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Nato has refused to apologise for a “friendly fire” attack on rebel tanks in eastern Libya that killed at least four people.
Rear Adm Russ Harding said that until Thursday’s incident, Nato had not been aware that rebel troops had started to use tanks.
“Our job is to protect civilians,” he told a news conference.
Rebel forces reacted with anger at the air strike on their tanks near the eastern town of Ajdabiya.
However, rebel commanders had stressed that it would not damage relations with the allied force.
Rear Adm Harding, speaking in Naples, described the situation between the towns of Ajdabiya and Brega – where the attack happened – as “very fluid” with vehicles “going backwards and forwards”.
He said tanks known to have previously targeted civilians in the town of Misrata had been on the road on Thursday. At that point, Nato did not know that rebel troops had begun to bring out their tanks.
He said that the UN mandate under which Nato is operating is to “protect civilians”, whether from the forces of Col Gadaffi or the rebel troops themselves.
“Let me be clear, it did not say to gain the trust of either side in doing that,” he said.
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Far more English university students than originally expected will be paying the maximum tuition fee of £9,000 a year, BBC research suggests.
About half of the 111 universities contacted by the BBC said they would charge £9,000 for all their courses.
And about two thirds said they would charge the top rate for at least some courses.
Ministers had said they had wanted the top fee to be charged only in “exceptional circumstances”.
The BBC research also suggests there will big differences in the financial support offered to poorer students, with some being offered as much as a £6,000 “discount” or fee waiver.
Among the universities that will charge £9,000 for all courses, the fee waiver for the poorest students ranges from £2,000 to £6,000 a year.
Changes mean that from autumn 2012, universities in England will be able to raise tuition fees from the present level of £3,290 a year to between £6,000 and £9,000, if they meet certain conditions.
Students will pay the fees once they graduate and are earning at least £21,000, and there will be support for those from poorer homes.
More than 50 of England’s 134 universities were surveyed.
The BBC contacted the 111 state-funded universities that offer undergraduate courses, but not private universities nor those offering only postgraduate courses.
More than 30 universities have already made their plans public and have details on their websites.
The BBC survey includes institutions that have not yet published their fee levels, which gave the information on the basis that they would not be identified.
A total of 45 universities were able to tell us a clear average fee. The average of these was £8,536.
Of the 10 prestigious Russell Group universities that took part, nine said they would charge £9,000 for all courses.
Their fee waivers, or discounts, for poorer students range between £2,500 and £6,000.
Of the 1994 Group, which represents other leading research universities, eight out of 11 universities that responded said they intended to charge £9,000 across the board.
Of the newer Million+ universities, only half – six out of the 12 that responded – will be charging £9,000 for some or all courses. Two say that they will charge £9,000 for all courses.
The fees should all be made public by late June or mid-July, months before teenagers apply for university places for 2012.
They will be published by the Office for Fair Access (Offa), together with the extra bursaries and fee waivers they plan to offer poorer students.
Offa is working through universities’ plans for these at the moment and has to approve them.
It has the power to take away a university’s right to charge fees of more than £6,000 a year if it is not doing enough to attract and financially support students from poorer homes.
Ministers have warned that further cuts could be made to teaching budgets if too many universities set higher fees.
Originally, they had said they had expected universities to charge £9,000 only in “exceptional circumstances”.
The government based its calculations on what the new system would cost the state, on an estimate that the average fee for a university course would be £7,500 a year.
But universities are independent bodies and many say they need to charge maximum fees to make up for the loss of funds from teaching grants.
In response to the survey, Universities Minister David Willetts said it was “important to look beyond the £9,000 headline”.
Once bursaries for poorer students and lower fees likely to be charged by private providers were taken into account, he said, the average was likely to be “significantly below” £9,000.
Mr Willetts also says universities could have 10% more in cash terms by 2014 under the new system.
The government’s changes to university funding are based on the idea that fees will rise and replace money being taken from teaching budgets.
Four universities surveyed by the BBC said they expected courses to close as a result of the funding changes.
One university said it expected more than 10 courses to close.
More than 30 universities have now declared the fees they plan to charge next year.
Those planning to charge the maximum are Cambridge, Oxford, Imperial College London, University College London, Manchester, Warwick, Essex, Leeds, Durham, Lancaster, Bath, Birmingham, Loughborough, Exeter, Sussex, Surrey, Liverpool, Aston, Liverpool John Moores, Reading, Kent, Central Lancashire, Leicester, Nottingham and Oxford Brookes.
The BBC News website has published a list of the universities that have declared their fees so far.
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China’s foreign ministry has removed all references to the detained artist Ai Weiwei from an official transcript of a government news conference.
Eight questions raised by journalists concerning Mr Ai – a fierce critic of the government – were omitted.
Mr Ai was detained at Beijing airport on Sunday. Officials have said he is under investigation for suspected “economic crimes”.
Mr Ai’s sister told the BBC that police had raided his workshop again.
The artists is a vocal critic of the Beijing government, complaining about a lack of basic freedoms and often incorporating these political themes into his work.
There had been no word on his detention until the Chinese authorities broke their silence on Thursday, saying Mr Ai was under investigation “on suspicion of economic crimes”.
Eight out of 18 questions asked at the news conference on Thursday had been left off a transcript posted on the foreign ministry’s website on Friday, Hong Kong broadcaster RTHK reported.
There was no explanation by the foreign ministry.
Meanwhile, Mr Ai’s sister, Gao Ge, said his workshop in Beijing had been raided for a second time by police “this time targeting the finance office”.
She also expressed her concern for her brother’s health.
“It’s been so many days, more than 150 hours has gone, and he has so many illnesses… We know nothing about his condition,” Ms Gao told the BBC’s Chinese service.
A number of governments, including the US, Britain and Germany, have raised concerns about Mr Ai’s detention.
But China’s foreign ministry on Thursday insisted the case had “nothing to do with human rights or freedom of expression”.
In the last couple of months, dozens of activists have been taken into custody or house arrest, none of them as open in their criticism as Mr Ai.
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A date for the taxi driver accused of murdering Swindon woman Sian O’Callaghan to enter a plea has been set.
Christopher Halliwell, 47, of Ashbury Avenue, Swindon, appeared via video link at Bristol Crown Court on Friday from Long Lartin prison.
The case was adjourned until 14 July for a plea hearing.
Miss O’Callaghan, 22, disappeared after leaving a Swindon nightclub on 19 March. Her body was found on 24 March.
Police investigating her murder said at a press conference this week that they also intend questioning Mr Halliwell about the disappearance of Swindon woman, Becky Godden-Edwards, whose body they discovered at Eastleach in Gloucestershire.
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A man has been arrested after a shooting on board the nuclear submarine HMS Astute left two people injured.
Police were called at 1212 BST to Southampton docks where the vessel has been berthed since Wednesday as part of a five-day visit.
An eyewitness said he saw one person being stretchered off the submarine into a waiting ambulance.
A spokeswoman for Hampshire police said there is no risk to public safety. The area has been sealed off.
Brian Cedar, who lives in Hythe marina, said: “I saw at least six people carry a stretcher off the gangway into a waiting ambulance.
“There were a couple of forensic people who have now left.
“If you can have a shooting like this on a nuclear submarine it is worrying.”
The area around the docks has been sealed off by officers from Hampshire Police.
The 97m-long (318ft) HMS Astute is based at the Faslane Naval Base on the Clyde.
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A regular survey of attitudes in England, which is due to be axed, is “too valuable to be lost”, the UK’s statistics chief has said.
Sir Michael Scholar has urged minister Eric Pickles to consider keeping the Citizenship Survey in some form.
He warned the government needed data to monitor its own policies and the survey had been used to provide information on David Cameron’s Big Society initiative.
The government said its £4m cost was “unsustainable” at a time of cuts.
The Citizenship Survey, set up in 2001, asks adults in England questions on subjects including race equality, faith, attitudes towards violent extremism, volunteering and charitable giving and feelings about their community.
Sir Michael, chairman of the UK Statistics Authority, pointed out that it has been used to monitor the impact of policies and events such as the Olympics, the recession and equality impact assessments – as well as by other bodies which cannot afford their own surveys.
In a letter to Communities Secretary Eric Pickles, Sir Michael said the statistics authority believed the Citizenship Survey was too valuable to be lost – and pointed out that government departments were among those to express concerns about it being axed in a consultation exercise.
“This is not a frontline service”
Department for Communities and Local Government
He said the survey’s data was in “widespread” use in government and was particularly relevant to a programme to measure “national well-being” announced last year and Prime Minister David Cameron’s Big Society.
“In our view, these requirements need to be addressed afresh, whether by a decision to retain the Citizenship Survey in some form, or by other, cheaper options which may be available.”
He suggested National Statistician Jil Matheson should meet Mr Pickles’ department’s own statisticians “to advise you on the most effective and cost-efficient way of meeting the statistical requirements which your consultation revealed”.
The UK Statistics Authority said it intended to publish reports on the effects of cuts in statistical work and draw the government’s attention to “any substantial impact” for those who rely on them.
But the Department for Communities and Local Government said the decision to end the survey was taken following an “open and transparent” consultation process.
“Every bit of the public sector needs to do its bit to tackle the last government’s budget deficit – including the statistics community,” a spokesman said.
“This is not a frontline service. Ministers would rather give money to charities and the voluntary sector than hand out blank cheques to opinion polling companies.”
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Iraqi forces have attacked a camp housing an Iranian exile group north of Baghdad, home to about 3,500 people.
Reports suggest at least three died in the clashes between troops and the People’s Mujahideen Organisation of Iran (PMOI) at Camp Ashraf.
The PMOI said more than 25 were killed and many wounded in the raid, but Iraqi officials have disputed the figures.
US Defence Secretary Robert Gates expressed concern and urged Iraq to show restraint.
The PMOI, a guerrilla group that opposes Iran’s Shia cleric leaders, is considered a terrorist group by the US and Iran.
The Iraqi army says that it went into Camp Ashraf, in Diyala province, to confront stone-throwers, and that the clashes were limited.
But the PMOI described the raid, which took place early on Friday, as a full-scale military assault with armoured vehicles.
“I can’t deny the occurrence of injuries among residents of Camp Ashraf, because we do not have information from inside the camp”
Ali al-Dabbagh Iraqi government
The PMOI said Iraqi Prime Minister Nouri Maliki, under the order of Iranian Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, had committed an “unprecedented murder in Ashraf”.
Major Hassan al-Tamimi of the Iraqi army in Baquba, capital of the province, told AFP news agency that three people had been killed and 20 injured, among them six soldiers.
But the death toll was not confirmed by the government.
Iraqi government spokesman Ali al-Dabbagh said Ashraf residents had thrown rocks at security forces during a “riot” and denied that Iraqi forces had opened fire.
“The security forces have pushed back residents of Camp Ashraf inside the camp by force,” Mr Dabbagh said. “The situation is now controlled.”
“I can’t deny the occurrence of injuries among residents of Camp Ashraf, because we do not have information from inside the camp,” he added.
The PMOI, also known as Mojahedin-e Khalq, set up Camp Ashraf in Iraq in the 1980s and was welcomed by then-President Saddam Hussein, who was fighting a war against Iran.
The PMOI’s military wing fought alongside Iraqi soldiers.
Correspondents say many of the organisation’s members continue to live in Camp Ashraf, to the annoyance of both Iraqi and Iranian governments.
Human rights organisations say that the residents of the camp should be protected from persecution or attack.
Mr Gates, who is visiting Iraq, said: “We’re very concerned with reports of deaths and injuries resulting from this morning’s clashes.
“I urge the Iraqi government to show restraint and to live up to its commitments to treat residents of Ashraf according to Iraqi law and their international obligations.”
In January, a Spanish judge opened an investigation into a raid by Iraqi security forces on Camp Ashraf in July 2009 which left 11 people dead. He wanted to see whether crimes against humanity were committed.
A complaint filed by human rights lawyers on behalf of relatives of the victims alleged that police and soldiers shot and beat unarmed residents of the camp so they could clear a space to build a police station there.
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Thousands of women are jockeying for position in a race to be the most fashionable as they turn out in their finery at Aintree.
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Broadcaster Miriam O’Reilly, who won an age discrimination tribunal case against the BBC, has landed a new presenting role on BBC One.
The 54-year-old will join Rav Wilding as a presenter for the Crimewatch Roadshow when it returns in June for its third series.
In January, O’Reilly won her case after claiming she had been dropped unfairly as a Countryfile presenter.
The BBC said it accepted the tribunal outcome and apologised.
“I’m delighted to be working on a programme that can really make a difference,” O’Reilly said.
“It’s a chance for me to use my journalistic skills and I’m really looking forward to getting back to the buzz of live TV”.
Wilding will host the programme from the studio, whilst O’Reilly will travel around the UK reporting from various different locations.
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Nato has said it will not apologise for a bomb attack on a rebel convoy of tanks on Thursday, in which at least four people died.
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Last year’s winner Don’t Push It tops the weights as 40 horses are set to contest the 164th running of the Grand National at Aintree on Saturday.
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Oil prices have surged to a two-and-a-half-year high on concerns about a shortfall in supply.
Brent crude rose by 0.4% to $123.17 in early trade in Asia. Light crude gained 0.5% to $110.82.
There have been concerns that the unrest in Libya and the Middle East will hurt supplies.
Production in Libya, the world’s 17th largest oil producer, has been severely affected as fighting between the government and rebels continues.
While there has been concern about a shortfall in supplies from the oil producing nations, the demand for oil has been increasing.
The economic growth of emerging nations is producing a surge in demand, fuelled by a need for oil to power the industrial sector, as well as an ever growing number of vehicles on the road.
The International Monetary Fund (IMF) issued a warning that the disparity in demand and supply of oil is likely to push prices even higher.
“There is a risk that the tensions between demand and supply trends could intensify again and prices could rise rapidly,” said Thomas Helbling an advisor to IMF’s research department.
The IMF also warned that the markets are likely to face further scarcity in oil supplies, which the markets seem to be factoring in already.
“The increase in the trend component of oil prices suggest that the global oil market has entered a period of increased scarcity,” the IMF said.
As concerns continue about a shortfall in supply, oil companies’ efforts to add more supply sources are also being hampered.
“To make matters worse there are considerable constraints affecting the development of new oil supplies.” said Rajiv Biswas of IHS global insight
He said the current events in North Africa and the Middle East are forcing companies to rethink their investment strategies.
“Political risks in large, low-cost oil producers like Iraq and Iran mean that companies face considerable difficulties and restrictions in investing in these countries” he added.
Mr Biswas said as these issues continue to affect the markets, oil prices are likely to rise even further.
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Thriller writer Craig Thomas has died at the age of 69, it has been announced.
Fans regard the Cardiff-born author as the inventor of the techno-thriller genre which includes his book, Firefox, made into a Hollywood blockbuster.
The 1982 movie starred Clint Eastwood as the US fighter pilot and spy Mitchell Gant, a character in a series of Thomas’s books.
The former English teacher was educated at Cardiff High School.
He was the son of the well-known Western Mail rugby writer JBG Thomas.
In a writing career spanning 30 years, Thomas’s novels were regarded as being “meticulously” researched, with “cutting edge technology” which made him an international bestseller, according to friends.
He wrote in his spare time during 11 years teaching English in grammar schools in the West Midlands.
Thomas and his wife Jill lived for many years in Staffordshire, but recently moved to Somerset.
He recently finished a two-volume commentary on the German philosopher, Friedrich Nietzsche.
He died from pneumonia following a short, but intensive battle with acute myeloid leukaemia, according to a statement released by his wife.
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Liberal Democrat leader Nick Clegg is joining his party’s campaign for the Welsh assembly election on Friday.
The deputy prime minister is the second UK party leader to campaign in Wales for the 5 May election, after David Cameron visited Swansea last week
He will hit the campaign trail with visits in south, mid and north Wales.
Meanwhile, Labour will focus on broadcasting, the Conservatives on small businesses and Plaid will open a new campaign HQ.
The Welsh Lib Dems have said they will fight the campaign on the economy, promising to tackle low skills and create jobs.
They would offer £2,000 grants for companies to train staff that they hire unemployed young people.
Asked about public spending cuts imposed by the UK government when she launched her party’s campaign on Tuesday, Welsh Lib Dem leader Kirsty Williams said focusing on Westminster “simply lets the Labour-Plaid government off the hook for the last four years”.
Tory candidates will visit a fruit and veg stall in Fairwater, Cardiff whose business rates would be wiped out by a Conservative assembly government.
Shadow culture secretary Ivan Lewis will unveil Labour’s election pledges on broadcasting during a visit to Cardiff.
Plaid Cymru leader Ieuan Wyn Jones will open his party’s new campaign headquarters in Cardiff.
Meanwhile, a former Liberal Democrat parliamentary candidate has defected to Welsh Labour.
Paul Penlington stood for the Vale of Clwyd at the 2010 general election.
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