Thai PM-elect ‘to form coalition’

 
Pheu Thai party leader Yingluck Shinawatra

Yingluck Shinawatra: “The first priority is the economy”

The surprise runaway winner of Thailand’s election, the Pheu Thai party, says it has agreed to form a coalition with four smaller parties.

The party – led by by Yingluck Shinawatra, sister of ousted PM Thaksin Shinawatra – won a clear majority with an estimated 265 seats.

Prime Minister Abhisit Vejjajiva has announced his resignation as leader of the Democrats, which won 160 seats.

The outgoing defence minister said the powerful army would accept the result.

Final results from Sunday’s poll are due on Tuesday.

Ms Yingluck, who has no previous political experience, said Pheu Thai and four other parties had “agreed to work together to run the country and solve people’s problems”.

“The first urgent issue is how to achieve reconciliation,” she said.

Thailand has been plagued by internal division since Mr Thaksin was ousted by a military coup in 2006.

“I really want to retire”

Thaksin Shinawatra Former Thai PM

This election comes a year after protests against the current government left more than 90 people dead. Many of the demonstrators were supporters of Mr Thaksin.

Critics of Ms Yingluck say she is too inexperienced and is simply a proxy for her brother.

But speaking from Dubai, where he lives in self-imposed exile to avoid a jail sentence for corruption, Mr Thaksin said Ms Yingluck’s lack of experience could be an advantage, saying a “clean slate” was useful at times in politics.

Mr Thaksin told reporters he did not want to return to Thai politics as he had been with his party too long.

“I really want to retire,” he said.

Mr Thaksin said he was proud of his sister and would give Pheu Thai “whatever advice they may need”, but that the Thai people were “in good hands”.

With nearly all votes counted, Ms Yingluck’s Pheu Thai has a clear majority with 265 seats, while outgoing Prime Minister Abhisit Vejjajiva’s Democrats have 159.

Thaksin Shinawatra speaks to reporters in Dubai (4 July 2011)Mr Thaksin said he would advise his sister on her new role if asked

The coalition will together have an estimated 299 seats, effectively controlling about 60% of parliament.

The election results pave the way for Ms Yingluck, a 44-year-old business executive, to become Thailand’s first female prime minister and the fifth person to hold the post since her brother.

As the results emerged on Sunday night, she said it was “a victory of the people” and that her party was “ready to deliver on all of the policies that we have announced”.

Thailand’s markets rose on Monday morning, but business leaders have expressed concern over whether the country can afford the populist reforms which have been promised by Pheu Thai.

The party pledged to introduce a minimum wage, provide development funds to rural villages, create a high-speed rail network and give every school child in the country a tablet computer.

The BBC’s Karishma Vaswani in Bangkok says the coalition announcement is being seen as a clever move in Thailand, as it will make it easier for Ms Yingluck to push through reforms promised during her election campaign and create a sense of stability.

Preliminary election results chart (Bangkok Post)

However, there are fears of further turbulence ahead for Thailand, our correspondent says, and concerns of how the influential military might react.

The outgoing Defence Minister, Gen Prawit Wongsuwan, said he had spoken to army leaders who said they would accept the result and had “never entertained any idea of doing anything that will damage the country”.

The army chief has dismissed speculation of a military coup but, says our correspondent, Thailand’s generals have made such promises before, and much depends on whether Mr Thaksin does decide to stay away.

To his supporters, he is a champion of the disadvantaged who was unconstitutionally forced from power by powerful elites, backed by the military.

To his critics, Mr Thaksin was a corrupt and authoritarian leader who manipulated gullible voters.

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Portillo to lead £55m arts scheme

Michael PortilloMichael Portillo was a Conservative cabinet minister and has since carved out a career in broadcasting
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Michael Portillo is to chair a £55m scheme to help arts organisations develop long-term funding plans.

About 50 organisations are expected to benefit from the grants, which will start at £500,000.

Groups will be able to bid for grants of up to £5m, but will be expected to raise double that amount through the private sector.

The Heritage Lottery Fund, Arts Council England and the Department for Culture, Media and Sport will fund the scheme.

The money will be available to arts organisations across the UK, and it is hoped applications can begin to be submitted in early September.

The £55 million is part of a £100 million pledge to support philanthropy.

The funds will be given as an endowment, with the interest used to pay the groups’ running costs.

Culture Secretary Jeremy Hunt, who announced the plans during a speech at the Whitechapel Art Gallery in London, said: “World class cultural organisations should have world class financial resilience.

“Michael Portillo is passionate about culture and will bring real wisdom to a process that will start a much-needed change in our approach to cultural fundraising.”

Alan Davey, Chief Executive of Arts Council England, said: “Arts and heritage endowments will provide a range of opportunities for arts and cultural organisations to build their skills and capacity to fundraise, to match-fund using new ideas and to invest for their long-term health and creativity.”

In December 2010, Mr Hunt announced an £80 million fund to help increase philanthropy. This was made up of £50 million from Arts Council England and £30 million from the Department for Culture, Media and Sport (DCMS).

Mr Hunt announced on Monday that this would be boosted by an additional £20 million Heritage Lottery Fund contribution.

Shadow Culture Secretary Ivan Lewis, said: “The test of its success will be whether public funding triggers new private giving, which would not otherwise have been raised, and supports arts organisations which currently receive little or no philanthropic support to develop this source of funding.

“By Mr Hunt’s own admission, this fund will do nothing to help organisations currently scaling down activities and struggling to survive as a result of the Conservative-led government’s disproportionate cuts to the arts.”

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Rogue genius

Bobby Fischer (AP and Getty Images)

Three years after his death, interest in chess genius Bobby Fischer shows no sign of waning, with a new documentary film about to have its UK premiere. So what is it about the controversial and eccentric chess star that fascinates, asks David Edmonds, co-author of Bobby Fischer Goes To War.

It’s difficult, now, to imagine the excitement generated by the 1972 world chess title match in Iceland between the Russian champion, Boris Spassky, and the American challenger, Bobby Fischer.

There were other big stories jostling for newspaper column inches at the time. It was the beginning of the Watergate scandal that would eventually compel President Nixon to resign. Henry Kissinger was shuttling around continents seeking a truce in Vietnam. There were riots in Northern Ireland. Idi Amin expelled Asians from Uganda. The Munich Olympics were about to take place.

But much of the world was gripped by a chess match – the so-called Match of the Century – a match that Fischer eventually, and dramatically, won. The match made stars of TV presenters. It was covered by both broadsheets and tabloids. The Daily Mirror trumpeted one of Fischer’s victories with the headline, Spassky Smashki.

Fischer in quotesOn winning: “I like the moment when I break a man’s ego”On the spirit of chess: “Chess is war over the board. The object is to crush the opponent’s mind.”On self belief: “There’s no-one alive I can’t beat.”On growing up: “When I was eleven, I just got good.”On the media: “I despise the media.”

When one reporter went from bar to bar in New York to see what their television sets were tuned to, he discovered that 18 of the 21 were showing the chess, and only three to the baseball game that the punters would normally have demanded.

What can explain this phenomenon? Why did a cerebral board game suddenly become all the rage? And why, half a century after first coming to prominence, does Bobby Fischer still exert such a hold on the public imagination.

The political context of his greatest triumph still resonates. The match happened at the height of detente. But the media portrayed Fischer v Spassky as a Cold War clash.

This was understandable. The Soviets had dominated chess since World War II. They used chess as a propaganda tool, as proof of the superiority of communism over capitalism. They had a highly efficient chess structure that identified talented players young, and trained them intensively. They believed that the world championship title was rightfully theirs.

The set-up in America, by contrast, was amateurish. There was negligible state support or business sponsorship of the game and the prize money in tournaments was meagre. Fischer was seen as a lone individual taking on the power of the Soviet machine.

Boris Spassky and Bobby Fischer in the 1992 rematchFischer played in a controversial rematch in 1992

It was a depiction Fischer himself bought into – he was going to “teach those commies a lesson”. Those two months in Reykjavik were full of drama – at one stage the Soviet team accused the Americans of using chemicals and “electronic devices” to influence Spassky. When a lighting fixture was examined all the Icelanders found were two dead flies.

Even to those outside the chess world, Fischer was a baffling, beguiling, infuriating personality. Most wanted to judge him either mad or bad – he fitted the romantic image of genius perfectly.

He had been attracting notoriety from a young age. At tournaments he complained about the lighting, noise in the audience, the size and shape of the chess board and pieces. He made incessant demands for increased prize money – and usually forced concessions.

“Bobby Fischer made chess sexy – or as sexy as chess can get”

Wrangling over gate receipts almost caused the Fischer-Spassky match to be abandoned and only when a British businessman stepped in to double the prize money did Fischer finally agree to participate. Twice before Fischer had dropped out of international chess for extended periods – so the organisers in Iceland were reluctant to call his bluff.

And it’s too easy to overlook the appeal of the chess itself. It’s no exaggeration to say that Fischer was one of the greatest chess players in history. He had a delightfully clean and direct, style – its beauty lay in its relentless efficiency.

He calculated at extraordinary speed, but neither sought, nor shied away from complications. Always, he fought to win, whether with the white or the black pieces. En route to challenge Spassky, the Fischer juggernaut seemed unstoppable and he accomplished the unthinkable – winning 20 games in a row against elite grandmaster opposition.

Soon after Fischer was crowned world champion, he became a virtual recluse, vanishing from view, and failing to defend his title against the young Soviet, Anatoly Karpov in 1975.

Tigran Petrosian takes on FischerFischer was regarded as the world’s greatest by many

In 1992, he reappeared, to play Spassky for a $5m pot. It was in the midst of the Yugoslav war, and the match contravened international sanctions.

The mercurial American won again, but from that moment on, he was a wanted man. Every now and then there would be a sighting of him, or he would pop up on a foreign radio station – ranting and raving, spewing poison.

On 9/11, after planes flew into the World Trade Center, costing thousands of lives, he appeared on Filipino radio and declared the news “wonderful”. “Death to the US”, he said. His violent anti-Americanism was matched by an equally virulent anti-Semitism – though he himself was of Jewish origin.

He was finally picked up in Japan in 2004 – he kicked and screamed and it took many men to hold him down. He might have been extradited to the United States had Iceland – the country he’d put on the map in 1972 – not offered him honorary citizenship. He died there four years later.

Bobby Fischer made chess sexy – or as sexy as chess can get. Neither before nor since the 1972 showdown, has chess seemed quite so exciting.

Fischer didn’t enjoy the limelight. But the more he shunned publicity, the more the Fischer legend grew. And it shows no sign of abating, even after his death.

David Edmonds appears in the documentary Bobby Fischer Against the World, which is released in the UK on 15 July.

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Pakistan groups condemn gay event

Activists of Jamaat-e-Islami Pakistan hold anti-US placards on the second of a rally in Karachi on June 5, 2011Jamaat-e-Islami (Pakistan’s largest Islamic party) activists hold regular anti-US demonstrations
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A group of religious conservatives in Pakistan has condemned a recent event hosted by the US embassy in Islamabad in support of gay rights.

The meeting was described as “cultural terrorism” in a statement issued by Pakistan’s largest Islamic party, on behalf of various religious groups.

The embassy described last week’s event as its first gay, lesbian, bisexual and transgender pride celebration.

Homosexual acts are illegal in Pakistan and can carry severe punishments.

Although homosexuality is not explicitly mentioned in Pakistan’s penal code, “carnal intercourse against the order of nature” is punishable by either a fine or imprisonment, the UNHCR says.

But under Sharia laws in Pakistan, which were introduced in 1990, homosexual acts can draw punishments of whipping, imprisonment or even death.

“Such people are the curse of society and social garbage,” the statement released by Jamaat-e-Islami read.

“They don’t deserve to be Muslim or Pakistani, and the support and protection announced by the US administration for them is the worst social and cultural terrorism against Pakistan,” the statement, which was issued in Urdu, is quoted by the AP news agency as saying.

The statement also described the event as the second most dangerous attack by the US after drone and missile attacks.

At the event the US deputy ambassador to Pakistan said that the US would support gay, lesbian, bisexual and transgender rights in Pakistan.

“I want to be clear: the US embassy is here to support you and stand by your side every step of the way,” he is quoted as saying in a statement on the embassy website.

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US embassy unveils Reagan statue in London

Ronald Reagan with Margaret ThatcherRonald Reagan and Margaret Thatcher were close allies during the 1980s
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A statue of former US President Ronald Reagan will be unveiled in central London at a ceremony outside the American embassy.

The invited guests include former UK prime minister Baroness Thatcher – who was a close ally of Reagan when they were both in power in the 1980s.

The 10-foot bronze statue was specially commissioned to “recognise Mr Reagan’s contribution to ending the Cold War”.

A piece of the Berlin Wall will be installed in front of the plinth.

The statue will stand outside the US Embassy in Grosvenor Square, opposite the statue of President Dwight Eisenhower.

Lady Thatcher famously described Mr Reagan as “the second most important man” in her life.

Foreign Secretary William Hague and former US Secretary of State Condoleeza Rice will speak at the unveiling, which falls on US Independence Day.

Mr Reagan famously described the Soviet Union as the “evil empire” and kept up a hardline strategy but he left the White House in January 1989, shortly before the collapse of communism.

Mr Reagan died in 2004, aged 93, after suffering from Alzheimer’s disease for many years.

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S Korean marine ‘shoots comrades’

Breaking news

A South Korean marine has turned his gun on his colleagues, killing three of them and injuring two others.

A spokesman for the defence ministry in the capital, Seoul, said the corporal had opened fire while on duty at Ganghwa island west of Seoul.

Only South Korean soldiers were involved in the incident; no other details were immediately available.

Ganghwa island, in the Yellow Sea, is near a disputed maritime border with North Korea.

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Rise in jobs in financial sector

Commuters in LondonThe increase in jobs was unexpected, the CBI said

The number of people employed in the UK’s financial services sector rose by 11,000 in the second quarter, the fastest rate since the financial crisis began in September 2007, a report says.

The survey by PricewaterhouseCoopers (PwC) and the CBI also said that business volumes in the sector grew.

But the rate of growth was slowing and was expected to slow further in the next three months.

Banking and securities trading were the only sub-sectors to see volumes fall.

Ian McCafferty, the CBI’s chief economic adviser, said the rise in employment in the sector was both heartening and unexpected.

“Despite sharper cost increases and a small rise in non-performing loans, firms’ profitability continued to improve with growth in volumes and incomes,” he said.

However, last week Lloyds Banking Group announced it is to cut 15,000 jobs by 2014 as it seeks to cut costs.

Andrew Gray, UK banking leader at PwC, warned: “Concerns about economic recovery and demand have caused a dip in banks’ confidence.”

He said that it had been an unsettling quarter following the Independent Commission on Banking’s interim report, which recommended that banks ringfence their retail arms from their investment banking units.

The loss of the payment protection insurance (PPI) case, which left banks facing an estimated bill of more than £5bn in compensation payouts, also dented confidence, he added.

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Scam mail addict?

Why does Royal Mail deliver “human tragedy” to our doors?

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Fox News hacker tweets Obama dead

Fox News twitter feedSeveral hours after the comments were posted, they had still not been taken down.
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Hackers have taken over a Twitter account belonging to US broadcaster Fox News and declared President Obama dead.

The @foxnewspolitics feed stated: “BREAKING NEWS: @BarackObama assassinated, 2 gunshot wounds have proved too much.”

More than two hours after the malicious postings appeared, they had still not been removed.

A group or individual, calling themselves The Script Kiddies appeared to claim responsibility.

Fox News Politics began posting bizarre messages around 07.00 BST on July 4.

The first read: “Just regained full access to our Twitter and email. Happy 4th.”

The next posting stated: “@BarackObama has just passed. The President is dead.”

Script Kiddies accountThe Script Kiddies account was quickly suspended.

Fox News Politics is one of the Twitter accounts associated with the industry-leading cable news network.

Its Twitter account carries the “verified” tick icon, indicating that the feed belongs to the organisation it claims to be.

In among the messages about President Obama, a couple of tweets appeared from a user called The Script Kiddies. However, that account was quickly suspended.

The phrase “Script Kiddie” is internet slang for an inexperienced person who uses off-the-shelf hacking technology, developed by other people.

It is unclear why Fox News has been attacked in this instance. However, the broadcaster’s conservative stance has made it unpopular with many Americans.

Fox News is the most watched cable news network in the United States, with its prime time shows attracting almost two million viewers, well ahead of rivals CNN and MSNBC.

An attack on another Fox Entertainment Group website, Fox.com was the first confirmed hit by hacker group Lulz Security in May 2011.

The now-disbanded organisation stole the personal details of 73,000 applicants for the US version of X Factor.

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JK Rowling splits with book agent

JK Rowling at the launch of PottermoreRowling recently launched a new website featuring unreleased Harry Potter material
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Harry Potter creator JK Rowling has parted company with her longtime literary agent Christopher Little, it has been announced.

The millionaire author has worked with Mr Little since he found a publisher for her first novel Harry Potter and the Philosopher’s Stone in 1996.

Rowling said it had been a “painful decision” but “was not taken without good reason”.

Her books have sold more than 400 million copies worldwide.

“This was a painful decision, especially as Ms Rowling had actively sought a different outcome for some weeks,” said a statement issued on her behalf.

“However, it was not taken without good reason and it finally became unavoidable.”

A spokesman for Mr Little confirmed the news and said that the agent was “surprised” and “disappointed” at the decision.

“Christopher Little has worked closely with J K Rowling as her agent since the very beginning sixteen years ago.

“He greatly admires her and her extraordinary talent and is proud to have played his role throughout this journey.

“However he is disappointed and surprised to have heard the premature news about the proposed new arrangements.”

Last month, Rowling launched a new website Pottermore that would feature previously unpublished Harry Potter material as a “give-back” to her fans.

“Some of it is new stuff in response to things fans have asked me over the years,” she told the BBC.

The website, which launches in October, includes an online store where fans can buy Potter e-books for the first time.

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VIDEO: The toe that broke boxer Haye’s dream

David Haye has revealed the broken little toe that hindered his performance in his heavyweight unification boxing match.

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S&P warns on Greek debt default

Protester stands before a fire on Syntagma Square in AthensThere have been violent protests against the austerity measures in Greece

Standard & Poor’s has downgraded Greece’s credit rating yet again, partly due to what it sees as the rising risk of the country having to restructure its private sector debts.

The rating agency downgraded Greece to CCC from B and said it would consider any such restructuring as a default.

Last week, the Greek parliament passed tough austerity measures to secure further financial aid.

However, there is a growing sense that a debt restructuring is inevitable.

German and French banks have already agreed in principle to roll over loans to Greece in order to give the country more time to repay its debts.

This could involve effectively reinvesting the proceeds of maturing Greek debt into newly-issued bonds.

Standard & Poor’s said that, depending on the circumstances, it viewed “certain types of debt exchanges and similar restructurings as equivalent to a payment default”.

The options laid out so far for restructuring Greek debt would constitute such a default, it said.

Over the weekend, eurozone finance ministers approved the latest tranche of emergency help for the Greek economy.

They will release 12bn euros (£10.4bn, $17.4bn) in the next two weeks to help Greece meet spending commitments and avoid defaulting on its huge debts.

Last week, the Greek parliament passed tough austerity measures demanded by the European Union (EU) and International Monetary Fund (IMF).

MPs backed the measures despite angry protests on the streets of Athens.

Last May, the EU and IMF provided 110bn euros in emergency loans to Greece, and agreed last month to provide another 120bn euros in loans to try and help the country though its debt crisis.

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Miscarriage ‘is no bar to baby’

 

Woman cryingEstimates suggest a fifth of pregnancies miscarry
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Women with repeated miscarriages can be reassured that their chance of having a healthy baby is the same as women who have never miscarried, say experts.

The news comes from a large meeting in Sweden where doctors are discussing the latest advances in fertility medicine.

The findings in over 1,000 women should offer some comfort to the 1% of couples who have lost three or more pregnancies in a row through no known cause.

Often the reasons for recurrent miscarriages cannot be found.

This can be an added source of stress and leave a couple wondering why they were affected.

Most recurrent miscarriages are unexplained, meaning there is no obvious cause, and no treatment to offer.

“We hope that our study will give them hope and encourage them to keep trying for the baby they want so much”

Study author Dr Stefan Kaandorp

Faced with this uncertainty, it can be difficult for couples to decide what action to take.

But researchers say they can now offer couples more accurate information to help them when they are considering whether or not they want to keep trying for a baby.

Two new studies, presented at the European Society of Human Reproduction and Embryology meeting in Stockholm, followed the outcomes of women with unexplained recurrent miscarriage.

The first – a Danish study that involved nearly 1,000 women – found two-thirds went on to have at least one child, mostly within five years of being diagnosed and referred to a recurrent miscarriage clinic, but often within a year of being seen.

The second study, carried out in the Netherlands with 213 women, found more than 70% became pregnant after a year of trying for a baby, rising to over 80% or eight out of 10 after two years of trying.

And over half of all the women in the study gave birth to a healthy baby, within an average wait of 41 weeks to conceive.

Dr Stefan Kaandorp, who led this Dutch research, said: “Our results mean that women with recurrent miscarriage can be reassured that their time to a subsequent conception is not significantly longer than that for fertile women without a history of miscarriage.

MiscarriageA miscarriage is the early loss of a pregnancyAn estimated one in five pregnancies miscarryRecurrent miscarriage is when this happens three or more timesAround 1 woman in every 100 has recurrent miscarriagesMost couples who have had recurrent miscarriages still have a good chance of a successful birth in future

“Recurrent miscarriage is extremely stressful for these women and we hope that our study will give them hope and encourage them to keep trying for the baby they want so much.”

A spokeswoman for the Miscarriage Association said: “One of the big issues for women going for investigation for recurrent miscarriage is that they expect answers.

“For them, a diagnosis means treatment and treatment equals a baby. But that is not always the case.”

She said finding no underlying cause could be good news because it means they have a good chance in the future of becoming pregnant and having a healthy baby.

Professor Siobhan Quenby, consultant obstetrician at Warwick Medical School in the UK, said she would be using the findings to help counsel her patients.

CarolCarol is undecided about whether or not to try for another baby

“The majority of patients I see with unexplained recurrent miscarriage feel like giving up. I spend a lot of my time trying to encourage them that they do have a good chance of going on to have a baby. It is good to have this latest data to put a figure on it.”

But the prospect of trying again can still be daunting.

Carol, aged 39 and from West Lothian, is not convinced that she wants to face the possibility of a fifth miscarriage, having already had four.

“At the moment, I feel like I would be happier not to fall pregnant again. I’m not sure I want to go through the stress and trauma again.

“It’s not just me who is upset and disappointed every time. It’s my husband and my family that feel it too.”

“And I’m going to be 40 in a couple of months and I consider that my time has run out.”

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Sportsday Live – Breaking sports news as it happens

Breaking sports news as it happens – Andy Murray inspired by Novak Djokovic win

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