Friends in deed

 

 Neil Tippett and Andy Jones

Watch: Neil Tippett and Andy Jones bought a house together with a third friend

Friendship can be a shoulder to cry on, companions to share a meal with on a Saturday night, or knowing that each will laugh at the other’s jokes.

But how many friends would be willing to share the biggest financial commitment of their lives?

Some first-time buyers, faced with demands for large deposits from lenders, are choosing to buy their first property with friends.

But is it a good idea?

Estate agents say joint ownership can make financial sense, but only if the deal is thoroughly thought through and everyone prepares a good exit strategy.

“Remember, this may be your home, but it is also a business transaction and one of the biggest decisions you will ever take,” says Peter Bolton King, chief executive of the National Association of Estate Agents (NAEA).

Former schoolmates Neil Tippett, Andy Jones, and Sam Jones, decided to take the plunge when they bought a house together in Oxted, Surrey.

Tips for joint ownershipDraw up a contract in case of a change of circumstancesShop around for mortgagesKeep paperwork in order and in everyone’s nameConsider a joint bank account for paying billsDraw up an inventory of non-shared items

Source: National Association of Estate Agents

Fifteen months later, the trio say they have no regrets, with washing up rather than their financial welfare leading to the only arguments.

“Just make sure you think through what is going to happen in the worst case scenario,” says Mr Tippett, a 28-year-old software engineer.

“As long as you think through those situations, and find the correct information on how to go about it, I would highly recommend it.”

All three were looking to “spread their wings” by moving out of their parents’ homes. But the barriers facing them will be familiar to many young people looking to set up home in the past couple of years.

Firstly, there were few homes available for young professionals to rent in their area.

Then, after ruling out the rental option, they found mortgage providers were rationing loans for all but the most affluent and safe of potential buyers.

“Being self-employed meant that getting a mortgage was very difficult. Getting a first-time mortgage was even harder,” says Andy Jones, a 28-year-old landscape gardener.

Then there was the deposit. In 2010, the average deposit, according to the Council of Mortgage Lenders (CML), was 23%. Just five years earlier, it had been 10%.

The most recent figures from the CML, for March 2011, show the average deposit in the UK was 21%.

In actual terms, this means that even now – with house prices continuing to fall – a typical deposit would be £33,809, based on the Land Registry’s average house price in England and Wales.

No clear figures are compiled that give any official picture as to whether more potential buyers are tackling these issues by teaming up to buy a home.

However, anecdotal evidence suggests that – as when house prices were exploding – more and more friends are considering joint ownership as an affordable option.

Having decided to share the financial burden, as well as the household chores, the three friends in Oxted drew up a plan of how much they could contribute towards the deposit and mortgage payments.

House keysBuying a house is usually one of the biggest financial commitments of anyone’s life

They discovered relatively few mortgage providers, or insurance companies, were set up for multiple ownership.

“It makes trying to find a mortgage harder than for couples. A lot of times when we phoned up, they refused if we tried to add a third name,” says Andy Jones, sitting on a garden bench in their well-tended garden.

“The computer did not understand the concept of three people buying together,” adds Mr Tippett.

They admit the search for a home took some time – but after about 20 viewings, they found the place that fitted all their criteria.

Honesty with each other should be the starting point for any group of friends embarking on joint ownership, according to Mr Bolton King.

“At a time when a lack of mortgage finance is hindering first-time buyers, opting to buy with a friend or relative can represent a sensible way of getting into the market,” he says.

“However, for anyone considering entering into a joint ownership I would stress the importance of a transparent, open relationship.”

Key advice from the estate agents trade body also includes:

Shopping around for a mortgage, including deals specifically designed for joint ownershipKeeping paperwork in order by ensuring documents are accessible to everyone and signed by all the co-buyersConsider making mortgage and bill payments from a joint bank account, rather than making them the sole responsibility of one ownerDraw up an inventory of items being brought into the house and who owns them, to avoid confusion if somebody moves out

However, arguably the most important piece of advice is to consider the worst-case scenario.

Numerous examples exist of when joint ownership has come to a bitter end among former friends.

The NAEA says buyers should consult lawyers about a co-ownership contract and agree in advance what would happen if one of the owner’s circumstances were to change.

Back at the house in Oxted, the three old school friends decided initially on a relaxed approach to this legal process.

Neil Tippett (left) and Andy JonesNeil Tippett (left) and Andy Jones have drawn up a legally binding deed of trust

“The three of us went down to the pub and sat there for a couple of hours, writing down our list,” says Mr Tippett.

“I then went through those with a solicitor.”

He came away with a “deed of trust”, which outlined exactly what should happen if one of the owners wanted to leave or there were major changes in their lives.

For example, if one of the trio loses their job, the other two will club together for three months to cover his share of the mortgage bill and hopefully allow time for him to get back into work.

The deed of trust also sets out a notice period if one of the housemates wants to leave, to allow time for another buyer to replace him or the other two to continue on their own.

It also states the level of offer they would accept if they decided to sell the property.

For now, they are happy where they are, as joint ownership has allowed them to step onto the first rung of the housing ladder together.

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

Bolivian jailed for plane hijack

Jose Flores Pereira under arrestJose Flores Pereira demanded a meeting with the Mexican president
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A Bolivian pastor has been jailed for more than seven years in Mexico for hijacking a passenger plane in 2009.

Jose Flores Pereira had told the crew of the Aeromexico plane he was on a mission from God to warn Mexico’s president of an impending earthquake.

He said he was carrying a bomb, but it later turned out to be three cans of fruit juice.

The pastor surrendered after commandos stormed the plane on the ground, freeing the 100 people on board.

Mexican authorities said Mr Flores Pereira, a protestant preacher who lived in Mexico, was a former drug addict who had a conviction for armed robbery in his native Bolivia.

He took over the plane from Cancun as it came in to land at Mexico City’s international airport on 9 September 2009.

Telling the crew he was carrying a bomb, he ordered the pilot to fly over the city seven times and demanded a meeting with President Felipe Calderon.

At the time, officials said Flores Pereira told them he was acting on “a revelation that Mexico was facing a great danger, and was threatened by an earthquake” in 2012.

The stand-off on the airport runway was broadcast live on Mexican TV.

He was found guilty of attacking a means of transport and illegally retaining people and sentenced to seven years, seven months and 15 days in prison.

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Global recovery at risk says IEA

Brent Crude Oil Futures $/barrelLast Updated at 19 May 2011, 16:30 ET *Chart shows local time Brent Crude Oil Future intraday chartprice change %111.45

-0.85

-0.76

The International Energy Agency (IEA) has urged oil producing countries to increase supply to avoid “derailing the economic recovery”.

The organisation says high oil prices are threatening the global recovery by reducing spending power and driving up inflation, placing upward pressure on interest rates.

The IEA statement suggests it could release emergency stockpiles if action is not taken.

Opec is due to meet in three weeks.

“The Governing Board urges action from producers that will help avoid the negative global economic consequences which a further sharp market tightening could cause, and welcomes commitments to increase supply,” the IEA said after a governing board meeting on Thursday.

The 12-member Organisation of Petroleum Exporting Countries is due to meet on 8 June to discuss co-ordinating future production.

IEA’s warning comes just a day after a report said that Iran’s president Mahmoud Ahmadinejad would attend the meeting in Vienna.

Iran is Opec’s second-largest oil producer and holds about 10% of world oil reserves. It currently holds the presidency of Opec.

“The IEA Governing Board expressed serious concern that there are growing signs that the rise in oil prices since September is affecting the economic recovery” the IEA statement said.

The energy group said it stood ready to work with producers as well as non-member consumers, but it is “prepared to consider using all tools that are at the disposal of IEA member countries”.

US light crude fell $1.66 to settle at $98.44 a barrel on the New York Mercantile Exchange.

While Brent crude slipped 88 cents to $111.42 a barrel on the London based ICE futures.

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VIDEO: ‘Magnetic’ boy – it’s Odd Box

The catwalk model who didn’t have a great day, the boy with the magnetic personality and the city made from toothpicks. It’s the week’s weird and wonderful video news stories in Newsbeat’s Odd Box with Dominic Byrne.

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NY court grants Strauss-Kahn bail

breaking news

Dominique Strauss-Kahn is appearing in a court in New York to make a fresh plea for bail after being charged with trying to rape a hotel maid.

Mr Strauss-Kahn, who earlier resigned as head of the International Monetary Fund, had been denied bail on Monday.

His lawyers said Mr Strauss-Kahn was an honourable man and would not attempt to abscond.

His resignation has sparked debate about his successor, with Europeans urging an EU leader.

Mr Strauss-Kahn has now been formally charged following a grand jury hearing, prosecutors said.

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Instruments saw Japan quake lurch

Seafloor movement (Science)

Japan’s 11 March mega-quake shifted the ocean floor sideways by more than 20m (65ft), according one instrument placed on the seabed off the nation’s coast.

This direct measurement exceeds the displacement suggested by some models built only from data gathered on land.

The figure was recorded by the Japan Coast Guard which maintains underwater geodetic equipment along the fault responsible for the giant tremor.

An upwards movement of 3m (10ft) was registered by the same instrument.

The data underlines once again the colossal nature of the Magnitude 9.0 quake and its associated tsunami.

“The scale is almost double that estimated only from the terrestrial data,” the coast guard’s Dr Mariko Sato told BBC News.

“Our results show how important offshore data are to know where and to what extent the rupture occurred on the plate boundary.”

Dr Sato’s research is reported in one of three online submissions to the journal Science this week.

The trio of papers shed further light on the causes and complexity of the devastating event. But they also illustrate the gaps in scientists’ knowledge.

“We simply have to do a better job,” said Professor Mark Simons, from the California Institute of Technology, whose team has pulled together a vast range of data to try to reconstruct what happened inside the Earth on that day.

The 11 March event occurred close to the Japan Trench, the tectonic plate boundary where the dense rock of the Pacific Ocean floor is being pulled down (subducted) underneath Japan as it moves westwards towards Eurasia.

Acoustic transponder (Transponder)The Coast Guard put their positional equipment in five locations on the seabed

The quake occurred well out to sea – some 130km from the city of Sendai in the Miyagi Prefecture; but at a relatively shallow depth under the seabed – just 32km.

Data from arrays of GPS stations on land recorded a lurch in a south-easterly direction as a result of the quake, and this information has been used to estimate what would be an even larger horizontal movement of the ocean floor right above the site of the rupture.

But Japan’s Coast Guard was able to recover more direct evidence by measuring the positions of five installations on the seabed. One of these instruments – fortuitously as it turned out – was sitting almost on top of the epicentre when the quake struck.

“The seafloor instrument is something like an acoustic-wave ‘mirror’,” explained Dr Sato.

“We first measure the position of a survey vessel by using the satellite (GPS) signal, and then measure the position of the seafloor instrument from the survey vessel by using acoustic waves. We repeated these observations – and comparing the positions of the seafloor instruments before and after the earthquake, we got the displacements.”

The instruments were set up 10 years ago, but their precise positions were assessed only last September. A cruise to conduct the post-quake reassessment occurred at the end of March, beginning of April.

The network reveals horizontal movement of 5m to 24m in an east-southeast direction, and a vertical displacement range of minus 0.8m (subsidence) to 3m (uplift). A station known as MYGI, which was closest to the quake’s epicentre, recorded the 24m figure.

“Our results imply a huge slip on the shallow plate boundary close to the trench, which could cause a great tsunami,” Dr Sato told BBC News. “It is difficult to explain the size of the tsunami only from our results, though they should give good constraints to the model by combining them with some other data.”

Although the seafloor may have been seen to shift horizontally by this astonishing figure, the distance the opposing slabs of rock at the site of the rupture slipped past each other under the seabed would have been even greater – perhaps 50-60m by some estimates.

The quake’s size and location surprised many researchers. There was general agreement that the “Miyagi segment” of fault that broke on 11 March had not built up the strain seen at other segments along the plate boundary, where Magnitude 7-plus tremors have occurred on a fairly consistent basis. But the models built by Professor Simons’ team from a mass of observational data show this assumption to have been deeply flawed.

Quite why such large strain should accumulate in the Miyagi area is not clear. One suggestion is that features on the descending Pacific plate, such as an underwater mountain, or seamount, can get stuck as it goes down under Japan.

“I think of it as a pin between two sliding plates, and the area around it can creep a little bit but essentially the plates are stuck by this pin,” explained Professor Simons.

“As the area around the pin creeps, it can fire off small earthquakes which in this case could be magnitude sevens or a small eight, but eventually the pin snaps and everything goes; and, if it’s waited a thousands years, you might get 50-100m of slip on the fault.”

The flawed thinking shown up on 11 March raises questions now about what might happen further to the south, closer to Tokyo, where one quarter of Japan’s population resides.

The so-called Ibaraki segment of the plate boundary has been thought to behave in similar fashion to that of the Miyagi segment.

“We’re most definitely not predicting an earthquake; what we’re trying to do again is highlight our ignorance, and it behoves us to put in a lot of effort to figure out what is going on there,” Professor Simons told BBC News.

According to the latest police figures, almost 15,000 people are now known to have died in the 11 March disaster with a further 11,000 still listed as missing.

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New method ‘confirms dark energy’

Hubble deep field galaxiesOne type of observation measured a pattern in the distribution of galaxies
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First results from a major astronomical survey have confirmed the existence of mysterious dark energy using a cutting-edge technique.

Dark energy makes up some 74% of the Universe and its existence explains why the Universe appears to be expanding at an accelerating rate.

The finding was based on studies of more than 200,000 galaxies.

Scientists used two separate kinds of observation to provide an independent check on previous dark energy results.

Two papers by an international team of researchers have been accepted for publication in the Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society journal.

One type of observation used by the astronomers involves measuring a pattern in how galaxies are distributed in space. This pattern is known by the term “baryon acoustic oscillations”.

The second type of observation involves measuring how quickly clusters of galaxies have formed over time. Both of these techniques confirmed the existence of dark energy and the acceleration in the expansion of the Universe.

The concept of dark energy was first invoked in the late 1990s by studying the brightness of distant supernovas – exploding stars.

To explain why the expansion of the Universe was speeding up, astronomers had to either rewrite Albert Einstein’s theory of gravity or accept that the cosmos was filled with a novel type of energy.

“The action of dark energy is as if you threw a ball up in the air, and it kept speeding upward into the sky faster and faster,” said co-author Dr Chris Blake of the Swinburne University of Technology in Melbourne, Australia.

“The results tell us that dark energy is a cosmological constant, as Einstein proposed. If gravity were the culprit, then we wouldn’t be seeing these constant effects of dark energy throughout time.”

The 3.9m Anglo-Australian TelescopeThe Anglo-Australian telescope was used in the galaxy survey

The latest findings have come from a galaxy survey project called WiggleZ, which began in 2006 and finished this year. WiggleZ used data from Nasa’s Galaxy Evolution Explorer (Galex) space telescope and the Anglo-Australian Telescope on Siding Spring Mountain in Australia.

The survey mapped the distribution of galaxies in an unprecedented volume of the Universe, looking eight billion years back in time – more than half the age of the Universe.

Cosmologist Bob Nicholl, who was not involved with the research, told BBC News: “This is a major step forward. These guys are serious, major scientists and we’ve been waiting for this result for some time.

The professor of astrophysics at Portsmouth University, UK, added: “It’s re-confirmation of dark energy, it gives us another data point to fit our theories around and it shows us the way to the future. More astronomers are going to be doing this in years to come.”

While dark energy makes up about 74% of the Universe, dark matter – which does not reflect or emit detectable light – accounts for 22%. Ordinary matter – gas, stars, planets and galaxies – makes up just 4% of the cosmos.

However, despite scientists being able to infer the existence of dark energy and dark matter, these phenomena still elude a full explanation.

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Twelve arrested near Queen event

Queen at concert in Convention Centre in DublinThe Queen received a standing ovation from the 2,000 guests at the indoor concert
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Twelve people have been arrested on their way to an event being held for the Queen at the convention centre in Dublin.

Irish police said the 11 men and one woman, who were stopped near Connolly Station, are known republican activists.

Rockets, flares and other fireworks along with bottles, fishing leads and other potential missiles were found.

Police believe these were to be used during protests on Thursday evening.

Similar missiles were also thrown at Gardai (Irish police) near Dublin Castle on Wednesday night and near the Garden of Remembrance on Tuesday.

The twelve were detained under public order legislation and are due to appear before a special sitting of Cloverhill District Court in Dublin on Thursday evening.

Around 2,000 guests have joined the Queen and the Irish President Mary McAleese for an evening of fashion, music and theatre.

A fashion show featuring Irish and British designers was held before a concert got under way.

The Chieftains, Westlife, Mary Byrne and a host of other performers, including 1996 Eurovision Song Contest winner Eimear Quinn are performing for the Queen.

Earlier, the Queen visited the National Stud in County Kildare.

She met students of the Racing Academy and some of the people who trained winners from this year’s Cheltenham Festival.

The Queen was also given an inspection of some of the leading stallions at stud.

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IMF urged to retain European head

NYPD prisoner movement slip for former IMF chief Dominique Strauss-Kahn The top seat at the IMF is vacant after Dominique Strauss-Kahn resigned, facing criminal charges

German Chancellor Angela Merkel says she will back a European candidate to head the International Monetary Fund.

Her comments follow the resignation of Dominique Strauss-Kahn, who is in US detention on charges of sexual assault.

Ms Merkel did not name a preferred candidate but said it was important to act quickly in light of the problems afflicting the eurozone.

Germany is Europe’s biggest economy and so Ms Merkel’s voice carries considerable weight, say analysts.

But developing nations have said they want more of a voice in the IMF, one of the world’s most important multilateral institutions.

Mr Strauss-Kahn had faced pressure to resign amid allegations he sexually assaulted a hotel maid in New York.

He is being detained in Rikers Island jail in New York and will make a second application for bail later on Thursday.

The Frenchman strenuously denies all charges against him and says he quit in order to “devote all my strength… to proving my innocence”.

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‘Statesman’ FitzGerald remembered

Garret FitzGeraldGarret FitzGerald was taoiseach at the time of the signing of the Anglo-Irish Agreement
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Former Irish prime minister Garret FitzGerald has died in hospital in Dublin after a short illness.

Mr FitzGerald, who was 85, served twice as taoiseach between 1981 and 1987 at the head of two coalition governments.

He was Fine Gael taoiseach at the time of the signing of the Anglo-Irish Agreement in 1985.

He retired from the Dail in 1992, but still took part in political campaigns, particularly on the Nice and Lisbon Treaties.

Mr FitzGerald, a former economics lecturer, was elected to the Seanad (the Irish Senate) in 1965 and the Dail in 1969.

When Fine Gael entered government in 1973 he was appointed foreign affairs minister.

Analysis

In the words of one Irish government official Garret FitzGerald was the grandfather of the nation.

He enjoyed widespread respect and admiration even among his political opponents.

He is credited with stimulating the peace process in Northern Ireland by negotiating the Anglo-Irish Agreement in 1985 with the then Prime Minister Margaret Thatcher.

Politicians in Dublin say this week’s visit to Ireland by the Queen would not have been possible without the work started three decades ago by Dr FitzGerald.

He also played a leading role in the Sunningdale Agreement negotiations which led to the short-lived power-sharing executive in Northern Ireland.

The Queen said in a statement on Thursday that she was saddened to hear of Mr FitzGerald’s death.

“A true statesman, he made a lasting contribution to peace and will be greatly missed,” the statement said.

“Please will you convey my sincere condolences to his family.”

Irish President Mary McAleese said Mr FitzGerald had been steeped in the history of the state and was someone who “constantly strove to make Ireland a better place”.

“His thoughtful writing, distinctive voice and probing intellect all combined to make him one of our national treasures,” she said.

“Above all, Garret FitzGerald was a true public servant.”

The Irish prime minister and Fine Gael leader Enda Kenny said Mr FitzGerald was “a truly remarkable man who made a truly remarkable contribution to Ireland”.

He described him as the “epitome of high honour and decency in public life” and said his “towering intellect, enthusiasm for life and optimism” would be “missed by everyone”.

Prime Minister David Cameron said Mr FitzGerald had made a “huge contribution to the peace process”.

Northern Ireland Deputy First Minister Martin McGuinness said the former premier had been “a major figure in Irish politics over many decades”.

He said he had only got to know him in later life as Mr Fitzgerald was “not interested” in meeting with Sinn Fein representatives during his time as taoiseach and leader of Fine Gael.

“My dealings with him only came in the aftermath of the Good Friday Agreement and the regular visits he made to the Patrick Magill Summer School (held in Glenties, County Donegal) and I think he and I got on very well,” Mr McGuinness added.

“I think at the end of day he was someone very conscious there were very many different views and that’s why he came to Glenties and that’s why he was prepared to listen very carefully to views, many of which would be the opposite of what he believed.”

Irish cabinet minister Joan Burton said Mr FitzGerald was an “extraordinary figure in Irish politics”.

“In terms of his personal history, his mother was from Presbyterian stock from the north and his father was a very distinguished republican and statesman,” she said.

“Dr FitzGerald was one of the initiators of the peace process both in his time as minister for foreign affairs and in the administration that he led in the 1980s.

“He was a great man and he had really endearing personal characteristics, he was extremely approachable.

“He was very courageous, when Ireland was emerging from a dominant clericalism he was one of the voices who actually broke out to create a more secular state in which religion is honoured but the business of the state is the business of the Republic and not completely entwined with that of particular churches.”

Former SDLP leader John Hume said Mr FitzGerald had been a “moderniser and reformer” who helped “change the face of Irish politics for the better”.

He said:”The SDLP worked closely with Garret over many decades and supported him as he displayed great intellectual foresight and inner fortitude to develop initiatives such as the New Ireland Forum and the Anglo-Irish Agreement which allowed us to open new chapters in our history and ultimately paved the way to peace and the democratic institutions we enjoy today.”

Seamus Mallon, former SDLP deputy first minister, said he was “saddened on a personal and political level”.

Mr Mallon said he admired the approach Mr FitzGerald had brought to his role as taoiseach and the political process.

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Anti-overdose kits trial expanded

Syringe and heroin powderThe scheme giving Naloxone kits to drug abusers will be expanded across Wales
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A kit that has helped more than 50 drug abusers in Wales survive a heroin overdose will be given to more addicts.

The Take Home Naloxone Rescue Scheme was tested in Welsh prisons and areas with a high number of drug-related deaths and near fatal poisonings.

Communities Minister Carl Sargeant has expanded the initiative across Wales.

Clive Wolfendale, of north Wales drug and alcohol agency Cais, welcomed the announcement and said: “Without question, it has saved lives already.”

The Take Home Naloxone (THN) project was launched in August 2009, giving heroin users, their friends and carers a basic first aid training on how to handle an overdose.

Individual users were given a kit to take home and use, if needed.

In addition, to the prisons, the project was run in Cardiff and Swansea as well as areas of north Wales, and the south east valleys.

“What we are trying to do is get people off drugs and not perpetuate the situation.”

Clive Wolfendale Cais

Wales has around 20,000 problem drugs users, according to Welsh Government figures.

The International Centre for Drugs Policy 102 illicit drugs-related deaths recorded in Wales in 2009, up from 61 in 2006.

Naloxone is an opiate which reverses the effects of heroin overdoses. The kits aim to provide more time for an ambulance to be called and treatment to be given.

Welsh Government figures showed 684 Naloxone kits have been given out, with 51 being used to reverse an opiate overdose.

Mr Wolfendale, who was acting chief constable of North Wales Police before taking over at charity Cais in 2009, said it had role to play in reducing the number of drug-related deaths in Wales.

He said: “The benefits in terms of reversing potentially fatal situations has been known about for some time.

“The pilot scheme is designed to give heroin users their own kids so they can self-administer in the event of a crisis situation. The feedback from users is ‘so far, so good’.

“Most drug users have a very difficult plight. They would not be doing it otherwise. But they are extremely attuned to their own body.

Man holding syringeThe scheme has been criticised elsewhere as implicitly encouraging drug us.

“They know very quickly when something is going wrong.”

Naloxone has also been tested in Scotland, where it has attracted controversy with critics claiming it implies an acceptance of continuing drug use.

Mr Wolfendale said: “What we are trying to do is get people off drugs and not perpetuate the situation.

“The alternative is that they are found dead in bed or in a park or in the street.

“They can, with the right support, live productive and happy lives and not be a burden on anybody.

“That’s much better than being on benefits and stealing to feed a drug habit and taking them through the criminal justice system and social exclusion.

“Just condemning them to a life or death situation when a remedy is available is not defensible in any sort of society that Wales wants to be.”

A total of £55,000 has been set aside to ensure that Naloxone training and kits is available across Wales by December 2011.

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Murray to be fit for French Open

Britain’s Andy Murray pulls out of Paris exhibition match with a minor injury but the world number four is expected to be fit for the French Open.

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