A senior Nottinghamshire police officer is cleared of stealing foundation from a Tesco store.
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A senior Nottinghamshire police officer is cleared of stealing foundation from a Tesco store.
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German playwright Bertolt Brecht may have died due to an undiagnosed childhood illness, new research claims.
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The sentencing of former footballer Paul Gascoigne for drink driving is adjourned after he fails to show up in court.
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Tottenham Hotspur made a loss for the financial year, despite record revenue, partly due to a loss on player trading.
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Scarlets wing George North wins his first cap for Wales’ clash against world champions South Africa on Saturday.
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Gales are expected to reach up to 80mph in north Wales Poor weather conditions are affecting the main transport links across Wales.
Storms overnight have brought localised flooding and lane closures to several arterial routes.
The old M48 Severn Bridge crossing is closed to high vehicles and speed restrictions are in place on the A55 Britannia Bridge at Anglesey and along the South Wales stretch of the M4.
Ferry services are being disrupted due to adverse weather on the Irish sea and storms are expected to hit North Wales.
Wind speeds of 43mph (69.2 kmph) have also been reported in the north and gusts could reach 80mph (129 kmph) later.
Wind speeds are expected to average between 30 and 50mph (48kmph and 80kmph) with gusts of up to 70-80mph (113 kmph- 129kmph) in the north.
Drivers are being urged to take care across the country, with flooding affecting many roads.
Flooding is affecting the A470 in Cardiff, at the Gabalfa roundabout. There has also been an accident northbound near Upper Boat and delays are possible.
The A466 is blocked due to a fallen tree near Trelleck Road at Tintern.
There are also reports of fallen power cables on the A40 eastbound between the B4310 and the B4297.
Flood water is also affecting the junction where the A470 meets the M4 at Junction 32.
One lane is closed due to flooding on the A470 northbound at Treforest and at Nantgarw.
The B4309 at Five Roads, Llanelli, is also partially blocked due to flooding around Rehoboth Road (Heol Rehoboth). Motorists are being advised to approach with care.
There are also reports of flooding and debris on the road on the A472 at Nelson, Caerphilly.
Also rain is causing problems with visibility on the M4 at Junction 23(Magor) and at Junction 49 (Pont Abraham roundabout).
Fire crews have been called to assist at several incidents of localised flooding.
Householders in the Brithweunydd area of Trealaw are receiving help pumping out flood water,
Firefighters are also at a house in Perthcelyn, Mountain Ash following a call at 6.30am.
Traffic Wales cameras show that matrix signs are set to 30mph on the A55 Britannia Bridge, due to the strong gusts between J8A A5 Ffordd Caergybi / Holyhead Road and J9 A487 (Treborth).
On the M48 Severn Bridge Westbound the main carriageway is closed to high vehicles and HGVs due to strong winds at J1 A403 / B4461 (Aust) in both directions but the bridge remains open.
High-sided vehicles are asked to find an alternative route and a diversion is in place via the slip roads,
The 10:00 and Stena Line services between Holyhead and Dun Laoghaire and the 13:15 between Dun Laoghaire and Holyhead have been cancelled due to adverse weather conditions.
BBC Wales has the latest online travel news and weather updates.
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Google launches a new feature, offering users a prominent phone contact for Samaritans when they search for the word “suicide”.
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Referee Michael Jones is to look at a video replay of the incident where Joey Barton appeared to punch Morten Gamst Pedersen – with Barton facing a possible ban.
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Prime Minister David Cameron acknowledges there were too few police at student fee protests on Wednesday
David Cameron has condemned the violence that broke out during protests over tuition fees after the Met Police announced an investigation into how it was handled.
The prime minister said the clashes in central London, which led to 35 arrests and 14 injuries, were “unacceptable”.
He praised the “brave” officers who tried to control the crowds, but said “there weren’t enough of them”.
Met chief Sir Paul Stephenson called Wednesday’s events “an embarrassment”.
Seven police officers were among those hurt during the protests outside Conservative Party headquarters in Westminster on Wednesday.
Windows were smashed, fires lit and missiles thrown at police after a group of protesters broke away from the main demonstration against a planned rise in university fees.
Some broke into the building itself, although hundreds of workers, including Tory Party staff, had already been evacuated.
Mr Cameron said he had watched events unfold from Seoul, where he was attending a G20 summit, and had been concerned.
“I was worried for the safety of people in the building because I know people who work in there, not just the Conservative Party, but other offices as well, and so I was on the telephone.”
Sir Paul apologised to those left inside the building for their “traumatic experience” and said the Met should have been better prepared for the possibility of violence.
“It’s not acceptable. It’s an embarrassment for London and for us,” he said.
“I think we’ve also got to ask ourselves some questions. This level of violence was largely unexpected and what lessons can we learn for the future.”
Fourteen people were treated for injuries following the demonstration in central London Mr Cameron said the situation had been “extremely serious” and welcomed the decision to hold an inquiry.
“I could see a line, a thin blue line of extremely brave police officers, trying to hold back a bunch of people who were intent on violence and destruction.
“They were very brave those police officers, but as the police themselves have said there weren’t enough of them and the police response needs to reflect that, so I’m very glad that the Met Police commissioner has said what he said.”
Hundreds of coachloads of students and lecturers travelled to London from across England for the demonstration in Whitehall, with 2,000 students also travelling from Wales.
As well as higher fees, they were protesting against plans to cut higher education funding by 40% and to all but wipe out teaching grants except for science and maths.
But the PM said he would not abandon his plan to reform tuition fees – and allow some institutions to charge up to £9,000 a year – and insisted it was “a more progressive system than the one that it will replace”.
Asked whether the protests reminded him of the sort of unrest seen under Margaret Thatcher’s Conservative government in the 1980s, Mr Cameron said: “There have been protests, both peaceful protests and sometimes protests that have turned quite nasty, under all governments, so I don’t see it like that.”
National Union of Students (NUS) president Aaron Porter told BBC Breakfast his members had “lost a lot of public sympathy” because of what happened.
“What we had done was assemble 50,000 students which I’m sure would have got a hell of a lot of attention and would have sent a clear message to government,” he said.
NUS president Aaron Porter says violence by students undermines their protest.
“But if we’re now having to spend time talking about the rights and wrongs of violence and criminal damage, actually in many respects I think it undermines our argument rather than allowing us to concentrate on the devastation to our universities and colleges.”
Former Flying Squad commander John O’Connor accused the Met of having “no tactics and nowhere near enough people” at the scene, and said it was naive of them not to anticipate the threat from anarchist groups aiming to infiltrate the protest.
“It’s an absolute disgrace,” he told the BBC.
“I don’t understand how anybody could have sat there planning that event and not taken the contingency plan into consideration that this is likely to erupt into violence.”
But London’s deputy mayor Kit Malthouse, who has responsibility for the capital’s policing, said “a large number of meetings” had been held with the NUS before the protests and a lot of intelligence gathered.
“None of that gave any cause for us to believe that there was going to be a significant problem,” he added.
At prime minister’s questions in the Commons on Wednesday, Deputy Prime Minister Nick Clegg was accused of hypocrisy by Labour because the Liberal Democrats had promised to scrap tuition fees altogether in their election manifesto.
Asked about his decision to sign an NUS pledge promising to fight any rise in fees, Mr Clegg told ITV1’s Daybreak: “I should have been more careful perhaps in signing that pledge. At the time I thought I could do it.”
Under the coalition’s plans, students would not have to pay anything “up front” and as graduates, would only have to pay back their tuition fee loans once they were earning £21,000 or more.
But the NUS and other opponents say the prospect of such large debts will deter young people from poorer backgrounds from going to university.
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The NI Secretary of State says he is “not minded” to continue the practice of 50-50 recruitment within the PSNI.
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Nouri Maliki gradually gained the support of parliament’s smaller factions The Iraqi parliament is due to meet after a reported breakthrough in negotiations to form a new government.
Negotiations have been in deadlock since elections in March.
MPs said a deal was reached to keep Nouri Maliki as prime minister after he gained the support of the Sunni coalition led by former PM Iyad Allawi.
The agreement is said to provide checks and balances against the abuse of power by any one group. The US said the reported deal was a “big step forward”.
One by one, smaller factions gradually fell into line, with Mr Maliki’s opponents saying that Iran was playing a major persuasive role behind the scenes.
But the question remained, how to bring on board the alliance headed by Mr Allawi, which won the bulk of the Sunni vote.
Everybody agrees they should be involved because marginalisation of the Sunnis was seen as a major factor driving the insurgency.
Now the deal appears to be that while Mr Maliki keeps the job as prime minister, Mr Allawi’s bloc will be given the speakership of parliament, the foreign ministry and the presidency of a new national council for strategic policy – it’s designed in theory at least as a check on the unbridled wielding of power by the prime minister.
The presidency of the republic is also expected to be retained by the current incumbent, the Kurdish leader Jalal Talabani.
Once parliament convenes, it is expected to begin by electing its own speaker and his deputies.
The chamber will then elect the president of the republic who will in turn invite the biggest parliamentary coalition, Mr Maliki’s, to nominate its candidate to try to form a government.
He would then have a month to try to put an administration together.
The tide turned for Mr Maliki in early October when the militant young Shia cleric Moqtada Sadr announced that the 40 or so seats he controls in the new parliament would back the incumbent for a second term.
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Cuts in national budgets make many leaders keen to rein in EU spending European governments are braced for a battle with Euro MPs and the EU Commission over the size of next year’s EU budget.
France and Germany are among 12 EU governments backing UK Prime Minister David Cameron in setting 2.9% as the maximum acceptable budget increase.
The European Parliament voted for a 6% increase – a figure backed by the European Commission.
If there is no deal before December the budget will stay at the 2010 level.
A three-week “conciliation” period began on 27 October for the parliament and the Council – the body representing the 27 EU governments – to thrash out a deal.
The draft 2011 budget set by the Commission totals 130bn euros (£112bn; $179bn).
MEPs and the Commission argue that a 6% increase is necessary to fund institutional changes brought in by the EU’s Lisbon Treaty, including the new EU diplomatic service, due to be launched next month.
The treaty gave MEPs real power to influence the budget, for the first time in the EU’s history.
MEPs also voted for increases in several other areas, including an extra 38m euros for programmes to boost innovation and skills, an extra 300m euros for a dairy fund, as part of the EU’s farm support, and an extra 100m euros in aid for the Palestinians.
“Payments from the budget continue to be materially affected by error, except in two areas of expenditure”
Vitor Caldeira President, EU Court of Auditors
Part of the increase would be offset by cuts in other areas, including 47m euros taken from the Iter fusion energy project.
MEPs and the Commission are also engaged in a court battle with EU governments over a proposed 3.7% pay rise for nearly 45,000 EU staff, including commissioners. The governments want to limit the rise to 1.85%.
At a summit in late October the governments agreed that the EU budget should reflect current economic conditions in member states, most of which are cutting jobs and investment in the public sector.
“It is essential that the EU budget and the forthcoming multi-annual financial framework reflect the consolidation efforts being made by member states to bring deficit and debt onto a more sustainable path,” they said in the summit conclusions.
Mr Cameron said reaching agreement on the 2.9% figure at the summit was a success, but his opponents pointed out that he had previously called for a budget freeze. The extra cost to the UK of a 2.9% rise has been estimated at £450m a year.
On Tuesday the EU’s budget auditors said the EU accounts for 2009 were “free from material misstatements and hence reliable”.
But they said only two areas of spending were free from error – administrative expenditure and economic and financial affairs.
Court of Auditors President Vitor Caldeira said that in one area the estimated error rate was above 5% – Cohesion spending, which allocates assistance to the EU’s poorest regions.
Cohesion, amounting to nearly a third of the EU budget, is the biggest item of spending after grants for farmers and rural development.
Mr Caldeira said the auditors had found “serious failures of national authorities to apply the rules on public procurement”.
The persistent errors mean that every year since 1995 the EU auditors have refused to sign off on the budget.
“Payments from the budget continue to be materially affected by error, except in two areas of expenditure,” Mr Caldeira said.
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A Moscow newspaper names the Russian intelligence agent it claims helped the US break up a Russian spy ring last summer.
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The Somali suspects face a mandatory life sentence if convicted of piracy Five Somali men accused of firing at a US Navy ship off the coast of Africa are set to face the first US piracy trial in more than 100 years.
The suspects apparently mistook the guided-missile frigate USS Nicholas for a merchant ship, west of the Seychelles, court documents said.
They allegedly fired on the ship which was patrolling the area for pirates; it shot back, forcing the men to flee.
The men were later captured and brought back to the US to stand trial.
The USS Nicholas piracy trial is thought to be the first in the US in at least a century, according to legal and maritime scholars, says the Associated Press news agency.
The trial, which is taking place in Norfolk, Virginia, is expected to last for about a month. Piracy carries a mandatory life sentence.
Norfolk is the home of the world’s largest naval base and the home port of the Nicholas.
The charges against the men include piracy, attacking to plunder a maritime vessel, and assault with a dangerous weapon.
The five suspects were arrested in April, along with six others who were captured a few days later in waters near Djibouti after allegedly shooting at the USS Ashland, an amphibious vessel.
Pirates operating off the African coast have intensified attacks on shipping in recent years.
With piracy increasing, there have been calls for international courts to be set up to deal with the problem.
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President Obama could face a chilly reception at the Seoul meeting The global financial system and world economy are set to dominate the agenda at a two-day meeting of the G20 group of nations in South Korea.
But there are fears the summit in Seoul could descend into a row between the US and China about so-called “currency wars” and trade imbalances.
Ahead of the meeting US President Barack Obama urged leaders to work together for global economic recovery.
He said the US would seek to create jobs and reduce global imbalances.
On a visit to a US base in Seoul before the main G20 meetings began, Mr Obama took the opportunity to urge North Korea to engage with the international community.
“North Korea’s continued pursuit of nuclear weapons will only lead to more isolation and less security,” he said. “But there is another path available to North Korea.”
Washington has blamed global economic imbalances in part on Beijing’s alleged manipulation of its currency to help boost Chinese exports, which has led to Beijing amassing huge foreign reserves.
Others, however, say America’s economic policies, specifically creating new money to pursue quantitative easing (QE), could also be a form of currency manipulation for its own ends.
Speaking to the BBC, the president of the World Bank, Robert Zoellick, said there were “definitely tensions” over currency.
The G20 group comprises the world’s 19 leading national economies, plus the European Union.
It was formed in 1999, and held its first meeting that year.
Until 2008 the G20 was overshadowed by the smaller G8 grouping of France, Germany, Italy, Japan, the UK, the US, Canada and Russia.
However, this has changed since the global financial crisis of 2008, and the G20 has effectively now replaced the G8 as the main global economic forum.
The major growth in the economies of G20 members China, India and Brazil has also contributed to the rising importance of the grouping.
The G20 currently meets twice a year, but this is set to reduce to one meeting from 2011.
“One has to be wary of the tensions because you don’t want them to slip into protectionism,” he said.
But he said that while the US raising the issue over China was “useful”, he added China’s next five-year plan for its economic development would focus on increasing domestic demand, adding this would be important in shifting China’s growth.
At a G20 press conference, Brazil’s Finance Minister Guido Mantega criticised the US central bank’s latest QE programme.
“The trouble with putting an extra $600bn into the US economy is that this money will not go into production, will not create jobs and neither will it boost domestic consumption.
“With more money in the market, investors will take advantage of higher interest rates in other places, put the money into these countries’ stock exchanges or invest in commodities, raising the prices and causing inflation in our countries,” Mr Mantega said.
Accused of forcing the dollar down to trade its way back to prosperity, Mr Obama is expected to hold one-on-one talks with two of the strongest critics of his administration’s economic direction – Chinese President Hu Jintao and German Chancellor Angela Merkel.
President Obama has said that the US alone could not restore growth but accepted the US must change, adding: “When all nations do their part… we all benefit from higher growth.”
“Everyone agrees on the “shared interest” in finding a solution to global imbalances. The disagreement is over how – and how quickly”
However, he defended America’s “decisive action to halt the fall in activity caused by the deepest crisis we have experienced in generations”.
And he again called on countries not to rely on exports to pull them out of their economic problems.
“We all now recognize that the foundation for a strong and durable recovery will not materialize if American households stop saving and go back to spending based on borrowing.
“Yet, no one country can achieve our joint objective of a strong, sustainable, and balanced recovery on its own.
“Just as the United States must change, so too must those economies that have previously relied on exports to offset weaknesses in their down demand,” Mr Obama said.
Britain’s Prime Minister David Cameron also warned that China should act to correct its trade imbalance.
“During and after the financial crisis, world leaders huddled close, staring together over the precipice. With the danger of an immediate plunge over, they began jostling, and are now pushing. But the cliff edge is still there”
Critics, especially in the US, have called for tariffs on Chinese imports unless the yuan is allowed to appreciate.
It is feared that other countries will rush to allow currency devaluation to also make their exports more competitive.
But China considers the exchange rate of its currency to be an internal matter and has only agreed to only gradually let the yuan appreciate.
The governor of the Bank of England, Mervyn King, has urged the G20 to agree to let current account imbalances unwind, rather than impose targets and policy instruments that could be damaging to all.
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