Nuclear sub to be docked for days

HMS AstuteHMS Astute was grounded on a shingle bank for 10 hours

A nuclear-powered submarine which spent 10 hours grounded on a shingle bank off the isle of Skye is to be assessed to see if its rudder was damaged.

HMS Astute was towed free by a tug on Friday evening and taken to deep water where a survey will be carried out.

Engineers will determine whether the £1bn submarine can return to its base at Faslane on the Clyde under its own power or if it requires assistance.

The boat was out on sea trials when it became stuck close to the Skye Bridge.

Related stories

HMS Astute, which was built by BAE Systems in Barrow in Furness, Cumbria, was not expected to enter service until next year.

It weighs 7,800 tonnes, equivalent to nearly 1,000 double-decker buses, and is almost 100 metres (328ft) long.

Its Spearfish torpedoes and Tomahawk cruise missiles are capable of delivering pinpoint strikes from 2,000km (1,240 miles) with conventional weapons.

The submarine’s nuclear reactor means that it will not need refuelling once in its entire 25-year life and it makes its own air and water, enabling it to circumnavigate the globe without needing to surface.

It is thought its rudder become stuck on a shingle bank at about 0800 BST on Friday.

There were no reports of any injuries and the Ministry of Defence said it was not a “nuclear incident”.

The vessel was towed free at high tide, at about 1800 BST.

John Ainslie, co-ordinator of Scottish CND, said: “This is just the latest in a long line of incidents involving nuclear submarines off the west coast of Scotland.

“Inquiries into previous incidents have shown an appalling lack of common sense and basic navigation skills on these hi-tech submarines.”

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

End ‘pocket money’ alcohol call

Young man drinking beerAlcohol Concern Cymru says the low price of shop alcohol makes it available to young people

A call has made for an end to the “pocket money” price of shop-bought alcohol fuelling under-age drinking.

Alcohol Concern Cymru said shop deals mean the weekly recommended alcohol limit for a man can be bought for less than £4 and a woman’s for under £3.

It backs Welsh Assembly Government ministers’ bid for power on alcohol licensing and pricing.

The charity said it wanted to see the unit price of alcohol raised to 50p as a way of deterring under-age drinking.

Andrew Misell, the charity’s policy manager, said the “ludicrously cheap” price of alcohol saw it on sale in some places for the equivalent of 18p a unit.

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He said: “If you take those low prices and you have retailers who are willing to turn a blind eye to underage purchases, then alcohol becomes available for young people.

“This is why we talk about “pocket money” prices. The issue with young people is that they tend to have less money. They may still be in education.

“If you are making alcohol available at such low prices, then young people may be able to get together enough money to buy a couple of litres of strong cider.

“You can get pretty drunk on that.”

The charity said its research had found some 500 under 16s in Wales were admitted to hospital for alcohol-related problems annually, while 54% of 15-year-old boys and 52% of girls have been drunk at least twice.

‘Binge drinking culture’

The charity’s report highlighted the alcohol-related harm reduction strategies used in Cardiff – based on work by hospital surgeon Professor Jonathan Shepherd – which researchers claim has made the Welsh capital the safest city of its size in the UK.

Tony Jewell, Wales’ chief medical officer, has called for Welsh ministers to have powers to be able to introduce tougher controls on alcohol to tackle “the binge drinking culture”.

Dr Jewell said alcohol was “extremely cheap” compared to 30 years ago.

Mr Misell said the charity welcomed the idea of the assembly government having such powers.

He said: “This is a chance for Wales to lead the way.

“There is not the push from Westminster for a minimum price when there certainly is from the assembly government.”

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

Grim milestone

Frank GardnerBy Frank Gardner

Paul and Rachel ChandlerThe Chandlers’ yacht, the Lynn Rival, was boarded by pirates on 23 October 2009

Saturday marks a grim anniversary for Paul and Rachel Chandler, a retired couple from Tunbridge Wells in Kent.

A whole year has now passed since they were seized off the Seychelles in the Indian Ocean by Somali pirates as they sailed westwards to Tanzania. They have since been taken to the Somali mainland where they continue to be held.

This week a London-based piracy analyst told the BBC: “At the anniversary of the captivity of Paul and Rachel Chandler it is to be hoped that those holding them can now show compassion and release them, as a sign of goodwill, and to encourage further international support for those most at need in Somalia.”

In happier times, the Chandlers planned their dream retirement – sell up, buy a yacht and sail round the world.

Last year they sailed their yacht, the Lynn Rival, from Turkey down through the Suez Canal, southwards through the Red Sea and then swung far out to the east to avoid the Somali coast.

In April 2009 they reached the Seychelles, and after six months there they set sail westwards for Tanzania, far to the south of Somalia but still through an area where several ships had recently been attacked by pirates.

On the night of 23 October they activated their emergency beacon: their yacht was being attacked and boarded by Somali pirates, hundreds of miles from the Somali shore.

“We are just animals to them, we’ve been kept caged up like animals. They don’t care about our feelings and our family and our lives and what they’ve taken”

Rachel Chandler

Over the next few days they were forced to sail at gunpoint towards the Somali port of Haradheere.

On 29 October a Royal Fleet Auxilliary supply ship, the Wave Knight, approached but its crew was unable to prevent them being transferred off their yacht and onto a much larger container vessel, the Kota Waja, which already held a number of captured merchant seamen.

The Chandlers were then taken ashore and deeper inland into Somalia. Separated at times, they have been allowed to make only occasional phone calls to their relatives in England, as well as rare appearances in videos where they are shown living in the thorn scrub bush.

In one of these broadcast in May this year Rachel Chandler vented her feelings about her captors.

She said: “We are just animals to them, we’ve been kept caged up like animals. They don’t care about our feelings and our family and our lives and what they’ve taken. They don’t care whose lives they ruin.”

The Chandlers’ plight is symptomatic of a wider problem throughout the western Indian Ocean.

In the last three years piracy has become a boom business with former fishermen arming themselves, then heading further and further out to sea in search of prey.

Western warships have had only limited success in deterring them, as observed by shipping lawyers in London.

Maritime lawyer Stephen Askins said: “The reality is that the pirates have shown themselves able to operate 1,200 or 1,300 miles from Somalia so in fact they are much closer to India than they are to Somalia itself.

“That’s the message that is being put out to all the ships crossing north to south through the Indian Ocean – that nowhere is safe and you have to be alert and be ready to repel or try to avoid a piracy attack.”

Paul and Rachel Chandler have now been held longer than anyone else taken by Somali pirates in recent memory. Both the Foreign Office and Somali leaders have called for their immediate release.

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

US forces ‘ignored Iraq torture’

Hooded Iraqi men are arrested by US troops in Bahgad (2004)The US military said the disclosure could endanger US troops and Iraqis

A new batch of secret US military records being released by Wikileaks shows commanders did not investigate torture by the Iraqi authorities.

The documents also suggest “hundreds” of civilians were killed at US military checkpoints after the invasion in 2003.

And the files appear to show the US kept records of civilian deaths, despite previously denying it.

US Secretary of State Hillary Clinton criticised the largest leak of classified documents in US history.

Speaking to reporters in Washington earlier, Mrs Clinton said she condemned “in the most clear terms the disclosure of any information by individuals and or organisations which puts the lives of United States and its partners’ service members and civilians at risk”.

Wikileaks infuriated the US authorities in July by publishing more than 70,000 secret papers about the war in Afghanistan.

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

Care cuts ‘may hit hospital beds’

Hospital wardCouncils in England face a big cut in central government funding over the next four years

Hospital beds in England may fill up with the elderly and vulnerable because of cuts to local authority social care funding, a top NHS figure has warned.

The claim came from the head of the NHS Confederation, Nigel Edwards, in a letter to the Daily Telegraph.

Mr Edwards said people who needed medical treatment may be denied a hospital bed as a result of the cuts.

The Department for Health responded that an extra £2bn was being allocated to protect social care.

Health spending was ring-fenced in Chancellor George Osborne’s Spending Review.

However, councils in England are facing a 27% cut in central government funding over the next four years.

Mr Edwards, whose organisation represents health service bodies in England, said this funding squeeze could have a “knock-on effect” on the health service.

In his letter to the Telegraph, Mr Edwards said: “Less support from council services will quickly lead to increased pressure on emergency services and hospitals.

“Hospital beds will be blocked for those who badly need care because the support services the elderly require after discharge will not be available.”

Spending Review: Key measures

• £81bn cut from public spending over four years

• 19% average departmental cuts – less than the 25% expected

• £7bn extra welfare cuts, including changes to incapacity, housing benefit and tax credits

• £1.8bn increase in public sector pension employee contributions by 2014

• Rise in state pension age brought forward

• 7% cut for local councils from April next year

• Permanent bank levy

• Rail fares to rise 3% above inflation from 2012

He added: “When it comes to the care of the most vulnerable in our society, it really is essential that the NHS and local authorities are in it together.”

The Department of Health said it understood that “social care can impact on NHS demands”.

A spokeswoman said: “That’s why we are strengthening programmes like re-ablement and the 30-day re-admission tariff, which will integrate hospital care with care in the community.

“We have allocated an additional £2bn by 2014-15 – this extra boost, alongside an ambitious programme of efficiency, will ensure that there is enough funding available both to protect people’s access to services and deliver new approaches to improve quality and outcomes.

“We expect local health and social care professionals will work together to ensure that the funding is spent on joint health and social care priorities and improve outcomes for everyone.”

Select
Graphic showing current share of seatsGraphic showing predicted share of seats

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

Scots protest over planned cuts

George OsborneChancellor George Osborne unveiled the spending cuts on Wednesday

Thousands of people are expected to march through Edinburgh to protest against public sector cuts.

Union group the STUC has arranged the rally to demonstrate against measures in the UK government’s Spending Review.

On Wednesday, Chancellor George Osborne announced the most wide-ranging cuts in public spending for decades.

Union leaders said they had been “overwhelmed” by the response from members to the protest rally. People from across Scotland are expected.

At least 100 buses will carry demonstrators from all across Scotland to the march through Princes Street before a rally at the Ross Bandstand in Princes Street Gardens.

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

Dreading the cuts

Anne NovisAnne Novis says she is ‘terrified’ for her future

Marcus Bradford, 43, left paralysed on his right side by a stroke, says his social life outside his care home will all but end.

Paul Corbett, 56, who is waiting for heart surgery, fears he could lose his home.

Anne Novis, 54, in constant pain from a spinal injury, worries she could lose some of the funding for the carers who wash and dress her.

They are among hundreds of thousands of long-term sick and disabled people likely to feel the effects of Wednesday’s spending review, announced as the government tries to tackle the national deficit.

Benefit reductions, cuts to local authority budgets and continuing reforms of the old incapacity benefits system have left many facing uncertainty.

‘Sometimes suicidal’

Marcus relies on £49.50 a week – the “mobility component” of the Disability Living Allowance – to travel beyond the vicinity of his Essex care home.

Marcus BradfordMarcus Bradford worries he would not be able to visit his mother if his mobility allowance was cut

But from October 2012, this will be axed for all care home residents.

He says without it, he will have just £18 a week left over from the benefits that pay for the home, and that barely covers his toiletries and clothing.

He says he won’t be able to afford to visit his ailing 75-year-old mother 30 miles away, or to travel eight miles into nearby Clacton-on-Sea.

Some days, he already feels deeply depressed – “sometimes suicidal” – about his condition.

“We won’t be able to do anything, we’re going to be resigned to staying in the care home, 365 days a year,” he says.

The government says care homes should provide for such visits, and that people in residential care will get the financial help they need.

The spending review also included changes to the Employment and Support Allowance, brought in by Labour to replace incapacity benefit, for people too ill or disabled to work.

A new qualifying test has been introduced. Unless claimants are severely disabled or terminally ill, they are expected to try, with support, to develop their capacity for “work-related activity” and start to look for jobs.

But on Wednesday it was announced that, from April 2012, these claimants will be given a year to find work – after which only the poorest will continue to receive ESA.

“It could mean I’ll have to give the house up – and then I’ll have to ask for social housing, which is basically defeating what the government wants to do!”

Paul Corbett ESA claimant and former coach driver

Anyone who has not found work, whose partner earns more than £90 a week, or who has more than £16,000 assets, will lose the benefit.

For Paul Corbett, who had to give up his job as a coach driver when he developed heart problems, this would mean losing about £300 a month, though it can be more for some claimants.

Paul’s wife is paid £6.58 an hour for working at McDonalds near their home in Talbot Green, Rhondda Cynon Taff, which would push them over the threshold.

After four failed angioplasty operations, he hopes another attempt – or open heart surgery – will eventually get him back to work.

But if he has to wait too long, he fears his ESA will be taken away.

Paul may still be eligible for other benefits, but he has already used up all his savings.

“It could mean I’ll have to give the house up – and then I’ll have to ask for social housing, which is basically defeating what the government wants to do!”

There are 200,000 people on ESA, classed in the “work-related activity group”, that the changes are likely to affect.

But another 1.5 million people on incapacity benefit will be re-assessed and transferred to the new system over the next three years.

Work and Pensions Secretary Iain Duncan Smith has said the reforms are “not about forcing sick and disabled people who cannot work into employment”.

“”I’ve been like this for 20 years, I’m not going to be able to get a job… it’s like la la land”

Anne Novis Former community worker now on disability benefits

He believes nearly one in four people on incapacity benefits are actually fit for work.

Mr Duncan Smith says he wants to end the “human tragedy” of the “lost potential of so many people who have been dumped to languish at the bottom end of society”.

But Anne Novis, a former community worker who has fostered 23 children, says she’ll feel “sick to the stomach” when the letter arrives inviting her to an assessment of her incapacity benefit status.

She knows of people with disabilities more severe than her spinal condition, who have been considered able to try to seek work.

While she is highly articulate, and can perform tasks like sending e-mails, she says she could do no more than spend an hour or two per day working online or on the phone, from her bed or reclining chair.

“But that won’t earn enough to live on,” she says.

“I’ve been like this for 20 years, my condition is deteriorating, I’m not going to be able to get a job… it’s like la la land.”

WheelchairThe government has pledged to “protect the vulnerable”

Disability campaigners say the new tests are flawed, pointing out that 40% of appeals against decisions are upheld.

But the Department for Work and Pensions says it is “unfair to suggest the system isn’t working” and points out that only 5% of all cases are overturned, although it has commissioned a review of the test.

Anne also fears a change in her incapacity benefit status would affect other disability benefits which are tied to it.

One of these funds half of the 70 hours a week of personal care on which she relies.

“I am personally terrified for myself,” she says. “I feel that I won’t have a life, that I would just be a burden on my family.”

She also fears for the local authority funding that covers the rest of her care.

David Congdon, head of campaigns and policy at the learning disability charity Mencap, says there is already an “enormous funding crisis” in social care as the population ages.

And local authorities now face 26% cuts to their budgets over the next four years.

The Treasury has transferred an extra £2bn from the health budget, but Mr Congdon says this “won’t really bridge the gap”.

The government promises to “protect the vulnerable”. But many disabled people have serious doubts.

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

Nuclear submarine to be assessed

HMS AstuteHMS Astute was grounded on a shingle bank for 10 hours

A nuclear-powered submarine which spent 10 hours grounded on a shingle bank off the isle of Skye is to be assessed to see if its rudder was damaged.

HMS Astute was towed free by a tug on Friday evening and taken to deep water where a survey will be carried out.

Engineers will determine whether the £1bn submarine can return to its base at Faslane on the Clyde under its own power or if it requires assistance.

The boat was out on sea trials when it became stuck close to the Skye Bridge.

Related stories

HMS Astute, which was built by BAE Systems in Barrow in Furness, Cumbria, was not expected to enter service until next year.

It weighs 7,800 tonnes, equivalent to nearly 1,000 double-decker buses, and is almost 100 metres (328ft) long.

Its Spearfish torpedoes and Tomahawk cruise missiles are capable of delivering pinpoint strikes from 2,000km (1,240 miles) with conventional weapons.

The submarine’s nuclear reactor means that it will not need refuelling once in its entire 25-year life and it makes its own air and water, enabling it to circumnavigate the globe without needing to surface.

It is thought its rudder become stuck on a shingle bank at about 0800 BST on Friday.

There were no reports of any injuries and the Ministry of Defence said it was not a “nuclear incident”.

The vessel was towed free at high tide, at about 1800 BST.

John Ainslie, co-ordinator of Scottish CND, said: “This is just the latest in a long line of incidents involving nuclear submarines off the west coast of Scotland.

“Inquiries into previous incidents have shown an appalling lack of common sense and basic navigation skills on these hi-tech submarines.”

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