French workers to step up protest

Civil Protection unit members clean the streets and piled-up rubbish in Marseille on 20 OctoberRubbish has been piling up on the streets of Marseille after nine days of strikes by collectors

Workers protesting against pension reforms in France have partially blocked access to Marseille airport.

Only a trickle of travellers are through a blockade affecting all roads to the terminal, unions say. The city is already crippled by a port blockade and a strike by rubbish collectors.

There have been escalating protests across France against government plans to raise the pension age from 60 to 62.

Related stories

Correspondents say Marseille is now the main focus of the protest.

There is no public transport, trains have been delayed or cancelled and the ports blockaded, and a nine-day strike by rubbish collectors means several thousand tonnes of refuse is piling up on the streets.

Central government official Michel Sappin, said: “There is a real danger to the safety and health of Marseille.”

The upper house of the French legislature is due to vote on raising the retirement age later this week. The lower house has already approved it.

At the scene

Marseille is becoming the waste-bin of France. At least that’s what some of the people mutter.

If the wind is blowing fiercely enough off the Mediterranean – as it does at this time of year – you can just about avoid the stench of rotting fruit and veg.

But if it isn’t, a walk along the main shopping thoroughfare can leave you with a lung full of bad air.

The rubbish hasn’t been cleared off the streets for over a week now. Great piles stand against shop windows.

A woman pushes her way past the black bags and cardboard boxes that have been thrown against the Rotary Club offices.

People talk of the rats running out from the piles of rubbish. One shopkeeper, standing outside his electrical shop, says he’s concerned about disease taking hold.

President Sarkozy has called for an end to the disruption.

“If it is not stopped quickly, this disorder which is aimed at paralysing the country could have consequences for jobs by damaging the normal running of economic activity,” he said on Wednesday.

He said he would press ahead with unpopular plans to raise the retirement age from 60 to 62 and the full state pension age from 65 to 67.

The debate on the pension reform bill started in June. But there are still more than 200 amendments to be debated and as left-wing senators pick a fight on each and every one of them, they are likely still to be ploughing through this debate into the weekend.

Ahead of the vote, correspondents say unions are stepping up the pressure on a 10th day of refinery strikes, go-slows on motorways and work stoppages at regional airports, with union leaders scheduled to meet later in the day to decide on their next move.

The more militant unions see this as the moment to pile on the pressure and there is a precedent for such a move, says the BBC’s Christian Fraser in Paris.

In 2006, student protests forced the government of the day to retreat on the controversial labour reform bill, even after the then president Jacques Chirac had signed it into law.

Some unions want to continue the protests whatever happens in parliament but that will depend on public support and the resolve of their members, many of whom have gone without pay for days even weeks, our correspondent adds.

President Sarkozy opinion poll graphic

About a quarter of France’s service stations had no fuel on Wednesday, and strikes also stopped work at two of France’s three liquefied natural gas (LNG) terminals.

On Wednesday, the country began importing electricity as the wave of protest action took hold of energy supplies. At least 12 of France’s 58 reactors were shut for maintenance but the unions say production has been cut at four others.

Interior Minister Brice Hortefeux authorised use of the paramilitary police to break blockades at fuel depots. He said he respected the right to protest, but that did not include the right to block workers or to commit pillage or violence.

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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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French workers to step up protest

Civil Protection unit members clean the streets and piled-up rubbish in Marseille on 20 OctoberRubbish has been piling up on the streets of Marseille after nine days of strikes by collectors

Workers protesting against pension reforms in France have partially blocked access to Marseille airport.

Only a trickle of travellers are through a blockade affecting all roads to the terminal, unions say. The city is already crippled by a port blockade and a strike by rubbish collectors.

There have been escalating protests across France against government plans to raise the pension age from 60 to 62.

Related stories

Correspondents say Marseille is now the main focus of the protest.

There is no public transport, trains have been delayed or cancelled and the ports blockaded, and a nine-day strike by rubbish collectors means several thousand tonnes of refuse is piling up on the streets.

Central government official Michel Sappin, said: “There is a real danger to the safety and health of Marseille.”

The upper house of the French legislature is due to vote on raising the retirement age later this week. The lower house has already approved it.

At the scene

Marseille is becoming the waste-bin of France. At least that’s what some of the people mutter.

If the wind is blowing fiercely enough off the Mediterranean – as it does at this time of year – you can just about avoid the stench of rotting fruit and veg.

But if it isn’t, a walk along the main shopping thoroughfare can leave you with a lung full of bad air.

The rubbish hasn’t been cleared off the streets for over a week now. Great piles stand against shop windows.

A woman pushes her way past the black bags and cardboard boxes that have been thrown against the Rotary Club offices.

People talk of the rats running out from the piles of rubbish. One shopkeeper, standing outside his electrical shop, says he’s concerned about disease taking hold.

President Sarkozy has called for an end to the disruption.

“If it is not stopped quickly, this disorder which is aimed at paralysing the country could have consequences for jobs by damaging the normal running of economic activity,” he said on Wednesday.

He said he would press ahead with unpopular plans to raise the retirement age from 60 to 62 and the full state pension age from 65 to 67.

The debate on the pension reform bill started in June. But there are still more than 200 amendments to be debated and as left-wing senators pick a fight on each and every one of them, they are likely still to be ploughing through this debate into the weekend.

Ahead of the vote, correspondents say unions are stepping up the pressure on a 10th day of refinery strikes, go-slows on motorways and work stoppages at regional airports, with union leaders scheduled to meet later in the day to decide on their next move.

The more militant unions see this as the moment to pile on the pressure and there is a precedent for such a move, says the BBC’s Christian Fraser in Paris.

In 2006, student protests forced the government of the day to retreat on the controversial labour reform bill, even after the then president Jacques Chirac had signed it into law.

Some unions want to continue the protests whatever happens in parliament but that will depend on public support and the resolve of their members, many of whom have gone without pay for days even weeks, our correspondent adds.

President Sarkozy opinion poll graphic

About a quarter of France’s service stations had no fuel on Wednesday, and strikes also stopped work at two of France’s three liquefied natural gas (LNG) terminals.

On Wednesday, the country began importing electricity as the wave of protest action took hold of energy supplies. At least 12 of France’s 58 reactors were shut for maintenance but the unions say production has been cut at four others.

Interior Minister Brice Hortefeux authorised use of the paramilitary police to break blockades at fuel depots. He said he respected the right to protest, but that did not include the right to block workers or to commit pillage or violence.

Send your pictures and videos to [email protected] or text them to 61124 (UK) or 0044 7725 100 100 (International). If you have a large file you can upload here.

Read the terms and conditions

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.

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

Rise in GCSE benchmark pass rate

Boys from Pimlico Academy celebrate GCSE resultsMore than half of England’s pupils are now getting five good GCSE passes

The proportion of pupils in England scoring five good GCSE passes including maths and English has risen, provisional results show.

This year, 53% of pupils attained the benchmark level – between A* and C – compared with 49.7% last year.

However, at A-level, the percentage of students gaining at least two passes fell, from 95.1% to 93.6%.

The schools minister warned that nearly a quarter of a million pupils left school without a range of good GCSEs.

According to the GCSE figures released by the Department for Education, almost three in four (74.7%) pupils achieved five C grades not including English and maths.

This year, figures including iGCSE results were also provided.

With those included, 53.1% of students achieved 5 or more GCSE passes from A* to C including maths and English.

The highest scoring local authority in terms of good GCSE passes including maths and English was Kensington and Chelsea, with 70.9%, followed by Sutton, with 70.2, and Redbridge with 68.7%.

The lowest was Knowsley in the North West, with 37.8%, followed by Barnsley, with 39.9%.

“We need to narrow this historic and entrenched attainment gap, especially between those from the poorest and wealthiest backgrounds,” said Schools Minister Nick Gibb.

“It is a waste of talent that children from disadvantaged backgrounds are continuing to miss out on universities and jobs just because of the accidents of their birth,” he said.

Mr Gibb praised “exceptional progress” made by academies, whose five good GCSE pass rates, including maths and English, rose 7.4 percentage points on last year.

Academies were established by Labour targeting low-performing schools in deprived areas, but the Conservatives want to expand the programme to all schools, beginning with those classed as “outstanding” by Ofsted.

The figures for A-level results showed that one in eight (12.4%) 16-18-year-olds was awarded at least three A* or A grades.

But this was down very slightly from 12.7% last year.

Private school students scored substantially better than state school pupils on this measure, with nearly a third (31.4%) of private school students achieving three or more A* or A grades, compared with one in 10 (10.6%) state school pupils.

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

Rise in GCSE benchmark pass rate

Boys from Pimlico Academy celebrate GCSE resultsMore than half of England’s pupils are now getting five good GCSE passes

The proportion of pupils in England scoring five good GCSE passes including maths and English has risen, provisional results show.

This year, 53% of pupils attained the benchmark level – between A* and C – compared with 49.7% last year.

However, at A-level, the percentage of students gaining at least two passes fell, from 95.1% to 93.6%.

The schools minister warned that nearly a quarter of a million pupils left school without a range of good GCSEs.

According to the GCSE figures released by the Department for Education, almost three in four (74.7%) pupils achieved five C grades not including English and maths.

This year, figures including iGCSE results were also provided.

With those included, 53.1% of students achieved 5 or more GCSE passes from A* to C including maths and English.

The highest scoring local authority in terms of good GCSE passes including maths and English was Kensington and Chelsea, with 70.9%, followed by Sutton, with 70.2, and Redbridge with 68.7%.

The lowest was Knowsley in the North West, with 37.8%, followed by Barnsley, with 39.9%.

“We need to narrow this historic and entrenched attainment gap, especially between those from the poorest and wealthiest backgrounds,” said Schools Minister Nick Gibb.

“It is a waste of talent that children from disadvantaged backgrounds are continuing to miss out on universities and jobs just because of the accidents of their birth,” he said.

Mr Gibb praised “exceptional progress” made by academies, whose five good GCSE pass rates, including maths and English, rose 7.4 percentage points on last year.

Academies were established by Labour targeting low-performing schools in deprived areas, but the Conservatives want to expand the programme to all schools, beginning with those classed as “outstanding” by Ofsted.

The figures for A-level results showed that one in eight (12.4%) 16-18-year-olds was awarded at least three A* or A grades.

But this was down very slightly from 12.7% last year.

Private school students scored substantially better than state school pupils on this measure, with nearly a third (31.4%) of private school students achieving three or more A* or A grades, compared with one in 10 (10.6%) state school pupils.

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

Councils ‘to lose 100,000 jobs’

Refuse collectionLocal services face cuts, the Local Government Association says

Up to 100,000 council jobs could be lost in England as a result of government spending cuts, the Local Government Association has said.

LGA chairman Baroness Eaton said “one in 10 of the workforce” would lose their jobs.

Some would go through voluntary redundancy and “natural wastage” but sackings were unavoidable, she added.

Chancellor George Osborne cut funding for local authorities by 7.1% from April in Wednesday’s spending review.

The Office for Budgetary Responsibility has estimated 500,000 public sector jobs could go over the next four years, as the chancellor cuts £81bn from public spending.

The LGA has suggested that about 20% of the lost jobs will be in local authorities.

Baroness Eaton dismissed suggestions that some councils would “go bust” but she added: “These cuts will hurt. We know this means there will be fewer libraries, more pot holes going unrepaired, parks shutting earlier and youth clubs closing.”

It also meant council workers would face redundancy, she said.

“Some jobs will go in natural wastage, not filling vacancies and voluntary redundancy. But there will be job losses where real people dedicated in their profession won’t be there any more.”

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

Councils ‘to lose 100,000 jobs’

Refuse collectionLocal services face cuts, the Local Government Association says

Up to 100,000 council jobs could be lost in England as a result of government spending cuts, the Local Government Association has said.

LGA chairman Baroness Eaton said “one in 10 of the workforce” would lose their jobs.

Some would go through voluntary redundancy and “natural wastage” but sackings were unavoidable, she added.

Chancellor George Osborne cut funding for local authorities by 7.1% from April in Wednesday’s spending review.

The Office for Budgetary Responsibility has estimated 500,000 public sector jobs could go over the next four years, as the chancellor cuts £81bn from public spending.

The LGA has suggested that about 20% of the lost jobs will be in local authorities.

Baroness Eaton dismissed suggestions that some councils would “go bust” but she added: “These cuts will hurt. We know this means there will be fewer libraries, more pot holes going unrepaired, parks shutting earlier and youth clubs closing.”

It also meant council workers would face redundancy, she said.

“Some jobs will go in natural wastage, not filling vacancies and voluntary redundancy. But there will be job losses where real people dedicated in their profession won’t be there any more.”

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

MP says her blog is ‘70% fiction’

Nadine DorriesNadine Dorries was cleared of any expenses wrong-doing

MP Nadine Dorries has said that the blog she writes on her constituency website is “70% fiction, 30% fact”.

She was criticised by the MPs’ standards watchdog for giving the impression on the site that she spent more time at her Mid-Beds constituency home than she actually did.

She said she wanted to reassure people about her commitment to the area.

Ms Dorries, a Conservative MP since 2005, was cleared of the main charge of misusing her allowances.

Parliamentary Commissioner for Standards, John Lyon, rejected a series of complaints made by a BNP spokesman that she lied about where her second home was and made inappropriate claims.

After a 15 month inquiry, he said: “Ms Dorries was not in breach of the rules of the House in claiming against Parliamentary allowances for her constituency home.”

“I rely heavily on poetic licence and frequently replace one place name/event/fact with another”

Nadine DorriesEx-MP Mackay told to apologise

But she was criticised for comments on her blog which “suggested that she spent the majority of her weekends in the constituency, whilst she had told the Commissioner that nearly all weekends were spent in her main home”.

Explaining the discrepancy, she told the watchdog: “My blog is 70% fiction and 30% fact.

“It is written as a tool to enable my constituents to know me better and to reassure them of my commitment to Mid Bedfordshire.

“I rely heavily on poetic licence and frequently replace one place name/event/fact with another.

“In the light of the bullying onslaught of the Daily Telegraph (which reported the claims about her expenses) I used my blog to its best effect in reassuring my constituents of my commitment to Mid Beds. My commitment is absolute and is always my first consideration regardless of where I sleep at night.

“However, I have always been aware that should my personal domestic arrangements become the knowledge of my political opponents, they would be able to exaggerate that to good effect. Hence the reason for my blog and my need to reassure my constituents.”

She also told Mr Lyons that she had wanted to maintain “some degree of a private life” and that, although she was often in the constituency at weekends, as she had said on her blog, that did not mean she slept there.

The Commons standards and privileges committee said Mr Lyons accepted her explanation of the blog entries but “notes that they ‘provided a misleading impression of her arrangements’, as did as did her comments about her use of the constituency home reported in the newspaper article which was referred to in the original complaint”.

Ms Dorries’ blog is one of the most widely-read and popular blogs at Westminster. Former foreign secretary Jack Straw is among those who have said they are a fan.

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

MP says her blog is ‘70% fiction’

Nadine DorriesNadine Dorries was cleared of any expenses wrong-doing

MP Nadine Dorries has said that the blog she writes on her constituency website is “70% fiction, 30% fact”.

She was criticised by the MPs’ standards watchdog for giving the impression on the site that she spent more time at her Mid-Beds constituency home than she actually did.

She said she wanted to reassure people about her commitment to the area.

Ms Dorries, a Conservative MP since 2005, was cleared of the main charge of misusing her allowances.

Parliamentary Commissioner for Standards, John Lyon, rejected a series of complaints made by a BNP spokesman that she lied about where her second home was and made inappropriate claims.

After a 15 month inquiry, he said: “Ms Dorries was not in breach of the rules of the House in claiming against Parliamentary allowances for her constituency home.”

“I rely heavily on poetic licence and frequently replace one place name/event/fact with another”

Nadine DorriesEx-MP Mackay told to apologise

But she was criticised for comments on her blog which “suggested that she spent the majority of her weekends in the constituency, whilst she had told the Commissioner that nearly all weekends were spent in her main home”.

Explaining the discrepancy, she told the watchdog: “My blog is 70% fiction and 30% fact.

“It is written as a tool to enable my constituents to know me better and to reassure them of my commitment to Mid Bedfordshire.

“I rely heavily on poetic licence and frequently replace one place name/event/fact with another.

“In the light of the bullying onslaught of the Daily Telegraph (which reported the claims about her expenses) I used my blog to its best effect in reassuring my constituents of my commitment to Mid Beds. My commitment is absolute and is always my first consideration regardless of where I sleep at night.

“However, I have always been aware that should my personal domestic arrangements become the knowledge of my political opponents, they would be able to exaggerate that to good effect. Hence the reason for my blog and my need to reassure my constituents.”

She also told Mr Lyons that she had wanted to maintain “some degree of a private life” and that, although she was often in the constituency at weekends, as she had said on her blog, that did not mean she slept there.

The Commons standards and privileges committee said Mr Lyons accepted her explanation of the blog entries but “notes that they ‘provided a misleading impression of her arrangements’, as did as did her comments about her use of the constituency home reported in the newspaper article which was referred to in the original complaint”.

Ms Dorries’ blog is one of the most widely-read and popular blogs at Westminster. Former foreign secretary Jack Straw is among those who have said they are a fan.

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

Fifa begins World Cup bids probe

Spain, Portugal and Qatar are being investigated by Fifa in connection with collusion over voting for the 2018 and 2022 World Cups, BBC Sport understands.

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

Fifa begins World Cup bids probe

Spain, Portugal and Qatar are being investigated by Fifa in connection with collusion over voting for the 2018 and 2022 World Cups, BBC Sport understands.

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

Fears over health budget promises

Hospital nurseThe NHS was high profile during the election campaign

Questions are being asked about the high-profile promises being made over health and social care spending by the government.

Chancellor George Osborne claimed to have increased NHS spending as well as pumping an extra £2bn into social care in the Spending Review in England.

But shadow health secretary John Healey suggests the NHS figures do not add up.

Meanwhile, campaigners fear social care may not see all the money as, overall, councils’ budgets are being cut.

The Tories made increasing NHS spending one of the central themes of the election campaign with the slogan “we will cut the debt, not the NHS”.

The government said on Wednesday it had kept to that promise – the combined capital and resource budget will rise by 0.1% a year on average in real terms throughout this parliament.

However, in a letter to Health Secretary Andrew Lansley, Mr Healey said these rises ignore several extra costs the NHS is having to bear.

“More effective partnership working must be the desired outcome”

Stephen Burke Counsel and Care

He said the government is taking £1bn a year out of the NHS for social care by insisting the health service invest in services that overlap with council social services departments, such as rehab care following discharge from hospital. He accused ministers of “double counting”.

The bill for the shake-up of the health service – primary care trusts are being scrapped and GPs put in charge of local budgets – will also amount to between £2bn and £3bn over the next four years, while the VAT increase will cost £250m.

Mr Healey said: “The NHS will have to find these extra costs within a funding settlement which it is increasingly clear falls far short of what many in the NHS believed your government had promised.”

These are on top of the extra long-term pressures from the cost of new drugs, obesity and the ageing population.

Independent experts, including the King’s Fund and Nuffield Trust think-tanks, agreed a case could be made for saying the small real terms rise would be swallowed up.

The Nuffield Trust also raised concerns about the extra money earmarked for social care.

Spending review branding

A special BBC News season examining the approaching cuts to public sector spending

The Spending Review: Making It Clear

Of the £2bn a year extra that is being ploughed into the system by 2014, half is coming from a direct grant to local government.

But as councils are facing an overall cut of 27% in their budget from central government, the Nuffield Trust said social care may not end up seeing the extra money.

Jennifer Dixon, chief executive of the think tank, said: “The reality is that local authority budgets will be stretched and funds for social care are not ring-fenced, so the extra £1bn per year is by no means certain.”

Stephen Burke, of Counsel and Care, the older people’s charity, agreed it was a risk. He also said getting the NHS and councils to work together to make sure the £1bn of NHS funds benefited social care was a “major challenge.”

He said in the past the two sectors had often failed to work together.

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

Fears over health budget promises

Hospital nurseThe NHS was high profile during the election campaign

Questions are being asked about the high-profile promises being made over health and social care spending by the government.

Chancellor George Osborne claimed to have increased NHS spending as well as pumping an extra £2bn into social care in the Spending Review in England.

But shadow health secretary John Healey suggests the NHS figures do not add up.

Meanwhile, campaigners fear social care may not see all the money as, overall, councils’ budgets are being cut.

The Tories made increasing NHS spending one of the central themes of the election campaign with the slogan “we will cut the debt, not the NHS”.

The government said on Wednesday it had kept to that promise – the combined capital and resource budget will rise by 0.1% a year on average in real terms throughout this parliament.

However, in a letter to Health Secretary Andrew Lansley, Mr Healey said these rises ignore several extra costs the NHS is having to bear.

“More effective partnership working must be the desired outcome”

Stephen Burke Counsel and Care

He said the government is taking £1bn a year out of the NHS for social care by insisting the health service invest in services that overlap with council social services departments, such as rehab care following discharge from hospital. He accused ministers of “double counting”.

The bill for the shake-up of the health service – primary care trusts are being scrapped and GPs put in charge of local budgets – will also amount to between £2bn and £3bn over the next four years, while the VAT increase will cost £250m.

Mr Healey said: “The NHS will have to find these extra costs within a funding settlement which it is increasingly clear falls far short of what many in the NHS believed your government had promised.”

These are on top of the extra long-term pressures from the cost of new drugs, obesity and the ageing population.

Independent experts, including the King’s Fund and Nuffield Trust think-tanks, agreed a case could be made for saying the small real terms rise would be swallowed up.

The Nuffield Trust also raised concerns about the extra money earmarked for social care.

Spending review branding

A special BBC News season examining the approaching cuts to public sector spending

The Spending Review: Making It Clear

Of the £2bn a year extra that is being ploughed into the system by 2014, half is coming from a direct grant to local government.

But as councils are facing an overall cut of 27% in their budget from central government, the Nuffield Trust said social care may not end up seeing the extra money.

Jennifer Dixon, chief executive of the think tank, said: “The reality is that local authority budgets will be stretched and funds for social care are not ring-fenced, so the extra £1bn per year is by no means certain.”

Stephen Burke, of Counsel and Care, the older people’s charity, agreed it was a risk. He also said getting the NHS and councils to work together to make sure the £1bn of NHS funds benefited social care was a “major challenge.”

He said in the past the two sectors had often failed to work together.

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

Avandia ban hurts Glaxo profits

Avantia pills and bottleSales of Avandia were banned in Europe because of a suspected link to heart disease

GlaxoSmithKline has announced third quarter profits weighed down by the European ban of diabetes drug Avandia and falling demand for flu vaccines.

The company made £1.29bn ($2bn) in the period, down 3.5% from a year ago.

Sales fell 2% versus a year earlier, but were up 2% if Avandia and pandemic drug sales are excluded, the firm said.

European regulators banned the diabetes drug in September, while sales in the US have also been restricted, because of a suspected link to heart disease.

GLAXOSMITHKLINE Last Updated at 21 Oct 2010, 09:43 ET *Chart shows local time GlaxoSmithKline intraday chartprice change %1274.00 p

-18.00

-1.39

More data on this share price

Sales of Glaxo’s herpes drug, Valtrez, were also hurt by growing competition from similar generic rival products after its patent expired, according to the drugmaker’s results.

Although a fall in sales was anticipated by most analysts, the figures nonetheless disappointed markets, with Glaxo’s share price falling more than 2% on the news.

Chief executive Andrew Witty blamed US healthcare reform and European austerity measures for the poor performance.

“Despite the challenging environment we face, I remain confident that [Glaxo]’s outlook continues to improve,” said Mr Witty.

The disappointing results follow on from a second quarter in which Glaxo recorded a loss due to one-off charges for restructuring costs as well as legal costs associated with Avandia among others.

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

Sheridan plot ‘in his own mind’

Tommy Sheridan and Katrine TrolleMr Sheridan has been cross-examining ex-colleague, Ms Trolle

A plot to “bring down” former Scottish Socialist Party (SSP) leader Tommy Sheridan “existed mostly in his mind”, a court has been told.

The claim was made by ex-colleague Katrine Trolle under questioning from Mr Sheridan who is conducting his own defence at the High Court in Glasgow.

The former MSP and his wife Gail, both 46, are on trial for perjury.

They deny lying during his successful defamation case against the News of the World newspaper in 2006.

Mr Sheridan won £200,000 in damages after the newspaper printed allegations about his private life, claiming he was an adulterer who had visited a swingers’ club.

After a police investigation, Mr and Mrs Sheridan were charged with perjury.

Ms Trolle previously told the trial she slept with Mr Sheridan on a number of occasions after meeting him on the SSP campaign trail in Glasgow in 2000.

The 36-year-old, who has travelled from Denmark to give evidence at the trial, said she had told police that Mr Sheridan had telephoned her and said party members were “out to get him”.

She added that she was unable to remember the phone conversation with him despite reporting it.

Gail SheridanMrs Sheridan is also accused of perjury

Of the alleged claims of an SSP plot mentioned in the phone call, she told Mr Sheridan: “I think it was mostly in your mind.”

Mr Sheridan accused Ms Trolle of collaborating with other SSP members, including Allison Kane, who has already given evidence to the trial.

She told the court she heard Sheridan admit he had been to Cupid’s club in Manchester on two occasions during an emergency meeting of the party’s executive on 9 November 2004.

Ms Trolle said she was good friends with Ms Kane but would never “lie in court for her”.

Mr Sheridan said: “If Allison Kane and others wanted you to support their plot to bring me down, even including lying in court, would you support them?”

Ms Trolle replied: “No.”

Mr Sheridan also showed the court an article printed by the News of the World on 14 November 2004, with the headline: “Tommy is Finished”.

It quoted the party’s regional organiser for the north of Scotland, Duncan Rowan, as saying that people had been “lining up for him in the party for years”.

Ms Trolle said the article implied that Mr Rowan “thought people wanted to do you in”.

She added: “But Duncan also thought there was going to be an armed uprising in Scotland for Scottish independence. I wouldn’t put too much into this. He saw enemies in his own shadow.”

Ms Trolle also told the jury she was left “disappointed and probably also a bit angry” when Sheridan won his action against the News of the World.

It is alleged that Mr Sheridan made false statements as a witness in his defamation action against the News of the World on 21 July 2006.

He also denies another charge of attempting to persuade a witness to commit perjury shortly before the 23-day legal action got under way.

Mrs Sheridan denies making false statements on 31 July 2006, after being sworn in as a witness in the civil jury trial at the Court of Session in Edinburgh.

The trial is due to last between two and three months and is expected to become the longest perjury case in Scottish legal history.

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

Wenger in fresh Fabregas pledge

Arsenal manager Arsene Wenger says he is confident he can keep hold of Cesc Fabregas “for a few more years”.

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