Gunman dies following house siege

Police vehicles at siege in Kirkheaton, HuddersfieldPolice went to the house to arrest a man in connection with an earlier incident

Police have surrounded a house in West Yorkshire after an officer was shot.

Several shots were fired in the incident in the Kirkheaton area of Huddersfield on Monday evening.

The officer has been taken to hospital for a check up and his injuries are not believed to be serious.

Assistant Chief Constable John Parkinson said officers have laid siege to the property and are attempting to talk to the gunman while appealing for him to give himself up.

Senior police officers said the position of the building meant they did not believe other residents in the area were at risk.

The gunman is believed to be alone.

Police went to the house at about 2200 GMT to arrest a man in connection with an earlier incident.

When he saw the officers he produced a handgun and opened fire, hitting one of them.

West Yorkshire Police said the 42-year-old gunman has continued to fire shots but police have not returned fire.

A police spokesman said: “The man produced a gun and fired at the officers. A male officer in his 20s was hit and attended hospital for minor injuries.

“Armed officers have now surrounded the premises and are trying to resolve the situation peacefully although shots have continually been fired at the officers.”

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

Sir Elton John and partner become parents

Sir Elton John and David Furnish. Photo: May 2010The couple said they were overwhelmed with happiness at news of the birth
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Sir Elton John and his partner have become parents to a son born to a surrogate mother in California.

Zachary Jackson Levon Furnish-John was born on Christmas Day, the UK musician and his Canadian husband David Furnish told the Usmagazine.com website.

“Zachary is healthy and doing really well, and we are very proud and happy parents,” said the couple.

They provided no details about the surrogacy arrangement.

“We are overwhelmed with happiness and joy at this very special moment,” the couple told the website in a statement.

They said the boy weighed 7lb15oz (3.6kg).

A representative for the couple said they intended to protect and respect the privacy of the surrogate mother, and would not be discussing any details relating to the surrogacy arrangements.

Last year, the couple, who were married in 2005 after 12 years together, tried to adopt an orphan in Ukraine.

However, Ukrainian officials said Sir Elton, 62, was too old and his civil partnership with Mr Furnish, 48, would not be recognised as a marriage by Kiev.

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

Call to set free India campaigner

Dr Binayak Sen is brought to a court in the Indian city of Raipur on 24 December 2010Dr Sen was found guilty of carrying messages and setting up bank accounts for Maoist rebels
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Civil rights groups and academics in India and the US have called on India’s government to free a leading public health specialist and human rights activist, Dr Binayak Sen.

He was sentenced to life in prison last Friday for helping Maoist rebels.

Dr Sen was found guilty of carrying messages and setting up bank accounts for the rebels, who are active in large areas of central and eastern India.

Activists say the evidence against Dr Sen was “manufactured”.

The human rights group Amnesty International has said his trial violated international standards.

“We are deeply shocked by the judgment of a Chhattisgarh [central Indian state] court holding Dr Sen to be guilty of sedition, and sentencing him to life imprisonment,” said a statement signed by US author Professor Noam Chomsky, Indian historian Prof Romila Thapar and dozens of well-known Indian academics.

“As a doctor he served the people with devotion and helped to save many lives; as a human rights activist he stood up in defence of the rights of the downtrodden.”

“And yet he has been handed down this sentence whose savagery is unbelievable.”

The statement calls on the higher judiciary to “hear his appeal expeditiously, must grant him immediate bail till the end of the appeal process, and must judge his case with enlightened reason”.

The court in Chhattisgarh found Dr Sen and three others guilty of treason and sedition and Dr Sen, who was out on bail since May 2009, was arrested.

He was first arrested from Bilaspur town in May 2007 for alleged links with Maoist leader Narayan Sanyal, whom he used to visit in jail.

India’s Supreme Court ordered his release on bail two years later.

Dr Sen, a trained paediatrician, says he does not support the Maoists.

A senior member of the local unit of a leading Indian human rights group, the People’s Union for Civil Liberties, he worked with poor tribal people in Chhattisgarh.

He ran a weekly clinic for the tribals and was piloting a community-based health programme.

Dr Sen was also awarded the prestigious Jonathan Mann Award for Global Health and Human Rights for his services to poor and tribal communities and his unwavering commitment to civil liberties and human rights.

His efforts in public health programmes helped to bring down the infant mortality rate in the state and deaths caused by diarrhoea and dehydration, say local doctors.

Dr Sen has been outspoken about the ways in which the government is trying to tackle the Maoists in Chhattisgarh by backing a controversial civil militia of local tribals called Salwa Judum.

He has also expressed his deep concern over rising inequality in India despite the economic boom.

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

Officer shot and wounded in siege

Police vehicles at siege in Kirkheaton, HuddersfieldPolice went to the house to arrest a man in connection with an earlier incident

Police have surrounded a house in West Yorkshire after an officer was shot.

Several shots were fired in the incident in the Kirkheaton area of Huddersfield on Monday evening.

The officer has been taken to hospital for a check up and his injuries are not believed to be serious.

Assistant Chief Constable John Parkinson said officers have laid siege to the property and are attempting to talk to the gunman while appealing for him to give himself up.

Senior police officers said the position of the building meant they did not believe other residents in the area were at risk.

The gunman is believed to be alone.

Police went to the house at about 2200 GMT to arrest a man in connection with an earlier incident.

When he saw the officers he produced a handgun and opened fire, hitting one of them.

West Yorkshire Police said the 42-year-old gunman has continued to fire shots but police have not returned fire.

A police spokesman said: “The man produced a gun and fired at the officers. A male officer in his 20s was hit and attended hospital for minor injuries.

“Armed officers have now surrounded the premises and are trying to resolve the situation peacefully although shots have continually been fired at the officers.”

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

Recreating Earth

The EarthThe Living Earth Simulator will collect data from billions of sources
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It could be one of the most ambitious computer projects ever conceived.

An international group of scientists are aiming to create a simulator that can replicate everything happening on Earth – from global weather patterns and the spread of diseases to international financial transactions or congestion on Milton Keynes’ roads.

Nicknamed the Living Earth Simulator (LES), the project aims to advance the scientific understanding of what is taking place on the planet, encapsulating the human actions that shape societies and the environmental forces that define the physical world.

“Many problems we have today – including social and economic instabilities, wars, disease spreading – are related to human behaviour, but there is apparently a serious lack of understanding regarding how society and the economy work,” says Dr Helbing, of the Swiss Federal Institute of Technology, who chairs the FuturICT project which aims to create the simulator.

Thanks to projects such as the Large Hadron Collider, the particle accelerator built by Cern, scientists know more about the early universe than they do about our own planet, claims Dr Helbing.

What is needed is a knowledge accelerator, to collide different branches of knowledge, he says.

“Revealing the hidden laws and processes underlying societies constitutes the most pressing scientific grand challenge of our century.”

The result would be the LES. It would be able to predict the spread of infectious diseases, such as Swine Flu, identify methods for tackling climate change or even spot the inklings of an impending financial crisis, he says.

Large Hadron ColliderIs it possible to build a social science equivalent to the Large Hadron Collider?

But how would such colossal system work?

For a start it would need to be populated by data – lots of it – covering the entire gamut of activity on the planet, says Dr Helbing.

It would also be powered by an assembly of yet-to-be-built supercomputers capable of carrying out number-crunching on a mammoth scale.

Although the hardware has not yet been built, much of the data is already being generated, he says.

For example, the Planetary Skin project, led by US space agency Nasa, will see the creation of a vast sensor network collecting climate data from air, land, sea and space.

In addition, Dr Helbing and his team have already identified more than 70 online data sources they believe can be used including Wikipedia, Google Maps and the UK government’s data repository Data.gov.uk.

Integrating such real-time data feeds with millions of other sources of data – from financial markets and medical records to social media – would ultimately power the simulator, says Dr Helbing.

The next step is create a framework to turn that morass of data in to models that accurately replicate what is taken place on Earth today.

“We don’t take any action on the information we have”

Pete Warden OpenHeatMaps

That will only be possible by bringing together social scientists and computer scientists and engineers to establish the rules that will define how the LES operates.

Such work cannot be left to traditional social science researchers, where typically years of work produces limited volumes of data, argues Dr Helbing.

Nor is it something that could have been achieved before – the technology needed to run the LES will only become available in the coming decade, he adds.

For example, while the LES will need to be able to assimilate vast oceans of data it will simultaneously have to understand what that data means.

That becomes possible as so-called semantic web technologies mature, says Dr Helbing.

Today, a database chock-full of air pollution data would look much the same to a computer as a database of global banking transactions – essentially just a lot of numbers.

But semantic web technology will encode a description of data alongside the data itself, enabling computers to understand the data in context.

What’s more, our approach to aggregating data stresses the need to strip out any of that information that relates directly to an individual, says Dr Helbing.

Crowd wearing face masksThe Living Earth Simulator aims to predict how diseases spread

That will enable the LES to incorporate vast amounts of data relating to human activity, without compromising people’s privacy, he argues.

Once an approach to carrying out large-scale social and economic data is agreed upon, it will be necessary to build supercomputer centres needed to crunch that data and produce the simulation of the Earth, says Dr Helbing.

Generating the computational power to deal with the amount of data needed to populate the LES represents a significant challenge, but it’s far from being a showstopper.

If you look at the data-processing capacity of Google, it’s clear that the LES won’t be held back by processing capacity, says Pete Warden, founder of the OpenHeatMap project and a specialist on data analysis.

While Google is somewhat secretive about the amount of data it can process, in May 2010 it was believed to use in the region of 39,000 servers to process an exabyte of data per month – that’s enough data to fill 2 billion CDs every month.

If you accept that only a fraction of the “several hundred exabytes of data being produced worldwide every year… would be useful for a world simulation, the bottleneck won’t be the processing capacity,” says Mr Warden.

“Getting access to the data will be much more of a challenge, as will figuring out something useful to do with it,” he adds.

Simply having lots of data isn’t enough to build a credible simulation of the planet, argues Warden. “Economics and sociology have consistently failed to produce theories with strong predictive powers over the last century, despite lots of data gathering. I’m sceptical that larger data sets will mark a big change,” he says.

“It’s not that we don’t know enough about a lot of the problems the world faces, from climate change to extreme poverty, it’s that we don’t take any action on the information we do have,” he argues.

Regardless of the challenges the project faces, the greater danger is not attempting to use the computer tools we have now – and will have in future – to improve our understanding of global socio-economic trends, says Dr Helbing.

“Over the past years, it has for example become obvious that we need better indicators than the gross national product to judge societal development and well-being,” he argues.

At it’s heart, the LES is about working towards better methods to measure the state of society, he says, which would account for health, education and environmental issues. “And last but not least, happiness.”

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