the railway minister, Liu Zhijun, who was accused of taking 1bn yuan (£95m). The Chinese Academy of Social Sciences estimates that 800bn yuan (£76bn) was transferred overseas by officials and executives who later fled the country . Far more is likely to have been squirrelled away or lavished on banquets, second homes and lovers inside China. Hu gave little hope, however, to those seeking wider political reform that might curb the power of cadres, some of whom he acknowledged were “incompetent” and “divorced from the people”. Instead of radical change, he said, the party needed more internal democracy. His comments reflect the transformation of the Chinese Communist party, which started in 1921 as a revolutionary organisation with a dozen founders, and is now a technocracy with 80 million members and distinctly aristocratic tendencies. Many senior cadres – large numbers of whom are now the “princeling” sons and daughters of former leaders – use party connections for self-enrichment in an increasingly divided society. Lacking an electoral mandate, the party has built its legitimacy on managerial competence and national strength, particularly with economic growth and engineering prowess. This week’s political celebrations have coincided with the unveiling of three mega-projects: the world’s longest sea bridge , which spans the 16 miles (26km) from Qingdao to Huangdao; the world’s longest gas pipeline, which stretches 5,400 miles (8,700km) from Xingjiang to Guangzhou; and a new high-speed railway, which cuts the travelling time between Beijing and Shanghai to less than five hours . In the runup to its own birthday this week, the party has also ramped up the propaganda volume with a series of high-profile events, including a “Red Song” contest in Chongqing that reportedly drew 100,000 people, the premiere of a star-studded historical drama about the founding years, and lavish TV galas. State media have run extensive special issues highlighting the successes of the party in ejecting foreign colonialists, taking power under Mao Zedong in 1959, lifting hundreds of millions out of poverty and maintaining stability. Little or no mention has been made of the party’s failings, including famines that killed tens of millions of people after the Great Leap Forward in the late 1950s, the murderous political chaos of the Cultural Revolution, and the massacre of several hundred protesters after the Tiananmen Square demonstrations of 1989. Hu only said lessons had been learned. “In some historical periods, we once made mistakes and even suffered severe setbacks, the root cause of which was that our guiding thought then was divorced from China’s reality. Our party managed to correct the mistakes by the strength of itself and the people, rose up amid the setbacks and continued to go forward victoriously,” he told the thousands of senior cadres gathered inside the Great Hall of the People. The biggest surprise was the non-appearance of the former president and party leader Jiang Zemin, prompting speculation of illness or a rift within the higher echelons of the party. The former is more likely, given that Jiang is 84, but he also represents a different strand of opinion about the future direction of the party and the nation. Internal party debates are carried out behind closed doors, but there has long been a divide between those like Jiang on the “right” who favour more deregulation, opening and market reform and those on the “new left” who favour a more interventionist, egalitarian and authoritarian approach. Hu was seen as being closer to the former when he took power in 2002, but he has spent much of his time as state president and party secretary straddling the two camps. China Communism Jonathan Watts guardian.co.uk

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Half a million Canadians set to flock to Ottawa to see young royal couple

Prince William and bride Kate guests of honour at capital city’s Canada Day celebrations The Canadian capital city of Ottawa is preparing for an influx of up to 500,000 visitors hoping for a glimpse of the guests of honour – Prince William, the country’s probable future king, and his bride, the Duchess of Cambridge – at its Canada Day celebrations on Friday. If the enthusiasm is as great as it was for the couple’s arrival at the start of their first official overseas tour together on Thursday, it may be overwhelming. Thousands thronged the streets around the national war memorial and the grounds of Rideau Hall, the governor-general’s residence, many screaming with excitement – desperate to see the duchess in particular. The Canada Day events will start with the couple attending a citizenship ceremony for the country’s newest citizens at the Canadian Museum of Civilization . Such ceremonies are held across Canada each national day, with about 150,000 sworn in. This year, for the first time, the newly elected Conservative government has called for military service personnel – preferably veterans of its Afghan participation – to attend each ceremony and make speeches about what it means to be a Canadian. The royal couple will hand out flags to those at the Ottawa ceremony. The centrepiece of the day will be the formal commemoration of the 144th anniversary of the day Canada recognises as the start of its foundation as a state in 1867, when the provinces of the eastern seaboard formed a single dominion for the first time. More poignantly and personally for William, it is the day on which his mother, Princess Diana, would have celebrated her 50th birthday – she attended the Canada Day celebrations during a royal tour in 1983, when seven years younger than William is now. This year, the royal couple will be driven to the formal noon ceremony on Parliament Hill in the state landau before watching military and artistic displays and hearing speeches. The government says their presence “will add a youthful dimension” to the show and William will make his second speech of the tour – perhaps with a slightly better French accent than he managed on Thursday, when he promised it would improve. The couple will briefly attend a rock concert featuring Canadian bands, again on the hill, and then a firework display which they will see from the more staid surroundings of a reception at the governor-general’s residence. What is likely to thrill the crowds more though is if the couple briefly depart from their schedule and stage another walkabout, as they did on Thursday. Canadians seem to like not only the couple’s youthfulness – which is being contrasted with the Queen’s longevity and Prince Charles’s stuffiness – but also their studied informality. At a barbecue on Thursday evening, the assembled group of young Canadians fell into stunned silence as the couple approached, to be told by the prince: “Talk among yourselves.” Canada Monarchy Prince William Kate Middleton Stephen Bates guardian.co.uk

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Mika: Morning Joe Being Pressured To Invite More Pro-Obama Flacks
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June Been there competition: colour – in pictures

Here are this month’s brilliant shots that best capture the theme of colour. The winner receives a £200 Point101 voucher, and a chance of winning the grand prize of a photographic safari to South Africa

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June Been there competition: colour – in pictures

Here are this month’s brilliant shots that best capture the theme of colour. The winner receives a £200 Point101 voucher, and a chance of winning the grand prize of a photographic safari to South Africa

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Gynaecologist who mutilated patient jailed

Graeme Reeves removed patient’s clitoris during surgery and assaulted two others, Australian court hears A former Australian gynaecologist was sentenced on Friday to three and a half years in prison for mutilating a patient’s genitals, indecently assaulting two other patients and ignoring a ban on practising obstetrics. Graeme Reeves, 60, was sentenced in the New South Wales district court after judge Greg Woods found him guilty in April of assaulting two patients during internal pelvic examinations at his clinic in the farming town of Bega in 2002 and 2003. The judge found Reeves not guilty on charges of similarly sexually assaulting three other patients. In March, a jury convicted him of maliciously inflicting grievous bodily harm by removing a 58-year-old patient’s clitoris during surgery in 2002 to remove a lesion from her labia. A jury had been unable to reach a verdict on the same charge in a trial in November last year. The jury in the latest trial accepted the prosecution’s case that Reeves never mentioned to the patient that he intended to remove her clitoris. His lawyer, John Stratton, told the court his client wanted to save her life by ensuring no cancer could spread from the genital area surrounding the lesion. The lesion was later found to be benign. The jury heard evidence that Reeves suffered from clinical depression and a personality disorder at the time of the offences. Woods said Reeves must spend at least two years in prison before he can be considered for parole. The judge ordered Reeves never again practise medicine involving contact with patients. The patient who suffered genital mutilation condemned the sentence as too lenient. “My sentence is for life,” she said. “Never did I consider for one second he was going to do what he did.” Reeves pleaded guilty in February to a charge of obtaining money by deception through charging for obstetric procedures, despite his ban. He pleaded not guilty to all other charges. The state medical board had banned him from practising obstetrics in 1997 after complaints from nine patients led to an official finding of unsatisfactory professional conduct. Prosecutor Margaret Cunneen told the judge in her sentencing submission that Reeves had continued to deliver babies by caesarean section after the ban because he was “too proud” to admit he had been found incompetent. Australia Doctors guardian.co.uk

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Gynaecologist who mutilated patient jailed

Graeme Reeves removed patient’s clitoris during surgery and assaulted two others, Australian court hears A former Australian gynaecologist was sentenced on Friday to three and a half years in prison for mutilating a patient’s genitals, indecently assaulting two other patients and ignoring a ban on practising obstetrics. Graeme Reeves, 60, was sentenced in the New South Wales district court after judge Greg Woods found him guilty in April of assaulting two patients during internal pelvic examinations at his clinic in the farming town of Bega in 2002 and 2003. The judge found Reeves not guilty on charges of similarly sexually assaulting three other patients. In March, a jury convicted him of maliciously inflicting grievous bodily harm by removing a 58-year-old patient’s clitoris during surgery in 2002 to remove a lesion from her labia. A jury had been unable to reach a verdict on the same charge in a trial in November last year. The jury in the latest trial accepted the prosecution’s case that Reeves never mentioned to the patient that he intended to remove her clitoris. His lawyer, John Stratton, told the court his client wanted to save her life by ensuring no cancer could spread from the genital area surrounding the lesion. The lesion was later found to be benign. The jury heard evidence that Reeves suffered from clinical depression and a personality disorder at the time of the offences. Woods said Reeves must spend at least two years in prison before he can be considered for parole. The judge ordered Reeves never again practise medicine involving contact with patients. The patient who suffered genital mutilation condemned the sentence as too lenient. “My sentence is for life,” she said. “Never did I consider for one second he was going to do what he did.” Reeves pleaded guilty in February to a charge of obtaining money by deception through charging for obstetric procedures, despite his ban. He pleaded not guilty to all other charges. The state medical board had banned him from practising obstetrics in 1997 after complaints from nine patients led to an official finding of unsatisfactory professional conduct. Prosecutor Margaret Cunneen told the judge in her sentencing submission that Reeves had continued to deliver babies by caesarean section after the ban because he was “too proud” to admit he had been found incompetent. Australia Doctors guardian.co.uk

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Pipe bomb found near children’s park in Northern Ireland

Viable bomb discovered after police given warning that device thrown at station had failed to explode A bomb thrown at a Northern Ireland police station has been found near a children’s playground, police have said. The viable pipe bomb was discovered near the park in Strabane in Co Tyrone on Thursday after the Police Service of Northern Ireland received a telephone warning that a device thrown at the town’s police station the previous day had failed to explode. Chief Inspector Andy Lemon said a child could easily have been injured. “Had a young child lifted this, this device was so large, it doesn’t bear thinking about,” he said. “The threat in this area has been severe for some time, and the officers are carrying out a number of security checks. “I’m most worried by the fact that this was left in an area 50 yards from a play park, and there were people there, young children.” Dissident republicans have made several attempts to attack the security forces in Strabane over the past two years. Eighteen months ago the Real IRA staged an armed show of strength in the border town at the funeral of a republican veteran who had died in police custody. The Real IRA maintains a relatively strong presence in the north-west corner of Northern Ireland and has been active in Derry city where it has bombed banks and police stations and carried out numerous “punishment shootings”. Northern Ireland Henry McDonald guardian.co.uk

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