A bomb blast in Burma’s capital Rangoon has injured four people, officials say.
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A bomb blast in Burma’s capital Rangoon has injured four people, officials say.
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Prime Minister David Cameron speaks to Fine Gael leader Enda Kenny and congratulates him on his victory in the Irish general election.
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Ireland’s new leader, Fine Gael’s Enda Kenny, has said the country is on “brink of fundamental change”
Ireland’s incoming leader has promised to work to renegotiate the country’s crippling 85bn euro bail-out next week.
Enda Kenny of Fine Gael said he would fight for a cheaper loan deal from the International Monetary Fund and Europe.
His party is now the largest in the 31st Irish parliament, the Dail.
Meanwhile, Sinn Fein has won 13 seats so far in the Irish general election, a gain of eight on its representation in the last Dail.
Fine Gael, Labour and Sinn Fein have all won record numbers of seats but FG’s rivals Fianna Fail suffered a crushing defeat. Mr Kenny said it was “a democratic revolution at the ballot box”.
Votes are still being counted but Fine Gael is expected to be the largest party in the Republic’s parliament, without having an overall majority.
Final numbers for the Dail parliament will not be decided until late on Sunday.
Mr Kenny plans to start fighting for a cheaper loan deal on 4 March when the European People’s Party, to which Fine Gael is affiliated, meets in Helsinki. He will follow that up at the European Council in Brussels the following week.
Mr Kenny said the IMF/EU bail-out was “a bad deal for Ireland and a bad deal for Europe”.
“We are not going to cry the poor mouth, other than to say the reality of this challenge is too much. I don’t want to talk about difficulties, I look for co-operation, consensus and support across Europe,” he said.
“We want to restore our pride at home and abroad. Our country is back in business.”
Dublin is buzzing with speculation about a visit to Ireland by US President Barack Obama at the end of May.
The possible trip is likely to be discussed next month when Mr Kenny goes to Washington for the annual St Patrick’s Day celebrations at the White House.
President Obama has distant Irish roots in the village of Moneygall in County Offaly.
If the president does go to Ireland, it may not be the only high-profile visit to Dublin this year.
The Queen may visit the Irish Republic for the first time, in a sign of how Anglo-Irish relations have been transformed by the peace process.
The incoming taoiseach also pledged to probe deep into the heart of the Irish banking crisis which has left the taxpayer saddled with crippling debts which some analysts believe could ultimately cost closer to 200bn euros.
“We do need to find exactly what went wrong here, who benefited from this and where decisions were made,” he said.
“This is bridging the gap between government and people – that chasm there was very bad for democracy.”
Meanwhile, Mr Kenny is weighing up options for a new government with his centre-right party Fine Gael on course to form a coalition with Labour, or a collection of independents if the numbers stack up.
He launched a fierce attack on the outgoing government, led by Fianna Fail, over its poor communications and lack of openness.
“I give you my guarantee that the incoming government is not going to leave the people in the dark about what is happening whether it is good or whether it is bad,” he said.
Mr Kenny, who secured the biggest single vote in the country in his Mayo constituency, said he wanted a quick resolution to talks on a new government.
Fine Gael is on course for 75 plus Dail seats, just a handful shy of majority single party government in the 166 strong Dail.
Fianna Fail leader Micheal Martin put on a brave face and said he believed that Fine Gael had managed to secure support from floating voters.
“There’s a soft vote there for Fine Gael and Labour, just as there was for us for years,” he said.
The party’s biggest casualty was Mary Coughlan, the outgoing deputy prime minister, who was punished by voters in Donegal South-West as they opted to support an independent candidate in her own backyard.
Hers was one of several dynasties brought to a dramatic end.
“It’s been a very difficult day for all of my colleagues, many of whom have lost their seats,” she said.
Other big names to suffer included ministers Mary Hanafin, Barry Andrews and Conor Lenihan, himself from a powerful Fianna Fail family and brother of the outgoing finance minister Brian Lenihan who narrowly retained his own seat.
The Haughey name will also be absent from the Dail for the first time in 54 years after Fianna Fail’s Sean Haughey lost his seat.
The Greens – former coalition partners – were wiped out. None of their TDs – two of whom held Cabinet posts up until a few weeks ago – were brought back to the Dail.
Leader John Gormley had always faced a tough battle in Dublin South East and blamed his failure on being in a government which made savage cuts.
“We have suffered a major defeat, but the party will regroup, we will continue. We’re a party with a set of beliefs and values and a vision for the future. We have great people here. We’re going to rebuild this party,” he said.
Labour had one of its best ever performances with the prospect of supporting a coalition.
“That is the most likely outcome, there’s no doubt about that,” leader Eamon Gilmore said.
Fianna Fail have paid the political price for the EU/IMF bail-out
Sinn Fein has more than doubled its seats in the Dail with party president Gerry Adams topping the poll in Louth after giving up his Westminster seat for West Belfast.
Mr Adams said his party was on course for major gains: “I think the votes across the state show a significant amount of people support the position we have taken up.”
Their success in the Republic of Ireland was extended with seats right around the border including two TDs in Donegal.
Further left wing appeal came from the United Left Alliance – a loose collection of the Socialist Party and the self-styled People Before Profit.
It will take two days to complete the official count.
Many parts of the country saw a big increase in turnout on the 67% recorded in the last general election in 2007.
Without a separation of bank and sovereign debt we are sunk. No matter who sits in the parliament, with no removal of the private bank debt from the Irish taxpayer the country will default. The sharks will swoop in and buy up everything (property/state assets/bank assets), we descend into servitude. History repeating itself, will people ever learn?
Paul Nolan, Gorey, Wexford
It is a complete farce, it doesn’t really matter which party wins the election. The real power lies with the IMF, they essentially ‘own’ Ireland now. Fine Gael will just be the puppets of the EU bailiffs. Sad times indeed for once such a proud country.
Polly Bell, Cork, Ireland
As an Irish Citizen who works in the Republic and lives in the North (British controlled zone) I have taken quite a bit of interest in this election and looked back into the history to see how these parties formed. Whilst Fianna Fail can be partly blamed for the lack of banking regulation, trying to remain on the pigs back and for years ignored the EU with regard to economic overheating and unsustainable growth, they are not entirely at fault. Citizens must share some of the responsibility for this. They were happy to take the ridiculous loans and accepted the lunatic property valuations. The three main political parties don’t seem to have a clear ethos or identifiable set of beliefs and remarkable the only party that did expose their thinking was Sinn Fein. It was clear that in the republic they position themselves to the left and have made it clear that they will follow a largely socialist approach. This would be a massive departure from their stance in the north, which is largely neo-conservative. For Ireland to succeed, she needs to understand who she is and what she represents. They need to decide which system of government is best for the country. They need to decide if they want to serve the people or the banks and captains of industry. Its regrettable that a right winged party, Fine Gael, holds the upper hand and they are clearing now and historically a party who do not know if they are Irish or best suckling the teat of British colonialism. Hopefully Labour will find themselves, understand their roots and if in coalition will steer the country towards more non-offensive policies. Ireland needs to realise that its not a US state. It may have senators, a president and have 26 of its counties in a republic and a health system that checks your wallet before your pulse…hold on….maybe it needs to become the 51st state afterall 🙂
Brian Toner, Newry, Island of Ireland
Fianna Fail’s defeat is like the aftermath of an earthquake except in an earthquake there are only innocent victims. The last twelve months we have listened to one lie after another and the Irish people have finally woken up to the fact that when people in particular politicians lie they must be punished. It is such a shame that some of the party’s members were allowed to resign before the election and receive such huge sums of money as a reward for their lies and deceit.
Catherine Brown, Dublin , Ireland
Doesn’t matter who gets the ministerial car – Jean Claude Trichet is the commander in chief. We are just an EU fiefdom and this stage, here to pay the gambling debts of French, German and UK banks.
Ewan Duffy, Celbridge, Kildare, Ireland
Wholly deserved.
Stuart, Tavira, Portugal
There was only one person I talked to on my recent trip home who admitted she was going to vote for Fianna Fail, she said: “I know they are awful, but I can’t bring myself to vote for anyone else.” This is the attitude of someone who supports a football team and sticks by them no matter what to do and cannot vote for a rival. It would be like a Manchester United supporter being dissatisfied with their team and supporting Liverpool instead – they simply cannot bring themselves to do it. Fianna Fail understands this mentality as is shown by a frequent slogan of theirs: “Vote for the winning team.” Only when people realise that politics needs to be taken more seriously than sport can this mentality be changed.
Diarmuid, Paris, France
Fianna Fail went on the “payroll” of the financial services sector and promoted and magnified the worst excess of financial practices that let to Ireland’s sever recession. Then Fianna Fail compounded the problem by lying to everyone about the real state if the Irish Government’s finances, leaving Ireland exposed to the harsh terms of the EU bailout that will haunt Ireland for years to come. Fianna Fail’s electoral disaster is well earned.
Michael Flynn, Philadelphia, USA
The people are angry so they hit out at the ruling party, however the winner in this election like Obama over here will be accepting a poisoned chalice. Any fool can govern when things are good, the only answer for Mother Eire is to default and let the financial sector clean up its own mess.
Chris Brennan, Boston, Massachusetts
Whoever wins, it won’t change the size of the debt.
Joe Ryan, Nogent, France
Delighted to see a Fine Gael led Goverment with Labour, between them they should have about 110 seats, in the Dail (parliament|) which will give our country stability.
John Mayne, Limerick, Ireland
Well said Polly Bell from Cork. Its about time ‘the people’ – those poor subjugated victims of the financial services industry took a bit of responsibility for their own property greed. Time to stop bleating at the politicians and bankers. Anybody who participated in what was obviously a property bubble must accept their fair share of the blame before Ireland can move on. The same goes for the USA, UK, Spain and Portugal. Personally I am not seeing anything that looks like the kind of leadership necessary emerging from this election but for Ireland’s sake I hope I’m wrong.
Francis Power, London, UK
Now Kenny will have to perform, he can’t just whine. People must not blame the IMF for the problems of the country but they should look inside their own heads. It was the Irish people who kept electing TDs who don’t understand their roles as national policy makers and not pot hole fillers or getting people their GMS cards. We need stable income which means everyone must file an income tax report and pay property rates. User pays must be implemented.
Keith Parrott, Killarney, Co Kerry, Ireland
We’re all doomed! That’s what my mam tells me – this election was not about who can remady the economic catastrophe but very much about punishing an entranched elite who got rich off the cetic tiger and messed it up, big time for everyone else. Ireland is indeed sitting a rather long and uncomfortable class at the school of hard knocks and tough surprises, its children may be playing truant and heading for the private tuition of Canada and Australia but the lesson will be remembered. I spent my adolescence in the West of Ireland from age 10 in 1995 emigrating from London. Even at that age I could sense the gap in wealth and living standards compared to the relative comfort of growing up in a single parent family in Croydon. Firsthand, I saw the boom transform a rural, working poor society into a confident, aspirational nation. In the years after returning to London in 2001 I was amazed at friends wheeling dealing talk of flats, properties, buying up Bulgaria and trips to Thailand – I was to say a little envious – me just in my first graduate job felt as if they where racing ahead. Trips back home involved enduring endless one-upmanship talk of assets and their ‘big plans’ for retirement. Heading back his Christmas was the most depressing stinker of an affair, mixed with utter disbelief at the self delusion of folks thronging shopping centres weighed down by presents, still spending money that was not theirs seemingly oblivious that several weeks ago their nation accepted a damming international bailout. Job lost, business failed, home gone, girlfriend deserted, wife and children moved in with grandparents. With luck and my feet on the ground I am one of Lord Young’s ‘Never had it so good’ – the last three years was something that happened to somebody else. Sure I am sill part of the jilted generation but that’s ok. Loans, none, negative equity, what’s that? We moan about libraries while Ireland debates the existence of entire hospitals. Ours was an Irish generation told we’d never have to leave home and endure the relative shame of having a nation unable to sustain our aspirations. People I know are shell-shocked at the prospect of an unknown future in foriegn shores and with pain to endure for at least a decade, many envision never returning. For those that do stay and the new government, god bless and good luck. The Irish are some of the hardest working and caring people on the face of the Earth, they have had a short sharp lesson of the power of modern world economics whilst making huge strides in their quality of life and they will be better for it. However, ask a 30-year-old Irishman in 15 years whether it was all worth it and it will be an undoubted yes.
Declan Wilkes, 27, London, formerly of Quilty, Co. Clare ROI
The Irish people aren’t punishing FF for the end of the Celtic Tiger, they are punishing them for their relationship with builders, their mismanagement of the banks, their encouragement of the bubble that lead to the burst.
Joe, Brussels, Belgium
I don’t know why Ewan Duffy is blaming the UK ‘gambling debts’ for the financial crisis in Ireland. The UK isn’t even in the euro and hasn’t been bailed out by the IMF. In fact it has been asked to bail out countries such as Ireland, Portugal and Greece to the tune of many millions of pounds sterling. The Irish taxpayers may find repaying the national debt tough, but the British taxpayer is being penalised too, and not just for their own debt.
Teresa Snow, Newton Abbot, Devon, England
I agree with Michael Flynn from Philadelphia: default would be in the Irish public interest. The bailout is a wealth transfer from common people to the perpetrators of this mess – and only makes them richer. One should not assist at one’s own hanging. Especially not when the real criminals not only get off scott free. but profit in the process. It is time for Western citizenries to lose their fear of corporate overlords, just as Arab citizenries are losing their fear of dictators.
Alex Antypas, Budapest, Hungary
As an Irish citizen I was very excited for this election. Fianna Fail have been in power for too long and have taken elections and the people for granted. I can only hope this huge defeat will make them look at themselves and that they will be a constructive opposition. I am delighted to see the amount of independants elected and I think this will make the Dail much better as I would hope these independants will vote with the government when they are doing things that are the interest of the people and vote against when they think the government is not doing right by the people. This Dail could be the most effective for having a strong opposition and policies will be better formulated for it. i can see light at the end of the tunnel for Ireland.
THOMAS JOHNSTON, Newcastle upon Tyne, England
The election is a sideshow really. The IMF run Ireland now. Fianna Fail got what they deserved but the unfortunate reality is the sheer scale of our debt means that it is going to be almost impossible for the new government to get us back on our feet. I fear Ireland is heading in to a spiral of debt. The more we try to fix the problem, the worse it will get. The only hope is to default on the bank debt and honour our sovereign debt. Those who stupidly lent money to our banks to inflate the property market can’t expect tax payers to pay for their ineptitude.
Kieran Leddy, Dublin
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Australian champions St George Illawarra Dragons hold on to win the World Club Challenge for the first time with a comeback victory over Wigan.
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The Taliban have claimed the capture A Canadian national is missing in Afghanistan, Canadian officials have said.
A spokeswoman for the department of foreign affairs in Ottawa said the man – named as Colin Rutherford – had travelled to Afghanistan as a tourist.
The confirmation followed a statement by the Taliban saying they had captured someone from Canada.
The Taliban said they had detained the man in Ghazni province, south-west of the capital Kabul, for spying.
A spokesman said he was still being held and that “documents in his possession revealed his clandestine intelligence activities”. The statement said the Taliban would soon release a video of him.
Two French television journalists were kidnapped by the Taliban north-east of Kabul more than a year ago and are still being held.
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Thousands of Egyptians have been streaming into Tunisia from Libya Libya’s border with Tunisia is being overrun with migrants, many of them from Egypt, fleeing turmoil in Libya, aid workers say.
A UN refugee official told the BBC that 20,000 Egyptians were stranded and needed food and shelter. Many are sleeping in the open despite the cold.
Some Egyptian refugees staged protests shouting: “We want to go home.”
About 100,000 people have fled anti-government unrest in Libya over the past week, the UN estimates.
The BBC’s Jim Muir at the Ras Jdir border crossing with Tunisia says the exodus of Egyptian workers from western Libya began on Wednesday, but has been intensifying daily since then.
The refugees are taken by bus to a nearby camp, but Liz Eyster of the UN refugee agency (UNHCR), told the BBC that Tunisian authorities were no longer able to cope with the influx.
“They’ve been accommodating people in shelters, schools and places of their own. But we’re now aware of the fact that they’re very much stretched and they need the support of the international community.”
Monji Slim, the local representative of the Red Crescent, told AFP news agency: “It is a humanitarian crisis, our capacities to take in people are exhausted. The entire world should mobilise to help Egypt repatriate its nationals.”
Gaddafi’s sons told ABC News there were no attacks on protesters
About 7,000 Egyptians have already been evacuated by air, but Ms Eyster said there was a “bottleneck in getting the Egyptians back home”.
One stranded refugee said: “All the people here are demonstrating because they want to go to Egypt. All countries are sending aircraft to rescue their people – Turkey, Korea, India, Bangladesh – everyone is arriving and leaving except for Egyptians.”
The exodus comes as the Libyan leader, Colonel Muammar Gaddafi, battles for political survival in an uprising that began in the east of the country.
At least 1,000 people are believed to have been killed in nearly two weeks of violence in which eastern cities cities have fallen to anti-government forces, who have also been joined by a number of senior officials.
Col Gaddafi is facing the biggest challenge to his 41-year rule, but still controls the capital Tripoli.
I spoke to doctors, to a lawyer, to various police officers who have changed sides – there were soldiers there who changed sides as well – and they’re running (Zawiya) as a sort of people’s republic in the centre of the town.
Some people are saying that the town is split. They’re saying there may even be a protest rally in favour of Gaddafi. We await that with interest.
But certainly the people in the centre of town – at least a couple of thousand – were adamant they were not going to budge.
However the centre of Zawiya, about 50km (30 miles) to the west, was being held by the anti-government camp on Sunday.
Pro-Gaddafi forces are surrounding the city.
Some of the demonstrators in Zawiya fired weapons into the air, saying they were protesting peacefully but were ready to fight.
“This is our revolution,” some, quoted by Reuters news agency, chanted.
A number of protesters stood on top of a captured tank while others crowded around an anti-aircraft gun, Reuters added.
In a televised speech on Thursday, Col Gaddafi addressed the people of Zawiya, saying young people were being duped with drugs and alcohol to take part in “destruction and sabotage”.
The UN Security Council unanimously backed an arms embargo and asset freeze on the Libyan government.
It also voted to refer Col Gaddafi to the International Criminal Court for alleged crimes against humanity.
Col Gaddafi’s son Saif al-Islam denied that his father had any assets abroad.
“We are a very modest family and everybody knows that,” he told ABC News. “They are saying we have money in Europe or Switzerland… It’s a joke.”
US President Barack Obama has said the Libyan leader should step down and leave the country immediately.
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Paul Owens died after being stabbed in Newcastle A 26-year-old man has been charged with the murder of 18-year-old Paul Owens, who died after being stabbed in Newcastle.
Mr Owens was assaulted on the Bryansford Road near the entrance to Donard Park at about 0100 GMT on Saturday. He died later in hospital.
A 20-year-old woman has been charged with assisting offenders. Both accused will appear in court on Monday.
A 29-year-old man who was also arrested was released without charge.
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Embattled French Foreign Minister Michele Alliot-Marie has announced her resignation after weeks of criticism over her contacts with the former Tunisian regime.
Announcing her resignation, she said she had committed no wrongdoing.
A veteran conservative politician and cabinet minister, she had been in her new job for just three months.
She was heavily criticised for initially offering French help to quell the uprising in Tunisia.
Subsequent revelations about her and her family’s links to the regime of former President Zine El-Abidine Ben Ali, and the fact that she had taken a Christmas holiday in Tunisia during the uprising made her position increasingly untenable.
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People have been trying to salvage what they can from shattered homes A landslide caused by intense rains has destroyed more than 150 homes in the Bolivian city of La Paz.
The authorities managed to evacuate the poor Kupini II area before it was smashed by a collapsing hillside.
Elsewhere in La Paz, at least five people drowned when a minibus was swept away by a swollen river.
Across Bolivia, weeks of heavy rain have killed at least 40 others and left more than 10,000 homeless.
Officials evacuated the Kupini II area on Saturday night after cracks began appearing in roads and bridges.
“My neighbours were running around and told me to get out,” local resident Maria Elena Siles told the Associated Press.
“I looked out the window and there were no more homes to the left or the right of mine”.
Residents have been trying to recover furniture and other belongings from wrecked houses, while crews with heavy equipment try to stop the landslide from threatening other areas.
Much of La Paz is built on steep mountainsides, and landslides are not uncommon, but officials say this was one of the worst the city has ever seen.
Troops have been mobilised to help the evacuation and recovery efforts.
So far the only confirmed fatalities in La Paz have been five people killed when a minibus fell into a raging river in the south of the city after a bridge collapsed.
The Bolivian government declared a national emergency last Tuesday because of torrential rains across much of the country.
The worst flooding has been in the northern Amazon lowlands, where dozens of rural communities have been cut off by rivers that have burst their banks.
Bolivian military planes and helicopters have been flying supplies to the worst-hit areas.
The government says this year’s rainy season has been particularly severe as a result of La Nina, a climatic phenomenon caused by a shift in currents in the Pacific Ocean.
In recent months parts of Colombia, Venezuela, Brazil, Mexico and Central America have also experienced severe flooding.
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The BBC’s Jeremy Bowen reports on the struggle for control of the Libyan town of Zawiya, as pro and anti-Gaddafi supporters make their voices heard.
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Adele also has her debut album and earlier singles in the charts Adele has held on to the charts with Someone Like You staying as number one single for a second week and 21 the best-selling album for a fifth week.
Someone Like You went to the top of the singles chart last week in the wake of her show-stopping acoustic performance at the Brit Awards.
Official Charts Company managing director Martin Talbot said: “Adele is proving to truly be the star of 2011.”
Someone Like You has sold more than 100,000 for two successive weeks.
Adele’s debut album 19 moved up two places from four to two and another of her singles Rolling In The Deep remained at number four.
While her cover of Bob Dylan’s Make You Feel My Love dropped one place from 24 to 25.
Last week, the singer-songwriter became the first living artist since The Beatles to achieve two top five hits in the Official Singles Chart and the Official Albums Chart simultaneously.
In January 1964, The Beatles’ singles I Want To Hold Your Hand and She Loves You were at numbers two and five while albums With The Beatles and Please Please Me were at one and two.
Elsewhere in this week’s singles chart, US actress Gwyneth Paltrow scored two top 40 single entries following her appearance on TV show Glee.
Her medley of Rihanna’s Umbrella and Singing In The Rain entered at number 22 and a cover of Cee-Lo Green’s chart-topper Forget You reached 31.
Jessie J – the BBC’s Sound of 2011 and winner of the Critics Choice award at the Brits – remained at number two with her hit Price Tag featuring B.O.B.
Rihanna climbed three places to number three with her single S&M.
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Mohammed Ghannouchi was seen as too closely linked to the old regime Tunisian Prime Minister Mohammed Ghannouchi has announced on state TV that he is resigning – a key demand of demonstrators.
He was speaking at a news conference in Tunis, after making a lengthy speech defending his record in government.
Mr Ghannouchi is seen as being too close to former President Zine al-Abidine Ben Ali, who was toppled in an uprising last month.
Mr Ghannouchi, 69, had served under Mr Ben Ali since 1999.
“After having taken more than one week of thinking, I became convinced, and my family shared my conviction, and decided to resign. It is not fleeing my responsibilities; I have been shouldering my responsibilities since 14 January [when Mr Ben Ali fled],” he said.
“I am not ready to be the person who takes decisions that would end up causing casualties,” he added.
“This resignation will serve Tunisia, and the revolution and the future of Tunisia,” he added.
It is exactly what the protesters had been demanding. Mohammed Ghannouchi, had served under the country’s old dictatorship, and as far as they were concerned, until he went, their revolution was unfinished.
The question now is whether this resignation will be enough to quell the violence. As the news has spread, people have been taking to the streets, chanting and singing of victory.
Earlier in the day, police in Tunis fired tear gas and warning shots to disperse the latest demonstration calling for a new government and a new constitution on a third day of violence.
On Friday and Saturday, anti-government protesters held huge rallies calling for Mr Ghannouchi’s resignation.
At least three people were killed in clashes between hundreds of demonstrators and security forces in Tunis on Saturday.
Tunisia’s government had insisted it was introducing reforms as fast as it could, and that it was planning to hold elections by July.
The BBC’s Paul Moss in Tunis: “Police are giving protesters merciless beatings”
But those promises did not seem to satisfy the protesters, correspondents say.
The fall of Mr Ben Ali after 23 years in power sparked similar uprisings in the Arab world, including one that led to the downfall of long-time Egyptian President Hosni Mubarak on 11 February and another under way in Libya.
The trigger for the protests in Tunisia was a desperate act by a young unemployed man on 17 December 2010.
Mohammed Bouazizi set fire to himself when officials in his town prevented him from selling vegetables on the streets of Sidi Bouzid without permission.
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Edward De Nunzio had planned to study at University College London A British gap year student has fallen to his death while jumping between chalet rooftops at a French ski resort.
Edward De Nunzio, 18, fell 16ft (4.8m) from an icy roof in Courchevel as he jumped between buildings on Saturday.
The trainee ski instructor, from Tadcaster, North Yorkshire, had been out with a friend who escaped unharmed.
His father, ex-Asda chief executive Tony De Nunzio, said the family was struggling to come to terms with his death.
“We are absolutely devastated by this tragedy,” he said.
“Edward was in Courchevel enjoying a three-month ski instructor course.
“He was a hugely talented young man with a bright future and we are overwhelmed by what has happened.”
Mr De Nunzio, who studied at Bootham School and the Minster School in York, achieved three As and two A*s at A-level.
He had planned to do voluntary work in Peru and travel around South America later this year, before starting a geography degree at University College London in October.
French police are now working to determine the exact circumstances of his death, in the early hours of Saturday.
His father, who has flown out to France, is currently non-executive director of Boots, non-executive chairman of Pets at Home and executive chairman of Maxeda, a large retailer in the Netherlands.
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By Rory Cellan-Jones
Rory Cellan-Jones’s avatar interviews Microsoft executive Reena Kawal’s avatar
If you spent $9bn a year on research and development and employed 900 of the world’s top computer scientists to come up with new ideas, what would you expect in return?
More than a new way of playing video games, a cynic might say.
Special Report: The Technology of Business Digital death of a business card? Mobile advertisers want your phone Rinsing your reputation the online way Mobile working comes of age Using voice to give your app the edge
But Microsoft – a company that may well spend more on R&D than any other business – believes its strategy is paying off, and the proof is the XBox Kinect system.
On a visit to the company’s headquarters, I had a chance to see some of the projects that Microsoft scientists at its laboratories in Redmond, in Beijing and in Cambridge, England, believe will change the way we see computers.
And the striking thing about what Microsoft’s research chief Craig Mundie picked to show off to a group of technology journalists was that almost all of them involved Kinect.
The system which turns a player’s body into a games controller was developed with the help of seven different research groups at the company’s three main labs, some working on voice recognition, others on motion sensors and a range of other technologies.
Now they are looking at what Kinect could do next.
This photo-realistic avatar is designed to be able to be put into a game or social network We saw a system which would allow two people to see different images on the same screen, their eyes tracked by the Kinect camera.
Other scientists showed off ways that the camera could capture objects and people in 3D, which might have applications in future telepresence systems.
And there was plenty of work on avatars, for use in either games or in video-conferencing. Two Chinese researchers demonstrated a photo-realistic talking head – type in some text and he’ll say anything you want, blinking and moving almost like a real person.
Craig Mundie says the success of Kinect, which racked up 8m sales in its first 60 days, is proof that the sheer scale of Microsoft’s R&D strategy is paying off.
“Microsoft is at a point where many of the things that we’ve been researching for twenty years are starting to add up and produce solutions,” he says. “You can’t rely on two guys in a garage to make all the changes, some of these things require a huge amount of technology and a lot of scale.”
Microsoft’s Craig Mundie: “We have produced consistent business results, and new technology in many ways”
But Microsoft desperately needed a hit from its research labs.
Ever since Bill Gates decided 20 years ago that the company would spend big bucks on trying to see into the future, there have been ideas aplenty but few stand out products. A decade ago, for instance, Gates was showing off tablet computers – but it took Apple and its iPad to make them mainstream.
Peter Lee, who runs the Redmond lab, says the research operation has a wide remit, from dealing with instant fixes to current products to blue-sky thinking.
Professor Lee, who joined Microsoft last year after a distinguished academic career and a spell at the US defence agency DARPA, insists the labs are having an impact on a daily basis.
“Some call it navel-gazing, we call it pushing back the frontiers of human knowledge”
Prof Peter Lee Microsoft
He cites the contribution to what he describes as the “holy war in search”, the battle between Google and Microsoft’s Bing.
“Hour by hour we have a large group of researchers actively involved in Bing, constantly adding new research advances into the product.”
But he thinks the long-term research is equally important.
“Some call it navel-gazing, we call it pushing back the frontiers of human knowledge,” he says with a smile, predicting that his lab will one day win a Nobel prize.
His boss Craig Mundie is Microsoft’s big thinker, charting the path of its future research. His current obsession is what he calls natural user interfaces, new ways of interacting with computers, of which Kinect is one example.
There is, he says, a shift about to happen from the old graphical user interface to a trend where “the computer is more like us – it sees, it listens, it speaks, it understands, it even seeks to do things on our behalf.”
It is an intriguing vision, but here’s a sobering fact. All these clever ideas, smart people, and major investment have not stopped Microsoft from being overtaken in the last year in terms of market value by Apple, which seems to focus on the customer experience now, rather than five years down the line.
Rory Cellan-Jones shakes hands remotely, using a 3D projection Big, sleepy, and dull, I suggested to Mr Mundie, is how many people now perceive Microsoft.
“We don’t feel big and sleepy or dull,” he responded, “but if people perceive us that way I think looking at the stuff that Kinect brings should change that view.”
And he insists that firms that do not have the patience to spend on long-term research will lose out in the end.
“I don’t think any company is going to prevail over a long period of time in giving good business returns, if they aren’t making these kind of investments. They’ll come and go in a generation if they don’t have the staying power that’s produced by having real mastery of the underlying technologies.”
Microsoft, which still generates huge revenues from its core products, Windows and Office, can well afford to keep spending on its blue-sky thinking. But having made such a big bet on science, it will be hoping that the coming years will produce more Kinects, and fewer tablet PCs.
This article is from the BBC News website. © British Broadcasting Corporation, The BBC is not responsible for the content of external internet sites.
An 89th-minute Obafemi Martins goal after an Arsenal mix-up helps Birmingham win an enthralling Carling Cup final at Wembley.
This article is from the BBC News website. © British Broadcasting Corporation, The BBC is not responsible for the content of external internet sites.