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Libya campaign has cost UK £260m

Written statement from defence secretary Liam Fox attributes high cost to advanced nature of weapons used in conflict The government has revealed that the cost of the operation in Libya has run to £260m, confirming the figure was higher than had initially been predicted. In a written ministerial statement, the defence secretary, Liam Fox, said costs for the initial operation would be £120m, while the cost of replenishing spent munitions could eventually reach £140m. The high costs – which the Treasury has agreed to meet – were attributed to the advanced nature of the weapons used in Libya. While the opposition backs the operation, it has pressed for details of expenditure to be revealed amid concern that the cost is escalating. Earlier in the year, the chancellor, George Osborne, said in the Commons that the eventual cost would be “in the order of tens of millions of pounds, not hundreds of millions”. But in his statement, Fox said: “The current estimate of the net additional costs of military operations for six months in support of Operation Ellamy – the United Kingdom’s contribution to coalition operations in support of United Nations security council Resolution 1973 – is in the region of £120m. This excludes costs associated with capital munitions expended. “Based upon current consumption rates, we estimate the cost of replenishing munitions may be up to £140m.” Prior to his announcement, he had said people would “have to take into account that we have used more expensive precision weaponry so that we minimise civilian casualties in Libya”. He added: “If we are going to fight operations in the future based on minimising civilian casualties, there is clearly a financial price to pay. “I think that shows that we are on the moral high ground and that we place a higher value on human life than the Gaddafi regime.” Jim Murphy, the shadow defence secretary, backed calls from service chiefs for contingency plans to be drawn up “to ensure that our armed forces are sufficiently equipped and that the conflict is sustainable beyond September”. He also urged Nato allies to do more to help reduce the British contribution. Murphy said: “Thanks to pressure from the opposition, ministers have now published figures revealing that the costs of the operation in Libya are higher than originally estimated. “We back the Nato-led operation, and continue to offer the government our support wherever possible. “We want the government to be clearer on what stresses and strains operations in Libya are making on the core defence budget, and whether our standing commitments are, or will be, affected by the ongoing conflict. “In particular, we will ensure the government keeps to its guarantees that the mission in Afghanistan will not be affected. That is absolutely vital.” In March, Osborne had told the Commons: “The House will understand that it is too early to give a robust estimate of the costs of the operations in Libya, but I can say that they should be modest compared with some other operations, such as Afghanistan. “The Ministry of Defence’s initial view is that they will be in the order of tens of millions of pounds, not hundreds of millions. I can tell the House today that, whatever they turn out to be, the additional costs of operations in Libya will be fully met from the reserve.” The national transitional council in Libya is also struggling to meet the costs of running an alternative government to that of Muammar Gaddafi. This week, Dr Ali Tarhuni, the minister for finance and oil in the council, wrote an open letter to the UK government, calling for the release of 1.4bn dinars (£700m) of Libyan government money (£700m), printed in the UK, that was impounded in Britain when the fighting began. The transitional council is running out of money and would like the government to release the funds, but the attorney general, Dominic Grieve, has said he is legally unable to do so. Foreign policy Liam Fox Jim Murphy House of Commons Libya Middle East Africa United Nations Nato Allegra Stratton guardian.co.uk

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Ai Weiwei driver freed but others from his circle still missing

Chinese artist’s cousin Zhang Jinsong released but authorities silent on whereabouts of friend, accountant and designer Police have freed Ai Weiwei’s cousin and driver after granting bail to the artist himself. Ai was released on bail on Wednesday night after 81 days of detention “because of his good attitude in confessing his crimes” and a chronic illness, the Xinhua news agency reported. The 54-year-old told the Guardian he was happy to be back with his family but was unable to comment further. He appeared tired and thinner than before his disappearance. Ai’s mother, Gao Ying, said her nephew Zhang Jinsong, who had worked for Ai, returned home in a good mental state but having lost around 9kg. He went missing a few days after his cousin. “They have returned home and the family can see each other. We are all very happy. For anything that happens there must be an ending, and now we are happy with the result of what has happened to us.” Earlier she said she was delighted that Zhang was to be released “since he got into the case because of my son”. The 43-year-old cousin, known to friends as Xiao Pang, travelled and worked closely with Ai . Three other associates who went missing shortly after Ai remain unaccounted for. The Xinhua report on Ai’s release cited police claims that a company controlled by the artist had evaded a huge amount of tax and intentionally destroyed accounting documents. It said the decision to grant bail reflected the fact he had repeatedly said he was willing to pay the taxes. But Ai’s family believe the accusations are retaliation for his social and political activism and that those connected to him – friends and colleagues – have been drawn in. They include Ai’s friend Wen Tao, 38. His girlfriend Shi Jing said his family had received no information about him. “I am always worried about Wen Tao and concerned that he might be persecuted inside there,” said his friend, artist Wu Yuren, who was himself tried but never sentenced for assaulting a police officer in what he said was retaliation for his activism. In his first public comments since his release on bail in April, Wu said: “I am concerned about the direction this country is going towards. Especially for intellectuals and artists, we are all concerned. There is less and less free space.” Hu Mingfen, 55, the accountant for the company that handled Ai’s affairs, and Liu Zhenggang, 49, a designer who worked at Ai’s studio, are also still missing. Asked whether police were holding the three, and if so why, foreign ministry spokesman Hong Lei said: “China is a country under the rule of law. For the specific situation please consult the competent authorities.” Police have refused to answer queries about them or register them as missing persons. Hong told a news briefing that Ai was “not allowed to leave the place he was living in” without permission, but did not clarify whether that meant his home or Beijing as a whole. Bail restrictions usually prevent a suspect travelling without prior approval. The spokesman confirmed that bail conditions would last for a year but declined to give further details of Ai’s situation, such as restrictions on his speech or whether he was allowed to make or exhibit art. Hong denied that China had bowed to international pressure, telling reporters: “The handling of Ai Weiwei’s case was the handling of a very common economic crime. “China is a country under the rule of law. We hope countries respect its judicial sovereignty without interfering.” He said Ai had been under residential surveillance from the day he vanished, 3 April. The measure does not require police to notify families – as detention would – and gives police six months rather than one before they have to refer the case to prosecutors. It usually equates to house arrest but the regulations do not spell out what constitutes a residence. Ai was held at an unknown location. Human rights groups have warned that in recent months dissidents and activists have been coming under intense pressure even after release from jail or detention. Some have effectively been held incommunicado. Zeng Jinyan, the wife of jailed activist Hu Jia, is understood to have left their young daughter with relatives after police warned that his release from prison on Monday could mean tight restrictions on their movements , probably amounting to house arrest. “Baobao cried her heart out on 19 June when I left for airport,” Zeng wrote in messages on a Chinese microblog service. “She asked if I could work from home and stay with her … I embraced Baobao for such a long time before saying goodbye to her that I can still feel her in my arms now.” China Ai Weiwei Human rights Tania Branigan guardian.co.uk

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Nuclear power plant site plans released by government

Eight new locations announced by Chris Huhne first guide to future of nuclear power in UK since Japan’s Fukushima disaster The government has pushed ahead with plans for new nuclear power plants in the UK, as it confirmed a list of eight sites where the next generation of reactors can be built. The eight sites are: Bradwell, Essex; Hartlepool; Heysham, Lancashire; Hinkley Point, Somerset; Oldbury, south Gloucestershire; Sellafield, Cumbria; Sizewell, Suffolk; and Wylfa, Anglesey. All are adjacent to existing nuclear sites. It is the first major announcement on the future of nuclear power in the UK since the Fukushima disaster in Japan. The energy and climate change secretary, Chris Huhne, had signalled last month that plans for new reactors in the UK were on track after an initial report on Fukushima from nuclear chief inspector Mike Weightman ruled out the need to curtail the operation of stations in the UK. The plans for new nuclear power plants are part of a series of national policy statements on energy that were published on Thursday, following public consultation. They will be debated and voted on in parliament, but ministers are hopeful that, with a pro-nuclear majority in the Commons, they will win. The energy minister, Charles Hendry, said: “These plans set out our energy need to help guide the planning process, so that if acceptable proposals come forward in appropriate places, they will not face unnecessary hold ups.” Nuclear power is one of the issues that divided Conservatives and Liberal Democrats when they entered government, with the coalition deal allowing Liberal Democrat MPs to abstain. Huhne, a Liberal Democrat, has since given his backing to new reactors. Nuclear power Chris Huhne Energy Energy industry Liberal-Conservative coalition guardian.co.uk

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Nuclear power plant site plans released by government

Eight new locations announced by Chris Huhne first guide to future of nuclear power in UK since Japan’s Fukushima disaster The government has pushed ahead with plans for new nuclear power plants in the UK, as it confirmed a list of eight sites where the next generation of reactors can be built. The eight sites are: Bradwell, Essex; Hartlepool; Heysham, Lancashire; Hinkley Point, Somerset; Oldbury, south Gloucestershire; Sellafield, Cumbria; Sizewell, Suffolk; and Wylfa, Anglesey. All are adjacent to existing nuclear sites. It is the first major announcement on the future of nuclear power in the UK since the Fukushima disaster in Japan. The energy and climate change secretary, Chris Huhne, had signalled last month that plans for new reactors in the UK were on track after an initial report on Fukushima from nuclear chief inspector Mike Weightman ruled out the need to curtail the operation of stations in the UK. The plans for new nuclear power plants are part of a series of national policy statements on energy that were published on Thursday, following public consultation. They will be debated and voted on in parliament, but ministers are hopeful that, with a pro-nuclear majority in the Commons, they will win. The energy minister, Charles Hendry, said: “These plans set out our energy need to help guide the planning process, so that if acceptable proposals come forward in appropriate places, they will not face unnecessary hold ups.” Nuclear power is one of the issues that divided Conservatives and Liberal Democrats when they entered government, with the coalition deal allowing Liberal Democrat MPs to abstain. Huhne, a Liberal Democrat, has since given his backing to new reactors. Nuclear power Chris Huhne Energy Energy industry Liberal-Conservative coalition guardian.co.uk

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Hackers attack News International servers

Attack on publisher apparently in retaliation for Sun coverage of LulzSec hacking coverage Hackers attacked servers used by News International to publish some of its digital content at 2am on Thursday morning, apparently in retaliation for coverage in the Sun of the activities of the LulzSec hacking collective. A senior source within News International confirmed to the Guardian that third-party architecture was affected for a couple of hours by a distributed denial of service (DDoS) attack, in which hundreds or thousands of machines make repetitive demands on an internet server. The computers used for the attack were mainly based in Russia, but that does not mean that the people behind it were based there. However, the attack did not delay the publication of the newspaper, and only caused delay in some of the digital publication, the source said. “We haven’t linked it to any particular coverage … the infrastructure that was affected isn’t linked to The Sun.” Newspaper groups are on high alert at the moment for DDoS attacks from hacker groups as the issue has risen to prominence following the arrest on Tuesday of a man in Essex who has been charged with offences relating to attacks on websites. Some hackers take offence at what they see as biased coverage. No group appears to have claimed responsibility for this latest attack. Hacking Internet Computing LulzSec News International Newspapers & magazines News Corporation National newspapers Newspapers Charles Arthur guardian.co.uk

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Hackers attack News International servers

Attack on publisher apparently in retaliation for Sun coverage of LulzSec hacking coverage Hackers attacked servers used by News International to publish some of its digital content at 2am on Thursday morning, apparently in retaliation for coverage in the Sun of the activities of the LulzSec hacking collective. A senior source within News International confirmed to the Guardian that third-party architecture was affected for a couple of hours by a distributed denial of service (DDoS) attack, in which hundreds or thousands of machines make repetitive demands on an internet server. The computers used for the attack were mainly based in Russia, but that does not mean that the people behind it were based there. However, the attack did not delay the publication of the newspaper, and only caused delay in some of the digital publication, the source said. “We haven’t linked it to any particular coverage … the infrastructure that was affected isn’t linked to The Sun.” Newspaper groups are on high alert at the moment for DDoS attacks from hacker groups as the issue has risen to prominence following the arrest on Tuesday of a man in Essex who has been charged with offences relating to attacks on websites. Some hackers take offence at what they see as biased coverage. No group appears to have claimed responsibility for this latest attack. Hacking Internet Computing LulzSec News International Newspapers & magazines News Corporation National newspapers Newspapers Charles Arthur guardian.co.uk

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Saab admits it cannot pay wages

Unions at Saab demand payment by Monday or they will start legal action that could end in bankruptcy for cash-strapped Swedish carmaker Saab said on Thursday it could not pay wages to employees because it had not yet obtained the necessary short-term funding to do so. Unions said the troubled carmaker had until Monday to pay their wages or they would start a legal process that could end in bankruptcy for the company, owned by Netherlands-based Swedish Automobile. IF Metall and Unionen said they would send a formal demand for payment if their members did not receive their wages. “Then the company has seven days to react,” said IF Metall representative Veli-Pekka Saikkala. “After that there are two alternatives. Either we see that the situation can be solved, or we demand that Saab is put into bankruptcy.” The cash-strapped carmaker is scrambling for funds to restart production after it was halted for most of April, May and June because it could not pay suppliers. Swedish Automobile and Saab are in talks with various parties to obtain short-term funding, including options such as a sale and leaseback of Saab’s real estate. “There can, however, be no assurance these discussions will be successful or that the necessary funding will be obtained,” Saab said. Swedish Automobile this month agreed a rescue package for Saab from two Chinese car companies, Zhejiang Youngman Lotus Automobile Co and Pangda, that would solve longer-term financing problems if approved by authorities in China and Europe. Saab spokeswoman Gunilla Gustavs said it was not possible to say when salaries would be paid: “That depends on when and if we can secure short-term funding, for example through the real estate deal. “This is really bad news and we are working intensely to do something about it. There are no guarantees but we are not giving up.” Saab said the Trollhattan factory in southern Sweden would remain idle until at least the end of next week, while the company holds talks with suppliers. The Swedish government declined to comment. Saab Automotive industry Sweden guardian.co.uk

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Pottermore website launched by JK Rowling as ‘give-back’ to fans

Harry Potter author unveils free, collaborative website for which she has written extensive background material JK Rowling has written extensive new material about the world of Harry Potter for her new venture, Pottermore , she revealed at a press conference launching the collaborative website. From Professor McGonagall’s love for a Muggle as a young woman, to how the Dursleys met; from new information about Slytherin, Ravenclaw and Hufflepuff houses, to details about wand wood, the fresh Potter background from the author already stretches to 18,000 words, with more to come. The material will be used on the new, free Pottermore website, a collaborative project for fans set in the Harry Potter universe. “I wanted to give something back to the fans that have followed Harry so devotedly over the years, and to bring the stories to a new generation,” Rowling revealed. “I hope fans and those new to Harry will have as much fun helping to shape Pottermore as I have. Just as I have contributed to the website, everyone else will be able to join in by submitting their own comments, drawings and other content in a safe and friendly environment. Pottermore has been designed as a place to share the stories with your friends as you journey through the site.” For the moment, Pottermore will be restricted to the world of the first book, Harry Potter and the Philosopher’s Stone, but all the books will be added in due course. The site is intended to bring the storyline to life for users, with new illustrations and interactive “moments” which can be navigated through. Users start out by choosing a magical username, and as they move through the chapters of the book they will be sorted into houses, choose wands and experience life at Hogwarts, just like Harry. Points can be won for houses by casting spells and mixing potions. The website will open to a lucky million users early on 31 July – Harry’s birthday – with its full launch to all users in October. It will also sell the long-awaited ebook versions of the Harry Potter books directly to users from October as well as digital audiobooks. “This is free,” added Rowling, who has sold more than 450m copies of the Potter books worldwide. “You don’t have to pay to get extra materials, you don’t have to buy a single thing. That was really important to me. This was about the ‘give-back’.” Although Rowling said it was “impossible to overstate what Harry Potter means to me”, Pottermore will be the only way fans will be able to get fresh material from Rowling about Harry’s world. “I’m pretty sure I’m done on the novel front,” she said. JK Rowling Harry Potter Children and teenagers Games Alison Flood guardian.co.uk

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Phone-hacking investigation: arrested woman ‘may have written for NoW’

Woman arrested by Scotland Yard detectives believed to have contributed articles to Sunday tabloid Detectives investigating phone hacking by the News of the World have arrested a woman in West Yorkshire, Scotland Yard has said. The 39-year-old woman is believed to be Terenia Taras, who has contributed more than 30 stories for the News of the World, although Scotland Yard would not confirm this. She was arrested at 6.55am on Thursday at her home on suspicion of conspiring to intercept communications contrary to section 1 of the Criminal Law Act 1977. Scotland Yard, which has 45 officers investigating phone hacking as part of Operation Weeting, did not release details of the woman’s identity. She was taken to a police station in West Yorkshire for questioning this morning. Taras is the ex-girlfriend of Greg Miskiw, the News of the World’s former assistant editor (news). Miskiw is now understood to be living in the US. She contributed to about 36 stories to the News of the World over a period of nearly six years. News of the World owner News International said the woman arrested on Thursday had never been on staff at the paper. Taras has also written occasionally for other tabloids including, most recently, the Sunday Mirror and, less often, for the Daily Mail. Her last bylined article appeared in the Sunday Mirror in December 2007. She last wrote for the News of the World in June 2004. She lived in London but moved to Leeds several years ago. The Metropolitan police commissioner, Sir Paul Stephenson, said on Wednesday the Operation Weeting team remained at 45 strong and was continuing its wide-ranging inquiry into phone hacking as well as providing information for the civil court claims. A spokesman for Scotland Yard said: “The woman was arrested from a residential address in West Yorkshire. “Operation Weeting is conducting a new investigation into phone hacking. It would be inappropriate to discuss any further details regarding this case at this time.” A spokeswoman for News International said: “This morning’s events did not relate to a current employee or a former full-time member of staff of the News of the World. “We have been co-operating fully with the police inquiry since our voluntary disclosure of evidence reopened the police investigation. “Since then we have been determined to deal with these issues both on the criminal and civil side. In April we admitted liability in several civil cases and we are attempting to bring these to a fair resolution.” The woman is the fourth person arrested by officers on the inquiry. In April a senior reporter at the News of the World, James Weatherup, was arrested and questioned. Weatherup, who has also worked as a news editor with the Sunday tabloid, was released after questioning. The paper’s chief reporter Neville Thurlbeck, and assistant editor (news) Ian Edmondson, were also held in April and released on police bail to return in September. Scotland Yard was heavily criticised over its handling of the original phone-hacking inquiry, which led to the conviction of News of the World royal editor Clive Goodman and private investigator Glenn Mulcaire in January 2007. The then News of the World editor, Andy Coulson, resigned following Goodman and Mulcaire’s convictions. Coulson resigned again as prime minister David Cameron’s director of communications in January this year, admitting that the ongoing row about the affair was making his job impossible. He had resigned as News of the World editor following the conviction of Goodman and Mulcaire in January 2007. Days later the Met launched Operation Weeting, after receiving “significant new information” from News International. •

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Politics live blog – Thursday 23 June

Rolling coverage of all the day’s political developments as they happen 12.39pm: Shadow defence secretary Jim Murphy (pictured, left) has put out a statement in response to the MoD announcement on the cost of the Libya operations: This is an important announcement by the government. Thanks to pressure from the opposition, ministers have now published figures revealing that the costs of the operation in Libya are higher than originally estimated. We back the Nato-led operation and continue to offer the government our support wherever possible. Where the UK can it is right we take action to protect innocent civilians. We support enforcing the mandate of UN resolution 1973, and we will also scrutinise Government action. We want the Government to be clearer on what stresses and strains operations in Libya are making on the core defence budget, and whether our standing commitments are or will be affected by the ongoing conflict. In particular we will ensure the Government keeps to their guarantees that the mission in Afghanistan will not be affected. That is absolutely vital. Following the concerns of the Service Chiefs, we also need to know what contingency plans are being made to ensure that our armed forces are sufficiently equipped and that the conflict is sustainable beyond September. Being clear on the endgame – how and when our forces will return home – must be the Government’s priority. 12.24pm: Hello. It’s Lewis Williamson taking over the blog for the afternoon. Liam Fox has now confirmed that military action in Libya has so far cost the UK £260m. In a written statement to MPs, Fox said the projected cost of the six-month, Nato-led campaign was “in the region of £120m”. Another £140m would have to be spent replacing missiles and other munitions if the mission continued at the same rate, he told MPs. “The Treasury has agreed to meet these costs from the reserve,” he added. 12.00am: Here’s an early lunchtime summary. • David Cameron has welcomed Barack Obama’s announcement that the US will withdraw about a third of its forces from Afghanistan next year . “I have already said there will be no UK troops in combat roles in Afghanistan by 2015 and, where conditions on the ground allow, it is right that we bring troops home sooner,” Cameron said. But James Arbuthnot, the Tory chairman of the Commons defence committee, said Obama was taking a gamble. “It is a gamble because White House officials have made quite clear that General Petraeus [the commander of US forces in Afghanistan] does not endorse this,” Arbuthnot said. “David Cameron is right in saying that the surge has had a beneficial effect. The risk is whether it is being reduced too soon. There is a risk that if this surge, and the benefits it has produced, proves to be reversible and fragile, then we might begin to allow the Taliban or al Qaida to regroup.” • Liam Fox, the defence secretary, has said that the need to use expensive weaponry to minimise the prospect of civilian casualties partly explains the high cost of the war in Libya. The Ministry of Defence will put out a statement later which is expected to say that the Libyan operation has already cost more than £200m. Labour’s Jim Murphy said the government should be “clearer on what stresses and strains operations in Libya are making on the core defence budget, and whether our standing commitments are or will be affected by the ongoing conflict”. • The Department of Energy and Climate Change has confirmed that eight sites which have been approved as suitable for new nuclear power stations by 2025. (See 11.16am.) • Labour has urged the government to abandon its plans to close more than half of the UK’s coastguard stations. Maria Eagles, the shadow transport secretary, said ministers should listen to the concerns raised in a report today from the Commons transport committee. “The Tory-led government should finally listen to coastguards up and down the country and abandon their dangerous and reckless plan to close more than half of Britain’s coastguard stations,” she said. “The cross-party transport select committee is clear that these plans will jeopardise safety along Britain’s coastline and Ministers must now think again.” I’m off now to give a talk. My colleague Lewis Williamson will be taking over for the afternoon. 11.28am: The MoD won’t be putting its statement about the cost of the Libyan operation until 2pm, but Liam Fox , the defence secretary (left), has already been talking about it. He said that that when people saw the figure – £250m, reportedly – they would “have to take into account that we have used more expensive precision weaponry so that we minimise civilian casualties in Libya”. He went on: If we are going to fight operations in the future based on minimising civilian casualties there is clearly a financial price to pay. But I think that that shows that we are on the moral high ground and that we place a higher value on human life that the Gaddafi regime does. 11.16am: The Department of Energy and Climate Change has named eight sites which have been approved as suitable for new nuclear power stations by 2025. The sites, which are all adjacent to existing nuclear plants, are: Bradwell, Essex; Hartlepool; Heysham, Lancashire; Hinkley Point, Somerset; Oldbury, South Gloucestershire; Sellafield, Cumbria; Sizewell, Suffolk; and Wylfa, Anglesey. There are more details in an announcement saying the government has finalised its energy national policy statements. Charles Hendry , the energy minister, says these statements should give “certainty” to the nuclear industry. Industry needs as much certainty as possible to make such big investments. These plans set out our energy need to help guide the planning process, so that if acceptable proposals come forward in appropriate places, they will not face unnecessary hold-ups. The coalition government is determined to make the UK a truly attractive market for investors, to give us secure, affordable, low-carbon energy. These national policy statements are an important milestone. 11.11am: John Redwood , the Conservative rightwinger, has backed Nick Clegg’s call for taxpayers to be given shares in the banks now part-owned by the state. (See 9.55am.) According to PoliticsHome, this is what Redwood told BBC News. I want to get all the risk of the banks off the government’s balance sheet. It is greatly distorting our government’s balance sheet and these banks should be owned in the private sector. It would be great if every taxpayer were given a share, with the proviso that you give back to the state when you sell the amount the state paid for it, and you keep the profit. 10.47am: You can read all today’s Guardian politics stories here. And all the politics stories filed yesterday, including some in today’s paper, are here. As for the rest of the papers, here are some stories and articles that are particularly interesting. • Robert Winnett in the Daily Telegraph says Eric Pickles and Caroline Spelman are no longer on speaking terms after a row about bin collections. Eric Pickles, the Communities Secretary, and Caroline Spelman, the Environment Secretary, had a telephone argument shortly before the Government announced an about-face on its plan to restore weekly bin collections. Mr Pickles said to Mrs Spelman: “Why don’t you spend less time speaking to your officials and more time listening to the electorate?” Mrs Spelman then hung up on her colleague and the pair are thought not to have spoken since, according to their parliamentary colleagues. A colleague said: “The whole thing is fairly unpleasant. They are both former chairmen of the Conservatives but they now appear to be daggers drawn on this issue, which Eric feels very passionately about.” • Greg Hurst in the Times (paywall) says Simon Hughes, the government’s advocate for access to universities, wants Oxford and Cambridge to scrap their traditional admissions interviews. In an interview with The Times he said interviews by tutors gave them a chance to “bond” on an intellectual level with candidates in a way that was unfair to other applicants. Tutors should be “absolutely removed” from admissions interviews, he said. “All the advice I have received in doing the work is clearly recommending that there should not be interviews by people that are going to be doing the teaching and if there are interviews they should be by an admissions team professionally qualified to do the selection process and do admissions. And they should be absolutely removed from the people who do the teaching,” he said. “I haven’t gone to university in the States but people who have [say], and the evidence we have had, shows that even in places like Harvard it isn’t the professor that is going to teach you that does the admissions it is the university admissions team.” • Graeme Paton in the Daily Telegraph says the government has decided that grammar schools should be allowed to expand. Nick Gibb, the Schools Minister, said state grammars would be able to take advantage of new rules to admit extra students without seeking the permission of local authorities. In a speech to head teachers, he praised the “world class” education provided by England’s 164 academically selective schools and suggested they were a powerful driver of social mobility. • Kiran Stacey in the Financial Times (subscription) says only a handful of British officials are working full-time on what will happen in Libya after Colonel Gaddafi is overthrown. The Department for International Development has 12 officials working on plans to follow the military mission. But neither the Foreign Office nor the Ministry of Defence has anyone looking solely at subsequent reconstruction. Douglas Alexander, the shadow foreign secretary, called the revelation “startling and deeply worrying”. • Sue Cameron in the Financial Times (subscription) says Steve Hilton, David Cameron’s policy guru, is getting the blame in Downing Street for “dud policies” like the Big Society and health reform. Early on there seems to have been a row over the Big Society, Mr Hilton’s pet project. “Many civil servants were full of goodwill for the Big Society,” says one insider. “But they’ve been frustrated by Hilton’s inability to put it forward in a way that is do-able. Officials aren’t sure what it’s about. Nor are ministers.” He added that the Big Society idea was never tested on the public because of opposition from Mr Hilton. “Hilton’s view,” he explained in incredulous tones, “is that you don’t test something you believe in.” Yet it was NHS reform, backed strongly by Mr Hilton at a big meeting in No 10 just before Christmas, that created real tension. Messrs Lansley and Hilton persuaded the government to persist with the plans, only to see them falter in the face of fierce public opposition. The arrival of [Andrew] Cooper, a pollster prepared to speak truth unto power and spell out the public’s concern about NHS plans, was an admission that all was not well. (Word is that Mr Cooper privately describes the health reforms as insane and says the NHS should have been left alone.) • Daniel Finkelstein in the Times (paywall) says a new biography of the former Liberal MP Richard Wainwright reveals something about the spirit that still survives in the Liberal Democrat party. Wainwright was an intelligent, talented man, capable of holding high office. Instead, he dedicated his life to a force going nowhere. He adored Liberals and his party. It was them against the world. They were hardy, true survivors, pressing on regardless. And this is important to grasp when looking at the current political position of the party. The first point is that 9 per cent in the polls may look like failure to the rest of the world, but it doesn’t look the same to the party of Wainwright. They’ve seen worse, lived with worse. It didn’t move them. They remained Liberals and true to their course. What others consider the realities of electoral politics don’t count as realities in their world. This is a party that has, on many occasions, come close to extinction. It has grown very tough. Being in government and at 9 per cent looks much more like success to Lib Dems than failure. • Paul Revoir in the Daily Mail says the Doctor Who screenwriter Russell T. Davies has described David Cameron and Nick Clegg as “evil”. ‘That Clegg and Cameron photo opportunity, at the bed, ‘oh, we’re all laughing’ – they are savage and evil people underneath it all,’ said the writer, thought to be a reference to the leaders’ hospital visit last week. ‘There is a great intelligence behind the Tory party that says let’s appear slightly bumbling and slightly buffoonish, while they are lethal as a laser underneath it all,’ he told Radio 4. 10.15am: For the record, here are the latest YouGov GB polling figures. Labour: 42% (up 12 since the general election) Conservatives: 36% (down 1) Lib Dems: 9% (down 15) Labour lead: 6 points Government approval: -25 9.55am: Nick Clegg has called for taxpayers to be given shares in the government-owned banks when the time comes to privatise them again. But the idea has been knocking around for a while. The Lib Dem MP Stephen Williams proposed the idea in a pamphlet he wrote for the Centre Forum thinktank (pdf) in March. “There is a danger that when the banks return to the private sector, it is business as usual. There is a general feeling in this country that we need to get something positive in return for the bail-out,” he said. But the Centre for Policy Studies, a Conservative thinktank, is also taking credit. It published a paper on this last month. “The deputy prime minister’s announcement that he is writing to the Chancellor asking him to consider the CPS proposals on reprivatising the banks is most welcome”, Tim Knox, the CPS’s acting director, said in a statement this morning. 9.20am: There are only about 39 wild animals used in British circuses, but their plight arouses strong feelings and this afternoon MPs will vote on a backbench motion tabled by the Tory MP Mark Pritchard “directing” the government ban the use of wild animals in circuses by July 2012. But, according to Labour’s Denis MacShane (who’s just given me a ring), Downing Street is not at all keen and some Tories MPs have received calls telling them that, if they value their careers, they will be well advised to vote against the ban. MacShane called because Tory MPs have been bending his ear. “It’s a mystery why David Cameron is so keen to defend cruelty to lions and tigers,” MacShane says. In the Commons last month James Paice, the environment minister, tried to defend the government’s refusal to impose a ban. As my colleague Damian Carrington reported at the time, Paice wasn’t particularly convincing. 8.50am: Ipsos MORI have published their June political monitor (a report on public opinion). Their state of the parties figures (based on the views of respondents who say they are absolutely certain to vote) show Labour on 39 points (down 3 from last month), the Tories on 37 points (up 2) and the Lib Dems on 11 (up 1). But some of the other figures are more interesting. • Labour has its largest lead on healthcare since 2002. When people are asked which party has the best policies on health, Labour is on 37 points and the Tories 21 – giving Labour a 16 point lead. In March last year Labour’s lead on this was 9 points. The fieldwork was done at the end of last week, after the government announced its climbdown on the health bill, suggesting that David Cameron’s concessions have not stopped NHS reform damaging the reputation of his party. • Voters support unions. Asked if unions have too much power, 52% said they disagreed, and only 35% agreed. Some 76% agreed that unions are “essential to protect workers’ interests”. • But voters are split on the forthcoming strikes. Asked if they supported the decision by some unions to strike this summer, 48% said they did support the unions and 48% said they didn’t. 8.33am: “Bold, but risky.” Lord Dannatt, the former head of the army, has just been on the Today programme commenting on President Obama’s decision to withdraw 33,000 American troops from Afghanistan by next year . Overnight we’ve also had reaction from David Cameron and General Sir David Richards, the chief of the defence staff, who have both welcomed Obama’s decision. Here’s what Cameron said. The surge by the US and international partners, supported by an increase in the number of Afghan army and police, has reversed the momentum of the insurgency and created the right conditions for security responsibility to begin to transfer to the Afghans from July. We will keep UK force levels in Afghanistan under constant review. I have already said there will be no UK troops in combat roles in Afghanistan by 2015 and, where conditions on the ground allow, it is right that we bring troops home sooner. And here’s what Richards said. I welcome President Obama’s statement which has been made possible by the surge of US and ISAF forces, coupled with the ever growing numbers and capability of the Afghan National Security Forces. Across the country, the insurgency is under real and sustained pressure. Their momentum has been halted and in some areas reversed. This summer will see the continuation of this process with Afghan forces beginning to take the lead for security in a number of areas including Lashkar Gah, the headquarters for British forces. The Afghan Army and Police are increasingly able to plan, direct and execute operations to provide security for their own people. But our collective military efforts need to continue until Afghan security forces are able to assume responsibility for security across Afghanistan by the end of 2014. Otherwise, it’s a patchy day. At 10am Lord Bew is publishing his review of Sats tests. He is calling for more use of teacher assessment in English . And at 11am Cameron is holding a press conference with Petr Necas, the prime minister of the Czech Republic. Cameron is visiting Prague before going to the EU summit in Brussels. There is a debate in the Commons this afternoon on a backbench motion ordering the government to ban the use of wild animals in circuses, although it is not clear when we’ll get the vote. And there are 16 written ministerial statements, including one about the operation in Libya. According to government sources, the Ministry of Defence is going to say the mission has already cost £250m . I’m giving a talk at lunchtime so I’ll post a summary at 12pm, earlier than usual. After that my colleague Lewis Williamson will be taking charge of the blog. House of Commons Foreign policy David Cameron Libya Andrew Sparrow guardian.co.uk

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