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For the first time in almost fifty years, an official Mini team is entering the World Rally Championship.
In 1964, the Mini turned its iconic status into world fame when it won the Monte Carlo rally.
The new BMW Mini, built and run by Prodrive, will take part in its first rally in Sardinia on 5th May.
The team is hoping to challenge for individual rally wins next year, and the championship in 2013.
The original Mini was driven to its famous win in Monte Carlo by Paddy Hopkirk.
With its small engine it struggled uphill against bigger American rivals, but excelled downhill – especially on loose surfaces and round tight bends.
It wasn’t the quickest car in the rally, but the bigger cars couldn’t get far enough ahead of the Mini to overcome their penalties under the handicap system.
We reunited Paddy Hopkirk with his 1964 car – now a museum piece – for a trip around Prodrive’s test track near Coventry.
Had he enjoyed driving it back in the ’60s? “Oh my goodness yes. It was my job and my life, but it was a job I loved doing. And I was probably better at doing that than I was at studying at university.”
We gave him a chance to compare his old car with the new version when he had the opportunity to drive the Prodrive Mini around the same circuit.
“I’ve never driven a Formula One car but it feels like it,” Paddy said. “What power – the grip and the brakes are just amazing.”
The new Mini rally car is officially unveiled next week. The 1964 win led to a big increase in sales for the car – and BMW is hoping to recreate at least part of that success.
The original Mini was very similar to a standard road car that people could buy from showrooms.
The new version is very different from its showroom equivalent, with millions of pounds invested in making it as competitive as possible. It’s the same shape as the standard car, but that’s about it.
And whereas in the 1960s rally cars were completely different and a handicap system allowed them to compete, now the cars are very similar in size, weight and power – so winning or losing will come down to tiny engineering differences and, of course, the driver.
The new man behind the Mini’s wheel is Kris Meeke.
“It’s a special time in my career I have to say, for a marque like Mini to be coming back to the World Rally Championship,” he says.
“A fellow countryman in Paddy Hopkirk back in 1964 made the Mini so popular.
“For me it’s just a special time and if we can emulate a little bit of the success they had back in the ’60s it’ll be fantastic.”
It is possible to buy the modern rallying Mini too. It’s road legal, and it’s possible to enter the rally in it.
Prodrive, which runs the rally team for BMW, sells the car and an aftercare package – with prices beginning around £400,000.
This article is from the BBC News website. © British Broadcasting Corporation, The BBC is not responsible for the content of external internet sites.
Thousands of students could have to decide on which university course to study without knowing how much they will pay for it, it is claimed.
Lawyers acting for a student planning to defer her place until 2012, when higher fees come in, say she is having to choose before fees are finalised.
They want the deadline for deferred admissions to be put back until after fees are formally set.
A government spokesman said it expected universities and Ucas to be flexible.
Last year 33,472 students deferred courses to take one or more gap years.
Universities across England have been setting their tuition fees for undergraduate courses beginning in 2012, after Parliament backed plans to allow vice-chancellors to increase them to a maximum of £9,000.
“It seems that there is a flaw in the government plans for tuition fees. ”
But their plans still need to approval from the Office for Fair Access and it is not due to give this until July.
This is more than two months after students will have to formally accept their offers on May 5.
After this, a formal review process means that fees may not be set finally until late summer.
On Wednesday, business secretary Vince Cable warned universities he could cut the number of student places on offer if they decided to push ahead with fees of £9,000.
Seventeen-year-old would-be sociology undergraduate Nancy Quilliam said she was in the difficult position of having to choose which offer to accept without knowing for sure what fees she would be charged.
Like many students she is planning to take a gap year, and wants to volunteer in Sierra Leone. And as she was born in August she is very young for her academic year.
She said: “It seems that there is a flaw in the government plans for tuition fees.
“At least 19,000 students will be having to choose their courses without knowing what they will be paying.
“I’ve got two good university options. If I knew there was a difference in the fees they are going to charge, it would definitely influence whether I choose one or another.
“But as it stands I don’t know”.
Ms Quilliam says the universities she has attractive offers from, Lancaster and Warwick, are likely to charge the highest maximum fee of £9,000.
But she cannot be absolutely sure because of the speed at which the changes to the university funding system are being made.
Public Law Solicitors acting for Miss Quilliam, a student at Islington Sixth Form College, in north-London, wrote to universities minister David Willetts saying: “It is extraordinary to expect people to make such a significant decision about their future and their financial liabilities without knowing the costs involved.
“Students taking up places in 2012 who are not deferring will of course not have to accept their university place until May 2012 by which time it must be assumed fee levels will have been determined.
“Ms Quilliam is being subject to a provision which discriminates against her and places her at a significant disadvantage without there being any justification or explanation for this adverse treatment.”
They ask for the university admission service, Ucas, to delay the admissions deferral deadline until after fee levels have been formally set.
The lawyers add: “This is a sensible and proportionate measure which could be implemented just for this year to redress the arbitrary unfairness of a scheme clearly implemented in a hurry.”
They add that “it would be unfair and irrational” not to comply with the request now the situation has been brought to the attention of the government.
A spokesman for the Department for Business, Innovation and Skills said: “The application process is managed by UCAS and the HE sector and they have already provided help to those who have announced their intention to defer.
“While the government does not interfere in the admissions process, we will look to sector and UCAS to be flexible where possible.”
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A burka worn by BBC world affairs editor John Simpson and a bullet that grazed Kate Adie’s leg in Beirut are to go on display for the first time.
Simpson wore the burka as a disguise to enter Taliban-controlled Afghanistan before the US-led attack in 2001.
His fellow BBC correspondent Kate Adie was scratched by a stray bullet in Lebanon and kept it as a lucky charm.
The items will be part of an exhibition on war reporting at the Imperial War Museum North in Manchester from 28 May.
The exhibition, called War Correspondent, will examine the roles and perils of journalists in conflicts from World War I to the present day.
It will also feature the white suit that became Martin Bell’s trademark during the Bosnian war, the typewriter used by ITN’s Michael Nicholson in Vietnam and a Reuters Land Rover that was hit by a rocket in Gaza in 2006.
The BBC’s Jeremy Bowen and the late Brian Hanrahan will also be featured, as will Richard Dimbleby, The Daily Telegraph’s Clare Hollingworth, who is credited with breaking the news of the German invasion of Poland in 1939, and American journalist Martha Gellhorn.
Imperial War Museum North director Jim Forrester said: “The remarkable men and women featured in this exhibition have all brought momentous events and important stories into our lives and living rooms, often at considerable risk to themselves.”
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A Cardiff University-led team of scientists are urging urgent action by health authorities worldwide after it discovered new strains of antibiotic-resistant bacteria in India.
It is the first time the bacteria, found in the drinking water supply of New Delhi, has been located in the wider environment outside a hospital.
The bacteria includes species which cause cholera and dysentery.
The full findings are published in The Lancet Infectious Diseases.
Cardiff scientists were the first to identify the NDM-1 gene which makes bacteria resistant to a large range of antibiotics.
Their research was extended when it was discovered that while most patients with the bacteria had recently been hospitalised in India, some cases had occurred without recent hospital treatment.
This then prompted the team to test the wider environment in New Delhi.
“This is an urgent matter of public health”
Prof Tim Walsh Cardiff University’s School of Medicine
Samples were taken from public water taps and waste seepage, such as water pools in the streets.
Resistant bacteria was found in 4% of the water supplies, and in 30% of the water pools.
Researchers then identified 11 new species of bacteria carrying the NDM-1 gene, including strains which cause cholera and dysentery.
Antibiotics are used to reduce excretion of bacteria in cholera patients, and to reduce the duration and severity of dysentery.
Study leader, Prof Tim Walsh, from Cardiff University’s School of Medicine, called the results “extremely worrying”.
“We found resistant bacteria in public water used for drinking, washing and food preparation and also in pools and rivulets in heavily-populated areas where children play,” he said.
Monsoon flooding
“The spread of resistance to cholera and to a potential-untreatable strain of dysentery is also a cause for extreme concern,” he added.
Researchers say a recent United Nations report showed 650 million Indian citizens do not have access to a flush toilet and even more probably have no clean water.
The New Delhi sewage system is also reported to be unable to cater for the city’s population.
The research team also said it believes that temperatures and monsoon flooding make New Delhi ideal for the spread of NDM-1.
“This is an urgent matter of public health,” said Prof Walsh.
“We need similar environmental studies in cities throughout India, Pakistan and Bangladesh to establish how widespread resistant bacteria are.
“If we are to maintain our ability to treat severe infection in vulnerable patients, this action is vital,” he added.
The team has offered to help the World Health Organisation (WHO) and the Asian health authorities with the action that needs to be taken.
“The environmental spread of bacteria is also an international issue,” Prof Walsh said.
“We have discovered patients in the UK and Europe carrying NDM-1 who did not visit hospitals while in India,” he added.
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Gunmen have attacked a police training centre in the southern Afghan province of Kandahar and are battling security forces inside, officials say.
Reports from the base near Kandahar city say there was an explosion followed by gunfire.
Several attackers are involved in the raid, officials say. There were no immediate reports of casualties.
Tens of thousands of Afghan police and troops are being trained to assume full security control once Nato leaves.
Afghan forces are frequently targeted by the Taliban and their allies who want to oust the Western-backed government of Hamid Karzai in Kabul.
Police say a number of armed men have taken up positions inside the training centre.
“They have been exchanging fire with police for the past hour. We have no report of casualties yet,” provincial police chief Khan Mohammad Mujahid told the AFP news agency.
He said the building was also used as a recruitment centre for army and police.
An AFP reporter at the scene says the area has been sealed off and helicopters are flying overhead.
Kandahar has seen some of the worst of the violence in Afghanistan in recent years and is seen as the spiritual homeland of the Taliban.
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The number of academy schools in England has tripled since the coalition came to power less than a year ago.
Another 162 schools in England became academies this month, bringing the total to more than 600, compared with 203 at the time of the last election.
And the government is inviting more to apply for the semi-independent status, existing outside local authorities, in charge of budgets, pay and conditions.
Unions oppose them, saying they will fracture the education system.
The government says one in six of England’s secondary schools is now an academy.
Ultimately, it wants all schools to have this status, meaning they would be directly funded from central government.
Schools that “convert” to become academies are given money which would previously have been used by the local authority to provide services to schools such as those for children with special educational needs (SEN).
There are now 629 academies open. Some of these (272) are old-style academies which were being set up by Labour as a way of raising standards in disadvantaged areas and were already in the pipeline at the time of the last election in May 2010.
Minister for Schools, Lord Hill, said: “I am delighted that so many schools have decided to become academies. As academies they can decide what is best for their pupils, parents and the local community, free from red-tape and politicians.
“By setting good schools free and improving performance in weak schools we will raise standards for all children no matter their background.”
The government says in six local authorities, a majority of secondary schools are now academies. These are: Bromley, North East Lincolnshire, Plymouth, Reading, Rutland and Southwark.
In the case of the London borough of Southwark, nearly 70% of its secondary schools are academies – but most of these were created under the old blueprint.
It has 11 academies but only two are the new style being promoted by the coalition.
However, in Bromley, also in London, all 11 of its academies have converted in the past year. There, 65% of state secondaries are academies.
In Plymouth, all but two of its 10 academies are schools which opted for the status following the election.
Primary schools can also become academies – but relatively fewer have taken up the offer so far. Since March, 82 primary schools have become academies.
Special schools can also apply for the status and officials say so far four have been approved and are “in the pipeline”.
Ministers initially prioritised schools classed as outstanding or good for conversion to academy-status but they are now opening the door to other schools.
This means those judged to be “satisfactory” will be considered. Officials say schools will need to show they have good leaders and be improving and “performing well”.
Teachers’ unions oppose the conversion of schools to academies and there have been strikes at some schools planning to make the change.
They say the academies programme will lead to a splintering of the education system, more competition between schools and less local accountability.
Christine Blower, general secretary of the National Union of Teachers, said: “It is irresponsible for the government to be prioritising an expensive academy programme at a time when essential local authority services to schools – such as specialist SEN support, speech and language therapy, education psychologists – are being cut.
“Head teachers and governors should think very carefully before relinquishing the support available from the local authority and its family of schools at a time of such economic hardship and uncertainty.”
The government says the programme will improve standards in schools by allowing head teachers to take more control and do what is right for their pupils.
This article is from the BBC News website. © British Broadcasting Corporation, The BBC is not responsible for the content of external internet sites.
Indonesia has passed a long-awaited law against people-smuggling.
Those found guilty of helping to transport illegal migrants into the country could now face prison terms of up to 15 years and a large fine.
Thousands of asylum-seekers and economic migrants use the country as a transit point in an attempt to get to Australia.
The new law against people-smuggling is part of a broader bill that overhauls much of the immigration system.
Until now, people-smugglers could operate with relative impunity in Indonesia. They could only be charged with minor immigration offences which usually resulted in a small fine.
But under this new law, they face up to 15 years in jail or a fine of $170,000 (£104,000).
The move will be welcomed by Australia, which has been putting pressure on the Jakarta government to reduce the number of asylum-seekers who pass through Indonesia before travelling on to Australia.
Indonesia will also benefit, because the migrants who arrive here often end up staying for years.
Some need to save money for the next leg of their trip, others are taken advantage of by people smugglers who leave them stranded mid-journey.
And if they are caught by the authorities, the asylum-seekers then have to wait to be resettled somewhere else.
But enforcing such a law is a lot more difficult than passing it. Critics say the system is already plagued by corruption – with people-smugglers frequently paying bribes to officials.
And the transport of illegal migrants is becoming an ever more widespread and lucrative trade.
This article is from the BBC News website. © British Broadcasting Corporation, The BBC is not responsible for the content of external internet sites.
Scottish Labour leader Iain Gray was targeted by anti-cuts protesters
Scottish Labour has been forced to cancel an election campaign event at a Glasgow train station, after it was hijacked by rowdy protesters.
Party leader Iain Gray arrived at Central Station to highlight his commitment to the city’s airport rail link.
But the event was cut short as he was greeted by people protesting against cuts, ahead of the 5 May election.
The other parties have focussed on health, policing and green issues.
Labour has promised to reinstate the Glasgow Airport Rail Link, if re-elected, after the project was cancelled by the SNP.
But Mr Gray’s media event on Thursday was disrupted by protesters from Citizens United Against Public Sector Cuts.
Meanwhile, the Tories’ Annabel Goldie is at Glasgow’s Springburn Health Centre to talk about her party’s health visitors.
The party wants to bring back prescription charges to raise £20m for more health visitors.
The Lib Dems have launched a Facebook campaign against a single police force.
They have strongly opposed such a move and claimed it could mean between 3,000 and 4,000 police officers removed from the beat, while deployment decisions would be taken out of the hands of local police chiefs.
Labour and the Tories back merging Scotland’s eight police forces into one to make vital savings.
The SNP government announced a consultation on the issue before the break-up of parliament, although Justice Secretary Kenny MacAskill said a “strong case” exists for a single force.
SNP leader Alex Salmond is due to make an announcement on investment in Scotland’s future and will highlight commitments to low carbon, as he campaigns in Dundee and Falkirk.
Scottish Labour leader Iain Gray was targeted by anti-cuts protesters
This article is from the BBC News website. © British Broadcasting Corporation, The BBC is not responsible for the content of external internet sites.
People living in Syria’s eastern Hasaka region are to be granted Syrian nationality by a decree from President Bashar al-Assad, according to state TV.
Many inhabitants of the region are Kurds, who make up about 10% of Syria’s 22.5m population.
Kurds in Syria frequently complain of discrimination.
President Assad – who is under pressure from pro-democracy protests – met Kurdish leaders in the city of Hasaka on Tuesday to hear their demands.
But Kurdish leader Habib Ibrahim told Reuters news agency Syria’s Kurds would continue a non-violent struggle for civic rights and democracy in spite of the decree.
“Our cause is democracy for the whole of Syria. Citizenship is the right of every Syrian.
“It is not a favour. It is not the right of anyone to grant,” he said.
Until the last week, Syria’s Kurdish population had distanced themselves from protests posing an unprecedented challenge to President Assad’s 11-year rule.
But then demonstrations erupted in Hasaka and Qamishli, with protesters chanting “Neither Arabic, nor Kurdish, we want a national unity” – in an attempt to defeat any accusations of trying to make a Kurdish movement.
The latest decree is among a series of measures taken by President Assad in what our correspondent in Damascus, Lina Sinjab, is a bid to please the public.
He has appointed Adel Safar, a reformist and former minister of agriculture, to form a new government.
Three committees were established in less than a week to investigate the killing of civilians in the cities of Deraa, Lattakia and Duma, a suburb of Damascus – and to study the lifting of the state of emergency which has been in force for almost five decades.
The committees will also examine the census of 1962 which deprived many Kurds in Syria of their citizenship.
This article is from the BBC News website. © British Broadcasting Corporation, The BBC is not responsible for the content of external internet sites.
A cursor on a computer screen can be controlled using thoughts about a range of vowel sounds, research has found.
Brain signals have been translated into motion or even pictures before, but the current research showcases a nascent technique called electrocorticography.
The approach uses sensors placed directly on the surface of the brain.
The authors of the Journal of Neuroengineering paper say the technique will lead to better “brain-computer interfaces” for the disabled.
A great many studies and demonstrations have in recent years made use of the electroencephalograph, or EEG, typically worn as a “cap” studded with electrodes that pick up the electric fields produced by firing neurons.
The technique has been shown to guide electric wheelchairs or even toys, based only on the wearer’s intention.
However, EEGs lose a great deal of the precious information that is available closer to the brain itself, what lead author of the study Eric Leuthardt, of Washington University in St Louis, in the US, calls the “gold standard” brain signal.
“You cannot get the spatial or the signal resolution,” he told BBC News.
“One of the key features in signal resolution is seeing the higher frequencies of brain activity – those higher frequencies have a substantial capability of giving us better insights into cognitive intentions, and part of the reason EEG suffers for this is it acts as a filter of all of these high frequency signals.”
That is, the EEG picks up signals outside the skull, which acts to absorb and muddle the signals.
Electrocorticography, by contrast, is so named because it taps directly into the brain’s cortex – the outermost layer of the brain.
In a surgical procedure, a plastic pad containing a number of electrodes is implanted under the skull.
Its power has already been shown off in allowing video game play by thought alone – but in the new study, the researchers have tapped into the speech network of the brain.
Prior studies have made use of the motor control signals in the brain: the thought or will to move in a particular direction.
But Dr Leuthardt said that the units of speech known as phonemes allow signals of a particular “discrete” nature, rather than signals that range in intensity, as with thoughts of motion.
“(It’s) for the same reason that you don’t type a paper with a mouse – you have a keyboard with a number of discrete commands,” he explained.
“We would want to facilitate somebody’s abilty to communicate by having different phonemes – or essentially key presses – that could allow them to have discrete type of control.”
Four patients who were already undergoing the electrocorticograph implantation – to establish the source of incurable epileptic seizures – participated in the latest study.
They were asked to think of four different phonemes – “oo”, “ah”, “ee” and “eh” – and their brain signals were recorded. Those higher-frequency signals were shown to reliably move a cursor on a computer screen.
“Do we need that gold standard to get this simple level of control? I think the likely answer is yes,” Dr Leuthardt explained.
“For a brain-computer interface, especially for someone who is severly impaired, they need something that is absolutely, completely reliable. If you think of EEG (systems), they move, they’re susceptible to noise, and the likelihood for reliablity is much lower.”
Just a few discrete but reliable signals – tantamount to being able to move a cursor in two dimensions and effect a “click” – could lead to a vast number of applications, he continued.
“What is one of the most prolific ‘2D-plus-click’ devices we have today? It’s an Iphone. Once you have 2D plus click… there’s innumerable different types of functionality you can create on an application base – but what you first need is the control.”
The study also showed that the large-area arrays utilised for the epilepsy research would not be necessary for future electrocorticography implants; an area just 4mm by 4mm can provide the same level of information.
This article is from the BBC News website. © British Broadcasting Corporation, The BBC is not responsible for the content of external internet sites.
Besieged Ivory Coast leader Laurent Gbagbo has fewer than 1,000 troops left in the main city of Abidjan, French Defence Minister Gerard Longuet says.
He estimates 200 of these fighters are at the presidential residence, where the strongman refuses to stand down.
Mr Gbagbo is encircled by forces loyal to rival Alassane Ouattara, who is thought to have several thousand men.
A BBC correspondent in Abidjan says a fresh attack is expected at any moment on the presidential compound.
A so-called final assault on the building on Wednesday by pro-Ouattara forces was fought off by Gbagbo loyalists.
Heavy weapon and machine-gun fire was heard earlier on Thursday in the city, which was rocked overnight by explosions.
Mr Gbagbo’s top generals have deserted him but his diehard supporters fight on in several districts, says the BBC’s Andrew Harding in Abidjan.
The French defence minister was quoted by AFP news agency as saying: “Today, at the moment, former president Gbagbo’s forces are reportedly a bit less than 1,000, including 200 at his residence.”
Reuters news agency reports that Mr Longuet also told the Senate in Paris on Thursday that French helicopters had destroyed two pick-up trucks of gunmen trying to break into the French ambassador’s residence.
Meanwhile, Israel has now asked Paris to extract Israeli diplomats from Abidjan, according to French Foreign Minister Alain Juppe.
We expect a fresh attack at any moment on Laurent Gbagbo’s besieged residence in Abidjan, although there’s a lull in fighting around the compound right now.
I’m in the west of the city and there are lots of soldiers around me. They say they constantly have to battle militias loyal to Laurent Gbagbo. I’ve just spoken to a civilian who says 10 people were killed on his street last night by those militias.
Soldiers are sweeping through neighbourhoods rounding up young men who they suspect may be involved. There are 200 of them here being kept inside a car wash at a garage by the roadside. They’re sitting on the floor looking very nervous.
The soldiers have just brought in a woman, who they claim is a Liberian mercenary; she’s told me she’s a Nigerian civilian. She looks very anxious.
On Wednesday evening, French helicopters rescued a Japanese ambassador from the city’s diplomatic quarter.
Soldiers exchanged fire with Gbagbo fighters as they whisked Okamura Yoshifumi and his aides to a French military camp south of Abidjan.
Mr Yoshifumi said unidentified gunmen had occupied his home near the presidential residence, firing heavy weapons from the building.
France has had troops in Ivory Coast alongside UN peacekeepers since the country’s civil war broke out almost a decade ago.
Mr Gbagbo insists he won a run-off vote in November, but the Ivorian election commission found he lost – and the UN certified that result.
The ballot had been intended to reunite the former French colony, which split in two following a northern rebellion in 2002.
After months of stalling negotiations, forces loyal to Mr Gbagbo’s rival last week swept south to Abidjan.
Mr Gbagbo says his rival’s troops want to kill him, but they say they have strict orders to capture him alive.
On Monday, French and UN attack helicopters bombarded Gbagbo arms sites in Abidjan, including inside the presidential compound.
Pro-Gbagbo forces had been accused of firing heavy weaponry at UN peacekeepers and into areas of the city that voted for his opponent.
The battle for Abidjan has now been raging for a week and it is unsafe for many of the city’s several million people to go outside.
The main banks have been closed for nearly two months and few people have the funds to stock up on food.
The International Criminal Court says it will investigate alleged human rights abuses by both sides during the fighting, which has left hundreds dead.
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Royal Rosa, Skippers Brig and Golden Kite are the last horses to make the 40-strong field declared for Saturday’s Grand National at Aintree.
This article is from the BBC News website. © British Broadcasting Corporation, The BBC is not responsible for the content of external internet sites.
The Director of Public Prosecutions has given evidence about phone hacking to the Home Affairs Committee.
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David Cameron has suggested that Britain and the legacy of its empire was responsible for many of the world’s historic problems. But is that view fair?
Answering questions from students in Pakistan on Tuesday, the prime minister said: “As with so many of the problems of the world, we are responsible for their creation in the first place.”
Here two historians give their view.
Nick Lloyd, lecturer in defence studies, King’s College London
Mr Cameron’s remarks about the painful legacy of colonialism could not be further from the truth and they reveal a disappointing lack of historical judgment. The British Empire in India, known as the Raj, was the greatest experiment in paternalistic imperial government in history.
By the time the British left India in 1947 they had given the subcontinent a number of priceless assets, including the English language, but also a structure of good government, local organisation and logistical infrastructure that still holds good today. Far from damaging India, British imperial rule gave it a head start.
“The empire gave its colonies real, tangible benefits”
At the centre of this was the Indian Civil Service, the 1,000 strong “heaven-born” group of administrators that ran the country. Their role in laying the foundations for strong, efficient government in India has never been accorded the respect and admiration it deserves.
While history has recorded that the ICS were aloof and disdainful of the “natives”, in reality, the men who ran India were selfless, efficient and – most importantly of all – completely incorruptible.
Not only did they oversee the spread of good government, western education, modern medicine and the rule of law, they also put in place local works, famine relief, and irrigation projects, most notably in the Punjab, which benefited enormously from what was then the largest irrigation project in the world.
Perhaps the most priceless asset of all was the English language itself, which gave a unity to the subcontinent that it had never known before and which is allowing India’s people to do business around the world today with great success.
Indeed, it is indicative of this that in February 2011, a Dalit (formerly untouchable) community in Uttar Pradesh built a shrine to the goddess English, which they believe will help them learn the English language and climb out of their grinding poverty.
Although Britain was not able to replicate its success in India everywhere across its vast colonial empire, it is still clear the empire gave its colonies real, tangible benefits. Wherever the British ruled, they erected a light, relatively inexpensive form of government that was not corrupt, was stable, and was favourable to outside investors.
Its imperial civil servants may not always have been completely sympathetic to local peoples, but they were always motivated by humanitarian impulses and did their best in often difficult circumstances. Indeed, when we look at Africa, many of the benefits of imperial rule were squandered in the generations after independence with a succession of corrupt and brutal regimes.
Dr Nick Lloyd is the author of the forthcoming book The Amritsar Massacre: The Untold Story of One Fateful Day
Andrew Thompson, professor of imperial and global history, University of Leeds
Does Britain’s colonial legacy still poison its relations with Africa, the Middle East and Asia? Mr Cameron’s remark raises important questions for society about how we relate to history.
“Detention without trial, beatings, torture, and killings punctuated the twilight years of colonial rule”
There’s the inheritance of colonial violence. What you saw in the later stages of empire was a series of British counter-insurgency operations, exported from one hot spot to another. In places such as Kenya, Palestine, Malaysia, Zimbabwe, and of course Northern Ireland, the British were forced to resort to repressive legal and military measures in what was to prove an ultimately vain attempt to curb the tide of political unrest and nationalist opposition.
Detention without trial, beatings, torture, and killings punctuated the twilight years of colonial rule. The disclosure this week of a large tranche of Foreign Office files, hitherto kept secret about full extent of British brutality against Mau Mau in Kenya, suggests there may be further revelations still to come. Will there be similar stories and claims from Palestine, Malaya, Cyprus or Nigeria?
There is also the question of whether the violence that characterised these counter-insurgency operations during decolonisation then set the scene for the way in which independent, post-colonial African and Asian governments dealt with political dissent from their own peoples.
The imperial past is far from being dead. On the contrary it is actually very much part of contemporary politics.
Perhaps we should not be surprised then when British foreign policy interests and interventions today are seen and perceived as “neo-colonial” in their nature.
The reaction of Iran in 2007 when 15 Royal Navy personnel were seized is instructive here. As heavy-handed as it may have seemed to people in Britain, it needs to be understood in the wider context of Iranian sensitivities over the presence of any western powers in or near its territorial waters – sensitivities arising in part from a very fraught and fragile 20th Century relationship over oil and territory.
In a deeper and more fundamental sense still, Britain’s colonial legacy can be seen in the ways in which globalisation is being experienced today. From the 1870s onwards, the integration of labour, capital and commodity markets promoted by empire was very much skewed towards its “white” settler societies.
The economic benefits of empire for the so-called dependent colonies were much more meagre in comparison or did not exist at all. When we find critics of globalisation questioning whether economic integration and cultural diversity can comfortably co-exist, we should remember that for much of the last century the form of globalisation the world experienced rested on a view of social relations governed by racial hierarchies.
Finally, we might reverse the colonial encounter and think about how empire has left an imprint on British society. Despite its multi-ethnic empire, Britain did not embrace ethnic diversity at home.
There was the rhetoric of an inclusive imperial citizenship for the peoples of all Commonwealth countries. But in reality in post-war Britain there was little desire to promote integration for immigrants from the likes of the West Indies and the Indian subcontinent.
The consequences are perhaps reflected in experiences today, especially in terms of the so-called ethnic penalty many of these communities face in education, employment or housing.
This article is from the BBC News website. © British Broadcasting Corporation, The BBC is not responsible for the content of external internet sites.
Chinese police have begun investigating the detained artist, Ai Weiwei, for suspected economic crimes.
China’s state news agency, Xinhua, reported the investigation but gave no other details.
It is the first official update on Ai Weiwei since he was detained by officials at Beijing airport on Sunday.
Ai Weiwei, who co-designed the Beijing Olympic stadium known as the “Bird’s Nest”, is often described as China’s most famous contemporary artist.
He is also one of the Chinese government’s fiercest critics, complaining about a lack of basic rights and freedoms – often incorporating these political themes into his work.
Xinhua’s one-line English-language report on the investigation later appeared to have been removed from its website. Internet links to the story returned an error message.
The BBC’s Jo Floto in Beijing says Mr Ai, the son of a prominent communist, had appeared to enjoy a degree of protection.
In the last couple of months, dozens of activists have ended up in custody or house arrest, none of them as open in their criticism as Mr Ai.
The news that he is being investigated for economic crimes may signal that China’s authorities will seek to characterise him as a common criminal, rather than a political prisoner, our correspondent says.
On Wednesday a Chinese state-run newspaper, The Global Times, described him as a maverick who took part in legally ambiguous activities.
Police later seized computers and money at his home and his wife, Lu Qing, told reporters the raid involved more than 40 policemen going in and out of their home.
She says she has heard nothing since.
“I am waiting for news,” she said. “I so far have no information from the authorities about the fate of Ai Weiwei.”
“He felt a premonition that he would be detained,” she added.
She is also concerned for his health, saying the 53-year old artist takes medicine for a range of illnesses.
Foreign governments have called for Ai Weiwei’s immediate release.
The US Ambassador Jon Huntsman mentioned the artist among other activists who “challenge the Chinese government to serve the public in all cases and at all times”.
Human rights groups say China’s current crackdown on dissent is a response to protests in the Middle East and North Africa.
Human Rights Watch said up to 25 lawyers, activists and bloggers had been either detained, arrested or had disappeared. Dozens more had been subjected to harassment, it said.
Ai Weiwei currently has an exhibition at the Tate Modern gallery in London, displaying 100 million porcelain objects that look like sunflower seeds.
This article is from the BBC News website. © British Broadcasting Corporation, The BBC is not responsible for the content of external internet sites.