Dog is wolf in jackal’s clothing

Image of what is believed to be an African wolf (Image: Oxford University/WildCRU)The taxonomic classification of the species has long been the subject of an ongoing debate
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DNA analysis has shown that the Egyptian jackal, previously believed to be a subspecies of the golden jackal, is a relative of the grey wolf.

Genetic information shows that the species, Canis aureus lupaster, is more closely related to Indian and Himalayan wolves than golden jackals.

Writing in Plos One, researchers said the renamed “African wolf” was the only grey wolf species found in Africa.

They also called for an urgent assessment of its conservation status.

There has been a long-running debate over whether the animal was a jackal or wolf.

In the late 19th Century, the renowned evolutionary biologist Thomas Huxley said that it looked suspiciously like grey wolves (Canis lupus).

In the 20th Century, other biologists made similar comments after examining skulls from specimens of the species. However, the taxonomical classification remained unchanged.

The team of researchers from Norway, Ethiopia and the UK explained why they decided to focus their attention on the species.

“During a field study of the Ethiopian wolf in central Ethiopia, we noticed that some golden jackals differed slightly in their appearance from golden jackals elsewhere,” they wrote.

They added that the canids were “larger, more slender and sometimes with a more whitish colouration”.

This, combined with a photograph taken in 2004 in Eritrea that showed a “wolf-like animal” which was suggested to be an Egyptian jackal, prompted the team to investigate the area’s highland golden jackals and sequence their DNA.

Exciting find

Co-author Claudio Sillero, from the University of Oxford’s Wildlife Conservation Research Unit (WildCRU), said it was “really exciting” to find that what they thought was a member of a relatively common species, only to find out that the animal could belong to a much more unique grouping.

Arabian wolf (Canis lupus arabs) (Image: Chris and Matilde Stuart)The Arabian wolf is believed to be the closest relative – geographically and genetically – to the African wolf

He added: “What I understand from the genetic work carried out by our Norwegian colleagues is that the consistency of the results returned very strong [similarities to other subspecies of the grey wolf].

“This is why we are very confident that we are looking at a different taxon.”

Professor Sillero explained what the next step would be in order to get the species formally reclassified.

“Traditionally, you would do a formal morphological description of the specimen. However, there is a possibility that we could describe the species on genetic material alone,” he told BBC News.

“We stopped short of doing that on this paper because we wanted to get the feedback, and the response has been phenomenal among colleagues.

“Somewhere along the line, I think we will push for it to be recognised as a separate species.”

Until now, the range of the grey wolf was known to extend to the Sinai Peninsula but not into mainland Africa. It was presumed that the closest living relative in the continent was the endangered Ethiopia wolf (Canis simensis), found only in the Ethiopian highlands.

Professor Sillero, who is also chairman of the International Union for Conservation of Nature’s canid specialist group, explained that researchers found examples of the species at two highland locations, which extended the known range of Canis aureus lupaster by at least 2,500km south-east.

“This brings more questions than answers, such as how far into the heartland of Africa do they go?”

He added that he had recently received an “intriguing photograph” taken in northern Senegal.

“It was a picture of a wolf, there is no question about that, but we have never talked about wolves being present in Senegal before,” he told BBC News.

“This wolf is hanging out with a family group of side-striped jackals. So this shows that there is complexity, not just in distribution but in sociality.”

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US man on Pakistan murder charges

Onlookers surrounding the motor bike of a commuter who was killed Onlookers surrounded the motor bike of the commuter who was killed
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A US consular employee has been charged with murder after two motorcyclists were shot dead in the Pakistani city of Lahore, police say.

Raymond David reportedly said he fired his gun in self-defence because the men were pursuing him in his car.

Another motorcyclist was run over and killed by a vehicle carrying Mr David’s colleagues as they came to his aid, police and witnesses said.

Mr David is expected in court later in the Punjab province capital.

Lahore’s Police chief Aslam Tareen told the BBC that Mr David was not a diplomat, but was employed on “security duties” in the consulate.

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‘Sharp rise’ in Darfur violence

A UN peacekeeper in Darfur, 10 January 2011Civilians have taken refuge near Unamid missions

Campaign group Human Rights Watch says there has been a sharp increase in attacks on civilians in Darfur.

A civil war that began in 2003 in Sudan’s Western region has flared up again in recent months.

But the conflict is receiving less attention, as Southern Sudan is about to split away following a separate civil war.

Human Rights Watch is accusing both government forces and rebels of attacks on civilians.

This week there has been fighting in Tabit, in North Darfur, which reportedly destroyed eight villages and caused thousands of people to flee the area.

Human Rights Watch says both government troops and rebel fighters targeted civilians according to their ethnic affiliations.

Both sides deny the claims.

In the early days of the war in Darfur, it was largely a conflict involving rebels from three ethnic groups perceived as African, against government troops and allied Arab militias, known as the Janjaweed.

The picture has become less clear subsequently.

There has been a surge in fighting since President President Omar al-Bashir’s special adviser Minni Minawi was fired in December.

Mr Minawi had been the only major rebel to sign a peace deal.

Now he is fighting the government again, and has joined his troops to several other groups in a loose alliance.

The war in Darfur is getting only minimal attention, because Southern Sudan is set to gain independence following a referendum.

The southerners obtained the vote thanks to a peace deal that ended their own war with Khartoum.

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Nasa marks space shuttle disaster

Nasa Administrator Charles Bolden at Arlington CemeteryThe ceremony took place at Arlington National Cemetery

The US space agency has held a day of remembrance for astronauts who have died in the line of duty, particularly the seven who died in the 1986 Space Shuttle Challenger disaster.

Flags flew at half-mast at Nasa installations across the country.

“The legacy of those who have perished is present every day… and inspires generations of new space explorers,” Nasa Administrator Charles Bolden said.

Friday is the 25th anniversary of the Challenger disaster.

The shuttle exploded 73 seconds after launch at an altitude of 14,000 metres (46,000ft), killing all on board.

“Every day, with each new challenge we overcome and every discovery we make, we honour these remarkable men and women,” Mr Bolden said.

During Thursday’s ceremony at Arlington National Cemetery in Virginia, he laid a wreath at a memorial to the seven astronauts, Commander Francis Scobee, Pilot Michael Smith, Mission Specialists Judith Resnik, Ellison Onizuka, Ronald McNair and Payload Specialists Gregory Jarvis and Christa McAuliffe.

On 28 January, 1986, the Challenger was on a mission – STS 51L in the official record – to deploy two satellites. It broke up after launch over the Kennedy Space Center in Florida.

Investigators later determined a sealing ring had failed in cold weather, allowing pressurised hot gas to leak from one of the rocket boosters and eventually to breach the external fuel tank.

The mission was notable because it carried for the first time a teacher, Ms McAuliffe.

“Christa confidently and joyfully embraced life, no less than her friends and colleagues on Challenger, and no less than the crews of Columbia, Apollo 1, and all of those people who courageously follow their own paths every day,” said Ms McAuliffe’s widower Steven McAuliffe, a federal judge.

He was referring to other fatal accidents in history of the US space programme.

A total of 24 people have been killed while supporting the space agency’s mission since 1964, Nasa said.

Seven astronauts died aboard the Columbia shuttle in 2003 when it disintegrated upon re-entry to Earth due to a damaged heat shield.

Three people died aboard the Apollo 1 in 1967 after a fire during a launch pad test.

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New schools ‘ideally academies’

Primary school classroomPopulation pressure means more schools are needed
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The Education Secretary Michael Gove has said all new schools in England should ideally be academies or free schools.

These are state-funded, but semi-independent schools.

Population increases in parts of England, especially London and the west Midlands, mean more schools are needed.

Mr Gove said if councils think a new school is needed, the “first choice” should be a free school or academy proposal.

This has now been put in to the Education Bill which was published yesterday, meaning councils will have to follow this approach, rather than setting up their own schools.

The government announced on Friday that a total of 249 groups – including parents, teachers and charities – have now come forward with proposals to set up free schools.

Thirty-five groups have gone to the next stage of the process and are developing a full business case and a plan.

Several are expected to open in September.

Representatives of many of the groups will be in London for a conference on Saturday, where they will meet Mr Gove and some of the figures behind the charter schools movement in the United States.

An Academies Act, passed in the summer, paved the way for groups of parents, teachers and charities to set up their own “free schools”, and for the expansion of the academies programme, under which schools are being encouraged to “opt out” of local authority control.

The new Bill says that if local authorities believe there is a need for a new school in their area, they “must seek proposals for the establishment of an academy”.

Free schools are also academies – schools directly funded by central government, which stand outside of local authority control.

The changes also allow special schools and Pupil Referral Units (PRUs) to become academies and set out the conditions for faith schools to take on this status.

Mr Gove was speaking at the King Solomon Academy in London which is run by the Ark foundation.

Asked about the duty being put on councils planning for new schools in their areas, Mr Gove said: “That would be the first choice I would like local authorities to make, that they should be free schools or academies”.

He said there was a need for schools, particularly primary schools in some areas, including London, east Lancashire, west Yorkshire and the midlands.

“My view is we should encourage innovation and choice by ensuring that as many of these schools as possible are academies or free schools.”

Teaching unions are strongly opposed to the schools. They say they will divide schools and fracture the school system. Academies and free schools do not have to follow national guidelines on teachers’ pay and conditions.

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Egypt quits net to stifle protest

Arbor graph of Egypt net traffic, Arbor NetworksThe drop in net traffic in Egypt was dramatic
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Internet connections across Egypt appear to have been cut, as authorities gear up for a day of mass protest.

Net analysis firms and web watchers have reported that the vast majority of the country’s internet has become unreachable.

The unprecedented crack down will leave millions of Egyptians without internet access.

There have been unprecedented protest in the country over the past few days – much of it co-ordinated via the web.

According to internet monitoring firm Renesys, shortly before 2300 GMT on 27 January virtually all routes to Egyptian networks were simultaneously withdrawn from the internet’s global routing table.

That meant that virtually all of Egypt’s internet addresses were unreachable.

Egyptian authorities seem to have manged this by shutting down official Domain Name Servers (DNS) in Egypt. These act as address books and are consulted by web browsing software to find out the location of a site a user wants to visit.

Messages circulating in Egypt pointed people towards unofficial DNS servers so they could get back online.

Mobile services are also affected.

A statement issued by Vodafone Egypt said it had been instructed to suspend services in some areas.

“Under Egyptian legislation the authorities have the right to issue such an order and we are obliged to comply with it,” it said.

That sudden drop off has been confirmed by other web traffic watchers, including Arbor Networks and BGP Mon.

Egyptian protesters clash with policeRiot police have clashed with the anti-government protesters in Egypt

“The government seems to be taking a shotgun approach by ordering ISP’s to stop routing all networks,” said Andree Toonk, a researcher at BGP Mon.

People and businesses within the country that relied on the four main ISPs have been cut off, Renesys’ chief technology officer, James Cowie wrote on the company’s blog.

“Link Egypt, Vodafone/Raya, Telecom Egypt, Etisalat Misr, and all their customers and partners are, for the moment, off the air,” he wrote.

Severing the majority of a country’s internet connections respresents “is unprecedented in internet history”, said Rik Ferguson, a security researcher at Trend Micro.

Earlier this week, Egyptians had reported being unable to access social networks such as Twitter and Facebook. At the time the Egyptian government denied it was behind the block, saying it supported free speech.

Many of the protesters were able to get round those restrictions by using smartphone apps – which had not been blocked – to access those sites.

Others used proxy servers – which divert web traffic to its destination via sites that haven’t been blocked.

Those initial restrictions now appear to have been a precursor to a much more stringent communication clamp down.

Elsewhere, unconfirmed reports suggest that mobile users have been blocked from receiving text messages.

But protesters continue to circumvent the net blockade. One Twitter user, @EgyptFreedomNow claimed it is still possible for Egyptians to access the internet using dial up connections.

The protests in Egypt followed similar unrest in Tunisia, which saw the collapse of Zine al-Abidine Ben Ali’s government.

Amid fears of a domino effect in the Middle East, other regimes are following Egypt’s lead in restricting access to some sites.

The Syrian authorities have banned certain programmes that allows access to Facebook’s Chat application.

The Egyptian Consulate in London was not answering calls at the time of writing.

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

EU studies Kosovo ‘organ traffic’

Eulex officer (file pic)Eulex works with Kosovo Albanian officials to fight crime and corruption
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The EU mission in Kosovo has begun investigating allegations that Kosovo Liberation Army (KLA) rebels engaged in organ trafficking.

“Eulex prosecutors have opened a preliminary investigation,” the EU rule of law mission (Eulex) said.

On Tuesday the Council of Europe, a human rights watchdog, approved a report by its investigator, Dick Marty.

Organs were taken from prisoners killed by the KLA after the 1999 war against Serb forces, Mr Marty alleged.

He accused a KLA faction led by Kosovo Prime Minister Hashim Thaci of involvement in organised crime, including organ trafficking.

Mr Thaci strongly denies the allegations.

Eulex said it took the allegations “very seriously” and was ready to “handle the judicial follow-up”.

“Eulex calls on all relevant organisations and individuals, including Dick Marty, to present what evidence they have…

Kosovo PM Hashim Thaci (5 Dec 2010)Prime Minister Hashim Thaci has strongly denied the allegations

“We understand concerns about witness protection in the region but we have full confidence in our own witness protection unit,” the statement said.

The Council of Europe’s parliamentary assembly called for international and Albanian investigations into crimes committed in the aftermath of the Kosovo conflict, including “numerous indications” that organs were removed from the bodies of prisoners held by the KLA on Albanian territory.

Swiss senator Dick Marty’s report, published last month, claims witnesses were silenced and paid off by members of the Drenica Group, a faction within the KLA, whose members allegedly engaged in organ trafficking, as well as heroin smuggling and assassinations.

The group’s leader is named as Mr Thaci, then the KLA’s political chief.

Mr Marty said he had never claimed Mr Thaci was directly involved in organ-trafficking, but added that “it [was] hard to believe that he never heard anything being said”.

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Cameron sticking to ‘tough’ plan

David CameronDavid Cameron argues that creating growth in the UK economy will not be easy

David Cameron is expected to say the economy is making “progress”, despite figures showing it shrank during the final quarter of last year.

The prime minister will argue that the challenges facing the UK are “not easy” to overcome but the budget deficit must be tackled through spending cuts.

In a speech, he will say coalition policies have allowed the country to keep its international credit rating.

The government set out its plans to cut spending last autumn.

Figures released this week showed the UK economy had contracted by 0.5% in the last three years of 2010.

This has led critics to question whether the government’s deficit-tackling programme was having a negative effect on growth.

Others argue that savings in areas like education, defence and council budgets are unnecessary and will damage many people’s lives, through redundancies and poorer public services.

In a speech to business leaders and politicians at the World Economic Forum in Davos, Mr Cameron will say: “Those who argue that dealing with our deficit and promoting growth are somehow alternatives are wrong. You cannot put off the first in order to promote the second.

“Average government debt in the EU is almost 80% of GDP. Some countries are again borrowing 5, 6 or 7% of GDP again this year. The figure for the UK is more than 10%. This is clearly unsustainable and action cannot be put off.”

Moving on to economic recovery, Mr Cameron will say: “To get there isn’t easy. We can’t just flick on the switch of government spending or pump the bubble back up. Making this transformation – and it is a transformation – requires painstaking work and it takes time…

“The scale of the task is immense, so we need to be bold in order to build this economy of the future. The British people know these things. They understand there are no short-cuts to a better future.

“And already we’re making progress. Not long ago we were heading towards the danger zone where markets start to question your credibility.

“Yet in the past eight months we’ve seen our credit rating – which was on the brink of being downgraded – affirmed at the triple-A level. We’ve seen market interest rates – which were in danger of spiralling – actually fall.

“All this has happened not in spite of our plan to cut the deficit, but because of it. That’s why we must stick to the course we have set out.”

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

Stephen Fry made honorary doctor

Sanjeev Bhaskar and Stephen FryFry was welcomed by comedian Sanjeev Bhaskar, who is the Chancellor at the University of Sussex
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Actor and broadcaster Stephen Fry has been given an honorary doctorate at the University of Sussex.

He received the honour in recognition for his work campaigning for people with bipolar disorder, mental health problems and HIV.

Fry said he “couldn’t be happier or prouder” about being made a doctor in front of 1,000 students.

He was given his honorary doctorate at a graduation ceremony at the Brighton Dome.

Fry was welcomed by comedian and actor Sanjeev Bhaskar, who is also the Chancellor at the University of Sussex.

Others getting postgraduate qualifications included Professor David Clary, chief scientific adviser to the Foreign and Commonwealth Office, who was made a doctor of science.

Kathy Walker, who is profoundly deaf, received a postgraduate certificate of education (PGCE) to teach maths.

Geoffrey Whitfield, 77, who spent a lifetime promoting peace through sport, graduated with a master’s in conflict studies.

University vice-chancellor Professor Michael Farthing said: “The university is delighted to recognise the enormous achievements in both the arts and the sciences, as represented by Stephen Fry and Prof David Clary.

“We are equally proud that the Sussex name will be represented at home and in all parts of the world by our talented and high-achieving graduates.”

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UK to double aid to polio fund

baby being vaccinated against polioThe new funding will help buy vaccines and conduct immunisations
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The UK government is doubling the amount of money it gives to the global campaign to wipe out polio to £40m ($63.3m) this year and next.

The money for the Global Polio Eradication Initiative (GPEI) should mean an extra 45m children can be vaccinated.

Over the last 20 years, polio cases have been cut by 99%, and the condition is close to being eradicated.

It is still endemic in Afghanistan, India, Nigeria and Pakistan.

And it is present in over a dozen countries altogether.

The UK currently donates £20m each year to GPEI, which is led by the World Health Organization (WHO).

The extra money will be given on the understanding that routine immunisation is strengthened in the countries affected.

The UK government has also called for each dollar of its funding to be matched by $5 from other donors.

The Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation is to donate an extra $102m (£64.3m) to the GPEI.

The UK Prime Minister, David Cameron said that it was possible to wipe out polio completely.

“We have the vaccines and the tools to do it. All that’s missing is a real and sustained political will to see this effort through to the end.”

“”Eradicating polio requires innovative thinking and political will”

Bill Gates

Andrew Mitchell, International Development Secretary, added: “Britain is at the forefront of the fight against polio.

“We have already provided funding for 1.2 billion doses of polio vaccine for children over the past two years and our increased commitment means many millions more will be protected from this terrible disease.”

Bill Gates said: “Eradicating polio requires innovative thinking and political will, as well as funding from a range of donors, to support an aggressive programme that will get the job done.”

The GPEI is a public-private partnership, spearheaded by the WHO. It is funded by the US, UK and Indian governments, Rotary International and the Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation.

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Jail for 26 after drugs crackdown

Poster for film Swansea Love StoryThe film released last year showed addicts injecting themselves
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An undercover police operation targeting drug dealers in Swansea has seen 26 people jailed for a total of more than 50 years.

Police targeted the supply of crack cocaine and heroin in the city centre.

Operation Avignon was launched partly in response to a documentary called Swansea Love Story which showed addicts injecting themselves in public.

Sentencing of the 26 took place over at Swansea Crown Court.

Operation Avignon took place last summer and involved undercover offices targeting street dealing in the city centre.

Police said they were determined to disrupt the supply of class A, B and C drugs with a particular emphasis on heroin and crack cocaine.

It was partly in response to the number of drug deaths and overdoses in the area.

It was also motivated by the amount of discarded needles and other drugs paraphernalia found in the city.

Officers also said they wanted to tackle the image of Swansea portrayed in the film which followed the everyday lives of addicts.

Police fight against drugsOver the past four years there has been an average of two drug deaths and between 20-40 overdoses per month in Swansea, Neath and Port Talbot.On average police make five seizures a day, resulting in an average of three arrests a day.In November police made 45 arrests for possession with intent to supply and recovered heroin with a street value of £150,000.Source: South Wales Police

During sentencing, Judge Peter Heywood said: “Heroin leads to a life of misery and degradation, it’s a downward spiral for those who take it.

“The police very properly had concerns about the escalating problem of heroin use in the city.

“It was becoming readily available and easy to get hold of.

“It’s almost at endemic levels in south Wales.”

Supt Phil Davies of South Wales Police welcomed the sentences.

They reflected “the concerns that society has in respect of Class A drugs” and “in particular heroin supply within Swansea and the impact it has upon the the community,” he said.

“I also hope that these sentences will provide a focus for reflection upon the need to seek harm reduction advice for those who are addicted to this drug and a stark reminder of the likely consequences to those who continue supplying class A drugs within our community.”

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