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Posts Tagged ‘Northern Ireland’

George Clooney DeLorean Biopic

George Clooney is in talks to play John DeLorean in an upcoming biopic based on the life of the flamboyant car manufacturer. The Oscar-nominated heartthrob is being courted to play the man who created the famous DMC-12 gull-wing cars made famous by the Back to the Future trilogy of the 1980s, The Daily Express has [...]

Charlie Chaplin Time Traveler? How Did Cellphone-Wielding Woman End Up In Chaplin’s “The Circus?”

Here’s a kooky riddle for you, just in time for All Hallow’s Eve…. Did a time traveler end up in a Charlie Chaplin film? One Irish filmmaker thinks so. After checking out the DVD extras that accompanied Chaplin’s 1928 silent film The Circus, George Clarke, a father-of-two from Northern Ireland, insists he spotted a woman [...]

Serbia 13th in FIFA world rankings

With 969 points Serbia holds position 13 in world rankings of the International Federation of Association Football ( FIFA). FIFA announced this Wednesday Zurich, Switzerland, that among the rivals of Serbia’s White Eagles in the qualification Group C for the European Championship 2012 in Poland and Ukraine, Italy is ranked 11th, Northern Ireland 59th, Estonia is 94th, whereas the lowest-ranked is the Faroe Islands at 118.

Serbia 13th in FIFA world rankings

With 969 points Serbia holds position 13 in world rankings of the International Federation of Association Football ( FIFA). FIFA announced this Wednesday Zurich, Switzerland, that among the rivals of Serbia’s White Eagles in the qualification Group C for the European Championship 2012 in Poland and Ukraine, Italy is ranked 11th, Northern Ireland 59th, Estonia is 94th, whereas the lowest-ranked is the Faroe Islands at 118.

EU official on Kosovo partition

EU delegation chief Vincent Degert has said that a partition of Kosovo was not on EU agenda, but that there were “many ideas” about how to solve the issue.
Degert mentioned ideas on solving the Kosovo issue based on models such as that of Germany, Italy and Austria, or Britain and Northern Ireland.

UK PM sorry for N. Ireland killings

On an historic day for Northern Ireland, a British Prime Minister has apologised for the events of Bloody Sunday in 1972. Relatives of those killed by British soldiers watched from Londonderry, as David Cameron unveiled a long-awaited report into the deaths.

Christine Bleakley’s ‘£6m deal to join GMTV’s Adrian Chiles’

Rumour has it that Christine Bleakley has parted ways with BBC, to join GMTV with her old sofa partner on The One Show, Adrian Chiles.
She is said to have negotiated a 6million pound, four-year contract directly with ITV’s director of television Peter Fincham. After confirmation from her agent, transfer rumours seem to be true.
“There will [...]

More flight misery as ash cloud returns

Flights in and out of the UK and Ireland face severe disruption due to the return of Icelandic volcanic ash. Already authorities have announced that flights to and from Belfast and other parts of Northern Ireland have been stopped until at least 12pm GMT.

British polls produce hung parliament


LONDON – No British political party has been able to secure an outright majority in the House of Commons and there will now be a frantic period of negotiations between the Conservatives and Liberal Democrats to decide the shape of the next government.
The general election has led to the first hung parliament since 1974, with the Conservatives bagging 306 seats to become the biggest party in the 650-member House, but could not win an overall majority – 326 seats – and face power-sharing talks after falling short of an overall majority, final vote results showed Friday.
Although the Conservatives have won the most seats, the largest party does not automatically have the right to try to form an administration.
The Labour party won 258 seats and the Liberal Democrats 57, after the last result from all constituencies contested in elections on Thursday was announced.
By winning 57 seats, the Liberal Democrats have made it impossible for the Conservatives to win the 326 seats they need to govern alone.
Northern IrelandÂ’s Democratic Unionist Party (DUP) won eight; the Scottish National Party (SNP) six; Sinn Fein five; the Welsh Plaid Cymru three; Social Democratic and Labour Party (SDLP) three in Northern Ireland, with one each for Greens and the Alliance Party, the latter in Belfast. One seat has been won by another candidate.
One seat has yet to be decided: an election will be held for the constituency of Thirsk and Malton in northeast England on May 27, after one of the candidates fighting it died during the election campaign.
Under Britain’s election rules, Labour Prime Minister Gordon Brown has the right to attempt to form a coalition first, but he accepted Liberal Democrat leader Nick Clegg’s decision to talk with Cameron first. Cameron and Clegg would be “entitled to take as much time as they feel necessary,” Brown said, while offering to talk to the Lib Dems if they failed.
“Clearly should the discussions between Cameron and Clegg come to nothing then I would of course be prepared to discuss with Clegg the areas where there may be some measure of agreement between our two parties,” he said.
Until Brown and Cameron’s statements, the centre-left prime minister’s key allies said Labour, which has ruled since 1997, would try to cling to power through a deal with the centrist Lib Dems. But Clegg said the Conservatives, as the largest party in the new parliament, had the “first right to seek to govern”.
In a statement in Westminster, Conservative’s leader David Cameron held out a “big, open and comprehensive offer” to the Liberal Democrats to work together in government.
He acknowledged that there would have to be reform of the electoral system and he proposed the creation of an all-party committee of inquiry to look at the issue. It was not immediately clear whether CameronÂ’s offer would involve a formal coalition with Liberal Democrats ministers in a cabinet.
As a major carrot to attract Lib Dems support, Cameron offered an all-party committee of inquiry on political and electoral reform to look at the possibility of changing WestminsterÂ’s first-past-the-post voting system. But he stopped short of promising the immediate legislation on a referendum on voting reform offered by Prime Minister Gordon Brown less than an hour earlier.
Cameron stressed that it was essential that the parties were able to offer leadership to the country: “Britain voted for change yesterday, but it also voted for a new politics, it did not vote for party political bickering, grandstanding and point-scoring.
“Our country’s problems are too serious, they are too urgent for that. So we must all rise to this occasion, we must show leadership.”
Cameron outlined the areas of policy agreement between the Conservatives and Lib Dems, which he said offered “a strong basis for a strong government”.
At the same time he stressed that – unlike the Lib Dems – the Tories remained “completely convinced” that the new government would have to start cutting BritainÂ’s record 163 billion pounds deficit this year. “This has been more than confirmed by recent events in other European countries, recent instability in the markets and recent conversations that we have had both with the Treasury and the Bank of England,” he said.
AFP adds: Britain could yet face fresh election within months, despite the start of talks between Conservatives and Liberal Democrats on a possible power-sharing deal in a hung parliament, experts warned.
David CameronÂ’s centre-right Tories and Nick CleggÂ’s centrist Liberal Democrats could struggle to find common ground since they strongly disagree on issues including Europe, defence and immigration, analysts said.
If the two parties fail to reach agreement, the Liberal Democrats could still make a pact with Prime Minister Gordon BrownÂ’s Labour party, which lost its overall majority in ThursdayÂ’s general election.
“Either way there’s going to be an election again soon, probably before the end of the year,” Victoria Honeyman, a politics lecturer at Leeds University, told AFP.
Monitoring Desk adds: Following a chaotic general election result, political horse-trading aimed at cobbling together BritainÂ’s first coalition government for decades has begun, reported Christian Science Monitor.
The political landscape is a mess after no one party emerged with enough seats to form a majority in Parliament. The ball, however, appears to be in the court of David Cameron, the British Conservative leader whose party won the most votes but fell short of the majority that only a few months ago was considered to be within his grasp.
Nick Clegg, whose centrist Liberal Democrats failed to shatter the Labour and Tory duopoly on power, said that the Conservatives had the first right to seek to govern after winning the biggest mandate in terms of votes and seats.
Before potentially approaching Mr CleggÂ’s party for support, however, the Tories may seek woo Northern IrelandÂ’s Democratic Unionist Party.
Meanwhile, donÂ’t write off Gordon Brown, who has returned to Downing Street from his home constituency in Scotland. His party defied predictions that were made as late as last week that it was headed for an electoral wipeout.

David Cameron tipped to enter 10, Downing Street

Conservative leader David Cameron, whose party has secured the largest number of seats and highest percentage of votes, is expected to form the next govt in Britain that is set for an India-style coalition politics after no party won an overall majority.
With results of 600 of the 649 seats declared, the Conservative party won [...]

New car bombing in Northern Ireland

Dissident republican extremists in Northern Ireland are “hell-bent on killing police officers”. This is according a police chief, who made the warning on Friday after an overnight car bombing that left two people injured.

Britain condemns bomb blast in N. Ireland

The British government condemned a car bomb attack on intelligence headquarters in Northern Ireland. The blast came just seconds after full police and justice powers were devolved to the troublesome province.

“Model for cooperation with Kosovo needed”

Serbia is not being asked to recognize Kosovo, but Belgrade must establish some model of cooperation with PriÅ¡tina, the British ambassador says. Stephen Wordsworth told B92 that Serbia was not requested to recognize Kosovo, but mentioned, as examples of “cooperation between Kosovo and Serbia”, which is increasingly being insisted on, two post-war Germanies, as well as the model which has been established by Republic of Ireland and Northern Ireland.

Serbia in Group C of Euro qualifiers

Serbia’s national football squad has been drawn to Group C of the UEFA European Championship 2012 qualifiers. Serbia will play against Italy, Slovenia, Northern Ireland, Estonia and Faroe Islands.

N. Ireland parties reach devolution deal

Northern Ireland’s rival main parties have agreed a deal to devolve police and justice powers to the province. It ends a lengthy row that had threatened to topple their power-sharing government.

Leaders fight to save N. Ireland Assembly

The British and Irish leaders are in Belfast in a last-minute attempt to try to save Northern Ireland’s fragile administration. It has been threatened by a row over policing and justice, Euronews reports.

British, Irish leaders to discuss Northern Ireland

A bitter dispute between Northern Ireland’s power-sharing parties has threatened to disrupt the fragile peace agreement there. Northern Irish leaders resume talks Monday on transferring policing and justice powers.

Nobel laureates Sen, Ramakrishnan are ‘British’, says Gordon Brown

Britain has laid claims to Nobel laureates Amartya Sen, an Indian citizen, and Venkatraman Ramakrishnan, an American of Indian origin.
The two were among “British Nobel Prize winners” who were hosted by Prime Minister Gordon Brown and his wife for a dinner at their 10 Downing Street residence, the British leader’s office said.
Guests at the dinner [...]

Northern Ireland leader stands aside over wife’s scandal

Northern Ireland’s embattled leader Peter Robinson stepped down temporarily on Monday, vowing to clear his name over financial allegations linked to his wife’s affair with a teenager. Robinson will stand down for six weeks, lawmakers were told, as the pressure finally got to the first

N Ireland loyalists disarm

Northern Ireland’s largest loyalist paramilitary group announced yesterday that it had completely disarmed, a milestone in the troubled province’s peace process. The political wing of the Ulster Defence Association (UDA), blamed for about 400 murders in its campaign to maintain British rule