Japanese smokers see prices soar

Smokers in TokyoThe government hopes the tax increase will encourage smokers to give up

Japan’s government has imposed the biggest tax increase on cigarettes the country has ever seen.

The price of the most popular brands is rising on Friday by about 40%, from 300 yen ($3.60; £2.30) to 410 yen ($4.90; £3.70).

The aim is to encourage smokers to quit, in a country with a reputation as one of the most smoker-friendly places in the industrialised world.

But instead smokers have been busy stocking up on cigarettes.

Lighting up is still allowed in restaurants and bars in Japan, and many offices have smoking rooms.

More than one in three Japanese men smoke, although only 12% of women do.

But now the government has put up the tax on cigarettes by 40%.

The aim is to encourage smokers to give up, and surveys show that 60% are thinking of doing so.

But not just yet. The convenience store chain Family Mart reported that sales nearly doubled in the weeks before the price rise.

And the biggest producer, Japan Tobacco, shipped an extra 12 billion cigarettes, one month’s supply, to meet demand.

“We are expecting a rush, especially the day before the price hike,” a spokeswoman for Lawson, a chain of convenience stores, told the AFP news agency.

“Each shop has expanded its cigarette stock.”

There have been predictions that the hoarding by smokers may even boost Japan’s economy, adding up to 0.6% to consumer spending in the three months from July-September.

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Grandage to step down from Donmar

Michael GrandageGrandage will leave the Donmar after nine years in 2011

Michael Grandage is to step down as artistic director of the Donmar Warehouse after nine years, it has been announced.

He will be leaving late 2011 after nine years leading the company.

“I am now keen to have a career that moves away from being in charge of a building in order to develop my work as a director in other ways,” he said.

During his tenure, Grandage expanded the company internationally with Donmar productions playing in four continents.

‘Big shoes to fill’

“With the Donmar’s reputation in a particularly exciting place both at home and abroad, I feel now is the right moment to start a handover period to a new artistic director,” Grandage said in a statement.

“It will enable someone to build on the success we have achieved over the last nine years and to look to the future with real confidence.”

After he replaced Oscar-winning director Sam Mendes in 2002, Grandage’s inaugural production was The Vortex with Chiwetel Ejiofor, whom he worked with again five years later in his production of Othello.

New writing provided the company with two of its biggest successes in recent years – Peter Morgan’s Frost/Nixon which enjoyed a West End transfer and a run on Broadway, and John Logan’s Red which saw the company return to Broadway and win six Tonys this year.

The director also put accessibility at the forefront of the company’s ethos, introducing a national touring programme and an extensive education programme.

Last year he led the company into the West End for a year long season of work at the Wyndham’s Theatre.

The season, featuring Ivanov with Kenneth Branagh, Twelfth Night with Derek Jacobi, Madame de Sade with Judi Dench and Hamlet with Jude Law, played to 98% capacity.

The Rt Hon Lord Smith of Finsbury, chair of the board of directors, said: “These are big shoes to fill, but we’re excited by the challenge of finding the right person to take us forward to further success.”

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Fishermen ‘on the brink of ruin’

Fishing on boat SustainThe Scottish Fishermen’s Federation is warning that skippers face a difficult future

Parts of the Scottish fishing fleet are on the brink of ruin, industry leaders have warned.

The Scottish Fishermen’s Federation said a large number of whitefish and prawn boats were “teetering on the brink of viability”.

The SFF is due to hold talks with European fisheries commissioner Maria Damanaki in Aberdeen on Friday.

She is expected to be given a box of mackerel to highlight the ongoing Iceland and Faroes quota wrangle.

SFF chief executive Bertie Armstrong said: “A key point we want to make to the commissioner is the huge effort that has been made by the Scottish fleet in ensuring sustainable harvesting.

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“The EC must recognise and reward the considerable sacrifice made by our fishermen by easing the current punishing fishing restrictions.”

He warned: “A large number of whitefish and prawn boats are teetering on the brink of viability and many segments of the fleet simply will not survive if there is any further tightening of the screw.

“For fishermen to have faith in fisheries management they must be rewarded for their efforts.

“At the moment the fishing industry is enduring increasing restrictions year-after-year despite there being signs of fish stock recovery. The industry can only take so much and the point has now been reached for these restrictions to be eased.”

Iceland and the Faroe Islands earlier unilaterally declared large catch quotas for mackerel, which Scottish skippers claim could damage its sustainability.

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Spanish hero Don Quixote becomes YouTube star

Image of Don Quixote and his squire Sancho Panza travelling on horsebackThe novel tells the story of a 17th Century gentleman obsessed with chivalry

The Royal Spanish Academy has invited people around the world to record short chunks of the classic novel Don Quixote and upload them to YouTube.

Miguel de Cervantes’ Don Quixote is often described as Spain’s most famous novel – and yet few have ever read it.

Now the academy, the official guardian of the Spanish language, has divided the work into more than 2,000 segments.

They will be read and recorded – in Spanish only – by volunteers visiting a special YouTube page.

The academy said the campaign was aimed at promoting both the Spanish language and the famous book, which carried the full title The Ingenious Hidalgo Don Quixote of La Mancha.

“The Spanish language does not occupy the space that it deserves on the internet,” the secretary of the academy, Dario Villanueva, said.

“We want to denounce that and do something to correct it,” the AFP news agency reported him as saying.

Written in 1605, the novel tells of the adventures of a retired gentleman from the la Mancha region who is obsessed with chivalrous ideas.

The original boasts 26 chapters and is nearly 1,000 pages long.

Those who wish to take part in the modern-day reading can sign up at www.youtube.com/elquijote. Each participant will be assigned a segment to be read on a video, which can then be posted online.

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Parties to meet Fox over defence

Computer generated image of aircraft carrier The carriers are being built on the Clyde and at Rosyth

First Minister Alex Salmond and his political rivals are due to meet Defence Secretary Liam Fox in their fight to save defence jobs in Scotland.

Mr Salmond and the leaders of the three main opposition parties in the Scottish Parliament fear the cancellation of orders for two Royal Navy aircraft carriers would threaten the future of Scottish shipbuilding.

Their joint submission to the UK strategic defence review also warns against big reductions in military personnel.

They will make the case for retaining jobs, bases and orders in talks with Mr Fox in London.

However, union bosses were furious, saying they have been excluded from the talks.

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The Scottish Trades Union Congress (STUC) claimed it had been snubbed by the Ministry of Defence (MoD) by not being included.

According to a spokesman for the first minister, their request for trade union and community representatives to attend the meeting was refused by the MoD.

STUC general secretary Grahame Smith said: “The defence secretary’s decision to exclude trade unions from the meeting amounts to a disgraceful and brazen snub to a loyal, dedicated and highly productive workforce whose aim was simply to contribute to a mature discussion about the future of their jobs.”

He said the MoD’s reasons were “clear to no-one”, even though it had seemed likely just two weeks ago that they would be involved.

Mr Smith added: “Workers in defence industries may legitimately conclude that their employer, the defence secretary and his department, cares nothing about their interests or views.”

Spending review branding

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

Spending Review: Making It Clear

However, the MoD said the request for a meeting about defence issues came from the leaders of the Scottish political parties and not from the trade unions.

A spokeswoman said: “Trade unions have already met with defence ministers as part of the consultation process for the UK Strategic Defence and Security Review.”

Mr Salmond’s spokesman said: “It’s regrettable that the Ministry of Defence has not acceded to the wish of the joint campaign to have broader representation in terms of trade union and community representation, but nonetheless the meeting will go ahead and it is a key platform to argue Scotland’s case and there is no doubt that the more united Scotland’s voice, then the stronger it will be.

“We’ve got an unprecedented joint campaign in Scotland in defence of jobs and skills and the first minister and the other party leaders will be mounting the strongest possible case with the defence secretary.”

Scotland’s defence industry generates an estimated £1.8bn turnover and employs more than 12,600 people, excluding jobs in MoD facilities.

It is feared that any downgrading of an aircraft carriers programme could cost thousands of jobs at shipyards on the Clyde and at Rosyth.

Concerns include the cancellation of one or more of the Queen Elizabeth Class Aircraft Carriers, the Type 26 Frigate Design contract and closure or “significant reduction” in military bases and sites in Scotland.

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Road hauliers fear fuel cost rise

Petrol pumpHaulage industry representatives are upset with the rise

A government fuel duty rise will put another 1p on the cost of a litre of petrol and diesel from Friday.

The AA has criticised the move and hauliers’ body, the Freight Transport Association (FTA) has called the move a “smash-and-grab approach”.

The FTA said above-inflation tax hikes since 2009 meant the freight industry faced “a disproportionate burden in narrowing the public sector deficit”.

It said the rise would add £125m more a year to transport industry bills.

“With another rise due in January and above-inflation rises set for the next three years, many businesses hit hard by the recent recession will feel like they are on borrowed time,” FTA chief economist Simon Chapman said.

“The price of oil is the highest it’s been for three months and is set to rise further as we come into the autumn peak period of oil demand.

“With economic recovery still so fragile, now is not the time to compound the problem with artificial price hikes.”

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New equality rights in workplace

Call centre workers“Everyone is protected by the new law,” says the Equality and Human Rights Commission

New streamlined workplace equality rules are due to be implemented, after being approved by the government.

The Equality Act covers many workplace areas and draws nine separate pieces of legislation into a single Act.

Equalities Minister Theresa May says it will now be easier for firms to comply with anti-discrimination rules.

The Act also bans age discrimination by employers and includes provisions aimed at extending the rights of disabled people.

‘Challenging times’

The new law restricts the circumstances in which employers can ask job applicants questions about disability or health prior to offering them a position, making it more difficult for disabled people to be unfairly screened out.

“In these challenging economic times it’s more important than ever for employers to make the most of all the talent available,” said Ms May.

There are also new powers for employment tribunals.

The Act will also stop employers using pay secrecy clauses to prevent employees discussing their own pay, which means men and women can compare pay.

But the Act will not make employers reveal how much they pay men compared with women, as had been planned by the Labour government.

‘Sexual orientation’

“Everyone is protected by the new law,” says the Equality and Human Rights Commission.

“It [the Act] covers age, disability, gender reassignment, marriage and civil partnership, pregnancy and maternity, race, religion and belief, sex (meaning gender) and sexual orientation.

“Under the act people are not allowed to discriminate, harass or victimise another person because they belong to a group that the Act protects, they are thought to belong to one of those groups or are associated with someone who does.”

During the summer there were some concerns expressed by shipping companies.

Some claimed the laws could force them to quit the UK because they would have to pay UK rates to foreign-based seafarers who do not have the burden of British living costs.

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Minimum wage up to £5.93 an hour

WalletUnions have welcomed the increase in the minimum wage

The national minimum wage has risen to £5.93 an hour from £5.80 and for the first time people aged 21 will benefit from the rate.

Previously the full rate applied to employees aged 22 and older.

There are also corresponding increases for younger workers, with 16 and 17-year-olds seeing a rise from £3.57 an hour to £3.64.

For 18 to 20-year-olds the rate is increasing from £4.83 to £4.92 an hour, the new rules state.

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The government has also introduced a minimum wage for apprentices for the first time, of £2.50 an hour, for those under 19 years old.

However, the British Chambers of Commerce (BCC) has warned the government about further rises that could damage job creation.

It said next year’s increase must be no more than 1.7%, as a larger rise would seriously impede retailers’ ability to maintain and create jobs.

BCC director-general Stephen Robertson said the government must strike the right balance between higher wages and more jobs.

“Trading conditions are tough, higher costs, such as next April’s National Insurance increase will pile on even more pressure,” he said.

“Even a small increase in 2011’s minimum wage could choke off retailers’ vital potential to create new jobs.”

The government is also cracking down on employers who flout the minimum wage laws. It said it would name and shame offenders, publicising breaches from 1 January 2011.

Employment Minister Edward Davey said firms had three months to put their house in order.

“Bad publicity can be a powerful weapon in the fight against employers who try to cheat their workers and competitors. Their reputation can be badly damaged if they are seen to be flouting the law,” he said.

The national minimum wage was introduced in 1999, at a rate of £3.60 an hour.

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Doctors’ body opposes NHS revamp

Hospital nurseAn overhaul of the NHS was announced in July

The forthcoming shake-up of the NHS in England could undermine its “stability and future”, doctors’ leaders say.

The British Medical Association warning sparks the start of what promises to be a delicate balancing act for ministers.

The government set out plans in July to give GPs control of much of the budget, while scrapping two tiers of managers.

The BMA said it was not against the whole vision, but it had “fundamental” concerns.; the government says the changes will help improve the service.

The BMA’s criticisms – made in its official response to July’s white paper – contrast with its initial response over the summer when it said it was “ready, willing and able”.

And they come as the government faces a legal challenge from the union Unison.

The key NHS changesGPs – Asked to get together in groups to take on responsibility for spending much of the NHS budgetHospitals – Encouraged to move outside the NHS to become “vibrant” industry of social enterprisesPatients – More information and choice, including ability to register with any GP they want toManagers – Strategic health authorities and primary care trusts facing the axe

The public sector union is seeking a judicial review over the way the government is handling the changes.

The official consultation period will end later this month, after which ministers are likely to start formal talks with BMA negotiators about implementing the changes.

It wants to start piloting the GP consortiums, which will take charge of the budget from the soon-to-be abolished primary care trusts, this financial year. Full roll-out will follow within two years.

But it is this pace of change which is one of the problems, according to the BMA.

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It said the timetable could threaten the £20bn savings the health service has to make by 2014.

The BMA also took issue with the “obsession” with competition, saying GPs would be set against hospitals – one of the objectives of the changes is to get more care done more cheaply outside hospitals.

Many doctors also fear the plans will lead to the increased involvement of the private sector – and ultimately damage the doctor-patient relationship as the public could start viewing their own GPs as rationers of services.

The BMA said there needed to be a clear distinction between individual GPs and the consortiums.

Dr Richard Vautrey, deputy chairman of the BMA’s GPs committee, conceded the majority of family doctors had “concerns”.

Analysis: Does it matter what the BMA thinks?

The BMA is probably one of the most powerful professional bodies.

But it has carefully positioned itself above the normal rough and tumble of the labour movement.

In fact, it is just as likely to throw its weight around in debates about drinking and science as it is over pay and conditions.

And with close links to influential voices across the political spectrum, it has a significant power-base.

But that does not mean it has a veto on these changes.

While the government is likely to seek formal talks soon, ministers could force through the plans if they wished.

Of course, that would create resentment within the profession and for the reforms to work the government needs doctors on side.

Instead, expect a long and drawn out period of negotiations, claim and counter claim with today’s intervention just the start.

The document said issues such as these had the “potential to undermine the stablility and long-term future of the NHS”.

BMA chairman Dr Hamish Meldrum added: “There are proposals in the white paper that doctors can support and want to work with.

“But there is also much that would be potentially damaging.

“The BMA has consistently argued that clinicians should have more autonomy to shape services for their patients, but pitting them against each other in a market-based system creates waste, bureaucracy and inefficiency.”

Shadow health secretary Andy Burnham said: “This backs up Labour’s warnings since the white paper was published.”

And Jennifer Dixon, chief executive of the Nuffield Trust, a health think-tank, suggested the BMA was right to highlight some of the issues.

“The reforms are substantial and will require significant management expertise to implement smoothly. A real concern is whether this level of reform can be implemented without risk of major failure.”

But she also questioned whether GPs were ready to take on the budget, likening it to local convenience stores trying to become the Tesco of the health service.

Health Secretary Andrew Lansley played down the criticisms.

“There are many GPs across the country who are keen to make the transition quickly, others want to know more about how it’s going to work before they implement it,” he said.

“This is what the consultation process is about, everyone coming forward to say how can we make this work.”

He added that the plans were aimed at making care better for patients.

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When live TV goes wrong – it’s Odd Box

The politician with the giggles, the man who loves swimming with a crocodile and the live TV heckler. It’s the week’s weird and wonderful video stories in Newsbeat’s Odd Box with Dominic Byrne.

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Ecuador gripped by ‘coup attempt’

President Rafael Correa addresses protesters in Quito, EcuadorPresident Correa told protesters the government would press ahead with reforms

About 150 members of the security forces in Ecuador have taken over the runway at the airport in the capital, Quito, forcing it to shut down.

It comes as police and troops in the country stage protests over government plans to cut their benefits.

A bridge and main access road into the capital are reported to have been blocked by protesters.

President Rafael Correa has appeared before protesters at a barracks in Quito to appeal for calm.

He told them: “If you want to seize the barracks, if you want to leave citizens undefended, if you want to betray the mission of the police force, go ahead. But this government will do what has to be done.”

The troops and police are protesting against austerity cuts which would reduce their bonuses.

Television stations have shown images of police setting tyres on fire in the streets of Quito, Guayaquil and other cities.

The mayor of Quito, Augusto Barrera, said all flights were suspended from the Mariscal Sucre International Airport.

“Unfortunately a group of people have occupied the runway,” the EFE news agency quoted him as saying.

The unrest came as it emerged that Mr Correa was considering dissolving the national assembly after failing to pass economic reforms.

He would then rule by decree until elections could be held.

The move would have to be approved by the country’s Constitutional Court.

Policy Minister Doris Solis said it was “a scenario that nobody would want but it is a possibility when the conditions for change do not exist”.

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HP names Apotheker as new chief

Leo ApothekerMr Apotheker previously worked for Germany’s SAP

Computer maker Hewlett Packard (HP) has named Leo Apotheker, former boss of business software maker SAP, as its new chief executive and president.

He replaces Mark Hurd, who stepped down from his positions as president and CEO after an investigation into claims made against him by a former HP contractor.

HP has also named Ray Lane, of venture capital firm Kleiner Perkins Caufield & Byers, as non-executive chairman.

Both appointments will come into effect on 1 November, said HP.

Mr Apotheker had been with SAP since 1988 and had been their chief executive since April 2008.

He becomes the third new HP boss in a decade.

Trading in HP shares was briefly halted after the stock market closed.

When after-the-bell trading resumed, HP’s shares fell by $1.37, or 3.3%, to $40.70.

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Canada doctor faces sex charges

Dr George DoodnaughtDr Doodnaught was sacked from the Toronto hospital in February

A Toronto anaesthetist has been accused of sexually assaulting 29 women under his care, police have said.

Dr George Doodnaught, 61, is believed to have assaulted the women while they were under anaesthesia and undergoing surgical procedures, police said.

Most assaults took place at North York General Hospital, police said.

Dr Doodnaught was charged in March with three alleged assaults. Police urged other victims to come forward, and 26 new charges were announced on Thursday.

Dr Doodnaught, an anaesthetist since 1981, was sacked from the hospital in February when the police investigation began. The alleged assaults occurred between June 1992 and February 2010, police said.

“We are extremely concerned that this number of people has come forward to police with allegations and we understand this is a difficult process for those patients and their families,” North York General Hospital said in a statement.

Dr Doodnaught has yet to face the allegations in court.

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Police back down on ‘spy’ cameras

Street scene showing one of the cameras in BirminghamWest Midlands Police has admitted mistakes were made in relation to the project

A lack of transparency over the installation of 218 “spy” cameras in parts of Birmingham has “significantly undermined” police trust, a report has found.

The cameras were put up earlier this year in eastern areas of the city with large Muslim populations.

The £3.5m cost of the cameras came from the Terrorism and Allied Matters Fund.

The Thames Valley Police report into the camera project said public consultation was “too little too late”.

The report was carried out by Sara Thornton, a member of the team which provided the funding.

The cameras were installed in the Washwood Heath and Sparkbrook districts and were put up by the Safer Birmingham Project (SBP), made up of the city council, police and other agencies.

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At the time residents reacted angrily, claiming there had been no consultation.

Steve Jolly, who has protested with others about the cameras, said the report showed the project was “ill thought-out”.

“It’s a frank admission that the whole thing was a disaster,” he said.

“It confirms everything that myself and other opponents have been saying.

“The scheme was ill thought out and counter productive.”

The report said the installation of the cameras, called Project Champion, was prompted by “problems” that had surfaced in West Midlands Police surveillance-based investigations during in 2006.

In 2007 the force identified an opportunity to obtain funding “that could provide a solution”.

The report states that during that year, the threat level in the UK was critical with and there were many covert counter terrorist investigations being carried out by the Security Services and the police.

“Questions should have been asked about its proportionality, legitimacy, authority necessity, and the ethical values inherent in the proposed course of action”

Independent report into Project Champion

But the report said overall West Midlands Police’s handling of the scheme, showed “little evidence of thought being given to compliance with the legal or regulatory framework” before the cameras were put up.

The force has since acknowledged mistakes and held several public meetings with campaigners and residents angry at their installation.

The report said the idea of carrying out surveillance of suspected terrorists in a residential area should have been challenged.

“The very practical problem regarding the surveillance of suspected terrorists during CTU investigations was considered to have been addressed by establishing a permanent surveillance capability in a semi-residential area of predominantly Asian ethnic groups,” the report said.

“This thinking should have been challenged by strong ethical and strategic leadership right from the start and questions should have been asked about its proportionality, legitimacy, authority necessity, and the ethical values inherent in the proposed course of action.”

In July, police said protective hoods and “camera not in use” signs were being fixed to the cameras until a full public consultation had been carried out.

The force also promised to remove more than 70 hidden cameras and stop any counter-terrorism involvement.

It is not clear now following this report whether the project will continue or be abandoned.

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