Miniature livers ‘grown in lab’

Organ for transplantThere is a shortage of organs for transplant

Scientists have managed to produce a small-scale version of a human liver in the laboratory using stem cells.

The success increases hope that new transplant livers could be manufactured, although experts say that this is still many years away.

The team from Wake Forest University Baptist Medical Center presented its findings at at conference in Boston.

UK experts said it was an “exciting development” but it is not yet certain a fully-functioning liver is possible.

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The demand for transplant livers far exceeds the number of available organs, and in recent years, research has focused on ways to use cell technology to support failing organs in the body, or even one day replace them.

Their building block is the stem cell, a “master cell” which can, in certain conditions, can divide to produce different types of body tissue.

However, constructing a three-dimensional organ from stem cells is a difficult task.

The method used by the Wake Forest researchers, and other teams around the world, is to form new liver tissue on a scaffold made from from the structure of an existing liver.

In this case, a detergent was used to strip away the cells from the liver, leaving only the collagen framework which supported them, and a network of tiny blood vessels.

“Whilst ‘off the shelf’ new livers are clearly still a long way off, this work gives a glimmer of hope that this is no longer just the stuff of science fiction”

Dr Mark Wright, Southampton University

The new stem cells – in this case immature liver cells – and endothelial cells, to produce a new lining for the blood vessels, were gradually introduced.

After a week in a “bioreactor”, which nurtured the cells with a mixture of nutrients and oxygen, the scientists saw widespread cell growth within the structure, and even signs of some normal functions in the tiny organ.

Professor Shay Soker, who led the research, said: “We are excited about the possibilities this research represents, but must stress that we’re at an early stage, and many technical hurdles must be overcome before it could benefit patients.

“Not only must we learn how to grow billions of liver cells at one time in order to engineer livers large enough for patients, we must determine whether these organs are safe to use.”

UK researchers welcomed the findings, which are being presented to the American Association for the Study of Liver Diseases. Professor Mark Thursz, from Imperial College London, said the results were “encouraging”.

“The report suggests that the authors have overcome one of the major hurdles in creating an artificial liver – to generate functioning human liver cells in a ‘natural’ liver structure.

“It is clear that the cells are growing well, but the next step is to show that they are functioning like normal human liver tissue.”

Dr Mark Wright, from Southampton University added: “In an era of increasing liver disease and death with a chronic shortage of liver transplants this represents an exciting development in an important field of work.

“The researchers appear to have made the step of combining stem cell technology with bioengineering as a first step to producing artificial livers.

“Whilst ‘off the shelf’ new livers are clearly still a long way off, this work gives a glimmer of hope that this is no longer just the stuff of science fiction.”

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Brazil finds massive oil field

President Lula da Silva with his hands dirty with oil on a Petrobras platform in the Tupi field, 28 October 2010Outgoing president Lula says oil will help Brazil eradicate poverty

A newly-tapped oil field off the coast of Brazil could contain up to 15 billion barrels of oil, officials say.

Brazil’s national petroleum agency said the Libra field most probably held around 8 billion barrels.

That matches the size of the giant Tupi oil field, whose discovery in 2007 drew attention to Brazil’s potential as a major oil producer.

If the 15 billion barrel figure were confirmed it would double Brazil’s known oil reserves.

It would also be the biggest oil field discovered in the Americas since 1976, when Mexico found the giant Cantarell field in the Gulf of Mexico.

The Libra exploratory well is located 183km (114 miles) offshore from Rio de Janeiro.

“The volume of recoverable oil belonging to the nation could vary from 3.7 billion to 15 billion barrels, with the most likely estimate being 7.9 billion barrels,” the national petroleum agency (ANP) said in a statement.

Brazil has discovered billions of barrels of oil in the last few years, mostly in deep, pre salt fields off its south-eastern coast.

The discoveries should make Brazil one of the world’s top 10 oil producers.

Outgoing President Luiz Inacio Lula da Silva has said future oil revenues will be used to eradicate poverty and invest in education and technology.

In September the Brazilian oil company Petrobras, which is partly owned by the state, raised $70bn (£44.7bn) to develop the new fields in the world’s largest ever public share offering.

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Security alert at Belfast airport

Belfast International AirportThe security alert is at Belfast International Airport

There is a security alert at Belfast International Airport.

Police and army bomb experts are examining a suspicious vehicle which was discovered in the airport’s long-stay car park at about 1430 BST on Saturday.

Flights are not affected at this stage, however travellers are advised to check with their airlines for more information.

It is believed the alert is not linked to bombs left on US-bound cargo planes.

Home Secretary Theresa May confirmed on Saturday that a device found in a package sent from Yemen and found on a US-bound cargo plane could have exploded on board the jet.

The device, intercepted at East Midlands Airport on Friday, was viable and could have exploded on board, she said.

Dubai police earlier confirmed that a second device, also on a US-bound cargo plane, contained explosives.

Washington suspects the devices were part of an al-Qaeda plot.

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UK terror threat remains ‘severe’

Police examine UPS vans at East Midlands airportOne device was found at East Midlands Airport

The government’s emergency planning committee is to meet later to discuss the discovery of a suspected explosive package on a cargo flight from Yemen.

The device – a printer cartridge with wires protruding – was found on a plane at East Midlands Airport on Friday, and sparked an international terror alert.

The flight was bound for Chicago. Another device was found on a Chicago-bound cargo plane in Dubai.

The home secretary has said there was no indication that the UK was a target.

Home Secretary Theresa May will chair the emergency committee, known as Cobra.

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She said air security for cargo planes was under review in the wake of the discovery, and direct flights from Yemen to the UK have been suspended.

Yemen is considered a source of a growing threat of extremist violence, with the Labour government earlier this year vowing to do more to combat it. The UK was working with the US to strengthen counter-terrorism there.

Mrs May said on Friday that it was unclear if the device was a “viable explosive device”, while the US described it as a “credible terrorist threat”.

Aviation expert Chris Yates said he had been told that the device also had a mobile phone attached. It could work as a remote detonation device, triggered by a phone call from anywhere in the world.

He said it was probably not possible to detonate while in the air, as mobile phones are short-range devices, and are out of range while at altitude.

“Cargo has always been seen as the Achilles heel of the aviation system. There are measures being taken for cargo, but those measures aren’t necessarily as robust as one might imagine, so it’s entirely possible that in some parts of the world a device such as this can be infiltrated into the cargo handling system and transported around the world on aircraft,” Mr Yates said.

Analysis

Yemen has risen rapidly towards the top of the list of countries of concern for Western counter-terrorism officials in the past year. The group al-Qaeda in the Arabian Peninsula – which has found a sanctuary in Yemen’s ungoverned spaces – has shown increasing ambition and sophistication in its attempts to target the United States and others.

But while the origin of this plot seems clear, its exact form does not. The presence of explosives in the devices suggests this was no dry run or simply an attempt to cause panic through a hoax.

But forensic experts in the UK have been continuing to study the substances found in the parts for a printer to try to understand exactly what they were and how they were to be used. There appears to be a strong conviction these were parts for a bomb but whether they were complete and how they were to be detonated and against which target remains uncertain.

“It would seem from everything we’ve seen and heard in the last 12 hours that this was an intelligence-led operation, pointing the authorities to these devices. It’s by good fortune that this information came in.”

US President Barack Obama’s top counter-terrorism adviser John Brennan said the US was “remaining vigilant.”

The packages were destined for Jewish places of worship in Chicago, Mr Obama said.

“We also know that al-Qaeda in the Arabian Peninsula – a terrorist group based in Yemen – continues to plan attacks against our homeland, our citizens and our friends and allies,” Mr Obama said.

The alerts were:

Suspect package found at DubaiSuspect package found at East Midlands AirportThree cargo planes owned by the freight company UPS searched in Newark and PhiladelphiaUS fighter jets escorted Emirates flight 201 from Dubai into New York, with officials saying the action was being taken “out of an abundance of caution” because cargo from Yemen was on boardSuspect package from Yemen examined on a delivery lorry in New YorkBA flight from London to New York met by authorities amid reports of search of its cargo

Mr Obama stressed that new aviation security measures were being taken in light of the alert by the Department of Homeland Security, “including additional screening”.

US officials told Associated Press they believed the packages contained PETN (pentaerythritol tetranitrate) – the same powerful explosive used in the failed bombing of a US-bound airliner last Christmas Day. However, the officials said that full testing had not been completed.

US security services remain on a high level of vigilance in the wake of the attempted Times Square bombing in May and the alleged attempted Christmas Day attack.

Map

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Nato troops ‘repel Afghan attack’

Aerial view of Paktika province, AfghanistanPaktika province is a remote region close to the border with Pakistan

Nato says its forces in Afghanistan have killed at least 30 Taliban fighters who tried to storm a combat outpost under cover of darkness.

The attack happened at a base in Paktika province, bordering Pakistan.

The militants are reported to have attacked from all directions, using rifles and rocket-propelled grenades.

Five coalition soldiers were wounded in the fighting, which was so fierce that soldiers at the camp had to call in air attacks to repel the assault.

A statement from the International Security and Assistance Force (Isaf) said that none of its troops were killed. Most of the soldiers in the area are from the US.

The BBC’s Quentin Sommerville, in Kabul, says that combat outposts are often small, remote bases and are frequent targets for well-planned attacks using rockets and mortars.

Local commanders say many of the insurgents in the area come mainly from across the border in Pakistan, our correspondent adds.

The border region has long been a hiding place for Islamist extremists and has been targeted in drone attacks against the Taliban and al-Qaeda.

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UK cargo plane device was bomb

A checked UPS jet at PhiladelphiaThe discovery of the packages triggered security alerts in the US, UK and Middle East

The US and UK are investigating the extent of a terror threat after explosives were found in two packages bound for the US from Yemen.

The packages were found in the UK and Dubai on two overnight cargo planes in transit from Yemen on Friday.

President Barack Obama said the devices were a “credible terrorist threat”.

UK Home Secretary Theresa May said experts were trying to establish whether the package found in Britain was “a viable explosive device”.

Related stories

Mr Obama’s top counter-terrorism adviser John Brennan said: “The United States is not assuming that the attacks were disrupted and is remaining vigilant.”

The discovery of the packages on FedEx and UPS cargo planes triggered security alerts in the US, UK and Middle East. Other planes at US airports were checked because they were thought to contain items from Yemen.

US officials later said that the two packages had been made inert.

The device found in Britain’s East Midlands airport was reportedly an ink toner cartridge that had been modified.

The packages were destined for Jewish places of worship in Chicago, Mr Obama said.

Analysis

Yemen has risen rapidly towards the top of the list of countries of concern for Western counter-terrorism officials in the past year. The group al-Qaeda in the Arabian Peninsula – which has found a sanctuary in Yemen’s ungoverned spaces – has shown increasing ambition and sophistication in its attempts to target the United States and others.

But while the origin of this plot seems clear, its exact form does not. The presence of explosives in the devices suggests this was no dry run or simply an attempt to cause panic through a hoax.

But forensic experts in the UK have been continuing to study the substances found in the parts for a printer to try to understand exactly what they were and how they were to be used. There appears to be a strong conviction these were parts for a bomb but whether they were complete and how they were to be detonated and against which target remains uncertain.

The alerts were:

Suspect package found at DubaiSuspect package found at East Midlands, UKTwo cargo planes owned by the freight company UPS searched in Newark and PhiladelphiaUS fighter jets escorted Emirates flight 201 from Dubai into New York, with officials saying the action was being taken “out of an abundance of caution” because cargo from Yemen was on boardSuspect package from Yemen examined on a delivery lorry in New YorkBA flight from London to New York met by authorities amid reports of search of its cargo

Speaking at a White House press conference late on Friday, President Obama said that “an initial examination of those [two] packages has determined that they do apparently contain explosive material”.

“Although we are still pursuing all the facts, we do know that the packages originated in Yemen.

“We also know that al-Qaeda in the Arabian Peninsula – a terrorist group based in Yemen – continues to plan attacks against our homeland, our citizens and our friends and allies.”

He stressed that new aviation security measures were being taken in light of the alert by the Department of Homeland Security, “including additional screening”.

Al-Qaeda and Jewish targetsApril 2002: Suicide bombing at synagogue in Djerba, Tunisia kills 19. Al-Qaeda claims the attackNov 2002: 16 people killed in suicide bombing al-Qaeda claims to have carried out of Israeli-owned hotel in Mombasa, KenyaMay 2003: 45 killed in bomb attacks in Casablanca, Morocco, on targets including Jewish cultural centre. Group linked to al-Qaeda blamed.Nov 2003: Two synagogues in Istanbul, Turkey, bombed, killing 23. Al-Qaeda claims responsibilityOct 2005: Germany sentences four Arab men accused of links to al-Qaeda of planning attacks on Jewish targetsIn pictures: Air cargo alert

John Brennan added: “It does appear there were explosive materials in both of the packages. They were in a form that was designed to try to carry out some type of an attack. The initial analysis is that the materials that were found and the device that was uncovered was intended to do harm.”

The White House later said Saudi Arabia had provided information that helped identify the threat.

The UK’s Daily Telegraph reported that an MI6 officer responsible for Yemen had received a tip-off.

FedEx and UPS suspended all their shipments out of Yemen, saying they would fully co-operate with investigators.

Speaking in London early on Saturday, Mrs May said that “at this stage I can say that the device [found in Britain] did contain explosive material”.

“The forensic work continues,” she said, adding that the British government’s emergency committee, known as Cobra, had met on Friday and would hold another meeting later on Saturday.

“We are reviewing the security measures for air freight from Yemen and are in discussion with industry contacts,” she said.

US officials told Associated Press they believed the packages contained PETN (pentaerythritol tetranitrate) – the same powerful explosive used in the failed bombing of a US-bound airliner last Christmas Day. However, the officials said that full testing had not been completed.

US security services remain on a high level of vigilance in the wake of the attempted Times Square bombing in May and the alleged attempted Christmas Day attack.

Map

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Protesters picket Vodafone shops

Protesters outside a shop in London earlier this weekProtesters outside a shop in London earlier this week

Campaigners claiming Vodafone has been let off an unpaid tax bill of £6bn have blockaded several shops.

Campaigner Ed Brompton said: “This money – £6bn – could be spent on schools, housing and hospitals.”

But a Vodafone spokesman denied the tax bill reports, adding: “We pay our taxes in the UK and all of the other countries in which we operate.”

A spokesman for HM Revenue and Customs said of the £6bn: “That number is an urban myth.”

Four shops in central London and others in Glasgow, Oxford and elsewhere were forced to close because of the demonstrations, sparked by a campaign on Twitter and Facebook.

One of the campaigners, Ed Brompton, said: “We’ve succeeded in closing three shops in Oxford Street and one in Tottenham Court Road. There is also action going on in Manchester and elsewhere.

He said: “This money – £6bn – could be spent on schools, housing and hospitals. But instead it is going to go to the shareholders, a few people who are already rich.”

A Vodafone spokesman said there had been protests outside a small number of UK stores and added: “We temporarily closed some of them and diverted customers to other locations so they were not inconvenienced.”

He said: “We pay our taxes in the UK and all of the other countries in which we operate.

“Reports suggesting that we have an outstanding tax bill for £6bn are incorrect, as this was never the case.”

The HMRC spokesman said: “We can’t comment on the details of the settlement but we can confirm that it was reached by HMRC following a rigorous examination of the facts. It was agreed that Vodafone’s liability was £1.25bn and at no point was the liability greater than that.

“There is no question of Vodafone having a tax liability of £6bn. That number is an urban myth.”

The campaigners cite an investigation by Private Eye magazine which they said showed the taxman had dropped an attempt to reclaim £6bn in taxes.

The sum purportedly stems from Vodafone’s purchase of the German telecoms firm Mannesmann, which was supposedly bought through a Luxembourg subsidiary to avoid paying tax in Britain.

The campaigners have also set up an online petition calling on the government to insist Vodafone pay the money.

The world’s largest mobile operator measured by revenue saw “organic service revenue” rise 1.1% to £10.6bn in the April to June quarter.

Last week Vodafone was told to pay a 112bn rupee (£1.6bn) tax bill in India.

Vodafone has been given 30 days to cough up the £1.6bn the Delhi government claims it owes following the 2007 purchase of the Indian telephone assets of Hong Kong conglomerate Hutchison Whampoa.

Vodafone claimed the $11bn transaction was exempt from tax because it took place between two offshore entities.

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TV licence boycott call over S4C

TV news gallery screenThe BBC will fund S4C out of the licence fee from 2013

Supporters of a Welsh-language pressure group will debate a motion to boycott the licence fee over planned changes to S4C.

The Welsh Language Society (Cymdeithas yr Iaith Gymraeg) is calling for “non-violent direct action”.

The group wants to stop UK government plans for the BBC to take over funding of the channel.

S4C’s budget will be cut by 25% by 2015, as part of the UK government’s Spending Review.

Related stories

The BBC will take over part-funding of the Welsh-language channel from 2013, with the Department for Culture, Media and Sport reducing its grant by 94% over the next five years.

UK Culture Minister Ed Vaizey has said the UK government is “committed to Welsh programming and committed to S4C”.

He said the channel had received a “very generous funding settlement”.

Speaking ahead of the society’s annual general meeting in Aberystwyth later, Bethan Williams, chair-elect of Cymdeithas, said: “The BBC has been very misleading by claiming that they are saving S4C by taking over the channel.

“As the only Welsh channel is gobbled up by the BBC, the fate of the language will be in the hands of a broadcaster in London which has to make severe cuts itself”

Bethan Williams Cymdeithas yr Iaith Gymraeg

“The truth is that these plans are a complete last minute stitch-up, between [UK culture secretary] Jeremy Hunt and BBC bosses in London.”

She said the UK government and the “BBC in London” were “threatening the future of the only Welsh language channel in the world”.

She added: “As the only Welsh channel is gobbled up by the BBC, the fate of the language will be in the hands of a broadcaster in London which has to make severe cuts itself.”

A TV Licensing spokesperson said: “Regardless of personal opinion, if you don’t have a valid TV licence when you need one, it’s against the law and you risk a prosecution and a fine of up to £1,000.”

Cymdeithas has a history of non-violent direct action, and more than one thousand supporters have been in court for taking part in campaigns since it was founded in 1962.

In the 1970s the group began to campaign for a Welsh language radio and television service. In February 1971, a group of students walked from Llanelwy, in Denbighshire, to Bangor, in Gwynedd, and burned their TV licences outside BBC premises.

When the Conservative government announced in 1979 it would not establish a separate Welsh language television channel, some protesters refused to buy licences and others climbed up television masts and invaded television studios.

Cymdeithas is organising a rally on 6 November in Cardiff to protest at the changes to S4C.

Any licence fee boycott would start on 1 December.

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Iain Gray: ‘I am ready to serve’

Scottish Labour leader Iain GrayIain Gray will also promise to provide many more apprenticeships for school leavers

Labour leader Iain Gray will promise to take a 5% pay cut if he is chosen to be Scotland’s new First Minister.

He will make the pledge at the Scottish Labour Conference in Oban on Saturday, and will vow to cut his ministers pay by a similar amount if elected.

Current SNP First Minister Alex Salmond earns around £140,000 a year.

Mr Gray will tell his party he wants to reduce the pay of senior civil servants, but will assure members: “I want to lead from the front.”

He has also indicated that other public sector workers in Scotland are unlikely to see pay increases for up to three years.

But Labour are committed to introducing a living wage of just over £7 an hour for the lowest paid.

Voters in Scotland will go to the polls next May to elect a new Holyrood administration.

The current SNP government has frozen salaries for ministers, but Mr Gray will promise to go further.

“We want to see a reduction in pay at the highest level in the public sector and I want to lead from the front,” he will say.

“That is why I will take a 5% cut and I commit my ministerial team to do likewise. A Scottish Labour government must lead by example.”

Mr Gray will also tell Labour members that his election manifesto will include a commitment to provide an apprenticeship place for every qualified school leaver who wants one.

While conceding the move “will be hard and not happen overnight”, he will insist: “We will do what is hard because it is right.”

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Man on rape charge granted bail

A man has appeared in court charged with raping a woman in Belfast.

Romuald Mindoukna Andele, 35, of Ravenhill Court in east Belfast, was charged with raping the woman twice on 3 October.

The accused, originally from Cameroon, was granted bail at Belfast Magistrates Court on Saturday.

He was told to surrender his passport, barred from the Donegall Road area, observe a curfew and report to police twice a week.

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Harman sorry over ‘ginger rodent’

harriet harmanHarriet Harman said Lib Dems were ‘political mutants’

Deputy Labour leader Harriet Harman has launched a withering attack on the Liberal Democrats at her party’s Scottish conference.

Speaking to delegates in Oban, she branded Chief Treasury Secretary Danny Alexander a “ginger rodent”.

She also said the Lib Dems in Scotland had become “political mutants” after joining a coalition with Conservatives.

Ms Harman urged delegates to ensure Labour claimed victory at next May’s Holyrood election.

She said many people who voted Lib Dem in May “believed that they were a progressive anti-Tory party”.

Ms Harman said they “woke up to see Nick Clegg with David Cameron in the rose garden of Number 10”.

She said that there was “incredulity” at seeing Mr Alexander, an MP from the north of Scotland, becoming “the front-man for the Tory cuts”.

“Now, many of us in the Labour Party are conservationists – and we all love the red squirrel,” Ms Harman said.

“But there is one ginger rodent which we never want to see again in the Highlands – Danny Alexander.”

She said every Lib Dem MP and MSP had mutated into “something alien to Scotland – Tories”.

Ms Harman insisted Labour had learned the lessons of their general election defeat.

She said the Scottish Parliament election will send a signal to the UK government – it is the beginning of the end.

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Fire at derelict mill building

Residents within a three-mile radius of a fire in County Tyrone are being advised to keep doors and windows shut.

About 50 firefighters were tackling the blaze at a derelict building on Mill Avenue in Sion Mills on Saturday.

Nine appliances were sent to the site of Herdman’s Mill after the fire was reported at about 0800 BST.

Police said people living between Sion Mills and Strabane should take precautions because the blaze was producing a high volume of smoke.

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Help Loan debt collection halted

picture of final demandsThousands of people have received demands for loan repayments from Help Loan

The debt collection agency used by Help Loan has stopped pursuing people alleged to have borrowed money from the payday loan firm.

Police say the personal details of at least 9,000 innocent Britons have been used to fraudulently take money from the Finnish-based firm.

Intrum Justitia says it has halted any collection action because of the scale of the fraud.

Help Loan believes the fraud has cost it at least £1.5m.

Security problem

The firm, which only started trading this summer, makes small loans at very high rates of interest. It offers people loans of between £50 and £300 which they must repay within 28 days.

These are often known as “payday loans” as they tide cash-strapped people over until their next salary payment. The company’s website says its application process takes no more than 10 minutes.

But lax security has allowed criminals to obtain thousands of £300 loans using stolen IDs. The first those people knew about it was when they received a demand for payment from the debt collectors.

Many are angry that despite already having contacted Help Loan and its debt collection company Intrum Justitia, they are still receiving letters demanding payment.

Continuing demands

Kim Hale from Hertfordshire got a crime reference number from the police and wrote to Help Loan’s parent company MCO Capital to say the firm had made a mistake the day after receiving her first letter in August.

But last week she got another repayment demand from Intrum Justitia, as she told Radio 4’s Money Box programme: “It seems amazing that these letters are still going out to people without anything that infers there might be a fraud going on.”

“We have decided to stop all reminder action on MCO cases”

Pascal Lebreu, head of western operations for Intrum Justicia

Pascal Lebreu, who is responsible for Intrum Justitia’s UK operations, says that since 27 October no more enforcement action has been taken against anyone alleged to owe MCO Capital money:

“We have decided to stop all reminder action on MCO cases. The level of fraud seems to be very high.”

Claims investigated

He said he was still reviewing his company’s relationship with MCO Capital and that he would take a decision on whether to end it next week.

“You can be sure if we don’t have any clear information, we will not continue anymore with them.”

MCO Capital says it already has a process in place so innocent people are not pursued.

“We are very sorry people have received distressing letters”

Adrian Kibbler, spokesman for MCO Capital

Adrian Kibbler, who speaks on behalf of the firm, said: “We are very sorry people have received distressing letters. If people believe they have been the victim of identity fraud, they can contact the company, there will be an investigation and the case will be closed.”

Incorrect interest

Money Box has also discovered that the Annual Percentage Rates quoted on the Help Loan website are highly inaccurate.

It states if someone borrowed £50 over 14 days, the APR is 1,877%. In fact it should be 132,965,598.

The Office of Fair Trading has confirmed this and says this will be part of its wider investigation into the company.

BBC Radio 4’s Money Box is broadcast on Saturdays at 1200 BST, and repeated on Sundays at 2100 BST.

At no time should you endanger yourself or others, take any unnecessary risks or infringe any laws. In most cases a selection of your comments will be published, displaying your name as you provide it and location unless you state otherwise. But your contact details will never be published.

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