Deadline peril for Mid-East talks

View of the Jewish settlement of Ariel, in the West BankThousands of new homes in the West Bank have already been planned

Diplomats are seeking a last-minute deal as a 10-month Israeli ban on settlement-building winds down, putting Middle East peace talks at risk.

In New York, Israel’s Defence Minister Ehud Barak told the BBC he feared the freeze would not be renewed on Sunday.

Palestinians have said they could leave the recently resumed peace talks if Israel does not extend its ban.

Settlers in the West Bank are preparing to resume construction late on Sunday if no deal is reached on an extension.

Israeli-Palestinian peace talks resumed in September after a 20-month hiatus.

But no agreement has yet been reached on the key issue of Israel’s settlements – which Israel says are no bar to talks – despite intensive efforts from US negotiators.

Speaking to the BBC’s diplomatic correspondent Bridget Kendall, Mr Barak said he was heading back to Israel to try to convince members of the Israeli government of the need for a compromise, but that he was not confident of success.

However, he was more upbeat on the prospects for the peace talks, suggesting there was a 50% chance of reaching a deal with the Palestinians about the settlement moratorium.

The chances of the peace process continuing nonetheless were better than even, Mr Barak said.

In a speech on Saturday to the United Nations General Assembly, Palestinian leader Mahmoud Abbas said Israel must choose between peace and the continuation of settlements.

Palestinians were willing and ready to reach a comprehensive and just peace agreement with Israel, Mr Abbas told the assembly, declaring that their “wounded hands” carried an olive branch to the Israelis.

Palestinian leader Mahmoud Abbas

Abbas insisted Israel must stop all settlement-building

Mr Abbas said the Palestinians would make every effort to reach a peace deal with Israel within one year.

He also criticised Israel, which he said had a “mentality of expansion and domination” and continued to blockade the Gaza Strip and imprison Palestinians.

However, the BBC’s Bridget Kendall, in New York, says Mr Abbas stopped short of publicly threatening to withdraw from talks with Israel if the moratorium is not extended.

It seems likely that a frantic search for a compromise is still going on behind the scenes, she adds.

Israel’s 10-month freeze on West Bank settlement-building expires at midnight local time on Sunday (2200 GMT).

Mr Abbas didn’t sound like a leader about to walk out of major international negotiations.

But nor did he commit himself.

More likely, the frantic behind-the-scenes search for a compromise continues.

President Abbas met Hillary Clinton last night and there has been talk of another meeting today with US Middle East peace envoy George Mitchell.

Senior Israelis are apparently in New York and White House officials say President Obama is standing by in Washington.

The US president staked his diplomatic reputation on driving this peace initiative forward and he will not want it to collapse now.

So it seems likely that Washington is pulling out all the stops in an attempt to broker an 11th-hour deal.

Right-wing politicians in Israel are calling for a swift resumption of construction, and are backing settlers’ plans to resume building as soon as possible.

“The building needs to restart – there are some 2,000 (housing) units that are already approved,” Sport and Culture Minister Limor Livnat, a member of Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu’s Likud party, told the AFP news agency.

At least one other pro-settler Likud MP, Danny Danon, plans to attend a symbolic ground-breaking ceremony at the settlement of Revava on Sunday, his office said.

“Our policy now is to resume a natural pace of building,” said Naftali Bennett, director general of the settlers’ organisation, the Yesha council.

However, any resumption of construction is likely to be small in scale, correspondents say, as most projects will require approval from Israel’s defence ministry.

On Thursday, US President Barack Obama urged Israel to extend its moratorium, saying it had “made a difference on the ground, and improved the atmosphere for talks”.

More than 430,000 Jewish settlers live in the West Bank and East Jerusalem.

The international community considers the settlements illegal, although Israel disputes this.

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

Miliband ‘to defend middle class’

Ed MilibandEd Miliband said Labour needed to accept the mistakes of the past

Ed Miliband has begun work as Labour leader with a vow to defend what he calls the “squeezed” middle class.

Mr Miliband won the leadership after beating brother David in a dramatic vote ahead of the party’s conference.

Writing in the Sunday Telegraph, he said a “new generation was entrusted with transforming our party”.

Mr Miliband also said Labour would now aim to “set out an alternative” but would support the coalition government “when it is right” on making cuts.

His victory comes as the Labour party conference starts in Manchester.

The former energy secretary, who will be interviewed on BBC One’s Andrew Marr Show later, wrote in the Telegraph: “My aim is to show that our party is on the side of the squeezed middle in our country and everyone who has worked hard and wants to get on.

“My aim is to return our party to power. This is a tough challenge. It is a long journey. But our party has made the first step in electing a leader from a new generation.”

Mr Miliband pledged not to oppose every government cut, saying public services would need to learn to do more with less, and there was a suggestion he wanted to replace tuition fees.

“We must never again lose touch with the mainstream of our country”

Ed Miliband Labour leader

He added: “As well as setting out an alternative when the government gets it wrong, we will support it when it is right.”

Referring to the leadership result, Mr Miliband said: “A new generation was entrusted with transforming our party and making sure that, once again, we stand up for the interests of families across Britain.

“We have a lot of ground to make up if we are to rebuild the broad coalition of support that swept us to power in 1997.”

He said the party needed to accept it made mistakes in government and show it had changed, adding: “We must never again lose touch with the mainstream of our country.”

Mr Miliband won the leadership by just over 1% from his brother after second, third and fourth preference votes came into play.

How Ed Miliband wonRound 1: David Miliband 37.78%, Ed Miliband 34.33% Diane Abbott eliminatedRound 2: David Miliband 38.89%, Ed Miliband 37.47%. Andy Burnham eliminatedRound 3: David Miliband 42.72%, Ed Miliband 41.26%, Ed Balls eliminatedRound 4: David Miliband 49.35%, Ed Miliband 50.65%. Ed Miliband wins

Ed Balls was third, Andy Burnham fourth and Diane Abbott last in the ballot of MPs, members and trade unionists.

Prime Minister David Cameron called Mr Miliband from his Chequers country retreat to congratulate him on his victory.

Mr Miliband, 40, replaces acting leader Harriet Harman in the contest triggered by the resignation of Gordon Brown.

He has immediate questions of personnel as well as policy to address, chiefly whether his defeated older brother – whom he does not mention in his Sunday Telegraph article – will be willing to take a job on his front bench.

Analysis

By Michael Crick, political editor, BBC Newsnight

An MP in the Ed Miliband campaign tells me they had predicted exactly the parliamentary Labour party section vote, and quite closely the union and affiliates’ section vote, but they were disappointed with the members’ section vote, as their figures had shown them winning among ordinary party members.

This might explain why several senior Ed Miliband supporters I’ve bumped into have been looking pretty glum.

Not to have a majority of your MPs, or party members, and to depend on union votes, leaves Ed Miliband in a very exposed position.

Ironically, he’ll have to spend much of the next few weeks distancing himself from the unions and showing he’s not in their pocket.

After the result, David Miliband told BBC News: “This is Ed’s day, it’s a big day for the Miliband family, not quite the day for the Miliband family that I would have wanted – the Miliband D family, rather than the Miliband E – but that’s the way things go.”

However, BBC Newsnight’s political editor Michael Crick says a source in the Ed Miliband camp said the brothers held several secret meetings during the week, once it became clear Ed would win.

Our correspondent adds that the source says David will be offered the job of shadow chancellor, although the Ed Milliband team are not very confident he will accept it.

The new leader will not be short of advice from colleagues.

In the Independent on Sunday, shadow Home Secretary Alan Johnson warned him not to move to the left.

Shadow Welsh Secretary Peter Hain said Mr Miliband should not rely solely on attacking the coalition, but focus on policies for the next election.

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

Lessons in life

Frank Furedi‘Think about your motives’, Professor Furedi tells parents

In our occasional series on key figures in education and family, sociologist and author Frank Furedi reveals the most important things he has learned in his life.

Name: Frank Furedi

Occupation: Professor of Sociology at University of Kent, and author of books including Paranoid Parenting, Politics of Fear, Where Have All the Intellectuals Gone?, Therapy Culture, Culture of Fear and Wasted: Why Education is not Educating

Education: BA in international relations at McGill University, Montreal, then studied African politics at the School of Oriental and African Studies in London and received his doctorate from the University of Kent.

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Lives: Faversham, Kent

Born: 1947, Budapest, Hungary

Family life: Married to Ann; says he is “attempting to father” his 15-year-old son, Jake

Unusual fact: A former student radical, in the 70s, he was the founder and chairman of the Revolutionary Communist Party.

1. Listen – because you can learn from anybody.

I have learnt that it is a mistake not to listen to people, even people who you don’t take seriously, because those who appear ignorant can surprise you with their insights into life. Even if you disagree with what they say, through listening you can learn what it is that leads them to adopt an erroneous conclusion. That’s one way of learning about other people’s experiences and about life.

A genuine listening strategy is surprisingly difficult to acquire – but it is well worth the effort.

2. Question everything

This is one of the things I found most difficult to do. It’s very easy to fall back into old ways and repeat things you have done in the past. When I simply follow someone else’s opinion or unthinkingly repeat what I thought previously, I quite often end up realising that I’m on the wrong track. However, through questioning my beliefs and those of others it soon becomes evident that what worked yesterday may be inappropriate in a different context.

Moreover, it’s only in the course of questioning that you make progress in developing and refining your ideas. I have really come to appreciate Socrates. He was always annoying everyone by going to the market and asking questions. But those questions often led to greater clarity.

3. Rely on your intuition

We live in a world where we are bombarded by conflicting instructions through the media. As a father and a teacher I have been forced to rely on my intuition. I have learned to use my intuition even when people that I respect point me in a very different direction. Intuition is really your experience codified – insights gained through the working of your emotions and ideas. It doesn’t mean you are always right but it does put you in the right direction.

4. Always reflect on your motives when you are dealing with your children

Parents make big emotional investments in their children so that sometimes they confuse their own needs with those of their children. It is easy to overlook the fact that sometimes what we want for ourselves is not what our kids need.

There is so much pressure to live our lives through our children. That’s why we need to pause and have a reality check. We need to think about our motives by asking the question: “Am I doing this for them or for myself?” You may still end up doing something that meets your own needs rather than those of your child, but at least you will not be deluding yourself.

5. Things are never as bad as they seem.

This is something I learned later in life. I was a micro-manager, always meeting deadlines, imagining that everything that could go bad would go bad. It is only relatively recently that I learned that the situation is rarely as bad as you imagine. We have a tremendous capacity for resilience, for bouncing back and not allowing our disappointments to overwhelm us.

Often what happens depends on how we respond to a problem. We can make a drama out of a crisis and feel sorry for ourselves for the next 10 years or we can find a strategy for moving on and looking for new opportunities. Moving on, always moving on, has become one of the key principles guiding my daily life.

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

Rescue cage arrives at Chile mine

Carolina Lobos in the rescue capsuleCarolina Lobos’ heart was racing when she stepped into the cage she hopes will pull her father to safety

A cage specially built to help rescue 33 men trapped underground in a mine in Chile has arrived at the mine head.

The steel capsule will be used to pull the men to safety one by one, once a rescue shaft wide enough to haul them up has been drilled.

Relatives of the miners were allowed to get into the narrow cage, which is little more than 50cm (20in) wide.

It is expected to take between 20-30 minutes to pull each miner up from their shelter at a depth of 700m.

The long – and extremely narrow – steel case has been named Phoenix, and its designers hope it will lift the men to a new life overground much like the bird in Greek mythology rose from the ashes.

Relatives of the miners, who have been camped out at the mine head since the men were trapped after a rockfall more than seven weeks ago, clapped when the rescue capsule was unveiled.

Carolina Lobos, 25, whose father Franklin is one of the men trapped, was one of a handful of relatives allowed to step into the cage.

She told the BBC it looked very narrow, but was actually surprisingly comfortable inside.

Ms Lobos said she had enough space to move and did not feel claustrophobic.

She did point out, though, that she had only been in the capsule for a couple of minutes and in the open air, whereas her father would have to stay in the cage for up to half an hour while it is pulled through the 700m of rock separating him and the other 32 miners from the surface.

The rescue capsuleThe capsule has been specially built for the rescue

“I was very nervous, my heart was racing,” she said.

“It was a very emotional moment for me to be in the capsule that will lift my dad to safety and bring him back to us,” she added.

The capsule is fitted with communication equipment allowing the miners to stay in touch with the surface, and with enough oxygen to last for 90 minutes.

There are handles which release a door at the bottom of the capsule, so in case it should get stuck, the miner can winch himself back down to the shelter.

The rescue pod arrived at the mine well ahead of schedule, but Mining Minister Laurence Golborne refused to be drawn on speculation that the rescue might happen earlier than the official estimate. Currently the miners are expected to begin emerging in the first week of November.

Early on Saturday local time the Strata 950, the first of three drills working to bore a hole wide enough to rescue the men, had reached a depth of 442m (1,458ft).

But the Strata is still on its pilot hole, and will have to drill down a second time to widen the shaft enough to fit the rescue pod.

The second drill, which has already completed its pilot hole, has reached 175m (577ft).

The third machine, which is the only one to drill a shaft wide enough in the first go, is at 62m (204ft).

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

Weighty matters

Chinese youngster Liu TaoLiu Tao weighed 40kg more than he should have before starting weight-loss treatment

The Aimin Fat Reduction Hospital in the Chinese city of Tianjin does not hide its aims behind an inoffensive name.

It currently has more than 100 patients, but only one goal – to get them to lose weight.

It is one of many hospitals, clinics and camps that have sprung up across China to help the country’s growing army of overweight and obese citizens.

These people are more liable to suffer from a range of illnesses, and are already putting pressure on China’s healthcare system.

Many countries have to cope with similar problems, but what is unusual in China is that there has been an explosion of obesity.

Just a generation ago, hardly anyone was overweight.

Elastic skin

Liu Tao is one of the hospital’s day patients. He is only 12 years old, but weighed 115kg before he began his course of treatment.

That is about 40kg above what someone of his height should weigh.

His treatment includes a very Chinese approach to weight loss: he has regular sessions of acupuncture and massage.

The massage ensures that his skin remains elastic – so it will shrink along with his waistline.

The youngster made a good start, losing 9kg in just over two weeks.

Liu TaoLiu Tao’s mum says he has always been bigger than other youngsters

China’s family planning policies have been blamed for the growing number of overweight children.

Many families have just one child and some say these children are spoilt; Liu Tao is an only child and admits he used to eat whatever he wanted.

His mum, Su Jinna, has now put him on a new diet. Vast evening meals, sometimes including two helpings, have been replaced by fruit and vegetables.

When the BBC visited their Tianjin home, Liu Tao was served a melon and a bowl of boiled broccoli for dinner.

Did the youngster like it? “It’s awful. It’s not sweet at all,” he said.

Getting people to stick to healthier diets is one of the problems identified by experts hoping to get overweight people to slim down.

Mrs Su also blames her son’s weight on China’s education system, which puts little emphasis on sporting activities.

“He leaves for school at seven every morning and doesn’t get back until seven in the evening,” she said.

“So after eating and finishing his homework it’s 10 o’clock, and there’s no time for anything else such as exercise.”

‘Nowhere to exercise’

The rising number of overweight Chinese people is, in part, the result of the country’s remarkable economic growth over the last 30 years.

“There is very little public space in urban areas and even when there is you often cannot walk on the grass”

Paul French Author

“People’s material lives have become a lot better as society has developed,” said Yu Baoxia, a doctor at the Aimin hospital.

“Take food for example, now people have access to all kinds of products. There’s great variety and people can usually buy whatever they want to eat.”

This lifestyle change is documented is a new book by Paul French and Matthew Crabbe, called Fat China: How Expanding Waistlines are Changing a Nation.

It details changes such as the rise of processed food and supermarkets, and the fall-off in physical activity as people move from the countryside to the cities.

“People come to the city and get fat,” said Mr French.

“There is very little public space in urban areas and even when there is you often cannot walk on the grass.”

Obesity has been linked to a range of illnesses such as cancer, heart disease and diabetes.

There are now thought to be more than 90 million diabetics in China – about one in 10 adults.

That is a problem for the whole of society, which will eventually have to pay more money to treat them.

“It will put a huge burden on the healthcare system because many of these illnesses require individual long-term expensive treatment,” said Peter Ben Embarek, of the World Health Organisation (WHO).

Not long ago, many Chinese people did not have enough to eat – some still do not.

Millions of people are thought to have died in a famine in the early 1960s.

But economic reforms have transformed the lives of the people who live here. Many are now richer than they every dreamed – and bigger than they ever thought.

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

Who’ll get emerald pile? Judge rules on jewel riches

The Bahia emeraldThe giant emerald is embedded in stone and has protruding spurs the size of a human arm

A California judge is being asked to determine the ownership of a giant emerald, thought to be one of the largest of its kind.

The Bahia emerald – named after the region of Brazil in which it was discovered – weighs 380kg (840lb).

It is said to be worth more than $370m (£235m) – and at least six people are claiming they are the rightful owners.

A judge will hear from all the parties claiming ownership of the gem before deciding the case in October.

One those at the centre of this dispute is Anthony Thomas, a construction executive from California, who says he paid two Brazilian gem dealers $60,000 for the emerald shortly after it was unearthed nine years ago – a fraction of its current value.

Mr Thomas says he arranged to have the stone shipped to his home in San Jose, but that it never showed up.

He believes he was tricked into believing it had been stolen so it could be resold for more money.

Mr Thomas is just one of those claiming ownership of the giant emerald.

One problem he faces is that – as he awaited its delivery – a fire broke out in his house, destroying his receipt.

The emerald did eventually make it to America, although whose possession it has been in since then is a matter of some doubt.

One thing that is known is that it spent some time in a bank vault in New Orleans which was flooded during Hurricane Katrina, leaving the valuable gemstone underwater for several months.

It was subsequently taken to Las Vegas for inspection by a potential buyer, where it was seized by the Los Angeles sheriff’s department.

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

UK’s worst rail crash remembered

Quintinshill memorialA new memorial is being unveiled to join the others which already exist in the area

A new memorial overlooking the scene of the UK’s worst rail disaster is being unveiled.

The commemorative plaque has been installed at Quintinshill Bridge near Gretna Green in Dumfries and Galloway.

It has been put in place to honour the 227 people who died when three trains crashed at the site on 22 May 1915.

Many of those who lost their lives were soldiers with the Royal Scots who were on their way to fight in the First World War.

The special dedication ceremony is part of plans by the local community to create a heritage trail in the area.

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It hopes people will turn out in force to pay tribute to those who died.

As well as claiming the lives of more than 200 people, nearly 250 more were injured in the crash.

The accident happened when a troop train carrying about 500 soldiers of the Royal Scots en route to Gallipoli crashed into a stationary goods train.

An express train from London subsequently ran straight into the wreckage.

The Royal Scots suffered the vast majority of casualties, with 215 killed, as fire ripped through the wooden train, fuelled by the gas lamps used for lighting.

Burned alive

The crash accounted for a large percentage of the battalion’s casualties for the entire war and it remains Britain’s worst rail disaster.

Two signalmen were later found guilty of negligence and jailed for their part in the incident.

The Times reported at the time under the headline “Troop Train Disaster”.

It said: “Many passengers were burned alive.

“The dead bodies, which lie in a white farm building near the railway and in a little hall at Gretna, are charred and scorched.

“There will be no remains to identify some of the soldiers.

“The debris of the trains has been their funeral pyre.”

‘Terrible disaster’

It was also reported that King George V had sent a telegram to the general manager of the Caledonian Railway Company.

“The King is shocked to hear of the terrible railway disaster near Carlisle which has cost the country many valuable lives,” it said.

“His Majesty deeply sympathises with those who have lost relatives and friends and trusts that you can send satisfactory reports about the injured.”

Eyewitness described hearing cries of help from those who were trapped in the wreckage.

Many of those who scrambled out of the debris tried to rescue the people still stuck inside but were driven back by the heat.

Initial estimates put the death toll at 158 but that subsequently rose to more than 200.

A dedication ceremony in their honour at the site where they lost their lives takes place at 1500 BST.

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

Lehman Bros art makes $12m in US

A man bids at the Lehman Brothers auction, New YorkThere was considerable interest in the Sotheby’s auction

An auction of fine art from the New York offices of collapsed investment bank Lehman Brothers has raised more than $12m (£7.6m) at Sotheby’s.

The proceeds will go towards paying Lehman’s creditors, owed $600bn since the firm’s collapse in 2008.

On Wednesday art from Lehman’s extensive European collection will be auctioned at Christie’s in London.

Top sellers in New York included work by Ethiopian artist Julie Mehretu and an oil painting by Liu Ye of China.

Mehretu’s ink and acrylic work, entitled Untitled 1, sold for a little more than $1m (£640,000.) Liu’s oil painting The Long Way Home went for $962,500 (£615,606).

Madonna by Gary Hume - photo from Christie'sMadonna by Gary Hume will go under the hammer in London

Both works set records for the artists.

However, a work by British artist Damien Hirst – entitled We’ve Got Style (The Vessel Collection – Blue/Green) – failed to sell after being expected to fetch about $1m.

The proceeds from the sales in both New York and London will go towards repaying the creditors of the investment bank, which was the biggest bankruptcy in US corporate history when it collapsed in September 2008.

Works by Lucien Freud and Gary Hume are in the company’s European collection, which is to be sold for an estimated £2m ($3.13m) by Christie’s in London.

A company sign from its offices in Canary Wharf, London, will be among the objects sold in London, as will Lehman Brothers cigar boxes and tea caddies.

With an estimated value of up to £150,000 ($243,530), an image of a New York stock exchange by photographer Andreas Gursky will be sold separately in October.

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

Up, up and away – balloon team lift off for race

Gas balloon over Bristol earlier in the weekThe gas balloons are inflated with hydrogen rather than hot air

Balloonists from 10 countries are preparing for lift off in one of the world’s oldest aviation races.

To win the 20 teams have to try to travel the greatest distance from the launch site, near Bristol, in hydrogen-filled balloons.

Some of the competitors could be airborne for three or four days.

It will be the first time in its 104-year history that the Coupe Aeronautique Gordon Bennett race will take off from the UK.

‘Brave guys’

Race launch director Clive Bailey said although the balloons were “very safe” there was always a risk.

“You potentially have a bomb above your head and then you have sea landings and landings at night with power cables so it’s not a straightforward thing,” he said.

“These are very brave guys.”

Winds in the Bristol area are coming from the north and it is thought the balloons could travel as far as Italy or Portugal.

The balloons are controlled by releasing gas to go down and throwing out sand to go up.

A spokesman for the organisers said the weather was “still behaving” and Saturday evening’s launch was on schedule.

“However the strength of the wind is an issue and this is currently causing a two to three hour delay,” the spokesman said.

“This evening’s launch window is between 7pm and midnight, subject to the weather.”

The Duke of Edinburgh and Sir Richard Branson are patrons of the 54th Coupe Aeronautique Gordon Bennett race.

David Hempleman-Adams, from Wiltshire, won the race in 2008 with co-pilot Jon Mason, giving them the honour of hosting it in their home country.

Mr Hempleman-Adams and Mr Mason were the first UK team to win, flying 1,098 miles (1,767km) from Albuquerque in New Mexico to Lake Michigan in just over three days.

The pilots in command of the British teams are David Hempleman-Adams, Colin Butter and Janet Folkes.

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

Scottish knife convictions fall

person holding a knifeThe number of people carrying knives in Scotland has fallen to a nine-year low

The number of people convicted of carrying a knife has fallen to its lowest for nearly a decade.

Figures from the Scottish government showed 3,194 crimes of having a knife in public were committed in 2009-10, a drop of 22% on the previous year.

The fall was welcomed by Justice Secretary Kenny MacAskill, who said it showed “tough enforcement” was paying off.

Opposition parties accused Mr MacAskill of being complacent on the issue.

Over the past three years, there has been a 30% fall in possession of all offensive weapons, including baseball bats and bricks.

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The latest knife carrying figures represent a drop of more than 4,000 on the previous year, which was a nine-year high.

It also represented the lowest figure since 2000-01, when there were 2,855 convictions.

In the Strathclyde area, the number of people convicted of having an article with a blade or point dropped by 16%.

Police in Fife and Central Scotland also reported drops of 18% and 30% respectively.

In Dumfries and Galloway the figure fell by 25% in the year, while in Grampian the figure dropped by 38%.

Mr MacAskill said: “These are welcome trends which demonstrate that our efforts to tackle knife crime through a combination of tough enforcement backed by education are beginning to pay off across the country.

“However, we cannot and will not be complacent.”

He said that jail terms for knife-carrying in Scotland had increased by almost two-thirds over the past two years.

Mr MacAskill added: “Police officers are carrying out a record number of stop and searches, courts have been given powers to impose four-year sentences just for carrying a knife while our proposed sentencing council can take a considered look at sentencing for knife offences – taking into account the views of the public, victims, and police.”

Labour said it was important to remember that 60 people had died in knife attacks last year.

The party’s justice spokesman Richard Baker added: “Almost 2,000 are hospitalised by attacks with blades, doing nothing cannot be the right option.

“Kenny MacAskill’s attitude stinks of complacency.

“Labour doubled the sentence for knife crime but more needs to be done to stem the tide of violence.

“The SNP’s soft-touch approach is not stopping the stabbings.”

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

Banks urged to widen web access

LaptopWhich? says banking online does not suit everyone

Banks have been urged to provide online access inside branches to help avoid “digitally excluded” customers missing out on the best deals.

A report from Which? magazine said online savers on average earned 37% more interest than those who only had branch-based accounts.

And it said travel insurance was up to 355% more expensive to buy in person.

The British Bankers’ Association said banks reserved the right to offer the best deals where they could.

Which? said branch-based instant access accounts paid 0.65% a year on average compared to 1.14% for web savers.

Investors could get a one-year fixed-rate bond at an average of 2.58% over the internet, but just 2.34% in a branch.

Interest rates for online Isas averaged 1.84%, which fell to 1.53% for branch-based products.

Government figures suggest that up to four million people are “digitally excluded”, meaning they do not have or cannot afford internet access.

Which? chief executive Peter Vicary-Smith said: “Not everyone is comfortable or able to manage their finances online and these people are missing out on the best deals as a result.

“Banks should be more inclusive by offering terminals in branches where customers could access online deals, with some help from staff.”

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

’17 applicants’ for every Scots teaching post

teacher genericThere were more than 75,000 applications for just 4,520 teacher jobs in Scotland

Every teaching vacancy in Scotland is being chased by an average of 17 applicants, according to official figures.

The competition for the posts varied from 49 for each job in Stirling to three per vacancy in Shetland.

The Liberal Democrats, who obtained the details through freedom of information requests, said the figures showed teachers’ talents were “being wasted”.

Education Secretary Michael Russell said the numbers were “a concern”.

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In total, 75,579 applications were made for 4,520 vacancies in 2009-10 – an average of about 17 for each position.

The average number of applications per job included 14 in Aberdeenshire, 21 in Dundee, 27 in Edinburgh and six in Glasgow.

Aberdeen City Council said it did not hold the details.

Higher numbers included 47 in Midlothian, 37 in East Renfrewshire and 33 in North Lanarkshire.

Lower averages per job included five in the Western Isles, four in Dumfries and Galloway, five in Orkney and 10 in Moray.

Lib Dem education spokeswoman Margaret Smith said the figures “will be deeply concerning for teachers”.

She added: “The SNP said they would maintain the record number of teachers they inherited from the previous executive but teacher numbers are down by 3,000.

“Scotland’s young people are also missing out on the opportunity to learn from newly-trained, enthusiastic teachers who have a wealth of talent and skill, being wasted as they struggle to find jobs.”

Education Secretary Michael Russell said: “The difficulties faced by teachers looking for a post is a concern.

“Scotland is already unique in guaranteeing a year’s employment after graduation from initial teacher education, but we want to do more and we are examining ways we can provide further help.

“While recent figures show that teacher unemployment is lower in Scotland than elsewhere in the UK, we are still working hard to address the issue and have cut student intake, which will reduce competition for jobs.”

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Medals for Afghan rescue soldiers

Two soldiers are to receive the Queen’s Commendation for Bravery after diving into a freezing canal to save a comrade injured by a Taliban bomb.

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Italian priest abuse victims meet

Victims of child abuse by Catholic priests in Italy have met for the first time, and called for such abuse to be made a crime against humanity.

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City life ‘boosts bug resistance’

CityscapeExposure to infectious diseases is more likely in cities

People from traditionally urban areas could be genetically better suited to fighting infection, say researchers.

The University of London team looked at how many people carried a specific gene variant known to give them resistance to TB and leprosy.

It was more common in those from areas with a longer history of urbanisation, where the diseases were more likely to have been rife at one point.

“This seems to be an elegant example of evolution in action”

Dr Ian Barnes, Researcher

They described the discovery as an example of “evolution in action”.

The phenomenon, reported in the journal Evolution, is suggested as an example of so-called “selective pressure” in relation to disease resistance.

It happens because, when a population is exposed to a killer illness, the people who are best placed to pass on their genes to the next generation are those whose genetic make-up helps them fight the infection.

In towns and cities, where people intermingle far more closely, the likelihood of being exposed to infectious disease is theoretically higher.

So, over the centuries, the greater the level of historical exposure, the more likely it is that these resistance genes will be spread widely among the population.

The scientists, from University College London and Royal Holloway, part of the University of London, tested this by analysing DNA samples drawn from 17 different human populations living across Europe, Asia and Africa.

The results were cross checked against historical and archaeological data about the date of the first city or urban settlement in each region.

The protective gene variant was found in nearly everyone from the Middle East to India and in parts of Europe where cities have been established for thousands of years, but were less frequent in regions with a shorter history of urbanisation, such as Africa.

Dr Ian Barnes, one of the authors of the research, said: “This seems to be an elegant example of evolution in action.

“It flags up the importance of a very recent aspect of our evolution as a species, the development of cities as a selective force.

“It could also help explain some of the differences we observe in disease resistance around the world.”

There are other examples of selective pressure in disease resistance – it has been suggested that one is the prevalence of the gene defect responsible for the lung disease cystic fibrosis.

Normally, the lethal nature of the condition across history would suggest that people carrying the gene defect were at a distinct evolutionary disadvantage, and their numbers would be fewer.

However, scientists believe that the gene gives carriers an advantage when faced with the cholera toxin – which, in early cities, could have significantly outweighed the disadvantage of some children developing cystic fibrosis.

Professor Brian Spratt, chair of molecular microbiology at the Imperial College London School of Public Health, said: “Individuals who are more resistant to a pathogen that causes a disease with substantial mortality, such as malaria or TB, will survive better and will contribute more offspring to the next generation. As many of their children will have inherited increased resistance to the pathogen, they also will survive better.

“Thus frequencies of these genetic sequences that provide increased protection to a disease will be far more common in areas where the disease has been killing people for centuries or even millennia than those where the disease has never been endemic.

The same effect should occur for some diseases with populations who have lived for centuries within dense cities because diseases such as cholera and TB will have always been a problem in cities due to overcrowding and poor sanitation, compared to people living nomadic lives.”

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