Toddler is found alone in street

A toddler has been found roaming the streets of an Essex town on her own late at night.

Police said they were trying to find the parents of the girl, thought to be aged two or three, who was found in Westcliff, late on Monday.

Officers said the girl was found by a member of the public in Genesta Road, just before 2300 GMT.

She is described as black and has long plaited hair. Police said she did not appear to speak English.

The toddler was dressed in purple leggings, a top and jacket.

Police made house-to-house inquiries but said they were unable to identify the girl.

She was placed overnight in the care of social services.

Anyone with any information has been asked to contact police.

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IMF predicts faster global growth

IMF logoThe IMF says economies in sub-Saharan Africa could be among the fastest to grow

The International Monetary Fund (IMF) has forecast that the world economy will grow faster this year than previously expected.

The IMF raised its growth forecast from 4.2% to 4.4%, but highlighted a two-speed recovery as advanced economies grow slower than emerging ones.

US growth is projected to reach 3%, up from the IMF’s previous estimate of 2.3% published in October.

The IMF estimates UK growth will be 2%, unchanged from its previous forecast.

There was also no change in the 1.5% growth forecast for the eurozone or for Japan, where 1.5% growth is also predicted.

The IMF said in its report: “In advanced economies, activity has moderated less than expected, but growth remains subdued, unemployment is still high, and renewed stresses in the euro area periphery are contributing to downside risks.”

However, emerging economies were more “buoyant”, the IMF said, with signs of overheating and inflation pressures a worry.

Growth projections for China and India were unrevised at 9.6% and 8.4% respectively.

Sub-Saharan Africa is predicted to produce the strongest growth of any region, at 5.8%.

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Siemens’ profits beat forecasts

Peter LoescherSiemens chief executive Peter Loescher said revenues grew in all regions
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Siemens beat analysts’ forecasts for its first quarter profits, helped by strong demand from fast-growing emerging economies.

The German engineering group, one of Europe’s biggest, said profits from continuing operations rose 17% to 1.79bn euros ($2.44bn; £1.53bn).

Revenues for the period, between October and December, were up 12% to 19.49bn euros.

Siemens is a big exporter to China, Brazil, India and Russia.

Latest data showed German manufacturing orders grew at their fastest rate in 10 months in November due to strong demand from outside the eurozone.

“Orders and revenue grew in all regions, particularly in emerging markets,” said Siemens’ chief executive Peter Loescher.

Orders from emerging markets rose 31%, and accounted for one-third of Siemens’ total orders for the quarter.

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Dead India girl’s father attacked

Dr Rajesh Talwar after being attacked outside a court near DelhiDr Rajesh Talwar was attacked by a man carrying a sharp weapon
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The father of schoolgirl Aarushi Talwar, whose murder in 2008 shocked India, has been attacked outside a court near the capital, Delhi.

Witnesses said Dr Rajesh Talwar was set upon by a man brandishing a sharp-edged weapon in Ghaziabad.

The attacker was arrested. Dr Talwar has been treated for his injuries.

The court has been hearing a case by investigators to close the inquiry into the murder of Dr Talwar’s 14-year-old daughter, blaming a lack of evidence.

Dr Talwar, a well-known dentist, was in court on Tuesday to challenge the Central Bureau of Investigation’s closure of the murder case, and to demand a fresh investigation.

TV pictures showed Dr Talwar bleeding as a man was restrained.

Senior local police officer, Raghubir Lal, said the attacker was being questioned.

Aarushi TalwarSchoolgirl Aarushi Talwar was found dead in her bedroom with her throat slit

“He is telling us that he had no motive. He says he [attacked Dr Talwar] for [becoming] popular, for [being featured] in the media,” he said.

Police are investigating reports that the assailant is the same man who attacked a former police officer outside a court in the nearby city of Panchkula, Haryana state, last February.

The former police officer was later convicted of molesting a 14-year-old girl who had committed suicide.

Aarushi Talwar was murdered in her bedroom, while her parents were at home in Noida, a Delhi suburb. She was found with her throat slit and a fatal head injury.

A day later the bludgeoned body of their servant, Hemraj, was found on the roof.

As well as Aarushi’s father, three other men were arrested, but later freed because of a lack of evidence.

They were Dr Talwar’s dental assistant and two servants employed by the Talwar family’s friends and neighbours.

The murder weapon has never been found, and while Aarushi’s mobile phone was recovered nearly 15 months after her death, its memory had been deleted.

Federal investigators took over the case from Noida police, who were accused of a botch job.

Tuesday’s attack was not the first such incident outside the court in Ghaziabad.

In January 2007, a mob attacked an Indian businessman, Moninder Singh Pandher, and his servant, who were accused in the rape and murder of at least 19 women and children.

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Palestinian views

Palestinians react to leaked documents on Middle East peace negotiations that suggest their leaders were prepared to give up large parts of occupied East Jerusalem to the Israelis.

They included all Jewish settlements, with the exception of Har Homa, and the Jewish Quarter and part of the Armenian Quarter in the Old City. It was apparently also suggested the flashpoint Arab neighbourhood, Sheikh Jarrah, be swapped for land elsewhere.

YACOUB ABU ARAFEH, SHEIKH JARRAH

Yacoub Abu Arafeh

I am very shocked because I don’t think that there is anyone in the world who has the right to make these negotiations on Jerusalem. It’s a red line for the Palestinian people. We struggle to protect Jerusalem.

We will still keep up our demonstrations every Friday against the Jewish settlements. Even the Palestinian Authority and Israel cannot take our land because it is illegal. We will continue our struggle to keep our houses and jobs in Sheikh Jarrah and Silwan and everywhere in East Jerusalem.

If this news is true, there will be big problems. People in Jerusalem will not trust the Palestinian Authority to represent them any more and I’m not sure what will happen.

HIJAZI RISHIQ, EAST JERUSALEM

Hijazi Rishiq in his shop

We must wait to find out the real truth because [the chief Palestinian negotiation] Mr Saeb Erekat has denied all this information that [the news channel] al-Jazeera produced. We know and we trust that our leaders cannot lose Jerusalem because Palestine is Jerusalem and Jerusalem is Palestine. Nobody can give up anything because the Palestinians will not agree to it.

I think this is a political game. We know the negotiations between Israel and the Palestinians are at a very hard point. The Americans cannot achieve anything. At the same time we read in the newspapers every day that there are new settlements, new raids on Gaza and people are being killed.

Now I am worried the Palestinian people don’t have much patience left. We are living a hard life. Here in Jerusalem, there is no business under Israeli occupation. That means we do not have enough work, enough money or enough food. I fear there will be a new intifada [uprising].

WALA’A ZAHRAN, RAMALLAH

Wala'a Zahran

I am not shocked because this Palestinian Authority has already shown it is willing to give up the settlements. The Israelis probably saw it was giving up all this land and decided to wait for it to give up more.

If the Palestinian Authority was acting correctly why is it so afraid?

If we were united we would do the same as what has just happened in Tunisia. The left-wing here should take its chance.

We need someone who all factions could agree on, perhaps someone independent, who could speak on behalf of all of us to the Israelis.

Negotiation should come from a strong position. I don’t think the Palestinian Authority is the right body to speak on our behalf.

AYMAN HAMED, RAMALLAH

Ayman Hamed

I believe these leaks are just meant to embarrass the Palestinian Authority and the Palestine Liberation Organisation.

[The satellite channel] al-Jazeera did a great job covering the intifada but with this news it is just damaging the reputation of the Palestinian leaders. We reject this.

We will not be affected in the way that we see our leaders. We know what their goals are.

The fallout from this will not last. It is just rumours from certain people who have their own agendas.

As well-educated people we must make sure this does not affect us.

MAHDI ABDUL HADI, PALESTIAN ACADEMIC SOCIETY, EAST JERUSALEM

Mahdi Abdul Hadi, chairman of PASSIA

I feel angry, disappointed and confused. This has confirmed the Palestinians’ suspicions about their representatives and our lack of a political system. It is also confirmation that Israel is stubborn and will not deliver anything.

This distorts the Palestinian cause. What will be left of Palestine if these people talk about giving up holy places – places that [late Palestinian President] Yasser Arafat was saying Palestinians would never give up?

Why is there not a stronger reaction on the street? Why are people not shouting and carrying signs saying: “Resign! We do not want you, you do not represent us?” It is because they have been crushed by the Israeli occupation. We are living in an apartheid system, in separate communities, closed off from each other, and with two political systems in Gaza and the West Bank.

For the time being I do not thing there will be any negotiations. I don’t see any Palestinian who is capable or responsible enough to meet Israelis publicly today on these issues. This is a dead end for the negotiations.

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

999 concern at police ‘hub’ plans

Stryd Moch, PwllheliGwynedd council will argue the Lleyn peninsula needs its own ‘hub’, especially during busy times
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Money-saving plans to reorganise North Wales Police response units have raised concerns in Bangor and on the Lleyn peninsula.

The North Wales Police Authority wants to create “hubs” at Caernarfon, Llangefni, Dolgellau and Porthmadog.

Opponents of the plan are questioning the locations, which they claim could lead to a lack of 999 emergency cover.

A police authority spokesman said officers would be “forward deployed” to “hotspots” to respond to calls.

Nigel Pickavance, from the People of Bangor Community Group, said the university city should have more not fewer police officers.

He said he was “shocked to hear by chance” that under the plans the city would not have its own hub, but would be covered from Caernarfon, nine miles (14km) away, instead.

There had also been a “lack of publicity” which meant there was very little time for the public to get their responses in before this Thursday’s deadline, he added.

“This needs to be challenged”

Nigel Pickavance Citizens of Bangor

“I think what they’ve done is a bit sly, as the details are on their website, but how many people go and read that,” he said.

“This needs to be challenged, and I’ve set up a Facebook page to try and get as many people as possible to e-mail their views in,” he added.

Mr Pickavance said he thought the locations of the new hubs had been chosen “geographically, not in terms of population, which would have been fairer”.

Gwynedd council will discuss the issue on the Lleyn peninsula in a meeting of the council board on Tuesday.

A report before the board notes that councillors had expressed “doubts” that the police could reach any incident on the Lleyn peninsula within 30 minutes, especially during busy times. It said a hub at Pwllheli was needed.

Town clock, BangorThe university city of Bangor cannot rely on police cover from Caernarfon, says Nigel Pickavance

Cuts could adversely affect policing, and there was a need to recognise the “different needs of urban and rural areas, especially where there are substantial changes in population at various times of the year”.

Council chief executive Harry Thomas concluded that the police, as with all other public bodies, were having to cope with fewer resources.

“We should all aim at these times to try to operate creatively to protect essential service, and as noted in the report there is concern in the light of the rural nature of the county,” he said.

The police authority’s chief executive, Tal Michael, said it was important to recognise that the response hub” location would only be where officers report for duty.

“Officers will be ‘forward deployed’ to hotspots so that they are ready and waiting to respond to calls,” he said.

“An important element will be the change in shift patterns for neighbourhood officers, so that some of them are always available at peak times, and will be able to response to calls in their local area,” he added.

Mr Michael added that the document “does not imply other police stations will close”.

Some “cashable efficiencies” might be found by selling off some police estate and “changing how we deliver a service to some of our public”, he said.

But there will be no details available until after a structural review is undertaken.

“If police stations do close in the future, then full consideration will have been given to providing a policing service in that area,” he added.

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

1 in 3 schools ‘not good enough’

A long line of students in the exam hallVery few schools are said to be “consistently outstanding”
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Standards in nearly a third of schools in Wales are not good enough, says the schools inspection body Estyn.

Its report on every school and education provider over six years found improvement in schools was “slow”.

The chief inspector, Ann Keane, said it was time to “face the facts” and “raise standards relative to other countries”.

The Welsh Assembly Government said the report showed it was “making progress in most areas” and would examine it in detail before a further response.

Last month, assessments suggested Welsh children were lagging far behind the rest of the UK and much of the world.

Speaking after the publication of the Programme for International Student Assessment (Pisa) assessments, Education Minister Leighton Andrews said there was “systemic failure” in the school system and accused teachers of “complacency in the classrooms”.

“In most local authorities, officers did not work well enough with school governors and elected members to help them understand school performance”

Ann Keane Chief inspector, Estyn

Mrs Keane said standards of literacy and numeracy were “not good enough”.

She said 40% of children entering secondary school had a reading age below their chronological age.

“Teachers and leaders need more training in how they deliver literacy and numeracy, not just in English and Welsh lessons but across the whole curriculum,” she said.

“That doesn’t just mean that basic skills are not being taught well enough, but that we’re not delivering in the higher order skills of literacy and numeracy either.”

Mrs Keane said the assessment system was also “not good enough”.

“We do not have robust comparable data on the literacy and numeracy levels of pupils because schools and authorities measure them in different ways,” she said.

Analysis

By Ciaran Jenkins, education correspondent

Without league tables or compulsory national tests (the much-maligned SATs), the chief inspector’s report is the best remaining barometer of standards in our schools.

And its conclusion is damning: around a third of schools aren’t up to scratch.

The report highlights areas of improvement for teachers and local authorities, but there is much for the assembly government to chew over too.

Over the past 10 years it has overseen the abolition of standardised national tests and school league tables.

And yet the chief inspector’s report finds that the teacher assessments that replaced SATs are “not good enough” and that more needs to be done to allow comparisons between schools in different areas.

However, of most concern is the poor standard of literacy and numeracy.

With education set to take centre stage in the assembly elections in May, Mr Andrews is expected to propose significant changes when he makes two key speeches in February.

“This makes it difficult to identify gaps in basic skills and to plan support in a consistent way.”

The report said that very few schools were “consistently outstanding”.

Just 8% of schools achieved the top grade across all aspects of inspection.

However, standards of education and training had “significantly” improved in further education, work-based learning and early-years provision.

Mrs Keane called for local authorities “to do more to challenge under performance in schools”.

“In most local authorities, officers did not work well enough with school governors and elected members to help them understand school performance,” she said.

“Neither did local authority staff always target their efforts to improve the performance of those schools that needed most support even though many authorities had procedures to intervene.

“These procedures were not followed robustly enough to prevent some schools from falling into the category of ‘school causing concern’ when inspected by Estyn.”

Around 4% of schools fell into this category, but the report says “30% of schools are not as good as they should be because of significant shortcomings in aspects of their provision”.

“It is encouraging that 70% of schools are achieving their targets”

Chris Keates NASUWT

Education Minister Leighton Andrews will make two keynote speeches in February, which are expected to include new proposals on school improvement.

The assembly government said: “We welcome Estyn’s annual report which shows we are making progress in most areas. We acknowledge there’s still work to do to raise standards and will now consider the report in detail before preparing our response.”

Chris Keates, general secretary of the teaching union NASUWT said: “This report provides much needed balance to the ill-informed political hysteria that continues to surround Wales’ ranking in the international Pisa results.

“It is encouraging that 70% of schools are achieving their targets.

“The remaining 30% face an uphill task unless the scandalous pupil funding gap between schools in England and Wales is closed.

“Teachers will be glad to see Estyn sharing best practice materials online as previous annual reports have tended to focus on identifying problems rather than offering solutions.

“These materials mark a welcome sea-change in the attitude of the Welsh inspectorate.”

The Association of Teachers and Lecturers Cymru said the report gave a “candid assessment” of education.

Philip Dixon, director of ATL Cymru, said it showed there are “centres of excellence in Wales and that we do know how to run successful schools and colleges, but it also shows that the sharing of that experience of excellence is still too patchy”.

“The report highlights the need for leadership at every level. This will be key if we are to make progress,” he said.

“It is particularly disturbing to see the distance that some local authorities still need to travel if they are to provide schools with effective support.”

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