Home » Archives by category » News » World News (Page 531)
Migration to UK rises by 21% despite coalition clampdown

European migrants arriving to fill skilled labour gaps or to study, while British emigration levels fall The government’s cap on migration to Britain from outside Europe is being more than offset by a renewed rise in migration from Poland and other EU countries, immigration experts have warned. British employers are increasingly turning to EU migrants to fill the gaps left by the government’s clampdown on the recruitment of overseas skilled labour from outside Europe, according to Oxford University’s migration observatory. The latest annual statistics show that net inward migration – which Conservative ministers have pledged to reduce to below 100,000 by the general election – actually rose by 21% during 2010, to 239,000. The Office for National Statistics said fewer people were leaving Britain to live abroad and net migration from eastern Europe was up – from 5,000 in 2009 to 40,000 in 2010. Emigration from the UK fell from a peak of 427,000 in 2008 to 336,000 last year. Publishing figures for the second quarter of 2011, covering April to June this year, the ONS said study remains the most common reason for people from outside Europe to come to Britain. Analysts at the Department for Work and Pensions said above-average unemployment rates in eurozone countries hit by the financial crisis, including Spain (20%), Lithuania (16%) and Latvia (16%), were behind increased migration to Britain. They also note that UK national insurance registrations from Ireland rose by 56% in 2010/11. The return of the skilled Polish worker to Britain is also confirmed by the latest figures. The Polish community now numbers 555,000, larger than the Irish (353,000) and the Indian (327,000) communities. “The UK clearly remains an attractive destination for migrants from Poland and other eastern European (A8) countries,” said Carlos Vargas-Silva of the Migration Observatory. “Despite all EU member states having to open their labour markets to A8 workers, the factors that created the initial pull for A8 workers to the UK still remain in place – there is a demand for their labour, wages are still much higher than Poland or other A8 nations and there are now well established A8 communities and networks here to help new and returning EU migrants to find a job and negotiate the complexities of life in a new country.” Matt Cavanagh, migration specialist at the Institute for Public Policy Research, said the figures show that ministers’ hope of meeting their target of reducing net migration to below 100,000 was becoming harder. He pointed to evidence earlier this week that employers were responding to the cap by recruiting more EU workers rather than increasing the skills of their current workforce or unemployed British teenagers. “Ministers need to start thinking about how to harness immigration to promote growth,” said Cavanagh. “All the indicators show that the immigration cap is not helping youth unemployment, which is back up above 20%, with those not in education, employment or training above 20%.” But the immigration minister, Damian Green, said immigration remained a British “addiction” and took comfort from the fact that the 239,000 net inward migration for the 12 months to December was lower than the previous quarter for the first time in two years. “After almost two years of increasing net migration the figures stabilised in the last quarter,” he said. “This explains why the government radically changed immigration policy, from our first months in office, to drive the numbers down with a limit on economic migration and changes to student visas to ensure we attract the brightest and best whilst tackling widespread abuse of the system. We are currently consulting on a range of further measures which will drive down numbers further.” The 2010 net migration figures include the period when the temporary cap on non-EU migration was imposed last July soon after the coalition came to power but exclude the period since April when the cap was made permanent. The ONS immigration figures also show that the number of people granted settlement in Britain hit a record 241,000, including dependants. The Home Office said the bulk were due to the one-off resolution of the backlog of asylum cases many of whom had been in Britain for years. They also show a 9% rise in asylum applications between April and June, including 336 from Libya in the first sign that the Arab Spring is having an impact on the flow of refugees coming to Britain. Some 25,900 people were held in detention in 2010. Nine children were held in immigration detention in July despite the coalition pledge to scrap the practice. Immigration removals and deportations fell to a 10 year low of 11,388 during between April and June. Immigration and asylum Europe European Union Poland Spain Lithuania Latvia Liberal-Conservative coalition Conservatives Damian Green Alan Travis guardian.co.uk

Continue reading …

An Idaho man who shot and killed a grizzly bear that wandered on to his 20-acre property has pleaded not guilty to unlawfully killing a protected species. Jeremy Hill’s supporters say he was only protecting his family after the 2-year-old cub, accompanied by its mother and another cub, entered his…

Continue reading …

A loyal Labrador retriever kept a faithful vigil at his master’s side this week even as friends and family wept at his coffin. Hawkeye the dog waited patiently at the Iowa funeral for a word or a whistle from downed Navy SEAL Jon Tumilson, 35, killed with 29 other US…

Continue reading …
Goldman Sachs to cut London bankers’ pay

US investment banking firm invokes contract clause enabling it to cut pay of London-based bankers US investment banking firm Goldman Sachs is cutting the pay of hundreds of its London bankers. The bank, which ratcheted up basic pay in 2009 in order to avoid the then Labour government’s bankers’ bonuses tax, has invoked a clause in its investment bankers’ contract to cut their pay back down. Goldman, which employs 5,500 staff in London, this week told employees that their basic pay will be cut this summer. It comes two years after the bank changed the contracts of London-based bankers to increase the amount it paid in basic pay and decreased bonus payments in order to help them avoid the then chancellor Alistair Darling’s bankers’ bonus tax . The shift away from big bonuses after the financial crisis led to bankers’ basic pay being increased by 50-100%. Last year Goldman paid its staff an average of $430,000 (£263,000). The bank’s total pay and bonus pool was $15.3bn. The pay cut is thought to affect staff at managing director or partner level. Goldman refused to comment. Bank bosses complain that political pressure forcing them to reduce bonuses has made it difficult for them to remove underperforming staff. Rich Ricci, co-chief executive of Barclays Capital, told the Financial Times last week that: “These days, when a banker doesn’t get a bonus, they no longer leave automatically. They’ve got their salaries to fall back on – and, really, there’s nowhere else for them to go.” Chris Forbes, the chief executive of PHD Search and Selection, a banking sector headhunter, said paying bankers high base salaries and lower bonuses does not produce the best results for banks as it removes the performance incentive. “High base salaries and low bonuses are not part of the traditional culture of the City and certainly reducing base salaries will lead the way to greater attrition of low performers.” The pay cut comes after Goldman announced an 18% fall in second-quarter revenue to $7.28bn and banks worldwide have announced 60,000 redundancies over the last few weeks. Barclays said on Thursday that it was cutting 140 jobs in its corporate business arm as part of plans to reduce costs. A spokesman for the bank said the redundancies will be in the UK infrastructure operations for Barclays Corporate, which is being brought closer together with the Barclays Capital investment bank arm. Barclays Corporate cut about 500 infrastructure jobs in May ago. It employs just over 11,000 staff. A survey today shows junior bankers on Wall Street are so unhappy with their pay they are considering quitting for jobs in private equity. A survey by headhunting firm Capstone Partnership found 60% of young US bankers are dissatisfied with their pay and want to leave the industry. “It’s been a rough couple of years for them,” said Rik Kopelan, managing partner at New York-based Capstone. “Fewer and fewer plan on making it a career, because they’re working these long hours and not getting paid as well as they were.” One investment banker said the banks had breached the “tacit understanding” that he or she would be well compensated. Considering “the sacrifice I make in my personal life (100-hour work weeks, cancelled vacations, etc.), this business has to be more rewarding,” the person said, according to a Bloomberg report of the survey. More than 80% of respondents said they did not believe their pay matched their effort and performance. Goldman Sachs Executive pay and bonuses Banking Barclays Global economy Recession Financial crisis Private equity United States Rupert Neate guardian.co.uk

Continue reading …
Government backs down on plan to shut Twitter and Facebook in crises

Home Office and police reject proposals including banning suspected rioters from using social networking sites during civil unrest The government has climbed down on plans to ban suspected rioters from social networking websites including Facebook and Twitter in times of civil unrest. Unprecedented measures such as shutting down websites and banning users are understood to have been dismissed by all sides early at a Home Office summit between the home secretary, Theresa May, and the major social networks on Thursday afternoon. The one-hour discussion focused on how law enforcement can better use Twitter and Facebook as part of day-to-day operations as well as in emergencies. A Home Office spokeswoman said: “The home secretary, along with the culture secretary and Foreign Office minister Jeremy Browne, has held a constructive meeting withthe Association of Chief Police Officers, the police and representatives from the social media industry. “The discussions looked at how law enforcement and the networks can build on the existing relationships and co-operation to prevent the networks being used for criminal behaviour.” The notion of banning suspected rioters from social networks was first raised by David Cameron a fortnight ago when he vowed to do “whatever it takes” to prevent a repeat of the unprecedent riots and looting across England. The prime minister announced that the social networks, including BlackBerry-maker Research in Motion, had been summoned to a Home Office meeting when responding to questions from MPs in the House of Commons. A Twitter spokeswoman said: “Governments and law enforcement agencies around the world use Twitter to engage in open, public communications with citizens. “We’ve heard from many that Twitter is an effective way to distribute crucial updates and dispel rumours in times of crisis or emergency. “People also use Twitter as a the first place to get information, monitor quickly changing events in real-time, and connect with friends, family and their communities. “We are always interested in exploring how we can make Twitter even more helpful and relevant during times of critical need.” Social networking Crime UK riots Police Josh Halliday guardian.co.uk

Continue reading …

When the people of Missouri choose a governor next year, they may need to ask themselves: Would you believe a man who says he stopped at a “pantless bar” just to use the bathroom? Peter Kinder, the state’s Republican lieutenant governor, has been caught up in the latest “sexless sex…

Continue reading …

In a mysterious phenomenon first observed in ancient times, animals at the National Zoo in Washington DC appear to have sensed Tuesday’s earthquake before humans did. Seconds before the ground began to shake, gorillas and orangutans dropped their food, grabbed their young, and climbed as high as they could. The…

Continue reading …
French lottery player scoops second jackpot

Montpellier man enjoys second jackpot in 15 years after continuing to play game using same numbers Most people would assume that, after a multimillion-euro lottery win, you have already had your luck and there would not be much point in buying another ticket. But a man in southern France has won the jackpot for the second time in 15 years by playing the same numbers. The man, an industrial worker from Montpellier who is in his 50s and wants to remain anonymous, first won the lottery in 1996, taking home the equivalent in francs of €2.8m (£2.47m). He kept playing the same winning numbers, spending €1,000 a month on various games. Last month, he won a second jackpot of more than €3m. He said he had a “lucky star”. When he was awarded his first cheque by lottery bosses in 1996, they jokingly asked him to keep supporting the game by continuing playing. He has been playing the same numbers since the French lottery started in 1976. “The first time I won, I nearly fainted, I went white and had trouble breathing before I really believed it,” the man told the BFMTV news channel. “This time, I took it all a lot more calmly, but with the same joy and the same gratitude towards fate.” He said he had invested his first winnings in business and planned to invest the second win for his two children’s inheritance. The lottery body, La Francaise des Jeux, said there was “one in more than a billion chance” of winning twice. There have been a handful of repeat lottery wins in France in the past 30 years, including one man who twice won €2.8m in three years. France Europe Angelique Chrisafis guardian.co.uk

Continue reading …
French lottery player scoops second jackpot

Montpellier man enjoys second jackpot in 15 years after continuing to play game using same numbers Most people would assume that, after a multimillion-euro lottery win, you have already had your luck and there would not be much point in buying another ticket. But a man in southern France has won the jackpot for the second time in 15 years by playing the same numbers. The man, an industrial worker from Montpellier who is in his 50s and wants to remain anonymous, first won the lottery in 1996, taking home the equivalent in francs of €2.8m (£2.47m). He kept playing the same winning numbers, spending €1,000 a month on various games. Last month, he won a second jackpot of more than €3m. He said he had a “lucky star”. When he was awarded his first cheque by lottery bosses in 1996, they jokingly asked him to keep supporting the game by continuing playing. He has been playing the same numbers since the French lottery started in 1976. “The first time I won, I nearly fainted, I went white and had trouble breathing before I really believed it,” the man told the BFMTV news channel. “This time, I took it all a lot more calmly, but with the same joy and the same gratitude towards fate.” He said he had invested his first winnings in business and planned to invest the second win for his two children’s inheritance. The lottery body, La Francaise des Jeux, said there was “one in more than a billion chance” of winning twice. There have been a handful of repeat lottery wins in France in the past 30 years, including one man who twice won €2.8m in three years. France Europe Angelique Chrisafis guardian.co.uk

Continue reading …
WikiLeaks cables reveal fears over China’s nuclear safety

Cables highlight regulation weaknesses that permitted cheap, out-of-date technology, ‘vastly increasing’ risk of nuclear accident China has “vastly increased” the risk of a nuclear accident by opting for cheap technology that will be 100 years old by the time dozens of its reactors reach the end of their lifespans, according to diplomatic cables from the US embassy in Beijing. The warning comes just weeks after the government in Beijing resumed its ambitious nuclear expansion programme, that was temporarily halted for safety inspections in the wake of the meltdown of three reactors in Fukushima, Japan. Cables released this week by WikiLeaks highlight the secrecy of the bidding process for power plant contracts, the influence of government lobbying, and potential weaknesses in the management and regulatory oversight of China’s fast-expanding nuclear sector. In August, 2008, the embassy noted that China was in the process of building 50 to 60 new nuclear plants by 2020. This target – which has since increased – was a huge business opportunity. To keep up with the French and Russians, the cable urged continuous high-level advocacy on behalf of the US company Westinghouse to push its AP-1000 reactor . This is crucial, according to the cable dated 29 August 2008 from the American Embassy in Beijing , because “all reactor purchases to date have been largely the result of internal high level political decisions absent any open process.” For the US embassy, a bigger concern was that China seemed more interested in building its own reactors – the CPR-1000 – based on old Westinghouse technology, at Daya Bay and Ling Ao. “As the CPR-1000 increases market share, China is assuring that rather than building a fleet of state-of-the-art reactors, they will be burdened with technology that by the end of its lifetime will be 100 years old,” reads another cable dated 7 August 2008 . For the past 10 years the CPR-1000 has been the most popular design in China. In 2009, the state news agency Xinhua reported that all but two of the 22 nuclear reactors under construction applied CPR-1000 technology. The cable suggests this was a dangerous choice: “By bypassing the passive safety technology of the AP1000, which, according to Westinghouse, is 100 times safer than the CPR-1000, China is vastly increasing the aggregate risk of its nuclear power fleet. ” “Passive safety technology” ensures that a reactor will automatically shut down in the event of a disaster. This is what happened when the earthquake struck Fukushima, though the fuel still overheated when the cooling system broke down. Plants without this feature are considered even less safe as they rely on human intervention which can be difficult to provide in a crisis situation. China says it has updated and improved the technology on which the CPR-1000 is based, but the government recognises that it is less safe than newer models. China’s national nuclear safety administration and national energy administration are currently drafting new safety plans, which are thought likely to include a stipulation that all future plants have to meet the higher standards of third-generation reactors like the AP-1000 or thorium technology. But it will still have to manage dozens of second-generation reactors for decades to come. Four CPR-1000s were approved by the state council just days before the Fukushima explosions. That accident – which was ranked on the same level as Chernobyl – has prompted a dramatic rethink of nuclear policy in Japan, Germany and Italy . There is no sign of a change of heart in China, which plans to build more reactors than the rest of the world put together between now and 2020. The latest to be completed was the CPR-1000 at Ling Ao earlier this month. The US embassy and Westinghouse may have wanted to play up the risks to improve the strength of their own bids, but safety concerns are also expressed within China. This year, Prof He Zuoxiu, who helped to develop China’s first atomic bomb, claimed plans to ramp up production of nuclear energy twentyfold by 2030 could be as disastrous as the “Great Leap Forward” – Mao Zedong’s disastrous attempt to jump-start industrial development in the late 1950s. Writing in the Science Times, He asked: “Are we really ready for this kind of giddy speed [of nuclear power development]? I think not – we’re seriously underprepared, especially on the safety front.” The rush to build new plants may also create problems for effective management, operation and regulatory oversight. Westinghouse representative Gavin Liu was quoted in a cable as saying: “The biggest potential bottleneck is human resources – coming up with enough trained personnel to build and operate all of these new plants, as well as regulate the industry.” Such worries increased in July when another of China’s new industrial projects – a high-speed railway – led to a collision that killed 39 people. It too was built domestically, based on foreign designs and rolled out faster than its operators appear to have been capable of dealing with. Nuclear power Energy WikiLeaks China Jonathan Watts guardian.co.uk

Continue reading …