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Overseas artists boycott Britain in protest at  visa clampdown

A Russian-born poet on US passport, Alex Galper, is held in cell and deported for planning to speak at arts festival A growing number of foreign artists, ranging from grassroots fringe performers to world-renowned stars, are ruling this country out of their future travel plans due to difficulties with obtaining visas. They are following in the footsteps of the admired Iranian film director Abbas Kiarostami, who abandoned plans to come to Britain to direct an opera after the UK embassy in Tehran asked him to submit his application documents twice. Since its introduction in 2008, a revised system for short-term visitors has seen many artists, photographers and musicians threatened with deportation . Border officials routinely take fingerprints and ask for assurances that visitors do not plan to use their cameras, paintbrushes or instruments , in case they are coming for paid work. The latest high-profile artist to rue his decision to travel to Britain is the Russian writer Alex Galper. A fortnight ago the acclaimed poet, who studied under Allen Ginsberg in New York, came to Britain on his American passport to give a poetry recital. But he was refused entry at Luton airport and is threatened with a 10-year ban. “I said to them, ‘I don’t have to tell you what I am doing. I am an American citizen.’ But they put me in the deportation room,” said Galper this weekend from New York. His case has fuelled efforts by the anti-censorship pressure group English PEN – together with the London Mayor’s office – to call on the government to scrap the approach currently adopted by the UK Border Agency. Jonathan Heawood, director of English PEN, said: “The UK Border Agency seem to have lost their passport to common sense. They told us that their heavy-handed treatment of visiting artists was a thing of the past, but that message has clearly not filtered through to the airport officials who treated Alex Galper so appallingly. A visa for unpaid artists already exists and should have been offered to Alex. Instead, he was treated like a criminal and deported without his personal belongings, and the charity event he had hoped to attend was ruined.” English PEN argues that foreign artists do not take work from British and European residents since they are invited here for their specific abilities. The organisation would like to see the so-called Entertainer Visitor Route redefined as Artist Visitors to provide more clarity. At the moment, only artists who come into Britain to take part in a “permit-free” event, such as the annual Edinburgh International Festival, are allowed to accept a fee. PEN claims this creates unnecessary confusion. “The current points-based visa system places a huge financial and bureaucratic responsibility on artists,” added Heawood. “To invite just one artist to the UK as a ‘licensed sponsor’ costs over £500. This might be affordable to large institutions, but is far too expensive for small groups. The UKBA don’t understand writers and artists, and they don’t understand the value of art and literature to the UK economy and society.” Galper did not need to apply in advance for a normal tourist visa. Although Russian by birth, he has a job in New York, and writes and promotes his poetry part-time. He first flew to Britain a month ago to stay with a friend and then accepted an invitation to attend a poetry event in Germany, taking an overnight trip to Berlin. Galper also received an invitation from a London-based theatre company, the Gruntlers Arts Group, to appear for no fee at a fundraising gala night. However, when Galper flew back to Luton from Germany, he was questioned by border officials who were suspicious that he could not show them an onward ticket for travel. Galper had, he said, made a booking for a return flight over the internet, but had no paper documentation. The Border Agency officials called Galper’s friend in London, who mentioned that he was due at the charity poetry event that evening. As a result, it was ruled that Galper had been deliberately deceptive and had intended to work in Britain. After making a phone call to the event organiser, David Parry, Galper was held in a cell overnight before being deported back to Germany the next day. “I knew all these people had been waiting for me in London,” said Galper. “Appearing there and meeting people would have been the highlight of my life. Instead I had to leave all my clothes at my friend’s house and travel without them for a month.” Back in London, the fundraising event was a flop and the journalists who came to interview Galper were sent home. “I am still hopping mad with anger about it,” said Parry. “I wanted to get some Beat poets together and there was a lot of interest. Then I got a call from Alex at the airport and he could not understand what was happening to him.” A Border Agency spokesperson said: “Creative artists from across the world are welcome to perform in the UK. However, as with any visitors, we expect individuals to meet entry requirements.” Immigration and asylum Arts policy Poetry guardian.co.uk

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Statue looted from church in the Blitz returned

A medieval statue stolen from a London church in 1941 was spotted at an auction house A treasured 17th-century statue that was looted from one of London’s last-surviving medieval churches during the Blitz has been returned to its rightful owners more than 70 years after it disappeared. The work, a sculpted and painted likeness of Dr Peter Turner, an eminent 17th-century botanist and physician at London’s St Bartholomew’s hospital, was stolen from St Olave’s church near the Tower of London on the night of 17 April 1941, when bombing severely damaged the church. Last month, the 1614 statue was finally brought back home to the church, restored in the 1950s, ending a 14-month legal dispute, which exposed the art trade’s failure to question the origin of works being sold on. In 2009, churchwardens received a tip-off from the Museum of London that the statue was about to be sold by Dreweatts, a British auctioneer, on behalf of an anonymous seller for an estimated £70,000. The church lodged a claim, and Dreweatts withdrew the statue from auction, retaining it until the case was resolved. The seller rejected calls to hand it back, insisting he had acquired it in good faith. The Art Loss Register, which liaises with the police and the art trade to help track down stolen artworks, waived its fees to take up the church’s cause. Detective work by the register’s lawyer, Christopher A. Marinello, revealed a chain of previous buyers included Paul de Grande, a Belgian ecclesiastical dealer, who had bought the statue from a trader in Holland who, in turn, had named a British dealer, Gray Dench from West Malling, as the original seller. Marinello’s research showed that the name was false and the trail led him to Gray Elcombe, who operated as an antique dealer and had been imprisoned for serious crimes. Marinello said: “I do not believe that de Grande or the Dutch dealer knew that this bust was stolen. The legal issues involved are very complex and will likely be discussed in art law publications in the future. However, both dealers knew that the bust originated from St. Olave’s. One simple phone call to St. Olave’s would have brought the true history to light.” The Dutch dealer declined to comment, but de Grande told The Observer that he did not ring St Olave’s because wartime photographs of its bombed state led him to believe it had been destroyed. In fact, St Olave’s stonework was largely reconstructed in the early 1950s. He detailed its connection to St Olave’s to the auction-house – information which, he said, ultimately led to its return. The statue, which had stood in St Olave’s for centuries, surviving the Great Fire of 1666 and watching over the resting place of diarist Samuel Pepys, will undergo conservation work before being reinstalled in the church. London Second world war Dalya Alberge guardian.co.uk

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Labour calls for schools to teach ‘route into work’

Andy Burnham says secondary schools should give pupils more vocational opportunities Any secondary school pupils not planning to go to university would be given a clearer “route into work” under Labour party plans for a new education contract between the individual and the state. Andy Burnham, the shadow education secretary, will this week reveal plans which would aim to give every secondary school pupil a path to employment if they met a set of required standards under a revamped curriculum more geared to the world of work. The idea, one of the first to emerge from Labour’s policy commissions, reflects its view that current thinking is geared too much to those heading to university and leaves the “forgotten half” languishing with little hope, having studied subjects that are too often ill-suited to modern working life. Burnham’s idea would involve a radical reshaping of the curriculum so that it offered a much wider choice of subjects than those included in education secretary Michael Gove’s English baccalaureate. More vocational subjects would be included, such as engineering, business studies and information and communications technology. “Latin is in and engineering is out [of the baccalaureate]. Why? It is the thinking of the 1950s,” Burnham said. “I want to give a clear message of hope to every young person that says: if you work hard and get up to the required standard, you can go on to something of value.” While stressing the ideas were still in the planning stage, he made clear that a further expansion of apprenticeships in the public and private sectors would be needed if the government was to meet its obligations under the contract. “The NHS, with a workforce of 1.3

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Labour calls for schools to teach ‘route into work’

Andy Burnham says secondary schools should give pupils more vocational opportunities Any secondary school pupils not planning to go to university would be given a clearer “route into work” under Labour party plans for a new education contract between the individual and the state. Andy Burnham, the shadow education secretary, will this week reveal plans which would aim to give every secondary school pupil a path to employment if they met a set of required standards under a revamped curriculum more geared to the world of work. The idea, one of the first to emerge from Labour’s policy commissions, reflects its view that current thinking is geared too much to those heading to university and leaves the “forgotten half” languishing with little hope, having studied subjects that are too often ill-suited to modern working life. Burnham’s idea would involve a radical reshaping of the curriculum so that it offered a much wider choice of subjects than those included in education secretary Michael Gove’s English baccalaureate. More vocational subjects would be included, such as engineering, business studies and information and communications technology. “Latin is in and engineering is out [of the baccalaureate]. Why? It is the thinking of the 1950s,” Burnham said. “I want to give a clear message of hope to every young person that says: if you work hard and get up to the required standard, you can go on to something of value.” While stressing the ideas were still in the planning stage, he made clear that a further expansion of apprenticeships in the public and private sectors would be needed if the government was to meet its obligations under the contract. “The NHS, with a workforce of 1.3

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British bid to attract 10,000 Brazilian students

Minister flies to Brazil to recruit fee-paying foreign students in a ‘desperate’ ploy to balance the university funding books Ministers have been accused of seeking to plug a black hole in university funding by arranging for 10,000 fee-paying Brazilians to study in the UK. David Willetts, the universities minister, flew to South America last month to arrange a deal that he hopes will be highly lucrative at a time of cuts to state funding for higher education. The Brazilian government is planning to provide up to £18,700 a student. Universities UK, the representative body for universities in this country, said it welcomed the plan, which promised “rich rewards”. The development follows a £200m cut by the coalition government to state funding for higher education, which will mean 24,000 fewer places for UK and EU students, including teacher training allotments, over the next two academic years. Figures published last week also suggested that 220,000 UK and EU students would be unable to attain places this autumn following a 1.4% year-on-year increase in demand for university places as of the end of June. While the Brazilians will not take places otherwise available to British and EU students, concerns were raised last night that the government’s funding model for higher education is becoming increasingly reliant on attracting overseas nationals who, if they had been born in the UK, might have struggled to attain a place at a university in this country. Brazil does not have a single institution in the Times Higher Education Supplement list of the world’s 200 top universities. Willetts’s mission also appears to fly in the face of a vow by the home secretary, Theresa May, earlier this year to bring in regulations that would result in 85,000 fewer non-EU nationals coming to the UK to study each year as part of plans to curb immigration. Sally Hunt, general secretary of the University and College Union, said: “UK higher education benefits massively from having staff and students from across the world. However, the government must not use overseas students as cash cows, and as a way of bailing out its flawed university funding plans. “With hundreds of thousands of domestic students set to miss out on a university place this summer, ministers shouldn’t be looking to ration access on the basis of who can pay the most. “If the UK wants to remain competitive in the global knowledge economy, we should be following the example of competitor nations and expanding student capacity for both home and overseas students.” The shadow universities minister, Gareth Thomas, said Willetts’s trip to Brazil was a “desperate” move. He added: “I am all for increasing exports, but with the government having cut teaching funding by 80% and funding for world-class facilities by 40%, this looks like a desperate attempt to help universities balance their books. “With David Cameron and David Willetts having axed almost 24,000 domestic student places, many English families who see loved ones turned away from university this summer will wonder if the government has got its priorities right.” Usman Ali, vice-president for higher education at the National Union of Students, said: “Instead of spending his time touting for a Brazilian bailout to the student funding chaos he created, David Willetts should reverse the cut he imposed to domestic student numbers that risks leaving many without a place this summer.” The deal was discussed at a roundtable meeting in Brazil attended by Willetts, Brazilian ministers, and 13 British university vice-chancellors, including those from Birmingham, Warwick and Nottingham. The details have yet to be finalised, but it is expected that the Brazilian undergraduates would stay in the UK for nine months, although the British government is also exploring the possibility of offering postgraduate courses. Non-EU students pay fees of up to £26,000 a year and are not counted within the allotment that each university is allowed to take on each year. It is estimated that the numbers of overseas students being educated in the UK could double in four years as universities seek sources of revenue amid a squeeze on central government funding. Durham University is expecting a 97% rise in the number of international students between now and 2014-15, and Exeter anticipates a 73% rise across four of its colleges. Figures show that the number of British students gaining places on degree courses starting last autumn fell by 0.1%, from 425,063 to 424,634. But the number of non-EU students rose by 7.8%, from 32,984 to 37,088. There was a 27.8% increase in students from China and a 20.4% rise in students from Singapore, although the improvement of higher education in both of these countries could see a future fall in numbers. A government spokesman said that talks over the Brazilian deal were at an early stage. A statement from Universities UK – whose chief executive, Steve Smith, joined Willetts in Brazil – said: “The scholarships are for a period of under one year and will not mean fewer places for UK students. “A successful scholarship programme will bring clear benefits to the UK and Brazilian HE sectors and their wider economies, contributing to the knowledge base in both countries, encouraging collaboration in world-class research and facilitating staff and student exchange.” University funding David Willetts Higher education Brazil Daniel Boffey guardian.co.uk

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British bid to attract 10,000 Brazilian students

Minister flies to Brazil to recruit fee-paying foreign students in a ‘desperate’ ploy to balance the university funding books Ministers have been accused of seeking to plug a black hole in university funding by arranging for 10,000 fee-paying Brazilians to study in the UK. David Willetts, the universities minister, flew to South America last month to arrange a deal that he hopes will be highly lucrative at a time of cuts to state funding for higher education. The Brazilian government is planning to provide up to £18,700 a student. Universities UK, the representative body for universities in this country, said it welcomed the plan, which promised “rich rewards”. The development follows a £200m cut by the coalition government to state funding for higher education, which will mean 24,000 fewer places for UK and EU students, including teacher training allotments, over the next two academic years. Figures published last week also suggested that 220,000 UK and EU students would be unable to attain places this autumn following a 1.4% year-on-year increase in demand for university places as of the end of June. While the Brazilians will not take places otherwise available to British and EU students, concerns were raised last night that the government’s funding model for higher education is becoming increasingly reliant on attracting overseas nationals who, if they had been born in the UK, might have struggled to attain a place at a university in this country. Brazil does not have a single institution in the Times Higher Education Supplement list of the world’s 200 top universities. Willetts’s mission also appears to fly in the face of a vow by the home secretary, Theresa May, earlier this year to bring in regulations that would result in 85,000 fewer non-EU nationals coming to the UK to study each year as part of plans to curb immigration. Sally Hunt, general secretary of the University and College Union, said: “UK higher education benefits massively from having staff and students from across the world. However, the government must not use overseas students as cash cows, and as a way of bailing out its flawed university funding plans. “With hundreds of thousands of domestic students set to miss out on a university place this summer, ministers shouldn’t be looking to ration access on the basis of who can pay the most. “If the UK wants to remain competitive in the global knowledge economy, we should be following the example of competitor nations and expanding student capacity for both home and overseas students.” The shadow universities minister, Gareth Thomas, said Willetts’s trip to Brazil was a “desperate” move. He added: “I am all for increasing exports, but with the government having cut teaching funding by 80% and funding for world-class facilities by 40%, this looks like a desperate attempt to help universities balance their books. “With David Cameron and David Willetts having axed almost 24,000 domestic student places, many English families who see loved ones turned away from university this summer will wonder if the government has got its priorities right.” Usman Ali, vice-president for higher education at the National Union of Students, said: “Instead of spending his time touting for a Brazilian bailout to the student funding chaos he created, David Willetts should reverse the cut he imposed to domestic student numbers that risks leaving many without a place this summer.” The deal was discussed at a roundtable meeting in Brazil attended by Willetts, Brazilian ministers, and 13 British university vice-chancellors, including those from Birmingham, Warwick and Nottingham. The details have yet to be finalised, but it is expected that the Brazilian undergraduates would stay in the UK for nine months, although the British government is also exploring the possibility of offering postgraduate courses. Non-EU students pay fees of up to £26,000 a year and are not counted within the allotment that each university is allowed to take on each year. It is estimated that the numbers of overseas students being educated in the UK could double in four years as universities seek sources of revenue amid a squeeze on central government funding. Durham University is expecting a 97% rise in the number of international students between now and 2014-15, and Exeter anticipates a 73% rise across four of its colleges. Figures show that the number of British students gaining places on degree courses starting last autumn fell by 0.1%, from 425,063 to 424,634. But the number of non-EU students rose by 7.8%, from 32,984 to 37,088. There was a 27.8% increase in students from China and a 20.4% rise in students from Singapore, although the improvement of higher education in both of these countries could see a future fall in numbers. A government spokesman said that talks over the Brazilian deal were at an early stage. A statement from Universities UK – whose chief executive, Steve Smith, joined Willetts in Brazil – said: “The scholarships are for a period of under one year and will not mean fewer places for UK students. “A successful scholarship programme will bring clear benefits to the UK and Brazilian HE sectors and their wider economies, contributing to the knowledge base in both countries, encouraging collaboration in world-class research and facilitating staff and student exchange.” University funding David Willetts Higher education Brazil Daniel Boffey guardian.co.uk

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Celebrate! Today’s a holiday. Sort of. July 9, 2011, is one of only six dates this century that will form a string of consecutive odd numbers when written down numerically, AOL News notes. As in, 7/9/11. The previous ones were 1/3/05, 3/5/07, and 5/7/09. The two in the future will…

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Jose Vargas joins fight for immigration reform after he admits: I am an illegal alien

Pulitzer Prize winner sets up lobby group Define American A Pulitzer prize-winning US journalist who caused a sensation in America by revealing he was an illegal immigrant is now openly campaigning for immigration reform in the United States. Jose Vargas recently stunned the worlds of American politics and journalism by writing a lengthy confessional piece, revealing that he had been unwittingly smuggled into the country as a young boy from the Philippines. He went on to forge an illustrious reporting career at some of the country’s best known publications and has now set up a campaigning group to press for immigration reform. The development turns Vargas from journalist into advocate and plunges him into one of the most contentious debates in American politics. There are an estimated 11 million illegal immigrants in the US. In recent months several states have passed strict anti-illegal immigrant laws that some activist groups say amount to racial profiling. Advocates of a crackdown, however, say illegal immigrants have played the legal system and taken away American jobs. Vargas has now set up an organisation called Define American that aims to lobby for reform and fight prejudice about who makes up America’s huge population of illegal aliens. In a video on the group’s website, Vargas tells how he discovered his papers were fake when he was 16 and went on to lead a secret life as someone who had no legal right to live in the US, but was a very successful professional. “I pay taxes. I am self-sufficient. I am an American. I just don’t have the right papers. I take full responsibility for my actions and I am sorry for the laws that I broke,” he says on the video. Campaigners have welcomed Vargas’s stance. “Jose is just one of many people who were brought here as children and who now want to legalise their status. He puts a face on a story and counters some of the ugly arguments made by anti-immigrant groups,” said Tyler Moran, policy director of the National Immigration Law Centre. Campaigning groups are currently focused on the so-called Dream Act, a piece of legislation aimed at allowing students who graduate from high school in the US but who arrived illegally as children to be granted permanent residency rights. At the moment there are numerous cases of such teenagers facing deportation orders. “These are often model students in our schools,” said Moran. However, the legislation is currently held up in Congress and unlikely to pass due to trenchant Republican opposition. Many Republican politicians, motivated by a largely anti-illegal immigrant base, have moved to the right on the issue in recent months as the presidential election looms next year. Moran said there was little chance the Dream Act would pass before then. “It is impossible to do almost anything in Congress right now,” she said. US immigration New York Newspapers Paul Harris guardian.co.uk

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South Sudan celebrates a sweet day of separation

The world’s newest republic enjoyed its independence day, but bitterness over the long struggle for freedom lingers on David Morbe had paint on his jeans, his shirt, his hands and the frames of his black-rimmed glasses. Beads of sweat clung to his forehead and ran down his back, past the inch-long shrapnel scar. Chisel in hand, he walked slowly around the base of his giant sculpture, carefully inspecting the detail on the eagle crest in front, and the name inscribed on the back – John Garang de Mabior. Morbe knew that nothing he created would ever be as important as the four-metre tall statue of South Sudan’s liberation hero that he and his two fellow sculptors had conceived and built. It was Friday evening in Juba, the southern capital. In a matter of hours, tens of thousands of people, virtually all of whom had suffered in some way during nearly 40 years of conflict since the end of colonial rule, would surround the statue on this dirt field to celebrate the birth of their nation, after a tragic false start 55 years ago. “The independence of Sudan back then was the beginning of slavery in South Sudan,” said Morbe, 35, as the sun began to set. “This is going to be the real independence for our people.” The moment arrived shortly after noon in sweltering heat on Saturday. Watched by dozens of heads of state, including Sudan’s Omar al-Bashir, the south’s wartime enemy, southern president Salva Kiir – black suit, black tie, black cowboy hat – unveiled Morbe’s statue to huge cheers. Christian and Muslim leaders said prayers, and Sudan’s national anthem played. “That’s the last one [that we sing], the end!” shouted a government official gleefully in the VIP stands. A man dressed as the Statue of Liberty held a sign that read: “Free at last. Republic of South Sudan.” Soldiers and traditional dance troupes paraded by before the Speaker of the southern parliament read the independence proclamation. The Sudanese flag was lowered, and the flag of South Sudan raised. Kiir took the oath of office. The north-south, Arab-non-Muslim divide that has always existed in Sudan was made official; the country split in two. “We congratulate our brothers in the south for the establishment of their new state,” said Bashir, taking to the podium. “The will of the people of the south has to be respected.” Congratulations flooded in from afar. David Cameron, who was represented by Britain’s foreign secretary, William Hague, said it was “an historic day, for South Sudan and the whole of Africa”. “Reaching this moment has required leadership and statesmanship from all sides. The actions of the government in Khartoum in recognising South Sudan’s independence have been significant, and I hope that today marks the beginning of a new and peaceful chapter in relations between north and south.” The US president, Barack Obama, granted South Sudan immediate recognition as an independent state. “Today is a reminder that, after the darkness of war, the light of a new dawn is possible,” he said. In the huge crowd, where boys held up paper flags and women ululated, emotions were barely contained. “This is very great actually,” said Taifa Kuer, a finance ministry official who, at the age of seven, became one of Sudan’s famous “Lost Boys”, marching for a month to Ethiopia before returning to fight for the rebel cause when he was just 14. “We have prepared for the next generation so they won’t suffer like we had to.” Like many elated southerners, Kuer seemed stunned that the day had in fact arrived, which was perhaps unsurprising, given the mistrust that has existed between the north and south. Indeed, when Bashir and the then rebel leader Garang signed a peace deal to end the second, 21-year-long civil war in 2005, many doubted it would last. The agreement allowed for a six-year interim period where the south would govern itself, and have an equal share with the north of the revenues from the oil produced from beneath its own soil. The prize at the end of the transition was a vote for southerners on unity or secession. Garang advocated unity – the southern struggle was a struggle for marginalised people all over Sudan, he argued – but when he was killed in a helicopter crash just a few months after the peace deal the notion of unity died with him. In the referendum in January, 99% of voters chose secession. The results spoke less of southern unity – there are dozens of ethnic groups in the south, and no real collective identity – than a desperate desire to rid themselves of the decades-long oppression and marginalisation by the northern government. When it achieved independence from Britain in 1956, Sudan was two distinct regions and peoples joined into one: a dry, Arab-dominated north, and a more lush, ethnically African south. The tension and suspicions were already rife; indeed, southern rebels had already taken up arms the year before, fearing, correctly, that the Arab leaders in Khartoum would exploit and abuse them. Charity Yuyada, 68, who watched the ceremony on television in Juba because she was “too old” to attend in person, remembered being forced to take school classes in Arabic rather than English. “That made us hate that language and the [Arab] people,” she said. That first war lasted 17 years, and claimed hundreds of thousands of lives. Yuyada spent two and half years living in the bush. Peace lasted from 1972 to 1983, before Garang launched a new rebellion led by his Sudan People’s Liberation Army (SPLA). So heavy was the fighting in the countryside that Yuyada was forced to move to Juba, which was held by northern forces. When the SPLA launched attacks on the city in 1990, Yuyada moved to Khartoum for safety. She stayed there, a second-class citizen separated from her extended family, until this January, when she returned to Juba a day before the referendum. “In that 21 years of war we had lost hope of freedom,” she said. “I’m so happy we are separating.” But her excitement could not hide her lingering bitterness, which was also plain to see in the town centre. Among the many banners offering positive messages for the new country’s future, there was this poem, printed on a banner sponsored by the Ministry of Energy and Mining: Our independence south is our separate house That embrace all the southerners To live freely in the bush Africans with our own traditions Herders after cows Farmers in the fields Fisherman along the Nile Hunters in the jungle Illiterate with the goat leathers Backwards with the bird feathers Much better than to be scholars, Under the Arabs’ domination” Morbe, the sculptor, had in fact been a scholar under Arab domination. He was born and raised in Juba, suffering the shrapnel wound during the SPLA offensive on the city in the early 1990s. “It was a terrible time here during the war, not possible to describe,” he said. “But we bore it.” He was desperate to join the rebels, but it proved extremely difficult, since nobody was allowed to leave Juba without the permission of the northern government. So he concentrated on his studies, and in 2002 he won at place in the fine arts programme at Sudan University of Science and Technology, in Khartoum. On graduation, he wanted to take up a teaching post, but was denied “because I am a southern and I am not Muslim”, he said. Instead, he returned to the south, finding work as a teaching assistant at Juba University’s arts faculty. Last year, together with two other southern fine arts graduates, Anthony Gordon and Emmanuel Mateayo, he came up with the idea of a giant sculpture to commemorate the new nation. After presenting the proposal to the government’s council of ministers, they received the go-ahead and a budget – and the news that the statue would be the centrepiece of the independence celebrations. “I am so proud to have been part of this moment,” Morbe said. “This day that we have wished for.” South Sudan Africa Xan Rice guardian.co.uk

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Heart disease has been the curse of Dick Cheney’s life since he had the first of five heart attacks more than 30 years ago, but he sees a silver lining. That first heart attack came during his 1978 run for Congress in a tight race. “As I looked back on…

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