Too wealthy for UK aid?

Bihar children being fed under a government schemeMore than a million children in Bihar suffer from severe malnutrition
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Britain’s decision to give £280m ($457m) in annual aid to India for the next four years has prompted questions in the UK about whether India needs the aid these days. The BBC’s Geeta Pandey travels to the northern state of Bihar to see where a sizeable chunk of the British money will be spent.

About two dozen children squat in a narrow lane separating mud and brick homes in Madhaopur village.

It’s a hot sunny afternoon and the children sit facing each other, hugging the wall where a thin sliver of shade keeps them out of direct sunshine.

A woman puts steel plates in front of each child, another ladles out khichdi – a rice and lentil dish – onto each plate.

Within minutes, the chattering ceases and the children begin to eat hungrily, scooping out khichdi with their hands and putting it in their mouths.

Ideally, the children should be served inside the Anganwadi (government sponsored child development) centre, but the pokey, window-less room that passes for the centre is too small to accommodate them all.

The building provides pre-school education to children between three and six years and gives them one cooked meal a day to supplement their nutritional needs.

“Nearly 50% children here are malnourished,” says Geeta Verma, who is part of the technical assistance team of DfiD (Department for International Development).

A baby being vaccinated in BiharDfiD supports vaccination programmes in the villages of Bihar

“They are given a daily meal by the Anganwadi workers. It’s a naturally fortified meal – for proteins we use lentils, for micronutrients, we use leafy vegetables,” she explains.

Research has shown that the diet in Bihar leaves children with a 300-calorie deficit and this meal aims to bridge that gap.

“This meal provides each child with 300 calories and 10 grams of protein,” Ms Verma says.

The team has helped prepare the menu and has been coaching the women in the important role nutrition plays in the physical and mental growth of their children.

In Madhaopur, DfiD is also supervising and assisting with immunisation of babies and has helped with a project to teach illiterate women.

Since being opened up in 1991, the Indian economy has grown rapidly. And at a time when most economies around the world are in recession, India’s continues to grow at an enviable 9%. This has helped lift millions out of poverty.

Sangeeta Kumari

“Bluntly speaking we are struggling for existence, we are trying to perform our best in the midst of a crisis. We have very poor infrastructure.”

Sangeeta Kumari Bihar government official

This has led to some in the UK wondering if India is too wealthy to qualify for receiving aid. They say the £280m could be put to better use in Britain where the economy is ailing and many services are being cut back.

Critics also point out that India has 69 dollar billionaires; it has its own space programme; plans to send a man to the Moon; spends billions of dollars annually on defence; and even has its own overseas aid programme.

But India has its areas of darkness too – according to World Bank estimates, 456 million live on less than $1.25 a day; tens of millions of children suffer from acute malnutrition; millions of Indians are illiterate; hundreds of thousands continue to die of totally preventable causes; and eight million children remain out of school.

And a visit to Bihar – one of the three states where DfiD will work – brings one face to face with poverty and deprivation.

The state is one of India’s poorest and the number of people living in extreme poverty here is twice that of Ethiopia. It also figures low on human development indexes.

According to official statistics, 55% of children in Bihar under three are underweight, more than 85% are anaemic, over a million children suffer from severe malnutrition, 60 million people have no access to toilets, and two in every three women are illiterate.

These factors weighed in when DfiD took the decision to continue with the aid to India.

In February, UK International Development Secretary Andrew Mitchell said he was convinced India needed aid.

“Some people – in both the UK and India – have been asking whether the time has come to end British aid to India. In my view, we are not there yet.

“India’s poorest states – each of them larger than most African countries – still face huge development challenges,” he said.

Indian Prime Minister Manmohan Singh welcomed the aid, saying “India is still a poor country”. But, he added, that if it was “not forthcoming, we will not collapse”.

Bihar womenManju Devi (right) says they have learnt a lot from the DfiD team

Many in India agree with that assessment. They say critics in Britain are making an unnecessary fuss about such a small sum of money which is not even 1% of what the Indian government spends on health and welfare schemes.

On the ground, though, those at the receiving end of the aid are more welcoming.

In Madhaopur, several dozen women who have benefited from the DfiD-supported adult literacy programme are happy to talk about how the learning programme has transformed their lives.

The village women do not understand what DfiD stands for, but they are grateful for the support they are getting from the team members.

“These sisters have taught us a lot,” says Manju Devi.

“We’ve learnt that a baby should be breastfed within two hours of birth, we have learnt about vaccination. Earlier we did not have a vaccination centre in the village. We had to then go to town and sometimes we would miss the date,” she says.

Bihar government official Sangeeta Kumari adds: “Bluntly speaking, we are struggling for existence, we are trying to perform our best in the midst of a crisis. We have very poor infrastructure.”

DfiD’s involvement in the area, she says, has brought new hope. “We welcome them, they have started a new programme here targeting nought to two-year-olds – these are children who are very vulnerable. I think it will be good to have them here.”

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Bones found near New York beach

A police officer searches an area near a crime scene on Long Island where the additional remains were foundPolice found two more sets of remains near Jones Beach in New York on Monday
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Police have found what they suspect may be human remains in two separate locations near a New York beach, in the same area where eight corpses have already been discovered.

A skull was found in brush about 90ft (27m) from a highway on Long Island on Monday, Lt Kevin Smith said.

Another set of remains was unearthed earlier in the day.

Since December, eight corpses have been found in the region. Police suspect a serial killer could be at large.

The latest discovery was made as police expanded their search from Long Island’s Suffolk County to Jones Beach in Nassau County, just east of the New York City border.

Police also made several discoveries of bones on Monday that were quickly determined to be animals.

Of the skull, Lt Smith said: “Whether it is human or not, is unknown at this point.”

The latest search was sparked by the discovery of four sets of remains in the past two weeks along Ocean Parkway, which leads to the popular Jones Beach State Park.

Police sent the two sets of remains, which were found several miles apart, to the medical examiner’s office to confirm whether they were human.

The bodies of four women who worked as escorts were found in the region in December.

Those remains, which were identified using DNA and dental records, were found while authorities were following up on the disappearance of a woman from New Jersey seen working as a escort in the Long Island area.

Investigators continue to search for the remains of Shannan Gilbert, a New Jersey woman who was last seen in May at nearby Oak Beach, where she had arranged to meet a client she had met through Craigslist.

Police have not officially linked the discoveries in the past several weeks with those found in December.

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House market ‘still in doldrums’

Estate agents in the town of Jaywick which has been named as the most deprived place in England There is no sign of sales prices picking up

There is no sign yet of the UK property market pulling out of the doldrums, says the Royal Institution of Chartered Surveyors (Rics).

Its latest monthly survey shows sales and prices were generally flat, while interest from would-be buyers was declining.

The survey results chime with those of other recent property surveys.

However, Rics said there were big regional differences, with London very different to the rest of the UK.

“The rather negative outlook for property prices across the UK seems to better reflect the general economy than the micro climate of London,” said Rics housing spokesperson, Ian Perry.

“The low level of buyer interest in many parts of the UK continues to impact on the market, resulting in some downward pressure on prices.

“With the prospect of forthcoming interest rate rises and continued shortage of mortgage funding, it seems that overall recovery for the national housing market is still some way off,” he added.

The Rics survey was based on answers from 259 surveyors who work as estate agents and the survey has traditionally had its finger on the pulse of the market.

The March survey found that nearly 60% of surveyors reported no change at all in the prices of the properties they had sold.

Where prices had fallen, they were normally just 0%-2% lower than before.

“Within England and Wales, a clear North South divide is emerging, with London being the only region recording rising prices, demonstrating that the capital is still operating under different market conditions to the rest of the country,” Rics said.

The generally stagnant nature of the property market was highlighted by the fact that completed sales per surveyor fell to their lowest level for 21 months, at just 14.4 sales in the past three months.

Meanwhile the number of homes for sale also dropped, to 64.6 per surveyor.

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Space race

Pallab GhoshBy Pallab Ghosh

InfographicHow would history have unfolded if a flag with one star instead of 50 had been planted on the Moon?

The Americans won the race to the Moon when Neil Armstrong set foot on the lunar surface in 1969.

That single act trumped the Soviet achievement of sending the first man into space eight years earlier. But what might have happened if the Soviet Union had got to the Moon first?

The first manned lunar landing was a triumph for Nasa, and when the Americans won the Space Race, they also sounded its death knell.

The Apollo lunar programme continued until 1972 and 12 astronauts touched down on the Moon’s surface. But US TV networks quickly bored of the Moon landings. When politicians lost interest, the Apollo programme was scrapped.

Of course, we have not been back since. Instead, human exploration of space has been confined to low-Earth orbit. But how would history have been different if a Soviet flag had been planted on the lunar surface first?

Piers Bizony, who has co-written a biography of Gagarin called Starman, says: “The Russians were in the business of conquering space,” he says. “The Americans felt they were in a race and the nature of a race is that once you think you’ve won it you tend to stop running.”

Had the Soviets got to the Moon first it is unlikely that they would have abandoned it as swiftly as the Americans.

Not being a democracy may have enabled the USSR to spend money and marshal the talents of their population in a way that America could not.

“Those who imagine Apollo had the Moon race to itself are wrong”

Piers Bizony Yuri Gagarin biographer

Space historian Dr Christopher Riley believes that not only would the Soviet Union have continued with Moon missions, but they might also have built lunar bases.

And he believes that the Americans would have been compelled to do the same and even try to continue to outdo their communist rivals.

“The history that followed in the decades afterwards would have been completely different,” he says.

In the summer of 1969, when the Apollo 11 crew were on their way to the Moon, US vice-president, Spiro Agnew declared that America would be on Mars by 1980. At the time, this was seen as a relatively feasible goal given how fast things had progressed in the 1960s.

“They certainly had it in their minds and on their drawing boards and there were designs of methods to get to Mars that might have been put into action in response to a Soviet landing on the Moon,” says Dr Riley.

Apollo 8 picture of the lunar far sideThe US seems to have taken a lead when it launched Apollo 8 into lunar orbit

So how close were we to following this alternative reality?

Quite close, according to Piers Bizony: “Those who imagine Apollo had the Moon race to itself are wrong,” he says.

The US seemed to have taken the lead in 1968 when it successfully boosted three astronauts into lunar orbit with its Apollo 8 mission.

But the Americans rushed ahead with that mission because they were afraid that the Soviet Union was about to beat them yet again and pull off another space coup.

The USSR was using a rocket called the Proton which is still in use today. The Soviets were sending payloads into space with a view to putting a cosmonaut into a so-called circumlunar flight which would take him around the Moon and straight home again without going into orbit.

They had flown an unmanned mission a few months before Apollo 8 that had taken just such a trajectory around Earth’s natural satellite.

The Soviets had also built their own Moon rocket (known as the N-1) and their own lunar lander.

So how did the Americans win?

The first seeds were sown in 1957 by President Eisenhower following the launch of the first satellite by the USSR.

N-1 rocketThe USSR designed its own Moon rocket, but it proved a spectacular failure during launch tests

The launch of Sputnik 1 generated fear across the US – and a quiet realisation that the country had fallen technologically behind the Soviet Union.

President Dwight Eisenhower’s response was to increase the budget for education to raise the academic standard in universities across America.

Dr Riley comments: “To increase the brainpower they’d need to pull off these technological feats to take on the Russians and win.”

Eisenhower also commissioned the Saturn V rockets, principally to launch multi-tonne satellites for spying. But when President Kennedy inherited the White House and had to respond to Gagarin’s flight, the Saturn V was already in development.

It was the Saturn V rocket that enabled the US to send astronauts to the Moon.

The early Soviet Space triumphs were managed and steered by Korolev the man who built the R7 rocket that put Sputnik and Yuri Gagarin into orbit.

But after Korolev’s death in 1966, the Soviet space effort lost focus.

Because he was not there to assert his authority, there was not one Soviet attempt to reach the Moon, but two or even three rival schemes to reach the Moon.

According to Piers Bizony, the rival schemes sucked resources from each other: “There was a great deal of confusion in the Soviet space effort in the late 1960s and as a result they didn’t have the technology to send a man to the Moon,” he says.

Nor did they have the computing power. By today’s standards the Apollo 11 onboard computer was pretty crude, but it was ahead of its time and was crucial for America’s successful Moon landings.

LM Apollo 11Crude computers were vital for the success of the US Moon landings

Might Yuri Gagarin even have been those cosmonauts to walk on the Moon?

Gagarin died in 1968 in a plane crash and so would not have been available for any Soviet Moon shot. In any case he was too much of a national treasure to have been sent on such a risky mission.

However, if Korolev and Gagarin had lived a little longer and if Soviet spies had stolen US computer technology then maybe history would have unfolded very differently. The Moon might well have been colonised and been a base for international manned missions to Mars and – perhaps – beyond.

But 50 years on from Gagarin’s historic flight, the Russians will once again be the planet’s pre-eminent space-faring nation. This year, the US will retire its space shuttle fleet, its only craft capable of sending astronauts into space.

According to Mr Bizony: “America has no clear idea of what will replace the shuttle and no clear idea of whether as a nation they are truly committed to the human spaceflight adventure.

“Meanwhile Russia will be flying American astronauts and those from other countries on board their Soyuz capsule. And that Soyuz lifts on a rocket very similar in its essential construction to the one that launched Yuri Gagarin.”

This article is from the BBC News website. © British Broadcasting Corporation, The BBC is not responsible for the content of external internet sites.

Retail sales crash during March

Shoppers on the High StreetMost sales categories saw a decline in March

The struggling UK High Street suffered another blow when the British Retail Consortium (BRC) recorded its worst fall in sales since records began.

The BRC said total sales in March were down 1.9% on a year ago, although the early timing of Easter last year had an effect on the figures.

But the BRC said shoppers did not want to spend “unless they really had to”.

Footwear was the only growth sector, as food and drink, clothing, homeware, electrical, and others all fell.

Meanwhile, like-for-like sales were down 3.5%, in their worst showing in nearly six years.

Internet sales, which have been defying the general downward trend, showed their slowest growth since records began in 2008.

Recording of High Street sales figures began two years earlier.

Internet sales were 7.5% higher than a year ago, much weaker than the 10.4% in February.

Clothes and book sales suffered their largest declines since 2009 and 2005 respectively.

“Falling disposable incomes and the fear of worse to come means people don’t want to spend”

Stephen Robertson BRC director general

“We have seen an emergence of new, lower spending patterns since the middle of January, which are currently continuing to trend downwards,” said Helen Dickinson, head of retail at survey partner KPMG.

“Many retailers will not be able to sustain this ongoing weakness in demand beyond the short-term and are hoping for some good news around the extended bank holiday period and a feel-good factor driven by the royal wedding.”

There has been a string of gloomy outlooks recently from the likes of Next, Mothercare, HMV, Currys and PC World parent Dixons Retail.

The BRC pointed out that “uncomfortably high inflation and low wage growth have produced the first year-on-year fall in disposable incomes for 30 years”.

“Falling disposable incomes and the fear of worse to come means people don’t want to spend,” added BRC director general Stephen Robertson.

“There’s only so much discounts and promotions can do to overcome that.”

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Minsk blast was plot – Lukashenko

Injured man being helped to stand

The explosion happened at the height of rush hour, as David Stern reports

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Belarus’ President Alexander Lukashenko has said a deadly blast in the metro system in the capital Minsk was an attempt to destabilise the country.

Eleven people were killed and scores injured in an explosion during the evening rush hour on Monday.

“I do not rule out that this [blast] was a gift from abroad,” said Mr Lukashenko, linking it to an explosion in 2008 in which 50 people were hurt.

A police spokesman said Minsk had been placed on high alert.

The explosion tore through the Oktyabrskaya metro station, about 100 metres from President Lukashenko’s main office and residence, at 1755 local time (1555 GMT). The station, one of the busiest in Minsk, links the city’s two metro lines.

Witnesses said there was a flash and a bang as passengers were getting off a train.

Many people suffered serious injuries – Interfax reported the explosive device was packed with metal fragments – and some witnesses spoke of bodies piled on the platform.

In televised remarks, Mr Lukashenko said the explosion was aimed at undermining “peace and stability”.

And he hinted at foreign involvement, making a connection to a blast at an independence day concert in 2008, when about 50 people were injured. That crime was never solved.

“These are perhaps links in a single chain. We must find out who gained by undermining peace and stability in the country, who stands behind this,” Mr Lukashenko said.

He called for a moment of silence to honour those killed.

“Prosecutors qualify this as a terrorist act,” a source in Mr Lukashenko’s administration told the Reuters news agency.

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One witness said at least part of the station’s ceiling had collapsed after the explosion.

Shortly after the explosion, an eyewitness, Maskim Lew, told Ekho Moskvy radio: “There are a lot of special forces troops, a lot of ambulances and firemen.

“Some people are being treated on the spot, some are being taken away, some – those who are conscious and in a more or less normal state – are being helped into ambulances.”

Mr Lukashenko, who has ruled Belarus since 1994, claimed victory in a presidential election last December, but international observers condemned the vote.

When the opposition called a rally in protest, about 600 people – activists and presidential campaigners – were rounded up and arrested. Some are still in jail.

The European Union and the United States imposed a travel ban on Mr Lukashenko and his inner circle because of the crackdown on 19 December.

Mr Lukashenko has previously said the opposition rally was an attempted coup financed by the West.

Tensions are rising in the former Soviet republic, says the BBC’s David Stern in Kiev. As well as the political tensions, Belarus has also suffered economic difficulties since the beginning of the year.

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Cueto handed nine-week ban by RFU

England’s Mark Cueto is banned for nine weeks for “making contact with the eye or eye area” of Northampton’s Christian Day, meaning he is free to play in the World Cup.

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Election candidates in TV debate

SeneddElections for the assembly take place on 5 May

Welsh assembly candidates have clashed over the economy, in the first BBC TV debate of the election campaign.

Hopefuls from the four main parties faced questions about public spending from an audience in Wrexham.

Labour’s Sandy Mewies blamed “greedy bankers”, and Heledd Fychan of Plaid hailed her party’s “vision” for Wales.

Lib Dem Aled Roberts said the economic “mess” had to be fixed, and Tory Darren Millar said Wales had not moved on under Labour-led assembly governments.

The debate at Wrexham’s Glyndwr University was the first of three to be shown on BBC One Wales during the campaign.

Ms Fychan, Plaid’s number-two candidate in the north Wales region, defended her party leader Ieuan Wyn Jones, deputy first minister in the coalition assembly government.

She said there had been improvements under his tenure as the minister responsible for the economy and transport, after Mr Jones was attacked by other panelists.

“The former Labour government left us with a legacy of debt”

Darren Millar Conservative

Plaid had plans to connect north and south Wales “so that we are one nation”, she said.

Labour’s Delyn candidate Ms Mewies said the coalition deal her party signed with Plaid in 2007 had “delivered the things in it”.

She said the state of the UK’s public finances was not the fault of the last Labour government, but the fault of “greedy bankers”.

“They are the people who should be suffering now. Instead it’s hitting the poorest hardest”, she said.

Mr Millar, Conservative candidate for Clwyd West, said public spending was being cut, because “the former Labour government left us with a legacy of debt”.

“We have not moved on in 12 years of Labour-led assembly government and certainly have not moved on in the past four of Labour-Plaid coalition,” he said.

He said the Conservatives were the “only party committed to invest in the NHS”. Opponents say Tory plans to ring-fence the NHS budget would mean bigger cuts for other assembly government departments.

Mr Roberts, lead Welsh Liberal Democrat candidate on the party’s north Wales list, called for the introduction of a “pupil premium” to target money at the most disadvantaged children.

He said the future jobs fund – introduced by the previous Labour UK government – was a “quick cheap fix”.

On the economy, he said: “The reality is that it’s a mess and that needs to be fixed. Whether that’s the fault of bankers or the Labour government isn’t going to get us out of this mess.”

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More mass graves found in Mexico

Morgue employee unloading bodies on 8 April, 2011An employee at a morgue in Tamaulipas prepares to unload more bodies found in mass graves
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The number of bodies found in mass graves in north-eastern Mexico over the past week has risen to 88, after 16 more corpses were discovered.

Investigators found four new graves in San Fernando, not far from the United States border.

They were tipped-off by a suspect who was detained on Saturday.

Police said he had confessed to the kidnapping and subsequent killing of dozens of victims, who were travelling through the area on buses.

On Thursday, police found 59 bodies in eight mass graves in San Fernando, in Tamaulipas state. Thirteen more bodies were discovered the following day in two other graves.

Officials say 16 people have been arrested in connection with the discovery of the mass graves, but the motive for the killings remains unclear.

The gruesome find resembles the discovery last August of the bodies of 72 Central and South American migrants, who were killed in the same town for refusing to join the ranks of the cartel which had abducted them.

Tamaulipas state, where the mass graves where found, is at the centre of a bloody battle between rival drug gangs for control of the lucrative drug-smuggling routes to the US.

Around 35,000 people have been killed in drug-related violence in Mexico since President Felipe Calderon declared war on the country’s drug cartels.

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VIDEO: France veil ban meets with defiance

Defiance from some Muslim women in France at the country’s ban on the Islamic veil

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Toole poised to come out of coma

Jockey Peter Toole is expected to be brought out of his medically-induced coma after being seriously hurt in a fall at Aintree on Saturday.

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Woman dies in train toilet fire

A woman has died after a fire broke out on a train travelling from Northampton to London.

The blaze is believed to have started in a toilet on the London Midland railways train at about 1705 BST on Monday.

The train stopped at Leighton Buzzard, Bedfordshire, and all passengers were taken off. As a precaution electricity was turned off on overhead power lines.

Bedfordshire fire service and British Transport Police were at the scene.

A spokeswoman for British Transport Police said the woman had suffered burn injuries.

No other people were believed to have been involved in the incident, said the spokeswoman.

London Midland railways have warned passengers to expect major delays on the line.

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VIDEO: Libyan rebels reject ceasefire plan

Libyan rebels reject calls by the African Union for talks with Gaddafi and a ceasefire.

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Ouattara urges Ivory Coast calm

LatestQ&A Gbagbo profileIn picturesAnalysis
Alassane Ouattara

Mr Ouattara: “All measures have been taken to ensure the physical integrity of Mr Gbagbo”

Ivory Coast’s UN-recognised President, Alassane Ouattara, has urged restraint after the dramatic capture of his bitter rival Laurent Gbagbo.

Announcing an investigation into Mr Ouattara, he promised him a fair trial and said a truth and reconciliation commission would be set up.

Mr Gbagbo surrendered after a military assault on his residence in Abidjan.

He had provoked a crisis by refusing to cede power, insisting he had won November’s presidential election.

But forces loyal to Mr Ouattara advanced on his residence on Monday, while French tanks backing the UN peacekeeping mission in the country stood by.

UN Secretary General Ban Ki-moon welcomed the detention of Mr Gbagbo, saying it had brought to an end months of unnecessary conflict, and the UN would support the new government.

US President Barack Obama also welcomed his capture, and called on armed groups in Ivory Coast to lay down their arms to boost the chances of a democratic future.

He added that victims and survivors of violence in the country deserved accountability for the crimes committed against them.

Speaking on his TV channel, a sombre Mr Ouattara appealed to Ivorians to “abstain from all reprisals and violence”.

Analysis

“The head of the snake has been cut off,” said one soldier loyal to elected President Alassane Ouattara. “Gbagbo’s militia will simply vanish now. The war is over.”

“It’s great,” said another man. “We are just so happy, and so relieved. The war is finished now.”

Is it? Much, I suspect, will depend on how Mr Ouattara handles the next few days, and what signals he sends regarding the treatment of both Mr Gbagbo and his armed supporters.

Troops now consolidating their hold on Abidjan will need to act forcefully to ensure there is not a rash of reprisal killings.

Harding on Africa: Relief for now

Mr Gbagbo, his wife Simone and his “collaborators” would be investigated by the judicial authorities, he promised.

The personal security of Mr Gbagbo and his family would be guaranteed, he said.

The country had just turned a painful page in its history, he added, but it was entering a new era of peace and hope.

There have been allegations of atrocities by both pro-Gbagbo and pro-Ouattara forces. The UN has reports of more than 1,000 people being killed and at least 100,000 fleeing the country.

UN peacekeeping chief Alain Le Roy confirmed that Mr Gbagbo and his wife were under UN police guard at Abidjan’s Golf Hotel, where Mr Ouattara has his headquarters.

Mr Gbagbo has been shown on pro-Ouattara TV sitting in a room, looking dazed but apparently uninjured, wearing an open shirt and white vest.

The TV channel broadcast a message from the deposed leader in which he called for an end to hostilities.

“I hope that we stop the fighting and get into the civilian part of the crisis, and that we end it quickly so the country can go back to normal,” he said.

Forces loyal to Mr Ouattara launched an offensive from their stronghold in the north at the end of March, after months of political deadlock.

Laurent Gbagbo

Pictures show Laurent Gbagbo after he was detained

As they closed in on Mr Gbagbo’s power base in Abidjan, the country’s main city, UN and French attack helicopters targeted heavy weapons being used by his forces.

Mr Ban said UN and French forces had acted strictly within the framework of a UN resolution aimed at protecting the civilian population.

He said he wanted to speak to “President Alassane Ouattara” as soon as possible.

“This is an end of a chapter that should never have been,” he added. “We have to help them to restore stability, rule of law, and address all humanitarian and security issues.”

Mr Le Roy told reporters after addressing the UN Security Council that the chief of Mr Gbagbo’s forces had called the UN to say that he wanted to surrender weapons.

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Romney lines up presidential run

Mitt RomneyMr Romney is the second high profile Republican to announce a bid
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Former Massachusetts governor Mitt Romney has taken the first formal step towards running for the Republican presidential nomination in 2012.

Mr Romney, who ran a failed bid in 2008, is setting up a committee to explore the feasibility of a run.

“It is time that we put America back on a course of greatness,” he said

Mr Romney is the second high profile Republican to announce a bid following former Minnesota governor Tim Pawlenty’s move in March.

While Mr Romney is widely expected to enter the 2012 race, correspondents say he has several hurdles to overcome, notably his moderate record as Massachusetts governor, which does not sit well with conservative primary voters.

Mr Romney’s reform of the Massachusetts health care system – an overhaul that some see as remarkably similar to the one President Barack Obama passed in 2009, in the face of forceful Republican opposition – is considered as albatross around his neck.

Mr Romney ran in 2008 but lost the Republican nomination to Senator John McCain.

In three-minute video announcing his latest move, Mr Romney trumpeted his highly successful business career and criticised President Obama’s attempts to turn around a faltering US economy.

“Across the nation, over 20 million Americans still can’t find a job or have given up looking,” Mr Romney said.

“America has been put on a dangerous course by Washington politicians and it’s become even worse during the last two years. But I’m also convinced that, with able leadership, America’s best days are still ahead,” he added.

Mr Romney has lined up donors, staff and advisers for his expected presidential bid and some consider him to be front-runner for the Republican nomination in a field without a strong favourite.

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