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Bashar al-Assad claims military operations in Syria have ‘stopped’

Syrian President Bashar al-Assad has told Ban Ki-moon that military operations against protesters have stopped, according to the UN Syrian President Bashar al-Assad told UN Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon that military and police operations against pro-democracy protesters had stopped, the United Nations said on Wednesday. In a phone call with Assad on Wednesday, Ban “expressed alarm at the latest reports of continued widespread violations of human rights and excessive use of force by Syrian security forces against civilians across Syria, including in the Al Ramel district of Latakia, home to several thousands of Palestinian refugees,” the United Nations said in a statement. “The Secretary-General emphasised that all military operations and mass arrests must cease immediately. President Assad said that the military and police operations had stopped,” the statement added. Residents of the besieged port city of Latakia said on Wednesday that Syrian forces raided houses in a Sunni district, arresting hundreds of people and taking them to a stadium after a four-day tank assault to crush protests against al-Assad. Assad’s forces attacked al-Raml, a seafront area named after a Palestinian refugee camp built in the 1950s, on the weekend as part of a fierce campaign to crush a five-month-old uprising. Latakia is of particular significance to Assad, from Syria’s minority Alawite community. The 45-year-old president, a self-declared champion of the Palestinian cause, comes from a village to the southeast, where his father is buried. The Assad family, along with friends, control the city’s port and its finances. Syria has expelled most independent media since the unrest began, making it difficult to verify reports from the country. The UN statement said Ban repeated his calls for an independent investigation into all reported killings and acts of violence, and for free access by the media. It added the U.N. chief called on Damascus to cooperate fully with the Office of the High Commissioner for Human Rights. “The Secretary-General also urged president Assad to engage in a credible and peaceful process of reform towards comprehensive change,” the statement said. Assad enumerated the reforms he will undertake in the next few months, including revision of the Constitution and the holding of parliamentary elections, the statement said. “The Secretary-General emphasized the need for reforms to be implemented swiftly without further military intervention,” it said Ban said a UN humanitarian assessment team, which the Syrian Government had agreed to receive, should be given independent and unhindered access to all areas affected by violence. Assad said the team would have access to different sites in Syria, according to the statement. The UN human rights chief is expected to suggest that the Security Council refer Syria’s crackdown on protesters to the International Criminal Court, envoys said on Wednesday. UN human rights chief Navi Pillay will address the 15-nation council in a closed-door session on Syria on Thursday, along with UN humanitarian chief Valerie Amos. Syria Middle East Bashar Al-Assad United Nations Arab and Middle East unrest Protest guardian.co.uk

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A-level results: gap may have widened between state and private

There are some indications in initial A-level results that private schools may have widened the gap with state schools A quarter of a million A-level candidates receive their results today amid some indications that private schools may have widened the gap with state schools. The Girls’ School Association, which represents heads of independent girls’ schools, said that of the first schools to announce their results, 32.9% of grades awarded were at A* level and 70% at A and A*. In last year’s results, for all private schools, 17.9% of entries were awarded an A* and just over half secured the two top grades. The Girls’ School Association figures were from just 18 schools, and the proportions may shift when results are published later on Thursday. In the GSA results, 61.9% of grades for combined sciences were at A and A*, and the A* pass rate for maths was 48.6%. The A* grade is being used to discriminate between the best candidates at an increased number of universities this year. Oxford is demanding the grade for 15 of its courses, while students applying for some courses at Bristol, Exeter and Sussex have been asked for it. Last year, the only universities to require an A* were Imperial, Cambridge, UCL and Warwick. The publication of results will trigger a scramble for the remaining places available in clearing. The number of applicants to UK universities has risen to 673,570 this year, a record high and a rise of 1.3% on 2010. There were around 487,000 undergraduates accepted at UK universities last year, and a similar number of places available this year. Around 210,000 candidates lost out on a place at university last year. Commenting on the girls’ school results, Caroline Jordan, who chairs the GSA’s education committee, and is also headmistress of St George’s, Ascot, said: “These are great emerging results which means that today girls educated in our schools are celebrating getting into the most prestigious universities, many of them to study medical, science and language courses. They have also proved themselves to be team players and taken part in a multitude of extra curricula activities throughout their time at school, they are well placed to be the leaders of tomorrow.” Students from low-income families will be less likely to be offered places at top universities next year, according to a study published on Thursday. The Higher Education Policy Institute, a thinktank, analysed the government’s university reforms which were unveiled in a white paper in June. As part of the changes, English universities will, from next year, have an 8% cut to the number of places they offer to students achieving less than two As and a B in their A-levels. However, they will be allowed to recruit an unlimited number of students with two As and a B or better. The thinktank warns that these reforms will damage social mobility because bright pupils from low-achieving schools and homes may be just as capable as their better-off peers, but are less likely to achieve two As and a B. The universities that take the largest share of poor students will be most affected by the 8% cut because they tend not to have many students with two As and a B, the thinktank says. Its study also predicts that middle and low-ranking universities will be forced to dramatically reduce their average tuition fees for next year to less than £7,500. The government is proposing to make extra places available under this threshold. At the moment, the estimated average annual tuition fee universities and colleges will charge next year is £8,393. Within a year or two, all but the most competitive universities will have to charge £7,500 or less, the thinktank expects. It says this will create a two-tier and “polarised” system under which bright, poor students would attend further education colleges and universities that lacked “kudos and the social capital of the more competitive institutions”. The thinktank predicts that in future years, top universities will be engaged in an “arms race” whereby they continually compete for AAB students by offering ever more generous scholarships and financial inducements. Responding to the analysis, universities minister David Willetts said: “The intent of our higher education reforms are clear: we are putting students at the heart of the system with a financing system that is fairer and affordable for the nation. “While we expect universities to offer good value for money, students will have the information to decide what course and institution is right for them. “Institutions will have to work much harder to attract students and be explicit about the quality of their teaching and the type of experience they offer.” Higher education A-levels Schools Jeevan Vasagar Jessica Shepherd guardian.co.uk

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Are you hoping that future generations will watch fine modern fare like Mars Needs Moms a thousand years from now, on DVDs that can endure 932 degrees Fahrenheit? You’re in luck, thanks to Millenniata, a company that has created the M-Disk—a DVD that stores data on synthetic material that…

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Maybe we’ll see a cage match between Al Gore and Rick Perry. The GOP presidential hopeful told an audience of New Hampshire business owners that he isn’t convinced humans have contributed to global warming, reports the National Journal . “I do believe that the issue of global warming has been politicized,…

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President Obama accused Republicans of keeping a politically motivated stranglehold on the US economy as his three-day bus tour of the Midwest wrapped up today, the Los Angeles Times reports. “I need you to send a message to folks in Washington,” he told voters at a seed-production facility in Atkinson,…

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It could be the end of days for a few crosses outside San Diego. The California Department of Transportation plans to remove three long-standing crosses from public property after receiving complaints about them, reports the San Diego Union Tribune . The large monuments have stood just east of a state highway…

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Add this to the Top 10 list of reasons not to make fun of al-Qaeda: A jihadist is calling for the assassination of David Letterman after he joked about the death of terrorist Ilyas Kashmiri on his show. The radical made his comments on the Shumukh al-Islam web forum, and…

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Fashion maven Coco Chanel was an anti-Semitic Nazi spy who recruited agents with her then-boyfriend, a German officer, according to a new biography. Sleeping With the Enemy: Coco Chanel’s Secret War charts her alleged espionage career with lover Hans Gunther von Dincklage, and draws on international archives to support claims…

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Indian activist Anna Hazare allowed 15 day hunger strike

Police had initially given Hazare permission to hold only a three-day public hunger strike but they have now relented A renowned Indian anti-corruption crusader struck a deal with police early on Thursday to hold a 15-day public hunger strike against graft, ending a bizarre standoff at a New Delhi prison where the activist’s brief detention had turned into a sit-in protest. Anna Hazare’s ordeal has struck a chord with Indians fed up with rampant corruption. Tens of thousands of demonstrators marched through cities across the country to show their support for his demand for a revised government reform bill, while Prime Minister Manmohan Singh accused Hazare of trying to circumvent democracy. Police had initially given Hazare permission to hold only a three-day public hunger strike, which he refused, but early Thursday morning they relented and agreed to allow him to hold a 15-day protest at a venue in the capital, Kiran Bedi, another protest leader, wrote on her Twitter account. “Delhi police removed the unacceptable conditions and offered 15 days permission. Anna accepted there,” Bedi wrote. The protest was to start Thursday afternoon. New Delhi police arrested Hazare on Tuesday to block his planned fast against corruption, but released him hours later. Hazare stopped eating Tuesday and refused to leave the jailhouse, demanding police allow him to hold the hunger strike publicly and indefinitely. After he struck his deal with police, the hundreds camped outside the jail erupted in cheers, threw flower petals in the air and shouted “Anna has won.” Hazare, clad in the simple white cotton garb of India’s liberation leaders, has become an anti-corruption icon by channeling the tactics of freedom fighter Mohandas K. Gandhi. In April, Hazare used a four-day fast to force the government to draft legislation for an anti-corruption watchdog. He had planned for weeks to begin another fast to press for a stronger bill. While Hazare’s campaign against corruption has strong support within India, critics have raised concerns that his method – embarking on a declared hunger strike to the death – is akin to blackmailing the government. On Wednesday, Singh told Parliament that Hazare was free to express his views, but that he was improperly usurping the role of elected representatives by trying to force them to pass his own version of the anti-corruption bill. “The path that he has chosen to impose his draft of a bill upon Parliament is totally misconceived and fraught with grave consequences for our parliamentary democracy,” Singh said, shouting over jeering opposition lawmakers. “Those who believe that their voice and their voice alone represents the will of 1.2 billion people should reflect deeply on that position,” he said. “They must allow the elected representatives of the people in Parliament to do the job that they were elected for.” New Delhi district court lawyers held a one-day strike to demand the judiciary also fall under the purview of any anti-corruption ombudsman. Protests erupted in cities across India, with some demonstrators burning effigies of Singh, while others held yagna ceremonies – purification rituals using fire – to symbolically clean the government. The protesters, many wearing headbands reading “I am Anna,” crossed religious and caste lines and included rich and poor, students, the elderly, eunuchs, housewives, businessmen and the homeless. Orissa’s state assembly shut down in shouting matches, and lawyers in one town wore black badges protesting Hazare’s arrest as an assault on democracy. “Do the people in this country have no rights about how an anti-corruption watchdog will work? Is this the end of Indian democracy?” said Prashant Bhushan, a lawyer who was helping organise the protest movement. The government is battling corruption allegations stemming from the murky sale of cellphone licenses and the hosting of last year’s Commonwealth Games, which together lost the country as much as $40 billion, according to government auditors. The main opposition is mired in a multibillion-dollar bribery scandal involving the granting of mining contracts in southern India. The scandals have embarrassed the government and paralysed Parliament, with lawmakers trading insults and accusations instead of addressing widespread malnutrition and a desperate need for land reform. On Tuesday, Parliament adjourned amid screaming between government and opposition lawmakers over Hazare’s arrest. India Anna Hazare guardian.co.uk

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The Social Security Administration is killing off thousands of Americans every year, at least temporarily. About one in 200 deaths typed into the agency’s Death Master File carries a misprint that officially terminates a living person, cutting off credit, bank accounts, and government assistance for the newly “dead,” the Chicago…

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