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MI5 ‘recruited al-Qaida sympathisers’

Senior Tory says six men were thrown out of security service amid ‘serious concerns’ and demands investigation

A senior Tory MP today called for an investigation into whether MI5 mistakenly recruited al-Qaida sympathisers.

Patrick Mercer, the chairman of the counter-terrorism subcommittee, said six Muslim recruits had been thrown out of the service because of serious concerns over their pasts.

The MP said he was writing to the home secretary, Alan Johnson, to call for an investigation into the matter.

Two of the six men allegedly attended al-Qaida training camps in Pakistan while the others had unexplained gaps of up to three months in their CVs.

Mercer told the Telegraph that the September 11 2001 terror attacks on the US should have prompted the British government to expand the security services, but this did not happen until the bombings on London’s transport network on 7 July 2005.

“It took an attack on this country for such measures to be started,” he said.

“But at this point it was an unseemly rush of which our enemies, not unsurprisingly, took advantage.”

Mercer added that he was concerned al-Qaida sympathisers who may have infiltrated the security services had not all yet been rooted out.

He said the two recruits who had allegedly been to training camps were not dismissed until after they had been given several weeks of training at MI5, but the others were identified before they started training.

A Home Office spokesman later said: “MI5 takes vetting very seriously indeed. All candidates are required to undergo the most comprehensive process of security vetting in the UK.

“Applicants go through extensive vetting and it is not unusual for a number to drop out or fail at the earliest stages for a variety of reasons.”

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Sexual healing

Is my husband gay?

When I met my husband and we were exploring our sexuality I realised he could get pleasure from anal sex. He admitted to a couple of same-sex relations, but he told me it was something he didn’t want to try again. At that time I felt adventurous and was happy to explore but he refused. Now, eight years on and with two young children, I do not feel “adventurous” (or “sexual” at all), but he suddenly wants madly to explore this path. I feel that this is unfair when I do not have the energy. But if I satisfy his desires, will I then be stimulating his gay tendencies? Or, if I refuse, will he look elsewhere? Is he really a gay man hidden in a heterosexual relationship?

You don’t have to worry about your husband’s sexual orientation. Same-gender experimentation is quite common, and indicates a desire to fathom one’s sexuality rather than “being gay”. As for anal sex, many people find this erotic and pleasurable. Nevertheless, it is understandable that, right now, you are not in the mood. Put aside your worries about your husband’s orientation and have a frank, relaxed discussion with him about your current lack of erotic energy. Let him know you would like to please him but are not quite up to it now. When you feel more energetic, you may decide to give it a try. But do not martyr yourself, and never allow yourself to be coerced into something you simply don’t fancy. Anal sex is not for everyone.

• Pamela Stephenson Connolly is a clinical psychologist and psychotherapist who specialises in treating sexual disorders.

• Send your own dilemma to Sexual Healing. Email private.lives@guardian.co.uk. Sexual Healing is opened up for comments at guardian.co.uk/lifeandstyle

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China and Taiwan presidents swap telegrams

Hu Jintao and Ma Ying-jeou talk of peace in a sign of improved relations that could lead to historic summit

First came direct flights, then freight links, and now a single telegram. The presidents of Taiwan and China exchanged direct messages today for the first time in 60 years, in the latest sign of their thawing relations.

Hu Jintao wrote to Taiwan’s Ma Ying-jeou to mark the latter’s election as chairman of the Nationalist party.

Bacuse of the enduring mutual sensitivities, the message was sent simply to Mr Ma, while Ma’s reply was addressed to Hu as general secretary of the Communist party.

Beijing still claims sovereignty over Taiwan, which has been self-ruled since Chiang Kai-shek fled there following his defeat in the civil war in 1949. China has warned it could use force if Taipei pursued formal independence.

“I hope our two parties can continue to promote peaceful cross-strait development, deepen mutual trust, bring good news to compatriots on both sides and create a revival of the great Chinese race,” said Hu in his telegram.

“We should continue efforts to consolidate peace in the Taiwan Strait and rebuild regional stability,” Ma replied, adding that they should “put aside disputes”.

Ma was elected president in spring last year on a platform of improving relations with China and because of widespread dissatisfaction with the ruling Democratic People’s party.

But while he has signed landmark trade deals, he has avoided political issues, due in large part to powerful anti-Beijing sentiment on the island.

Lin Chong-pin, a strategic studies professor at Tamkang University in Taipei, told Reuters that the telegram suggested the Chinese leader wants to meet Ma eventually. “It’s sort of expected … It is in Hu Jintao’s benefit or advantage to meet,” Lin said. “It would be a personal feat.”

But analysts believe both sides may take years to weigh up the risks before proceeding.

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Kayaker makes record 55m waterfall drop

Watch Tyler Bradt execute a world-record drop over the Palouse falls in Washington state

This has to be seen to be believed.

When Tyler Bradt shot down Palouse falls, he broke a world record and his paddle, but he survived virtually unscathed.

Bradt achieved the feat in April, but the video has only just emerged.

After plunging 55 metres (180ft) he surfaced after seven seconds only slightly out of breath and with a sprained wrist.

“I actually expected more of an impact,” he told the Seattle Times. “… considering the waterfall, the injuries were pretty minor.”

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Should I ditch my secret millionaire?

A reader wonders whether finding out about her new boyfriend’s hidden wealth will jeopardise their relationship

Every week a Guardian Money reader submits a question, and it’s up to you to help him or her out – a selection of the best answers will appear in Saturday’s paper.

This week’s question

I have been seeing a lovely guy I met on a dating website. We get on ridiculously well but, unknown to him, I’ve found out he’s a millionaire. I’m uncomfortable that our lives are so very different, and worry he might see me as a “gold digger”. My friends say I’m in a flap about nothing and it’s a no-brainer! How do I resolve this? Do I finish it? Or am I being prejudiced against the rich?

What are your thoughts?

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Miliband looks beyond war in Afghanistan

With British soldiers being killed at the highest rate since the war against the Taliban started eight years ago, David Miliband, the foreign secretary, will say tomorrow that more effort must be made to promote the political and economic development of Afghanistan.

In a speech at Nato headquarters in Brussels, Miliband will stress the need for a comprehensive strategy beyond the fighting by mainly US and British soldiers in southern Afghanistan.

His intervention comes at a time of concern within the government at the impact on public opinion of the rising number of British deaths. Ministers and defence chiefs have warned there will be more casualties as British and US troops mount offensive operations in an attempt to provide more security for the Afghan presidential elections next month.

The incumbent, Hamid Karzai, is expected to win, though privately both US and British officials are concerned about his dependence on corrupt warlords who pay scant regard to basic human rights.

Miliband is expected to emphasise the need for development aid to be channelled to economic and welfare programmes to help ordinary Afghans. Military action must be complemented by measures to improve the way Afghans are governed, Miliband is expected to say.

The coming months are regarded as crucial if Nato-led forces are to force the Taliban to retreat and lead to a reconciliation process involving at least some of their leaders to negotiate an inclusive agreement involving Pashtuns and with the blessing of Pakistan.

Whitehall officials said tonight that Miliband would go easy on European allies, most of whom have refused to allow their soldiers to be deployed for combat.

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£45 zombie movie to get cinema release

‘It just goes to show you don’t need thousands and thousands of pounds to make a film,’ says Colin director

A film made for £45 is to be released in cinemas across the country after finding a distributor.

Colin, a zombie movie made using a camcorder, has been snapped up by Kaleidoscope Entertainment and is due to hit the big screen in time for Halloween.

Shot in Wales and London, the film charts the progress of Colin, a man who is bitten by a zombie, dies and is resurrected as one of the flesh-eating undead. Viewers gain an insight into his life prior to zombification and witness him munching his way through various victims.

The director, Marc Price, who also wrote and produced the film, said he was amazed it would now be shown across the country. The 30-year-old, originally from Swansea and now based in London, edited the film while working for a courier firm, Creative Couriers.

Price said: “The whole thing is just insane, If you’d told me the film was going to get released in the cinema when we first started on the project I just wouldn’t have believed it. I really thought it was a joke when I was told.

“I hope this will encourage others to go out with the video cameras and make films. It just goes to show you don’t need thousands and thousands of pounds to make a film.”

The film, which took 18 months to complete, caused a stir when it was screened at the Cannes film festival this year. It will be released in London and major cities across the UK.

Film buffs can get a sneak preview at the Frightfest fantasy and horror film festival in London next month.

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‘Godfather’ of Swat Taliban arrested

Radical cleric held in Pakistan after claims he reneged on pledge to oppose terrorism

Pakistani police have arrested Sufi Muhammad, a radical cleric considered to be the political godfather of Taliban groups in the Swat region of Pakistan.

Muhammad brokered last February’s ill-fated peace deal which allowed the Taliban to seize control of the Swat valley. The deal’s collapse triggered an army attack in May.

An elderly, black-turbaned figure with a stern demeanour, Muhammad kept a low profile after fighting erupted. But in recent days he angered provincial authorities by holding public meetings.

“Instead of keeping his promises by taking steps for the sake of peace, and speaking out against terrorism, he did not utter a single word against terrorists,” said Iftikhar Hussain, information minister for the North-West Frontier Province.

It was not clear what charges were being brought against Muhammad, who was taken into custody in Peshawar, in the north-west of Pakistan. Although his group, the outlawed Tehrik Nifaz-i-Shariat-i-Muhammadi, claims to be peaceful, two senior officials were detained during fighting. They later died when the army convoy they were travelling in was hit by a roadside bomb.

In late 2001 Muhammad gained notoriety after he led hundreds of Pakistanis, many of them untrained farmers, to fight US forces in Afghanistan. Many were killed and Muhammad was jailed on his return.

Last year the provincial government released him to help broker peace with the Swat Taliban, whose leader, Maulana Fazlullah, is his son-in-law.

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Pakistan arrests two over Pole’s beheading

Pro-Taliban former politician among those suspected of killing Piotr Stanczak, kidnapped near Afghan border last year

Police in Pakistan are holding two men, including a former politician, over the beheading of a Polish geologist kidnapped near the Afghan border last year.

Police investigator Malik Tariq Awan says the men are linked to the Taliban and were arrested last month.

Awan named one of the suspects as Shah Abdul Aziz, a member of a pro-Taliban religious party elected to parliament’s lower house in 2002.

He said that Aziz is believed to be responsible for plotting the abduction of Piotr Stanczak, who was kidnapped in September while surveying oil and gas fields. A video showing his beheading surfaced in February.

The other man is a militant who has admitted to being involved in the beheading, Awan said.

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40 rescued after sandbank collapses into sea

Three lifeguards are being hailed as heroes after rescuing 36 children and four adults who got into trouble when a raised sandbank collapsed into the sea beneath them.

The party were plunged into cold waters at Tenby, west Wales, during the incident yesterday.

RNLI lifeguards patrolling Tenby South Beach had already spotted the group before they needed assistance and used rescue boards and fluorescent buoyancy aids to ferry them to safety, before performing first aid on a number of casualties.

The rescue happened at 4pm at a sandbank known locally as the White Back at the right side of the beach outside of a red and yellow flag zone.

An RNLI spokeswoman said that the group were walking along the sandbank, which liquefies and gets swept away as the tide comes in, when they suddenly found themselves out of their depth in “treacherous waters.”

At the time of the incident, the group was making its way back to the shore after receiving a warning from one of the RNLI patrol.

Two members of the patrol, Adam Pitman and Jon Johnson, entered the water with rescue boards and tubes and brought the party safely to shore while another lifeguard, Coral Lewis, radioed the Coastguard.

The spokeswoman said that first aid was performed on one person suffering from a “hypothermic asthma attack” and on another who had a “hypothermic secondary drowning”.

“Six of the group’s lives would have been lost had the lifeguards not intervened,” the spokeswoman added.

The children, who were aged between 12 and 15, were of varied swimming ability. They were staying at the nearby Kiln Caravan Park, which leads on to the beach.

Dave Miller, Coastguard Sector Manager in South Pembrokeshire, said: “The three RNLI lifeguards did a superb job today.

“If not for their fast response times and the methods they used at the scene, lives would have been lost.”

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Two held after car crash kills three

Two men arrested on suspicion of causing death by dangerous driving after collision in Colne, Lancashire

Three people have been killed in a car crash, police said. Two men and a woman, all in their 20s, were pronounced dead at the scene after their blue Ford Focus was involved in a collision with a green Rover 600 at about 11pm yesterday in Colne, Lancashire.

The occupants of the Rover were not injured. Two men aged 46 and 29, both from Colne, were arrested on suspicion of causing death by dangerous driving, a Lancashire police spokeswoman said.

Sergeant Tracey Ward, who is leading the investigation, said: “I would like to appeal to anyone who witnessed this collision to contact police. I would also like to speak with anybody who may have seen either a blue Ford Focus or green Rover 600 driving along Skipton Old Road shortly before 11pm.

“A full investigation into the circumstances surrounding this incident is under way and any amount of information, no matter how small, may help us piece together exactly what has happened.”

• Police 08451 25 35 45; Crimestoppers 0800 555 111.

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My space

The millionaire businessman shows us the home office where he turns into Goldfinger

When I’m in my chair I feel like Goldfinger or one of the other Bond villains. Under my desk there’s a secret switch on the right which can raise my monitor out of the top. I also have cats like Mini-Me in Austin Powers, but mine are two Persians called Coco and Bella (short for Tinkerbell); Coco was here first and gets very territorial of this area. She’s a very snooty cat.

My wife is an artist, and we’ve got quite a nice set-up. She paints in her studio to the left of this space. When I’m buying art with her, I tend not to negotiate. She’s very passionate about her field and says: “For God’s sake darling, artists need a living, too.”

When we first bought the house this room was my gym. I bought a treadmill and after three years I still hadn’t removed the Harrods price tag. I used to hang my jacket on the arms instead and I don’t think we ever actually turned it on.

We’ve lived here in St John’s Wood for 15 years now. We moved from Winchmore Hill, where we had a slightly larger house, because we needed to move closer to town so that my daughters, Hannah and Gemma, could go to City of London School for Girls. They are both now in their final years at university (they are only 11 months apart).

Hannah is quite interested in private equity, because she’s very financially astute. Gemma is more artistic. What tends to happen at the weekend is if I have bits and pieces to do, they will be in here on the sofas opposite my desk, doing their homework on their laptops.

My executive assistant shares my office at Hamilton Bradshaw in Mayfair, but I can normally do two or three meetings from here before I leave. I’m very protective of the rest of the house though. That’s strictly for family business only.

• The Real Deal: My Story, from Brick Lane to Dragons’ Den, by James Caan, is published by Virgin books at £18.99. Dragons’ Den is on Wednesdays at 9pm on BBC2.

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Nurses ‘neutral’ on assisted suicide

The Royal College of Nursing has today dropped its five-year opposition to the principle of assisted suicide after a consultation with its members.

Almost half (49%) of its members said they supported assisted suicide, while two out of five (40%) said they were against it.

The move comes as a poll in today’s Times found that 74% of people want doctors to be allowed to help terminally ill people end their lives.

The survey found that six out of 10 people said they wanted friends and relatives to be able to help their dying loved ones to take their own lives, without fear of prosecution.

But it also found that only 13% supported a blanket right to assisted suicide regardless of the individual’s health, while 85% said it should be legal only “in specific circumstances”. The Royal College of Nursing has opposed assisted suicide since 2004, but now has a neutral stance. It plans to issue detailed guidance to nurses on the issue, as the consultation also revealed a need for information.

Dr Peter Carter, the college’s chief executive, said: “We fully support the common themes that came through the consultation, namely maintaining the nurse-patient relationship, protecting vulnerable patients and making sure there is adequate investment in end-of-life care.”

Sandra James, chairwoman of the RCN’s council, said: “In reaching our decision we considered individual members’ opinions as well as the views from RCN branches and forums, and non-RCN affiliated bodies.” In July doctors at the British Medical Association stuck by their opposition to assisted suicide. It followed high-profile cases involving Britons using the Dignitas clinic in Switzerland.

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A certain age

The heat has brought out a new plague of mad, show-off, kamikaze-style boy cyclists. I have never been all that keen on cyclists, ever since the dog was mown down and I was nearly sliced in two on the pavement, but compared with this new lot, the old-style cycle maniac is Fotherington-Thomas.

The latest sort tend to come out on warm evenings and have a new type of bike – minimalist, no gears, no lights. Bare-chested, or with shirts billowing in the wind, they swirl and wheelie about, across red lights, the wrong way up one-way streets, along pavements – no bells, no helmets, no fluorescent jackets. None of that cissy stuff, just top-speed, miss-death-by-half-a-whisker freestyle riding.

“They’re all boys, aren’t they?” says my friend Olga breezily, “That’s what they do. Give them any sort of vehicle and they’ll try and kill themselves in it.” She rather admires them, because she’s a cyclist herself. I had a terrific row with her in the car last week, me driving along in the dark, a whirling mass of shadowy boy cyclists weaving and zipping round the cars and hovering in blind spots, while Olga applauded them and admitted shooting red lights, nipping up one-way streets and along pavements herself.

“I’ve got every right to do it,” said she saucily. “There are no proper cycle lanes and those one way systems are terrifying. You all drive much too fast. The only safe place for cyclists is on the pavement.”

I had a shout, but Olga didn’t give a stuff. Last week a crazed motorist cut her up, called her a lesbian, and drove on to the pavement, trying to kill her. And Fielding had to jump off his bike and hurl himself into a hedge just before a mad motorist crushed his bike to pulp, on purpose.

There’s no arguing with Olga and Fielding. To them, it’s clear cut: cyclists green and good, motorists bad. They know they’re right. But I know I’m right. This is another war with no solution in sight. Let’s hope there aren’t too many casualties.

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Jakarta police find unexploded bomb

Timed device could have sent panicked crowds fleeing into path of suicide attacker at Marriott hotel

A third bomb on a timer was set to go off before suicide bombers blew themselves up at two hotels in Jakarta last week but malfunctioned, police said today.

The device, a laptop filled with explosives and bolts, was found on the 18th floor of the JW Marriott and was supposed to go off first, according to Ketut Untung Yoga of the national police.

The explosion would probably have sent panicked crowds fleeing to the ground floors, where a suicide attacker detonated his explosives pack.

“It is clear that the bomb found inside the hotel was equipped with a timer that shows the time of the [failed] explosion,” Untung Yoga said. “It was supposed to explode before the other two.”

Last Friday’s near-simultaneous explosions at the Marriott and Ritz-Carlton killed seven people and wounded more than 50, breaking a nearly four-year lull in terrorist activity in the country. The two bombers, believed to have been associated to the regional terror network Jemaah Islamiyah (JI), also died.

An unknown number of suspects have been picked up in a manhunt that has also targeted Noordin Top, a Malaysian fugitive and alleged mastermind of four bombings in Indonesia.

JI used a combination of stationary, timed explosives and suicide bombers in the 2002 and 2005 Bali bombings that killed more than 220 people. The group was also blamed for the first bombing of the Marriott in 2003 and an attack on the Australian embassy in 2004.

JI was thought to have been wiped out after a crackdown that has led to the jailing of hundreds of militants in recent years.

But last Friday’s attack showed that militants are still able to strike high-security targets in the heart of the capital, reviving fears that more bombings may follow.

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Winehouse ‘punched dancer after photo request’

Amy Winehouse reacted with “deliberate and unjustifiable violence” when a dancer politely asked her for a photograph at a charity ball, a court heard today.

Lyall Thompson, prosecuting, said the 25-year-old singer appeared to be under the influence of alcohol or “some other substance” when she punched Sherene Flash in the eye at the summer ball in Berkeley Square, London, last September.

Winehouse, who performed at the ball before the alleged assault, denied punching Flash but admitted pushing her away when Flash put her arm round her.

The court heard the incident happened backstage in a dressing room soon after midnight on 26 September. Winehouse had agreed to have her photograph taken with Flash, whose friend Kieran Connelly then tried to get into the photograph.

Winehouse, who pleaded not guilty to assault at a previous hearing, said: “Her friend came round in front of us and started taking a picture … I was like, ‘Do I get a choice in this, hello?’

“I pushed her up, like away. I wanted her away from me. It was more like an indication of ‘leave me alone, I’m scared of you’. I meant to just get her away from me … I thought, people are mad these days, people are just rude and mad, or people can’t handle their drink.”

Winehouse said attention from the public was “not necessarily unwanted”.

Flash said she had had several alcoholic drinks that evening but denied being drunk. She said that Winehouse, who had drunk champagne, vodka and white wine, “punched forcefully in my right eye”, adding that she was shocked and began to cry.

The trial continues.

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Police numbers reach record levels

• Rise of 1,911 officers despite budget cuts
• Forces still failing to meet race equality target

Police numbers have hit a record high in England and Wales, with 143,770 officers in post in March this year, according to official figures out today.

The Home Office said this was an increase of 1,911 officers over the previous 12 months and included 1,200 constables.

The increase includes 648 police community support officers, who have a patrolling role, to bring their total to 16,331. The number of such officers has grown rapidly from only 1,176 when the role were introduced in 2003.

The new figures for the 43 police forces in England and Wales indicate that budget cuts and efficiency savings being faced by chief constables have not yet led to a reduction in police numbers.

However there was not a uniform rise across the country. While 27 forces increased their numbers, including an extra 1,100 recruited by the Metropolitan police in London, 16 forces reported a fall in numbers. The largest falls were recorded in North and South Yorkshire and Humberside.

Women now represent 27% of rank and file police officers but only hold 13% of senior posts.

There are now 6,290 black and minority ethnic police officers, an increase of 497 in the last year. However this represents only 4.4% of the total and fails to meet the 7% race equality target set for the police.

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Should I forgive my drug-using ex?

Post your advice below. The best responses will be published in G2 next Thursday

I was in a gay relationship for a year with a man in recovery (from his addictions) for 13 years. I thought he was the love of my life. I gave everything I had and then more. But then I discovered that he had started to drink and take drugs again – and of course was lying to me. We broke it off in November. He is now contacting me again, I guess to patch things up. I am sure he is still abusing substances. Shall I take his call?

If you would like to respond to this week’s problem, please post your comment below.

When leaving a message on this page, please be sensitive to the fact that you are responding to a real person in the grip of a real-life dilemma, who wrote to Private Lives asking for help, and may well view your comments here. Please consider especially how your words or the tone of your message could be perceived by someone in this situation, and be aware that comments which appear to be disruptive or disrespectful to the individual concerned will not appear.

If you would like fellow readers to respond to a dilemma of yours, send us an outline of the situation of around 150 words. For advice from Pamela Stephenson Connolly on sexual matters, send us a brief description of your concerns. We regret that only letters that are published will be answered.

All correspondence should reach us by Tuesday morning: email private.lives@guardian.co.uk (please don’t send attachments) or write to Private Lives, The Guardian, Kings Place, 90 York Way, London N1 9GU. Please note that Private Lives and Sexual Healing are opened up to comments each Thursday at guardian.co.uk/lifeandstyle

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Brett Lee may miss third Ashes Test

• Attacking spearhead to miss match against Northamptonshire
• He has not played since picking up rib injury at Worcester

Brett Lee is looking increasingly doubtful for the third Ashes Test after Mike Hussey, who captains the Australians tomorrow against Northamptonshire, said today that the fast bowler was “not right”.

Lee will not take part in the match against Northamptonshire starting tomorrow, meaning he would not have played since injuring a rib in the warm-up match against Worcestershire earlier this month.

“Brett Lee is still not right,” Hussey said of the 32-year-old Lee and with the Edgbaston Test starting a week tomorrow the bowler looks unlikely to be fit in time.

Hussey said the Australian 12 to play against Northants is yet to be finalised but Peter Siddle, Ben Hilfenhaus and Mitchell Johnson, the three quick bowlers who started the opening two Tests of the five-match Test series, are all included. In addition, Stuart Clark, who has yet to feature in the Test series, is expected to appear.

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Brett Lee may miss third Ashes Test

• Attacking spearhead to miss match against Northamptonshire
• He has not played since picking up rib injury at Worcester

Brett Lee is looking increasingly doubtful for the third Ashes Test after Mike Hussey, who captains the Australians tomorrow against Northamptonshire, said today that the fast bowler was “not right”.

Lee will not take part in the match against Northamptonshire starting tomorrow, meaning he would not have played since injuring a rib in the warm-up match against Worcestershire earlier this month.

“Brett Lee is still not right,” Hussey said of the 32-year-old Lee and with the Edgbaston Test starting a week tomorrow the bowler looks unlikely to be fit in time.

Hussey said the Australian 12 to play against Northants is yet to be finalised but Peter Siddle, Ben Hilfenhaus and Mitchell Johnson, the three quick bowlers who started the opening two Tests of the five-match Test series, are all included. In addition, Stuart Clark, who has yet to feature in the Test series, is expected to appear.

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