Girl, 10, hurt by lightning bolt

A girl has been taken to hospital after possibly being struck by lightning in Merthyr Tydfil.

Firefighters were called to a house at King Edward Villas at about 1715 BST after reports of a lightning strike hitting a property.

An elderly woman was also examined by paramedics at the scene but was not taken to hospital for treatment.

South Wales crews used thermal imaging cameras at the scene of the strike but there was no fire at the property.

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‘Disabled children mocked’ probe

Disabled children picturesThe council is investigating allegations the pictures were displayed on an office wall
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An investigation is being carried out into allegations that council staff mocked disabled children, calling them offensive names.

Kent County Council (KCC) said a member of staff had been suspended while a disciplinary hearing took place.

The allegations centre on the school transport office, where staff are said to have pinned on the wall pictures of children who looked different.

KCC said: “The county council totally condemns any such behaviour.”

A photo taken of an office wall with pictures of disabled children pinned to it is being investigated by the council.

It is believed pictures were sent to the office at Kings Hill, West Malling, by parents applying for school bus passes.

Scope, the charity for disabled people, said it could not comment on the KCC case while the investigation was being carried out but it was not unusual to hear about such incidents.

“We work with disabled people and their families across the country and they tell (about) this low level but really quite unpleasant harassment and abuse,” said spokeswoman Alexandra O’Dwyer.

“For individuals trying to go about their lives and be exactly the same as everybody else it is one of the things that makes life particularly difficult.”

KCC said in a statement it expected the highest standards of professional conduct from all staff.

“Accordingly, these allegations are being dealt with very urgently and the member of staff involved in this issue has been suspended while a disciplinary hearing takes place in accordance with county council procedures,” it added.

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

Change the clocks

Clocks showing different time zones
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Samoa plans to move itself from one side of the international dateline to the other, redrawing this already wobbly line. How does a country go about changing its time zone?

Samoa sits in the middle of the Pacific Ocean, just 32km (20 miles) east of the international dateline.

On Samoa’s side of this imaginary line that runs from pole to pole, it is Tuesday. On the other side, it is already Wednesday. And this makes it tricky to communicate with its key neighbours Australia and New Zealand, a day ahead on the other side of the line.

Samoan sunsetSamoa’s sunsets will no longer be last in the world

So Samoa plans to reset its clocks and calendars when it shifts the dateline – probably on Thursday 29 December, Prime Minister Tuilaepa Sailele Malielegaoi told his cabinet.

Samoa will lose a day as it jumps straight from Thursday to Saturday. Any residents with a birthday on Friday 30 December will have to celebrate a day early, or a day late, as that date will not exist in their country.

“There is no body that can say yes or no,” says David Mumford, of Collins Bartholomew, which publishes the Collins and Times atlases for HarperCollins.

“The country decides for itself. Then it’s just a matter of publicising it, informing the international community and the map-makers.”

“There is no body that can say yes or no”

David Mumford

In mid-April, a Samoan official made contact with the cartographers at Collins Bartholomew, alerting them to the proposed change and asking who else might need to be informed.

“There have been various deviations and enclaves over the years, so we need to keep an eye out for proposed time zone changes. Once these go ahead, we update our atlases,” says Mr Mumford.

The dateline, and standard time zones in convenient hourly chunks, dates from 1884’s International Meridian Conference.

It agreed upon a 24-hour clock for the world, with days starting at midnight at longitude 0º – a prize awarded to Greenwich, in London. This meant longitude 180º – the imaginary dateline which separates two consecutive calendar days – would run through the Pacific Ocean.

Confusing time zonesChina has one time zone – once it had fiveCommunists made this change in 1949 to streamline and unify this vast countryLast year, Russia whittled its 11 time zones down to nineIndiana, in the US, has two time zonesThe bizarre world of time zones

Nor did the meridian conference specify the exact course of the dateline.

It zigs and zags as it crosses land or passes through island groups. It kinks east to encompass Siberia within the same date as the rest of Russia, and west to bring Hawaii into line with the rest of the US.

Over the years, many countries have ignored this international standard and set their own time as a way to assert national identity, to make political connections, or to keep one time zone within their borders.

Some opt for local time based on the position of the sun, says Rebekah Higgitt, curator of the history of science and technology at the Royal Observatory in Greenwich.

In 2007, Venezuela’s president Hugo Chavez shifted the entire country back 30 minutes. And France used to be on Paris time, which is only nine minutes ahead of GMT. But the country is now GMT+1.

The international dateline and Samoa's proposed change to it

“A switch can make historical records confusing, and may cause headaches for legal cases, but most people won’t notice,” says Ms Higgitt.

Swapping sides of the dateline is not a first for Samoa. It, and neighbouring American Samoa, lay west of the dateline until 1892, when a US businessman convinced both to switch to the east for trading purposes.

The last country to shift the international dateline was Kiribati, which previously straddled the dateline, meaning a time difference of 23 hours between neighbouring islands.

When Samoa had two 4 Julys in 1892

Letter from Margaret Isabella Stevenson, mother of Robert Louis Stevenson

“In former days communication was entirely with Australia, and it was simpler and in every way more natural to follow the Australian calendar; but now that so many vessels come from San Francisco, the powers that be have decided to set this right, and to adopt the date that belongs to our actual geographical position.

To this end, therefore, we are ordered to keep two Mondays in this week, which will get us straight.”

From A History of the International Date Line

So on New Year’s Day 1995, it declared that it was adding a huge eastward bulge to its section of the dateline so all 33 of its islands would have the same date.

“It was an administrative convenience,” says Michael Walsh, the Kiribati Honorary Consul to the UK.

“There were nine islands on the other [eastern] side of the international date line, and 20% of the population lived on the other side. An unintentional byproduct of this was that when the millennium came, we were the first to see the sun.”

There were not so many practical problems with this move, he says. The eastern-most islands were uninhabited, with no infrastructure. “We just did it and told the world. Some atlases took a while to adjust.”

Kiribati’s decision did prove somewhat controversial, says Roger Pountain, of Collins Bartholomew, as some believe that the dateline is a global standard, and is therefore a matter for the international community to decide.

“It is still the case that some cartographers, website owners, and even public authorities continue to prefer to show the dateline as not diverted round Kiribati, while also acknowledging that Kiribati’s time zone conflicts with that,” says Pountain.

Samoa may yet find itself in a similar position.

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

Einstein immigration papers found

Einstein's landing cardThe landing card was issued to Albert Einstein when he arrived at Dover
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Recently discovered immigration papers documenting Albert Einstein’s 1933 escape from Nazi Germany are being displayed for the first time – at a Liverpool museum.

The German-born Jewish scientist fled his native country after Hitler labelled him an enemy of the regime.

The landing card, issued when he arrived at Dover, was discovered at Heathrow Airport.

It is being exhibited at Merseyside Maritime Museum in Liverpool.

The card, signed by the Noble Prize-winning physicist, records Einstein’s arrival from Belgium on 23 May, 1933.

It lists his profession as ‘Professor’ and his nationality as ‘Swiss’.

“What’s remarkable is that the landing card bears his signature, has his profession as ‘professor’ and lists his nationality as Swiss”

Lucy Gardner Merseyside Maritime Museum

Landing cards were once completed by all passengers arriving in England, the reverse of the card states that Einstein was heading for Oxford.

Lucy Gardner, assistant curator of Merseyside Maritime Museum’s Border and Customs gallery, said: “We didn’t know this landing card ever existed until we visited UK Border Agency officers at Heathrow.

“We were keen on acquiring any documents relating to immigration but were stunned to find paperwork relating to such a prominent historical figure as Albert Einstein.”

Einstein was a professor at the Prussian Academy of Science in Berlin from 1914.

When Hitler’s regime took over Germany and began its repressive measures against Jews in particular, Einstein resigned from his position.

Einstein, who died in 1955, settled in the United States after spending a period under armed protection in England.

His 1921 Noble Prize was awarded for his contribution to science with his Theories of Special and General Relativity.

Lucy Gardner said the immigration card revealed Einstein’s feelings about his country’s government.

“What’s remarkable is that the landing card bears his signature, has his profession as ‘professor’ and lists his nationality as Swiss.

“This shows how Einstein had renounced his German citizenship only weeks earlier in angry reaction to Nazi policies.”

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

CIA ‘not to pull Pakistan chief’

Pakistani Prime Minister Yusuf Raza Gilani in Kabul, Afghanistan - photo 16 AprilMr Gilani said the US raid was “a violation of sovereignty”

The US has said it will not withdraw the CIA station chief in Pakistan, despite his name being leaked to local media last week.

But officials quoted by US media said the name published in Pakistani news outlets was spelt incorrectly.

Relations between the countries have been under severe strain since a US raid killed Osama Bin Laden last week.

Last year the former head of the CIA in Islamabad had to be withdrawn after his identity was revealed in the media.

On Friday, the private TV channel ARY broadcast what it claimed was the current CIA station chief’s name. The Nation, a right-wing newspaper, then reported the story on Saturday, according to the Associated Press news agency.

Some unnamed US officials are reported to have said that the latest leak was a deliberate move by the authorities in Pakistan, which they say was intended to divert attention from questions over Bin Laden’s presence in their country.

Asad Munir, a former intelligence chief with responsibility for Pakistan’s tribal areas, where a number of militants find sanctuary, said the release of the name would not necessarily put the official at risk.

“Normally people in intelligence have cover names. Only if there is a photograph to identify him could it put his life in danger,” Mr Munir told AP.

Bin Laden was killed in a US raid on a compound in Abbottabad, close to Islamabad and hundreds of metres away from the prestigious Pakistan Military Academy.

There have been suspicions – strongly denied by Pakistan – that someone in Pakistan’s Inter-Services Intelligence (ISI) spy agency, which has a long history of contacts with militant groups, may have helped hide Bin Laden.

On Monday, Pakistani Prime Minister Yousuf Raza Gilani insisted that allegations of Pakistani complicity and incompetence were “absurd”.

He said that Pakistan was “determined” to examine the failures to detect Bin Laden and stressed that the country’s relationship with the US was still strong.

Map of Abbottabad
Diagram of the compound

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

Accused ‘at home during shooting’

John CooperJohn Cooper denies four counts of murder and other separate charges, including rape
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A man accused of two double murders in Pembrokeshire in the 1980s has told a Swansea Crown Court jury he was at home when a brother and sister were shot.

At the opening of his defence, John Cooper, 66, said he did not kill Richard and Helen Thomas at their house near Milford Haven in 1985.

He also told the jury he had “nothing whatsoever” to do with the deaths of Peter and Gwenda Dixon in 1989.

He looked after his granddaughter on weekday mornings at that time, he said.

Mrs and Mrs Dixon from Oxfordshire, were shot while they were walking the coastal path near Little Haven, on the last day of their holiday.

Richard and Helen Thomas were found dead at their house near Milford Haven in 1985. They had been shot.

Taking to the witness stand, Mr Cooper, of Letterston, told the jury he knew farmer Mr Thomas by sight.

He said that while working for another farmer, he had been to the yard at Scoveston Park where the Thomases lived, but had never been inside their house.

He told the court: “Farmers borrow things off each other. I remembered, on prompting, I had been there twice, three times.”

“I never said that many words to the man to fall out with him”

John Cooper

He was then asked by his barrister, Marc Evans QC, if he had ever quarrelled with Mr Thomas.

Mr Cooper replied: “I never said that many words to the man to fall out with him.”

He said on the night of 22 December 1985, when the Thomases were shot, he was at home.

The defendant denied having anything to do with their deaths or starting the fire that gutted their home.

Mr Cooper was also asked by his barrister whether he had anything to do with the deaths of the Dixons in late June 1989.

He replied: “Nothing whatsoever.”

He said around that time he would look after his one-year-old granddaughter on week days while his late wife, Pat, would go to work.

The prosecution say that a bank card that belonged to the Dixons was used to withdraw money from cash points at Milford Haven and Haverfordwest following their deaths.

The jury has heard from witnesses who gave descriptions of a man seen outside the bank.

Mr Cooper told the jury: “That was not me.”

Mr Cooper told the court he did sell a wedding ring to a jeweller in Pembrokeshire on 5 July just days after the Dixons were killed.

But he denied it belonged to them and said he had been trading in coins, gold and rings since the 1970s.

Mr Cooper is also charged with rape, sexual assault and the attempted robbery of five teenagers in a field near the Mount Estate in Milford Haven in March 1996.

He told the jury: “I’ve not been down that area for 30 to 40 years. I was not there.”

He said from 1993 he had suffered from arthritis, which by then restricted his movements.

The jury has heard that in 1998 Mr Cooper was tried and convicted for 30 burglaries and one count of robbery, crimes he still denies today.

He denies all charges and the trial continues.

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

Venezuela links to Farc detailed

Farc commander Raul Reyes left a trove of documents recovered after the raid that killed him in March 2008Farc commander Raul Reyes, killed in a 2008 raid, left behind a mass of material
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New analysis has set out the complex ties between Colombia’s Farc rebels and the government of Hugo Chavez in Venezuela.

The report by the International Institute for Strategic Studies is based on thousands of rebel documents seized by Colombian forces in 2008.

Mr Chavez let the Farc use Venezuelan territory but also moved against them when it suited him, the IISS says.

The report was a “Latin America dodgy dossier”, Venezuela’s UK embassy said.

The IISS analysed the links between the Farc, Colombia’s biggest guerrilla group, and the neighbouring countries of Venezuela and Ecuador.

Its dossier is based on a two-year study of e-mails and documents recovered during a raid by Colombian forces on a Farc camp just over the border in Ecuador in March 2008.

This included computers, hard drives and memory sticks which held sensitive correspondence and documents belonging to a top rebel leader, Luis Edgar Devia Silva, better known by as Raul Reyes, who was killed during the raid.

The Colombian government gave the archive to the IISS to conduct a detailed analysis.

The IISS says the documents show how the Farc rebels aimed to develop their international ties and how collaboration grew between the guerrillas and Mr Chavez’s administration.

The Farc’s ability to rely on cross-border sanctuaries has long been key to its survival, the report says, while President Chavez came to see the Farc as a strategic ally against the perceived threat of a US invasion or other plots.

Joaquin Perez, a suspected Farc rebel is escorted by policemen after his arrival at Bogota police on 25 April, 2011Venezuela has deported suspected Farc members to Colombia in recent months

However, Mr Chavez’s ties with the Farc are complex.

“Whenever he has judged it expedient, he has been ready to put the relationship on the back burner and even act against Farc interests,” the dossier says.

The IISS suggests that it is probable that Venezuelan support for the Farc continues.

However, the report’s main author, James Lockhart Smith, says the recent deportation of Joaquin Perez, an alleged top Farc guerrilla from Venezuela to Colombia, is highly significant, coming amid improving ties between the two nations.

The Farc’s attempt to win similar support in Ecuador has been less successful, the IISS concludes.

Indeed, Ecuador was often an uncertain or downright hostile environment for the rebel groups because of the extensive penetration of Colombian or US intelligence.

The Venezuelan embassy in London challenged the assertion that the files had not been tampered with by the Colombian authorities before being handed over to Interpol for authentication.

And the embassy said the Colombian Supreme Court had dismissed the “evidence” from the computers as inadmissible in prosecution cases against Colombian politicians.

The embassy said the report could be “part of an aggressive propaganda tool against Venezuela” at a time when relations between Venezuela and Colombia had “reached a level of stable cooperation and friendly dialogue”.

Interpol itself concluded that Colombia did not conform to internationally recognised principles for handling electronic evidence but also that “no user files have been created, modified or deleted on any of the eight Farc computer exhibits following their seizure on 1 March 2008”.

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

Labour press Huhne on carbon row

Coal fired power station at Eggborough in East YorkshireMinister Vince Cable has voiced concern that the competitiveness of British industry could be harmed
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Three government departments have opposed a policy for curbing greenhouse gas emissions, the BBC has learned.

Ministers have until now heeded the recommendations of the independent watchdog which advises them on how far such emissions should be cut.

However, the transport and business departments and the Treasury now oppose the Committee on Climate Change’s new “carbon budget”.

It had recommended that the UK should halve emissions between 1990 and 2025.

This, it says, is necessary for the country to achieve its legally binding targets on carbon.

Energy Secretary Chris Huhne agrees, but BBC environment analyst Roger Harrabin understands that the Treasury and the Department for Transport want to block the plan.

And a letter from Business Secretary Vince Cable, leaked to BBC News, said that accepting the carbon budget risked endangering the competitiveness of British industry.

In a letter to Liberal Democrat leader Nick Clegg and Chancellor George Osborne, seen by the Guardian newspaper, Mr Cable says he is “unable to give clearance to the proposal as it stands” and calls for an urgent cabinet meeting.

Mr Cable is reported to have written: “Agreeing too aggressive a level risks burdening the UK economy, which would be detrimental to UK, undermining the UK’s competitiveness and our attractiveness as a place to do business.

“I have a number of concerns about supporting the CCC’s (Committee on Climate Change) recommended level at this time.

“It is important that we strike the right balance between our pursuit to decarbonise the UK economy whilst ensuring that UK economic growth and employment is sustained.”

The proposed carbon budget is supported though in another leaked letter from Foreign Secretary William Hague.

Mr Hague said the UK should be focusing its business on low carbon growth.

Our analyst says the row is likely to come to a head at a cabinet meeting on Monday.

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Grenade ‘could have killed child’

DerryalertPolice came under attack while dealing with a security alert in the Creggan area
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The PSNI Chief Superintendent in Londonderry has said two children under the age of 10 were nearby when a military grenade was thrown at officers in the city.

It happened as police were dealing with a security alert in the Southway Road area of Creggan on Monday afternoon.

Chief Supt Stephen Martin said the “viable” device landed at one police officer’s feet.

He said it was “sheer good fortune” that no-one was hurt or killed.

“There were four officers in fairly close proximity to the attack,” he said.

“I have absolutely no doubt that the person who threw this believed it would detonate and if it had detonated I would be talking this morning about seriously injured or killed police officers and young children.”

Meanwhile, on Tuesday, police in Derry were dealing with a report that a suspicious object had been left in the Foyle Street area.

Several homes were evacuated in Monday’s alert and Army bomb experts were called to the scene to examine a suspicious object.

As it was being declared a hoax, a man threw a hand grenade at officers and escaped in the direction of Kildrum Gardens. The grenade did not explode.

Mr White said police officers had chased the culprit, but that he had escaped via an alleyway.

He said a further 30 homes were evacuated as a result of the attack for “several hours”.

The four officers who were standing close to where the grenade landed were neighbourhood policing team members.

“Everywhere I go as a district commander, people speak with one voice, they say ‘we like our neighbourhood policing teams, leave our neighbourhood policing teams alone, they are doing great work’,” Mr White added.

Last November, three police officers were hurt and one of them suffered serious arm injuries when a grenade was thrown by a cyclist at Shaw’s Road in west Belfast.

The dissident paramilitary group Oglaigh na hEireann (ONH) said it was responsible for that attack.

Mr White said police would be looking at whether there were similarities between the grenade incidents in Belfast and Derry.

Sinn Fein MLA Martina Anderson described Monday’s attack as “futile” and said it would “achieve absolutely nothing”.

“Whatever group was behind this attack they need to reflect on the political realities of Ireland in 2011,” she said.

“They need to come forward and tell the people of Derry how this will advance the goal of achieving a united Ireland?”

SDLP MP for Foyle Mark Durkan described those responsible as “reckless”.

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

Shalit protest on Israeli holiday

Yoel Shalit being removed from the stageYoel Shalit wants politicians to remember his brother who has been held in Gaza for five years

Israel’s main Independence Day celebration was interrupted by a protest by the brother of the captured Israeli soldier, Gilad Shalit.

The televised service on Monday night traditionally involves the lighting of a dozen torches on Mount Herzl in Jerusalem.

Yoel Shalit and his girlfriend carried signs calling for Gilad Shalit to be remembered.

Police moved them on after they appeared in front of top politicians.

Gilad Shalit, was captured by militants from Gaza in a cross-border raid near Israel’s Kerem Shalom crossing in June 2006.

He has since been held at an unknown location by the Palestinian militant group Hamas that governs the Gaza Strip.

His family and other supporters have worked hard to keep his case in the public eye, even setting up a large demonstration tent close to the Prime Minister’s residence in Jerusalem.

The Israeli soldier, who had the rank of corporal when he was seized, has since been promoted to staff sergeant. He is now 24.

In a television interview on Monday, the Hamas leader, Khaled Meshaal, said that negotiations to free Gilad Shalit, in exchange for the release of about 1,400 Palestinian prisoners in Israeli jails, had stalled.

He blamed the Israeli prime minister, Benjamin Netanyahu.

Mahmoud Abbas and Khaled MeshaalIsrael is opposed to a reconciliation pact signed by rival Palestinian factions

Meanwhile, at an official Memorial Day ceremony, Mr Netanyahu stressed his government’s commitment to bringing the soldier home.

Reports said he also referred to Hamas after its recent signing of a reconciliation deal with the rival Fatah faction headed by the Palestinian Authority President, Mahmoud Abbas, saying, “we will not be tempted to believe that the leopard has changed its spots.”

Israel views Hamas as a terrorist organisation. It opposed the pact that should lead to the setting up of an interim Palestinian unity government tasked with preparing for new elections.

Memorial ceremonies, to recall Israel’s wartime losses, take place at cemeteries, including Mount Herzl, immediately before Independence Day each year. They are sombre events in contrast with the joyful celebrations that follow when Israelis hold barbecues, parties and hike outdoors.

The Jewish state was founded on May 14, 1948, and anniversaries are calculated in accordance with the Hebrew calendar.

On 15 May, Palestinians, mark the creation of Israel with a day of mourning, called al-Naqba, Arabic for ‘catastrophe’.

They remember the hundreds of thousands of refugees and land and property that was lost.

In a routine step, the Israeli authorities prevent most Palestinians from entering Israel from the occupied West Bank during Independence Day celebrations. They say this is a necessary security precaution.

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

Egypt tourism minister ‘jailed’

File picture of Egypt's former tourism minister Zuheir Garranah during a hearing in his trial in Cairo on 23 February 2011Zuhair Garranah handed out licences illegally

Egypt’s former Tourism Minister Zuhair Garranah has been jailed for five years on charges of corruption, an Egyptian judicial source has said.

Garranah had handed out tourism licences illegally, the source said.

Last week, ex-Interior Minister Habib al-Adly was jailed for 12 years for money-laundering and profiteering.

A number of former officials are being investigated in Egypt following the popular uprising that ousted President Hosni Mubarak in February.

Garranah, who was sentenced along with two businessmen, was charged with wasting public funds worth $51m (£31m) after authorising the sale of state-owned land for well below the market price, the AFP news agency reports.

More than 20 Mubarak-era ministers and businessmen linked to the regime have been detained since Mr Mubarak’s departure.

The trial of corrupt officials, including Mr Mubarak, was a key demand of protesters.

Mr Mubarak remains in a hospital in the Red Sea resort of Sharm el-Sheikh, despite a directive from the new government that he too should be moved to prison.

The former president – who was ousted on 11 February – is under investigation on suspicion of involvement in the killings of anti-regime protesters.

At least 846 civilians were killed during 18 days of street protests. Most were shot in the head and chest.

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

Their favourite year?

Nick Clegg and David Cameron after forming the coalition, students protesting against spending cuts and George Osborne ahead of his second Budget
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On Wednesday it will be 12 months to the day since David Cameron and Nick Clegg strode out into sunshine of the Downing Street rose garden to face the media for the first time as a political couple.

These were unprecedented scenes in modern British politics.

The previous Thursday’s general election had ended in stalemate – but instead of forming a minority government and risking another general election, Conservative leader Mr Cameron made a “big, open and comprehensive offer” to the Liberal Democrats.

Over the next five days – in the full glare of the media spotlight and with the markets watching nervously – the Lib Dems hammered out the terms of a coalition agreement with the Conservatives, while holding simultaneous talks with Gordon Brown’s Labour Party.

On the Tuesday, with it becoming apparent that there would be no coalition deal with Labour – which would in any case have been short of an overall majority – Gordon Brown resigned as prime minister.

Newly-annointed Prime Minister David Cameron and his deputy Nick Clegg were now free to embark on a journey into the political unknown.

Britain was not meant to do coalition governments and the Lib Dems and Tories were not seen as natural allies.

The early days proved more stable and harmonious than many had expected.

However turbulence and division were just around the corner, together with that enemy of all politicians attempting to exercise power – events.

Here is how the first 12 months unfolded.

MAY 2010 – COALITION BORN

Nick Clegg, deputy Prime Minister and David Cameron, Prime Minister

Cameron: “We can act for the long term and make big decisions for the future”

All smiles in the garden of No 10 as David Cameron and Nick Clegg put the seal on the first coalition government since 1945 in front of the world’s media.

They pledge to lead a “bold and reforming” government that will take the country in a “historic new direction”.

As ministers begin their work, much attention is on George Osborne’s deficit reduction strategy.

But the chancellor is dealt an early blow as his deputy, Lib Dem David Laws – seen as one of the coalition’s biggest potential stars – steps down over allegations about his parliamentary expenses after just 17 days in the job.

JUNE 2010 – ‘TOUGH’ BUDGET

George Osborne

George Osborne: “The years of debt and spending made this unavoidable”

David Cameron’s first Prime Minister’s Questions in government is overshadowed by a series of fatal shootings in Cumbria.

The month in politics is dominated by the coalition’s first Budget – in which George Osborne sets out what he says are “unavoidable” steps to reduce the deficit.

The chancellor raises VAT from 17.5% to 20%, freezes child benefit and public sector pay, cuts housing benefit and helps the lowest-paid by raising their personal tax allowance.

Other measures include a £2.5bn levy on banks. Labour calls the package “reckless”.

JULY 2010 – SCHOOLS ROW

Education Secretary Michael GoveEducation Secretary Michael Gove was forced to apologise to schools

Michael Gove is in the spotlight as MPs approve legislation granting more schools academy status and paving the way for parents and other groups to open “free schools”.

But the education secretary is embarrassed after he admits errors in an announcement on school building cuts. A number of institutions are given the go-ahead, but their projects have been axed.

David Cameron’s first steps on to the world stage are marred by controversy, when, on a visit to India, he warns Pakistan against facing “two ways” on terrorism.

AUGUST 2010 – 100 DAYS AND COUNTING…

David, Samantha and Florence CameronDavid and Samatha Cameron’s new baby is called Florence

The coalition marks its first 100 days in office – a period of frenetic policy activity by any standards – but announcements on the day are thin on the ground with Westminster taking a collective breather after recent events.

It is far from quiet in the Cameron household, however, as the prime minister’s wife Samantha gives birth to a baby daughter at a hospital in Cornwall.

The Camerons, who lost their son Ivan in 2009, say they are “absolutely thrilled” with the arrival of their fourth child, whom they name Florence.

SEPTEMBER 2010 – CLEGG AT CONFERENCE

Nick CleggNick Clegg told his party it must hold its nerve

With large spending cuts on the horizon, Nick Clegg is expected to get a rough ride at his party’s autumn conference in Liverpool. Lib Dem activists give the leadership a bloody nose by opposing government plans for free schools.

But Mr Clegg avoids any major rows or splits, telling supporters that Lib Dems are already achieving “great things” in government and the party must “hold its nerve” and make the coalition work whatever criticism comes its way.

Meanwhile, MPs approve plans to scrap ID cards – a key Lib Dem and Conservative objective.

OCTOBER 2010 – SPENDING DECISIONS

After months of speculation, George Osborne reveals the scale of the budget squeeze he said is needed as he announces £81bn of spending cuts between 2011 and 2015.

As a signal of things to come, he tells delegates at the Tory party conference that higher-rate taxpayers will no longer be able to claim child benefit from 2013.

In his Spending Review later in the month, Mr Osborne outlines £7bn in extra welfare cuts but pledges to protect health spending.

Meanwhile, David Cameron faces a new opponent across the dispatch box with Ed Miliband elected Labour leader.

NOVEMBER 2010 – STUDENT FEES PROTESTS

Students inside Millbank Tower

Tory headquarters were targeted during student protests

Europe’s economic problems take a turn for the worse as Ireland asks for a bailout to clear its debts and the UK offers Dublin a multi-billion pound loan.

Closer to home, opposition to coalition plans to raise the cap on student tuition fees to £9,000 gather pace. Protests in central London turn violent as Conservative Party headquarters are attacked by demonstrators.

The Lib Dem leadership, which has broken its pre-election pledge not to raise fees, also comes under sustained criticism – with Nick Clegg burned in effigy by protesters as he increasingly becomes the focus of anti-coalition anger.

DECEMBER 2010 – CABLE AND MURDOCH

Vince CableVince Cable ‘declared war’ on Rupert Murdoch

MPs agree to raise the cap on university fees but only after more than 20 Lib Dem MPs vote against the policy.

Nick Clegg dismisses talk of a split but a bad month for the party gets worse after Vince Cable is recorded telling an undercover reporter he has “declared war” on Rupert Murdoch.

The business secretary is stripped of responsibility for determining the media tycoon’s bid for BSkyB.

Elsewhere, the coalition backs down on plans to overhaul school sports and England fails in its bid – fronted by David Cameron – to host the World Cup.

JANUARY 2011 – COULSON QUITS

Andy CoulsonAndy Coulson stepped down as Mr Cameron’s press secretary

Andy Coulson, one of David Cameron’s closest advisers, steps down as No 10 director of communications.

Continuing coverage of phone hacking allegations at the News of the World, where he used to be editor and which he has always denied knowledge of, means he is unable to give “110% to the role”, he says.

All eyes are on Oldham East and Saddleworth as Labour sees off the challenge of the Lib Dems to win the first by-election of the Parliament.

FEBRUARY 2011 – FOREST U-TURN

Caroline Spelman apologised to fellow MPsCaroline Spelman

After David Cameron says he is “not happy” with plans to sell-off swathes of woodland in England, it is only a matter of time before they are dropped.

Environment Secretary Caroline Spelman apologises to MPs for the policy, in a show of humility she says others could learn from. The coalition’s opponents claim it is looking increasingly weak and prone to policy U-turns.

Meanwhile, Parliament backs plans for a referendum on the UK voting system – a key concession to the Lib Dems in May’s coalition negotiations – after a lengthy fight between the Commons and the Lords.

MARCH 2011 – LIBYA CRISIS

David Cameron

David Cameron: military action is “necessary, legal and right”

The world has been watching for months as peaceful protests sweep across North Africa and the Middle East but the uprising in Libya and its regime’s violent response brings the crisis to a head.

Mr Cameron is on a trade mission to the Middle East, with arms dealers among his guests, when the news breaks. The PM mobilises support for a UN resolution authorising military action to protect civilians.

MPs vote to support the government’s action by a majority of 544.

Domestically, Chancellor George Osborne cuts fuel duty and corporation tax in a Budget he says will put “fuel in the tank” of the UK economy. But Labour says the coalition’s economic plan is failing as growth forecasts are downgraded.

APRIL 2011 – NHS PRESSURE

Health Secretary Andrew Lansley and Prime Minister David CameronHealth Secretary Andrew Lansley (right) was forced to consult further on NHS reform

Ministers announce a pause for further consultation over its controversial shake-up of the NHS. The “listening exercise”, involving meetings with the public and medical professionals, is seen as a slap down for health secretary Andrew Lansley.

After nurses passed a motion of no confidence in him, he apologises for any shortcomings in how the changes have been explained.

But he and David Cameron insist the principles behind the plan are correct and the NHS can not stand still. Labour say he has no mandate for the changes, which were not in the coalition deal.

The battle between opposing sides on the referendum to change the voting system descends into a bitter slanging match, with Lib Dem ministers claiming Nick Clegg has been unfairly targeted by both the No campaign and senior Conservatives.

MAY 2011 – ELECTION VERDICT

Gary Long

Several defeated Lib Dem councillors called on Nick Clegg to stand aside

The Lib Dems have been braced for a bad night at the polls for English local elections and national elections in Scotland and Wales – and that is precisely what they get.

But what really rankles with them is that the Conservative vote holds up well.

Nick Clegg claims his party is bearing the brunt of public anger over coalition policies.

But to make matters worse, the Lib Dem leader sees his dream of ditching first-past-the-post for Westminster elections shattered when the alternative vote is resoundingly rejected in a referendum.

The coalition partners insist they are still committed to seeing their agreement through to its conclusion, but it is clear the dynamics of the partnership will never be the same again.

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

Mosley loses European privacy bid

Max MosleyMax Mosley wants to end “ambushes” by tabloid newspapers
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Judges in Strasbourg are due to rule on ex-motorsports boss Max Mosley’s bid to force newspapers to notify people before exposing their private lives.

In 2008, the UK High Court ruled the News of the World invaded his right to privacy by reporting on his sex life.

Mr Mosley says financial damages could not restore his reputation and has taken his call for “prior notification” to the European Court of Human Rights.

A victory could lead to new UK privacy laws, which newspaper bosses oppose.

Mr Mosley was awarded £60,000 in damages against the News of the World for breach of privacy after they ran a story about him paying five women to take part in a sado masochistic orgy.

But he was aggrieved that he had not been made aware of the paper’s intention to publish and so never had the chance to apply for an injunction to stop the story.

At the European court, lawyers for Mr Mosley, now 71, argued that money was not a sufficient remedy for the loss of a person’s privacy.

They say newspapers should be made to notify the subject of a story before they run it.

This would give them time to seek a court order from a judge to stop the story being published.

Mr Mosley’s lawyers say the failure of UK law to oblige newspapers to notify people before exposing their private lives violates the European Human Rights Convention, to which Britain is a signatory.

If judges support Mr Mosley’s case, the government might have to reinforce privacy laws, compelling editors to go to celebrities or public figures at the heart of a story before running it.

The move would fuel the row over the use of super-injunctions to protect certain people, usually celebrities, from the media spotlight.

The government says current UK rules strike a good balance between the “right to private life” and the “right to freedom of expression”.

Newspaper bosses say imposing “pre-publication notification” to toughen the “right to private life” would amount to a breach of the “right to freedom of expression”.

Mr Mosley, the former president of the International Automobile Federation, insisted his legal case did not threaten press freedom because “in 99 cases out of 100, if they (newspapers) are going to write something about someone of any great interest they will approach the person”.

“What we are talking about here is cases where they don’t come to you… because they know if they did you would seek an injunction,” he said.

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

Niger court drops Tandja charges

breaking news

The appeals court in Niger has ordered the release of the country’s former President Mamadou Tandja, who was ousted in a coup in February 2010.

Since then Mr Tandja, in power for 10 years, has been held, accused of misappropriating public funds.

The coup leaders were angered after he sought a third term in office

Last month, the junta officially handed power to veteran opposition leader Mahamadou Issoufou, who won a run-off election in March.

“All proceedings against Mamadou Tandja have been cancelled. He has been wholly exempted from the accusations against him,” one of his lawyers, Souley Oumarou, told the AFP news agency.

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

Greek sprinters guilty of perjury

Breaking news

A court in Greece has sentenced two Greek sprinters to suspended jail sentences for staging a motorcycle crash to avoid a doping test.

Kostas Kenteris and Katerina Thanou were found guilty of perjury and sentenced to 31 months in prison each.

Their coach Christos Tzekos was sentenced to 33 months. The sentences were suspended pending appeal.

The sprinters had said an accident caused them to miss a drugs test on the eve of the 2004 Olympics in Athens.

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