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Queen’s spending drops 5% to £32.1m

Reduction in maintenance bill for royal residences helps to reduce monarch’s annual costs The Queen cost the taxpayer £32.1m in the last year – a drop of more than 5%. Her keeper of the privy purse, Sir Alan Reid , said that it was partly achieved by a pay freeze across all the royal staff, which will be continued this year, and by deferring spending on property maintenance – but warned that it will be difficult to cut spending any further. The Queen’s accounts – released as the attention of royal watchers is on the positive publicity being generated by her grandson and his new wife on their Canadian tour – show that spending has been cut by 19% in real terms over the past five years. They contrast strikingly with the accounts released last week for the Prince of Wales , which show that his income increased by 4% or £1m including money from the taxpayer, and his spending particularly on overseas travel also increased. The Queen’s travel spending was also significantly higher – reflecting many overseas events including her historic first state visit to Ireland – up from £3.9m to £6m, but her income from the civil list was down from £14.2m to £13.7m, and grants for property maintenance were down from £15.4m to £11.9m. In a statement Sir Alan said: “The Queen is very keen that the royal household should continue to reduce its expenditure in line with public expenditure reductions.” “The decrease in expenditure is due mainly to increased income generation, the deferral of property maintenance expenditure and the implementation of a pay freeze. This pay freeze will continue onto this year. However he warned the palace can not continue cutting at the same rate: “Over the past five years The Queen’s official expenditure has reduced by 19% in real terms and while the royal household will continue to identify efficiencies it will be very difficult for overall expenditure to reduce very much further without impacting on the royal household’s activities in support of the Queen and the long-term health of the estate.” Legislation is currently before parliament to change funding the Queen’s official spending to a new system called the sovereign grant, the biggest shakeup since the creation of the civil list – when the crown surrendered revenues from estates and assets in return for an annual grant – in the mid 18th century. Announcing the change in October, the chancellor, George Osborne, announced that the taxpayer’s funding of the Queen would remain frozen for a further year, and that royal spending would be expected to reduce by 14% by 2012-13. The Queen Monarchy Maev Kennedy guardian.co.uk

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Police reforms could threaten public safety, warns senior officer

Sir Hugh Orde, president of the Association of Chief Police Officers, says reforms ‘run risk of compromising safety of citizens for reasons of expediency’ One of Britain’s top police officers has warned that the government’s police reform programme, combined with spending cuts, risks compromising public safety. Sir Hugh Orde, the president of the Association of Chief Police Officers (Acpo), warned that if the introduction of elected police commissioners, the creation of a national crime agency and other changes were mismanaged they risked undermining the historic British tradition of policing. Orde told the Acpo summer conference meeting in Harrogate, North Yorkshire on Monday that the “service of last resort” faced a period of “changes to accountability, changes to central structures and changes to pay and conditions, which, if mismanaged, could threaten the impartial model of policing that has existed for 180 years and is revered around the world”. He said: “We understand the government’s determination to deliver a substantial programme of reforms across the public sector, but we cannot afford to get policing wrong and, unless greater clarity emerges in the very near future, I fear we run the risk of compromising the safety of citizens for reasons of expediency.” He said the public sector was facing its most challenging times in living memory: “In short, we have a change programme that, at one end, will produce some of the most radical changes to police governance since 1829 and, at the other, will without question reduce police and staff numbers and pay.” Orde earlier told the BBC that concerns centred on the “loose ends where we lack clarity”. He explained that at the same time that police pay reforms were being negotiated, the national police improvement agency, which delivers all the IT and police training, was being dismantled and a national crime agency was being proposed but not even draft legislation had yet been produced. “So bring that all together and add a new accountability structure currently making its way through the House of Lords and what you see is a very confused policing landscape that needs to be cleared up before we can move on.” The home secretary, Theresa May, is due to address the Acpo conference later and is expected to defend the government’s police reform programme and drive to find savings in the police service. The £11bn annual Whitehall grant to police forces is due to be cut by 20% by 2014-15. However, Yvette Cooper, the shadow home secretary, said May would be deeply unwise not to heed such a serious warning from one of Britain’s top police officers. She said: “David Cameron and Theresa May are taking big risks on law and order. Hugh Orde is right to point out that the home secretary is reducing police numbers and police powers but increasing the risk of politicisation. “This endangers the centuries-old tradition of impartiality as well as the effectiveness of the police and it is communities that will pay the price.” Police Public services policy Alan Travis guardian.co.uk

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Police reforms could threaten public safety, warns senior officer

Sir Hugh Orde, president of the Association of Chief Police Officers, says reforms ‘run risk of compromising safety of citizens for reasons of expediency’ One of Britain’s top police officers has warned that the government’s police reform programme, combined with spending cuts, risks compromising public safety. Sir Hugh Orde, the president of the Association of Chief Police Officers (Acpo), warned that if the introduction of elected police commissioners, the creation of a national crime agency and other changes were mismanaged they risked undermining the historic British tradition of policing. Orde told the Acpo summer conference meeting in Harrogate, North Yorkshire on Monday that the “service of last resort” faced a period of “changes to accountability, changes to central structures and changes to pay and conditions, which, if mismanaged, could threaten the impartial model of policing that has existed for 180 years and is revered around the world”. He said: “We understand the government’s determination to deliver a substantial programme of reforms across the public sector, but we cannot afford to get policing wrong and, unless greater clarity emerges in the very near future, I fear we run the risk of compromising the safety of citizens for reasons of expediency.” He said the public sector was facing its most challenging times in living memory: “In short, we have a change programme that, at one end, will produce some of the most radical changes to police governance since 1829 and, at the other, will without question reduce police and staff numbers and pay.” Orde earlier told the BBC that concerns centred on the “loose ends where we lack clarity”. He explained that at the same time that police pay reforms were being negotiated, the national police improvement agency, which delivers all the IT and police training, was being dismantled and a national crime agency was being proposed but not even draft legislation had yet been produced. “So bring that all together and add a new accountability structure currently making its way through the House of Lords and what you see is a very confused policing landscape that needs to be cleared up before we can move on.” The home secretary, Theresa May, is due to address the Acpo conference later and is expected to defend the government’s police reform programme and drive to find savings in the police service. The £11bn annual Whitehall grant to police forces is due to be cut by 20% by 2014-15. However, Yvette Cooper, the shadow home secretary, said May would be deeply unwise not to heed such a serious warning from one of Britain’s top police officers. She said: “David Cameron and Theresa May are taking big risks on law and order. Hugh Orde is right to point out that the home secretary is reducing police numbers and police powers but increasing the risk of politicisation. “This endangers the centuries-old tradition of impartiality as well as the effectiveness of the police and it is communities that will pay the price.” Police Public services policy Alan Travis guardian.co.uk

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French nuclear power plant explosion heightens safety fears

Blast at EDF’s Tricastin power station in Drôme comes days after nuclear authorities found 32 safety concerns at plant An explosion sparked a fire at a French nuclear power station on Saturday just two days after the authorities found 32 safety concerns at the plant. The blaze at the Tricastin plant in Drôme in the Rhône valley sent a thick cloud of black smoke into the sky. A mistral wind sent it south over a nearby motorway on one of the busiest travel days of the year as the French left for their summer holidays. EDF, which runs the power station, said the incident had happened in an electric transformer situated in the non-nuclear part of the plant and had not resulted in any radiation leak or any other contamination. A statement issued by the energy giant raised more concerns as it omitted to mention the explosion – only a fire – and did not give the cause of the blaze. “This event happened in the non-nuclear part of the installation and had no radiological consequence on the environment and the population. The fire brigade was immediately called and the fire was rapidly brought under control. Nobody was hurt,” it said. It added that the plant’s number one reactor was not in operation at the time of the fire having been “closed for it’s annual maintenance”. Police confirmed there was no environmental contamination. On Thursday France’s nuclear safety authority the Autorité de sûreté nucléaire (ASN) demanded 32 safety measures at the Tricastin number one reactor, a 900 MW water pressurised reactor built in 1974 and put into operation in 1980. In 2007 an ASN report had concluded: “the site must make improvements in management and training” and criticised the plant’s procedure for dealing with fires as “taking too long”. The following year uranium leaked from the number two reactor at Tricastin during a cleaning operation and contaminated local rivers. Swimming and fishing were banned as a precaution. Although one of the oldest reactors in use in France, the ASN agreed last year that its working life could be extended for another decade. The safety measures revealed last week include greater protection against fire, flooding and earthquakes including improvements to the methods of cooling of the nuclear fuel rods in order to lessen the risk of an explosion of hydrogen at the heart of the reactor. The ASN said the faults in the reactor were “known and under surveillance” and ordered that the new safety measures should be completed before December 2014. A week ago the French president, Nicolas Sarkozy, bucked the anti-nuclear trend sweeping Europe since the Fukushima disaster by pledging €1bn of investment in atomic power as well as “substantial resources” to strengthen research into nuclear safety. France has 58 nuclear reactors, 34 of which are reactors of the type at Tricastin and have an average age of 28 years. About 74% of the country’s electricity comes from nuclear sources and it is the world’s largest net exporter of nuclear energy. Sarkozy said France was known to be “considerably ahead” of other countries in terms of atomic power technology and safety. “Our power stations are more expensive because they are safer,” he said last week. After the Fukushima nuclear accidents in March, caused by a combination of earthquake and tsunami, the French prime minister, François Fillon, asked the ASN to carry out an “open and transparent” audit of the country’s nuclear installations, examining the risks of flood and earthquake damage, loss of power and cooling, and emergency accident procedure, to examine if any improvements could be made. Its conclusions are expected in September. Corinne Morel-Darleux, local member of the Parti de Gauche (Left party) said: “It was not a nuclear accident but it’s an incident that was seen and raises questions about the security of this plant.” France Nuclear power Energy EDF Energy Europe Kim Willsher guardian.co.uk

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Kerala temple’s secret vaults yield £12bn in treasure

Jewels piled in sacks and tonnes of gold at Thiruvananthapuram temple worth more than India education budget Investigators plan to pry open the final vault hidden deep beneath an old Hindu temple where treasure worth more than India’s entire education budget has been found. A seven-member team of experts has so far entered five of the six secret subterranean vaults piled high with an estimated £12.5bn-worth of jewels, which have lain untouched for hundreds of years. The temple has been placed under round-the-clock police guard as onlookers and devotees thronged the shrine in the centre of Thiruvananthapuram, the capital of southern Kerala state. Sacks filled with diamonds were found next to tonnes of gold coins and jewellery, reports claimed, in the vaults of the 16th-century Sree Padmanabhaswamy temple, the royal chapel of the former rulers of Travancore, now part of Kerala. “The current market value of the articles found so far by the committee members would be roughly 900bn rupees[£12.5bn],” one temple official who was not authorised to speak to the media said. Investigators searched the vaults to draw up an inventory of the riches amid deep security fears. They said they had no idea of the amount of treasure they would find. Estimates of the haul’s worth range across billions of pounds, with investigators unwilling to disclose the official amount given the ambiguity involved in valuing priceless jewels and gold coins by weight. Police set up a dedicated control room close to the temple on Monday, as Kerala’s chief minister, Oommen Chandy, pledged full state security for the hoard and promised it would remain the property of the temple after an inventory was made. “We are ready to protect the temple wealth. We will chart out measures for the permanent security in consultation with the Travancore royal family, which administers the temple now, and the chief priest of the temple,” Chandy said. Historians supported the estimates of the treasure’s value, noting the lucrative trade routes that passed through the region for many centuries. “Traders, who used to come from other parts of the country and abroad for buying spices and other commodities, used to make handsome offerings to the deity for not only his blessings but also to please the then rulers,” said PJ Cherian, director of Kerala Council for Historic Research. As estimates of the treasure’s worth rise, a fierce debate is growing regarding what to do with the hoard, in a country where 450 million people live in poverty. Leaders of the Hindu community want the wealth to be invested in the temple, while many intellectuals, including former supreme court judge VR Krishna Iyer, have suggested it should be used for the public good. The government has said it would adhere to the supreme court’s ruling on ownership of the treasure found in the temple, which is still controlled by the royal family – unlike other temples in Kerala managed by the government. The vaults were searched after a lawyer petitioned the country’s top court to order the government to take over the temple as it did not have adequate security. Several temples in India have billions of dollars worth of wealth as devotees donate gold and other precious objects as gifts to spiritual or religious institutions that run hospitals, schools and colleges. The Tirumala temple in eastern Andhra Pradesh state is reported to have three tonnes of gold, a third of which it deposited with the State Bank of India last year, while spiritual guru Sai Baba, who died in April, left behind an $9bn estate. India Hinduism Religion guardian.co.uk

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Interview: Armando Iannucci on moving beyond the BBC

The creator of The Thick of It tells Dan Sabbagh how being online has boosted his credibility and why he’s gone beyond the BBC – despite being ready to man the barricades to save its digital channels Armando Iannucci, comedy all-rounder, is pretty clear what he thinks about the BBC – saying that he will “man the barricades” in support of a corporation that has commissioned so many of his programmes, from I’m Alan Partridge to The Thick of It. Yet, curiously, after several years embedded in a comedy unit inside the corporation, and a shorter spell as a freelance while his Anglo-American film In the Loop was coming together, Iannucci has moved beyond the BBC’s orbit. He has a new job, working for an independent producer, Baby Cow, as chief creative officer, and reckons that when it comes to comedy at least “the ecology is healthy”, or to put it another way, “I’d like to sell something to ITV”. Unlike others of his generation who have made the switch from BBC to indie, Iannucci “doesn’t want to be running a business”. Baby Cow is owned by his friends, Henry Normal and Partridge star Steve Coogan, and for Iannucci, who doesn’t live in London, its offices are a useful base for future projects. He talks hopefully about working in a way that “takes me out of my comfort zone” and notes that “Baby Cow doesn’t do a funny panel show” and that “it doesn’t do BBC1 or [again] ITV”. Where we meet, in an office on a largely disused floor, there are piles of old scripts and background notes, including, at the top of a box of papers, Alan Partridge’s life story, presumably background and inspiration for a Partridge movie that is in the works. Nor is he short of things to do – as well as the film there is a series for HBO, and more of The Thick of It coming up. He believes that for the first time in years “the BBC is not the only place to go to” for comedy writers, citing “the squeeze on their budgets” and pointing out that ITV, Channel 4 and “even Sky” are moving into comedy. Plus there is money to put content online – Iannucci wrote the Alan Partridge North Norfolk Digital series that appeared first on the internet, sponsored by Foster’s. “The ecology is healthy,” he says; no worries about the death of public service broadcasting here. He frets more about BBC executives’ ability “to turn themselves into a police station even when they haven’t committed a crime” under the slightest pressure from tabloid critics – although he is shrewd enough not to get drawn into complaining about any over-zealous culture of compliance. He also voices concern about the prospect of BBC cuts. A particular concern is the vague threat of closure still hanging over BBC3 and BBC4. “BBC3 and 4 combined are where Channel 4 was when it started up,” he says, arguing that “The Thick of It wouldn’t have got on as a BBC2 show” because of the pressure of needing a certain level of ratings. Conversation with Iannucci bumps around; he tends to answer questions fairly briefly and unemotionally, and sometimes a full answer emerges only after returning to a topic a few times. He wants to work on more of Mid Morning Matters, set in North Norfolk Digital, which shows “you can just do a comedy without a channel controller giving you the OK”. The first of the 12 episodes attracted over 1m views, and the web series is now being reversioned for TV. Later, it emerges he wants to develop an Alan Partridge app “sometime next year” but – importantly – he doesn’t want it to be some sort of news feed site because that would make for a boring interactive experience. “We did a Malcolm Tucker app, and thought, let’s invent a story. So the phone turned into Malcolm Tucker’s phone, where other cast members left him messages. Over 30 days you can follow the story.” Partridge, though, isn’t going fully digital, even if the thinking behind taking the character online was in part that it was a good fit – one can imagine the perennial underachiever appearing on YouTube because his television career was finally over. But then there is the film too. A script is with the BBC, but, Iannucci says: “It’s not Alan goes to Hollywood; it’s very Norwich-based.” He says he wants to introduce Partridge to a new generation through the mixture of old and new media. “My 11-year-old thinks I’m cool because he watches things I’ve made on YouTube,” he says, adding that the vast video archive is critical now for comedy. “A lot of people only know Eddie Izzard from YouTube, where they watch his standup.” Warming to this theme, he argues that YouTube is the arena where comic careers now begin. “If you wanted to be in comedy, it used to be the case you wrote scripts or did standup. Now people just send me YouTube links of their own work.” But he doesn’t think broadcasters such as the BBC should be putting up raw submissions because “as with anything creative, 90% of it is shit”. Politics, meanwhile, dominates the rest of his work. After a break, there’s a new series of The Thick of It coming next year, somehow surviving the fall of New Labour. “The cast has dispersed; there’s been a change of government.” But who is going to be the hapless minister? “There’s always been Roger Allam,” he points out. Allam played Peter Mannion, the Tory shadow minister for social affairs and citizenship, with more than a hint of Ken Clarke, in a special and in series three back in 2009. One wonders how super-aggressive spin-master Malcolm Tucker will survive in opposition, and indeed without Alastair Campbell in No 10, to which Iannucci’s first answer is: “It’s not written yet.” Later though, he observes that it has taken time to “get under the skin of the coalition”, adding: “It’s been interesting to watch the two parties get on. It looked like David Cameron’s laid-back style was more efficient, but in fact it looks like a mess. They keep changing their minds.” He says that “politics feels unreal” at the moment, and that “when Cameron and Clegg wander into the room, you don’t think that’s the prime minister and deputy prime minister. They are two sales executives. The gravitas with politics has gone.” Political influence It is tempting to think that Iannucci has had a little to do with that himself. It is not uncommon for those who work in politics to conclude that at any one time they are among either the hopeless characters from The Thick of It or the heroic ones from The West Wing. Continuing the theme, his next project is Veep, for HBO, a eight-parter which is set in the vice president’s office, and stars Julia Louis-Dreyfus. “This is a person who has stood in an election and lost to the president – so they inevitably think that they are better than them. I think that’s a funny dynamic.” Working for HBO has stimulated him, and he takes satisfaction from the fact that the programme is likely to be aired in the UK on Sky Atlantic very soon after it airs in the US, because the British channel has a long-term output deal with the US broadcaster. “In a way it doesn’t matter where a programme is made,” he says, highlighting the transatlantic sensibility and economics of upscale television. Increasingly, he believes that US broadcasters are competing for UK talent: “The problem will come if the US starts buying up every project they like.” But it hard to imagine American viewers warming to something as British as Alan Partridge in big numbers, even if Steve Coogan is an increasingly familiar actor on the far side of the pond. Later I ask him directly about whether comic art has overtaken real life, and in particular politics, given how influential The Thick of It was and is. This time he gives a vivid example. “When I was doing the research for Veep, I went around the West Wing, shown around by Obama’s personal aide. The West Wing is rather disappointing, it’s poorly lit, it’s a warren. “Obama’s aide was in this tiny room, with a single bookcase – but from his door there was the Oval Office. Anyway, he was showing us around and he was saying ‘this is the Roosevelt Room – that would be where CJ and Josh [characters from the West Wing] would have been talking’ and I thought why not say that’s where this president or that president did this or that. What’s happened is that the only shared reality we have is things we have seen on television.” Iannucci may not have written The West Wing, but the point is clear enough. And for a writer, director, producer and performer who has helped create some of the reality-defining shows of the past two decades, the opportunities have never been greater, given the growing market for his work, in the UK and the US, on screen and online. Armando Iannucci BBC BBC3 Television industry BBC4 Comedy Television Radio comedy YouTube Dan Sabbagh guardian.co.uk

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Thai army ‘will not challenge’ Yingluck Shinawatra coalition

As sister of former leader Thaksin Shinawatra announces coalition deal, army says it accepts Thailand election results Thailand’s outgoing defence minister has said the army will not intervene after supporters of exiled former prime minister Thaksin Shinawatra swept to another resounding general election victory. Thaksin’s younger sister Yingluck, who fronts the Puea Thai party, announced she had agreed a coalition deal with four minor parties that would give the new government 299 seats. Puea Thai won an absolute majority with 264 seats in the 500-seat parliament, according to preliminary election commission results that could still shift somewhat. But by moving fast to cement its triumph with outside support has made it harder for opponents to intervene. It paves the way for Yingluck to become the country’s first female prime minister. Thaksin was toppled by a military coup in 2006 and now lives in Dubai as a fugitive due to an abuse of power conviction that he says was politically motivated. His Thai Rak Thai party and its successor were also disbanded and many of their leaders banned from politics – yet he continued to command massive popular support, as the electoral landslide showed. Puea Thai campaigned on the promise: Thaksin thinks – Puea Thai does. Yingluck said her first task was the “roadmap to reconciliation” after years of unrest. She also cited the need to tackle high prices, improve international relations and curb corruption. Meanwhile, outgoing Democrat prime minister Abhisit Vejjajiva said he had decided to step down as party leader, although his right-hand man, Surichoke Sopha, also a Democrat MP, said he believed the party still wanted Abhisit. Surichoke added: “I don’t think this [Puea Thai] government will last long … They will have to compromise with the ruling class and at the same time satisfy the grassroots.” The country has become polarised between Thaksin supporters, particularly the rural poor and new money – and the old elites that sought to keep him from power with the support of the urban middle classes. The split became even more entrenched when more than 90 people died as the military cracked down on Thaksin-supporting protesters in the centre of Bangkok last year. While redshirt leaders were jailed over the demonstrations, the government refused to acknowledge that the army had caused any deaths. General Prawit Wongsuwan, a former army chief close to leaders involved in the ousting of Thaksin, said the military would not intervene or stop Yingluck forming a government. “I can assure you that the military has no desire to stray out of its assigned roles,” he told Reuters. “The army accepts the election results.” Political analyst Chris Baker cautioned: “They always say they have nothing to do with politics and then they keep interfering.” But he added: “They are obviously feeling quite sensitive after the last five years. They know they made a mess of it. “They are going to be very reluctant to make a move that puts them in the public eye in politics. They are going to pull the strings of the [anti-Thaksin, conservative and monarchist] yellowshirts and that sort of thing. I think we are more likely to see a formula of street demonstrations and judicial action [than coups].” Activist and former senator Jon Ungpakorn believed the scale of the Puea Thai win should offer protection against a coup even in the long term. “I’m not so concerned about the army now and more that the [anti-Thaksin] People’s Alliance for Democracy and ultra-nationalist and monarchist sections of society may cause trouble.” He predicted attempts to disband the party, perhaps because of the involvement of Thaksin, who is banned from political activity in Thailand. Democrats have made it clear they will challenge Puea Thai wins in particular constituencies on legal grounds, but the sheer number of seats Puea Thai won means that may not have much impact on the overall outcome. Ungpakorn added: “At the same time we need a lively criticism of the new government and not allow Puea Thai to behave like the old Thaksin government trying to stifle political opposition and criticism.” Experts say much will also depend on how carefully Puea Thai plays its hand. They campaigned in part on an amnesty for Thaksin, but know that bringing him back too quickly could galvanise opposition. Speaking from Dubai, Thaksin told reporters: “In Thailand, things are changing. I don’t think a coup d’etat will happen again soon.” Thailand Thaksin Shinawatra Tania Branigan guardian.co.uk

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Ratko Mladic removed from war crimes court after being disruptive

Former Bosnian Serb army chief refused to enter plea and interrupted judge as charges against him were read out Former Bosnian Serb army chief Ratko Mladic was removed from the UN war crimes court at The Hague on Monday after refusing to enter a plea and disrupting the judge’s attempts to read out the charges against him. Presiding judge Alphons Orie warned Mladic several times on Monday not to interrupt him as the defendant argued he should be allowed to choose his own lawyers. “No, no, I’m not going to listen to this without my lawyer,” Mladic shouted as he removed his translation headphones when judge Alphons Orie began reading out the charges. Shortly before guards escorted Mladic from court, he shouted at Orie: “You want to impose my defence. What kind of a court are you?” After a brief break, Orie resumed the hearing and began reading out the charges against Mladic. The tribunal judges entered not guilty pleas to 11 charges on Mladic’s behalf, which include genocide, and relate to the 43-month siege of the Bosnian capital Sarajevo and the massacre of 8,000 Muslim men and boys in Srebrenica. Ratko Mladic War crimes International criminal court Serbia Bosnia and Herzegovina Europe guardian.co.uk

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Politics live blog – Monday 4 July 2011

Rolling coverage of all the day’s political developments as they happen including the launch of the report from Andrew Dilnot’s commission on funding of care and support 10.15am: More questions. Q: Why did you not impose a cap on the amount people would have to spend on hotel costs? Could someone end up losing their home to pay these costs? Dilnot says that if you are living at home, you pay for your food and accommodation. It would be unfair if people in care homes did not have to pay these costs. The report says these “hotel” costs should be capped at between £7,000 and £10,000. These charges are reasonable because pension credit guarantees an income of just over £7,000 to people in retirement. Q: The report recommends implementation from 2013. Would you be disappointed if this were to slip to 2014 or beyond? Dilnot says the report say it should be implemented “with pace”. The commission used this phrase because it sounded “modern and thrusting”, he jokes. The system does need reforming. In some respects, it is the last vestiges of the Poor Law. It would be naive to expect all parties to back the idea immediately. Dilnot says he will not be disappointed if the white paper arrives by Easter of next year. (A few moments ago Dame Jo Williams said she hoped it would come by the end of the year.) He would like implementation to start by 2014. But he is not too worried about the precise date. Lord Warner says the commission was asked to report within a year, so that the government could legislate in the next session of parliament. He assumes that is still the plan. But some measures could be implemented more quickly, he says. 10.09am: The questions are still going on. Q: Is there anything in your plans to stop people going to the most expensive care homes available? Dilnot says a cap could provide people with a “perverse incentive” to go to a very expensive home, so that they reach the £35,000 cap quickly. But Dilnot says he is proposing a system that takes into account what reasonable spending would be. Q: In the light of Southern Cross, do you have any thoughts on how care sector regulation could be improved? Dame Jo Williams says Southern Cross raises questions about whether or not there is a role for an economic regulator in the sector. Q: Who should people consult for advice on this area? Lord Warner says the commission backs a Law Commission proposal for councils to be given a statutory duty to provide advice on care 10.00am: Dilnot is still taking questions. Q: At what age do you envisage people starting to take out insurance for their care costs? Dilnot says at the moment people cannot plan for anything. At the moment people build up wealth in their homes and in their pensions. It might be sensible to see if those saving vehicles could be linked to saving to cover the costs of care. Q: What will you do if the report is kicked into the long grass? What will your response be? “Astonishment”, says Dilnot. Dilnot asks Dame Jo Williams how the care sector would feel if the report were kicked into the long grass. (Williams is chair of the Care Quality Commission.) Williams says people want more than talk. “It’s time for change.” People need to be able to plan. “It’s time for action,” she says. She hopes and believes that the government will publish a white paper by the end of the year. If the government were not to do this, then “disappointment” would not be the right word. The commission would be “disgusted”, she says. Dilnot says he wants the government to talk to interest groups and the other parties. He wants cross-party consensus. These are not “easy things” to do. But he is “confident” that something will happen. 9.52am: Q: The report mentions the possibility of a specific tax for pensioners to fund this. What are you proposing? (I’ve just found this section. It’s on page 74. It says the government could fund the proposal by raising extra money through taxation, by reprioritising existing expenditure or by introducing a specific tax increase. On this, it says “it would make sense for this [tax] to be paid at least in part by those who are benefiting directly from the reforms. In particular, it would seem sensible for at least a part of the burden to fall on those over state pension age.”) Dilnot says his report deliberately does not make recommendations on this because this is a “political decision”. Q: Would women have to pay higher premiums to pay for their care (because they live longer)? Dilnot says women would be the main beneficiaries of these changes, because they are more likely to have significant care needs. He says we will have to “wait and see” what products the financial services industry produce. 9.50am: Dilnot says the report does not just cover funding. It also proposes a major information campaign to improve the information and advice available to people about care. Carers need more support, he says. The system of assessing people’s care needs should be made more consistent too, he says. Dilnot is now taking questions. 9.42am: Dilnot says he has been studying means tests for 30 years. He illustrates the way the current means test works, with a chart showing a straight line dropping after £23,250 – because at that point people lose all their assets if they need to pay for care. Dilnot says they had a debate in the commission about when it was right to use the term “cliff edge”. This really is a cliff edge, he says. It’s crazy. The commission is proposing a fairer system. People with assets worth more than £150,000 would only have to pay up to £35,000 in care costs, he says. But the cap would be lower for people with fewer assets. For example, for people with £40,000, it should be set at £9,000; for those with £50,000 it would be set at £12,000. 9.37am: Dilnot says people told the commission they were “frightened” of the future because they did not know what costs they would face. At the moment, if you face care costs of £150,000, the worst position to be is right in the middle of the index of wealth distribution. This group face the risk of losing 84% of their assets, he says. (The politics of this chart are fascinating. It explains exactly why this is such a “Middle England” issue. It’s in the report, on page 36.) 9.35am: Dilnot is illustrating his opening remarks with charts projected onto a screen. It’s a bit like an Institute for Fiscal Studies briefing. Dilnot, of course, did used to run the IFS. One person in 10 aged 65 will face care costs of more than £100,000, he says. But at the moment there is no insurance system that enables people to cover this risk. The current system is “under enormous pressure”, he says. 9.30am: Dilnot is starting his press conference now. He is on the platform with the two other members of his commission, Lord Warner and Dame Jo Williams. Dilnot starts by saying that we should be celebrating the fact the people are living for longer. His report says that the number of people aged 85 and over in England is expected to double to 2.4m over the next 20 years. (The report only covers England, although Dilnot’s commission has consulted the devolved administrations about its plans.) Spending on social care is currently only £14bn, he says. Total government spending is about £700bn. It’s good to bear that in mind, Dilnot says. 9.17am: I’m at the QE2 centre in Westminster, in a suite where the press conference is due to start in about 10 minutes. The report itself is only 80 pages long, but the commission has published a second document, running to 195 pages, containing its supporting evidence. Dilnot has already given us the key points. (See 8.40am.) Here are some other findings and recommendations that stand out. • Dilnot’s claim that his plans would cost £1.7bn is based on the government capping the amount that people have to contribute to their care costs at £35,000. But the report suggests any figure between £25,000 and £50,000 would be an acceptable level for the cap. A £50,000 would cost the government just £1.3bn, while a £25,000 cap would cost £2.2bn. • Dilnot says that, under his plans for a new cap on costs and a higher means-testing threshold “no one going into care would have to spend more than 30% of their assets on their care costs”. Under the current system, people face losing up to 90% of their assets. • Dilnot says the government has already put more money into adult social care. But he says this money is not all getting through. “The impact of the wider local government settlement appears to have meant that the additional resources have not found their way to social care budgets in some areas,” the report says. • Anyone who enters adulthood with a care and support need – ie, a severe disability – should be eligible to free state support without being subject to a means test, the report says. The proposals has not been trailed in advance, but for some families it could turn out to be hugely significant. 8.52am: I’m off to the Dilnot press conference now. There’s an embargo until 9.30am, and so I won’t be posting until then. In the meantime, here’s a short reading list. • A Guardian interview with Andrew Dilnot • An article by David Brindle and Tom Clark in the Guardian explaining the background to today’s announcement • A report put out by the Dilnot comission explaining the responses to its consultation (pdf) 8.40am: The long-awaited report from Andrew Dilnot’s commission on funding of care and support is being published later this morning but Dilnot has just been on the Today programme and he’s spilled the beans on the main outline of what he’s proposing. Here are the main points. • Care costs should be capped at £35,000, Dilnot says. That means people would not have to pay any more than that for their care. (At the moment people can face unlimited bills.) But this figure would be means-tested, and for people with limited assets the cap would be lower. • So-called “hotel costs” would also be capped . Under Dilnot’s plan, although care costs would be capped at £35,000, people would still have to pay the cost of food and accommodation – as they would if they were healthy and able to look after themselves at home. But Dilnot says that the cost of these charges should be capped at between £7,000 and £10,000 a year to stop care homes raising fees excessively. • The means-test threshold should be raised to £100,000 . At the moment people have to pay for their own care if they have assets [ie, a home] worth more than £23,250. Dilnot says this figure should be raised to £100,000. • The total cost of the package would be £1.7bn a year. Dilnot insisted that as affordable. It was one four-hundredth of total public spending, he said. • Dilnot insisted that the government was not going to ditch his plans . On his Telegraph blog this morning , Benedict Brogan said the idea was “DOA” [dead on arrival] because it was going to cost too much. But Dilnot rejected this. “I have spoken with all the main players in this area,” he said. “I do not think that’s the position we are in.” He said he thought there would be a white paper on this subject next spring and that, although the government was unlikely to start funding the scheme before 2014, “by then we are almost certain to be seeing some shift”. • Dilnot said the current system was flawed . “At the moment there’s a massive market failure,” he said. “There’s a big area of our lives where you cannot get any risk coverage.” Dilnot is holding a press conference at 9.30am. I’ll be covering it live on the blog, and focusing on the report, and the reaction to it, for most of the morning. Later I’ll start to broaden out and focus on some of the other politics around. Here’s a full list of what’s coming up today. 9.30am: Andrew Dilnot publishes his report on the funding of care and support at an off-camera press briefing. 10am: Andrew Lansley , the health secretary, speaks at the Faculty of Public Health annual conference. 10am: William Hague attends the unveiling of a statue of Ronald Reagan outside the US embassy. 10.15am: The Labour MP Graham Allen launches his government-commissioned report on early intervention . In an article for the Guardian on Saturday , Iain Duncan Smith warmly welcomed Allen’s proposals. 2pm: The NHS Future Forum publishes a report with recommendations on changes to the health bill. As usual, I’ll post a lunchtime summary at around 1pm, and an afternoon one at about 4pm. House of Commons Carers Social care Long-term care Older people Andrew Sparrow guardian.co.uk

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Fox News’s hacked Twitter feed declares Obama dead

Rogue 4 July tweets on TV news channel’s politics service go viral but Fox News is apparently back in control Fox News has apparently fallen victim to hacking, with its politics Twitter feed repeatedly announcing President Barack Obama had been shot dead . @foxnewspolitics began tweeting the information to its 33,000 followers at about 2am local time, with the posts rapidly being shared around the internet. The rogue tweets appeared to begin after the account sent a message saying Fox had just “regained full access to our Twitter account”. The following tweets all related to the supposed death of Obama, with some posts being very specific about the president’s injuries. “@BarackObama has just passed. The President is dead. A sad 4th of July, indeed. President Barack Obama is dead,” came the first tweet . The string of messages continued : “@BarackObama has just passed. Nearly 45 minutes ago, he was shot twice in the lower pelvic area and in the neck; shooter unknown. Bled out”, and then : “@BarackObama shot twice at a Ross’ restaurant in Iowa while campaigning. RIP Obama, best regards to the Obama family.” Whatever the hoaxer’s identity, they do not appear to have been entirely web-savvy. The first three posts revealing the president’s death were directed to the @BarackObama Twitter feed, meaning only those following both accounts would have seen the messages. The unknown tweeter appeared to realise the error of their ways, switching tack to post three more tweets that would have been seen by all followers: “#ObamaDead, it’s a sad 4th of July. RT to support the late president’s family, and RIP. The shooter will be found; “BREAKING NEWS: President @BarackObama assassinated, 2 gunshot wounds have proved too much. It’s a sad 4th for #america. #obamadead RIP; “We wish @joebiden the best of luck as our new President of the United States. In such a time of madness, there’s light at the end of tunnel.” Fox News was not immediately available for comment. Fox Twitter Internet Blogging Barack Obama United States Fox News TV news Television industry US television industry Adam Gabbatt guardian.co.uk

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