Utility bills drive up home costs

Housing - genericUtility bills, including electricity and gas, have risen fastest of any household spending category
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The cost of owning and running a home in Scotland has risen by £116 in the year to March, according to economists.

While mortgage payments fell, the cost of energy bills and repairs put the total up by 1.4%, to an average £8,641.

The Bank of Scotland research showed costs were lower than three years ago because of the mortgage element – but only by 1.8%, or £159 on average.

This was a smaller fall in costs than any part of England, but slightly bigger than Wales and Northern Ireland.

In London, the cost owning and running a home fell by 5.9%, which is explained by the high share of household income spent on mortgages.

The study indicated that the cost of mortgages, including lower interest rates with capital repayments, had fallen by 21% – about £796 on average.

That fall continued over the year to March, with a fall of 3%.

However, other costs rose by 13% in the three years to March – with inflation putting up average prices by 10%.

Utility bills, including electricity and gas, have risen fastest of any household spending category – up 19%, or £259 since 2008.

The cost of maintenance and repairs was up by 17%.

Earnings concern

For those renting their home, costs have risen during the three years by 10%.

Suren Thiru, housing economist at Lloyds Banking Group, which includes Bank of Scotland, said: “Household finances remain under pressure with the significant drop in mortgage payments since 2008 mostly offset by increases in other household bills.

“The current strain on household finances is particularly concerning at a time when earnings growth remains weak”

Suren Thiru Lloyds Banking Group

“Rising utility bills have been a clear driver behind this, along with increases in maintenance costs and council tax charges.

“The current strain on household finances is particularly concerning at a time when earnings growth remains weak.”

A separate report on the housing market by a Glasgow University professor has called for “urgent and fundamental reform of the housing market to avoid the damaging rollercoaster of boom and bust”.

Mark Stephens, an urban studies expert, has drawn together evidence for the Joseph Rowntree Foundation (JRF), which recommends reform to council tax that links tax bills to home valuations.

Until that can happen, it says there should be more bands, and wider variation in costs of council tax.

It says stamp duty should be more evenly increased for higher cost homes, in a similar way to income tax. That way, higher rate duty would be charged only on higher tranches of the price being paid.

It says there must be action to increase the supply of housing, as shortages lead to price volatility, but it argues that will not be enough to stabilise the market.

‘Boom seeds sewn’

The report argues that lenders should be pressed to lend responsibly, taking more steps to ensure borrowers understand their mortgages and what they can afford.

The Rowntree report also proposes reform to mortgage insurance, including lenders and government in preparing to meet mortgage payments when borrowers lose income through redundancy or illness.

Julia Unwin, chief executive of the JRF, said: “Since the 1970s, there have been four boom and bust cycles in the housing market.

“This persistent instability distorts housing choices, inhibits house-building, and drives arrears and possession rates, putting people at great risk, and creates wealth inequality between the generations.

“We have set out to provide a series of policy options that together would help provide long-term stability in the market.

“I urge policy-makers to look at these and act now, because the seeds of the next housing boom have already been sown.”

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

Lords reform plans to be unveiled

James LandaleBy James Landale

Peers at the State Opening of Parliament, 2010There are still many questions to be answered about what shape changes to the Lords will take
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The government will unveil its plans later to replace the House of Lords with an elected second chamber.

There will be a draft bill included in a White Paper for a house of 300 members serving 15-year terms, with one third of them elected by proportional representation every five years.

Deputy Prime Minister Nick Clegg will set out a series of options in an attempt to secure consensus for change.

But the plans are expected to face strong opposition from peers and MPs.

In the coalition agreement, the government promised to bring forward proposals to reform the House of Lords.

On Tuesday it will fulfil that promise, at least up to a point.

The draft bill will be tucked discreetly at the back of a White Paper containing as many options as there are proposals.

The government will not specify whether the whole chamber should be elected or whether some – 20% – should be appointed.

It will not specify the chamber’s name, which form of PR should be used for the elections, the size of the multi-member constituencies and – most contentious of all – what should happen to the 800-odd existing peers.

One option is for all but 200 to be expelled immediately, with the survivors elected from among their own number.

Another would see their expulsion phased in more gradually with a third nominated out as a third elected come in.

Another option would see them all staying on until 2025, at least those who survived.

Ministers had been hoping to come up with something rather more specific but the plans changed in recent weeks.

First the alternative vote referendum was overwhelmingly defeated and Mr Clegg is keen to avoid a reputation as a man obsessed with tilting at constitutional windmills when the rest of the country is worried about the economy.

Second, a strategic decision has been taken to try to seek some kind of consensus, optimistic though this may be.

By listing options rather than a prescriptive plan, Mr Clegg hopes to avoid provoking an early fight with peers.

And by offering them the chance to stay on in the reformed second chamber, he hopes to buy off some who are more interested keeping their backside on a red bench than the constitutional niceties of reform.

All the detail will now be considered by a joint committee of both houses of Parliament that will be asked to report by next February.

Only once that committee has reported will we see just how serious the government is about reform.

In theory the government would like to be able to respond to the committee by the spring so it is in a position to put forward a proper, all-singing, all-dancing bill in the next Queen’s speech in May 2012.

The bill would go through Parliament in the back end of 2012 and the beginning of 2013 so that there would be enough time to get everything ready for the first Lords elections on the same day as the general election in 2015.

That, at least, is the optimistic scenario. But the prospects for delay and parliamentary trench warfare are huge.

For a start, the government may ask the joint committee to report by next February but that may not happen.

The committee may decide to take more time. Committees do that. The May 2012 deadline for a proper bill may, as a result, be missed.

The bill may make such slow progress that it clogs up all other parliamentary business and has to be abandoned.

It might eventually get through but too late for arrangements to be made for the 2015 elections.

Opponents of reform are already getting organised, sending letters to MPs and forging cross-party alliances.

The three main party leaderships may all be signed up to some kind of elected second chamber but their parliamentary parties are much less keen.

Many peers oppose an elected second chamber because they fear it will politicise their house, depriving it of independent expertise, knowledge and wisdom, and filling it instead with party apparatchiks.

Ed Miliband may favour a wholly elected second chamber but many of his Labour peers are as opposed to reform as their Conservative colleagues.

And many MPs oppose an elected second chamber because they fear it will be more assertive with its new found elective legitimacy, and challenge the supremacy of the House of Commons.

Already the search is on for the new Michael Foot and Enoch Powell, the two MPs who formed a cross-party alliance to head off an elected Lords in the late 1960s.

The likelihood is that if the government wants to get this through, it will probably at some stage have to use the Parliament Acts to override the Lords and force the changes through against their will, something that has only been done four times in the last century.

Ultimately, the question for the government is how much political capital it is prepared to spend on something that a Liberal government first promised in the pre-amble of the Parliament Act of 1911.

The omens for a speedy result are not good.

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

IMF chief sent to tough NY jail

Dominique Strauss-Kahn in Manhattan court 16 May 2011Strauss-Kahn’s offer of a $1m bail bond was turned down
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IMF chief Dominique Strauss-Kahn has been remanded in custody at New York’s notorious Rikers Island jail on charges of sexual assault.

The judge said Mr Strauss-Kahn, 62, was a flight risk. He was arrested on Saturday after boarding a plane and accused of trying to rape a hotel maid.

He faces seven charges and could be sentenced to up to 25 years in prison.

Mr Strauss-Kahn, who had been seen as a favourite in France’s 2012 presidential elections, denies the charges.

His lawyer expressed disappointment at bail being denied, but said his client would be exonerated.

“This battle has just begun,” defence lawyer Benjamin Brafman told the court.

Mr Strauss-Kahn had been due to attend an EU finance ministers’ meeting in Brussels to discuss financial bail-outs.

The IMF has played a central role in organising rescue packages for the troubled economies of Portugal and Greece.

Defence lawyer Benjamin Brafman

Defence lawyer Benjamin Brafman spoke after the hearing

The BBC’s Chris Morris in Brussels says the IMF chief has gained the trust of countries in Europe which are giving financial assistance, and those which are receiving it.

The European Union says the scandal should not affect bail-outs for eurozone countries.

Jean-Claude Junker, the Luxembourg prime minister said: “I am very sad and upset. He is a friend of mine… Mr Strauss-Kahn is in the hands of American justice, it’s not up to us to comment on this, but it makes me deeply, deeply sad.”

French Finance Minister Christine Lagarde described Mr Strauss-Kahn’s predicament was “crushing and painful”.

“When I hear your client was at JFK airport about to board a flight, that raises some concerns”

Judge Melissa JacksonDoes IMF boss have immunity?Profile: IMF and World Bank

The IMF said in a statement that it had been briefed on the charges against its managing director, and that it would “continue to monitor developments”.

Prosecutors told the court it was not the first time Mr Strauss-Kahn had been involved in such an incident and argued he had been arrested attempting to flee the country.

Mr Strauss-Kahn’s lawyer Benjamin Brafman contested this, saying the defendant had not tried to flee the scene and was actually rushing for a lunch appointment.

He added that Mr Strauss-Kahn later called the hotel to say he was at the airport and had left a mobile phone in his room.

However Judge Melissa Jackson denied the defence’s offer to post $1m (£617,000) bail and agree to Mr Strauss-Kahn staying with his daughter in New York until the next hearing on Friday.

“When I hear your client was at JFK airport about to board a flight, that raises some concerns,” Ms Jackson said.

At the scene

On a rain-soaked Monday morning, the pavements outside the courthouse were blocked by reporters and cameras all waiting to catch a glimpse of this particularly high-profile defendant.

Dominique Strauss-Kahn was brought from a holding cell to the courtroom looking pensive in a black overcoat. Cameramen and photographers jostled to try to capture an image of the IMF head and French presidential hopeful.

But instead it was his New York lawyer who spoke to the waiting media after the judge said Mr Strauss-Kahn must remain in jail. Benjamin Brafman is well-known in legal circles in the US. His past clients have included other famous figures such as Michael Jackson and Sean P Diddy.

When Mr Brafman emerged he told reporters that the battle had only just begun.

The charges relate to an alleged assault at the Times Square Sofitel hotel in New York.

According to the New York Police Department, a 32-year-old maid told officers that when she entered his suite on Saturday afternoon, Mr Strauss-Kahn emerged from the bathroom naked, chased her and sexually assaulted her.

The woman was able to break free and alert the authorities, a NYPD spokesman added.

Later on Saturday Mr Strauss-Kahn was detained on board an Air France flight at New York’s John F Kennedy airport minutes before take-off.

The IMF chief underwent medical examinations on Sunday. Police were looking for scratches or any other evidence of his alleged assault.

He was later charged with a “criminal sexual act, unlawful imprisonment and attempted rape”. Police say the maid formally identified him in a line-up.

Until he was arrested, Mr Strauss-Kahn was considered a favourite to become the Socialist candidate for the French presidency next year.

Tristane Banon in 2004Writer Tristane Banon alleges Mr Strauss-Kahn assaulted her in 2002

Opinion polls gave him a good chance of defeating President Nicolas Sarkozy.

Socialist party president Martine Aubry described his arrest as a “thunderbolt” but called for Mr Strauss-Kahn to be presumed innocent.

Mr Strauss-Kahn’s wife, French TV personality Anne Sinclair, has also protested his innocence.

Meanwhile, another allegation against Mr Strauss-Kahn has emerged. A French writer says she may file a complaint for an alleged sexual assault in 2002.

Tristane Banon, 31, says Mr Strauss-Kahn tried to rape her when she went to interview him for a book she was writing.

“We’re planning to make a complaint,” Ms Banon’s lawyer told AFP news agency. Mr Strauss-Kahn’s lawyers have so far not responded to the allegation.

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

Coalition to reveal carbon target

Coal fired power station at Eggborough in East YorkshireThe announcement follows policy disagreements between cabinet ministers
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The government is to set out plans to reduce greenhouse gases and change the way energy is produced.

The UK’s fourth “carbon budget” has been agreed following recent disputes among ministers on the possible impact such changes will have on business.

It will set targets for 2027, following recommendations from the government’s official advisory body.

But there is expected to be an “opt-out” for the UK if European competitors fail to stick to similar aims.

The Committee on Climate Change has urged the UK to accept a global agreement roughly equating to an emissions cut of 50% – based on 1990 levels – by 2025.

The 2027 target, which is expected to be similar, forms part of reaching a longer-term aim of a 60% reduction by 2030.

Analysis

The business department BIS insisted on a proviso to cushion industries from higher electricity prices before agreeing to sign off on a world-leading agreement detailing emissions cuts to 2027.

One of the main beneficiaries will be the rump of the UK steel industry which threatened that UK plants would close if energy prices rose substantially.

I understand that the fine print of the concessions won’t be announced until later in the year.

The sweeteners will be given to industrial sectors like steel which are most vulnerable to competition from imports.

The Treasury is considering various options, including whether to grant rebates for energy taxes designed to underpin nuclear and renewables, and whether to grant credits for methane generated from industry as a by-product to be captured and burned as fuel.

BIS has also secured a concession for a review of the climate targets in 2014 to monitor whether other EU nations are taking similar steps.

Prime Minister David Cameron moved to resolve a cabinet row over the UK’s climate change targets, with Climate Change Secretary Chris Huhne urging the acceptance of targets, but Business Secretary Vince Cable questioning their possible effect on economic competitiveness.

And Foreign Secretary William Hague put the case for strong carbon targets to keep up with countries like China in the move towards low-carbon energy, and to retain the UK’s international moral leadership on the issue.

The BBC understands that the UK’s main energy-using industries have secured key concessions from the government to ease the impact of higher electricity prices.

However, consumer watchdog Which? has expressed concern that domestic customers will not be similarly shielded from price rises.

The Committee on Climate Change has forecast that to meet emissions targets the average household fuel bill will go up by £1 a week until 2020 when it will plateau out with no major rises after that.

Mr Huhne will announce the carbon budget in a written ministerial statement at about 1200 BST.

For Labour, shadow climate change secretary Meg Hillier said: “I am demanding that Chris Huhne comes to the House in person to make his announcement and answer to MPs.

UK carbon budget chart

“The fourth carbon budget will have a massive impact on British households, jobs and firms. It beggars belief that he is considering slipping out the announcement as a written statement.”

Greenpeace has described the agreement as “rare victory for the green growth agenda” in the face of what it said was “vehement” opposition from the Treasury and the Department of Business.

But Friends of the Earth said Mr Huhne should have gone further and accepted advice to tighten the UK’s existing 34% emissions reduction target, by 2020, to compensate for the cuts already achieved due to the recession.

A Department of Energy source defended the government’s handling of the issue, arguing that it would be wrong to pre-empt discussions under way in the EU and the UK was still arguing to increase the EU 2020 target from 20% to 30%.

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

‘Trouble’ at West Ham hotel party

Grosvenor House Hotel in Park LaneSupporters were charged £275 to attend the event in Park Lane
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Police were called to reports of trouble involving West Ham players and supporters at a top London hotel.

The club, which was relegated from the Premier League on Sunday, held its end of season dinner at the Grosvenor House Hotel in Park Lane.

Trouble is thought to have broken out at Monday evening’s £275-a-head event when a player refused to sign an autograph for a supporter.

A spokesman for the Metropolitan Police said no arrests were made.

He said: “We were called at 2115 BST to reports of a disturbance at the Grosvenor House Hotel in Park Lane.

“Officers attended. There were no offences alleged and no arrests.”

A spokeswoman for the club denied there had been any trouble.

West Ham’s relegation to the Championship was confirmed with a 3-2 defeat at fellow strugglers Wigan Athletic.

Just over an hour after the match, the club’s owners confirmed they had sacked manager Avram Grant.

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

Fox challenges foreign aid pledge

Liam FoxLiam Fox has questioned the way the overseas aid commitment would be enshrined in law
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A plan to enshrine in law a promise to spend 0.7% of gross national income on overseas aid has been challenged by Defence Secretary Liam Fox.

In a letter leaked to the Times, Dr Fox said he “cannot support the proposal in its current form”.

A source close to Dr Fox said the issue was not the level of the target, but how best to reflect this in law.

Downing Street said it remained fully committed to implementing its pledge in line with the coalition agreement.

The BBC understands Dr Fox’s letter was written to Prime Minister David Cameron about five weeks ago.

The defence secretary said that “creating a statutory requirement to spend 0.7%” on overseas aid could lead to legal challenges and limit the government’s options on where money was spent.

BBC political correspondent Jo Coburn says this is a sentiment shared by many Conservative backbenchers.

The defence secretary called on Mr Cameron to put the principles, rather than specific commitments, in law following the example set for the military covenant.

Dr Fox wrote: “I have considered the issue carefully, and discussed it with [International Development Secretary] Andrew [Mitchell] and [Foreign Secretary] William Hague, but I cannot support the proposal in its current form.

“In 2009 the proportion of national income spent on ODA [official development assistance] was only 0.52%.

“The bill could limit HMG’s [Her Majesty’s Government] ability to change its mind about the pace at which it reaches the target in order to direct more resources toward other activities or programmes rather than aid.”

The source close to Dr Fox said: “The defence secretary fully supports the principle of a 0.7% target on international aid. The issue is simply how best to reflect this in law.”

The promise to spend 0.7% per national income on aid by 2013 was put in the Conservative manifesto before the last general election and then repeated in the coalition agreement.

Number 10 said it was a commitment that would be honoured.

A Downing Street spokesman said: “The aid allocation in the Spending Review shows our commitment to implementing our pledge to spend 0.7% of GNI [gross national income] on official development assistance from 2013.

“We are fully committed to enacting the 0.7% commitment into law, in line with the coalition agreement.”

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

Government calls in Mary Portas to save high street

Mary PortasMary Portas has criticised supermarkets for killing off smaller retailers
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TV retail guru Mary Portas is to carry out a government-backed review aimed at halting the “decline of the high street” in England.

She will look at the problem of empty shops and how to prevent the growth of “clone towns” dominated by chainstores.

Ms Portas, the star of Mary Queen of Shops and Secret Shopper, is due to present her findings in the autumn.

Prime Minister David Cameron said high streets had to become more “vibrant and diverse” in an effort to survive.

Ms Portas’s review, carried out for the Department for Business, Innovation and Skills, will involve visits to several town centres and “engagement events” with shop-owners and customers.

She said: “With town centre vacancy rates doubling over the last two years the need to take action to save our high streets has never been starker.

“I am calling on businesses, local authorities and shoppers to contribute their ideas on how we can halt this decline in its tracks and create town centres that we can all be proud of.”

A report published on Monday by the Ernst & Young Item Club suggests UK high street spending will not return to pre-recession levels until 2013.

It also said consumer spending is expected to rise by only 2% a year up to 2020.

Ms Portas will present her report to Deputy Prime Minister Nick Clegg, the aim being “to identify what government, local authorities and businesses can do to promote the development of more prosperous and diverse high streets”.

Mr Clegg said: “Empty high streets are a blight on the local economy. Vacant shops are also a wasted opportunity with far reaching consequences.

“When goods and services start to disappear, our sense of community can be weakened and undermined. It is vital therefore that we examine what steps can be taken to revitalise and reinvigorate high street shopping centres across the country.”

Mr Cameron said: “The high street should be at the very heart of every community, bringing people together, providing essential services and creating jobs and investment; so it is vital that we do all that we can to ensure they thrive.

“That is why I am delighted that Mary Portas has agreed to take on this review and I am confident that her straight-talking, no-nonsense approach will help us to create vibrant and diverse town centres and bring back the bustle to our high streets.”

Previously Ms Portas has blamed supermarkets for “killing” Britain’s smaller shops by making it impossible for them to compete on price.

A former creative director at Harvey Nichols retail group, she has since become known as a TV expert on transforming under-performing shops.

Ms Portas starred in Mary Queen of Shops on the BBC Two before moving to Channel 4, where she presents Secret Shopper.

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

Bail-out for Portugal is approved

EU and Greek flagsDebt-hit Greece was bailed out by the EU and IMF a year ago

Eurozone financial leaders are set to meet in Brussels to discuss additional help for Greece’s debt-hit economy.

Issues up for discussion include what conditions to apply to any more financial bail-outs for the country.

Some European leaders are unhappy at what they perceive as limited Greek efforts to raise money by selling government property.

The talks have been overshadowed by the arrest of IMF boss Dominique Strauss-Kahn, who had been due to attend.

He was arrested Sunday in New York on suspicion of the sexual assault of a hotel maid.

Debt-strapped Greece was bailed out a year ago by the EU and IMF to the tune of 110bn euros (£93bn; $157bn) euros.

Since then it has imposed a series of financial cuts and austerity measures to try to balance its books.

On Friday, EU Economic and Monetary Affairs Commissioner Olli Rehn said Greece must take additional steps to consolidate public finances because it was missing its deficit reduction targets.

The country has a 327bn euros debt pile, or nearly 150% of its economic output.

Germany provided a large chunk of the Greek bail-out cash and wants to see stringent conditions applied before backing any new aid.

Many analysts believe that Greece’s financial troubles are so deep that a Greek default on its debts appears inevitable.

However, the European Central Bank appears determined to prevent this as such a move could undermine the euro.

However, the euro fell to a seven-week low against the dollar and a two-month low against the yen before the meeting.

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

Border Agency ‘lack of control’

A UK Border Agency officerThe Border Agency’s points-based entry system only applies to people coming from certain countries
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The UK Border Agency has a “lack of control” over the system used by multinational companies to bring their own foreign staff into the UK, say MPs.

The Commons Public Accounts Committee said it was concerned by intra-company transfers, particular by IT firms.

The MPs’ report said the UKBA estimates that overall 181,000 workers have stayed on without permission but it does not know for sure.

Immigration Minister Damian Green said the report showed the case for reform.

The coalition government has set an annual limit on the number of migrant workers who are allowed to come into the UK through what is known as the points-based system.

But the system only applies to people from outside of the European Economic Area. There is also an exemption for intra-company transfers, providing the worker switching to a UK office is earning at least £24,000.

But in its report, the Public Accounts Committee said it was very difficult to verify how much of each worker’s salary was in fact an allowance for housing – meaning some firms could be tempted to exploit this loophole to bring in cheaper workers from abroad as opposed to similarly skilled British people.

Margaret Hodge, chairwoman of the committee, said the UKBA lacked the information it needed to ensure that the rules were complied with.

“We are concerned at the lack of control of workers entering Britain through the intra-company transfer system,” said Mrs Hodge.

REQUESTS FOR INTRA-COMPANY TRANSFERS AS OF SEPT 2010IT workers: 41,700Consultants/economists: 2,600Company chiefs: 1,700Other occupations: 13,600Source: Comptroller and Auditor General/Public Affairs Committee

Mrs Hodge also the agency did not have a grip on making sure that migrant workers whose visas have expired actually left.

She said: “[The UKBA] estimates that 181,000 such workers are staying on without permission – but it can’t even verify the figures, and does not try to enforce the employer’s duty to ensure that the people they bring in leave when they are required to do so.

“The Agency has not exercised proper checks on sponsoring employers. It has visited only one in five of those applying for licences. It does not know how many existing sponsors have been inspected and lacks the information required to take a robust risk-based approach.”

Responding to the criticisms, immigration minister Damian Green said: “This report demonstrates why the immigration system needs radical reform.

“I want enforcement and compliance to be the cornerstone of our immigration system and we are making it more difficult for people to live in the UK illegally by taking action against employers that flout our rules.

“Any employers found to be abusing our immigration system risk losing their licence to sponsor any migrant workers.”

He went on: “This government has already introduced an annual limit on economic migrants, including a significant tightening of the ICT rules, and sweeping changes to the student visa system.”

But Sir Andrew Green, chairman of pressure group Migration Watch UK, said: “The main reason the system is so deeply flawed is that the basis of the UK’s immigration control, the face-to-face interview, no longer plays any part in the process.

“The PBS (points-based system) has turned out to be a box-ticking exercise that places the initiative with those who have a financial interest in a visa being granted. No wonder employers prefer it.”

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

Bedbugs bite

Bedbug displayed at the Smithsonian Institution National Museum of Natural History in WashingtonBedbugs are hard to get rid of once you acquire them
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In popular culture, New York is the city that never sleeps, the concrete jungle in which dreams are made, a place to walk on the wild side.

The reality is the US financial capital is, above all, a crowded and bustling pool of humanity, in which about nine million people live and work cheek by jowl.

Such proximity makes it the perfect breeding ground for a creature that certainly causes its residents to lose sleep, and for many is the stuff of nightmares.

For the past few summers, New York has been struggling with an epidemic of bedbugs – tiny bloodsucking insects that hide during the day, but come out to feed at night.

An infestation of bedbugs is very easy to acquire, and very difficult to eradicate. They can be picked up in taxis or cinemas, on subway trains or in hotel rooms.

Last year, some of the city’s flagship retailers were affected. Lingerie retailer Victoria’s Secret and teen fashion store Hollister were among those that had to close outlets while pest controllers were called in.

For businesses, finding bedbugs can be very bad news indeed.

Getting rid of them can be very expensive, with treatment of commercial premises sometimes costing tens of thousands of dollars.

But damage to reputations can be even harder to rectify, according to Scott Bermack of New York legal firm LeClair Ryan.

Bedbugs (photo: National Pest Management Association)Bedbugs are becoming more resistant to chemical treatments, experts say

“It’s a public relations nightmare,” he says. “There’s a perception among the public that one bug is an infestation.

“You hear about one bug in a store or a hotel and the customers are going to run out and tell their friends and tell all the websites.”

Disgruntled customers are also likely to take legal action. When bedbugs are found, says Mr Bermack, the writs soon follow.

“You have people suing for damage to furniture, damage to clothing. You have people suing for pain and suffering, for emotional damages or psychological damages.

“There’s really no limit to the creativity of the plaintiffs’ lawyers in terms of the claims they’ll make.”

Because companies are anxious to limit bad publicity, many of these cases are settled out of court – adding thousands of dollars to the bills they already face for getting rid of the bugs.

Lawyers, of course, are making money out of the bedbug epidemic, but they are not the only ones.

Battling bedbugs

Bedbugs

Do not take in second-hand beds or mattressesDo not allow clutter to build up where you sleep – it is a perfect nesting place for bedbugsWhen looking around rented accommodation, watch out for tell-tale blood spots or smears on sheets, and in the seams of furniture and upholsteryDo not wait to report a problem – nip an infestation in the bud before it growsBedbugs are not thought to be able to bite through clothing – as a last resort, you can zip yourself into a sleeping bag or all-over body suitCall pest control to deal with an infestation

“It’s been terrific in terms of revenue,” says Timothy Wong, director of pest control firm M&M Environmental.

His office in Manhattan’s Lower East Side is packed with the bulky equipment needed to eradicate bedbugs, and a pervasive smell of insecticide hangs in the air.

“Six or seven years ago, bedbug-related services made up less than 1% of our total revenue. Today, it’s more than 25%,” he says.

“We’re treating almost everything, from commercial offices to retail stores, hotels, giant department stores, airlines – just about everybody.”

His company makes its money not only from getting rid of bedbugs, but also from preventing them getting established in the first place.

Inevitably, the surge in demand for pest control services has prompted many entrepreneurs to try their luck in the market. But according to Mr Wong, few have succeeded.

“There were a lot of new players who came in. In 2010, there were more than 125 new entrants into the market.”

“But the funny thing is, 60 or 70% of them have already left. They came into an industry that they’re not familiar with. The overheads are huge, the equipment is expensive, and the training is expensive.

“So people jumping into the business thinking they can turn up and cash in… well, it’s difficult. And I think they’re proving that’s the case.”

But for Mr Wong’s own company, business is booming – a fact made all too obvious by the row of sales staff crammed into a narrow corridor, taking calls from anxious homeowners and businesses.

It’s a line of work that looks unlikely to dry up any time soon.

Insecticides that used to be effective against bedbugs, such as DDT, have been banned, while the insects have steadily become immune to others.

Bedbug activity increases during warm weather, and experts say this summer will be no exception. New York is bracing itself for another irritating onslaught.

But the uncomfortable fact is that, as in so many areas, where New York leads, other cities look set to follow.

Bedbugs are notoriously good travellers, and signs of similar epidemics are already emerging in Philadephia, Los Angeles, Washington, London and Paris.

Good business for some, sleepless nights for others.

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

Guatemala massacre details emerge

Ranch where the attack took placeAt least 27 people were found dead at the ranch, many decapitated
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A farm worker in northern Guatemala has told how he managed to survive a gruesome massacre at the hands of a suspected Mexican drugs cartel.

The man said armed men arrived at his ranch in Peten province on Saturday demanding to see the landowner.

When workers refused to co-operate the gangsters bound their hands and started hacking at them with machetes.

Many of the 27 victims were decapitated but the farm worker says he survived by playing dead.

He lay in the grass until the gang had gone and was found by police who arrived at the scene on Sunday morning.

“I thank God I am still alive,” the man told AFP news agency. He has not been named for security reasons.

“I played dead when they stabbed me in the stomach. Then I hid and left at around 5am and I came across a pile of human heads,” he said.

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The man is now under armed guard while being treated at a hospital.

The ranch is close to Guatemala’s border with Mexico.

The attackers are thought to be members of the powerful Zetas drugs cartel, the authorities say.

Police said the killings could be linked to a battle between drug gangs fighting for control of the area.

They say there are also suspicions the massacre could be linked to the murder of Haroldo Waldemar Leon – the brother of an alleged Guatemalan drugs boss – who was shot in the same area on Saturday.

Guatemala President Alvaro Colom, who flew to Peten on Monday, condemned the killings.

“This is a barbarity,” he said. “We will get them even if they are hiding in their lair. We will get them.”

Mexican cartels are increasingly moving into northern Guatemala, an important transit point for drugs smuggled from South America to the US.

Guatemalan law enforcement officials say the gang has increasingly moved its operations south since Mexican President Felipe Calderon stepped up his country’s fight against the drugs trade.

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