Each of the leaders pledged to work towards peace
The first direct talks between Israeli and Palestinian leaders in nearly two years have begun with a pledge of “full and active support” from the US.
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Each of the leaders pledged to work towards peace
The first direct talks between Israeli and Palestinian leaders in nearly two years have begun with a pledge of “full and active support” from the US.
US Secretary of State Hillary Clinton said Israeli PM Benjamin Netanyahu and Palestinian leader Mahmoud Abbas had the “opportunity to end this conflict”.
Mr Netanyahu said painful concessions from both sides would be needed.
Mr Abbas called on Israel to end all settlement construction and lift the blockade of the Gaza Strip.
The talks at the US State Department are the first such negotiations in 20 months.
US President Barack Obama initiated the talks, giving them a one-year deadline.
He has said the goal is a permanent settlement that ends the Israeli occupation of territory captured in 1967, and an independent, democratic Palestinian state existing peacefully beside Israel.
Opening the negotiations, Mrs Clinton said the US had “pledged its full support to these talks and we will be an active and sustained partner” but said Washington would not impose a solution.
Almost exactly 17 years ago at the White House, an earlier generation of leaders signed a document that was supposed to start the process of ending the conflict between Israel and the Palestinians.
It didn’t. Thousands have been killed since then.
If these talks fail – which is quite possible – it will be even harder next time around.
This is no longer just a conflict between rival nationalists over the possession of land.
Steadily, a religious war is being grafted on to it as well.
Making deals between nationalists has so far been impossible.
Compromise between those on both sides back in Israel and the Palestinian territories who believe they are doing God’s will would be much more complicated.
“Mr Prime Minister, Mr President, you have the opportunity to end this conflict and the decades of enmity between your peoples once and for all,” she said.
“The core issues at the centre of these negotiations – territory, security, Jerusalem, refugees, settlements and others – will get no easier if we wait, nor will they resolve themselves.”
Speaking after Mrs Clinton, both Mr Netanyahu and Mr Abbas acknowledged the difficulty of the task ahead.
“This will not be easy,” Mr Netanyahu said. “True peace, a lasting peace, will be achieved only with mutual and painful concessions from both sides.”
Mr Abbas said: “We do know how hard are the hurdles and obstacles we face during these negotiations – negotiations that within a year should result in an agreement that will bring peace.”
The leaders also raised two of the issues that are central to the talks: security for the Israelis, and Jewish settlement construction on Palestinian territories.
“We call on the Israeli government to move forward with its commitment to end all settlement activities and completely lift the embargo over the Gaza Strip,” Mr Abbas said.
Mr Netanyahu said “a genuine peace must take into account the security needs of Israel”. He also repeated the demand that the Palestinians recognise Israel as a Jewish state.
After their statements, Mrs Clinton, Mr Abbas, Mr Netanyahu and the US envoy to the Middle East talks, George Mitchell, broke off for talks away from the media.
Mr Mitchell emerged to say that Mr Abbas and Mr Netanyahu were talking alone. He said relations between the two men were “cordial” and there was a “constructive and positive mood”.
He said the two leaders had agreed to hold further talks on 14-15 September, then about every two weeks after that.
It had already been agreed, Mr Mitchell said, that the two sides would work to reach a framework agreement on all the issues dividing them that would be followed by a comprehensive treaty.
On Tuesday, four Israeli settlers were shot dead in an ambush near the West Bank town of Hebron. Another two Israelis were wounded by gunshots on the West Bank on Wednesday.
The militant wing of Hamas has claimed responsibility for this week’s shootings of Israelis The armed wing of the Palestinian Islamist movement, which controls the Gaza Strip, said it carried out both attacks.
Hamas, excluded from the talks because its authority is not recognised by Israel, the US or the European Union, has promised to continue to target Israelis.
Mr Abbas is from the more moderate Fatah faction.
The BBC’s Jon Donnison in the Gaza Strip says that as the peace talks get under way, Hamas seems to be sending out a message that it is not to be ignored.
It is hard to see how there can be peace between Israelis and Palestinians, unless Fatah and Hamas sort out their differences first, our correspondent adds.
The talks are also being attended by Jordan’s King Abdullah and Egyptian President Hosni Mubarak.
Another meeting between Mr Obama, Mr Abbas and Mr Netanyahu could be held during the UN General Assembly at the end of the month.
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Lotteries are on a list of approved ways of allocating places at over-subscribed schools in England A controversial lottery system for secondary school places in Brighton failed in one of its key aims – to give poorer children equal access to top schools, academics say.
Researchers looked at what has happened in Brighton and Hove since a lottery was brought in two years ago.
They say pupils in the poorest areas still have little chance of getting into the most popular schools.
Brighton and Hove Council says the system is fairer than the previous one.
It uses a lottery on top of a catchment area system.
The city is divided into catchment areas and if a school is over-subscribed with applications from that area, a lottery is used as a tie-breaker to decide who should get a place.
In the past, places went to pupils who lived closest to the schools, leading critics to say pupils were being “selected by mortgage”.
Now, families living in wealthier areas close to their favoured school might not get a place there.
The changes sparked a major protest in Brighton, but they were declared to be fair by the Schools Adjudicator last year.
Research presented to the British Educational Research Association on Friday says the system does not give equal chances to all pupils because catchment areas are still the main determinants of access to particular schools.
The new catchment areas are drawn in such a way that families in the poorest neighbourhoods still have little chance of getting into the most popular schools, according to the academics.
The most popular schools are in the centre of the city, while the most deprived areas are to the east and far west.
“The main lesson of our analysis is that the introduction of a lottery on its own is not enough to equalise access to the high-performing popular schools,” said Rebecca Allen of the Institute of Education, London, and Simon Burgess and Leigh McKenna from Bristol University in their report.
“The drawing of the catchment area boundaries is central to the outcome of the reform.”
The researchers say if anything, socio-economic segregation has increased slightly, although some students from wealthier neighbourhoods were now attending less academically successful secondaries than they might have expected to previously.
“These are the primary group losing out from the reform, balanced by a more diffuse group of winners who gained access to the higher performing schools,” the report says.
Simon Burgess said there were two slightly different messages from the findings – but they were not contradictory.
He said although there was some “evening out”, the lottery had not equalised the chances of poorer pupils getting into the highest-performing schools.
“We all hoped and expected that the use of a lottery as opposed to proximity would make school admissions a little fairer.
“We were puzzled as to why that appeared not to be true. The reason is the catchment area.”
Brighton and Hove Council says it is too early to draw firm conclusions about the lottery, referred to as random allocation.
A spokesman said: “The aim was to create a system that is fairer to more people than the previous system and ensure children could get places at a school that’s near to them. We argue that these aims have been achieved.
“The geographical spread across the city of our secondary schools meant that under the previous system children in large areas of the city were unable to get places at their local school – because they were too far away in terms of home to school distance – and were having to travel across the city to other schools instead.
“Under the catchment area based system we now have, all children get priority for a school that’s near to them.”
The council will review the system in 2012 as agreed when it was adopted, he said.
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Judges to deliver verdict more than five years after trial began
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The hurricane is currently heading north-west Evacuations have begun in areas of the US east coast likely to be hit by Hurricane Earl.
The storm has dropped to category three but is still generating sustained winds of 201km/h (135mph).
President Barack Obama said officials needed to be ready for a “worst case” scenario in a call to the US Federal Emergency Management Agency (Fema).
One island in North Carolina’s Outer Banks is being evacuated and visitors are being asked to leave another.
“The most important thing for people living in Earl’s potential tract to do is to listen to and follow the instructions of their local officials”
Craig Fugate Fema administratorIn pictures: Hurricane Earl batters Caribbean
The narrow islands are served by a single main road and officials worry that waves washing over it will cause danger to travellers.
Fema has warned people along much of the the eastern seaboard of the US to be vigilant and follow official bulletins.
Forecasters at the National Hurricane Center said they expected the hurricane to turn north and then run parallel to the east coast.
“The most important thing for people living in Earl’s potential tract to do is to listen to and follow the instructions of their local officials,” Fema administrator Craig Fugate said.
A hurricane warning has been issued for the east coast of the US from Bogue Inlet North Carolina north-eastward to the North Carolina/Virginia border, including the Pamlico and Albemarle sounds.
The hurricane watch has been adjusted northward and now extends from the North Carolina/Virginia border northward to Cape Henlopen, Delaware.
A warning means hurricane conditions are expected somewhere within the affected area, with the first tropical storm-force winds within 36 hours. A watch expects the same within 48 hours.
The local authorities in the Outer Banks expect the storm to pass 80 miles (130km) away from the islands, which are popular with tourists, meaning high winds and waves are likely.
Ferries have been transporting vehicles from Hatteras Island as part of the evacuation Hatteras Island is being evacuated of visitors, while both visitors and residents have been told to leave Ocracoke Island just to the south.
The hurricane is currently east of the central Bahamas and is moving north-west.
“Large swells from Earl should affect the Bahamas and the south-eastern coast of the United States today [Wednesday]. These swells will likely cause dangerous surf conditions and rip currents,” the NHC said.
The Labor Day weekend marks the end of a holiday season and many Americans use it to head for the beach.
On Monday the hurricane battered north-eastern Caribbean islands and Puerto Rico, causing power cuts and flooding.
Earl is being closely followed by Tropical Storm Fiona, currently east of the Leeward Isles with winds of up to 65km/h.
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Unison Scotland members will discuss how to respond to a move by councils to impose a pay deal on 150,000 workers.
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The drugs work by strengthening the bones Long-term use of bone-strengthening drugs – used to treat fractures – may boost the risk of oesophageal cancer, Oxford University research suggests.
The study of 3,000 people found taking bisphosphonates for five years upped the risk from one in 1,000 to two in 1,000 for 60 to 79-year-olds.
The researchers said the risk was small, but reliable information on risks and benefits was needed.
But experts said for many, the case for taking the drugs “would be strong”.
The findings, published in the British Medical Journal, were based on an analysis of anonymised GP records.
They contrast with previous research which found no increased risk for the bone-strengthening drugs.
‘Talk to doctor’
“Anyone who is taking these drugs and is worried about their risk of cancer should talk to their doctor”
Dr Laura Bell Cancer Research UK
It is not known why the risk may be increased, although the drugs are known to irritate the oesophagus.
Thousands of stomach and colorectum cancers were also studied, but no increased risk was found.
Lead researcher Dr Jane Green said even if the findings were confirmed by other studies “few people” taking bisphosphonates would ever develop the cancer.
“Our findings are part of a wider picture. Bisphosphonates are being increasingly prescribed to prevent fracture and what is lacking is reliable information on the benefits and risks of their use in the long term.”
About 600,000 people in the UK are currently taking the drugs – including a tenth of all women over the age of 70.
Dr Laura Bell, from Cancer Research UK, agreed the findings should be treated with caution, pointing out the risks were “still small”.
“Anyone who is taking these drugs and is worried about their risk of cancer should talk to their doctor.”
The National Osteoporosis Society said: “It is a case of balancing the reduced risk of fractures against the side effects of treatment.
“When you consider the fact that there are 230,000 osteoporotic fractures every year in the UK and 1,150 hip-fracture-related deaths every month, the case for treatment is strong.”
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An explosion has torn through an offshore oil platform in the Gulf of Mexico, west of the site of the blast in April that caused a huge oil spill.
The blast, which threw 13 people into the water, was reported by a helicopter company at 0930 local time (1330 GMT).
The platform, which caught fire, was not producing oil or gas, the Department of Homeland Security said.
The blast occurred around 130km (80 miles) south of Vermilion Bay along the central Louisiana coast.
Helicopters, boats and aircraft were sent to the site.
Immersion suits
All 13 workers who fell into the Gulf are accounted for and have been transported to another platform by an oil support vessel, the Coast Guard said. One person is reportedly injured.
The platform is owned by Mariner Energy and is located off the Louisiana coast Before being rescued by the support boats, all 13 workers were given special immersion suits to protect them from the water, said Coast Guard chief petty officer John Edwards.
The federal government was prepared to respond to the situation if there had been reports of pollution, White House spokesman Robert Gibbs said.
Mr Gibbs added that President Barack Obama was in a national security meeting, and he was unaware if the president was informed of the blast.
The platform is owned by Mariner Energy and is located in shallow water, approximately 340ft (105m) from the floor of the Gulf.
“Right now we’re focused on search and rescue and then, ultimately, as this thing progresses we’re going to be looking into the cause,” Mr Edwards said.
Mariner Energy Spokesman Patrick Cassidy told the CNN TV network the blast occurred “quite a ways away” from any wells.
Mr Cassidy confirmed the platform was not in production at the time of the explosion.
The structure had been undergoing maintenance activities prior to the blast, said Melissa Schwartz, spokeswoman for Bureau of Energy Management Regulation and Enforcement.
Seven Coast Guard helicopters, two planes, and three boats were sent to the site of the explosion from the states of Louisiana, Texas, and Alabama.
Coast Guard helicopters did not spot any oil floating around the burning platform, said Coast Guard fireman Katherine McNamara.
The latest explosion comes more than four months after an blast ripped through a Deepwater Horizon rig run by BP, causing about hundreds of million gallons of oil to be released into the Gulf of Mexico.
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Stuart Wilson had been staying with his family at a caravan park near Cranfield beach A six-year-old boy who was struck by a speedboat at Cranfield beach in County Down has died in hospital.
Stuart Wilson, from Rathfriland, was on a wave board being towed by a boat, when the collision happened at about 1700 BST on Bank Holiday Monday.
He suffered severe head injuries and was taken to Daisy Hill Hospital in Newry, before being transferred to the Royal Victoria Hospital in Belfast.
His family had been holidaying at a caravan park near the beach.
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