Winehouse cancels two tour dates

Amy Winehouse arrives in Belgrade, Serbia (18 June 2011)The European tour is meant to mark a new start for the singer after treatment for alcohol addiction
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Amy Winehouse is to cancel part of her European tour after the singer was booed for appearing to be too drunk to perform at a concert in Serbia’s capital Belgrade.

She is pulling out of shows in Istanbul, Turkey, on Monday, and Athens, Greece, on Wednesday.

A spokesman said Ms Winehouse would like to apologise to fans, but “feels that this is the right thing to do”.

The singer has struggled with addiction for some time.

Her spokesman added that Ms Winehouse will return home after agreeing with management that “she cannot perform to the best of her ability”.

Her tour, which was originally scheduled to include 12 performances, is now due to resume in Bilbao, Spain, on 8 July.

The concert in Belgrade was the first of the tour, and for almost 90 minutes, Amy Winehouse mumbled her way through parts of songs, said the BBC’s Mark Lowen.

He added: “She sang a few strained notes, before stumbling across the stage and at one point throwing her microphone to the floor.

“At times she left the stage altogether – her band attempting to fill in.

“She was frequently booed by the crowd. Many had paid up to €45 (£40) to see her in a country in which wages are some of the lowest in Europe, and their anger was clear.”

The Grammy-award winning singer had been under strict instructions not to drink after recently finishing a course of alcohol rehabilitation in London.

Hotel staff on her European tour are said to be under orders to remove alcohol from her room.

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Take That top album chart again

Take That Take That are on a 29-stadium tour, with 1.8 million tickets sold
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Take That have topped the album chart once more with their reunion hit Progress, which was the biggest-selling album of last year.

The album, which has been re-released with an extra eight tracks, jumped 10 places to take the number one position.

Take That are currently on an extensive sell-out tour of the UK and parts of Europe.

Dance act Example remained at number one in the singles chart.

Example, whose real name is Elliot Gleave, held on to number one for a second week with his single Change The Way You Kiss Me, despite competition from other dance acts Calvin Harris and Ed Sheeran.

Harris’s single Bounce entered the chart at number two and Sheeran was at number three with The A Team.

Other new tracks in the top 40 were Spaceship from Tinchy Stryder and Dappy, in at number five, and Katie Perry’s Last Friday Night (TGIF), which entered at number 24.

In the album chart, other new entries were So Beautiful Or So What by Paul Simon, who came in at number six, and Hell – The Sequel by Bad Meets Evil, in at number seven.

Nerina Pallot’s Year Of The Wolf came in at number 31 and Sophie Ellis-Bextor’s Make A Scene was at number 38.

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Monroe’s Seven Year Itch dress auctioned for $4.6m

Marilyn Monroe in The Seven Year Itch (Sept 1954)
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The white dress worn by Marilyn Monroe in the 1955 film The Seven Year Itch has sold for $4.6m (£2.8m) at an auction in Los Angeles.

The dress was part of a collection of film memorabilia collected by actress Debbie Reynolds over four decades.

She had hoped to house them in a museum but the project never came to fruition.

Other lots included Elizabeth Taylor’s Cleopatra headdress, a Charlie Chaplin bowler hat and the guitar played by Julie Andrews in The Sound of Music.

Reynolds, 79, was in tears as the auction on the iconic Seven Year Itch dress closed, CNN reported.

Auction house Profiles in History had expected it reach around $2m.

It was bought by an unidentified buyer bidding by telephone.

A red sequined dress and feathered headdress worn for Monroe’s role in Gentlemen Prefer Blondes reached $1.47m and a saloon girl costume from River of No Return for $510,000.

Many of the items had been given to Reynolds by her close friend Dame Elizabeth Taylor, who died earlier this year. The horse racing outfit worn by Taylor as a child in National Velvet sold for $73,800.

The trademark bowler hat worn by Charlie Chaplin in several films, including The Little Tramp, reached $135,300 while a dress and pair of ruby slippers worn by Judy Garland in the filming of The Wizard of Oz sold for $1.75m despite not having appeared in the film.

Keya Morgan, a collector of memorabilia and author of a book on Monroe, said the auction was “totally crazy, especially in this recession”.

She told CNN Monroe would have been amazed to see her old outfits sell for so much.

Reynolds began collecting props and costumes in 1970 and had amassed some 3,500 items.

Speaking before the auction, she said the cost of maintaining them had become too high and that by selling them “I won’t have quite so much responsibility and I can rest a little more”.

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McCain blames migrants over fires

Senator John McCain (right)John McCain (right) said the US border must be made secure
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US Senator John McCain has blamed illegal immigrants for starting some of the huge wildfires that have devastated the state of Arizona in recent weeks.

Arizona’s Republican senator said migrants “set fires because they wanted to signal others… to keep warm” and also to distract border agents.

The comments by Mr McCain prompted a sharp rebuke from Latino rights advocates, CNN reported.

The fires have already gutted some 700,000 acres (283,279 ha) of land.

Mr McCain’s comments came during a news conference in Phoenix, Arizona, on Saturday.

The senator said: “There is substantial evidence that some of these fires have been caused by people who have crossed our border illegally.”

However, he did not provide any details of the evidence he cited.

A man watches a controlled burn in the Apache-Sitgreaves National Forest in ArizonaFirefighters have lit controlled burns in Arizona in the hope of reducing fuel available to the wildfire

Mr McCain also suggested that “the answer to that part of the problem (fires) is to get a secure border”.

In response, Latino rights campaigner Randy Parraza called his comments “careless and reckless”, CNN reports.

He said the senator “should know better” than to make such an accusation without presenting any facts, adding: “It’s easier to fan the flames of intolerance, especially in Arizona.”

In May, the US Supreme Court upheld a controversial law in Arizona that imposed penalties on businesses that hired illegal immigrants.

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Turkish aid for displaced Syrians

BBC's Matthew Price

The BBC’s Matthew Price says residents of Bdama have fled to the Turkish border as that is where they feel safest

Turkey is for the first time supplying food across the border to people displaced within Syria as the Syrian army tightens its grips on restive areas in the north of the country.

Syrian forces have cut off the village of Bdama and closed its bakery, the only source of bread for thousands.

Witnesses say Syrian forces have set up checkpoints and are making arrests.

Turkey says more than 10,500 people have crossed over to its territory but more are camping on the Syrian side.

“Distribution of humanitarian aid has begun to meet the urgent food needs of Syrian citizens waiting on the Syrian side of our border,” Turkey’s emergency situations agency said in a statement on Sunday, the AFP news agency reported.

Analysis

The number of people living here, squeezed up along the Syrian Turkish border, has been growing. Over the weekend, more people have come to this particular camp from the town of Bdama, which Syrian forces went into early on Saturday morning.

I have spoken to a number of people here who have described hearing shots being fired in the town. One man said that while the army was in the town, it had tried to reassure people that they were indeed safe. Then he said that he knew of a number of people who had gone back to Bdama, believing the words of the soldiers, and they had then been arrested.

So it is clearly, as far as the people here are concerned, a very frightening situation and they are living out here among the fig trees and the olive groves, out under the baking sun during the day in makeshift camps.

They all say they don’t know when they will return to their homes.

Activists said the army had surrounded Bdama with checkpoints and was stopping people attempting to flee towards the border.

Nonetheless, hundreds have managed to escape and are living in makeshift camps on the Syrian side.

The local Turkish governor’s office said some Syrians were collecting food at the border to take to the stranded families, the Associated Press reported. The governor’s office said there was no question of Turkish soldiers crossing into Syria.

Raka el-Abdu, 23, told AFP that his family fled Bdama on Saturday but he went back on Sunday morning to get bread. He reached the village using mountain routes and found it all but abandoned.

“They closed the only bakery there. We cannot get bread any more,” he said. “I saw soldiers shooting the owner of the bakery. They hit him in the chest and the leg.

“The army is controlling all the entrances to the village and checking identities to arrest protesters,” he added.

Turkey has condemned the crackdown by Syrian President Bashar al-Assad on a three-month-old uprising by protesters demanding greater openness and an end to corruption.

Good relations between the Turkish government and President Assad have been severely strained by the crisis.

The UN says that at least 1,100 people have died since protests began, but Syrian rights groups put the overall death toll in Syria at 1,297 civilians and 340 security force members.

The International Committee of the Red Cross (ICRC) has sent its president to Syria for talks about the humanitarian crisis.

ICRC president Jakob Kellenberger has repeatedly asked Syria to grant the ICRC and the Syrian Red Crescent access to those wounded or detained.

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Illegal shebeen raided by police

An illegal shebeen in Killkeel has been raided by police.

They seized alcohol, still making equipment and £400 in cash at the shebeen in the Mount Esplanade area of the town.

About 40 people were at the shebeen when police raided it at about 0300 BST on Sunday.

A police spokesman said inquiries were continuing.

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Vaccine hope for prostate cancer

Syringe and vialCancer vaccines make the immune system target tumours
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A new approach to developing cancer vaccines has been used to treat prostate tumours, an international team of scientists has said.

DNA from healthy cells was used to create a vaccine which cured 80% of mice, Nature Medicine reports.

The researchers believe the principle could be applied to other cancers and have begun studies on melanoma.

Cancer Research UK said it was a significant development, but human trials would be needed.

Cancer vaccines are not new. Unlike traditional vaccines which protect against infection, these work by making the immune system attack tumours already in the body.

Specifically they target markers on the surface of cancerous cells, known as antigens.

Professor Alan Melcher, of the University of Leeds, said: “The biggest challenge in immunology is developing antigens that can target the tumour without causing harm elsewhere.”

Researchers in Leeds and at the Mayo Clinic, in the US, broke up chunks of DNA from healthy prostate cells and inserted them into a virus.

“This is an interesting and significant study which could really broaden out the field of immunotherapy research”

Professor Peter Johnson Cancer Research UK

The mice were then repeatedly infected with the virus.

The prostate DNA made the virus produce a wide range of prostate antigens, so when the immune system battled the virus it learned to attack the cancerous prostate cells.

Crucially, healthy prostate cells and other parts of the body were not affected.

In the lab, a course of nine injections with the virus cured 80% of mice with prostate tumours.

Professor Melcher said human trials were years rather than months away.

“We have reason to be quite excited. It’s not out-of-the-blue research, but based on immunotherpay and virus treatments which are looking very promising and that is what is really exciting,” he added

Doctors recently claimed that the drug Ipilimumab, which stimulates the immune system to fight cancer, could increase life expectancy.

Researchers say using healthy DNA is a “proof of principle” which could have implications for vaccines for other cancers. They are trialing the same technique in mice with skin cancer.

Professor Peter Johnson, Cancer Research UK’s chief clinician, said: “This is an interesting and significant study which could really broaden out the field of immunotherapy research.

“Although the vaccine didn’t trigger the immune system to overreact and cause serious side effects in mice, it will need to be further developed and tested in humans before we can tell whether this technique could one day be used to treat cancer patients.”

Dr Kate Holmes, research manager at the Prostate Cancer Charity, said the study provided “new hope”.

“Although we are hopeful that the results of this study could help to form the basis of a new cancer vaccine in future, it is important to remember that the researchers have only investigated the potential of their vaccine in mice.

“Further research looking at its effect in men is needed. We look forward to the outcome.”

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Church clears way for gay bishops

Cross and clothing of Church of England BishopDivisions over gay clergy have threatened to split the Anglican Communion worldwide
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The Church of England is expected to confirm that openly gay clergy can be made bishops, if they are celibate.

Legal advice is due to be published as early as Monday saying homosexual clergy in civil partnerships can become bishops.

The move is in response to the Equality Act, which protects from discrimination on the grounds of sexuality.

But it risks deepening divisions over gay clergy, which threaten to split the Anglican Communion worldwide.

The legal advice is due to go to the General Synod next month.

Some liberals could be wary of any move which shows a difference in approach between homosexual and heterosexual people, while conservatives wish to avoid anything which is at odds with church teaching.

Canon Chris Sugden – a key critic of openly gay clergy – said if bishops were “faithful to the teaching of the Church” it was “unexceptionable”.

He said Christian teaching “makes a distinction between inclination, orientation and attraction on one hand – and practice and behaviour on the other”.

He said the problem over the last 10 years was that gay activists “take great exception to the distinction being made between same sex attraction and same sex behaviour”.

“Some of the current activists for the gay cause are saying this distinction between attraction and behaviour is an unacceptable denial of human rights if a) they cannot express it and b) they don’t have access to high posts in the church,” he said.

Rev Rod Thomas, chairman of the conservative evangelical group Reform, said: “If someone is gay by inclination but doesn’t engage in any sexual activity – then there is nothing to say that that is wrong.”

But he said had “hesitations… because of what’s happened in the past with guidance for bishops on civil partnerships”.

“Civil partnerships ministered in the church must under take with a vow of celibacy. But that guidance has not always been followed with rigour.

“People who are in civil partnerships say their sex life is none of the bishop’s business and often bishops in turn show no intention of finding out. Why should we believe that no inquiries will be made about their private lives in this instance?” he said.

Christina Rees, who is a senior Synod member, said she thought this area was “the most controversial”.

“People like Rod Thomas already think that the Church has gone too far and that there should be much more rigour applied, while others – many others – in the Church find it incredibly distasteful that just because someone is known to be same sex oriented and in a partnered relationship, that that means that the Church still is able to question them about their current sex life and their past sex life,” she said.

Keith Porteous Wood, executive director of the National Secular Society, said the law does not permit discrimination against homosexual orientation or practice.

“So either the bishops are subject to the law and this does not meet it, or they are not and the Equality Act is being used as a smokescreen,” he said.

Last year the Archbishop of Canterbury Dr Rowan Williams said he had no problem with gay people being bishops as long as they were celibate.

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Tyre fire fight ‘could be weeks’

Fire at former Mettoys site in SwanseaFire crews have been at the site since lunchtime on Thursday
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Firefighters who have been battling a tyre blaze since Thursday predict it could be weeks before the fire is finally out.

Officers are making good progress at the old Mettoys factory in Swansea, which is used to store shredded tyres.

Crews have begun cutting holes in the outer walls to remove the burning materials from within.

Ystrad Road, Bruce Road and Kingsway have been re-opened but non-essential traffic should avoid the area.

Emergency services have been at the scene in Fforestfach since the fire was reported at 1305 BST on Thursday.

Approximately 5,000 tonnes of shredded tyre waste had been deposited at the premises and the cause of the fire is under investigation.

Mike Crowley of the Mid and West Wales Fire and Rescue Service said: “We have made very good progress since Thursday.

“Our advice to local residents and visitors to the area is to minimise exposure wherever possible”

Lika Nehaul Public Health Wales

“The fire is under control and there is no risk of the fire spreading.

“The material is very difficult to fully extinguish while it remains in the building.

“The most effective way of dealing with it is to remove the material in small sections and extinguish it outside.

“Having breached the outer walls of the building the next phase is to remove the waste materials in small sections . . . due to the amount of material on fire it will take several weeks to remove and fully extinguish it.”

Queensway, the road on which the factory is located, still has restricted access although emergency services are assisting local businesses to gain access to their premises.

A nearby Park and Ride service remains suspended.

Public health experts have reiterated advice to residents and businesses in the area.

Lika Nehaul, consultant in communicable disease control at Public Health Wales, said: “Air quality measurements from near the scene of the fire show that the concentrations of pollutants in the smoke have the potential to irritate eyes, nose and throat and cause an impact on health if inhaled.

“There is greater potential for health problems in people with existing chest and lung problems such as asthma, chronic bronchitis and cardiac problems including angina.

“Our advice to local residents and visitors to the area is to minimise exposure wherever possible by staying indoors and closing windows and doors.”

A serious incident room has been set up at Swansea Civic Centre.

Swansea council’s environment director Reena Owen said: “It’s inevitable that there will be disruption to the local community and businesses but our aim is to minimise the impact as much as possible.”

A further update is expected on Monday.

Environment Agency Wales has deployed booms and other pollution control equipment to minimise pollution at Fforestfach Stream.

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Serving up profits

Rafael Nadal celebrates with the Wimbledon trophy after winning the title in 2010Players may want success, but organisers and sponsors also hope Wimbledon will reap dividends

As the 125th Wimbledon Championships get under way, the man in charge of running the tournament is wondering what the weather holds in store for the next fortnight.

But Ian Ritchie, the chief executive of the All England Club, is not too concerned, as the retractable roof that has been in place on Centre Court since 2009, guarantees that no days will be a complete wash-out.

Even before the roof was built, though, the unpredictable British weather wasn’t able to dampen spirits or profits at the tournament.

Last year’s event made a £31m profit, or surplus. That is what was left over after the All England Club took out its operating expenses.

The average surplus over the last four or five years has been in the region of £25m to £30m.

All of that is passed on to the Lawn Tennis Association (LTA).

The LTA has been criticised for not doing enough to improve the state of British tennis – Andy Murray is the only British man in the world’s top 100, while only two British women make the top 100. But the All England Club refuses to get involved.

“We work on the assumption that what we do is manage the Championships and work on that. What the LTA do with that [money] is up to them,” says Mr Ritchie.

Wimbledon makes more than 50% of its gross income from selling the broadcasting rights to the tournament around the world, with the event now shown in 185 countries.

Li Na arrives for the WTA pre-Wimbledon partyChina will be following closely Li Na’s progress at Wimbledon

According to Mr Ritchie, Wimbledon made its biggest surplus of about £35m in the late 1980s and early 1990s, boosted by revenues from German TV, when players like Boris Becker and Steffi Graf were at their peak.

Li Na, who became the first Chinese player to win a Grand Slam with her victory at the French Open, is now generating a similar interest in China, and Asia generally.

“We’ve been in discussions with [state broadcaster] CCTV in China about coverage this year. We’ve been involved with them for some time,” says Mr Ritchie.

But he admits that the revenues generated may not have as much of an overall boost to finances as those from German TV did in the past.

“The rights fees paid in China are not as significant [as in other countries] but you get audiences of tens of millions of people,” he says.

“It is important for us to make sure Wimbledon is seen around the world.”

The second biggest portion of Wimbledon’s income comes from sponsorship, or what Wimbledon likes to call its official suppliers.

The All England Championships is the only one of the four Grand Slams that does not have advertising around its courts.

Instead, it enters into long-term agreements with brands to provide goods and services.

Ian RitchieIan Ritchie took over at the All England Club at the end of the 2005 Championships

Its oldest official supplier is Slazenger, which has supplied balls to the Championships since 1902.

New additions to the official suppliers list this year are Sony, with whom the All England Club has worked to develop 3D coverage of both finals and the mens’ semi-finals; Jacob’s Creek, who replaces Blossom Hill in providing wine; and Lavazza, which is replacing Nescafe as the official coffee of The Championships.

For the suppliers, even if they do not get the advertising space that other tournaments offer, being associated with the Wimbledon name alone can be very attractive.

Hertz, which provides cars to transport players around during the Championships, says it is the most important corporate event it does internationally.

“It marries tradition and modernity,” says Michel Taride, president of Hertz International.

The company gets about 700 tickets for its hospitality suite and high visibility for its brand in London.

It is currently in the middle of a five-year deal and although it has been cutting costs throughout the downturn, decided this was one cost they were not going to cut.

Sometimes there is a value in the tournament which is hard to quantify but is highly important in the services industry where building relationships with clients is crucial, says Mr Taride.

Wimbledon has always insisted that revenues from tickets themselves make up a relatively small amount of the overall income.

Corporate tickets are limited to about 10% of overall ticket sales for the show courts.

The majority of tickets go through the public ballot, which Mr Ritchie describes as “the most egalitarian” system.

But there has also been anger that those who can afford a debenture ticket – which for Centre Court for 2011-2015 costs £27,750 and guarantees a ticket for every day of the Championships for those five years – can also profit from them, as it is the only ticket which can be sold on.

But profits or not, there is one key element which keeps the tournament at the top of its game year after year.

The fact that the players value the tournament so much is the real key to the success of the tournament, says Mr Ritchie.

“It is all about the players at the end of the day.”

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VIDEO: Wozniacki hijacks Djokovic interview

Womens’ world number one Caroline Wozniacki quizzes Novak Djokovic on how he will snap his one-match losing streak and who is his favourite female tennis player is after hijacking the Serb’s pre-Wimbledon news conference in Monaco.

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PM’s ‘bad dads’ attack criticised

Mother walks with her daughterMr Cameron said fathers who abandon their children should have “shame heaped upon them”
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David Cameron has been accused of “ripping away” support from single parents, just hours after making a stinging attack on absent fathers.

The prime minister said “runaway dads” should be “stigmatised” in the same way as drink-drivers.

But charity Gingerbread said government proposals to charge those needing state help to obtain child maintenance would make life harder for lone parents.

Ministers said they wanted to encourage parents to settle their own affairs.

Writing in the Sunday Telegraph to mark Father’s Day, the prime minister said fathers who failed to “financially and emotionally” support their children must face consequences.

“It’s high time runaway dads were stigmatised and the full force of shame was heaped upon them,” he said.

“They should be looked at like drink-drivers, people who are beyond the pale.

“His government is making it much easier for deadbeat dads to run from their responsibilities”

Yvette Cooper Shadow home secretary

“They need the message rammed home to them, from every part of our culture, that what they’re doing is wrong; that leaving single mothers, who do a heroic job against all odds, to fend for themselves simply isn’t acceptable.”

But Fiona Weir, from Gingerbread – which campaigns on behalf of single parents – criticised the prime minister.

“David Cameron is right that single mums – and indeed single dads – do a heroic job, but those same parents are about to have government support ripped away from them if they need help securing child maintenance payments from their child’s other parent,” she said.

“If the prime minister really wants to support heroic single parents, he must withdraw these damaging proposals which would limit access to the CSA [Child Support Agency].”

Since 2008 – when the much-maligned CSA was effectively axed – the Child Maintenance and Enforcement Commission (CMEC) has collected money from non-resident parents.

But earlier this year, the government said it wanted to encourage separating couples to organise their own payments and was proposing to charge those who did not for accessing the services of the CMEC.

They would be required to pay an upfront fee of £100 (or £50 if they claim benefits), plus an ongoing charge of between 7% and 12% of the money paid.

For Labour, shadow home secretary Yvette Cooper said Mr Cameron’s words were “hollow”.

“His government is making it much easier for deadbeat dads to run from their responsibilities by charging mums to use the Child Support Agency,” she said.

Erin Pizzey

Erin Pizzey: “There is a vast mass of women equally as feckless as the men”

Mr Cameron also said he was determined to introduce tax breaks for married couples – despite Liberal Democrat opposition to the idea.

But Ms Cooper said such a policy would “reward runaway dads who remarry”.

Erin Pizzey, founder of domestic violence charity Refuge, said Mr Cameron was displaying a lack of understanding about the reality of family break-ups.

“There are a lot of reasons why [fathers are] not with their children… not least that women won’t let them,” she said.

Ms Pizzey said it was wrong to single out men, adding: “There is a vast mass of women who are equally as feckless as the men and we never talk about them.”

Bob Greig, from the single parenting website Only Dads, agreed that the prime minister’s argument was “too simplistic”.

“There are many cultural, employment, financial, [and] legal issues as well which prevent dads from having a full-on relationship with their children post-separation and divorce,” he told the BBC.

“Why that isn’t recognised in his article in the Telegraph I just don’t know.”

The Camerons have three children, Nancy, Arthur and Florence – who was born last August.

Their first child, Ivan, who was born profoundly disabled and needed 24-hour care, died in February 2009.

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Additional 281 free school bids

Michael GoveMichael Gove said free schools will be ‘free from meddling and prescription”
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There have been 281 bids to open free schools in England in the second round of applications, the Department for Education has said.

It follows 323 applications made in the first round, of which 32 are now being moved forward by officials.

Between 10 and 20 free schools are expected to open in September.

Free schools are schools which are set up by groups of parents, teachers, charities, businesses, universities, trusts, religious and voluntary bodies.

They are funded directly by central government, and are free from the control of local authorities.

The government hopes that about 100 will open next year.

Education Secretary Michael Gove said: “Our critics said it was impossible to open a school in little more than a year. Several will open this September.

“They told us that schools wouldn’t want to become academies. They are converting at a rate of two every school day.

“The rationing of good schools must end. Our reforms are about creating a generation of world-class schools, free from meddling and prescription, that provide more children with the type of education previously reserved for the rich.”

The second round of applications to set up free schools were received by the Department for Education between 17 March and 15 June.

Of the 281 bids, 227 were for mainstream schools, 20 for schools for children with special educational needs, and 34 for alternative provision schools, such as pupil referral units.

Of the 227 mainstream applications, 56% were from local groups, with 18% from independent schools wishing to move into the state sector, and 5% from existing academy schools.

The successful bidders will be announced in September.

Mr Gove is due to give a speech on the free schools programme on Monday, in which he will say there have been some “extremely promising proposals”.

The Department for Education also says that the number of new applications is in line with expectations.

The first application window ran from 18 June 2010 to 11 February of this year.

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