£20,000 to site local windfarms

Wind turbines SwindonOnshore windfarms are going up across the UK but many locals fight against their installation
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Local communities in England which agree to site an onshore windfarm will receive payment backed by the government, under new plans.

Renewable UK, the renewable energy trade association, will launch a “wind energy industry guarantee” that will average £20,000 per year per project.

With the average life of a windfarm estimated at 20 years, this could add up to £400,000.

There are also plans to offer other benefits.

There will be a commitment to pay £1,000 per megawatt (MW) of installed capacity each year for the lifetime of a wind farm whose average output is expected to be 20MW.

Windfarms have been controversial in some areas, with some campaigners saying they are noisy and spoil the landscape.

The initiative will be launched later on Wednesday by the Department for Energy and Climate Change (DECC) and Renewable UK.

A joint statement from the two said: “The package of measures will see wind farm developments of 5MW and above that are submitted to planning authorities come with a commitment to community funds and/ or benefits in kind.”

It adds that although goodwill payments already apply when a windfarm is built, there are no common national standards.

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High earners’ migration cap to go

Airport arrivalsThe government wants to cut immigration to “tens of thousands” a year
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Non-European Union workers earning more than £150,000 a year are to be excluded from the government’s immigration cap.

Scientists will also be given “a significant advantage” in coming to the UK as firms attempt to fill jobs where there are staff shortages.

Immigration minister Damian Green said the UK had to “attract the brightest and the best” to promote recovery.

Business groups welcomed the step but Labour accused ministers of leaking the information to the media.

The opposition questioned why the announcement was not being made first to Parliament.

Shadow Home Office minister Gerry Sutcliffe said the Home Office had become a “serial offender” in briefing the media in advance of important announcements.

The government has said it wants to cut the overall non-EU immigration limit from approximately 200,000 to “tens of thousands” by 2015.

This will be split into monthly allocations with a total of 4,200 available for the first month in April, with 1,500 each month after that – a total of 20,700.

Mr Green said chemists, biochemists, physicists, geologists and research and development managers will all be among those given an advantage, while high earners would be exempt.

He added that the new rules will only apply to new applicants and not to those already in the UK, although those wanting to settle in the UK would have to be clear of any criminal convictions.

“We have made it clear employers should look first to people who are out of work and who are already in this country”

Damian Green Immigration minister

Mr Green said: “Britain needs to attract the brightest and the best to fill jobs gaps but this should never be at the expense of workers already here.

“We have worked closely with businesses while designing this system and made it clear employers should look first to people who are out of work and who are already in this country.”

Each application for a certificate of sponsorship, which firms will need to bring skilled migrants into the UK, will be ranked with the most points awarded for jobs on the shortage occupation list.

If any month is oversubscribed, those with the most points will be granted permission to come to the UK, the Home Office said.

If demand exceeds the allocation by fewer than 100 in any month, those places will be taken from the following month. Any unused places will also be rolled over to the following month.

Firms will need to have already advertised the job in the UK and failed to find a suitable candidate.

Intra-company transfers (ICTs), used by firms to bring their own people into the UK for more than a year to do specific jobs, will be excluded from the cap, but a minimum salary of £40,000 will be introduced.

But firms will still be able to bring non-EU workers into the UK on ICTs for less than 12 months as long as they earn £24,000.

Employers group, the CBI, welcomed what it said was the government’s decision to “prioritise skilled workers” – saying it was vital if the UK was to remain an “attractive place to invest”.

Adam Marshall, director of policy at the British Chambers of Commerce, said: “Business said loud and clear that any new immigration rules must still let companies access the right talent, at the right time, when domestic workers are unable to fill skills gaps.

“The new rules show that, after a period of great uncertainty, the government is listening harder to business concerns.”

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CBS reporter in Egypt mob assault

CBS correspondent Lara Logan is pictured in Cairo's Tahrir SquareLara Logan was reporting from Tahrir Square when she was attacked

A senior CBS correspondent is recovering in hospital in the US after she was beaten and sexually assaulted by a mob while covering the Egyptian protests, the US network says.

It says the attack occurred on Friday in Cairo’s packed Tahrir Square after President Hosni Mubarak stepped down.

Ms Logan became separated from her crew and was rescued by women and soldiers.

The Committee to Protect Journalists has said 52 journalists were assaulted and 76 detained during events in Egypt.

All the detained journalists have now been released.

In a statement, CBS said that Ms Logan and her team had become became “surrounded by a dangerous element amidst the celebration” with a mob of more than 200 people “whipped into a frenzy”.

It said Ms Logan was recovering following what it described as “a brutal and sustained sexual assault and beating”.

A group of women and an estimated 20 soldiers managed to save her after she became separated from her colleagues and security, it added.

The 39-year-old South African returned to the US on Saturday.

Ms Logan is CBS News’ chief foreign affairs correspondent and has reported from Iraq and Afghanistan.

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Vote over top council pay packets

Communities Secretary Eric PicklesCommunities Secretary Eric Pickles said staff salaries needed to be “democracy proofed”
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Local authorities planning to pay employees more than £100,000 will have to seek the approval of councillors in a vote, Communities Secretary Eric Pickles has said.

Mr Pickles said this would ensure pay packets were “democracy proofed”.

The Communities Secretary intends to amend the Localism Bill which is being discussed in the Commons.

It comes as research showed 43% of council chiefs got paid more than £150,000 last year.

Mr Pickles said councils needed to be sure “they didn’t sully their reputation by taking decisions behind closed doors” and “reward chief executives when they should be focusing resources on protecting frontline services”.

He added: “The changes we are introducing will mean that local government jobs will now have to be ‘democracy proofed’ before mega-salaries are paid out.

“I think the democratically elected leaders of any council should make sure they have their say on pay and that £100,000 is the place to start that.”

He went on to say the Localism Bill was “one of the most radical pieces of legislation to be debated in this chamber for decades”.

“It is a triumph for democracy over bureaucracy that will fundamentally shake up the balance of power in this country.”

As a result of the new measures, councils will have to prepare and publish a statement setting out the authority’s policy on the remuneration arrangements of its chief officers.

Big bonuses and above-inflation annual pay rises could also have to be included.

When councils want to depart from their senior pay policy statement – which authorities will be required to follow when setting senior pay – they will need to refer back to the full council for a vote.

As part of the coalition’s transparency agenda, councils have already been compelled to publish receipts for any expenditure over £500.

Last year Mr Pickles called for council chef executives earning over £200,000 to take a 10% pay cut.

He urged those earning £150,000 – which is more than the Prime Minister’s current salary of £142,000 – to take a 5% pay cut.

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Tinie Tempah wins two Brit Awards

Tinie TempahTinie Tempah is nominated for four awards, including best British male
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Eyes will be on Tinie Tempah at the Brits later, where he will compete for the coveted British album of the year award and three other prizes.

The 22-year-old urban artist is also up for best single for Pass Out, best breakthrough act and best British male.

Rapper Plan B, folk band Mumford and Sons and Mercury Prize winners The xx have three nominations each.

Gavin and Stacey star James Corden will host the ceremony, taking place at London’s O2 arena for the first time.

Tempah will go up against the three triple-nominated acts and Take That for British album of the year.

He will also battle it out against Mark Ronson, Paul Weller, Plan B and Robert Plant in the best British male category.

Take That, scheduled to perform at the event, will compete against Biffy Clyro, Mumford and Sons and Gorillaz for the best group honour.

Elsewhere, Cheryl Cole, Ellie Goulding and Paloma Faith are up for best British female alongside Laura Marling and Rumer.

Rihanna and Arcade Fire are also expected to perform, while singer Kylie Minogue will be among stars presenting awards.

The Brit awards will be broadcast live on ITV1 from 2000 GMT.

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Iran president dismisses protests

Mahmoud Ahmadinejad (11 February 2011)Mr Ahmadinejad said the opposition wanted to undermine a pro-government rally held last Friday

President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad has said the opposition protests seen in Iranian cities on Monday are “going nowhere” and vowed to punish their organisers.

Mr Ahmadinejad told state television that “enemies” were trying to “tarnish the Iranian nation’s brilliance”.

Two people were killed and several wounded in clashes between protesters and security forces in central Tehran, officials said.

US President Barack Obama sharply criticised the authorities’ response.

“I find it ironic that you’ve got the Iranian regime pretending to celebrate what happened in Egypt, when in fact they have acted in direct contrast to what happened in Egypt by gunning down and beating people who were trying to express themselves peacefully,” he told reporters on Tuesday.

Mr Obama said the US could not dictate what went on inside Iran, but hoped people would have the “courage to be able to express their yearning for greater freedom and a more representative government”.

“They threw some dust towards the sun… but the dust will return to their eyes”

Mahmoud Ahmadinejad Iranian PresidentIranian opposition evolvesWill Iran import Arab uprisings?

Not long afterwards, Iran’s president dismissed the protests in Tehran and other major cities, saying they had wanted to undermine a rally held last Friday to mark the 32nd anniversary of the Islamic Revolution.

“It is clear the Iranian nation has enemies because it is a nation that wants to shine, conquer peaks and change [its international] relations,” he said.

He added: “Of course, there is a lot of hostility against the government. But they knew that they would get nowhere.”

Mr Ahmadinejad said the organisers of the protests wanted “just wanted to tarnish the Iranian nation’s brilliance”.

“It is a shining sun. They threw some dust towards the sun… but the dust will return to their eyes.”

On Monday, thousands gathered at Tehran’s Azadi Square in solidarity with the uprisings in Tunisia in Egypt – their first major show of dissent since December 2009, when eight people were killed. Many chanted “Death to dictators”.

The BBC’s Mohsen Asgari, who was at the rally, says it was not long before riot police fired tear gas, while men on motorbikes charged the crowd with batons.

Protests in Tehran

Footage of the protests in Tehran was captured on mobile phones

The next day, the culture ministry’s security chief said Sane Jaleh, a 26-year-old student and government supporter had been killed. Later, MP Kazem Jalali said one of the injured had also died.

Acting police commander Gen Ahmed Reza Radan said several people had been arrested, but did not specify how many. Witnesses told the BBC that dozens of protesters were taken away in police vans.

Earlier, conservative members of Iran’s parliament called for the two opposition leaders they accused of fomenting the unrest, Mir Hossein Mousavi and Mehdi Karroubi, to be tried and sentenced to death.

Pumping their fists in the air, a large group marched through the main parliamentary chamber, chanting “Death to Mousavi, death to Karroubi”.

Iran parliament

Conservative MPs called for the execution of Mr Mousavi and Mr Karroubi

“Mehdi Karroubi and Mir Hossein Mousavi are corrupts on earth and should be tried,” a statement signed by 221 MPs asserted. “We believe the people have lost their patience and demand capital punishment.”

The charge of “corrupt on earth” has been levelled at Iranian political dissidents in the past and carries the death penalty.

Former President Mohammad Khatami was also criticised.

Before Monday’s banned rallies, Mr Mousavi was placed under de facto house arrest by the police. The former prime minister’s supporters said the move was intended to prevent him attending the rally.

Mr Karroubi, a former speaker of parliament and a senior cleric, is also being held under de facto house arrest.

Both men disputed the re-election of President Ahmadinejad in June 2009, which triggered protests that drew the largest crowds in Iran since the Islamic Revolution in 1979. The unrest prompted a brutal crackdown.

The opposition says more than 80 of its supporters were killed in the six months after December 2009, a figure the government disputes. Several have been sentenced to death, and dozens jailed.

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Imperial announces fees of £9,000

Imperial College LondonImperial College wants to charge the maximum level of fees from 2012

Imperial College London has become the first university in England to formally announce that it wants to charge the maximum level of tuition fees.

Imperial, a world-famous science institution, plans to charge £9,000 for all subjects from 2012.

Cambridge University has proposed fees of £9,000, but it has still to complete its decision-making process.

Imperial College will now have to provide details of support for poorer students to the Office for Fair Access.

The central London college, one of the country’s top-rated universities, says it wants to charge maximum fees to “maintain the excellence of the education we provide to students”.

After the government raised the limit for tuition fees for universities in England from 2012, individual institutions have been holding internal discussions about how much they should charge.

“For those who can manage Imperial’s courses, the college will work to ensure they can manage its costs”

Keith O’Nions Rector, Imperial College

Details are beginning to emerge, with Cambridge moving a step closer on Monday to adopting fees of £9,000, when its council backed a recommendation for maximum fees.

Imperial College, one of the country’s top-rated institutions, has become the first to unequivocally set out its intention to charge the top level of fees.

It will now have to decide what package of financial support will be available to students from low-income families.

“Our message to the outside world though must be that for those who can manage Imperial’s courses, the college will work to ensure they can manage its costs,” says a statement from the rector, Keith O’Nions.

Imperial, specialising in science, medicine and engineering, has performed strongly in international league tables.

Before MPs voted on the fee increase, there had been claims that the top level of fee would only be charged in “exceptional circumstances”.

But there are already signs that leading universities intend to charge at the upper level of fees.

Oxford University says that it will need to charge at least £8,000 per year to replace the budgets that are being cut.

There have been suggestions that if universities such as Imperial, Cambridge and Oxford opt for the highest level of fee, it will make it harder for other leading universities to charge less.

Cambridge’s review of fees warned that charging less than the top rate would raise questions about their commitment to quality.

But there have been warnings from the government that universities should not all expect to be able to charge the maximum amount – not least because of the cost of student loans.

Any universities wanting to charge more than £6,000 will need to reach agreement with the Office for Fair Access.

But universities have argued that they face deep cuts to their teaching budgets and need to charge tuition fees above this level to maintain their current funding.

Universities will be submitting their fees plans in the next few weeks, with the final outcome on fee levels expected to appear in the summer.

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Space truck launch delayed

Ariane (Esa)The 200th Ariane arrives at the launch pad
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Europe’s unmanned space freighter is on the launch pad in French Guiana, ready to begin its voyage into orbit.

At more than 20 tonnes, the truck will be the heaviest payload an Ariane 5 rocket has ever lifted into the sky.

The robotic ship, dubbed Johannes Kepler, will be delivering food, air, fuel, experiments and other equipment to the International Space Station.

Another key task for the freighter in the coming months will be to push the station to a higher altitude.

The ISS has a tendency to lose height over time as it brushes through the residual atmosphere still present 350km above the Earth.

Johannes Kepler will dock with the rear of the platform and use its propulsive might to boost the station’s orbit.

Lift-off for the freighter and its carrier Ariane from the Kourou spaceport is timed for 1913 local time (2213 GMT) on Tuesday.

The launch is doubly significant because it marks also the 200th mission of an Ariane rocket since the vehicle series was introduced in 1979.

“Kepler’s mass at lift off will be 20,062kg. This is a record for the launcher and for the European Space Agency (Esa),” said Nico Dettmann, who runs the freighter programme at Esa.

“The integration and launch campaign have been very smooth, but still we have to be thorough and careful,” he told BBC News.

Artist's impression of ATV-2 Johannes Kepler over France

An artist’s impression of ATV2 Johannes Kepler flying over France

Kepler is due to make a docking with the orbiting platform next Wednesday.

The spacecraft – also known by the generic name of Automated Transfer Vehicle (ATV) – is the second such craft to be sent to the ISS by Europe.

The first, “Jules Verne”, had a near-flawless flight to the station in 2008.

Esa trucks are part of the barter arrangement the 18-nation alliance has with its international partners on the ISS project.

Instead of handing over cash to cover station running costs, Europe has taken on the major responsibility of resupplying the platform.

In return it gets residency rights for its astronauts, and current flier, Italian Paolo Nespoli, will be on hand at the ISS to unload Kepler when it docks.

ATV (BBC)

Much the cargo was loaded into Kepler months ago but workers at Kourou used a special elevator in recent days to add some final items.

“We’ve loaded 430kg of late cargo,” said Olivier de la Bourdonnaye, the ATV project manager at the truck’s manufacturer, Astrium.

“This is something new we can offer to the partners so that they can decide – not at the last minute, but – in the last weeks before launch what they want to put in the spacecraft for the mission. This includes food which must be eaten soon by the astronauts and not kept stored for a long time.”

ATV late loadingStores are loaded late by going into the ship on a type of elevator

Three further freighters have already been ordered to help fulfil Esa’s commitments through to about 2016. But with the station set to stay in orbit until at least 2020, Europe will need to decide soon how to meet its “subscription” during the extension.

This could involve the procurement from European industry of additional ATVs, either in their current configuration or perhaps in a form modified to fulfil tasks additional to simply hauling cargo.

The truck is the biggest, most sophisticated vehicle Europe has ever flown in space.

Its automatic rendezvous and docking technology allows it to find its own way to the station and attach without any human intervention.

Esa believes the vehicle’s capabilities will feed into many other exploration activities, at the Moon, Mars and other Solar System destinations.

Artist's impression of ARV approaching the ISS (EADS Astrium)
Ariane V rocket lifting off in Kourou, French Guiana

It currently has no return capability, however, and is simply ditched in Earth’s atmosphere to burn up at the end of a mission.

Feasibility studies have looked at how a return capsule could be added, even one capable of carrying astronauts.

Member states may be reluctant to commit at this stage to such an expensive development.

“Budget constraints are tremendous as you know, but more fundamentally I think that first Europe has probably to build a consistent strategy for exploration,” observed Francois Auque, Astrium’s chief executive officer.

“And today they have not reached this stage; some conferences have occurred, but the vision about exploration for Europe I think is not mature enough to strongly trigger tracks of development,” he told BBC News.

Commentators expect this vision to become clearer in the coming months.

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FBI ‘overstated’ anthrax evidence

Bruce Ivins, in a file photoBruce Ivins killed himself in 2008 shortly after being told he would be charged
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US investigators overstated the strength of scientific evidence against a man accused of sending letters laced with anthrax, a review panel has said.

But the National Research Council did not dispute the conclusion that government scientist Bruce Ivins was responsible for the attacks.

The panel said scientific evidence was “consistent” with that result.

The attacks, weeks after the 9/11 terror attacks, killed five, including two postal workers in Washington.

“We find the scientific evidence to be consistent with their conclusions but not as definitive as stated,” said Lehigh University President Alice Gast, who led the panel.

The letters containing the lethal germ were posted to cities across the country. In addition to the five killed, 17 people were made ill.

Ivins killed himself weeks before he was to be charged.

In a statement, the National Research Council said that advanced scientific methods alone – in isolation from traditional investigative methods – were insufficient to trace the source of the anthrax used in the attacks.

The review was carried out at the FBI’s request.

The FBI said in a statement its investigation had not relied only on scientific findings.

“The FBI has long maintained that while science played a significant role, it was the totality of the investigative process that determined the outcome of the anthrax case,” the agency said.

In 2008, investigators said Ivins, a researcher at the army biological weapons laboratory in Fort Detrick, Maryland, was the sole person responsible for the deadly anthrax attacks.

Ivins killed himself that August, shortly after investigators told him he would be charged.

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Aberdeen 1-2 Motherwell

Francis Jeffers and Jamie Murphy are on target as Motherwell beat 10-man Aberdeen at Pittodrie.

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AC Milan 0-1 Tottenham

Tottenham earn a memorable first leg win at AC Milan to give themselves the upper hand in their last 16 Champions League tie against the Serie A leaders.

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Birmingham 0-2 Newcastle

Jonas Gutierrez inspires Newcastle to their first win in six matches at the expense of Birmingham at St Andrew’s.

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MPs reject 40% AV threshold plan

Ballot boxThe poll is due to be held on 5 May
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MPs have overturned a proposal to make a referendum on the Westminster voting system non-binding unless 40% of the electorate take part in the poll.

Peers backed the measure earlier this month but the Commons rejected the proposal by a majority of 70.

Cabinet Office minister Mark Harper said there was a “compelling” case for voters to make the final decision.

MPs rejected a number of other Lords amendments as they sought to pass a bill needed to authorise the referendum.

Ministers said they had listened to concerns from MPs and peers over the bill and “engaged constructively” over the most contentious issues but Labour said the bill was being “bulldozed” through Parliament.

The Parliamentary Voting System and Constituencies Bill has to be approved by Parliament by Wednesday so that it can become law in time to hold the referendum on the Westminster voting system on 5 May as intended by the government.

“This is not legislating on the basis of the long term democratic health of this country or on the basis of sound principles”

Chris Bryant Shadow Constitional Reform Minister

Aside from enabling the referendum on whether to switch from first-past-the-post to the Alternative Vote, the bill will cut the number of MPs from 650 to 600 and change parliamentary boundaries so that constituency electorates are broadly the same.

Mr Harper said the 40% threshold plan for the referendum would “encourage people to stay at home” and flew in the face of the principle that people “should get what they vote for”.

Labour supported the amendment, former home secretary Jack Straw describing it as “sensible”. But the measure was comfortably defeated in a Commons vote.

MPs also voted to overturn a proposal backed by peers which would have allowed the Boundary Commission to allow constituencies to deviate by up to 7.5% from the proposed standard 76,000 size in exceptional circumstances – as opposed to the 5% supported by the government.

But the government did make a concession to protect the Isle of Wight from some of the boundary changes designed to ensure parliamentary constituencies have roughly the same number of voters.

Under the government’s initial plans, the Isle of Wight would have been divided into two constituencies – with one attached to the mainland.

But the plans for a “cross-Solent” seat prompted substantial opposition and the coalition was defeated on the issue in the Lords last month.

The government has decided that the Isle of Wight will be divided into two seats – but within the geographic boundaries of the island – and the plans were approved by MPs.

Mr Harper said ministers were responding the “strength of opinion” expressed by parliamentarians and the public over the issue.

The two Houses of Parliament must decide on the final wording of the bill on Wednesday before it gets – as expected – Royal Assent on Thursday.

For Labour, Chris Bryant said many MPs would “rue the day” on which they approved the bill, given the unsatisfactory way in which it had been conceived and debated.

“The government has bulldozed its way through every convention so far,” he said. “This is not legislating on the basis of the long-term democratic health of this country or on the basis of sound principles but solely to meet the partisan needs of the coalition.”

A number of Tory MPs also criticised the way in which the legislation had been handled.

Bernard Jenkin, chair of the Public Administration Committee, said it had been passed with “indecent haste” and the referendum campaign would be squeezed into eleven weeks rather than the six months foreseen in past legislation governing such polls.

“This is a shoddy way to conduct a referendum. It is unconstitutional, it is deeply political and it will undermine the value of any referendum result,” he said.

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Obama sees ‘right Egypt signals’

US President Barack Obama says he sees “the right signals” in Egypt, citing meetings between the military council and opposition leaders.

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