Blancer.com Tutorials and projects
Freelance Projects, Design and Programming Tutorials
world news,online new,us news,uk news
A global cinema audience will this week watch Danny Boyle’s stage production of Frankenstein. It’s the latest take on Mary Shelley’s famous Gothic novel. But what’s the book really about?
The idea emerged from a summer that didn’t happen.
Due to the largest volcanic eruption for more than 1,600 years, in Indonesia in late 1815, the northern hemisphere was plunged into a freakishly cool and sunless summer the following year.
On the shores of Lake Geneva, the miserable weather kept five British tourists cooped up inside a villa for days, where they passed the time in a horror story-writing competition. The 19-year-old Mary Godwin, in Switzerland with poet Percy Shelley, envisioned “the hideous phantasm of a man” and turned her contribution into a novel published anonymously in 1818.
It told the story of a Swiss scientist, Victor Frankenstein, who is so horrified by the ugly creature he brings to life from assembled body parts that he abandons him, with terrible consequences.
Within a few years, the novel was being adapted for the stage, and in the 20th Century there were many memorable film versions that took the work in different directions. This week, a production by Slumdog Millionaire director Danny Boyle at London’s National Theatre is being screened live to 400 venues in 22 countries.
Nearly 200 years after that sunless summer, the novel is considered a landmark work and every decade brings a new interpretation. Here is a selection – some include plot details.
1. Science can go too far
The term “Frankenstein foods” – applied to genetically modified products – suggests the name of the novel has become a byword for bad science. But this metaphor is unfair, says Angela Wright, a lecturer in Romantic literature at the University of Sheffield.
“There’s evidence that she was very conversant with the scientists of her day. But she believed in the sanctity of human life and knew the work of Lawrence and Abernethy, who were working in Edinburgh in the 1810s in dissection theatres, on the re-animation of corpses. [Her husband] Percy Shelley was also very interested in that.”
She thought these people had crossed a line, says Wright, but she had a lot of admiration for scientific thought in general.
2. Actions have consequences
1910: Thomas Edison makes first film1931: Boris Karloff (above) plays the monster1957-1974: Hammer Films produce a series of Frankenstein movies featuring Peter Cushing1974: Young Frankenstein parody by Mel Brooks1994: Kenneth Branagh’s film returns to novel2011: Frankenstein’s Wedding, BBC Three
It’s not just the responsibility of creating life that Shelley wants to emphasise, says Wright, and this is clear in the letters of Robert Walton that frame the Frankenstein story – the wider narrative that is often overlooked.
Walton is the seafarer who rescues Frankenstein from an ice float deep in the Arctic, as the scientist pursues the monster. Encouraged by Frankenstein, the captain ignores the pleas of his crew to to turn back, actions that Shelley appears to condemn.
“Walton doesn’t take responsibility for the safety of his men and that is criticised within the novel. He comes round but regretfully, simply because the atmospheric conditions are against him, not out of concern for his men.
“He seems to be a very shadowy double of Victor Frankenstein in many ways, because he pants for tales of romance and adventure in the same way.”
3. Don’t play God
“As suggested by the novel’s subtitle, The Modern Prometheus, Victor Frankenstein is an example of the Romantic over-reacher, who transgresses boundaries between the human and the divine,” says Marie Mulvey-Roberts, author of Dangerous Bodies: Corporeality and the Gothic.
According to Greek myth, Prometheus stole fire from the gods and gave it to man, and suffered eternal punishment. The sense that Frankenstein has pursued forbidden knowledge is further underlined by the references to Milton’s Paradise Lost, a work the creature reads and recites. His rejection by his creator can be seen as a second Fall of Man.
4. A warning about freed slaves
1797: Born in London to two major literary figures, Mary Wollstonecraft and William Godwin1814: Meets one of father’s acolytes, the married Percy Shelley, with whom she runs off to France1815: Gives birth prematurely and baby dies1816: Begins Frankenstein in wet summer on Lake Geneva with Shelley, Lord Byron and othersDec 1816: Shelley’s wife dies, he marries Mary1818: Frankenstein published1822: Percy Shelley dies1851: Dies after long writing career
Shelley was writing the novel a mere 10 years after the abolition of the slave trade in the British Empire, and she did so in Bath, not far from the port of Bristol, where many of the slaving ships departed the country. There are references to it in the novel, says Mulvey-Roberts.
“Frankenstein says he is enslaved to his work, and the creature escapes like a refugee slave, pursued by his master. But then there’s a power shift, so you get a hegemonic master-slave dialectic where the slave is a master and the master is a slave to his work and to his obsession.
“Mary Shelley was certainly no supporter of slavery but she did not protest when [Foreign Secretary George] Canning used the analogy of the Frankenstein as a spectre warning of the danger of slaves being emancipated too quickly. In the novel when the creature assumes mastery, he causes mayhem leading to the loss of life.”
5. Shelley’s maternal guilt
Many critics think the novel is shaped by the tragic events in Shelley’s own life. Her mother died days after she was born and Shelley herself lost her first child, born prematurely.
The first feminist interpretation of Frankenstein was by Ellen Moers, who read Shelley’s novel as a sublimated afterbirth, says Diane Hoeveler, from Marquette University in Wisconsin, US.
“The author expels her own guilt both for having caused her mother’s death and for having failed to produce a healthy son for Percy, as his legal wife Harriet had done three months earlier.
“For Moers, the novel’s strength was to present the ‘abnormal, or monstrous, manifestations of the child-parent tie’ and in so doing, ‘to transform the standard Romantic matter of incest, infanticide, and patricide into a phantasmagoria of the nursery’.”
6. Post-natal depression
The novel can be read as a critique of the family as much as a longing for one. The monster can be seen as a way of coping with the loss of her mother shortly after Mary Shelley’s birth as well as the loss of her own babies. It deals with the rejection, the lack of nurture – Victor’s solitary male propagation.
Marie Mulvey-Roberts
The feminist movement has championed the elevation of Mary Shelley to canonical rank, says Prof John Sutherland, former Booker Prize judge and an expert on Victorian fiction. And there are moments when the creation appears to be presented as a birth and Victor Frankenstein as a stricken mother.
“It was on a dreary night of November, that I beheld the accomplishment of my toils… It was already one in the morning; the rain pattered dismally against the panes, and my candle was nearly burnt out, when, by the glimmer of the half-extinguished light, I saw the dull yellow eye of the creature open; it breathed hard, and a convulsive motion agitated its limbs. How can I describe my emotions at this catastrophe, or how delineate the wretch whom with such infinite pains and care I had endeavoured to form?” (Frankenstein by Mary Shelley, Chapter five)
Is this, asks Sutherland, inventor’s remorse or post-natal depression?
7. Monsters are not born monsters
Boyle’s production suggests the scientist is the real monster The creature’s initial innocence suggests you are not born a monster, says Vic Sage, a professor at the University of East Anglia who has written extensively on the Gothic tradition.
“When he looks into the pool and sees himself, you want to shout out at him ‘You’re not a monster, you’re OK.'”
Many of the Hammer films didn’t even give the monster a voice, he says, only capable of grunting the odd word.
“Even with [director] James Whale, it doesn’t ever feel like history could ever be on Boris Karloff’s side. They are thought to be great films but they missed the point of the book.
“Mary Shelley gave him a voice. It’s great that he talks like an 18th Century philosopher because then you have this disparity between his appearance and his speech, which tests the viewer.”
8. Difference should be celebrated, not shunned
Today’s society has a greater understanding of the notion of difference, says Dr Sage, so the scene where Frankenstein rejects his creation, so repulsed is he by his disfigurement, has a wider resonance.
“Everyone reading it now knows that she’s dramatising difference in the most absolute way possible. Differences in race and class. That’s why it’s very important to think that the creature is a creature and not a monster, and that he has a voice.”
9. Vive la revolution
Within decades of the book’s publication, the central theme was picked up by cartoonists and used satirically, says Chris Baldick, author of In Frankenstein’s Shadow: Myth, Monstrosity and Nineteenth-Century Writing.
In 1843, a cartoon entitled The Irish Frankenstein appeared in Punch, and depicted Irish political leader Daniel O’Connell being threatened by a thuggish Irish peasant.
Forty years later, Charles Parnell appeared in the same magazine after the Phoenix Park murders, cowering from a simian-looking creature.
The inference in both cartoons was that the politicians had helped to create a monster.
Frankenstein’s creature has been interpreted as symbolic of the revolutionary thought which had swept through Europe in the 1790s, but had largely petered out by the time Shelley wrote the novel.
Critics said the creature’s failure to prosper and the havoc unleashed was evidence that Shelley was anti-revolution, unlike her radical parents and husband, and supportive of the old order.
But by applying modern values to the narrative, it is clear that the failings lie with man, the creator, and not the creature, says Dr Sage.
“That’s the notorious riddle: Who is the ‘new Prometheus’ of the title – Victor or his creature? You can read into it that it’s a failure of the revolution that he represents, but only if you don’t have the psychological and social attitudes of today.”
10. Christian allegory
The book is really a dialogue between reactionary and progressive points of view, says Sage, and this applies to the question of the presence of Milton and the Christian story – the treatment of the Fall – which it puts under the glass.
“The creature has read Milton but, as he says, he feels more like the fallen angel than Adam in that story, because he has to play the part of the outcast. Mary Shelley dramatises the conflict between the Romantic view of Satan as a Promethean hero, out to take God’s place, which was the projection of a set of male poets – Blake, Shelley, Byron and Goethe, for example – and the havoc that such idealistic projects wreak domestically, in people’s actual lives.”
This article is from the BBC News website. © British Broadcasting Corporation, The BBC is not responsible for the content of external internet sites.
The investigations began after allegations were made about police conduct at the rally on 9 December An investigation has begun into whether three Metropolitan Police officers colluded to falsely arrest a man at a tuition fees protest in central London.
A 20-year-old breached a cordon on 9 December and was chased and caught by an officer, the Independent Police Complaints Commission (IPCC) said.
But a subsequent conversation between the arresting officer and colleagues has sparked an inquiry, the IPCC added.
It will also consider when and how the man suffered a chipped tooth.
The matter was referred to the IPCC by the Metropolitan Police, a Scotland Yard spokesman said, and the force awaited the inquiry’s findings.
One of the officers had been wearing a sound device which recorded the pursuit and the man’s detention in Parliament Square.
It also recorded a discussion between the group of police and will now be examined as evidence.
“We are investigating a serious allegation that an officer colluded with colleagues to abuse his position by arresting a young man on false grounds,” said the IPCC’s commissioner Rachel Cerfontyne.
“We will also be looking at the circumstances of how the man suffered a broken tooth during his detention.”
The demonstration on 9 December was one of a series of rallies opposing the increase in tuition fees in England.
It was the day of the attack on a limousine carrying the Prince of Wales and the Duchess of Cornwall, which was surrounded by a mob as the couple were driven to the London Palladium.
This article is from the BBC News website. © British Broadcasting Corporation, The BBC is not responsible for the content of external internet sites.
Soderbergh rose to prominence with Sex, Lies, and Videotape Steven Soderbergh has announced his retirement from film-making saying his next two films will be his last.
“When you see those athletes hang on one or two seasons too long, it’s kind of sad,” the Oscar-winning Traffic director told US radio show Studio 260.
Soderbergh, 48, is planning a Liberace biopic, with Michael Douglas and Matt Damon, and a film version of The Man from U.N.C.L.E. with George Clooney.
Both were “a great way to sort of step off”, he added.
Soderbergh, who in 2001 was nominated for the best director Oscar for both Traffic and Erin Brockovich, said: “When you reach the point where you’re like, ‘if I have to get into a van to do another scout I’m just going to shoot myself’, it’s time to let somebody else who’s still excited about getting in the van, get the van.”
He said he had “a sense of having been there before”.
Ocean’s Eleven featured an all-star cast Making art was about solving problems but “at a certain point the solves sort of become the same”, he added.
The film-maker, who plans a new career in painting or photography, said that for the past three years he had “been turning down everything that comes my way”.
Soderbergh became the youngest winner, at the age of 26, of the Palme d’Or at the Cannes Film Festival for his 1989 film Sex, Lies, and Videotape, starring Andie MacDowell.
Other successes include the Ocean’s franchise – starring actors including Clooney, Damon, Brad Pitt, Catherine Zeta-Jones and Julia Roberts – and his 2008 Che Guevara biopic.
Aside from the Liberace and The Man from U.N.C.L.E. films, Soderbergh has two completed films due for release.
Action film Haywire, starring Antonio Banderas and Ewan McGregor, is due out next month while thriller Contagion, featuring actors including Kate Winslet and Jude Law, is expected later in the year.
This article is from the BBC News website. © British Broadcasting Corporation, The BBC is not responsible for the content of external internet sites.
The couple were murdered at Legahory Court in Craigavon Police investigating the murder of a couple in Craigavon have renewed their appeal for witnesses.
Husband and wife, Hugh McGeough, 56, and Jacqueline McGeough, 44, were murdered at their Legahory Court home at about 1100 GMT last Monday.
Police believe the couple let whoever killed them into their home.
The PSNI returned to the scene on Monday and talked to residents to gather more information about events before and after the shootings.
The officer in charge of the investigation, Detective Chief Inspector Richard Harkness, said the community had a “collective duty” to deal with the events in a “responsible manner”.
“The investigation is moving forward, but we would make more progress if people with information gave that information to police,” he said.
“Some media reporting of the murders and the investigation is inaccurate, unhelpful and dangerous.
“If the killer or killers are to be apprehended and brought before the courts, I need those individuals with information to come forward and provide me with details of what they know, what they have heard or what they have seen.”
Although police believe the couple were killed at about 1100 GMT, it was not until 1800 GMT, when their son called at the house, that their bodies were discovered.
Their son had called at the house at tea-time last Monday after he became concerned that his mother was not answering the telephone.
A motive for the killings has not yet been confirmed, but it is understood that police are investigating a possible drugs connection.
The house where the murders happened stands isolated in the middle of a field. It is fitted with security cameras and a number of security lights. The doors and windows are fitted with bulletproof glass.
BBC NI Home Affairs Correspondent Vincent Kearney said Mr McGeough has been described as “a well-known and prolific drug-dealer”.
“Hugh McGeough served a nine-year sentence for his part in the killing of Peter McNally, a 19-year-old shot about a mile away from the house in Craigavon in 2001,” he said.
“That killing was said to be part of a drugs war – a feud between rival drugs gangs. There is certainly a lot of speculation about this and it is a line that the police are pursuing.”
Detectives want to hear from anyone had any contact with Mr or Mrs McGeough between Sunday 6 and Monday 7 March.
They also want to talk to anyone who saw vehicles outside the couple’s home at 136 Legahory Court between 1100 and 1130 GMT last Monday or who saw anyone entering or leaving the house.
This article is from the BBC News website. © British Broadcasting Corporation, The BBC is not responsible for the content of external internet sites.
For the first time, the social network plots the development of a news story around the world by monitoring users’ status updates.
This article is from the BBC News website. © British Broadcasting Corporation, The BBC is not responsible for the content of external internet sites.
Amateur footage has emerged of the moment Friday’s devastating earthquake struck Japan. Footage shows teachers inside a second floor staff room at Osato Junior High School in Miyagi prefecture as the earthquake hit.
This article is from the BBC News website. © British Broadcasting Corporation, The BBC is not responsible for the content of external internet sites.
The couple confirm that they’re expecting a girl for their fourth child, which is due in July, after having three boys.
This article is from the BBC News website. © British Broadcasting Corporation, The BBC is not responsible for the content of external internet sites.
The Bank of Japan hopes to stabilise the financial markets after Friday’s earthquake The Bank of Japan is to inject 15 trillion yen ($183bn; £114bn) into the banking system to stabilise financial markets.
Tokyo’s Nikkei 225 Index fell 7% on the first day of trading after Friday’s quake as the markets assessed the full impact of the devastation.
The amount is the largest ever in a single operation by the Japanese central bank.
The bank also announced steps to ease monetary policy.
“We will take every possible measure, including providing liquidity, to ensure the stability of financial markets,” a bank spokesman said.
Japan is facing upheaval on a huge scale as it grapples with the massive clean-up operation, a potential nuclear meltdown, power shortages and huge disruption to the economy.
As the country comes to grips with the extent and scale of the devastation, consumers are expected to withdraw their savings to pay for immediate expenses.
Analysts say that the central bank is making sure there is no panic in the market by ensuring enough liquidity in the banking system.
The bank will also make available another 6.8 trillion yen ($73bn;£45.4bn) in the next two days.
During the Bank’s monetary policy meeting on Monday it also announced the expansion of an asset buying fund by 5 trillion yen ($60.8bn;£37.8bn) to support businesses.
In a statement the Bank said this was to “preempt a deterioration in business sentiment,”.
The nine-member policy board also voted unanimously to keep its key interest rate at virtually zero.
Japan’s central bank has kept interest rates at record lows in recent years in a bid to boost growth as the country struggles to emerge from the effects of the global financial crisis.
Now with the triple impact of the earthquake, tsunami and nuclear accident, many believe that Japan’s economy could be pushed back into recession.
As the central bank injects fresh funds into the economy and the estimated cost of rebuilding goes up, there are concerns about Japan’s growing deficit.
Japan has the largest debt in the industrialised world and the devastation caused by the earthquake and tsunami is likely to take that figure higher.
The nation’s credit rating was recently downgraded on concerns that not enough is being done to address it.
However, Japan’s debt is funded largely by local savings, so most analysts do not believe there is any immediate threat of a fiscal crisis in the country.
“We still see that the market will readily fund the government right now,” said Tom Byrne of ratings agency, Moody’s.
“We still don’t see an immediate fiscal crisis,” Mr Byrne added.
This article is from the BBC News website. © British Broadcasting Corporation, The BBC is not responsible for the content of external internet sites.
Coach Martin Johnson says England must up their game if they are to seal a Six Nations Grand Slam against Ireland on Saturday.
This article is from the BBC News website. © British Broadcasting Corporation, The BBC is not responsible for the content of external internet sites.
Critics of traffic management fear it could lead to a two-tier internet. The UK’s biggest broadband providers are to give clearer information about how they slow down users’ connections to maintain their network performance.
BT, Virgin Media and Sky are among the companies that will publish details of their “traffic management” policies.
The firms say they want to help customers understand why they need to vary connection speeds.
Critics claim the practice will lead to a two-tier internet where some services pay for faster access to their sites.
The code of practice has been drawn up by the Broadband Stakeholder Group, which represents most of the UK’s large internet service providers (ISPs).
Once it comes into effect, users will be able to view a breakdown of how and when their connection is restricted.
“There is a core of consumers who understand this stuff quite well, but it’s not something that most people are aware of at this stage,” said Anthony Walker, chief executive of the Broadband Stakeholder Group.
Mr Walker said that most companies already make information about their traffic management policies available, but the new guidelines meant that they would all use the same simple format – allowing customers to compare ISPs.
Members signing up to the code will have to give details about how much they reduce speeds, how long the reduction lasts and whether certain services are blocked, slowed down or prioritised.
Most internet service providers (ISPs) vary the speed of broadband connections depending on the time of day or volume of traffic on their network.
Tasks that are not speed critical, like downloading files or sending emails, are delayed slightly to ensure that other services, such as streaming video, run smoothly.
Most analysts agree that some form of traffic management is necessary.
“Go and ask someone on an ISP that doesn’t use traffic management,” said Andrew Ferguson, editor of the independent website Thinkbroadband.com.
“When congestion kicks in on a Friday night, they are the people who can’t go and play on their Xbox Live, they can’t play PlayStation online, because latency [network delay] has gone through the roof.
Many ISPs have begun exploring the possibility of offering “managed services” – effectively giving an exemption from traffic management to website and online applications that are willing to pay for it.
The idea has been met with widespread opposition from proponents of net neutrality, who believe that all internet traffic should be treated equally.
“We recognize that there are certain types of traffic shaping that need to occur in order to maintain the integrity of the network,” said Jeff Lynn from the Coalition for a Digital Economy (Coadec).
“But we see that as very different from developing business models in which a particular ISP takes money from 4 on Demand [for example] and makes it easier to download 4oD videos than it does BBC videos,” said Mr Lynn.
Jim Killock, executive director of the Open Rights Group, said that transparency on its own was not enough: “We need meaningful guarantees that ISPs will not act to restrict competition.
“If competition and innovation on the net suffers, that will damage the whole UK economy.”
The Broadband Stakeholder Group’s code of practice includes provision for ISPs to explore managed services: “offering a guaranteed quality of service for specified content, services or applications.”
However, that explicit mention of managed services does not constitute a declaration of intent, according to Mr Walker.
“This document doesn’t take a view on whether that is a good thing or a bad thing. That is part of a wider policy debate,” he told BBC News.
“If those services do start to emerge, it is really important that both consumers and policy makers are aware of it so that any policy or regulatory framework is based on clear evidence about what is happening in reality rather than just speculation or conjecture about what might happen.”
The code will be piloted by BSkyB, BT, O2, TalkTalk, Three, Virgin Media and Vodafone during 2011, with a review of how it is working in the following year.
Campaigners for net neutrality suggest that ISPs are only adopting voluntary measures in the hope that they will stay the hand of legislators and regulators across the UK and Europe.
There is some evidence that may be working.
The UK’s telecoms watchdog, Ofcom, launched a consultation on the issue of traffic management in 2010. It has yet to publish any findings, although it welcomed new the code of conduct.
Last November, the culture minister Ed Vaizey said that ISPs should be able to explore the use of managed services as a way of financing the UK’s growing internet infrastructure.
And European lawmakers also appear to be moving towards a more hands-off approach, opting to let the market decide.
The EU’s Digital Agenda Commissioner Neelie Kroes recently suggested that mobile users who found themselves disconnected for using Skype should “vote with their feet” and change provider.
This article is from the BBC News website. © British Broadcasting Corporation, The BBC is not responsible for the content of external internet sites.
This is thought to be among the largest group of pirates to be captured Dozens of pirates aboard a Mozambican ship have been captured by India’s navy after a gun battle in the Arabian sea.
The Indian navy says it seized 61 pirates and rescued 13 crew from the vessel, which had been used as a mother ship from where pirates launched attacks around the Indian Ocean.
Attacks by pirates off the Indian coast have become increasingly more violent.
Meanwhile, a Bangladeshi ship hijacked by pirates last year has been freed after a ransom was paid.
The M V Jahan Moni and 26 Bangladeshis aboard were released after the ship’s owners paid a $4m (£2.49m) ransom, company executives said.
It was captured in early December about 550km (341 miles) off the south-west coast of India on its way to Greece. It is now on its way to Oman.
The Mozambican fishing vessel, the Vega 5, had been hijacked in late December.
Two Indian navy ships intercepted the ship in the Arabian Sea nearly 1100km (695 miles) off the southern coast of Kochi and engaged in a gun battle, the navy said in a statement.
A large number of small arms and a few heavy weapons were also seized in the raid.
The Vega 5 had been a “risk to international shipping for the last four months, having carried out several attacks”, the navy statement said.
This is thought to be among the largest group of pirates to be captured. The nationalities of the pirates is not clear.
In February a group of 28 suspected Somali pirates were captured in the Indian Ocean in a joint operation between the Indian coastguard and the navy.
Piracy in the Indian Ocean has been on the increase as pirates seek to avoid naval patrols elsewhere.
This article is from the BBC News website. © British Broadcasting Corporation, The BBC is not responsible for the content of external internet sites.
Premier Wen Jiabao has often talked about the need for political reforms in China Chinese Premier Wen Jiabao has once again said China needs to carry out political reforms.
He said the economic achievements of the last 30 years could be lost without “institutional” changes.
The premier did not spell out exactly what reforms are necessary – and said they would have to be introduced gradually.
But his comments appear to put him out of step with more conservative colleagues.
More democracy?
Mr Wen made his comments at an annual press conference held at the end of China’s annual parliamentary session in Beijing.
When asked about political reform, he could have easily ducked the question.
But he said: “Without political restructuring, economic restructuring will not succeed and the achievements we have made in economic restructuring may be lost.”
That seems to put him at odds with another senior leader, Wu Bangguo, who only last week ruled out the possibility of major political changes.
In a speech to the parliament, Mr Wu said the economic achievements of the last few decades would, on the contrary, be lost if the system was changed too much.
There is though perhaps not as much distance between the two men as would first appear.
Chinese leaders often talk about making their political system more “democratic” and introducing reforms.
Most of the time they mean they want to improve the efficiency of the current system and make it more responsive to people’s demands.
Mr Wen added that change would have to come step by step – and under the leadership of the Chinese Communist Party, which has ruled China for more than 60 years.
He also said that there were no parallels between China and the countries of the Middle East and North Africa, countries that are currently going through political upheavals.
But Mr Wen – who has made similar comments before – did seem to go further than he needed to go.
People can currently vote for their own village leaders in China. The premier held out the possibility that direct elections could be extended beyond this limited level.
“If we are to address the people’s grievances we must allow the people to supervise and criticise the government,” he said.
With little known publicly about how Chinese leaders reach decisions – or what their real opinions might be – it is difficult to assess the importance of Mr Wen’s words, or where they might lead.
Perhaps nowhere. The premier is due to retire in two years’ time; he might already has one eye on his legacy.
This article is from the BBC News website. © British Broadcasting Corporation, The BBC is not responsible for the content of external internet sites.
Poor practice must never be tolerated, says Ruth Marks, the older people’s commissioner for Wales Care of some elderly hospital patients is “shamefully inadequate”, according to a review for Wales’ older people’s commissioner.
It found some patients degraded and humiliated and the commissioner, Ruth Marks, is calling for “fundamental change”.
Health Minister Edwina Hart said the findings will be considered as part of work to “improve patient care”.
Recommendations include improving discharge times and patient privacy.
The review was carried out following a public consultation and a poll of 1,500 people which found that one in five either knew someone who had a negative experience of hospital care, or had one themselves.
The panel, chaired by Dame Deirdre Hine, a former chief medical officer for Wales, gathered evidence through hospital visits and written evidence.
The report highlights as unacceptable a “lack of timely response to continence needs” which it found widely reported.
“Attitudes and practices that assault the dignity and self esteem of older people at a time when they are most anxious and vulnerable must be stopped”
Dame Deirdre Hine Review panel chair
It said the sharing of patients’ personal information within earshot of others “should cease wherever possible”.
The report said that “too many older people are still not being discharged in an effective and timely manner and this needs urgent attention”.
The review panel also heard that older people have low expectations of what to expect in terms of dignity and respect while in hospital.
“Attitudes and practices that assault the dignity and self esteem of older people at a time when they are most anxious and vulnerable must be stopped,” said Dame Deirdre.
The report, called Dignified Care? details recommendations, including the need to change the culture of caring for older people by empowering ward managers to run wards in a way that “enhances dignity and respect” as well as “prioritising continence care”.
Some of the findings in this report make for uncomfortable reading – and in many ways, that’s the point.
It draws attention to issues like avoidable incontinence, when people are denied the right to go to the toilet.
It says the effect is degrading and humiliating for patients – “an assault on their self respect”.
The report highlights the contrast between the good, compassionate care many thousands of older patients receive every day in Wales, and basic failures which erode the dignity of older patients.
Some of the problems – such as delayed discharges from hospital – are long standing.
Others, like the sharing of personal patient information could be addressed with very simple changes. But the need for change is becoming more acute.
The number of frail, elderly patients is increasing year on year – within 20 years, the number of people aged 85 and over is set to double.
At the same time, the Welsh NHS faces a shrinking budget in real terms – making improving patient care more difficult than ever.
Ms Marks said: “Fundamental change is needed to prevent what is sometimes shamefully inadequate care and treatment. Poor practice must never be tolerated.
“The attitudes, behaviour and sensitivity of staff on the wards are crucial.
“We need strong, positive leadership at all levels and a system which builds in dignity and respect as the cornerstone of high quality care.
“There are examples of effective leadership and good practice and it is vital these are built on and become the norm.”
Health boards and trusts which runs the hospitals concerned have three months to respond to the recommendations.
Mrs Hart said: “We are taking action in these areas but we will consider the report’s findings and recommendations as we continually work to improve patient care.
“Every day the health service cares for thousands of patients and the vast majority of patients are satisfied with their care.
“However, there will be occasions where the standard of care does not meet our high expectations and we must to all we can to reduce this.
“That is why it is so important that patients or relatives raise concerns to the hospital ward sister or other members of staff to ensure action is taken to address any issues.”
This article is from the BBC News website. © British Broadcasting Corporation, The BBC is not responsible for the content of external internet sites.
Chris Mullin (centre) said the release of the Birmingham Six was one of the best days of his life Twenty years ago the Birmingham Six were freed after their convictions for the murders of 21 people in two pub bombings were quashed.
They had served 16 years behind bars in one of the worst miscarriages of justice seen in the British legal system.
Paddy Hill, Gerry Hunter, Johnny Walker, Hugh Callaghan, Richard McIlkenny and Billy Power strode from London’s Old Bailey on 14 March 1991, their innocence finally proved.
Alongside the men as they left court greeted by cheering crowds and beeping car horns was Chris Mullin, a journalist and MP who had been working towards their freedom since the late 1970s.
“I was convinced that here were six civilians who were in the wrong place at the wrong time”
Chris Mullin
Mr Mullin, now 63, first became interested in the case when his journalist friend Peter Chippindale, who attended the men’s trial and that of the Guildford Four, told him “he thought they’d got the wrong men in both cases”.
Later, Mr Mullin, a law graduate, came across a newsletter by two Irish priests which presented the six men’s version of events.
Shortly afterwards Paddy Hill wrote to Mr Mullin from prison detailing his innocence. It was one of hundreds of letters Mr Hill penned to people he thought could help him.
The six men were from Northern Ireland and had lived in Birmingham since the 1960s.
Five of them had left Birmingham New Street train station for Belfast on 21 November 1974, the night the Tavern in the Town and Mulberry Bush pubs were bombed.
Five of the men were arrested at Heysham ferry port They were travelling to Belfast to attend the funeral of James McDade, an IRA member who had blown himself up planting a bomb in Coventry. They were arrested in Heysham, Lancashire, as they waited for the ferry to Northern Ireland.
Mr Mullin’s involvement in the case deepened with his passion to prove the men’s innocence.
“I was convinced that here were six civilians who were in the wrong place at the wrong time,” he said.
“They drank in the wrong pubs and clubs – while two of them worked with a man who was a genuine member of the IRA.”
Mr Mullin became a researcher for ITV’s World in Action in 1985 and aimed to “see if we could unearth new evidence” in the case.
The investigative current affairs programme, made by Granada TV, dedicated several editions to discrediting the evidence on which the six men had been convicted.
Mr Mullin said the main planks of evidence were “confessions” by four of the men and forensic evidence which their trial had heard was “99% accurate” in showing two had handled explosives.
Watch news footage of the Birmingham Six being released in 1991
Expert witness Frank Skuse said Mr Hill and Mr Power had tested positive for nitroglycerine in Griess tests – chemical analysis looking for the presence of organic nitrate compounds.
Other scientists had argued the test was unreliable because a positive result could be gained from nitrocellulose in a range of innocent products.
In the autumn of 1985, World in Action demonstrated how shuffling an old pack of playing cards containing the substance produced a positive Griess test. The accused men had played cards on their train journey.
Mr Mullin said a breakthrough came when an ex-police constable got in touch and “confirmed many of the violent tactics” the six claimed were used by the now defunct West Midlands Serious Crime Squad to secure confessions.
Mr Mullin said the alleged tactics included bringing dogs and shot guns into the cells and “conducting mock executions”.
The ex-officer was interviewed on World in Action in 1986.
In the same year, Mr Mullin published a book, Error of Judgement: The Truth about the Birmingham bombings, in which he claimed to have traced and met some of those actually responsible for the bombings.
The bombings happened while many people were out drinking in the city As demands for the case to be re-examined grew in Britain and Ireland, it was referred back to the Court of Appeal by the then home secretary Douglas Hurd. But the convictions were upheld in 1988.
It took three more years of articles, books and documentaries by a growing number of campaigners before the men’s convictions were again re-considered.
Mr Mullin said the day the men were released was among the best of his life.
“It was a very exciting moment,” he said. “It came a bit quicker than we anticipated. The Crown had abandoned the forensic evidence and confessions and was trying to upgrade the circumstantial evidence.
“And we had expected Michael Mansfield [defence lawyer] to continue his submissions but he said it was all ‘nonsense’ and sat down. At which point the judge quashed the convictions and the men were propelled outside to cheering crowds, cameras and helicopters flying overhead.”
“It was very good to be publicly vindicated”
Chris Mullin
Mr Mullin was with the men as they were driven in a convoy of cars to a party put on by the Catholic Chaplaincy in Hampstead.
Mr Mullin, who was the Labour MP for Sunderland South for 23 years, said he had received a lot of criticism for backing the case and still has the Sun’s front page declaring “Loony MP Backs Bomb Gang” on his office wall.
“So it was very good to be publicly vindicated so spectacularly,” he said.
The men’s release was a day of celebration for some but for many of those involved in the Birmingham bombings and the aftermath the scars will always remain.
The families and friends of the 21 people killed, and the many who were terribly injured, have never seen justice done.
The IRA is believed to have carried out the bombings but no one has ever admitted responsibility.
West Midlands Police said there were no plans to reopen the inquiry into the pub bombings but “it would look at any fresh information that came to light”.
Paddy Hill helped set up a group to help other victims of miscarriages of justice Mr Mullin said a miscarriage of justice such as the Birmingham Six case was “not likely” to happen now.
Interviews in police custody have to be recorded, a result of the Criminal Evidence Act 1984.
And the Royal Commission, set up after the Birmingham case, established the Criminal Cases Review Commission.
One of the Birmingham Six, Richard McIlkenny, died in 2006, aged 72.
In 2010, Mr Hill, who co-founded the Miscarriages of Justice Organisation (Mojo), won his fight to get trauma counselling on the NHS.
He told the BBC’s Hardtalk programme last month he still found it very difficult that none of the police officers he alleges played a part in his imprisonment have been prosecuted.
He said he told those looking for justice it would come from the most unexpected sources.
Mr Hill added: “The one thing about the British public – when they see an injustice they are not afraid to stand up and scream about it – and thank God.
“We were put into prison just to satisfy and to quell the public outcry and in the end it was the public outcry that got us back out again.”
This article is from the BBC News website. © British Broadcasting Corporation, The BBC is not responsible for the content of external internet sites.
From one of the earliest depictions of the continent – to the colonial scramble for land – the maps of Africa reveal a great deal about the people who have lived there through the centuries.
To try to shed new light on the African archives held by the Royal Geographical Society, London-based African community groups were asked for their views on the documents.
They spoke to Cliff Pereira and Zagba Oyortey – both African-born – who explain here how the maps tell the story of a changing continent.
Rediscovering African Geographies can be seen at the Royal Geographical Society in London between 22 March – 28 April 2011.
Exhibition images copyright RGS (with the Institute of British Geographers) – supported by the Museums, Libraries and Archives Council.
Music courtesy KPM Music. Slideshow production by Paul Kerley. Publication date 21 March 2011.
Related:
The BBC is not responsible for the content of external websites.
More audio slideshows:
The photography of Sir Wilfred Thesiger
This article is from the BBC News website. © British Broadcasting Corporation, The BBC is not responsible for the content of external internet sites.