Man Utd fans out for title parade

Manchester United celebrate Premier League successManchester United have won more league titles than any other club
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Manchester United fans are set to put Champions League heartbreak behind them to help celebrate the club’s record-breaking 19th domestic title.

Up to 150,000 supporters are expected to take to the streets as the players embark on an open-top bus tour to parade the Premier League trophy.

Fans will line a 4.5-mile route from Manchester Cathedral, in the city centre, to Stretford Mall, Trafford.

A number of roads will be closed to traffic to accommodate the crowds.

Councillor Mike Amesbury, a Manchester United fan, said the city council wanted as many fans and their families as possible to attend.

“Get there nice and early and get a good spot to see your footballing heroes and celebrate the fact we’ve won 19 league titles,” he said.

“It will be yet another parade on the streets of Manchester.”

Greater Manchester Police (GMP) said closures would include Deansgate (from 0700 BST) and Great Ducie Street (from 0900 BST).

Access to many of the roads along the route will also be limited as the parade gets under way at 1000 BST.

Police have also reminded fans that drinking alcohol will not be permitted along the route.

It is the second victory parade in Manchester in a week.

On Monday, up to 100,000 Manchester City fans celebrated their team’s first trophy in 35 years with an FA Cup victory parade from Albert Square to the City of Manchester stadium.

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

Defending Mubarak

Woman supporter holds a poster of Hosni Mubarak in central CairoSupporters of the former president say he deserves respect as a war hero

It is seven weeks since Egypt’s former president, Hosni Mubarak, swapped his luxury residence in Sharm el-Sheikh for a nearby hospital, having reportedly had a heart attack during interrogations. Now, the embattled leader is finding support in some unlikely quarters.

The public debate has not been silenced by the decision to try Mr Mubarak and his sons for corruption and their roles in the killing of more than 800 protesters during the recent uprising.

He and his top officials have also been fined $90m (£55m) for cutting off mobile phone and internet services.

Many Egyptians who took part in the revolution are relieved that the ruling military council – whose members Mr Mubarak appointed to their posts – is not sparing its old ally from charges which can carry the death penalty.

However, they continue to fear that the 83-year-old will escape even a court appearance. They point to the fact that he remains in a regular hospital, rather than a military or prison facility, despite orders to move him.

On the other hand, there are a significant number of Egyptians who say the former leader should not be prosecuted.

They have organised a series of recent protests and plan a demonstration in Cairo’s Mustafa Mahmoud Square to coincide with a rally by reformists in Tahrir Square.

Disagreement over the fate of Mr Mubarak highlights the potentially dangerous divisions as Egypt grapples with a difficult period of political transition.

Police outside Sharm el-Sheikh International HospitalThe former president is under police guard in a hospital in the Red Sea resort of Sharm el-Sheikh

“We are not calling for Mubarak to come back, but we are against insulting him because he is a national symbol,” says May, a well-off mother of two, and an organiser of the support rallies.

“He should be treated in a way that isn’t humiliating, that is suitable for a former president of Egypt and a hero of the October war,” she says, referring to the surprise attack launched by Egyptian forces on Israel in 1973.

She accepts that her opinions may make her unpopular with some but insists her voice – and those of others like her – should be heard.

“We are supposed to have democracy and freedom of speech after the 25 January revolution,” she says.

Pro-Mubarak demonstrations have featured slogans such as “The people want to honour the president” and “Your people will never forget you”.

On 4 May, about 4,000 supporters gathered in front of the Egyptian TV studios to celebrate the ex-president’s birthday.

“We wanted to take photos and send them to him to boost his morale,” says Inas al-Fouli – who argues Mr Mubarak should be exempt from trial because of his age and ill health.

“[Anti-Mubarak groups] attacked us… sabotaged our celebration and ate the president’s birthday cake”

Inas al-Fouli Participant in pro-Mubarak birthday rally

As with other events of its kind, it ended in clashes with anti-Mubarak protesters. The army had to intervene.

“They attacked us with stones, knives and Molotov cocktails. They injured many of us, sabotaged our celebration and ate the president’s birthday cake,” says Inas.

For them, feelings of anger towards Mr Mubarak have not dissipated.

“Mubarak must stand trial for the sake of the revolution’s martyrs and their families,” says Khalid Abd al-Hamid, a member of the 25 January Revolution Youth Coalition.

He says that Mr Mubarak abused his presidential powers in unforgivable ways.

“Mubarak spoiled political life in Egypt, stole the future of the entire population and deliberately took bad decisions to keep his post. He led a gang that stole from the people for 30 years right in front of their eyes,” he adds.

Another anti-Mubarak activist, Azza Tawfik, agrees.

“If Mubarak doesn’t go on trial, it will be a bold continuation of the very corruption that he created,” she says.

The row about the appropriate treatment for the former president has sparked the creation of several opposing Facebook groups.

The biggest one backing Mr Mubarak, “I am sorry, Mr President”, has over 83,000 supporters while its rival “I am not sorry, Mr President” has attracted over 156,000.

Egyptian protester waves a mock noose outside a Cairo courtroomMany Egyptians welcomed the announcement that Mr Mubarak could face the death penalty.

In a further illustration of the split, the weekly newspaper al-Youm al-Sabi recently ran a poll on its website. Nearly 51% of readers said they would pardon Mr Mubarak if he returned the money he allegedly acquired through illegal means, while almost 49% rejected the idea.

For Egyptian state TV – a powerful propaganda tool for the government before the revolution – the debate has presented a new challenge.

It has tried hard to ignore the pro-Mubarak protests taking place on its doorstep – opening itself to new claims of bias.

Last month, a Nile News TV presenter was suspended for talking about the rallies during his show.

Other areas of the media are freely joining the discussions on how to deal with the Mubarak dilemma.

There is recognition that this matter will mark an important chapter as Egypt strives towards freedom and democracy.

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

Swine flu bug ‘missed by doctors’

Bill AndersonBill Anderson died in hospital in Dunfermline in September 2009

A fatal accident inquiry into a Scottish swine flu death has heard the victim was relieved when told by doctors he did not have the virus.

Bill Anderson, 53, from Fife, was the first Scot to die who was not suffering from a pre-existing health condition.

His wife Lynda told the inquiry at Dunfermline Sheriff Court he was sent to hospital by NHS 24 in September 2009 but was diagnosed with seasonal flu.

The former RAF medic, from Kirkcaldy, died four days later.

Mr Anderson fell ill on 4 September 2009 shortly after returning from Tenerife with his 56-year-old wife Lynda.

The next day he called NHS 24 who advised him to see a doctor in Kirkcaldy’s Victoria Hospital.

Mr Anderson was given a prescription and spent the next few days in bed but his condition worsened.

His daughter called 999 and he was taken to the Victoria and then transferred to Queen Margaret Hospital in Dunfermline where he later died.

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

Inmates kill India prison doctor

File picture of a Bihar prisonBihar prisons are overcrowded
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A doctor has been beaten to death by inmates of a prison where he was examining a patient in the northern Indian state of Bihar, police say.

Some reports say Dr Buddhadev Singh Bhudeo was being pressured by prisoners to issue fake medical certificates so they could avoid appearing in court.

The police have lodged cases against seven prisoners in the jail in Bihar’s Gopalgunj district.

Bihar’s government says it will introduce laws to protect doctors.

Dr Bhudeo was found unconscious in a prison ward and taken to hospital where he died of his injuries.

In an earlier incident, a doctor in a jail in the state capital, Patna, was reportedly threatened by a prisoner who demanded a fake medical certificate.

Bihar’s health minister Ashwani Choubey told the BBC that the state government was planning introduce further protection for doctors.

“The doctors posted in jail have to work under pressure from the inmates for producing fake medical certificates and the Gopalgunj incident is a fallout of this pressure,” said Mr Choubey.

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

Rain parade

The Rigby familyThe Rigby family are season ticket holders and wanted to celebrate the league title win
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Having been defeated at Wembley two days before and with Manchester’s stereotypical rain teeming down, you could be forgiven for thinking United’s legions of supporters might not be up for a victory parade.

The reality at Old Trafford could not have been further from the truth.

“Nineteen titles is still amazing and well worth celebrating,” said Graham Rigby.

He and his family drove in from Wigan to join the throng at Manchester United’s ground.

“We’re season ticket holders, lifelong supporters and all love United – why wouldn’t we be here?”

His sentiment is one echoed throughout the crowd at the famous old stadium, many of whom have forgone the start of the parade at Manchester Cathedral to see their idols as they make the journey past their home.

As a result, along Sir Matt Busby Way, it feels like a match day.

Scarves and flags are being sold by the dozen, burger vans are set up ready to feed the soggy hordes and all around the sound of air horns can be heard.

Jolie Welsh (l) with her familyJolie Welsh missed the treble parade so was desperate to see this one

Nineteen-year-old Jolie Welsh from Manchester wouldn’t be anywhere else.

“I wasn’t allowed to go to the treble parade – my mum wouldn’t take me out of school for it – so there was no way I was going to miss this.”

“My family gave up a weekend away to come to this.”

The mention of the treble is one of only a small number of references to European football that can be heard.

The majority of those lining the parade route up to the ground are concentrating on their team’s record-breaking 19th league title, waving flags emblazoned with one word – champions.

Not everyone is there for such reasons though.

For Rose and Tom Gurang from Sale, it is a chance to see their first victory parade.

“You don’t see these every day, do you?” says Mr Gurang.

Saif UllahSaif Ullah had been ready for the parade for four hours before arriving

“Being able to see the players up close and them reacting to you, that’s great.

“We don’t mind the rain – it’s worth it.”

It is the Ullah family from Manchester that sum up the atmosphere and the reasons why neither defeat in the Champions League nor unending rain was ever going to spoil the day.

Dressed in a variety of hats, scarves and kits, the four siblings are grinning and getting ready to cheer.

“I’ve been a Manchester United supporter since I was three,” says eldest sister, 27-year-old Saima.

“I wasn’t going to miss this, whatever the weather.”

She points at her younger brother, eight-year-old Saif.

“He’s been up and dressed in his kit since six o’clock this morning – that’s how much it means to us to be here.”

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

Vehicles damaged in Antrim attack

Eight vehicles belonging to an education authority are off the road after an attack by vandals on Sunday.

Sixty windows were also smashed during the attack on the North-Eastern Education and Library Board’s centre in Antrim.

The vehicles were parked at the back of the premises on the Lough Road. The damage was reported shortly before midnight.

Police have appealed for anyone with information to contact them.

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

Charles Dickens’ home to open to visitors

Charles DickensDickens wrote some of his best-known work at Gad’s Hill Place
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The former Kent home of Charles Dickens is to be turned into an International Heritage Centre.

The plans have been revealed by Gad’s Hill School, which currently occupies the building at Higham, near Rochester.

It is to build a new £10m building in the grounds of the old house, allowing Gad’s Hill Place to be turned into a museum and heritage centre next year.

Dickens penned classic novels such as Great Expectations and A Tale of Two Cities at the property.

Project leaders hope to attract visitors from across the world to the Grade I-listed Georgian building.

The independent school for three to 16-year-olds has used the site for teaching since the 1920s.

Headmaster David Craggs has long campaigned for pupils to leave the 18th Century house and for Dickens’ home to be opened to visitors on a permanent basis.

“We’ve been able to do this because the school has become more and more successful over the years,” he said.

“It’s scandalous that Dickens’ home has never been opened to the public. The school has occupied it for the best part of 90 years.

“Trying to run a school in what is a very old building is becoming more difficult.”

Gad's Hill SchoolCharles Dickens loved the house as a child but was only able to live in it as a successful author

Mr Craggs said the ground floor and the basement of the building had been preserved in its original state.

“My study, for example, if the man [Dickens] walked in tomorrow he would recognise it as if he’d walked out the day before.”

Marion Dickens, the author’s great-great granddaughter and a governor at the school, said Gad’s Hill was the only home ever owned by Dickens.

“He became very attached to it as a poor small boy living in Chatham… it was his impossible dream to live in it.”

He bought the house in his early 40s once he was a successful author, she said, adding that it was “a sanctuary that he came home to… this house mattered more to him than any other”.

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

Germany pledges nuclear shutdown

Anti-nuclear protester in Munich, 28 MayGermany saw mass anti-nuclear protests in the wake of the Fukushima disaster
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Germany’s ruling coalition says it has agreed a date of 2022 for the shutdown of all of its nuclear power plants.

Environment Minister Norbert Rottgen made the announcement after a meeting of the ruling coalition that lasted into the early hours of Monday.

Chancellor Angela Merkel had set up an ethics panel to look into nuclear power following the disaster at the Fukushima plant in Japan.

Germany saw mass anti-nuclear protests in the wake of the disaster.

Mr Rottgen said the seven oldest reactors, which were already subject to a moratorium, and the Kruemmel nuclear power plant, would not resume.

Six others would go offline by 2021 at the latest and the three newest by 2022, he said.

Mrs Merkel’s Christian Democrats had met with its junior partners on Sunday after the ethics panel had delivered its conclusions.

Before the meeting she said: “I think we’re on a good path but very, very many questions have to be considered.

“If you want to exit something, you also have to prove how the change will work and how we can enter into a durable and sustainable energy provision.”

The Fukushima plant was crippled by the March earthquake and tsunami in Japan, causing radioactive leaks that spurred anti-nuclear protests in Germany.

Mr Rottgen said a tax on spent fuel rods, expected to raise 2.3bn euros ($3.28bn) a year from this year, would remain despite the shutdown.

Germany’s nuclear industry has argued that an early shutdown would be hugely damaging to the country’s industrial base.

Before March’s moratorium on the older power plants, Germany relied on nuclear power for 23% of its energy.

The anti-nuclear drive boosted Germany’s Green party, which took control of the Christian Democrat stronghold of Baden-Wuerttemberg, in late March.

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

Children hurt in bouncy castle

Three children have been injured after a bouncy castle broke loose from its tether.

Police believe the inflatable castle, at the White House Hotel on the West Cliff in Whitby, blew away in the wind at about 1440 BST.

A seven-year-old boy was airlifted to hospital with broken bones, while a nine-year-old boy broke a bone in his leg.

A girl, aged seven, is thought to have suffered concussion.

All three remain stable in hospital.

The seven-year-old boy was flown to the James Cook Hospital in Middlesbrough. His injuries are serious but not thought to be life-threatening.

The other two children were taken by ambulance to Scarborough District Hospital.

An investigation is under way into what happened.

Ch Insp Steve Smith, from North Yorkshire Police, told BBC Radio 5 live: “It appears that the bouncy castle blew away in the winds and the three young people who were in it at the time got, to a certain degree, taken off the ground, and they’ve received some quite serious injuries in two cases.”

A force spokesman said: “All three remain in hospital in stable conditions. The bouncy castle was recovered with the help of officers from the North Yorkshire Fire and Rescue Service.

“There is no longer any police involvement with this incident and the circumstances leading to the bouncy leaving its tether will be conducted by officers from the environmental health department at Scarborough District Council.”

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

Man held over child’s crash death

A man has been arrested on suspicion of causing death by dangerous driving, after a three-year-old girl died in a collision.

The child was allegedly struck by a Mazda sports car on Kneesworth Street, Royston, Hertfordshire, shortly after 1500 BST on Saturday.

A five-year-old girl who was also involved in the collision was unhurt, Hertfordshire Constabulary said.

A man in his 60s is being questioned by police over the incident.

The three-year-old was taken to Addenbrooke’s Hospital in Cambridge, where she was later confirmed dead.

Insp Matt Thompson said: “This is a tragic incident. We are very keen to hear from anyone who saw the road traffic collision and so may be able to explain how it happened.

“This is quite a busy road, with the White Bear pub nearby, and people may have seen the collision take place while they were out and about.

“They could have been outside the pub at one of the tables or inside looking out of the window and seen something.”

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

Lagarde in Asian charm offensive

Christine LagardeMs Lagarde announced her candidacy for the IMF’s top job last week
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Christine Lagarde is planning to visit China, India and Brazil to drum up support for her bid to head the International Monetary Fund (IMF).

The French finance minister said she wanted to visit the three countries in an effort to ease concerns over her candidacy.

Emerging economies have voiced their concerns over the continuing hold of European nations over the IMF.

All 10 of the fund’s managing directors since its inception have been European.

Leaders of developing economies have voiced their displeasure, saying that the head of a global body should be chosen purely on merit.

India’s prime minister Dr Manmohan Singh was quoted as saying “We would like to remind the industrialised world that there is a tacit agreement that the top positions in international financial institutions must not go to specific countries as a matter of right,” according to a transcript of comments issued by the Foreign Ministry.

“You do recognise that those who exercise power, they don’t want to give up power and therefore the struggle for a better, balanced world order, a more equitable world order… is going to be a long haul”

Dr Manmohan Singh Indian prime minister

The balance of global financial power has changed drastically in the past few years.

Economies like China and India have grown at a much faster pace that those in the developed world, making them increasingly important players on the world stage.

However their influence at global bodies like the IMF has not altered much during the same period.

And India’s prime minister Dr Singh said it will take a long time for that change to happen.

“You do recognise that those who exercise power, they don’t want to give up power and therefore the struggle for a better, balanced world order, a more equitable world order, including the management of global institutions like the IMF, World Bank, Security Council… it is going to be a long haul, I am afraid,” he said.

His views were echoed by Professor Charles Adams of the Lee Kuan Yew School of Public Policy in Singapore, who said that though the IMF had been moving in the right direction, the pace had been too slow.

“We have seen some changes in the IMF away from the European and major advanced economies to the emerging market economies, but it has been slow, at times painful,” he said.

“It does not yet reflect the economic reality,” he added.

The French foreign minister Alain Juppe said that Ms Lagarde had received the backing of the leaders of the Group of Eight Nations (G8) of developed economies.

“Among the eight heads of state and government, plus the president of the European Commission and the president of the European Council who were there (at the G8 meeting in Deauville, France), there was unanimous support for Christine Lagarde,” Mr Juppe was quoted as saying by the Reuters news agency.

The Group of Eight Nations represents some of the biggest and most powerful economies in the world.

Its members are the US, United Kingdom, France, Germany, Italy, Japan, Canada and Russia.

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

Thousands ‘lack social care help’

Woman helping an elderly man to his doorMinisters are looking to revamp the social care system in England
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Hundreds of thousands of older people in England who need social care are not getting any support from the state or private sector, campaigners say.

Age UK says 800,000 people are excluded from the system – and the figure is set to top one million within four years.

It said budgets had hardly risen in recent years even before the squeeze, despite the ageing population.

The charity renewed its call for an overhaul of the system, something ministers are looking at.

Social care in England is means-tested, which means those with savings of over £23,250 are excluded.

But councils have also been making it more difficult for those who do meet the income threshold to get care, by tightening the eligibility criteria.

Six years ago, half of councils provided support to people with moderate needs, but that figure has now dropped to 18%.

“Care and support in England has reached breaking point, putting older people at risk and their families under intolerable strain”

Michelle Mitchell Age UK

It means only 1.2 million are getting formal care either at home or in a care home – although some of these are being forced to pay for the services themselves anyway, as they exceed the income cap.

The report – based on previously published data by government bodies and independent researchers – pointed out while the NHS had received significant budget rises in recent years, social care increases had stalled.

Once inflation is taken into account, funding has only been rising by 0.1% a year since 2004 – equivalent to £43m. By comparison, the NHS budget rose by £25bn.

Michelle Mitchell, charity director of Age UK, said: “The figures we have uncovered beggar belief. Care and support in England has reached breaking point, putting older people at risk and their families under intolerable strain.”

The charity has been calling for means-testing to be scrapped so that a universal system could be created, guaranteeing everyone a certain level of support if needed.

The government has set up a review of the system and is expected to publish plans for reform later this year.

Other parts of the UK are also looking at how they provide social care amid mounting problems.

A Department of Health spokesman said: “The government recognises the urgent need to reform the social care system – an ageing population and rising expectations make the current system completely unsustainable.”

He added the plans to be put forward later this year would “put in place a lasting and fair settlement for social care”.

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