
The BBC’s Wyre Davies: “There is a lot of anger and confusion at the hospital”
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The BBC’s Wyre Davies: “There is a lot of anger and confusion at the hospital”
The commander of Libya’s rebel forces has said Nato apologised for mistakenly hitting a column of rebel tanks near the eastern town of Ajdabiya.
Gen Abdelfatah Yunis said the deadly air strike had occurred despite a warning to Nato that the tanks were being moved to the front line.
Nato said it was investigating the claim, without giving further details.
Rebels said four rebels died, while local doctors told the BBC at least 13 fighters had been killed in the strike.
“We would like to receive answers about what happened. We would like a rational and convincing explanation,” Gen Yunis said.
He also said such mistakes must not be repeated and called for better co-operation in the future.
But the general stressed that there was no tension between the opposition and Nato, despite anger among some local residents.
It was the third such incident in recent days involving international forces deployed to protect Libyan civilians.
“Nato, with all the equipment they have – is this the second mistake? Is it really a mistake or something arranged secretly?”
Benghazi residentIn pictures: Nato ‘hits Libya rebels’
The BBC’s Wyre Davies reported chaotic scenes on the outskirts of Ajdabiya, with rebel forces in retreat.
Meanwhile, a relief ship carrying emergency supplies of food and medicine has arrived in the besieged rebel-held city of Misrata, in western Libya.
The rebels hit in the air strike had been moving a group of tanks, armoured vehicles and rocket launchers near the front line between the towns of Ajdabiya and Brega in more than 30 transporters.
One rebel commander told the BBC he saw at least four missiles land among rebel fighters.
As well as those killed, many more were injured, he said.
There is considerable anger among rebel troops at what appears to have been a terrible mistake, our correspondent says.
They are asking why rebel units were hit, he adds, when they could be seen clearly advancing in a westerly direction towards the front line.
“It is unbelievable,” said one Benghazi resident. “Nato, with all the equipment they have – is this the second mistake? Is it really a mistake or something arranged secretly?”
Another said: “The allies and the UN Security Council must allow us to be armed. We don’t want anything, just to be armed to defend ourselves against this dictator and fascist.”
Rebel forces in the area began retreating on Wednesday after heavy bombardment from government forces.
Chairman of Nato’s military committee, Admiral Giampaolo Di Paola, said it is still unclear what happened
They had been calling for more Nato air strikes in recent days.
Nato said it was investigating the incident, noting that the area where the attack occurred was “unclear and fluid with mechanised weapons travelling in all directions”.
“What remains clear is that Nato will continue to uphold the UN mandate and strike forces that can potentially cause harm to the civilian population of Libya,” said the alliance in a statement.
Meanwhile, a different rebel spokesman said Thursday’s fatal air strike was carried out by pro-government forces rather than by Nato.
“This was not a Nato air-strike; on the contrary, it was conducted by Gaddafi’s brigades using SIAI Marchetti SF-260 planes,” Col Ahmad Bani told al-Arabiya television.
The alliance took over air operations from a US, French and British coalition a week ago, to enforce a UN mandate to protect civilians in Libya.
Last Friday, at least 13 people were reportedly killed when a coalition plane fired on a rebel convoy between Brega and Ajdabiya.
Three medical students were among the dead.
The attack came after rebels reportedly fired an anti-aircraft gun.
In a separate incident, seven civilians died and 25 were hurt in a coalition air strike on a pro-Gaddafi convoy near Brega.
Further west, in Libya’s third-biggest city, Misrata, a ship chartered by the UN World Food Programme delivered hundreds of tonnes of high energy biscuits, flour, and water purification tablets, as well as enough medicine to last 30,000 people for a month.
Misrata has been under attack by Libyan government forces for several weeks, and Libyan rebels have complained it would “cease to exist” within a week unless Nato took action to save it.
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Rebels in eastern Libya say their forces have been mistakenly hit in an air attack by Nato jets.
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Besieged Ivory Coast leader Laurent Gbagbo has fewer than 1,000 troops left in the main city of Abidjan, according to French Defence Minister Gerard Longuet.
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50 hot air balloons float into the record books by flying across the English channel to France
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High Street retailer Marks & Spencer is being prosecuted after allegedly failing to protect shoppers and workers against asbestos.
The Health and Safety Executive accuses Marks & Spencer and two of its contractors of breaches at shops in Reading, Bournemouth and Plymouth.
Refurbishment work was being carried out at the time of the alleged breaches, between 2004 and 2006.
At Winchester Crown Court, Marks & Spencer denied all the charges.
Jurors were told three out of four Marks & Spencer stores have suspended ceilings using tiles made in part from asbestos.
The material is easily-broken and releases fibres into the air – and is one of the most dangerous sources of asbestos.
Jurors were told there was no doubt that Marks & Spencer knew it had an issue with asbestos as the firm had its own code of practice for dealing with it.
Yet when work was carried out in Reading’s Broad Street store in 2006, the process was chaotic, said Richard Matthews, prosecuting.
“Better an unattractive store in the short term than the risk of anything else in the long term”
Richard Matthews, prosecuting
It seemed Marks & Spencer did not want to release enough floor space to allow contractors to carry out the work safely for fear it would lose out on sales, the court heard.
Mr Matthews said the firm had also failed to carry out sufficient surveys to identify the location of asbestos in the stores.
In one case it was only found when a workman began to saw through a partition. He had to be decontaminated.
Mr Matthews said: “Marks & Spencer had a duty to make sure asbestos did not take those working in the store by surprise.
“If that meant making the store unsightly to customers or interfering with their shopping experience then so be it – better an unattractive store in the short term than the risk of anything else in the long term.”
Marks & Spencer has pleaded not guilty to breaching three counts of section 2(1) of the Health and Safety at Work Act, relating to its own staff, and three counts of section 3(1), relating to members of the public and other workers.
Each charge relates to each of the three stores and dates from September 2004 to November 2006.
PA Realisations, formerly known as Pectel Limited, faces one charge relating to the works at the Reading store, while Willmott Dixon Construction faces two charges relating to the Bournemouth store.
Mr Matthews said Marks & Spencer could not shift the blame on to its contractors as it had a “duty of care” to ensure the work was carried out safely.
The hearing continues and is expected to last up to 15 weeks.
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A Montreal theatre’s hiring of a French rock star convicted of manslaughter has sparked a row, with politicians calling for him to be denied entry.
Theatre du Nouveau Monde has engaged Bertrand Cantat to appear next year in a series of plays by Sophocles.
Cantat was convicted in 2003 of beating girlfriend Marie Trintignant to death in a Lithuanian hotel room. He was released from prison in 2007.
Canadian law appears to bar him. The theatre said he had paid for his crime.
“It is unacceptable,” said Gerard Deltell, of provincial party Action democratique du Quebec, who proposed a motion in the Quebec provincial legislature calling on the federal government to bar the former singer for Noir Desir.
“Mr Cantat is not welcome in Quebec.”
Gilles Duceppe, the leader of the Bloc Quebecois, also condemned the theatre’s choice.
Josee Verner, a former minister in Prime Minister Stephen Harper’s Conservative government, said the party would not allow Cantat to enter the country if it were returned to power in the upcoming 2 May election.
“There will be no exception made for him under Canadian immigration laws,” Ms Verner said, according to the Reuters news agency.
Canada’s immigration act bars from entry anyone convicted abroad of a crime that is punishable in Canada by at least 10 years in prison. Cantat would have faced life in prison had he been convicted of manslaughter in Canada.
Theatre du Nouveau Monde is Montreal’s largest theatre company.
The three Sophocles plays, directed by Wajdi Mouawad, are to be performed from 4 May to 6 June 2012.
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The BBC’s Wyre Davies: “There is a lot of anger and confusion at the hospital”
Rebels in eastern Libya say their forces have been mistakenly hit in a Nato air raid.
Doctors in Ajdabiya told the BBC at least 13 rebel fighters had been killed by the strike on a rebel tank position.
The BBC’s Wyre Davies reports chaotic scenes on the outskirts of Ajdabiya, with rebel forces in retreat reporting being hit by Nato air strikes.
It is the third such incident in recent days involving international forces deployed to protect Libyan civilians.
One rebel commander told the BBC he saw at least four missiles land among rebel fighters.
Many people have been killed and many more have been injured, he said.
Civilians are reported to be fleeing Ajdabiya in their thousands, according to the latest wire reports, after rumours spread that Gaddafi forces were preparing to attack the city.
The rebels had been taking a group of tanks, armoured vehicles and rocket launchers near the front line between the towns of Ajdabiya and Brega in more than 30 transporters.
A doctor at Ajdabiya hospital tells the BBC’s Wyre Davies that there are many serious injuries
Whether or not a Nato pilot mistook all of that heavy armour for Gaddafi weaponry remains unclear, he adds.
Following the apparent Nato attack, ambulances were seen heading in the opposite direction, towards the hospital in Ajdabiya.
There is considerable anger among rebel troops after what appears to have been a terrible mistake, our correspondent says.
They ask why rebel units were hit, when they could be seen clearly advancing in a westerly direction towards the front line, he adds.
Rebel forces in the area began retreating on Wednesday after heavy bombardment from government forces.
They had been calling for more Nato air strikes in recent days.
Nato is said to be looking into the incident.
The alliance took over a week ago air operations from a US, French and British coalition to enforce a UN mandate to protect civilians in Libya.
Last Friday, at least 13 people were reportedly killed when a coalition plane fired on a rebel convoy between Brega and Ajdabiya.
Three medical students were among the dead.
The attack came after rebels reportedly fired an anti-aircraft gun.
In a separate incident, seven civilians died and 25 were hurt in a coalition air strike on a pro-Gaddafi convoy near Brega.
This article is from the BBC News website. © British Broadcasting Corporation, The BBC is not responsible for the content of external internet sites.
The abuse of Emmanuel Adebayor in Tottenham’s Champions League defeat at Real Madrid had “racial undertones”, says an anti-racism group.
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A row flares over an advert by an animal rights group which claims that giving children meat is “child abuse”.
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Four men have been charged by police investigating the death of a businessman at his East Sussex farm.
Julian Gardner was killed last October after apparently disturbing intruders at his farm near Robertsbridge.
Sussex Police said three men from Kent had been charged with burglary and conspiracy to pervert the course of justice.
A fourth faces a conspiracy charge. They are all due to appear at Hastings Magistrates’ Court on Friday.
Sussex Police said a fifth man would also be charged with burglary and conspiracy to pervert the course of justice by officers on Friday.
Anthony Hill, from the Crown Prosecution Service, said: “I have today advised Sussex Police to charge four men with the burglary of Bush Barn Farm, near Robertsbridge, in the early hours of October 11 last year, during which the landowner, Julian Gardner, was killed.
“Additionally, these men and a fifth man, are also charged with conspiring to pervert the course of public justice in relation to the investigation into the murder of Julian Gardner that then ensued.
“This decision was taken in accordance with the Code for Crown Prosecutors.”
Lee Delay, 22, of Whitegate Close, Tunbridge Wells; Christopher Leek, 29, of Pear Tree Close, Cranbrook and Paul Dunn, 56, of Tanyard Estate, Sandhurst are all charged with burglary and conspiring to pervert the course of public justice.
Terence Dunn, 55, of Tanyard Estate, Sandhurst, has been charged with conspiring to pervert the course of public justice.
Police believe Mr Gardner, 53, was attacked when he disturbed intruders at Bush Barn Farm, near Robertsbridge, in the early hours of 11 October.
A post-mortem examination found Mr Gardner, who ran an agricultural and car repair business, suffered multiple injuries.
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The brother of a Welsh tourist fatally stabbed on an American street says the killer should “willingly” go to jail for the rest of his life “to atone”.
Anthony Ritch was giving a victim impact statement to a New Jersey court, where Robert Davies faces sentencing for the death of Lavern Ritch in 2007.
Robert Davies has been convicted of the reckless manslaughter of Mr Ritch, 37, of Penarth, Vale of Glamorgan.
Prosecutors want a recommended jail term doubled from 10 to 20 years.
William Merz, prosecuting, said Davies was “dangerous with a capital D”.
The trial heard that he stabbed Mr Ritch through the heart in the the summer resort town of Margate, New Jersey, where the tourist was visiting with friends from Atlantic City.
Mr Ritch, who was once a contestant on the British version of the Gladiators TV show, had been trying to help Davies, the court heard.
Mr Ritch, who worked as a personal fitness instructor and swimming coach at a Cardiff sports centre, joined in a chase through the streets.
The chase began after Davies had been punched in the face moments earlier and left bleeding after insulting a Mexican man.
Davies had claimed he has acted in self-defence, wrongly believing his victim was a member of the group chasing him.
Mr Ritch’s family said the verdict of the February trial – when Davies was acquitted of murder and aggravated manslaughter – had left them feeling Davies had “got off”.
In addition to being found guilty of reckless manslaughter, Davies was also found guilty of weapons offences.
In his statement to the court on Thursday, Anthony Ritch said the family was in constant pain as result of his brother’s killing, and wanted the longest possible sentence for Davies.
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The Queen, accompanied by the Duke of Edinburgh, is to go on a four-day state visit to the Republic of Ireland on 17 May, Buckingham Palace has said.
The tour, announced last month, will include a ceremony in Dublin’s Garden of Remembrance and a visit to the Taoiseach at Government Buildings.
The Queen will also make a speech at a state dinner at Dublin Castle.
It is the first state visit to the Irish Republic by a British monarch since independence.
King George V was the last reigning monarch to visit the country in 1911 when it was then part of the UK.
The Queen was invited to Ireland by the Republic’s President, Mary McAleese, who will formally welcome the monarch at her home in Dublin’s Phoenix Park, the Aras an Uachtarain.
The trip will combine visits to historically significant sites with tourist attractions.
The BBC’s royal correspondent Nicholas Witchell said the most notably symbolic event was the ceremony at the Garden of Remembrance, where all those who gave their lives in the cause of Irish freedom and stood against the Crown are commemorated.
He said it was not known whether the Queen would lay a wreath.
In Dublin, the Queen will attend events at Trinity College Dublin, the National War Memorial Gardens in Islandbridge and at Croke Park stadium.
The ground is the home of Gaelic football where, in 1920 during the Irish War of Independence, British forces fired into the crowd at a football match, killing 14 spectators and players.
The Gaelic Athletic Association pledged to give the Queen a warm welcome to the 82,000-seater stadium.
“We are confident this historic visit to Croke Park will be welcomed by those who play, administer and support our games, at home and abroad, including of course throughout Britain,” the organisation said.
There are also plans for the Queen and the duke to visit the Irish National Stud in Kildare, as well as Cashel, in County Tipperary, home to the popular tourist destination of the Rock of Cashel, and Cork.
The British ambassador in Ireland will host an event celebrating the monarch’s return visit.
Security on the trip is expected to be tight, particularly in light of the recent murder of Constable Ronan Kerr in Northern Ireland.
The BBC’s Ireland correspondent Mark Simpson has called the state visit a “watershed moment” in British-Irish relations.
The war of independence and use of the British army in the Troubles in Northern Ireland strained relations between the UK and the Irish Republic for much of the 20th Century.
The Queen also suffered personal loss when an IRA bomb blast killed her cousin Lord Louis Mountbatten on his boat in Ireland in 1979.
Sinn Fein President Gerry Adams said the party was “aware of the offence the visit will cause to many Irish citizens”.
“Sinn Fein wants to see the normalisation of relationships between our two nations and republicans have been in the leadership of this process, but that can only be based on mutual respect and equality and on the ending of the partition of Ireland,” he added.
Separately, Clarence House has announced Prince Charles is to make a short official visit to the US, also in May.
He will travel to Washington, where he will meet US President Barack Obama at the White House.
He will also give a keynote speech at a conference on sustainable agriculture at the city’s Georgetown University and attend an event to support British and US armed forces deployed overseas.
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Teachers have gone on strike protesting over violence, threats and “poor management” at a Lancashire school.
Staff at Darwen Vale High School in Darwen said they have a lack of backing from management when they confront bad behaviour from pupils.
The teachers formed a picket line outside the 1,100-pupil school during the one-day walkout on Thursday.
Head teacher Hilary Torpey said management was in talks with the unions over how to better support staff.
The unions say pupils’ behaviour includes challenging teachers to fights, pushing and shoving staff, pupils making malicious allegations, constant swearing, and filming lessons on mobiles and threatening to post them online.
There have also been problems with cyber bullying and pornography, it is claimed. And it is alleged that when teachers confiscated pupils’ phones they have then been returned by management, leaving staff “totally undermined”.
“The vast majority of pupils at Darwen Vale behave well and take their education seriously”
Hilary Torpey Head teacher
Members of the National Association of Schoolteachers/Union of Women Teachers (NASUWT) and the National Union of Teachers (NUT) are on strike.
The dispute is also supported by members of the Association of Teachers and Lecturers (ATL) and the support staff’s union, Unison.
Parents of children at the school have been told no classes will be held during the walkout.
Avis Gilmore, secretary of Lancashire NUT, said: “There is obviously a problem, it is the last resort for teachers to go on strike.
“It is necessary to make the management understand the problem.”
Head teacher Ms Torpey, who began her first full academic year at the school in September, said she was disappointed with the strike.
“My main priority is around the wellbeing and education of our pupils and the best interests of the school. I want to ensure disruption is kept to a minimum,” she said.
“I am disappointed that the trade unions have chosen to take this action. The vast majority of pupils at Darwen Vale behave well and take their education seriously.
“We are in discussions with the unions and with the staff around how we can best resolve this situation so that staff feel well supported when they do need to deal with behaviour issues.”
In its latest Ofsted inspection in June 2010, Darwen Vale was rated as a good school where pupils’ behaviour was also given a good rating.
Currently, pupils are being taught temporarily at former Holden Fold school buildings, which have a capacity of only 800.
The original Darwen Vale High School is being rebuilt under the Building Schools for the Future programme.
The new £18m school is scheduled to open in September 2012.
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Rory McIlroy lights up Augusta with a stunning 65 and is joined late on by Alvaro Quiros for a share of a two-shot lead on the opening day of the Masters.
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Eurozone interest rates have been raised to 1.25% from the record low of 1% by the European Central Bank.
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