Cameron warns of challenges ahead

David Cameron and wife Samantha pose for the first time with their baby daughter Florence Rose Endellion outside Number 10The Camerons’ fourth child, Florence, was born during their holiday in Cornwall

Prime Minister David Cameron is returning to work on Tuesday following a spell of paternity leave.

He will chair the first cabinet meeting since the early summer, with ministers expected to focus on the economy.

Mr Cameron has been off work for three weeks, after his holiday in Cornwall was extended by the early birth of his fourth child, Florence.

His deputy Nick Clegg has been handling the day-to-day running of government in Mr Cameron’s absence.

Florence, whose middle names are Rose Endellion, was born on 24 August at the Royal Cornwall Hospital in Truro. She had been expected in September.

The Cameron family returned to Downing Street last week.

Tuesday’s cabinet meeting will focus on the state of the economy ahead of the comprehensive spending review in October, in which the government will outline the details of its cuts programme for Whitehall departments.

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Blitz commemorated at St Paul’s

Coventry city centre - the morning after the Blitz destroyed three quarters of itThe service will be held in London, but other cities, such as Coventry, were also targeted in the Blitz

A remembrance service will be held later to mark the 70th anniversary of the start of the Blitz.

Hundreds of people across the UK were killed and injured in the series of co-ordinated air attacks by Hitler’s forces.

The City of London Salute at St Paul’s Cathedral, London, will celebrate those who worked to protect Britons, such as pilots, firefighters and nurses.

Nearly 1,000 German planes crossed the channel on 7 September 1940.

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More than 400 people were killed on the first day alone. Hundreds more were injured and huge fires burned across London.

The date of 7 September has been chosen for the commemoration as it is exactly 70 years to the day since Hitler’s war offensive switched from military targets to the bombing of cities and industrial centres.

The event is being organised jointly by the lord mayor of the City of London and the RAF Association.

It is intended to recognise the effort of everyone directly involved in the Battle of Britain and the Blitz.

Those attending will include people who worked as firefighters, nurses, ambulance workers, as well as those who were children at the time, Battle of Britain pilots and other military personnel.

Organisers have encouraged Londoners and tourists to turn out to support WWII veterans and current military personnel, who will hold a march-past through the City after the service.

A WWII Spitfire, Lancaster and Dakota will fly overhead at the same time.

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Neighbours incensed over huge trees

Leyland Cypress trees in Weston Mill, PlymouthNeighbours have complained about the 35ft high Leyland Cypress trees

A dispute has broken out in a Devon neighbourhood over the height of trees surrounding a property.

David Alvand, of Weston Mill, Plymouth, has planted about 16 Leyland Cypress trees on three sides of his house which stand about 35ft (10.6m) tall.

Residents in the street have complained to Plymouth City Council (PCC).

PCC said it was hoping “further mediation” would resolve the dispute before its tree officers visited the street to see if action was necessary.

The Leyland Cypress tress which Mr Alvand planted overshadow the house and road.

He told the BBC that there was “no story to tell” and that he had “nothing to say” on the matter. He would not make any further comment.

In a statement PCC said they had put the complaint “on hold” to see if a resolution could be found without the council’s involvement.

The statement continued: “If Mr Alvand and his neighbours cannot agree a way forward then our tree officers will need to visit the property and take measurements to determine the ‘action hedge height’ and establish what, if any, remedial action needs to be taken.”

This is the second time Mr Alvand has faced a formal complaint over the use of his land.

In 2003 he lost a legal battle against a 3m (9.84ft) high wall built around his property, which neighbours dubbed the “Berlin Wall”.

A jury at Plymouth Crown Court decided that Mr Alvand had failed to comply with a planning enforcement order and he was fined £700 with costs of £2,500.

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Political void ‘threatens Iraq’

Hussein al-Shahristani 2008Hussein al-Shahristani is part of Iraq’s caretaker government

Six months after Iraq’s parliamentary elections, a government minister has warned that the political deadlock is damaging the security situation.

Oil and electricity minister Hussein al-Shahristani told the BBC that insurgents were exploiting the failure to reach a power-sharing agreement.

Despite improvements in recent years, attacks remain a daily reality, killing hundreds each month.

On Sunday, insurgents attacked an army base in Baghdad, killing 12 people.

American soldiers were called in to help Iraqi forces fight the insurgents, in the first such use of US troops since the end of the US combat mission five days ago.

Iraqi voters went to the polls on 7 March, but returned a hung parliament. Six months on, there is still no government.

First there was the election – much hailed for being inclusive and relatively peaceful; Then there was the recount – with millions of ballots sifted through by hand, the BBC’s Gabriel Gatehouse reports from Baghdad.

Scene of attack (05/0/10)Twelve people died on Sunday in a daylight raid by suicide bombers on an army base in Baghdad

The result, however, stayed the same: a parliament so hung – or finely balanced – that the politicians still cannot decide who should form the next government, our correspondent says.

Hussein al-Shahristani, a close ally of the prime minister in Iraq’s caretaker government – effectively the same government that was in power before the election – told the BBC that bombers have been able to exploit political differences to their advantage.

“The security could have been handled more firmly,” he said. “Now the terrorists are hoping that by having these political differences they can penetrate through the cracks in the political system.”

In other areas of life, the absence of a new government has had little impact – jobs are scarce and public services are patchy at best, our correspondent says.

As the US winds down its military involvement in Iraq, many Iraqis are pondering their legacy of democratic government; Some are wondering what is the point of voting, if you still don’t get to change your leaders, he adds.

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Strike severely disrupts Tube

Millions of London Underground passengers face disruption throughout the day because of strike action.

The first in a series of 24-hour walkouts began at 1700 BST on Monday with maintenance staff walking out. Drivers, signallers and station staff stopped working four hours later.

They are unhappy about plans to cut 800 jobs in ticket offices and say security could be at risk.

Passengers have been advised to find alternative means of travel.

A Transport for London (TfL) spokesman said it expected to be able to provide a 50% service on some lines and 25% on others.

But it could not say which services would be worst hit and said the situation would be reviewed hour-by-hour.

An extra 100 buses and 10,000 more passenger journeys on Thames riverboat services are being laid on. Some taxi ranks will be marshalled and escorted bike rides will be operating.

Mayor Boris Johnson has criticised the action as a “trumped-up and politically motivated” attempt to attack the coalition government.

“Sending out a few volunteers without the necessary operational licences and training to try and run a few trains is a disaster waiting to happen”

RMT general secretary Bob Crow

General secretary of the RMT union Bob Crow, who will join a picket line at Euston in the morning, said: “We have laid out the clearest possible evidence to the mayor and his officials that if he breaks his promises and slashes station staffing numbers he will be giving the green light to disaster.”

The chief executive of the London Chamber of Commerce, Colin Stanbridge, said that each day the Underground was shut would cost the capital’s economy £48m.

BBC London’s transport correspondent Tom Edwards said the level of service would depend on how many Tube staff turn up for work and how many managers are available to replace those who do not.

“Comparing it to the last strike, which involved one union and was over pay, when there was severe disruption, this time there are two unions so I think we can expect a skeleton service at best.”

The Rail Maritime and Transport (RMT) and the Transport Salaried Staffs’ Association (TSSA) unions are fighting plans to cut ticket office staffing levels, claiming security could be compromised for passengers.

But London Underground (LU) has insisted the plans would mean all stations would still be staffed and has pledged there will be no compulsory redundancies.

In a separate dispute, up to 200 Jubilee and Northern line maintenance staff employed by Alstom-Metro began a 24-hour strike at 1900 BST on Sunday after rejecting an “insulting”, sub-inflation pay offer.

The RMT has said it expects the impact of the strikes to be “massive”.

Boris Johnson

Boris Johnson says health and safety is not being prejudiced

The union has also accused LU bosses of playing “fast and loose” with safety in their efforts to keep the Tube running during the strike.

The RMT said a circular had been sent to staff seeking volunteers to help run services during the walkout.

According to the union the note, signed by LU’s managing director Mike Brown, said no operational licence was needed if people volunteered to support staff turning up for work, adding that lapsed licences could be renewed.

Mr Crow said: “Sending out a few volunteers without the necessary operational licences and training to try and run a few trains is a disaster waiting to happen.”

Denying the allegations, TfL said it would never do anything to compromise safety on the Underground.

Further strikes are planned for October and November.

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Priest to meet dissident families

Fr Paddy O'Kane Fr Paddy O’Kane has challenged dissident republicans over their campaign of violence

A priest in Londonderry who challenged dissident republicans over their violence is to meet families who claim they are being harassed by the PSNI.

Fr Paddy O’Kane from Ballymagroarty agreed to the meeting after talks with the 32 County Sovereignty Committee.

During the talks, he said he criticised those behind the bomb attack on Strand Road police station and recent hoax bomb alerts.

However, he said he had a pastoral duty to listen to the families’ concerns.

He added it did no good to demonise people, but instead it was better to appeal to their better natures.

“I am going there simply to listen, I have no intention of entering into the political affray,” he said of the meeting.”

“I have raised no expectations for these people that I will be fit to do anything.”

“I am going to hand this over to the politicians and to the press.”

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Australia ‘kingmakers’ to decide

Tony Windsor, Bob Katter and Rob Oakeshott at Parliament House in Canberra. 6 Sept 2010Tony Windsor, Bob Katter and Rob Oakeshott have held long talks with both sides

Three independent Australian MPs who hold the balance of power in the lower house of parliament are due to decide who will be the next prime minister.

The three MPs, who represent rural constituencies, say they are finalising their negotiations with both sides.

There has been political deadlock in Australia since last month’s inconclusive election.

Caretaker Prime Minister Julia Gillard is hoping her Labor Party can cling to power.

Opposition leader Tony Abbott, who made an unexpectedly strong showing in the election, says he will offer a better deal to the Australian bush and outback.

With negotiations over the formation of the next government now in their third week, there is growing public impatience with the rural-based MPs – dubbed the three amigos – to reach their decision.

As things stand, the parliamentary arithmetic could hardly be more finely balanced.

The conservative opposition has 73 seats. The Labor government, which has the backing of another independent and the Greens’ sole MP, has 74.

Needing just two more seats to form an overall majority, Ms Gillard probably has more reason to be cautiously confident of reaching a deal with the three independents – Bob Katter, Rob Oakeshott and Tony Windsor.

Some conservatives have publicly all but admitted defeat, but the kingmakers been very guarded about their intentions, and could still yet be influenced by the simple fact that they represent fairly conservative-minded constituencies in the Australian bush and outback.

All three say they want a stable and effective government that will last the full parliamentary term, and have worked together as an informal voting block.

But there is still the possibility that they might ultimately go their separate ways, which raises the spectre of a dead-heat – and a quick return to the polls.

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Guatemala mudslide search halted

A woman struggles to cross a flooded street in Santa Ana Mixta, southern Guatemala, Monday, Sept. 6, 2010Thousands are at risk from further flooding

Emergency teams in Guatemala have resumed rescue efforts after devastating mudslides buried dozens of people.

At least 44 people have died in slides across the country following torrential rains.

More than 11,000 people have had to be evacuated from their homes and thousands more remain at risk from further flooding and landslides.

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Rescue work was suspended on Sunday due to bad weather.

Crews resumed work at 0600 local time (1200 GMT), said Cesar Aguirre, a spokesman for emergency services.

“We hope that the rains let up a bit, and allow us to work,” he told the AFP news agency.

A massive mudslide engulfed scores of people on Sunday in Nahuala while they had been trying to search for others caught in an earlier landslide.

The mud crashed onto the Inter-American Highway north-west of Guatemala City as the crowd tried to dig out five vehicles and a bus. At least 24 people have been pulled out dead so far in the double slide.

Teams are now using heavy machinery to clear the earth and debris, while Guatemala’s civil defence director Sergio Cabanas told the BBC that they’d given up hope that anyone may be pulled out alive.

“My son, he was working with me…but I lost him and I can’t do anything about it”

Victim’s father

“We have given up for dead all those trapped in the mud,” he said.

Scores more landslides and floods have struck other areas of the country.

One man told the AP news agency his son had gone missing in Nahuala when they had joined the effort to look for survivors.

“My son, he was working with me – he was helping, out of solidarity. He was scraping the earth to the side with a hoe, I was with the shovel…but I lost him and I can’t do anything about it,” he said.

More rains are predicted in the days ahead.

President Alvaro Colom has called on his country’s congress to free up emergency funds for tackling what he has called a “national tragedy”.

On Sunday, he said that, in 24 hours, 189 different incidents had occurred “mainly in the regions of Suchitepequez, Retalhuleu, Escuintla and Solola”.

The devastation was comparable to Tropical Storm Agatha, which killed 165 Guatemalans in May, he added.

Weeks of heavy rain have saturated Guatemala’s mountainous terrain, causing hillsides to collapse suddenly.

Parts of the country have seen the heaviest rainfall for half a century, according to Guatemala’s national meteorological institute.

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Fry slams BBC ‘culture of fear’

Stephen FryFry will return to BBC Two to front the eighth series of QI

Stephen Fry has said there is a culture of fear at the BBC which is creating “incredibly bland” programmes.

The host of BBC Two’s QI told the Radio Times executives with “cold feet” were shying away from taking creative risks.

“A lot of the adventure and excitement have gone out of television programming and a lot of it is just down to fear.”

Anti-BBC rhetoric in some newspapers was compounding the situation, he said. The BBC was not immediately available to respond to Fry’s comments.

Fry said: “It’s distressing because it’s working – not by making people feel any less loyal to the BBC, but by affecting the culture of the BBC.

“There is this thing, I call it interfering.”

Compliance systems

He said: “I do know of so many cases where executives would say ‘What we want is something new, something different, something extraordinary!’

“And they’re brought something new, different and extraordinary and immediately the executive gets cold feet, falls back on something else and we end up with something incredibly bland.”

He added executives were more inclined to play it safe but “for a creative institution, that’s death”.

The BBC strengthened its compliance systems in 2008 after a series of rows over taste and decency including the Jonathan Ross and Russell Brand prank calls and complaints over comments made by comedian Frankie Boyle on BBC Two’s Mock the Week.

Talking about the forthcoming series of QI, Fry said unlike other panel shows the celebrity contestants were not in on the answers – apart from one panellist.

“There’s only one regular guest who always insists on seeing the questions beforehand and prepares for them. I won’t tell you his or her name,” he said.

“It really annoys me. In fact, one day, I’ll make sure that person is given a list from another programme because they don’t need them.”

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Tales from the Blitz

aftermath of the Belfast Blitz, May 1941Scenes likes this were commonplace across the UK during the Blitz

Memories of the Blitz do not go away for the ever-dwindling number of people who lived through it.

The BBC’s Ian Shoesmith spoke to some of those who lived through the most intensive bombardment the UK had even witnessed.

Between 7 September 1940 and 10 May 1941, at least 43,000 civilians were killed, more than 140,000 were injured, and around the UK an estimated one million homes were damaged or destroyed.

Jean Taylor certainly remembers her 14th birthday.

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On the night which redefined modern warfare, she was just grateful to have survived long enough to hear the people in the air raid shelter sing Happy Birthday to her on the chimes of midnight as the bombs rained down on her home city of Coventry.

Three quarters of the city was destroyed in 11 hours of relentless bombing, which started in the early evening of 14 November 1940.

By the time Jean emerged from her shelter around dawn the following morning, at least 568 of her fellow citizens were dead and thousands more were homeless.

You would have thought the smouldering rubble of Coventry’s ancient cathedral would have served as a metaphor for its inhabitants’ morale.

But just as a new cathedral would quickly rise from the debris, so too did the spirit of the people.

“It was a horrible, stinky place… there were just a couple of latrines, so you could imagine the smell”

Jean Taylor Survivor of the Coventry Blitz

Not that survivors like 83-year-old Jean ever doubted it would: “Hitler thought that wiping Coventry out would wipe out the British, but we were bloody-minded and would never have let that happen.”

Nearly seven decades on, her memories of that long night are still very fresh: “The air raid sirens started going at 7 o’clock. My mum always had a bag packed, with a flask and sandwiches.”

The local shelter was dug into the site of a local school. “It was a horrible, stinky, smelly place,” she said, “300 people were cooped up in there and of course everybody in those days used to smoke.

“There were just a couple of latrines, so you could imagine the smell, especially as fear has a certain effect on you.”

“The bombing went on and on, for about 11 hours constantly. You’d occasionally hear the ‘pom-pom-pom’ sound of the ack-ack (anti-aircraft guns) but the planes were so low overhead it was so noisy.

“In the morning we came out and it was all horrible and misty and cold. In the estate next to us there was a huge crater the depth of two double-decker buses. The Germans had taken out the gas, the water and the electricity, so it was very hard.”

London memories

Alf Morris, 79, was 10-years-old and living in Bethnal Green, east London during the Blitz.

He said: “We were all neighbours, we all looked after one another and when the war came, men used to do night watch and they would patrol the streets.

“When the air raid warning would go in the middle of the night, they would wake everyone up to get everybody into the Anderson shelters.

“On the first night of the Blitz, we stayed in there with my mother and our relatives.

“My mother said all the bangs were guns but they really knew they were bombs. We were so frightened. I was crying because was terrified of the noise.”

He said when the family was finally able to leave the shelter and return to their home, they found a huge mess left behind. They took what they could and were forced to stay with a relative.

“The Blitz brought everybody together. There were no arguments – as everyone was in the same boat”, he said.

Rationing in the city, though, was cancelled for 17 days afterwards, but it didn’t matter “because there was nothing anyway!”

She remembers hearing rumours that the government had deliberately sacrificed Coventry so as not to alert the Nazis that Britain had managed to crack some of their top-secret codes.

Had Downing Street increased air defences in Coventry, the rumour went, the Germans would have guessed that the Allies were onto them, and changed the codes they used.

Jean said: “The rumour was that they decided to sacrifice the few (in Coventry) to save the many. Nobody has ever confirmed or denied that, and that says a lot.”

Hull Blitz survivor Denis Grout is only around to tell his story because his dad had “a funny feeling” that something was about to happen during one particularly intensive night of bombing.

He was only 10 years old when his house was totally destroyed by a bomb which landed at the end of his terrace and killed five people who had gathered in a shelter there.

Denis, now 79, thinks he probably only survived because of his dad’s premonition. He said: “He said to my mum ‘we’re going on the lorry’. My mum said ‘why?’ and he replied ‘because I’ve got a funny feeling’.”

From the hills of South Cave, to the west of the city centre, “we watched the whole of Hull on fire” before returning home to find their house totally destroyed.

Hull was an easy target for the Luftwaffe, being a heavily-industrialised city on the east coast, at the confluence of two rivers.

And it suffered more than most – one estimate suggests two-thirds of the then population of 320,000 were made homeless.

Denis said: “We didn’t have shelters at the start of the war, so at first we went under the stairs but that wasn’t a good idea because of the gas main. So we sheltered under the big kitchen table we had our dinner on.

“I think I can remember the sirens and going to the shelter. That sound is still in your ears and it still makes me feel weird when I hear them””

Mavis Templeman Survivor of the Blitz in Hull

“The shelters were damp and everything, but we certainly used them. Basically you dug a big hole and then bolted the bent, corrugated iron around it. Four people could lay down in them, but sat up you could get six to eight people in them.

“A lot of people wouldn’t go into the shelters though. My mum did because we were children.”

But while Denis and his immediate family were lucky, his cousin Mavis Templeman wasn’t so fortunate.

Both her 18-month-old sister and four-year-old brother were killed when a bomb exploded on their air raid shelter in May 1941, along with her mother and two grandparents.

Mavis, who was then only three years old, was the sole survivor.

To this day, she doesn’t know whether her almost total lack of memory of that night is because she was simply too young, or because her brain had erased what happened for her own sake.

Mavis said: “I think I can remember the sirens and going to the shelter. That sound is still in your ears and it still makes me feel weird when I hear them”.

One can only begin to imagine how her father reacted to the news that his wife and two of his children had perished.

“Dad was away in the Army when it happened,” she said, “He came back and picked me up from hospital, and I had a big bandage wrapped around my head.

“He was so shell-shocked at what had happened. I lived with him until I was eight, but he couldn’t cope after what had happened and I was adopted.

“I used to think ‘I don’t like you’ about my dad, but nowadays they call it PTSD.”

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