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A nurse has been arrested on suspicion of murdering three patients who died after vials of intravenous saline solution were tampered with . The 27-year-old suspect worked in the two wards in a British hospital where a total of 14 patients fell ill after receiving solution contaminated with insulin, the Telegraph…

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Pakistani PM: US promises not to repeat Bin Laden raid

Yousuf Raza Gilani says Hillary Clinton has assured him there will be no more unilateral raids, contradicting US officials’ claims Pakistan’s prime minister, Yousuf Raza Gilani, says he has received US assurances there will be no repeat of the unilateral raid that killed Osama Bin Laden in May. Gilani’s remarks, in an interview with the Guardian, contradict assertions by the US president, Barack Obama, and other American officials that US forces would take similar action against other al-Qaida leaders if necessary. Gilani was speaking in London at a time when Pakistani relations with the west, particularly the US, are at a low in the wake of the raid on Bin Laden’s hideout in the Pakistani town of Abbottabad on 2 May. After the special forces operation, US officials voiced suspicions that Bin Laden must have had a network of local supporters, possibly inside the Pakistani state, while Pakistani leaders were outraged not to have been consulted over the raid inside their territory. “Since we were sharing information with US and there was a tremendous relationship with the CIA and ISI [Inter-Services Intelligence], therefore we could have done a joint operation in Abbottabad, but it didn’t happen. Therefore we had a lot of reservations,” Gilani said. He added: “They have assured us in future there will be no unilateral actions in Pakistan, and there would be co-operation between both agencies.” The Pakistani prime minister said he had received the assurance personally from the US secretary of state, Hillary Clinton. In her public statements, however, Clinton has declared the US would strike unilaterally against other top militants if others did not. She said in May : “We’ve made it clear to people around the world that if we locate someone who has been part of the al-Qaida leadership, then you get him or we will get him.” Speaking to the BBC just before his visit to Britain the same month, Obama was equally blunt on the issue. He said: “We are very respectful of the sovereignty of Pakistan. But we cannot allow someone who is planning to kill our people or our allies’ people – we can’t allow those kind of active plans to come to fruition without us taking some action.” On Thursday, however, Gilani said any repeat of the Abbottabad raid would be “totally unacceptable”. “Public opinion would further aggravate against the United States and you cannot fight a war without the support of the masses. You need the masses to support military actions against militants,” he said. He said another raid would damage “not only our relationship, but also our common objective, to fight against militants. We are fighting a war and if we fail that means that it’s not good for the world. We can’t afford losing.” After the raid against Bin Laden, the Pakistani government said it had stopped the US launching drones from its territory in pursuit of militants in tribal areas. Nevertheless, drone strikes on the Pakistani side of the border with Afghanistan have continued. “We don’t allow our bases to be used. They have other bases they use,” Gilani said. Asked where those bases were, he replied: “I don’t know. You ask the Americans. This is a question to put to them.” The prime minister added: “Drone attacks are against our strategy too, because we have been isolating the militants from the local population and when there are drone attacks they get united again.” Pakistan United States Osama bin Laden Hillary Clinton Julian Borger guardian.co.uk

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Stepping Hill hospital sabotage leads to death of two more patients

Insulin poisoning at hospital in Stockport claims fourth and fifth victims Two more patients have died of suspected insulin overdoses at a hospital as a 27-year-old nurse continues to be interviewed by police on murder charges. The patients fell ill at Stepping Hill hospital in Hazel Grove, Stockport, where three other patients have died. Tests are continuing to determine if saline that had been injected with insulin was directly responsible for the deaths of Tracey Arden, 44, 84-year-old George Keep, and Arnold Lancaster, 71. Detectives are questioning Rebecca Leighton, who works as a nurse at the hospital. She was arrested at her flat in the Heaviley district of Stockport at 6am on Wednesday. Sixty detectives from Greater Manchester police are working on the case. The treatment of 14 patients since 7 July on two acute medical wards – A1 and A3 – is being examined by police. Thirty-six bags of saline in a storeroom were found to have been sabotaged with insulin. On Tuesday police said the person responsible could still be at the hospital. Detectives can apply for an extension to continue questioning Rebecca Leighton if they need more time. Officers were first called nine days ago after an experienced nurse noticed unexpected drops in blood sugar levels in a large number of patients on the ward. Staff have now been told to work in pairs when checking and administering drugs. A single keyholder has to be asked for access to locked drugs cabinets. Police have said a product containing saline found damaged in the maternity ward at Stepping Hill was not contaminated, according to preliminary tests. Inquests into the deaths of three patients have been opened and adjourned at the request of the police. Tracey Arden had been diagnosed with multiple sclerosis 12 years ago. She had been admitted to the hospital on 7 July suffering from associated illnesses. Her parents, who live nearby, said she had been in good spirits when they left but within two hours began to deteriorate. Hospital staff called and told them to return urgently but she died before they arrived. Retired businessman George Keep was admitted to the hospital with a fractured hip after a fall on 27 June and had seemed to be recovering initially. He ran his own house maintenance firm and was described by relatives as a keen gardener and very strong for his age. His health suddenly deteriorated at the hospital and for six days doctors struggled to keep him alive. He was given blood and put on a saline drip for hydration but died last Thursday. Retired photographer Arnold Lancaster, of Romiley, had worked for the Stockport Express. He died on 11 July. The hospital has said it is not concerned about the health of nine other patients who were affected by the saline. Dr Chris Burke, chief executive of Stockport NHS Foundation Trust, said the trust was unable to comment further or provide any more details because of the police investigation. The Nursing and Midwifery Council confirmed that Rebecca Leighton had been arrested. Friends expressed their shock. It is understood her mother, Lynda, is a senior manager at the hospital responsible for training nurses. Other hospitals across the north-west had been warned to be vigilant. Crime NHS Health Helen Carter guardian.co.uk

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England v India – live! | Andy Bull

• Hit refresh or auto-update for the latest posts • Email rob.smyth@guardian.co.uk with your thoughts • Follow Andy and Rob on Twitter, if that’s your thing • There is other cricket going on today too. Click here for the County cricket – Live! blog • Have a look at our gallery of all the best pictures from Lord’s 24th over: England 62-1 (Strauss 22, Trott 18) Another errant delivery, this time from Sharma, escapes the diving Dhoni for three byes. Trott then forces three behind backward point. Duncan Fletcher was furious with how England bowled on the first day against India at Headingley in 2002 – India eventually got 600 – and he won’t be entirely happy with India’s performance in not dissimilar conditions today. I don’t know whether India are undercooked or not, but they haven’t been quite on their game. In other news, our esteemed, cricket-loving blog editor is probably waking up on the other side of the Atlantic. I’d just like to say: Morning Busfield ! 23rd over: England 55-1 (Strauss 21, Trott 15) Strauss chases a grotesquely wide delivery from Zaheer and swishes at nothing other than the freshest air. The next delivery jags down the leg side for four byes. The ground is fairly quiet, although the atmosphere is more expectant than subdued. There’s a Before-the-Lord-Mayor’s-Show feel to the match, the series, and indeed the rest of time. “Both pairs are horrendous (especially pair 1),” says Mark Healey (and a few others). “Pair 2 have the bonus that you can play dot to dot during a Cook and Trott blocking masterclass during some part of this series however so I would go for them.” My friend says he’d love to see what travesties some of you are wearing on your feet right now. He needs new trainers, though. Come on, help him find some new trainers! 22nd over: England 50-1 (Strauss 21, Trott 15) A lucky escape for Trott in the first over after lunch. He waved his bat almost absent-mindedly at a wide, shortish delivery from Ishant Sharma, and the ball flew straight through the vacant third-slip area for four. “Congratulations to Lorraine Reese (Pre-game rambling: This is just cruel) for proving that investigative journalism is alive and well and not reliant on hacking,” says Ian Copestake. “I hear you, Smyth, will be putting out a statement shortly in response to what the press are calling ‘Swingergate’.” I have no idea what this refers to, and I suspect it’s best I keep it that way. But seriously folks – because sometimes the laughter has to stop – can we please do away with ‘-gate’ culture. A) It sounds ridiculous and B) it leaves us with nowhere to go if Gareth Southgate does something naughty. Good cause department One of my best friends recently completed the first of a series of runs in support of Sands , after the awful stillbirth of his son Ramzi last year. It’s impossible to imagine something so devastating happening to anyone, never mind someone you’ve been close to for nearly 20 years. If you’re feeling generous, his JustGiving page is here . Question Should a 35-year-old man in his thirties wear these trainers ? I can’t decide. My friend wants to know. He also wants to know whether these trainers are quite cool or utterly awful . He can’t decide. I don’t know why he keeps looking at the sale pages though. Maybe he doesn’t get paid enough for his hard work and morale-boosting quips around the office . Hello . We knew the ICC would do something special for the 2000th Test, but we didn’t know they were going to build a time machine. That morning session was straight outta 1987, with the ball swinging round corners* and the batsmen needing to achieve a higher state of consciousness just to survive. India did not bowl quite as well as they should have done, bowling too many deliveries that could safely be left alone, yet it was still a serious mental challenge for England. They are fortunate to have a top three who secretly fantasise about having their discipline tested in conditions like these. Like true love, and Hold On by Wilson Phillips, Test cricket can stimulate the soul in so many different ways. The last time England hosted the best side in the world, in 2005, the series also began at Lord’s on July 21. It opened with a flurry of haymakers; Australia were 87 for five at lunch, and 17 wickets fell on the first day. This was in total contrast, an unspoken battle of wills, yet it was almost as compelling. In many sports, the word ‘absorbing’ is a euphemism. Not in Test cricket. This is a seriously high level of sport, and both sides were respectful of that throughout a fine morning session. * The glee in Bumble’s voice was lovely, like he’d seen an animal he thought was extinct: ” Look at the swing !” LUNCH On that note I’m going to step down for the afternoon session. Rob Smyth will be here shortly, so please send your emails to him at rob.smyth@guardian.co.uk . I can’t believe that it’s taken the OBO two hours to hit the fish in the barrel: “Now that we’ve got the eagerly anticipated Strauss-Khan matchup in the middle,” says Ant Pease. “What are other OBOers’ favourite matches featuring players with the names of current or former heads of the IMF?” Yes, the players are going off . What an absorbing session that was, a reminder, perhaps, that this series is going to be about much, much more than wickets and sixes. One thing is clear – India’s fast bowling attack are going to be extremely potent in English conditions. 20th over: England 43-1 (Strauss 20, Trott 9) Harbhajan is bowling from around the wicket to Strauss, spearing the ball in towards middle stump. Strauss pushes a single out to long-on= and leaves Trott to face what should be the final ball of the session. 19th over: England 42-1 (Strauss 19, Trott 9) Another single for Strauss, tucked off his hip. After watching Trott swing and miss at a wide ball, Sharma slips a delivery past his outside edge, then purses his lips in appreciation of the delivery. Trott holds his forward defensive pose and stares at the pitch. The next delivery comes back down the slope, moving a foot and more after pitching. 19th over: England 41-1 (Strauss 18, Trott 9) The second bowling change of the day brings Harbhajan Singh into the attack. My word that’s close. His very first ball snicks off the edge of Trott’s bat and flies to Rahul Dravid at slip, he reaches down and gets his fingers to it, but no more, and the ball runs away for a single. Another chance gone begging for India then, with Trott missed at slip, and Strauss surviving a wayward throw when he could have been run out. Over the series these little inaccuracies in the field be the difference between the two sides. 18th over: England 39-1 (Strauss 17, Trott 8) We’re getting very familiar with Kumar’s smile this morning. He breaks into another one after beating Strauss’ outside edge yet again. Gautam Gambhir hobbles around the boundary rope and flings himself across the turf to try and intercept a cut shot from Strauss. He ends up palming it over the rope. He would have found that all much easier if he hadn’t been wearing shin pads. That’s the kind of small detail which will infuriate Duncan Fletcher. 17th over: England 35-1 (Strauss 13, Trott 8) from around the wicket, Ishant jags a shortish ball into Strauss’ gut, tucking him up and doubling him over. This first hour has been a real battle for Strauss, who has 13 from 52 balls. The odd scratchy run to the leg side aside, he’s been thinking only of staying in. He takes another such run now, and and Trott then pops up on his tiptoes and flicks four runs away to fine leg. Jeff Phillips, I can’t help but feel you’d be better off sharing this kind of stuff with your brother himself rather than the tens of thousands of strangers on here: “The image of that Test Match board game has made me feel a bit guilty. I would like to take this opportunity to apologise to my younger brother, whose birthday it is today, for never allowing him to play in any of the epic Test Match games that occurred in our house. Even when I had nobody else to play with I still wouldn’t let him play, despite the fact that playing on your own was a rather unsatisfactory experience. Sorry, Jon and happy birthday – you may have to wait another 25 years before I apologise for the fact that I have not bought you a card or a present.” 16th over: England 30-1 (Strauss 12, Trott 4) The score creeps on, Trott turning two runs away to leg. “Sitting on the beach in Tunisia,” gasps Mike Williams, who seems to be have turned a little delirious in the heat. “45 degrees in the shade. I’ve put the locals in the field on what looks like a turning sand strip. Intend to work the ball into the sea as often as possible. Will send sun your way when the waiter comes round again.” That reminds me of that wonderful passage in Pickwick Papers: “‘Warm! — red hot — scorching — glowing. Played a match once — single wicket — friend the colonel — Sir Thomas Blazo — who should get the greatest number of runs. — Won the toss — first innings — seven o’clock A.m. — six natives to look out — went in; kept in — heat intense — natives all fainted — taken away — fresh half-dozen ordered — fainted also — Blazo bowling — supported by two natives — couldn’t bowl me out — fainted too — cleared away the colonel — wouldn’t give in — faithful attendant — Quanko Samba — last man left — sun so hot, bat in blisters, ball scorched brown — five hundred and seventy runs — rather exhausted — Quanko mustered up last remaining strength — bowled me out — had a bath, and went out to dinner.’ ‘And what became of what’s-his-name, Sir?’ inquired an old gentleman. ‘Blazo?’ ‘No — the other gentleman.’ ‘Quanko Samba?’ ‘Yes, sir.’ ‘Poor Quanko — never recovered it — bowled on, on my account — bowled off, on his own — died, sir.’” 15th over: England 28-1 (Strauss 12, Trott 2) The first bowling change brings Ishant Sharma in to the attack, looking like he’s just stepped out of the salon. A very different kind of challenge, this. His first two balls are short, and sharp. But his third is too straight, and Trott knocks it away for a single to long leg. Ishant switches around the wicket, and Strauss finally gets a delivery he can tuck in to. It’s short and wide and he cuts it up and over gully and away for four. 14th over: England 22-1 (Strauss 8, Trott 1) “Are England asleep at the wicket, merely snoozing or about to have a nightmare?” says Steven Fanning. “Losing Cook so early is a disastrous start.” The opposition are allowed to play well, you know. Particularly in these conditions. But it was certainly a shock to see Cook fall given his form these last few months. Kumar swings another delivery past Strauss’ outside edge, and the stands, grinning ruefully at the batsman. Strauss looks back, a cheekier sort of smile spreading across his face. “Too good for me,” he seems to be saying, “but unluckily for you not good enough to get me out.” 13th over: England 20-1 (Strauss 6, Trott 0) Bumble points out that there have been seven maidens in 12 overs so far, which shows how watchful England have been. Trott goes about the lengthy process of marking his guard. “Strip Cook of the ODI captaincy!” shouts Mark Healey, who could have a fine career as TalkSport’s cricket correspondent ahead of him if he so wished, “It’s clearly impaired his judgement! He would never have been trapped lbw like that before he started playing for England in ODI’s again!” 12th over: England 19-1 (Strauss 6, Trott 0) Billy Bowden is doing some very ostentatious foot-prodding on the wicket, seemingly suggesting that Praveen is following through too straight. This is interesting, after the uproar in the West Indies when Daryl Harper penalised Kumar for following through down the wicket. The furore that followed forced him into early retirement. It would be a strong move from Billy to do the same thing here. WICKET! Cook 12 lbw Zaheer (England 19-1) Well I just don’t know what to make of that. Stop the clocks, Cook is out. For less than a hundred. It was a good ball from Zaheer, sliding in past the inside edge, hitting the pad with a resounding thump. Up went umpiren Rauf’s finger. It was a good decision the ball was hitting the top of leg stump. 11th over: England 19-0 (Strauss 6, Cook 12) “Surprised England succeeded in not lose any wickets while I was in the shower,” writes David Naylor. “I half expected to come back out and find them 7 for3 with Praveen having taken a hat-trick. Positive signs already! I’ve already learned much of following English cricket in the past two years of learning. Think negatively, and pray for rain, right?” You’ve learned much, young Padawan. As they say, a pessimist can never be disappointed, only pleasantly surprised. Sachin seems to have plenty of advice for the bowlers today. And it must have been good because with the very next ball… 10th over: England 19-0 (Strauss 6, Cook 12) “I’d like to dispute your claim that ‘You cannot calculate the intangibles’,” pipes up Harry Tuttle. “As recently as 2009, researchers from the Cambridge Mathematics department published findings that strongly suggest one calculates the intangibles by adding four to any real number suspected of ‘omitting intangible, or otherwise non-numerical, elements’. Of course, people forget that some MCC purists argue that batting and bowling averages be expressed in complex numbers. That would really shift the terms of debate.” Sadly enough my B in GCSE mathematics means that I’m so under-qualified in this area I can’t even tell whether that’s a joke. What I can tell you is that with Strauss on strike, Kumar has changed his angle of attack, sliding the ball across the bat towards the slips. Simply enough, the Indians plan is to try and get Cook LBW early in the innings, presumably thinking that his head falls over a touch towards the off, and to have Strauss caught in the slips as he loses his position outside off. 9th over: England 19-0 (Strauss 6, Cook 12) Zaheer tinkers with his field. He only has two slips in place for Strauss now, which seems a little cautious in these conditions. he beats the bat outside off stump, and then serves up a ball that is too straight and which Strauss taps away for a single. 8th over: England 18-0 (Strauss 5, Cook 12) Oddly, Praveen seems to be swinging the ball less now that the lacquer has come off, which is the opposite of what you would expect. He’s tightened his line though, all six balls landing on middle-and-leg and moving a touch towards off. Cook deadbats all six of them. Alan White is another OBO reader experiencing Test Match induced flashbacks thanks to that earlier photo: “We used to fold the mat in half when packing it away which left a selection of slightly curved creases running down the middle of the wicket. With just a tiny alteration of line the ball would follow the path of these creases, allowing us to swing it both ways like Anderson in his pomp. DOES IT GET BETTER THAN THAT? No. No, it doesn’t.” 7th over: England 18-0 (Strauss 5, Cook 12) That’s a chance! Ishant throws at the stumps from mid-on, with Strauss out of his ground. The ball whistles by. If it had hit he would have been out. Cook clips three runs away to mid-wicket, and Strauss eases a single away square. “I get that sly look you refer to from my tailor,” writes Paul Billington. “He’s always wrong though.” 6th over: England 12-0 (Strauss 2, Cook 9) Strauss steers a single past the slips, and Cook then picks a delivery from Praveen that comes back the other way. He whips it away square and takes two runs. He plays a slightly less graceful version of the same shot to the next ball, and England take two more. Cook looks in impeccable touch. “Two friends of mine in their Test Match heyday (c.1987) decided in their boredom to alter one of the game balls, altering the smooth sphere with badly-applied varnish to create the a different delivery option,” Tom Oxley rambles on, “Rolling it slower down the bowler’s chute allowed the ball to stick to the miscreant fibres of the fluffy playing surface. In other words, spin.” Goodness Oxley, that was like listening to a particularly incoherent anecdote from an inebriated MCC member. 5th over: England 7-0 (Strauss 1, Cook 5) Cook collects a leg bye, and later in the over Strauss gets his first single too. “On the subject of Indian fans and their chants, there’s certainly an element of lost in translation, but also something more sinister at times,” says Will Russell. “We were in Nagpur for the 1st test in 2006, where Alastair Cook (and Ian Blackwell!) made their Test debuts. After a day or so of listening to the crowd, we concluded that they were chanting ‘Hoggy is a bastard’, in the direction of our favourite Yorkshire dog-lover. They must have been annoyed that he took 6-57 in the first innings. Hoggy then rode the Man of the Match motorbike around the outfield after the match. Good stuff.” To be fair, the England fans can be just as bad at times – look at how they taunted Mitchell Johnson and Jason Gillespie. 4th over: England 5-0 (Strauss 0, Cook 5) Praveen switches back over the wicket. His first ball is too short, and Cook cuts England’s first runs away square. Harbhajan lumbers after it like a donkey chasing a carrot. Later in the over Praveen beats the bat with a straight delivery, it hits Cook on the pads in front of leg stump, but the umpire shakes his head. And rightly so, it pitched outside leg and was passing over the top of the stumps. But it was a first reminder that at some point in this series India are going to have real cause to regret their dogmatic resistance to the DRS, which is not being used for lbw decisions in this series. “Three maidens,” scoffs Tarun Baloch. “Are England preparing for Timeless Test already?” Well, they’re up and running now. Cook collects another single at the end of the over. 3rd over: England 0-0 (Strauss 0, Cook 0) Zaheer is now bowling too wide to trouble Strauss. He shows enough restraint to leave the first three balls alone, and then strides out to play a worrying sort of shot at a ball that just swings by his outside edge. Three maidens to start with then, and at the end of this over Zaheer stops mid-wicket, puts his hand on his hip and shoots Strauss a sly look that seems to say, “I’ve got your measure, fella.” Bikram Shivkumar is following the OBO from Chennai: “Yup, palms are sweaty, feeling slightly feverish…the symptoms before a big India game are all present. A quote from someone way more articulate than I am: ‘You will hear people say that there is no sentiment in sport. Of course there is. A touch of sadness, a bit of joy, a lump in the throat and hope in the breast, that is what we watch and play sport for. Take away sentiment and emotion and sport grows cold.” 2nd over: England 0-0 (Strauss 0, Cook 0) Praveen Kumar starts at the other end, which is interesting. Like Zaheer, Praveen is a bit of an artist with the ball. These two must be the slowest opening pair in world cricket. He won’t get it up above 80mph, but he will swing the ball. My word. What a first delivery, and what a second delivery too. Praveen is getting an absurd amount of movement in his first over, landing the ball on middle-and-leg and making it loop past the outside edge. He switches around the wicket for the final ball, and Cook swings and misses at a delivery that hardly gets through to Dhoni. This has been a wonderfully old-fashioned start to the match, a real test of technique. “On the jubilee line this morning there were a group of Indian fans sporting flags and the Ishant “display bust in a down market jeweller’s” look,” writes Dom Hastings. “They were singing “who’s the fat man in the hat?” to no one in particular, pausing occasionally to fall about in mirth. When they disembarked at St John’s Wood the song changed to “Graeme Swann, he’s a duck!!” and as the door closed and the train sped off towards central London I was left slightly perplexed – something lost in translation?” 1st over: England 0-0 (Strauss 0, Cook 0) Zaheer’s first ball cuts back in off the seam, past Strauss’ outside edge. There didn’t seem to be too much pace on the ball, so the slips shuffle up a little closer. The Indians in the crowd are already making a racket, crying out “ZA-HEER! ZAHEER!, ZA-HEER, ZAHEER!” His length is already full, and his line hovers around off-stump. He knows what he is doing. A couple of balls pass by the bat, and the others are patted down into the ground. It’s a maiden. Zaheer, looking a little wide around the middle bowls a pair of practice deliveries and then turns to face Andrew Strauss… I can’t stop top appreciate the quality of Wither’s story, because India are gathering in to a huddle and England’s openers are walking out to the middle. “Spine-tingling moments for every player…” opines Athers. Ladies and Gents, let’s begin… “John Dalby’s misty-eyed reminec-, remenisc-, RECOLLECTIONS mentioning the majestic Test Match board game take me back to only a few years ago,” writes Neil Withers. “When as a late 20-something I returned to my parents home with a few friends to watch my local football team play an early season game. Now, my parents were abroad at the time (as the middle class retirees they are) so the day after the game my friends and I got out the old faithful Test Match and played a few games, carefully smoothing the faded green plasticky cloth onto the living room carpet to get a true playing surface. When the time came to leave, we picked up all the players and peeled back the faded green plasticky cloth to reveal… a perfect (if sticky) green hexagon on my parents’ beloved beige living room carpet. Never has my life resembled a Yellow Pages advert so closely! After much (MUCH) cleaning, scrubbing, scouring and chemicals later, we had to leave, unsure whether the dark patch was just because the carpet was still a bit wet. I’d love to pretend my parents are none the wiser, but as a dutiful son (who also went back while they were still away to check) I told them after they got back – while they were too jet-lagged to get properly annoyed.” The gangling Ishant walks down the pavilion steps, a ball clutched in his hand , and over in the stands Alec Stewart rings the silver bell that signals five minutes to the start of play. More hot montage action from Sky , and by the time it has faded out we are just about ready to start. “I don’t grudge your mancrush on Sachin,” says my wife Prasanna A. But “tatters and all, pauper people, lifelong anxiety of being Indian” is just pure hogwash.” [Hogwash, poetry, sometimes they're functional synonyms for one another, no? Anyway...] “Think Indian self-esteem is several notches above what it used to be in seventies and eighties. And due to various factors which may or may not include sports. I am Indian and let me tell you that Sachin has let me/us down as many times as he has lifted our spirits. On the other hand, since the 2001 Ind-Aus series, the Indian batting line-up has collectively lived up to its lofty reputation. So the rational Indian puts his faith in the team or more specifically in Sehwag, Dravid, Sachin and VVS. And without Sehwag, we are going to be under the cosh most of the series. It will take all of Dhoni’s self confidence to wrangle a drawn series. So please stop projecting your converter’s zeal re Sachin on the whole Indian population.” That’s all very true, Prasanna. I should have been more specific. Sunderan wrote that in the mid-90s, when it had more of a ring of truth about it than it does now. But it is still a serviceable shorthand for the pressures the man has endured over the length of his 22-year career. I’m a little surprised that England have chosen Stuart Broad , unless they’re still entertaining thoughts about the relative weakness of the Indian batsmen against short-pitched bowling. As James Himsworth says: “Stuart Broad has got to do something to warrant his selection here, he was poor in the Ashes before he was injured and he was poor against Sri Lanka, whereas Big Timmy Bres has been in sublime form.” “Now India are going to bowl, I wouldn’t really mind if it started raining quite a lot…” Oh, Piers Barclay, has it come to that already. Soothe yourself with calming thoughts of Jonathan Trott’s forward defensive. That’s a great start to the series for India then, not that we’ve had a ball bowled yet. Rob Smyth has arrived in the nick of time too. He scowls at the TV and mutters “Trent Bridge, 2007 all over again” to himself. So we’re all set to start. Except that the match has been delayed by a wet outfield, so we’ll wait a little longer yet. “I am bound to say your normal sound judgement is wobbling over Tendulkar,” writes Jon Perraton. Remember the all time test batting rankings . There are more things in heaven and earth, Perraton, than are dreamt of in your statistics. You cannot calculate the intangibles. And England look like this: AN Cook, AJ Strauss, IJL Trott, KP Pietersen, IR Bell, EJG Morgan, MJ Prior, GP Swann, SCJ Broad, JM Anderson, CT Tremlett. Praveen Kumar takes the final slot in the Indian bowling line-up, so they look like this: G Gambhir, A Mukund, SR Tendulkar, R Dravid, VVS Laxman, SK Raina, MS Dhoni, Harbhajan Singh, Z Khan, I Sharma, P Kumar. And England have picked Stuart Broad, not Tim Bresnan . “It gives better balance to our side and certainly to our bowling attack,” says Strauss. He admits he would have bowled first if he had won the toss. Sorry, sudden flush of excitement there . “Any news on the teams?” asks Ant Pease. “Surely Sky have had the decency to have bugged the dressing rooms?” Well, for starters, Yuvraj has been left out of the Indian team. !!!!!!!!! Time for the toss! And India have won it! They will bowl first. Here’s John Dalby, coming over all misty-eyed: “The recent tiresome debate over the ICC all time XI got me to thinking about an altogether more interesting ATG-type list. If I shut my eyes and try to imagine the perfect cricketing scene, what do I see? The skies over Newlands are a striking blue with the clouds enveloping Devils Peak providing a hint of weather to come. Taking guard is the Little Master, scratching his mark in the crease, demonstrating complete ambivalence towards anything going on about him. Malcolm Marshall stands what seems half a mile away, looking as harmless and pleasant as he was chillingly effective. Carl Hooper stands at the non-strikers end, floppy sun hat and all, quietly surveying the scene with a serenity of a man whose heart-rate has never risen above 45. Jonty Rhodes skips about at point, like the PE Teachers pet, all athleticism and cat-like reflexes eager to please his master but sneering towards anyone whose ability doesn’t match his own. And so it goes, the players change positions, I sometimes have Hooper at slip, alongside the incessant jabbering of Adam Gilchrist, with Gower at his flowing peak, almost horizontally relaxed at the non-strikers end. Who is grazing out at cow corner? Who are the umpires? Basically, what is the pitch perfect snapshot of a cricket match that you would sell your children and your prized Test Match game from the 80′s to be able to watch?” The toss will be held at 11am . By the end of the series I will be in South Korea . No, don’t ask. “Mr Kumar can have the first e-mail of the series, but can I pitch for the last?” asks Gary Naylor, who has surely earned the right to. “Well, what a series. People will claim that the highlight was Sachin’s 100th 100 at Lord’s, but I’m going for Laxman turning back the clock ten years with a double ton to give India another win after following on at Edgbaston. But you can’t argue with England’s 3-1 win to go top of the World Rankings, Broad’s three five-fers or KP’s return to his best. We didn’t expect this starting out on a grey morning at Lord’s when David Cameron was still Prime Minister and Sky was still broadcasting.” If Don Bradman had experienced the level of scrutiny that Sachin has been subject too , his reputation both today and in time gone by would have been very, very different. But that may be a story for another time. “Be careful what you wish for” says Daniel Beckell. “…it might come true; There seem to be a lot of bloggers/pundits hoping for a fairytale Tendulkar ton today. I’m not one of them. I want England to win and, if Tendulkar does score a ton, it increases the chances of an India win. As such, and I acknowledge this is more than a little one-eyed, I hope he treads on his stumps first up. There, I’ve said it.” Out in the middle Sachin Tendulkar is in his tracksuit, facing a few throwdowns and creaming a few straight drives down the ground . He pauses to have a little chat with Fletch, who is no doubt reminding him about how to play the forward press. On the subject of Sachin, earlier this year I had the privilege of watching him score his 98th and 99th international centuries during the World Cup in India. They were a perfect pair of innings, one efficient, the other explosive. If you’ve seen Sachin bat in India, you’ll become a believer. Since then I honestly think he is neck-and-neck with Bradman as the best batsman international cricket has known. The pressur and expectation he lives with has never been better expressed than it was by the poet CP Sunderan: “Batsmen walk out into the middle alone. Not Tendulkar. Every time Tendulkar walks to the crease, a whole nation, tatters and all, marches with him to the battle arena. A pauper people pleading for relief, remission from the lifelong anxiety of being Indian, by joining in spirit their visioned saviour.” I’m thoroughly fed up with all the foreplay . Can we start already? The groundstaff are doing the hokey-cokey with the covers , and for the moment the toss is going to be delayed just a touch. Gah. This is just cruel : “I’ve been re-reading the OBOs from the previous two Ashes series (for fun) and found this 2009 gems from Rob Smyth,” writes Lorraine Reese. “‘There is sincerely more chance of me slicing off my swingers and donating them to charity than there is of me going on Tw*tter.’” Oh Bobby . Mike Holding is wondering exactly what Duncan Fletcher can tell the senior batsmen in India’s team. Not much, he reckons. Reluctant as I am to contradict Mikey, the word from Fletch is that he has already been doing a little technical tinkering with Rahul Dravid in the West Indies. If anyone had any false impressions about just how good India are , it’s worth remembering that they have never lost a Test series under MS Dhoni’s captaincy. That’s the kind of consistency that takes you to No1 in the world. The first email of the series comes from Anand Kumar . Because he really wanted it. Let that be a lesson to the rest of you. “I wanted to be the first person to be on OBO for this “can’t wait for the damn thing to begin” test series. Being a scarred Indian fan who endured the humiliation of overseas defeats for a long time, I have a very strange feeling about this one. In 96-97, When India toured SA, I thought SRT would score a 100 in the first test. 100 was scored but by the whole team! Again, on the recent tour to SA, I was hoping for great 1st innings things and on a rain shortened day, we were bundled out. Considering the overcast conditions in Lord’s and the number of Saffers in the English team, I am scared this will happen again. Please say it won’t! Please!” England have a great opportunity to take a lead here at Lord’s . Half of India’s team are still trying to readjust from the conditions they faced in the West Indies, and the rest haven’t played a Test match in over six months. There’s a little grass on the pitch, and a lot of moisture in the air. It should be a good morning to bowl. The power of a good montage knows no bounds. Sky have just run a highlights reel of the key match-ups in this series, and my excitement levels have shot up. But they won’t really peak until Rob Smyth arrives in the office, he’s been giggling like a schoolgirl all week. He even threatened to get out of bed early this morning. Not that early, obviously, because he’s not here yet. Morning everyone . How are you feeling this morning? Palms a little moist? Brow a touch fevered? Thoughts about the respective merits of Tim Bresnan and Stuart Broad inexplicably dominating your inner monologue? It’s time, at last. The 2000th Test, the 100th between England and India, and the most eagerly anticipated match in this country outside of an Ashes series since the West Indies were in their pomp a whippersnapper’s lifetime ago. This being the proper start of the summer it’s probably worth checking the weather. A quick look outside the window from the top floor of Guardian Towers eastwards across the cityscape shows a solid gray morass of cloud, stretching from here to eternity St John’s Wood. We might not start on time but the weathermen say that we’ll get plenty of play, perhaps interrupted by a shower or two in the middle of the afternoon. I’m going to need to drink another cup of coffee or two before I can get into this in earnest . While I do that, why don’t you go watch Goldenhair Gower and other highlights from series gone by. Or, if your boss is so mean that he doesn’t allow you to watch YouTube at work, here’s a whole page load of ways to waste the final hour before the start of play reading about what we’re about to see unfold. India in England 2011 England cricket team India cricket team Cricket Andy Bull guardian.co.uk

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‘British Taliban’ arrested in Afghanistan

British armed forces arrest two Britons in western Afghan city of Herat suspected of fighting for the Taliban British special forces have captured two Britons in Afghanistan believed to have been planning an attack on UK soldiers. Though there have been unconfirmed reports in the past about British-born individuals joining the Taliban-led insurgency in the country, this is the first time any such suspects have been captured. The two men were seized at a hotel in the western city of Herat in a joint operation with Afghan intelligence service, the National Directorate of Security (NDS), according to defence officials. They are British passport holders with dual nationality and have been taken to a British base in Helmand province. The Ministry of Defence and Foreign Office confirmed the arrests but would not immediately give any further details about the operation. An MoD spokesman said: “We can confirm that British forces have detained two individuals in Afghanistan who claim to be British nationals. We are not prepared to comment further at this stage.” A Foreign Office spokeswoman added: “We can confirm that two British nationals have been detained in Afghanistan. Embassy staff are providing assistance.” Nato forces in Afghanistan can hold suspects for a maximum of four days before releasing them or handing them over to the Afghan authorities. However, the period can be extended. The Foreign Office spokeswoman said: “The UK has a national policy of detaining beyond 96 hours in exceptional circumstances, in particular where it could provide information that could help protect our forces or the local population.” News of the arrests came as the UK handed responsibility for security in Helmand’s capital, Lashkar Gah, to Afghan forces on Wednesday in a step towards the planned pullout of British combat troops by the end of 2014. Afghanistan Taliban Richard Norton-Taylor guardian.co.uk

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A leopard that strayed into an Indian village mauled 11 people before wildlife officials managed to sedate it with tranquilizer darts. The fully-grown big cat later died of injuries sustained in a fierce battle with villagers, who used knives and stones to beat it back, the AP reports. Six villagers,…

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MP attacks Hague over review of arms sales to Arab regimes

Former Conservative defence minister challenges claim of ‘no evidence’ of misuse of UK-supplied weapons during Arab spring Senior MPs have delivered a severe rebuke to the government over its approval of the sale of a wide range of arms, including sniper rifles, machine guns and “crowd control goods” to countries in the Middle East and north Africa. Britain supplied the weapons despite official guidelines stating that exports of equipment that could be used for internal repression must be blocked. In a damning report earlier this year, the Commons arms export controls committees demanded an urgent review of exports to “authoritarian regimes worldwide”. They referred specifically to the Mubarak and Gaddafi regimes in Egypt and Libya, to Bahrain, Syria, Yemen and Saudi Arabia. Observers said military trucks sent by the Saudis to help suppress demonstrations in Bahrain were British. In a written statement slipped out earlier this week, the foreign secretary, William Hague, said that in light of the committees’ findings, the government had conducted a review. It “concluded that there was no evidence of any misuse of controlled military goods exported from the United Kingdom”. Hague added: “Consultations with our overseas posts revealed no evidence that any of the offensive naval, air or land-based military platforms used by governments in north Africa or the Middle East against their own populations during the Arab spring, were supplied from the United Kingdom.” But in a stinging response, Sir John Stanley, a former Conservative defence minister and chairman of the arms controls committees, said he was not surprised by the outcome of the government’s review. “Given that there has been, understandably, an almost total absence of official observers in close proximity to the violent internal repression that has been taking place, and given also the fact that the UK government approved arms exports including machine guns, sniper rifles, combat shotguns and ammunition were not emblazoned with union jacks, it is hardly surprising that the [Foreign Office] could safely conclude ‘there was no evidence of any misuse of controlled military goods exported from the United Kingdom’,” Stanley said. The fact that the government had now revoked 157 arms export licences to north Africa and the Middle East provided “the clearest evidence of the scale of the misjudgment of the risk that arms approved for export to certain authoritarian countries in north Africa and the Middle East might be used for internal repression, a misjudgment by both the present government and its predecessor”, Stanley added. He has written to Hague, demanding more information about the government’s arms exports policy and asking why the government had not revoked arms and arms-related exports to Saudi Arabia, Syria, and Yemen, as well as to Libya, Egypt, and Bahrain. In a report in April, the Commons committees said the government must set out “how it intends to reconcile the potential conflict of interest between increased emphasis on promoting arms exports with the staunch upholding of human rights”. The MPs also castigated the government for failing to demonstrate satisfactorily whether, and if so how, it assesses the risk that individual arms exports may be linked to bribery and corruption. Defence policy Arms trade William Hague Middle East Saudi Arabia Egypt Libya Syria Yemen Bahrain Richard Norton-Taylor guardian.co.uk

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Phone hacking: Met police to investigate mobile tracking claims

Whistleblower Sean Hoare claimed the News of the World would pay officers to illegally procure phone-tracking data Scotland Yard has been asked to inspect thousands of files that could reveal whether its officers unlawfully procured mobile phone-tracking data for News of the World reporters. There were half a million requests by public authorities for communications data in the UK last year – of which almost 144,000 were demands for “traffic” data, which includes location. A Metropolitan Police Authority (MPA) member has asked the force to investigate allegations that News of the World reporters were able to purchase this data from police for £300 per request. The claims were made by Sean Hoare, the News of the World whistleblower, days before he was found dead at his home on Monday. His disclosure about the purchase of illicit location data was first made to the New York Times , which said the practice was confirmed by a second source at the tabloid. Police have said Hoare’s death was not suspicious. Mobile phone location data, which is highly regulated, would give tabloid reporters access to a method of almost total surveillance, arguably even more intrusive than hacking into phone messages. Jenny Jones, a Green party member of the MPA, has written to the commissioner requesting an audit of all cases where the Met obtained tracking data from mobile phone companies. She has also asked the commissioner to guarantee that anyone with reason to suspect a tabloid may have gleaned their whereabouts from their mobile phone signal will have their case looked into. Two police surveillance sources with knowledge of the system said location data was routinely used by police. Both said any corrupt purchase of information would require a fabricated request under the Regulation of Investigatory Powers Act (Ripa) and therefore the knowledge of a senior officer. The Met and other forces have central databases where they record Ripa authorisations for audits by the interception of communications commissioner. Police are also compelled to keep Ripa authorisations files under the same rules that compel them to keep evidence connected to criminal investigations, which in some cases can mean paperwork is stored for decades. Records are also kept by mobile phone providers, with at least one company maintaining an “indefinite” database of Ripa requests since 2009. This detailed audit trail contrasts with the paucity of evidence in cases of phone hacking, due to the fact that records of phone activity are generally destroyed after 12 months. The New York Times first reported that the News of the World may have had access to phone-tracking data last week, days before Hoare’s death. It said Hoare, a reporter who was sacked from the News International title in 2005, alleged that his editor Greg Miskiw could locate information about a person’s precise whereabouts via their mobile phone number. Hoare claimed that Miskiw had once helped him locate a person in Scotland, and said the information came from “the Old Bill”. The following day he told the Guardian that reporters would ask a news desk executive to obtain the location of a target: “Within 15 to 30 minutes someone on the news desk would come back and say: ‘Right, that’s where they are.’” He added: “You would just go to the news desk and they would come back to you. You don’t ask any questions. You would consider it a job done.” Hoare made no reference to which police force may have sold the data, although the Metropolitan police is currently investigating evidence that corrupt officers from within its ranks were selling information to the News of the World. Mobile phone companies can provide police with real-time location information about the whereabouts of suspects or missing people at 15-minute intervals. More commonly, police request a “cell site dump”, which gives a complete historical record of the whereabouts of person’s mobile phone. There are two ways the data is obtained. When a phone is used for a call or SMS message, details of its location are logged. Alternatively so-called “pinging” can be used when a phone is not in use, by sending the device signals and triangulating the results from cellphone masts. The level of accuracy ranges from a few hundred metres to around two kilometres, depending on proximity to the masts. Mark Lewis, a solicitor who represents phone-hacking victims, said: “I have sources that I can’t reveal who tell me they could do it [obtain the data].” He said he had clients who suspected they had been tracked: “One or two were very suspicious about how they had been found – simply because they were where they were not supposed to be.” If police want to monitor the contents of emails or calls to combat terrorism or serious crime they require a warrant from the home secretary. Far more common however is the interception of communications data, which relates to the “who, where and when” of messages or calls. There is a complex framework through which the data is channelled from phone companies to police. Phone companies provide data to “police liaison units” – funded by the Home Office – which contain a handful of people with maximum security clearance to deal with incoming requests. Police in turn have special points of contact (Spocs), who liaise with the mobile phone companies and process the requests. They are trained and accredited by the National Policing Improvement Agency and given unique pin numbers. There are almost 600 accredited Spocs in police forces on a nationwide register maintained by the Association of Chief Police Officers . Under Ripa, these gatekeepers require detailed justifications from a senior officer to request phone information as part of an investigation, in a process that can take up to ten days. In emergencies, senior police can request the information orally, but paperwork is retrospectively filed centrally. Anyone who suspects their phone was inappropriately tracked is able request details from police or their phone provider under the Data Protection Act . Phone hacking News of the World Metropolitan police Police Newspapers & magazines National newspapers Newspapers Paul Lewis guardian.co.uk

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Irish PM’s attack on Catholic church a ‘wake-up call’, says archbishop

Diarmuid Martin, archbishop of Dublin, speaks after Enda Kenny accuses Vatican of downplaying abuse of Irish children by clerics The archbishop of Dublin has said the Irish prime minister’s attack on the Catholic church following a report on child sex abuse in the country should be a wake-up call for clergymen. Enda Kenny launched his unprecedented attack on the Vatican in the Irish parliament, accusing it of downplaying the rape and torture of Irish children by clerical sex abusers. He said the recent Cloyne report had exposed an attempt by the holy see to frustrate the inquiry into child sex abuse just three years ago and illuminated the “dysfunction” and the elitism still dominant in the Vatican. Archbishop Diarmuid Martin – close to tears in an interview on RTE Television – said the only way all allegations, abuse and cover-ups could be exposed was through invasive audits of each diocese. “I’m very disappointed, annoyed,” he said. “What do you do when you’ve got groups, whether in the Vatican or in Ireland, who try to undermine what is being done or simply refuse to understand what has been done?” The archbishop said the diocese of Cloyne had ignored Vatican policy issued in 2001 by the then Cardinal Joseph Ratzinger, now Pope Benedict. “What does that say? What sort of a cabal is this that is in there [Cloyne]?” He added: “If they think that by not getting at the truth they are helping the church, the statement in today’s Dail should teach them a lesson.” Kenny had told the parliament that the Vatican seemed more interested in upholding the power and reputation of the Catholic church than in confronting the abuse of Irish children by its priests and religious orders. He said that the Vatican’s attitude to investigations in Cloyne, which covers county Cork, was the “polar opposite of the radicalism, the humility and the compassion that the church had been founded on”. He said the rape and torture of children had been downplayed, or managed, to uphold instead the institution with its power and reputation. One of the most damning findings of the report was that the diocese failed to report nine out of 15 complaints made against priests, which “very clearly should have been reported”. This latest report, coming after a string of inquiries into Catholic clerical sex abuse across Ireland, has set the present Irish government on a collision course with the church not only in the republic but at its global headquarters in the Vatican City. Vatican spokesman Fr Federico Lombardi, speaking in a personal capacity, had said that there was nothing in the advice given by the papal nuncio to Ireland in 1997 to encourage bishops to break Irish laws. He said that the Vatican’s advice to Irish bishops on child protection policies could not be interpreted as an invitation to cover up abuse cases. This drew sharp criticism from Ireland’s justice minister, Alan Shatter, who described the Vatican spokesman’s argument as disingenous. Some Irish parliamentarians have called on the Fine Gael-Labour coalition to expel the papal nuncio from Ireland in protest at the Vatican’s attittude to the allegations in the Cloyne diocese. Ireland Catholicism Enda Kenny Vatican Child protection Religion Christianity Europe Henry McDonald guardian.co.uk

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Mau Mau torture claim Kenyans win right to sue British government

Four Kenyans allegedly tortured at hands of colonial officials during 1950s insurgency can pursue compensation, judge rules Four Kenyans who claimed they were tortured at the hands of colonial officials during the Mau Mau insurgency in the 1950s have won the right to sue the British government. Without deciding whether there had been systematic torture of detainees, the judge, Mr Justice McCombe, ruled that they had arguable cases in law to pursue claims for compensation. The decision is a severe setback for the Foreign Office which had argued that the UK government should not be answerable for any abuses committed by the former British colony and that liability had devolved onto the present Kenyan government. The judge described the UK authorities’ attempts to avoid responsibility as “dishonourable” but accepted that before a full trial the issue of whether the injuries were sustained too long ago – and beyond any period of limitations – would have to be argued at a separate hearing. Of the five original Kenyan claimants, one has already died. The remaining four are all in their 80s. They allege that they suffered brutal treatment in detention camps at the hands of British colonial officials and soldiers, including castration and sexual assaults. In a summary of the judgment, McCombe said: “I have decided that these five claimants have arguable cases in law and on the facts as presently known that there was such systematic torture and the UK government is so liable.” Earlier in the judgment, he declared: “There is ample evidence in the few papers that I have seen suggesting that there may have been systematic torture of detainees during the [Mau Mau] emergency. “The [documents] evidencing the continuing abuses in the detention camps … are substantial, as is the evidence of the knowledge of both governments that they were happening and of the failure to take effective action to stop them.” Welcoming the decision, Martyn Day of the solicitors Leigh Day and Co who represented the Kenyan survivors, said: “It is an outrage that the British government is dealing with victims of torture so callously.” Kenya Africa Foreign policy Human rights Owen Bowcott guardian.co.uk

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