Ivory Coast military call queried

Ecowas soldiers training in Senegal in 2007Regional body Ecowas has been drawing up plans for an intervention force

Ghana’s president has said he does not think military force will solve the post-election deadlock in Ivory Coast.

John Atta Mills also said Ghana would not take sides in the stand-off between incumbent leader Laurent Gbagbo and his rival, Alassane Ouattara.

The international community has recognised Mr Ouattara as the winner of November’s presidential election and urged Mr Gbagbo to quit.

West African regional grouping Ecowas has threatened to force Mr Gbagbo out.

Mr Ouattara called this week for a special forces operation to remove Mr Gbagbo.

But President Mills appeared to reject such an idea in a speech on Friday. “I personally do not think the military option will solve the problem in Ivory Coast,” he was quoted as saying.

“Ghana is not taking sides and Ghana will support any government.”

Ghana is one of three countries that would normally be expected to play a leading role in any military intervention by Ecowas.

Mr Ouattara remains behind a blockade at a hotel in the main city Abidjan, protected by UN peacekeepers and New Forces former rebels who control the north of the country.

There are an estimated 10,000 UN troops in Ivory Coast – and the mission has sent a request to the UN Security Council for an extra 1,000 to 2,000 soldiers.

Ecowas has already started drawing up plans for a regional intervention force, though there are questions about how ready or well-equipped member countries are.

Mr Gbagbo has come under increasing pressure from the international community.

In response, he said on Thursday he was expelling the ambassadors of Britain and Canada.

Both countries have expelled ambassadors appointed by Mr Gbagbo in order to replace them with diplomats chosen by Mr Ouattara.

The US has frozen the assets of Mr Gbagbo, his wife and three aides, and has announced that it is barring US citizens from financial dealings with Mr Gbagbo.

November’s election was intended to reunify the country, which has been divided since a 2002 conflict.

Mr Ouattara was initially proclaimed the winner by the country’s election commission – a verdict backed by the UN, which helped organise the poll.

But the country’s Constitutional Council, headed by an ally of Mr Gbagbo, later ruled that he had won, citing voting irregularities in the north.

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

Pakistan leader rescues coalition

Prime Minister Yousuf Raza Gilani in Lahore on 5 January 2011Yousuf Raza Gilani has been caught between the demands of political opponents and the IMF

Pakistani Prime Minister Yousuf Raza Gilani has pulled his government back from the brink, persuading a former ally to rejoin the coalition.

The Muttahida Quami Movement (MQM), which walked out last Sunday, relented a day after Mr Gilani defied the IMF with a climbdown on fuel price rises.

After talks with the MQM in Karachi, Mr Gilani also confirmed there would be no tax reform soon – another IMF demand.

As well as rampant militancy, Pakistan faces the threat of hyper inflation.

The sense of crisis has been growing in the country after Tuesday’s assassination by his bodyguard of an outspoken liberal governor of the ruling Pakistan People’s Party.

Mr Gilani’s car was showered with rose petals as he arrived to meet MQM leaders on Friday in Karachi, the capital of the southern province of Sindh.

“The Muttahida Qaumi Movement announces it will sit on the government benches in the larger interest of the country and democracy,” senior MQM member Raza Haroon told a news conference with Mr Gilani afterwards.

The MQM pulled out two ministers from the federal cabinet last month, and decided on Sunday it would cross over to the opposition benches in the parliament.

The MQM’s change of heart comes a day after the prime minister told parliament fuel prices would be restored to the levels they were on 31 December.

The MQM had walked out condemning the 9% rise in the price of petrol and kerosene, leaving the prime minister facing a possible no-confidence vote.

Mr Gilani’s U-turn was criticised on Thursday as a “mistake” by the US and by the International Monetary Fund (IMF), which has been withholding part of an $11bn (£7bn) loan to Pakistan.

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

EastEnders baby plot to end early

Samantha Womack as Ronnie BranningCharacter Ronnie Branning was seen swapping babies in New Year episodes
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A controversial EastEnders cot death storyline is to be brought to an early conclusion following almost 6,000 complaints to the BBC.

The story of Ronnie Branning swapping her dead child for another baby drew criticism from Sudden Infant Death Syndrome (Sids) awareness campaigners.

The story will now conclude in spring.

The BBC had said there was “no inference that Ronnie’s actions are in any way typical of a bereaved mother of a newborn baby”.

It has now confirmed the storyline is “due to finish earlier than planned”.

In New Year episodes, Ronnie, played by actress Samantha Womack, was shown finding her baby, James, dead in his cot.

She was later shown in the living quarters above the soap’s Queen Victoria pub where she swapped James with baby Tommy, the newborn son of characters Kat and Alfie Moon.

On Thursday, actress Womack – who is leaving the soap – denied she had quit over the storyline, saying her exit had been agreed with producers for several months.

Her agent added: “Her contract comes to a natural end later this year and she will be taking a break from the show.”

Sids awareness campaigner Anne Diamond, whose baby son died in 1991, told the BBC News website EastEnders scriptwriters had “lost the plot”.

The TV presenter said the baby swap storyline was a “crass twist to an otherwise credible storyline” that had not done “one iota of good in educating a young audience about cot death”.

But BBC controller of drama production John Yorke told Radio 4’s World At One programme that the job of the show’s creators was to “create a drama that people talk about”.

“What’s cheering about this – and I do hear the concerns – is that everybody’s talking about cot death and we’re putting it back on the agenda, 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.

New car sales ‘to fall in 2011’

Citroen cars for sale at a dealership in BristolSMMT said the outlook for 2011 remains “challenging” and it expects sales to fall

Sales of new cars in the UK grew by 1.8% in 2010 from the previous year, according to industry figures.

Registrations rose by 35,847 units to 2,030,846 according to the Society of Motor Manufacturers and Traders (SMMT).

But the SMMT warned sales were set to fall by 5% this year as “difficult market conditions continue”.

Demand for fleet vehicles rose by more than 10%, but private sales slipped following the end of the government’s Scrappage Incentive Scheme in May 2010.

This was reflected in sales which were up by 19.9% in the first half of the year, but which fell 13.8% in the second six months.

December sales were down by 18% on a year earlier – again because of the impact of scrappage scheme sales in 2009.

And while overall sales grew in 2010, it was the second lowest volume of car sales in the past decade and almost 375,000 below 2007 levels, the figures showed.

The SMMT’s chief executive Paul Everitt said 2010 had been a “year of recovery for the motor industry”.

“Economic conditions remain extremely challenging, but industry expects demand to strengthen in the second half of the year,” he added.

“Competition in the retail sector will intensify as the industry seeks to rebalance demand across its new and used car and service and repair business.”

Mr Everitt added that UK motor manufacturing had recovered “particularly well” in 2010, saying the outlook was for “further steady growth” this year.

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

EU spurns Iran nuclear tour offer

Iran's Bushehr nuclear power plant, file picIran’s Bushehr nuclear power plant was built with Russian help

The European Union plans to reject Iran’s invitation for an EU ambassador to tour Iran’s nuclear sites.

The EU’s foreign policy chief, Baroness Ashton, said it was the job of the UN’s International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA) to examine Iran’s nuclear sites.

Iran says it will open its nuclear facilities to envoys from several countries, including Russia and China, but not the US.

Many Western countries suspect Iran is trying to develop nuclear weapons.

Iran insists that its nuclear programme is for civilian purposes only.

“What I’ll be saying is the role of the inspections of nuclear sites is for the IAEA and I do hope Iran will ensure that the IAEA is able to go and continue and fulfil its work,” Baroness Ashton told Reuters news agency on Friday.

Earlier the US State Department dismissed Iran’s offer of an inspection tour by diplomats as a “clever ploy”.

The last such trip which Tehran arranged was in February 2007.

Iran said the visit would take place ahead of a second round of talks on its nuclear programme, scheduled for late January in Istanbul, Turkey, although no date has been confirmed.

Iran is set to hold talks with the five permanent UN Security Council members – the US, Russia, China, the UK and France – plus Germany.

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

Clegg denies ‘peacenik’ stand-off

Nick CleggNick Clegg will make his case for reforming anti-terror laws and promoting civil liberties
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Nick Clegg is to promise a tough but fair approach when he outlines the government’s views on anti-terror legislation and civil liberties.

In a speech in central London, the deputy prime minister will pledge a “mission to restore British freedoms”.

It comes as ministers try to reach agreement over a replacement for control orders, which place a series of constraints on terror suspects.

Mr Clegg will also announce plans to reform libel laws.

The deputy prime minister will make his case for reforming anti-terror laws and promoting civil liberties.

He will accuse Labour of presiding over the most aggressive period of state interference in a generation.

Mr Clegg will attack the previous government on ID cards, the DNA database and 90-day detention without charge.

“My party spent years campaigning against the erosion of our civil liberties under Labour,” the Liberal Democrat leader is set to say.

“And now, in government, we are going to turn a page on that chapter; resurrecting the liberties that have been lost; embarking on a mission to restore our great British freedoms.”

Mr Clegg will also announce the government is to publish a draft defamation bill.

He will put the case for restoring the UK’s international reputation for free speech with a new statutory defence for those speaking out in the public interest.

The bill would also cater for dealing with defamation on the internet.

English libel laws are having a “chilling effect on scientific debate and investigative journalism”, he will state.

Mr Clegg is expected to say: “The test of a free press is its capacity to unearth the truth, exposing charlatans and vested interests along the way.

“It is simply not right when academics and journalists are effectively bullied into silence by the prospect of costly legal battles with wealthy individuals and big businesses.”

However, BBC political correspondent Vicki Young says there is unlikely to be much detail in the speech about the planned replacement for control orders.

Ministers are agreed that some terror suspects will still face restrictions on their activities but whether these include curfews, a ban on internet and telephone use, or tagging, is yet to be decided.

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

Scots ‘not asked for spare jabs’

Flu vaccineThe Scottish government has an emergency pot of flu vaccines

Scotland says it was never asked by England for some of its spare flu vaccines, despite the shortfall south of the border.

England’s Department of Health scoured Europe for jabs after some areas ran out before deciding to use old stocks left over from the pandemic.

But it has now emerged the Scottish government has “plenty” left after ordering an emergency supply in case its own GPs ran out.

It said it would have tried to help.

A spokeswoman said: “We would always consider helping England in any way appropriate should a request be made, while our priority has to be public health in Scotland which is what we have planned for.”

In England, GPs order flu vaccines direct from manufacturers.

In Scotland, pharmacists order on behalf of GPs, but the government also gets in extra itself for a contingency pot. There are thought to be tens of thousands of doses in that stockpile.

Instead of turning to Scotland, which has reported no vaccine shortages, English health officials have spent time this week asking suppliers whether there are any available vaccines in Europe.

But with little on offer, they took the decision on Thursday to let GPs who have run out access the 12m stockpile of vaccine left over from 2009.

It is still in date, but only protects against the swine flu strain, just one of three circulating this winter albeit the dominant one.

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

Kean still hopeful on Ronaldinho

Blackburn’s bid to sign Brazil midfielder Ronaldinho is “back on” according to Rovers manager Steve Kean.

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

Bomber targets Afghan bath house

Locator map
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At least 17 people have died in a blast in a crowded public bath house in Afghanistan’s southern Kandahar province.

At least 23 people were injured in the attack, which took place in the town of Spin Boldak, on the Pakistan border.

Officials said a suicide bomber was behind the blast, which targeted a police commander inside the building.

The blast happened as the bath house was packed with people getting ready for Friday prayers.

“A suicide bomber blew up explosives strapped to his chest at a public bath in Spin Boldak,” border police official Gen Abdul Razaq told news agency Agence France Presse.

A local Afghan intelligence source in Spin Boldak told the BBC that a local police commander called Ramazan always used the bath house, on the town’s main road, ahead of Friday prayers.

Afghanistan’s security institutions have been targeted in recent weeks in a wave of attacks on the country’s army and police who will eventually take over security responsibilities from international forces.

No-one has yet claimed to have carried out the attack but the town is situated some 70 miles (110km) east of the provincial capital of Kandahar, a province that has long been a Taliban stronghold.

A statement from the governor of Kandahar’s office called the attack unIslamic.

“This brutal and inhumane act was the work of the enemies of Islam and humanity,” said Zalmai Ayoubi.

The attack is one of the deadliest in recent months and has been condemned by President Hamid Karzai, according to a source close to the president in Kabul who spoke to the BBC.

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

Sunday ferry sailings ‘essential’

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Ferry operator Caledonian MacBrayne has started consulting people on Harris about the possibility of introducing a Sunday service.

At the moment, Tarbert, on the island, does not have a service on the Sabbath, although a boat goes empty from Harris to North Uist to provide a Sunday service to Skye from Lochmaddy.

The ferry company said it was aware that local opinions were divided.

It added that no decision would be taken until the consultation ended.

The first scheduled Sunday ferry sailing from the isle of Lewis, which is connected to Harris, began in June 2009.

There had been strong opposition on the island, where the Sabbath day has traditionally been strictly observed.

CalMac said religion or beliefs were not valid reasons under European law to refuse to run the ferry.

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

Quango reduction plan ‘botched’

Whitehall signThe government announced in October which quangos would be axed
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Plans to axe scores of quangos will not deliver significant savings or improve accountability, MPs have warned.

A cross-party Commons committee carried out a review of the government’s cull of quangos and concluded the whole process was “botched”.

Its chairman said the audit “was rushed and poorly handled” and missed a “Big Society” opportunity to grant greater powers to charities.

The report found the legislation would give MPs excessive powers to axe more.

In October the government announced it was axeing 192 of the public bodies – such as the Film Council and the Audit Commission – while 118 would be merged. The review was overseen by Cabinet Office Minister Francis Maude.

Quangos – “quasi-autonomous non-governmental organisations” – are arm’s-length bodies funded by Whitehall departments but not run by them. They are advisory bodies, consumer watchdogs or organisations carrying out public services.

The government reviewed 901 bodies – 679 quangos and 222 other statutory bodies.

A review of that review was carried out by the Commons public administration select committee, which found the tests used to judge the quangos were “hopelessly unclear” and had not been applied consistently.

“The current approach is not going to deliver significant cost savings or result in greater accountability,” the report found.

“There was no meaningful consultation, the tests the review used were not clearly defined and the Cabinet Office failed to establish a proper procedure.”

Conservative MP Bernard Jenkin, chair of the committee, said: “The whole process was rushed and poorly handled and should have been thought through a lot more.

Quangos to be abolished

“This was a fantastic opportunity to help build the Big Society and save money at the same time, but it has been botched.

“The government needs to rethink which functions public bodies need to perform and consider transferring some of these functions over to mutuals and charities.”

The MPs said the potential for cost savings was “probably exaggerated” in pre-election promises and reducing spending required more fundamental decisions about cutting state roles altogether.

Returning direct responsibility to ministers for some roles risked undermining other forms of accountability and some issues could get lost in wider Whitehall remits, they concluded.

“This will mean less effective accountability and challenge on a day-to-day basis,” they said.

A commitment by ministers to consult further was welcome, the MPs said, but demanded an assurance that decisions would be reversed if those talks found they had been wrong.

The report said “badly drafted” legislation implementing the cull needed more safeguards to prevent ministers abusing wide powers to abolish and reform other bodies in future.

Among its recommendations, the committee said the legislation should be limited to the present process.

It said it “contains insufficient safeguards to prevent the misuse of powers by ministers” – something which has already led to several defeats in the House of Lords.

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

Mystery bracelets

England's winning Ashes teamAndrew Strauss, Ian Bell and Paul Collingwood all wore the bands

A growing number of celebrities are being spotted with a distinctive silicone band on their wrists. While users claim it can help with balance, critics dismiss it as unscientific hocus pocus. So why would anybody wear a Power Balance band?

Andrew Strauss is a victorious cricket captain, having starred in a dazzling Ashes series win.

The cricket fans might talk about diligent batting, calm captaincy and canny field placings. But what about the £30 rubber band visible on his wrist?

It’s a Power Balance bracelet – a silicone band with a hologram. They are an increasingly common sight on the golf course, and away from sport both Robert De Niro and Kate Middleton have been spotted wearing them.

Ian PoulterThe bands are increasingly popular among professional golfers

But this is a controversial gizmo.

The bracelet’s distributors in Australia have just had to apologise and change their marketing and advertising text after the Australian Competition and Consumer Commission took action.

The commission said that the local distributors had claimed the bands would “improve balance, strength and flexibility”. They also criticised the slogan “Performance Technology”.

The distributors admitted no credible scientific basis for the claims, the commission said.

On the US website of Power Balance it explains the bands thus: “Power Balance is based on the idea of optimising the body’s natural energy flow, similar to concepts behind many Eastern philosophies. The hologram in Power Balance is designed to resonate with and respond to the natural energy field of the body.”

The idea that people have a “natural energy field” might cause a certain flutter of the eyebrow.

Simon Singh, co-author of Trick or Treatment?: Alternative Medicine on Trial, is not convinced, particularly by the slogan “Performance Technology”.

Notable wearers

Alex Reid wearing the band

Cricketer Ian BellBasketball star Shaquille O’NealRugby union player Marc van GisbergenCagefighter Alex Reid

Source: Power Balance

“Technology implies science. You look at a Power Balance band and you say ‘I don’t see the technology, I don’t think it’s biologically plausible, I don’t see research trials, I just see a bit of rubber.'”

Power Balance’s UK website has endorsements from an array of sporting stars. They quote England batsman Ian Bell as saying: “The Power Balance bracelet supports my active lifestyle facilitating improvement across all areas of my fitness.”

In this video, the firm shows athletes doing balance and strength tests without the bands and then performing better with.

Proof of effectiveness? Sadly, no.

John Porcari, a professor in the department of exercise and sport science at the University of Wisconsin-La Crosse, recently tested 42 student athletes in an experiment.

Balance, flexibility, strength and vertical jump were tested, while the athletes wore either a Power Balance band or a generic rubber band. Both the athletes and the testers did not know which was being worn while the experiment was conducted.

There was no difference between the bands, but there was a marked improvement in tests which were being done by an athlete for the second time.

This suggests that once people know what is coming, they prepare themselves and perform better in the test. And that’s without even considering the possible placebo effect, the idea that the psychological boost of believing in the bands can improve performance.

Paul Collingwood and Andrew StraussPaul Collingwood and Andrew Strauss wear both the Power Balance and Trion:Z ‘magnetic therapy’ bands

David Fletcher, lecturer in sport and performance science at Loughborough University, says the bands could act in the same way as a lucky charm.

“Habits, routines and rituals are all part of a lot of elite athletes’ preparations. There is a lot of evidence that pre-performance routines can help performance.

“It isn’t something I would particularly advocate. I would look at more robust routines rather than wearing lucky underwear or wearing these bands. What happens if you forget your lucky underwear?”

Dylan Evans, a lecturer in behavioural science at Cork University’s School of Medicine and author of Placebo: Mind Over Matter in Modern Medicine, hadn’t heard of the Power Balance bands until he got one for Christmas from his mum.

“It took me about two seconds after I had unwrapped it to think this is a placebo.

“I was really impressed by the marketing. They have managed to get away without deceiving anyone in the sense of an overt lie. There are no claims on the packaging itself.

“They don’t make any reference at all to any health outcomes. They leave that as an inference that most people will draw.”

Even the £30 cost may help with the psychological effect of a band.

Ian BellIan Bell has worn one and prospered, Paul Collingwood has worn one and retired

“There is some evidence to show that the more expensive a placebo is, the more of a placebo effect it has,” Evans notes. This is why branded drugs can appear to “work” better than generic drugs.

“Expectations can enhance performance and become a self-fulfilling prophecy.”

So if you take the sceptics’ view, the bands are a placebo. But is there anything wrong with buying into a placebo?

In medicine, the use of placebos is an ethical minefield, and doctors are often fiercely critical of unproven alternative therapies that cause patients to dangerously eschew conventional treatment.

But what harm can a rubber band do that is only linked to sporting performance?

“They are selling at £30 a pop with the clothes of science when it’s nothing more than pseudo science,” says Singh. “Somebody is losing £30 and their golf swing is not going to be made better by magnetic forces or balancing your energy.”

A spokeswoman for Power Balance in the UK emphasised that the company was not claiming there was any scientific evidence behind the product. The Australian ruling was purely about local marketing and did not affect the product globally.

In a statement the firm said: “From its inception, Power Balance has lived and thrived in the ultimate testing environment, the real world. We continue to see, hear and learn about how people believe our products have positively affected their lives.”

And any golfers who think the bands are improving their putting may refuse to be put off by the scientists.



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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.