Drivers stuck in snow overnight

School signLess than half all Scotland’s schools opened last week
Related stories

About 90% of Scotland’s schools are hoping to reopen after being closed for a week due to snow.

A relatively dry weekend allowed local authorities to clear roads, though travel disruption was still expected.

Heavy snow is falling in Dundee, Perth, Stirling, Falkirk and parts of Fife.

There are blizzard conditions on the A9 between Perth and Dunblane. The road is down to one lane in places. The M80 is also badly affected through Stirling.

The M90 between Perth and Fife has a covering of snow and traffic is moving very slowly.

Scotrail are now running trains between Aberdeen and Inverness, and from Glasgow and Edinburgh to Aberdeen and Inverness.

Buses are replacing trains between Dundee and Edinburgh and Perth and Edinburgh.

There are no trains between Glasgow and Dunblane or on the far north line.

Edinburgh to Glasgow Queen Street services are reduced to half hourly.

Inverness and Wick airports are closed.

Grampian Police said drifting snow was affecting roads between Fochabers and Elgin; Inverurie and Huntly; Huntly and Banff; and MacDuff to New Pitsligo. Some higher routes were closed.

Aberdeen and Aberdeenshire councils said school transport would been affected, with some routes cancelled and others changed.

Education Secretary Michael Russell said: “We have experienced the worst snowfall at this time of year since 1965.

“Despite the best efforts of local authorities and school staff, road closures and hazardous conditions made school closures unavoidable in many parts of the country.”

At the height of last week’s disruption less than half of Scotland’s schools opened.

Mr Russell added: “We do not expect any blanket school closures and many local authorities which experienced significant disruption last week are hoping to open most, if not all, schools in their area.”

Weather and travel infoFrequent travel updates on BBC Radio Scotland – 92 to 95 FM and 810 MWDo you know of a problem? Call the travel hotline on 08000 929588 (call only if it is safe to do so)BBC Travel online updates Scotland-wide travel updates National rail enquiries BBC weather updates Met Office weather warnings Scottish Water advice on warm pipes

Transport Minister Stewart Stevenson said transport staff across the country were working round the clock to keep networks open.

“I am pleased our national roads network is almost entirely reopen again,” he said.

“We have adequate salt supplies to see us through further bad weather, currently four times more than at the worst time in the winter last year and more deliveries due in the next few weeks.

“We also have a contingency supply ready for use in an emergency.”

While schools are set to reopen and transport links have been restored, forecasters are warning of more bad weather to come.

Forecasters warned that the wintry weather would push into Dumfries and Galloway and the Borders during Monday afternoon.

During Monday night, wintry showers will become confined to the Northern Isles, Northwest Highlands and Galloway.

Elsewhere, it will be dry, clear and very cold with a widespread frost, severe in places.

There will be a risk of icy roads once again, and patches of freezing fog, as temperatures dip to -6C in the towns and cities, and as low as -15C in the Central Highlands.

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

Drivers stuck in snow overnight

Traffic queuing on the M8 in Glasgow (6/12/10)Heavy snow caused severe disruption on the M8 which links Glasgow and Edinburgh

Hundreds of drivers were stranded overnight after more snow and ice brought further chaos to the UK.

Scotland saw the worst of the havoc, with scores of cars stuck in deep snow across the country’s central belt.

About 150 pupils, parents and staff spent the night in a South Lanarkshire school after the terrible weather conditions stopped them getting home.

The Met Office has heavy snow warnings for Orkney and Shetland, the Highlands, Grampian and North West England.

There are warnings of widespread icy roads for the rest of Scotland, Northern Ireland, and London and South East England.

Many motorists have been stuck overnight on the M8 after after heavy snow caused severe disruption to the route which links Glasgow with Edinburgh.

Traffic was also brought to a standstill on the M80 which runs through central Scotland.

Drivers were advised to stay with their vehicles. Some said they were frustrated by a lack of information.

One told the BBC: “I’d really like it if someone told us if we were moving or not. If we were told we’re not moving, we could actually get some sleep.

“People are saying ‘should we stay in our cars or shouldn’t we? Should we keep the engine running? What if we run out of petrol?'”

Another said: “I actually found out the road was closed when I was on the road. You know, it wasn’t a great help. I knew it wouldn’t be easy but I never thought it would be this bad.”

However, Scottish transport minister Stewart Stevenson described his government’s handling of the major travel disruption as a “first class response”.

Mr Stevenson blamed inaccurate weather forecasts for the problems.

“The police, the hospital services, our road operating companies, have all been pulling together to make sure that we get equipment to the right place,” he said.

“We’ve brought snow ploughs and gritters down from further north in Scotland to supplement the usual equipment in the central belt.

“So a great deal has been done in the face of really atrocious weather conditions.”

The heavy snow across Scotland and Northern Ireland has cleared southwards and there are Met Office severe weather warnings for snow across parts of north-west England into Tuesday morning.

BBC weather forecaster Matt Taylor said ice would be a more widespread problem across the UK.

Temperatures will struggle to get above freezing in parts of Scotland, northern England and Wales.

Glasgow and Edinburgh airports will be open but passengers are advised to check with their airline.

Belfast International and London City airports have warned of delays and cancellations in fog and freezing weather.

The enhanced content on this page requires Javascript and Flash Player 9

UK forecast for 07/12/2010

Map Key

land colour Landcloud colour CloudLakes, Rivers & Sea colour Lakes, Rivers & Sea

Fog Fog Colour Range

Light
Heavy

Frost Frost Colour Range

Light
Heavy

Pressure Fronts

Cold Front IllustrationCold
Warm Front IllustrationWarm
Occluded Front IllustrationOccluded

Rain Rain Colour Range

Light
Heavy
Extreme

Snow Snow Colour Range

Light
Heavy

Temperature tab only

Temperature (°C) Temperature range chart

Send your pictures and videos to [email protected] or text them to 61124 (UK) or +44 7725 100 100 (International). If you have a large file you can upload here.

Read the terms and conditions

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

Asia ‘leading recovery’ says bank

Christmas decorations, Hong Kong shopping mall November 2010Strong domestic demand has helped spur Asian growth rates
Related stories

East Asia’s emerging economies are leading world recovery with a likely growth rate this year of 8.8%, the Asian Development Bank says.

That will soften to 7.3%, said the ADB in its twice-annual regional report.

External conditions – notably the weakness of the US and European economies – continue to affect prospects however, it added.

The bank warned that currency wars, inflation and protectionism remained serious challenges.

“The unsynchronised global recovery – red-hot growth in emerging economies against tepid, uncertain recovery in advanced economies – pose policy challenges for emerging East Asia,” said the ADB.

“Competitive non-appreciation – or ‘currency wars’ as some put it – may escalate into trade wars as countries try to preserve international competitiveness and exports.”

The inflationary pressures and rises in asset prices also pose policy dilemmas, the bank said.

Australia left interest rates unchanged (at 4.75%) citing the global uncertainties and the strong local currency which the financial authorities said would help curtail inflation.

Economic stimulus packages are beginning to be rolled back too, the Bank said, which would contribute to the slower growth expected next year.

However, robust recovery was the norm across the 14 economies reviewed by the bank, driven by stronger domestic demand.

“After slowing sharply in 2008 and 2009, the East Asian economies recovered strongly in 2010 which has led GDP growth back closer to 2007 levels,” said the bank.

The region had reached a record 9.6% growth in 2007.

Many of the region’s stock markets also bounced back sharply, the bank said in the December edition of its twice-annual Asia Economic Monitor.

China’s economy expanded by 9.6% in the third quarter, and Singapore by 10.6%, but the bank saw signs this pace would be easing off.

It also warned that the overall outlook remains “highly uncertain”.

“A weaker- and longer-than-expected recovery process in advanced economies will further delay policy normalisation, increasing economic distortions and lowering long-term growth prospects,” the report said.

The report examined the Asean economies – Indonesia, Thailand, the Philippines, Malaysia, Singapore, Vietnam, Cambodia, Laos and Burma – as well as China, Hong Kong, Taiwan and South Korea.

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

Cameron hints at Afghan pull-out

British soldiers in AfghanistanThe prime minister voiced his optimism over the withdrawal of British forces from Afghanistan
Related stories

David Cameron has said British troops could start coming home from Afghanistan as early as next year.

The prime minister was speaking as he visited the country to assess for himself the situation on the ground.

He said progress against the Taliban and in training Afghan military and police made him optimistic about the prospects for British troop withdrawal.

Last month, Mr Cameron made a commitment to MPs to withdraw British combat troops from Afghanistan by 2015.

BBC deputy political editor James Landale, who is travelling with Mr Cameron, said it was almost a tradition now for prime ministers to visit Afghanistan before Christmas.

Mr Cameron went to Afghanistan, like his predecessors, to thank British forces for what they are doing in the country.

He did this with some in person at an isolated patrol base and with others by a round-robin Army fax.

“We have to deliver on the ground what’s necessary, but what I’ve seen today gives me cause for cautious optimism”

David Cameron

Mr Cameron stayed overnight at the main British base, Camp Bastion, and promised the troops there more unmanned drones and Warthog armoured vehicles to take the fight to the Taliban.

After a day of visits and meetings, Mr Cameron said he was cautiously optimistic about the progress in denying the Taliban territory and in training Afghan police and troops.

Our correspondent said Mr Cameron was so confident that he said it was now possible some British combat troops could start returning to the UK next year.

Not everyone in the Army was keen on the idea but the prime minister has a firm commitment to get all combat troops out of Afghanistan by 2015 and wanted to make a start, our correspondent added.

Mr Cameron said: “We have to deliver on the ground what’s necessary, but what I’ve seen today gives me cause for cautious optimism.

“We are ahead of schedule on training up the Afghan National Army, I’ve just been to see Afghan police officers being trained up – 500 every eight weeks coming out of an academy run by the British. There are signs for optimism.”

The prime minister has told MPs that the country needed to know “there is an end point to all of this”.

The UK has more than 10,000 troops deployed in Afghanistan.

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

Jail reform

Frankie's calendar on his prison cell wallWaiting for a fresh chance at Feltham YOI
Related stories

Frankie had a date ringed on the calendar on his cell wall: 29 November.

Guilty of robbery, the 17-year-old was sent to Feltham Young Offenders’ Institution. But he spent months preparing for release on the specialist Heron wing, being coached in how to be a good citizen.

As release day approached, Frankie studied computing, aiming to get into college and to one day work in the UK’s video games industry.

“There’s no chance I’ll reoffend,” he said, as the day loomed.

“Definitely, 100%. I have had a lot of support here. Now I will think twice before I act. I was in prison last Christmas. This Christmas, I’m with my family.”

The 30-bed Heron Unit has dealt with 120 young men in its first year. Inmates have to demonstrate a genuine willingness to change their lives. But in return, they get specialist help from extra staff, including “resettlement brokers”. These experts work with the offender on the inside – and then maintain that contact after release.

PLAN TO CUT PRISON POPULATIONHalve sentence for those who admit crime at police stationPay more foreign national prisoners to leaveFaster risk assessments to release some indeterminate sentence prisonersStop remanding criminals unlikely to be jailed after trialRecall only those who commit serious breach of release licenceMore drug offenders and mentally ill into treatment

The brokers’ job is to ensure that the former offender gets into college and housing or receives whatever other solutions they need to chaotic lives. It’s partly mentoring – but a lot of no-nonsense monitoring and pressure to reform.

Almost eight out of 10 young offenders leaving Feltham go on to reoffend within two years. In its first year, Heron’s reoffending rate has been 14%, with a further nine young men removed from the scheme while still inside.

Heron’s resettlement brokers are one of a number of key projects that have been emerging as policy makers look for new answers to sentencing and jailing inmates.

And it’s the mind-boggling social and economic costs of criminal justice that Justice Secretary Ken Clarke says he wants his green paper to slash in a “rehabilitation revolution”.

The average annual cost of a prison place is now more than a place at Eton and hits almost £55,000 at intensive and challenging environments such as Feltham. Those costs as a proportion of all criminal justice spending have been rising over 20 years, with the prison population at near record levels of roughly 85,000.

National Audit Office figures show that 60% of inmates held for a year or less go on to reoffend – and that has an estimated cost to the country of between £7bn and £10bn.

Graphic showing reoffending rates

But at the same time, the Ministry of Justice’s budget is projected to be cut by almost a quarter over the next four years. Thousands of jobs will go as £2bn is lopped from legal aid, courts, prisons and probation.

So when it comes to dealing with criminals, we can’t afford to keep locking them up.

But if there is no new government money, can sentencing and rehabilitation be reformed?

The ministry insists that the “dangerous and serious” offenders will still be locked up – but there is going to be a concerted focus to find fresh ways to stop lower-level offenders from embarking on long and disruptive lives of crime.

With this idea as a starting point, Mr Clarke says judges should be deciding on sentences, not newspapers or politicians.

RESETTLING OFFENDERS

Mohammed, Resettlement Broker

Mohammed Ellis-Francis is a Feltham “resettlement broker”, working with offenders before and after release.

“One of the things that I find with young offenders is that there can be a lot of hope and aspirations – they can be very positive. But there are many background issues that need dealing with. I’m talking things like homelessness, family problems and drugs.

“Gang crime a big issue for a lot of them – but the question is whether we can do more than fix just one problem – and help them fix their entire lives. So we’re working to resettle some people who, at the end of the day, have never been settled.

“My job is to be a continuous thread, to stop them going from agency to agency, pillar to post on release. I make practical interventions – make sure they get to an interview, get housing to sort out their accommodation.”

Rather than set absolute jail terms, he argues, policy makers should focus on protecting the public by establishing what levers judges can pull to stop someone offending, rather than a one-size fits all approach.

That’s the thinking behind Mr Clarke’s controversial decision to drop a Conservative election pledge to try to jail more people who carry knives.

And the government is also promising a greater focus on tackling drug and alcohol abuse, a rethink on how to deal with mentally-ill offenders and efforts to get more ex-offenders into jobs. London Mayor Boris Johnson is already lobbying the capital’s businesses on that point, piling pressure on employers to give people like Frankie from Feltham a chance.

The short term aim is a modest 3,000 fall in the prison population by 2014-15. But the longer-term dividend could be massive.

But who will pay for the reforms if the MOJ’s budget is being cut?

The Heron scheme at Feltham, for example, has specific funding that runs out in 18 months’ time.

Another closely watched London scheme, the Diamond Initiative, conducts similarly intensive monitoring and mentoring of adult offenders coming off short-term sentences.

The first evaluation of that £11m initiative has been extremely promising, reporting a halving in the reoffending rate among the targeted offenders.

Other schemes being investigated include pilots of “Integrated Diversion and Offender Management” (IDOM) teams.

This basically means getting the police, probation and other agencies, such as drug treatment bodies, to work in the same office. The same people doing the same job they have always done – but in a joined-up way that makes the difference.

Economics of reoffending

A prisoner in jail

60% of criminals who serve short sentences reoffend within a year of leaving prisonEach prisoner costs the taxpayer approximately £50,000 a yearOne study of rehabilitation work by St Giles Trust found that every £1 invested in specialist rehab programmes saved the public purse £10

In one case cited by the West Midlands IDOM pilot, a 15-year-old girl was caught carrying a knife into school. In other areas, the teenager might have been heading to the courts. In this case, the IDOM team put her into some intensive counselling that made her change her behaviour. They say she hasn’t reoffended since.

However, with the Ministry of Justice cutting thousands of jobs, a huge bet is going to be placed on the private or voluntary sector – and radical proposals for “payment by results”.

Peterborough Prison has also seen the roll-out of Social Impact Bonds, a rehabilitation programme funded by City cash.

Investors buy into a bond which funds specialist reoffending work by recognised expert charities. If reoffending rates fall, the investors get a dividend from the Ministry of Justice.

Ministers insist the reforms are not being driven by cost-cutting but by a flexible approach to prisons and rehabilitation that is more constructive than simply “warehousing” criminals until its time for their release.

A graph showing the rising prison population during the 20th century

But Harry Fletcher of probation union Napo says that professionals are very sceptical.

“This Green Paper is not primarily about value for money or building on ‘what works’. It is motivated by an ideological wish to drive down costs and introduce the private sector,” he says.

“The [payment by results] scheme is predicated on the private sector raising massive amounts of capital from investors. This will only happen if successive pilot schemes give positive results. Because of the nature of offenders, with chaotic and troubled lifestyles, this is highly unlikely to happen.”

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

Sentencing reforms to be unveiled

Ken Clarke

Ken Clarke: “Serious knife crimes will get serious prison sentences, but we’re not setting absolute tariffs”

Related stories

Justice Secretary Ken Clarke is due to set out proposals to reform sentencing in England and Wales.

A Green Paper will put the emphasis on making prisons more purposeful and toughening up community sentences.

The reforms are driven by the need to cut the £4bn prison and probation budget by about 20% over four years.

Earlier, Mr Clarke said a Conservative election pledge that anyone caught carrying a knife could expect a jail term would not be implemented.

Ministers are aiming to cut the prison population by 3,000 to reduce costs.

They are expected to propose measures to restrict the use of indeterminate sentences, extend the use of bail for suspects and give greater sentence reductions for defendants who plead guilty early.

BBC home affairs correspondent Danny Shaw says the key reform will be to make community sentences a more credible alternative to custody.

Mr Clarke believes unpaid work schemes undertaken by offenders should be more punitive, with activities becoming more physical and intense.

But plans in the Conservative manifesto for prisoners to “earn” their release, as part of a so-called Min-Max sentencing regime, have been scrapped, as has the pledge that anyone convicted of a knife crime can expect a jail term.

Asked by BBC political editor Nick Robinson on Monday whether people caught carrying knives could expect a lesser punishment, Mr Clarke said: “Anybody who is guilty of serious knife crime will go to prison but I’m not in favour of absolute rules.

“I’m in favour of actually allowing judges to see how nasty the offender is, see what the offence was, see what the best way of protecting the public from him is.”

In the Conservative election manifesto, the party said four out of five people convicted of a knife crime did not go to prison and they would send a “serious, unambiguous message that carrying a knife is totally unacceptable”.

The document said: “We will make it clear that anyone convicted of a knife crime can expect to face a prison sentence.”

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

Royals on skis for festive card

The Prince of Wales and Duchess of Cornwall cross-country skiing in ScotlandThe official card will be sent to charitable volunteers and friends
Related stories

The Prince of Wales and Duchess of Cornwall have chosen a relaxed photograph of themselves skiing at Balmoral for their 2010 Christmas card.

The image from their private collection was taken at the Queen’s estate in Aberdeenshire after heavy snowfall.

The couple decided to try cross-country skiing during their stay – with the prince dressed in full tweed, from his cap and jacket down to his plus fours.

The official card will be sent to friends, supporters and volunteers.

Wedding snaps

Charles has been a regular visitor to the Swiss resort of Klosters for many years and is an experienced downhill and cross-country skier.

Camilla is known to prefer walking, only trying cross-country skiing for the first time last winter.

She wore a hat and large scarf with a jacket similar to her husband’s.

Last year the couple chose a picture from Royal Ascot. In 2008 they were shown holding umbrellas and laughing on the deck of the St Mawes to Falmouth ferry in Cornwall and in 2007 they chose an image from a public engagement.

The previous two years involved weddings: In 2006 they picked a photo from the wedding of the duchess’s daughter, Laura Parker Bowles, and in 2005 it was a family photo from their own wedding.

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

Colombia mudslide ‘buries dozens’

Rescue workers clear rubble in Medellin, Colombia (6 Dec 2010)Local people searched the debris with bare hands before rescuers arrived
Related stories

Dozens of people are feared to have been buried by a landslide in the Colombian city of Medellin.

Rescue workers with sniffer dogs are at the scene and said they had managed to rescue seven people so far.

One body has been recovered from beneath the tonnes of rubble, said disaster management officials.

Landslides are common in the Colombian Andes region – the latest was triggered by the heaviest rains in the country in four decades.

The Red Cross says 176 people have been killed by the rains this year and thousands have had to leave their homes.

Sunday’s landslide hit the La Gabriela district of Bello, north of Medellin, at 1900 GMT.

The BBC’s Jeremy McDermott in Medellin said local people were initially digging for survivors with their bare hands, after a large section of hillside fell onto a poor area of the city, in Antioquia province.

Emergency teams then arrived with specialist equipment and lighting.

One Red Cross worker said up to 200 people could be missing.

“We are focused on moving rubble to see if we find survivors,” Cesar Uruena told the AFP news agency.

“The landslide buried 10 houses, each of then with three stories. Because on Sundays people usually have their family over for lunch, we think that on average there were between 15 and 20 people in each house,” Uruena explained.

Most major rivers in Colombia have burst their banks as a result of the heavy rain, and tens of thousands of people have been left homeless.

Map

Colombian President Juan Manuel Santos has said he is considering calling a national state of emergency if the rains continue.

But our correspondent says the country’s emergency services are already struggling to cope with the scale of the disaster.

Neighbouring Venezuela is also experiencing heavy flooding.

Some 70,000 people have been driven from their homes there.

President Hugo Chavez has said his government plans to seize private land to house some of those forced to abandon their homes.

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

Iraq wife in charge or free plea

Ramze Shihab AhmedMr Ahmed’s wife says she is “desperately worried” about him

The wife of a British man held for a year without charge has used the anniversary of his arrest to appeal for help from the UK government.

Ramze Shihab Ahmed, 68, a dual UK-Iraqi national who lived in north-west London, has been held in Iraq since December 2009.

He was arrested and claims to have been tortured after travelling there in an attempt to free his detained son Omar.

Wife Rabiha al-Qassab urged the government to put pressure on Iraq.

She is calling on the Iraqis to either charge or release Mr Ahmed by Christmas.

It has been claimed he has suffered electric shocks to his genitals and suffocation by plastic bag while being held.

Mrs al-Qassab, a former teaching assistant, said: “I can hardly believe that a whole year has gone by with my husband in jail like this.

“This man and his family have suffered enough”

Kate Allen Amnesty International

“It’s disgraceful what they’re doing to him. He doesn’t even know what he’s accused of.

“An Iraqi judge recently visited my husband and assured him that the ‘confession’ that the interrogators tortured out of him will be disregarded and that they’ll re-investigate the case.

“This is better news but I want to see the Iraqis say either ‘we’re charging him’ or, much more likely, ‘we’re going to release him’.

“I appreciate the fact that (Foreign Secretary) William Hague has raised the case with the Iraqi authorities.

“Why couldn’t Mr Hague insist that he must be either released or properly charged by Christmas?”

Kate Allen, Amnesty International’s UK director, added: “This shocking case has dragged on for far too long and we need to see the Iraqi authorities resolving it without further delay.

“This man and his family have suffered enough.”

A spokeswoman for the Foreign and Commonwealth Office said: “We are very concerned by Mr Ahmed’s allegations of mistreatment, and raised them with the Iraqi authorities at a senior level as soon as we were aware of them.

“The foreign secretary raised this issue with the Iraqi minister for human rights during her visit to the UK on 26 November.

“The British Embassy in Baghdad has repeatedly made clear to the Iraqi authorities how seriously we take such allegations and have requested there be an investigation.

“We expect the Iraqi government to follow through on its commitment to investigate.”

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

Deal reached on Bush era tax cuts

US President Barack ObamaMr Obama said there were elements of the deal that he opposed
Related stories

US President Barack Obama has announced a bipartisan agreement has been reached to extend soon-to-expire Bush era tax cuts to all Americans.

Referring to the bitter wrangling over the issue, Mr Obama said he would not “let working families become collateral damage for political warfare”.

Some Democrats have reportedly objected to the deal, saying it is too generous to the wealthy.

Unemployment benefits will also be renewed under the agreement.

The announcement comes two days after the US Senate rejected President Obama’s preferred tax plan.

‘Grave injustice’

Mr Obama said there were elements of the deal that he opposed – including an extension of tax cuts for the wealthiest 2% of Americans.

But he said striking a deal with Republicans was more important than allowing the tax cuts to expire on 1 January 2011 amid a political stalemate.

He said it would be a “grave injustice to let taxes increase” for ordinary Americans.

“Make no mistake, allowing taxes to go up on all Americans would have raised taxes by $3,000 for a typical American family and that could cost our economy well over a million jobs,” he said at the White House.

Other elements of the deal include a cut in Social Security taxes and tax breaks for businesses.

News of the agreement comes a week after the government reported that joblessness in the US had risen in November to 9.8%.

With the agreement on tax cuts finalised, analysts say Congress may now focus its attention on holding a debate over whether to ratify the New Start Treaty, which seeks to reduce the nuclear arsenals of both the US and Russia and allow each to inspect the other’s facilities.

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