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The ceremony is intended to emphasise Ouattara’s legitimacy More than 20 heads of state are preparing to attend the inauguration of Ivory Coast’s President Alassane Ouattara.
The ceremony aims to draw a line under six months of bloody unrest.
Fighting broke out after Mr Ouattara’s predecessor Laurent Gbagbo refused to admit defeat following last year’s presidential election.
Mr Ouattara has promised to promote reconciliation in the country, where ethnic divisions are marked.
He took the oath of office two weeks ago.
But this ambitious inauguration ceremony aims to reinforce his legitimacy as president after a violent power struggle with Mr Gbagbo.
It is expected to be a demonstration of international backing: on the guest list is Nicolas Sarkozy, president of the former colonial power France, several African heads of state and the UN Secretary General Ban Ki-moon.
It is also designed to build domestic support, or at least acceptance.
Representatives from across the political spectrum have been invited, including members of Mr Gagbo’s party.
The ceremony is meant to symbolize the beginning of a reconciliation process that is key to the country’s recovery.
Mr Ouattara is keenly aware that he won only a little more than half the vote, and the presidential stand-off reignited festering ethnic tensions, with human rights groups accusing both sides of killings, rape and other crimes.
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The Hepworth Wakefield, named after sculptor Barbara Hepworth, becomes the largest purpose-built art gallery to open in the UK for 43 years.
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Leinster take on Northampton in the Heineken Cup final at the Millennium Stadium in Cardiff.
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The former head of the IMF, Dominque Strauss-Kahn, who is awaiting trial on charges of sexual assault, has left prison on bail.
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‘I have to sit on a plastic bag’
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Chinese and South Korean leaders will start a visit to Japan by touring Fukushima prefecture, where a nuclear plant was damaged by the March earthquake and tsunami.
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By Sarah Rainsford
The crowds deplore Spain’s unemployment rate – the highest in the EU Thousands of Spaniards in central Madrid have vowed to defy a ban on their protest camp and continue their open-air sit-in.
Spain’s electoral board has ruled that the gathering cannot continue into the weekend.
It argues the protest could unduly influence voters taking part in local and regional elections across the country on Sunday.
The decision was met with jeers in Puerta del Sol, where thousands gather every evening – and hundreds have been camping out for five nights now.
Dubbed the “Spanish revolution”, the protest began with a march through Madrid on Sunday, led by young Spaniards angry at mass unemployment, austerity measures and political corruption.
It turned into a spontaneous sit-in on the square in Sol, which organisers say has now been mirrored in 57 other cities.
“Our life is practically over, but they are acting for their future. They have everything to gain and nothing to lose”
Alfredo Guerra Unemployed hotel worker
Independent of any trade union or political party, the protesters’ ranks have been swollen through campaigns on social networking sites and Twitter.
“Finally the Spanish people are on the street,” says Juan Lopez, 30, a camp spokesman. He lost his job six months ago in a round of staff cuts due to the economic crisis.
“Young people are here because they’re worried about the future. We can’t tolerate it that 43% of the young have no jobs. That should be the first priority of our society,” he argues.
Spain’s young generation has been hard-hit by the crisis. Most had temporary contracts, making them cheap and easy to fire.
Many highly-qualified graduates are forced to work as low-paid interns for years and a growing number have moved back home to live with their parents.
Increasingly frustrated, they have finally found their voice.
“On Sunday we realised we were not alone,” Juan Lopez explains. “Before [the march] we didn’t feel we could make a difference. Now we want the politicians to listen to the people, and help change our country.”
The protesters are not identifying with any particular political party, Spanish media say. The protesters’ demands, pasted up all over Puerta del Sol, are impossible to ignore.
A statue of King Carlos III on horseback has been decorated with declarations. The metro entrance is now a vast citizens’ noticeboard. “We are not slaves,” one sign says; another instructs: “No alcohol: today the priority is revolution!”
The camp has become more organised by the day, with bright blue tarpaulins strung from statues and lamp posts and tents pitched on the cobblestones. There are sofas, mattresses and – since Wednesday – four chemical toilets, provided by the firm for free.
Behind a table piled high with fruit, biscuits and Turkish delight, is a mountain of milk cartons, canned fish and crisps.
“I brought bread, tomatoes, cheese and chickpeas,” says Leticia Moya, 28, an unemployed nursery worker who lives close to the camp and is one of many supporters donating supplies.
“I feel we should all collaborate, however we can. I can’t stay sleeping here overnight, but at least I can bring food. I don’t have much, but I prefer to spend my money on this, than on going out at the weekend,” she says.
Usually filled with mime artists, tourists and shoppers, the plaza in Sol has been transformed into a vast democracy camp.
During the day, curious locals – many of them pensioners – tour the site, joining in on one of dozens of animated debates.
There are committees for food, cleaning, legal affairs and communication and daily assembly meetings that hear proposals and allow joint decisions to be made.
The protests have spread to Bilbao in the north and to other cities in Spain “It’s the young who are leading this,” says Alfredo Guerra, admiringly, as he listens in on one assembly. A hotel worker, aged 56, he also lost his job in the recession.
“Our life is practically over, but they are acting for their future. They have everything to gain and nothing to lose,” he says.
A core group of protesters have been camping out non-stop since Sunday. Others, who have to work or study, sign up for shifts to join them.
A rough attempt by police to dislodge the apparently peaceful demonstration on Sunday night only brought more people out in support.
In one corner, there is a queue to sign a petition that reads: “We want to demonstrate that society is not asleep, and we will fight for what we deserve. We want a society that prioritises people over economic interests.”
“We’re fed up with politicians governing according to the markets, and not the needs of the citizens,” explains Antonio Rodriguez. “They don’t represent us – we’re asking for change,” he says.
Opinion polls show the Socialist government will fare badly in Sunday’s elections. But the protesters in Sol are no happier with Spain’s right-wing alternative.
There is much talk on the plaza of electoral reform – to prevent power simply switching back and forth between two parties. Many also demand a ban on all candidates implicated in corruption.
Proposals for debate are posted in a suggestions box.
The camp in Sol has been growing every night, even spawning its own internet TV channel – soltv.tv – and dominating the local news coverage. But as it all emerged spontaneously, no-one is quite sure where it will lead.
Later on Friday, the protesters will discuss the electoral board’s ban on their action and take a formal decision on their response.
Individually though, they have already vowed to stay put – right in the middle of Madrid.
“For the moment, we’re staying here 24 hours a day,” says Juan Lopez. “We have to make sure our message is heard.”
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Tens of thousands of Spaniards defy a ban and continue a Madrid protest against the government’s economic policies, on the eve of local elections.
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Hincapie (left) was “like a brother” said Armstrong Another teammate of cyclist Lance Armstrong has alleged he saw him using banned performance-enhancing drugs, CBS News reports.
George Hincapie, whom Armstrong once described as being “like a brother”, becomes the latest former member of the US Postal team to testify against him.
He said he and Armstrong had supplied each other with EPO before races and discussed using testosterone, said CBS.
Armstrong has consistently denied the allegations against him.
Earlier this week he wrote on Twitter: s “Never a failed test. I rest my case.”
Hincapie was considered one of Armstrong’s most loyal team mates on the US Postal team, and rode alongside him in all his seven Tour de France victories.
But the CBS programme 60 Minutes said he had testified to a US federal investigation into doping that he and Armstrong had taken EPO together.
Hincapie declined to take part in the programme, but told reporters it was “unfortunate that that’s all people want to talk about”.
“I want the focus on the future of the sport, what it’s done to clean itself up. I believe in cycling and want to support it.”
The comments come a day after Tyler Hamilton said he and Armstrong both used EPO during the 1999 Tour de France.
I saw [EPO] in his refrigerator… I saw him inject it more than one time like we all did,” Hamilton told the CBS programme 60 Minutes. “Like I did, many, many times.”
Hamilton, 40, served a two-year ban for so-called blood-doping from 2005-2007.
An Armstrong spokesman dismissed the allegations, and accused Hamilton of seeking publicity.
Last year, Floyd Landis – who rode in the US Postal team for several years – also launched a series of similar allegations against Armstrong.
Erythropoietin (EPO) is a hormone naturally produced by the kidneys. It is injected under the skin to stimulate red blood cell production, and its overall effect is to increase endurance.
Armstrong won the Tour de France for seven consecutive years from 1999-2005. He retired following the last of those triumphs.
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A teenager has been charged with stabbing a police officer in south London.
Alastair Gregson, 18, is alleged to have attacked Pc Nigel Albuery in Bute Road, Croydon, on Thursday night.
The 34-year-old officer was conducting a stop and search when he was stabbed several times, according to police.
Mr Gregson, of Whitefield Avenue, Purley, will appear at Croydon Magistrates’ Court on Saturday charged with grievous bodily harm with intent.
He also faces another charge of grievous bodily harm with intent against an 18-year-old woman, possession of an offensive weapon and intimidation of a witness in relation to an incident last Saturday.
Two other 18-year-olds arrested in connection with the stabbing of Pc Albuery have been released with no further action, police said.
Pc Albuery’s injuries are not thought to be life threatening and he remains in a stable condition in a south London hospital.
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Leaders of China and South Korea will be touring the disaster zone hit by the Japanese tsunami in the next few hours.
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During festival time in Pakistan’s Kalash valley, almost anything is possible for women.
They can declare their love for a suitor and end their marriages, as long as the community knows about the impending split in advance. They can even elope.
It is a far cry from large swathes of Pakistan where a conservative Islamic outlook dictates how women behave and the rights they have.
“Women are considered impure, but women are highly respected in society”
Yasir Kalash man
But in the Kalash valley a more liberal approach prevails, partly because of its unique religion and culture. The Kalash people are not Islamic – they worship a pantheon of gods and goddesses and hold exuberant festivals inspired by the seasons and the farming year.
“In our religion, you can choose whoever you want to marry, the parents don’t dictate to you,” says Mehmood, a 17-year-old Kalash girl who accompanied me as we scaled a labyrinthine puzzle of small houses set into the mountain face.
In this close society, one person’s roof is somebody else’s veranda. Little staircases connect one house to another and it felt like climbing into a tree house in the clouds.
Through the wooden window frames and ladders of the houses were panoramic views of immense jagged stones and gloriously green mountains surrounding this secluded valley.
Sahiba, a happy-go-lucky, 20-year-old with two children, lives in one of these houses and she told me about how she ran away with her husband during one festival.
Sahiba says she was able to run away with the man she loves “I met my husband the way I’m talking to you… I got to know him for three years before marrying him,” she said.
“When there is a festival whoever the girl is in love with she can run away with him… and that’s how I left with the man who is now my husband.”
She explains how after they ran away together they went to stay at his parents house.
“You can stay for as long as you want, there’s no specific time, but finally after two months we got to my parents house and after that we got married.”
It’s an unconventional courtship but this is an unconventional place. Certain tasks are still segregated. Women generally do the housework while the men do trade and labour work. Both men and women farm.
The Kalash attitude to gender is also defined by notions of purity. Some rituals can be executed only by men. The temple itself near the area of the seasonal spring festival is off-limits to women as well as Muslims.
Women must wash clothing and bathe separately. And during their menstrual cycle and in pregnancy women live a separate house outside the village. They can go to the fields to work, but they are not meant to enter the village.
Yasir, one Kalash man, said: “Women are considered impure, but women are highly respected in society.
“There are only a few things women are not meant to do.”
Indeed marriage and divorce is simpler for women than for men. Jamrat, 22, left her husband after a year and now lives with another man at his parents’ house. Her ex-husband converted to Islam, re-married and moved to a neighbouring village.
But there are financial considerations too.
“The second husband needs to give double the amount of money the first husband gave at the time of the marriage because for the first husband it’s like he lost his money AND his wife,” she says.
If the woman does not re-marry, the ex-husband has the right to retrieve the money from the bride’s father. Although Jamrat is technically not married to her new partner, he nonetheless had to give 60,000 rupees ($700; £425) to the first husband.
The Kalash women I met in Rumbur and Balanguru are bold and outspoken. They look you in the eye when talking and do not hesitate to speak their mind.
In this small village – far above the hot chaos of Pakistan’s main cities and towns – the patriarchy that informs most aspects of life in the rest of the country is clearly non-existent.
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Ed Miliband wants Labour to have a clear vision of the future Labour leader Ed Miliband is set to urge his party to set out a “national mission” to regain voters’ trust.
Mr Miliband will say in a speech in London that Labour lost the general election because of policy mistakes.
He will try to distance “his” Labour party from the one led by Tony Blair and Gordon Brown, says BBC political correspondent Ben Wright.
Voters will only return to Labour when the party admits its mistakes when in government, he will say.
Accepting the scale of the electoral task Labour faces, Mr Miliband will say Labour must also offer a clear and positive vision of the future, one that addresses people’s concerns about income inequality and today’s generation of youngsters having a harder life than their parents.
In elections earlier this month, Labour was defeated by the SNP in key Scottish heartlands, dropping from 46 seats to 37 at Holyrood, and losing some of its most senior figures.
A review of the party’s poor showing was commissioned by Mr Miliband.
The party fell just short of an overall majority in Wales, but did make strong gains in town halls in the north of England at the expense of the Lib Dems.
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The date for BBC Alba’s launch on Freeview is due to be announced Not all the BBC’s digital radio stations will be taken off Freeview in order to make way for the Gaelic TV station BBC Alba, it has emerged.
It had been expected all the corporation’s radio stations would be removed whenever BBC Alba broadcast because of restricted bandwidth.
However, three radio stations – 1 Extra, 5 Live and 6 Music – will now remain on the platform 24-hours a day.
The date when BBC Alba is launched on Freeview is due to be announced.
The BBC Trust decided last year that BBC Alba should be made available on Freeview.
Because of restrictions on capacity, it had been thought all the BBC’s radio stations would have to be taken off Freeview whenever BBC Alba was on the air – usually from about 1700 until midnight on weekdays and from mid-afternoon onwards at the weekend.
Despite the change, stations such as BBC Radio Scotland and Radio 4 will not be broadcast on the medium when BBC Alba is on air, although will continue to be availalbe on FM or medium wave.
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Vince Cable said the financial crisis had done ‘profound damage’ Business Secretary Vince Cable says it has been a challenge for the government to explain to the public how bad a state the economy is in.
He told the Guardian the country was poorer because of the banking collapse and recession – and o from a “squeeze” from the changing world economy.
Britain is no longer one of the “price-setters, in world markets, he says.
“We have had a very, very profound crisis which is going to take a long time to dig out of,” he warned.
Speaking about the state of the economy, Mr Cable said: “It is a challenge to us to communicate it better. I don’t think it is understood that the British economy declined 6 or 7%…
“We are actually a poorer country, mainly because of the banking crash, the recession that followed it and partly due to the squeeze we are now under from the changing balance of the world economy.”
He added: “Britain is no longer one of the world’s price setters. We take our prices from international commodity markets driven by China and India.
“That is something we have got to live with and adjust to. It is painful. It is a challenge to us in government to explain it. The political class as a whole is not preparing the public for how massive the problem is.”
“Ultimately it comes back to this defensiveness and an unwillingness to accept that Britain was operating a model that failed… it makes it more difficult for us to get through to the public about the scale of the problem. That is to everyone’s loss.”
He said Britain’s deficit was “only one of the symptoms” of the financial crisis.
“We had the complete collapse of a model based on consumer spending, a housing bubble, an overweight banking system – three banks, each of them with a balance sheet larger than the British economy.
“It was a disaster waiting to happen and it did happen. It has done profound damage and it is damage that is going to last a long time.”
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