Judgment Day: Atheists plan ‘rapture’ party

File photo of Harold CampingHarold Camping says he will spend Saturday at home in California
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US atheists are to hold parties in response to an evangelical broadcaster’s prediction that Saturday will be “judgement day”.

The Rapture After Party in North Carolina – “the best damned party in NC” – is among the planned events.

Harold Camping, 89, predicts that Jesus Christ will return to earth on Saturday and true believers will be swept up, or “raptured”, to heaven.

He has used broadcasts and billboards to publicise his ideas.

He says biblical texts indicate that a giant earthquake on Saturday will mark the start of the world’s destruction, and that by 21 October all non-believers will be dead.

Mr Camping has predicted an apocalypse once before, in 1994, though followers now say that only referred to an intermediary stage.

“We learn from the Bible that Holy God plans to rescue about 200 million people,” says a text on the website of Mr Camping’s network, Family Radio Worldwide.

“On the first day of the Day of Judgment (May 21, 2011) they will be caught up (raptured) into Heaven because God had great mercy for them.”

The Rapture After Party in Fayetteville, North Carolina, is a two-day event organised by the Central North Carolina Atheists and Humanists.

Promoters of Harold Camping's prediction in New York, 13 May 2011This prediction has been given an unusually high level of publicity

“Though the absurdity of this claim is obvious to the majority of the world, it’s a great opportunity to highlight some of the most bizarre beliefs often put forth by religious fundamentalists and raise awareness of the need for reason,” said a posting about the party on the group’s website.

Atheists in Tacoma, Washington, have headed their celebration “countdown to back-pedalling”.

Events are also planned in Houston, Florida and California.

An atheist and entrepreneur from North Hampshire, Bart Centre, is enjoying a boost in business for Eternal Earth-bound Pets, which he set up to look after the pets of those who believe they will be raptured.

He has more than 250 clients who are paying up to $135 (£83) to have their pets picked up and cared for after the rapture.

They would be disappointed twice, he told the Wall Street Journal. “Once because they weren’t raptured and again because I don’t do refunds.”

Meanwhile Mr Camping, who has been criticised by more mainstream Christians, says he knows “without any shadow of a doubt” that “judgement day” is arriving.

He says he will spend Saturday with his wife, close to a TV or radio.

“I’ll be interested in what’s happening on the other side of the world as this begins,” he told Reuters.

There is no “Plan B”, he says.

His campaign has been unusually widely promoted – both in the US, and overseas, including in the Middle East.

In Vietnam, thousands of members of the Hmong ethnic minority gathered near the border with Laos earlier this month to await the 21 May event, the Associated Press reported.

Chris McCann of eBible Fellowship, one of the groups helping to spread the message, said it had been publicised in almost every country.

“The only countries I don’t feel too good about are the “stans” – you know, Afghanistan, Uzbekistan, those countries in Central Asia,” he said.

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Strauss-Kahn to be freed on bail

Mr Strauss-Kahn enters court

Strauss-Kahn’s lawyer said the idea of his client skipping bail was “ludicrous”

The former head of the International Monetary Fund (IMF) is due to be released from jail having been granted bail by a judge in a New York court.

Dominique Strauss-Kahn was ordered to post cash bail of $1m (£618,000) and a $5m insurance bond.

He will be confined to a New York apartment under armed guard.

He is due to appear in court on 6 June, when he will formally enter a plea over allegations he tried to rape a hotel maid. He has denied the charges.

Mr Strauss-Kahn, 62, has spent four nights at the notorious Rikers Island prison since his arrest on Saturday over the alleged incident at New York’s Sofitel hotel.

He was denied bail at a hearing on Monday, but on Thursday he went before a different judge.

The prosecution had argued that the defendant should be denied bail, as he had the means to live “a life of ease and comfort” in parts of the world “beyond this country’s jurisdiction”.

Defence lawyers said their client was honourable and would not try to abscond.

“The prospect of Mr Strauss-Kahn teleporting himself to France and living there as an accused sex offender, fugitive, is ludicrous,” his lawyer, William Taylor, said.

Bail conditionsConfined to New York apartment rented by wifeSecurity firm Stroz Friedberg to oversee monitoringMonitored 24 hours a day, seven days a weekAt least one armed guard at all timesElectronic monitoring$1m bail, $5m insurance bond

Supreme Court Justice Michael Obus imposed $1m cash bail and said there must be 24-hour home detention, with an armed guard and electronic monitoring.

One armed guard must be deployed at all times, at Mr Strauss-Kahn’s expense, and the defendant must surrender all travel documents, the judge added. In addition to the cash bail, a $5m insurance bond would also apply.

Mr Strauss-Kahn’s wife, Anne Sinclair, who was in court for Thursday’s hearing, is said to have rented an apartment in New York where her husband will be confined.

Mr Strauss-Kahn has now been formally charged following a grand jury hearing, attended on Wednesday by his accuser, a 32-year-old originally from Guinea in west Africa.

The charges set out by the New York district attorney’s office included four felony counts – two of criminal sexual acts, one of attempted rape and one of sexual abuse – plus three misdemeanour offences, including unlawful imprisonment.

Wife Anne Sinclair (left) and daughter Camille at the court hearing on 19/5/11Anne Sinclair (left) and daughter Camille attended the hearing

Manhattan district attorney Cyrus Vance said Mr Strauss-Kahn had been indicted on all the charges presented to the grand jury.

Late on Wednesday, Mr Strauss-Kahn announced his resignation from the IMF. In a statement posted on the IMF website, he said he had resigned with “infinite sadness” but wanted to “devote all my strength, all my time, and all my energy to proving my innocence”.

His resignation has sparked debate about his successor, with leading voices in Europe saying another European should head the fund. A number of figures have voiced support for French Finance Minister Christine Lagarde.

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Singer Kathy Kirby dies aged 72

Kathy KirbyWith her blonde good looks, Kirby was often compared to Marilyn Monroe

Singer Kathy Kirby, best known for her cover version of Secret Love in 1963, has died aged 72.

She will also be remembered for representing the UK in the Eurovision Song Contest with I Belong, coming second to Luxembourg.

During her career, Kirby had two top 10 hits and three other singles in the top 40.

In a statement, her family said the star passed away on Thursday night after suffering from a short illness.

“She will be greatly missed by her family and her many friends who have stood loyal over the years,” the statement said.

Born in Essex, the star began her career working with bandleader Bert Ambrose who took her on the club circuit.

The blonde pin-up was often compared to Marilyn Monroe and, after securing her first record deal, went on to appear on several US TV programmes, such as The Ed Sullivan Show.

Kirby – whose niece Sarah is married to Sir Mark Thatcher – was one of the biggest stars of the early 1960s.

The singer, who lived in west London, made her last screen appearance in the early 80s, having largely withdrawn from the public eye.

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

Authors slam school library cuts

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Top children’s authors have condemned increasing cuts to school library services in England.

Services providing books to up to 600,000 pupils have been axed in the past year, research by the Times Educational Supplement (TES) suggests.

Author Philip Pullman said schools were not properly funded and were choosing between paying for building maintenance and using a library service.

The government said head teachers knew what was best for their pupils.

Mr Pullman condemned the cuts as an “absolute disgrace”.

“The government doesn’t fund schools properly, so schools have to make the choice between repairing the toilet roof and having a school library service,” the best-selling author told the TES.

Former children’s laureate Michael Rosen said: “School library services have been decimated, but they are central to education.

“I cannot think of anything more important in education than to fill classrooms full of books that children can browse through.”

The services not only provide fresh stocks of books to schools, they also offer a range of resources and help organise visits from authors.

But local authorities are not obliged to run a school library service. Currently, just 85 councils out of more than 150 with responsibility for schools run their own dedicated service.

The TES asked 66 of the surviving services about the future. Some 46 said they were not making any changes, but 10 said falling demand had led to changes including cutting what they offer or increasing charges.

A further 10 authorities said the situation was unclear.

In the past 12 months alone, services have been scrapped in large local authorities including Kent and Birmingham.

They have also been axed in Gateshead, Cambridgeshire and Sutton. Greenwich, which suspended its service in 2009, confirmed this week that it would not be re-opening.

General secretary of the National Association of Head Teachers, Russell Hobby, said: “A library has more effect on reading than a phonics check.

“Being able to have a wide range of books that appeal to different interests will do more to drive literacy than some of the government’s strategies.”

A spokesman for the Department for Education said: “Ministers have been crystal clear about the centrality of literacy.

“Teachers and heads need no reminding of the importance of school libraries – they know what’s best for their pupils and so there are no plans to make it a statutory requirement.

“We are targeting as much funding as possible directly into heads’ hands so they can make the right choices about school library provision and book resourcing.”

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

SSE hints at more price increases

Gas ringWholesale gas and electricity prices are continuing to rise sharply, SSE warns
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Scottish & Southern Energy (SSE) has become the second big energy supplier to hint that gas and electricity prices may go up steeply this year.

The company’s pre-tax profits rose 29% in the last financial year, to £2.1bn.

However, it said its household gas business had been losing money, with a 25% rise in wholesale prices last year outstripping December’s 9% price rise.

SSE warned that wholesale gas and electricity prices for the coming year had risen since then by as much as 33%.

“Forward annual wholesale prices for electricity and gas have risen by around one quarter and around one third respectively in the six months following SSE’s 29 October 2010 announcement of a price increase for household gas supply,” the company said.

Earlier this month Centrica, which owns British Gas, said its customers might have to pay more for their energy.

It said that “end-user prices” did not reflect the price it was having to pay in the wholesale gas market.

The Bank of England has also cited an expected rise in energy bills as one of the main reasons for its recent prediction that the inflation rate may rise even further this year.

Audrey Gallacher, of Consumer Focus, said: “Hard-pressed consumers will be grinding their teeth in frustration as the second of the Big Six hints at price rises while reporting increased profits.”

“Customers simply don’t have faith that they are being asked to pay a fair price and Ofgem has shown this lack of trust has firm foundations,” she added.

In March the energy industry regulator Ofgem demanded radical changes to the industry and the dominance of the Big Six energy suppliers.

As well as accusing firms of bamboozling customers with over-complex tariffs, it said it had found evidence that major energy firms “have adjusted prices in response to rising costs more quickly than they reduced them when costs fell”.

SSE rejected this accusation and said that Ofgem’s analysis was false.

“The analytical flaw arises because energy suppliers like SSE recover some of their fixed costs (such as network costs in gas) through charges on units of energy used,” it argued.

“This means that if consumption is reduced, some fixed costs are not recovered by suppliers who, as a result, have to ensure unit prices are at a level that enables them to recover fixed costs.”

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

BP reaches deal on Gulf oil spill

The Deepwater Horizon burns in AprilThe Deepwater Horizon blast killed 11 people and caused one of the worst oil spills in history

MOEX Offshore has agreed to pay $1.065bn (£657m) to BP to settle all claims between the companies relating to the Deepwater Horizon rig accident.

MOEX owned 10% of the Macondo well, which eventually leaked millions of gallons of oil into the Gulf of Mexico.

BP has said it will put the money into the $20bn trust it established to meet claims relating to the oil spill.

The settlement excludes fines, penalties or punitive damages that may be applied in future.

MOEX is a unit of the Japanese trading house Mitsui.

“MOEX is the first company to join BP in helping to meet our shared responsibilities in the Gulf,” said BP chief executive Bob Dudley.

“We call on the other parties involved in the Macondo well to follow the lead of the MOEX and Mitsui parties.”

The April 2010 blast aboard the Deepwater Horizon rig killed 11 people and caused one of the worst oil spills in history.

The Macondo well, about a mile underneath the rig, was finally sealed in September.

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

Cameron raises Bahrain ‘concerns’

Crown Prince Salman bin Hammed Al Khalif of BahrainPrince Salman declined the invitation to Prince William’s wedding in April

David Cameron is expected to raise Bahrain’s violent crackdown on anti-government protests, when he meets the country’s crown prince later.

Prince Salman bin Hammed Al Khalif’s visit comes after he turned down an invitation to the royal wedding.

Revolts in the Middle East and north Africa, the stalled mid-east peace process and the situation in Bahrain are also expected to be discussed.

The prince’s visit has been criticised by human rights campaigners.

Following the uprisings in Tunisia and Egypt, there were protests in Bahrain demanding greater freedom and rights, with some even calling for the overthrow of the monarchy.

Bahrain’s government was widely condemned for imposing a state of martial law and inviting troops from neighbouring Saudi Arabia to help put down protests against the ruling al-Khalifa dynasty.

State of emergency

Prince Salman’s visit to London comes less than a month after he chose not to attend the wedding of Prince William and the Duchess of Cambridge.

He had said he did not want his country’s unrest to “overshadow” the celebrations.

On 1 June the Gulf state is due to lift the state of emergency that was imposed in March following weeks of pro-democracy protests which resulted in the deaths of at least 29 people.

“Britain should not be conducting business as usual with a tyranny that is guilty of gross human rights abuses”

Peter Tatchell Human rights campaigner

Hundreds of people have been arrested and dozens put on trial in special courts.

Ahead of the meeting, a Downing Street spokesman said Mr Cameron welcomed the chance to meet the prince to discuss developments in the Middle East.

He said: “We said all along that the situation in different countries is different.

“There are different circumstances and we need to reflect that. Clearly, in all cases we would support reform and dialogue.”

Human rights campaigner Peter Tatchell said it was “a huge error of judgement” on the part of Mr Cameron to invite the crown prince to No 10.

He added: “Britain should not be conducting business as usual with a tyranny that is guilty of gross human rights abuses.

“David Cameron should press the Bahraini authorities to lift the state of emergency immediately, halt the use of torture and release all political prisoners. Saudi Arabia and the UAE should be urged to withdraw their troops.”

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

Royal visit

Mark SimpsonBy Mark Simpson

Queen Elizabeth II and Prince Philip arrive at Baldonnel Airport, Dublin, on 17 May 2011Getting off on the right foot: The Queen arrived in Ireland wearing green
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She came, she saw, she conquered the sceptics.

The Queen won over the Dublin doubters who thought the four-day trip to Ireland would simply be an extravagant, expensive tour by an archaic, arrogant monarch.

Irish eyes were smiling the minute she stepped off the plane wearing green. Suddenly, the mundane monarch became the emerald Queen.

Then came the laying of a wreath at Ireland’s Garden of Remembrance for the 1916 rebels. To cap it all, she began her keynote speech at Dublin Castle by speaking in Irish.

“Wow, wow, wow,” said the Irish President Mary McAleese in between large intakes of breath.

Unlike the rest of the visit, the use of the native Irish language had not been scripted. It was not in the copy of the speech handed out to the media.

Was this because it was only a last-minute decision by the Queen? Or did she want to keep it secret for maximum impact? We will probably never know.

The front-page headline in the Irish Examiner newspaper the next day read like the title of a new movie – The Queen’s Speech. Inside, the editorial page condemned the 100 violent protesters who tried to disrupt the royal visit.

“The violent protests have been attracting international publicity and fuelling those who like to stereotype us as backward Paddies protesting about grievances of a bygone age.

“Our economy is in deep trouble and we need all the international understanding we can get,” stated the editorial.

Irish President Mary McAleese and Queen Elizabeth II at the Dublin Convention Centre on 19 May 2011

“There was genuine warmth between them and it shone through the lens”

Mark Simpson on Twitter

For many in Ireland, modern economics is now more important than old politics. As the Nobel Peace Prize winner John Hume used to say “you can’t eat a flag”.

The United Kingdom is Ireland’s biggest trading partner and good political relations make good business sense.

At the same time, it would be foolish to think British-Irish relations are now perfect.

It would also be naive to believe that the Queen’s visit was universally popular in Ireland. For some, normal state-to-state relations can only take place once Northern Ireland is handed back to the rest of Ireland.

That is not just the view of violent dissident republicans; it is the view of Sinn Fein, and with 14 out of 166 members of parliament, they are the fourth largest party in the Republic.

There is no evidence that the Queen’s gestures of goodwill towards Ireland and expressions of regret about aspects of the past, changed the minds of republican hardliners.

However, talking to people on the streets of Dublin and listening to radio phone-in programmes it was very clear that she wooed the undecideds.

Many of those who were indifferent about the visit on Tuesday had moved from neutral to positive by Thursday. Just look at Twitter.

One tweet early on Friday morning summed this up. @conor_pope Dublin wrote: “A week ago I was a fiercly (sic) republican royal sceptic. Now everytime I seen the Queen she makes me smile. # queensvisit

Queen Elizabeth at the Guinness Storehouse in Dublin on Wednesday 18 May 2011The will she or won’t she moment at the Guinness brewery

The feedback was not all positive. There were complaints about the huge traffic disruption caused in Dublin city centre, eyebrows were raised at the 13m euro (£11.5m) security bill and there was genuine disappointment that the Queen did not do more walkabouts and meet ordinary Irish people.

It is also worth recording the fury of every photographer on Fleet Street when Her Majesty stayed well clear of the perfectly-poured pint of the black stuff at the Guinness brewery. Even the Duke did not get his lips wet, never mind don a creamy moustache.

What cheered up the photographers was the chemistry between the Queen and President McAleese. There was genuine warmth between them and it shone through the lens.

It is often argued that the problems between Britain and Ireland stem from the fact that the British know too little about their history and that the Irish know too much.

That cannot be said of the two heads of state. By steering their way so expertly through the political minefields of recent days, they created a landmark moment in the peace process.

For many people, the sight of the 85-year-old Queen, dressed in green, tentatively stepping off the plane in Dublin will live long in the memory.

One small step for ma’am, one giant leap for British-Irish relations.

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

Tepco head quits after $15bn loss

Tepco President Masataka Shimizu, after meeting the economy minister in Tokyo on 10 May 2011The future of Tepco President Masataka Shimizu has been in question since the earthquake

Tokyo Electric Power (Tepco), which operates the crippled Fukushima nuclear power plant, is expected to reshuffle its top management as it reports one of the biggest losses in Japanese corporate history.

The company is due to announce full-year earnings at 1530 in Tokyo.

Speculation has swirled about the future of the firm, which provides a third of Japan’s power.

It is facing billions of dollars in losses and compensation claims.

On Friday, the Nikkei newspaper and the national broadcaster NHK said that the company would announce a major reshuffle of its top management.

President Masataka Shimizu and Chairman Tsunehisa Katsumata have both stated earlier that they would step down once the crisis was resolved or under control.

A report by Japan’s top-selling Yomiuri newspaper said Mr Shimizu would step down later on Friday.

Tepco declined to comment on the reports when contacted by the BBC.

The company has been struggling since the earthquake and tsunami hit Japan on 11 March.

Its Fukushima nuclear plant was severely damaged and has been leaking radiation ever since.

Thousands of people have been evacuated from the region around the nuclear plant and the company has been charged with cleaning up the problem and paying compensation to the victims.

A badge on the overall of a Tepco employee

Yuuichiro Nakajima, an investment banker at Crimson Phoenix discusses the future of Tepco

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Bomb hits US vehicle in Peshawar

Map

Two foreigners are among seven people who have been wounded in an explosion in the north-western Pakistani city of Peshawar, police say.

Initial reports said a roadside bomb hit an armoured vehicle in which the foreigners were travelling. The blast rammed it into an electric pole.

A passer-by was killed in the attack, police said.

Pakistan has seen a spurt in violence since al-Qaeda leader Osama Bin Laden was killed earlier this month.

Al-Qaeda and its Pakistan Taliban allies have threatened to avenge the 2 May killing by US commandos.

Last Friday, a twin suicide bombing killed more than 80 people, most of them paramilitary recruits, in north-west Pakistan.

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