Home » Archives by category » News » World News (Page 696)

Stock markets around the world are tumbling in the wake of yesterday’s Wall Street meltdown . Market indexes across Asia saw major dives, and European markets are down in early trading, AP reports. The sell-off is “just a knee-jerk reaction to what’s going on,” said an analyst in Australia , which saw…

Continue reading …

Paul McCartney plans to contact police over ex-wife Heather Mills’ claim that a Daily Mirror journalist hacked into his voicemail messages, reports Reuters . After finishing his US tour and returning to Britain, “I am going to talk to the police because apparently I have been hacked,” McCartney said. “I don’t…

Continue reading …
Brits behaving less badly? Foreign Office reports fewer problems

British Behaviour Abroad report shows fewer arrests, hospital visits, and passports lost Britons are more likely to require consular help in Spain, get arrested in Thailand, or die in the Philippines, according to Foreign Office figures. While the number of Britons arrested abroad fell last year, statistics show they are still getting into other difficulties while holidaying or living overseas. Total arrests in the 12 months ending March 2011 reached 5,700, a reduction on 6,439 in 2009-10 and 6,919 in 2008-09, according to the British Behaviour Abroad report. Spain recorded the highest number of Britons of arrests, at 1,745, although proportionate to visitor numbers the place Britons were more likely to be arrested was Thailand, followed by the US. Countries with the majority of arrests concerning drugs offences included Jamaica, Norway, Argentina, Brazil, Serbia and Peru. In total, 5,972 Britons died abroad last year, with those in the Philippines most likely to die, although 84% of the deaths were through natural causes. Thailand recorded the deaths of 374 Britons, 64% of which were from natural causes. There were more Britons requiring hospital treatment abroad. Proportionately, Britons were more likely to end up in a Thai hospital. The country recorded 246 cases last year, a mix of ill expats and visitors falling ill or through accidents. The report also highlighted the need for comprehensive travel insurance to cover expensive medical treatment. Previous research has suggested around one in six Britons travel abroad uninsured. The number of Britons raped abroad fell to 115, from 132 the previous year. But sexual assaults rose from 140 to 163. According to the Foreign Office report, proportionately the highest number of sexual assaults occurred in Egypt, followed by Turkey. There were 25,969 cases of lost or stolen passports in 2010-11 compared with 27,272 in the previous 12 months. Foreign Office research, from a poll of 2,000 UK adults, revealed that 43% of 18- to 24-year-olds know someone who has taken illegal drugs while abroad. It also showed that two thirds of people in Britain don’t always find out about the laws of the country they are visiting before they head off abroad, putting them at risk of unknowingly breaking the law, said the report. Nearly one third (32%) of people were not aware that they will always be prosecuted under local law if they broke the law abroad, with 6% thinking they would be prosecuted under UK law, 22% thinking it depended on the country, and 4% admitting to not knowing at all. David Lidington, minister for Europe, said: “We work hard to warn British nationals about the consequences of breaking the law abroad so it is really encouraging to see the overall number of cases of arrests and drug arrests falling. “But last year there were still 5,700 arrests of British nationals overseas. Prison conditions in some parts of the world can be very poor, overcrowded and in some cases dangerous, and sentences can be much tougher than in the UK. “People are mistaken if they think the FO can get you out of jail. We can’t, but we will work hard to try and ensure your sfaety, and that you get a fair trial.” Spain Thailand Philippines Caroline Davies guardian.co.uk

Continue reading …

Jon Stewart has a question for the atheist group suing to block the cross at the 9/11 memorial : “Why do you give a shit?” The cross is “an artifact found at Ground Zero that has come to mean something to people,” said the Daily Show host, who was appointed to…

Continue reading …

The comic know around the world as nerdy Mr. Bean is recovering in a British hospital after crashing his McLaren F1 super car, striking a tree and lamppost before the vehicle burst into flames. “Rowan Atkinson is “lucky to be alive considering the state of the car,” said a witness….

Continue reading …
Pupils ‘will not lose out’ over exam paper errors

Exam boards seek to reassure students who sat papers containing errors that they will get the grades they deserve Students who sat exam papers that contained errors this summer will “get the grades they deserve,” exam boards have said. Qualifications regulators for England, Wales and Northern Ireland are investigating why mistakes appeared in 12 exam papers. Some 10 of the errors were in papers sat by pupils in England. The Joint Council for Qualifications, which represents exam boards, said it had taken action to ensure no pupil would be disadvantaged by the errors. In some cases, exam boards have awarded pupils full marks for rogue questions, while in others they have discounted the question and changed the total number of marks available for a paper. It said exam boards had used “well-tested statistical procedures … to ensure that all students receive the grades they deserve”. In a joint statement, the exam boards said they “deeply regret” that the errors occurred and “wish to apologise again to students and their families”. “Although only 12 out of more than 60,000 questions set this year were affected, we understand the distress they have caused,” they said. Exam boards said they had told university admissions tutors which papers have contained errors so that students’ chances of winning places on degree courses would not be jeopardised. The qualifications regulators said their investigation into why the errors happened would be finished before the end of the year. The errors included a printing mistake in a maths paper, set by the AQA exam board, which included questions originally answered by pupils taking the same exam in March. Over 31,000 pupils at 567 schools and colleges took the paper. Other errors were discovered in a GCSE Latin paper and a physics A-level exam, both set by the OCR exam board. GCSEs Schools A-levels AS-levels Students Jessica Shepherd guardian.co.uk

Continue reading …
Pupils ‘will not lose out’ over exam paper errors

Exam boards seek to reassure students who sat papers containing errors that they will get the grades they deserve Students who sat exam papers that contained errors this summer will “get the grades they deserve,” exam boards have said. Qualifications regulators for England, Wales and Northern Ireland are investigating why mistakes appeared in 12 exam papers. Some 10 of the errors were in papers sat by pupils in England. The Joint Council for Qualifications, which represents exam boards, said it had taken action to ensure no pupil would be disadvantaged by the errors. In some cases, exam boards have awarded pupils full marks for rogue questions, while in others they have discounted the question and changed the total number of marks available for a paper. It said exam boards had used “well-tested statistical procedures … to ensure that all students receive the grades they deserve”. In a joint statement, the exam boards said they “deeply regret” that the errors occurred and “wish to apologise again to students and their families”. “Although only 12 out of more than 60,000 questions set this year were affected, we understand the distress they have caused,” they said. Exam boards said they had told university admissions tutors which papers have contained errors so that students’ chances of winning places on degree courses would not be jeopardised. The qualifications regulators said their investigation into why the errors happened would be finished before the end of the year. The errors included a printing mistake in a maths paper, set by the AQA exam board, which included questions originally answered by pupils taking the same exam in March. Over 31,000 pupils at 567 schools and colleges took the paper. Other errors were discovered in a GCSE Latin paper and a physics A-level exam, both set by the OCR exam board. GCSEs Schools A-levels AS-levels Students Jessica Shepherd guardian.co.uk

Continue reading …
Met police quadruples size of cybercrime unit

Scotland Yard issues fresh warning to hackers following arrests of teenagers accused of links to LulzSec and Anonymous The Metropolitan police has quadrupled its cybercrime unit to 85 officers in just two months as the investigation into so-called “hacktivist” groups, LulzSec and Anonymous, gathers pace. Scotland Yard issued a fresh warning to computer hackers following the high-profile arrests of three British teenagers accused of having links to the groups. Detective Superintendent Charlie McMurdie, the head of the Met’s e-Crime unit, said on Thursday that the cybercrime division has benefited from a recent £30m boost to its budget. The Met has helped coordinate an international investigation into the hackers linked to attacks on gaming firms and government agencies, including the UK Serious Organised Crime Agency (Soca and the US Congress. Jake Davis, an 18-year-old from the Shetland Islands, was released on bail on Monday after being charged with five offences under the Computer Misuse Act, the Serious Crime Act and the Criminal Law Act. Davis is accused of gathering data from NHS computers, being involved with attacks on News International and being part of an attack that crippled Soca’s website. The arrest of Davis, who allegedly used the online alias “Topiary”, follows that of Essex teenager Ryan Cleary in June and the arrest and release of an unnamed 16-year-old from London two weeks ago. The apparent ringleader of LulzSec, known as “Sabu”, remains at large. Police have warned that anyone using a computer unlawfully – which includes online denial of service (DoS) attacks, used frequently by the hacker collectives – faces up to 10 years in prison. Det Supt McMurdie warned : “What they’re doing isn’t civil disobedience, it’s serious crime.” The Met said in a statement: “Under UK legislation, it is an offence if a person acts from within the UK upon a computer anywhere else in the world. It is also an offence if someone anywhere else in the world to criminally affect a computer within the UK.” Hacking Internet Computing Metropolitan police Police Crime Josh Halliday guardian.co.uk

Continue reading …
Met police quadruples size of cybercrime unit

Scotland Yard issues fresh warning to hackers following arrests of teenagers accused of links to LulzSec and Anonymous The Metropolitan police has quadrupled its cybercrime unit to 85 officers in just two months as the investigation into so-called “hacktivist” groups, LulzSec and Anonymous, gathers pace. Scotland Yard issued a fresh warning to computer hackers following the high-profile arrests of three British teenagers accused of having links to the groups. Detective Superintendent Charlie McMurdie, the head of the Met’s e-Crime unit, said on Thursday that the cybercrime division has benefited from a recent £30m boost to its budget. The Met has helped coordinate an international investigation into the hackers linked to attacks on gaming firms and government agencies, including the UK Serious Organised Crime Agency (Soca and the US Congress. Jake Davis, an 18-year-old from the Shetland Islands, was released on bail on Monday after being charged with five offences under the Computer Misuse Act, the Serious Crime Act and the Criminal Law Act. Davis is accused of gathering data from NHS computers, being involved with attacks on News International and being part of an attack that crippled Soca’s website. The arrest of Davis, who allegedly used the online alias “Topiary”, follows that of Essex teenager Ryan Cleary in June and the arrest and release of an unnamed 16-year-old from London two weeks ago. The apparent ringleader of LulzSec, known as “Sabu”, remains at large. Police have warned that anyone using a computer unlawfully – which includes online denial of service (DoS) attacks, used frequently by the hacker collectives – faces up to 10 years in prison. Det Supt McMurdie warned : “What they’re doing isn’t civil disobedience, it’s serious crime.” The Met said in a statement: “Under UK legislation, it is an offence if a person acts from within the UK upon a computer anywhere else in the world. It is also an offence if someone anywhere else in the world to criminally affect a computer within the UK.” Hacking Internet Computing Metropolitan police Police Crime Josh Halliday guardian.co.uk

Continue reading …

Monkeys at a British zoo have developed a way of saying “leave me alone” that doesn’t involve biting or flinging poop. The mandrills cover their eyes—much like in the “see no evil” gesture—when they desire solitude, and their fellow monkeys respect the signal, the Telegraph reports. Researchers believe…

Continue reading …