BBC News | UK | World EditionBAA 'should sell three airports' Wed, 20 Aug 2008 09:36:39 -0000
The Competition Commission says BAA may have to sell three of its seven UK airports - two in London and one in Scotland.
Glitter facing Thai deportation Wed, 20 Aug 2008 12:43:45 -0000
Thai authorities say they are preparing to expel paedophile Gary Glitter after he refused to board a UK-bound flight.
Khyra couple face murder charge Wed, 20 Aug 2008 10:36:24 -0000
The mother and stepfather of a seven-year-old girl who allegedly starved to death appear in court charged with her murder.
Thousands strike in pay dispute Wed, 20 Aug 2008 10:40:23 -0000
Council workers are staging a 24-hour walkout over pay, disrupting schools, bin collections and ferries in Scotland.
Driver held in 4x4 safari crash Wed, 20 Aug 2008 11:26:04 -0000
The driver of a 4x4 which crashed in Turkey killing a father and his eight-year-old daughter is detained by police.
PM's tribute to cancer campaigner Wed, 20 Aug 2008 12:16:13 -0000
Gordon Brown leads tributes to a young man who has died from leukaemia after famously documenting his experiences in a blog.
The Economist: BritainThe Tories and values: Thu, 14 Aug 2008 11:49:44 -0000
A mini-revival of social conservatism is in the airBRITISH conservatives have largely eschewed the culture wars fought by the American right. Tories have had old-fashioned views on marriage and other moral issues, to be sure, but they have rarely given them much prominence. The lack of a vocal religious right partly explains why they have had a cooler relationship with the Republicans than the Labour Party enjoys with the Democrats. And David Cameron, their leader, began his stewardship of the party in liberal style, declaring himself eminently relaxed about the exotic lifestyles to be found in modern Britain.All the more interesting, then, that recent weeks have seen tentative but unmistakable stirrings of social conservatism from the Tories. In July Mr Cameron gave a speech (in a church, no less) denouncing moral relativism. The fight against crime and other ills was, he said, being hamstrung by society’s “refusal to make judgments about what is good and bad”. On August 4th Michael Gove, the party’s schools spokesman, deplored the portrayal of women in men’s magazines. Conservatives such as Iain Duncan Smith, the party’s former leader, and Ed Vaizey, its arts spokesman, have also criticised the British Board of Film Classification for giving the new Batman film a lenient 12A rating. Even the party’s embrace of the “libertarian paternalism” espoused in “Nudge”, the year’s most talked-about book among policymakers, is telling. ...
Inflation: Thu, 14 Aug 2008 11:49:44 -0000
As long as prices surge the Bank of England cannot cut interest rates. That will not help a floundering governmentOVER the past few months the economy has developed a disquieting tendency to outgloom the gloomiest prediction. The housing market in particular has fared much worse than expected as house prices, turnover and residential investment have all tumbled. That is one big reason why economic activity is turning down sharply, trumping earlier forecasts of a moderate slowdown and pushing up the jobless count. But above all the upsurge in inflation has proved far more extreme than was once projected. The Bank of England has the task of keeping the annual rate of inflation, measured by the consumer-prices index (CPI), at 2%. As recently as March it appeared to be on top of the job: inflation, at 2.5%, was only a bit higher than the official target. But by May inflation had reached 3.3% and it vaulted to 4.4% in July. The 0.6 percentage-point rise since June, when inflation was 3.8%, was the biggest since the series started in 1997. ...
English spelling: Thu, 14 Aug 2008 11:49:44 -0000
The rules need updating, not scrappingGHOTI and tchoghs may not immediately strike readers as staples of the British diet; and even those most enamoured of written English’s idiosyncrasies may wince at this tendentious rendering of “fish and chips”. Yet the spelling, easily derived from other words*, highlights the shortcomings of English orthography. This has long bamboozled foreigners and natives alike, and may underlie the national test results released on August 12th which revealed that almost a third of English 14-year-olds cannot read properly. One solution, suggested recently by Ken Smith of the Buckinghamshire New University, is to accept the most common misspellings as variants rather than correct them. Mr Smith is too tolerant, but he is right that something needs to change. Due partly to its mixed Germanic and Latin origins, English spelling is strikingly inconsistent. ...
Real ale: Thu, 14 Aug 2008 11:49:44 -0000
Folk-drink or aspirational libation?EARLS COURT, a vast, high-ceilinged exhibition centre in west London, does not make for a promising pub. There are few seats, and the bright fluorescent lights do little to make drinkers feel at ease. But the lack of creature comforts did not dampen the high spirits of the students, beer connoisseurs and off-duty businessmen attending the Great British Beer Festival, billed as the world’s biggest, on August 5th-9th. They roamed from bar to bar, sampling over 450 varieties of beer and cider.Such good cheer may seem odd, given that beer seems to be falling out of favour in Britain. Sales have dropped by 9% over the past decade, in part because wine has grown more popular. But not all beers are the same. The festival was organised by the Campaign for Real Ale (CAMRA), a 90,000-strong lobbying group promoting traditional, unpasteurised, unfiltered beer, stored and served from casks wherein, with live yeast, it continues to ferment. ...
Nuclear disarmament: Thu, 14 Aug 2008 11:49:44 -0000
The new nuclear pioneersBRITAIN as a “disarmament laboratory”? Tell that one to veterans of the Campaign for Nuclear Disarmament (CND). Earlier this year they celebrated the 50th anniversary of the first Easter protest march to Aldermaston, home of the Atomic Weapons Establishment (AWE) where research and design work continues on Britain’s Trident-based nuclear warheads. Yet AWE has lately been turning its nuclear skills to a rather different purpose: finding solutions to some of the many difficulties that disarmament would pose if it ever turned from slogan to reality. To CND’s regret, and the annoyance of the Scottish Nationalists who want to eject the submarines that carry the country’s nuclear-tipped Trident missiles from their Faslane base on the Clyde, Britain is not about to disarm unilaterally. It remains one of the five officially recognised nuclear powers, alongside America, China, France and Russia. Over the protests of its own left-wingers, last year the Labour government persuaded Parliament to replace the deterrent’s ageing submarines; legislators will probably have to vote before long on replacing the missiles and warheads too. ...
Oyster cards: Thu, 14 Aug 2008 11:49:44 -0000
The contract for London’s transport card is up for grabsFEW phrases in British politics are more radioactive than “Private Finance Initiative” (PFI), a convoluted scheme under which government pays private firms to carry out work on its behalf. Many such contracts have been plagued by delays and costly legal disputes. For all the talk of greater efficiency, the real attraction of building and running schools and hospitals, say, through a PFI arrangement is that it allows the government to shove spending off the official balance sheet (although that loophole is to be closed next year). Yet not all PFIs have been disasters. One of the best has been London’s Oyster-card system, which allows travellers to store their entitlement to use the Tube or city buses on a computerised card that gets them through ticket barriers with a simple wave of the wallet. The little blue card has been a big success: over 10m have been issued since its launch in 2003, 6m are in active use and four-fifths of the journeys on London’s public transport involve one. ...
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Bill Index - Civil Contingencies Bill 2003/04 - Description of Bill's progress with links to associated documents.
A: Civil Contingencies Bill - Guide to the new powers the government wants to take in the event of a major terror attack or other emergency. With video and related links.
Meta Description: [ BBC News Online's guide to the new powers the government wants to take in the event of a major terror attack or other emergency. ]
A: The Civil Contingencies Bill - QA about the government's proposed new measures for authorities to deal with terrorist attacks and other civil emergencies.
Cabinet Office - Civil Contingencies Bill - Government site provides the consultation Document and the full Draft Bill with Explanatory Notes and Partial Regulatory Impact Assessments on local responders and emergency powers.
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Global Alternative - Britain Prepares Its Own Version of US Patriot Act - richard Tyler explains his belief that the Bill is a legal veneer for the Labour government to defend its own existence during an “emergency”, granting ministers draconian powers to remove fundamental civil liberties.
Liberal Democrats - Civil Contingencies Bill - Offers the chronology of the Bill with links to the full debates and reports, Lib Dem statements, and links to the Bill, Explanatory Notes and Library Research paper.
Liberty - Response to Government's Civil Contingencies Bill - Liberty's Director Shami Chakrabarti responds to the publication of the Civil Contingencies Bill.
Meta Description: [ In reaction to the the publication of the Civil Contingencies Bill today, Liberty's Director Shami Chakrabarti said: ]
Local Government Association - Civil Contingencies Bill - Offers a Rough Guide to the Bill, including key issues for local government. With links to legislative steps.
New Alliance - Blair's 'Enabling Act' - Euro-sceptic group explains their concerns with the Civil Contingencies Bill, believing it allows the Government and Ministers to exercise almost absolute powers on the slimmest excuses.
Patriot Act - Summarises the Bill and concerns about certain points. Includes links to documentation.
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Scottish Executive - Civil Contingencies in Scotland - Government site provides the Scottish Consultation Report and the Cabinet Office Consultation.
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UK Resilience - Civil Contingencies Bill - Official government site presents supporting documents for the Civil Contingencies Bill, including draft regulations, the public consultation report, response to the Joint Committee of the House, Regulatory Impact Assessment and links to the full text of the Bill.
Warmwell.com - Civil Contingencies Bill - Presents concerns about the proposed emergency powers with background material, columns and news articles.
Watching Them, Watching Us - Civil Contingencies Bill Concerns - Special interest group presents several issues they have with the Bill.
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