Man ‘murdered in farm burglary’

Julian GardnerPolice believe Julian Gardner was killed during a burglary that went wrong

Police believe a man who was found dead at his farm was murdered during a burglary that went “tragically wrong”.

The body of Julian Gardner, 52, was found near his home at Bush Barn Farm, off the A21 north of Robertsbridge, at about 0800 BST on Monday.

Sussex Police think he may have been murdered after he disturbed thieves in outbuildings on his farm.

The force is investigating whether cars discovered abandoned a few miles from the site were used during the incident.

Det Ch Insp Adam Hibbert said: “We are treating this as a murder inquiry and believe that this was a burglary that went wrong, with tragic consequences.

“Julian Gardner possibly disturbed an unknown number of people forcing outbuildings where he ran an agricultural and car repair business.

“The space he leaves will never be filled”

Tribute from Molly Gardner and Anna Murphy

“He was found near the buildings by his business partner just after 0800 BST on Monday.

“How he died is yet to be established and a post mortem is due to take place late this afternoon.”

He added: “We are investigating the discovery of a couple of cars – Land Rover and Jeep – that we found abandoned a few miles from the site yesterday but any possible connection to this incident is still being assessed.

“This is a tragic incident and my thoughts are with Julian’s family. We do not know who is responsible. We rely on the public to come forward.”

Police said Mr Gardner ran an agricultural and car repair business at the farm.

Bush Barn FarmPolice were called to the farm after the body was discovered by a colleague of the victim

A tribute from his family said their lives would never be the same again.

In a statement released through Sussex Police, Mr Gardner’s mother Molly Gardner and his sister Anna Murphy said: “Julian was our son, brother and dear friend and nothing will ever be the same in our lives without him.

“He had so much more living to do. If only he had known how many people have had their lives enriched by knowing him.

“He was so honest, so dependable, funny, loyal and hard-working.

“The space he leaves will never be filled.”

A spokeswoman for the National Farmers Union (NFU) said local members had been warned to be “extra vigilant” following the incident.

She added: “He was not an NFU member but he was well-known locally. Rural crime is a concern in the South East and our members will be extra vigilant.

“We send our sympathies to Mr Gardner’s family and the community.”

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Man used hosepipe to punish son

A man has been given a 150-day suspended sentence for hosing down his eight-year-old son with cold water as punishment for urinating in the house.

At Margate Magistrates Court the man, who is in his 30s and cannot be named for legal reasons, had admitted an act of cruelty towards a child.

A woman called police after witnessing the incident in Canterbury.

The boy’s ordeal lasted for more than two hours as his father punished him for going to the toilet in a drawer.

The court heard the police found the boy in the front garden cold and shivering in September 2009.

A woman visiting a friend raised the alarm after hearing the child screaming loudly and wailing so much that she at first thought it was an animal.

The child has now been taken into local authority care.

The father’s 150-day sentence is suspended for two years.

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Terror suspect due in NYC court

Ahmed Khalfan GhailaniAhmed Khalfan Ghailani, a native of Tanzania, was arrested in 2004

Opening statements are expected on Tuesday in the first civilian trial of a former Guantanamo inmate, Ahmed Ghailani, taking place in New York.

Tanzanian-born Ghailani, 36, denies helping al-Qaeda kill 224 people in the 1998 US embassy bombings in Africa.

Prosecutors will proceed without a key witness after a judge ruled last week that he could not testify.

The Obama administration hopes to hold similar civilian trials for other high-profile Guantanamo inmates.

These could include alleged 9/11 mastermind Khalid Sheikh Mohammed.

But correspondents say matters have been complicated by District Judge Lewis Kaplan’s decision last week to exclude testimony from the prosecution’s top witness in the Ghailani trial.

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Test case

The man, Hussein Abebe, was expected to testify that he had sold TNT used in the bombing of the US embassy Tanzania in August 1998 to Mr Ghailani.

But the judge ruled the witness could not testify as he had been named by Mr Ghailani while he was “under duress”.

Mr Ghailani was detained in Pakistan in 2004, taken to a secret CIA facility and then to Guantanamo Bay in 2006.

He was subject to what the government refers to as “enhanced interrogation” by the CIA. His lawyers say he was tortured.

Mr Ghailani is accused of having purchased the vehicle and explosives used in the attack in Tanzania, and of having served as an aide to al-Qaeda leader Osama Bin Laden.

He denies the charges, but faces life in prison if convicted.

Whereas other Guantanamo detainees have been tried by military commissions, Mr Ghailani is the first prisoner to be tried in the civilian courts.

The case is seen as a test of the administration’s pledge to close the US military prison in Cuba by next January.

Proceedings were expected to begin on Tuesday with jury selection, followed by opening statements.

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Uganda court ends treason trial

Kizza Besigye (Archive photo)Kizza Besigye had faced the treason charges since 2006

Uganda’s Constitutional Court has quashed the treason charges against opposition leader Kizza Besigye.

The Forum for Democratic Change leader had challenged the legality of the charges he and 10 others had faced in both civilian and military courts.

In a unanimous ruling, the panel of five judges said there was no way of guaranteeing a fair trial.

Dr Besigye is set to take on President Yoweri Museveni for a third time in elections next year.

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After the judgement, Dr Besigye told the BBC’s Focus on Africa programme he welcomed the ruling as the court “had condemned the actions of the state”.

He said it was a relief to be able to get his passport back and that his reputation had been restored.

“All the trumped-up charges that have been brought against me have been put to a final stop,” he said.

Dr Besigye used to be Mr Museveni’s personal doctor and the two men were allies in the guerrilla war which brought Mr Museveni to power in 1986, before they fell out.

After losing the 2002 poll, Dr Besigye fled Uganda, saying he feared for his life.

He returned before the 2006 election, but was not able to campaign properly as he was charged with supporting an armed group and rape.

He was cleared of the rape in March 2006 – and has said all the allegations were part of a campaign of political persecution.

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Police take 28 children in raids

Police have taken 28 children into protection after raiding a gang of suspected child traffickers based in east London.

Met officers raided homes across the borough of Redbridge and found children between three and 17 years old.

Three adults were arrested on suspicion of assault and neglect of a child, two on suspicion of benefit fraud and two because they were wanted on warrant.

A boy, 3, was taken to hospital with bruises and facial injuries.

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QUB to review student’s 2:2 grade

Queen's University, BelfastAndrew Croskery who graduated from Queen’s in June was only half a percent off obtaining a 2:1 in his degree

A Belfast graduate who took his university to court after they awarded him a 2:2 degree is to have his degree classification reviewed.

Andrew Croskery, from County Down, had applied for a judicial review of the grade he received from Queen’s University in Belfast.

Mr Croskery was only half a percent off obtaining a 2:1 in his degree.

Judicial review proceedings have been adjourned to see if the review can bring a resolution.

Mr Croskery graduated in June with a degree in electrical engineering. He applied for the judicial review in September.

The High Court heard the proposal was being made without prejudice in a bid to ease any concerns by Mr Croskey.

Mr Croskery claimed if he had received better supervision he would have achieved a higher degree.

It had been argued that he was denied a right to appeal against his classification because he graduated from Queen’s this summer.

The University’s stance was not compliant with his client’s human rights, according to his lawyers.

At an earlier hearing it was claimed Mr Croskery’s job prospects had been jeopardised because of the degree awarded.

Lawyers for Queen’s had argued a judicial review application was not the proper forum for the challenge because it had a board of visitors which considered student appeals and complaints.

But on Tuesday, a judge granted a three-week adjournment for the review process to take place.

This is expected to examine his degree classification on the alleged grounds of inadequate supervision and procedural irregularities.

A further challenge may also be brought to a Central Students Appeal Committee.

Mr Croskery, who was in court for the short hearing, left without making any comment.

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Duffy claims strip-search ‘abuse’

Colin DuffyColin Duffy is charged with murdering the two soldiers

A Lurgan republican accused of the Real IRA murder of two soldiers is claiming he was subjected to sexual and physical abuse during a prison strip-search.

Colin Duffy, 42, has been in custody since March of last year when Sappers Patrick Azimkar and Mark Quinsey were shot dead outside Massereene barracks.

His claims have meant the preliminary investigation into the murders – due to restart has been delayed again.

The abuse is alleged to have happened in prison on Tuesday morning.

Defence lawyer Mark Mulholland told Coleraine Magistrates Court that Duffy, from Forest Glebe in Lurgan, had been left in “significant pain” as a result.

Duffy, along with 45-year-old Brian Patrick Shivers, from Sperrin Mews, Magherafelt, is accused of the murders of the two soldiers on 7 March last year.

Prosecuting QC Terrence Mooney claimed that DNA evidence linked both men to the gunmen’s Vauxhall Cavalier car, from which police later recovered a “terrorist kit” of camouflage gear.

Mr Mooney further claimed that the evidence provided a significant and strong inference which would allow the court to find that there was a prima facie case against both men.

They are also accused of the attempted murder of five others injured in the attack and possession of the two AKM rifles used by the gunmen.

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Cable accepts unlimited fees plan

Vince CableVince Cable will have to deliver a deal acceptable to rebel Lib Dem MPs

Business Secretary Vince Cable is under intense pressure to deliver a deal on tuition fees which will be acceptable to Liberal Democrat MPs.

Mr Cable is set to respond in the House of Commons to Lord Browne’s proposals calling for an unlimited level of tuition fees for students in England.

A backbench rebellion is threatened – and the Lib Dem party said that it remains party policy to scrap fees.

Students have warned that raising fees would mean “crippling debts”.

The UCU lecturers’ union said the plan, which could see fees rising to as much as £12,000 per year, was “the final nail in the coffin for affordable higher education”.

Lib Dem MPs will be waiting to see whether Mr Cable can offer any more progressive elements to Lord Browne’s proposals.

There have been suggestions he will call for higher-earning graduates to pay back student loans at a higher rate of interest than the 2.2% plus inflation set out by Lord Browne.

Accepting the main proposal of Lord Browne, that the limit on fees should be lifted, presents deep political difficulties for the Liberal Democrats.

The party’s MPs, including Mr Cable, signed a pledge at the election to vote against any increase in fees.

Party leader, Nick Clegg, made a video for students in which he delivered a personal message saying that tuition fees were “wrong” and that he would oppose them.

The press office of Mr Cable’s own party said it is still policy to scrap fees – despite the expectation of Mr Cable entirely contradicting this by endorsing an increase in fees.

Mr Cable will have to find a form of compromise that will allow his MPs to accept a deal on higher fees – despite warnings from students that they will challenge MPs who “betray” their election pledge.

The blueprint for universities in England set out by Lord Browne would see an emphasis on competition.

It calls for the current £3,290 cap on fees to be scrapped and replaced by a free market, in which universities set their own charges for different courses.

Students in a lectureUniversities should no longer face limits on how much they should charge, says Lord Browne’s report

But Lord Browne’s review proposes that universities that charge more than £6,000 a year would lose a proportion of the fee to help cover the cost of student borrowing.

Lord Browne said: “We have taken off the cap but we haven’t taken off the restrictions.”

He said all universities were different and needed different amounts of money, but he predicted that few would put fees very high.

He acknowledged graduates would be paying significantly more back in their tuition fee and maintenance loans but insisted they were not being left with “mortgage-style debts”.

“They would be paying the same interest rate as the government uses to borrow. They will only pay it back when their earnings go above £21,000,” he said.

The report comes ahead of next week’s comprehensive spending review, in which major cuts to higher education funding are expected.

Lord Browne sets out a system in which much of the cost of a degree would be transferred from the taxpayer to the student.

Shadow university minister John Denham said the report reflected the belief that teaching budgets would be cut by around two-thirds.

“This is a massive cut even when set against the coalition’s aim to cut spending by 25%,” he said.

NUS president Aaron Porter

NUS President Aaron Porter: “If people have the ability and the aspiration to go to university, they shouldn’t be priced out”

This more competitive market would also mean that for the first time universities could go out of business, says the report.

Universities must compete over students, fee levels and against new providers, the review panel recommends: “If they fail… they might ultimately close or be taken over.”

The report seeks to balance higher charges with support for applicants from poorer families.

As now, students would not have to pay fees up-front, but would receive a loan.

But they would not have to start repaying it until their earnings reached £21,000 per year, up from the current level of £15,000.

All students will be able to borrow £3,750 per year – and young people from families earning less than £25,000 will receive an additional grant of £3,250.

There have been warnings that middle-income families will face a particular financial squeeze from such a fee hike.

“There is a feeling that the rich can afford it – and the poor will quite rightly be protected – but people in the middle could find themselves really penalised,” says Justine Roberts of the Mumsnet website.

If accepted by the government, the reforms are expected to take effect in 2012 at the earliest.

Paul Marshall, executive director of the 1994 Group of research-intensive universities, welcomed the review as “the first progressive step” towards increasing funding for universities.

CURRENT UK TUITION FEESEngland, Wales, Northern Ireland: Max £3,290 paScotland: Free to Scottish and EU students, £1,820 pa to other UK (£2,895 for medicine)Students from elsewhere in the EU pay the same as those locallyStudents from outside the EU pay whatever the university chargesTuition fees: Across the UK N Ireland: Decision due Scotland: Minister rules out upfront fees Wales: Ministers to react

But the Million+ group of new universities said it would deter poorer students, and would “undoubtedly mean that some students who would have gone to university will decide not to go”.

The Russell Group of leading universities said the higher charges would provide necessary extra income.

“That’s because, bluntly, our leading institutions will not be able to compete with generously-funded universities in other countries if they are not able to secure extra funding.”

The National Union of Students said students would be left with “crippling levels of debt and many universities face utter devastation as a result of horrific cuts”.

Elsewhere in the UK, Scottish students studying in Scotland do not have to pay any fees. In Northern Ireland and Wales, fees are charged up to a maximum of £3,290 a year.

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Trio guilty of Halloween murder

Ben GardnerMr Gardner was punched and kicked in the street

Three men have been found guilty of murdering an IT worker on Halloween in a row over his girlfriend’s hat.

Ben Gardner, 30, was punched and kicked in Sutton, south London, in October 2009 after the hat was snatched.

Allanna Devine was also punched as Mr Gardner lay injured. The attack took place after Miss Devine asked for her hat back, the Old Bailey heard.

Daniel Ransom and Ross Collender, both 21, and Jordan Dixon, 18, of Carshalton, had denied murder.

Mr Gardner, who worked for insurance firm Legal & General, had been to a club with Miss Devine to celebrate her birthday.

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In the early hours of the morning, Miss Devine was waiting for him outside a kebab shop when a group of men snatched a pirate’s hat and black wig she was wearing, the court heard.

They did not react to the provocation.

But later in the evening as they returned to Miss Devine’s home they saw the group loitering by the hat, the court heard.

When she asked for it back she was verbally abused.

Collender then “suddenly and unexpectedly” punched Mr Gardner in the face. He was then punched by Dixon, falling onto his back in the road.

Then Ransom kicked the “utterly defenceless” IT worker in the head.

It was described by witnesses as being like a “penalty kick” and Mr Gardner died on 1 November from “catastrophic brain damage”.

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Profits killing personal privacy

hands on a laptop

Personal privacy is in danger of being killed off by the profit-making motives of firms which hold our data, security expert Bruce Schneier has warned.

BT’s chief technology officer expressed his concerns at the RSA Security Europe Conference in London.

While the death of personal privacy had been predicted for a long time, rapid technological changes posed a mortal danger to it, he said.

Mr Schneier urged lawmakers to do more to help preserve and protect privacy.

The death of privacy had been predicted before with the emergence of many different technologies, he said. But before now that threat had been largely overblown.

Related stories

“Just because the technology is there does not mean that privacy invasions must happen,” he said.

The difference now, he said, was that the falling cost of storage and processing power made it far easier to keep data such as e-mail conversations, Tweets or postings to a social network page than it was to spend the time managing and deleting the information.

The migration of human social interaction from ephemeral forms that took place face to face into data that never goes away and does not allow us to forget or leave behind our past actions was undoubtedly going to change society, he said.

“Forgetting is a very powerful social tool that helps us get by and get along,” he said.

As lives are lived more and more online or via the phone it has led, said Mr Schneier, to a situation in which everyone has to be the guardian of their own privacy policy.

“We are now seeing the death of privacy”

Bruce Schneier

“That’s new and fundamentally unnatural,” he said.

Deciding what data we are prepared to surrender would be fine if people were given a proper choice, he said.

Unfortunately, he said, users of social networking sites or any online service were being presented with choices defined by priorities they did not choose.

The choices are filtered through the law, which is being outstripped by technological change, leaving people with only what net firms give them or can get away with.

“The social rules are being set by businesses with a profit motive,” he said.

Facebook has faced a barrage of criticism about its privacy settings and despite effort to address user concerns, has continued to worry privacy campaigners.

Google boss Eric Schmidt said, after the row about its StreetView service scooping up wi-fi data: “If you have something that you don’t want anyone to know, maybe you shouldn’t be doing it in the first place.”

Talking about privacy policies on web sites, Mr Schneier said they were hard to find and understand because it was in the interest of those sites to confuse people into disclosing more than they were comfortable with.

The more data about their members that sites gathered the better they can serve advertisers or use the data for their own marketing purposes, he said.

“We are now seeing the death of privacy,” he said. “Those CEOs are doing it and doing things to hasten its demise.”

In some senses, he said, this was not their fault because the production of data was a natural by-product of the way that computers work.

But, he said, this did not mean that legal and technological protections were not needed. The law was currently abdicating its role and there was a pressing need for tools that could help people manage their online presences.

He said that how we deal with privacy now would define how future generations regard us in the same way that commentators now look critically on the pollution produced as a by-product of the industrial revolution.

“They are going to look back at us and look at the things we do to deal with the pollution problem of the information age and judge us,” he said.

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

Outside the box

Gap logosGap says it learnt from its mistake, on the right

Gap clothing company has ditched its new logo after only one week, due to an online backlash. So what are the perils of changing a company emblem?

Cheapy, tacky, ordinary.

Some of the adjectives used by Gap customers to describe its now-axed logo. After less than one week, it has been consigned to the graveyard inhabited by rejected arrows, squiggles and inadvertently offensive corporate emblems.

The clean font, with a small blue square overlapping the “P”, prompted such an outcry that the US clothing firm initially enlisted the help of the public in rethinking the design.

But within days it announced, early on Tuesday morning, it was returning to the solid blue box and “GAP” written in a capitalised serif font, a look introduced 20 years ago.

British customers won’t have noticed because the change had yet to be implemented in the UK.

But Gap isn’t the first company to learn that messing with one’s visual identity is a risky business. So what did it do wrong, and what other logo makeovers have come under fire?

Gap, 2010

For a few days, it was goodbye to the 20-year-old solid blue square and the capital letters, hello to Helvetica and a small blue patch.

Other troubled logos

2012 logo and Cornwall Council logo

New logos like London 2012 and Cornwall Council, which was later ditched, can cause as many problems as revamped ones

Last week, unveiling the new design, Marka Hansen, president of Gap North America, said it was more contemporary and current, honouring the “heritage through the blue box while still taking it forward”.

But after a slew of criticism, much of it on Facebook, the company promised to take on board customers’ own suggested logos as it reconsidered the emblem.

Then on Monday evening, the purveyor of preppy fashions folded, admitting its mistakes in not consulting its customers first.

Gap is trying to change its stripes without changing the product offering, says marketing expert Craig Smith.

“Where marketers often go wrong is they think they have identified an opportunity for the brand to evolve and become something else, become more modern, and they think they can shortcut this by changing the visual identity, and carry the customers with them.

“It’s a fundamental error because customers may not be ready to go with you. The product positioning has to change first, then the logo should be the last thing.”

American ApparelMore Helvetica

My personal feelings are that the typeface is fine, says award-winning logo designer Jon Pink of J Pink Design.

“The letter forms in lowercase have an attractive quality to them and the simplicity is refreshing. I think if that was really a complaint, there would be similar complaints regarding other famous logos which utilise Helvetica in their logos, like American Apparel, [US homewares retailers] Crate&Barrel, Jeep, Panasonic, British Gas and 3M.

“However the addition of the blue square seems to be hated on a united front – it just looks cheap, tacky and very dull. So whilst including some connection of the original logo makes perfect sense in business terms, this illustrates perfectly that logic and reason can play second fiddle to gut instinct.”

BP, 2000

In 2000, BP unveiled a new greener logo, replacing the shield with a green, white and yellow flower-shaped one. At the same time, it adopted the slogan Beyond Petroleum.

BP logosBP went from shield to flower in 2000

The move cost £4.5m ($7m) in brand research, with tens of millions more dollars to be spent supporting the change. Environmentalists accused the firm of spending more on the logo than on renewable energy.

But it was 10 years later when the dangers of adopting a “green” emblem were clear, says Mr Smith.

“They’ve only learnt the error of their ways with the Deepwater Horizon crisis, because you can’t pretend that a fossil fuel company is in any sense an eco-friendly brand.

“You immediately lay a trap for yourself. Since the crisis, lots of people online have been corrupting the logo.”

The lesson there is that you can’t pretend to be something that you’re not, he adds.

Tropicana, 2009

Last year, fruit juice brand Tropicana dropped its famous orange and straw illustration from its cartons in the US, in favour of a glass of orange juice, a move that sparked countless complaints and criticism from customers. The brand’s owner, PepsiCo, relented and went back to the orange.

Tropicana cartonsThe glass of juice on Tropicana cartons was short-lived

“The 2009 redesign was meant to contemporise our graphics and, as a result of that, we learned just how passionate consumers are about our brand,” says Tropicana’s Gina Judge, in an upbeat assessment of the miscalculation.

“A group of very loyal Tropicana fans told us they loved our straw in orange imagery, so we brought that icon back to the packaging.”

The new look made the brand look ordinary, says Mr Smith. “For a loved, long-standing household brand there is no such thing as a successful logo overhaul – the only triumph is subtlety.

“For each of the six decades that Tropicana has been a fridge and family staple, its visual identity should have been refreshed. If you unveil a revolutionary redesign, expect your customers to revolt.”

In contrast, says Mr Smith, a brand like Heinz has managed to change its logo many times over the years but in such a subtle way that no-one really notices.

BT, 1991

British Telecom’s piper was introduced in 1991 and lasted 12 years, but at the time he was widely ridiculed, both for the £50m price tag and the way he looked like he was knocking back a yard of ale. He was preceded by, and later followed by, more conceptual designs.

BT phone boxThe piper soon became a fixture on British streets

“I think BT were trying to visually embody a human, almost personal element through the piper image,” says Mr Pink.

“He is listening and communicating at the same time which would bode well with BT at the time. There is no doubt that depicting a human figure would also help the company achieve a more personal image, perhaps with more focus on customer service than it had before, but the style and pose were its failing points.”

The colouring, replacing a purple and yellow “T”, was trying to reinforce the British element, he says.

“Once a business has established its brand positioning amongst the general public, it is often the logo that is seen to embody that branding and therefore acts as the visual connection between consumer and business much like we connect a person’s face with his personality.

“In fact that is a good analogy to logos and brands – if we think of a brand being someone’s personality and the logo being someone’s face it makes it easier to see why as humans we like familiarity and how breaking that connection can cause confusion and puzzlement.”

Conservative party, 2006

When David Cameron ditched his party’s hand-held blue torch for a scribbled tree, former party chairman Lord Tebbit described it as “a bunch of broccoli”.

Tory logosFrom torch to tree

Others said it looked like Mr Cameron’s child had drawn it, says Mr Pink, and the softer colour palette was far removed from the very staunch red, white and blue of the old logo.

“I actually feel that criticism was unfair and that this is one of the more thought-out logo revamps of the last decade. Such a sharp change in direction helped David Cameron to distance himself from Lady Thatcher, but also helped the party appear more relaxed and environmentally conscious.

“The oak tree is also a symbol of strength and stability – both of which are great values to portray for a political party.

“Logos are like anything else that has been created- they are very subjective, so drastic changes will always split opinions, but this is one instance where I feel the naysayers have been proven wrong and the designers right.”

What a weak response from Gap. The old logo is tired, dated and desperately in need of a refresh. The new logo looked fresh and innovative. The public invariably take time to warm to new visual identities and businesses need to stand up and defend the need for change. Alas, not so in this case.

Graham Newsom, Chessington, England

People don’t want drastic changes in anything – that’s the lesson. Be it relationships, politics, price variations or weather – it brings a knee jerk reaction. And with social media putting raw power in the hands of users, brands need to plan their moves very well.

Rajasekar Raju, Chennai, India

Think the original GAP logo has become a worldwide icon so the right decison has been made. Who can forget the idiocy of the ethnic tail designs on BA planes fiasco. I’m no lover of the Union Jack, but that encapsulated BA across the world for many I’m sure and was unsurprised to see it return.

Gruithainn, Dundee

When I saw the new Gap logo I honestly thought it was for a completely different company, not the clothing firm. Changing a logo is fine, but you need to consider brand awareness, the strength of your brand and what market you are in. When walking around a city centre, shopping precinct or supermarket we all recognise logos, that’s what a brand is. Unless GAP are really struggling I don’t understand the need to change.

Rob Holmes,

“The new logo looked fresh and innovative”, Graham Newson. Really? Does a bland, overused font (evidence aplenty within this article – American Apparel, Crate&Barrel, Jeep, Panasonic, British Gas, 3M…) with an unimaginative and uninteresting small faded blue square really qualify as “innovative” in any way at all? It looked like something out of Microsoft clipart, circa 1995. Terrible. Old logo much better, iconic and a huge improvement. What do we say? “If it ain’t broke…”

Alex, Cardiff

If you have a warm feeling associated with a brand then the same goes for its logo. It should only change if the brand is not getting as much attention as it used to get. I still won’t buy Pepsi since they changed from the white label to the blue! Blue just makes me think it’s Pepsi Max!

Brenda, Armagh

The old Gap logo looks its age, but unfortunately not old enough to take on a retro feel. I do feel that this is controversy that would have passed over very quickly without any perceptible damage to the brand. Gap seems to have been hijacked in its plans less by its customers than by a social media mob.

Peter Blair, London

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French unions launch new strike

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.

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

Agony aunt Claire Rayner dies

Claire RaynerClaire Rayner became something of an institution in the 1980s

Agony aunt Claire Rayner has died at the age of 79.

She worked for the Sunday Mirror during the 1980s and was named medical journalist of the year in 1987. She has also wrote a string of novels and appeared on countless TV shows.

A former nurse and midwife, for many years she was the president of the Patients’ Association.

She had been suffering from cancer for several years and in 2006 wrote about her illness on the BBC News website.

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