Three held after man is shot dead

Breaking newsThe victim recieved a gunshot wound to the chest

A 36-year-old man has been shot dead in County Down.

Police said the shooting happened in the Rooney Park area of Kilkeel at 2230 BST on Saturday.

The victim recieved a gunshot wound to the chest during a row between two groups of foreign nationals in the town. A second man was shot in the leg.

Three men, aged 26, 31 and 36 have been arrested and are being questioned at Antrim police station.

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Three men charged over arms find

Police cordon south ArmaghPolice have set up a cordon around the scene of the operation in south Armagh
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Police in Northern Ireland have said they have made a “number of significant arrests” in relation to dissident republican activity.

The BBC understands three arrests were made in the raid near Keady in south Armagh, not far from the border with the Irish Republic.

Police have said that they cannot release any further information on the operation at this stage.

They said the threat remains “severe” and urged vigilance over Easter.

Since the murder of 25-year-old PSNI constable Ronan Kerr three weeks ago, police have warned that dissidents are continuing to target its officers.

BBC Northern Ireland’s Conor Macaulay, reporting from Keady, said police would not comment on claims that weapons may have been found in a car in the area.

“If weapons have been recovered, it will be the second success for the security forces since the murder of Ronan Kerr.

“In the days after his killing, rifles and explosives were found near Coalisland in County Tyrone.”

Police have asked the public to be both careful and patient over the Easter holiday period.

“Dissident terrorist groups are continuing to identify officers and target them with the single objective of killing them.

“And, in so doing, their reckless actions will also put the lives of our wider communities at risk.

“We ask for (the public’s) patience with their officers if they are inconvenienced due to police activity,” a spokesperson added.

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Flowers and sunshine for Queen on Easter Sunday

The Queen and the Duke of Edinburgh being presented with flowersThe Queen was presented with flowers from children amid glorious sunshine

The Queen was joined by members of the royal family as they attended an Easter Sunday service at Windsor Castle.

The annual Easter Matins took place at St George’s Chapel.

The Queen, dressed in a pale blue hat and suit, and the Duke of Edinburgh were presented with flowers from children amid glorious sunshine.

It was one of the last formal engagements before the wedding of Prince William and Kate Middleton at Westminster Abbey on Friday.

The couple did not attend.

Onlookers clapped as the Queen left the chapel before she chatted to local children and was presented with bouquets of flowers.

Also in attendance was the Princess Royal and her husband Vice Admiral Timothy Laurence, the Duke of York with his daughters Princess Beatrice and Princess Eugenie, and the Earl and Countess of Wessex.

The service was conducted by the Right Rev David Connor, the Dean of Windsor.

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‘No confidence’ on Gove policies

Education Secretary Michael Gove speaks to pupil at Pimlico AcademyMr Gove has made many decisions that have angered unions
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The NASUWT teachers’ union annual conference has passed a motion saying it has “no confidence” in government policies for education in England.

General secretary Chris Keates also accused Education Secretary Michael Gove of “educational vandalism” in a “report card” on his time in office.

He had “damaged school buildings” and lacked “attention to detail”, she said.

But the schools minister said the government wanted to extend better opportunities to vulnerable children.

Nick Gibb, addressing the annual conference in Glasgow, said the government was driven by a “mission to make opportunity more equal”.

But a resolution passed by delegates called for a campaign by all means necessary, including industrial action, to ensure a “national system of state education”.

It included an amendment that said teachers “have no confidence in the education policies of the Coalition Government”.

The text of the motion said: “The concerted political assault on teachers; the experiment with the diversity of providers in state education; increased autonomy for schools; and opening up the school system to marketeers and profiteers are a recipe for chaos”.

This would “continue to disenfranchise and disadvantage the vast majority of children, young people and the workforce”, it said.

Ms Keates styled her address as a school report on Mr Gove’s behaviour, drawing laughter from the floor as she referred to a wide range of decisions he has made which the union has opposed.

Chris Keates, Nasuwt‘State education is just not right for Michael,’ Ms Keates concluded

She said Mr Gove had been “involved in some educational vandalism” by “trying to break up the national pay and conditions framework”.

She added that he had been “getting into trouble over damage to school buildings”, in his decision to scrap the Building Schools for the Future programme, which the government said was wasteful.

The education secretary had been “caught encouraging others to behave badly” by “encouraging covert decision-making by heads and governors to minimise opposition – disenfranchising parents, local communities, staff and trade unions” as schools moved to become academies, she said.

He “really must pay more attention to detail” in his claims that England is dropping down international education league tables, she said.

She said that a recent OECD analysis had judged the UK to have met rigorous criteria that Sweden – an example Mr Gove often refers to – had not.

“His behaviour isn’t helped by the fact that he has made some poor subject choices,” Ms Keates said, as the English Baccalaureate championed by Mr Gove is “far too narrow for such a clever pupil”.

The EBacc is to be awarded to any student gaining good GCSE passes in English, maths, two science qualifications, a language and history or geography, but has been criticised for excluding subjects such as music, art, design and technology and RE.

“Michael has had one success,” Ms Keates concluded. “In 12 months he has managed to generate the levels of dissatisfaction among teachers that it took the last Tory government 18 years to achieve.

“Now at the NASUWT we don’t like to give up on anybody but I am afraid state education is just not right for Michael. I think a managed move might be on the cards.”

Mr Gibb, addressing the conference before Ms Keates spoke, said Mr Gove’s own upbringing “ignited a burning passion to extend better opportunities to the most vulnerable children”, he said.

Nick Gibb (Image: DfE)Mr Gibb said the government’s policies aimed to deliver equality of opportunity

He said the government was cutting bureaucracy, boosting teachers’ professional development and reducing prescription about how to teach, as well as extending free child care to disadvantaged two-year-olds and directing the £2.5bn pupil premium to benefit the poorest school students.

Mr Gibb was speaking less than a week after he was heckled as he addressed another teaching union, the Association of Teachers and Lecturers, over government plans to change the teachers pension scheme.

Mr Gibb told NASUWT members he acknowledged that proposals by Lord Hutton, in his review of public sector pensions, “had given rise to huge anxieties”.

He said the government was determined to retain defined benefit schemes, and was committed to ensuring that benefits already built up in teachers’ pensions were not affected.

The Department for Education is due to set out its proposals to alter staff pensions in the autumn.

Lord Hutton recommended that nurses, teachers and most other public sector staff work until at least 65, and receive pensions linked to career-average earnings, rather than final salaries.

The National Union of Teachers voted on Saturday to hold a ballot for strike action on the issue, but NASUWT says it will pursue negotiations first.

Mr Gibb also defended the schools budget, after shadow education secretary Andy Burnham criticised the government in a speech on Saturday, saying schools faced falling budgets.

The schools minister said the coalition government had faced “difficult choices” as it inherited a budget deficit “that was costing £120m in interest each and every day – enough to build 10 new primary schools, every single day”.

He said he was “proud” of the school budget settlement, under which per pupil spending has been maintained in cash terms to 2014-5, as other public services faced cuts.

Mr Burnham had said this means school spending will still fall by 1.1% in real terms over the next four years.

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Busby son ‘disgusted’ at TV film

Sandy Busby

Sandy Busby said his family were not consulted during the making of the film

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The son of Manchester United legend Sir Matt Busby has criticised a television drama about the Munich air disaster.

The film United tells the story of the aftermath of the 1958 crash which claimed the lives of 23 people, including eight of the team’s players.

Sandy Busby said he was “disgusted” with the portrayal of his father, who was seriously injured in the crash.

A BBC spokesman said the film, due to be shown on BBC Two on Sunday, was “a drama not a documentary”.

The drama focuses on Manchester United coach Jimmy Murphy, played by David Tennant, and how he rebuilt the team while Sir Matt, played by Dougray Scott, recuperated from his injuries.

Mr Busby said: “I can’t understand it, it’s called United, all about the Busby Babes. You think they’d contact the Busby family wouldn’t you?

“I was disgusted with the portrayal of my father. He had this camel coat on, and a fedora, and all through the film he was never seen in a tracksuit. He was known as probably the first tracksuit manager at that time. I was disgusted.”

Dougray Scott and David Tennant in UnitedScott plays Matt Busby to Tennant’s Jimmy Murphy in the drama

He said there were some terrible “stupid accusations” in the 90-minute film, and some omissions.

“Why didn’t they include other players that died and were injured in the crash? If I was one of their family I would be very upset.

“There was about eight players never mentioned. They never mentioned Tom Curry, who was a trainer at the time. He was the trainer in the dressing room, he was like a second dad to the lads.”

Mr Busby said he had spoken to the film-makers over his concerns and that he thought it was “very poorly done.”

A BBC spokesman said: “It was a dramatic choice to focus on the stories of Jimmy Murphy and Bobby Charlton but the same story could have been told in many ways as all are equally important.

“The film was researched using biographies, testimonies, documentaries, personal accounts, first-hand interviews and Manchester United FC Museum.

“The story of the Busby Babes is of huge social and cultural significance in this country and this film is a respectful and fitting portrayal of the spirit of the club and community as they fought to overcome this tragedy.

“As soon as the film was finished, a private screening was arranged in Manchester for the survivors of the film and the relatives of those who lost their lives. No one came forward to object.”

United will be shown on BBC Two at 2100 BST on Easter Sunday and can be seen afterwards on the iPlayer (UK only).

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Doctor Who opener watched by 6.5m

Doctor Who: The Impossible AstronautThe Impossible Astronaut was followed by a tribute to late Doctor Who actress Elisabeth Sladen on CBBC
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The first episode in the new series of Doctor Who was watched by an average audience of 6.4 million viewers, according to overnight viewing figures.

On a sunny day in parts of the UK, that was down from the eight million recorded by overnight figures on Matt Smith’s show debut in April 2010.

The Impossible Astronaut had an average audience share of 36.7%. Figures peaked at seven million.

The episode featured aliens partly inspired by Edvard Munch’s The Scream.

BBC One viewers watched as Smith’s Doctor was reunited with Karen Gillan’s Amy Pond, Arthur Darvill’s Rory Williams and Alex Kingston’s River Song in 1960s America.

While final consolidated viewing figures – which include playback on recording devices – will push ratings higher, The Impossible Astronaut is likely to be the least watched series opener since Doctor Who was relaunched in 2005.

The new episode was described by the Daily Telegraph as a “wordy episode which concentrated more on atmosphere than pace and visual thrills”.

Doctor Who series openers since 20059.6m – The Eleventh Hour – 3/4/2010 (Matt Smith)9.1m – Partners in Crime – 5/4/2008 (David Tennant)8.7m – Smith and Jones – 31/3/2007 (DT)8.6m – New Earth – 15/4/2006 (DT)10.8m – Rose – 26/3/2005 (Christopher Ecclestone)

Source: Barb consolidated figures

Thanks, in part to “fizzing dialogue” and “a great concept” for a new monster, it was “a cracking start” to the new series, the paper added.

The Los Angeles Times, reviewing the programme because it is shown on BBC America, said Smith had “screwed into this role good and tight”, praising his Doctor as “an ancient child, an unstable mix of authority and impulsiveness”.

But Kevin O’Sullivan, writing in the Sunday Mirror, said the episode was called The Impossible Astronaut because it was “impossible to understand” complaining that “this ball of all-round confusion was no way to start a series”.

The episode had been written for “strictly sci-fi nerds only”, he added.

Elisabeth Sladen and Tom Baker Sladen starred as Sarah Jane Smith opposite Jon Pertwee and Tom Baker, pictured, in Doctor Who

Saturday’s episode began with a dedication to the memory of the late Doctor Who actress Elisabeth Sladen who died of cancer this week at the age of 63.

The actress also appeared in four series of spin-off show The Sarah Jane Adventures on children’s channel CBBC, which began in 2007.

At the end of the The Impossible Astronaut, a tribute to Sladen – who starred opposite Jon Pertwee and Tom Baker as the Doctor’s assistant between 1973 and 1976 – was screened on CBBC.

Saturday night’s tribute featured Smith as well as his Doctor Who predecessor David Tennant.

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Sri Lankan ministers in IPL row

Deccan Chargers Captain Kumar Sangakkara Gandhi International Stadium in Hyderabad on April 14, 2011Sri Lankan stars like Kumar Sangakkara will have just days to prepare for England

Sri Lanka’s former sport minister has denied claims that he made a 10-year-deal allowing the country’s cricketers to play in the Indian Premier League.

Gamini Lokuge criticised his successor, current sports minister Mahindananda Aluthgamage, for making the claims.

Last week Mr Aluthgamage ordered the players to return from the IPL by 5 May to prepare for a tour of England, scheduled to start on 26 May.

But later he made a u-turn, saying Mr Lokuge had agreed a deal with India.

“The BCCI [Board of Control for Cricket in India] informed us that there is an agreement with Gamini Lokuge to allow Sri Lankan players to take part in the IPL,” Mr Aluthgamage told the BBC.

“I myself found that the former minister has come to such an agreement. Considering that and the close friendship between the BCCI and the Sri Lanka Cricket (SLC) we decided to allow the players to join the team in England on 19 May.”

But Mr Lokuge, who held the sports portfolio from Jan 2007 until April 2010, denied those claims, saying Mr Aluthgamage had been “ill-advised”.

“No such agreement was signed,” he told the BBC’s Sinhala service.

Mr Lokuge, who said he had always allowed the players to compete in the IPL, said that Mr Aluthgamage had eventually reached the “proper decision”.

The delay means some of Sri Lanka’s biggest stars – including Kumar Sangakkara and Mahela Jayawardene – will arrive in England with just a few days to prepare before the first Test match.

There was a similar controversy in 2008 when a tour of England once again clashed with the IPL.

Amid strong protests from the players, the England tour was cancelled and the players were allowed to take part in the IPL.

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Teachers step up academies fight

Primary school classroomThe Education Secretary says ideally all new schools should be academies
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Teachers are to step up the pressure on the government over its plans to rapidly expand the number of academies in England over the next few years.

Ministers want the independently-run, but state-funded schools to become the “norm” by the end of this Parliament.

They say the increased freedoms will enable head teachers to raise standards.

But the National Union of Teachers says the rapid growth in academies is part of a drive towards privatisation.

The NUT annual conference agreed on a concerted campaign, including strike action and legal challenges, over what delegates say is a “sham” consultation process.

Education Secretary Michael Gove has said he wants all schools to become academies, which operate outside of local authority control.

This month the Department for Education said there are now 600 academies in England – three times the number of academies when the coalition government came to power last May.

Academies can set their own curriculum, hours, and staff pay and conditions, and also gain control of a share of funding previously held back for borough-wide services.

Mr Gove argues that this flexibility enables head teachers to improve performance, and says any new schools, whether set up by community groups as free schools or by local authorities, should ideally be academies.

But he has stopped short of allowing either type of school to make a profit.

Delegates at the NUT conference in Harrogate said the rapid expansion of the programme warranted a national response from the union.

David Plews, from Lewisham, said some teachers are scared to fight against moves by their schools to convert to academy status.

He said: “We need a different strategy – we need to make this a national dispute.”

Alasdair Smith from Islington argued that legal challenges could be mounted on the basis of insufficient consultation.

He said: “The idea of the consultation is an absolute sham – you can make a decision to become an academy and then consult.”

Under the new rules on academy conversion, maintained schools only need consult with those whom they consider appropriate before converting.

And this consultation may take place after the Secretary of State has approved their outline bid for academy status.

A Department for Education spokesman said: ” The consultation may take place before or after an academy order or an application for an academy order has been made in respect of the school, but it needs to take place before the funding agreement is signed – ie before the school legally becomes an academy.”

The High Court overturned Mr Gove’s decision to scrap school rebuilding projects in a number of local authority areas on the basis of insufficient consultation.

And a group of mothers are mounting a legal challenge over their local authority’s decision to close a number of children’s centres before issuing a consultation.

Ivan Hickman, of Stoke, said that in some cases, the expected financial benefits of becoming an academy failed to materialise.

He said: “Funding is not as much as you were expecting and the lie of become an academy to get more money to protect our school does not add up – in practice it does not happen.”

Delegates also said they feared ministers wanted eventually to open up state education to profit, by expanding the role of free schools and academies.

Lambeth teacher Bridget Chapman said “edubusinesses are hovering like vultures to feed on the carcasses” of state schools.

And Geoffrey Gray of Leicestershire said the Conservatives had been planning their free school and academies policies for 13 years.

“Their aim is to create a fully-fledged market place by making academies the norm by the end of the Parliament.”

He added that because the academies expansion was growing school by school, trade unionists had been left fighting a “rearguard guerrilla campaign” when what was needed was a national plan of action.

NUT general secretary Christine Blower said Mr Gove has already said that he has no objection in principle to schools making a profit.

“The government cannot justify the transfer of publicly-funded assets in the form of school buildings and land into the hands of unaccountable sponsors or academy trusts.

“It is already becoming clear that the majority of free schools will be run by established academy chain sponsors or private companies.”

A spokeman for the Department for Education said: “We trust teachers and headteachers to run their own schools. This is a genuinely permissive policy – we want schools to decide what’s best for them, not politicians or bureaucrats.

“Many school leaders have already shown a keen interest in gaining academy freedoms. They want to use those powers to increase standards for all children and close the gap between the richest and the poorest.”

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South Sudan clashes leave 57 dead

Map of Sudan

At least 57 people have been killed in fighting between government forces and a rebel militia in South Sudan, officials have said.

South Sudan army spokesman Brig Malaak Ayuen said dozens were also wounded in the clashes in the state of Jonglei.

The local authorities accuse the government in Khartoum of backing the rebels to destabilise South Sudan, which will soon become independent.

The UN says more than 800 people have been killed in the region this year.

There are at least seven rebel groups operating in South Sudan.

Brig Ayuen said rebels led by Maj-Gen Gabriel Tang were responsible for the fighting on Saturday, south of the town of Malakal.

Gen Tang led a southern border militia allied to the government in Khartoum during Sudan’s 21-year civil war that ended in 2005.

His forces were accused of burning and looting southern villages along the Nile River during the conflict, which left two million people dead.

Members of the Sudanese armed forces loyal to Gen Tang in Malakal clashed with the Sudan People’s Liberation Army (SPLA) in 2006 and 2009 in breach of the peace deal. The 2006 fighting killed about 150 people.

He was pardoned by South Sudan’s president ahead of January’s referendum, in which southerners voted to secede. He also agreed to reintegrate his militia into South Sudan’s army.

In a separate incident in Jonglei, a Sudanese employee of the UN World Food Programme was killed on Friday by unknown assailants.

This week there have also been clashes in neighbouring Unity state, where a militia led by former SPLA Gen Peter Gadet began an assault on government forces, leaving at least 45 people dead.

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Candidate quizzed on ‘harassment’

Mike Powell, leader of the Welsh Liberal Democrat Alliance group on RCT CouncilThe Lib Dems’ website says Mr Powell is known for his “no-nonsense” politics

A Liberal Democrat Welsh assembly candidate is being investigated by police over the alleged harassment of aides to the local Labour MP.

Councillor Mike Powell, who is standing in Pontypridd, was arrested and bailed, and Labour said his computer equipment and a mobile phone were being examined.

South Wales Police confirmed a man has been questioned and bailed.

Lib Dems claimed there had been “malicious” complaints about Mr Powell. He has been asked to comment.

Welsh Labour confirmed that Allen Bevan and Gareth Mantle – aides to Labour MP Owen Smith – had complained to police, but said that they were not the only complainants.

It is understood one allegation centres around video footage of individuals being posted on the internet.

A posting on the Welsh Liberal Democrats’ website says Mr Powell “is well known for his positive, no-nonsense approach to politics”.

‘Inquiries ongoing’

A Lib Dem spokesperson said: “This is the latest in a long line of malicious complaints from Labour councillors about Mike Powell.”

Lib Dems also claimed that “these allegations have been given no credence by the ombudsman nor by the police who previously confirmed they would be taking no further action in these matters”.

A Welsh Labour spokesman claimed that police considered it was a serious matter.

Labour added: “However, as Mr Powell is now out on bail and the matter is in the hands of the South Wales Police, we do not think it would be appropriate to comment any further.”

In a statement, South Wales Police said they “can confirm that a 51-year-old man from Pontypridd has been questioned by officers after a complaint of harassment was made against him.

“The male has been bailed to return to a police station in May.

“Inquiries are ongoing.”

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Efforts to ease Old Firm tensions

Rangers and Celtic fansRangers and Celtic are meeting for the final Old Firm derby of the season
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Extra police are being deployed in efforts to prevent any disorder surrounding the Old Firm clash amid fears of a surge in violent crime.

Rangers host Celtic at Glasgow’s Ibrox stadium, with a win vital for both sides in the SPL title race.

Strathclyde Police are concerned about rising sectarian tensions after a parcel bomb was sent to Celtic boss Neil Lennon.

On Saturday, officers arrested two men in raids over online hate campaigns.

Chief Constable Stephen House has said 1,000 extra officers would be out to guard against a “perfect storm” of alcohol, sun and a bank holiday.

The game is set to kick off at 1230 BST. The force has said arrests and violence tend to increase around the fixture.

Meanwhile, detectives are continuing their hunt for whoever sent parcel bombs to Celtic manager Neil Lennon, Paul McBride QC and former MSP Trish Godman.

Officer have again appealed for information about a couple in their early 20s who were seen in the Ayrshire town of Kilwinning, on the day the most recent explosive device was found in a postbox there.

Two men were arrested and charged with sectarian breach of the peace on Saturday in an operation targeting abusive internet sites and dozens of others are being investigated.

The arrests were made in Paisley and Dalmarnock in the east end of Glasgow. The men are expected to appear at Glasgow Sheriff Court on Tuesday.

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