China works to ease Korea tension

Protesters in Seoul, 26/11South Koreans have held angry protests against the North’s artillery barrage

China’s Foreign Ministry has begun working to ease tensions on the Korean peninsula, holding a series of talks with Washington, Seoul and Pyongyang.

Officials said their priority was to avoid a recurrence of Tuesday’s violence, which saw North Korea fire artillery shells at a southern island.

The South responded with its own fire, and announced joint military exercises with US forces would begin on Sunday.

Pyongyang said the drills were pushing the region to “the brink of war”.

The US and other powers have repeatedly urged Beijing – Pyongyang’s only ally – to use its influence to defuse the crisis.

On Friday, China’s Foreign Minister Yang Jiechi met the North’s ambassador in person, and spoke on the phone to his US and South Korean counterparts, according to a statement carried by the state-run Xinhua news agency.

“The top priority now is to keep the situation under control and to ensure such events do not happen again,” the statement said.

No details of the conversations were released, and the US state department has not yet commented.

At least four South Koreans died on Tuesday when the North shelled the Southern island of Yeonpyeong.

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The incident led to the South replacing its defence minister and evacuating most of the island’s civilian population.

The barrage of shells was one of the worst incidents between the two Koreas since the end of the 1950-53 war between them, which concluded without a peace treaty.

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

In pictures: S Korean anger US-South alliance under pressure Koreans angry and worried Brief history of the Korean War

Pyongyang blamed the South for provoking the shelling by holding military exercises close to Yeonpyeong.

And the North’s official KCNA news agency warned against the planned military exercises on the weekend.

“The situation on the Korean Peninsula is inching closer to the brink of war due to the reckless plan of those trigger-happy elements to stage again war exercises targeted against the [North],” a KCNA report stated.

The forthcoming four-day US-South Korea naval manoeuvres were organised well ahead of this week’s attack, but they have angered both North Korea and China.

Beijing has warned against any infractions into its exclusive economic zone, which extends 320km (200 miles) from China’s coast.

Meanwhile, South Korea has increased troop numbers on Yeonpyeong and says it will change its rules of engagement to allow it to respond more forcefully to similar incidents.

The cabinet decided that the old rules of engagement gave too much emphasis to preventing a military incident escalating.

A presidential spokesman said the South would implement different levels of response in the future, depending on whether the North attacked military or civilian targets.

This week’s tension comes as the North is undergoing an apparent transition of power from leader Kim Jong-il to his young son Kim Jong-un.

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Shock over Ghana ‘witch killing’

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There has been widespread shock in Ghana over the death of a 72-year-old woman accused of being a witch.

The woman, who lived in the port city of Tema, near Accra, was allegedly set on fire by a group of five adults, one of whom is believed to be a pastor.

The suspects say her death was an accident, and deny committing any crime.

The BBC’s David Amanor in Accra says belief in witches is common among both educated and uneducated Ghanaians.

Three women and two men have been arrested, aged between 37 and 55.

Police say the suspects tortured the woman, Ama Hemmah, until she confessed to being a witch, before dousing her with kerosene and setting her on fire.

She died from her injuries the following day.

According to reports, the suspects say that they poured anointing oil on the woman which caught fire as they were trying to drive out an evil spirit.

Our correspondent says newspaper pictures showing the woman’s injuries have caused revulsion in Ghana, and the incident has been condemned by human rights and women’s activists.

Our correspondent says there have been other cases of violence against women accused of being witches, and a government-backed commission has urged religious and civil society groups to help tackle the problem.

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Fresh snow causes more disruption

Winter weather in Aberdeen (25/11/10)The UK has been hit by an unusually early cold spell
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Fresh snowfalls are expected to hit the UK as forecasters warn that ice will prove a major hazard on the roads.

Northern Ireland, west Wales and south-west England are set to be worst affected by snow and ice on Friday.

The Met Office has severe weather warnings in place for many parts of the UK including northern Scotland, the eastern Borders and eastern England.

The earliest widespread snowfall for 17 years has gripped many parts of the UK and the cold snap could last two weeks.

BBC weather forecaster Laura Tobin said: “The really significant thing on Friday is going to be the ice as opposed to the snow, especially in Northern Ireland, west Wales and south-west England.”

Rain, sleet and snow is expected to turn to ice on untreated roads or where heavy downpours wash away grit.

Some 2-5cm (1-2in) of snow is forecast in these areas, with up to 10cm (4in) on higher ground.

The forecaster said the snow in eastern England and eastern Scotland would turn icy for Friday morning but they would not be as badly affected by snow.

Other parts of the UK are expected to be cold and sunny.

The Met Office has severe weather warnings for Friday for Northern Ireland, northern Scotland, eastern Borders, eastern England, south-west England, and Wales.

A plane with 188 passengers and one infant on board overshot the runway at Newcastle airport in icy conditions on Thursday night.

No one was injured on the Thomsonfly Boeing 737-800 from Lanzarote but the airport was closed for a while after the incident.

Saturday’s horse racing meeting at Newcastle has become one of the first sporting fixtures to be cancelled, with Gosforth Park under 7in (18cm) of snow. The weekend’s FA Cup second round matches could also be at risk.

The AA said it had attended more than 11,000 breakdowns by 1700 BST on Thursday, with the total for the day expected to be up 50% on normal.

Aberdeenshire Council said 121 schools in the area were closed or partially closed because of snow.

On Saturday, there will be more snow showers in northern and eastern areas of the UK as well as Northern Ireland, with temperatures barely above freezing.

The wind will pick up on Sunday, to make it feel even colder, with temperatures unlikely to be above 2C (36F).

Forecasters said the cold spell could last a fortnight, with snow reaching England’s southern counties next week.

Temperatures are expected to drop to -5C (23F) in some areas over the next few days, far lower than those normally experienced in November.

It is unlikely to rise much above 2-5C (36-41F) by day, remaining lower in more exposed rural areas.

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UK forecast for 26/11/2010

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Clegg ‘undecided’ over fees vote

Deputy Prime Minister Nick CleggNick Clegg was the target of protesters’ anger

Deputy PM Nick Clegg has declined to rule out Lib Dem ministers abstaining in the crucial Commons vote on university tuition fees.

Mr Clegg told BBC News the Lib Dems were “looking at this as a party”.

Downing Street said Lib Dem ministers were entitled to abstain under the terms of the coalition agreement.

It comes as Labour leader Ed Miliband turned down an invitation to take part in student protests after saying he had been “tempted” to take to the streets.

Lib Dem MPs are under fierce pressure after signing a pre-election pledge not to raise fees from their current £3,290 level and calling for them to be scrapped in the long term.

Mr Clegg has said earlier this week that he “massively regrets” being in a position where he cannot deliver on his election promise.

Up to a dozen of the party’s MPs, including former leaders Sir Menzies Campbell and Charles Kennedy, are expected to oppose the legislation, although this will not be enough to defeat it.

Newspaper reports suggested that Mr Clegg and Business Secretary Vince Cable may be preparing to abstain in the vote – due before Christmas – in order to hold the parliamentary party together.

Asked about the possibility during a visit in Sheffield, Mr Clegg told the BBC: “We are looking at this as a party.

“In the coalition agreement we were very, very clear that for Liberal Democrat MPs, if they didn’t like the details of the policy, they were able to abstain.”

But he said that more Lib Dems were becoming “comfortable” with the policy as they studied the details.

He has said the coalition’s proposals are fairer than the current system as the level at which graduates will start to repay money will rise to £21,000, there will be additional support for the poorest students and upfront fees for part-time students will be axed.

“There’s a very concerted attempt to make it easier for lots of people who presently don’t go to university – bright youngsters from disadvantaged backgrounds – to go to university,” said Mr Clegg.

“The more people see that the detail is fairer than what we have at the moment, I think more and more people are feeling comfortable – notwithstanding all the demonstrations and controversy – with what’s being proposed.”

A Downing Street spokesman said collective responsibility would not be an issue if Lib Dem ministers decided to abstain in the vote.

He said: “There are specific provisions in the coalition agreement which allow Liberal Democrat MPs to abstain on this issue.”

On Wednesday, there were 35 arrests and seven injuries to police officers as initially peaceful marches in Whitehall again flared into violence, with much of the anger directed at the Lib Dems.

Lib Dem deputy leader Simon Hughes’ London office was targeted on Thursday for a sit-in.

In an interview with BBC Radio 4’s Today programme on Friday, Labour leader Ed Miliband said he was “obviously” not in favour of violent protests but he understood the depth of anger that people felt about rising tuition fees and cuts in university budgets.

Asked if he would join future protests, he said: “We’ll see what happens”.

But he rejected an invitation from a group co-ordinating protests to attend the march planned for next Tuesday in London.

A spokeswoman for Ed Miliband said: “Ed will not be going on any demonstration.”

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Heavy snow falls across NI

Archive picture of snow in Braid Valley, County AntrimMore snow is expected in Northern Ireland this weekend

More snow is expected in Northern Ireland over the weekend with icy roads and freezing temperatures likely.

A weather warning is in place for widespread ice on roads on Friday morning.

Motorists and pedestrians have been urged to take extra care, with icy stretches expected to persist in places throughout the day.

Colin Brown of Roads Service said it was prepared for a “consistent cold period” over the next week.

“Last night we experienced some very difficult situations, there was rain, sleet and hill snow and then this morning clearing skies,” he said.

“This has now affected temperatures to drop and coupled with the shower activity we could now see quite a lot of roads icing up this morning.

“Black ice is what we would ask the public to be aware of.

“We are fully stocked with 65,000 tonnes of salt in our barns, that should take us through a normal winter, but if this winter is anything like last winter we may see much more salt being stocked up as we progress through the next few months.”

BBC NI weather presenter Angie Phillips said that initially most of the snow showers on Friday would be across counties Londonderry, Tyrone and Fermanagh, but they would gradually penetrate further inland to affect other areas at times, especially during the late afternoon and evening.

She said the snow would affect some areas more than others, “but would start to settle, with up to four inches possible across higher ground in the north”.

It is expected that snow showers will ease off on Friday night, but widespread frost and icy conditions will develop as temperatures inland drop to between -3C and -5C.

Saturday is also expected to have an icy start and will be another “bitterly cold day with highs around 3C”.

Sleet and snow showers will develop again, drifting inland at times through the day, but they will tend to be more frequent and heavy across northern and western parts.

Sunday is likely to be icy and cold with sleet and snow showers, and these may become more frequent in the north and east as an easterly wind picks up.

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Bangladesh wins Asian Games gold

Bangladesh cricket players celebrate their victoryBangladesh ended the Afghan cricket team’s dream

Bangladesh has won a first-ever gold medal in the Asian Games, with its cricketers defeating Afghanistan in the Twenty20 competition in China.

They defeated Afghanistan by five wickets in the men’s final with just three balls to spare.

Bangladesh restricted Afghanistan to 118-8 but had some anxious moments in the reply before chasing down the total.

The Afghan cricketers made the final when they unexpectedly beat Pakistan.

The Bangladeshi captain said the pressure of playing in a final in a major tournament had been enormous.

The team’s coach said Afghanistan’s rise had been “remarkable”.

“We are celebrating, but I hope Afghanistan will celebrate too because they deserve the silver medal,” Imran Sarwar said.

“They are a very good side and I am sure they will become a top team in the near future.”

Mohammad Shabbir hit successive straight sixes off the 19th over as Bangladesh raced to the winning target of 119.

Afghanistan’s 118-8 off 20 overs was largely thanks to an unbeaten 38 off 36 balls by Mohammad Asghar and a battling 25 by Shabbir Ahmed.

“Afghanistan fought really hard, but it’s exciting for us that we have won our first ever gold medal at the Asian Games,” Shabbir said after the match.

Pakistan beat Sri Lanka by six wickets for the bronze medal.

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Zuma seeks to ease Harare rifts

Zimbabwean President Robert Mugabe (C) and his wife Grace (R) chat with the Prime Minister Morgan Tsvangirai (L) at the National Sports Stadium in Harare on August 10, 2010Morgan Tsvangirai (L) and Robert Mugabe (R) entered a power-sharing deal in 2009

South Africa’s President Jacob Zuma is in Harare to ease tensions between Zimbabwe’s rival leaders.

Zimbabwe’s mediator arrived a day after Prime Minister Morgan Tsvangirai took President Robert Mugabe to court over the appointment of regional governors.

Mr Tsvangirai says he should have been consulted over the appointments under the power-sharing deal which saw him become prime minister.

Mr Mugabe’s allies have dismissed the claims.

The case is the latest sign of worsening relations between the long-time rivals.

“In my humble view, submission and plea, all of this is plain, clear and simple. Wherever the Constitution obliges the President to act in consultation with me as Prime Minister, he must first secure my agreement,” Mr Tsvangirai said in court papers, reports the AFP news agency.

The BBC’s Brian Hungwe in Harare says both leaders have been increasingly critical and outspoken about the failures of the power-sharing agreement – with both calling for an early election.

Last month Mr Mugabe said that the coalition deal should not be renewed when it expires in February.

They agreed to form a unity government after the country’s economy collapsed following disputed elections in 2008.

Money

A key part of the deal was to draft a new constitution.

But the process of agreeing a new constitution has been halted following repeated reports of political violence.

On Thursday, Finance Minister Tendai Biti told journalists that Zimbabwe had the finances to cover a poll next year.

“We have put money for elections, of course and for referendums,” Mr Biti told journalists after presenting his 2011 budget.

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Russian parliament condemns Katyn

The portrait of an executed Polish officer on a memorial wall near Katyn, western Russia (image from 2005)Some 22,000 Poles were shot dead at Katyn and other sites
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Russia’s lower house of parliament has condemned the mass killing of Poles at Katyn during World War II, in a new step to address the massacre.

The Duma accepted that Soviet dictator Joseph Stalin and his officials had ordered the “Katyn crime” in 1940.

They also recalled that thousands of Soviet citizens had been shot at Katyn in western Russia in the late 1930s.

In a stormy debate, Communist MPs opposed the declaration, some seeking to deny Soviet blame.

Soviet propaganda sought for decades to portray the massacre as the work of the Nazis, who overran Katyn after invading the USSR in 1941.

The truth was finally acknowledged in 1990, in the dying days of Soviet power, but the issue has continued to cloud relations between Russia and Poland.

The Duma said it hoped for “the beginning of a new stage in relations” with Poland “based on democratic values”.

Russian President Dmitry Medvedev is set to visit the country early next month.

Russian Communists carry a Stalin poster in St Petersburg, 7 NovemberJoseph Stalin remains a hero for some Russian Communists

“Published documents, kept in classified archives for many years, not only revealed the scale of this horrific tragedy, but also showed that the Katyn crime was carried out on direct orders of Stalin and other Soviet officials,” the Duma declaration says.

“Official Soviet propaganda attributed responsibility for this villainy, which has received the collective name of the Katyn tragedy, to Nazi criminals.

“This theory remained the subject of hidden but nevertheless fierce discussions in Soviet society and unfailingly provoked the wrath, grievance and mistrust of the Polish people.”

Russian leaders have publicly expressed regret for the massacre and this year saw the official online publication, by order of Mr Medvedev, of key documents proving the guilt of Stalin and his secret police chief Lavrenty Beria.

Nobody has ever been convicted over the massacre, with Russian prosecutors arguing that those responsible are now dead.

A Russian judicial investigation in 2005 only confirmed the execution of 1,803 victims, while the actual number of Polish prisoners killed at Katyn and other Soviet sites is generally held to be about 22,000, including about 8,000 military officers.

The Duma declaration called for the massacre to be investigated further in order to confirm the list of victims.

It also argued that Katyn was a tragedy for Russia too as thousands of Soviet citizens were executed and buried in ditches there in the years 1936-38, the period of Soviet history known as the Terror.

Russia’s Communist Party, which described Katyn last month as “one of the greatest myths of the 20th Century”, voted against the declaration.

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Live – Nadal v Berdych

World number one Rafael Nadal takes on Tomas Berdych aiming for an unbeaten group-stage record and a potential semi-final clash with Andy Murray at the ATP World Tour Finals.

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Flute player stole 299 bird skins

Edwin RistEdwin Rist will be sentenced at St Albans Crown Court in January
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A musician has admitted stealing rare bird skins from the Natural History Museum at Tring in Hertfordshire to raise money for a new flute.

The 299 brightly-coloured skins were taken from a collections area of the Akeman Street museum on 24 June 2009 during a break-in.

US citizen Edwin Rist, 22, appeared at Hemel Hempstead Magistrates’ Court and admitted burglary and money-laundering.

He will be sentenced at St Albans Crown Court on 14 January.

Hertfordshire Police said most of the birds had been recovered.

Rist, a student at The Royal Academy of Music, was described as a very talented flautist and a James Bond fantasist by defence solicitor Andrew Harman.

Mr Harman said some of the money from the sale of the bird skins was going to be used to buy a new flute.

The museum’s director of science, Professor Richard Lane, said at the time of the break-in that the birds formed part of a collection assembled over the past 350 years.

He said the items were of scientific interest, and many were irreplaceable and “literally priceless”.

There are about 750,000 bird skins, representing 95% of known living species, held at the museum.

BirdsThe museum said that specific birds had been targeted in the break-in

Professor Lane said the ornithological collections were used by researchers throughout the world, who either visit Tring or request loans.

He said: “The knowledge gleaned from these collections can help protect endangered species and answer questions about the biodiversity of the world around us.”

The court heard how Rist, of High Street, Willesden Green, London, visited the museum before the burglary, telling staff he was a photographic student taking pictures on behalf of an ornithologist from Oxford University.

They allowed him to photograph the birds, which were not on display but were in a separate locked room.

Police found the photographs along with pictures of the museum layout, prosecutor Jan Brooks said.

The court heard Rist used a brick to smash a window at the museum to get in.

He spent the night at Tring railway station with the stolen birds, after missing the last train home.

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New snow warning as freeze bites

Icy country road in WalesSnow has fallen unseasonably early in some parts of Wales
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Drivers are being urged to take care on the roads as weather forecasters predict widespread icy roads in many parts of Wales.

The Met Office is warning the UK faces a 10-day cold snap, with the earliest widespread snowfall for 17 years.

A number of councils across Wales have begun precautionary road gritting and most say their salt barns are full.

Severe ice warnings have been issued for Carmarthenshire, Ceredigion, Gwynedd, Anglesey, and Pembrokeshire.

Councils in Wales insist that they are better placed than last year to respond to a return to wintry conditions.

Last winter it snowed every month from December through to March and some councils struggled to keep the roads clear as their rock salt supplies ran low.

In addition to what each council has, the Welsh Assembly Government has said there are 130,000 tonnes of rock salt stored for road gritting, with a further 38,000 ordered and due to be delivered shortly.

Deputy First Minister and Minister for the Economy and Transport, Ieuan Wyn Jones said: “This will be stored in barns across the country.

Snow on roadCouncils say they are better prepared for the winter weather than last year

“A different approach to how salt is used will also mean that it is utilised more effectively and will last longer.”

An icy mountain road has been closed all night after an accident involving two vehicles on Thursday evening.

Blaenllechau Road in Ferndale, Rhondda Cynon Taf, known locally as the Llanwonno mountain road, which links Ferndale and Llanwonno, was due to remain closed until 1000 GMT on Friday.

Meanwhile Welsh Water is advising householders to avoid frost damaged pipes as the winter weather strikes by checking that all pipe work, cisterns and tanks in unheated areas are well insulated.

The Met Office’s ice warning carries through to 1100 GMT but BBC Wales meteorologist Derek Brockway said Friday’s frosts and icy roads could be accompanied by 2cm-5cm of snow especially in the north and west.

He said: “Parts of the east and the south east may get away with next to nothing but it will stay very cold over the weekend.

“Next week will be very cold. On Tuesday and Wednesday, there’s a 30-40% chance of a blizzard, which would cause major disruption.

“This is only a possibility at this stage but it is worth keeping an eye on weather reports.”

BBC Wales has the latest online travel news and weather updates.

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‘Groomed’ missing girl is found

A Cornwall schoolgirl who went missing after she was thought to have been groomed on the internet is found at a house in Surrey.

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