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Posts Tagged ‘Guardian’

Ellen DeGeneres: Guardian Angel To Shelter Animals This Holiday Season

Ellen DeGeneres is sure to get a Woof Woof! and plenty of tail wags from rescued animals across the US this holiday season. The Emmy-winning daytime hostess has teamed up with Halo, Purely for Pets to deliver one million meals to shelter pets awaiting adoption. Ellen and Halo have partnered with a number of non-profit [...]

Turkish surgeon at heart of Kosovo organ scandal

The Guardian writes that Turkish Surgeon Yusuf Ercin Sonmez played a key role in the illegal human organ trade in Kosovo in 1999.

A Turkish donor and the Israeli recipient were laid down on beds beside each other before the kidney was exchanged.

About 500 children abducted from Britain yearly: report

Almost 500 children were abducted from Britain and taken abroad last year, the Guardian newspaper said Monday, highlighting Pakistan as a hotspot. An estimated 470 youngsters were abducted in 336 separate cases reported to authorities in 2008, a 20 per cent increase on 2005 figures, according

Charging for content

Given the recent Guardian/Observer news this is an interesting contribution from the FT’s editor. I do wonder though – given the world now expects stuff for free – whether this is a horse that has bolted once you get outside either ‘elite’ audiences such as FT and Economist readers, or ultra-specialist media.

Guardian Daily: Purdy on assisted suicide

The Guardian’s Maggie O’Kane on evidence of possible collusion by Iraqi government officials in the kidnapping of five British men in Iraq – four of whom are believed dead.

Debbie Purdy on her historic legal victory to get clarification on whether her husband would be prosecuted if he joined her should she wish to end her life.

The Guardian’s Steve Morris joins former solidiers paying their respects to the soldiers who have died in Afghanistan.

And Family Guy creator Seth MacFarlane is joined by the Guardian’s Stuart O’Connor to talk about his new project and his appearance at this weekend’s BBC Proms.


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

guardian.co.uk © Guardian News & Media Limited 2009 | Use of this content is subject to our Terms & Conditions | More Feeds



U.S., UK Prepared To Open Talks With Taliban: Guardian

A concerted effort to start unprecedented talks between Taliban and British and American envoys was outlined yesterday in a significant change in tactics designed to bring about a breakthrough in the attritional, eight-year conflict in Afghani…

Finance guardian for US octuplets

Nadya Suleman, 27 July 2009

A judge in California has appointed a guardian to look after the financial interests of octuplets born in January.

The move follows an announcement that their mother, Nadya Suleman, had signed a deal allowing her children to appear in a reality TV show.

The six boys and two girls are the world’s longest surviving octuplets.

The series will also feature Ms Suleman’s six other children, none of whom is older than eight. Collectively, the 14 youngsters will earn $250,000.

They will not be followed 24 hours a day – but the programmes will document certain milestones in their lives, such as birthdays and special events, over three years.

The judge appointed a guardian to oversee the estate of the octuplets at the request of an advocate for children in entertainment.

Fifteen per cent of the income will be placed in a trust for the children to access when they reach 18 years of age.

Ms Suleman, 33, is a single, unemployed mother. Her decision to conceive through in vitro fertilisation was criticised by some fertility experts and commentators.</p


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

London daily on virtues of Belgrade nightlife

The Guardian newspaper recently wrote about Belgrade in its travel section. The story says that Belgrade is “defiantly No. 1 when it comes to clubbing” and recommends that people visit.

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?

guardian.co.uk © Guardian News & Media Limited 2009 | Use of this content is subject to our Terms & Conditions | More Feeds


Tories can’t wait to make cuts, says Darling

Alistair Darling accused the Conservatives today of “almost wallowing” in the prospect of making deep cuts in public expenditure if they win the next general election and promised he would set out Labour’s own spending priorities before polling day, so that voters would have a clear choice.

The chancellor spoke as David Cameron, the Conservative leader, confirmed the Guardian’s weekend report that the Tories are preparing for a decade of retrenchment. He admitted his party could no longer afford to reverse either Labour’s 50p income tax rate on top earners immediately or to fulfil its pledge to abolish family inheritance tax.

“It’s incredibly daunting, the scale of the challenge and the mess that is being left in terms of the economy and, particularly, the budget balance. I mean it really is a daunting prospect,” Cameron said on BBC1′s Andrew Marr Show. “And that’s why I’ve said, you know, I can’t remember an opposition leader who in opposition has looked the British public in the eye and said ‘you know we are going to cut public spending, we have to do that’.”

In line with his strategy of highlighting his party’s openness – evident in shadow Treasury chief secretary Philip Hammond’s “pain and brickbats” admission in Saturday’s Guardian, Cameron said voters were “crying out actually for someone who’s going to lead them and who’s going to say ‘right, we’re all in this together’.”

The chancellor adopted a different approach to the “hard choices” ahead on tax-and-spending. With the Hammond interview in mind, he said that over the past few days some senior Tories had been “almost wallowing in the prospect of making cuts here, there and everywhere”.

All the parties should now set out their spending priorities “underpinned by values and principles” so that voters could decide whose mandate they should endorse to govern them until 2015, Darling said. “I think there is a distinction between people, if you like the slash and burn mentality, and those who believe that public spending actually can make a difference to the fabric of this country.”

Gordon Brown was still the man with “the values (and) commitment” to win the election despite Thursday’s drubbing at the Norwich North byelection, he said.

A handful of Labour MPs have called for a change of leader since the Conservative Chloe Smith, 27, took the Labour seat on a 16% swing. Brown told the Sunday Mirror: “We’ve got to show that we are a disciplined party getting on with the work of government. I think people are very clear that we’ve got a task ahead. We’ve got work to do to prepare for the autumn.”

Darling claimed international support for Labour’s response to the recession and said the VAT cut from 17.5% to 15% had been right, despite costing the Treasury £1bn a month. It would also be right to restore it next year as conditions eased, he said, a crucial distinction for Labour which claims the backing of leading economists in saying that cuts designed to balance the budget would repeat the mistakes of the 1930s if imposed before the economy was growing steadily again.

For his part Cameron stressed the need to cut deeply and soon, not least to persuade the City that it is safe to finance huge government borrowing, a Tory priority.

guardian.co.uk © Guardian News & Media Limited 2009 | Use of this content is subject to our Terms & Conditions | More Feeds


£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.

guardian.co.uk © Guardian News & Media Limited 2009 | Use of this content is subject to our Terms & Conditions | More Feeds


Daily podcast: Swine flu helpline tested

In a study for the Guardian, the independent Institute for Fiscal Studies
has assessed the public finances and the likelihood of spending cuts over
the next few years. Nicholas Watt, our chief political correspondent, says it’s a bleak picture.

David Batty tests a new Department of Health website and phone line for people worried they might have swine flu.

Home affairs editor, Alan Travis, looks at new British Crime Survey statistics on drug use, which shows more young people are taking Class A drugs such as ecstasy and cocaine.

One of Europe’s most popular folk songs is Der Kufsteinlied – a yodelling
ditty that’s a staple of German TV and beer-hall gatherings. It’s been the
subject of a court battle over royalties, as Kate Connolly reports from Berlin.

The National Trust is enlisting the help of surfers to help look after
Britain’s coastline. Steven Morris reports from north Cornwall.


Public services ‘face decade of pain’

Institute for Fiscal Studies forecasts 16% cuts across Whitehall

Britain will face spending cuts of more than 16% to key public services, such as law and order and higher education, if Labour and the Tories deliver on their goals to protect schools, hospitals and defence, the Institute for Fiscal Studies has warned.

As the two main parties gear up for a bitter general election battle that will be dominated by this issue, the IFS says Britain is facing a decade of pain that will see the tightest constraint in public service spending since 1977.

Concern has grown already this week about immediate shortfalls in the culture and education budgets, but the Guardian is publishing research by the IFS at the start of a two-day series on the future of public spending which reveals that spending on a majority of public services will have to be cut by up to 16.3% over the next three-year spending period – 2011-14 – if the next government is to deliver real-term rises for health, schools, defence and overseas aid.

Labour and the Tories have both said they would like to protect these four areas. They have also agreed, at a minimum, to cut Britain’s record fiscal deficit from 11.9% of GDP next year to 1.3% by 2018.

Carl Emmerson, the IFS’s deputy director, said: “It could be eight years of pain … Unfortunately that is the kind of choices we are looking at. It will be very difficult for public services. Under the Labour spending plans at the moment it is the tightest three-year period since 1977 when the IMF were involved in setting spending plans in the UK.”

Gordon Brown and David Cameron are warned by Four former chancellors – Denis Healey, Geoffrey Howe, Nigel Lawson and Norman Lamont – say Britain is facing the most far-reaching public spending cuts since the 1970s. Speaking to the Guardian, Lord Lawson, who is advising the Tories, indicates that Cameron will follow the example of Margaret Thatcher, who held an emergency budget within 40 days of her election victory in 1979 to stabilise sterling.

Lord Healey, Labour chancellor from 1974-79, says: “It is always painful to many people depending on what area you cut. It will be very painful for those who get the money at the moment.”

Sir Michael Bichard, former permanent secretary at the education department, who is advising both the Treasury and the Tories, tells the Guardian that the political debate on public spending is still “pretty undeveloped”. He also calls for a “jolt to the machine” to shake up Whitehall.

“We all are currently guilty of engaging in a debate about tactical issues when there are some huge strategic issues,” he said. “I think the debate about public spending is pretty undeveloped. But you’ve also got an election in less than a year and there aren’t many politicians who want to be seen with an axe in their hand in the year before an election.”

He and other recently retired mandarins have urged the two main party leaders to consider a complete overhaul of Whitehall to avoid costly duplication in the distribution of public spending.

Public spending has already become the key election battleground. The row erupted when Gordon Brown claimed the Tories would threaten vital public services after Andrew Lansley, the shadow health secretary, said public spending would have to be cut by 10% if NHS spending were to rise in line with inflation, as the Tories have promised, and social security and debt interest payments were maintained.

The government softened its position last week, with Lord Mandelson saying that Britain faces years of spending restraint, after it became clear that Lansley made his comments on the basis of government and IFS figures. The IFS is to go a step further and explain how the 10% cuts will be increased to 16.3% if similar spending safeguards are offered to schools, defence and overseas aid.

guardian.co.uk © Guardian News & Media Limited 2009 | Use of this content is subject to our Terms & Conditions | More Feeds


Amitai Etzioni: Do we have inalienable responsibilities to one another?

I have a confession to make. I am an avid reader of personal advice columns. When I read those published generations ago, I feel that…

Asda pulls ad for ‘dangerous’ £70 bike

Supermarket pulls TV ad for ‘flat-pack’ bike after experts say brakes and steering would not work properly

Asda no doubt felt it had scored a PR coup when trumpeting the arrival of “Britain’s cheapest bike” in its stores. For £70, customers could walk away with a brand new adult’s mountain bike.

But this morning the offer turned into a PR disaster, when the supermarket was forced to pull a TV advert for the bicycles after viewers noticed they had been built so badly that they were dangerous.

Mark Brown, director of the Association of Cycle Traders, noticed that the front forks of the men’s bike in the advert faced the wrong way.

This would mean the bicycle would not steer correctly and the brakes would not work properly, according to the Cycling Experts website.

“Not even Asda know how to set up their own bikes,” said Brown, responding to a blog about the £70 bikes on the Guardian website. “This is indicative of the problems which arise from what we in the bike industry call ‘flat-pack bikes’. However, unlike flat-pack furniture this could seriously damage your health.”

The Asda bikes come in parts, meaning customers have to attach the pedals, front wheel, handlebars and saddle themselves.

Brown added: “I believe this TV advert has now been pulled but it really goes to show how dangerous it is for these retail giants to move into non-food sectors where they have no expertise.

“Heaven help the poor customer with little or no cycle experience and lacking the wrong tools who tries to build this ‘bicycle’ for themselves.”

Today Asda’s press office issued a mea culpa.

A spokeswoman said: “As soon as we spotted the error, we put the brakes on the TV ad and pulled it. Our agency is back-pedalling as we speak and we will be wheeling out the new one tomorrow. Thankfully the thousands of customers that have already bought one have managed to correctly follow the instructions on how to assemble the bike, unlike us.”

Read a review of Asda’s £70 bike on the Guardian’s bike blog

guardian.co.uk © Guardian News & Media Limited 2009 | Use of this content is subject to our Terms & Conditions | More Feeds


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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Guardian Daily: Murdoch on phone-hacking

Former News of the World editor Andy Coulson – now David Cameron’s communications chief – and three executives from the paper gave evidence to MPs on the Commons culture committee yesterday. The Guardian’s Andrew Sparrow says committee members will continue their investigation into allegations of phone hacking.

Workers are staging an occupation of a wind turbine factory to protest against the imminent closure of the plant and the loss of hundreds of jobs. Steven Morris spoke to one of the workers involved in the sit-in at the Vestas Wind Systems factory on the Isle of Wight.

Michael Tomasky, editor of Guardian America, looks at President Obama’s efforts to pass legislation to reform America’s healthcare system.

A large comet or asteroid has crashed into Jupiter, creating a large hole in the planet’s atmosphere. The scar on Jupiter was spotted by an amateur astronomer, reports science correspondent Ian Sample.

The Mercury music prize shortlist has been unveiled, with Bat For Lashes, Kasabian and Florence and the Machine tipped to win. Rosie Swash from our music website considers 2009′s runners and riders for the £20,000 prize for best album.


Guardian editor calls for local news funding

Alan Rusbridger, the Guardian’s editor in chief, tonight threw his support behind a plan to give public funding to Britain’s national press agency to allow it to provide news from public authorities and courts as local newspapers withdraw because they can no longer afford it.

Rusbridger, speaking at a seminar on the future of journalism at the Media Standards Trust in London, also outlined his vision for a new digital world in which the public grows much closer to journalists.

Speaking in front of guests including film director Lord Puttnam, BBC business editor Robert Peston and Ofcom chief executive Ed Richards, Rusbridger said local news needed to be supported, or “corruption and inefficiency” would grow as scrutiny lessened.

He said the Press Association, in which most of the big British media firms including the Guardian Media Group are shareholders, should be the recipient of public money to provide local news as other providers such as newspapers and ITV regional news disappear.

In return, PA would contract out the reporting of public authorities and courts to local papers, with the content then shared with other outlets.

PA is currently looking for funding to trial the idea.

Rusbridger said the gradual disappearance of local journalism worried him.

“This bit of journalism is going to have to be done by somebody,” Rusbridger said. “It makes me worry about all of those public authorities and courts which will in future operate without any kind of systematic public scrutiny. I don’t think our legislators have begun to wake up to this imminent problem as we face the collapse of the infrastructure of local news in the press and broadcasting.”

Rusbridger said local public service journalism was a “kind of utility” which was just as important as gas and water.

“We must face up to the fact that if there is no public subsidy, then some of this [public service] reporting will come to pass in this country,” he said.

“The need is there. It is going to be needed pretty quickly.”

Rusbridger also laid out his vision of what he called “mutualised news,” which he said would “take down the walls” of traditional media companies by distributing information through new means such as social networking site Twitter and by asking the public to get involved through experiments such as “crowd sourcing”, used by the Guardian to help with its investigation into the death of Ian Tomlinson at the G20 protests.

“It was a piece of conventional reporting and tapping into the resources of a crowd,” he said. “There are thousands of reporters in any crowd nowadays. There was nothing to stop people from publishing those pictures but it needed the apparatus of a mainstream news organisation for that to cut through and have impact.”

He added: “What I like about idea of mutualised news is it gets over the concept of us versus them. It is us and them. It blurs the line between journalists and reader. It is much more diverse and plural than a conventional newspaper. It gives us a huge extensive resource.”

Rusbridger denied it would be the end of conventional journalism, saying that trained journalists and the public could work together, adding it was “futile” to deny that “something interesting and exciting is going on here.”

“There are many things that mainstream media do which in collaboration with others is still really important. The ability to take a large audience and amplify things and to give more weight to what would [otherwise] be fragments. Somebody has to have the job of pulling it all together.”

Rusbridger admitted that he had originally dismissed Twitter as “silly” but now saw its huge benefits for media companies in building communities and distributing news. “When Twitter started, I confess, I didn’t get it. Sometimes you are too old to keep up with all these things and Twitter just seemed silly and I didn’t have time to add it to all of these other things, but that was completely wrong.”

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Guardian Daily: Murdoch on phone-hacking

Former News of the World editor Andy Coulson – now David Cameron’s communications chief – and three executives from the paper gave evidence to MPs on the Commons culture committee yesterday. The Guardian’s Andrew Sparrow says committee members will continue their investigation into allegations of phone hacking.

Workers are staging an occupation of a wind turbine factory to protest against the imminent closure of the plant and the loss of hundreds of jobs. Steven Morris spoke to one of the workers involved in the sit-in at the Vestas Wind Systems factory on the Isle of Wight.

Michael Tomasky, editor of Guardian America, looks at President Obama’s efforts to pass legislation to reform America’s healthcare system.

A large comet or asteroid has crashed into Jupiter, creating a large hole in the planet’s atmosphere. The scar on Jupiter was spotted by an amateur astronomer, reports science correspondent Ian Sample.

The Mercury music prize shortlist has been unveiled, with Bat For Lashes, Kasabian and Florence and the Machine tipped to win. Rosie Swash from our music website considers 2009′s runners and riders for the £20,000 prize for best album.