Young specialists with broadcasting flair were sought by BBC Radio 3 and research council to bring fresh voices to the public They are, in theory, the brightest of our bright young things: 10 academics chosen in an X Factor-style talent search with specialist subjects that range from the history of fan mail to the significance of the desert in modern culture. The Guardian can name the winners of a competition to find a new generation of thinkers and communicators, pictured as they gathered on Monday at the BBC. The talent search was a collaboration between Radio 3 and the Arts and Humanities Research Council. Matthew Dodd, head of speech programming at Radio 3, said they wanted to find academics with a flair for broadcasting earlier in their career. “We felt that the people in academia we were dealing with were often very established with published books who were on air regularly,” he said. “We are looking for people with the most interesting ideas who want to share their knowledge and can make fantastic programmes.” It began with whittling down more than 1,000 applications – “far in excess of what we expected,” says Dodd – to select 57 finalists at a series of day-long workshops and auditions. He said: “It was a revelation to us how media savvy they were. The notion of being in an ivory tower was a long, long way away. They were all brimming with ideas and eager to spread their knowledge. There was none of the gaucheness that a stereotype of the scholar might throw up.” The list was then whittled down to the 10 winners. One is Alexandra Harris, who won last year’s Guardian First Book award for Romantic Moderns, her revisionist work on culture between the wars. Harris, an English lecturer at Liverpool University, got through with her specialist subject on how the weather – and more specifically being cold – has influenced English art, music and literature, although she admitted “it is research which is very new and I’m just starting.” She called the New Generation Thinkers scheme a fantastic opportunity and added: “I’ve never been a believer in the ivory tower university and all the people who have inspired me have been just terrific communicators who have made their research buzzing and relevant. “It also felt like a breath of hope at this point where it’s just cuts, cuts, cuts and this sense of academia being irrelevant and the government turning its back on the humanities. In a way, I wanted to apply just to say, ‘I love the sound of this scheme.’” Another of the 10 is Philip Roscoe, a lecturer at University of St Andrews school of management, who is looking at how economics shapes the moral landscape in everyday settings, including internet dating, an industry he called “social engineering on a massive scale”. He said much academic research is important and interesting but is a hard-sell in terms of generating headlines. “The prospect of being able to make some programming about the ideas and the concepts behind the research and take some time and do it properly was very appealing.” The others and their specialist subjects are Corin Throsby, Cambridge University, the history of fan mail; David Petts, Durham University, the commercialisation of British archaeology; Jon Adams, London School of Economics, on crowding in the modern city; Laurence Scott, Kings College London, on the image and significance of the desert in modern culture; Lucy Powell, University College London, a literary exploration of prisons; Rachel Hewitt, Queen Mary, University of London, on the 1790s: the Age of Despair; Shahidha Bari, also Queen Mary, on the Arabian Nights; and Zoe Norridge, York University, on cultural responses to the Rwandan genocide. All 10 can be heard on the next 10 editions of Night Waves from tonight and they will then develop their broadcasting ideas further with Radio 3 as well as appear in special New Generation Thinkers debates. Radio 3 Higher education BBC Lecturers Entertainment Mark Brown guardian.co.uk
Continue reading …Young specialists with broadcasting flair were sought by BBC Radio 3 and research council to bring fresh voices to the public They are, in theory, the brightest of our bright young things: 10 academics chosen in an X Factor-style talent search with specialist subjects that range from the history of fan mail to the significance of the desert in modern culture. The Guardian can name the winners of a competition to find a new generation of thinkers and communicators, pictured as they gathered on Monday at the BBC. The talent search was a collaboration between Radio 3 and the Arts and Humanities Research Council. Matthew Dodd, head of speech programming at Radio 3, said they wanted to find academics with a flair for broadcasting earlier in their career. “We felt that the people in academia we were dealing with were often very established with published books who were on air regularly,” he said. “We are looking for people with the most interesting ideas who want to share their knowledge and can make fantastic programmes.” It began with whittling down more than 1,000 applications – “far in excess of what we expected,” says Dodd – to select 57 finalists at a series of day-long workshops and auditions. He said: “It was a revelation to us how media savvy they were. The notion of being in an ivory tower was a long, long way away. They were all brimming with ideas and eager to spread their knowledge. There was none of the gaucheness that a stereotype of the scholar might throw up.” The list was then whittled down to the 10 winners. One is Alexandra Harris, who won last year’s Guardian First Book award for Romantic Moderns, her revisionist work on culture between the wars. Harris, an English lecturer at Liverpool University, got through with her specialist subject on how the weather – and more specifically being cold – has influenced English art, music and literature, although she admitted “it is research which is very new and I’m just starting.” She called the New Generation Thinkers scheme a fantastic opportunity and added: “I’ve never been a believer in the ivory tower university and all the people who have inspired me have been just terrific communicators who have made their research buzzing and relevant. “It also felt like a breath of hope at this point where it’s just cuts, cuts, cuts and this sense of academia being irrelevant and the government turning its back on the humanities. In a way, I wanted to apply just to say, ‘I love the sound of this scheme.’” Another of the 10 is Philip Roscoe, a lecturer at University of St Andrews school of management, who is looking at how economics shapes the moral landscape in everyday settings, including internet dating, an industry he called “social engineering on a massive scale”. He said much academic research is important and interesting but is a hard-sell in terms of generating headlines. “The prospect of being able to make some programming about the ideas and the concepts behind the research and take some time and do it properly was very appealing.” The others and their specialist subjects are Corin Throsby, Cambridge University, the history of fan mail; David Petts, Durham University, the commercialisation of British archaeology; Jon Adams, London School of Economics, on crowding in the modern city; Laurence Scott, Kings College London, on the image and significance of the desert in modern culture; Lucy Powell, University College London, a literary exploration of prisons; Rachel Hewitt, Queen Mary, University of London, on the 1790s: the Age of Despair; Shahidha Bari, also Queen Mary, on the Arabian Nights; and Zoe Norridge, York University, on cultural responses to the Rwandan genocide. All 10 can be heard on the next 10 editions of Night Waves from tonight and they will then develop their broadcasting ideas further with Radio 3 as well as appear in special New Generation Thinkers debates. Radio 3 Higher education BBC Lecturers Entertainment Mark Brown guardian.co.uk
Continue reading …Food must be imported and water use tightly regulated to protect dwindling supply, a leading groundwater expert has warned China needs to reduce food production on its dry northern plains or aquifers will diminish to a “dire” level in 30 years, the country’s leading groundwater expert has warned. Zheng Chunmiao, director of the Water Research Centre at Peking University, said the world’s most populous country will have to focus more on demand-side restraint because it is becoming more expensive and difficult to tap finite supplies below the surface. “The government must adopt a new policy to reduce water consumption,” Zheng told the Guardian. “The main thing is to reduce demand. We have relied too much on engineering projects, but the government realises this is not a long-term solution.” Zheng’s comments are based on his studies of the aquifers under the North China plain, one of the country’s main wheat growing regions. He said the water table is falling at the rate of about a metre a year mainly due to agriculture, which accounts for 60% of demand. “The water situation in the North China plain does not allow much longer for irrigation,” Zheng said. “We need to reduce food production even though it is politically difficult. It would be much more economical to import.” The government will be reluctant to accept such a radical step, which could weaken the country’s ability to feed itself. But it may not have a choice. Over the past 10 years, Zheng estimates the annual water deficit in northern China at 4bn cubic metres. This is increasingly made up from underground sources, which account for 70% of water supplies. Although some aquifers remain 500 metres thick, others are emptying at an alarming rate. This has created depletion cones, the deepest of which is at Hengshui near Xizhuajiang. Before trimming agricultural production, the government will try to improve usage efficiency. Plans are now being drawn up to measure and centrally manage the remaining resources, which are currently under the control of regional governments that often tend to draw up water unsustainably for the short-term benefit of the local economy. The Yellow River Conservancy Commission – which has the nation’s most advanced river management network – is expected to serve as a model. “The government is considering a system similar to ours that will collect data on underground water resources and connect it to our Yellow River monitoring system,” said Pei Yong, director of the water regulation division. “I think it will start three or four years from now.” Even before this begins, controls on underground water use are slowly being tightened. Well digging – once a lucrative, ubiquitous and poorly regulated business – is already feeling the pinch. Kaifeng Well Drilling – a company in Henan – charges 100-500 yuan for each metre drilled, but it has recently laid off workers because it gets permission for only two wells a year now, compared to about 30 in the 1980s. “Business is very bad. Many firms have had to change business,” said the director, who only gave his surname, Wang. “The controls are very tight now. You only get permission to drill in areas with severe water shortages.” Such restrictions are said to have slowed the rate of aquifer depletion, but the situation remains critical. Zheng said much more needs to be done, including demand reduction, water transfers and greater use of desalination plants. “We will get there because we have to,” he said. “If nothing changes, then in 30 years, we will face a dire situation.” Water Food Drought China Jonathan Watts guardian.co.uk
Continue reading …Food must be imported and water use tightly regulated to protect dwindling supply, a leading groundwater expert has warned China needs to reduce food production on its dry northern plains or aquifers will diminish to a “dire” level in 30 years, the country’s leading groundwater expert has warned. Zheng Chunmiao, director of the Water Research Centre at Peking University, said the world’s most populous country will have to focus more on demand-side restraint because it is becoming more expensive and difficult to tap finite supplies below the surface. “The government must adopt a new policy to reduce water consumption,” Zheng told the Guardian. “The main thing is to reduce demand. We have relied too much on engineering projects, but the government realises this is not a long-term solution.” Zheng’s comments are based on his studies of the aquifers under the North China plain, one of the country’s main wheat growing regions. He said the water table is falling at the rate of about a metre a year mainly due to agriculture, which accounts for 60% of demand. “The water situation in the North China plain does not allow much longer for irrigation,” Zheng said. “We need to reduce food production even though it is politically difficult. It would be much more economical to import.” The government will be reluctant to accept such a radical step, which could weaken the country’s ability to feed itself. But it may not have a choice. Over the past 10 years, Zheng estimates the annual water deficit in northern China at 4bn cubic metres. This is increasingly made up from underground sources, which account for 70% of water supplies. Although some aquifers remain 500 metres thick, others are emptying at an alarming rate. This has created depletion cones, the deepest of which is at Hengshui near Xizhuajiang. Before trimming agricultural production, the government will try to improve usage efficiency. Plans are now being drawn up to measure and centrally manage the remaining resources, which are currently under the control of regional governments that often tend to draw up water unsustainably for the short-term benefit of the local economy. The Yellow River Conservancy Commission – which has the nation’s most advanced river management network – is expected to serve as a model. “The government is considering a system similar to ours that will collect data on underground water resources and connect it to our Yellow River monitoring system,” said Pei Yong, director of the water regulation division. “I think it will start three or four years from now.” Even before this begins, controls on underground water use are slowly being tightened. Well digging – once a lucrative, ubiquitous and poorly regulated business – is already feeling the pinch. Kaifeng Well Drilling – a company in Henan – charges 100-500 yuan for each metre drilled, but it has recently laid off workers because it gets permission for only two wells a year now, compared to about 30 in the 1980s. “Business is very bad. Many firms have had to change business,” said the director, who only gave his surname, Wang. “The controls are very tight now. You only get permission to drill in areas with severe water shortages.” Such restrictions are said to have slowed the rate of aquifer depletion, but the situation remains critical. Zheng said much more needs to be done, including demand reduction, water transfers and greater use of desalination plants. “We will get there because we have to,” he said. “If nothing changes, then in 30 years, we will face a dire situation.” Water Food Drought China Jonathan Watts guardian.co.uk
Continue reading …More than 5,000 police officers to guard central Athens as striking workers plan to march on parliament Greece is facing major disruption on Tuesday as unions begin a 48-hour general strike before a parliamentary vote on harsh austerity measures demanded in return for international rescue loans. Protest rallies in Athens are due to converge on parliament as industrial action called in protest against tax hikes was expected to disrupt or halt most public services. More than 5,000 police have been deployed to guard central Athens where anti-austerity demonstrations earlier this month ended in scenes of violence as protesters clashed with riot officers. “We expect a dynamic and massive participation in the strike and the march to the centre of Athens. We will have 48 hours of working people, unemployed, young people in the streets,” Spyros Papaspyros, leader of public sector union ADEDY, told Reuters. Doctors, paramedics, journalists, postal workers and private sector employees were all expected to join the protest. Stoppages by Greek air traffic controllers are likely to disrupt flights and ferry departures from Athens are also expected to be hit. The unions are angry that the proposed austerity package would raise taxes on minimum wage earners and other Greeks in addition to earlier cuts that have driven unemployment past 16%. Parliament must approve and implement the programme this week if Greece is to receive a scheduled bailout loan of €110bn from the European Union and the International Monetary Fund. Without the loan Greece risks becoming the first eurozone country to default on its debts – an event that could trigger a crisis in other economically weak European countries and have major global consequences. “These measures are a massacre for workers’ rights. It will truly be hell for the working man. The strike must bring everything to a standstill,” Thanassis Pafilis, a member of parliament for the pro-strike Greek Communist party, told Associated Press. The three-day parliamentary debate over the austerity package came as France, among eurozone nations scrambling to prevent a default, suggested rolling over some Greek debt for 30 years. The proposal by the French president, Nicolas Sarkozy, offered hope to Greece’s socialist prime minister, George Papandreou, before the debate. “I call on you to vote for survival, growth, justice, and a future for the citizens of this country,” Papandreou told politicians. Unable to offload its sovereign debt, Greece is dependent on bailout loans and is banking on a new rescue package to cover a 2012 financial hole. Although any further assistance is likely to be dependent on approval of austerity measures, Papandreou said he hoped the terms of a second bailout would be better than the first. “I call on Europe, for its part, to give Greece the time and the terms it needs to really pay off its debt, without strangling growth, and without strangling its citizens,” he said. Theodoros Pangalos, the deputy prime minister, rejected suggestions Greece might be forced to abandon the euro and return to its old currency, the drachma. “There would be riots everywhere, shops would have empty shelves and people would be jumping out of windows … It would also be disastrous for the entire economy of Europe,” he told the Spanish daily El Mundo. Greece Europe Protest European debt crisis European banks Barry Neild guardian.co.uk
Continue reading …Higher education white paper promises to give students more power to ensure they get their money’s worth, but Labour brands reforms a ‘complete shambles’ University courses with a poor track record of employment will be “named and shamed” under government proposals to give students a clearer choice of degree and curb the costs of tuition fee loans. Measures to open up the sector and give more power to students to ensure they get their money’s worth are reforms tied to the government’s plans to triple tuition fees to £9,000 from 2012, due to be outlined in the government’s long-awaited white paper on higher education on Tuesday. In what is seen as the most radical shakeup of the higher education system in decades, the white paper is expected to contain measures to allow popular universities to take in any student who gains at least two A grades and a B at A-level, allowing these institutions to grow. Universities charging low fees, including higher education colleges, could also be told that they can increase their numbers in a move that will be seen as a way to encourage institutions to lower their fees. The proposals were criticised by Labour and the National Union of Students, who warned that the reforms would see the quality of degree courses suffer and leave students open to “market chaos” in the higher education sector. The government also wants to see courses that are not valued by employers either scrapped or overhauled. Ministers will ask for the publication of detailed information about the employment and earning outcomes of specific degrees, to limit losses to the taxpayer from students who fail to repay their loans. At present, two-thirds of universities are seeking to charge the maximum £9,000 fee from next year, despite wide variations in employability. Universities will be required to publish comparable data on teaching hours and accommodation costs, and to account for how fee income is spent. In a round of broadcast interviews given ahead of the publication of the white paper, David Willetts, the universities minister, said the government was looking for a “transformation” in the amount of information students receive. “There are some courses that are far better at preparing young people for the world of work than others. At the moment, the student finds it very hard to get that information,” he told BBC Breakfast. “In future, they are going to be able to see ‘if I do biological sciences at one university, I have got a much better chance of a job in a pharmaceutical company than if I do biological sciences at a different university’. Yes, all that information should be out there and we are insisting for the first time that it should be available for prospective students.” Willetts said he wanted to see education institutions compete both on fees, but also on the “quality of the experience” for students as the government dismantles the system of quotas on student places. He told BBC Radio 4′s Today programme that UK universities should dispense with the public sector “mindset”. “They are not, they do not belong to the public sector. What they do receive is a large amount of public money … what we will be saying today is if there are alternative providers that come in they may be FE colleges, of course should have the opportunity of offering higher education but they should be regulated on the same basis as everyone else and I think there’s a great opportunity here. “Existing universities have been over-regulated so we’re going to cut back the burden of regulation The ones outside the system often have not been regulated at all.” John Denham, the shadow business secretary, branded the reforms a “complete shambles” and accused the government of “making it up as it goes along”. “Whatever we get this afternoon wasn’t any part of the proposals that were put to the House of Commons last December,” Denham told Sky News. “Remember, the government cut higher education funding by 80%, which is why we have this huge increase in fees. They then said very few universities would charge £9,000 – most of them want to charge £9,000. “So what’s happening here is that they’re trying to drive down the cost of some courses, but I fear very much at the expense of quality of higher education and the stability of some universities and we will do our students no favours if we give them a cut-price, low-quality degree when what they need is a really good quality higher education.” Aaron Porter, president of the National Union of Students, said the reforms would leave the majority of students facing “complete market chaos”. “To use proposals for more information as a justification for lifting the cap on fees to £9,000 is outrageous and will not fool students and their families. It’s the price, rather than educational standards, that will have tripled,” said Porter. “Ministers are at risk of creating stability for the perceived best but complete chaos for the rest. The vast majority of university entrants, who don’t get the very best grades, will be treated to complete market chaos and real uncertainty about their universities and courses.” The white paper comes as research revealed that graduates are facing record levels of competition for jobs, with more than 80 fighting for every position, research suggests. Employers are now receiving 83 applications on average for each job – almost double the numbers of two years ago (49), and nearly treble compared with three years ago (31) according to the Association of Graduate Recruiters. Higher education Students Student finance David Willetts University funding Jeevan Vasagar Jessica Shepherd Hélène Mulholland guardian.co.uk
Continue reading …• Thorntons to halve its portfolio of 364 stores • Chief exec blames ‘significant changes’ in consumer behaviour • Carpetright profits slump 70% • Jane Norman and Homeform have gone into administration More than 10,000 jobs are now at risk across the UK retail sector as Thorntons announced the closure of up to 180 stores on Tuesday, threatening around 1,000 jobs. Carpetright also added to the gloom, axing this year’s dividend and warning that it sees “no respite” from the challenges that have forced several high street names into administration in recent weeks. Thorntons plans to almost halve its portfolio of 364 UK stores. Some 120 will definitely close over the next three years, as their leases expire, and a further 60 could also be shuttered. The move comes less than two months after Thorntons suffered its second profits warning of 2011 . At the time, the company blamed the unusually sunny Easter. On Tuesday, chief executive Jonathan Hart said Thorntons needed to close stores in response to “significant changes in consumer shopping behaviour”. He admitted that the high street was suffering badly. “Our goal is to refocus the business across all channels and seek to deliver industry competitive returns over the next three to five years. Although we see the prospect of weakness in high street footfall and consumer sentiment continuing, I am confident that this strategy is right,” said Hart. Under Hart’s strategy, Thorntons will attempt to find a franchisee to run stores which it closes, although it admitted this will not be possible everywhere. Floorings chain Carpetright told its shareholders that consumer demand was weak across its markets, with profits slumping by 70% to £6.6m. It also hinted that stores will close. “With leases on 94 stores in our estate due to expire in the next five years, we have ample opportunity to reshape the portfolio, reduce the size of store footprints and lower our ongoing rent roll,” the company said. The store closures at Thorntons mean that more than 10,000 UK retail workers have been hit with the threat of unemployment in the last week. On Monday, womenswear chain Jane Norman fell into administration, leaving its 1,600 staff facing an uncertain future. Discount department store chain TJ Hughes, which employs around 4,000 staff across its 57 shops, filed an intention to appoint an administrator. Homeform, the owner of Kitchens Direct, Dolphin Bathrooms and Moben Kitchen, went into administration last Thursday . It employs 1,300 people across its 160 showrooms, and also uses the services of 1,500 self-employed fitters and designers. A further 750 jobs are at risk at Habitat, with restructuring firm Zolfo Cooper trying to find a buyer for its 30 stores outside London . Thorntons Retail industry Job losses Graeme Wearden guardian.co.uk
Continue reading …In an effort to avert Thursday’s strikes, the prime minister will call on unions to keep negotiating after talks failed to reach a settlement to avoid this week’s walkouts David Cameron is to appeal directly to public sector workers not to go on strike this week, telling an audience of local government leaders that the current pension arrangements are “not fair to the taxpayer”. The prime minister will intervene in the furious row between the government and unions over pension reforms after talks on Monday failed to negotiate a settlement to avoid Thursday’s walkouts. Up to 750,000 teachers, lecturers and civil servants are preparing to strike over the reforms. He is expected to say, during a speech to the Local Government Association in Birmingham on Tuesday, that the current system is “unsustainable” and reforms inevitable. Downing Street sources said that the language would be “non-confrontational” and that he would urge unions to keep negotiating before moving to strike action. Monday’s talks failed to reach any firm agreement, despite the government appearing to offer a significant compromise over local government pensions. Two hours of talks left the unions and government still fundamentally divided with major unresolved gaps in opinions, according to Brendan Barber, the general secretary of the Trades Union Congress. Unions said they had made no progress on the most contentious proposals – to increase public sector workers’ contributions, change the system of uprating schemes, and raise the pension age for government employees. But the biggest public sector union, Unison, indicated the government had given enough ground on local government pensions to delay their strike ballot until later in the summer, in the hope of further concessions. The government described the talks as constructive and indicated that it was preparing to offer concessions on the local government scheme, which is funded and has 3.5 million mostly low-paid members. There have been warnings that higher contributions could tip the scheme into surplus while forcing low-paid workers out. Lord Hutton, the Labour former business secretary who drew up the blueprint for the coalition’s pension reforms, last week warned that the proposed three percentage point increase in contributions might trigger a mass opt-out, jeopardising the viability of the scheme. The minister for the Cabinet Office, Francis Maude, and the chief secretary to the Treasury, Danny Alexander, said in a joint statement that the talks would now continue into July – although one Whitehall source also suggested that there was no pressing deadline to end the talks before the pension contributions are due to kick in next April. “We recognise that the funding basis for the local government pension scheme is different. There are important implications for how the contributions and benefits interact, as both Lord Hutton and the unions have set out. On that basis, we have agreed to have a more in-depth discussion with local government unions and the TUC about how we take these factors into account,” the statement said. “While the talks are ongoing it is obviously disappointing that some unions have decided on industrial action. But what the recent ballot results show is that there is extremely limited support for the kind of strike action union leaders are calling for. Less than 10% of the civil service workforce has voted for strike actions and only about a third of teachers.” Barber said: “In some areas it’s clear that there is the possibility of agreement, but in terms of some of the key issues there is clearly a major gap between our position and that of the government. “The strikes will be taking place on Thursday. Four unions balloted their members and reached that decision and that reflects the degree of anger and worry and real fear there is across everyone who works for public sectors that their pensions are under threat.” Dave Prentis, the head of Unison, which has 1.2 million members in the pension scheme, said his union would not now ballot until after further talks in the summer, indicating that they went into the talks fully expecting to do so. “There was a sense that today we were in real negotiations,” he said. The Association of Teachers and Lecturers, the National Union of Teachers, the University and College Union and the PCS all confirmed they would go ahead with Thursday’s strike. Some unions have privately said they will stick with the talks – despite believing they are doomed – to avoid the public relations disaster of being perceived to be responsible for negotiations collapsing. Unions and government are eager to win over public opinion ahead of strikes. One ComRes poll suggested that although 55% of people believe the public will not support co-ordinated strikes, 78% agree it is unfair for low-paid public employees to “pay the price for mistakes made by bankers before the financial crisis”. David Cameron Trade unions Public sector cuts Public services policy Public finance Public sector pay Public sector careers Public sector pensions Local government Polly Curtis guardian.co.uk
Continue reading …Officer taken to hospital with hand injuries as Met launches investigation after dogs die on hot day An investigation has been launched into the deaths of two police dogs who were left in a car on one of the hottest days of the year. The Metropolitan police animals, a working Belgian malinois and a German shepherd puppy, were found collapsed in an unventilated vehicle at the force’s training centre in Keston, Kent, on Sunday. A Met police officer, believed to be their handler, was found by colleagues following the incident in the Newham area of London suffering from hand injuries. It is not known if his wounds were self-inflicted. He was last night still receiving medical treatment, police said. The Directorate of Professional Standards has launched a probe into the circumstances of the incident, which took place as temperatures soared to as high as 29C in the south-east. A Scotland Yard spokesman said: “On Sunday June 26 at approx 11am staff at a Metropolitan police service (MPS) building were alerted to two police dogs having been left in an unventilated private vehicle. “Entry was forced to the vehicle and two MPS dogs, a working Belgian malinois and a German shepherd pup, were found in a state of collapse. “Both were taken to an emergency vets where they subsequently died. “An investigation by the Directorate of Professional Standards into the circumstances of this incident has begun.” Police refused to name the officer linked to the incident, but confirmed a policeman was found with injuries following the discovery of the dead canines. The Scotland Yard spokesman added: “The officer was located in Newham Borough suffering a hand injury. He was taken to an East London Hospital as a precaution and is currently receiving medical treatment.” The deaths follow those of two German shepherd police dogs, who were left to die in a baking hot car outside Nottinghamshire police headquarters in July 2009. A spokeswoman from the Dogs Trust, the UK’s largest dog welfare charity, said it was “saddened” to hear of the two latest deaths. She added: “Whilst the cause of death is still to be determined, the charity would like to remind dog owners and police dog handlers that leaving your dog in a car can prove rapidly fatal, particularly during a heatwave. “It can take just 20 minutes for a dog to die and temperatures can reach over 40C in some vehicles.” Police dog handler PC Mark Johnson was handed a six-month conditional discharge after he was found guilty of animal cruelty in relation to the deaths of the two dogs in Nottinghamshire. During his trial in February last year, Nottingham magistrates’ court was told he suffered from depression and obsessive compulsive disorder, which led to him forgetting that he had left the dogs in his car outside Nottinghamshire police’s Sherwood Lodge headquarters near Arnold as temperatures reached 29.3C. Metropolitan police Police Animals London guardian.co.uk
Continue reading …Cuts protests last winter prompted one police chief to warn of a new era of political unrest. But months later, the great British revolt went quiet. Will a teachers’ strike reignite the unrest? Just off a stairwell at the University of London Union, last winter one of the nerve centres of the student anti-cuts protests, there is a small, locked room. “Free Education For All,” read the old placards piled carelessly on a windowsill. “Protest/Strike/Occupy.” Stacked more neatly on the floor, like firewood, are hundreds of unused placard handles. Has the anti-cuts movement just been biding its time in recent months, while the coalition’s poll ratings have steadied and mass protests have almost ceased? Or has a certain momentum been lost? This Thursday’s planned strikes, the first big, overtly political ones since the coalition took office more than a year ago, should clarify the state of play somewhat. But what is already obvious, though not much remarked on, is that opposition to the government’s radical policies – policies for which it has provocatively little electoral mandate – has not developed in the ferocious way many people thought it would. Are most Britons simply not that angry with the coalition? Or is it that modern political anger has its limits? Seven months ago, the students who had just stormed the roof of Conservative party headquarters sent a text to journalists. “We are against all cuts,” the occupiers announced. “This is only the beginning.” Strikingly, within hours a government source described the disorder in London that day in exactly the same terms: “This is just the beginning. This is the first of a series of protests by various sections of society against what we are now doing. This sets the benchmark for other protests.” A fortnight on, after another turbulent student march, it was the turn of the head of the Metropolitan police, Sir Paul Stephenson, to forecast “disorder on the streets” as Britain entered a “new period” of political ferment. Through the winter and into the early spring, evidence of this apparent change kept coming: campus occupations on a scale not seen since the 1970s; the involvement of schoolchildren , and of young Britons of all classes, on the student marches; the massive all-ages anti-cuts demonstration in London in March; even the attack during the December student march on a Rolls-Royce containing a startled Prince Charles and Camilla – a world-turned-upside-down moment worthy of a revolutionary propaganda film. “In November and December there was this euphoria of dissent,” says Mark Fisher, a leftwing blogger and academic. “It made you think a new thing was coming.” In March, the radical publisher Verso rush-released a book, Springtime: The New Student Rebellions , on the unrest in Britain, the rest of Europe and the Arab world. “There is a new mood in the air,” declared the introduction. At Verso’s 40th anniversary party in London in November, intense-looking participants from ongoing student occupations met excited veterans of the legendary youth insurrections of the 60s. But then the great British revolt went a bit quiet. A plan to turn Trafalgar Square in London into a centre of resistance like Tahrir Square in Egypt came to nothing. The campus occupations ended. At the May local elections, the Liberal Democrats were mauled but the Conservatives did much better than expected. The wedding of Prince William and Kate Middleton in April suggested that much of austerity Britain was still keener to gawp at rather than attack luxurious royal vehicles. Meanwhile, the spring’s unusual glut of sun and bank holidays and huge non-cuts-related foreign news stories also helped change the British political atmosphere. Just at the moment the long-dreaded cuts began to take effect, with the start of the current financial year, they almost disappeared from the front pages for the first time in many months. “It’s not that the anger has gone away, but without the constant flashpoints provided by the student protests, it feels more dissipated,” says Fisher. Owen Jones, another well-connected young leftwing writer, says: “The danger is just to have one-day [actions], almost to release a bit of anger, make the point, do some media-friendly protest-as-theatre, then go home – with no sense of where the protests go next.” University College London had the winter’s most high-profile student occupation . The grand square room the students held for a fortnight – talking to journalists, hosting sympathetic academics and celebrities, and turning the walls, according to an admiring London Review of Books article, into “a sort of slogan competition” – now looks as if the occupation never happened. The walls are slogan-free and spotless. The chairs are back in rows for the room’s usual round of exams and dinners and conferences. Outside in the main quadrangle, the occupation’s banners are gone, and students wander about in graduation gowns: non-political life goes on. Since January, pollsters have noticed this lull. “We expected to see more anger,” says Tomasz Mludzinski of Ipsos Mori. “The net satisfaction ratings for the government are holding up pretty well.” In the 70s Edward Heath, a more moderate Tory prime minister than David Cameron, infamously had ink thrown at him and a cigarette stubbed out on his neck by enraged voters. During Margaret Thatcher’s premiership in the 80s, Morrissey and Elvis Costello wrote songs longing for her death, Margaret on the Guillotine and Tramp the Dirt Down (” . . . when they finally put you in the ground/I’ll stand on your grave and tramp the dirt down”). Heath and Thatcher’s modest backgrounds, and Thatcher’s gender, made some people readier to hate them. Cameron’s old-fashioned male ruling-class aura, depressingly, prompts more deference and acceptance. In recent months, the double-digit leads Labour sometimes enjoyed over the Tories in the winter have disappeared, to be replaced by a flimsier advantage. The Conservatives’ ratings remain remarkably steady, at around the 36% they won in the general election. The proportion of voters worried about losing their jobs or being directly hurt by the cuts is, according to YouGov, slightly smaller now than it was in January. “We’ve had at least 18 months of everyone telling us, ‘It’s going to be hard,’” says Lawrence Janta-Lipinski of YouGov. “There’s been some very good perception management by the government.” Cameron, famously, used to work in PR. Others, too, have had things to gain from issuing apocalyptic forecasts: police chiefs shielding their budgets from the cuts; unions wanting to show their continuing political relevance; newer anti-cuts groups wanting attention; and a media hungry, as ever, for national crises. Meanwhile, Cameron’s U-turns – starkly different from Thatcher’s behaviour in office – have made his government’s policies look like bargaining positions rather than actual ambitions. Political anger needs a focus, and the coalition presents a moving target. Polls also show voters deeply split over who is responsible for the cuts and the feeble economy: besides the coalition, they blame the bankers, Gordon Brown’s government and the global economy. The parliamentary expenses scandal has also cast a long shadow, spreading a paralysing disillusionment with politics in general, evident in the poor performances of all three main parties in the 2010 election. Ed Miliband’s time as Labour leader has done little, so far , to unite and energise the coalition’s enemies. But his frustrating silences and missed open goals in the Commons are only part of a bigger problem. As a political vehicle and way of thinking, the British left has been losing ground for three decades. Even the fiery Mark Serwotka , head of the Public and Commercial Services Union and one of the instigators of Thursday’s strikes, conceded in this paper last December : “The union movement today is different from that of the early 1980s – the last time we faced such an attack on the public sector. Membership is barely half what it was, and anti-union laws constrain us.” Labour local authorities, too, lack the legal loopholes – and the political confidence – that enabled Ken Livingstone’s Greater London Council to act as a rallying point against Conservative policies in the 80s. Instead, with expressions of regret, and fierce but usually short-lived protests outside their council chambers, current Labour authorities have voted the government’s cuts through. In 2009, shortly after the financial crisis, Fisher published Capitalist Realism , a punchy but dispiriting book about the collective gloom created by a malfunctioning market economy and a shrinking left. Across the west, he wrote, there is a “widespread sense that not only is capitalism the only viable political and economic system, but also that it is impossible even to imagine a coherent alternative”. A related sense of resignation underlies public attitudes to the cuts: seen as “unfair” by a two-to-one margin in all YouGov’s recent polls, but also seen as “necessary” by the same margin. The sociologist Richard Sennett produces a good metaphor for the dread and passivity that has frequently been the British national mood since the general election: “It’s the snail pulling into its shell.” Thirty years ago next month, another economic slump and austerity government helped provoke Toxteth in Liverpool into the fiercest of the many riots of the Thatcher era. Toxteth is still poor: most of its eerily half-empty landscape of huge, often derelict Victorian properties, waste ground and boxy council estates is in the most deprived 1% of neighbourhoods in the country. The area remains profoundly alienated from the Conservatives, without a Liverpool MP since 1979. But residents seem more resigned than in the 80s. “The north ‑always gets hit worst by cuts,” says a pensioner in one of the few remaining shops, who has been in Toxteth since the 40s. “People are angry. But they’re really scared of losing their homes, their jobs.” A newsagent in the street where the 1981 riot started says: “This government can’t manage a thing. But when I get into debt, I blame myself first, the government second.” As we talk, a stream of customers ask him the prices of the cheapest sweets and sugary drinks: modern British escapism in action. “In the 80s, you could get 100,000 people on the streets in Liverpool against the Tories,” says Tony Nelson, a longstanding Liverpool trade union and community activist. “Those days are gone. People are watching Jeremy Kyle on TV all day. There is anger among the unemployed, but community groups like us, we’re keeping a lid on it for now.” But, he goes on: “The government needs to be very careful: they’re thinking of taking funds away from the community groups. People in this city have always had a disrespect for authority. If there’s one place where something kicks off, it’ll be here.” There are two ways that street unrest can badly damage a government. One is for the government to appear to have lost control, as with Heath and the miners’ strikes of the 70s, which led to power cuts and the police being swamped by mass pickets. The other is for protests to crystallise a wider dissatisfaction, as with the poll tax march and riot of 1990, which showed how out of touch the Thatcher government had become. In other circumstances, anger can fizzle out – or even backfire. The 1981 inner-city riots , the 1984-85 miner’s strike , and the immense 2003 anti-Iraq war march all temporarily shook governments, but left them even more publicly determined not to change course. In each case, they won a general election not long afterwards. So far for the coalition, the protests have been awkward rather than fatal. But it is more vulnerable than most recent governments. There is potential for splits both between and inside the coalition parties in response to well-organised opposition. The government’s many U-turns have made further campaigns against its policies likely. There is the economic situation: Britons are among the gloomiest of all westerners about their economy, according to Ipsos Mori. And there is the fact that austerity governments across the world are losing elections. In many ways the coalition, with its lack of a proper majority or mandate, and its faithful adherence to the free-market economics discredited by the financial crisis, resembles a cartoon character that has run off a cliff and, any moment, may feel the force of gravity. “After two years of this government, will the public be as forgiving? I don’t think so,” says Vidhya Alakeson of the Resolution Foundation , a thinktank which this year has been running focus groups of economically-stressed voters. She has found her interviewees “partly ignorant” about the impact the cuts will have on them, and “partly grateful to still be staying afloat” financially, for now, but also “a bit sad” at “losing out on options” they expected to have. After the seemingly endless boom of the Blair years, says Alakeson, “I don’t think those expectations have gone away.” And frustrated public expectations can be lethal for governments. Often, it is not until the second or third year that a British government’s poll ratings collapse. And Britain, like other rich democracies, is only just emerging from a long depoliticised era, dominated by the technocratic ideas explored in Adam Curtis’s recent BBC2 documentary series All Watched Over by Machines of Loving Grace , and by what Fisher calls the “debate and comment” culture of cathartic but politically impotent radio phone-ins and internet forums. The anti-coalition actions so far have at least re-established the idea that protest can be meaningful, and even enjoyable. And just as the cuts are turning out not to be the overnight apocalypse many feared, but a quieter, more relentless erosion , so the protests may not hurt the government immediately, but eat away at its perceived legitimacy for years until its rickety structure suddenly folds. “There’s a huge, slow momentum building,” says a spokesman for the rising activist group UK Uncut, which is scheduled to meet unions for the first time to discuss coordinated anti-government protests. “So far, UK Uncut has done single-day actions, but it will definitely have to look again at that model. There is some way to go in getting the Daily Mail readers who are outside their local library protesting at cuts and, say, striking teachers to link up.” Yet few doubt that interesting times are coming. On Newsnight a fortnight ago, a British political veteran gave his little-reported view of the prospects for unrest in Europe and beyond. “There is enormous discontent among young people,” he said, “about longterm unemployment, about the extent of economic problems . . . We will see political movements for change – not just in the Arab world.” And as he concluded his remarks, the foreign secretary William Hague looked intriguingly calm. Protest Cuts and closures Students Tuition fees Public sector cuts Public services policy Public finance David Cameron Conservatives Liberal-Conservative coalition Andy Beckett guardian.co.uk
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