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Ignoring the red-and-white danger sign, Sri Mulyati walks slowly to the train tracks outside Indonesia’s bustling capital, lies down, and stretches her body across the rails. Like the nearly dozen others lined up along the track, the 50-year-old diabetes patient has given up on doctors and can’t afford expensive medicines….

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Despite her upcoming divorce from husband Marc Anthony, Jennifer Lopez still believes in love. “I remain an eternal optimist about love,” she tells Vanity Fair in her first interview since announcing the split. Making her family work “was my biggest dream, and I really worked hard at it. We both…

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US debt crisis continues as turmoil infects Italy and Spain

Markets spooked as bond yields in both founder members of single currency hit monetary union records Financial markets in Europe and North America were gripped by a new sense of crisis as the turmoil caused by the narrowly averted US debt default moved back across the Atlantic and infected Italy and Spain – two key members of the eurozone. Bond yields in both the founder members of the single currency hit monetary union records, forcing Spain’s prime minister, José Luis Rodríguez Zapatero, to abandon his holiday plans. Italy responded to a fresh wave of losses in its banking sector by announcing a crisis meeting of economic policymakers. Interest rates on Spanish and Italian bonds rose to well above 6%, the level that signalled the beginning of the bailout process for Greece, Ireland and Portugal. Meanwhile, interest rates on assets seen as safer fell sharply, with the yield on UK 10-year gilts dropping to an all-time low of 2.77%. Gold rose to a new record level for a ninth day in a row on Tuesday. Wall Street’s Dow Jones index had lost 266 points by the close in New York – its eighth successive fall and longest losing streak since the global banking system was on the brink of collapse in October 2008. US shares have given up virtually all their 2011 gains, while stocks in Europe and Asia are already trading below the levels at which they ended 2010. “There is a growing sense of crisis enveloping markets in the northern hemisphere,” said Nick Parsons, the global head of strategy at National Australia Bank. Amid fears that Italy and Spain will require a financial bailout to bring down their borrowing costs, Bob Diamond, the chief executive of Barclays, said Europe’s sovereign debt crisis, and woes in the US, justified the UK’s new reputation as a “safe haven” amid the turmoil. Diamond warned that the single currency’s problems were not going to disappear – which he dubbed “chronic event risk”, and said it was important to support David Cameron and George Osborne’s efforts to put Britain’s public finances back on track. “If they don’t address public spending they put at risk the [UK's] triple A rating. If the US gets downgraded, it is an issue for the US but it is still a relatively minor market event. But if the UK gets downgraded, it would have bigger implications for the economy,” said Diamond. “I do support what the prime minister and the chancellor here are doing.” Diamond’s intervention came as the US Senate voted for the deficit reduction plan agreed by Democrats and Republicans in Washington and as Fitch, one of the world’s three big rating agencies, gave the US a breathing space by saying it would not immediately strip the world’s biggest economy of its prized top-notch credit ranking. Fitch stressed, however, that the respite could be shortlived. While pointing out that the risk of default was “extremely low”, the rating agency said that without significant changes in fiscal policy, the US debt to gross domestic product ratio “will reach 100% by the end of 2012, and will continue to rise over the medium term – a profile that is not consistent with the United States retaining its triple A sovereign rating”. BNP Paribas bank was on Tuesday forced to take a €534m hit against its exposure to Greek government debt. The bank insisted it would be a one-off occurrence despite a large exposure to Italy, in the latest sign that banks across Europe are beginning to take hits against the country. HSBC set aside £65m on Monday. Confirmation of the US debt deal prompted a fresh political row in the UK, with the government insisting the spending restraint agreed to by Barack Obama was tougher than that announced by George Osborne. Conservative MPs said the US deal vindicated the coalition’s approach and represented a setback to the shadow chancellor, Ed Balls, who has been urging the UK government to adopt the more cautious approach to deficit reduction hitherto favoured by the US. Labour sources disputed that America’s programme of cuts was now more draconian than Britain’s and said the Republicans appeared to have forced Obama into “a plan that some believe risks going faster than is economically wise, just at the time when worries are growing about the fragility of the US recovery”. Market turmoil Economics Spain Italy United States Global economy Stock markets Euro Currencies Euro European Union Europe Economic policy Larry Elliott Jill Treanor guardian.co.uk

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Barack Obama hints at tax rises after US debt bill goes through Senate

US president refuses to rule out tax rises for wealthiest Americans as he prepares to sign debt limit bill into law Barack Obama came out fighting in an attempt to undo the damage to his reputation caused by the long-running debt stand-off, and pacify Democrats who feel betrayed by the deal that will result in spending cuts totalling trillions of dollars. The president, who turns 50 tomorrow, faces a tough re-election fight next year. He needs not only to win back such disaffected Democrats, but also to get them out to campaign for him and vote in their droves, as they did in 2008. Speaking minutes after the Senate joined the House in approving the deal to prevent the US going into default, Obama offered an olive branch by putting tax rises back on the table. Republicans have insisted repeatedly over the last few days that the deal does not include tax rises. But Obama, in a short statement in the Rose Garden, said the country’s huge national debt could only be reduced through a combination of spending cuts and tax rises, particularly for the wealthy and big corporations such as those in the oil industry. “Everyone is going to have to chip in,” he said. “That is only fair. That’s the principle I’ll be fighting for during the next phase of this process.” He then attempted to turn the debate away from the debt ceiling towards jobs and pay, the issues that Democrats regard as the key to the 2012 election. But despite hints at ending tax breaks introduced by George W Bush, Obama may decide such a strategy would be too risky so close to a presidential election. He signed the debt bill late on Tuesday, just hours before the midnight Treasury deadline that could have seen the US default on its debts, a national humiliation likely to have had a huge impact on markets and the global economy. Democrats, from members of Congress to grassroots members, lined up to criticise the president for giving in to what they view as extortion tactics by Republicans aligned to the Tea Party movement. The Republican leader in the Senate, Mitch McConnell, added to the view that this was a Republican victory. Speaking minutes before the vote, McConnell told Republicans who had wanted even deeper spending cuts: “Although you may not see it this way, you’ve actually won this debate.” The ebullient mood among Republicans was reflected in an article yesterday in the New York Post by the conservative John Podhoretz , speechwriter to two Republican presidents: “If Barack Obama loses next November, we’ll look back on Sunday – July 31, 2011 – as the day he became a one-termer. He demonstrated the one key quality common to all unsuccessful leaders: haplessness.” He described Obama as looking powerless and compared Obama’s negotiating strategy to “Daffy Duck, who once ended a rapid-fire exchange at gunpoint with Bugs Bunny by turning the rifle on himself and pulling the trigger”. The Senate, following the House vote, yesterday passed the deal to raise the $14.3 trillion debt ceiling. It was passed by 74 votes to 26. Gabrielle Giffords, pictured above, the Arizona politician who was shot in the head in January, returned to Congress to participate in the vote. She said she had been “deeply disappointed” by the political wrangling that had taken the US to the brink. At the end of a period in which the debt row left Washington all but paralysed, Congress broke up for the summer and Obama will return to the campaign trail . The row forced him to cancel several fundraising opportunities, but he is scheduled to travel to his hometown of Chicago, where he celebrated on election night 2008, for a number of events. The Obama-led events are reported by the Chicago Sun-Times to cost those wishing to attend almost $40,000 a head. But his support for tax rises will resurrect the ideological battle when Congress returns next month. As part of the deal, a bipartisan committee has been set up to look in detail at where the cuts are to be made, reporting at the end of November. The committee will be the focal point as the battle between spending cuts and tax rises is resumed. Polls show voters increasingly frustrated and dismayed, not only with Obama’s performance over the crisis but also with members of Congress from both sides. A CNN/Orc poll found only 17% said politicians in Washington had behaved as responsible adults, while 77% believed they had behaved like spoiled children. Obama’s popularity dropped 5% in the polls over the last week, with most putting him around 45%, but a Gallup poll at the end of last week had support for him at just 40%. Michael McDonald, a specialist in polling and politics at George Mason University, said: “Everyone took a hit in the polls on this one. No one came out smelling of roses after this debacle. All took a short-term hit.” But he added that Obama’s approval ratings of 40% were problematic going into an election year. “That is dangerous territory,” he added. “I would not want to be down to 40%. We have to see whether it is short-term or long-term. I would say it is likely to be long-term because of the state of the economy, and if people are crystalising their opinions of Obama’s handling of the economy, he is in danger.” Obama received a boost in the polls in May when Osama bin Laden was killed but this quickly faded. One positive he may take from the debt row is that it offers a campaign strategy for next year, portraying the Republicans as extremists at the mercy of the Tea Party movement. Barack Obama US Congress United States US politics US economy US economic growth and recession Economics Ewen MacAskill guardian.co.uk

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The US plans to back off an anti-terrorism rule that’s stemming the flow of aid to Somalis plagued by drought and famine. The current rules forbid US-funded groups from paying “taxes” or tolls to terrorist groups, the Washington Post explains. That’s proved untenable for aid workers in Somalia. Al-Qaeda ally…

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If, for some reason, you would really like a couple of original portraits of Adolf Hitler’s dear old mom and dad (and you have $100,000) … you’re in luck. The portraits of Alois and Klara Hitler, missing since World War II ended, have been in the possession of a French…

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Pathologist Freddy Patel’s suspension extended by GMC

General Medical Council launches new disciplinary inquiry into Freddy Patel and extends ban to 31 December Pathologist Dr Freddy Patel’s suspension from the UK medical register, in part for a botched postmortem that delayed a 2002 murder investigation , has been extended pending a new disciplinary inquiry. Patel was the pathologist who conducted the initial postmortem on newspaper seller Ian Tomlinson, who died during the G20 protests in London in April 2009. The profession’s regulatory body, the General Medical Council (GMC), was not able to confirm whether this was the subject of an allegation that might lead to Patel’s latest appearance before a fitness-to-practise panel. Patel was suspended in March this year for at least four months for “irresponsible” reports on a postmortem in 2002, which delayed a murder investigation, as well as dishonesty and failing to redress previous shortcomings. James Meikle guardian.co.uk

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Bad: Getting arrested on suspicion of DUI. Worse: Getting arrested on suspicion of DUI at 10:30 in the morning. That’s what happened yesterday to Samantha Ronson, DJ and Lindsay Lohan ex extraordinaire. Ronson was pulled over on her way home from Las Vegas, where she DJed Sunday night, when…

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As nasty as the debt ceiling fight was, it was just a warm-up for the 2012 presidential election, which is shaping up to be a major referendum on the size, role, and philosophy of government, reports the Washington Post . “This had nothing to do with the debt ceiling,” said a…

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Hosni Mubarak due in dock but Egypt uncertain whether trial will proceed

The 83-year-old ousted president faces charges of corruption and unlawful killing which could carry the death penalty Egypt’s faltering revolution will reach a defining moment on Wednesday morning when toppled president Hosni Mubarak goes on trial to face charges of corruption and unlawful killing. Just over six months after the start of an uprising that would eventually overthrow his regime, ending 30 years of autocratic rule and sending shockwaves across the region, the 83-year-old is scheduled to appear in the dock in white prison overalls and will stand behind the bars of a specially constructed metal cage – although there are some doubts whether he will actually appear. His much-anticipated downfall is to be screened live on Egyptian state television, attracting tens of millions of viewers. For most, it will be a scene that only last year seemed utterly unimaginable. “Egypt’s many problems cannot be solved by one appearance of Mubarak in a courtroom,” said Soheir Basma, a middle-aged Cairo woman who will be tuning in for the trial. “But people must see justice being done, and maybe the sight of that happening to Mubarak will inspire us to carry on fighting for our own rights, the rights he denied us for so long.” Yet as the final preparations are made to ferry the ailing former leader from his hospital bed in the Red Sea resort of Sharm el-Sheikh to the temporary courthouse – a police academy that once bore his name, in the sandy outskirts of the capital – few Egyptians are under the illusion that this trial will be a panacea for the multiple problems their country is facing. Earlier this week military forces stormed Tahrir Square, where a protest against army generals – the country’s de facto rulers since Mubarak was ousted in February – had been under way since early last month. Using tactics reminiscent of Mubarak’s security services, soldiers and riot police beat demonstrators and dragged several off into military detention. Revolutionary youth groups have called for daily marches to condemn the violence. As Egypt lurches towards parliamentary elections in November, when the armed forces have promised to return to their barracks, many are sceptical that the military top brass will succeed in holding Mubarak to account. “It’s crucially important that Mubarak gets a fair hearing, because this needs to be the trial that breaks the cycle of impunity which characterised his 30 years in power,” said Heba Morayef, of Human Rights Watch. “Mubarak’s Egypt was all about police being above the law, so if this trial proceeds in accordance with due process, then it’s not only very politically significant but it also sets a precedent regarding accountability in this country, and changes the balance of power between government security services and the rule of law.” However, there is uncertainty over whether Mubarak will appear or not, with some reports suggesting that even if he does enter the dock, the trial will be swiftly adjourned – a potentially welcome compromise for the ruling generals, who are facing intense public pressure to see the prosecution through but fear that politically explosive revelations may leak out when Mubarak takes the stand, implicating the army top brass. Mubarak is to be flown by military helicopter to an airstrip close to the police academy, before being driven the final 500 metres by ambulance. His co-defendants – his sons Alaa and Gamal, former interior minister Habib El-Adly, and six other senior regime officials – will be transported from Tora prison by armoured vehicles. Up to 8,000 soldiers and police officers are being deployed to secure the trial. In the streets of Cairo on Tuesday, conversations were full of the impending legal drama. “He’s definitely guilty, and a quick verdict would be really good for the country as it would bring all the protests to an end and get things moving again,” said Ahmed Yusuf, a 26-year-old student of commerce at Ain Shams university. “Mubarak didn’t care about us. He took no interest in his people – and that’s why he never noticed that we were rising up to defeat him. I’m going to be very happy tomorrow.” Others sounded a different tone. “To be honest, I was detached from the regime – I never received anything good from it, and I never felt particularly oppressed by it,” said Karim Hadi, a garage worker who has a college degree in factory management but has been unable to find a job in his chosen field. “I see Mubarak like any other traitor or common criminal, and I hope he gets what he deserves.” Mubarak could face the death penalty if convicted. But even a guilty verdict may not be enough to quell much of the popular anger stemming from his reign, particularly as the “unlawful killing” charges refer only to the 18-day uprising this year – and to none of the alleged brutality that proceeded it. “My biggest regret is that Mubarak will never face trial for the 30 years of police brutality, systematic torture and forced disappearances carried out under his rule,” said Morayef. “His legacy is such a destructive one because he institutionalised abuse, and it will take us generations to overcome that.” Hosni Mubarak Egypt Arab and Middle East unrest Middle East Africa Jack Shenker guardian.co.uk

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