Hamadoun Toure, spokesman for the UN’s special representative for Ivory Coast: ”The countdown has started”
Blancer.com Tutorials and projects
Freelance Projects, Design and Programming Tutorials
world news,online new,us news,uk news
Hamadoun Toure, spokesman for the UN’s special representative for Ivory Coast: ”The countdown has started”
There has been heavy fighting in Ivory Coast’s main city, Abidjan, between forces loyal to the UN-recognised president, Alassane Ouattara, and supporters of incumbent Laurent Gbagbo.
Witnesses have reported hearing intense gunfire near Mr Gbagbo’s residence, while Mr Ouattara’s supporters say they have taken control of state television.
His government earlier closed Ivory Coast’s borders and declared a curfew.
Mr Gbagbo has refused to relinquish the presidency since November’s election.
But the national army has put up almost no resistance since Mr Ouattara’s supporters launched an offensive on Monday.
Pro-Ouattara forces reportedly now control about 80% of the country.
As the battle for control of the country appeared to reach a climax, gunfire was heard around several strategic buildings in Abidjan.
“[My troops] have come to restore democracy and ensure respect of the vote by the people”
Alassane Outtara
Heavy fighting was reported close to the headquarters of RTI state TV and Mr Gbagbo’s residence, both in the northern district of Cocody.
“The gunfire has been intense and they’re shooting in four or five directions at a time. There’s a lot of people,” a resident told the AFP news agency. “It looks like a final assault.”
A spokesman for Mr Ouattara’s government, Patrick Achi, said the former president had so far shown no signs of giving up.
Mr Gbagbo has not been seen in public for weeks. His residence is mainly protected by members of the elite presidential guard, and is located on a peninsula in Abidjan’s lagoon.
Mr Achi also said Ouattara loyalists had taken control of RTI. This could not be confirmed, but the channel went off-air late on Thursday.
Earlier, Mr Ouattara’s government said Ivory Coast’s land, sea and air borders had been closed until further notice. It also declared that there would be a curfew from 2100 GMT to 0600 GMT in Abidjan until Sunday.
Phillippe Mangou’s decision to seek refuge is bad news for Laurent Gbagbo – and certainly for the forces supposed to be defending the incumbent president in Abidjan. He was a known Gbagbo loyalist, but not as hard-line as some of the other generals.
It does now feel like the end of things for Mr Gbagbo. A credible source says the head of the gendarmerie, Edouard Kassarate, has gone over to the Ouattara side, with the military police en masse pledging allegiance to Mr Ouattara.
There are also rumours of people leaving, certainly most of Mr Gbagbo’s supporters have sent their children overseas – and there is talk of unrest at the airport as some people try to flee.
And after looting was reported in several parts of the city, UN and French peacekeepers took control of Abidjan’s international airport.
The BBC’s John James in Bouake says growing panic seems to be setting in among Mr Gbagbo supporters, especially following the decision of the head of the army, Gen Phillippe Mangou, to seek refuge with his wife and five children at the home of the South African ambassador.
On Thursday evening, Mr Ouattara’s television channel featured several high-level military officers pledging allegiance to his government. A source also told the BBC that the head of the gendarmerie, Edouard Kassarate, had defected.
The head of the UN mission, Choi Young-jin said that as many as 50,000 soldiers, police and gendarmes had abandoned Mr Gbagbo, with only the Republican Guard and special forces personnel remaining loyal.
“[My troops] have come to restore democracy and ensure respect of the vote by the people,” Mr Ouattara said in an address. “To all those who are still hesitating, whether you are generals, superior officers, officers, sub officers, rank-and-file… there is still time to join your brothers-in-arms.”
Western diplomats say it is only a matter of time now before Mr Gbagbo flees or is captured, our correspondent says.
Mr Ouattara’s government is giving assurances that the outgoing president will not be harmed, he adds. They say, instead, that Mr Gbagbo will be made available to the International Criminal Court.
Earlier, UN Secretary General Ban Ki-moon again demanded that Mr Gbagbo immediately cede power to Mr Ouattara “to enable the full transition of state institutions to the legitimate authorities”.
The US Assistant Secretary of State for African Affairs, Johnnie Carson, urged both sides to exercise restraint and protect civilians. Both Mr Gbagbo and his wife would be held accountable if significant violence broke out, he added.
Mr Ouattara was internationally recognised as president last year, after the electoral commission declared him winner of the November run-off vote.
The UN, which helped organise the vote, certified it as legitimate. However, Mr Gbagbo claimed victory after the Constitutional Council overturned Mr Ouattara’s win.
The forces supporting Mr Ouattara have made lightning advances since Monday, moving out from their base in the northern half of the country.
On Wednesday, his fighters captured Ivory Coast’s capital, Yamoussoukro, and the key port of San Pedro. Mr Gbagbo’s hometown of Gagnoa also fell.
Since the crisis began in December, one million people have fled the violence – mostly from Abidjan – and at least 473 people have been killed, according to the UN.
Sanctions and a boycott on cocoa exports in what is the world’s biggest producer of cocoa beans have brought West Africa’s second-biggest economy to its knees, with banks closed for more than a month.
An armed rebellion in 2002 split the nation in two – a division the elections were meant to heal.
Send your pictures and videos to [email protected] or text them to 61124 (UK) or +44 7725 100 100 (International). If you have a large file you can upload here.
This article is from the BBC News website. © British Broadcasting Corporation, The BBC is not responsible for the content of external internet sites.
Very low levels of radioactive iodine believed to be from the Fukushima nuclear plant are traced in rain.
This article is from the BBC News website. © British Broadcasting Corporation, The BBC is not responsible for the content of external internet sites.
Watch: US jobseekers forced to take lower-paid jobs
The US unemployment rate fell to a new two-year low in March of 8.8%, from 8.9% in February.
It was the fourth monthly fall in a row. The unemployment rate has fallen by a percentage point during the last four months.
Employers created 216,000 jobs in March, the US Department of Labor said, higher than market expectations.
“This suggests the recovery is continuing,” said David Sloan of IFR Economics.
Most of the new jobs were created in the private sector, in factories, shops and health care, as well as in education and several professional and financial services.
The new private sector jobs offset job losses in the public sector, mainly resulting from cuts by local government.
“The numbers are obviously good and one can hope that we will continue to see the market rise in continuing months,” said Bernard Baumohl, managing director and chief global economist of Economic Outlook Group.
If employers keep on creating jobs at this pace, as many economists expect, there will be a further 2.5 million new jobs in the US by the end of the year.
“The steep decline in the jobless rate and the solid employment growth in recent months are encouraging,” said the chairman of the Council of Economic Advisers, Austan Goolsbee, in a post on the White House blog.
That will do little, however, to alleviate widespread concerns that the economic recovery in the US is failing to create enough jobs to make up for the 7.5 million lost during the recession.
“As long as millions of people are looking for jobs, there is still considerable work to do to replace the jobs lost in the downturn,” Mr Goolsbee acknowledged.
Analysts were also worried about the possible impact of rising oil and other commodity and energy prices.
“There’s a nagging concern that the job outlook may be in jeopardy as energy prices keep escalating,” said Mr Baumohl.
“That will put a squeeze on household spending and business investments, and one has to wonder whether we’ll see the pace of hiring slow as a result.”
However, others pointed to slow wage growth, which could offset the impact of higher energy and commodity prices.
“Soft earnings still highlight that underlying inflation pressures are going to be restrained,” said David Mann, regional head of research for the Americas at Standard Chartered in New York.
Earlier this week, the US Department of Commerce unexpectedly cut its estimate of fourth-quarter growth to an annualised rate of 2.8%, from 3.2% previously.
This article is from the BBC News website. © British Broadcasting Corporation, The BBC is not responsible for the content of external internet sites.
Everton striker Louis Saha is expected to be ruled out for the rest of the season because of the ankle injury he sustained in the 2-1 victory over Fulham.
This article is from the BBC News website. © British Broadcasting Corporation, The BBC is not responsible for the content of external internet sites.
Miss O’Callaghan was found dead near Uffington, Oxfordshire Sian O’Callaghan is likely to have died of head injuries, an inquest has been told.
Miss O’Callaghan, 22, from Swindon, disappeared after leaving the town’s Suju nightclub on 19 March following a night out with friends.
Her body was found near Uffington, Oxfordshire, on Thursday last week. Christopher Halliwell, 47, of Swindon, has been charged with her murder.
The inquest was opened and adjourned at Oxford Coroner’s Court.
A Home Office forensic pathologist is still working to confirm a precise cause of death while Wiltshire Police continue to examine the remains of a second woman discovered in Gloucestershire.
Coroner Nicholas Gardiner said: “I think the actual cause of death has not yet been defined but is likely to be head injuries of some description.”
Miss O’Callaghan’s body was formally identified by Pete Shawe, the partner of her mother Elaine.
Mr Halliwell, a taxi driver from Ashbury Avenue, Swindon, has been remanded in custody to appear via video link at Bristol Crown Court on 8 April.
This article is from the BBC News website. © British Broadcasting Corporation, The BBC is not responsible for the content of external internet sites.
Emergency laws grant Syria’s notorious security services wide-ranging powers New anti-government protests have begun in several Syrian cities after Friday prayers, reports say.
Hundreds of people are rallying in the southern city of Deraa and also in Qamishli and Hassakeh in the north-east despite heavy security, witnesses say.
Activists have dubbed Friday a Day of Martyrs to honour the dozens of people killed during two weeks of protests.
President Bashar al-Assad said earlier this week that demonstrations were part of a foreign “plot”.
In a speech on Wednesday, Mr Assad did not announce the lifting of emergency legislation as some analysts had predicted.
However, the president later said he had directed a legal committee to look into lifting unpopular emergency laws – in place since 1963.
Backing for Mr Assad’s regime has also been in evidence, with huge crowds joining officially encouraged shows of support for the regime in Damascus on Tuesday.
On Friday, protesters took to the streets in Deraa, Qamishli, Hassakeh and also Latakia, eyewitnesses said.
“The one who kills his people is a traitor”
Worshipper in Damascus mosque
The marchers reportedly chanted “We want freedom!” and “The blood of martyrs is not cheap!”
The north-east is the centre for the Kurdish population, who until now distanced themselves from the protests across Syria over the past two weeks, the BBC’s Lina Sinjab in Damascus reports.
But in Qamishli and Hassakeh protesters chanted “Neither Arabic, nor Kurdish, we want a national unity” in an attempt to defeat any accusations of trying to make a Kurdish movement, our correspondent says.
She adds that in Damascus there is a heavy security presence around the main mosques – especially the Umayyad mosque where the first anti-government protest began.
Hundreds of security and pro-government gangs gathered around the mosque and later mixed with people praying inside.
The doors of the mosque were closed to prevent any protests, our correspondent says.
“We fear being arrested, we only want freedom for those who are detained. They (the government) have security and buses waiting for us outside,” one worshipper told the BBC.
People are also reportedly locked in the al-Rifai mosque in Damascus, where some of the prayers chanted “The one who kills his people is a traitor” and “We are all Syrians”.
So far they have been no reports of violence.
Activists and rights groups estimate that between 60 and 130 people have died in clashes in the past two weeks.
Government officials say the death toll is closer 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.
David Cameron says the Conservatives are delivering for Wales in Westminster as he joined the party’s campaign ahead of the assembly election.
The prime minister said public spending cuts were lower in Wales than England.
He hailed the decision to electrify the main railway line between London and Cardiff, and said ministers were looking at extending it to Swansea.
He told party members in Swansea the Tories had a “great manifesto” for the election on 5 May.
More follows
This article is from the BBC News website. © British Broadcasting Corporation, The BBC is not responsible for the content of external internet sites.
Manufacturers were hit by rising raw materials costs and slowing consumer demand UK manufacturing grew at its slowest pace for five months in March as new orders dropped following a slowdown in consumer spending, a survey has found.
The Markit/CIPS purchasing managers’ index fell to 57.1 last month, down from a revised 60.9 in February.
A score above 50 indicates growth in the manufacturing sector.
The survey also found that UK manufacturers increased prices to offset rising raw material costs and slowing consumer demand.
“The mini-boom in UK manufacturing ran out of steam during March as faltering domestic consumer confidence, inflationary pressure and supply chain disruption combined to slow down expansion,” said David Noble, chief executive of CIPS.
“Hopes that the UK economy might start to rebalance towards manufacturing seem to be withering on the vine,” he added.
This article is from the BBC News website. © British Broadcasting Corporation, The BBC is not responsible for the content of external internet sites.
Eileen Docherty was stabbed by John Docherty A taxi driver who claimed that he was sleepwalking when he stabbed his wife has been jailed for six years.
John Docherty attacked 56-year-old Eileen at their home in Penilee, Glasgow, in December 2009, leaving her permanently scarred.
The 57-year-old lodged a special defence claiming that he was acting during the onset of somnambulism.
A jury found him guilty of attempted murder following a week-long trial at the High Court in Glasgow.
The attack happened on 14 December 2009 at the couple’s home in Bowfield Crescent.
The court heard how Docherty had not been himself for a number of weeks prior to the incident.
He thought his wife of 37 years was seeing another man and began to check her mobile phone and text messages.
The father-of-two even joined her at work during one of her weekend shifts, the court heard.
“While you have a history of sleepwalking, you were not sleepwalking when you committed this dreadful crime”
John Beckett QC Judge
The pair eventually sought medical help and their GP later noted there was a marriage issue.
The evening before the attack, Docherty and his wife had gone on a night out with friends.
They returned to their home about midnight and Mrs Docherty went to bed leaving her husband downstairs.
Prosecutors said that in a drunken and jealous rage he grabbed a kitchen knife and attacked his wife.
The court heard Docherty’s 999 call in which he claimed there had been a fight. He also stated his wife had told him she had been with his friend.
Mrs Docherty suffered a number of wounds to her face, neck and hands. One doctor said they were potentially life threatening.
She told the trial that she still loved her husband, adding: “I basically know that he was asleep. There is no way he would have done this knowingly.”
Docherty – who had a history of sleepwalking – lodged a unique special defence claiming he had no recollection of the incident although accepted he had caused the injuries.
He also insisted that there had not been any bad feeling between himself and his wife.
But, sleep expert Professor Colin Espie told the court it was highly unlikely Docherty would have been asleep at the time.
Jailing the taxi driver, Judge John Beckett QC told Docherty: “You nearly killed your wife, but, during your time on remand, she has visited you in prison almost every day and has forgiven you.
“While you have a history of sleepwalking, you were not sleepwalking when you committed this dreadful crime.”
This article is from the BBC News website. © British Broadcasting Corporation, The BBC is not responsible for the content of external internet sites.
Bank of Ireland hopes to keep its independence Bank of Ireland shares have jumped on hopes the government will not have to take a majority stake in the firm.
Shares in the bank rose more than 36%, a day after the results of the stress test on the Irish banking system were announced.
The tests found the country’s banks will need an extra 24bn euros (£21.2bn) to survive the financial crisis.
Bank of Ireland said it would be able to meet its capital requirements and thus remain independent.
However, shares in Irish Life & Permanent fell sharply, and were down 58% by lunchtime.
“It seems very likely that the government will end up owning a majority stake in Irish Life & Permanent,” said Emer Lang, banking analyst with the stockbrokers Davy in Dublin.
“The painful consequence is that there is a shortage of capital of £21bn in these banks… That is a colossal sum for them to find.”
Bank of Ireland has been ordered to raise 5.2bn euros ($7.4bn; £4.6bn) by early summer to meet capital requirements. The bank said it would do so.
“It has potential to raise some of that through further debt management,” said Ms Lang, adding that some of the rest might come from existing shareholders, thus minimising the government’s involvement.
The Irish Republic’s government currently owns a 36% stake in Bank of Ireland. Investors hope it will keep its stake below 50%.
“The Bank of Ireland has at least a fighting chance of maintaining its independence,” said Ms Lang.
“It has three months to keep itself out of the government’s hands.”
Irish Life & Permanent has to raise 4bn euros. Emer Lang said it should be able to raise 1.1bn euros from its life business and from debt management, but that it would struggle to raise the remaining 2.9bn.
Shares in Allied Irish Banks initially fell 15%, but soon bounced back and rose 5.2%.
The bank is already majority-owned by the government, and the state’s stake might be raised, she said.
Allied Irish Banks is expected to be merged with building society EBS as part of a government plan to reduce the number of banks in the country.
Bank of Ireland and Allied Irish Banks are expected to become the two main “pillar banks” on which the banking system will rest in the future.
Most of the cost involved in restructuring the Irish banking system will be borne by the taxpayer.
Finance Minister Michael Noonan had tried to get German, US and UK investors in Irish bank bonds to share in the burden, but his plan was vetoed by the European Central Bank (ECB).
The ECB was concerned large investors might panic and thus make it harder for bond issuers to raise funds, thus causing a damaging credit crunch.
This would also mean Irish banks might find it difficult to raise funds in the future by issuing bonds.
“It would inhibit their capacity to get funds in the market in two and a half, three years time, if the people they are going to be seeking the funds from have shared in the burden – by burning the bondholders – to use the expression,” Mr Noonan said.
This article is from the BBC News website. © British Broadcasting Corporation, The BBC is not responsible for the content of external internet sites.
Police hope the card will encourage mothers to contact police about their child Mothers of young men believed to be involved in gun crime on Merseyside are being sent cards urging them to pass on information to police.
Merseyside Police are sending out the Mother’s Day cards which read: “Don’t keep mum about gun crime.”
They hope the message will encourage women to help turn their children away from a life involving gangs and guns.
Anti-gun campaigner Paula Ogungboro said the stunt was “disgusting” and would devastate some mothers.
The force said the aim of the card was to get mothers to contact the Matrix team, the gun and gang crime unit.
Det Ch Supt Paul Richardson said: “We want to reduce gun crime on our streets and stop anyone else from getting seriously injured or killed through the futile use of guns.
“We are hoping that the strong bond between a mother and her child will help mothers to come forward and speak to us so we can help to prevent their child from being jailed, seriously injured or even killed.
“Would they like their mother to get a card like that? It’s quite distasteful”
Paula Ogungboro Mothers Against Guns
“No mother wants to lose a child and I would urge anyone who knows that their sons, or daughters, have got links to gangs involved in guns, to contact us and help us tackle the issue before it is too late.”
Mrs Ogungboro, 53, from Toxteth, launched campaign group Mothers Against Guns in Liverpool after her son, Eugene, was shot dead in 2003.
Asked what she thought of the idea, she replied: “I think it’s disgusting actually.
“At the end of the day any mum that know their kids are dealing in guns would say something to their child.
“But to send them a Mother’s Day card… Would they like their mother to get a card like that? It’s quite distasteful.
“It’s not the mothers that’s got the gun is it? At the end of the day it’s the kids who have got the guns and it’s down to the police to deal with the kids, not the parents.”
Mrs Ogungboro said there would be a number of mothers unaware of what their children were up to, adding that she would be “devastated” to receive such a card.
This article is from the BBC News website. © British Broadcasting Corporation, The BBC is not responsible for the content of external internet sites.
Yemen has been hit by weeks of demonstrations Tens of thousands of people are taking to the streets in Yemen again as the country’s political crisis deepens.
In the capital, Sanaa, two rival demonstrations will be held – in support of and against President Ali Abdullah Saleh.
Representatives from the government and the opposition are reported to have met and agreed to avoid confrontation.
Protests in recent weeks have brought President Saleh’s 32-year-old rule to the verge of collapse.
He is under increasing pressure both at home and abroad to resign immediately.
The UK Foreign Office has urged Britons to leave Yemen as soon as possible, and warned of a “high possibility of violent demonstrations” on Friday.
A BBC correspondent in Sanaa says tens of thousands of demonstrators are marching in two different directions in the capital.
Anti-government protesters are moving towards the renamed “Change Square” near the university, while supporters of the president are gathering in the city’s Tahrir Square some 2km (1.2 miles) away.
President Saleh has offered to step down in 2012, but the opposition wants him to go now Our correspondent says only a political deal between the government and opposition will resolve this crisis, but for now all talks have stalled and neither side is willing to back down.
President Saleh has agreed to resign by January 2012, but the opposition is calling for his immediate departure.
Western diplomats in Sanaa say they are pushing for a transfer of power, our correspondent reports.
President Saleh, for many years, was an ally of the West and seen as vital in the war against terror and tackling the presence of al-Qaeda in the country. Mr Saleh says that without him al-Qaeda could still take over the country.
But, increasingly, many people both at home and abroad are viewing him as the main source of instability, our correspondent adds.
Send your pictures and videos to [email protected] or text them to 61124 (UK) or +44 7725 100 100 (International). If you have a large file you can upload here.
This article is from the BBC News website. © British Broadcasting Corporation, The BBC is not responsible for the content of external internet sites.
Radiotherapy is used to treat prostate cancer Prostate cancer screening does not save lives, according to a 20-year study, published in the British Medical Journal.
One in four newly diagnosed cancers in UK men is prostate cancer.
Last year, the body which regulates screening in the UK advised against routine screening.
The UK National Screening Committee said this study provided further evidence that the harms outweigh the benefits.
Prostate cancer kills 10,000 people in the UK every year.
While there is no screening programme, men over 50 may still request a test.
This latest study was carried out in Norrkoping in Sweden. It followed 9,026 men who were in their 50s or 60s in 1987.
“The potential harms significantly outweigh the benefits of screening”
Dr Anne Mackie UK National Screening Committee
Nearly 1,500 men were randomly chosen to be screened every three years between 1987 and 1996. The first two tests were performed by digital rectal examination and then by prostate specific antigen testing.
The report concludes: “After 20 years of follow-up, the rate of death from prostate cancer did not differ significantly between men in the screening group and those in the control group.”
The favoured method of screening is the prostate specific antigen (PSA) test.
However, around 15% of men with normal PSA levels will have prostate cancer and two-thirds of men with high levels of PSA do not in fact have prostate cancer.
One study has suggested that to prevent one death from prostate cancer you would have to screen 1,410 men and treat 48 of them.
Dr Anne Mackie, programmes director of the UK National Screening Committee, said: “This evidence provides further support for the recommendation the Committee made in November not to screen for prostate cancer at this time.
“At the moment the potential harms significantly outweigh the benefits of screening. We will re-assess the evidence for prostate cancer screening against our criteria again in three years, or earlier if new evidence warrants it.”
Dr Sarah Cant, head of policy and campaigns for The Prostate Cancer Charity, said: “Whilst this research suggests that screening men for prostate cancer doesn’t reduce the number of men dying from the disease, this was a relatively small study and not all the screening rounds used the PSA test, which is the most effective test we have at the moment to indicate prostate problems that might be cancer.
“We know from another larger study that screening using the PSA test can reduce mortality rates.
“However, this previous trial showed that screening can lead to many men undergoing unnecessary treatment for a harmless prostate cancer. The Prostate Cancer Charity therefore doesn’t believe there is enough evidence yet to support a screening programme.”
This article is from the BBC News website. © British Broadcasting Corporation, The BBC is not responsible for the content of external internet sites.
Real Madrid boss Jose Mourinho says Cristiano Ronaldo, Karim Benzema and Marcelo will not play in the Champions League quarter-final first-leg tie against Tottenham.
This article is from the BBC News website. © British Broadcasting Corporation, The BBC is not responsible for the content of external internet sites.
The 14-year-old girl was attacked as she walked into the school in Wollaston, Stourbridge A teenage girl has been airlifted to hospital after suffering suspected stab wounds as she walked into school in the West Midlands.
Police said the 14-year-old pupil suffered serious injuries at Ridgewood High School, in Park Road West, Stourbridge, at about 0840 BST.
An 18-year-old man, who was held by witnesses at the scene, has been arrested and will be questioned later.
A West Midlands Police spokesman said the man was known to the girl.
Clive Nutting, head teacher at Ridgewood High School, said the school had been closed for the rest of the day.
The scene has been sealed off while investigations are carried out.
Ch Insp Mark Bramwell, of West Midlands Police, said: “We are in the very early stages of this inquiry, however we do believe this to be an isolated incident and wish to reassure other pupils and parents that there is not any known risk to any other individuals.”
Police said the girl was injured as she was walking into school.
Her family have been informed.
Parents of other children have been asked to collect them from the school.
This article is from the BBC News website. © British Broadcasting Corporation, The BBC is not responsible for the content of external internet sites.