Laws suspended over MP expenses

Lib Dem MP David LawsMr Laws has indicated he would be keen on a return to government
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Lib Dem MP David Laws is expected to be rebuked over his expenses claims when the findings of a standards investigation are published later.

Mr Laws quit as Chief Secretary to the Treasury when it emerged he had claimed about £40,000 to pay his partner rent, which is against expenses rules.

The standards and privileges committee is expected to say he broke several rules, relating to more than rent.

Any heavy criticism could end his hopes of a quick return to the government.

The BBC understands that a lengthy investigation by the Parliamentary standards commissioner discovered other breaches of parliamentary rules by Mr Laws relating to phone bills and building work.

But it is believed the commissioner has concluded Mr Laws acted to protect his privacy – in an effort to conceal his homosexuality – not for any financial gain.

The Commons standards and privileges committee will publish the commissioner’s findings at 1100 BST and rule on any punishment.

Mr Laws is expected make a statement in the House of Commons at about 1300 BST.

The Yeovil MP quit as a Treasury minister after just 17 days in the cabinet last year.

He has previously indicated he would be keen on a return to government and Prime Minister David Cameron has also signalled he would like to see him back quickly.

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Spain shocked by fatal earthquake

Cars crushed by rubble

The quake caused widespread panic in Lorca

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Thousands of people have spent the night outdoors in the southern Spanish town of Lorca after an earthquake which killed at least eight people.

The magnitude-5.2 tremor toppled several buildings after striking at a depth of just 10km (six miles), 120km south-west of Alicante.

Lines of cars lay crushed under tonnes of rubble after Spain’s worst earthquake for 50 years.

Wednesday evening’s quake came about two hours after a 4.4-magnitude tremor.

Regional officials on Thursday put the official death toll at eight, revising it down from 10. It is not clear how many people were injured, although Spanish media say there are dozens with some in a critical condition.

Shocked residents and workers rushed out of buildings and gathered in squares, parks and open spaces after the quake struck at 1847 (1647 GMT) in the town in Murcia region.

Old buildings were badly damaged.

Residents walk past a cracked wall of a building in Lorca

Spanish TV captured dramatic images of a church bell tower crashing to the ground, landing just metres from a cameraman.

As night fell, many of Lorca’s 90,000 residents were either unable or still too afraid to return to their homes.

Mayor Francisco Jodar said as many as a third of the population slept out.

The Red Cross had set up a temporary shelter with 800 beds on the edge of town, but many people preferred to “sleep outside” to be near their homes or for fear of aftershocks, spokeswoman Carla Vera said.

Many people spent the night huddled under blankets in parks and other open spaces including an outdoor basketball court and playgrounds.

“We know we live near a fault line but we never thought this would happen,” Lorca resident Pepe Tomas, 56, said.

“People are afraid. No-one here has ever seen anything like this before.”

Map

Ms Vera said the Red Cross has moved in 24 ambulances and set up three field hospitals.

The interior ministry says 225 emergency military units and 400 workers, including rescuers with dogs, have been sent to Lorca.

Some 350 ambulances have transferred 400 patients out of two of the town’s hospitals, the regional government said.

Spain has hundreds of earthquakes every year but most of them are too small to be noticed.

Murcia is the country’s most seismically active area and suffered tremors in 2005 and 1999. It is close to the large faultline beneath the Mediterranean Sea where the European and African continents meet.

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UK offers office to Libya rebels

A rebel in Libya's western mountainsRebels have been fighting Col Gaddafi’s forces since February

Libyan rebel leaders have been invited by Prime Minister David Cameron to set up a formal office in London.

Mr Cameron met Mustafa Abdul Jalil, chairman of the Interim National Transitional Council, in Downing St as fighting continued in Libya.

He also announced that “several million pounds” worth of equipment was being sent to police in the rebel stronghold of Benghazi.

Rebels have been fighting Libyan leader Col Muammar Gaddafi since February.

Other support includes sending a special representative to the council, and helping to improve the council’s broadcasting capacity and boosting the UK presence in Benghazi with “specialists who will form the core of an international stabilisation response team”.

Mr Cameron said: “I’ve been struck again today by the resolve and bravery of Abdul Jalil and those he represents in standing up to a tyrant who is still today killing innocent people in Libya.

“The world stands in awe at the sacrifice people have been prepared to make in Benghazi, in Misrata and in the western mountains and elsewhere to seek the freedoms that we all take for granted.”

He described the National Transitional Council as “Britain’s primary partner” in Libya, as “Gaddafi can have no part in the political transition that lies ahead.”

The UK has already supplied 1,000 sets of body armour, satellite telephones and humanitarian aid, including the funding the evacuation of 4,000 people from Misrata and providing 30 metric tonnes of medical and emergency food supplies to the town, Mr Cameron said.

Libya’s third-largest city, Misrata, is the only significant western rebel holdout and is strategically important because of its deep-sea port, which has become a lifeline for supplying civilians and for evacuating wounded people fleeing the fighting.

Mr Jalil said he wanted to thank the British people and government for “for their discipline and moral stand”.

“This stand was not based on any benefit that the British government may derive from this support. It is a humanitarian position. I assure you that you will never regret taking this stand.”

He added that he had invited Mr Cameron and Foreign Secretary William Hague to visit the rebels in Libya.

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Car found in family murder probe

Ding family photoThe Dings are thought to have been stabbed to death on the day of the royal wedding
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Police investigating the murders of a family of four in Northampton have found the Vauxhall Corsa missing from their home.

Lecturer Jifeng Ding, his wife Helen and their two daughters Alice, 12, and Xing, 18, were found stabbed to death in Pioneer Close in Wootton on 1 May.

Businessman Anxiang Du, 52, is wanted in connection with their murders.

Police said the car was found in north-west London following a call from a member of the public.

Mr Du, who lived in Coventry and worked at a herbal medicine shop in Birmingham, travelled to Northampton by train just a day after losing what has been described as a bitter court battle over his shared business interests with the Ding family.

He was reported missing by his own family on Friday after they discovered a note “saying goodbye” at the shop where he worked.

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Third body discovered near lane

Policeman at Raikes Lane roadblockA policeman in Raikes Lane after the bodies of two men were found by a passing motorist

A body has been found in West Yorkshire close to the spot the bodies of two men were found by the side of a road.

West Yorkshire Police said the body was found on fire in Holme Lane, in the Holme Wood area of Bradford, at 0638 BST, by firefighters.

Police launched a double murder inquiry after the bodies of two men were found lying in New Lane near its junction with Raikes Lane in Tong on Tuesday.

A police spokesman said it was too early to say if the deaths were linked.

The latest discovery was made about 500m across fields from where the bodies of the two unidentified young men were found by a passing motorist.

The fire service said they were called to Holme Lane at about 0613 BST to attend a “fire in the open” and discovered the body in the fire.

Police investigating the discovery have cordoned off a nearby park and Denbrook Avenue.

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BA and union agree to end dispute

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British Airways and the Unite union have reached an agreement to settle their long-running industrial dispute.

As part of the deal BA has agreed to restore travel concessions to staff who went on strike and to award some lower-paid employees top-up payments.

Both issues were at the centre of the bitter dispute which has lasted for almost two years and involved 22 days of strikes.

The agreement will now be put to a ballot of about 10,000 union members.

In a statement Unite general secretary Len McCluskey said: “We always said that this dispute could only be settled by negotiation, not by confrontation or litigation. And so it has proved.

“I am particularly pleased that travel concessions will be restored,” he said.

BA said: “On behalf of our customers, we are very pleased the threat of industrial action has been lifted and that we have reached a point where we can put this dispute behind us.

“Our agreement with Unite involves acknowledgement by the union that the cost-saving structural changes we have made in cabin crew operations are permanent.

“We have also agreed changes that will modernise our crew industrial relations and help ensure that this kind of dispute cannot occur again,” the airline said.

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Taggart axed by ITV after 30 years

TaggartTaggart has been STV’s flagship drama programme since 1983
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ITV has axed the Scottish police drama Taggart after 28 years, in the wake of poor viewing figures south of the border.

The programme’s future on ITV1 had been the subject of intense speculation for some time.

ITV confirmed it had decided not to commission any further series of Taggart for the ITV network.

Programme producers STV said they were exploring a range of options with other broadcasters to keep Taggart going.

The company said it was committed to the brand and recognised the continuing popularity of this long-running series.

It is believed the company will look at possible co-financing deals with other UK-based channels or foreign broadcasters.

An ITV spokesman said: “Since it was first broadcast in 1983, Taggart has been one of ITV’s most enduring dramas but, reflecting the demands of our audience and as part of the ongoing creative renewal of the ITV1 schedule, our priority is to invest in new and original drama for the channel.”

He added: “ITV1 broadcast five out of the top 10 new dramas on any channel last year, including the most popular new drama in over five years, Downton Abbey.

“A broad range of new drama series premiering on the channel over 2011 includes Marchlands, Vera, Injustice, Scott & Bailey, The Jury and DCI Banks.”

Two years ago, Taggart came close to being axed but STV and ITV worked out a co-production deal.

This meant that STV paid a significant proportion of the production cost itself but also gained the right to screen the series before it was shown across the network.

Previously STV had simply been commissioned by ITV to make the series and it was shown across the whole of the UK simultaneously.

The most recent series was shown in the STV region last autumn while viewers in the rest of the UK saw the acclaimed costume drama Downton Abbey. Taggart’s ratings within the STV region remained strong.

But when the series was shown on the network a few months latter, it was a different story. Taggart’s ratings across the UK fell to 3.8 million for the most recent series – considered poor for a mainstream drama.

In recent years, ITV has axed a number of long-running dramas – notably Heartbeat and The Bill – to put more effort into bringing new shows to the screen.

Although Taggart had lost its popularity on ITV1, it remains popular in Scotland and is important to STV commercially and the television industry in Scotland.

For instance, STV generates money from Taggart through sales to foreign broadcasters – over the years it has been screened in many countries around the world.

ITV did recently commission another drama from STV – a 90-minute one-off called Fast Freddie, The Widow and Me, which is expected to be shown over Christmas.

STV and ITV recently ended a long-running legal dispute amicably. The dispute was triggered by STV’s decision to drop a number of ITV network programmes but touched on many other matters.

ITV sources are stressing the decision to discontinue Taggart was a purely creative decision, completely unconnected with the dispute.

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Radio listening reaches new high

Evan Davis on Radio 4's Today programmeThe Today programme has added 600,000 listeners in a year, according to the figures
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A record number of people in the UK are listening to the radio, with 47.3m tuning into at least one station each week, according to Rajar figures.

BBC Radio 4 drew a record average weekly audience of 10.83m, from January to March, with its Today programme breaking 7m for the first time.

Talksport, named national station of the year this week, reached 3.25m listeners a week for the first time.

BBC Radio 2’s Chris Evans remains king of the breakfast shows with 9.18m.

That compared with the 7.52 million who listened to BBC Radio 1’s Chris Moyles.

There were also record figures for BBC stations Radio 1, 1Xtra and 6 Music

Today, whose presenters include Evan Davis and John Humphrys, added 600,000 listeners in comparison to the same period in the previous year.

And Talksport added almost 900,000 listeners in a year.

On Monday night, it became the first commercial operation to win the Sony Radio Academy Award for national station of the year.

Overall, commercial radio had a record audience of 34 million listeners a week.

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EU begins Schengen border review

Tunisian migrants held in France, 5 May 11Many Tunisian migrants have travelled from Italy to France – fuelling criticism of Schengen
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EU home affairs ministers are meeting to consider controversial proposals to change Europe’s 25-nation Schengen accord on passport-free travel.

Divisions have emerged over how best to handle the influx of migrants fleeing the turmoil in North Africa.

Italy and Malta, on the immigration frontline, are urging their EU partners to help them more.

Schengen allows for the temporary reimposition of border controls in special cases to ensure public order.

This week the European Commission President, Jose Manuel Barroso, said such measures should be “exceptions” and “an absolute last resort”.

He said freedom of movement, enshrined by Schengen, was one of the EU’s essential foundations.

On the eve of the Brussels meeting, Denmark announced that it would reinstate control booths on its borders with Germany and Sweden within weeks.

Denmark will carry out random checks of cars and passports, deploying more customs officers and video surveillance to tackle cross-border crime, Finance Minister Claus Hjort Frederiksen said.

Denmark, like the rest of Scandinavia, is a Schengen member and Mr Frederiksen insisted that the extra controls would be in line with the EU agreement.

Schengen agreementIn June 1985, leaders from Germany, France, Luxembourg, Belgium, and the Netherlands met in Schengen, Luxembourg, and agreed gradually to abolish checks at shared bordersFull convention came into effect a decade later, also covering Italy, Spain, Portugal and GreeceCreated single external border, harmonised some rules on asylum and visas, enhanced police and judicial co-operation and established shared information databaseIrish Republic and UK co-operate in certain aspects of Schengen but border checks retainedAustria joined agreement in 1997, followed by Nordic countries in 2000. Nine new EU member states were incorporated in 2007 and Switzerland in 2008

The anti-immigration Danish People’s Party, a key ally of the government, had demanded the reimposition of border checks.

Populist parties elsewhere in Europe are making similar demands, amid widespread fears that migrant workers are taking advantage of Schengen at a time of economic hardship.

Tensions rose recently between France and Italy after Rome granted temporary residence permits to thousands of French-speaking Tunisians, many of whom then took trains to France.

EU officials say no concrete outcome is expected at Thursday’s meeting, but modifications to Schengen could be approved at a European summit next month.

Schengen, which dates back to 1995, abolished internal borders, enabling passport-free movement for EU citizens across most of Europe.

It also introduced common procedures for controlling the EU’s external borders.

On 4 May the European Commission urged the EU to step up co-operation to deal with new migration pressures in the southern Mediterranean. More than 25,000 Africans have sailed to Italy and Malta in small, overcrowded boats this year to escape the turmoil in Libya and Tunisia.

EU Home Affairs Commissioner Cecilia Malmstrom says tiny Malta is struggling with a disproportionately large number of refugees from North Africa and she will urge EU countries to resettle many of them.

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