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Grazia admits digitally slimming Duchess of Cambridge

Press Complaints Commission confirms magazine admitted digital alteration of bride image for 9 May royal wedding edition Grazia has admitted that it inadvertently slimmed down the waist of the Duchess of Cambridge by digitally altering a controversial cover picture of her in her Alexander McQueen wedding dress. In its 9 May edition the weekly fashion title published a photo of what appeared to be an impossibly thin looking bride standing alone from the day of the royal wedding, which reignited the debate over the presentation of the female form in women’s magazines. The Bauer Media-owned magazine has admitted that it did doctor the original image, of William and Kate leaving Westminster Cathedral after their wedding ceremony. In the process of removing her husband, the Duke of Cambridge, from the original photo and digitally reinstating Kate Middleton’s right arm – by using a mirror image of her left arm – to give the impression she was posing on her own, her waist was also reduced in size. After investigating a complaint that the image had been manipulated, the Press Complaints Commission said: “The magazine explained how the image had been altered to remove the arm of Prince William so that the duchess could be featured on the cover alone. “This involved mirroring one of the duchess’s arms and an inadvertent result of the change was the slimming of her waist.” In a statement Grazia said it had wanted “a great image of the duchess on her own, but all the photographs had the duke in too … so we asked our reproduction house to remove him from the picture (common practice among glossy magazines). This would have left the Duchess with only one arm, so they copied over her arm to complete the picture.” . Grazia said it “would like to reassure all our readers that we did not purposely make any alternations to the Duchess of Cambridge’s image to make her appear slimmer, and we are sorry if this process gave that impression”. The final image on the front cover shows the duchess with a sharper than normal synched waist and a disconnection between the bodice of the dress and the skirt on her right side, showing where the technicians had been at work. The Duchess of Cambridge is not the first to have her image electronically enhanced for a glossy magazine cover. Kate Winslet, an actor renowned for celebrating a normal figure has fallen victim to the airbrush on more than one occasion. In 2003, the editor of GQ admitted digitally lengthening and slimming her legs for a raunchy cover shoot in which she posed in a basque and high heels. Winslet protested that she “was pretty proud of how my legs actually looked in the real picture”. Last month L’Oréal was forced to pull adverts for foundation creams featuring Pretty Woman star Julia Roberts and supermodel Christy Turlington after admitting the images had been digitally retouched. Four years ago advertising watchdogs also criticised L’Oréal for a mascara advert in which Penélope Cruz wore false eyelashes. • To contact the MediaGuardian news desk email editor@mediaguardian.co.uk or phone 020 3353 3857. For all other inquiries please call the main Guardian switchboard on 020 3353 2000. If you are writing a comment for publication, please mark clearly “for publication”. • To get the latest media news to your desktop or mobile, follow MediaGuardian on Twitter and Facebook . Magazines The Duchess of Cambridge Press Complaints Commission Censorship Bauer Royal wedding Photography Women Alexander McQueen Fashion Lisa O’Carroll guardian.co.uk

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Iowa Republican debate: Palin and Perry steal show without taking stage

Sarah Palin and Rick Perry still not formally seeking presidential nomination, so Romney and Bachmann will vie for spotlight • In pictures: Republican contenders in Iowa The Republican race for the White House heats up over the next three days, beginning on Thursday night with a nationally televised debate where some contestants will be vying to become the frontrunner and others trying to avoid being knocked out. With eight declared candidates on stage, it is already a crowded field. But a lot of the focus in the hall will be on two absent Republicans: Texas governor Rick Perry, who is expected to announce on Saturday that he is planning to join the race, which is likely to see him move into first position; and Sarah Palin, who has not declared but will continue her tease of supporters with a visit to Iowa. The event at Iowa state university in Ames is the biggest of the presidential debates so far as Republicans battle it out to take on Barack Obama for the White House in 2012. Mitt Romney, who lost out to John McCain for the Republican nomination in 2008, is the current frontrunner nationwide, while congresswoman Michele Bachmann is, according to polls, the frontrunner in Iowa, where the first caucus is scheduled to be held in February. For other candidates such as businessman Herman Cain, former House speaker Newt Gingrich and former senator Rick Santorum, the debate may be a last chance to prevent their campaigns running out of financial backers and volunteers. The debate, sponsored by Fox News and the Washington Examiner, will see the debut of Jon Huntsman, former US ambassador to Beijing in the Obama administration. Huntsman has positioned himself more to the centre than others on the stage. He has failed to make any impression so far on the campaign. The debate comes two days before the Iowa straw poll. A good performance could help push a candidate into the top spot. “It puts so much pressure on these candidates to perform well,” Chuck Laudner, a former executive director of the Republican party of Iowa, told the Des Moines Register. “A bad performance has the real chance of sinking their straw poll numbers.” Romney failed to connect with voters in Iowa in 2008. He is not officially standing in the straw poll on Saturday, mainly because he knows he would lose it. Huntsman is not standing either for the same reason. It is a traditionally important election event in which campaign teams invest lots of money and energy; a piece of old-fashioned theatre in which candidates occupy tent space and are available for most of the day to the electorate. As an added attraction Bachmann is offering live music, provided by a country and western band. Laudner told the Des Moines Register the best strategy for those taking part in the debate would be to ignore Romney. “They’re speaking to the straw poll crowd and they’ve got him beat at the straw poll already,” he said. “If anybody they’d probably take a shot or two at Rick Perry.” The candidate under the most pressure in the debate is Tim Pawlenty, the former governor of Minnesota, who is basing his campaign on winning Iowa but has seen Bachmann pull ahead after a strong performance in the last debate in New Hampshire. Pawlenty was widely viewed as being too cautious in that debate, unwilling to take on Romney on issues such as health. Ron Paul, an outsider, commands a fervant band of supporters and is good at fundraising, both of which should ensure he does well in the straw poll. Although much time is devoted to the poll, past results have proved to be a poor indicator of the eventual winner in Iowa, never mind the eventual Republican nominee. Perry is scheduled to visit Iowa on Sunday after trips on Saturday to South Carolina and New Hampshire, other early voting states in the Republican nomination battle. Palin’s supporters in Iowa say they expect her to make an appearance on Friday at the Iowa state fair. She sent an email out on Wednesday that she would be heading to Iowa with her bus tour, which began on the East Coast in May. The next big debate is scheduled for September, in California, and Perry is likely to be in the race by then. Republican presidential nomination 2012 United States Republicans US elections 2012 US politics Sarah Palin Rick Perry Mitt Romney Ron Paul Michele Bachmann Tim Pawlenty Jon Huntsman Ewen MacAskill guardian.co.uk

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Iowa Republican debate: Palin and Perry steal show without taking stage

Sarah Palin and Rick Perry still not formally seeking presidential nomination, so Romney and Bachmann will vie for spotlight • In pictures: Republican contenders in Iowa The Republican race for the White House heats up over the next three days, beginning on Thursday night with a nationally televised debate where some contestants will be vying to become the frontrunner and others trying to avoid being knocked out. With eight declared candidates on stage, it is already a crowded field. But a lot of the focus in the hall will be on two absent Republicans: Texas governor Rick Perry, who is expected to announce on Saturday that he is planning to join the race, which is likely to see him move into first position; and Sarah Palin, who has not declared but will continue her tease of supporters with a visit to Iowa. The event at Iowa state university in Ames is the biggest of the presidential debates so far as Republicans battle it out to take on Barack Obama for the White House in 2012. Mitt Romney, who lost out to John McCain for the Republican nomination in 2008, is the current frontrunner nationwide, while congresswoman Michele Bachmann is, according to polls, the frontrunner in Iowa, where the first caucus is scheduled to be held in February. For other candidates such as businessman Herman Cain, former House speaker Newt Gingrich and former senator Rick Santorum, the debate may be a last chance to prevent their campaigns running out of financial backers and volunteers. The debate, sponsored by Fox News and the Washington Examiner, will see the debut of Jon Huntsman, former US ambassador to Beijing in the Obama administration. Huntsman has positioned himself more to the centre than others on the stage. He has failed to make any impression so far on the campaign. The debate comes two days before the Iowa straw poll. A good performance could help push a candidate into the top spot. “It puts so much pressure on these candidates to perform well,” Chuck Laudner, a former executive director of the Republican party of Iowa, told the Des Moines Register. “A bad performance has the real chance of sinking their straw poll numbers.” Romney failed to connect with voters in Iowa in 2008. He is not officially standing in the straw poll on Saturday, mainly because he knows he would lose it. Huntsman is not standing either for the same reason. It is a traditionally important election event in which campaign teams invest lots of money and energy; a piece of old-fashioned theatre in which candidates occupy tent space and are available for most of the day to the electorate. As an added attraction Bachmann is offering live music, provided by a country and western band. Laudner told the Des Moines Register the best strategy for those taking part in the debate would be to ignore Romney. “They’re speaking to the straw poll crowd and they’ve got him beat at the straw poll already,” he said. “If anybody they’d probably take a shot or two at Rick Perry.” The candidate under the most pressure in the debate is Tim Pawlenty, the former governor of Minnesota, who is basing his campaign on winning Iowa but has seen Bachmann pull ahead after a strong performance in the last debate in New Hampshire. Pawlenty was widely viewed as being too cautious in that debate, unwilling to take on Romney on issues such as health. Ron Paul, an outsider, commands a fervant band of supporters and is good at fundraising, both of which should ensure he does well in the straw poll. Although much time is devoted to the poll, past results have proved to be a poor indicator of the eventual winner in Iowa, never mind the eventual Republican nominee. Perry is scheduled to visit Iowa on Sunday after trips on Saturday to South Carolina and New Hampshire, other early voting states in the Republican nomination battle. Palin’s supporters in Iowa say they expect her to make an appearance on Friday at the Iowa state fair. She sent an email out on Wednesday that she would be heading to Iowa with her bus tour, which began on the East Coast in May. The next big debate is scheduled for September, in California, and Perry is likely to be in the race by then. Republican presidential nomination 2012 United States Republicans US elections 2012 US politics Sarah Palin Rick Perry Mitt Romney Ron Paul Michele Bachmann Tim Pawlenty Jon Huntsman Ewen MacAskill guardian.co.uk

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A Ringling Brothers elephant collapsed as it was was being loaded into a circus train, triggering cries of abuse. The sad spectacle in Annaheim was captured on film by animal rights activists who were keeping an eye on circus activities. Circus spokesmen claimed that 54-year-old Asian elephant Sarah merely tripped…

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‘Kids for cash’ judge gets 28 years in Pennsylvania bribery case

Mark Ciavarella Jr took $1m in bribes from the builder of two detention centres in return for filling them with juvenile offenders A long-serving judge has been ordered to spend nearly 30 years in prison for his role in a bribery scandal that prompted the state’s high court to overturn thousands of juvenile convictions. Former Luzerne County Judge Mark Ciavarella Jr was sentenced on Thursday to 28 years in prison for taking $1m (£617,000) in bribes from the builder of two juvenile detention centres in a case that became known as “kids-for-cash”. The Pennsylvania supreme court overturned about 4,000 convictions issued by Ciavarella between 2003 and 2008, saying he violated the constitutional rights of the juveniles, including the right to legal counsel and the right to intelligently enter a plea. Ciavarella, 61, was tried and convicted of racketeering charges earlier this year. His lawyers had asked for a “reasonable” sentence in court papers, saying, in effect, that he had already been punished enough. “The media attention to this matter has exceeded coverage given to many and almost all capital murders, and despite protestation, he will forever be unjustly branded as the ‘kids for cash’ judge,” they said. Federal prosecutors accused Ciavarella and a second judge, Michael Conahan, of taking more than $2m in bribes from the builder of the PA Child Care and Western PA Child Care detention centres and extorting hundreds of thousands of dollars from the facilities’ co-owner. Ciavarella, known for his harsh and autocratic courtroom demeanour, filled the beds of the private lockups with children as young as 10, many of them first-time offenders convicted of petty theft and other minor crimes. The judge remained defiant after his arrest, insisting the payments were legal and denying he incarcerated youths for money. The jury returned a mixed verdict following a February trial, convicting him on 12 counts, including racketeering and conspiracy, and acquitting him on 27 counts, including extortion. The guilty verdicts related to a payment of $997,600 from the builder. Conahan, meanwhile, pleaded guilty last year and awaits sentencing. Pennsylvania United States guardian.co.uk

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Rebecca Black received so much grief from classmates after her song Friday went viral that she opted for homeschooling. “When I walk by they’ll start singing ‘Friday’ in a really nasally voice,” the 14-year-old told ABC before last night’s live appearance on America’s Got Talent . “Or, you know, they’ll be…

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Christchurch welcomes blueprint for rebuilding after earthquake

Residents of New Zealand city enthusiastic over long-term plan, but funding and timescale still to be agreed It may take decades before the plan becomes a reality, and nobody is certain who will pay for it. But an ambitious blueprint to rebuild the New Zealand city devastated by an earthquake has been greeted with enthusiasm by residents of Christchurch. Large swaths of New Zealand’s second city are still in ruins, entire suburbs have been declared uninhabitable, and the region has been buffeted by thousands of aftershocks. But unveiling the plan on Thursday, Christchurch Mayor Bob Parker offered the vision of a “safe, sustainable, green, hi-tech, low-rise city in a garden”. Dedicating the plan to the 181 people who lost their lives in the February disaster, Parker said: “We’ve had enough distraction to fill our hearts for generations. This piece of work is about all of us grasping our futures, believing in what we can together do.” The plan, which involves 70 projects over the next 20 years, envisages a compact central business district dominated by low-rise buildings. There would be large new areas of public parkland, including a broad green corridor along the banks of the River Avon. The 150-page document also emphasises environmentally sensitive transport, including a new light rail network, pedestrian boardwalks and cycle lanes. Among other initiatives are an indoor sports complex, upgraded hospitals and libraries, and a redeveloped Cathedral Square in the heart of the city. An $8 million memorial to those who died in February’s earthquake is also proposed. The 6.3 magnitude quake was the most severe of a string of shakes in Christchurch and its surrounding Canterbury region in the last year. More than 7,500 aftershocks have been measured since a 7.1 magnitude earthquake hit in September last year. The plan was unanimously backed by Christchurch councillors, who sifted through more than 100,000 suggestions submitted by residents and interest groups. It now goes out for consultation before being formally presented to central government in December. Ashley Campbell, who has set up a Facebook page calling for a large park around the Avon river, called the plan “hugely encouraging”. Campbell, a Cantabrian no based in Auckland, said: “It’s obvious that the people who are planning Christchurch are thinking seriously about what can be done. It’s only a start, but it’s a really, really encouraging start.” The response on social networks, forums where residents have often vented frustration with the local and central government responses, was almost universally enthusiastic. “The city plan is making me feel pretty good about deciding to stay in chch,” tweeted one resident. “Heaps to like, exciting times ahead.” Another typified the mood: “The draft is almost surprisingly – unbelievably – good. First time we’ve felt positive here in, oh, about 11 months?” Enthusiasm was not unanimous. Matthew Carpenter, spokesman for the Canterbury Business Recovery Network, which represents 150 employers, said the council was wrong to “lay all cards on the table” in rebuilding the central city. Speaking to Radio New Zealand, he called for investment to be split between the city and a “satellite town”, away from the “earthquake-prone” city. The government welcomed the draft plan, but emphasised that funding was limited. “The draft plan has a pretty big wish list. It’s now up to the people of Christchurch to debate the plan, prioritise its projects and decide how much they are prepared to pay to fund them,” said the Canterbury earthquake recovery minister, Gerry Brownlee, in a statement. He added: “The council advises that the majority of the projects in the draft plan will be funded by insurance proceeds and by ratepayers.” New Zealand Natural disasters and extreme weather Toby Manhire guardian.co.uk

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Germans at an ultra-nationalist rock concert snapped up free T-shirts bearing nationalist flags and the slogan ” hardcore rebels,” only to find a very different message after the shirt had been washed. “If your T-shirt can do it, you can do it too—we’ll help you get away from right-wing extremism,…

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Farmers turn away from organic as sales drop

The economic downturn means organic farmers are less likely to reap rewards of premium prices for their produce Farmers across the UK have been deserting organic farming, or holding back on plans to convert their land to more environmentally friendly farming methods, as sales of organic products have fallen in the economic downturn. Last year, only 51,000 hectares was in “conversion” – the process that farmers need to go through to have their land and practices certified as organic. That is less than half the amount of land that was in conversion in 2009, which itself was down markedly from the recent peak of 158,000Ha in 2007, according to statistics released by the Department for Environment, Food and Rural Affairs on Thursday morning. Far fewer farmers are interested in turning their land to organic production, despite the promise of premium prices for their produce, after a marked fall in sales of organic goods in the past two years as a result of the recession. Sales of organic products fell by 5.9% in the UK last year, according to the Soil Association , from £1.84bn in 2009 to £1.73bn in 2010. That continued a decline from record sales of £2.1bn in 2008, and came amid rising food prices overall. The rapid decline in interest from farmers is not yet reflected in the amount of land in organic production overall in the UK, which has risen slightly. It takes several years to convert land from conventional production to organic production, in part because of the need to stop using fertilisers and pesticides that may still be present in the soil. That time lag, while land that has been in preparation moves into full organic production, created the small rise in the total area of land organically farmed last year – from 619,000Ha across the UK in 2009 to 668,000Ha overall. What Thursday’s figures show is that this is not being replenished by new farmers coming on board. As the decline in farmers entering organic conversion feeds through, the overall figure for organically farmed land is likely to stagnate or fall. “This is very worrying,” said Kirtana Chandrasekaran, food campaigner at Friends of the Earth . “What this points to is that the UK government is doing barely anything to promote organic farming, despite the benefits of it.” In England, about 90,000Ha was in conversion in 2007 and 2008, but since then that area has decreased dramatically, to about 30,000Ha. Organic conversion has fallen in all regions except Northern Ireland, which has only a small organic industry. In livestock farming, the picture is mixed. Despite widespread publicity by food campaigners on the benefits of choosing free range or organic chickens over the battery-bred variety, organic production decreased last year, continuing a fall in which more than half a million fewer organic chickens, turkeys and other organic poultry was produced in the UK for a year than at their peak production of nearly 4.5m in 2006. Similarly, fewer pigs are bred organically, with about 47,000 on farms last year, down from a peak of more than 71,000 in 2007. However, the number of cattle being reared organically is rising steadily, to more than 350,000 beasts last year. In the past decade, Scotland has experienced the biggest exodus in organic producers, with 189,000Ha either in organic production or in conversion last year, compared with 429,000Ha in 2002. This reflects changes to government incentives in the early 2000s. The number of organic producers or processors, including arable and livestock farmers, and food processors, fell by 3.7% last year across the UK as a whole, with the number in Scotland falling by nearly 14%. Organics Farming Food Recession Agriculture Ethical and green living Food & drink Economics Food science Fiona Harvey guardian.co.uk

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Somali refugee settlement in Kenya swells as row grows over empty camp

Kenyan government refuses to open £10m refugee camp despite growing concern over 400,000 squeezed into Dadaab Somalis fleeing famine and conflict have pushed the population of the world’s biggest refugee settlement past 400,000 for the first time, with the host Kenyan government apparently blocking the opening of an already built overspill camp. About 1,400 Somalis arrive at Dadaab in Kenya’s north-east every day, pushing the boundaries of the refugee camps deeper into the arid scrubland, far from toilets, water points and security patrols. Aid workers are desperate to move some of the most vulnerable people to a new £10m camp called Ifo 2. It was built late last year to house more than 40,000 people and features three schools, four water towers and several hundred latrines. But the Kenyan government has refused to allow the camp to be opened, arguing that it suggests permanence and that the refugees should instead be cared for on Somali soil. In a compromise arrangement, thousands of Somali families living in makeshift shelters on the outskirts of the three existing camps are being moved into tents on a hastily cleared piece of land called Ifo Extension, where the latrines are still being dug and water has to be trucked in. The impasse over Ifo 2 is causing increasing frustration for aid agencies and the refugees, with the Kenyan government and the UN refugee agency (UNHCR) receiving criticism. The Kenyan prime minister, Raila Odinga, suggested last month that Ifo 2 could be opened, but the government has not officially confirmed this, and local politicians strongly oppose the move. UNHCR, which described the increasing numbers at Dadaab as “a huge concern”, says it has taken Odinga’s comments at face value and insists people will soon move into the new camp. “Ifo 2 is open,” William Spindler, spokesman for the agency in Dadaab, said. “We have told NGOs that they can move in.” But a visit to Ifo 2, where refugees were originally supposed to be settled in brick houses, revealed it to be empty. While dozens of tents for refugees were erected there on Wednesday, workers said they had been ordered to stop by the local authorities. Shelterbox, the charity that donated the tents, said on Thursday that work had resumed. The situation is likely to become ever more urgent because the flow of Somalis across the border is expected to continue in the coming months. Famine conditions already exist in several parts of southern Somalia, and aid is arriving slowly because of logistical challenges and restrictions imposed by the al-Shabab insurgents who control some of the worst-hit areas. Many of the refugees are arriving in poor shape, with many children suffering from malnutrition. The three Dabaab camps – Dagahaley, Ifo and Hagadera – were originally set up 20 years ago when Somalis first started fleeing drought and war. They were designed for 90,000 people, but the population quickly swelled past that as Somalia descended into a failed state. Kenya has historically been a generous host to refugees from neighbouring countries. But in recent years the government has become concerned by the situation in Somalia, particularly the terror threat posed by al-Qaida-affiliated insurgents. The flood of Somali refugees – more than 130,000 Somalis have reached Dadaab this year, about 85,000 of them since June – has also raised concern about the environment. In 1991, water could be found 10 metres below the surface. Now boreholes in Dabaab must be drilled 200 metres underground. Tree cover has been drastically reduced by the need for firewood. Besides the 400,579 refugees that were officially recorded in Dadaab by Monday, a further 38,000 were waiting to be registered. This means Dadaab is the third-biggest “city” in Kenya. If the current flow continues, the official camp population will exceed half a million people by late October. In a statement on Tuesday, the Kenyan president, Mwai Kibaki, reiterated the message that the status quo was unacceptable. “Somali refugees need to be settled inside their country and be given food and other forms of support they may require while there,” he said. Politicians in north-east Kenya are even more vehement that the influx of Somalis must end. They say the refugees receive much better services than the local population, who have also been affected by the drought and historic underdevelopment. The one-room brick houses built by aid agencies for refugees in Ifo 2 have been a particular source of resentment, mainly because they are seen as better than the homes of millions of Kenyans. Only 116 out of the planned 15,000 houses were built before the government ordered the project halted last December. Kenyan officials are also concerned that building permanent structures would make the refugees reluctant to go home. UNHCR says it has settled 14,000 people in tents on the 10-metre by 12-metre plots in Ifo Extension over the past few weeks, and plans to move 90,000 more there from the edges of the existing camps. By November, it hopes to have moved a further 90,000 people to a new settlement called Kambi Os, near the Hagadera camp. The government has yet to approve this. Somalia Kenya Refugees Africa Famine United Nations Drought Water Xan Rice guardian.co.uk

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