Home » Archives by category » News » World News (Page 501)

Rick Perry’s presidential campaign comes with a large security detail provided by Texas state police, but its costs are going to secret for the next 18 months, thanks to a provision added to a school finance bill, reports the Washington Post . Perry—who was “extremely concerned” to protect his travel…

Continue reading …

A 50-year-old Oklahoma mother of 11 is heading to Harvard, 30 years after dropping out of college, reports Fox News . Allyson Reneau maintained a 4.0 GPA at Oklahoma University, while raising her large family and running her own gymnastics center. Starting tomorrow, Reneau will fly to Massachusetts once a…

Continue reading …

As fighting continues in Tripoli for the future of Libya, bodies are piling up in the streets—from combat, reprisals, and innocents just caught in the crossfire. And as the corpses decompose in the summer heat, they are becoming such a health risk that removing the bodies has become the…

Continue reading …
Ministers back anti-abortion lobby’s counselling reforms

Charities warn of ‘distress and delay’ as they are stripped of responsibility to counsel women seeking a termination The government has caved in to calls from anti-abortionists to overhaul existing protocols and strip charities of their responsibility to counsel women seeking to terminate a pregnancy. The Department of Health confirmed that it would change the rules to ensure abortion counselling was offered “independently” of clinics that conduct terminations. Its announcement was made in advance of an attempt next week led by the Tory backbencher Nadine Dorries to amend the health and social care bill to force such a requirement. Dorries says that the charity-run abortion services – including the British Pregnancy Advisory Service (BPAS) and Marie Stopes – have a financial conflict of interest in advising women seeking terminations. She says that by offering independent counselling, 60,000 of the 200,000 abortions each year could be prevented. The charities say that another layer of counselling could cause distress by delaying access to abortions. They also say that the counselling they offer is continuous throughout the process of seeking a termination and that there is no evidence they are biased in the care they provide . Yvette Cooper, the shadow home secretary, said the government’s decision was based on prejudice rather than evidence. The Department of Health confirmed that it would move to change the rules and said it was consulting on the precise method to use, with sources acknowledging that it was a direct response to lobbying from backbenchers. An aide to the health secretary, Andrew Lansley, said: “We remain of the view that we can do this without legislation but we aren’t shying away from a parliamentary debate. We want women to have the offer of independent counselling, independent of the abortion provider. “We believe that it would be an improvement on the current system. Equally, the timing of it has been determined by cross-party push by backbenchers on all sides of the house to ask the government to look into this issue.” Dorries launched her campaign for the change alongside Frank Field, the Labour MP. They are backed by the campaign group Right to Know, which has set up a website and Facebook page. Dorries, a former nurse who says she is campaigning on the issue after witnessing botched terminations, says she does not oppose abortion. However, she has previously campaigned to reduce the abortion time limit and said that her explicit aim was to reduce the number of terminations, claiming that 60,000 could be prevented each year if women were given independent advice. “The important thing is that the government have highlighted themselves and agreed that counselling by organisations that are paid to conduct the procedures is not independent. That’s the most important. That’s very reassuring. It validates the amendment and what we’re doing,” she told the Guardian. “The abortion process is so fast – 7-14 days. Women who do have doubts or niggles are on the other side before they have a chance to think it through. The majority may feel it’s fine but there are a growing number thinking it wasn’t what I wanted to do. As it gets faster and faster more women are falling off the edge. This is a women’s right’s issue.” Dorries said she did not know how the Right to Know campaign was being funded, claiming that it represented “hundreds” of people and was run by a lobbyist. She would not reveal the lobbyist’s name, or the other organisations the lobbyist represents but did say that she was receiving advice from Dr Peter Saunders, the head of the Christian Medical Fellowship. Saunders led the Alive and Kicking campaign, a group of anti-abortion groups including the ProLife Alliance, which campaigned for an immediate cut in the abortion time limit, prohibition of abortion for “social convenience” and a cooling-off period. Right to Know refused to reveal how it is funded saying only that it relies mostly on individuals. A spokeswoman said: “This is a campaign that has attracted support from people of very different backgrounds and beliefs (including atheists) who simply share the common view that the support and information that women receive ahead of an abortion should be improved.” Ann Furedi, chief executive of the BPAS, said: “The thing I find most frustrating about this discussion is the assumption behind it that we want to encourage women towards the abortion option, rather than the option of continuing the pregnancy. Nothing could be further from the truth. I can say with hands on heart that the last thing that anyone involved in abortion wants is for a woman to be having treatment that they are not sure about. Everybody wants people to walk away feeling that the right thing has been done.” The health and social care bill is due to be debated in the Commons when parliament returns next week, and a decision on whether to select the amendment – one of the first submitted – will be taken on 6 September. Dorries claimed that private polling has suggested that up to 80% of MPs could back the amendment. All three parties confirmed that, as is traditional with matters of conscience, there would be a free vote on the issue. Lib Dem sources said that they had not opposed the decision to introduce independent counselling within the Department of Health but that the coalition agreed the legislation was unnecessary. Cooper said: “These plans are based on prejudice rather than evidence. This could make it harder for women to get proper health advice and counselling when they need it most. Health ministers need to urgently think again. David Cameron should not put politics before the interests of women’s health and women’s lives.” John Healey, the shadow health secretary, said the Labour health team would vote against Dorries’ amendment: “The Tory backbenchers are hijacking the health bill to make arguments that are entirely irrelevant to the huge and fundamental changes being made to the NHS. MPs will only get two days to debate the bill, and that limited time would be spent on more important matters than this amendment.” A Department of Health spokesperson said the department “wants women who are thinking about having an abortion to be able to have access to independent counselling. Work is under way currently to develop proposals around counselling on which the department intends to consult externally.” Abortion Health Women Conservatives Pregnancy Health & wellbeing Family Polly Curtis guardian.co.uk

Continue reading …

About 700 soldiers, police, and Treasury agents seized 1,500 slot machines from 11 casinos around Monterrey, Mexico, in the wake of Thursday’s attack on a local casino that killed 52 people , reports the AP . Authorities did not link the raids to Thursday’s attack, but instead said they were part…

Continue reading …

Barely a hurricane but massive and packed with rain, Irene lumbered onto the New Jersey shore this morning on its way toward pummeling New York, which the AP reports turned eerily quiet as the city hunkered down. The National Hurricane Center said the center of the huge storm reached land…

Continue reading …
Manchester United 8-2 Arsenal | Premier League match report

If Arsenal were in poor shape before this fixture, the devastation at Old Trafford has left them in a chaotic state. Injuries cannot account for this mauling that included the dismissal of Carl Jenkinson, with a second yellow card, when the score was 6-2. Manchester United were pitiless, with Ashley Young lashing their eighth in stoppage time Arsenal have failed to keep pace with United for some years, but this match showed that Sir Alex Ferguson’s team is almost out of view. Considering the weakness of the line-up Arsène Wenger had to select, with the centre-half Thomas Vermaelen ruled out by a thigh injury and the teenager Francis Coquelin making his debut in midfield, it was natural that the visitors should suffer. Even so, nobody envisaged such humiliation. Wenger’s line-up inflicted pain on themselves when, with the score at 1-0 for United, their goalkeeper David de Gea dived to his right in the 27th minute and saved a penalty from Robin van Persie that had been awarded following a Jonny Evans challenge on Theo Walcott. Within two minutes, the lead was extended as Ashley Young bent a shot into the top corner. The United opener had come when Anderson lifted a pass over the defence and Danny Welbeck was too sharp for Johan Djourou as he headed home the bouncing ball that had been lifted into the area by Anderson. The advantage was extended when Young curled a shot high into the net. United’s third, in the 41st, minute was bent into the top corner by Rooney after he had tapped a free-kick sideways to Young, who stopped it and left the forward with a better angle from which shoot. Theo Walcott would fire home through the legs of De Gea on the verge of the interval, but Arsenal could not really resist here. The second half was even more of a rout. Further United goals followed, with Rooney bending home another attempt, Nani finishing stylishly from the Englishman’s service, the substitute Park Ji-Sung coming off the bench to strike and Rooney himself completing a hat-trick from the penalty spot after Walcott had pushed Patrice Evra. In the midst of the barrage, Van Persie had scored to reduce the deficit to 6-2. It was hardly the sort of resistance Arsenal had hoped to mount. Premier League 2011-12 Manchester United Arsenal Premier League Kevin McCarra guardian.co.uk

Continue reading …

Another day, another politician who cannot keep his clothes on around cell phones. This time, the exhibitionist seems to be Puerto Rican conservative Sen. Roberto Arango, who had several anatomically vivid pics show up on popular gay cruising app Grindr , reports Gawker . When asked about the photos by a Puerto…

Continue reading …
Polar bear attack survivor: ‘I thought I was going to die’

Patrick Flinders, 17, tells of terrifying ordeal as polar bear rampaged through school group’s camp in Svalbard, Norway A teenager left with horrific facial injuries after being mauled by a polar bear on a school expedition to the Arctic has told how he believed he was going to die during the attack. Patrick Flinders defended himself by lashing out at the animal as it rampaged through a camp of young British explorers trekking across the Norwegian island of Svalbard earlier this month. The 16-year-old’s friend Horatio Chapple was killed during the attack, while three others were seriously injured. Flinders and his 13-strong group from the British Schools Exploring Society were asleep in tents on the remote Von Postbreen glacier near Longyearbyen when the 250kg polar bear entered the camp at around 7.30am on 5 August. He said he heard a scratching outside his tent before it suddenly collapsed. Flinders told the Sunday Mirror: “The fabric of the tent hit my face. I pulled my sleeping bag over my head crumpled into a ball and shut my eyes. I was screaming ‘I don’t want to be here any more.’ “I saw the bear dragging one of the leaders along by his head in the middle of the circle of six tents. I wanted to hide but there was nowhere to go. Then the bear came towards us.” Flinders, from Jersey, added: “I looked up and saw its huge mouth snapping. All around its nose was blood. At that moment I thought I might die. It hit me with its paw and my arm came out of my sleeping bag. Then I felt its teeth around my elbow, biting down on the bone. “Suddenly it had my head in its jaws and I could feel it crunching my skull … I could hear it crack. I heard a growl which was deafening because I was so close up.” Flinders was left with fragments of the bear’s teeth lodged in his head and later needed 20 staples. He was sharing a tent with 17-year-old Eton schoolboy Chapple and another friend, Scott Bennell-Smith from Cornwall. Flinders said he lashed out and tried to punch the bear before the attack came to an end: “I lashed out and waved my arm up to punch the bear in the head, again and again to get it off me. “Scott must have decided to run because it suddenly dropped me and ran after him,” he said. “Scott screamed. Then I heard one shot.” Expedition leader Michael Reid, 29, managed to shoot the bear dead but only after his rifle failed four times. He suffered head and facial injuries during the rampage. Leader Andy Ruck, 27, and Bennell-Smith were also badly mauled. Speaking of his friend’s death, Flinders said: “Horatio had been lying one side of me, Scott on the other. If I had slept where he was I would be dead. I feel guilty it was him and not me.” Arctic Polar regions Norway Animals Europe guardian.co.uk

Continue reading …

With another hiker found dead in Yellowstone National Park on Friday, authorities are investigating whether he was another grizzly bear victim, reports the AP . The man most likely died Wednesday or Thursday and was found a few miles from where a grizzly killed a man in July . The most recent…

Continue reading …