Motorists warned over bomb alert

The scene of the security alert in NewryThe scene of the security alert in Newry on Friday
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Police have warned motorists ignoring or moving traffic cones close to the scene of a Newry security alert that they have a “blatant disregard” for people’s safety.

The Belfast to Dublin Road is closed due to a suspicious van which has been found in an underpass.

Police had said the vehicle was “cordoned off”, but some motorists have been able to get close.

There are also reports of two suspect devices in Lurgan.

A number of people have been moved from their homes at Francis Street and Castle Lane Mews in the town.

Army bomb experts have carried out a controlled explosion at Francis Street.

The security alert in Newry began shortly before 2300 BST on Thursday after two bomb warnings were received by the Daisy Hill Hospital and a charity.

The motorway is closed in both directions.

Motorists have been advised to avoid both scenes of the security alerts and use the diversions in place.

BBC Northern Ireland reporter Conor MacAuley said that police had told him the suspect vehicle was “extremely well cordoned off”.

However, speaking on Friday morning, he said some motorists had still been able to get close to the vehicle.

“There are road closed signs up, there are cones, some signs and lights, but I can’t see any police presence at the moment,” he added.

“What has happened is that someone has come along and they have moved the cones out of the road and traffic is moving freely up and down past the suspect vehicle.

“I have seen dozens of cars driving past this morning, some of them with small children in the back of their cars doing the school run.

“People obviously don’t realise the potential danger they are in.”

He said police would be aware of the dissident republican threat in the area.

“It is not long ago that a primed mortar was found on the motorway here which led to the discovery of a bomb-making factory in County Louth,” he said.

“Police will be cautious because they will know that if this was called in with very specific details about where this suspicious vehicle was there is always the risk there is the possibility of a secondary device.

“I would say they will move very slowly and this alert could go on for some time yet.”

The railway line between Newry and Dundalk has also been closed because of the ongoing security alert.

Passengers are being transported by bus between these stations.

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School building system ‘failing’

Temporary school building in SandwellSome schools awaiting rebuilds rely on temporary classrooms

The system for school building in England is not fit for purpose and new schools should be built to a standard blueprint, a review has said.

The government-commissioned review by Dixons director Sebastian James said value for money was consistently poor.

It said Labour’s £55bn Building Schools for the Future scheme was “expensive” and did not help the neediest schools fast enough.

Some 700 school rebuilds were stopped when the scheme was axed last year.

The review looked at planning, funding and building new schools, and refurbishing and maintaining existing ones.

Mr James said the overwhelming majority of people who had given evidence said the current system was “complex, time-consuming, expensive and opaque”.

Savings of up to 30% could be made by streamlining it, he said.

He said that, under BSF, the public sector had “failed consistently to get the value it should have done”.

The scheme, which saw several flagship, innovative schools designed and built, produced designs that were “far too bespoke”, the review said.

A “lack of expertise” among those procuring the buildings – often head teachers – meant there was little opportunity to lower costs or improve building methods, it found.

The review also said that other processes for funding capital projects “diverted funds to those most adept at winning bids rather than necessarily to those in most need”.

The system, particularly BSF, led to “islands” of expenditure in some areas, “whilst extremely dilapidated schools” in others “remained untouched”, Mr James said.

He recommended that new buildings should be based on a set of “standardised drawings” which “will incorporate the latest thinking on educational requirements”.

A new central body should be set up to negotiate contracts with the construction industry, while local authorities should be allocated “notional budgets” which they would use to develop their own local strategies, the review said.

The Department for Education, however, should set aside a centrally held budget for free schools – schools set up by parents or other community groups under a policy championed by Education Secretary Michael Gove.

Better data should be gathered on the condition of school buildings, so that money could be allocated based on the state of existing premises and the need for new places, it added.

Mr Gove welcomed the report: “We must have a system for school building which is much simpler, less bureaucratic and which targets priority projects,” he said.

Ty Goddard, director of the British Council for School Environments (BCSE), said there was “much to be welcomed” in the review’s conclusions.

“A simplification of the rules, regulations and processes will help everyone,” he said.

The review was commissioned in the wake of the government’s decision to scrap the Building Schools for the Future scheme.

The move sparked an outcry among teachers, councillors and pupils alike, many of whom had worked hard on developing the projects.

After announcing the end of the scheme last July, Mr Gove had to apologise to council officials after a number of errors appeared in the list of schools he published that were to proceed.

At that point a decision had not been made on 150 school projects left in limbo, with a decision still to be made on whether they would proceed.

Some 75 of these schools, mostly academies, were later told their developments would go ahead.

In February, a High Court judge ruled that the the decision to axe projects in six local authority areas was “unlawful” because of a lack of consultation.

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Kenyan deputy PM appears at ICC

Uhuru Kenyatta (file photo)Uhuru Kenyatta is also finance minister and the son of Kenya’s founding president
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Kenya’s Deputy Prime Minister Uhuru Kenyatta and two others are due at the International Criminal Court in The Hague, accused of links to 2007-8 post-election violence.

The three are seen as allies of President Mwai Kibaki.

Three backers of Mr Kibaki’s rival, Prime Minister Raila Odinga, appeared on Thursday.

All six are accused of crimes against humanity during the violence in which some 1,000 people died.

Some 500,000 people were driven from their homes, 100,000 of whom still remain in camps.

The violence broke out after supporters of President Kibaki were accused of trying to rig the presidential election in December 2007.

It ended when Mr Kibaki and Mr Odinga agreed to share power, with Mr Odinga becoming prime minister.

On Thursday, ICC judges said a hearing would be held in early September to decide whether the men would stand trial. If convicted, they could face life imprisonment.

All six deny wrongdoing.

Alongside Mr Kenyatta, who is also fiance minister and the son of Kenya’s founding president, secretary to the cabinet Francis Kirimi Muthaura and former police chief Mohammed Hussein Ali are expected to hear charges of murder, deportation, persecutions and rape.

On Thursday, former Higher Education Minister William Ruto, former Minister for Industrialisation Henry Kosgey and radio executive Joshua Arap Sang appeared in court for the preliminary hearing.

Ocampo’s list

Supporters of President Mwai Kibaki

Uhuru Kenyatta – deputy prime minister and finance minister and son of Kenya’s founding presidentFrancis Muthaura – head of civil service and cabinet secretaryHussein Ali – police chief during the violence

Supporters of Prime Minster Raila Odinga

William Ruto – former minister of higher education. Member of the Kalenjin communityHenry Kosgey – former minister of industrialisation – chairman of Odinga’s Orange Democratic MovementJoshua arap Sang – reporter and executive of radio station, Kass FM

They have not been formally charged but are accused of crimes including murder, deportation, persecutions and torture.

Mr Ruto told the court the allegations “made here sound to me like they can only be possible in a movie”. He added: “For an innocent man like me to be dragged here really is a matter that puzzles me.”

Kenya had asked the ICC for a deferral, and says it is now able to investigate and prosecute these cases itself.

Some 40 Kenyan MPs gathered outside the court in The Hague to provide moral support for the accused on Thursday.

“We feel this is not the right way to go. We can manage our own affairs,” said one lawmaker, Mohamud Ali. “Yes, we had our problems. We were down, but now we are up.”

Both Mr Kenyatta and Mr Ruto are seen as likely candidates to stand in the 2012 presidential elections, but any criminal charges could effectively end their political ambitions.

Mr Ali suggested that the court cases could be seen “as a way of trying to influence the outcome of 2012”.

The ICC alleges that a criminal plan was put in place in the Rift Valley for supporters of President Kibaki to be attacked after the election.

ICC prosecutor Luis Moreno Ocampo has said that in retaliation, police were given the green light to use excessive force and a vigilante group was organised to attack civilians.

The violence brought the country to the brink of civil war, with long-standing ethnic and economic rivalries ignited by political divisions.

One of the worst incidents saw a church where about 100 people had sought sanctuary set on fire, killing dozens inside.

The violence ended after former UN Secretary General Kofi Annan brokered a peace deal between the two presidential rivals. As part of the deal, it was agreed that perpetrators would face justice in Kenya or at the ICC in The Hague.

The organisation Human Rights Watch says this appearance of the six Kenyans in The Hague is an important test of their co-operation with the ICC.

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Jail term for airline bomb hoax

James GlenThe court heard James Glen had been anxious about flying and had consumed alcohol

A man has been jailed for three years after admitting a hoax that triggered a bomb scare on an airliner heading to Britain from the Middle East.

James Glen, 38, admitted communicating information about a bomb hoax on an Etihad Airways flight heading from Abu Dhabi to Heathrow on 24 January.

Chelmsford Crown Court heard he told a flight attendant a passenger had a gun and had threatened to blow himself up.

The plane was redirected to Stansted Airport and two RAF Typhoons scrambled.

The jets escorted the plane, which was carrying 163 passengers and 15 crew, into the Essex airport.

It was flying on the day that 35 people died in a suicide bomb attack at Moscow’s busiest airport.

Glen had been living in Australia for 18 years and was returning to the UK to start a job working on rally cars in Chard, Somerset.

Duncan Penny, representing Glen, said his client had a history of depression and had consumed alcohol and taken an anti-histamine drug.

Mr Penny said Glen was on his first flight in 20 years, had expressed a fear of flying and was tired.

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MoD ‘reprieve’ on £1bn fund gap

British soldiers in IraqSome 7,000 jobs are expected to be lost from the Army over the next four years
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The Ministry of Defence (MoD) has won a reprieve on its £1bn funding gap this year, the BBC understands.

The Treasury and MoD have agreed on measures to be taken this year in a deal apparently brokered by Downing Street, the BBC’s Caroline Wyatt said.

Some spending will be either frozen or postponed. The Treasury stressed there has been no extra funding for the MoD.

Under the strategic defence review announced in October, defence spending is set to fall by 8% over four years.

The Royal Navy and RAF will lose 5,000 jobs each, the Army 7,000 and the Ministry of Defence 25,000 civilian staff.

But the review, which was concluded before service personnel were deployed to Libya in addition to Afghanistan, failed to close a £1bn spending gap in this year’s MoD budget.

Our correspondent said the deal agreed between the Treasury and MoD comes amid increasing speculation that senior military figures are pressing Downing Street to think again about some of the cuts decided in the review.

It is thought that under the terms of the agreement some spending will be either frozen or postponed, some of it to the next financial year.

That would mean avoiding extra cuts this year, which our correspondent said “could have proved politically unpopular, with the armed forces once again active on two fronts”.

“Some costs will be shifted from the MoD’s budget to the Treasury special reserve, for example the allowance given to those on active duty,” she said, adding that there are also targets for efficiency savings, with a clampdown on all non-operational spending.

However, some analysts argue that the MoD budget will come under renewed strain next year, with some of the pain simply deferred unless deeper cuts are made in 2012 or extra money is found for defence.

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Osborne House in ‘royal’ mix up

Osborne House, Isle of WightThe royal title will not be bestowed on the former palace
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English Heritage has been told it cannot change the name of Queen Victoria’s former palace Osborne House to include a royal title.

The name change to “Royal Osborne” was announced last month and the heritage body said it hoped people would “celebrate this royal association”.

But it did not seek permission through the Cabinet Office to add the royal label to the Isle of Wight landmark.

A government spokesman said royal pre-fixes were “very sparingly” granted.

The new title had been expected to come into effect from 1 April. Some literature was already using the “royal” name.

A spokesman for the Cabinet Office said: “If any organisation wants to have the royal pre-fix it has to go to the cabinet and a decision is made – it is very sparingly granted.”

English Heritage, the government’s statutory adviser on the historic environment, claimed it had never been its intention to officially change Osborne House’s name.

But last month a statement sent out by the organisation said: “We hope people will be delighted with the new name and will celebrate this royal association.”

On Friday an English Heritage spokesman said: “We apologise if in our wish to communicate the importance of Osborne House, we have caused any confusion or offence.”

The 342-acre estate, at East Cowes, was bought by Prince Albert and Queen Victoria in 1845. It was the couple’s main residence with their nine children.

Queen Victoria died at the palace in 1901 after reigning for nearly 64 years.

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Construction firm sheds 200 jobs

Bricklayer at workAdministrators were called in after concerns over the future of the firm emerged
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More than 200 workers at a Dumfries-based construction firm have been made redundant after the company went into administration.

Staff at R&D Construction were told of the job losses at meetings on Friday.

Administrators Ernst & Young were called in this week after concerns about the future of the firm emerged.

They confirmed 205 of the company’s 226 employees have been made redundant, while the rest are being retained on a short-term basis.

Concerns about the firm’s future came to light a week ago when wage payments were delayed.

Site staff were subsequently told not to report for work on Monday.

Ernst & Young said difficult trading conditions exacerbated by a harsh winter had led to their appointment.

The firm is the main contractor for a multi-million pound housing renewal programme in Dumfries and Stranraer.

The renewal project is being funded by Dumfries and Galloway Housing Partnership (DGHP), the Scottish government and the local council.

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US budget talks down to the wire

US President Barack Obama

President Obama: “There are a few issues that are outstanding… so I’m not prepared to express wild optimism”

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Crisis talks over bitterly disputed US spending cuts are still taking place as the deadline looms to strike a deal and avoid a government shutdown.

President Barack Obama said progress had been made after night-time talks with congressional leaders.

He said he was not prepared to express “wild optimism” but hoped to be able to announce a deal on Friday morning.

Without a deal, the law funding most of the US government will expire at midnight, forcing services to cease.

Some 800,000 government employees would be barred from working and would not be paid, government lending would cease and national parks and other government-run sites would close.

The US military would continue to operate but troops would not be paid until the deadlock was broken.

BBC North America editor Mark Mardell, in Washington, says both Republicans and Democrats might be damaged by a shutdown and may pull back from the brink.

But this is only a dress rehearsal for bigger rows about next year’s budget, the deficit as a whole and the debt ceiling, and each time doing a deal will become that bit more difficult, our correspondent adds.

“Even if a breakdown is averted today, there are many more moments yet to come over budget, debt and deficit – late night crisis meetings at the White House may become a fixture”

Mark Mardell BBC North America editorRead Mark’s thoughts in full

The last US government shutdown came in 1995, amid a dispute between the Republican Congress and Bill Clinton’s White House.

That shutdown lasted for 20 days and was estimated to have shaved a full percentage point off US economic growth for one quarter of the year.

This time around, talks have been stalled for days as Republicans – urged on by the fiscally conservative Tea Party movement – push for larger budget cuts than Democrats are willing to concede.

Mr Obama held two sessions of talks on Thursday with the Republican Speaker of the House of Representatives, John Boehner, and the Democratic Senate majority leader, Harry Reid.

The president spoke after the second session ended without an agreement.

“I’m not yet prepared to express wild optimism but I think we are further along today than yesterday,” he said.

The White House then announced that his planned trip to the state of Indiana on Friday had been postponed.

Government shutdownsUS government shut down 10 times during the Carter and Reagan administrationsLast shutdown was in 1995 under President Bill ClintonLaw passed in 1870 prohibits government from operating if a budget hasn’t been passedThis is interpreted to exempt so-called essential servicesThese include: National security, air traffic control, some but not all medical servicesBut not: Processing of visas and passports, museums and monuments, answering work e-mails (by non-essential workers)What ‘government shutdown’ means

Republicans in the US House have pushed for $61bn (£37.4bn) in cuts between now and the end of the fiscal year on 30 September, and have sought to use the budget bill to dismantle Democratic policy priorities.

The Democrats have accepted cuts of more than $33bn (£20bn) from last year’s levels but say the size of the cuts Republicans demand would hinder the nascent US economic recovery.

Our correspondent Adam Brookes says there is an ideological dimension to the dispute, with the Republicans calling for budget cuts in areas, such as abortion and environmental protection, that Democrats want to see protected.

A leading House Democrat, Steny Hoyer, said on Friday that lawmakers had come “70% of the way on the numbers” but were still fighting over social policies – such as on abortions and the environment – attached to the legislation.

“I think we’re very close. We have come 70% of the way in terms of dollars. That’s a long way to go in terms of trying to reach compromise,” he said.

Looking tired, Mr Obama spoke late on Thursday after leaving the cross-party meeting, which also included Vice-President Joe Biden.

“My hope is that I’ll be able to announce to the American people some time relatively early in the day that a shutdown has been averted, that a deal has been completed,” he said.

“There’s no certainty yet.”

He said his administration had spent the past two years trying to right the ailing US economy and that he feared a government shutdown would derail signs of recovery seen recently.

“For us to go backwards because Washington couldn’t get its act together is unacceptable,” he said.

Meanwhile, Mr Boehner and Mr Reid said in a joint statement they would work through the night “to attempt to resolve our remaining differences”.

Throughout the day on Thursday, congressional leaders from both parties insisted no deal had been reached but also said they were optimistic one could be struck before a temporary measure funding the US government expired.

The US government has subsisted without a long-term budget since 1 October, funded by a series of temporary measures.

The most recent of those is set to expire at midnight on Friday, forcing all government services deemed non-essential to shut down and keeping hundreds of thousands of government workers at home.

Republicans in the House approved another temporary measure on Thursday – but one that would cut $12bn from spending in a single week.

Mr Obama said in a statement that the US government could not continue to operate on a week-to-week basis and that he would veto the Republican bill if it arrived on his desk.

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New York ‘at risk’ as seas rise

Richard BlackBy Richard Black

New York (Image: BBC)Places like New York are projected to experience an above average sea level increase
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New York is a major loser and Reykjavik a winner from new forecasts of sea level rise in different regions.

The Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) said in 2007 that sea levels would rise at least 28cm (1ft) by the year 2100.

But this is a global average; and now a Dutch team has made what appears to be the first attempt to model all the factors leading to regional variations.

Other researchers say the IPCC’s figure is likely to be a huge under-estimate.

Whatever the global figure turns out to be, there will be regional differences.

Ocean currents and differences in the temperature and salinity of seawater are among the factors that mean sea level currently varies by up a metre across the oceans – this does not include short-term changes due to tides or winds.

So if currents change with global warming, which is expected – and if regions such as the Arctic Ocean become less saline as ice sheets discharge their contents into the sea – the regional patterns of peaks and troughs will also change.

“Everybody will still have the impact, and in many places they will get the average rise,” said Roderik van der Wal from the University of Utrecht, one of the team presenting their regional projections at the European Geosciences Union (EGU) meeting in Vienna.

“But places like New York are going to have a larger contribution than the average – 20% more in this case – and Reykjavik will be better off.”

Of the 13 regions where the team makes specific projections, New York sees the biggest increase from the global average, although Vancouver, Tasmania and The Maldives are also forecast to see above-average impacts.

Gravity trap

One peculiarity of the projections is that areas closer to melting ice sheets will experience a smaller sea level rise than those further away.

Graphic showing sea level variations (Eumetsat)

Sea level rise is not set to be consistent around the globe

Battling against the rising tide

This is because ice sheets such as those on Greenland or Antarctica gravitationally attract the water.

This pulls the water towards the coast, effectively making it pile up to an extent that can be measured in centimetres.

If the ice begins to melt, it raises the average sea level simply by entering the sea; but the gravitational pull is now smaller, so locally the sea level may go down.

“So if the Greenland sheet melts more, that’s better for New York; but if Antarctica melts, that’s worse for New York – and it’s equally true for northwestern Europe,” Professor van der Wal told BBC News.

The effects are particularly pronounced for Reykjavik, the closest capital to Greenland, which is projected to receive less than half the global average sea level rise.

Ice sheet question

Roderik van der Wal is one of scientists working on the sea level projections that will be included in the next IPCC assessment, due out in 2013-4.

Before then, other scientists are likely to have completed more regional models that can be put into this mix

“We’re right at the beginning of making regional projections, and at this point there is still a lot of uncertainty,” commented Stefan Rahmstorf, a sea level specialist from the Potsdam Institute for Climate Impact Research in Germany.

“But it is clear that some parts of the world will feel sea level rise much more quickly than other parts; and an additional factor is land movements.

“In some places such as a lot of the Scandinavian coastline, the land is rising so fast that they will not have any problem with sea level rise in the near future, whereas in other places the land is subsiding – that includes some of the world’s big delta cities.”

Just before the last IPCC report came out in 2007, Professor Rahmstorf published research showing that sea levels had been rising faster that climate models predicted.

Since then, he and others, using various techniques, have concluded that somewhere between half a metre and two metres is likely by the end of the century.

He came to the EGU with a further analysis putting the likely range at 0.75-1.9m – the range reflecting uncertainties in how ice sheets may melt, and in how society may or may not respond to the findings of climate scientists by controlling greenhouse gas emissions.

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

More bodies found in Ivory Coast

Prisoners are loaded on to a truck by Ouattara forces in Abidjan, 7 AprilPro-Ouattara forces round up prisoners in the main city of Abidjan

More than 100 bodies have been found in Ivory Coast, the United Nations has said, amid the continuing conflict between rivals for the presidency.

The UN said the bodies had been found in the west of the country, in apparent ethnic killings.

Internationally recognised President Alassane Ouattara has been battling incumbent Laurent Gbagbo, who is now blockaded in a bunker in Abidjan.

Meanwhile, the EU says it may ease sanctions after a plea by Mr Ouattara.

The UN has certified Mr Ouattara as the winner of November’s run-off vote for president but Mr Gbagbo has refused to cede power.

Mr Ouattara’s forces have swept down from the north over the past two weeks but much of the main city of Abidjan is dominated by Gbagbo supporters and days of fighting has plunged it into crisis.

Rupert Colville, spokesman for the UN High Commissioner for Human Rights, said its team had found more than 100 bodies in the past 24 hours across three locations.

“All the incidents appear to be ethnically motivated,” he said.

Alassane Ouattara

Mr Ouattara tells Ivorians Mr Gbagbo’s refusal to step down had caused a great crisis

Mr Colville said that 40 bodies had been found in Blolequin, west of the town of Duekoue, adding that the “perpetrators appear to be Liberian mercenaries”.

He said: “The team also went to a nearby town of Guiglo, where they saw more than 60 bodies.”

He said some victims had been burned alive and others had been thrown down a well.

The announcement follows reports of separate mass killings last week in Duekoue, following its capture by pro-Ouattara forces.

Each side blamed the other for those killings, which the International Committee of the Red Cross says claimed at least 800 lives.

Mr Colville said of the latest killings that “one has to be a little bit cautious of assigning responsibilities”.

Map

On Friday, UN relief agencies called for humanitarian corridors which will allow safe passage for thousands of people fleeing the fighting.

Meanwhile, the European Union says it hopes to begin easing some of its sanctions on the Ivory Coast soon, following a request from Mr Ouattara.

A spokesman for EU foreign policy chief Baroness Ashton told the BBC: “We’ve received a request from President Ouattara to remove certain entities from the sanctions list. We are working on this in close consultation with President Ouattara and hope to be able to begin easing the sanctions soon.”

There are EU sanctions across many sectors, including on two key ports, banks and on cocoa exports, as well as individual sanctions on Mr Gbagbo and dozens of his supporters.

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Israeli strikes ‘kill six Gazans’

A foreign worker lies on the ground as mortar shells hit the southern Israeli kibbutz of Nir Oz, 8 AprilMore mortar shells have hit the southern Israeli kibbutz of Nir Oz

At least six Palestinians have been killed by Israeli air strikes in Gaza, including two women, doctors say.

The Israeli strikes come hours after Islamist group Hamas said it had brokered a deal for Gaza’s militant groups to stop firing on Israel.

On Thursday, members of its military wing hit an Israeli school bus with an anti-tank shell, injuring two people.

Friday’s deaths raise to 10 the number of Palestinians killed since Thursday, amid the worst fighting since 2009.

Last night, Hamas – which governs the Gaza Strip – met with other militant factions and agreed to enforce a ceasefire if Israel also stopped firing.

However neither side seems to have stopped for long, says the BBC’s Jon Donnison in Gaza City.

A Palestinian child in his damaged family house in Gaza City, 8 AprilIsrael has carried out air strikes on dozens of targets in the Gaza Strip

Israeli artillery fire and air strikes have been heard across Gaza throughout much of the day, our correspondent says, and at least six rockets were fired into Israel, hitting an area north of the Gaza Strip, according to Israeli police.

It is not clear whether the fresh violence signals an end to the truce, or whether the firing of rockets was carried out by a Palestinian splinter group that had not signed up to the ceasefire.

Israel says it is responding to the school bus attack on Thursday near the Nahal Oz kibbutz. A 16-year-old boy suffered a serious head wound and was taken to hospital for surgery.

Militants from the al-Qassam Brigades, the military wing of Hamas, hit the bus with an anti-tank shell. They said it was in response to the killing of Hamas leaders last week.

The bus attack was condemned by the US, which said it was particularly concerned by reports that the Gaza militants had used an advanced anti-tank weapon to target civilians.

At least 10 Palestinians have been killed since Thursday and more than 40 have been injured.

Several of those killed were civilians, including a mother and her 21-year-old daughter, as well as a 55-year-old man in the southern city of Khan Younis, Palestinian medics say.

Another 50-year-old civilian who had been sitting outside his home died when he was hit by tank fire on Thursday, an official in Gaza said.

Four others were identified as leaders of the Qassam Brigades and two of Friday’s victims had been members of the group, Hamas said.

Last month saw some of the worst violence since Israel launched a major offensive in Gaza in December 2008.

In one week in March, at least 10 Palestinians – including several civilians and children – were killed by Israeli attacks.

In the same period, militants in Gaza fired more than 80 rockets and mortar shells into southern Israel.

Israel says it holds Hamas responsible for all attacks coming out of Palestinian territory, even if it is other militant groups carrying them out.

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VIDEO: Electric ‘super bus’ reaches 250km/h

Netherlands develops and electric “super bus” that has a top speed of 250km/h.

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Friend or foe?

alcohol
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The link between alcohol and cancer has been made starkly clear by a report in the British Medical Journal.

It shows that for men 10% of all cancers can be traced back to alcohol, for women the figure is 3%.

And the more you drink the greater the risk.

But when you look at the wider effect on health, the message is more confusing. This centres around the red-wine effect, where a small amount is thought to benefit heart health.

Government alcohol advice

Men should not regularly drink more than 3-4 units a day.

Women should not regularly drink more than 2-3 units a day.

Source: NHS Choices

BBC Alcohol units guide

However long-term excessive alcohol consumption is clearly deadly. Alcoholic liver disease accounts for approximately 5,000 deaths in the UK each year.

The latest study shows that the dangers of drinking escalate quickly, especially for cancers which have already been linked to alcohol such as oesophagus, liver, bowel and breast cancers.

In men who regularly drink less than a pint and a half of beer, 3% of these cancers were linked to alcohol.

For those who had more, the figures go up to 18%.

Professor Sir Ian Gilmore, the chair of the UK Alcohol Health Alliance, said: “I think what becomes quite clear out of this study is that there is a link between the amount that people drink and the risk, so the more that people drink the more they will be at risk.”

But several studies have reported the benefits of drinking in moderation.

In February, the Institute for Population and Public Health at the University of Calgary published an analysis of decades of research on the subject.

How alcohol affects the body

People drink alcohol because of the pleasurable effect the chemical has.

But the same chemical has different effects in different parts of the body.

It has been shown to increase the levels of “good cholesterol” which is beneficial to the heart.

Alcohol is also converted into a chemical called acetaldehyde, which can damage DNA. This has been suggested as an explanation for the cancer-causing effect.

It is also thought to increase levels of the hormone oestrogen, which can drive the growth of breast cancer in women.

It showed a 14% to 25% reduction in heart disease in moderate drinkers compared with those who had never consumed alcohol.

One of the challenges here is the definition of moderate. The effect was noticed in those regularly drinking between 2.5g and 14.9g of alcohol. One small glass of wine contains approximately 12g.

At the time, the lead researcher, Professor William Ghali, told the BBC: “Our extensive review shows that drinking one or one to two drinks would be favourable.

“There is this potentially slippery slope, most notably with social problems and alcoholic cirrhosis of the liver, but the overall mortality including cancer and accidents shows you would be better with alcohol.”

Although as Ellen Mason, from the British Heart Foundation, warns: “Drinking more than the recommended daily maximum appears to offer no protection at all and can lead to high blood pressure, increasing the risk of strokes and heart attacks.

“If you don’t drink alcohol already there is no reason to start just because of the potential heart health benefits. There are much safer and healthier ways to look after your heart, like getting physically active, eating a healthy, balanced diet and stopping smoking.”

Professor Karol Sikora, the medical director of Cancer Partners UK, said: “On balance a small amount does no harm. Once you go above two slugs a day then you get into the danger zone. Although people always underestimate how much they drink.

“I’ve got friends coming over tonight and I will be cracking open a bottle, maybe a few.”

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

Man accused of grooming 22 girls

A man has appeared in court accused of grooming 22 girls in the UK via the internet.

Paul Anthony Wilson, 20, from Birmingham, appeared before the city’s magistrates to face 43 charges.

Charges include 19 counts of inciting a child to engage in sexual activity and 19 charges of making indecent images.

He was also charged with making a child look at indecent images, distributing images and one charge of making 755 indecent child photos.

Mr Wilson was remanded in custody and is next due to appear before Birmingham magistrates on 15 April.

The case relates to internet grooming and involves 22 girls from across the UK aged between 12 and 15, the court heard.

The alleged offences took place between 9 May, 2008 and 5 January, 2011.

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

Live – 2011 Masters day two

Northern Ireland’s Rory McIlroy holds a share of the overnight lead as day two of the 75th Masters gets under way at Augusta, with Ian Woosnam and Ian Poulter among the early starters.

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