Take it or leave it

CashIf you request a tenner, that’s all you usually get

Dozens of cash machines in Sydney, Australia, were accidentally overpaying customers this week. So if you take money under these circumstances, what is the correct course of action, legally and morally?

Free cash. It sounds too good to be true. And for some customers of the Commonwealth Bank in Sydney this week, it was.

When word got around the streets that some cash machines were giving out more money than customers were entitled to, queues began to form and people took advantage.

There was talk, according to one witness, that they were giving out “free money”.

The bank later explained that an error had prevented the machines from properly identifying customer accounts, but that all transactions were correctly recorded and the bank would be pursuing the money.

But is it an offence to keep cash accidentally dispensed from a cash machine?

In England and Wales, it’s pretty clear – it’s not your money, says Mark Haslam, a criminal defence lawyer at BCL Burton Copeland in London.

“The only issue is what’s going to be debited from your account, so if you ask for £10, they give you £100 and they debit £100, then it’s yours.

“But if it’s clearly a malfunction and it’s dishing out money [without deducting it], and people come from miles around because word gets around quickly, then you’re helping yourself knowingly and that’s theft.”

‘Report it’

If you happen to be passing and someone tells you it’s handing out £200 every time, then it’s clearly theft because there’s knowledge and intent, and the intent could be proved.

“So the best course of action in terms of the law is to report it straightaway to the bank,” says Haslam. “It’s the only way you can preserve your position, but if you sit on it and wait for them to find you, then it’s a lot weaker.”

‘Take it, it’s your free lunch’

Cash

What do banks do with the money they make out of their ‘account charges’ and ‘service charges’? Well, for one thing, these charges pay for systems that protect the banks from risks like cash-machine malfunction. If those systems let the banks down, I say ‘tough on the banks – it’s a windfall for the customers’.

Just as when the bankers pay themselves huge bonuses out of the charges they exact on our accounts, the banks say ‘tough on the customers – it’s a windfall for us.’ The bankers get plenty of free lunches. Why shouldn’t their customers too?

The law concerned is more likely to be theft rather than fraud, he says, because you’ve taken money to which you are not entitled.

The 1968 Theft Act says: “A person is guilty of theft if he dishonestly appropriates property belonging to another with the intention of permanently depriving the other of it.”

In Scotland, the same principle applies under common law theft, says a spokeswoman for the Law Society of Scotland.

But UK banks don’t always take a hard line.

Dozens of people who took advantage of a cash machine in Dundee paying out double the requested amount in January were told by the machine’s operator that they would not have to return the extra money, although it was up to individuals’ consciences.

Our advice is simple, says Brian Mairs, a spokesman for the British Bankers’ Association. “If an ATM dispenses money to you in error, you should take it into the branch as soon as possible. Taking money that is not yours is a punishable crime.

“Any moral indignation should be proportionate”

Julian Baggini Philosopher

“Banks have invested heavily in recent years in ensuring the security of customers’ money and the integrity of ATMs. There have been instances where an ATM has malfunctioned and the bank has written off the loss, but it would be wrong to assume that they will do so every time.”

Morally speaking you are doing something wrong, stealing, if you take it, says Simon Rippon of the Oxford Uehiro Centre for Practical Ethics. But the interesting question is whether this kind of stealing is more excusable than stealing from an individual.

Someone who takes cash from a malfunctioning cash machine is judged more leniently than someone else who takes cash that is accidentally left behind by the person in front of them, and who fails to inform that person of their loss, he says.

“The 18th Century Scottish philosopher Adam Smith, who is best known for his ‘invisible hand’ economic theory, provided a moral theory in his book The Theory of Moral Sentiments that can very naturally explain the distinction between these cases. On Smith’s theory, moral judgements arise out of our sympathy with the feelings of others.”

Do you back Ada or Bob?

Suppose that Ada takes the money from a malfunctioning cash machine, thinking that the bank will barely miss it, but so much money means a lot to her personally.

Now suppose that Bob is at another cash machine that isn’t malfunctioning, but rather has just been used by the absent-minded old Professor Plump, who has accidentally left his cash behind.

Bob thinks of calling Plump back in order to return his money, but decides instead to swipe it for himself, thinking that Plump is both well-off and amnesiac, and probably won’t even miss it. Don’t we judge Bob to have done something worse than Ada?

This is surely not because we think the consequences of Bob’s actions are likely to be any worse, but rather because Jones has harmed, or may have harmed, a specific, identifiable individual.

It’s difficult to identify an individual to sympathise with in the case of the misfiring cash machine, says Rippon, so it is only natural for us to judge the person in that case much less harshly than we judge the person in the second example.

This feeling that a bank cannot be a victim of crime is sometimes felt very strongly. In 2003, a family in Coventry made repeated visits to an obliging cash machine and the four of them took out £134,410, which they spent on a new car and air tickets to Jamaica. Three of them were imprisoned.

It’s a crime to take the money, but there are two reasons why many people instinctively find this kind of theft less serious or even harmless, says Julian Baggini, editor of The Philosophers’ Magazine.

One is that the transaction is completely impersonal and does not require surreptitious behaviour. The other is that people view crime against large corporations as victimless, even though prices and insurance premiums are affected by theft and fraud.

“Leading a moral life requires us to be the kind of person who does the right thing without always stopping to work out if we gain or lose by doing so,” says Baggini.

“We do what is right and hope that others will do the same because we want to be that kind of person, not some kind of egotist who is forever trying to work out what acts will serve our own petty self-interest.”

People who keep money from rogue cashpoints are not modern day Robin Hoods, he says. Theirs is not a principle act but an opportunistic one.

“But any moral indignation should be proportionate. I think given that many people struggle with money, resisting temptation, even if it is the right thing to do, is hard enough for us to understand those who don’t.”

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

Fake invitations, look-a-likes and obedience

Brigitt HauckBy Brigitt Hauck

With the big day nearing for Prince William and Kate Middleton, the internet is abuzz with royal wedding stories. As a confessed wedding obsessive, I’ll be keeping up with what’s being talked about. This week’s round up includes counterfeit invitations, look-a-likes and the question of obedience.

In a true sign of the times, Prince William and Kate Middleton’s modern romance has gone digital, with this week’s launch of an official wedding website. The site promises “exclusive content” and “regular updates”, and should anyone erroneously believe the royals are not up to speed on the social media scene, try this paragraph on for size:

“The website will bring together all of the official social media around the event, including the Clarence House and Buckingham Palace Flickr account, Twitter (@Clarence House), The Royal Channel on YouTube and the British Monarchy Facebook page, providing direct easy access to all channels of communication. Subject to further planning work, the website may feature a live web stream broadcast of the wedding itself.”

But it’s a fair bet that one celebrity family won’t be “friending” the royal couple in a hurry.

E! Online headline: Osbournes not attending royal wedding

Celebrity mum and daughter Sharon and Kelly Osbourne have better things to do than sit and ponder what they will be doing on 29 April, reveals E! Online. When asked if they would attend the wedding, Osbourne Snr told reporters:

“I’ve got to work. Are you crazy?”

Osbourne Jnr chimed in with:

“I don’t want to go. I don’t know them. Why would you go to someone’s wedding you don’t know? You’d be wedding crashers.”

Talking of which, an unnamed man allegedly attempted to sell blank copies of the royal invitations to an undercover reporter for just under £2,000, says the Daily Telegraph.

Daily Telegraph headline on fake royal wedding invitations

“A reporter for the the Mail on Sunday met the man last week and was shown an invitation almost identical to the genuine document. The only difference between the genuine and fake invitation is that the black market version is missing two dotted lines where the names of guests are written by hand.”

Ah-ha! Foiled by the missing dotted lines.

Despite the slim chance of any counterfeit invitation slipping by security the entertainment blog Defamer humorously suggests they’d pay the hefty price tag for a chance to be close to a certain royal.

“We’d totally pay that to be close to Prince Harry. Or maybe [alluding to an image of the invitation] we can just print this page out, scribble our name on the line and try to saunter into Westminster Abbey. That could work!”

thebookseller.com headline on royal wedding book

Meanwhile, thebookseller.com reports that satirical photographer and filmmaker Alison Jackson is trying to make a pretty penny off of a book that loosely documents the long-standing romance of the prince and his future queen.

“To obey or not to obey; that is the question”

Ashley Peskoe ABC News

“The photographic title will take a tongue-in-cheek look at the royal romance through the lens of photographer and Bafta award-winning filmmaker Jackson, who has made a name for herself through her use of famous look-a-likes to create paparazzi parodies.”

Anne Furniss, the editorial director of publishing house Quadrille, is in no mood for accusations of shameless cashing in:

“This is an affectionate peep behind the scenes, looking at the romance, in-laws, wedding preparations and the big day itself. The book will include humorous photographs that aim to answer probing and personal questions on the forthcoming marriage of Prince William and his bride-to-be, Kate Middleton.”

But princess-to-be Kate Middleton apparently has bigger questions to wrestle with. Bigger maybe even than the dress.

ABC News headline: Will Kate 'Obey' William?

Ashley Peskoe for the ABC News blog the Royal Diary asks: “Will Kate Middleton ‘obey’ Prince William?”

“To obey or not to obey; that is the question. When Prince William and Kate Middleton ascend the alter next month and vow ‘to love and to cherish till death us do part’, Kate must decide if she is going to say the traditional vows or, instead, use a modernized version. In the traditional vows, the groom promises ‘to love and cherish till death do us part’ and the bride promises to ‘love, cherish and obey’. In the modern vows, however, the word ‘obey’ is excluded.”

If immediate family history is any indication, here’s a clue: according to ABC News, Prince William’s mother, Princess Diana, was the only royal bride to opt for the modern vows, when she married in 1981.

“If Kate wants to throw out both of these options and write her own vows, well, that is out of the question. The Church of England forbids couples from using any vows other than those written by the church.”

…which firmly rules out any of those contemporary vows such as: “I declare my respect and commitment and promise to strive for happiness and harmony.”

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

EU ‘won’t change carbon target’

Richard BlackBy Richard Black

Traffic congestion, Brussels (Image: AP)The EU energy road-map did seem to favour a 30% cut if other big emitters followed suit
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The European Commission will not urge EU nations to set tougher targets on climate change despite analysis showing that doing so would be cost-effective.

On Tuesday the commission will unveil a road-map on climate and energy policy.

Its own analysis said that a target of a 25% cut by 2020 could easily be met, and would be economically better than the existing target of 20%.

However, a senior diplomatic source has told BBC News that the final version will explicitly urge sticking at 20%.

The news has disappointed climate campaigners who accused heavy industries of “scaremongering”.

The commission is also set to recommend that some of the 20% reduction can be achieved through buying emission credits from overseas, rather than entirely through cuts at home.

The analysis – leaked in a draft version of the road-map two weeks ago – said the price of carbon should be maintained through “setting aside” some of the allowances to emit that EU nations will receive for the period 2013-2020.

However, the BBC’s source said this would not now be the case.

The door will be left open to adopting a 30% target if there is a new global deal under the UN climate negotiations.

Split ambitions

“The scaremongering tactics of a handful of industrial lobbyists have successfully castrated Europe’s climate ambitions”

Bryony Worthington Sandbag

The two commission directorates most closely involved in the issue – energy and climate – have been at loggerheads on the EU’s ideal scale of ambition.

In the middle of last year, climate commissioner Connie Hedegaard released research showing that the economic slump had reduced emissions so much that the 20% or 30% targets would both be far cheaper to achieve than when they were adopted in 2008.

Emissions from industry, for example, fell by nearly 12% during 2009.

A group of academics calculated that given this fall, meeting the 20% target was tantamount to “business as usual”.

Environmental groups have urged that in order to meet its “fair share” of global emissions cuts, and to re-invigorate the UN process, the EU should be contemplating 40%.

But energy commissioner Gunther Oettinger recently declared that going above 20% would lead to the “de-industrialisation” of Europe.

“Yet again it seems the scaremongering tactics of a handful of well connected industrial lobbyists have successfully castrated Europe’s climate ambitions,” said Baroness (Bryony) Worthington, director of the campaign organisation Sandbag.

“The smokestack industries of Europe are wrong when they claim that the only way to meet our targets is through de-industrialisation; investing in new clean energy technologies will actually boost economic activity,” she told BBC News.

“They also fail to mention that many of them are handsomely profiting from the sale of spare emissions permits which leave them largely untouched by requirements to reduce emissions.”

However, some branches of industry do want tougher targets. Earlier this week, a group of bosses from leading energy companies urged the commission to go for at least 25%.

“As leaders of utility companies we know that the benefits of early action far outweigh the costs of inertia or delayed action,” they said.

“Private investors take their signals from such target and… this will deliver more new jobs in innovative environmental and clean technologies and will secure competitive advantage within the borders of the EU.”

Short-term worries

Gasometers (Getty Images)Energy Commissioner Gunther Oettinger said cuts greater than 20% would de-industrialise Europe

Back in 2008, the EU set three parallel targets for 2020:

cutting emissions by 20% from 1990 levelsdelivering at least 20% of its energy from renewable sourcesincreasing energy efficiency by 20%

The bloc is on target to achieve the first two, but not yet the third; and the commission is due shortly to release a document setting out what extra needs to be done to meet it.

Calculations done for the road-map show that if that is achieved on top of the renewables target, emissions will fall 25% from 1990 levels by 2020.

They also show that a 25% cut would set the EU on the most economic pathway to achieving an 80-95% cut by 2050, the agreed long-term goal.

Nevertheless, the BBC’s source said, concerns over the short-term impact of such a target meant 20% would be explicitly retained, as would the caveat that international trading could be used to meet it.

Not all of the road-map’s wording has been agreed, but the final version is due to be published on Tuesday afternoon.

Member states would then have to ratify it in order for its contents to become official EU policy.

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

Libya removes itself from the net

Libyan rebels, ReutersNet access in Libya that was intermittent is now non-existent, report web analysis firms

As fighting inside the country intensifies, Libya’s links to the net appear to have been completely severed.

Net monitoring and security firms are reporting that no net traffic is entering or leaving Libyan net space.

Renesys said the outage was more than just a “blip” as many sites have been unreachable for more than 12 hours.

Net traffic into and out of the country had been intermittent during recent protests but the cut coincided with a push to oust rebels.

During the early days of the rebellion in Libya, net access was restricted but in early March net traffic started to pick up in areas no longer under the control of Colonel Gaddafi’s government.

Graphs of net activity maintained by Google show a steady rise in traffic to its sites throughout this week. In particular, Libyans were making heavy use of YouTube to post images of the conflict.

This changed late in the evening of 3 March when net traffic stopped flowing into and out of the troubled nation.

Rik Ferguson, senior security advisor at Trend Micro, said the approach to cutting net links was different to that taken by Egypt.

While all routers reported that lines to Libya were live, any traffic sent was not reaching its destination and was probably being “blackholed”, said Mr Ferguson.

Attempts to trace the routes that traffic could take into the country ended a hop short of official Libyan net space, said Mr Ferguson.

This meant that not only was Libya cut off from the net, but those inside the country would not be able to send messages or browse sites either.

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

Clegg defiant despite poll slump

Deputy Prime Minister Nick Clegg

Deputy Prime Minister Nick Clegg: ‘No contest for non-Labour candidates,’

Nick Clegg has said people should not “write off” the Lib Dems despite the party slumping to sixth place in the Barnsley Central by-election.

The party finished behind UKIP, the BNP and an independent as its share of the vote dropped to just over 4%.

Labour, which won the poll comfortably as turnout dropped to 36%, said the Lib Dems had “paid the price” for a series of broken promises in government.

But Mr Clegg said the party would prove its critics wrong.

The Lib Dems slipped from second place in last year’s general election to sixth place in Thursday’s poll – which was triggered by the conviction of the constituency’s former Labour MP for expenses fraud.

Labour held the seat with a slightly increased majority of 11,771, with UKIP doubling the share of the vote it gained in May to beat the Conservatives into third place – one of the eurosceptic party’s best-ever by-election results.

Turnout in the by-election fell to 36.5%, compared with 56.4% at the May 2010 poll.

By-election resultsDan Jarvis (Lab) 14,724Jane Collins (UKIP) 2,953James Hockney (C) 1,999Enis Dalton (BNP) 1,463Tony Devoy (Ind) 1,266Dominic Carman (LD) 1,012Kevin Riddiough (Eng Dem) 544Howling Laud Hope (Loony) 198Michael Val Davies (Ind) 60

Lab maj 11,771: Turnout 36.5%

Labour win Barnsley by-election Analysis: Lib Dems ‘humiliated’

Mr Clegg said it was “obviously a bad result” for the Liberal Democrats, whose share of the vote fell from 17.2% last year to 4.1% and whose candidate lost his deposit.

“In truth it was a no contest for any non-Labour candidate,” he said.

“It was a very safe Labour seat. Labour got a huge majority on an abysmally-low turnout and everybody else was left to pick up the pieces.”

But the Lib Dem leader was defiant about his party’s long-term fortunes and its continued alliance with the Conservatives in the coalition government.

“I have no doubt people will try to use this single result to write off the Liberal Democrats. They have done it in the past and we have proved them wrong and we will prove them wrong again.

“In government, nationally, we will continue to do what I think is absolutely vital for the long-term benefit of the country. Namely sort the economic mess we inherited from Labour for the long-term benefit of Britain.”

Welcoming the victory of Labour candidate Dan Jarvis, a 38-year-old former soldier who served in Afghanistan and Iraq, Shadow Justice Secretary Sadiq Khan said the party had increased its majority and share of the vote.

Dan Jarvis

Mr Jarvis said the result sent “the strongest possible message” to David Cameron and Nick Clegg

But he said the poll was notable for the “absolute hammering” that the Lib Dems had received.

“The important thing is this. This is not the price you pay for being in government. It is the price you pay for making bad decisions in government. The Lib Dems gave been shown for being two-faced.

“They make a promise on one day, in one part of the country and they break it on another day. When you are in government, you cannot do that.

“What this shows is that people are waking up to what the coalition government is doing and the Conservatives and Lib Dems are equally to blame.”

UKIP leader Nigel Farage heralded the party’s performance, saying they were the “real winners” in Barnsley Central.

“We’ve shown our potential in European elections by getting big scores in the past and now we’re doing it in first past the post Westminster elections,” he said. “We are delighted though I have to say but not completely surprised.

“Because just over the last month, whether it’s votes for prisoners, car insurance for young women, annuities for old men, increasingly our Parliament is seen to be completely impotent. So the UKIP message that we should take back control of our own lives is very relevant to voters.”

The by-election is only the second since the coalition government took power last May, with Labour also winning the previous contest in Oldham East and Saddleworth in January.

BBC political correspondent Ross Hawkins said the result would be a real concern for the Lib Dems ahead of May’s English council elections although it remained to be seen whether the slump in their support was a one-off or a sign of a wider trend.

Former MP Eric Illsley held Barnsley Central with a majority of just over 11,000 in last year’s general election but he resigned his seat after pleading guilty to falsely claiming £14,000 in parliamentary expenses. He was later jailed for a year.

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

Commons seats shake-up outlined

Chamber of House of CommonsAll parts of the UK will lose seats as part of the re-organisation

There will be 31 fewer MPs representing English constituencies after the next general election as part of plans to cut the size of the House of Commons.

The Boundary Commission has published details of where seats will disappear to meet the government’s objective of cutting the number of MPs by 50 to 600.

Wales is to lose 10 seats while Scotland and Northern Ireland will see a fall of seven and two respectively.

MPs backed the move last month but only after fierce opposition from Labour.

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

Islanders’ fuel deal moves closer

Petrol pumpFrance successfully applied for lower fuel costs on Corsica

The European Commission has received a request for lower fuel costs on UK islands, the BBC understands.

The UK government hopes to take 5p off a litre of fuel on the Northern and Western isles, Argyll and Clyde islands and the Isles of Scilly.

It could be autumn before the bid is processed and voted on by finance ministers, EC sources have said.

The Scottish Liberal Democrat conference in Perth was told the application had been made.

Chief Secretary to the Treasury Danny Alexander said permission to introduce the discount for island communities had been sought from the EC.

He said: “Everyone in the country is feeling the pressure of high fuel prices.

“But these island communities are where the prices are highest and the pressure is huge on families and I’m delighted to be part of a government that is going to deliver that help to those hard-pressed island communities.”

Under the Energy Tax Directive of the European Union – which the UK is signed up to – minimum rates for fuel duty are set down and each country must have a standardised rate within their borders.

UK ministers require permission to lower costs.

Sources in Brussels have told BBC 5 Live the application arrived from the Treasury on Thursday.

France applied for permission to lower the rate of duty it charges in Corsica, and this was granted.

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

US and Israel blamed for Stuxnet

Bushehr reactorIran’s Bushehr reactor is believed to have been on of the intended targets for Stuxnet.
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Israel and the United States created the Stuxnet worm to sabotage Iran’s nuclear programme, a leading security expert has claimed.

Ralph Langner told a conference in California that the malicious software was designed to cripple systems that could help build an Iranian bomb.

Mr Langner was one of the first researchers to show how Stuxnet could take control of industrial equipment.

It is widely believed that its target was machinery used to enrich uranium.

Speaking at the TED conference in Long Beach, California, Mr Langner said: “My opinion is that Mossad [Israel’s intelligence agency] is involved.”

However he speculated that Israel was not the main driver behind the creation of Stuxnet.

“There is only one leading source, and that is the United States,” said Mr Langner.

In a recent report on Stuxnet, the security firm Symantec said that it would have taken a team of between five and 10 developers, six months to create the worm.

Mr Langner said that the project would have required “inside information”, so detailed that “they probably knew the shoe size of the operator.”

Stuxnet first came to light in July 2010. Nearly 60% of reported infections were inside Iran.

The worm targets industrial control systems, known as programmable logic controllers (PLCs), made by Siemens.

While PLCs are used to control a wide variety of automated systems, it is believed that it was those inside Iran’s nuclear facilities that were the intended target.

Analysts who have examined the Stuxnet code say it could have been used to damage centrifuges which play a crucial role in the process of enriching uranium for both nuclear power and weapons.

The United States and Israel have led an international campaign to halt Iran’s nuclear programme, however there is no hard evidence to link either country to the creation of Stuxnet.

Earlier in the week Iran’s Interior Ministry denied that Stuxnet had been responsible for a shutdown at the country’s Bushehr nuclear reactor.

A report by the International Atomic Energy Agency showed that Russian engineers working at the plant had removed 163 fuel rods.

Iranian sources said that the action was taken as a result of problems with the rods, rather than Stuxnet.

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

UK pushes on with broadband plans

Road through a woodIt is important to get next-generation broadband to rural areas
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The government is pushing ahead with the second wave of funding for super-fast broadband across the UK.

It comes despite the fact that no firms or technologies have yet been chosen for original pilot areas earmarked to test how to roll out next-generation broadband to remote areas.

New bids are now being invited for a further £50m.

The government has pledged to make the UK the best place for super-fast broadband in Europe by 2015.

The £50m will be made available to local authorities around the UK.

“This is very much a locally-driven process and we encourage bids from all local people with plans for improving broadband in their local area,” said Chancellor of the Exchequer George Osborne.

Local councils wanting to take advantage of the latest tranche of funding will need to apply via the Broadband Delivery UK.

The government estimated that the funding would help a further 800,000 homes to benefit from next-generation broadband.

Some have questioned the timing of the new scheme, given that pilots intended to be testbeds for best practice in connecting the so-called ‘final third’ have yet to begin.

This is the third of UK homes that are not economically attractive to firms such as BT and Virgin Media because offering next-generation services there would cost too much money.

At the time they were announced Secretary of State for Culture, Media and Sport Jeremy Hunt said: “Our aim is to use these rural market testing pilots to discover exactly what needs to be done to make super-fast broadband commercially viable in rural communities”.

Despite announcing the four areas in October – North Yorkshire, Cumbria, Herefordshire and the Highlands and Islands – no firm or technologies have yet been chosen for the areas.

Each trial was allocated a fund of between £5m and £10m.

Lack of progress led Labour MP Ian Lucas to ask the government to “pull its finger out” last month.

A spokesman for the Department for Culture, Media and Sport conceded that it has been a long process.

“Councils are having to get everything ready. They have to know what work needs to be done.”

He said that announcements would be made soon.

In total the government has earmarked £530m of public money to be spent on bringing super-fast broadband to rural areas.

This money is drawn from the BBC license fee and was originally earmarked to help people with the switch over to digital TV.

Any funds to speed up broadband roll-out should be applauded said Sebastien Lahtinen of broadband news site ThinkBroadband.

“This crucial step will be welcomed by those living in the ‘final third’, the most remote areas of the UK which currently suffer from a lack of decent broadband services.

However, many in those areas will continue to be frustrated that it’s going to take years to roll out across the entire country,” he said.

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

Newborn dies in infection scare

Princess Royal MaternityAn outbreak control team has been established at the maternity hospital

A baby has died and another child is in an isolation unit at Glasgow’s Princess Royal Maternity (PRM) hospital after contracting a bloodstream infection.

NHS Greater Glasgow said eight other children at the neonatal unit had also tested positive for serratia marcescens and were being monitored.

The health authority said both the child that died and the child moved to isolation had been born prematurely.

Serratia marcescens is an organism that occurs naturally in the gut.

To have it on or in the body (colonisation) is not uncommon or harmful in healthy people.

However, in cases where people are vulnerable to infection, such as premature babies, the organism can cause serious infection.

An Outbreak Control Team has been established at the hospital.

Lead infection control consultant, Dr Craig Williams, said: “The eight babies who are colonised are being nursed together as a cohort in one part of the neonatal unit totally separately from other patients.

“We are investigating the cases at the PRM to establish if there is any link between the cases.”

NHS Greater Glasgow said serratia marcescens colonisation was also identified in two babies at the Southern General’s neonatal intensive care unit who had been transferred from the PRM neonatal unit.

The authority said the babies were being nursed in isolation at the Southern and were not giving cause for concern.

Dr Williams added: “We would also expect a number of babies to be colonised with serratia marcescens, however, our trigger for screening is if a baby develops a bloodstream infection, which is why we have taken the precaution of isolating the colonised babies and creating a separate neonatal area for new admissions while we investigate the situation.”

All the babies in neonatal units at both hospital have been screened and it is understood that no further babies at the Southern General have been found to be colonised with serratia marcescens and the Unit was operating as normal.

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

Toure ‘took wife’s slimming aid’

Arsenal manager Arsene Wenger believes Manchester City defender Kolo Toure’s failed drugs test is a result of the player taking a “slimming product belonging to his wife”.

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

Pakistani Christians bury leader

Family members of Christian leader Shahbaz Bhatti mourn, outside his home in Islamabad, Pakistan on Thursday, March 3, 2011.Mr Bhatti’s murder has left his family and other Christians devastated
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Hundreds of Pakistanis have gathered amid tight security in the city of Faisalabad for the funeral of former minorities minister Shahbaz Bhatti.

Mr Bhatti, the only Christian in the cabinet, was shot dead on Wednesday after urging reform to blasphemy laws. The Taliban said they killed him.

Top leaders are attending the funeral service in Islamabad’s main church.

Mr Bhatti’s body will then be flown to Faisalabad in Punjab for burial in his native village of Khushpur nearby.

Wednesday’s assassination in Islamabad was the second this year of a Pakistani politician who wanted to reform the controversial blasphemy laws.

In January, Punjab Governor Salman Taseer, who had also opposed the law, was shot dead by one of his bodyguards in the capital.

The blasphemy law carries a death sentence for anyone who insults Islam. Critics say it has been used to persecute minority faiths.

Observers say Mr Bhatti’s killing leaves Pakistan’s Christians without their most prominent voice and threatens to silence debate on the blasphemy law. The government is accused of giving in to religious hardliners.

Stringent security precautions are in place for the funeral.

Shahbaz Bhatti

Shahbaz Bhatti predicted his death in a video recorded four months ago

Roads have been closed and police and paramilitary forces deployed around Fatima Church in the capital for the service for Mr Bhatti, 42, who was a Roman Catholic.

Marksmen took up positions on the roofs of nearby buildings ahead of the mass.

Pakistan is observing three days of mourning for the murdered minister and there have been protests by angry and frightened Christians across the country, condemning his killing.

Christian leaders have dismissed government promises that the killers will be caught. They say their community, and other minorities, no longer feel secure in Pakistan.

The BBC’s Syed Shoaib Hasan says Mr Bhatti has become a martyr for the local Christian community because of his outspoken stance on the blasphemy law.

But our correspondent says the government seems to lack his courage to take steps to amend what many are now calling Pakistan’s black law.

In January an MP from the governing Pakisan People’s Party (PPP), Sherry Rehman, dropped a bill to reform the law, because her party leaders would not back it.

She has all but disappeared from view amid concerns for her security.

The apparent ease with which Mr Bhatti, a PPP leader, was killed has caused great concern.

He had just left his mother’s home in a suburb of the capital when several gunmen surrounded his vehicle and riddled it with bullets in broad daylight, say witnesses.

The minister’s driver was spared before the gunmen escaped.

Mr Bhatti was without guards or the security escort that is standard for all Pakistani ministers, and it is not clear why. Police and federal officials are investigating.

Even before his assassination, Mr Bhatti had predicted his own death in a chilling video. He had told the BBC he had been denied more protection but would defy the death threats from Islamist militants for his efforts to reform the blasphemy law.

The law has been in the spotlight since a Christian, Asia Bibi, was sentenced to hang in Punjab last November. She denies insulting the Prophet Muhammad.

Christians make up an estimated 1.5% of Pakistan’s 185 million population.

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