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The Guardian        p.1        15 November 2008

http://digital.guardian.co.uk/guardian/2008/11/15/pdfs/gdn_081115_ber_1_21219641.pdf

http://www.guardian.co.uk/society/2008/nov/15/baby-p-child-abuse

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

The Guardian

p. 10

8 September 2004

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Rob Rogers

The Pittsburgh Post-Gazette

Pennsylvania

Cagle

11 November 2005

http://cagle.msnbc.com/politicalcartoons/PCcartoons/rogers.asp

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

The Guardian        Media        p. 9        14 November 2005

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

To End the Abuse,

She Grabbed a Knife

 

MARCH 8, 2014
The New York Times
SundayReview|Op-Ed Columnist

 

ATLANTA — WHAT strikes one American woman in four and claims a life in the United States every six hours?

This scourge can be more unsettling to talk about than colonoscopies, and it is so stigmatizing that most victims never seek help.

Paula Denize Lewis, an executive assistant here in Atlanta, was among those who kept quiet about domestic violence, for that’s what I’m talking about. She tried to cover up the black eyes and bruises when she went to work, and when she showed up with her arm in a sling she claimed that she had fallen down the stairs.

Then one evening, she says, her alcoholic boyfriend was again beating her, throwing beer cans at her and threatening to kill her. She ran for a telephone in the kitchen to call 911, but he reached it first and began clubbing her on the head with it.

Lewis reached frantically into a kitchen drawer for something to defend herself with. “I grabbed what I could,” she said.

What she had grabbed turned out to be a paring knife. She stabbed her boyfriend once. He died.

Lewis was jailed and charged with murder. With the help of the Women’s Resource Center to End Domestic Violence, the charge was reduced to involuntary manslaughter and she was sentenced to probation.

That episode underscores the way our silence and squeamishness about domestic violence hurts everyone. If there had been earlier intervention, Lewis might have avoided years of abuse and a felony conviction — and her boyfriend might still be alive.

Domestic violence deserves far more attention and resources, and far more police understanding of the complexities involved. This is not a fringe concern. It is vast, it is outrageous, and it should be a national priority.

Women worldwide ages 15 to 44 are more likely to die or be maimed as a result of male violence than as a consequence of war, cancer, malaria and traffic accidents combined. Far more Americans, mostly women, have been killed in the last dozen years at the hands of their partners than in the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan.

American women are twice as likely to suffer domestic violence as breast cancer, and the abuse is particularly shattering because it comes from those we have loved.

“He’s the only person I’ve ever loved,” Ta’Farian, 24, said of her husband, whom she met when she was an 18-year-old college student. He gradually became violent, she says, beating her, locking her up in a closet, and destroying property.

“My family was like, ‘He’s your husband. You can’t leave him. How would you support yourself?’ ”

Still, she says, it became too much, and she called 911. Police arrested him. But she says that the day before the trial, her husband called and threatened to kill her if she testified against him, so she says that out of a mix of fear and love she refused to repeat in court what had happened. Her husband was let off, and she was convicted of false reporting of a crime.

Ta’Farian is now in hiding, fearful of her husband as well as of the courts; she dissolved into tears as she was telling her story, partly out of fear that her conviction could cost her the custody of her son. Ayonna Johnson, who works for the Women’s Resource Center, comforted her, saying: “You should not have gotten punished for trying to stay alive.”

Domestic violence is infinitely complex in part because women sometimes love the men who beat them: they don’t want the man jailed; they don’t want to end the relationship; they just want the beatings to end.

Women can obtain temporary protective orders to keep violent boyfriends or husbands away, but these are just pieces of paper unless they’re rigorously enforced. Sometimes the orders even trigger a retaliatory attack on the woman, and police officers around the country don’t always make such a case a priority — until it becomes a murder investigation.

One way of addressing that conundrum is mandated classes for abusers, like one run by the group Men Stopping Violence. One session I sat in on was a little like Alcoholics Anonymous in its confessional, frank tone, but it focused on domestic abuse. The men were encouraged to be brutally honest in examining their shortcomings in relationships; it’s surely more effective than sending abusers to jail to seethe at their wives and wallow in self-pity.

Sometimes there’s a perception that domestic violence is insoluble, because it’s such a complex, messy problem with women who are culprits as well as victims. Yet, in fact, this is an area where the United States has seen enormous progress.

Based on victimization surveys, it seems that violence by men against their intimate partners has fallen by almost two-thirds since 1993. Attitudes have changed as well. In 1987, only half of Americans said that it was always wrong for a man to beat his wife with a belt or stick; a decade later, 86 percent said that it was always wrong.

A generation ago, police didn’t typically get involved. “We would say, ‘don’t make us come back, or you’re both going to jail,’ ” recalled Capt. Leonard Dreyer of the DeKalb County Sheriff’s Office. In contrast, sheriff’s officers now routinely arrest the aggressor.

Three steps are still needed. First, we must end the silence. Second, we must ensure that police departments everywhere take the issue seriously before a victim becomes a corpse. Third, offenders should be required to attend training programs like the one run by Men Stopping Violence.

A young mom named Antonya Lewis reflects the challenges. She stayed with a violent boyfriend for years, she said, because he was the father of her daughters and was always so apologetic afterward — and also because that was what she had been told was a woman’s lot in life.

“My mom always told me to suck it up,” she said. But then her boyfriend beat her up so badly that he broke a bone near her eye and put her in the hospital. She told him that she was done with him, and when he continued to stalk her and threaten to kill her, she called the police — repeatedly — with little effect. Now she has moved to a new city and is starting over.

“I didn’t want my daughters to see him beat me,” she said. “I didn’t want them to think this is what a man can do to a woman.”

That, too, is progress.

 

A version of this op-ed appears in print on March 9, 2014,

on page SR1 of the New York edition with the headline:

To End the Abuse, She Grabbed a Knife.

To End the Abuse, She Grabbed a Knife, NYT, 8.3.2014,
    http://www.nytimes.com/2014/03/09/opinion/sunday/
    kristof-to-end-the-abuse-she-grabbed-a-knife.html

 

 

 

 

 

Nearly 1 in 5 Women in U.S. Survey

Say They Have Been Sexually Assaulted

 

December 14, 2011
The New York Times
By RONI CARYN RABIN

 

An exhaustive government survey of rape

and domestic violence

released on Wednesday affirmed that sexual violence

against women remains endemic in the United States

and in some instances may be far more common

than previously thought.

Nearly one in five women surveyed said

they had been raped

or had experienced an attempted rape at some point,

and one in four reported having been beaten

by an intimate partner.

One in six women have been stalked,

according to the report.

Nearly 1 in 5 Women in U.S. Survey Say
They Have Been Sexually Assaulted,
    NYT, 14.12.2011,
    http://www.nytimes.com/2011/12/15/health/
    nearly-1-in-5-women-in-us-survey-report-sexual-assault.html

 

 

 

 

 

2.30pm update

Scores killed in Iraq blasts

 

Monday February 12, 2007
Staff and agencies
Guardian Unlimited

 

At least 80 people were killed

and nearly 165 wounded

in car bomb attacks on markets in Baghdad today

on the first anniversary of an attack

on one of Shia Islam's holiest shrines,

Iraqi officials said.

Two bombs went off at the Shorja market,

setting off secondary explosions and killing

at least 71 people.

A roadside bomb at a second market

killed at least nine.

Scores killed in Iraq blasts, G, 12.2.2007,
https://www.theguardian.com/world/2007/feb/12/
iraq.iraqtimeline 

 

 

 

 

 

Cancer deaths drop

for 2nd straight year

 

Updated 1/17/2007
11:15 AM ET
USA Today
By Anita Manning

 

The number of Americans dying of cancer

declined for second year in a row,

this time by a much greater number,

the American Cancer Society reports,

a signal that decades of advances

in prevention and treatment

are paying off, experts say.

In its annual report, released Wednesday,

the cancer society says

there were 3,014 fewer cancer deaths

in 2004 than in 2003.

Rates of cancer — the number of cases

per 10,000 population —

have been declining since 1991, says the society,

but the first reported drop in actual numbers of deaths

was a decline of 369 deaths between 2002-03.

The 2004 numbers represent only the second drop

in more than 70 years of record keeping.

Cancer deaths drop for 2nd straight year, UT, 17.1.2007,
    http://www.usatoday.com/news/health/2007-01-17-cancer_x.htm

 

 

 

 

 

Public service pay rises

to be outstripped by private sector

 

Monday October 9, 2006
Guardian
Richard Wray


Britain's private sector workers will see their pay rise by twice as much as their public sector counterparts this year, according to a report out today.
Treasury policy limits public sector pay increases to 2% over the next 12 months, but according to research by employment specialists Incomes Data Services, the average pay of a private sector employee is likely to increase by more than 4%.

In its latest annual pay report, the group estimates that retail price inflation will rise to 4%, the highest it has been for eight years. While not the government's preferred measure of inflation, RPI is traditionally used as a benchmark for pay bargaining.

"Although it is not possible to predict what will happen to pay rises with exact precision, it is still true that the RPI inflation measure is the key to pay setting in the private sector," said Ken Mulkearn, editor of the report.

"Inflation close to 4% will be a very strong upward pressure on the level of pay settlements."

There is little sign, however, that there will be any reduction in the gap between public and private sector pay awards. Last month, in his annual submission to the International Monetary Fund, the chancellor, Gordon Brown, seemed to warn of a further increase in interest rates, following August's quarter-point rise, to keep inflation in check and enable him to stick to his long-term pay target.

"We know that if we are to sustain growth in the future we must never be complacent, and always be vigilant to risks," he said. "That is why I have said I supported the pro-active forward-looking action by the Bank of England in August, and why we will continue to base public sector pay settlements on our 2% inflation target."

In a survey of nine City institutions, Incomes Data Services found RPI was forecast to hit 4% between the end of this year and February 2007. The biggest factor in the rise was higher domestic fuel bills. In its last set of figures the Office for National Statistics said RPI rose to 3.4%, in August, up from 3.3% in July. The consumer price index, the government's preferred measure of inflation and the one used by the Bank of England in rate setting deliberations, rose to 2.5% in August up from 2.4% in July. The CPI excludes items such as house prices and council tax bills.

The pay report notes that 2006/7 is a key period for the renewal of long-term pay deals, with a significant number of agreements ending over the winter.

Public service pay rises to be outstripped by private sector, G, 9.10.2006,
https://www.theguardian.com/business/2006/oct/09/
politics.money 

 

 

 

 

 

Fifth of young see seaside first abroad

 

Tuesday August 1, 2006
Guardian Unlimited
Carolyn Fry


One in 10 British children has never been to a UK beach and 31% object to donkey rides believing they are "cruel", new research showed today.

A fifth of British youngsters had their first seaside holiday abroad and, despite Britain being surrounded by water, 3% of children have never been to the seaside at all.

Today's younger beach-goers are also concerned about environmental and ethical issues. Nearly two thirds (61%) claimed clean seawater and no litter were the most important things when choosing a beach. Although 16% said they would happily go on a donkey ride, a third objected to the activity because they thought it was "cruel". The survey questioned 1,246 children aged eight to 14.

The survey, commissioned by children's TV channel Toonami, found that children prefer to be active on holiday. Nearly two thirds (61%) said their ideal day at the beach would be spent building sandcastles, while 55% said they would go surfing or snorkelling, and 53% said they would go rock pooling.

When asked who they would most like to be stranded on a desert island with, friends topped the list at 49%, with parents second at 25% and celebrities third with 15%. Johnny Depp, Wayne Rooney and Jordan were voted the top celebrity choices. Some 58% of children agreed they would least like to be marooned with their schoolteachers.

Those questioned also had similar ideas on what makes for an ideal beach. A whopping 78% said there must be unlimited ice cream, 56% opted for giant water slides and 48% requested a wave machine.

Fifth of young see seaside first abroad, G, 1.8.2006,
https://www.theguardian.com/travel/2006/aug/01/
travelnews.uknews 

 

 

 

 

 

14th month of house price falls

 

House prices fell for the 14th month in a row and show no signs of recovery in the near future, a survey shows today.

Hometrack said national house prices fell by an average of 0.1% this month compared with July and have declined by an average of 3.7% over the past year.

The national average price is £161,000, down from a peak of £167,000 in June last year.

After almost a decade of rising house prices, the market has cooled rapidly over the past year in response to the Bank of England's monetary policy committee progressively raising the cost of borrowing from 3.5% in November 2003 to 4.75% last August.

Signs that the economy is now weakening - growth in household spending is stagnating and manufacturing is in recession - prompted the MPC to cut rates by a quarter-point this month to 4.5%.

Some economists do not believe this will be enough to rekindle the property market. John Wrigglesworth, Hometrack's economist, said: "House prices have failed to respond to the recent interest rate cut and continue their stagnating negative trend, which has gone on for well over a year."

Hometrack said activity in the market had increased by 4.1% this month, indicating some return of confidence. This tallies with comments by housebuilder Persimmon that it had seen a strong rise in reservations for new homes in recent weeks.

But the number of new buyers continued to fall, down by 0.5% in August, and as a result it is a buyers' market. The average discount is more than 6% of the asking price, equating to £12,000 saved on the average property, Hometrack said.

14th month of house price falls, G, full text, 29.8.2005,
https://www.theguardian.com/business/2005/aug/29/
housingmarket.houseprices 

 

 

 

 

 

Mumps crisis warning

as cases rise 15-fold

 

Doctors last night warned that the crisis of mumps among teenagers and people in their early 20s had reached national epidemic proportions, at 15 times the rate a year ago.

Nearly 28,500 suspected cases of mumps were reported in England and Wales in the first 17 weeks of the year, compared with 1,800 in the same period in 2004.

Headline and first §§, G, 13.5.2005,
https://www.theguardian.com/society/2005/may/13/
health.medicineandhealth 

 

 

 

 

 

WASHINGTON (Reuters) -

The Federal Reserve nudged interest rates up

on Tuesday for an eighth straight time

and repeated a pledge to use "measured" increases

to quell an increase in inflation.

Fed raises rates, keeps measured vow, R, Tue May 3, 2005 06:17 PM ET,
    http://www.reuters.com/newsArticle.jhtml;jsessionid=
    HVRIBZB2AEETQCRBAEOCFEY?type=businessNews&storyID=8378615

 

 

 

 

 

Labour fears meltdown in marginals

 

Chancellor warns voters

that his party's headline poll lead

masks a deteriorating situation

in many key seats

 

Michael Howard could be Prime Minister at the end of the week if as few as one Labour voter in 10 decides to switch allegiance or abstain, the Chancellor, Gordon Brown, claimed yesterday.

His words reflected Labour's nervousness that the party's consistent lead in the opinion polls - eight percentage points, according to this paper's latest poll - is melting away in marginal seats, where Conservatives and Liberal Democrats have concentrated their campaigning. Other polls show Labour with a wafer-thin 3 per cent lead, with the Liberal Democrats showing strongly on all three.

    Headline, sub and first §§, IoS, 1.5.2005,
    http://news.independent.co.uk/uk/politics/story.jsp?story=634701

 

 

 

 

 

GM Cuts Outlook;

Shares Fall 14 Percent

 

DETROIT (Reuters) - General Motors Corp. (GM.N: Quote, Profile, Research) on Wednesday warned its 2005 earnings will be as much as 80 percent below its prior forecast due to slumping North American auto sales, sending its shares down 14 percent to a 12-1/2-year low.

The warning from the world's largest carmaker, whose once dominant position in its key U.S. market has fallen to less than a 25 percent share on a steady loss to foreign automakers, spurred Standard & Poor's to caution that it could downgrade GM's debt to "junk" status at any time, which would likely raise its borrowing costs.

    Headline and first §§, R, Wed Mar 16, 2005 04:37 PM ET,
    http://www.reuters.com/newsArticle.jhtml;jsessionid=
    3W4XRMLKG5XXGCRBAE0CFEY?type=businessNews&storyID=7924506

 

 

 

 

 

The forgotten killer

 

Malaria hits one in 12 of world population,
It kills one million people every year,
Treatment costs as little as £10 per person,
Incidence in Asia twice previous estimates

 

More than half a billion people are suffering from malaria today, twice as many as scientists thought had been affected by one of the biggest killers in the developing world.

The new figures are the result of detailed research that gives the most accurate assessment yet of the disease that kills at least a million people a year. Scientists now believe there are about 515 million cases of malaria out of 2.2 billion people who are at risk - about a third of the world's population.

The discovery throws the slow progress of the world's fight against malaria into sharp relief.

In countries such as Malawi, malaria claims more lives each year than Aids, but attracts a fraction of the attention. Coachloads of overseas visitors come to view the Aids projects run by Médicins Sans Frontières in the country, but few are interested in malaria.

    Headline, sub and first §§, I, 10.3.2005,
    http://news.independent.co.uk/world/science_technology/story.jsp?story=618474

 

 

 

 

 

December falls add to house price fears

 

House prices fell in December, the Nationwide reported yesterday, dragging the annual rate of property inflation to its lowest for nearly three years.

The news, coming on top of the weakest November mortgage lending figures in eight years on Wednesday, shows the housing market will kick off 2005 in poor shape, with the Bank of England predicting further falls in the coming months.

The Nationwide said the average house price, which has trebled in the past eight years, fell 0.2% this month from November after a surprise 0.9% rise the month before. The average house is now worth £152,623.

The drop was smaller than markets had expected and so the pound moved up from the 14-month low against the euro it hit on Wednesday as dealers thought the Bank would not need to cut interest rates in the near future. Prices are now 12.7% higher than in December 2003, down from a rate of 15% in November.

Nationwide's chief economist Alex Bannister said that 2004 had been a year of two distinct parts with prices rising 11.4% in the first seven months of the year but only 1.2% in the last five months.

December falls add to house price fears, G, 31.12.2004,
https://www.theguardian.com/business/2004/dec/31/
housingmarket.houseprices

 

 

 

 

 

BBC viewing figures fall

to all-time low

 

Viewing figures for the BBC's two main television channels have fallen to an all-time low in the week that the director general, Mark Thompson, announced swingeing cutbacks.

BBC1's share of all television viewing is set to fall through the psychologically important 25 per cent barrier for the first time in the broadcaster's history, according to audience figures for this year up to 9 December.

BBC2 has also seen its audience share plummet by almost 9 per cent over the same period. If these trends continue for the final three weeks of 2004, it will mean that for the first time less than 10 per cent of the television audience are tuning into BBC2 on average, while less than a quarter of viewers are watching BBC1.

The figures, which reflect the changing landscape of British television, show the combined audience share for BBC1 and BBC2 has fallen by almost 9 per cent since 2000.

The decline, largely because of the rise of multi-channel viewing, has afflicted ITV1 even more severely than the BBC - since 2000 the channel's audience share has fallen 22 per cent to 22.8 per cent of all television viewers. In 2004, for the first time, multi-channel television has attracted higher overall viewing figures than either BBC1 or ITV1, with 26 per cent of the audience.

But Channel 4 has proven it is possible for a terrestrial broadcaster with a public service remit to improve its audience share against such a competitive backdrop.

In the past year

[ ce marqueur de temps ne doit pas être confondu avec last year (l'année dernière) + passé ; in the past year (l'année en cours) appelle le present perfect ],

the channel's audience share has climbed by 1.4 per cent to 9.8 per cent, thanks to a range of popular factual programmes, such as Wife Swap and How Clean Is Your House?, and to its coup in winning the terrestrial rights to The Simpsons from BBC2.

Channel 4 began broadcasting the popular American cartoon show in March this year. Channel Five has also seen its audience share climb by 1.7 per cent to 6.66 per cent.

Between 1 January and 9 December, BBC1's audience share fell 3.5 per cent to 24.67 per cent, while BBC2's share dropped by 8.9 per cent to 9.99 per cent.

The figures from the Broadcasters' Audience Research Board (Barb) reflect the dilemma that sits at the heart of Mr Thompson's battle to secure the licence fee for another 10-year charter period, when the BBC's current royal charter comes to an end in 2006.

BBC viewing figures fall to all-time low, I, 14.12.2004,
    http://news.independent.co.uk/media/story.jsp?story=592946

 

 

 

 

 

US death toll in Iraq

at record level

 

A further 135 American soldiers died in Iraq in November, equalling the number killed in April, previously the worst single month for US casualties. Seventy-one died in the assault on Fallujah and 600 were wounded, according to the US military in Baghdad.

The casualty rate is more than 10 per cent of the 5,000 to 6,000-strong US force sent into the city. General John Sattler, the commander of the 1st Marine Expeditionary Force, which is in charge of western Iraq, said yesterday that 62 of those killed in Fallujah were marines.

(...)

The battle for Fallujah brings the number of Americans killed in Iraq since the invasion to at least 1,250, with 9,300 wounded. The number of insurgents killed in Fallujah is not known, but was put by the interim Iraqi government at more than 2,000.

    US death toll in Iraq at record level, I, 2.12.2004,
    http://news.independent.co.uk/world/middle_east/story.jsp?story=588815

 

 

 

 

 

Petrol prices fuel inflation rise

 

Rising energy prices pushed inflation up to 1.2% in October from 1.1% the previous month, official figures showed today.

The Office for National Statistics (ONS) said the largest impact on the consumer price index had come from petrol, with rising crude oil costs leading to an increase in average unleaded and diesel prices of around 2p a litre last month.

Meanwhile, household utility prices rose at the fastest rate since records began in 1997. Further upward pressure came from package holidays and food.

However, falling clothing and footwear prices offset those upward pressures. Price reductions in October for cars, some travel fares and TV and video rentals also put downward pressure on inflation, the ONS said.

Today's figures were in line with City expectations and, with inflation well below the Bank of England's 2% target, analysts said interest rates could stay unchanged at 4.75% for some time.

Petrol prices fuel inflation rise, G, 16.11.2004,
https://www.theguardian.com/business/2004/nov/16/
politics.money 

 

 

 

 

 

JJB shares slump

after takeover talks fail

 

JJB Sports shares today fell by one fifth after it emerged

that talks concerning a potential £600m takeover

had ended unsuccessfully.

Headline and §1, G, 13.10.2004,
https://www.theguardian.com/business/2004/oct/13/
money 

 

 

 

 

 

UK unemployment hits 20-year low

 

The number of unemployed people in Britain has hit its lowest level in 20 years, figures showed today.

Data released by the Office for National Statistics revealed that unemployment numbers have fallen by 51,000 to 1.39 million.

Using the internationally recognised ILO measure, the ONS said the unemployment rate had fallen to 4.7% in the three months to August, the lowest level since 1984. Almost 74.7% of the UK population is in employment.

"There are over 200,000 more people in work than this time last year," the minister for work, Jane Kennedy, said. "With the success of the economy and growing employment, more people have moved from welfare into work. Our aim now is to build on this success by extending employment opportunity to all."

"Jobcentre Plus, together with programmes like the New Deal, have contributed to historically low levels of unemployment and are increasingly making a difference for other people on benefits."
 

Statistics also showed that the number of people claiming unemployment benefits had fallen by 200 to 834,000in September to 834,000.

Despite being the lowest level since 1975, the figure fell far short of a predicted drop of 5,000. Following 16 consecutive monthly falls, the ONS also reported that drops in the claimant count appeared to be slowing. Regional figures showed the highest unemployment rate between June and August was in London, with 6.9% unemployed, while the lowest was in the south-west, at 3.4 %. The manufacturing sector has been hardest hit by job losses, particularly in the textiles and clothing industries.

The ONS also said the number of inactive people of working age had risen by 91,000 to 7.93 million on the quarter, the highest figure since this series began in 1984. Meanwhile, average earnings, excluding bonuses, rose more than expected in the three months to August. They went up from 4.2% to 4.3%, with the rise attributed to pay increases in private sector education and for some local government employees.

Headline and first §§, G, 13.10.2004,
https://www.theguardian.com/uk/2004/oct/13/
business.politics 

 

 

 

 

 

Race-hate crime

'increases eleven-fold in a decade'

 

The shocking extent of race-hate crime in modern Britain was exposed yesterday by figures revealing an eleven-fold increase in the number of victims of racially motivated attack or abuse over the past decade.

The charity Victim Support disclosed that it helped 33,374 people who believed they had been targeted because of their skin colour in the past 12 months. Ten years ago, it handled 3,072 similar complaints.

Its hate crime co-ordinators are reporting a massive surge in all types of offences. These include arson attacks on homes and places of worship, wounding and assault, verbal abuse, racist letters and leaflets through the post, harassment and bullying at work or school.

    Headline and first §§, I, 12.10.2004,
    http://news.independent.co.uk/uk/crime/story.jsp?story=571240

 

 

 

 

 

One in three girls

a smoker

by age 16

 

Researcher suggests teenagers may be using habit as diet aid

Girls at secondary school are twice as likely as boys to become regular smokers and may be using cigarettes as an appetite suppressant to keep their weight down, according to research today from Leeds University.

It found no difference between girls and boys at 11-12 when 2% of both groups admitted to regular smoking.

But by the age of 13-14, 16% of girls and 8% of boys had taken up the habit. And in the run-up to GCSEs at 15-16, 31% of girls and 16% of boys said they were smoking regularly.

The findings came from a six-year investigation by the university's school of psychology for the Economic and Social Research Council. They emerged as John Reid, the health secretary, struggles to establish a consensus within the cabinet over whether or not to include a ban on smoking in public places in a white paper in the autumn.

Headline, sub and first §§, G, 23.9.2004,
https://www.theguardian.com/society/2004/sep/23/
smoking.publichealth 

 

 

 

 

 

14% rise in house prices

 

House prices rose 2.1% in July to stand 14.3% higher than July last year, government data showed yesterday.

The annual rise was up from 13.9% in June but the Office of the Deputy Prime Minister warned that its figures were based on completions in July and so were not comparable with the latest Nationwide or Halifax numbers, which are based on mortgage approvals and point to a slowing market.

The ODPM said the weakening in prices would not show up in its figures until September completions were available in November.

Paul Smith, the chief executive of the Spicerhaart estate agent group, agreed: "The house price figures released by the government bear no resemblance to the state of the market in July. Data from across our network shows that the average price of agreed house sales declined by 2.3% between June and July. This was then followed by a further decrease of 1.5% between July and August."

The ODPM's inflation rate of 14.3% is lower than that of the two main lenders' indices in recent months owing to difference in calculation methods and the fact that its numbers are not seasonally adjusted, whereas the others are.

Its report said the average price of all dwellings across Britain was £177,474, up from £173,756 in June. It said the rise was broad-based across different types of property and all the home countries except Scotland, where house price inflation slowed to 22.3%. Welsh inflation rose to 30.4% while in England it increased to 13.4% in July.

Headline and first §§, G, 14.8.2004,
https://www.theguardian.com/business/2004/sep/14/
housingmarket.houseprices

 

 

 

 

 

FALLUJA, Iraq (Reuters) -

U.S. warplanes bombed houses

in the Iraqi city of Falluja for a third successive night,

killing at least eight people, four of them children,

doctors and residents said on Thursday.

Children Among 8 Dead in U.S. Air Strikes on Falluj,
R, 9.9.2004,
http://www.reuters.com/newsArticle.jhtml;jsessionid=5QLKFILCL54MKCRBAEOCFEY?type=topNews&storyID=6187936

 

 

 

 

 

Her comments came after the Office for National Statistics said that the number of couples getting divorced in England and Wales is higher than at any time since Labour came to power in 1997. It said there were 153,490 divorces last year, an increase of 3.9% since 2002. This was the third successive year of rising divorce rates, since falling back from 157,107 in 1996. The record was 165,018 in 1993.

Ms Northam said: "These figures are a reflection of the way society is changing. Developments in the role of women have affected the power balance of modern couples and that is a struggle for some men who find it hard to negotiate. People also expect a better quality of relationship and sometimes may set their sights too high. And there are the long working hours. I sometimes nearly fall off my chair when I hear couples describe their working week, with schedules taking so much energy and putting them under such pressure."

Internet access was the new factor allowing a disaffected husband or wife to pursue other relationships while saying they were working at home. "It makes having extramarital relationships easier," Ms Northam said. The ONS said the divorce rate for men was highest in their early 30s, with 27.7 divorces per 1,000 married men aged 30-34. Among women the divorce rate was highest in the 25-29 age group, with 28.9 divorces per 1,000 married women.

The average age at divorce for both men and women continued to rise in 2003: to 42.3 years for men and 39.8 for women. Couples divorcing last year had been married on average for 11.3 years. More than half (55%) had at least one child under 16.

Divorce rate surges as friends are reunited, G, 1.9.2004,
https://www.theguardian.com/uk/2004/sep/01/
johncarvel

 

 

 

 

 

Wettest summer in almost 50 years

may be followed by warm, dry spell

 

It seems as if we have spent the summer huddled under umbrellas whingeing about the weather while meteorologists chide us that it is really not so bad. But moan at will because it is now official: we have been enduring the wettest summer for nearly half a century.

More than double the normal amount of rain fell in England and Wales during June, July and August, according to the Met Office. The last time it was wetter was in the summer of 1956.

In the last three months there has been an average of 274mm (10.8in) of rain in England and Wales, comfortably beating other notoriously damp summers, including 1999, 1980 and 1961.

Although drier than the summer of 1912, when England and Wales were deluged with an average of 410mm of rain, 2004 will go down in meteorological history as the joint 12th wettest summer since records began in 1766.

Wettest summer in almost 50 years may be followed by warm, dry spell,
G, 30.8.2004,
https://www.theguardian.com/environment/2004/aug/30/
weather.climatechange 

 

 

 

 

 

With 37% of its adult population HIV-positive,

one country has been forced to rewrite the rulebook

on tackling the virus

Botswana: a beacon of hope in Africa, sub, G, 15.7.2004,
https://www.theguardian.com/world/2004/jul/15/
aids.rorycarroll

 

 

 

 

 

More than four out of 10 economists believe house prices in the UK will fall over the next three years, according to a survey released today.

And just 15% - one in seven - thought prices would continue to rise at the above-inflation rates seen in recent years.

The poll, for the BBC Radio 4 Today programme, came as the governor of the Bank of England, Mervyn King, prepared to appear before a parliamentary committee to explain his recent warning to would-be housebuyers to be wary as prices may fall and interest rates rise.

Some 255 members of the Society of Business Economists responded to the postal survey. Of them, 42% said they expected house prices to be lower by the middle of 2007, including 18% who said they would drop by 10% or more.

Meanwhile, 58% said values would be the same as they are now or higher, including 15% who predicted they would rise by 15% or more.

Economists divided in property market debate, G, 24.6.2004,
https://www.theguardian.com/money/2004/jun/24/
business.houseprices 

 

 

 

 

 

The number of south Asian murder victims has almost quadrupled in the past decade from 10 in 1993 to 38 last year, compared with 32% for the general population, while the kidnap rate has more than doubled from 90 to 228 from 1998 to 2003, accounting for 20% of the Met's total kidnap figure last year and racking up 114 kidnaps so far this year. In some cases, victims are being seized in India or Pakistan and ransoms demanded from relatives in the UK.

A growing number of young Asians are becoming embroiled in drug dealing, guns and gangs. Minor disputes are escalating with young south Asian gang members resorting to violence, including stabbings and shootings.

Drug crime in Asian communities has increased 41% in the past five years, compared with the overall figure of 37% for London. Pakistan is the source of 27% of the heroin found in London, with a rising number of Asian addicts and associated crime, and Tower Hamlets, one of the Asian crime hotspots, dubbed the UK's heroin capital.

In the past year in London, there were 2,270 Asians arrested, 81 gun crimes, 72 firearms seized and 442 knives recovered from the Asian community. More and more south Asians are also carrying out organised economic crime, such as benefit fraud and money laundering.

Met unit to tackle Asian crime rise:
Number of murder victims quadruples in a decade, G, 15.6.2004,
https://www.theguardian.com/uk/2004/jun/16/
ukcrime.prisonsandprobation 

 

 

 

 

 

Two to 6% of children suffer from depression,

and suicide is the third leading cause of death

in 10-to-19-year-olds, says Professor Bailey.

An estimated 40,000 children were on SSRIs last year.

Safety alert on adult use of antidepressants, G, 14.6.2004,
https://www.theguardian.com/news/2004/jun/14/
uknews 

 

 

 

 

 

Increasing numbers of people are becoming dependent on cannabis, The Observer has learnt.

Department of Health figures show that drug centres are reporting growing numbers coming to them with problems related to the drug. Nine per cent of all those attending clinics cited cannabis as the main reason they were attending, rather than any of the other drugs they were using, twice as many as a decade ago.

With a separate study by the World Health Organisation showing that one in five 15-year-olds in Britain smokes cannabis - more than twice the world average - there is concern that many are becoming addicted to the drug earlier in life.

Alarm at rising cannabis 'addiction', O, sub and first §§, 13.6.2004,
https://www.theguardian.com/society/2004/jun/13/
drugsandalcohol.drugs

 

 

 

 

 

They will return in their thousands next week to walk the beaches and the fields of Normandy. All will have their memories of being young and losing friends during the Allied landings. Richard Todd, who will be among them, was in the first wave of troops to set foot in France on D-Day. Less than two decades later, he went back to star in the most famous film about history's greatest invasion.

Film star recalls his own longest day, O, 30.5.2004,
https://www.theguardian.com/uk/2004/may/30/
military.film

 

 

 

 

 

Jobless levels in Britain would double if the government included in its official figures those people diverted from the dole queue into a hidden category of people claiming incapacity benefit, according to a new study which could embarrass senior ministers.

Debunking the theory that the problem of unemployment is all but solved, it reveals that about 2.5 million people are out of work - compared with the 1.4 million classed as jobless under the broader definition of the International Labour Organisation. Official government figures, based on people receiving job seekers' allowance (JSA) put the level at about 900,000.

    Unemployment time bomb is ticking inside list of benefit claimants:
   
University team says dole queue is far longer than ministers claim, G, 22.5.2004,
   
http://www.guardian.co.uk/business/story/0,3604,1222325,00.html

 

 

 

 

 

The WHI study - which included more than 16,500 women - suggested that for every 10,000 healthy women taking the combined drug, eight more will develop invasive breast cancer, seven more will have a heart attack, 18 more will suffer blood clots and eight more will have a stroke than among 10,000 healthy women not taking the treatment. That prompted the team to stop the research, on the grounds that it would be unethical to continue.

However, it also showed that six fewer women will develop colon cancer and five fewer will suffer hip fractures. But concern was amplified by the British "Million Women Study" which reported in August last year that women on some combined types of HRT were twice as likely to develop breast cancer as those who had not used it.

The study, which looked at the medical histories of almost 1.1m British women who were cancer-free as they entered the national breast screening programme, also indicated that oestrogen-only therapies might increase the risk of breast cancer by 30%.

(...)

"It has a dramatic effect on breast cancer: if you are 50, only two in 1,000 women get breast cancer in a year. It goes to four in 1,000 if they are taking HRT for five years."

Life change : There is no single answer on HRT safety.
The risk, as Tania Branigan found out,
may have been settled before you were born,
G, 17.2.2004,
https://www.theguardian.com/society/2004/feb/17/
health.lifeandhealth

 

 

 

 

 

Ms Johnson is particularly worried by the soaring rates of chlamydia, an infection whose incidence in England increased by 139% in six years to more than 78,000 new cases. As many as one in 10 people may be infected but most will not know it can lead to serious health problems including ectopic pregnancy and infertility.

In the last 10 years, new sexually transmitted infections in England have more than doubled to nearly 1.5m a year. "We have a problem of growing seriousness," said Ms Johnson.

    Explicit ads target sex diseases among young :
   
Soaring rates of infection prompt government
    to launch unromantic campaign distributing spoof Valentine cards, G, 7.2.2004,
   
https://www.theguardian.com/uk/2004/feb/07/health.society

 

 

 

 

 

The cancer death rate has fallen by 18% for men and 6% for women in a generation, the charity Cancer Research revealed yesterday.

The overall 12% reduction in mortality between 1972 and 2002 contrasts with recent figures showing a steady rise in new cancer cases, many of them related to lifestyle factors, including smoking, drinking and obesity.

But better screening, treatments and quality of life care have helped to improve the five-year survival rate for many cancers.

The lung cancer death rate in men has fallen by nearly half in 30 years, but remains higher than for women, in whom the rate has risen by more than half in the same period.

The number of deaths from breast cancer in every 100,000 of the population has fallen by a fifth, and there have been significant falls in bowel and stomach cancer mortality.

Cancer survival improves despite more cases,
G, 4.2.2004,
https://www.theguardian.com/uk_news/story/0,3604,1140212,00.html 

 

 

 

 

 

Ryanair's chief executive, Michael O'Leary, claimed yesterday that low-fare airlines such as his own would have to put up their prices by some £10 a ticket after a ruling from the European commission.

The commission's decision - which O'Leary called "a disaster" for consumers and low-fare travel - said that Ryanair had received some £11m in state aid from the Belgian authorities to fly to and from Charleroi airport in southern Belgium and ordered the no-frills airline to return up to £3m of the money.

Ryanair claims EC ruling will hit budget travel, but rivals doubt it,
G, 4.2.2004,
    http://www.guardian.co.uk/airlines/story/0,1371,1140442,00.html

 

 

 

 

 

New poll reveals public mistrust

 

Three times as many people trust the BBC to tell the truth than trust the government despite Lord Hutton's damning judgment, an exclusive poll by ICM for the Guardian shows.

More dramatically, the survey reveals that confidence in both has been shattered. Almost half of those surveyed said they trusted neither.

In a sign that Tony Blair has failed to achieve a "bounce" from the Hutton report, the survey also found a six-point drop in support for the Iraq war to less than half of voters.

The prime minister's net personal rating was minus 17 points, with 55% of voters unhappy with his performance compared with 38% expressing satisfaction. This compared with a net rating of minus 15 points a week ago. Support for the war fell by six points from 53%, a week ago to 47%, with a five-point increase in opposition, from 41% to 46%.

The survey, which polled 532 adults hours after the publication of Lord Hutton's report, found:

· 31% of voters trust the BBC "more" to tell the truth. This contrasted with 10% who trust the government more, a figure which dropped to 5% among 25- to 34-year-olds. A handful (7%) trust both. In a sign of the challenge facing Downing Street, as it tries to improve relations with the Labour party in the wake of the fiasco over university top-up fees, 17% of Labour voters trusted the government to tell the truth. This compares with 25% of Labour voters who trust the BBC.

· 49% believe the BBC failed to treat Dr Kelly fairly, a figure which increased to 60% when the same question was asked about the government.

Greg Dyke may be encouraged to learn that more people believe Tony Blair should have to resign than him. In the survey 37% said the prime minister should resign, compared with 35% who said Mr Dyke should resign. Nearly a quarter of Labour voters (24%) believe the prime minister should resign, a figure which rises to 39% when the question was asked about Mr Dyke.

But nearly half of voters, 49%, believe that Andrew Gilligan, whose report triggered the row with the government, should resign.

Next in line is Geoff Hoon, the defence secretary, whose head is demanded by 41% of voters even though he was cleared by Lord Hutton. He is followed by Gavyn Davies (38%) who resigned as BBC chairman within hours of the publication of Lord Hutton's report.

The survey may dampen celebrations in Downing Street in another area. It found that 45% of voters believe the prime minister lied over his claim that he did not authorise the leaking of Dr Kelly's name. This is only a three-point improvement for the prime minister on this question, over last week's ICM poll.

This is likely to comfort Michael Howard, the Tory leader, who was criticised after the report when he attempted to remind the prime minister of his categorical denial made on a flight last July.

Voters appear to share Lord Hutton's finding that Dr Kelly behaved unwisely in meeting Gilligan.

The poll found 47% of voters believe the scientist was "at least partly the author of his own misfortune", compared with 35% who disagreed with this.

· ICM interviewed a random sample of 532 adults on the evening of January 28. Interviews were conducted throughout the country by telephone and the results have been weighted to be representative of all adults.

New poll reveals public mistrust, G, 30.1.2004,
https://www.theguardian.com/politics/2004/jan/30/
uk.bbc

 

 

 

 

 

The true scale of the Parmalat fraud became clearer yesterday as the company announced that its real debts last year were over €14bn (£10bn), almost eight times more than the bankrupt company's former executives had admitted.

The figures - a first estimate by the company's administrators one month after Parmalat went bankrupt - were worse than any previous estimate. Analysts warned that the final figure for debt in the administrator's final report due by early March could be even higher; accounts for the last three months of 2003 have not yet been reassessed.

Auditors PricewaterhouseCoopers, hired in December to check the company's books, reported that Parmalat's net debt at September 30 was €14.3bn not €1.8bn as the company announced in its third-quarter results last November. Earnings figures for January-September (before interest, tax, depreciation and amortisation) had been pumped up to €651m when the true figure was €121m. In the same period, sales were recorded at €5.4bn instead of the true €4bn.

Parmalat admits real debt is 14bn euros, G, 27.1.2004,
https://www.theguardian.com/business/2004/jan/27/
corporatefraud.parmalat

 

 

 

 

 

Just consider the statistics. By 2050 one person in five in Britain will be over 70, a regiment of 12 million oldsters - double the current population of London - filling residential homes and sheltered housing across the land. In addition, there will be a further eight million aged between 60 and 70. For the first time, there are now more over-60-year-olds than under-16s in this country.

   Living with Britain's population timebomb:
   
100 years ago, there were five people working for every retired person.
    Soon for every pensioner, there will be just one worker.
    But we have not woken up to this social revolution as we grow older and healthier.
    Robin McKie asks what this means for the future
    and how our lives will change, O, § 1-2, 25.1.2004,
    https://www.theguardian.com/society/2004/jan/25/
longtermcare.politics

 

 

 

 

 

Hutton: 48% think Blair lied

Poll reveals public pressure for resignation

if PM criticised


Tony Blair is losing the battle for public opinion on two key issues - the Hutton inquiry and tuition fees - that will next week determine the fate of his premiership, according to the results of this month's Guardian/ICM opinion poll.

The survey shows that almost half the voters - 48% - believe Mr Blair was lying when he said he had not authorised the leaking of David Kelly's name to the media. And nearly two-thirds of all voters, including 42% of Labour voters, believe he should resign if Lord Hutton's report says he lied over the leaking of Dr Kelly's name.    

(...)

The survey shows that Mr Blair goes into the crunch week of his premiership with a poor net personal rating of minus 15 points, with 54% of voters unhappy with the job he is doing compared with 39% saying they are satisfied.

The ICM poll confirms the rise in popularity of the new Conservative leader, Michael Howard, with the voters giving him a positive personal rating of plus 14 points. This compares with Iain Duncan Smith's net rating of minus 22 points in October before he was toppled.

But Mr Howard's arrival has failed so far to transform Tory fortunes in the polls. This month's state of the parties shows Labour on 39% (up one) and the Conservatives on 34% (up one) and the Liberal Democrats on 20 (down two), down from 28% a year ago.

One saving grace for Mr Blair is that he does appear to be winning the battle over whether or not the war in Iraq was justified. A majority, 53% (up six since November), now say that it was, with an anti-war minority of 41%.

The ICM results on Hutton show that 33% of all voters believe Mr Blair was telling the truth when he said he did not authorise the leaking of Dr Kelly's name. A total of 48% believe he lied. Labour voters are more sympathetic: 61% think he is telling the truth, but 23% think he is lying.

(...)

ICM interviewed a random sample of 1,007 adults aged 18 and over by telephone between January 16-18 2004. Interviews were conducted across the country and the results have been weighted to the profile of all adults.

Headline, sub and first §§, G, 20.1.2004,
https://www.theguardian.com/politics/2004/jan/20/
uk.davidkelly

 

 

 

 

 

Anti-counterfeiting groups estimate that fake goods cost

UK industry more than £10bn in 2003,

compared with £6bn in 1999.

Rising tide of counterfeit goods costs UK £10bn:
   
Criminal gangs move out of drug smuggling into less policed racket,
    O, 18.1.2004,
   
https://www.theguardian.com/uk/2004/jan/18/
ukcrime.whitehall

 

 

 

 

 

GCSE results at schools in England's toughest areas

improved twice as much as the national average last year.

GCSE improvement in toughest areas, PA, 15.1.2004.

 

 

 

 

 

Women working full time expect to earn the same as men, but on average gross £559 less a month, the Equal Opportunities Commission said today at the start of a fresh assault on unfair pay.

It published results of a poll by the market research firm BMRB International showing that 88% of women expect to earn the same as a man with the same qualifications, rising to 94% among women under 25.

These women were "heading for disappointment" because the latest data showed the difference in average pay between men and women working full time is just over £6,700 a year - about 18%.

Women workers earn £500 less a month than men, says EOC, G, 14.1.2004,
    https://www.theguardian.com/money/2004/jan/14/
genderissues.pay

 

 

 

 

 

Four million CCTV cameras watch public.

UK has the highest level of surveillance

 

More than four million surveillance cameras monitor our every move, making Britain the most-watched nation in the world, research has revealed.

The number of closed circuit television (CCTV) cameras has quadrupled in the past three years, and there is now one for every 14 people in the UK. The increase is happening at twice the predicted rate, and it is believed that Britain accounts for one-fifth of all CCTV cameras worldwide. Estimates suggest that residents of a city such as London can each expect to be captured on CCTV cameras up to 300 times a day, and much of the filming breaches existing data guidelines.

Big Brother Britain, 2004, sub, I, 12.1.2004,
    http://news.independent.co.uk/uk/this_britain/story.jsp?story=480364

 

 

 

 

 

Fewer than one in four people believe Tony Blair's account of events surrounding the death of Dr David Kelly, a poll revealed.

Half said the Prime Minister was lying when he said he did not sanction the leaking of Dr Kelly's name, the YouGov survey found.

Less than a quarter, 23%, said Mr Blair was telling the truth, according to findings published in The Mail on Sunday. Another 27% are undecided.

Most think PM lied over Kelly - poll, PA, 11.1.2004.

 

 

 

 

 

The report says: "Self-reported health is strongly related to happiness. With the exception of reasonably high levels in Wales, the expected pattern of regional disparities is largely confirmed, with people in the North less likely to report a good state of general health than those in the South."

There are also "extreme regional disparities" in death rates. "Put bluntly, people in the North die earlier than people in the south," says the study. It found another broad north-south divide over the number of people suffering from depression. "Levels of depression for men in the Northern and Yorkshire and North-west [NHS] regions were three-fifths higher than for the North Thames region and absolute differences for women were even higher," says the study.

'Happy poverty' of North shown to be a myth, I, 26.12.2003,
   
http://news.independent.co.uk/uk/this_britain/story.jsp?story=476077

 

 

 

 

 

Child eczema 'has tripled

since 1970s'

 

Nearly one in three children has suffered eczema

by the age of three-and-a-half, triple the rate in the 1970s,

a study suggested last night.

A fifth of babies develop the condition in the first six months

according to data on 14,000 children born since 1991.

Headline and first §§, G, 23.12.2003,
https://www.theguardian.com/uk/2003/dec/23/
science.health

 

 

 

 

 

Love it or hate it, Desmond's red top has been the newspaper publishing success story of the decade. When he bought the ailing title just over three years ago, it was selling 627,000, excluding bulks. Today its circulation has soared to 858,000, up 37% over the three-year period, thanks to a combination of showbiz celebrity gossip, endless pictures of the model Jordan wearing very little and news about TV and its stars. Hill was last year named the Editor of the Year at the What the Papers Say awards.

Over the same period the Mirror's circulation slipped 11% to 1.9m. Its lead over the Star - more than 1.5m three years ago - is now in danger of slipping under a million.

But there are signs, perhaps, that the Star is beginning to plateau. Year on year it is up just over 1% and it peaked three months ago with a sale of nearly 930,000.

    Hello girls: Last week Dawn Neesom became the new editor of the Daily Star,
    with a brief to attract more women readers to the paper
    with the highest flesh count in Fleet Street.
     Here she tells John Plunkett how she hopes to do it, G, 22.12.2003,
    https://www.theguardian.com/media/2003/dec/22/
dailystar.mondaymediasection

 

 

 

 

 

Anecdotal evidence of the poor Christmas trading experienced by many retailers was backed up by leaked figures at the weekend, which showed Marks & Spencers and other specialists in fashion and women's clothing suffering the most.

According to market research firm Taylor Nelson Sofres, M&S lost about 3% of its market share in the three months to mid-November, compared with figures a year earlier.

Retailers suffering Christmas gloom, G, 22.12.2003,
https://www.theguardian.com/business/2003/dec/22/
christmas2003.christmas2003

 

 

 

 

 

Yesterday, however, Margot Wallstrom, the EU's environment commissioner, warned that the EU's own efforts to cut greenhouse gas emissions were in crisis.

Ms Wallstrom said that only two countries, Sweden and the UK, were on track to meet the EU's target of cutting 1990 greenhouse emissions by 8% before 2010 and that 13 of the EU's 15 member states would easily miss that goal.

Brandishing an annual progress report on the subject, she said that the EU was on course to achieve only a 0.5% cut in its 1990 greenhouse gas levels with existing policies.

"This is serious," she said. "Time is running out. The figures in the report show that the policies and measures taken in the member states so far will not be enough.

"Unless more is done, the EU as a whole and the majority of its member states will miss their Kyoto emissions targets."

Denmark, Spain, Ireland, Austria and Belgium were the worst offenders, the report said,

while the UK was forecast to overshoot the EU's target by a comfortable margin of 1.4% and Sweden by 3.3%.

That compared with Spain undershooting the target by 33.3% and Ireland by 26.8%.

EU nowhere near meeting Kyoto targets, G, 3.12.2003,
https://www.theguardian.com/environment/2003/dec/03/
europeanunion.climatechange

 

 

 

 

 

Leading independent fiscal experts last night warned that Gordon Brown would be forced into fresh tax increases after the latest set of public borrowing figures showed the government deficit running at twice last year's levels.

Despite the continued VAT windfall from strong retail sales - up 0.6% last month - the Institute for Fiscal Studies said the chancellor would struggle to meet his self-imposed financial targets, as a result of higher than expected spending and weaker than anticipated tax receipts.

Data from the Office for National Statistics showed net borrowing by the state in the seven months to October was £21.1bn, compared with £10.7bn in the same period a year earlier. October, traditionally a bumper month for tax receipts, saw last year's £2.8bn surplus dwindle to one of £300m.

More tax rises 'are inevitable' , G, 21.11.2003,
https://www.theguardian.com/business/2003/nov/21/
politics.money

 

 

 

 

 

The number of smokers in England and Wales has hit a record low, with levels now plummeting by 170,000 people each year, according to Cancer Research UK.

A huge drop over the past few years puts the current level of those who smoke at one out of four people, outstripping government targets for 2005 of 26 per cent. This means that half a million fewer people are indulging in the habit than in 2000.

The study, which looks at data from the General Household Survey (GHS) and the Omnibus survey, shows the lowest percentage of people smoking since figures using the GHS began in the early Seventies.

The new figures have delighted anti-smoking groups, who feared that the situation in the Nineties - where the rate stopped declining and there was a persistently high level of smoking - was irreversible.

Britons are winning war on smoking, O, 2.11.2001,
    http://society.guardian.co.uk/cancer/story/0,8150,1076245,00.html

 

 

 

 

 

An unprecedented census of the world's oceans has revealed man's dire ignorance of the most unexplored region of the planet.

Five hundred species of fish have been identified since the project began three years ago but scientists believe there are 10 times as many yet to be discovered. A total of 210,000 species of marine animals and plants are known to science but the true number could be closer to two million - and some are threatened with extinction before they are even named.

(...)

Dr Ron O'Dor, chief scientist for the project, said: "We know almost nothing about the oceans - 99.99 per cent of them have not even been sampled. We need an inventory because we don't know where we are now."

(...)

Three hundred scientists from 53 countries are working on the 10-year project, which will cost $1bn (£650m).

    Scientists discover 500 species of fish in billion-dollar trawl of the world's oceans,
    I, 24.10.2003,
   
http://news.independent.co.uk/world/science_medical/story.jsp?story=456669

 

 

 

 

 

The NSPCC warned last night that children who have been abused by people producing pornographic photographs for the internet are likely to suffer life-long damage.

An analysis of 140,000 images of child pornography posted on websites over six weeks found 35,000 were pictures showing the systematic abuse of just 20 children,

none of whom had featured before on known pornographic sites.

This worked out at an average of 1,750 images of each child, none of whom could be identified or located.

Even the children's home countries were in doubt, according to University of Cork researchers, who were looking into the activities of European paedophile networks.

Child porn 'endlessly recycled', G, 8.10.2003,
https://www.theguardian.com/technology/2003/oct/08/
childprotection.childrensservices 

 

 

 

 

 

House prices are continuing their upward march, rising by 1.5% - or £65 a day - last month, Britain's biggest mortgage lender said yesterday.
(...)
Prices in London increased by 2.1% during the third quarter, cancelling out the 0.7% fall in the second quarter.*

However, the annual rate of house price growth in the capital has slipped to 8.6% - the first time the figure has been below 10% since the start of 2001.

By contrast, annual house price growth in the north of England is now running at 37.6%.

House prices go up by £65 a day, G, 4.10.2003,
https://www.theguardian.com/business/2003/oct/04/
housingmarket.houseprices

 

 

 

 

 

Collectively, the householders of the world could be about to put the cat out. African lion numbers have fallen by 90% in the past 20 years, according to a recent report. There are only about 23,000 alive today. That's the number of seats at Barnsley football club stadium.

The tiger is also an endangered species. At the highest estimate, there are fewer than 8,000 left. To put that number in perspective, about that many people work on Ministry of Defence sites in Wales. There are probably only 15,000 or so cheetahs in the whole of Africa. The Iberian lynx is down to about 600.

And it's not just the cats that we're putting out. The Cross River gorilla sub species, for example, which lives on the border between Nigeria and Cameroon, is down to about 200 at the most. That is fewer than the number of British men who each year develop breast cancer. There are fewer than 50 Chinese alligators surviving in China. Most books give a estimate for sperm whales of 1 to 2 million, but a paper published last year gave an estimate of 360,000. The most recent estimate for southern hemisphere minke whales is about half the total estimate of 760,000 derived from surveys in the late 1980s.

(...)

This makes them natural candidates for extinction in a world in which human numbers have soared from 2.5 billion to more than 6 billion in 50 years. The planet's population grows by more than 80 million every year. There are roughly 240,000 extra mouths to feed every day.

    Goodbye cruel world : Lion numbers have dropped by 90% in 20 years.
    The other big cats are going fast.
    How long before all the Earth's 'mega species' disappear from the wild?
    By Tim Radford, G, 2.10.2003,
   
https://www.theguardian.com/education/2003/oct/02/
research.highereducation2

 

 

 

 

 

After five years in the financial doldrums,

trapped by plunging prices and food scares,

farmers were given a boost yesterday with a prediction

that their incomes will rise fourfold this year.

A combination of severe drought elsewhere in Europe

and rising global food prices means

that the average profit from an acre of farmland

will rise from £17 last year to £70 for 2003.

    Out of the doldrums at last:
    UK farmers quadruple their income as Europe wilts,
    I, 1.10.2003,
   
http://news.independent.co.uk/uk/environment/story.jsp?story=448672

 

 

 

 

 

A rapid surge in construction output, missed in earlier data from the Department of Trade, led the Office for National Statistics to double its estimate of growth in the second quarter to a healthy 0.6%, from 0.3%. For the first three months of the year, growth was also twice as strong as previously thought, at 0.2%.

Interest rates were cut to a 48-year low of 3.5% in July as business groups reported mounting pessimism in the corporate sector and the Bank of England's monetary policy committee.

(...) Construction output expanded by 4.4% in the second quarter, according to the revised figures - a sharp turnaround from a 1% decline in the last three months of 2002.

Recount builds better economic view, G, 1.10.2003,
https://www.theguardian.com/business/2003/oct/01/
money.interestrates 

 

 

 

 

 

Blair:

Three out of five voters say

he lied over Saddam threat

 

Three out of five people believe that Tony Blair lied over the threat posed by Iraqi weapons in the run-up to war, according to an NOP poll for The Independent.

(...)

The good news for Mr Blair is that Labour, on 38 per cent, enjoys a nine-point lead over the Tories (29 per cent),

who are only narrowly ahead of the Liberal Democrats, on 27 per cent.

If Mr Brown were Prime Minister, Labour's lead would increase by one percentage point.

    Headline, §1 and paragraph, I, 30.9.2003,
    http://news.independent.co.uk/uk/politics/story.jsp?story=448383

 

 

 

 

 

Ecstasy use doubles in five years

 

Ecstasy use in the UK has exploded dramatically over the past five years, with double the number of people taking the drug. Ecstasy users are poised to overtake the combined number of heroin and cocaine users.

A United Nations report reveals that in Britain 2.2 per cent of the population aged 16 to 59 - 730,000 people - now take ecstasy, compared with 1.2 per cent five years ago. More people take ecstasy as a proportion of the population than in any other country, except Australia and Ireland.

The report, by the UN's Office on Drugs and Crime, shows that more than 120 million tonnes of ecstasy are now produced annually. The mass production has led to a plunge in prices: an ecstasy tablet can be bought for £3.

The number of Britons taking heroin has remained relatively static at around 300,000. Just under 500,000 use cocaine. Soon, figures suggest, ecstasy will be more popular in the UK than cocaine and heroin combined.

The report shows seizure rates for synthetic drugs such as ecstasy and amphetamine (speed) are rising by 28 per cent a year. Heroin is up by only 8 per cent and cocaine by 1.5 per cent. Globally, the number of people who consume ecstasy has soared to eight million - an increase of 70 per cent over five years. If the trend continues, global consumption of ecstasy will exceed that of heroin, now used by nine million people, within the next 12 months.

The number of people in the UK taking amphetamines has dropped from 2.6 per cent of the population five years ago to 1.6 per cent. Many of the users are believed to have switched to ecstasy.

The National Criminal Intelligence Service estimates 500,000 to two million ecstasy tablets are consumed each week in Britain. Last week, figures published in the journal Human Psychopharmacology showed there had been 72 ecstasy-related deaths in the UK in 2002, compared with 12 in 1996. Experts partly blamed the deaths on the falling costs of the drug which is often taken alongside other drugs. The report shows 40 million people worldwide take synthetic drugs such as ecstasy and amphetamine - almost twice the number who use heroin and cocaine.

'Synthetic drugs abuse begins with experimental use among mostly young people. Gradually, it may lead to dangerous polydrug use and addiction, with severe health consequences,' said Antonio Maria Costa, executive director of the UN's Office on Drugs and Crime.

The UN report shows that between 1999 and 2001 75 per cent of ecstasy laboratories seizures were in the Netherlands, 14 per cent in Belgium and 6 per cent in the UK.

Each year around 60 ecstasy factories are seized by law enforcement agencies in Europe. As they prioritise combating ecstasy production, the factories move to eastern Europe where they are less closely monitored.

Headline and first §§, O, 28.9.2003,
https://www.theguardian.com/society/2003/sep/28/
drugsandalcohol.drugs

 

 

 

 

 

Soaring property values in the north in the past 12 months have significantly eroded the historic north/south house price divide, according to research from Halifax estate agents.

Northern regions, which have lagged behind the south for most of the past decade, have been catching up fast with increases of nearly 50% in some parts over the past year, the study showed, compared with a 13% national average. Dumfries and Galloway led the charge with a rise of 48% over the past year, taking the cost of an average home to £101,687. Close behind were South Humberside with a 36% leap to £91,498 and Northumberland where prices rose by 35% to an average of £118,456.

Other growth areas included Dyfed in Wales, where prices have shot up by 44% to £113,801, and Fife which saw a rise of 35%. The average cost of a property nationally has risen by 138% since 1993, to £154,503. Despite the north's recent record growth, southern counties came top for price increases over the past decade and remain the most expensive areas in which to buy, the study found.

North/south house price gap shrinks, G, first parfagraphs, 27.9.2003,
https://www.theguardian.com/business/2003/sep/27/
housingmarket.houseprices

 

 

 

 

 

One in five lessons taken

by teachers untrained in subject

 

The report also went on to show schools were facing a timebomb, with more than one in three staff in many of these subject areas now aged over 50. In chemistry, the figure was 35 per cent and maths 31 per cent. No secondary school subject had an increase in the percentage of teachers aged 30 to 39.

Charles Clarke, the Secretary of State for Education, blamed a 1992-98 recruitment slump for the rise in untrained staff taking maths lessons.

Figures this year showed a 35 per cent rise in recruits to maths teacher training courses.

"These results are promising, considering there are 25,000 more teachers since 1997, almost 18,000 of whom are in secondary schools," he said. 

    Headline and paragraphs, I, 27.9.2003,
    http://education.independent.co.uk/news/story.jsp?story=447099

 

 

 

 

 

Cheaper ecstasy is blamed

for six-fold rise in deaths

 

A sharp drop in the price of ecstasy sold in British nightclubs was blamed yesterday for a six-fold increase in deaths linked to the drug.

Coroners' reports showed that 202 deaths were caused by ecstasy over the past six years, rising from 12 in 1996 to 72 from 2001 to 2002. One in seven of those who died was under 19.

Researchers from St George's Hospital Medical School in Tooting, south London, who analysed the figures, said that the fall in the price of the drug was an important factor behind the rising death rate. The price of the drug has halved since 1994, when pills cost about £16.50.

    Headline and first paragraphs, I, 23.9.2003,
   
http://news.independent.co.uk/uk/health/story.jsp?story=446155

 

 

 

 

 

One in three universities discriminates

against middle-class pupils,

study reveals

 

Of the 56 universities who replied to a survey, 20 said they would consider a pupil from school with lower than average A-level results as a factor to take into account when recruiting students. Seven said they made lower offers to disadvantaged students.

Headline, I, 23.3.2003,
    http://education.independent.co.uk/news/story.jsp?story=446125

 

 

 

 

 

The world is beginning to look like France, a few years before the Revolution. There are no reliable wealth statistics from that time, but the disparities are unlikely to have been greater than they are today. The wealthiest 5% of the world's people now earn 114 times as much as the poorest 5%. The 500 richest people on earth now own $1.54 trillion - more than the entire gross domestic product of Africa, or the combined annual incomes of the poorest half of humanity.

The worst of times,
GI, p. 15, 2.9.2003.

 

 

 

 

 

It is notoriously hard to establish the number of police officers involved in the Special Branch, tasked with countering terrorism and monitoring "subversive" organisations, but, Statewatch says the numbers in Britain grew from 1,638 in 1978 to 4,247 last year.

The Special Branch is now two and a half times as big as it was at the height of the cold war or the worst part of the Northern Ireland conflict.

Special Branch is bigger than in cold war,
GI, p.1, 2.9.2003.

 

 

 

 

 

Scientists have solved the mystery of why some smokers get lung cancer while others escape - and developed a blood test to identify those most at risk. They have found a genetic variation that makes some smokers ten times as likely as others to get the disease.

Test will show which smokers face lung cancer death,
T, p.1, 3.9.2003.

 

 

 

 

 

The extent to which the Kelly affair has also damaged the prime minister's standing was revealed by an ICM poll in the Sunday Telegraph,

which revealed that two-thirds of the public and 62% of Labour voters felt deceived by the government over the issue of weapons of mass destruction.

Even more problematically for Mr Blair, a majority of his supporters, 55%, blame the government for the death of Dr Kelly.

But only a third believe he should resign, in contrast to more than half of those surveyed (52%) who believe the defence secretary, Geoff Hoon, widely seen as the most likely fall guy, should go.

New Gilligan claim on controversial email,
GI, p. 1, 25.8.2003.

https://www.theguardian.com/media/2003/aug/25/
huttoninquiry.hutton

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

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