Is the living room heading for extinction?
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Is the living room heading for extinction?
This article is from the BBC News website. © British Broadcasting Corporation, The BBC is not responsible for the content of external internet sites.
Tens of millions of pounds of NHS money from a Portsmouth hospital is destined for an offshore tax haven, a BBC investigation finds.
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Tokyo Electric Power Company may face as much as 2 trillion yen ($23.6bn) in compensation claims, according to JP Morgan.
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A pilot project aimed at boosting the confidence of young cancer sufferers could be rolled out after successful trials.
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Scotland’s political leaders will face questions about business and the economy as they go head-to-head at a hustings in Edinburgh.
The event on Tuesday evening has been organised by the Federation of Small Businesses (FSB).
On the podium will be the SNP’s Alex Salmond, Labour’s Iain Gray, Lib Dem Tavish Scott, Conservative Annabel Goldie, and the Greens’ Patrick Harvie.
Campaigning for all parties continues ahead of the 5 May poll.
As the fourth week of electioneering gets under way, the Scottish Lib Dems, the Scottish Tories and Scottish Labour are promoting their manifesto commitments published last week.
The SNP is preparing for its manifesto launch later this week. The Scottish Greens are also due to publish their manifesto.
About 200 invited guests from Scotland’s small business community are expected to quiz the five political leaders at the hustings taking place at Dynamic Earth.
The event, in association with the Sunday Times Scotland, will be chaired by political broadcaster Colin Mackay.
(Source: Scottish Government Corporate Statistics 2010)
Andy Willox, the FSB’s Scottish policy convener, said: “Scotland’s small businesses have faced some tough times since the last Scottish Parliament elections. Our members have been leaned on by banks and big business.
“Many still sometimes feel that government at all levels can forget how important they are.
“However, we are encouraged at the pro-small business stance adopted by all the parties in this election.
“They know, as we do, that Scotland’s small businesses have a track-record of creating jobs, generating revenues and advocating for community improvements.
“They know, with big business already shedding jobs and the public sector facing difficult times, it is more important than ever that they give small businesses the tools they need to get on with the job.
“I look forward to seeing Scotland’s next first minister making their case to Scotland’s small businesses.”
The FSB says it is Scotland’s largest direct-member business organisation. It represents more than 20,000 Scottish members in every sector of the economy.
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The dead sister of a convicted child sex attacker is being exhumed from a church graveyard in Devon by police officers investigating sexual abuse.
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Many doctors recommend to their patients treatments that they would not pick for themselves, a study shows.
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The survival rate for bowel cancer surgery varies widely between hospitals in England, a study in the journal Gut shows.
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News International has written to another nine claimants in the phone-hacking scandal asking for further evidence that journalists intercepted their voicemail, it has emerged.
On Friday, the News of the World apologised to eight victims of hacking and set up a £20m compensation fund.
It has now come to light a further nine alleged victims received letters in which liability was not admitted.
A News International spokesman has confirmed the letters were sent.
The claims of the further nine claimants will be considered by lawyers at the News of the World’s parent company before a decision is made on whether they are also entitled to an apology and compensation.
On Sunday Charlotte Harris, a lawyer for some of the people who have accused the News of the World – including football agent Sky Andrew – said as many as 7,000 people might have been affected.
She said Mr Andrew would not accept a settlement until full disclosure about the newspaper’s behaviour was made.
On the same day lawyers for two of the News of the World’s phone-hacking victims – actress Sienna Miller and publicist Nicola Phillips – said the paper’s apology and offer of compensation were not enough.
The News of the World printed an apology over the long-running phone-hacking scandal in its latest edition.
The BBC understands that News International is ready to settle claims with eight people, including former Culture Secretary Tessa Jowell, her estranged husband, lawyer David Mills, designer Kelly Hoppen, sports broadcaster Andy Gray, and Joan Hammell, a former aide to ex-Deputy Prime Minister Lord Prescott.
There are 24 active claims against the paper being heard by High Court judge Mr Justice Vos.
In 2007, the first police investigation led to the convictions and imprisonment of then NoW royal editor Clive Goodman and private investigator Glenn Mulcaire, who was employed by the paper.
Last week, the NoW’s chief reporter Neville Thurlbeck, 50, and former news editor Ian Edmondson, 42, were arrested on suspicion of having unlawfully intercepted voicemail messages. They were subsequently released on bail until September.
News International – which also owns the Times and the Sun newspapers – said it would continue to co-operate with the Metropolitan Police inquiry.
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Iraq’s government has said members of an Iranian exile group must leave the country by the end of the year, after deadly clashes with security forces.
The People’s Mujahideen Organisation of Iran (PMOI) would be forced out of its base north of Baghdad, Camp Ashraf, “using all means”, a spokesman said.
But its members would be deported to a third country and not Iran, he added.
The PMOI’s political wing has said 34 people were killed and 300 injured in an “attack” on Camp Ashraf on Friday.
Medics say at least 10 died, while officials put the toll at three.
The PMOI, also known as Mojahedin-e Khalq, is considered a terrorist group by the US and Iran.
It set up Camp Ashraf in Iraq in the 1980s and was welcomed by then-President Saddam Hussein, who was fighting a war against Iran. He funded and armed the PMOI, which fought alongside Iraqi troops.
During the US-led invasion of Iraq in 2003, Camp Ashraf was bombed by coalition forces. PMOI leaders eventually agreed a ceasefire and its members were disarmed.
“We have to find a nation where they can go, and we will look to the UN to help”
Ali al-Dabbagh Iraqi government spokesman
In 2009, the US military handed responsibility for the camp to Iraq’s Shia-led government, which has repeatedly vowed to close it.
On Monday, Iraqi government spokesman Ali al-Dabbagh said that in the wake of last week’s violence the cabinet had “committed to implement an earlier decision about disbanding the terrorist group, the People’s Mujahideen Organisation of Iran, by the end of this year at the latest, and the necessity of getting it out of Iraq”.
“This organisation must be removed from Iraqi territory by all means, including political and diplomatic, with the co-operation of the UN and international organisations,” he said in a statement.
Iraq was “taking into consideration the wish of the PMOI members to choose the country in which they wish to reside”, he added.
“We have to find a nation where they can go, and we will look to the UN to help.”
A spokesman for the UN High Commission on Refugees, Andrej Mahecic, said residents of Camp Ashraf could apply individually for refugee status, which would help them find a permanent home.
But before that could happen, they would have to renounce violence as a means of achieving their goals, which some have refused to do, he added.
Shahin Gobadi, a PMOI spokesman based in Paris, said the camp residents would be willing to move to the US or EU member states willing to grant them asylum.
“We have no intention of staying in Iraq, but there has been no response,” he told the Reuters news agency.
Mr Gobadi said they were also willing to return to Iran, but only if it could be guaranteed that they would not be punished by the authorities.
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Libya’s most high-profile minister to flee the regime has called on all sides in the conflict to stop his country becoming “a new Somalia”.
Speaking publicly for the first time since coming to the UK, Moussa Koussa said: “The unity of Libya is essential to any solution and settlement.”
He told the BBC: “I ask everybody to avoid taking Libya into civil war.”
Mr Koussa was Col Muammar Gaddafi’s foreign minister until 12 days ago, when he fled to London.
He is a former head of Libyan intelligence and has been accused of being involved in the 1988 Lockerbie bombing.
He has been staying at an undisclosed location since travelling to the UK from Tunisia.
BBC’s security correspondent Gordon Corera said he was told Mr Koussa was not ready to be interviewed, but would give a statement in Arabic.
In the prepared statement, he said: “I ask everybody, all the parties to avoid taking Libya into civil war. This would lead to so much blood and Libya would be a new Somalia.
“More than that, we refuse to divide Libya. The unity of Libya is essential to any solution and settlement for Libya.”
He said the solution would come from the Libyans themselves through discussion and democratic dialogue.
The UK and its allies have a responsibility to ease the dialogue so that Libyans can build a democratic country, he added.
He went on to speak about his relationship with the UK, saying Britons were Libya’s friends, historically and on a personal level.
He also explained his reasons for leaving Col Gaddafi’s regime after 30 years.
He told how he had been “devoted” to his work and was confident and certain that it was serving the Libyan people.
However, he said, recent events had changed things and he was aware his resignation would bring problems but was ready to make a sacrifice.
The BBC’s Middle East editor Jeremy Bowen said Mr Koussa’s decision to speak in Arabic suggested he wanted to send a message back home – to both sides.
The former minister’s comments come as Libya’s rebels reject a proposal put forward by an African Union delegation to end the eight-week conflict.
The AU said Col Gaddafi had accepted the plan on Sunday, but on Monday his forces attacked the besieged western city of Misrata.
The US, the UK and Italy have repeatedly called for the Libyan leader to step down.
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The first series of documents have been released by the High Court in the legal challenge by Kenyans for abuses and torture more than 50 years ago.
The documents give further details of what ministers in London knew about how the colony was attempting to crush the rebellion that paved the way to independence.
The papers – the first of more than 17,000 pages – contain reports of British officers implicated in atrocities including the murder of suspected Mau Mau rebels.
One document sent to a cabinet minister says an officer was involved in burning alive a suspect held at a detention and interrogation camp.
Others detail the shock of a senior police commander sent from London to investigate.
Many of the documents released by the High Court on Monday evening were only recently found at the Foreign Office’s own archives after years of investigations by academics.
The papers were brought to the UK when Kenya became independent – but unlike other papers, they were never made public in the National Archives. Until weeks ago, they were in boxes at the Hanslope Park archives near Milton Keynes.
The four Kenyans who are suing the UK say the documents form a paper trail proving that London knew about and approved torture and abuse in Kenya.
The government denies the claim, saying London cannot be held responsible for the actions of a former colonial administration.
The documents, many of which have yet to be reviewed, cover the eight years of the May Mau uprising and emergency and the response in Kenya and London.
In 1952, Sir Evelyn Baring, Kenya’s governor, declared a state of emergency amid the growth of the Mau Mau movement. It was dedicated to overthrowing the colonial regime.
London sent troops to crush the rebellion, and the Kenyan administration built a series of “screening” or interrogation camps which were designed to break the will of suspects.
Some 150,000 Kenyans were subjected to screening. During the fighting, at least 11,000 rebels were killed – although academics think the true death toll could be more than twice that.
Many suspects taken into the “Pipeline” camps were treated increasingly harshly until they recanted. Others were put on trial in special courts and more than 1,000 were sent to the gallows.
According to the documents, officials were telling ministers as early as 1953 about forced labour in the camps and that “if therefore we are going to sin, we must sin quietly”.
But not all officials supported the policies.
Colonel Arthur Young, sent by London to run Kenya’s police, complained to Governor Baring about the “inhumanity” of various parts of the security forces amid his investigations of wrongdoing.
“The other lamentable aspect of this case is the horror of some of the so-called screening camps which, in my judgement, now present a state of affairs so deplorable that they should be investigated without delay,” said Col Young.
“An African who is unfortunate enough to suffer from the brutalities which are clearly evident has no-one to whom he can complain,” he wrote.
“I do not consider that in the present circumstances government have taken all the necessary steps to ensure that in its screening camps the elementary principles of justice and humanity are observed.”
He later quit over what he saw – but the documents show that reports were reaching the highest levels of Whitehall.
In January 1955, Baring sent a telegram to Alan Lennox-Boyd, the Secretary of State for the Colonies and a cabinet minister.
Baring told the cabinet minister that eight European [meaning white] officers had been accused of serious crimes, including accessory to murder. They would be given immunity from prosecution.
One district officer was accused of the “beating up and roasting alive of one African”.
A Kenyan Regiment Sergeant and a field intelligence assistance had been implicated in the burning of two further suspects “during screening operations”.
“I had not myself realised until today that the extension of the principle of clemency to all members of the security forces involved so many cases with Europeans as principals,” wrote Baring.
The military element of the uprising was effectively crushed in 1956 – but the Kenyan administration still had to deal with thousands held in camps.
“Main criticism we shall have to meet is that [the plan] which was approved by Government contained instructions which in effect authorised unlawful use of violence against detainees”
Alan Lennox-Boyd, Colonial Secretary
Baring’s administration devised the “dilution technique” – a system of assaults and psychological shocks to detainees, to force the compliance of the toughest Mau Mau supporters.
Baring telegrammed the Colonial Secretary in London asking for his approval to use “overpowering” force.
Lennox-Boyd was told that one commander, Terrence Gavaghan, had developed the techniques at the Mwea camps in central Kenya – and he needed permission to treat the worst detainees in a “rough way”.
The cabinet minister’s approval came within weeks, according to court documents.
The papers show that a ministerial delegation saw firsthand prisoners beaten for refusing to don camp clothes. Ringleaders of the “Mau Mau moan” – a chant of defiance – were singled out for special punishment.
They were beaten and forced to the ground. Once there, a boot was placed on their throat while mud was forced into their mouths.
“European officers themselves carried out the violence necessary, the senior ones leading and directing,” said the document.
One Hanslope Park document is a letter between Kenyan Special Branch police officers about treatment of “fanatical” detainees at the Mwea camps.
“If they deny having taken an oath they are given summary punishment which usually consists of a good beating up,” says the report. “This treatment usually breaks a large proportion.
“If this treatment does not bear fruit the detainee is taken to the far end of the camp where buckets of stone are waiting. These buckets are placed on the detainee’s head and he is made to run around in circles until he agrees to confess the oath.”
Another minister said that Gavaghan had explained how difficult detainees would be subjected to the “third degree”.
“The measures adopted were to be kept awake all night, having water thrown at him and to be beaten up on a variety of pretexts,” he wrote.
By 1959, parliamentarians in London were demanding an investigation after 11 detainees were beaten to death for refusing to work.
Alan Lennox-Boyd asked Governor Baring for details of the so-called “Hola incident”. He said he would face questions over the “Cowan Plan”, the regime of forced labour under threat of beatings.
“Main criticism we shall have to meet is that ‘Cowan plan’ which was approved by Government contained instructions which in effect authorised unlawful use of violence against detainees,” he wrote.
A later telegram from Lennox-Boyd underlined that London would stand by the governor.
“There will be full defence of rehabilitation policy and use of legal force as necessary,” he said.
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Researchers are warning iodine deficiency could be becoming endemic in the UK and are suggesting manufacturers should start adding it to table salt.
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A US appeals court has ruled that twin brothers who say the idea for Facebook was stolen from them by Mark Zuckerberg cannot back out of a settlement deal they made with the website.
Tyler and Cameron Winklevoss had asked in January to re-open a $65m (£42m) legal settlement signed in 2008.
The twins say Mr Zuckerberg stole their idea after he was hired by them to code their ConnectU site in 2003.
The court said it saw no reason to re-open their case against Facebook.
Facebook has rejected the brothers’ claims.
“The Winklevosses are not the first parties bested by a competitor who then seek to gain through litigation what they were unable to achieve in the marketplace,” three Ninth Circuit Court of Appeals judges said in the ruling.
“At some point, litigation must come to an end. That point has now been reached,” the judges said.
The Winklevosses have argued that Mr Zuckerberg, who attended Harvard with them, took the code for their social networking website and launched Facebook with it in 2004.
Facebook agreed to a 2008 settlement to end “rancorous litigation” but did not admit Mr Zuckerberg had taken the twins’ idea.
The Winklevosses received $20m in cash and $45m worth of stock valued at $36 per share in the deal.
“For whatever reason, they now want to back out… Like the district court, we see no basis for allowing them to do so,” the judges said, referring to the settlement deal.
The legal team representing the Winklevosses has not yet commented on Monday’s ruling.
Mr Zuckerberg has always maintained that Facebook was his creation.
The lawsuit over Facebook was dramatised in the film The Social Network, which was nominated for best picture at the Oscars.
Today Facebook is the world’s biggest social network with more than 500m users, and Mr Zuckerberg is one of the world’s youngest billionaires.
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It has been claimed that as many as two out of five humans on the planet today owe their existence to the discoveries made by one brilliant German chemist.
Yet this is the same chemist denounced by young German students today as a “murderer”.
No-one personifies better than Fritz Haber the debate over science’s capacity for good and evil.
And there is more to his dramatic life even than this. For Haber personifies too the tragedy of a Jew desperate to be a patriotic German, whose life was destroyed after the Nazis came to power.
And in the cruellest of all the ironies, his work was developed under the Nazis to create the gas used to murder millions in the Holocaust – including his relatives.
Fritz Haber was born in 1868 in Breslau, in what is now Poland.
As a young man he was bursting with ambition. “We only want one limit, the limit of our own ability,” he wrote.
He went to study chemistry in Berlin – the ideal formula, he hoped, for transforming a provincial Jewish boy into a successful German.
Historian Fritz Stern, whose parents were close friends of Haber, says he was “ambitious but also vulnerable”.
It was an exhilarating time, as Germany, newly unified under the Kaiser, powered ahead with scientific research at the forefront.
But anti-Semitism also grew as the century drew to a close, which preyed on Haber’s mind despite his decision to convert to Christianity.
The breakthrough that made his name answered one of the great challenges of the time – feeding growing populations.
Crops needed better supplies of nitrogen to produce more food. Previously this had been supplied in a limited and laborious way by ships full of bird droppings or nitrates mined in South America.
But in 1909 Haber found a way of synthesising ammonia for fertiliser from nitrogen and hydrogen.
Working with Carl Bosch, an engineer from the chemical company BASF, the Haber-Bosch process was born, making it possible to create huge amounts of fertiliser.
It seemed miraculous, described as creating “bread from air”.
The fertiliser went on to be used on a large scale, bringing about a huge increase in crop yields, and practically banishing the fear of famine in large parts of the world.
One observer describes it as “the most important technological invention of the 20th Century”.
But the process was also highly useful for the military in making explosives.
And when World War I broke out soon afterwards, Haber – now working for the Kaiser’s research institute in Berlin – was desperate to prove his patriotism.
He began experimenting with chlorine gas which, he said, would shorten the war.
The first attack using his methods was at Ypres in 1915. Haber was promoted to captain in the German army – but on the night he celebrated promotion in his villa in Berlin, his wife committed suicide.
Clara Immerwahr, a trained chemist, had become increasingly frustrated with her life at home looking after their son, and with the military direction of her husband’s research.
“Haber’s life was the tragedy of the German Jew – the tragedy of unrequited love”
Albert Einstein
Haber rushed back to the front, apparently unmoved. But in a letter soon afterwards he wrote: “I hear in my heart the words that the poor woman once said… I see her head emerging from between orders and telegrams, and I suffer.”
By the end of the war he had re-married, but his reputation was as uncertain as ever. Awarded the Nobel Prize for his work on ammonia, he also feared arrest as a war criminal for his poison gas research.
In the new Germany of the Weimar Republic, Haber continued to strive patriotically, with characteristic self-confidence.
The country faced huge reparations payments. Haber claimed he could extract gold from seawater to pay off the debts – but this time there was no miraculous breakthrough.
By the early 1930s he could see vicious anti-Semitism spreading around him, and his claim to be a German patriot was no protection.
“In early 1933”, his daughter Eva told me, “he went to his institute. There was the porter, who said: ‘The Jew Haber is not allowed in here.'”
Haber resigned, devastated, went briefly into exile, and died of a heart attack in 1934.
Despite the significance of his discoveries he remains much less well known than his friend and colleague Albert Einstein – perhaps because his reputation is so disputed.
It was not just the poison gas. There was one other area of research in the 1920s in which Haber and his colleagues were successful: developing pesticide gases.
Of Haber’s legacies, this was the bitterest. For this research was later developed into the Zyklon process, used by the Nazis to murder millions in their death camps, including his own extended family.
His godson, historian Fritz Stern, says we must remember Haber “in all his complexity”. He was a man of “scientific greatness, deeply cultivated”.
But in an “excess of patriotism” he invented gas warfare, which “has come to define… the unspeakable horror of the First World War”.
And as for his tortured relationship with Germany, Einstein concluded: “Haber’s life was the tragedy of the German Jew – the tragedy of unrequited love.”
You can hear Chris Bowlby’s The Chemist of Life and Death on BBC Radio 4 on Tuesday 12 April at 2100 BST and again on Wednesday 13 April at 1630. You can also listen on the iPlayer.
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