Winds of 100mph batter Scotland

Winds of up to 80mph (130kmph) have been forecast for parts of Scotland.

The Met Office has issued a “be prepared” warning for the south and central Scotland and a “be aware” warning for the rest of the country.

Ferry operators Caledonian MacBrayne and NorthLink have warned of cancellations and delays to services because of the weather.

Sailings affected include Oban to Coll and Tiree, Wemyss Bay to Rothesay and Barra to Eriskay.

The Met Office said winds should ease by evening.

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School appeal to ‘pyjama parents’

Woman wearing pyjamas on Middlesbrough streetSome parents were still wearing pyjamas at the end of the school day
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A Middlesbrough head teacher has asked parents to get properly dressed before the school run.

It follows sightings of a number of them still wearing their pyjamas when they brought their children to school.

Some people were even attending meetings at Pallister Park Primary school in their nightwear.

This prompted the school’s head, Chris Wain, to send out letters to parents urging them to think about what they were wearing.

Ms Wain said: “What we were seeing was people staying in their pyjamas all day.

“They were dropping their children off in the morning and collecting them in the afternoon wearing the same pyjamas.”

Outside the school, one parent, accompanied by a friend in slippers, was wearing leggings over her pyjamas.

She said: “I have to cover up otherwise the school goes mad.”

In 2007, the principal of a Northern Ireland primary school also reprimanded parents who regularly turned up at the school gate in their pyjamas.

He said the trend set a bad example to pupils and made staff uncomfortable.

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Jail term policy ‘money-driven’

Ken ClarkeLabour called for Ken Clarke to resign following remarks he made about rape
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Proposals to halve the prison terms of offenders who enter early guilty pleas are driven purely by a desire to save money, Labour has claimed.

Shadow justice secretary Sadiq Khan told a Commons debate the plans were “a recipe for disaster”.

But Justice Secretary Ken Clarke insisted cost-cutting was “not the principle motive for reform”.

A Labour motion opposing the policy was defeated on Monday evening by 221 to 303.

Mr Clarke was forced to apologise last week after he appeared to suggest some rapes were more serious than others during a discussion about the policy. However, he laughed off calls from Labour for him to resign.

Currently, offenders who plead guilty at the earliest opportunity are entitled to a reduction in their sentence up to a maximum of 33%, but the government is consulting on extending that to 50%.

The Ministry of Justice estimates it would save 3,400 prison places – and £130m – per year by 2015. That saving represents 62% of the £210m a year it has promised to cut.

During the debate, Mr Khan said Mr Clarke’s decision to accept a 20% cut in his budget had “led to a fixation with reducing the prison population”.

He said the desire to do so by cutting sentences, rather than by cutting crime, showed the government “knows the price of everything but the value of nothing”.

“There is absolutely no evidence at all behind this proposal”

Philip Davies Conservative MP

“Nothing in these plans will reduce reoffending or do justice. They are a recipe for disaster that confirms how out of touch this government is with the real world,” Mr Khan added.

In reply, Mr Clarke said he regarded it “as in the national interest to make reductions in public expenditure”, but saving money was not his primary motivation.

“The principle motive is to make the criminal justice system better and to tackle some of the problems we’ve inherited,” he said.

He insisted the discount policy had the support of the prime minister, adding that David Cameron ran a “scrupulously collective government”.

Mr Clarke has said the proposals could spare rape victims the ordeal of having to give evidence at a trial by giving a greater incentive for offenders to plead guilty.

But Mr Clarke was warned by an MP from his own backbenches that he may have to step down for the sake of his party.

Philip Davies, who represents Shipley, said: “These proposals have to go. And I very much fear that if the Secretary of State doesn’t listen to the widespread opposition to these plans, for us to restore our reputation as a party of law and order, he will have to go as well.

“This is simply an arbitrary proposal. There is absolutely no evidence at all behind this proposal to suggest that more people will plead guilty as a result.”

In the vote on the Labour motion, Mr Davies rebelled and supported the opposition.

Following its defeat, Justice Minister Crispin Blunt said the motion was “a good example of how not to debate or create public policy in this area”.

“There is a growing appreciation and understanding that the simplicity of the opposition motion cannot do justice to the complexity of issues and the factors we must reconcile,” he said.

“The motion is outside any proper context and is premature, prejudging proper consideration of our policies as a whole.”

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Man killed after tree crushes car

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A man has been killed after the car he was driving was hit by a tree which had fallen during gale-force storms battering Scotland.

Strathclyde Police confirmed that the incident happened on Mollanbowie Road in Balloch, West Dunbartonshire, at about 1500 BST.

Fire crews worked for several hours to cut the driver free.

He was confirmed dead at the scene. Police officers are still at the accident and the road remains closed.

Winds of up to 100mph have been causing travel disruption on Scotland’s road, rail and ferry networks.

Thousands of homes were without power as the severe weather brought down trees and electricity lines.

Rail services across the country were affected with commuters stranded at stations and just a handful of trains still running.

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Three die in Yemen street battle

Anti-government protest in Sanaa - 23 MayMany protesters want Mr Saleh to go immediately

Heavy fighting has broken out in the Yemeni capital Sanaa between security forces and members of the country’s powerful Hashid tribe.

Several people were hurt in the clashes in a northern district, near the home of tribal leader Sheikh Sadeq al-Ahmar.

Witnesses said machine-guns and grenades were used, sending some local residents fleeing in panic.

Sheikh Ahmar, a former supporter of President Abdullah Saleh, joined protests against his rule in March.

The clashes come a day after Mr Saleh refused to sign a Gulf-brokered transition deal.

He said he would only sign in the presence of opposition leaders.

Saleh supporters besieged Western and Arab diplomats in the United Arab Emirates embassy, preventing the Gulf mediators from reaching the palace for the intended signing.

Middle East unrest: Yemen

Yemeni President Ali Abdullah Saleh. Photo: 22 May 2011

President Ali Abdullah Saleh in power since 1978Population 24.3m; land area 536,869 sq kmThe population has a median age of 17.9, and a literacy rate of 61%Youth unemployment is 15%Gross national income per head was $1,060 (£655) in 2009 (World Bank)Profile: President Saleh Yemen country profile

The Gulf Co-operation Council then suspended the initiative because of “a lack of suitable conditions”.

The deal called for Mr Saleh to step down after 33 years in office and hand over power to a unity government within a month.

It would also have given the president immunity from prosecution.

Mr Saleh has been criticised by Western powers, in particular the US and France, for failing to agree to a transfer of power.

Many protesters meanwhile – inspired by the successful revolts in Tunisia and Egypt – say the accord does not go far enough, and are calling for Mr Saleh’s immediate departure.

In March, Sheikh Ahmar said he was “joining the revolution” and called on Mr Saleh, himself a member of the Hashid tribe, “to exempt Yemen from the bloodshed and make a quiet exit”.

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

Rumour mill

Threat sent to Mrs Nelson in June 1998Threat sent to Mrs Nelson in June 1998

How and why did Rosemary Nelson die following a car bomb attack in March 1999?

The Rosemary Nelson report makes sober reading for one simple reason. Although it finds there was no state collusion in the car bomb that took her life in 1999, the subtext is that those who planted it thought, quite literally, they could get away with murder.

Sir Michael Morland and the other inquiry panel members make clear that the state failed to take reasonable steps to protect her in the face of a growing threat to her life.

Rosemary Nelson’s death happened during a very dark period of the peace process. The previous summer had seen Northern Ireland rocked by sectarian tensions over the Drumcree Orange Order parade in Portadown, the murder of three little boys who were Catholic and the massive Omagh bomb planted by dissident republicans.

The political power-sharing agreement had been signed – but there was no certainty it would stick.

Bullet in post

So while politicians attempted to secure the deal, Mrs Nelson was one of the key figures among the communities at the frontline of sectarian tensions.

As a lawyer, she represented the nationalist residents of the Garvaghy Road in Portadown who opposed the Drumcree parade’s route through their area. She also had a string of clients accused of republican paramilitary violence.

One of those was Colin Duffy, whom she represented when he was accused of the murder of two police officers.

ROSEMARY NELSON TIMELINE15 March 1999: Rosemary Nelson dies after a bomb exploded under her carMarch 2000: Prime Minister Tony Blair given 100,000-signature petition demanding public inquiryNovember 2004: Govt launches inquiry and says it will look at collusion allegationsSept 2007: NI Policing ombudsman says officers did not properly investigate threats against the solicitorApril 2008: Inquiry finally opens after being criticised for delays

What emerges in the report is that Nelson’s legal work made her enemies – and those enemies were forming their views on vague intelligence from inside the Royal Ulster Constabulary’s Special Branch and loyalist rumours on the streets.

Some RUC Special Branch officers had become convinced that Rosemary Nelson was not “any other solicitor” and that her association with Colin Duffy went beyond the normal lawyer-client relationship.

Some officers believed they were having an affair – and many more believed she was actively assisting the Provisional IRA.

At the Special Branch regional headquarters in Portadown, she was considered to be a “PIRA personality”. One Special Branch chief told the inquiry: “The dogs on the street knew that Mrs Nelson was sympathetic to PIRA.”

Rosemary Nelson publicly repudiated claims that she was in league with the IRA.

But her protestations did not stop rumours.

“We observed that among SB officers who gave evidence to the inquiry there was an unquestioning acceptance of the truth of the intelligence reports,” says the report.

“Officers at every level… regarded Rosemary Nelson as an active supporter of PIRA.”

Rosemary Nelson Rosemary Nelson represented several high profile clients from her office in Lurgan

Critically, the report finds, those intelligence assessments did not stay on secret systems.

“It seems to us likely that the view fixed in SB that there was a relationship between Rosemary Nelson and Colin Duffy spilled into other sections of the force, at least in South Region,” says the report. “Intelligence concerning Rosemary Nelson’s supposed links with PIRA also spilled beyond SB.”

Given that she was already a hate figure for many loyalists, these leaks “increased the danger to Rosemary Nelson’s life”.

In one 1997 incident, one of her clients said a police officer said: “She [Nelson} won’t be here that long – she will be dead.” Another client accused officers of calling her a “terrorist with a deformed face”.

Trevor McKeown, a loyalist convicted of killing an 18-year-old Catholic woman, gave a statement, saying that two RUC officers had asked him why he had not shot Mrs Nelson instead.

ROSEMARY NELSON: KEY FACTS

Rosemary Nelson had represented a number of key republicans

One of those was Colin Duffy

Her clients made her a “hate figure” for loyalists

Supporters said she had been threatened, including by police officers from the then Royal Ulster Constabulary

Family say that police officers must have colluded in her killing

McKeown’s story first emerged in a News of the World story, six years after the alleged comments. The inquiry found it could not dismiss his allegations as a media tale because they accurately reflected the views of CID officers.

What the report makes clear is RUC officers who publicly abused her, or who threatened her indirectly with remarks to her clients, legitimised her as a target in the eyes of loyalist gunmen.

She received anonymous death threats and a bullet through the post.

And in 1998, a leaflet circulating in Portadown reported loyalists cheering news of her death. The leaflet falsely claimed that her facial scars, caused by a birthmark operation, were caused by her involvement in a botched IRA bomb attack.

And it is this history of threats that led the inquiry to conclude that the state failed to protect Rosemary Nelson.

It accuses the RUC of failing to stop its officers abusing her and says there was a “corporate failure” to warn her how serious the situation had become. Furthermore, the NIO should have pressured police chiefs to make sure the solicitor was safe, says the report.

“The combined effect of these omissions … was that the state failed to take reasonable and proportionate steps to safeguard the life of Rosemary Nelson.

“If Rosemary Nelson had been given advice [and assuming she took it] the risk to her life and her vulnerability would have reduced.”

Instead, she got into her car on 15 March 1999 and suffered fatal injuries from the bomb that subsequently exploded.

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

Kirk votes to allow gay ministers

The Reverend Scott RennieThe appointment of the Reverend Scott Rennie divided the church
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One of the most controversial issues to face the Church of Scotland is due to be debated at its General Assembly.

A gay minister was appointed to an Aberdeen church in 2009, a move which threatened to split the Kirk.

Commissioners are being asked whether to continue an indefinite ban on the ordination of gay ministers until a report next year.

Another option is to lift the ban but await a separate report which would be published in two years.

For two years, since it confirmed the Reverend Scott Rennie’s appointment to Queen’s Cross Church, the Kirk has been consulting widely with its officials and congregations on the issue of the ordination of gay ministers.

One in five members of Kirk sessions have said they would leave if it is agreed that gay ministers can be ordained, while one in 10 have said they would leave if the Kirk rules they can not be ordained.

Dr Bill Naphy, from Aberdeen University, warned that it was a “very divisive issue” but said he believed the Church of Scotland faced losing whole congregations if it approved the ordinations.

The subject hit the headlines two years ago as traditionalist members attempted to block Mr Rennie’s appointment.

Following a lengthy debate, the Assembly ultimately voted in support of the Aberdeen-based minister but called for a commission to study the general issue “for the sake of the peace and unity of the Church”.

The debate will focus on the commission’s report.

Dr Naphy, an expert in both the history of sexuality and Calvinism told the BBC’s Politics Show: “I think the Kirk is likely to take a very cautious approach.

“I think if they allow the ordination of gay ministers there will probably be whole congregations that leave.

“I think it’s less likely that whole congregations will leave if it goes the other way. It is more likely that individuals will walk away.

“Either way the vote goes there will be people and congregations who are likely to leave.”

He added: “The very fact that the Kirk has spent two years debating an issue that relates to handful of verses in the Bible must seem a very peculiar thing for the Kirk to spend its time on.

“In actual fact the Bible doesn’t say a great deal about sexuality at all.”

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

Dark night

Jose Luis Rodriguez Zapatero (22 May 2011)Mr Zapatero has already ruled out an early election, saying he has important reforms to enact
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Spain’s Popular Party (PP) celebrated its historic electoral victory into the early hours of Monday morning.

As the results poured in, a jubilant, well-heeled crowd thronged the street outside the party’s headquarters, dancing and cheering.

Two elderly ladies in their nightdresses looked on from a balcony above, waving the national flag.

For Spain’s centre-right opposition, this is a moment to savour.

They have beaten the Spanish Socialist Workers’ Party (PSOE) in the municipal vote by a record 10% and snatched symbolically important Socialist strongholds like Seville and Castilla-La Mancha.

Keen to capitalise on that, many in the crowd of PP supporters called for Prime Minister Jose Luis Rodriguez Zapatero to resign, which would force an early general election.

Maria Dolores de Cospedal, a victorious PP candidate in Castilla-La Mancha, agreed that it would be very hard for Spain to go on like this for another 10 months.

She believes that the financial markets, as much as local Spaniards, are looking for stability.

The government should reflect on that, she warned.

Mr Zapatero has already ruled out bringing the vote forward, saying his party would see out the current parliament in order to implement the vital reforms that Spain needs.

Popular Party leader Mariano Rajoy celebrates in Madrid (22 May 2011)For Spain’s centre-right opposition Popular Party, this is a moment to savour

But the call to dissolve parliament is likely to become a haunting refrain.

On Monday morning, newspaper headlines were unanimous. “PP crushes PSOE” was one in El Mundo; “The 22 May tsunami drowns the Socialists” was in El Pais.

The defeat of the Socialists was widely predicted, but the scale of the party’s loss suggests a possible landslide win for the PP in the general election, which is due next March.

Mr Zapatero has blamed his party’s drubbing on the economic crisis Spain plunged into three years ago. Some 4.9 million people are unemployed, many businesses have been forced to close, and the youth jobless rate is a staggering 45%.

Throughout the election campaign the Socialists argued that painful austerity cuts and reforms were vital and that the crisis was not of Spain’s making.

Sol, a protester in MadridThousands of mainly young Spaniards have set up camp in central Madrid

The party has been punished nonetheless, leaving the PP – with an opaque campaign for change – to reap the rewards.

Writing in the left-leaning El Pais, Juan Cruz called the PSOE a shadow of its former self.

“It was a dark night, which has turned into a tunnel that will be very difficult to get out of,” he added.

There was prior warning of the defeat, when an unprecedented wave of protests erupted on Spain’s streets.

Thousands of mainly young Spaniards have joined in, many setting up camp in central Madrid, frustrated at a political class they do not feel represents them.

The protesters say they will stay until next Sunday at least, or until someone “reaches out a hand and says they hear us, they are listening, and they will act”, as one young camper called Sol explained.

With no jobs to go to, most of the protesters have nowhere else pressing to be.

Also causing a stir following the election is the success of candidates linked to the political wing of the Basque separatist group, Eta.

A pro-independence electoral alliance, Bildu, saw off several legal challenges to run for office in the Basque Country. It won more council seats in the region than anyone else.

Members of Bildu celebrate in San Sebastian (23 May 2011)Bildu was cleared to run for office by a court after its members expressly rejected the use of violence

The Terrorism Victims Association (AVT) said Eta had won, causing irreversible damage to democracy.

“Bildu are rubbing their hands with glee,” complained the right-wing newspaper ABC. “The results are very worrying.”

But Bildu was cleared to run for office by the Constitutional Court after its members expressly rejected the use of violence. So other interpretations are more positive.

“These results are the end of Eta. There is no way back,” said Inigo Urkullu, leader of the moderate Basque nationalist party, PNV, which won 30% of the regional vote.

“This shows that people have backed exclusively political methods to achieve independence,” he added.

Back in Madrid, the Socialists are preparing for a new election process, this time internal.

Mr Zapatero had already said he would not run for a third term in office. The process of choosing his successor will start next weekend.

With a new face at the helm, the Socialists hope to avoid disaster at the general election.

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

Canada officers shot in ‘dispute’

BBC map of Brossard

A Quebec provincial police officer has been killed and another wounded after an apparent domestic dispute ended in gunfire, officials have said.

A man in the city of Brossard was shot to death and a woman shot in the leg.

A police spokesman told local media that investigators believe the male officer shot himself and that all the bullets were fired from his gun.

He declined to specify the nature of their relationship. The shooting occurred in the woman’s home.

“The shooting seems to have been one where the man took his own life,” Longueuil Pc Martin Simard told the Montreal Gazette.

“Whether he shot the woman before doing that, or inadvertently, remains to be seen. The shots were all fired inside the home and he did not live there.”

After the shooting, which happened on Saturday night, the man, aged 45, was transported to hospital where he was pronounced dead. The injury to the woman officer, 33, was said not to be life-threatening.

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