Liverpool FC gets new £320m offer

Liverpool crest on a gate at the club's Anfield groundMr Lim says his offer is as attractive as John Henry’s in financial terms

Peter Lim, a Singapore billionaire, is offering £320m in cash for Liverpool football club and its liabilities.

The offer trumps the £300m offered by New England Sports Ventures – which was accepted last week by Liverpool’s chairman, Martin Broughton.

BBC business editor Robert Peston says Mr Lim is also offering to provide £40m in cash to buy players.

Liverpool’s board will find it difficult to ignore the offer, raising more uncertainty about the club’s fate.

The offer coincided with the start of a case in London’s High Court to resolve a power struggle on Liverpool’s board of directors.

Royal Bank of Scotland, which holds the bulk of Liverpool’s debts, is seeking a court order preventing the club’s co-owners, Tom Hicks and George Gillett Jr, from removing two board members, including Mr Broughton.

Philip Snowdon QC, for RBS, told the court that Mr Hicks and Mr Gillett were in “breach of contract” and guilty of “breath-taking arrogance”.

Mr Lim, whose previous bid for Liverpool was rejected in favour of New England’s, has an estimated net worth of $1.6bn (£1bn), according to Forbes magazine.

He made his fortune in fashion, logistics and agri-business.

His interest in English football stems from his ownership of several Manchester United themed bars in Asia – which have persuaded him that there is huge global potential for making money from top-flight English football.

There have been suggestions that he intends to sell the Manchester United bars if he secures control of arch-rival Liverpool.

What may excite Liverpool fans about the offer is that Mr Lim is promising to hand manager Roy Hodgson £40m to buy players in January’s transfer window, says our business editor.

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7 July aftermath videos broadcast

The devastated carriage at AldgateThe bomb devastated the carriage at Aldgate

The inquests into the 7 July suicide bombings in London have been shown footage of the aftermath of the attack on a train at Aldgate.

The emergency services video was taken hours after the attacks and shows the devastation caused to the train in the tunnel.

Seven passengers were killed at Aldgate.

Counsel to the inquests Hugo Keith QC said staff acted promptly to deal with the “horror that had occurred”.

Four suicide bombers killed 52 people in co-ordinated attacks on London’s transport network on 7 July 2005.

Mr Keith said the Aldgate bomber, Shehzad Tanweer, had been standing in the second carriage when he detonated his device, hidden in a rucksack.

It blew a hole in the floor but the train continued moving a short distance before coming to a halt.

Mr Keith said the driver, Timothy Batkin, could hear the screams of passengers in the carriages behind him but his initial mayday calls went unanswered.

He eventually used his own mobile phone to raise the alarm. This was possible because the train was in a shallow section of the underground.

7 July: Key facts

Four bombs:

Three on underground trainsOne on bus

Victims:

26 at Russell Square13 on bus at Tavistock Place7 at Aldgate6 at Edgware Road

Suicide bombers:

Hasib HussainMohammad Sidique KhanGermaine LindsayShehzad TanweerHave your say: What will the inquest achieve?

Hours after all the casualties were removed from the train, emergency services returned underground to video the scene.

The film shows a forensics officer, wearing blue gloves, walking along the rails to the abandoned train near Aldgate.

Carriage doors can be seen, blown out, with shattered glass from windows and the interior of the carriage completely wrecked.

Seats were destroyed, along with the roof, parts of the floor and handrails.

Each scene on the film shows the personal belongings of passengers, which had been left behind.

The Aldgate bomb detonated in a wide section of track, rather than a tight tunnel, which meant wreckage was strewn for some distance.

Families of the deceased were in court to see the video.

The video shown in court was heavily edited to minimise the distress but it was still clear that it was the scene of a major loss of life.

Earlier Mr Keith had detailed to the inquests a string of delays getting emergency services to the scene of each underground bomb attack.

Analysis

The first two days of the inquests have raised questions about how quickly the emergency services responded to each of the underground bombs.

But on Tuesday the families saw the scale of what the first responders were confronted with underground.

Despite being heavily edited, the film taken at Aldgate station is a terrible scene of destruction, loss of life and major injury.

But what’s also become clear is that those closest to the blast did not flinch in coming to each other’s aid.

There were attempts to save lives in the darkness, smoke and soot – individual acts of humanity amid grave personal danger.

Elizabeth Kenworthy, a passenger at Aldgate, used her jacket and a belt to make tourniquets for two of the critically injured.

And the driver, Timothy Batkin, and four station staff went into the dark to form a human chain to rescue as many as possible.

He said the evidence seemed to suggest the emergency services struggled to establish the exact site of each bomb and faced serious difficulties communicating with each other once on site.

Rescue teams were using runners to pass messages between platforms and ground level.

But referring specifically to the scene at Aldgate, he said the driver, Mr Batkin, and staff on the platform acted quickly.

“Those on the scene acted promptly to respond and to notify the emergency services of the horror that had occurred,” he said.

He said one of the emergency radio channels stopped working.

Mr Keith said this contributed to problems the emergency services had communicating with each other.

Mr Keith described events at Edgware Road station, where he said the first ambulance did not arrive until 9.13am, as a result of the location being wrongly given as Praed Street.

Five minutes later – and 23 minutes after the explosion – the first fire engine arrived.

Mr Keith said at 9.21am a London ambulance crew called in to say they were running out of resources, saying: “It’s chaos down here.”

Coroner Lady Justice Hallett is examining how each victim died and whether MI5 could have stopped the bombers. Many families still want a public inquiry.

In addition to those killed, some 700 people were injured, many of them severely and permanently, when four al-Qaeda-backed suicide bombers, all British men, detonated their devices.

On Monday Mr Keith said bombers Mohammad Sidique Khan, Shehzad Tanweer, Germaine Lindsay and Hasib Hussain had unleashed an “unimaginably dreadful wave of horror”.

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McCarthy favourite to win Booker

Tom McCarthyMcCarthy previously wrote novels Remainder and Men in Space

The winner of this year’s Man Booker prize will be announced later with Tom McCarthy’s C the 8/15 favourite to win.

His book, the story of one man’s obsession with the early days of radio, goes up against Parrot And Olivier In America, by Peter Carey.

Carey is hoping to becoming the first author to win the prize three times.

Howard Jacobson’s The Finkler Question, Damon Galgut’s In A Strange Room, Andrea Levy’s The Long Song, and Room, by Emma Donoghue, are also contenders.

Related stories

Bookmakers stopped taking bets on Tuesday afternoon before judges met up to start their discussions.

“We closed our book with Tom McCarthy the 8/15 favourite – the hottest favourite we’ve ever had, displacing last year’s first ever winning odds-on favourite,” William Hill spokesman Graham Sharpe told the BBC News website.

Last year’s winner was historical novel Wolf Hall, by Hilary Mantel.

C, by McCarthy, follows the life of Serge Carrefax, a man transfixed by the technologies of the 20th Century.

Carey, whose book is an exploration of American democracy, won the Booker in 1998, for Oscar and Lucinda, and again in 2001, for True History of the Kelly Gang.

Jacobson’s The Finkler Question, the 6/1 joint second favourite – along with Damon Galgut’s In A Strange Room – is a story of friendship and loss, exclusion and belonging.

In A Strange Room is based on the author’s experience of going through chemotherapy as a child after he was diagnosed with Burkitt’s lymphoma.

The case of Josef Fritzl, who imprisoned and raped his own daughter in Austria, is the inspiration for Emma Donoghue’s novel Room, an early favourite for the prize after the shortlist was announced.

The Long Song, Andrea Levy’s tale of the last years of slavery in Jamaica, completes the shortlist.

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Deficit plan is wrong – Johnson

Shadow cabinet meetingThe shadow cabinet met for the first time on Tuesday

Alan Johnson has attacked the government’s proposed spending cuts in his first Commons appearance since becoming shadow chancellor.

Mr Johnson told MPs borrowing had risen under Labour to stop a “financial meltdown” but coalition plans for major cuts were entirely avoidable.

He said it was wrong to cut public spending until it was clear private sector investment was back on its feet.

Chancellor George Osborne said Labour was “in denial” about the deficit.

The two politicians clashed for the first time at Treasury questions since Mr Johnson’s appointment as shadow chancellor on Friday.

It also came ahead of next Wednesday’s government spending review.

Mr Osborne joked that he had done the shadow chancellor’s job for nearly five years when the Conservatives were in opposition and he hoped his opposite number would hold it for “even longer”.

“He is seeking to cut public spending before there is any momentum to private sector spending in our economy”

Alan Johnson Shadow chancellor

Mr Johnson, whose appointment the Conservatives have described as a “caretaker” role, has made light of his perceived lack of expertise for the job and prefaced his first question by referring to his “vast economic experience”.

He asked whether the government was still committed to its four-year plan to eliminate the bulk of the structural deficit in light of recent “unfortunate” comments by Lib Dem cabinet minister Chris Huhne.

The energy secretary said at the weekend that he did not believe the coalition was not “lashed to the mast” when it came to the timing of spending cuts and this could alter depending on changes in economic conditions.

But the government had got its economic arguments the wrong way round, Mr Johnson told MPs.

“The deficit was unavoidable to avoid financial meltdown and his budget proposals were entirely wrong,” he said.

“Wrong because they would, according to the Institute of Fiscal Studies, have two and half times the adverse effect on the poorest as the richest in our society. And wrong because he is seeking to cut public spending before there is any momentum to private sector spending in our economy.”

Mr Osborne said government was about hard choices and Labour had not come up with a “single suggestion” about how to reduce the deficit or how it would implement the £44bn of cuts it had advocated at the election.

The chancellor also announced a number of measures to strengthen the independence of the Office for Budget Responsibility and said it would publish its latest economic forecasts on 29 November.

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Murder accused ‘shook baby girl’

Alexis MathesonSix-week-old Alexis Matheson, of Aberdeen, died in 2007

A man has gone on trial accused of murdering a six-week-old baby girl after various attacks in Aberdeen.

Mark Simpson, 29, denies murdering Alexis Matheson by assaulting her in the city’s Deansloch Crescent between 8 November and 9 December 2007.

He allegedly seized hold of her, shook her and compressed her chest leaving her so severely injured that she later died in hospital in Edinburgh.

Mr Simpson has gone on trial at the High Court in Aberdeen.

The case is scheduled to last several weeks.

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Obama will not ban home seizures

Home with bank owned signRepossessions in the US are expected to rise to a record 1.2 million this year

The White House has ruled out a temporary ban on the repossession of homes, despite a growing row over alleged malpractice.

Some US banks have already imposed their own moratorium on foreclosures while they investigate possible legal flaws in the eviction process.

Amid claims that shoddy paperwork led to wrongful repossessions, calls have grown for a nationwide moratorium.

Related stories

But a White House spokesman said this could have “unintended consequences”.

Last week, Bank of America said it would extend its ban on sales of repossessed homes from 23 US states to all 50.

JPMorgan Chase and Ally GMAC Mortgage have suspended foreclosures in 23 states.

At issue are claims that foreclosure documents were signed off without proper checks and people were wrongly evicted.

BoA is looking into whether homes were repossessed by so-called “robo-signers” and other automated processes, whereby mortgage company employees or their lawyers do not thoroughly verify the information in them.

With banks expected to take over a record 1.2 million homes this year, up from about one million last year, according to the real estate data company RealtyTrac, the foreclosure issue is a hot political potato.

“American families should not have to worry about losing their homes to sloppy bureaucratic mismanagement or fraud,” said Senate Banking Committee chairman Christopher Dodd last week.

He also announced that the committee would hold a hearing next month to look into mortgage servicing and foreclosure processing.

However, on Tuesday White House spokesman Robert Gibbs said that a temporary ban could have an unforeseen impact on the ailing US housing market.

“There are a series of unintended consequences to a broader moratorium,” he said. President Barack Obama’s administration was determined to “get to the bottom of” a problem of hasty foreclosures.

But Mr Gibbs added: “We want to take the just and necessary steps to ensure that the process is being followed legally. At the same time, we don’t want to see broader harm done to the housing market and to the housing recovery.”

Critics of a moratorium have warned that it could penalise pension funds, insurance companies and other investors, making new loans more expensive.

Investors seeking to recover bad loans would might be prevented from doing so, critics argue.

Tim Ryan, chief executive of the US Securities Industry and Financial Markets Association said on Monday: “It is imperative… that care be taken in addressing these issues to ensure that no unnecessary damage is done to an already weak housing market and, in turn, that there is not further negative impact on the economy.”

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Dating tests reveal some of the earliest life on Earth

Microbial tunnels in subseafloor meta-volcanic glass from the Hooggenoeg Complex of the Barberton Greenstone belt, South Africa (Grosch et al. 2009)The microscopic structures are thought to have been cut by ancient microbes

Tiny tubes thought to have been etched into South African rocks by microbes are at least 3.3 billion years old, scientists can confirm.

A new analysis of the material filling the structures shows they were created not long after the volcanic rock itself was spewed on to the seafloor.

The tubules could therefore represent the earliest “trace” evidence of activity by life on Earth.

The dating work is reported in Earth and Planetary Science Letters.

It is a follow-up study to the University of Bergen team’s discovery of the microscopic tunnels and pits first published in 2004.

“We’re kind of looking at their ‘footprints’ – we’re looking at the holes, the microborings, left by the bugs as they dissolved into, or chewed, into the rocks”

Dr Nicola McLoughlin University of Bergen

The structures are seen in rocks from the famous Barberton Greenstone Belt in the Mpumalanga Province of South Africa.

These rocks were originally erupted underwater but over the course of Earth history have been lifted on to dry land.

The basalt that forms the rock had previously been dated to 3.47-3.45 billion years old, but there was some doubt about when the tubules themselves were created.

By comparing the ratio of different types, or isotopes, of uranium and lead atoms in the material that now fills these tunnels, the team can show they must have been etched by about 3.34 billion years ago – in other words, very soon after the host rock itself was formed.

The issue of when life first appeared on our planet is a hotly debated topic.

The constant recycling of rock means there are very few locations like Barberton where a physical record of the ancient Earth can still be examined.

Some researchers argue that the peculiar chemistry of rocks at Isua in Greenland betrays the presence of bacteria some 3.8 billion years ago.

What is different about Barberton is that this geochemical signal is also supported by shapes and textures – so-called trace fossils – in the rock which could have been cut by the ancient microbes themselves.

It is not the same as having the “body” fossils of the organism, but researchers can make a strong case that the shapes have a biological origin if they can point to similar tubules made by modern microbes. The Bergen team believes it can do this.

“We’re kind of looking at their ‘footprints’ – we’re looking at the holes, the microborings, left by the bugs as they dissolved into, or chewed, into the rocks,” explained Dr Nicola McLoughlin from Bergen’s Centre for Geobiology.

“So instead of looking at the microbe itself, you’re looking at the cavity or hole that it makes. We’re still working to convince people of the biogenicity of these things and we think we have really good constraints on the modern seafloor,” she told BBC News.

“But things get more difficult in the ancient [setting] because the shapes are simpler and the chemistry has been modified. What this paper does show, however, is the progress we have made in dating these structures.”

The Barberton rocks in which the tubules were first identified were found at the surface. The University of Bergen is now analysing rocks that have been drilled from deep underground.

At the very least, this type of investigation will tell them more about what conditions were like on Earth almost 3.5 billion years ago.

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Officer ‘raped vulnerable women’

Newcastle Crown CourtMr Mitchell is alleged to have preyed on women he met while on duty, the court heard

A police officer preyed on vulnerable women he met while on duty and then raped them, a court has heard.

Pc Stephen Mitchell, 42, denies five counts of rape, six of indecent assault and 15 of misconduct in public office.

The officer, from Glasgow, was based at Pilgrim Street police station in Newcastle, where he came across heroin addicts and other vulnerable women.

The offences were alleged to have taken place between 1999 and 2007, Newcastle Crown Court heard.

On the first day of Mr Mitchell’s trial, Paul Sloan QC, prosecuting, said: “It was during the course of his duties that the defendant came into contact with each of the complainants in this case.

“As well as being known to the police, each of the complainants was a vulnerable female, whether because of drug abuse, health problems, domestic circumstances or a combination of those factors.

“The defendant took advantage of their vulnerabilities, usually providing or offering favours but then requesting, or in some cases requiring by force sexual favours in return.”

Mr Mitchell joined Northumbria Police in 1998, the court heard.The trial continues.

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French protests ‘biggest so far’

A general view shows the exterior of the Gare de L'Est train station in Paris (11 October 2010)Polls suggest a large majority of people in France remain in favour of the strikes

French unions are staging a national day of strikes and demonstrations in opposition to the governments pension reforms – the third in a month.

Ministers want to raise the minimum retirement age from 60 to 62, and the state pension age from 65 to 67.

Related stories

The civil aviation authority says up to half of flights to and from France will be cancelled because of walkouts.

Meanwhile, public transport and energy sector workers are set to vote on whether to begin open-ended strikes.

The rolling strikes would be organised by serving notice of 24-hour stoppages and renewed each day before they expired. Members of the union would need to be balloted at the end of the strike day on Tuesday.

Among those to have already declared in favour are union members from the state rail company, SNCF, and gas and electricity companies.

“We’re not here to do what’s easy, we don’t always have the people’s approval”

Eric Woerth Labour MinisterGavin Hewitt’s Europe

Already, a strike by workers at the oil and cargo terminals around Marseille are entering their third week, forcing up diesel prices in Europe.

Some 50 ships are stranded outside the port, and the French oil giant Total has continued to shut down its La Mede refinery because of a shortage of oil. Four other refineries may have to close this week.

A fleet of tankers has been employed to supply petrol stations.

The government’s pension reform proposals have triggered four waves of protests so far, and brought hundreds of thousands onto the streets.

On Tuesday, half of all flights to and from Paris Orly airport, and one in three at Charles de Gaulle and Beauvais are set to be cancelled. One in three high-speed TGV trains are expected to run, while the Paris metro was disrupted after workers started their strike on Monday evening.

Analysis

This is “crunch week” for the key reform of Nicolas Sarkozy’s presidency, with some unions now threatening open-ended action. The unions raised the stakes last week announcing two strike days in a week – one on Tuesday, another planned on Saturday. But it is the ballot on the rolling strikes that will be held on Tuesday evening, and the prospect of fuel shortages around the country, that will most concern the government and hold the interest of the country.

Already in Marseille dockers are heading into a third week of strikes that is now leading to the closure of important oil refineries. Workers at most of France’s other refineries have also backed rolling 24-hour strikes from Tuesday meaning there will be a daily vote on whether to pursue the action. According to the polls a large majority of people in France are in favour of the strike action. The numbers that turn out for the demonstrations in the biggest cities this week will indicate how strong the resolve is. But there are two unknown factors – would these rolling strikes carry the same level of support as the one-day action, and can they maintain momentum?

Teaches, postal workers and lorry drivers are set to join the strikes.

“This is one of the last chances to make the government back down,” said Francois Chereque, the leader of the French Democratic Confederation of Labour (CFDT). “The large majority of employees cannot afford to pay for repeated days of strikes.”

The French upper house, the Senate, is currently voting on the pension reform plans, article by article. The most contentious parts – raising the standard minimum retirement age from 60 to 62, and the age for a full state pension to 67 from 65 – have already been approved.

“We’re not here to do what’s easy, we don’t always have the people’s approval,” Labour Minister Eric Woerth said. “It’s difficult to tell the French that the they have to work more, up to 67 years, but it has to be done.”

Last week, President Nicolas Sarkozy said he would inject more money into his retirement reform bill so mothers of three or more children, and parents of handicapped children could retire earlier. The changes will be financed by new taxes that will bring in 3.4bn euros (£3bn).

But he said there would be no concessions on the key elements of the bill, which is expected to be passed by the Senate in the next two weeks.

French workers can expect to spend more of their life in retirement than those in any other country, according to figures from the Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development (OECD).

Under current rules, both men and women in France can retire at 60, providing they have paid social security contributions for 40.5 years – although they are not entitled to a full pension until they are 65.

Retirement years

The government says it will save 70bn euros (£58bn) by raising the retirement age to 62 by 2018, the qualification to 41.5 years, and the pension age to 67.

Unions and opposition politicians say the plan puts an unfair burden on workers, particularly women, part-timers and the former unemployed who may struggle to hit the 41.5 year requirement.

They have made counter proposals, including calls for taxes on certain bonuses and on the highest incomes to help fund the pension system.

The BBC’s Christian Fraser in Paris says Mr Sarkozy may be encouraged by splits emerging within the union movement.

The leader of the French Confederation of Christian Workers (CFTC) union, Jacques Voisin, has distanced his organisation from any open-ended strikes, our correspondent says.

And critically, the union that represents a large number of the Paris metro drivers says its members will not be striking at all, he adds.

However, according to opinion polls, a large majority of people in France remain in favour of the strikes.

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Hurricane heads to Mexico coast

A tropical storm heading towards Mexico’s Yucatan Peninsula has strengthened into a hurricane.

Forecasters at the Miami-based National Hurricane Center say Paula now has winds of 120km/h (75 mph).

The hurricane is also likely to bring heavy rainfall to parts of Honduras, Nicaragua and Belize.

Mexico and Central America have been hit by a series of floods and landslides in recent weeks, with thousands of people left homeless.

At 0900GMT Paula was located some 370km (230 miles) south-east of the island of Cozumel, the National Hurricane Center said.

The hurricane is expected to move north towards the Yucatan Peninsula, where a hurricane warning is in force along part of the coast.

Emergency officials in Honduras have been urging people to leave low-lying coastal areas.

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New Hungary dam ‘almost finished’

Workers wearing protective suits walk through a street covered by red sludge in Deveczer, Hungary, 12 October 2010More walls of the reservoir are expected to collapse in the next few days

Emergency crews in Hungary have almost completed a new dam to contain further spillage from the reservoir that leaked toxic sludge earlier this month, officials say.

They say final test are being conducted on the emergency barrier.

Meanwhile the Hungarian government is preparing to take over the company at the centre of the disaster.

Eight people have died from the 4 October spill that devastated towns near Akja in the west of the country.

Related stories

The new wall, about 1,500m (1,600yd) long and up to 30m wide, is designed to protect villages when the walls of the reservoir give way and spill a second wave of toxic sludge.

The authorities expect the reservoir to collapse in the next few days.

Engineers and relief workers have been racing since the weekend to complete the emergency dam.

EU experts are helping the Hungarians with the barrier, as well as assessing the longer-term impact of the spill on the ground water and the soil.

About 150 people were injured after up to 700,000 cubic metres (24.7m cu ft) of toxic by-product from the production of alumina burst from the storage reservoir last week.

The residue has covered an area of 40 sq km (15.6 sq miles).

The parliament in Budapest passed a bill last Monday paving the way for the state to take over the company at the centre of the disaster, MAL Hungarian Aluminium, until those affected had been compensated and the damage cleaned up.

Resident of the flooded village of Devecser cleans up a yard covered in toxic sludge, 11 October 2010The government plans to take control of MAL until those affected have been compensated

Prime Minister Viktor Orban blamed negligence for the spill and said the company should bear the costs.

Environment State Secretary Zoltan Illes said the company could face damage claims amounting to 73m euros ($102m; £64m).

The chief executive of the Akja plant, Zoltan Bakony, was detained for questioning on Monday.

Mr Bakonyi had said last week that the reservoir had been inspected daily and no signs of weakness had been spotted.

The plant, located about 160km (100 miles) from Budapest, produced alumina from bauxite ore. Alumina is used to make aluminium metal as well as advanced ceramics.

The toxic sludge escaped from a breach in the corner of the reservoir, near the plant.

Most of those killed were drowned or swept away in the nearby village of Kolontar as the sludge hit.

All life in the Marcal river, which feeds the Danube, is said to have been extinguished.

The sludge reached the Danube on Thursday, but Hungarian officials said on Friday that the pH level in the river was “normal”, easing fears that Europe’s second-longest river would be significantly polluted.

Emergency crews have been working to dilute the alkaline content of the spill, adding huge quantities of gypsum and chemical fertilisers to the waters of the Marcal and Raba rivers.

Infographic showing Hungary's toxic spill - 11 October 2010

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US warned over Pakistan aid logos

USAID logoThe US insists that branding is important in non-sensitive areas of Pakistan

A group of 11 prominent charities is preparing a letter calling on the US to remove logos on American-funded assistance in Pakistan.

The letter, signed by charities including Save the Children, Oxfam, and World Vision says that such “branding” of aid jeopardises their neutrality.

They say that this is especially dangerous in a country with numerous anti-American militants.

The letter will be delivered later this week in Washington, officials say.

It says that there are “strong indicators” that branding will attract violent attacks for both economic and ideologically-motivated reasons”.

Supplies unloaded from a helicopterAid agencies say that the safety of partners and beneficiaries is at stake

The letter will be sent to the US government aid agency, USAID, by the InterAction group, a coalition of more than 160 humanitarian organisations working around the world.

International charities have for several years refrained from using their own logos in Pakistan because of the security risk.

However the US government, through USAID, requires non-governmental organisations that receive funding to “brand” aid with the agency’s handshake logo and the words “from the American people” in local languages.

USAID have yet to comment on the proposed letter, but a blog written by the organisation’s Mark Ward says that it is “highly sensitive to the risks of branding in environments where one’s association with foreigners can turn a humanitarian worker into a target”.

The blog says that in those parts of Pakistan where security is not an issue, “we continue to require branding on our aid”.

“Branding is not just required by law; it ensures transparency when America provides aid. We believe that the people we help have a right to know where their assistance is coming from,” Mr Ward wrote.

The letter is being sent amid fears for aid workers posed by the Taliban in Pakistan and Afghanistan.

On Friday Scottish aid worker Linda Norgrove was killed in Afghanistan as US special forces tried to rescue her from kidnappers.

Save the Children Pakistan representative Mohammed Qazilbash told the BBC that the danger posed by such logos was especially apparent when displayed on rebuilt schools, reconstructed buildings, health posts, T-shirts, caps and vehicles.

“It is essential that the US considers this because the safety and security of our beneficiaries and partners in Pakistan is at stake,” he said.

“We are currently negotiating an alternative branding strategy with the US authorities,” he said.

In August the UN said it was reviewing security measures for its staff in Pakistan, after the Taliban warned foreign aid workers to stay out of the country.

There have been a number of attacks on aid workers in Pakistan in recent years, although none since devastating floods this summer.

In March militants killed six Pakistani staff working for World Vision in the north-west of the country.

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Tata cuts 180 jobs in Flintshire

Shotton in FlintshireThe Shotton plant employs more than 800 workers

Tata Steel has announced 180 jobs are to go at its plant in Shotton, Flintshire.

Staff were told its Living Solutions arm, which makes panels for commercial buildings, will close as Tata concentrates on core business.

Living Solutions was set up in 2003 so former owners Corus could diversify but it has never been profitable.

Tata blamed a weak building industry and the end of a defence supply contract.

The company stressed Living Solutions’ closure would not affect the rest of its operations, with 800 people employed at Shotton.

“I hope this is not a sign of things to come”

Peter Hughes Unite union

Andrew Black, managing director of Tata Steel Building Systems, said the decision was taken “with great regret” after a detailed review, and blamed the “continuing weak construction market” and the end of a long-term contract to supply accommodation for the defence industry.

“Living Solutions has been unable to establish sufficient market presence to justify continuing with the business, which has never been profitable,” said Mr Black.

“Clearly this is a very difficult time for our colleagues at Living Solutions and I would like to pay tribute to everyone who has worked so hard to try to develop this business venture.”

He said the modular buildings sector was “highly competitive” and the company had already tried to address the problems by cutting costs but there were “no prospects of generating viable new business”.

The company has supplied buildings for an upgrade of Ministry of Defence garrisons at Aldershot and around Salisbury Plain as part of a six-year £92m contract.

Army barracks with buildingsTata Living Solutions has been helping refurbish Army accommodation as part of a £92m contract

Peter Hughes, of the Unite union, said he had heard rumours about possible job losses, but the union had not been involved in any talks.

He said: “I hope this is not a sign of things to come. Our concern would be that that part of the site was bringing in a lot of income.

“The worry now is that the rest of the site will have to absorb the costs of the site.”

Unite represents about 450 of Shotton’s 800 workforce.

Mr Hughes said most of the staff losing their jobs were taken on as new employees when Living Solutions was launched.

The Idian steel-maker Tata bought Anglo-Dutch firm Corus in a £4.3bn ($8.1bn) takeover in 2006.

When it opened, Corus Living Solutions was seen as a way for the steel-maker to branch out in the future.

In 2004, Edwina Hart, then minister responsible for social housing, claimed the company’s steel-framed units could help ease a housing shortages in Wales.

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

Nato helicopter is hit by Taliban

Chinook helicopter in AfghanistanChinook helicopter are widely used across Afghanistan

At least one person has been killed and seven wounded in an explosion on board a Nato helicopter in eastern Afghanistan, coalition officials say.

They say that the Chinook helicopter was in the process of landing when the explosion happened, and that its cause was not immediately clear.

There were about 26 Nato-led International Security Assistance Force (Isaf) troops on board at the time.

Nato has not said where exactly the blast took place.

But it has said that the landing site has now been secured by troops.

Isaf initially said that two people had been killed in the blast, but a spokesman later scaled down the casualty figure.

“Operational reporting is very fluid. You’ve got to understand that we’re trying to get all the facts,” an Isaf spokesman told the AFP news agency.

“There are seven wounded and one killed in action. It is up to respective governments to release details of those killed in action. The seven wounded are Isaf personnel,” the spokesman said.

Eastern Afghanistan is one of the most dangerous parts of the country, where Taliban and other Islamist insurgents have a strong presence.

It is just across the border from Pakistan, where militant groups are also strong on the ground.

There are currently about 152,000 foreign troops under US and Nato command in Afghanistan, fighting in a bid to reverse a nine-year Taliban insurgency.

Two-thirds of the troops are Americans.

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