Bishop offers shoe-shine service

Flashback to the Bishop cleaning shoes in Swansea for Maundy Thursday in 2010Bishop John Davies will spends two hours cleaning shoes near the market’s Oxford Street entrance
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The Bishop of Swansea and Brecon is to run a shoe-shine service at Swansea market for Maundy Thursday.

The Thursday before Easter is acknowledged by Christians as the day of the Last Supper, when Jesus washed the feet of his disciples.

The free service is from 1200-1400 BST, but the Right Reverend Rev John Davies hopes for donations to his Lent Appeal.

His good causes are three charities nominated by clerics as they have connections with the diocese.

Bishop Davies said: “On Maundy Thursday the Christian church remembers how Jesus washed his disciple’s foot – which was a dirty, stinking job usually done by the lowest servant.”

He said he hoped through this “modern day act of service”, people may feel “moved to go to their local church” on Easter Sunday.

Swansea lord mayor Richard Lewis is also taking part, cleaning the bishop’s shoes after his own have had the same treatment.

Bishop Davies offered the same service last year.

“This has become a special feature of the build-up to Easter in the city centre,” he said.

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Killer of woman, 89, was on drugs

George Norman JohnsonGeorge Norman Johnson had taken heroin and crack cocaine before killing Florence Habesch
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A man has admitted murdering an 89-year-old woman in her home while under the influence of heroin and crack cocaine.

George Norman Johnson killed Florence May Habesch in Rhyl, Denbighshire.

Johnson, who lives a few hundred yards away, had only vague memories of events leading to her death but knew he killed her, Caernarfon Crown Court heard.

He pleaded guilty to murder and was remanded in custody for sentencing, which will be on 3 May at Caernarfon.

Mrs Habesch died from “blunt force” head injuries, the court was told

His defence barrister said he had been under the influence of heroin and crack cocaine at the time of the killing in George Road.

Johnson was arrested in the Midlands after fleeing the murder scene in February.

Florence May HabeschFlorence Habesch’s family used to own a jewellery shop in Rhyl

The Habesch family were well known in the seaside town.

They used to own a jeweller’s store on the resort’s main street.

At the time of her death, Mrs Habesch’s family said she was a “private, respected lady who had many people that cared for her and who will miss her dearly”.

The court heard that a psychiatric report on Johnson did not assist his defence case.

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Top Bahrain activist ‘on trial’

Zainab al-Khawaja, daughter of leading Bahraini activist, 12 April 2011Zainab al-Khawaja ended her hunger strike calling for her father’s release.

A leading Bahraini human rights activist, Abdulhadi al-Khawaja, is standing trial in a military court, his daughter Zainab believes.

She said he told her the date, time and place of the trial, but when family members came to the court officials denied any knowledge of the case.

Mr Khawaja had called for the country’s leaders to be held to account after a brutal crackdown on recent protests.

He was seized from his home with two sons-in-law earlier this month.

Zainab al-Khawaja ended a week-long hunger strike after international activists said they needed her to speak up for those detained in the crackdown.

The family was turned away from the court on Thursday morning, although Mr Khawaja had pleaded with them to bring him fresh clothes in time for his appearance, the 27-year-old said.

“My father is a very strong man. He used to smile after being beaten-up,” Mr Khawaja’s daughter told the BBC.

But in a recent telephone conversation his voice was very weak and he kept telling his family the oppression was great, Ms Khawaja said.

“It was something that made me and my whole family very, very scared for him,” she added.

Human rights groups and Mr Khawaja’s family say he was beaten and arrested after masked and armed police entered their home on 9 April.

Demonstrators, mostly from the country’s Shia majority, have taken to the streets since 14 February in a series of escalating protests calling for democratic reform.

Some are also calling for an end to the rule of the al-Khalifa dynasty.

The uprising prompted the government to impose martial law and invite troops from Sunni-ruled neighbourhoods.

More than 400 activists and protesters have been arrested in recent weeks, Human Rights Watch reports.

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

Nokia market share falls further

Nokia C7 smartphoneInvestors have been awaiting news of how Nokia will boost its presence in the smartphone market
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Mobile phone maker Nokia has posted better-than-expected profits for the first three months of 2011, down 1% to 344m euros (£304m).

But its market share fell 4% to 29% as cheaper rivals and the popularity of competitors’ smartphones ate into Nokia’s dominance.

Nokia also said that it had struck a long-awaited deal to develop smartphone technology with Microsoft.

Investors welcomed the news, sending Nokia shares up almost 3%.

Stephen Elop, chief executive, said: “In the first quarter, we shifted from defining our strategy to executing our strategy. On this front, I am pleased to report that we signed our definitive agreement with Microsoft and already our product design and engineering work is well underway.”

The Finnish company’s slow response to the smartphone threat from Apple’s iPhone and the Blackberry handsets has been one of investors’ key concerns.

On Wednesday Apple unveiled a 95% rise in first-quarter profits, and said it had sold a record 18.65 million iPhones during the quarter.

Consultants Strategy Analytics said that Apple had now overtaken Nokia as the world’s largest handset seller in revenue terms.

Despite shifting more than 108.5 million handsets in the last quarter – almost six times that sold by Apple – Strategy says that the US’s firms revenues from its more expensive phones far outstripped its Finnish rival’s.

In a report published on Thursday, Strategy estimated that Apple’s wholesale revenues for its iPhone division were $11.9bn (£7bn, 8bn euros) in the first quarter, against $9.4bn for Nokia.

“Difficult times lie ahead as [Nokia] transitions the portfolio.”

Geoff Blaber Analyst, CCS Insight

Under the Microsoft deal, Nokia will start using the US company’s software on its smartphones instead of its own Symbian platform.

Nokia said the deal will enable it to cut annual costs by around 1bn euros.

Nokia’s group sales rose by 9% to 10.40bn euros, while smartphone sales were up 6% at 7bn euros.

The company’s key phone unit reported an operating profit margin of 9.8% for the January-March period, well ahead of analysts forecast of 8.6%.

However, Nokia said that for the full year, margins would fall to within a 6%-9% range.

“Finalisation of the agreement with Microsoft means Nokia can now focus on execution, but margin guidance underlines that difficult times lie ahead as it transitions the portfolio,” said analyst Geoff Blaber from CCS Insight.

Despite the drop in Nokia’s market share – the first time in a decade it has fallen below 30% – Sami Sarkamies, analyst at Nordea, said: “The first quarter was very strong, much better than expected.

“It seems the situation is under control, there were no dramatic changes,” he added.

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University has licence suspended

Glasgow Caledonian UniversityGlasgow Caledonian has 28 days in which to demonstrate it has addressed the problem
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Glasgow Caledonian University has had its licence to sponsor foreign students temporarily suspended by the UK Border Agency (UKBA).

The move came after an agency inspection indicated 150 Filipino nursing students had been working almost full-time.

The university said it was co-operating with authorities to resolve the issue.

Unions have called for an immediate inquiry into the running of the university.

The foreign students have been taking a BSC Nursing (Professional Development) course, which is understood to involve a large proportion of work-based learning.

Under immigration rules, students are allowed to work while they are studying, but only for a maximum of 20 hours a week.

But following an inspection last week, the agency expressed concern that students were working much longer hours.

It is understood students were found to be working full-time in care homes and had only been attending formal studies for one or two days a month instead of the required minimum of 15 hours a week.

Phil Taylor, UK Border Agency regional director, said: “I can confirm that Glasgow Caledonian University’s Tier 4 licence has been suspended following concerns about abuses of the immigration system.

“While we feel that this action is disproportionate, we are working with them to fully understand the issues and implement any changes needed as a result ”

Glasgow Caledonian University statement

“Highly trusted sponsors bringing in international students must ensure that they are attending the course for which they are enrolled and that they are complying with the requirements of the immigration rules.

“The UK Border Agency makes regular checks on sponsors, and where we find evidence that they are not fulfilling their duties, we may suspend their licence.”

The university now has 28 days in which to demonstrate it has addressed the problems or it could have its Tier 4 “trusted sponsor” licence revoked.

About 10% of the university’s 17,000 students are from overseas.

In a statement, the university said it expected the issues to be resolved in the near future.

It said: “As conversations are ongoing, the UKBA has asked the university to implement a 28-day suspension of our processing of immigration paperwork, as their processes require.

“While we feel that this action is disproportionate, we are working with them to fully understand the issues and implement any changes needed as a result.

“Our duty of care to our students is our absolute priority and they have time and again recognised that by voting us top in Scotland for international student support. We are proud of that, and will ensure it remains the case as we make any changes requested of us.”

Unions called for an immediate inquiry into the running of the university.

In a statement, the university’s combined union committee (CUC) claimed Glasgow Caledonian had become the first institution in the UK to have its Tier 4 licence suspended.

Dr Nick McKerrell, CUC convener, said: “Serious questions need to be answered by all senior management at GCU. Thus the unions are requesting an immediate independent inquiry into the running of the institution.

“Also our governing body, the Court, must convene an emergency meeting to make senior managers answer for their actions.

“We are in uncharted waters here. Only such actions will reassure staff that these issues are being taken seriously.”

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Woman denies biting off testicles

A mother of four accused of biting off her boyfriend’s testicles has denied grievous bodily harm.

Maria Topp, 43, allegedly attacked Martin Douglas at his Newcastle flat at 0400 GMT on 18 February.

He required emergency hospital treatment for his injuries.

Ms Topp, from Aycliffe Place, Wrekenton, Gateshead, appeared at Newcastle Crown Court for a brief hearing on Thursday to deny the charge. She was granted bail.

Her two or three-day trial will be fixed later.

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PM ‘uneasy’ about injunction use

David Cameron, at BBC ScotlandDavid Cameron suggested that new legislation could be needed
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Prime Minister David Cameron has said he feels “uneasy” about the development of privacy law in the UK.

He argued that Parliament, not judges, should decide on the balance between the freedom of the press and the right to privacy.

His comments follow a number of recent injunctions which have banned the identification of celebrities.

But a leading law firm has defended injuctions, saying they are not just for the rich.

Mr Cameron was challenged about the use of injunctions during a question-and-answer session at the General Motors factory in Luton.

He said that judges were using cases based on the Human Rights Act to develop a privacy law that left him feeling “a little uneasy”.

However, Mr Cameron admitted he had not got all the the answers and said he needed to think some more about it.

On Wednesday, High Court judge Mr Justice Eady agreed to issue a “contra mundum” order – effectively a worldwide ban – in the case of a man who sought to prevent publication of material about his private life.

Such orders were previously used to stop the publication of details about the killers of James Bulger, when a court ruled that there was a “strong possibility” that their lives would be at risk if they were identified.

A contra mundum order is intended to apply forever, and it applies to all those who might come to know of it – as opposed to forbidding the publication of details by a specific newspaper or journalist.

Giving his reasons for making the order, sought by the claimant at a hearing on 6 April, Mr Justice Eady said the High Court had the power to stop anyone and everyone from publishing material to protect an individual’s rights.

He said this power could be used “wherever it is necessary and proportionate”.

In a separate case, a married Premier League footballer who reportedly had an affair with Big Brother’s Imogen Thomas won the right to continue his anonymity.

The decision is seen by many as another step in the move by the courts to extend protections for the right to respect for privacy and family life under Article 8 of the European Convention on Human Rights.

But it also marks a further advance in the steps the courts are prepared to take in restricting the right to freedom of expression under Article 10 of the Convention.

The law firm Carter Ruck, which has represented famous figures seeking injunctions, defended the practice.

Carter Ruck managing partner Cameron Doley said that injunctions could be obtained by people who were not rich and they were not there just to help the powerful suppress scandals.

And he argued that “genuinely private people” had a right to protection.

Liberal Democrat MP John Hemming has criticised the cost of contesting an order, describing the system as “unbalanced”, and one that can be won by money rather than arguments.

But Mr Doley said that, since the cost of obtaining an order could cost in the low tens of thousands of pounds, it was within the reach of people who were not rich or famous.

“They may be professional people like doctors and lawyers who have some prominence but are not household names like John Terry.”

PR consultant Max Clifford said: “The privacy of the rich and famous seems to be exactly what the courts are determined to achieve.

“What we’ve got in this country now is a privacy law that wasn’t brought in by Parliament but the judges have decided what they want and that’s what they’ve achieved.”

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Man charged over Tesco murder bid

Stabbing

The man was stabbed at a Tesco store on the Ballygomartin Road

A 50-year-old man is in a serious condition after being stabbed at a Tesco supermarket on the Ballygomartin Road in north Belfast.

The incident happened at about 1630 BST on Wednesday. It is understood the injured man is a senior loyalist from the Shankill Road area.

A 30-year-old man was arrested a short time later at Twaddell Avenue

Police said the victim had multiple stab wounds as a result of the attack and was in a serious condition.

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Man bailed after reservoir deaths

Emergency services at Clywedog Reservoir, LlanidloesThe family were travelling from Machynlleth, where they had been on holiday
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A man has been bailed by police after a collision in which a woman lost her mother, husband and two foster children when their car plunged into a Powys reservoir.

Police said two cars collided on the B4518 at the Llyn Clywedog reservoir near Llanidloes on Wednesday, and one had entered the water.

A woman from Pontypridd escaped from the car, but her family died.

A local man was arrested on suspicion of causing death by dangerous driving.

Police said the family had been travelling from Machynlleth, where they had been on holiday.

The bodies were recovered with the help of the fire service, a diving team and RAF helicopters.

The car remains in the water, and specialist recovery is required.

Police said the two cars that collided were travelling in the same direction on the B road which skirts the reservoir, and one car plunged over a 20ft (six metre) bank into 30 ft (nine metres) of water.

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Al Fayed mulls bid for Pinewood

Mohamed al FayedMr Al Fayed said that ‘there can be no certainty that an offer will be forthcoming’
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Mohamed Al Fayed has revealed himself as the rival suitor for the Pinewood Shepperton film studio.

“Mr Al Fayed confirms he is considering making an all-cash offer for Pinewood,” said the Egyptian businessman in a statement to the London Stock Exchange.

“There can be no certainty that an offer will be forthcoming.”

Any offer would be in competition to an £87.8m takeover bid made earlier this month by Peel Holdings, a company run by billionaire investor John Whittaker.

Peel Holdings has offered 190 pence per share for the 75-year-old film studio company.

But as of lunchtime on Thursday, Pinewood’s shares had rallied 15% to 221p per share since the company first revealed on Wednesday that it had been approached by a possible second buyer.

Peel has recently sold the Trafford Centre to Capital Shopping Centres for £1.6bn and has already built a 29.78% stake in Pinewood.

Pinewood SheppertonLast Updated at 21 Apr 2011, 06:11 ET Pinewood Shepperton one month chartprice change %221.00 p+

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During 2010, Pinewood filmed the fourth instalment of the Pirates Of The Caribbean franchise, the final Harry Potter film and an adaptation of Jane Eyre.

Pinewood has studios in Buckinghamshire, and at Shepperton and Teddington in Middlesex.

Last month, Pinewood unveiled a 31% rise in pre-tax profits to £5.8m, and said it was looking to the future with “confidence” despite a poor economic climate.

The firm also unveiled an investment plan for small-budget British films.

The company will target films with production budgets of about £2m each and will invest equity up to 20% per film.

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