Bank levy to be made permanent

George Osborne

Osborne: ‘The levy will raise more net each year for the Exchequer than the one year bonus tax did last year’

A levy on bank balance sheets will be made permanent, potentially raising billions of pounds, Chancellor George Osborne has confirmed.

The chancellor said he would introduce legislation on Thursday in order “to extract the maximum sustainable tax revenues from financial services”.

He said he wanted banks to make a fair contribution.

The banking industry said the move would have an impact, particularly on overseas banks operating here.

The government expects the levy to generate about £2.5bn a year.

“We neither want to let banks off making their fair contribution, nor do we want to drive them abroad,” the chancellor said.

“Many hundreds of thousands of jobs across the whole United Kingdom depend on Britain being a competitive place for financial services,” he added.

The levy is not expected to affect smaller banks and building societies but the UK operations of foreign banks will have to pay the levy.

The British Bankers’ Association said that banks “fully understand they have a role to play in the UK’s economic recovery”.

“Decisions taken today will have an effect on the whole industry and particularly on overseas banks operating in the City,” it added.

“We clearly need to see the detail of today’s announcements to be able to assess their impact on the UK banking sector and our attractiveness as a global financial centre.”

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But it added that it was pleased that the chancellor had indicated the government wanted to strike a balance between raising tax revenues and keeping the UK’s financial services sector competitive.

The levy is expected to be introduced in January and differs to the previous government’s tax on bank bonuses.

It will be a tax on the total size of bank balance sheets, but certain items, including retail deposits covered by insurance and bank capital will be excluded.

According to June’s Budget documents, the levy will be set at 0.04% in the first year and will then rise to 0.07%.

The chancellor also reiterated that he wanted all of the UK’s top 15 banks to sign up to a code of practice on taxation introduced by the previous government.

He said that only four banks had signed up so far and had earlier set a November deadline for the rest to comply.

The code of conduct seeks to deter banks from avoiding tax, and follows reports that many banks have used complex transactions and financial instrument to avoid tax.

The code calls on banks to ensure that their tax and the tax obligations of their customers are observed – and that they do not go out of their way to avoid tax for themselves or clients

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Pair guilty of ‘sex abuse’ death

Robert DaleyRobert Daley was stabbed to death at his home in Stockwell

A boy and girl have been found guilty of killing a man who had been accused of sexually assaulting one of them.

The 15-year-old girl, who cannot be named due to her age, told the Old Bailey Robert Daley touched her indecently twice when she was 12.

The pair had denied fatally stabbing the 45-year-old at his flat in Stockwell, south London, in April. The girl was found guilty of manslaughter.

The 15-year-old boy was found guilty of murder.

The prosecution said the defendants, then both 14, had gone “to teach him a lesson”.

Earlier that day, Mr Daley had been informed that the Crown Prosecution Service was dropping a case involving an allegation of sexual assault against him.

The girl, her 15-year-old sister and a woman had complained to police that the heavy drinking crack user had abused them.

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Lady Thatcher ‘still in hospital’

Baroness ThatcherBaroness Thatcher was PM from 1979 to 1990

Former Prime Minister Baroness Thatcher has been admitted to hospital.

It is understood that the Conservative peer was taken to Cromwell Hospital in west London on Tuesday evening, to be treated for an infection.

A spokesman said her condition was not serious and she was expected to be home in a few days.

Last week, Baroness Thatcher – who was prime minister from 1979 to 1990 – pulled out of a visit to Downing Street to mark her birthday, because of flu.

The BBC understands that she has not completely recovered and the hospital admission is linked to last week’s illness.

In 2005, Baroness Thatcher was advised by doctors that she should not make public speeches in the wake of some minor strokes.

But she still attends some public functions, including a recent address by the Pope during his state visit to the UK.

In March 2008, she was taken ill during a dinner in Westminster and spent the night in hospital as a precaution, bit was later given a clean bill of health.

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Gazza warned he could face jail

Paul Gascoigne outside Newcastle Magistrates CourtPaul Gascoigne was told he could be jailed

Former footballer Paul Gascoigne has been warned he could be jailed after admitting driving while more than four times the legal alcohol limit.

The 43-year-old Tyneside-born former England midfielder appeared at Newcastle Magistrates Court.

Gascoigne was stopped by police in Newcastle on 8 October.

He is due to stand trial next month for allegedly drinking and driving in North Yorkshire in February.

At Newcastle Magistrates Court on Wednesday, District Judge Stephen Erl was told Gascoigne had 142mg of alcohol in 100ml of breath when he was stopped in Jesmond, Newcastle, on 8 October.

The legal limit is 35mg.

Judge Erl said he would sentence Gascoigne on 11 November after the preparation of probation reports.

He said all options “up to and including a custodial sentence” were open.

In a football career spanning nearly 20 years, Gascoigne played for Newcastle, Tottenham, Lazio, Rangers, Middlesbrough and Everton. He won 57 England caps.

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Increase in ‘classroom spending’

girl counting Schools may not know for several months how they will be hit, say head teachers’ leaders

Schools in England are to get a real-terms increase in funding, the chancellor George Osborne has said.

The schools budget will rise from £35bn to £39bn for the next four years, he told MPs.

Educational Maintenance Grants – paid to encourage 16-to-19 year-olds to stay in school and training – are to be “replaced”.

The Department for Business, Innovation and Skills – is to be cut by 7.1%.

Details just emerging from the Department for Education say while the schools budget will increase, there will be a 3% cut in the department’s “resource spending”.

The Sure Start scheme, which provides centres and services to families of young children, will continue.

It will be protected “in cash terms”, Mr Osborne said, and will focus on its original remit.

Mr Osborne announced there would be “personalised budgets” for “special educational needs”. Details were not given.

Councils in England have learned that they are facing an overall 7.1% cut in revenue.

Funds given to councils for schools will continue to be ring-fenced (will have to be spent on schools). Mr Osborne said the funds would be in the form of a “simplified schools grant”.

Education is devolved across the UK, but Mr Osborne said the funding mechanism for Scotland, Wales and Northern Ireland meant the “relative protection” of education would be passed on.

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Court rules in favour of pre-nup

Katrin Radmacher and Nicolas Granatino Katrin Radmacher and Nicolas Granatino spent most of their married life in west London

A decision by the Supreme Court later in the divorce case of a German heiress could change the law on pre-nuptial agreements in England and Wales.

In July, the Court of Appeal agreed that Katrin Radmacher, thought to be worth £100m, should be protected by the terms of a German marriage contract.

But her ex-husband Nicolas Granatino is fighting to get that ruling overturned.

So-called “pre-nups” are not currently binding in England and Wales, but the outcome of the case could change that.

Ms Radmacher’s former husband had agreed not to make any claims on her fortune if they split up, but was awarded £5.85m by a High Court judge in 2008.

She challenged that decision and judges at the Court of Appeal agreed that the couple’s pre-nuptial contract should have been taken into account.

They slashed his lump sum payment to about £1m. Mr Granatino also received a £2.5m fund for a house, which would return to Ms Radmacher when the younger of their two daughters, aged 10 and seven, reaches 22.

Mr Granatino says being forced to accept the smaller settlement would leave him in financial ruin, and he is asking the Supreme Court to reverse the decision.

“Making pre-nups legal isn’t a vote winner”

Andrew Newbury Law Commission

Before the Court of Appeal judgement was handed down, it was understood pre-nuptial agreements were not recognised in English law.

But in making their ruling the judges said “decisive weight” must be given by the courts in England and Wales to such contracts.

Mr Granatino, who is French and an investment banker who became an Oxford University researcher, and his former wife, who is a German heiress to a paper company, signed their pre-nup in 1998.

They spent most of their life together in Chelsea, west London, until their divorce in 2007.

The Law Commission is due to report in 2012 on whether a change in the law should be made to ensure pre-nuptial agreements are fully enforceable.

Until then, the Supreme Court ruling will provide the clearest guide.

Andrew Newbury, one of the lawyers who contributed to the Law Commission review, said: “Giving pre-nuptial agreements the full force of law would be a very significant step, arguably the biggest development in family law reform for more than 20 years.

“However, there are those who see their introduction as making divorce easier and that goes against all parties who have pledged to support the family.

“Making pre-nups legal isn’t a vote winner either, so the political impetus for change is going to be negligible, even though calls for that change to happen are actually growing in frequency and volume.”

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A military icon

Harrier Jump Jet

The iconic Harrier Jump Jet, set to be axed from next year under spending cuts, came to be a proud example of British excellence in engineering and military ingenuity, says Gary Eason.

It has served Britain with distinction and holds that rare position of being one of the few military aircraft that the average person on the street can name. The Harrier Jump Jet is iconic.

Capable of vertical takeoff and landing, it has been a formidable weapon and was vital in winning the Falklands War. It has also been essential more recently in Afghanistan.

It’s also responsible for bringing some weird language into relatively common parlance: VTOL (vertical take-off and landing), VSTOL (vertical/short take-off and landing) and STOVL (short take-off and vertical landing)

Also, during the Falklands War, there was VIFFing. This technique – which may owe more to comic book gung-ho than military fact – refers to “vectoring in forward flight”,- basically allowing for remarkably tight turns.

What is certain is that the Harrier is unique in being a fast jet with a serious military punch, that can take off and land vertically.

It is perhaps also thought of as a uniquely British thing, developed by Hawker Siddeley at a time when the British were still very good at that sort of engineering. There is one currently hanging in Tate Britain, an extraordinarily poignant, somehow almost mammalian-looking thing.

In fact the idea behind it is French and it’s the product of international collaboration. Various designs for vertical take-off and landing aircraft were being tossed about in the 1950s, but the idea of four rotating nozzles channelling the thrust off a single engine came from Frenchman Michel Wibault.

Unconventional

He approached the French and American governments unsuccessfully, before being directed by a Nato office in Paris – which put up development funding – to Bristol Aero-Engines in England.

There Gordon Lewis took the swivelling nozzles concept, applied it to a jet engine and made it a practical proposition, according to Chris Farara, who joined the flight development team as a new graduate in 1960.

Harrier Jump Jets

“I counted them all out, and I counted them all back”

BBC’s Brian Hanrahan Reporting in the Falklands War

The airframe that pulled the whole package together was designed by Ralph Hooper of Hawker Aircraft in Surrey, now part of BAE Systems.

John Farley first flew the P1127 prototype in 1964, while a test pilot at the Royal Aircraft Establishment.

“Every time I got out I used to climb down the ladder and say ‘thank god I didn’t break it’,” he says.

One of the biggest problems was that, at low speed, the aircraft’s normal flight controls are useless. So it uses what is called a reaction control system – air bled from the engine into nozzles in the nose, tail and wingtips.

On a point of principle, Hawker had decided it was going to require the pilots to learn how to operate this unconventional system rather than try to build in complex and unreliable auto-stabilisers. But also, the original engine was under-powered.

“It had to be thrashed to provide the thrust to hover,” says Mr Farley.

As a result it had to be taken out and rebuilt after just one hour of hovering and 20 hours of normal flight – at £60,000 a pop. So practising hovering was a luxury they could not afford.

“You were paying £1,000-a-minute direct engine depreciation,” says Mr Farley. “It required all the skill that I could bring to bear in terms of handling the aeroplane. That’s what test flying was like in the 1960s – there were no simulators.”

‘Black death’

The British, American and German governments agreed to build nine aircraft and an international squadron was formed – nominally part of the RAF – which proved its military potential. Things got sidetracked somewhat by a Nato requirement for a supersonic version, which ultimately never came about.

In the UK, RAF and Navy rivalries – which were nothing new – muddied the water further, until ultimately the Navy pulled out and the RAF went ahead with what became the Harrier.

Harrier Jump JetsThe jets can takeoff vertically

And, in spite of American reservations about buying any military hardware that is not US-built, the US Marine Corps ordered more than 100. The American demand for a bigger, more capable version was a key driver behind the Harrier II (known in the US as the AV-8B), developed with McDonnell Douglas.

To date there have been some 30 variants of the original Harrier, used by armed forces in the UK, America, Italy, Spain, India and Thailand.

But for most people the Harrier only really came into the public consciousness in the Falklands conflict in 1982. It was used to fight off Argentine aircraft and to bomb enemy positions ashore. It is said the aircraft’s capability, along with the skill of its pilots, gave the British the edge in the conflict.

The Harriers shot down at least 20 enemy aircraft without a single combat loss in return and were nicknamed the “black death” by Argentine pilots.

Reporting on the conflict at the time, BBC journalist Brain Hanrahan was restricted from revealing aircraft numbers during battle. But in one morning alone 15 Harriers sortied and returned, giving rise to his often-quoted words: “I counted them all out, and I counted them all back.”

Mr Farara, of the Hawker Association, made up of those who worked for the company, thinks it sad that the UK’s deployment is ending.

“But it’s had a good run.”

Mr Farley last flew one in 1999. It was a fly-by-wire experimental craft to prove systems for the US-British Joint Strike Fighter that will ultimately replace it. The new craft was very different from the thing he grappled to control almost 50 years ago.

He says the Harrier’s demise says more about the UK than it does about the jet, which is still regarded very highly in other countries. He thinks the British may regret not having the flexibility it provides.

“I think we’ve blown it,” he says. “I find it pathetic.”

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Rural broadband to survive cuts

Oxfordshire countrysideThe government remains committed to providing fast net services to rural areas

The government will trial super-fast broadband in the Highlands, North Yorkshire, Cumbria and Herefordshire, it announced in its Spending Review.

Next-generation broadband is among a handful of projects to survive the cuts, which will see £83bn wiped from public spending.

The BBC has agreed to contribute £300m towards the £530m total cost of funding rural broadband.

The rest of the money has been set aside from the digital switch-over.

Extending broadband services in rural areas is expected to benefit around two million households, including those in remote locations who currently struggle on dial-up speeds.

Speaking about the decision to trial next-generation broadband in rural areas, Chancellor George Osborne said: “It will help encourage the growth of our creative industries as a key part of the new economy we are seeking to build.”

Fibre vote

Around a third of the UK is currently due to miss out of super-fast broadband because it is not regarded as economically viable to offer services in remote areas.

BT is trying to address the issue and recently agreed to roll out fibre optic services across the whole of Cornwall, part funded with EU money.

It has also set up a ‘vote for fibre’ project to identify areas where there is demand for such services.

However it will only consider roll-outs to areas with more than a 1,000 votes, meaning many rural communities will be too small to qualify.

Dr Charles Trotman, chairman of the Final Third First campaign, thinks it could create a new digital divide.

“Where do you find an exchange with a thousand people in a rural area? It is a good initiative but it has to be rethought or it will add to the urban/rural digital divide,” he said.

Airwaves auction

Malcolm Corbett, chief executive of the Indepedent Networks Co-operative Assocation (Inca), a group of community broadband schemes, thinks local solutions will remain vital.

“With private sector investment limited to commercially attractive areas and public sector funding limited full stop, it’s up to us to work together – private, public and community sectors, to make sure Britain creates the broadband infrastructure we need for the future,” he said.

In the Spending Review 2010 document the government also revealed that it will hold spectrum auctions for next-generation mobile broadband in either 2011 or 2012.

The document said that at least 500Mhz of public sector airwaves will be released over the next ten years for new mobile services, including mobile broadband.

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US inquiry into China rare earths

Mini magnets made from chemically processed rare earths are shown in BeijingThe 17 different rare earths are found in everything from magnets to hybrid cars and computer monitors

US trade officials say they are looking into a New York Times report that China is blocking shipments of rare earths to the US and Europe.

China mines 97% of the specialist metals crucial to green technology.

The report, citing anonymous industry sources, said Chinese customs officials had broadened export restrictions.

Meanwhile China’s commerce ministry has denied a report by the official China Daily that it will cut quotas by 30% next year to stop overmining.

“The report is completely false,” the ministry said in a statement.

“China will continue to supply rare earths to the world, and at the same time, to protect usable resources and sustainable development, China will also continue to impose restrictive measures on exploration, production and import and export of rare earths.”

The US Geological Survey recognises 17 different rare earths.

They are used in everything from catalytic converters in cars to computer monitors, TVs and in pharmaceuticals.

Analysts say without these elements, much of the modern economy would shut down.

China accounts for about 97% of global rare-earth production. The BBC’s Paul Mason says the rare earth story goes to the heart of China’s relationship with the West.

The US, which is also a major buyer of rare earths, mined no rare earth elements last year.

US trade officials say they are now checking the New York Times report that China is blocking shipments to the US and Europe, following reports of a similar move against Japan.

The newspaper cited unnamed Chinese rare earths officials as saying that “the embargo is expanding”.

Nefeterius McPherson of the US Trade Representative’s office said: “We’re seeking more information in keeping with our recent announcement of an investigation into whether China’s actions and policies are consistent with WTO rules.”

Washington is investigating whether China is violating international trade rules by subsidising its clean energy industries.

Japan accused China of halting rare earth shipments last month amid a diplomatic row over Japan’s detention of a Chinese fishing boat captain whose trawler collided with two Japanese patrol boats.

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Police break French oil blockades

The French president has ordered riot police to reopen blocked fuel depots after days of strikes.

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How to spend $140m

Meg Whitman at the NASCAR rallyFormer eBay CEO Meg Whitman, who recently appeared at a Nascar rally, is running the most expensive non-presidential campaign in history

November’s mid-term elections in the US are shaping up to be the most expensive congressional races in history. Candidates are raising and spending record amounts – so where does all that money go?

The politician on the most extreme spending spree this year is Republican Meg Whitman, the former eBay CEO who is running for governor of California.

She has set a record, running the most expensive non-presidential campaign in history. With a substantial personal fortune, she has ploughed $140m (£89m) of her own money into her campaign, vastly outspending her rivals in both the primary and the general election.

For comparison, the entire Australian federal election in August cost just $52m. In the UK, the maximum a political party can spend on a national election is $31m.

So what does $140m buy you?

For one thing, it doesn’t necessarily guarantee you a key to the governor’s mansion.

“Across the US, spending on political ads is expected to reach $3.3bn this year”

The latest polls show Ms Whitman trailing the Democratic candidate, Jerry Brown – a former California governor from a well-known political family – even though she has outspent him almost 10 times over.

The remaining weeks of the campaign will be an uphill battle for Ms Whitman. Although Californians have elected high profile Republican governors in the past – including Ronald Reagan and Arnold Schwarzenegger – the state is liberal-leaning, which helps give Mr Brown an edge.

With that in mind, Ms Whitman’s campaign strategy is apparently to be ever-present on television and radio, and in the mailboxes of Californians.

According to her campaign finance reports, by far the biggest chunk of her spending – almost $95m – has been on advertising, mostly television.

Meg Whitman's campaign spending

Like most campaigns, she’s engaged advertising firms to work with campaign staff, pollsters and other paid consultants to develop concepts, write scripts, produce spots, advise on strategies to get ads seen by the target audience – and buy the television time to screen the ad.

Ms Whitman has paid one firm, a previously tiny outfit in Virginia called the Smart Media Group, more than $83m to produce and place her ads. Other firms have been paid to advise Ms Whitman on communicating with particular groups or on specific issues.

“By June, Meg Whitman had spent more on private planes ($675,000) than her Democratic rival Mr Brown had spent on his entire campaign”

California, America’s most populous state, has 13 separate media markets and for a candidate to reach across the entire state, he or she must purchase ad time in each one.

These markets are some of the most expensive in the country. Brad Adgate, senior vice president of media research company Horizon Media, says a 30-second spot during prime time in Los Angeles, reaching about 20% of the population, might cost $67,000.

That is significantly costlier than in smaller states. For example, according to Mr Adgate’s research, in the small city of Bowling Green, Kentucky, airing the same ad would cost less than $1,000.

At this stage in the campaign, Ms Whitman is estimated to be running 1,300 television ads each day.

Across the US, spending on political ads is expected to reach $3.3bn this year. Mr Adgate says this has provided a much-needed “shot in the arm” for the television advertising industry.

International comparisons - cost of campaigns

The influx of political ads has been particularly valuable for local stations, who normally rely on local business – like car dealerships and retail stores, which have been particularly hard-hit by the recession – for their advertising dollars.

“There is a huge demand for local political ads right now. You cannot watch a local TV station and not see a political ad,” Mr Adgate says.

Tom Edmonds, president of Edmonds Associates political consultants says radio can also be a particularly attractive medium for political campaigns.

It is significantly cheaper, averaging around $1,500-2,000 for a 60-second spot on a popular LA station. In a rural market in a poorer state, Mr Edmonds says ad time can be bought for $10.

Radio can also make it easier to target certain groups – older voters tend to listen to golden oldies stations, Latinos may listen to Spanish language stations, active Republicans may listen to conservative talk back radio and so on.

But to figure out which voters you need to target – which groups are receptive to your message, which ones not to bother with and what issues matter most to key groups – campaigns tend to hire additional consultants.

Ms Whitman has spent around $1.5m on pollsters to conduct both telephone polling and focus groups.

What can you buy for $140m?Six million large pepperoni pizzas from New York’s Lombardi’s PizzaMore than 6,000 Toyota Prius carsCollege tuition for 11,700 Californians at UCLAThree seasons of Mad MenA fancy cupcake from Sprinkles in Beverley Hills for every Californian (and you’d have $20m left over)Jackson Pollock’s Number Five paintingRobbie Williams (his estimated net worth is around $140m)

These firms aren’t paid to provide the sort of head-to-head comparisons of each candidate’s appeal produced by firms like Gallup – campaigns can read about those in the newspaper.

Campaign pollsters tend to provide detailed information on how likely particular groups are to vote for the candidate, and what messages resonate most effectively.

That information is used to develop printed campaign material – on which Ms Whitman has spent more than $8m.

These days, high-profile campaigns like Ms Whitman’s use sophisticated micro-targeting and printing techniques to categorise voters and send very specific mailings.

“Each piece of direct mail on your block could be different. Campaigns send specific information,” says Mr Edmonds, adding they can even sometimes identify the nearest polling station to direct a voter to.

Ms Whitman has also paid an internet firm founded by former eBay colleagues more than $4m to manage her website and online communications.

She has spent enormous amounts ($5.7m) on adviser salaries and set up over 90 campaign offices around the state. She’s also targeted particular ethnic groups with multilingual phone calls and ad spots in languages including Spanish, Mandarin, Farsi and Korean.

Campaigns like Ms Whitman’s also hire consultants for a range of specific tasks – to book speaking engagements, throw fundraising events (different planners are usually employed for each major city a candidate raises money in) and even advise on wardrobe.

Ms Whitman has spent a staggering $11.7 m on such consultants – which is more that Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid has spent on his entire campaign so far.

Not only that but by June she had spent more on private planes ($675,000) than her Democratic rival Mr Brown had spent on his entire campaign.

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Guinea rivals back new poll chief

Guinean police patrol the streets of Conakry during a rally. Photo: 19 October 2010Guinean police have stepped up security ahead of the poll

Guinea’s two rival presidential candidates have said they are prepared to go ahead with Sunday’s run-off after the replacement of the election chief.

The move by the military rulers was aimed at quelling violence and threats to boycott the much-delayed vote.

Cellou Dalein Diallo, who had accused the former election commission head of bias, told the BBC he was now “ready”.

Related stories

Alpha Conde’s campaign manager said his camp was happy with Tuesday’s late night appointment.

“I think this is a solution we can accept,” Makale Traore told BBC Afrique.

There has been concern that replacing the election head in the week before the run-off could put the whole process in doubt again.

The election is intended to end the political crisis that began when soldiers seized power in December 2008.

Earlier this week, two supporters of Mr Diallo were killed as police opened fire on crowds demanding the removal of Lounceny Camara as the election commission head.

His replacement is Siaka Toumany Sangare, an army general and Malian national working in Guinea with the Organisation International de la Francophonie.

Alpha Conde (l), Cellou Dalein Diallo

Alpha Conde (l)

Age: 72Long-time opposition leaderJailed several times18% of first-round votes

Cellou Dalein Diallo (r)

Age: 58Minister 1996-2004Prime minister 2004-644% of first-round votes

A junta spokesman said the decision to install Gen Sangare had been taken after “advice and consultation” with the international community.

Elizabeth Cote of Guinea’s International Foundation for Electoral Systems, which has been engaged in training for the polls, welcomed his appointment.

“He’s an electoral expert… he knows the hurdles and knows exactly where things stand logistically,” she told the BBC’s Network Africa programme.

The second round has been delayed twice, once in July because of investigations into electoral fraud and again in September because of clashes between rival supporters.

The electoral commission was then plunged into chaos when its initial head died not long after being convicted of defrauding Mr Conde in the first round.

A power struggle ensued and the new electoral chief was then taken to court by Mr Diallo over separate allegations of rigging in June.

Mr Diallo, whose supporters have been fighting running battles with police on the streets of the capital Conakry for the past two days, had been threatening to boycott Sunday’s vote.

“What I can tell you is that I am ready,” he said in a BBC interview after Gen Sangare’s appointment.

The former prime minister is seen as the favourite to win the run-off. He took 44% of the votes in the first round – and claims he was denied overall victory only by fraud.

Mr Conde, a veteran opposition leader, won 18% of the vote – although he claims he was cheated out of some 600,000 ballots.

Correspondents say the fierce tensions between the two candidates’ supporters has its origins in rivalry between Guinea’s two largest ethnic communities. Mr Diallo is a Peul, while Mr Conde is a Malinke.

Despite being the largest ethnic group, a Peul has never been president. The Malinke are heavily represented in the ruling military junta.

The first round was seen as Guinea’s first democratic vote since independence in 1958, raising hopes of an end to military and authoritarian rule in the mineral-rich country.

Guinea is the world’s largest exporter of the aluminium ore bauxite. It also has important deposits of iron ore, but it remains one of the poorest countries in West Africa.

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Prince jailed for servant murder

Saud Abdulaziz bin Nasser al Saud (l) with his servant Bandar Abdulaziz (r)The pair had just returned from a Valentine’s Day night out when Al Saud launched the assault

A Saudi prince has been jailed for life for murdering his servant at a hotel in central London.

Bandera Abdulaziz, 32, was found beaten and strangled in the Landmark Hotel, Marylebone, on 15 February 2010.

The Old Bailey was told the assault by Saud Abdulaziz bin Nasser al Saud had a “sexual element” and he had attacked Mr Abdulaziz many times before.

Al Saud, 34, who had admitted manslaughter but denied murder, was given a minimum jail term of 20 years.

“I think the most likely explanation is that you could not care less whether you killed him or not”

Mr Justice Dean

The Saudi prince was also found guilty of causing grievous bodily harm with intent in relation to an earlier attack in a hotel lift, a charge which he had denied.

The murder of Mr Abdulaziz was the final act in a “deeply abusive” master-servant relationship in which Al Saud carried out frequent attacks on his aide “for his own personal gratification”.

Judge Mr Justice Dean said: “You were in a position of authority and trust over him which you exploited ruthlessly.

“I think the most likely explanation is that you could not care less whether you killed him or not.”

He continued: “It is very unusual for a prince to be in the dock on a murder charge.

“It would be wrong for me to sentence you either more severely or more leniently because of your membership of the Saudi royal family.”

The 34-year-old was fuelled by champagne and cocktails when he bit his servant hard on both cheeks during the attack on 15 February, the court heard.

Jurors heard that Mr Abdulaziz was left so worn down and injured – having suffered a “cauliflower” ear and a swollen eye from previous assaults – that he let Al Saud kill him without a fight.

A gay masseur who visited him there described the “dashing” Saud as a cross between Omar Sharif and Nigel Havers.

The prince initially wrongly believed he had diplomatic immunity and his royal status would save him.

But he must serve 19 years having already spent one on remand.

Mr Justice Dean added: “No-one in this country is above the law.”

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Neo-Nazis jailed for Roma attack

Right wing extremists David Vaculik (L to R), Jaromir Lukes, Ivo Mueller and Vaclav Cojocaru in court in Ostrava where they were convicted of an arson attackThe four defendants were active in, or had links to, far-right or neo-Nazi groups

Four right-wing extremists in the Czech Republic have been jailed for an arson attack on a Roma family.

The court in the eastern city of Ostrava handed down sentences of up to 22 years for racially motivated attempted murder.

Three people were hurt when three Molotov cocktails were thrown into a Roma house in Vitkov on 19 April, 2009.

One of the victims was a toddler who barely survived, suffering 80% burns on her body.

“They committed the crime… in an exceptionally cruel and painful way”

Judge Miloslav StudnickaDelays bedevil EU help for RomaSlovakia’s own separation barrier

Two-year-old Natalka Kudrikova only left hospital in December, after many operations, and has lost three of her fingers.

Her mother Anna Sivakova suffered 30% burns.

The case caused a public outcry and sparked unrest among the Roma community.

Following the attack, the Czech government stepped up its efforts to fight right-wing extremism.

David Vaculik, Jaromir Lukes and Ivo Mueller were sentenced to 22 years in jail for the attack, while the youngest defendant Vaclav Cojocaru, was given a 20-year term.

The judge, Miloslav Studnicka, said the crime was motivated by the four men’s membership of extremist groups and movements, and by “an effort to show off within these movements” ahead of the 120th anniversary of Hitler’s birth, the following day.

Natalka Kudrikova was severely burned in an arson attack, Czech RepublicDoctors call Natalka’s survival a miracle after she suffered 80% burns

“They committed the crime,” said the judge, “in an exceptionally cruel and painful way on people younger than 15 years and for their ethnicity.”

All four men immediately appealed against the verdict.

Several of the accused had claimed they did not know the house was inhabited.

Czech TV quoted defendant Ivo Mueller as saying that the group did not expect there to be such “disastrous consequences”.

“I want to apologise to the Sivak and Maly families,” he reportedly said. “I am sorry that such a small child was injured.”

The men were also ordered to pay damages of the equivalent of 17m koruna ($957,000; £608,000) to a health insurer and to the Roma family.

The Czech Republic has a Roma population estimated at between 250,000 and 300,000.

They are among the poorest in Czech society and Roma leaders often complain of endemic racial discrimination.

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Tibetan students protest in China

File image of paramilitary police in Lhasa on 27 March 2008Qinghai was the scene of violent protests in 2008, but police did not intervene this week

At least 1,000 ethnic Tibetan students in China have protested against what they say is the loss of their culture and language, a rights group has said.

The students say education reforms mean most textbooks and lessons will now be in Mandarin Chinese.

The London-based Free Tibet campaign group said the peaceful march took place in Tongren, Qinghai province.

The area is home to many ethnic Tibetans and was the scene of heavily suppressed riots in 2008.

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Residents contacted by phone by Reuters said the march through Tongren, also known as Rebkong, was allowed to pass without police interference.

They said the protests took place on Tuesday.

“They (the protesters) went home in the early afternoon after government officials came out and talked with them,” one of the residents told Reuters.

Estimates of the total number of participants ranged from 1,000 to 7,000.

The Free Tibet group said there were between 5,000 and 9,000 demonstrators from six schools.

The Tibet DivideChina says Tibet was always part of its territoryTibet enjoyed long periods of autonomy before 20th CenturyIn 1950, China launched a military assaultOpposition to Chinese rule led to a bloody uprising in 1959Tibet’s spiritual leader the Dalai Lama fled to IndiaDalai Lama now advocates a “middle way” with Beijing, seeking autonomy but not independenceNo room to talk in ‘stable’ Tibet

It said they were angered by changes to education policy which would limit the use of Tibetan language in schools.

All textbooks and subjects will be in Mandarin Chinese, except for Tibetan and English language classes.

“The Chinese are enforcing reforms which remind me of the Cultural Revolution,” the group quoted one unnamed former Tongren teacher as saying.

“This reform is not only a threat to our mother tongue, but is in direct violation of the Chinese constitution, which is meant to protect our rights.

“The use of Tibetan is being systematically wiped out as part of China’s strategy to cement its occupation of Tibet,” Free Tibet said.

China rules the Tibet Autonomous Region strictly but usually allows more freedom to Tibetan populations elsewhere in China; Tibetan is an official language in Tibet and parts of China such as Qinghai.

The Chinese government says it is bringing development and economic opportunities to areas long subject to official neglect.

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