Zippy voice actor Skelton dies

 
Zippy and George

A clip from the ITV television show Rainbow featuring Zippy and his friend George

Actor and singer Roy Skelton, best known for voicing puppets George and Zippy in the popular children’s programme Rainbow, has died aged 79.

His daughter Samantha Skelton told the BBC that her father passed away after suffering a stroke.

The actor joined Rainbow in the early 1970s and remained with the show until it ended in 1992.

Geoffrey Hayes, who also starred in the show, said: “He really brought Zippy and George to life through his voice.”

Skelton was “fabulous at improvising if something went wrong,” he added.

“The most wonderful thing was if Zippy and George were having an argument between themselves, it sounded like he’d double-tracked it as they seemed to be talking over each other. It was a wonderful technique and I don’t know how he did it.

“Although he was known for Zippy and George he was actually a fabulous actor with a great singing voice and a wonderful raconteur – he used to tell us some wonderful stories.”

Skelton also voiced the Daleks in Doctor Who from 1967 to 1988, as well as the Cybermen and the Krotons.

In 2002, he guest-starred in the audio drama Sarah Jane Smith: Test Of Nerve.

He reprised the role of Zippy in 2008 for the BBC One series Ashes to Ashes.

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Afghanistan faces ‘2014 crisis’

US Secretary of Defence Robert Gates speaks to troops in Afghanistan on 6 June 2011The report comes as the US considers reducing troop numbers in Afghanistan

Afghanistan faces a financial crisis when foreign troops leave in 2014, Democrats on the US Senate Foreign Relations Committee have warned.

The two year study by the committee’s Democratic majority is to be released on Wednesday.

It urges President Obama to make better use of the roughly $320m a month in foreign aid it spends in Afghanistan, with a focus on sustainability.

It concludes that misspent foreign aid can result in corruption.

It can also alter markets and undercut the ability of the Afghan government to control its resources.

“Afghanistan could suffer a severe economic depression when foreign troops leave in 2014 unless the proper planning begins now,” the report says.

The State Department and the US Agency for International Development are spending about $320m a month on foreign aid in Afghanistan, arguing that the money is an essential part of the campaign to win “hearts and minds”.

Among the successes has been a sevenfold increase in the number of children attending school and gains in health care.

US wheatAfghanistan has received about $18.8bn in US foreign aid over 10 years

But the report says that the US must scrutinise more closely how it spends the money and how it relies so heavily on contractors.

It says that the US must have a better overview of how it channels aid through the Afghan government.

“Transition planning should find the right balance between avoiding a sudden drop-off in aid, which could trigger a major economic recession, and a long-term phase-out from current levels of donor spending,” the report states.

The Congressional report said that about 80% of US Agency for International Development funds allocated in Afghanistan’s south and east – the traditional heartland of the Taliban and other insurgents – were being used for short-term stabilisation programmes instead of long-term development projects.

“The evidence that stabilisation programs promote stability in Afghanistan is limited. Some research suggest the opposite,” the report says.

Afghanistan has received about $18.8bn in US foreign aid over 10 years – more than for any other country, including Iraq.

Correspondents say that the conclusions of the report mean that Ryan Crocker – President Obama’s choice to serve as US ambassador to Afghanistan – is certain to face several sceptical and war-weary lawmakers questioning the level of US investment in Afghanistan in the 10th year of the war.

Republicans and Democrats are pressing for a robust drawdown of the 100,000 US forces in Afghanistan, a process that is expected to begin in July.

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

Man in court over Bangor murder

Bangor murder victim Duncan MorrisonDuncan Morrison was shot dead in Hazelbrook Avenue

A 35-year-old man has appeared in court charged with murdering a man in County Down last month.

Peter Greer from Mountcollyer Avenue in Belfast is charged with shooting 56-year-old Duncan Morrison at a house at Hazelbrook Avenue in Bangor.

He is also accused of trying to kill Stephen Ritchie in the same attack. He denies both charges and is due to appear in court again next month.

Another man is already in custody charged with the killing.

A number of supporters of Mr Greer were in court and as he was led away, one shouted: “Chin up Pete”.

When they and friends of the murder victim left court, a number of armed police were present.

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

Minister ‘avoids workshy smears’

 
Chris GraylingMr Grayling said he was careful in his use of language about welfare reforms
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Employment Minister Chris Grayling has denied claims the government had helped fuel press coverage labelling benefit claimants as “workshy”.

He told MPs that tabloid stories had left him “bemused” and he had been criticised for saying people should not be judged as “scroungers”.

But MPs told him there had been a “shocking” failure by ministers to sell welfare reforms as a good news story.

Labour’s Glenda Jackson said it had been sold as “attacking the workshy”.

Mr Grayling was giving evidence to the Work and Pensions Committee about the government’s continuing efforts to move more people off incapacity benefit and its successor – Employment and Support Allowance – if they are capable of work.

The government is seeking to reassess all 2.6 million people on IB and ESA by 2014 using a test, the work capability assessment (WCA).

The WCA determines whether applicants are entitled to the highest rate of ESA – for those deemed unable to work at all due to sickness or disability – or are considered “fit for work”, in which case they are put on Jobseeker’s Allowance instead.

It can also place applicants into a “work-related activity group”, where they will be expected to take steps to prepare themselves for work in the medium to long term.

“I think that the government has singularly failed with the tabloids, with the media and with the message getting out.”

Stephen Lloyd Lib Dem MPBenefit tests ‘not money driven’

Mr Grayling said that many people had been effectively abandoned on benefits and the aim of the WCA was to identify those who could return to work.

He stressed that those who could not work due to disability had nothing to fear: “This is not about forcing people who can’t work into work.”

But he was challenged about press releases from the Department for Work and Pensions – and media coverage of the reforms which suggested many of those on incapacity benefit were “workshy”.

Ms Jackson asked him: “Why has the government sold this programme, or attempted to sell this programme, as attacking the workshy?… This has had a very serious impact on people out there.”

Lib Dem MP Stephen Lloyd told Mr Grayling that he was supportive of the welfare reforms, but added: “I, however, think that the government has singularly failed with the tabloids, with the media and with the message getting out.”

They were particularly critical of media coverage of WCA pilots in Burnley and Aberdeen.

Committee chairman Dame Anne Begg said the DWP press release had stated that 70% of claimants “could work” – without stressing that 30% were eligible for Jobseekers Allowance and would require extra help to get ready for work and 40% “might be fit for work some time in the future – if they get better”.

“Sometimes stories run in a way that completely bemuse me”

Chris Grayling Employment minister

And Mr Lloyd said there were still examples of ministers using the wrong language when describing the reforms.

He said the government was not “getting out and selling this for what it is – which is a once-in-a-lifetime positive opportunity to transform the lives of many disabled people – I think it’s been shocking.”

Mr Grayling said neither he, nor Work and Pensions Secretary Iain Duncan Smith, had used disparaging terms such as “scroungers” .

“We as ministers in the Department for Work and Pensions go out of our way to set out what we are doing in the context of helping people… and we don’t use some of the language that has been used on some outlets.”

He said he had gone to some lengths to stress the positive aspects of the plan – writing articles for newspapers, letters to local newspapers, webchats and meetings with voluntary groups and Jobcentre teams.

But he said: “I make no bones about it – I don’t control… the editorial tone of the newspapers.”

He said he had advised “a number of media outlets” about the need for careful language but said some stories the department considered insignificant had shot to the top of the tabloid news agenda.

“Sometimes stories run in a way that completely bemuse me,” he said.

He added he had been personally criticised for being too careful in his language: “I was accused of ‘watering down’ our approach on welfare reform because I made the point it was important not to judge people as ‘scroungers’.”

Mr Grayling said while there were “clearly some people who are claiming incapacity benefit who are frankly, fit to work” the majority of those who could eventually return to work were still “a long way away from the work place” and would need much extra support to get back there.

“The challenge for us, through the assessment process, is to re-energise those people and focus them on the things they can do.”

But he also said there was a “duty on the party of representative groups” – like charities – not to use “strong language” which could exacerbate concerns.

He said that he hoped that as the welfare reforms began to take effect, there would be more positive “role models” of people who had been long-term unemployed and had got back into work, who could help ease concerns among others.

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Rising power

Damian GrammaticasBy Damian Grammaticas

Chinese aircraft carrier

Watch: Damian Grammaticas takes a look at the new carrier

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It is the most visible symbol of China’s rising military power.

The giant, grey hulk of China’s newest warship, 60,000 tonnes of steel, sits at a dockside in the port of Dalian, almost ready to set sail.

The People’s Liberation Army (PLA) has been reluctant to say anything about its first aircraft carrier as it has not yet entered service. But it must be the military’s worst-kept secret. It is there for all to see, somewhat incongruously, right behind Dalian’s Ikea superstore.

The huge carrier has been years in the making, and it is an unmistakeable sign of China’s expanding military and its desire to project Chinese power further beyond its borders than ever before.

“An aircraft carrier is a symbol of the power of your navy,” says General Xu Guangyu, who used to serve in the PLA’s headquarters and is now retired.

“China should at least be on the same level as other permanent members of the UN Security Council who have carriers.”

Gen Xu now advises China’s government on its military modernisation programme. Seven nations currently operate carriers – it used to be eight, but the UK has just withdrawn its last one from service and will have to wait several years for a new one to be built.

“It’s also a symbol of deterrence,” adds Gen Xu, “It’s like saying, ‘Don’t mess with me. Don’t think you can bully me.’ So it’s normal for us to want a carrier. I actually think it’s strange if China doesn’t have one.”

Dalian is not just a major naval base, it is a major commercial port too. Its docks curve around a huge bay. There is an oil refinery, quays for cargo, and the shipyards where giant cranes tower over the hulls of massive container vessels and tankers under construction.

Size comparison of world aircraft carriers. List of aircraft carriers by country: US 11, Itay 2, France 1, India 1, Spain 1, UK 1, Russia 1, Brazil 1, Thailand 1

“The development of our armed forces is connected with the development of our economy,” says Gen Xu.

“In energy supplies and trade we now have interests that span the globe. There are vital shipping routes in Asia, the Indian Ocean, Africa, and both sides of the Pacific that we need to protect. So our military strength needs to match the range of our economic and diplomatic activity.”

The PLA is focusing on both the navy and the air force in its modernisation, having identified them as relatively weak. When it is launched, the carrier will mark a significant leap forward for China’s navy.

Watching all this closely is the United States. For more than half a century, since the end of World War II, the US Navy has operated its carrier battle fleets unchallenged in Asia and the Pacific. The US has 11 carriers of its own.

The US and China view each other’s military programmes with suspicion. Many in the PLA believe America is trying to encircle it and prevent its rise.

America says China’s military developments are opaque and shrouded in secrecy, its real intentions unclear.

“For the longest time China denied that they were going to pursue an aircraft carrier navy even trying to get the world to believe that the purchase of the first aircraft carrier from Ukraine was all about creating a new casino in one of their harbours,” says Rick Fisher, a senior analyst at the International Assessment and Strategy Center, a think tank in Virginia, US.

“[It] is going to have aircraft comparable in capability to the recent fighters on American fighter decks in about two to three years time.”

Some observers believe China wants to build up to four carriers of its own.

Mr Fisher, who has spent 20 years studying China’s military, says it has big ambitions.

China's aircraft carrier is seen under construction in Dalian, Liaoning province (April 2011) (above) and on Google Maps (below)The 300m (990ft) carrier, under construction in Dalian, is thought to be nearly finished

“The aircraft carrier is part of China’s fulfilment of its 2004 historic mission that the People’s Liberation Army will increasingly defend the Communist Party’s interests outside of China,” he says.

“By the 2020s China wants a military that will be globally deployable and will be able to challenge American interests where they need to be challenged.”

Last month the visit of Chen Bingde, the Chief of the General Staff of the PLA, to the Pentagon was trumpeted as an effort to improve long-strained military relations between the US and China.

US and Chinese military bands played together as Gen Chen was hosted in America.

He tried to allay American fears by saying China would never seek to match US military power. China, he said, is way behind America.

“This visit to America, I saw America’s military power, I feel stunned, not only do we have no ability to challenge America, but also the American warships and aircraft, America’s strategy, it’s a real deterrent for us.”

China’s military is generally believed to be 20 years behind America’s in its development. But in its rapid expansion, China is focusing on weapons designed to blunt US military power.

The PLA has invested heavily in submarines. It is believed to be close to deploying the world’s first “carrier-killer” ballistic missile, designed to sink aircraft carriers while they are manoeuvring at sea up to 1,500km (930 miles) offshore, and it is building its own stealth fighter aircraft along with advanced carrier-based aircraft built from Russian designs.

All of these can target US bases, US ships and US carriers in Asia. They will make it much more dangerous for US carrier fleets to operate close to China’s coast, pushing them out further offshore.

In any future conflict they could make it much harder for the US to operate as freely as it would like. That in turn opens up more room for China to flex its own military muscles in Asia.

Having an aircraft carrier will then enable China to project power further than it has before. So looking on with concern are Vietnam, the Philippines and Malaysia, who all have territorial disputes with Beijing in the South China Sea.

And Taiwan, Korea and Japan that look to the US for their security may start to question how much America can really protect them in future. This may, one day, undermine US security guarantees and its influence in the region.

There is much work to do before China’s aircraft carriers become a potent force. But, sitting in the port in Dalian, the carrier is a clear sign of China’s naval ambitions and the shift of power that is likely to bring.

Map

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China ends wind power subsidies

Wind farms of China Power International New Energy Holding Ltd. Gansu ProvinceChina has pledged to boost wind power and other renewable energy sectors
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China has agreed to halt subsidies to wind-power manufacturers that violate World Trade Organisation (WTO) rules, according to US Trade Representative Ron Kirk.

The move comes after the the United Steelworkers Union filed a complaint to the World Trade Organisation (WTO).

The Chinese currently subsidise wind-power firms that use domestic parts instead of imports.

Mr Kirk said this gives them an unfair advantage over US wind turbine makers.

“We challenged these subsidies so that American manufacturers can produce wind turbine components here in the United States and sell them in China,” said Mr Kirk.

“That supports well-paying jobs here at home.”

“The US is pleased that China has shut down this subsidy program,” he said.

There was no comment in response to the statement by Mr Kirk from China.

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

No bodies at Texas ‘grave’ site

Aerial view of the property believed to be at the centre of the investigation

Eric Latz, a journalist for KSHN Radio in Liberty County said there were conflicting reports coming from the scene

US police are to search a rural house in eastern Texas, where they believe there is a mass grave.

US media say there may be up to 30 dismembered bodies including children buried there.

Liberty County Sheriff’s Department spokesman Rex Evans says the office received an anonymous report on Tuesday that there were bodies in the home.

Police are seeking a search warrant for the property, whose residents are said to be “uncooperative”.

So far, Mr Evans said, no bodies have been found.

Aerial shots on local TV stations showed a dozen police vehicles parked along a road in wooded country.

The FBI confirmed it had been asked to take part in an investigation.

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

Watchdog attacks business courses

cashSome courses leave pupils with little little knowledge of business and the economy, inspectors say
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Many vocational business qualifications are failing to develop pupils’ understanding and skills in the subject, inspectors have warned.

Ofsted said 30 of 39 English schools whose vocational business courses it inspected had a “serious problem”.

Its report questioned whether business courses examined through internally set and marked assignments should be seen as equivalent to GCSEs.

Ministers said there were concerns about the quality of some courses.

Inspectors found some lessons focused too much on completing “narrow written assignments” that gave students little opportunity to debate issues, extend their thinking and develop a broader understanding and skills in the subject.

“Students often had only vague ideas about the economy, interest rates and their impact”

Ofsted report

Despite students achieving good results, the quality of their work was weak, they said.

The report added: “Evidence from lesson observations, scrutiny of written work and discussion with students brings into question the case for claiming that such courses are equivalent to between two and four single-award, traditionally examined GCSEs at Key Stage 4.”

The report – called Economics, business and enterprise education – looked at enterprise education across the whole school, as well as formal qualifications for 14 to 18-year-olds.

In the secondary schools inspected, Ofsted found enterprise education – which is statutory at Key Stage 4 – to be wanting.

“The provision for, and development of, all students’ economic and business understanding and their financial capability were […] often weak,” the report said.

“As a result, students often had only vague ideas about the economy, interest rates and their impact, recession, inflation, why prices vary and the ownership of companies.”

Chief inspector Christine Gilbert said economics, business and enterprise education was about equipping young people with the skills to leave school well-informed as consumers, employees and potential employers.

“More should be done to directly involve students with the business world and local businesses,” she said.

“The report highlights the need to review the equivalency of vocational business qualifications that are assessed wholly or mainly by internally set and marked assignments with more traditional GCSEs and GCE A-levels.”

The Ofsted report comes just weeks after Education Secretary Michael Gove announced his plans to reform vocational education.

Under the measures 14-year-olds will be given more opportunities to study at college rather than school, and league tables will be overhauled so that only vocational qualifications identified as high quality are likely to be included.

A spokesman for the Department for Education said: “This report raises serious concerns about the quality of some courses taught in our schools.

“All young people should have access to high-quality qualifications that lead to employment, further or higher education.

“This summer, we will be carrying out a consultation on the characteristics of high-quality vocational qualifications so we can ensure that only those qualifications that meet the criteria are taught in our schools.

“We also plan to do more to encourage industry experts to teach in schools – providing students with a better understanding of how the business world works.”

The report follows the publication in March of a report by Professor Alison Wolf on vocational education.

Professor Wolf said hundreds of thousands of young people in England were doing vocational courses which did not lead to university or a job.

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Indonesia cattle abuse row grows

Australian cows are loaded onto a truck after arriving at the Tanjung Priok port in Jakarta. Photo: May 2011Indonesia is Australia’s largest market for live cattle exports
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The Australian government has suspended live cattle exports to Indonesia until safeguards are adopted to end the brutal slaughter of animals.

The move follows an investigation into Indonesian abattoirs by Australia’s ABC broadcaster, which showed graphic footage of animals being mistreated.

It prompted a public outcry and demands for the government to act.

Last week, Canberra suspended exports to abattoirs shown in the programme, but now it has issued a blanket ban.

The ban is the result of public revulsion and outrage at the gruesome footage from Indonesia’s abattoirs that was broadcast last week in an ABC TV documentary.

It showed steers being whipped, beaten and slashed repeatedly, and suffering terrible pain befDid animal cruelty report lead to an over-reaction?ore they are slaughtered.

“No piece of television journalism aired in Australia in the past 12 months has had such an profound impact on the public and, more importantly, government policy”

Nick Bryant BBC News, SydneyDid animal cruelty report lead to an over-reaction?

Australia first announced a ban on live exports to the 12 abattoirs featured in the programme.

But the public demanded more, signing online petitions to halt the trade with Indonesia and pressing lawmakers in Canberra to bring in a complete ban.

Butchers have also reported that beef sales are down by up to 15%.

An early indication that a ban was about to come into effect came on Tuesday, when about 2,000 cattle were not allowed to board a ship in Western Australia that was about to set sail for Indonesia.

Now has come the announcement that exports will be halted until safeguards are put in place in Indonesia to safeguard the animals.

Australia exports more than 700,000 cattle each year, the vast majority of it to Indonesia.

However, Australian farmers have warned that a ban would destroy many rural livelihoods.

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Real-life tragedy

BBC Hamlet, 1980Ophelia’s death could have been inspired by Shakespeare’s memory of a local tragedy

An Oxford historian has found evidence of a story that could be the real-life inspiration for Shakespeare’s tragic character, Ophelia.

Dr Steven Gunn has found a coroner’s report into the drowning of a Jane Shaxspere in 1569.

The girl, possibly a young cousin of William Shakespeare, had been picking flowers when she fell into a millpond near Stratford upon Avon.

Dr Gunn says there are “tantalising” links to Ophelia’s drowning in Hamlet.

A four-year research project, carried out by Oxford University academics, has been searching through 16th century coroners’ reports.

These have revealed a treasure trove of information about accidental deaths in Tudor England.

Oxford research into coroners' reportsThe coroners’ reports revealed the story of Jane Shaxspere

But Dr Gunn says they were taken aback to find an account of the death of a girl who might have been a young cousin of her contemporary, William Shakespeare.

“It was quite a surprise to find Jane Shaxspere’s entry in the coroners’ reports – it might just be a coincidence, but the links to Ophelia are certainly tantalising,” he said.

The coroners’ report, originally written in Latin, describes the death of two-and-half-year-old Jane Shaxspere, who drowned picking marigolds in a stream beside a millpond.

The translation of the report records the cause, time and place.

“By reason of collecting and holding out certain flowers called ‘yellow boddles’ growing on the bank of a certain small channel at Upton aforesaid called Upton millpond – the same Jane Shaxspere the said sixteenth day of June about the eighth hour after noon of the same day suddenly and by misfortune fell into the same small channel and was drowned in the aforesaid small channel; and then and there she instantly died.

“And thus the aforesaid flowers were the cause of the death of the aforesaid Jane.”

The biographical gaps in William Shakespeare’s life make it impossible to know if this was the death of a cousin or other relation when the playwright was a boy living in Stratford upon Avon.

But Emma Smith from Oxford’s English faculty says that it’s likely that William Shakespeare would have known of the story – and that it could have been in his thoughts when writing the flower-strewn drowning of Ophelia in Hamlet.

“It’s interesting to think of Ophelia combining classical and renaissance antecedents with the local tragedy of a drowned girl,” said Dr Smith.

There are other theories about the inspiration for Ophelia, including the story of Katharine Hamlet, who drowned in the river Avon, not far from Stratford upon Avon, in 1579 – a decade after Jane Shaxspere.

“And thus the aforesaid flowers were the cause of the death of the aforesaid Jane.”

The coroner’s report into how Jane Shaxpere died collecting flowers

The haunting image of the drowned girl, garlanded by flowers, caught the imagination of painters, such as the pre-Raphaelite John Everett Millais.

The research project, funded by the Economic and Social Research Council, has also uncovered the type of health and safety nightmares that troubled the Tudors.

These are often more Monty Python farce than Shakespearean tragedy, says Dr Gunn.

The detailed accounts of deaths include hazards such as being run over by a cart.

There were also three fatalities involving performing bears.

Archery proved to be a particularly dangerous activity for Tudor villagers.

There are 56 deaths reported from accidents involving bows and arrows. Dr Gunn says this includes spectators paying a heavy price for falling asleep too near to the targets.

The most inept archery death, he says, was a man who managed to shoot himself in the head with an arrow.

The first accidental death from a handgun appears in 1519, when a man shooting at a target hit a woman who walked in front of him.

There were fatal maypole accidents and a particularly pungent end was faced by a man who fell into a cesspit when relieving himself.

Millais, OpheliaThe painter Millais was inspired by the image of the drowned girl with flowers

More ambiguously, a man died following the crushing of his testicles “during a Christmas game”.

And a man from Scotland died while demonstrating how he liked to lie down and be tied up, a recreation which he had claimed to be popular in his homeland.

There were also workplace accidents, such as coal miners suffocating underground and workers drowning when they were washing themselves in rivers.

“Coroners’ reports of fatal accidents are a useful and hitherto under-studied way of exploring everyday life in Tudor England,” says Dr Gunn.

“Some medieval historians have used them, but the Tudor records are much fuller. The enquiries into the deaths were extensive and solemnly undertaken.”

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

Kyrgyzstan ‘risks more violence’

Houses burning in Jalalabad, Kyrgyzstan - 13 June 2010The ethnic fighting in southern Kyrgyzstan forced tens of thousands of people to flee

Failure to deliver justice for the killings of civilians in ethnic clashes in Kyrgyzstan in 2010 could spark more violence, Amnesty International warns.

In a report released ahead of the first anniversary of the 10-14 June pogroms, Amnesty urges Bishkek to “establish the truth about what happened”.

Some 470 people died in the clashes between Kyrgyz and ethnic Uzbeks in the south of the country.

Hundreds of people were injured and thousands of houses destroyed.

The violence, which was mainly centred in the cities of Osh and Jalalabad, followed weeks of turmoil after the ousting of then President Kurmanbek Bakiyev in a mass uprising in the Central Asian country in April 2010.

In its “Still Waiting for Justice” report, the London-based human rights group urges the Kyrgyz government to punish the perpetrators of last year’s violence.

“The failure to bring to justice those behind the violence could provide fertile soil for the seeds of future turmoil and future human rights violations,” said Nicola Duckworth, Amnesty’s Europe and Central Asia director.

map

“Ethnic bias and corruption are behind the pervading impunity in Kyrgyzstan.

“The rule of law must be upheld in order to rebuild the trust between the ethnic groups and prevent future bloodshed. All crimes, including crimes against humanity, must be investigated and tried in fair proceedings,” Ms Duckworth said.

The report says that 20 cases of rape and other sexual violence have been documented during the violence, but points that the real number is believed to be much higher.

The document also accuses Kyrgyz security forces of using “excessive force” and torturing detainees in the aftermath of the violence.

Members of both communities suffered losses, but 74% of those killed were ethnic Uzbeks, Amnesty says.

Despite this, the report says that subsequent government investigations targeted mainly ethnic Uzbeks.

It says courts have handed out at least 27 life sentences, “all of them against ethnic Uzbeks”.

Last month, an inquiry by an international panel – the Kyrgyzstan Inquiry Commission (KIC) – concluded that the co-ordinated and systematic nature of the attacks could amount to crimes against humanity if proved in court.

But Bishkek rejected the report, saying that the investigation was ethnically biased.

Kyrgyz lawmakers have recently voted to ban the head of the inquiry, Finnish politician Kimo Kiljunen, from entering Kyrgyzstan.

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

Majestic shuttle in station image

Endeavour ISS (Nasa)
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It is a stunning image and one that is bound to be reproduced over and over again whenever they recall the history of the US space shuttle.

The picture was taken by Italian astronaut Paulo Nespoli as he left the International Space Station in May in a Soyuz capsule to return to Earth.

Safety procedures mean the Russian vehicle would never normally be in transit when a shuttle is present.

It makes this the first-ever image of an American orbiter docked to the ISS.

Endeavour sits firmly on the bow of the station, which is moving across the surface of the Earth at a speed of 27,000km/h (17,000mph) and at an altitude of approximately 355km (220 miles).

Nespoli’s camera is looking along the ISS’s truss, or backbone, which carries the four sets of giant solar wings. The stern is occupied by Europe’s robotic freighter – the Johannes Kepler ship.

The pictures were acquired on 23 May but were only released by the US space agency (Nasa) on Tuesday. They had been eagerly awaited by space fans.

Nespoli had spent a lot of time during his 159-day stay at the station taking pictures of Earth and life aboard the international outpost. Many of these images were posted on his mission Flickr account. It was widely expected therefore that the European Space Agency astronaut would get some excellent shots during the unique departure.

The timing and subject is also perfect. Endeavour is seen here making her final sortie into orbit, making the last big US assembly item delivery – a $2bn particle physics experiment known as the Alpha Magnetic Spectrometer. The seven-tonne machine now sits on top of the platform.

Endeavour was also the orbiter chosen to take up the first American segment of the platform when the project had just got started in the late 1990s.

The youngest of Nasa’s shuttles returned to Earth on 1 June and will now be prepared for public display at a science museum in California. Sister ship Atlantis stands ready on the launch pad in Florida for a swansong of her own in July. Once her mission is done, no orbiter will ever fly again.

Nespoli’s crewmates in the Soyuz were Russian cosmonaut and Expedition 27 commander Dmitry Kondratyev; and Nasa astronaut Cady Coleman.

Their replacements blasted off from Kazakhstan on Tuesday in another Soyuz vehicle. Nasa astronaut Mike Fossum, Russian cosmonaut Sergei Volkov and Japanese astronaut Satoshi Furukawa are scheduled to arrive at the ISS on Thursday, raising its complement once again to six individuals.

The venerable Soyuz will be the only way for astronauts and cosmonauts to reach the platform in the years following the retirement of the shuttle fleet.

Nasa hopes some US commercial carriers will become available in the middle of the decade.

Endeavour ISS (Nasa)

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