Heart drugs ‘may curb dementia’

ECGA heart trace or ECG can show up the problem

Treating stroke survivors for a heartbeat problem called atrial fibrillation (AF) might prevent many patients from going on to develop dementia, UK experts believe.

Research into nearly 50,000 patients’ records found that AF after a stroke more than doubles the risk of dementia.

Doctors say we should now investigate whether more vigorous treatment with drugs to control AF might delay or even prevent dementia.

The work appears in Neurology journal.

Atrial fibrillation is the most common heart rhythm disturbance and affects up to 500,000 people in the UK.

Although not usually life-threatening in itself, it does increase the risk of stroke.

“These results may help us identify potential treatments that could help delay or even prevent the onset of dementia”

Lead researcher Dr Phyo Kyaw

Blood-thinning drugs and medication to slow the irregular heartbeat are often prescribed to reduce stroke risk.

Now experts at the University of East Anglia in the UK believe tighter management of AF might also offer some protection against dementia.

They looked at research where people with and without AF were followed up to see how many went on to develop dementia.

By analysing 15 separate studies they found that stroke survivors with AF were 2.4 times more likely to develop dementia than stroke survivors who did not have the heart condition.

About a quarter of patients with stroke and atrial fibrillation were found to have developed dementia during follow-up.

Lead researcher Dr Phyo Kyaw said: “These results may help us identify potential treatments that could help delay or even prevent the onset of dementia.

“Options could include more rigorous management of cardiovascular risk factors or of AF, particularly in stroke patients.”

Rebecca Wood of Alzheimer’s Research UK said: “While this paper shows there is a link between atrial fibrillation and dementia, we don’t yet know if treating atrial fibrillation will prevent or delay the onset of dementia.

“More research will give us the answers we urgently need.”

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

Mother in murder leaflet appeal

Daniel SmithDaniel Smith was shot as he left a fast-food restaurant
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A mother’s plea to help find the killers of her son is to be taken to schools in north London.

Daniel Smith, 22, was shot in Harrow Road, Paddington, in May 2010 in what is believed to be a case of mistaken identity.

His mother intends to hand out leaflets outside Brent and Westminster schools to help catch the culprits, in a move backed by the Metropolitan Police.

The leaflet is headed with “Murder, why would you do it?”

It contains a short letter from Mr Smith’s mother, Winnie Smith, asking: “Why didn’t the people who killed him just aspire to be like Daniel?

“They would then be known as men. My son was amazing. We still feel cheated by the people who are shielding his killers.”

Detectives have offered a reward of up to £20,000 to help catch the killer.

“There must be people who were there at the time and have not yet spoken to us – we would very much like them to come forward”

Det Ch Insp John Crossley Metropolitan Police

Mr Smith, from Paddington, who lived with his mother and two sisters, had been out with a friend before stopping at a KFC fast food restaurant on his way home.

Eyewitnesses said he was shot as he walked back to his car. He managed to stagger into the takeaway but collapsed and died later in hospital.

Det Ch Insp John Crossley, who is leading the investigation, said: “Harrow Road is a busy main road, where the number 18 bus runs.

“There must be people who were there at the time and have not yet spoken to us – we would very much like them to come forward.

“We also believe that the people responsible live locally, and have been talking about this crime.”

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

Lab-grown urethra ‘world first’

Cell culture workThe graft was cultivated in the lab
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The world’s first tissue-engineered urinary tubes or urethras, grown in the lab using patients’ own cells, have been hailed a success by medical experts.

US surgeons have used the lab-grown tubes to treat five Mexican boys with damaged urinary tracts.

They told the Lancet that all of the boys are now fit and that the grafts have taken and repaired the defects.

The same team has already managed to grow new bladders for patients.

Professor Anthony Atala and colleagues are currently working to engineer more than 30 different replacement tissues and organs.

He is director of the Wake Forest Institute for Regenerative Medicine in Winston-Salem, North Carolina.

The first step in engineering the replacement urethras was taking a small sample of cells from the bladder of each of the boys.

Aged 10 to 14, the boys had suffered injuries in accidents.

“Totally grown in the laboratory, these urethras, living tubes which convey urine from the bladder, highlight the power of cell-based therapies”

Professor Chris Mason Regenerative medicine expert at UCL

From these samples, the scientists isolated the cells they would need to grow the new structure that expels urine from the bladder.

These cells, needed to make the muscle, lining and supportive tissue, were nurtured and multiplied in the lab for weeks until they were plentiful enough for the job.

They were then placed onto a biodegradable mesh that was shaped into a tube and sized to be a perfect fit for the patient.

After a week of incubation to allow the cells to take to the mesh, the lab-grown grafts were surgically transplanted into the patients.

Six years on the grafts are still doing well, looking and functioning exactly like a normal urethra in the five boys who are now entering their teens.

Without this revolutionary treatment they boys would have required an artificial graft that has up to a 50% chance of failure, or would have faced a life of probably incontinence and repeated urine infections.

Professor Chris Mason, an expert on regenerative medicine at University College London, said: “Totally grown in the laboratory, these urethras, living tubes which convey urine from the bladder, highlight the power of cell-based therapies.

“When an organ or tissue is irreparably damaged or traumatically destroyed, no amount of drugs or mechanical devices will restore the patient back to normal. If the goal is cure, then cell-based therapies are the answer.

“Using living cells as ‘medicines’ is a major step-change in clinical practice. Cell-based therapies complement drugs and devices by aiming to cure the large unmet medical needs of our generation, including blindness, diabetes, heart failure, Parkinson’s disease and stroke.”

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

Cuts ‘to hit 28,000 police jobs’

Bonnet of a police carPolice forces in England and Wales face funding cuts of 20% over the next four years
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Government cuts will claim 28,000 police jobs, the Association of Chief Police Officers (Acpo) has said.

The Acpo estimate for England and Wales has been made in a confidential memo to ministers published in the Guardian.

Acpo predicts the jobs of 12,000 police officers and 16,000 civilian staff will be lost as a result of spending cuts.

Meanwhile, the Winsor review of police pay and conditions to be unveiled on Tuesday is expected to recommend cutting £180m in annual bonuses.

Greater Manchester Chief Constable Peter Fahy confirmed the job loss forecast – representing a reduction of about 12% of posts – to the Guardian.

He said: “We will have fewer staff, the same or more demands, and will need to incentivise staff to produce higher quality.”

The review of police pay by former rail regulator Tom Winsor is set to suggest scrapping a series of allowances and bonus payments, and reducing the amount of overtime.

He is also expected to consider areas such as police housing, travel allowances and shift patterns, in an attempt to modernise working practices and make the service more cost-effective.

Mr Winsor has said his review represents a “once in a generation” opportunity for reforming a pay structure he described as a “mess”.

Acpo said overtime was needed to allow forces “to respond flexibly to any event or crime at any time whether it be a flood, a major murder investigation or public order incident”.

BBC home affairs correspondent Danny Shaw says the Acpo figures are the latest and most reliable figures on police job cuts since Chancellor George Osborne’s Spending Review last October.

Home Secretary Theresa May has warned that reductions in police pay are “unavoidable” in order to minimise front-line job losses.

Speaking at the weekend, she said: “We are working with police forces to identify savings that actually go beyond the reduction on the central policing grant in the next four years.

“I know that some will reject in principle the very idea of reviewing pay and conditions, but I remind them that those savings will save the jobs of thousands of police men and women.

“Nobody is pretending decisions like these will be easy.”

Shadow home secretary Yvette Cooper said the figures were the “latest nail in the coffin for the prime minister’s claim that he would protect the front line at all costs”.

“Chief constables are being put in an impossible position by a government that seems happy to ride roughshod over public safety and the morale of the police force,” she said.

“The government is cutting too far and too fast with 20% frontloaded cuts.

“The home secretary and her ministers have a blind arrogance in their dealings with the police.

“Rather than working with them, they are bludgeoning police numbers, their budgets and their operational capacity.”

The government is planning to cut its funding for the police by 20% by 2014-15.

The 43 forces in England and Wales currently employ about 244,000 people, comprising 143,000 police officers and 101,000 civilians.

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

UK growth tipped to slow in 2011

Job centreThe BCC said it believed that the Bank of England will raise interest rates in May
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The UK economy will grow by less than expected in 2011 but growth in 2012 will be better than predicted, the British Chambers of Commerce forecasts.

The group downgraded its forecast for UK GDP growth in 2011 to 1.4% from a December forecast of 1.9%.

The BCC said the downward revision was due to an unexpected fall in fourth quarter GDP.

It also increased its unemployment forecast for early 2012 to 2.65 million, up from 2.6 million.

However the BCC, which represents hundreds of small businesses, raised its prediction for 2012 growth to 2.3% from 2.1% in December.

The forecast comes a day after Prime Minister David Cameron gave a speech at the Conservative Party spring conference in Cardiff highlighting the importance of the private sector to the UK’s economy.

He pledged to stand behind entrepreneurs and stand against what he called the “enemies of enterprise”

Interest rates

BCC director general David Frost said: “British businesses will welcome the Government’s desire to boost enterprise and reduce red tape but these words must be backed by action.”

“While we support efforts to reduce the UK’s deficit, these measures alone will not deliver a sustainable recovery,” he added.

The BCC said it believed that the Bank of England will raise interest rates in May from the current historical low of 0.5%.

But the group warned that such a move could be premature at this stage of the economic cycle.

Separately the financial services firm PriceWaterhouseCoopers has issued a report suggesting that the Monetary Policy Committee of the Bank of England should not raise interest rates before the economic recovery is secure, despite concerns over inflation.

“The MPC faces a difficult task in balancing upside risks to inflation against downside risks to growth,” said John Hawksworth, PWC’s chief economist.

“Our own judgement, however, is that the MPC should not be increasing rates until it is clear that the recovery is secure. We do not believe that it needs to increase interest rates immediately to meet its target of a 2% CPI inflation rate in two years time,” Mr Hawksworth added.

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

US ‘to name Locke envoy to China’

Commerce Secretary Gary LockeGary Locke was the first Chinese-American to be appointed to the role of US commerce secretary
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President Barack Obama is to nominate Commerce Secretary Gary Locke as the new US ambassador to China, senior administration officials have said.

If confirmed, Mr Locke would replace current ambassador Jon Huntsman, who is due to leave the post on 30 April.

Mr Huntsman announced his resignation last month, fuelling speculation he may be preparing a 2012 White House bid.

Mr Locke, whose father was born in China, is the first Chinese-American to serve as US commerce secretary.

The formal announcement of his nomination as ambassador to China is expected on Tuesday, officials said.

The appointment would need to be confirmed by the US Senate.

Mr Locke, who joined the Obama administration in March 2009, is a former two-term Democratic governor of Washington state.

Mr Huntsman, a Republican former Utah governor, was appointed Beijing envoy by Mr Obama in 2009.

The White House has declined to speculate on Mr Huntsman’s future plans.

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

Fair access levy for universities

Students in a lectureUniversities have been told how much they should give back to support poorer students

Universities in England wanting to charge fees of £9,000 per year could have to spend £900 of that income on access for poorer students.

The Office for Fair Access (Offa) has published guidelines showing how much universities should spend on fee subsidies and outreach projects.

It sets a sliding scale ranging from 15% to 30% of fee income above £6,000.

Offa’s director, Sir Martin Harris, says poorer students might feel they “cannot afford to go to university”.

The guidelines from Offa provide the clearest rules so far on how much universities should spend on ensuring that higher tuition fees from 2012 do not exclude poorer students.

Universities which have a “low proportion of under-represented students” are being advised to spend about 30% of fees above £6,000.

This would mean that some of the most prestigious universities charging £9,000 per year would have to spend £900 of this fee income on projects to support and recruit students from poorer backgrounds.

In universities which have a “high proportion of under-represented students”, the guidelines suggest payments of 15% – or about £450 if fees were set at £9,000.

“There is a real risk that disadvantaged students in particular will start to feel they cannot afford to go to university”

Sir Martin Harris Office for Fair Access

If universities fail to deliver, Offa can refuse to sign the next annual access agreement – which would prevent a university from charging more than £6,000 per year.

The guidelines propose more spending on means-tested fee waivers and outreach work with schools, rather than on bursaries.

The government has raised the upper limit for tuition fees to £9,000 per year – and Sir Martin warns that the perception of such fee levels might put off poorer students, despite the financial support available.

“We are now entering uncharted territory and none of us can predict exactly how the new higher fees will affect student behaviour. There is a real risk that disadvantaged students in particular will start to feel they cannot afford to go to university,” says Sir Martin.

Offa has a track record of reaching agreements with universities by consensus and conversation – and has never imposed a sanction.

These latest guidelines are also suggested levels, rather than precise thresholds – to be discussed and reviewed between institutions and Offa – and the access watchdog is not taking on the role of a price regulator.

Imperial College LondonImperial College, Exeter and Cambridge have signalled fees of £9,000 per year

Universities themselves will decide whether they have high or low levels of under-representation – with agreement from Offa – and there will not be any fixed national benchmarks for such levels.

Deputy Prime Minister Nick Clegg had claimed that access agreements would mean universities such as Oxford and Cambridge would have to “dramatically increase” the numbers of students drawn from poorer backgrounds.

But the 1994 Group of research universities welcomed the fact that the guidelines allow universities to set their own targets.

“By allowing universities to set their own widening participation benchmarks Offa have recognised that each university has its own priorities, and will be best placed to set the most appropriate measures,” says 1994 Group executive director Paul Marshall.

Having raised the fee level to a maximum of £9,000, the government is now wrestling with a lack of funding if too many universities set fees at this level. The funding for financial support for students is based on fees averaging £7,500 per year.

But many universities have warned that they will need at least this level to replace the funding withdrawn in government spending cuts.

Ministers dispute the claim that universities will need to charge so much.

Universities say they are already committed to widening participation – working with schools, organising visits and providing bursaries and scholarships.

The proposals for £9,000 fees from Cambridge University already include plans for a means-tested fee waiver of £3,000.

The Russell Group of leading universities says its members spend £75m a year on access projects – and that the biggest barrier for poorer applicants is that they are not getting good enough results in school.

But the Russell Group welcomes the flexible approach which allows universities “scope to set their own targets and milestones for access work”.

The Million+ group of new universities highlighted the areas that remain unclear – such as access for part-time students.

Sally Hunt, head of the UCU lecturers’ union, said plans for higher education were in a “shambolic state”.

“Universities are in a very difficult position as they try to set fees for a new untried system. Students are in a difficult position as they start to consider where they might like to study as how much it will cost them to study won’t be clear until the summer,” she said.

NUS leader Aaron Porter said the access regulator should now be in a position to ensure universities with poor records on access “are not allowed to continue to make excuses or pass the buck”.

Universities Minister David Willetts said: “The government has been clear that universities charging more than £6,000 who are not meeting their access benchmarks should redouble their efforts to widen participation.”

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

Mediation for city tram companies

Edinburgh tramThe tram project is already behind schedule and over budget
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Both sides in the Edinburgh tram dispute are to meet to try to break the deadlock that has brought work on the £545m project to a virtual standstill.

A contractual dispute between the tram company Tie and contractors Bilfinger Berger has pushed the project over budget and behind schedule.

Tie has refused to give any details of the mediation process.

But it is understood talks will take place at a hotel and will include Transport Scotland representatives.

It is thought the negotiations could take up to two weeks to complete.

Tie’s chief executive, Richard Jeffrey, said: “Mediation is a critical juncture for the tram project and I am confident that all parties can work together to find a way forward.

“While we understand that there is a lot of interest in the process it is vital that it is carried out in private in order for us to gain the best deal possible for the city, and all those involved have agreed to maintain a policy of confidentiality throughout.”

Sue Bruce, council chief executive, said: “I believe everyone involved in the tram project, as well as the people living and working in Edinburgh, has a vested interest in the outcome of the mediation process.

“We all want to see the project continue as quickly as possible and get trams running in the city, however it is crucial that those involved are given the opportunity to work to find a solution for going forward.”

The Scottish government has capped its investment in the project at £500m, with the city council paying the remainder.

The local authority has been taking steps to increase its contribution to up to £100m to cover additional costs, but council chiefs have said they do not know how far a £600m budget will go.

It is hoped the route will be finished by the end of 2013.

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

House sales rise but prices dip

Looking in an estate agent's windowThe survey suggests that Scots seem to be more confident than those in other parts of the UK
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There is more evidence of pick up in the Scottish housing market, according to the surveyors body RICS.

It said the number of homes sold in Scotland during February rose and the number of people enquiring about property for sale also rose sharply.

However, prices dipped as sellers dropped their prices to attract buyers.

Scotland along with only two other areas of the UK – London and the north east of England – saw a rise in demand for property.

RICS Scotland director Graeme Hartley said: “Scotland’s property market is once again showing different results to the rest of the UK.

“Scots seem to have more confidence in the market, despite the need for large deposits and a possible interest rate rise.”

Many of the surveyors responding to the survey said they had seen an increase in people wanting up-to-date home reports.

Andrew MacFarlane of Graham + Sibbald in Hamilton said: “We have experienced an increase in home report instructions but also of refreshed home reports; an indication that properties on the market for some time are beginning to attract buyers.”

He added: “Home reports are also proving to be a catalyst for home repairs and upgrading, and an improvement in housing stock available. Of the home reports we have prepared and defects identified, 60% of those reports prompted repair work.”

Other surveyors said they also had experience that homes were being presented for sale in a better state of repair.

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

Huhne to hail ‘green jobs’ boost

Engineer insluating loftMinisters are calling for a “step-change” in the way homes are insulated
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The government will help pay to train 1,000 apprentices to insulate homes as part of its “green deal” energy plan.

Announcing the move, Chris Huhne will say a “big injection” of skills and cash is required if ambitious energy efficiency targets are to be realised.

The energy secretary will also outline deadlines for progress on electric car and carbon capture and storage schemes.

Environmental campaigners say there is a lack of clarity about how the UK will move to a low-carbon economy.

The Lib Dem minister will herald the apprenticeships scheme as evidence of how government and business should work together to create jobs and speed the transition to a more sustainable economy.

Under the plan, the government will cover the cost of training 16- to 18-year-old apprentices and will share the cost for over 19-year-olds with businesses which may include B&Q and British Gas.

It is envisaged that the apprentices will become experts in installing cavity and solid wall insulation in homes and more energy-efficient heating systems in business premises.

“Building a greener future must be at the heart of this month’s Budget”

Friends of the Earth

Ministers want to accelerate the green deal programme – under which homeowners will get their properties insulated at no upfront cost and reimburse firms carrying out the work from the savings they make on their energy bills.

Mr Huhne has said he hopes the programme will sustain 100,000 jobs within five years and that a “step-change” is needed to make energy-saving technology more widely available.

“To succeed, we will need a big injection of skills and investment,” he will say. “These apprenticeships are a perfect example of how government and business can work together to a low-carbon future.”

Amid criticism that government plans to achieve this are too vague, he will unveil a draft “carbon plan” containing specific deadlines in high priority areas such as power generation and transport.

The first contract to set up a demonstration carbon capture and storage project will be awarded by the end of the year, the Green Investment Bank will be operational by September 2012 and a “nationwide strategy” to promote installation of electric vehicle infrastructure will be in place by June.

“This carbon plan sets out a vision of a changed Britain,” Mr Huhne will argue, “with more secure energy supply and more stable energy prices and benefiting from the jobs and growth a low carbon economy will bring.”

The BBC’s Environment Analyst Roger Harrabin said businesses had complained of a “policy vacuum” in energy policy amid uncertainty over oil price volatility, continuing support for technological development and changing consumer behaviour.

Friends of the Earth said development of a low-carbon economy must be a “top priority” for ministers.

“Building a greener future must be at the heart of this month’s Budget,” its Head of Climate Action Mike Childs said. “Thousands of new green jobs could be created if we invested in the UK’s vast green energy potential and slashed energy waste.

“Continuing to put short-term political interests ahead of our long-term security will create an economic crisis that will dwarf our current financial problems.”

Labour has accused ministers of “confusion and indecision” over planned incentives for people to replace fossil fuel energy systems with renewable ones, and on “feed-in tariffs” to reward small-scale residential energy production.

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

Double murder inquiry launched

breaking news

A double murder inquiry has been launched after a man and woman were shot dead in a flat in Craigavon, County Armagh.

Their bodies were discovered in the property in Legahory Court just after 1800 GMT on Monday.

Detectives from the PSNI’s serious crime branch are investigating the circumstances of their deaths.

Police have appealed for anyone who noticed unusual or suspicious activity in the area to contact them.

BBC Newsline reporter, Julie McCullough visited the scene of the shootings.

“It is unclear which flat it happened in because the police cordon covers a wide area,” she said.

“The names of the man and woman who were killed have not been released yet.

“We believe the man was in his 40s and the woman who was killed, was his girlfriend.

“There has been a lot of rumour and speculation here as to why these shootings happened, but at this stage the police haven’t confirmed anything.”

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

‘Old Firm’ faultline

Celtic and Rangers fansThe Old Firm fixture goes back more than 100 years
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What is so extraordinary about an ill-tempered football match that it has to be discussed at a government summit convened at the request of the police?

The simple answer is that the game was between Celtic and Rangers.

The Barcelona motto, “Més que un club”, meaning “More than a club”, could also apply to these two Scottish giants.

They are institutions, split largely along religious, cultural and political faultlines. When there is fallout from a game, it can go far beyond the pitch.

Last week, following a Scottish Cup replay at Celtic Park, it did.

During a volatile match, which Celtic won 1-0, there were three Rangers players sent off, several touchline and tunnel confrontations and 34 arrests inside the stadium.

Police described the events as “shameful”, with politicians and the Scottish Football Association also being highly critical.

Scotland’s First Minister Alex Salmond later agreed to host a summit in Edinburgh following a request from Strathclyde Police.

So how did Celtic and Rangers arrive here?

Both clubs are known collectively as the “Old Firm” – a term of association, which unsurprisingly, is unpopular to some of their fans.

Brother WalfridCeltic were founded by Irish Marist brother Walfrid

Although the origin of the label is not clearly known, it has become accepted that it refers to the commercial benefits that flow from the great rivalry.

Both clubs are from Glasgow – Scotland’s largest city – but like other giants of world football, their appeal draws support from a worldwide fan base.

It is across the water, however, in Ireland, that the origin of their bitter rivalry can be found.

Celtic were founded by an Irish Marist brother – Walfrid – and historically draw their support from the descendants of Irish Catholics who emigrated to Scotland after the Great Famine.

The club also has a substantial well of support across Northern Ireland and the Republic.

Rangers were founded by brothers Moses and Peter McNeil, Peter Campbell and William McBeath and have traditionally drawn support from Scotland’s mainly Protestant community.

It also has a substantial support in the mainly Unionist Northern Ireland.

Although both clubs attract support from other sections of society, it is this religious divide which has come to define the fixture’s 100 years plus history.

For many Celtic fans, their club is an integral part of the Irish diaspora, and embodies a unique Irish Scots identity that has overcome discrimination in employment, housing and education to fully play a part in modern Scotland.

Across the city, many Rangers fans see their club as “quintessentially British”, with a pro-Union ethos which is often expressed through strong support for the monarchy and the country’s armed forces.

The physical manifestation of these historical differences can be seen in the strips, flags and songs of both clubs.

But why should these cultural differences be a problem for an internationally famous derby match?

The answer, for some authorities in Scotland, is that they have fed a sectarian-fuelled hatred between the clubs’ fans that too often leads to unacceptable levels of violence and anti-social behaviour.

Critics accuse both sets of Old Firm fans of sectarian singing, which would not be tolerated in any other social gathering.

Jack McConnellJack McConnell held a sectarianism summit while he was First Minister

They also claim the fixture lies at the root of high levels of alcohol-related violence on match days and that modern Scotland cannot, and should not accept this any longer.

The most infamous case of disorder came during the 1980 Scottish Cup Final when both sets of fans ended up on the field after Celtic had triumphed 1-0.

The resulting riot saw supporters attack each other and hurl bottles, cans and bricks, while mounted police charged the fans in a desperate bid to restore order.

With the full shame played out on live television, the fallout was profound.

In the aftermath, alcohol was banned from every ground in Scotland and the police presence at games was greatly increased.

Over the years, there have been other notable incidents involving players, referees and fans, but nothing on this scale.

If the alcohol ban and eventual introduction of all-seater stadiums went some way to addressing the issue of violence, it did nothing to diminish the charge of sectarianism which has been continually levelled at both sets of fans.

In 2005, the then First Minister, Labour’s Jack McConnell, hosted an anti-sectarianism summit after referring to the issue as “Scotland’s shame”.

There was much debate but it did little to diminish what critics perceived as the core problem.

Since then, Rangers have been fined twice by Uefa for sectarian chanting by some fans.

One song – the so-called “Famine song” – has been ruled as racist by Scottish courts and also attracted widespread criticism from the Irish Republic.

Celtic have not been without their own problems too.

Poppy on Celtic shirtSome Celtic fans protested against the Poppy being used on the club’s strip

There was heavy criticism when a representative of one fans’ group, the Celtic Trust, said chants about the IRA were “songs from a war of independence going back over a hundred years”.

A section of fans, who call themselves the Green Brigade, also caused controversy when they unfurled a banner condemning the club’s participation in the Poppy commemoration.

Supporters of both clubs could no doubt lengthen the crime count of their rivals, but in the eyes of critics, however unjustifiable it may seem to some fans, they are both as bad as each other.

In recent years, senior police have become increasingly bullish about the problems they have to deal with when the Old Firm go head-to-head.

Figures have been published which show a sharp rise in domestic abuse incidents and serious assaults during and after the fixture.

More recently, some senior police officers have stepped up pressure by calling for the fixture to be banned, or played behind closed doors.

There have also been claims, from police again, that the fixture will cost the country up to £40m this year.

In the wake of last week’s ill-tempered Scottish Cup replay, Strathclyde Police requested a summit to address issues of Old Firm-related disorder.

Amid the continuing fallout on the field, what can Tuesday’s meeting in Edinburgh achieve?

No doubt, the police hope it will lead to renewed efforts to reduce sectarian behaviour and violence and a rebuke for both clubs over recent on-field and touchline conduct.

But critics have accused them of blowing last week’s events out of all proportion and lacking perspective in a bid to, perhaps, lever more resources during a time of budget pressures.

They also ask how can two football clubs be held responsible for wider social problems such as alcohol-related violence and anti-social behaviour.

Throw in the cultural baggage of both clubs, and the summit has an unenviable task.

Whatever the outcome, the Old Firm game is, once again, a political football.

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

UK ‘over-reliant’ on GPS signals

Artist's impression of Galileo satellite in orbit (Esa)Global Navigation Satellite Systems underpin a considerable proportion of economic activity
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The UK may have become dangerously over-reliant on satellite-navigation signals, according to a report from the Royal Academy of Engineering.

Use of space-borne positioning and timing data is now widespread, in everything from freight movement to synchronisation of computer networks.

The academy fears that too many applications have little or no back-up were these signals to go down.

Receivers need to be capable of using a variety of data sources, it says.

Dr Martyn Thomas, who chaired the group that wrote the report, told BBC News: “We’re not saying that the sky is about to fall in; we’re not saying there’s a calamity around the corner.

“What we’re saying is that there is a growing interdependence between systems that people think are backing each other up. And it might well be that if a number these systems fail simultaneously, it will cause commercial damage or just conceivably loss of life. This is wholly avoidable.”

Global Navigation Satellite Systems (GNSS) such as the US-operated Global Positioning System (GPS) are hugely popular and are finding more and more uses daily.

As well as the car dashboard device that provides directions, sat-nav systems are used by cellular and data networks, financial systems, shipping and air transport, agriculture, railways and the emergency services.

It is not just the excellent positioning that GNSS affords but the very precise timing information these systems deliver that has made them so popular.

The European Commission, in a recent update on its forthcoming Galileo sat-nav network, estimated that about 6-7% of Europe’s GDP, approximately 800bn euros (£690bn) annually, was now dependent in some way on GNSS data.

The RAEng report claims to be the first assessment of just how many applications in the UK now use GPS signals and their like, and their probable vulnerability to an outage of some kind.

It says sat-nav signals are relatively weak – equivalent to receiving the light from a bright bulb at a distance of 20,000km – and this leaves them open to interference or corruption.

Possible sources include man-made ones, such as deliberate jamming, and natural hazards, such as solar activity. Both can introduce errors into the data or simply take it out altogether.

“The key thing for us is the concept of cascade failures,” said report co-author Prof Jim Norton, the president-elect of BCS – the Chartered Institute for IT.

“This is what we characterise as accidental systems – systems that exist, but people don’t recognise they exist because they don’t understand the interdependencies. There will be a single common point of vulnerability and failure, but it’s not obvious.”

Dr Thomas added: “We concluded that the UK was already dangerously dependent on GPS as a single source of position, navigation and timing (PNT) data.

“[We concluded] that the back-up systems are often inadequate or un-tested; that the jammers are far too easily available and that the risks from them are increasing; that no-one has a full picture of the dependencies on GPS and similar systems; and that these risks could be managed and reduced if government and industry worked together.”

The report makes 10 recommendations. Three relate to raising awareness of the problems and getting users to assess their own particular vulnerabilities and possible back-up solutions.

Two cover hardware solutions, including the suggestion of a government-sponsored R&D programme to seek better antenna and receiver technologies to enhance the resilience of systems. The report also lauds the land-based eLoran radio navigation system as a very worthy back-up technology.

And five recommendations fall into the policy domain. Chief among these is the urgent suggestion that mere possession of jamming equipment be made illegal.

Criminal gangs use this equipment to hide their activity, for example blocking the GPS tracking systems in the lorries or high-performance cars they seek to steal.

These jammers can be bought off the internet for as little £20. Some are capable of swamping all receivers over a wide area.

“It’s already illegal to put GNSS jamming equipment on the market in the UK,” said Prof Jim Norton. “The problem is it’s not necessarily illegal to hold it, to import or even to advertise it. It doesn’t require legislation; it just requires [the telecoms regulator] Ofcom to place a banning order, and we would strongly recommend they do that.”

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Summit focus on Old Firm ‘shame’

Old Firm imagesPolice called for the summit after trouble broke out at last week’s Old Firm game
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First Minister Alex Salmond is to host a summit in Edinburgh later to discuss the fallout from last week’s “shameful” Old Firm Scottish Cup replay.

Police requested the move after the game saw three red cards, several touch-line and tunnel confrontations and 34 arrests inside Celtic Park.

Representatives from both clubs, the Scottish Football Association (SFA) and Strathclyde Police will attend.

A statement on any outcome is expected at St Andrews House at 1500 GMT.

Strathclyde Police confirmed on Thursday that it had asked for a summit on Old Firm-related disorder following the previous night’s match, which Celtic won 1-0.

A statement from the force said: “There can be no doubt that the levels of drunken violence that have blighted our communities and the number of people who have been arrested due to their sectarian behaviour is simply unacceptable. Something has to be done.”

Later, during First Minister’s Questions at Holyrood, Mr Salmond had said “the disgraceful scenes last night cannot be ignored”.

He described the Strathclyde Police initiative as “a welcome one” and said both clubs and the SFA had agreed to attend.

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Guatemala urged to protect women

Page from a Guatemalan newspaper showing faces of some of the women killed in 2004Hundreds of women are murdered in Guatemala each year.
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Guatemala must do more to stop high numbers of women being killed across the country, Amnesty International has said.

The authorities must also do more to ensure the perpetrators are brought to justice, the human rights group said on the eve of International Women’s Day.

According to official figures, 685 women were killed in Guatemala in 2010.

Guatemala has one of the highest murder rates in the world, but less than 4% of cases end in a successful conviction.

“Women in Guatemala are dying as a consequence of the state’s failure to protect them,” Amnesty’s Guatemala researcher Sebastian Elgueta said.

“High levels of violence and a lack of political will along with a track record of impunity mean authorities are unable to pursue perpetrators, or just don’t care,” he added.

“Perpetrators know they will not be punished.”

In 2008 Guatemala passed a law specifically aimed at violent crimes against women, but Amnesty says the authorities are not making full use of their powers.

Guatemala’s high rate of violent crime is widely seen as a legacy of the 1960-96 internal conflict between the state and left-wing guerrillas, in which more than 200,000 people were killed, most of them by the army.

Since 2008 a UN-backed International Commission Against Impunity (CICIG) has been supporting Guatemala’s justice system and trying to end a deeply-entrenched culture of impunity.

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