Titian painting sells for $16.9m

Titian's A Sacra ConversazioneThe oil on canvas painting had changed hands six times, according to Sotheby’s
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A 450-year-old Madonna and Child work by Titian has sold for $16.9m (£10.7m) in New York, setting a new auction record for the Renaissance master.

A Sacra Conversazione: The Madonna and Child with Saints Luke and Catherine of Alexandria was sold at Sotheby’s to a European telephone bidder.

It beat the previous Titian auction record of £7.5m ($11.9m) paid at Christie’s in London in December 1991.

That was the price achieved for the artist’s Venus and Adonis painting.

A spokeswoman for Sotheby’s said A Sacra Conversazione was “one of only a handful of multi-figured compositions by Titian that remain in private hands”.

It was also, she added, “the most important to appear at auction in decades”.

Sotheby’s said the oil on canvas work – painted around 1560 – had changed hands only six times during its life.

Prior to recent exhibitions in London, Paris and Amsterdam, it had not been seen publicly for 30 years.

In 2008 the National Gallery in London and the National Galleries of Scotland launched a joint appeal to buy a pair of Titain paintings for £50m each.

Enough was eventually raised to buy one of the paintings, Diana and Actaeon, for the nation. Funds are currently being sought to secure its partner, Diana and Callisto.

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Booker prize judges get e-readers

Booker prize shortlistThe judges read 138 books last year before creating their longlist
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Judges of this year’s Man Booker prize have been sent electronic book readers for the first time to help them work their way through more than 100 novels.

Writer Susan Hill said on Twitter that she and her fellow judges were given the devices “so they won’t have to post us tons of real books”.

Publishers have been asked to submit their 2011 entries in both digital and physical form.

Judges will unveil a longlist in July, with a winner to be named in October.

A spokeswoman for the prize told the BBC that the change in the submission rules was to give more flexibility.

“The technology is there, so we should use it to give the judges the option,” she said.

Judges will still be able to request hard copies of the books if they prefer, the Booker representative added.

Last year the judging panel read 138 books before choosing Howard Jacobson’s novel, The Finkler Question, as the winner of the £50,000 prize.

Dame Stella Rimington, former director-general of MI5, chairs this year’s judges, which include journalist Matthew d’Ancona and former MP Chris Mullin.

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Race to drill hidden polar lake

Lake VostokThe first satellite images of Lake Vostok were obtained in the 1990s
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With only about 50m left to drill, time is running out for the Russian scientists hoping to drill into Vostok – the world’s most enigmatic lake.

Vostok is a sub-glacial lake in Antarctica, hidden some 4,000m (13,000ft) beneath the ice sheet.

With the Antarctic summer almost over, temperatures will soon begin to plummet; they can go as low as -80C.

Scientists will leave the remote base on 6 February, when conditions are still mild enough for a plane to land.

The team has been drilling non-stop for weeks.

“It’s like working on an alien planet where no one has been before,” Valery Lukin, the deputy head of Russia’s Arctic and Antarctic Research Institute (AARI) in St Petersburg, which oversees the project, told BBC News.

“We don’t know what awaits us down there,” he said, adding that personnel at the station have been working shifts, drilling 24 hours a day.

Microorganism, Lake VostokMicroorganisms have already been found in the lake’s frozen water

But some experts remain concerned that probing the lake’s water – thought by some to be isolated from everything else on Earth – could contaminate the pristine ecosystem and cause irreversible damage.

The sub-glacial laje is located underneath the remote Vostok station in Antarctica.

Overlaid by nearly four km of ice, it has been isolated from the rest of the world for millions of years. Some scientists think the ice cap above and at the edges has created a hydrostatic seal with the surface, preventing lake water from escaping or anything else from getting inside.

And if the Russian team gets through to the pristine waters, they hope to encounter life forms that have never been seen.

It was at the Vostok station that the coldest temperature ever found on Earth (-89°C) was recorded on 21 July 1983.

Normally, water in such extreme conditions exists only in one state: ice. And when, in the 1970s British scientists in Antarctica received strange radar readings at the site, the presence of a liquid, freshwater lake below the ice did not instantly spring to mind.

“After three km and as we near the bottom [of the ice sheet], the ice temperature gets very close to the ice melting point, and all sorts of problems begin”

Alexey Ekaikin Vostok station, Antarctica

It was not until 1996 that the discovery was formally acnowledged, after satellites sent in the images outlining the lake’s contours.

Space radar revealed that the sub-glacial body of fresh water was one of the largest lakes in the world – and one of some 150 subglacial lakes in Antarctica.

At 10,000 square km and with depths reaching 800m, it is similar to Lake Baikal in Siberia or Lake Ontario in North America.

Since the lake has remained sealed off from the rest of the world, scientists estimate that conditions in it have probably remained unchanged for some 15 million years.

For liquid water to exist in Antarctica, glaciologists suggest that the ice cap serves as a giant insulating blanket, able to capture the Earth’s geothermal heat to melt the bottom of the ice sheet.

Eager to explore the ancient lake, scientists started drilling and managed to go as deep as about 3,600m – but when the untouched waters were only some 130m away, in 1998, the project ground to a halt.

Vostok station, AntarcticaAntarctica’s Vostok station was built in 1956

“We had to stop because of the concerns of possible contamination of the lake,” explained Alexey Ekaikin, a member of the current expedition, who spoke to the BBC Russian Service from Vostok station.

He said that drilling was resumed in 2004, when the team came up with new, ecologically safe methods of probing the lake.

In November 2010, the scientists submitted a final environmental evaluation of the project to the Antarctic Treaty’s environmental protection committee and were given the go-ahead to sample the ancient waters.

They said that instead of drilling into the lake, they would go down until a sensor on the drill detects free water.

“We have to make a huge effort not to spoil the environment by being interested in it”

Dr Andy Smith British Antarctic Survey

Then they would take the drill out without going any further and adjust the pressure so that instead of any liquid in the borehole falling down into the lake, water in the lake would be sucked up.

Then the drill would be taken away and left for quite some time to freeze, creating a plug of frozen ice in the bottom of the hole.

Finally, next season, the team would drill down again to take a sample of that ice and analyse it.

But the work has not been going very smoothly, being repeteadly delayed because of technical difficulties.

“Up until three km down, drilling is usually relatively easy – it has been done in Greenland and here in Antarctica. But after three km and as we near the bottom [of the ice sheet], the ice temperature gets very close to the ice melting point, and all sorts of problems begin,” said Dr Ekaikin.

Dr Lukin added that additional difficulties arise from the changing structure of the ice – after about 3,600m, it is pure frozen lake water, composed of huge round monocrystals of a metre or more in diameter and as hard as glass.

Ice from Lake VostokThe ice is extremely hard, which has caused the team problems while drilling

That is why for the past few weeks, the team had been advancing at a snail’s pace – about 1.6m a day.

They have already reached the 3,700m mark and have just some 50m more to go.

Dr Ekaikin said that having analysed the ice cores obtained so far, the scientists have already discovered some bacteria that are likely to be living at the bottom of the lake, where the water is warmer because of the heat coming from the Earth.

Besides possibly discovering new microorganisms, sampling the waters could also move us a step closer to the understanding of similar glacial conditions at one of Jupiter’s moons, Europa.

Its surface, researchers suspect, is covered by a huge ocean, hidden within a thick shell of ice.

Despite all the precautions, some international observers still dub the project a threat to the ancient sub-glacial lake.

“It’s probably almost impossible to make something absolutely, utterly and totally clean,” said Dr Andy Smith, a glaciologist at the British Antarctic Survey.

“It’s worth [sampling the waters], as even though originally it seemed a really wild thing to expect, there will be life there – anywhere we go on the planet where there’s an extreme environment, we always find life.

“But we have to make a huge effort not to spoil the environment by being interested in it,” he added.

But the Russians working in Antarctica believe that the risks are virtually non existent and that the possibility of a great discovery makes it entirely worthwhile.

In 2006, researchers reported evidence for a network of rivers under the ice which connect Antarctica’s sub-glacial lakes. Some scientists think this could spell trouble for the prospects of finding microbial life that has evolved “independently”.

Nevertheless, some of those on the team working at Lake Vostok have been waiting for a eureka moment for decades, and have been coming to the base to drill since the discovery of the lake in the 1970s.

Now they are hoping the technology will not fail them and they will be able to reach the waters before the season ends on 6 February.

Because if not, they will have to stay patient for yet another long year.

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

Quiz of the week’s news

7 days 7 questions

It’s the Magazine’s 7 days, 7 questions quiz – an opportunity to prove to yourself and others that you are a news oracle. Failing that, you can always claim to have had better things to do during the past week than swot up on current affairs.

Graphic of the number seven

1.) Multiple Choice Question

“Feminists are now amongst the most obnoxious bigots” – said who?

Ex-Sky Sports commentator Andy GrayAndy GrayEx-Sky Sports presenter Richard KeysRichard KeysConservative MP Dominic RaabDominic Raab

2.) Multiple Choice Question

Dinosaur discovery of the week – one that shares a close common ancestor with the T-Rex, but has a single claw on each hand, not the more common two or three. What do scientists say they used their middle claw for?

Dinosaur Stabbing preyPreeningDigging

3.) Missing Word Question

Genghis Khan * tyrant in history

slowestfattestgreenest

4.) Multiple Choice Question

This photo of Baroness Ashton, the EU’s high representative for foreign affairs, in Istanbul was altered by Iranian media. In what way?

Baroness Ashton in Istanbul Removed necklaceChanged skirt to trousersRaised neckline

Info

Asriran.com showed Iranian press pictures of Lady Ashton next to Saeed Jalili, Iran’s chief nuclear negotiator, with her black top raised higher. They had held talks in Istanbul on Iran’s controversial nuclear programme.

Baroness Ashton with Iran's Saeed Jalili

5.) Multiple Choice Question

Lawmakers in New York are looking to crack down on pedestrians doing what as they cross the street?

A street view Roller bladingUsing phonesReading

6.) Multiple Choice Question

The poor performance of the UK economy in the final quarter of 2010 was partly attributed to snow. But not all sectors were sluggish. Which grew the most?

A street HospitalityConstructionManufacturing

7.) Multiple Choice Question

“Godfather of Fitness” Jack Lalanne died aged 96. He popularised fitness in the US and certain catchphrases. Which is NOT his?

Jack Lalanne Ten seconds on the lips, and a lifetime on the hipsFeel the burnEat right and you can’t go wrong

Answers

It’s Raab, whose broadside against “equal rights” for women coincided with Gray’s and Keys’ derogatory remarks about women in football. Gray was sacked, Keys resigned. It’s digging. Linhenykus monodactylus stood just 60cm tall and weighed about the same as a large parrot. It may have used its dino-digits to dig into insect nests. It’s greenest. His military campaigns, which caused the deaths of 40m people and wiped out civilisations, scrubbed about 700m tons of carbon dioxide from the air, according to US research. It was her neckline, raised to make her outfit less revealing. See the doctored photo by clicking the right arrow. It’s the use of phones and gadgets. Democratic State Senator Carl Kruger has been trying since 2007 to ban the use of mobile phones, iPods and other gadgets by pedestrians in major cities while crossing the street. It’s manufacturing, which grew by nearly 1.5%. The building industry shrank by 3.25%, while hospitality suffered a smaller contraction. It’s “feel the burn”, which was a catchphrase used by Jane Fonda.

Your Score

0 – 3 : Mr Bean

4 – 6 : Missed the boat

7 – 7 : Mr Muscle

For past quizzes including our weekly news quiz, 7 days 7 questions, expand the grey drop-down below – also available on the Magazine page (and scroll down). You can also do this quiz on your mobile device.

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

Cuts threat to children’s centres

ChildChildren’s centres offer childcare and parenting
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Some 250 Sure Start children’s centres in England could close within a year while many more face budget cuts, two charities have claimed.

A survey of 3,500 centre managers for Daycare Trust and 4Children found more than half of the 900 who responded were expecting to run reduced services.

And about 7%, or 58, said they expected to be shut within a year.

Children’s minister Sarah Teather said there was enough money available to maintain existing children’s centres.

She added that the new Early Intervention Grant gave local authorities the freedom to make the best decisions for the families in their areas.

But the level of this grant is 11% lower than the equivalent funding for the previous year.

“Families across the country, particularly the most vulnerable, depend on Sure Start Children’s Centres”

Anne Longfield 4Children chief executive

And the protection around children’s centre funding has been removed in a shake-up of budgets.

The two charities sent their survey to all 3,500 children’s centre managers in England. A total of 917 replied between 20 and 25 January.

They were asked about expected budgets, redundancies and the impact on the centres, set up under Labour to help families with parenting and childcare.

Of those who had an indication of what their budgets for 2011-12 would be, 86% said they were expecting reductions.

The charities said if the findings of the survey were replicated across all centres in England, it would lead to about 250 closures and 2,000 providing a reduced service.

It comes after the BBC News website reported claims that at least one children’s centre was likely to close in every local authority area in England.

Anne Longfield, chief executive of 4Children, said: “Families across the country, particularly the most vulnerable, depend on Sure Start Children’s Centres to help get their children off to the best start in life.

“We know that local authorities have some extremely difficult spending decisions to make but investment now will lead to real savings in the long term.

“Local authorities need to find new ways to ensure Sure Start Children’s Centres earn their keep by allowing them to become genuine hubs for all children and families services in communities, reducing replication and improving impacts.

“Voluntary and community organisations stand ready to help councils find innovative solutions to these funding dilemmas.”

Acting chief executive of the Daycare Trust Anand Shukla said: “Behind every Children’s Centre facing closure is a community of families devastated at losing one of their most valued local services.

“The tragedy of these cuts is that the full extent of Sure Start’s impact on children’s development will only be achieved in the long term, and the impending closure of so many centres means this investment will not now be fully realised.”

Ms Teather said she understood that local authorities were facing difficult decisions which required local discussion and hard choices.

“Many areas haven’t yet made final decisions, but what’s important is that communities have access to services that support children and families, particularly the most disadvantaged,” she said.

“We know high quality early years support can have a lasting impact on children’s lives, and local authorities should be continuing to channel resources to those who will benefit most from the excellent support children’s centres can offer.”

She added that local authorities had a legal duty to provide sufficient children’s centre provision to meet local need and must consult before closing or changing children’s centres.

Shadow Education Secretary Andy Burnham said Sure Start was widely recognised as a highly valuable service and that Prime Minister David Cameron had promised to protect it and build on it.

He added: “By standing by while cash-strapped local authorities are forced to make cuts and closures to the children’s centre network, the Tory-led government are stacking the odds even further against aspirational families who want to get on in life.”

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

Many ‘miss out on radiotherapy’

RadiotherapyAre too few patients getting radiotherapy?
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Tens of thousands of cancer patients are not being given the most successful treatments, according to a panel of radiotherapists.

They claim too few people are getting radiotherapy because GPs and the public see drugs and surgery as better options.

They warn this could explain why the UK has lower cancer survival rates.

The government’s national clinical director for cancer said more money was being invested in radiotherapy.

It is estimated that 52% of all cancer patients in the UK should receive radiotherapy, but the actual figures fall short.

In England and Wales 38% of patients get radiotherapy, 35% in Northern Ireland and 43% in Scotland.

But the experts say that suggests approximately 30,000 cancer patients are not getting what they would consider the best treatment.

A YouGov poll of 2,000 members of the public showed fewer than one in 10 consider radiotherapy to be a modern form of cancer treatment with 40% describing the procedure as frightening.

What is radiotherapy?

It is a treatment for cancer using radiation, usually X-rays, to damage the DNA in cells. Healthy cells can repair the damage. Rapidly dividing cancerous cells cannot, so they they die.

Dr Jane Barnett, president of the Royal College of Radiologists, said: “Twenty years ago the public was told that radiotherapy was a treatment of the past and would be superseded by a magic bullet, but radiotherapy is still a magic bullet.”

“Even people in the profession didn’t realise it could become a modern medicine with the use of computer imagery. The perception fell behind the reality.”

Charlotte Beardmore, from the Society and College of Radiographers, said patients often had misconceptions about the therapy such as becoming radioactive during the treatment.

Professionals also admitted anti-cancer drugs, backed by the pharmaceutical industry, were better promoted than radiotherapy.

Dr Barnett said GPs were also poorly informed about the subject: “Radiotherapy plays a very small part in a doctor’s training, unless you’re going to be a clinical oncologist, compared with drugs and surgery which play a part in many fields.”

The National Radiotherapy Awareness Initiative is trying to improve radiotherapy’s reputation.

It says radiotherapy cures more people than chemotherapy, is 13 times more cost effective and is targeted to within millimetres.

Professor Tim Maughan, oncologist at the Velindre Hospital in Cardiff, criticised the government’s decision to set up a cancer drugs fund worth £200m a year.

He said: “It’s the wrong decision. I don’t understand how we can chose to spend money on drugs which have not been deemed cost effect by NICE (the National Institute of Health and Clinical Excellence).

Professor Mike Richards, national clinical director for cancer, said: “Radiotherapy is one of the key treatments for cancer, improving access to and uptake of radiotherapy will undoubtedly contribute to saving lives.

“The recently published national cancer strategy clearly recognises the role of radiotherapy and commits additional funding.”

New technologies, such as Intensity Modulated Radiotherapy (IMRT), are more effective at targeting the radiation at the tumour, minimising damage to nearby tissues and reducing side effects.

But here the UK lags behind. In Europe around 20% of patients have access to IMRT, in the UK it is only 7%.

One of the newest forms of treatment, proton beam therapy, fires particles at a tumour rather than using radiation waves.

Patients in the UK are already being sent to Europe for this treatment, which is even much more focused.

A decision on setting up a proton radiotherapy centre in the UK will be made in April.

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

Car bomb at Iraq funeral kills 48

Map

A car bomb has exploded near a funeral ceremony in a mainly Shia Muslim area of Baghdad, killing at least 30 people, Iraqi officials say.

Another 50 were wounded, they said.

The blast comes after a series of bombings killed dozens of Shia pilgrims during their annual pilgrimage to the holy city of Karbala last week.

A spate of bombings in the past month against pilgrims, police recruits and security forces across Iraq has killed more than 170 people.

The car that exploded on Thursday was parked near a funeral tent in the capital’s north-western Shula district, an interior ministry source said.

The recent rise in violence comes as the US military prepares to withdraw from the country at the end of the year.

This poses a major challenge to Iraqi Prime Minister Nouri al-Maliki and his fragile coalition government, formed only last month.

In other parts of the capital on Thursday, three roadside bombs claimed the lives of three Iraqis, including a policeman.

Violence has declined sharply in Iraq since the height of the sectarian killings of 2006-2007, but near daily attacks continue.

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

NHS case for change ‘over-sold’

GP and patientGP consortia should be up and running by 2013
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The government has over-sold the need for its overhaul of the NHS in England, a leading health economist suggests.

One of the key arguments put forward by ministers was that England was lagging behind in terms of the number of deaths from certain diseases.

But Professor John Appleby, of the King’s Fund think-tank, said such comparisons were “not straightforward”.

The government rejected the criticism, saying it was the right thing to focus on improving health.

It is handing control of much of the NHS budget to GPs in the coming years. This move will also lead to the abolition of primary care trusts and strategic health authorities.

Health Secretary Andrew Lansley has said the changes are needed to make the NHS more responsive to patients.

But he has also based the proposals on the fact that outcomes in England – the numbers dying early from disease and how long they are surviving – lag behind other European countries.

“These trends must challenge one of the government’s key justifications for reforming the NHS”

Professor John Appleby The King’s Fund

But Professor Appleby, writing in the British Medical Journal, said the government’s approach revealed “only part of the story”.

One of the areas which ministers have focused on is heart disease, but Professor Appleby said the UK had had the largest fall in heart attack deaths between 1980 and 2006 of any European country.

If the trends continued, the UK will have a lower death rate than France – one of Europe’s top performers – as soon as 2012, Professor Appleby said.

A second focus of the government is cancer deaths.

But Professor Appleby said it depends on what cancer statistics are focused on.

He said death rates for lung cancer in men, for instance, rose steadily to a peak in the UK in 1979 and have been declining ever since, whereas in France it happened much later.

Meanwhile, breast cancer deaths in the UK have fallen by 40% over the last two decades to virtually close the gap with France. Again, if trends continue, it is likely that the UK will have lower death rates in just a few years.

Professor Appleby said such measures needed to be “approached with caution” as they were often down to lifestyle factors as well as the quality of healthcare.

But he added: “These trends must challenge one of the government’s key justifications for reforming the NHS.”

However, health minister Lord Howe said: “There is a wealth of research which demonstrates beyond doubt that UK health outcomes are relatively worse than they could be.

“Our proposals will put the NHS on a more sustainable footing for the future, empower clinicians to design services in the best interests of patients and ensure it is comparable to the world’s best-performing health systems.”

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Lord Fowler calls for inquiry into phone hacking

The government needs to carry out a full-scale investigation to find out how the public can be protected from phone hacking, former Conservative cabinet minister Lord Fowler has said.

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Yemenis rally against president

An anti-government rally in Sanaa, 27 JanuaryYemen’s protests are said to be inspired by the popular revolt in Tunisia
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Thousands of Yemenis are demonstrating in the capital Sanaa, calling on Ali Abdullah Saleh, president for more than 30 years, to step down.

This comes after mass protests in Egypt and a popular uprising in Tunisia that ousted its long-time leader.

Yemeni opposition members and youth activists gathered in four parts of the city, including Sanaa University, chanting anti-government slogans.

They also called for economic reforms and an end to corruption.

Yemenis complain of mounting poverty among a growing young population and frustration with a lack of political freedoms.

The country has also been plagued by a range of security issues, including a separatist movement in the south and an uprising of Shia Houthi rebels in the north.

There fears that Yemen is becoming a leading al-Qaeda haven, with the high numbers of unemployed youths seen as potential recruits for Islamist militant groups.

Economic and social problemsPoorest country in the Middle East with 40% of Yemenis living on less than $2 (£1.25) a dayMore than two-thirds of the population under the age of 24Illiteracy stands at over 50%, unemployment at 35%Dwindling oil reserves and falling oil revenues; Little inward investmentAcute water shortageWeak central government

Protesters gathered in several locations of the city on Thursday morning, chanting that it was “time for change”, and referring to the popular uprising in Tunisia that ousted President Zine al-Abidine Ben Ali earlier this month.

Opposition MP Abdulmalik al-Qasuss, from the al-Islah (Reform) party, echoed the demands of the protesters when he addressed them.

“We gather today to demand the departure of President Saleh and his corrupt government,” he was quoted as saying by the AFP news agency.

There have been a series of smaller protests in the lead up to Thursday’s mass demonstrations.

On Saturday, hundreds of Sanaa University students held competing protests on campus, with some calling for President Saleh to step down and others for him to remain in office.

Over the weekend, Yemeni authorities arrested prominent rights activist, Tawakul Karman, accusing her of organising the anti-government protests. Her arrest sparked further protests in Sanaa.

map locator

After her release from prison on Monday, she told CNN that there was a revolution taking place in her country inspired by Tunisia’s so-called Jasmine Revolution.

Protests in Tunisia have ended 23 years of President Ben Ali’s rule and ignited unrest elsewhere in the region, including Algeria and Egypt.

President Saleh, a Western ally, became leader of North Yemen in 1978, and has ruled the Republic of Yemen since the north and south merged in 1990. He was last re-elected in 2006.

Yemenis are angry over parliament’s attempts to loosen the rules on presidential term limits, sparking opposition concerns that Mr Saleh might try to appoint himself president for life.

Mr Saleh is also accused of wanting to hand power to his eldest son, Ahmed, who heads the elite presidential guard, but he has denied the accusations.

“We are a republic. We reject bequeathing [the presidency]”, he said in a televised address 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.

Cameron accused over economic impact of cuts

Prime Minister David Cameron should “put his arrogance aside” and acknowledge that the government’s spending cuts are failing to secure economic growth, Labour leader Ed Miliband has said.

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