Last Atlantis crew arrive for launch

Jonathan AmosBy Jonathan Amos

Crew (Reuters)Just four astronauts will fly on the final space shuttle mission. Atlantis lifts off on Friday
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The four US astronauts who will crew the last ever space shuttle mission have arrived in Florida.

The three men and one woman will launch in the Atlantis orbiter on Friday from the Kennedy Space Center.

Bumper crowds are expected on the Space Coast to watch the 1126 local time (1526 GMT) lift-off.

The US space agency (Nasa) is retiring its shuttles to make way for crew and cargo transportation services that will be operated by private companies.

Atlantis will be hauling more than 3.5 tonnes (8,000lb) of supplies to the International Space Station (ISS).

This load includes a year’s worth of food. It should give Nasa some room to play with if the new commercial players have difficulty meeting their contractual obligations.

The four Atlantis astronauts – Commander Chris Ferguson, Pilot Doug Hurley, and Mission Specialists Sandy Magnus and Rex Walheim – flew into Kennedy from their training base in Houston, Texas.

As it was Independence Day here in the US, they had no hesitation in waving the Stars and Stripes for the photographers.

“This is a day that is decidedly American,” said Commander Fergusson. “We have an eventful 12-day mission ahead of us… and when it’s all over I think I can speak for everyone when I say we’ll be very proud to put the right-hand book-end on the space shuttle programme.”

Pilot Hurley added: “We want to thank the team that processed the Atlantis shuttle for her last flight. We just want to honour the entire Kennedy team that has worked on these magnificent machines these last 30-plus years.”

The 8 July ascent will be the 135th shuttle launch and the 33rd of Atlantis.

In total, 355 individuals will have flown 852 times on those 135 missions since the very first shuttle flight on 12 April, 1981.

The five orbiters used over the course of the programme have flown 864,401,200km (537,114,016 miles) – a distance roughly similar to travelling from the Earth to the Sun and back three times.

Atlantis will add a further 6.5 million km (four million miles) to that total.

Discovery was the first ship to begin the run-down with a final flight in March, followed by Endeavour which landed one last time on 1 June.

The vehicles are all being retired to museums. Atlantis will end its days at the Kennedy Space Center visitor complex.

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

Cairo clashes after police freed

A poster showing Mohammed Sayyed Abdelatif, killed in the January/February uprising, at Tahrir Square in Cairo, Egypt - 3 July 2011Relatives of those killed in the uprising are demanding speedier trials of the accused

Clashes have broken out at a Cairo courthouse after seven police officers accused of killing protesters earlier this year were released on bail.

After scuffling with guards at the courthouse, hundreds of people then blocked the highway to Suez.

The police officers allegedly killed 17 people in Suez during protests that toppled former President Hosni Mubarak.

There is growing tension in Egypt over the pace of trials for police accused of using deadly force in the uprising.

About 850 people were killed as the former government tried to quell an 18-day uprising that forced Hosni Mubarak from power on 11 February.

After his overthrow, the new military-led government promised to reform the security services.

Activists, and the relatives of those killed, have been frustrated at the slow pace of trials for police officers and senior officials accused of involvement in the deaths.

Mr Mubarak and his sons Alaa and Gamal are due to go on trial in August over the deaths of protesters.

After the judge in Cairo ordered the release of the seven officers and adjourned their trial until September, the victims’ families tried to rush toward the defendants, who were quickly removed.

A number of people then tried to storm the judge’s office but were blocked by security guards.

A group blocked traffic on the nearby highway to Suez, while other people inside the city mounted a protest.

The clashes were the latest unrest in Egypt after police and protesters fought in Cairo’s Tahrir Square last week, leaving hundreds of people injured.

Tahrir Square was the epicentre of the protest movement that toppled Mr Mubarak.

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

Chavez addresses Caracas crowds

Hugo Chavez salutes the crowd from the balcony of the presidential palace in Caracas, Venezuela 4 July 2011Hugo Chavez thanked the cheering crowds for their support, saying it was “the best medicine”
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Venezuelan President Hugo Chavez has addressed thousands in Caracas after receiving medical treatment in Cuba.

They cheered as he waved the Venezuelan flag from his palace’s balcony and said he would win his health battle.

Mr Chavez, 56, had been in Cuba since 8 June, where he underwent an operation to remove a cancerous tumour.

He has said he would not be able to take part in celebrations to mark the 200th anniversary of Venezuela’s independence from Spain on Tuesday.

He would not attend the parade but would follow it from the presidential palace, he said.

Dressed in his trademark green military fatigues and red beret, Mr Chavez initially led the exultant crowd in a robust rendition of Venezuela’s national anthem, Gloria al Bravo Pueblo (Glory to the Brave People).

“The return has begun,” he said, thanking the people for their support. “This is the best medicine for whatever illness.”

Standing unaided, Mr Chavez spoke without notes for around 30 minutes.

At the scene

It has been a triumphant return for the president, who had looked frightened and apologetic in his message to the nation broadcast last week in which he informed Venezuelans that he had been treated for cancer.

It seemed that the government had deliberately wanted to surprise the country with his return.

Returning in time for the bicentennial celebrations is an important achievement for a president who likes to compare his socialist revolution with the independence struggle of his hero Simon Bolivar 200 years ago.

That Mr Chavez will be forced to watch proceedings indoors is an indication that he is still battling ill health. How much he will be able to resume his usual duties in the coming weeks is a question many want answered.

Triumphant return for Chavez

At one point he held up a crucifix, saying: “Christ is with us!”

The thousands-strong crowd, bedecked in the red of his ruling Socialist party, chanted back: “Oh, no! Chavez won’t go!”

Earlier, Mr Chavez said he had spent “very difficult days” in Cuba but that his recovery was going well.

Mr Chavez, who has led Venezuela for 12 years and survived a coup attempt in 2002, told state TV he was under very strict medical supervision “with medication, rest, meals controlled”.

There had been widespread speculation about Mr Chavez’s health after he left Venezuela more than three weeks ago for what officials said was an operation on a pelvic abscess.

Last week he revealed he had also had surgery to remove a cancerous tumour. He said he was determined to win his health battle and was on the road to recovery.

Political observers speculated that he could be gone for months, and some questioned whether he could realistically return to office.

Although his return has calmed much speculation, correspondents say it is still unclear how serious Mr Chavez’s condition is or if he will need continued treatment that will leave him weak.

Mr Chavez’s extended stay in Cuba led to the postponement of a regional summit scheduled to begin on Tuesday.

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

Living costs ‘rising for parents’

FamilyFamilies have seen prices rise for many essential items, the report says

Parents must each earn at least £18,400 in 2011 so their family can live to an acceptable standard, a charity says.

Cuts to childcare assistance and the freeze on child benefit, when prices have risen, have raised the income requirement, the Joseph Rowntree Foundation (JRF) said.

The minimum cost of living was 5% higher than in 2010, the report said.

But the government said it was doing what it could to help people who were feeling squeezed.

“The Government recognises that people are feeling squeezed and is doing what it can to help, reducing fuel duty so taxes on fuel are 6p lower than they would have been and implementing an increase in the personal allowance in April, taking over 800,000 of the lowest paid out of tax,” an HM Treasury spokesman said.

The JRF report added that a single person needed to earn £15,000 before tax and benefits for an acceptable standard of living.

“This report shows that the squeeze in living standards caused by the combination of rising prices and stagnant incomes is hitting people on low incomes hard,” said the author of the report, Donald Hirsch, of Loughborough University.

Since 2008, the JRF has gathered information from focus groups to set a benchmark for what it considers to be an “acceptable standard of living”.

The official cost of living rose by 4.5% in the year to April, as calculated by the Consumer Prices Index (CPI) measure of inflation.

However, the JRF said that the “minimum budget” had risen by between 4.7% and 5.7% during the same period.

Minimum weekly budgetSingle working age: £240.89Pensioner couple: £302.74Couple with two children: £705.63Lone parent with one child: £466.08

Source: Joseph Rowntree Foundation. Weekly budget including rent and childcare

This was because the basket of goods included food, council tax and public transport, taking up a considerable chunk of lower-income families’ budgets, which had risen sharply in price.

“In practice, earnings have risen by less than inflation, meaning that many people on low incomes are finding it substantially harder to make ends meet than a year ago,” the report said.

In addition, the housing costs had risen, and tax credits had been cut for some families so they needed to cover more of their childcare costs themselves.

“This report is an early sign of the huge impact that even seemingly modest changes in the welfare system can have, especially for low-income working families who depend on it to achieve an acceptable living standard,” the report said.

The report said that for each pound by which they fell short of what they needed, they had to earn several pounds more to cover for higher taxes and lower tax credits.

In a statement, the government said that it had, “announced above-inflation increases to the child element of the Child Tax Credit of £180 in 2011-2 and £110 in 2012-13, funded in part by recycling the savings from freezing child benefit”.

The gap between the national minimum wage and the minimum income standard was highlighted by the JRF.

It suggested that a wage of £7.67 an hour would be needed by a single person, and £9.41 an hour by each of a couple working full-time with two children.

A lone parent with one child would need to earn £9.33 an hour. The national minimum wage is £5.93.

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

Smart cards

Rajini VaidyanathanBy Rajini Vaidyanathan

Women queue up to buy subsidised food

WATCH: Critics of the smart card scheme say queues have increased since the card’s introduction

Women are waiting in line in one of Chandigarh’s slum areas, holding empty shopping bags ready to be filled with rice, wheat and sugar.

As each customer reaches the counter, they hand the shopkeeper a plastic card with their photograph on, then they’re asked for something else – their fingerprints.

In order to buy any of the supplies from this government-run ration store, they need to place their fingers on a small credit-card-style machine.

Only once they get a match can their purchase go ahead.

Women buying staples from the government shop using their smart cardsWomen buying staples from the government shop using their smart cards

The shoppers here in Chandigarh are part of a project that uses biometric smart cards to deliver food to the city’s poorest. 

In India, those living below the poverty line (BPL) or on lower incomes, are allowed to buy basic food staples such as rice, sugar and wheat at highly subsidised rates, at government-run Fair Price shops. 

In most places, families are given paper “ration books” that record how much food has been purchased and by whom. 

But this scheme in Chandigarh is doing away with the old system.

The credit card-sized biometric smart cards contain a 64kb microchip that stores the fingerprints, photograph and other personal details of the head of the family and at least two other members. 

It can also store a record of the purchases made by every family – how much they have bought and at what price. 

Those behind the scheme believe the technology will do away with fraud, and ensure food reaches the genuine recipients.  Under the old paper system where little proof was needed to claim food,  people could easily use someone else’s card, say officials. 

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“It means only the person who is holding the smart card will get the food – no-one else can claim the food as theirs” says Bachan Singh, of Chandigarh’s food and supplies department, which is administering the scheme. 

“Everyone will get the proper quantity of food, at the proper price,” he says.

“I like the smart cards a lot,” says Usha, a mother of three young children who is waiting to buy food. “I lost my card recently and was able to get another one easily.”

Usha works as a domestic maid and earns about 1,500 rupees a month ($33; £21). By that definition hers is a BPL family, and is entitled to up to 35kg of subsidised grains per month. 

But Kunti Devi disagrees with Usha’s assessment of the scheme. A widow, she earns 2,000 rupees ($44; £28) a month as a cleaner and has reported problems with the new scheme. 

“The machine doesn’t always read my fingerprints properly, sometimes they tell me to go away and come back later,” she says.

“I also have to wait a long time in the queue, before it was much quicker.”

Fingerprint scanningFingerprints are scanned and the data recorded in the chip on the smart card

One of the biggest challenges officials face is getting people to trust the new technology. Here in this slum area there are no computers or televisions – the idea of doing things electronically is alien to many. 

Teething problems are evident in the scheme. During the time we visited, the machine broke down and led to an even longer queue of people waiting in the searing heat for their food. But government officials did turn up promptly to investigate. 

Vinay Verma, who deals with the technical aspects of the machines, says some of the problems stem from the fact the vendors themselves are unfamiliar with the machines. 

He says failure is often down to human error, such as the cable not being pushed in properly, or the cards not properly inserted. 

The city has bold plans to register 200,000 families onto this scheme by September, so far only 5,000 have signed up to the cards.

MachineThe machine checks the customers fingerprints against the biometric data on the card

“The government wants people to give their biometric data and fingerprints, and many people have a fear that this will be used in another way, so they are not coming up in numbers to give their data,” says Surendra M Bhanot, from the Consumers Association of Chandigarh.

Mr Bhanot says many of the people the scheme is aimed at are illiterate and fear this biometric information could end up in the hands of the police. 

An awareness drive is one way he believes this hurdle can be overcome. 

Using this kind of technology to deliver rations is costing the Chandigarh authorities 44 crores and 66 lakhs rupees ($10m; £6.2m). None of this cost is picked up by the cardholder themselves. 

The deployment of biometric smart cards to deliver rations is one way the government could meet its bold plans to ensure food rations reach the country’s poorest. In its draft food-security bill it guarantees subsidised food grains to at least 90% of rural households and 50% of urban families. 

New technology is one way it could deliver this – if the Chandigarh smart-card scheme is seen to be a success, it could be replicated across India. 

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

Serbs welcome home champion Djokovic

Crowds in Belgrade welcome Novak Djokovic, 4 July 2011Thousands turned out to greet the Wimbledon champion
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Wimbledon tennis champion Novak Djokovic has received a rapturous welcome in his native Serbia the day after winning the title.

A smiling Djokovic and his team were given an open-top bus tour from Belgrade airport escorted by a dozen police vehicles.

Outside parliament, tens of thousands of fans cheered as their hero raised a replica of the famous trophy.

Djokovic, 24, beat Spain’s Rafael Nadal in Sunday’s final.

“You made this day the best day of my life,” Djokovic told the screaming crowd.

Novak Djokovic greets crowds in Belgrade, 4 July 2011Djokovic raised a replica of the Wimbledon trophy to huge cheers from the crowd

“He is the pride of Serbia and [the] Serbian people,” said one teenage girl who had travelled some 80km (50 miles) to Belgrade from the town of Novi Sad.

“Lucky is the mother that gave birth to such a hard-working and gifted boy,” said onlooker Milorad Veselinovic.

Many of those gathered in Nikola Pasic Square carried Serbian flags and banners reading “Nole we love you” and “Nole the king” referring to Djokovic’s nickname.

Djokovic guaranteed his place as world number one when he beat Jo-Wilfried Tsonga in the last four at Wimbledon.

He followed up by outplaying defending champion Nadal 6-4, 6-1, 1-6, 6-3 on centre court on Sunday.

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

Strauss-Kahn faces Paris sex case

Breaking news

French writer Tristane Banon is to file a lawsuit for attempted rape against former IMF chief Dominique Strauss-Kahn, her lawyer says.

The lawyer, David Koubbi, said the suit referred to an incident in 2002 when Ms Banon went to interview Mr Strauss-Kahn in a flat in Paris.

Mr Strauss-Kahn was recently freed from house arrest in New York in a separate alleged sex assault case.

He denies assaulting a hotel maid in the US city on 14 May.

It was shortly after Mr Strauss-Kahn was arrested in New York that Ms Banon came forward to say that he had tried to assault her in 2002.

She did not go to the police, but did raise the allegation in a TV chat show in 2007, when Mr Strauss-Kahn’s name was bleeped out.

Mr Koubbi said the suit would be filed on Tuesday. He had previously said it would not be filed until Mr Strauss-Kahn’s New York trial finished.

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