Six people in fire airlift rescue

Liathach fire above Torridon village - picture by Steve Carter www.stevecarter.comIt is understood hillwalkers had to be airlifted to safety from Liathach. Picture by Steve Carter

Fire crews in the Highlands are using a helicopter to drop water on a heath fire that is threatening properties near Torridon.

Highland Fire and Rescue Service said it was currently dealing with three large heath fires at Dundonnell, Lochaber and Torridon.

The brigade has been tackling the fires since Saturday.

It is understood the blaze also resulted in hillwalkers being airlifted to safety from Liathach, Torridon.

Meanwhile, a number of roads have been closed while firefighters tackle a blaze at Loch Lomond and Trossachs National Park.

Central Scotland Fire and Rescue service said a large area of scrub and gorse was on ablaze at Glengyle, at the northern end of Loch Katrine.

The brigade said it was also using a helicopter to drop water in the area in a bid to douse the flames.

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Doctors warn over alcohol risks

Cans of lager on saleDoctors said a significant proportion of the adult population was at risk of health problems
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Doctors have warned that a “significant proportion” of adults are risking alcohol-related health problems.

A BMA Scotland survey suggested that on one day last month GPs saw more than 5,500 patients where alcohol had contributed to their ill health.

The study claimed that alcohol was a factor in 6% of all GP consultations.

The BMA urged politicians on the campaign trail to outline how they would tackle alcohol misuse in the next Scottish Parliament.

Dr Alan McDevitt, deputy chairman of the BMA’s Scottish General Practitioners Committee, said: “Those who suffer from alcohol-related health problems are not just alcoholics or heavy binge drinkers.

“By regularly drinking over and above recommended limits, a significant proportion of the adult population is at risk of experiencing health problems that are linked to the alcohol they consume, whether it is high blood pressure, breast cancer or even domestic abuse.”

Drink driving

The British Medical Association study was based on a sample of 31 practices from across Scotland.

It said that each day alcohol would cost Scotland £97.5m in terms of health, violence and crime.

On one day an average 98 people would be admitted to hospital with an alcohol-related condition, while 23 people would commit a drink driving offence, it said.

Other health organisations backed the BMA’s call for action to tackle the country’s alcohol problem.

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Welsh leaders clash in TV debate

BBC Wales political editor Betsan Powys (R), and Kirsty Williams, Carwyn Jones and Nick Bourne listen to a point made by Ieuan Wyn JonesBBC Wales political editor Betsan Powys (R), and Kirsty Williams, Carwyn Jones and Nick Bourne listen to a point made by Ieuan Wyn Jones

Wales’ four main party leaders have clashed in a televised debate days before the assembly election.

The leaders of Labour, Plaid Cymru, the Conservatives and Liberal Democrats argued over the state of schools, public cuts and keeping their promises.

They also put forward their own differing suggestions for cutting public spending.

Monday night’s BBC One Wales debate in Newport was one of the last chances to secure votes before Thursday’s poll.

Labour and Plaid have been in coalition in the assembly government since the last election four years ago, but their two leaders fell out during the programme, hosted by BBC Wales political editor Betsan Powys.

First Minister and Welsh Labour leader Carwyn Jones was accused of “arrogance” by Plaid Cymru’s Ieuan Wyn Jones “to think they could take Wales for granted”.

Members of the audience listen to the debate at the City Campus in NewportMembers of the audience listen to the debate at the City Campus in Newport

But Carwyn Jones said he was surprised by the accusation, and said there was nothing arrogant in aiming to win the election.

The Labour and Plaid leaders also differed on education, which dominated the first part of the debate, staged at the City Campus at the University of Wales.

In response to a question from a retired head teacher who called standards in schools appalling, Carwyn Jones said he did not accept that description for all schools.

He cited Welsh successes such as the foundation phase, which offers learning through play for under-sevens, and said the 30% of schools which did not come up to scratch had to improve.

Ieuan Wyn Jones called it a scandal that 13,500 11-year-olds would go to secondary school this year while “functionally illiterate”.

The Plaid leader said Wales needed a transformation in education, and while his party had been in government for the past four years, he would not “defend the indefensible”.

Welsh Conservative leader Nick Bourne said Welsh schools’ results were appalling, and they wanted more control of their budgets, which his party was promising.

Mr Bourne accused Carwyn Jones of being “far too complacent” over schools.

Kirsty Williams, of the Welsh Liberal Democrats, asked if Ieuan Wyn Jones had not addressed the state of education during his time in government “because Carwyn wouldn’t let him”.

Betsan Powys (R) with the four party leaders in NewportThe parties debated such areas as school standards and public spending cuts

She said the gap in spending on pupils between England and Wales had grown to more than £600, and said Lib Dems were committed to closing it.

Each of the leaders was also asked which areas of public spending they would cut.

Mr Bourne included “NHS managers on top salaries doing nothing,” freezing top salaries in the civil service, and cutting over-spending on public projects such as roads.

Plaid’s Ieuan Wyn Jones put forward cuts in the salaries of assembly government cabinet ministers, £150m of education budget savings re-invested in schools, and reducing NHS middle management.

The Welsh Lib Dem leader said she would end the £8m subsidy for air flights between north and south Wales, cut the amount processing assembly grants, and publish every assembly government spending decision over £25,000.

Meanwhile, Carwyn Jones said civil service staffing had fallen by 800 in the past year, and said Labour had committed to protect schools, skills and hospitals.

They were also asked how they would keep their manifesto, given that it was possible they could have to go into coalition after the election.

Carwyn Jones said he was not being complacent, and taking nothing for granted, but his party was the only one looking to win outright on Thursday.

That prompted Ieuan Wyn Jones to accuse him of taking Wales for granted, and said Plaid had delivered 230 out of 237 manifesto promises since 2007.

The Welsh Tory leader said he could not pre-judge the result, and urged voters to weigh up his party on its detailed manifesto.

Ms Williams said the Lib Dems had a “properly costed and deliverable manifesto” and she had shown that in negotiations “I can fight my corner”.

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VIDEO: Obama receives standing ovation

US President Barack Obama has received a standing ovation at a bipartisan dinner at the White House following the death of al-Qaeda’s leader, Osama Bin Laden, who was killed in a top secret operation which he ordered.

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Digital book sales soar in the UK

Amazon Kindle 2General title books are increasingly being read on digital devices, the data shows
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Sales of digital books are soaring in the UK, figures from the Publishers Association show.

The association said that in 2010 sales of e-books and audio book downloads in the “general titles” category, which includes novels and consumer titles, shot up from £4m to £16m.

Academic and professional books still dominated overall digital sales, which reached £180m last year.

It still remains a small proportion of total book sales, which hit £3.1bn.

However, the increased digital sales suggests devices such as Amazon’s Kindle and the Sony Reader are increasingly making an impact.

Richard Mollet, chief executive of the Publishers Association, said: “Digital publishing is growing at an impressive rate in whichever part of the sector you choose to look.

“Now that technology is putting e-reading devices into consumers’ hands, we are starting to see the rapid growth of digital sales in this area too, as consumer publishers develop digital formats to reach wider audiences.”

He added the traditional print book market remains “hugely popular” and the figures suggest print and digital books will co-exist in the future.

In the US, electronic books sold more than either hardbacks or paperbacks in February.

The Publishers Association said the digital innovation taking place in the UK could be threatened if copyright laws are watered down in a government review.

Mr Mollet said: “The innovation in the digital marketplace and the strength of British publishers’ export performance is only possible because of the robust and flexible copyright framework which underpins the UK creative industries.”

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World ‘safer’ without Bin Laden

Interior of Osama Bin Laden's compound

Footage from inside Bin Laden’s compound

US President Barack Obama has hailed the death of al-Qaeda leader Osama Bin Laden as a “good day for America,” saying the world is now a safer and a better place.

Bin Laden was killed in a raid by US special forces on a compound in the Pakistani city of Abbottabad.

He is believed to have ordered the attacks on New York and Washington on 11 September 2001, as well as a number of other deadly bombings.

He topped the US “most wanted” list.

But his details on the list have now been updated with a simple banner indicating his current status: “Deceased”.

DNA tests carried out after the operation indicated with “99.9%” certainty that the man shot dead was Osama Bin Laden, US officials said.

He was buried at sea after a Muslim funeral on board an aircraft carrier in the north Arabian Sea, Pentagon officials said.

The US has put its embassies around the world on alert, warning Americans of the possibility of al-Qaeda reprisal attacks for Bin Laden’s killing.

CIA director Leon Panetta said al-Qaeda would “almost certainly” try to avenge the death of Bin Laden.

The US president’s chief counter-terrorism advisor, John Brennan said that al-Qaeda, though weakened, remained a danger.

“It may be a mortally wounded tiger but it still has some life in it,” he said.

As news of Bin Laden’s death was being digested around the world, President Obama said: “Today we are reminded that as a nation there is nothing we can’t do”.

Bin Laden, 54, approved the 9/11 attacks in which nearly 3,000 people died.

He evaded the forces of the US and its allies for almost a decade, despite a $25m (£15m) bounty on his head.

On Sunday, US forces said to be from the elite Navy Seal Team Six undertook the operation in Abbottabad, 100km (62 miles) north-east of Islamabad.

US officials said Bin Laden was shot in the head after resisting.

The compound in Abbottabad is just a few hundred metres from the Pakistan Military Academy – the country’s equivalent of West Point or Sandhurst.

The BBC’s Aleem Maqbool in Abbottabad says it will undoubtedly be a huge embarrassment to Pakistan that Bin Laden was found not only in the country, but also on the doorstep of the military academy.

Pakistan was only notified of the operation once US forces had left its airspace.

Mr Brennan said it was “inconceivable” that Bin Laden did not have a support system in Pakistan.

“We’re going to pursue all leads to find out exactly what type of support system and benefactors that Bin Laden might have had,” he said.

However, US Secretary of State Hillary Clinton said co-operation from Pakistan helped lead the Americans to Bin Laden.

Bin Laden’s body was consigned to the sea after a burial service on the USS Carl Vinson.

“The deceased’s body was washed and then placed in a white sheet. The body was placed in a weighted bag. A military officer read prepared religious remarks which were translated into Arabic by a native speaker,” a US defence official said.

“After the words were complete, the body was placed on a prepared flat board, tipped up, whereupon the deceased’s body eased into the sea,” the official said.

Barak Obama

US President Barack Obama: “This is a good day for America”

Photographs of Bin Laden’s body have not been released.

The head of the al-Azhar mosque in Cairo, Sunni Islam’s most important seat of learning, condemned the decision to dispose of the body at sea.

Grand Imam Sheikh Ahmed al-Tayeb said it was an affront which ran “contrary to the principles of Islamic laws, religious values and humanitarian customs”.

As the news spread, crowds gathered outside the White House in Washington DC and Ground Zero, in New York, chanting “USA, USA”.

In Pakistan, about 100 people took part in a protest in the western city of Quetta, burning a US flag and chanting anti-American slogans.

Mrs Clinton said the operation sent a signal to the Taliban in both Afghanistan and Pakistan.

“You cannot wait us out, you cannot defeat us, but you can make the choice to abandon al-Qaeda and participate in a peaceful political process,” she said.

And she said there was “no better rebuke to al-Qaeda and its heinous ideology” than the peaceful uprisings across the Arab world against authoritarian governments.

Giving more details of the raid, one senior US official said a small US team conducted the attack in about 40 minutes.

Three other men – one of Bin Laden’s sons and two couriers – and a woman, were killed in the raid, the official said.

Speaking later, Mr Brennan said that the woman who died was believed to be Bin Laden’s wife.

“She served as a shield,” he said, adding: “It was unclear is she was put there, or if she put herself there.”

He confirmed that US commandos on the raid had been ready to take the al-Qaeda leader alive, if that had been possible.

Map of Abbottabad
Diagram of the compound

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

Missing car link in family murder

The crime scene in Pioneer Close, Wootton, NorthamptonThe bodies were found in a house in Pioneer Close, Northampton
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A missing car could hold the key to the killing of a couple and their two daughters, who were all found stabbed at a house in Northampton.

Police want to trace a silver five-door Vauxhall Corsa, registration BG60 PMO, that was hired by one of the family members and was last seen on Friday.

The family was named locally as college lecturer Jifeng Ding, his wife Helen Chui, and daughters Alice and Xing.

They were attacked at their detached home in the Wootton area of the town.

Police said they did not think it was a random attack. They are believed to be investigating the background of the family – who are of Chinese descent – to try to establish a motive for the murder.

One line of inquiry is a comment posted on Facebook which appears to have been made by the eldest daughter.

A tribute page set up on the website to Xing, 18, Alice, 11, has been joined by more than 1,500 people.

On a separate page, comments have been made by students at Manchester Metropolitan University in praise of Xing and Alice’s father Jifeng, who was known as Jeff.

Helen Chui is believed to have worked locally as a teacher.

The bodies of the family were found on Sunday evening after police were called by neighbours who had noticed that the curtains of the family’s home had remained drawn over the weekend.

A Northamptonshire Police spokesman said: “At this moment in time the motive behind the deaths does not appear to be due to burglary or robbery.

“Local officers are conducting house-to-house inquiries and are liaising with residents and local people to offer reassurance and advice over any safety concerns.

“We do not believe there is any risk to the wider public.”

A spokesman for Manchester Metropolitan University said it was assisting police following the deaths.

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Waste centre fire ‘may be arson’

Residents have been warned to close windows and stay indoors after a large fire broke out in a Ministry of Defence training area in Monmouthshire.

South Wales Fire and Rescue Service said the blaze was in a building containing 200 tonnes of cardboard and polythene in Caerwent, near Caldicot.

Gwent Police said the wind was taking large plumes of black smoke towards Caerwent and Llanvair Discoed.

Six fire engines were sent to the scene.

According to the Ministry of Defence website, the Caerwent training area consists of 1,250 acres within a security fence.

There is a network of 31 miles of roads, more than five miles of railway sidings, 400 buildings, open pasture land and woodland.

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UK warning after Bin Laden death

Osama Bin LadenOsama Bin Laden was blamed for the 9/11 attacks by the US
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UK Prime Minister David Cameron has hailed the death of al-Qaeda leader Osama bin Laden as “a great success”.

Bin Laden, blamed by the US for the 9/11 attacks, was killed by US forces in Pakistan.

“The news that Osama Bin Laden is dead will bring great relief to people across the world,” Mr Cameron said in a statement hours after the news was confirmed by US President Barack Obama.

He said it was “a time to remember all those murdered” by Bin Laden.

Bin Laden was top of the US “most wanted” list, and President Obama said his death was “the most significant achievement to date in our nation’s effort to defeat al-Qaeda”.

Mr Cameron congratulated Mr Obama and others responsible for carrying out the operation.

“Osama Bin Laden was responsible for the worst terrorist atrocities the world has seen – for 9/11 and for so many attacks, which have cost thousands of lives, many of them British,” Mr Cameron said.

“It is a great success that he has been found and will no longer be able to pursue his campaign of global terror.”

He also thanked “all those who work round the clock to keep us safe from terrorism. Their work will continue.” Responding to news of bin Laden’s death, a senior Labour Party source said:

A Labour Party source told the Press Association: “Few will mourn the death of a man who caused misery for millions. Today is a day for remembering both his victims and for redoubling our efforts to end the scourge of terrorism across the world.”

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Kenya welcomes death of Bin Laden

 
Aftermath of 1998 Nairobi bombingMost of those killed in the US embassy attacks were Kenyan

Kenyan leaders have welcomed the killing in Pakistan of Osama Bin Laden, the man behind the 1998 bombing of the US embassy in Nairobi.

President Mwai Kibaki said it brought justice for the Kenyan victims of al-Qaeda.

Some 224 people, mostly Kenyans, were killed in the simultaneous bombings of the US embassies in Nairobi and in Tanzania’s main city Dar es Salaam.

Kenyan security services are now on high alert in case of revenge attacks.

The most senior official in Kenya’s internal security ministry, Francis Kimemia, told the BBC that the US should also target al-Qaeda cells in East Africa.

The al-Shabab militant group, which controls much of southern Somalia, has close links to al-Qaeda and last year carried out a suicide bombing in Uganda.

In 2009 US forces killed Saleh Ali Saleh Nabhan, a top al-Qaeda operative accused of links to the 1998 embassy bombings, in a raid in Somalia.

Kenya’s prime minister was among those hailing Bin Laden’s death.

“Osama’s death can only be positive for Kenya, but we need to have a stable government in Somalia,” Raila Odinga told Reuters news agency.

“The loss of its [al-Qaeda’s] leader may first upset the movement but then it will regroup and continue.”

Osama Bin LadenBin Laden lived in Sudan for five years

Douglas Sidialo, chairman of Kenya’s 1998 US Embassy Bomb Victims’ Association, who lost his sight in the attack, said Bin Laden’s death was “a reason for celebration”.

However, he said he would have preferred him to have been captured alive and put on trial to answer for his crimes.

Bin Laden lived in neighbouring Sudan from 1992-6 but authorities in Khartoum have not yet commented.

The BBC’s James Copnall, in Khartoum, says Sudanese authorities are caught between trying to improve relations with the US and a domestic constituency which has some support for Bin Laden and even has fond memories of him.

Osama Bin Laden was killed by US forces in a ground operation in outside the Pakistan capital Islamabad, after the US received intelligence on his whereabouts.

US President Barack Obama said US forces had taken possession of his body.

Bin Laden was accused of masterminding a number of atrocities, including the attacks on New York and Washington on 11 September 2001.

He was top of the US’ “most wanted” list.

The US has put its embassies around the world on alert, warning Americans of the possibility of al-Qaeda reprisal attacks for Bin Laden’s killing.

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Saab ‘to resume car production’

Saab signSuppliers have refused to deliver parts to Saab, saying their were concerned about not being paid

Swedish carmaker Saab plans to resume production within a week after its parent company Spyker Cars secured a 30m euro ($45m; £27m) loan.

The short-term funding has come from the investment fund Gemini.

Work at Saab’s Trollhattan plant has been suspended since 6 April after suppliers refused to deliver parts, citing lack of payment.

Saab said it would now be able to restore confidence, but added it still needs to secure longer-term funding.

In addition to the six-month loan from Gemini, Spyker is seeking to borrow a further 29.1m euros from the European Investment Bank (EIB).

The EIB gave Spyker a 400m euro loan in 2010 to help fund its purchase of Saab from General Motors of the US.

Victor Muller, chief executive of Spyker and chairman of Saab, said in a statement on Monday: “I would like to apologise to our dedicated employees, suppliers, dealers and customers for the disruptions of the past weeks.

“We will do everything in our power to restore the confidence in our company as soon as practically possible.”

Spyker had been in separate funding talks with Russian businessman Vladimir Antonov, and a number of Chinese car manufacturers.

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Real and Barca protests dismissed

The complaints lodged by Real Madrid and Barcelona following their ill-tempered Champions League semi-final first leg are rejected by Uefa.

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AUDIO: Raid eyewitness ‘heard heavy gunfire’

A man who unknowingly lived in the same town as Osama Bin Laden has said he heard “heavy gunfire followed by a huge blast”, as US forces attacked his compound.

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