Suspect denies 2003 murder charge

Mohammed Musa MohamoudMohammed Musa Mohamoud was murdered in Butetown, Cardiff, in April, 2003

A 27-year-old man extradited from Canada to the UK is due to appear in court on suspicion of murdering a man in Cardiff seven years ago.

Mohammed Musa Mohamoud, 26, from Butetown, Cardiff, was murdered on 18 April, 2003.

The man was arrested in Canada in July and was extradited last Friday. South Wales Police officers accompanied him from Canada to Heathrow Airport.

He will appear before Cardiff magistrates’ court.

The court is sitting at Cardiff Crown Court while refurbishment of the magistrates’ court takes place.

A South Wales Police spokesperson said Mr Mahoud’s family had been informed and were being supported by a police family liaison officer.

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

Minister defends housing reforms

Housing Minister, Grant Shapps

Housing Minister Grant Shapps: “We need to do things differently”

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Minister Grant Shapps has said people will not be “chased out of their homes” by reforms to social housing in England which could end council homes for life.

Ministers want to allow councils and housing associations to grant fixed term tenancies lasting at least two years for new tenants.

Mr Shapps said the vulnerable would be protected and councils could still grant tenancies for life.

But he said with five million people on the waiting list, change was needed.

The Department of Communities and Local Government has published a consultation document outlining plans to reform social housing in England – which include the option of shorter tenancies, as well as allowing social landlords to charge a higher rent for shorter term tenancies – of up to 80% of local market rents.

It also allows councils to set the rules for who qualifies for the housing waiting list – although central government will still set rules for who gets priority – and introduces a new “social home swap scheme” for tenants who want to move areas.

Other proposals include allowing councils to offer those made homeless private rented housing and introducing a new “self financing arrangement” for council houses.

Existing tenants would not be affected by the proposals.

“The proposal for a minimum of this period shows the government’s naivety in how quickly people are able to get back on their feet”

Campbell Robb Shelter

Mr Shapps told BBC Radio 4’s Today programme the housing waiting list had doubled in the past 13 years and would double again if nothing was done: “The whole point of this is to ensure that we can actually house more people and in appropriate sized homes for each individual.”

The document says that new fixed term tenancies would have “a minimum time period of at least two years but no maximum time period”.

When a fixed term tenancy came to an end, landlords would decide whether to reissue it, reflecting the “tenants’ levels of continuing need, work incentives and local pressures for social housing”.

It says the government will decide after consultation whether the minimum period should be longer, “whether some groups should always be guaranteed a longer fixed term or a social home for life and whether existing secure or assured tenants should always continue to receive a lifetime tenancy when they move”.

The possibility that tenants may only get two years in a property – with six months’ notice from landlords – has worried some housing charities.

Campbell Robb, chief executive of Shelter, said: “We know that very few people go from homeless to self-sufficient within two years. The proposal… shows the government’s naivety in how quickly people are able to get back on their feet, and we urge them to reconsider this in favour of at least a five-year minimum.”

“There’s no reason why a home in future should always be the home for life”

Grant Shapps Housing minister

Mr Shapps told the BBC the fixed term tenancies would be “significantly more protected than the private rented sector”.

“There’s no reason why a home in future should always be the home for life. You don’t get that in the private sector,” he said.

He said most tenancies were likely to be of “significant length” – of between five years and a lifetime.

“All of the kind of statutory rules will be in place to ensure that the most vulnerable are protected and people are not being chased out of their homes in any way. We just need a more flexible system.”

The measure will be subject to consultation, but the government hopes it will be in place by summer 2011.

Lib Dem Deputy Leader Simon Hughes said his party would need “a lot of persuading” when David Cameron first mooted the idea of ending life-long tenancies in the summer.

For Labour, shadow housing minister Alison Seabeck said: “The government’s plans will worry both existing and prospective social housing tenants up and down the country.

“Council tenants are being told they may be forced to move if their income increases. That sends the wrong message to families trying to get on and could act as a cap on aspiration.”

The coalition has announced plans to cut funding for social housing by more than 60% and for new tenants to pay higher rents but says it hopes the changes would free up funds to build 150,000 new affordable homes over the next four years.

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

Expenses fraud policeman jailed

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A Metropolitan Police officer has been jailed for three years for defrauding the force in a property scam while investigating the 7 July bombings.

Det Con Daren Pooley, 41, sought to make a “quick profit” out of the force while on a deployment to Leeds in 2006, Southwark Crown Court heard.

His wife, Nicola, 38, was sentenced to 36 weeks imprisonment suspended for 18 months.

They were both convicted of conspiracy to defraud.

Between April 2006 and September 2007, Pooley, a counter-terrorism officer, his future wife and his brother-in-law Stephen Butler charged the Met £1,950 for apartments for which the officer was paying £650 in rent.

Butler pleaded guilty to conspiracy to defraud in May.

Pooley was on long-term deployment when the fraud took place. He and his wife had denied the charge.

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

Four in court over boy’s killing

Adil BasharatA tribute page on Facebook to Adil Basharat has been visited by thousands of people

Four men have appeared in court charged with the murder of a 16-year-old boy in Northamptonshire.

Adil Basharat, of Milton Keynes, was assaulted in Stratford Road, Deanshanger, on Friday. He died in Milton Keynes Hospital on Sunday.

Three men aged 19 – Adam Moore, Freddie Wilson, Daniel Anderson – and Jake Batten, 21, appeared before Northampton magistrates charged with murder.

All four are believed to come from the Milton Keynes area.

None of the men’s addresses were given when they appeared in court.

They were remanded in custody to appear before Northampton Crown Court on Wednesday morning.

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

England’s pupils ‘less tolerant’

Pupil in classroomAll secondary school pupils currently have to study citizenship
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School pupils in England have less tolerant attitudes to immigration, and are less interested in news than their international peers, a study finds.

The research showed a hardening of attitudes on immigrants, jail sentences and benefit payments as students in England got older.

The National Foundation for Educational Research also found that English pupils’ knowledge of the EU was poor.

But it found that regular citizenship classes could raise civic involvement.

The final report from The Citizenship Education Longitudinal Study, showed a mixed picture of the civic engagement, attachment, understanding and attitudes of young people in England.

The research tracked the attitudes of some 24,000 pupils over nine years, as they aged from 11 to 18.

It showed that over time, the cohort experienced a hardening of attitudes towards refugees and immigrants, jail sentences and benefit payments.

It also showed their trust in politicians declined.

The researchers also compared the attitudes of English teenagers with those of their international counterparts.

This revealed that English pupils had attitudes which were “broadly democratic and tolerant”, the study said.

But “their tolerance of immigration is well below the international average and their view of European migration is particularly critical,” the researchers said.

English pupils had a “low” level of interest in social and political issues, the study found.

“Citizenship classes are a very important part of education”

Christine Blower National Union of Teachers

The report’s authors noted that this is an international trend, but that English young people had a level of news media interest significantly below the international average.

Pupils in England scored significantly above average in the international test of civic knowledge and understanding when compared to all participating countries.

But when compared only to their European counterparts, their performance was average.

Their knowledge of the European Union was significantly below that of other pupils in Europe, with English pupils scoring the worst on many questions of all 24 member states that took part in the study.

Pupils in England had a strong sense of national identity, which outweighed their sense of European identity.

The research also showed a weakening of English pupils’ attachment to their communities at local, national and European level, although their attachment to their school communities remained strong.

Trust in social, civil and political institutions also remained high, although 33% reported in the latest survey that they do not trust politicians “at all” – up from 20% at age 11.

The findings indicated that when citizenship education learning is delivered in slots of more than 45 minutes per week on a regular basis, it can improve young people’s chances of positive involvement in civic activities.

It also suggested that this can lead to young people feeling more able to make a difference to their communities.

Citizenship became compulsory for pupils aged 11 to 16 in September 2002 and a GCSE is available in the subject.

In the citizenship classes, young people learn about democracy and justice, the structure of political systems and how to function in that structure.

But Education Secretary Michael Gove has said he wants to slim down the national curriculum.

On Sunday he told the BBC that “hundreds of pages of prescription” aimed at teachers would be removed.

The Association for Citizenship Teaching (ACT) last month said it understood that citizenship will be made non-statutory in the coming curriculum shake-up.

It fears this will mean the end for a subject which, it says, chimes with the Conservatives’ “Big Society” idea.

The government said it had not decided the future status of any subject.

Millicent Scott, Development Manager at the ACT said citizenship education, when taught well, equipped young people with the skills to appreciate the intricacies of controversial issues:

“The future health of British democracy will only be secure if we have an active, engaged electorate who participate in public life. Citizenship education supports the development of these skills.”

Christine Blower, General Secretary of the National Union of Teachers, said citizenship classes were “a very important part of education”

But she said many schools struggle to find sufficient time to teach it properly.

“Also, as the report suggests, teachers need to have access to training in order to be able to teach the subject effectively,” she added.

Citizenship education is statutory in some form in England, Northern Ireland and Wales, and is one of the national priorities for education in Scotland.

Pupils in Wales, Northern Ireland and Scotland were not included in the study.

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