South Korea stages military drill

South Korea ships of Yeonpyeong island (6 Dec 2010)South Korea said the drills were taking place in 29 land and sea locations

South Korea has begun a series of major live fire exercises in disputed waters off the west coast, despite warnings from the North against conducting them.

It comes as Japan and the US are also conducting major joint military drills.

Tension has been high on the peninsula since North Korea shelled a disputed South Korean island last month, killing four South Koreans.

The US is set to host talks with Japan and South Korea, while China has called for six-nation talks to resume.

North Korea has accused Seoul of provocation, over its threat to use air strikes in response to further attacks from the North.

South Korea’s Joint Chiefs of Staff said the firing exercises by warships and artillery units on land were being held in 29 locations, including one of five islands near the disputed Yellow Sea border with the North.

The Northern Limit Line, the maritime border declared by UN forces at the end of the Korean War in 1953, is not recognised by Pyongyang.

Japan and the US are also holding large scale military exercises, their biggest ever.

The exercises, called “Keen Sword”, involve 44,000 personnel, 400 aircraft and 60 warships.

The US nuclear-powered George Washington aircraft carrier, which also took part in recent US-South Korean exercises, joined Japan’s Aegis missile-equipped destroyers and F-15 jet fighters amid heavy wind and rain.

North Korea: Timeline 2010

26 March: South Korean warship, Cheonan, sinks, killing 46 sailors

20 May: Panel says a North Korean torpedo sank the ship; Pyongyang denies involvement

July-September: South Korea and US hold military exercises; US places more sanctions on Pyongyang

29 September: North holds rare party congress seen as part of father-to-son succession move

29 October: Troops from North and South Korea exchange fire across the land border

12 November: North Korea shows US scientist new – undeclared – uranium enrichment facility

23 November: North shells island of Yeonpyeong, killing at least four South Koreans

27 Nov-1 Dec: South Korea and US hold joint military drills

Division and tension in South Korea Q&A: Inter-Korean crisis Koreans angry and worried

The drills were planned before the North Korean shelling of Yeonpyeong island on 23 November.

They are being held to mark the 50th anniversary of the Japanese-US alliance and last until 10 December.

A forthcoming security review in Japan is reportedly due to identify North Korea as a threat and to note China’s military strength as a cause for concern.

The update of the National Defence Programme Guideline, expected this month, will include measures for Japan to respond more robustly to threats in its region, Japanese media said.

Separately, a South Korean presidential security panel has proposed more than doubling the number of its marines, a core force in defending the country’s western border islands, the South Korean news agency Yonhap reported.

The Commission for National Security Review said South Korea should turn the Marine Corp into a “Rapid Reaction Force” and increase the number of marines to around 12,000 from the current 5,000 by creating another division, Yonhap said.

It was citing the findings, not yet formally announced by the government, of a review prompted by the apparent torpedoing of a South Korean warship by North Korea on 26 March, at a cost of 46 south Korean lives.

The commission also called for restoring the 24-month military service period, Yonhap said, quoting unnamed sources.

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

King’s Speech scoops indie awards

Colin Firth

The King’s Speech was the toast of this year’s awards

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Colin Firth’s latest film, The King’s Speech, has won five prizes at the British Independent Film Awards.

The period drama, which earned him the best actor prize for his role as the stammering King George VI, also won best British independent film.

Carey Mulligan won the award for best actress for her role in the big-screen adaptation of Kazuo Ishiguro’s best-seller, Never Let Me Go.

Both films will be released in the UK early next year.

Firth called The King’s Speech “an improbable story about people who could have been consigned to the footnotes of history, and nobody’s told it before.

“It’s already punched above its weight”

Colin Firth on The King’s Speech

“It was taken as a risk – somebody found the money – and I think it will pay off.”

The film also took best supporting actor honours for Helena Bonham Carter and Geoffrey Rush, with an additional prize going to screenwriter David Seidler.

Yet Firth, who is attracting Oscar buzz for his role, refused to speculate on its chances during awards season.

“It could end tonight,” he said. “It’s already punched above its weight.

“It already got noticed at the festivals, it’s funnier than we thought, it has the capacity to make people cry.

“I can’t project myself into glories that aren’t in place yet.”

Helena Bonham Carter, right, with mother ElenaBest supporting actress Helena Bonham Carter attended the awards with her mother, Elena

Bonham Carter admitted she was “slightly apprehensive” about the attention surrounding the film.

“There’s so much hype, I just hope people don’t get immensely disappointed and resent it deeply when they see it,” she told the BBC.

The awards, known as the Bifas, were hosted by actor James Nesbitt and took place at Old Billingsgate Market in London.

Bonham Carter was also presented with the Richard Harris award for outstanding contribution by an actor to British film.

Elsewhere actor Liam Neeson received an award from variety magazine for his part in focusing the international spotlight on Britain.

Carey Mulligan, Oscar nominated for last year’s An Education, said she hadn’t expected to win for Never Let Me Go.

She admitted she had told her mother to stay at home instead of joining her at the ceremony, as she had done last year.

“I feel embarrassed… we made this small little film and these guys are going to go and win Oscars”

Monsters director Gareth Edwards

“Now I regret that,” Mulligan said.

“But it’s at home in London where I grew up, and to have a platform to talk about our small independent films is amazing.”

Newcomer Gareth Edwards beat veteran Mike Leigh in the best director category for his low-budget film Monsters, which opened in UK cinemas this weekend.

Monsters also won awards for best achievement in production and best visual effects, created by Edwards on a computer in his bedroom.

“I always wanted to make a monster movie,” said Edwards.

“With my background in digital effects, I felt like an alien invasion and giant monsters weren’t out of the question.”

Yet he admitted feeling uncomfortable about beating the likes of Leigh, The King’s Speech director Tom Hooper and Kick-Ass director Matthew Vaughn.

“I didn’t want to make eye contact with anyone when I walked up there,” he said.

Joanne FroggattIn Our Name was best newcomer Joanne Froggatt’s first film role

“I feel embarrassed because they are heroes of mine We made this small little film and these guys are going to go and win Oscars.”

Joanne Froggatt, seen recently in ITV1’s period drama Downton Abbey, picked up most promising newcomer for her debut film role in In Our Name.

The film tells of a female soldier who returns from a tour of duty in Iraq with post-traumatic stress disorder.

“It means so much to me, but so much to our film as well,” she said.

“We were on such a micro-budget and everybody worked so hard and became really passionate about the subject matter.

“I’ve been a professional actress for 14 years but this my first role in a film and it’s also my first award for my acting,” the former Coronation Street star added.

“So to have the two together is an absolute dream come true. With the success of Downton Abbey too this year has just been phenomenal.”

The Douglas Hickox award for best first-time director went to Clio Barnard for The Arbor.

French crime thriller A Prophet, meanwhile, was named best foreign film.

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

Plant power

Arty picture of trees outside urban buildingsThe Big Tree Plant will plant one million trees in urban areas over the four years

The government says spending £4.2m on planting trees in towns and cities – particularly in deprived areas – will improve the quality of people’s lives. But do trees really make people happy?

It is almost an accepted wisdom that a property positioned on a pretty tree-lined street surrounded by shrubbery is more appealing than its counterpart on a concrete-clad bare and barren road.

Some British and US surveys suggest a lush lawn or well-landscaped yard can improve property prices by as much as 15%.

But the government’s Big Tree Plant campaign – which aims to plant one million trees in English urban areas over the next four years – claims trees are not only good for our bank balance, but they do wonders for our well-being.

And it says getting people involved in the planting process makes communities even happier.

So do people really care about trees and do they enhance lives – or is it all wishy-washy nonsense?

Street with treesTrees can increase property values

Margaret Lipscombe, director of urban programmes at the Tree Council, says trees bring a plethora of benefits to people’s lives.

“Not only are trees beautiful but they are practical. They provide shade in the summer and then their leaves drop off, allowing light in when it is needed in winter.

“They are good for local climate change because they put water back into the atmosphere which cools the area. And they help biodiversity as tree-lined streets provide wildlife corridors for birds or insects to travel.

“Trees also encourage healthier lifestyles and studies have shown people are calmer when trees are in their environment,” she says.

The idea that trees have a positive effect on health has been around a while, but it is one that is hard to measure.

A Dutch study suggests every 10% increase in green space can postpone health complaints in communities by five years. And a US study is regularly cited to suggest patients that have a view of nature through hospital windows recover better after surgery.

Earlier this year, the environment secretary at the time, Caroline Spelman, put a figure on it – in some inner city areas, each tree was worth as much as £78,000, she said.

Ms Lipscombe argues the calming influence of trees has even been known to slow down driving speeds as drivers tend to go more slowly when something is in their peripheral vision.

Annamaria Mignano

“It sounds a bit naff and middle-class but once trees were planted it really softened the street”

Annamaria Mignano Tree lover

She concedes some people have negative feelings about trees – because they worry about slipping on berries, bird droppings on cars or blocked light – and there can be a ‘Not In My Back Yard’ mentality.

Certainly the number of huge broad-leafed trees, so loved by Victorian planners that they became a permanent part of British urban landscape, have seen a sharp decline over recent years.

In 2007, a London Assembly referred to the loss of 40,000 full-grown trees in the capital over a five-year period as a “chainsaw massacre”, suggesting a “risk-averse” culture among councils was partly to blame.

But one person who credits new trees with changing her life is Annamaria Mignano, 47, who lives in a warehouse conversion in Tower Hamlets in London. She says when she first moved into the area there were no trees on her street – or two of the roads that led to it.

“It was a concrete thoroughfare in an area where there are lots of factories with high walls, it was desolate, looked abandoned and aggressive, and was the kind of place that you didn’t want to be, especially as a woman on your own.

“It sounds a bit naff and middle-class but once trees were planted in 2000 it really softened the street. It looks more appealing, people aren’t as scared and no longer run down the road to get home. It has definitely made me more happy.”

The 30 trees have also brought people out onto the streets and created more of a community feel, she adds.

Graffiti blight

It is a feeling that is echoed in another part of Tower Hamlets, Manchester Estate, where Trees for Cities chief executive Sharon Johnson says getting the community involved in planting trees – and choosing what types of trees to plant – has had a big impact on a deprived area.

“The urban wasteland was blighted by litter and graffiti, but by adding shrubs, fruit trees, willow hedges and a woodland area we have turned it into a utilised community place.

“There is also a natural play area – with logs and boulders which children run over and through.”

Before after pictures of Manchester Estate in Tower HamletsUnderused green spaces in Manchester Estate were landscaped in 2009

Ms Johnson says engaging people with the space they live in, and giving them a sense of ownership, makes them want it to succeed so trees rarely become the victims of vandalism.

There was a problem with people training their pit balls or fighting dogs to chew bark to strengthen their jaws a few years ago but their presence can actually reduce crime, she says.

Shaun Bailey

“People want to express themselves with bricks and mortar, not trees”

Shaun Bailey Community worker

“It really hit me that we had made a difference when a man that lived there who had been looking for a housing transfer said he was reconsidering his plans now he had this space on his doorstep.”

Ms Johnson argues it is a pattern that is repeated throughout the country, highlighting a sensory garden and orchard at an autism centre in Sheffield as a particular success. But not everyone is convinced that planting trees is the best solution.

Shaun Bailey, a community worker in the west of London thinks there are far bigger issues that need addressing, and warns against getting carried away about trees.

“There is no point in it looking pretty if you live in a rubbish place, it’s a false investment.

“Council housing, who pays and how, is far more important. We should stop building sink estates, look at the social mix of housing and incentivise people to live together.”

Making shared ownership viable for people on low incomes should also be a priority, he adds.

“One of the great British traditions is moving house, we should be helping people own houses so that they have the opportunity to trade on them.

“Perhaps planting trees is the beginning of making a shared and decent living space, but I’ve lived in a lot of estates and they would not have changed my life.

“People want to express themselves with bricks and mortar, not trees.”

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

BBC Sound of 2011 list revealed

Sound of 2011 longlist artists

Fifteen of music’s most exciting rising stars have been named on the longlist for the BBC’s Sound of 2011.

The list was compiled using recommendations from more than 160 influential UK tastemakers, who were asked to name their favourite new acts.

The Sound of 2011 winner and top five will be unveiled in January.

Sound of

Full details and videos on Sound of 2011 siteSee lists from previous yearsView the list of tastemakers

Ellie Goulding came top of last year’s list. Other winners in the list’s nine-year history include Little Boots, Adele, Mika and Corinne Bailey Rae.

The up-and-coming artists on this year’s longlist range from singer-songwriters Anna Calvi, Daley and Clare Maguire to pop starlet Jessie J and London grime MC Wretch 32.

Cutting-edge producers and vocalists also feature heavily.

James Blake, Nero, Jai Paul and Jamie Woon have been backed after fusing dubstep and pop with influences from soul to drum and bass.

Rock bands Mona and The Vaccines are named along with leftfield guitar groups Esben and the Witch, Warpaint and Yuck.

SOUND OF 2011: THE LONGLISTJames BlakeAnna CalviDaleyEsben & the WitchJessie JClare MaguireMonaThe Naked & FamousNeroJai PaulThe VaccinesWarpaintJamie WoonWretch 32Yuck

New Zealand five-piece The Naked & Famous, with their synth-rock sound, are also on the longlist.

The tastemakers included radio DJs and producers, TV presenters and producers, newspaper critics, magazine and website editors and respected bloggers.

All participants were asked to name their favourite three new acts, who could be performers from any country and any musical genre.

They must not have had a UK top 20 single or album by 14 November 2010 and must not already be famous, for example by featuring in the final stages of a TV talent show or being a member of a successful band.

The top five will be revealed in the week commencing 3 January. One act from the top five will be featured on the BBC News website and BBC Sound of 2011 website every day that week, while BBC Radio 1 will broadcast sessions and interviews with the acts.

Last year, Ellie Goulding was joined in the Sound of 2010 top five by Marina and the Diamonds, Delphic, Hurts and The Drums.

The previous winners are: Little Boots (Sound of 2009), Adele (Sound of 2008), Mika (Sound of 2007), Corinne Bailey Rae (Sound of 2006), The Bravery (Sound of 2005), Keane (Sound of 2004) and 50 Cent (Sound of 2003).

Other artists in the top five in previous years include Florence and the Machine and La Roux (Sound of 2009), Duffy and the Ting Tings (Sound of 2008), Klaxons (Sound of 2007), Bloc Party (Sound of 2005), Franz Ferdinand (Sound of 2004) and Dizzee Rascal (Sound of 2003).

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

Severe weather warning for Monday

Black iceMotorists are being warned of the dangers of black ice

The PSNI is warning motorists to be cautious on Sunday as icy conditions affect roads across Northern Ireland.

In County Antrim, the Frosses Road at the Glarryford junction is likely to be closed for most of Sunday while a large lorry is removed.

It is understood it skidded off the road a number of days ago.

There have also been two collisions on the Portaferry Road in Newtownards. Drivers are warned of treacherous conditions close to the yacht club.

There are no reports of injuries in either incident.

Police have also asked motorists travelling on the M2 at Antrim Area Hospital to use the inside lane in both directions.

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

Colombia landslide ‘buries many’

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