Egypt crash kills eight Americans

A crash victim is brought to hospital in AswanThe injured were taken to a hospital in Aswan, with some then airlifted to Cairo

Eight American tourists died and 21 were injured when their bus hit a stationary lorry in southern Egypt, say media and police.

The crash happened early on Sunday as the bus was travelling from Aswan to the ancient temple site of Abu Simbel, Egyptian news agency Mena reported.

The bus driver and a tour guide were also hurt.

The injured were taken to a military hospital where they were treated for fractures and cuts, Mena said.

The accident reportedly happened around dawn, shortly after a three-coach convoy had set off on the 115-mile (185km) journey from Aswan to Abu Simbel.

One of the coaches struck a lorry laden with sand which had broken down and was parked at the side of the road.

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Six of the dead were women, reported Mena and a police official.

Four tourists were in critical condition, a police official said according to AFP news agency.

The injured were taken to a military hospital in Aswan. Some are now reported to have been airlifted to a hospital in Cairo that often treats injured tourists.

Passengers inside the other two coaches were unharmed.

Road accidents are common in Egypt due to poor roads and lax enforcement of traffic regulations. An estimated 8,000 people die in car accidents each year in the country.

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

Festive freeze – swimmers brave icy Welsh waters

[L-R]: Anna Davies, Katrina Brown and Elinor Jones enjoy the annual Porthcawl swim Feeling elfy: Anna Davies, Katrina Brown and Elinor Jones ignore freezing weather to take the plunge at Porthcawl on Christmas morning
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Hardy sea swimmers are taking the plunge into icy Welsh waters to shake off the Christmas cobwebs.

Among those hosting swims on Sunday at 1100 GMT are Tenby, Pembrokeshire, and Llanystumdwy FC, Gwynedd, on the Moranedd side of Criccieth beach.

But the Walrus Dip at Cefn Sidan near Pembrey, Carmarthenshire, was cancelled earlier for the first time in its 24-year history because of icy roads.

More than 600 swimmers turned out for the Christmas Day swim at Porthcawl.

“To have such a crowded beach, at this time of the year and in such harsh cold conditions goes to prove that some of our departed founder swimmers were looking down on us”

Nicola Willis Portchawl swim committee

Porthcawl organisers estimated that between 2,000 – 3,000 spectators watched their charity event.

The Porthcawl swim was in its 46th year, and among those who joined in was the mayor, Mary Emment-Lewis, as well as Victor Davies and Chris Hughes, who have each taken part more than 40 times.

‘Fantastic number’

Swimmers ranged in age from children to and one entrant of 84, Ken James, of Ogmore Vale, while many were in fancy dress.

Ian Stroud, of the swim committee, said: “Once again we have been grateful to all who supported our swim and the number of people that turned up was fantastic, considering the freezing conditions.”

His thermometer showed the temperature was -10C (14F) at 0900GMT on Christmas Day.

But despite the conditions, he said the number of swimmers “far exceeded our expectations”.

Porthcawl Christmas Day swimThere’s no holding this Christmas Day swimmer back as icy Porthcawl waters beckon

Nicola Willis, who chairs the swim committee, said: “To have such a crowded beach, at this time of the year and in such harsh cold conditions goes to prove that some of our departed founder swimmers were looking down on us and provided us with very sunny conditions for a swim that saw more people in the water than we thought possible, considering the snow conditions that have lasted for more than a week now”.

Meanwhile, Tenby has changed the name of this year’s even to the Big Red Swim to mark its “ruby” anniversary, with the focus of fundraising on the Ty Hafan children’s hospice.

Tenby Sea Swimming Association chairman Chris Osborne said he would be taking part for the first time in 20 years because it was “a special occasion”.

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

Government defends free books cut

Philip PullmanAuthor Philip Pullman described the project as one of the most imaginative and generous ever conceived
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Leading writers have condemned a government decision to withdraw funding from a charity that provides free books to children to encourage reading.

Booktrust will lose its £13m support for schemes in England from April.

Author Philip Pullman called it an “unforgiveable disgrace”, and ex-poet laureate Sir Andrew Motion said it was an “act of gross cultural vandalism”.

The Department for Education said ministers had to take “tough decisions in difficult economic times”.

Children’s writer Mr Pullman told the Observer: “Bookstart is one of the most imaginative and generous schemes ever conceived.

“The savings made by its abolition will be negligible, the damage done will be immense”

Sir Andrew Motion Former poet laureate

“To put a gift of books into the hands of new-born children and their parents is to help open the door into the great treasury of reading, which is the inheritance of every one of us, and the only road to improvement and development and intellectual delight in every field of life.”

Sir Andrew said Booktrust had become a “national institution and the envy of the world”.

“The savings made by its abolition will be negligible, the damage done will be immense,” he said.

Bookstart provides packs to parents when their babies are first born and then further books at later stages in their development.

The project started in 1992 and has received money from the government since 2004.

It is funded separately by the devolved administrations in Scotland, Wales and Northern Ireland.

Co-founder Wendy Cooling was awarded the MBE in 2008 for services to children’s literacy.

Bookstart chief executive Viv Bird said she was “immensely surprised and disappointed” to hear that funding would be withdrawn.

Labour leader Ed Miliband said: “The abolition of Bookstart will deprive children of an early opportunity to discover the joy of reading.”

Ms Bird said the charity would be seeking other sources of support.

A Department for Education spokesman said: “We believe homes should be places that inspire a love of books and reading.

“However, in these difficult economic times ministers have to take tough decisions on spending and the particular fund managed by Booktrust will end at the end of this financial year.”

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

Wikileaks exposes US drug wiretap

President Ricardo MartinelliPanama’s president says the request was “misinterpreted” by the US envoy

Fresh US diplomatic cables released via Wikileaks suggest governments have pressed the US Drug Enforcement Agency (DEA) to extend wiretapping services.

Publishing the secret cables, the New York Times said governments wanted information on political adversaries.

Panama and Paraguay are two of the nations cited.

Panama’s government says President Ricardo Martinelli’s request on wiretaps had been “misinterpreted” by the US envoy.

In a cable from August 2009, President Martinelli is reported to have “sent the Ambassador a cryptic Blackberry message that said: “I need help with tapping phones.”

Then US Ambassador to Panama, Barbara Stephenson, says: “He made reference to various groups and individuals whom he believes should be wiretapped, and he clearly made no distinction between legitimate security targets and political enemies.”

The Panamanian president’s office has issued a statement saying the government “regrets the misunderstanding by the US authorities. The request for assistance was made for the struggle against crime, drug trafficking and organised crime”.

“We never asked for help to tap telephones of politicians. Any interpretation to such a request is completely wrong,” it says.

In a cable from February 2010, the DEA tries to resist a request by the government in Asuncion to spy on the Paraguayan People’s Army insurgent group, accused of a number of kidnappings.

The New York Times says that when US diplomats baulked, Paraguay Interior Minister Rafael Filizzola threatened to shut the service down.

Diplomats finally agreed to allow wiretapping for anti-kidnapping work under certain circumstances.

“We have carefully navigated this very sensitive and politically sticky situation. It appears that we have no other viable choice,” a cable says.

The Times says the DEA has 87 offices in 63 countries and that many governments are eager to take advantage of the advanced wiretapping technology the agency uses.

DEA spokesman Lawrence Payne said on Saturday it could not comment as the cables were considered classified.

A number of cables reveal the extent of the involvement of senior officials in the drug trade in some countries.

In one cable dated March 2008, US diplomats in Guinea report that a supposed incineration of drugs was faked.

The cable says: “The event was a real eye-opener and a facade. The incineration was a ridiculous attempt by the [government of Guinea] to prove that a law enforcement campaign against narcotics exists. If anything was proven, it was that the traffickers’ influence has reached the highest levels of the government.”

The Wikileaks website – together with several major media organisations – is currently publishing tens of thousands of leaked US diplomatic cables.

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

Tube drivers in Boxing Day strike

A London Underground trainAslef wants its members to be paid triple time and be given a day in lieu
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A strike by train drivers on London Underground is taking place in a dispute about working on Boxing Day.

The drivers’ union Aslef called for triple pay and a day off in lieu for working on the bank holiday.

London Underground, which has accused the union of ignoring a prior agreement, sought an injunction to prevent the strike but that was rejected by the High Court.

The walkout could hit shoppers heading to the traditional Boxing Day sales.

London Underground says it intends to run as many Tube services as possible, as well as 700 bus routes and some river services.

In 1996, Aslef signed an agreement that it would consider Boxing Day a normal working day in return for higher pay and longer holidays.

But the union said increased Tube services on bank holidays meant drivers now had to work more public holidays than was the case when the agreement was signed.

London Underground challenged the strike notification, saying it was illegal as it was not worded properly, but after a hearing lasting almost four hours, the court ruled against the company.

It comes after a series of Tube strikes by members of the RMT union in recent months over plans to cut jobs in stations.

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

Thousands flee Ivory Coast crisis

UN peacekeeper in Abidjan, 24 Dec 10The UN has 10,000 troops in Ivory Coast

About 14,000 people have fled Ivory Coast to neighbouring Liberia following last month’s disputed Ivorian presidential election, the UN says.

A spokesperson told the BBC that the UN was prepared for a total of 30,000 refugees in the region.

Most of those fleeing are supporters of Alassane Ouattara, who is recognised internationally as the new president.

Incumbent Laurent Gbagbo has rejected widespread calls to step down, citing vote rigging in northern areas.

The spokeswoman for the UN refugee agency (UNHCR), Fatoumata Lejeune-Kaba, said most of those who had left Ivory Coast since the 28 November election had come from villages in the west of the country.

She said they had been walking for days to escape tensions they feared could explode into violence, and the flow was continuing.

On Friday West African leaders told Mr Gbagbo to stand down or expect to face “legitimate force” from the regional bloc Ecowas.

Mr Gbagbo’s government said the threat was unjust. It also condemned a decision by the West African central bank to give control of Ivory Coast’s account to Mr Ouattara.

Laurent Gbagbo (21 December 2010)Mr Gbagbo says the presidential poll was rigged in rebel areas that backed Mr Ouattara

Earlier Mr Ouattara urged the armed forces to protect civilians against attack from “the militias and foreign mercenaries that are spilling Ivorian blood”.

He said perpetrators of recent violence would be prosecuted and invited investigators from the International Criminal Court to the country.

Mr Ouattara and his cabinet are based at a hotel in the main city, Abidjan, under the protection of UN troops.

Mr Gbagbo has demanded that UN and French troops leave the country. A close ally even warned that they could be treated as rebels if they did not obey the instruction.

The UN, which has 10,000 peacekeepers in the country, rejected the call.

UN officials say at least 170 people have been killed in recent attacks linked to the Ivorian armed forces, who remain publicly loyal to Mr Gbagbo.

There have been suggestions that member nations send in troops to strengthen the presence of the UN peacekeeping force.

The election was meant to unite the country after a civil war in 2002 split the world’s largest cocoa producer in two, with the predominantly Muslim North supporting Mr Ouattara and the mainly Christian south backing Mr Gbagbo.

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

Writers condemn children book cut

Philip PullmanAuthor Philip Pullman described the project as one of the most imaginative and generous ever conceived
Related stories

Leading writers have condemned a government decision to withdraw funding from a charity that provides free books to children to encourage reading.

Booktrust will lose its £13m support for schemes in England from April.

Author Philip Pullman called it an “unforgiveable disgrace”, and ex-poet laureate Sir Andrew Motion said it was an “act of gross cultural vandalism”.

The Department for Education said ministers had to take “tough decisions in difficult economic times”.

Children’s writer Mr Pullman told the Observer: “Bookstart is one of the most imaginative and generous schemes ever conceived.

“The savings made by its abolition will be negligible, the damage done will be immense”

Sir Andrew Motion Former poet laureate

“To put a gift of books into the hands of new-born children and their parents is to help open the door into the great treasury of reading, which is the inheritance of every one of us, and the only road to improvement and development and intellectual delight in every field of life.”

Sir Andrew said Booktrust had become a “national institution and the envy of the world”.

“The savings made by its abolition will be negligible, the damage done will be immense,” he said.

Bookstart provides packs to parents when their babies are first born and then further books at later stages in their development.

The project started in 1992 and has received money from the government since 2004.

It is funded separately by the devolved administrations in Scotland, Wales and Northern Ireland.

Co-founder Wendy Cooling was awarded the MBE in 2008 for services to children’s literacy.

Bookstart chief executive Viv Bird said she was “immensely surprised and disappointed” to hear that funding would be withdrawn.

Labour leader Ed Miliband said: “The abolition of Bookstart will deprive children of an early opportunity to discover the joy of reading.”

Ms Bird said the charity would be seeking other sources of support.

A Department for Education spokesman said: “We believe homes should be places that inspire a love of books and reading.

“However, in these difficult economic times ministers have to take tough decisions on spending and the particular fund managed by Booktrust will end at the end of this financial year.”

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

Cosmic origins

Planck all-sky CMB image (Esa/HFI/LFI consortium)
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There’s an idea in the area of physics known as quantum mechanics that suggests one can’t measure a phenomenon without influencing the result.

It turns out that sometimes this same “observer effect” crops up in science journalism.

The story goes that, right now, there is a quiet debate happening that could have implications for how the Universe as we know it came to be – and what came before.

And the debate is being driven in part by the fact that news outlets including BBC News took a small peek into the machine of modern-day astrophysics.

It started in a fairly pedestrian way: I spotted a paper authored by someone with a familiar name, outlining analyses of what is known as the cosmic microwave background, or CMB.

Professor Sir Roger Penrose, along with his colleague Vahe Gurzadyan, had crunched through the publicly-available data on this ever-so-slightly jumbled glow of light that permeates the whole of the cosmos.

They found neat, circular rings of order in the CMB, a feature which would support a theory of Professor Penrose’s: that the Big Bang is just the latest in an endless cycle, rather than a beginning per se.

"Rings" in WMAP microwave background data (VG Gurzadyan/R Penrose)The initial paper suggested these rings were echoes from before the Big Bang

As is common among cosmologists, the researchers published the idea on Arxiv.org, a repository for scientific papers before they go through the publishing process – where I found the manuscript and wrote a story on it, among other news outlets.

Three weeks later, two papers were posted to the Arxiv site refuting Professor Penrose’s hypothesis: one by Hans Kristian Eriksen and Ingunn Wehus at the University of Oslo and another by Douglas Scott, Jim Zibin, and Adam Moss from the University of British Columbia.

Just two days later, a third refutation by Amir Hajian of the University of Toronto appeared.

It is rare that science works in this way; rarer still that it works at this speed. And there is some indication it’s going this way in part because the BBC and others shed light on the initial paper.

In any case, the process is a remarkable, almost-but-not-quite public airing – kind of like a high-speed film of how scientific discourse can go on – with footnotes.

There are a number of factors driving this unusual debate. Perhaps the most obvious is the “celebrity science” factor.

“What’s going on is that out of many outrageous claims made in cosmology each year, one was singled out recently for a huge amount of attention,” Douglas Scott told BBC News.

“That would not have been the case had it come from someone without the reputation of Sir Roger.”

It should also be said that Professor Penrose is championing a theory that, if correct, would completely upend the “inflationary cosmology” that is the current, widely-accepted best guess as to the Universe’s origins.

“As far as the public is concerned, in a situation like [this one] the publicity may happen too fast to get out the news that there were big errors with the work; once the errors are found, the story has died down and the media have moved on”

Jim Zibin University of British Columbia

Or, as Hans Eriksen put it: “The story contained a rather explosive mix of pre-Big Bang physics, black holes and Roger Penrose – any science journalist has got to love that.”

And so we did. But Dr Eriksen hinted also at another factor surrounding the story – that the public nature of the data made the analysis easy to repeat – and refute.

That is, the current best-available data on the CMB are free to download; for now, that comes from the Wilkinson Microwave Anisotropy Probe, or Wmap.

Jo Dunkley, a University of Oxford astrophysicist and part of the Wmap team, explained that the hunt for “anomalies” like that posited by Professor Penrose is a common pursuit.

“That’s a whole industry in our field, to look for unusual things in the maps,” Dr Dunkley tells me.

“In the map of the sky, you can see an ‘s’ and an ‘h’ if you look carefully. People have joked that it’s Stephen Hawking’s signature on the sky, but obviously we don’t think that’s significant.

“The nice thing about Penrose’s theory is that it’s a theory that you then go and test; that’s exactly what we should be doing.”

She’s right. While all of this is going on, another paper is posted on the Arxiv that purports to see “bruises” of other universes in the CMB. That, too, should be tested for significance – perhaps before it gets media attention.

The standard first test is to plug the new idea into simulations of the sky; you create a model on the basis of everything that is known and the result should replicate what observations bear out in the real CMB data.

It is here that the authors of the three rebuttal manuscripts suggest that Gurzadyan and Penrose have got it wrong. They say the original paper shows nothing more than what your common-or-garden inflationary cosmologist would have predicted on the basis of existing theory.

To prove the point, Douglas Scott and colleagues showed that a hunt for triangles in the CMB was statistically as successful as that for the circles that support Professor Penrose’s theory.

After that, but before the third paper was published, Penrose and Gurzadyan had posted their riposte; it is clear that the subtleties of the argument are still being discussed, principally through the medium of the Arxiv site.

For some corners of science, this “preprint” culture is faster than the traditional refereed journal approach, in which results are sent to journals, who choose appropriate but anonymous experts to sign off the veracity or merit of the work.

Planck telescope first images (SPL)The Planck telescope will soon be providing significantly more detailed data on the CMB

But preprint servers are to that process as YouTube is to Cannes: you can find more, faster, but you can’t know much about the quality of what you’ll see.

“The new technology raises new problems but also provides the means to resolve them quickly,” Jim Zibin told BBC News. “In a sense… the old refereeing system is not fast enough to respond, and a new, informal form of refereeing appears to fill the void.

Preprints and these debates can be seen as a workshop, then – but Amir Hajian says it is important to have a home for the finished product.

“The debates finally end – that is the nature of science,” he told BBC News.

“Unknowns will be knowns sooner or later; what is important is to have trusted refereed journals to publish the final polished version of each work.”

In the interim, Dr Zibin hinted that media interest kicks off the “observer effect” in the delicate experimental setup.

“As far as the experts are concerned, incorrect work will either be corrected via Arxiv comments, the standard review process, or more slowly over many years and many papers, or will simply go unnoticed and forgotten.

“But as far as the public is concerned, in a situation like [this one] the publicity may happen too fast to get out the news that there were big errors with the work. Once the errors are found, the story has died down and the media have moved on.”

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

Nigeria pledges to hunt bombers

Police in Jos (file photo)Police are now patrolling the area, urging residents to go home
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Nigeria’s president has said his government will do all it can to find those responsible for a string of bomb attacks that killed at least 32 people near the central city of Jos.

Goodluck Jonathan promised that the bombers would “face the law”. No group has said it carried out the attacks.

The Christmas Eve blasts happened in an area where up to 1,000 people died in sectarian clashes this year.

The region straddles Nigeria’s mainly Muslim north and the Christian south.

About 74 people were wounded in the bomb blasts. Some are in a critical condition.

In a separate development, at least six people died in attacks on churches by suspected Islamists in the north-eastern city of Maiduguri.

Speaking in the capital Abuja, President Jonathan said: “I assure all Nigerians that we shall unearth those behind the Jos bomb explosion and apprehend them to face the law.”

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A statement from his office added: “The president expressed sadness at explosions which killed many innocent Nigerians, Christians and Muslims alike.”

Friday night’s bomb explosions occurred during Christmas Eve celebrations in villages near Jos, police say.

Gregory Yenlong, a spokesman for Nigeria’s Plateau state, told Bloomberg news agency that there had been threats “to disrupt Christmas celebrations in Jos”.

Past clashes have been between rivals gangs of Muslims and Christians, but observers say the underlying causes are economic and political rather than religious.

Muslims are generally from the Hausa- or Fulani-speaking communities. They are often nomadic people who earn a living from rearing animals or petty trade.

The mainly Christian Berom, Anaguta and Afisare groups have traditionally been farmers.

Some Christian farmers feel they are under threat, as Hausa-speaking Muslims come down from the north looking for pasture for their animals.

In Maiduguri, suspected Islamist sect members attacked at least two churches late on Friday.

In one incident, petrol bombs killed five people including a Baptist pastor, Reuters news agency reported.

A security guard at a nearby church died in a similar assault, Reuters added.

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