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Stop and search powers to be reviewed

Written By Unknown on Rabu, 30 April 2014 | 19.12

30 April 2014 Last updated at 13:10

Police stop and search powers are to be overhauled with a revised code of conduct, Home Secretary Theresa May has announced.

She said while stop and search was "undoubtedly an important police power", when misused it could be "counterproductive" and an "enormous waste of police time".

Mrs May said the number of stop and searches should come down. If it did not, she would introduce legislation to enforce new measures, she said.


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Sacking over poor elderly home care

30 April 2014 Last updated at 08:17 Alison HoltBy Alison Holt BBC Panorama
Panorama secret filming revealed The Old Deanery resident, Joan Maddison, was slapped

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Secret filming by BBC Panorama shows some residents being taunted, roughly handled and one being slapped

One staff member has been sacked and seven suspended from one of England's largest care homes after an undercover probe by BBC Panorama found poor care.

The filming at the Old Deanery in Essex showed some residents being taunted, roughly handled and one was slapped.

The home said it was "shocked and saddened by the allegations".

Care Quality Commission figures seen by the BBC show over a third of homes that received warning notices since 2011 still do not meet basic standards.

Continue reading the main story

"Start Quote

People shouldn't be getting into this business if they don't care"

End Quote Andrea Sutcliffe Care Quality Commission

Allegations of poor care and mistreatment at the 93-bed home in Braintree, where residents pay roughly £700 per week, were first raised by 11 whistleblowers in August 2012.

Essex County Council put it on special measures for three months until concerns were addressed.

But secret filming by Panorama's undercover reporter over 36 shifts found many of the same sorts of issues reported a year earlier, including:

  • a woman slapped by a care worker who had previously been complained about for her poor attitude towards residents
  • the same woman, who has dementia and is partially paralysed after a stroke, was also repeatedly mocked and taunted by other care workers
  • cries for assistance from a resident suffering a terminal illness ignored as she sought help for the toilet, and her call bell for assistance left unplugged on one occasion
  • a resident bed-ridden with a chronic illness left lying in his own excrement after two care workers turned off his call bell without assisting him

Alex Lee, the reporter who conducted the undercover filming, said she saw "many good care workers trying their best" - but also saw some staff "mock, goad, taunt, roughly handle and ignore" elderly residents.

"Some were even left in their own mess for hours," she said.

Last November, while Panorama was undercover, the home was inspected by the regulator and passed for the first time in 18 months.

When the CQC revisited this February after being told about Panorama's findings, they found too few staff and some residents waiting an "unacceptably long time" for call bells to be answered.

Continue reading the main story

Panorama: Find out more

  • Behind Closed Doors: Elderly Care Exposed, BBC One, Wednesday 30 April at 21:00 BST

Anglia Retirement Homes Ltd, which runs the Old Deanery, said the incidents involved a "small number of staff" and were not reflective of the high standards of care it demanded.

A statement said: "As soon as the new management team was made aware of the allegations we took immediate action.

"We hired an independent law firm to carry out a full investigation as a matter of urgency.

"Eight staff were immediately suspended, and have not returned to work, pending a full inquiry.

"Our priority remains the health and wellbeing of our residents and we have more than 200 dedicated members of staff who remain committed to the highest standards of care."

It added: "The care worker responsible for slapping a resident has been summarily dismissed."

Whistle-blowers

The company was taken over by new owners in November 2013.

A former care assistant at another home, who became a whistleblower, said she had experienced problems not being solved. Eileen Chubb runs a charity called Compassion in Care which supports people reporting misconduct in the industry.

She has had nearly 2,000 calls to her helpline in 14 years and she often found repeated complaints about the same problems in the same homes.

"Every day cases are coming in where there has been up to 15 staff, 20 staff, raising concerns, then six years later, more staff raising the same concerns again," she said.

Andrea Sutcliffe

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Andrea Sutcliffe: "I'm shocked and really angry about what Panorama have found"

The CQC said it would work with the care sector to improve standards, but it was determined to ensure problems were addressed.

Its new chief inspector of social care, Andrea Sutcliffe, said she was "shocked and really angry" about the poor care Panorama had found.

She said her "heart goes out" to those affected, but also to the "hundreds of thousands" of good care workers who had been let down by the "small minority".

"People shouldn't be getting into this business if they don't care," she said.

Asked if the CQC's systems were working, she said most care was good and the organisation would act on any concerns raised.

Minister for Care and Support Norman Lamb said there was a "stubborn minority of care providers who do not meet acceptable standards".

"We have to send out the message that there should be no place in our care services for providers of that sort," he said.

Alex Lee

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Undercover reporter Alex Lee worked 36 shifts at the Old Deanery in Essex

Panorama: Behind Closed Doors: Elderly Care Exposed on BBC One on Wednesday 30 April at 21:00 BST and then available in the UK on the BBC iPlayer.


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Inmate dies in 'botched' execution

30 April 2014 Last updated at 11:53
Clayton Lockett

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Execution of Clayton Lockett (pictured): Journalist and witness Courtney Francisco describes what she saw - some may find this audio distressing.

A US death row inmate in Oklahoma died of a heart attack after his execution was halted because the lethal injection of three drugs failed to work properly.

The execution of Clayton Lockett, 38, was stopped after 20 minutes, when one of his veins ruptured, preventing the drugs from taking full effect.

The execution of a fellow inmate, due two hours later, was postponed.

Both men had unsuccessfully challenged a state law that shields the identities of companies supplying the drugs.

Continue reading the main story

Analysis

Since it was first used in Texas in 1982, "the triple-drug cocktail" has become the standard execution method in US states that have the death penalty. It was designed by anaesthesiologist Stanley Deutsch as an "extremely humane" way to end life.

The first drug, a barbiturate, "shuts down" the central nervous system, rendering the prisoner unconscious. The second paralyses the muscles and stops the person breathing. The third, potassium chloride, stops the heart.

But critics suggest that the method may well be painful. One suggestion is that people could be too sedated by the first drug to cry out, or that they might be in pain but paralysed by the second drug.

Another complication, as appears to have been the case with Clayton Lockett, is that intravenous drug use is common among death row inmates, meaning many prisoners have damaged veins that are difficult to inject.

Problems sourcing some of the drugs in the official protocol have also led to claims that states are using untested drugs in their executions.

The problems surrounding Lockett's execution come amid a wider debate over the legality of the three-drug method and whether its use violates guarantees in the US constitution "against cruel and unusual punishment".

Lockett was sentenced to death for the 1999 shooting of a 19-year-old woman.

'Botched'

Lockett writhed and shook uncontrollably after the drugs were administered, witnesses said.

"We believe that a vein was blown and the drugs weren't working as they were designed to. The director ordered a halt to the execution," Oklahoma Department of Corrections spokesman Jerry Massie said.

But Lockett's lawyer, David Autry, questioned the remarks, insisting his client "had large arms and very prominent veins," according to the Associated Press.

The prisoner was moving his arms and legs and straining his head, mumbling "as if he was trying to talk", Courtney Francisco, a local journalist present at the execution, told the BBC.

Prison officials pulled a curtain across the view of witnesses when it became apparent that something had gone wrong.

"It was a horrible thing to witness. This was totally botched," Mr Autry said.

Oklahoma Governor Mary Fallin said in a statement that she had ordered a full review of the state's execution procedures.

Calls for investigation

Fellow inmate Charles Warner, 46, had been scheduled to be put to death in the same room two hours later in a rare double execution.

Warner's lawyer, Madeline Cohen, who witnessed Lockett's execution, said he had been "tortured to death" and called for an investigation.

"The state must disclose complete information about the drugs, including their purity, efficacy, source and the results of any testing," she said.

Warner was convicted of the 1997 murder and rape of an 11-month-old girl.

Continue reading the main story

Lockett's last moments

  • 18:23 - Sedative administered
  • 18:33 - Doctor declares Lockett unconscious
  • 18:36 - Lockett is restless and a doctor discovers a ruptured vein
  • Curtain drawn
  • Execution halted
  • 19:06 - Lockett dies from a heart attack

All times local - Central Time

He and Lockett had unsuccessfully challenged an Oklahoma state law that blocks officials from revealing - even in court - the identities of the companies supplying the drugs.

The state maintains the law is necessary to protect the suppliers from legal action and harassment.

Lockett and Warner argued they needed to know the names of the suppliers in order to ensure the quality of the drugs that would be used to kill them and to be certain that they had been obtained legally.

In March, a trial court ruled in their favour, but the state's highest court reversed that decision last week, ruling that "the plaintiffs have no more right to the information they requested than if they were being executed in the electric chair".

US states have encountered increasing problems in obtaining the drugs for lethal injections, amid an embargo by European pharmaceutical firms.

Some have turned to untried combinations of drugs or have sought to obtain the drugs custom-made from compounding pharmacies.

The triple-drug cocktail, first used in Texas in 1982, has become the standard execution method in the US.

It was presented as a more humane replacement for lethal gas and the electric chair, but critics of the three-drug protocol say it could cause unnecessary suffering.

Several US states that still have the death penalty have since switched to a single-drug method.


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Third Met PC sacked over 'plebgate'

30 April 2014 Last updated at 12:44

A police officer has been sacked over press leaks about the "plebgate" affair, becoming the third Met PC to be dismissed over the row.

PC Gillian Weatherley was dismissed for "gross misconduct", Scotland Yard said.

She was sacked for leaking information about the 2012 argument between police officers and MP Andrew Mitchell.

PCs Keith Wallis and James Glanville have already been sacked for gross misconduct, with two more officers yet to face such hearings.

Mr Mitchell was accused of calling officers plebs during the argument at the gates of Downing Street - an allegation he has denied.

The Conservative MP resigned as chief whip in the wake of the controversy.

'Misleading statements'

A panel chaired by Commander Julian Bennett found PC Weatherley had breached professional standards in relation to "honesty and integrity; orders and instructions; confidentiality; discreditable conduct and challenging and reporting improper conduct".

The Met said it had brought the gross misconduct case after the Crown Prosecution Service decided in November that criminal prosecution was not appropriate.

PC Weatherley was on duty at the Downing Street gates on the night of the dispute, 19 September 2012, and the Met said she had exchanged several messages with PC Glanville over the next three days.

It added that she had subsequently given "inaccurate and misleading statements" to detectives from Operation Alice - the investigation into alleged misconduct by officers.

Scotland Yard said it "would not disclose" how information was leaked to the press by PC Weatherley or to whom.


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Farage will not stand in by-election

30 April 2014 Last updated at 13:04
Nigel Farage

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Nigel Farage said that it was more important to focus on the European elections

UKIP leader Nigel Farage has said he will not stand in the forthcoming Newark by-election.

The contest has been brought about by Tuesday's resignation from Parliament of former Tory MP Patrick Mercer over a cash-for-questions scandal.

Mr Farage said he did not want to look like an "opportunist" by entering the contest, as he did not "have any links with the East Midlands".

He added that he wanted to focus on UKIP's European elections campaign.

Although the Conservatives have a majority of 16,000 in Newark, UKIP is currently doing well in opinion polls.

But John Curtice, professor of politics at the University of Strathclyde, said UKIP would be "trying to succeed on the back of no particular local support at all".

'Courage'

Mr Farage told BBC One's Breakfast: "I haven't had long to think about it but I have thought about it, and we're just over three weeks away from a European election at which I think UKIP could cause an earthquake in British politics, from which we can go on and win not just one parliamentary seat but quite a lot of parliamentary seats.

"For that reason I don't want to do anything that deflects from the European election campaign, so I'm not going to stand in this by-election.

"I want to focus the next three weeks on winning the European elections and also I don't have any links with the East Midlands. I would just look like an opportunist, and I don't think that would work."

Asked whether he had decided not to run for fear of losing, Mr Farage replied: "I have shown some courage over the years…

"It's about choosing the right battles. It's about prioritising and I know that if I were to have said yes to standing in Newark the next three weeks would be dominated by am I going to win, am I not going to win, and we wouldn't be talking about open-door immigration, EU membership and that most of our laws being made somewhere else."

'Not an idiot'

Mr Farage referred to the former leader of the Monster Raving Loony Party, once a fixture at such contests, saying: "I'm not Screaming Lord Sutch. I don't stand in every by-election."

Ken Clarke, seen as the most Europhile of the Conservative members of the cabinet, told BBC Radio 4's Today programme that Mr Farage had been right to decide not to run, saying: "I am not really surprised. Whatever else Nigel is, he is not an idiot, and I don't think he'd have the faintest chance of winning in Newark."

He accused UKIP, which advocates leaving the European Union, of "peddling a total nonsense that our economic problems have been caused by immigration".

Mr Clarke, who is a Nottinghamshire MP, said: "I don't think the residents of Newark, some of whom I know because I used to represent some of the villages there, they're not going to vote for a card, larking about, trying to get protest votes."

For the Liberal Democrats, Chief Secretary to the Treasury Danny Alexander said: "Nigel Farage is clearly frightened to put himself forward to try and actually get a seat in the UK Parliament.

"He's very happily heckling from the sidelines doing his thing in the European Parliament ,and I think many people will look at this and say it's not really that impressive."

Mr Mercer, who has represented the Nottinghamshire constituency since 2001, is due to be suspended from the Commons for six months for allegedly asking questions in Parliament in return for money.

Secret filming of Patrick Mercer

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Secret filming shows Patrick Mercer signing a contract with the fake lobbying company set up by BBC Panorama

He was filmed by undercover reporters from the BBC's Panorama last year apparently agreeing to set up a parliamentary group to push for Fiji to return to the Commonwealth.

The MP had already said he would not contest the general election next year, having served as an independent since May 2013.

'Heaviness of heart'

In a short statement, the former soldier said he would not contest the findings of a report into his conduct, to be published on Thursday, which will call for him to be barred from Parliament for six months.

He said he was resigning with "a great heaviness of heart" for the sake of his family, adding: "I am an ex-soldier, I believe that when you have got something wrong, you have got to 'fess up and get on with it."

The MP, a prominent critic of David Cameron, who sacked him as a shadow minister in 2007, said he hoped his successor would be a Conservative.

The party has selected Robert Jenrick to contest Newark. Labour - which held the seat between 1997 and 2001 - has chosen Michael Payne as its candidate. The Liberal Democrats have yet to make a selection.

At the 2010 general election, Mr Mercer won 27,590 votes. Labour came second with 11,438 votes, the Lib Dems third with 10,246 and UKIP fourth with 1,954.


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Three generations killed in fire

Written By Unknown on Senin, 28 April 2014 | 19.12

28 April 2014 Last updated at 12:18
Ishfaq Hussain Kayani

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Cousin Ishfaq Hussain Kayani says the family are "in a state of shock"

Three generations of a family, including a baby girl and her two young brothers, have died in a house fire.

Relative Ishfaq Kayani said the deaths at Wake Road, Sharrow, in Sheffield, were a "tragedy beyond imagination".

The victims were his cousin Shabbina Begum, 54, her daughter Anum Parwaiz Kayani, 20, Adhyan Parwaiz Kayani and Amaan Parwaiz Kayani, aged nine and seven, and their baby sister.

Twenty firefighters tackled the blaze which began shortly after midnight.

Rescue attempt

A police cordon remains in place in Wake Road, a street of mostly terraced houses, as the investigation into the cause of the fire continues.

Mr Kayani said Mrs Begum, the children's grandmother, had initially escaped the fire but returned to the house in an attempt to rescue them and Miss Parwaiz Kayani, the children's aunt.

"She gave her life trying to save her grandchildren," he said.

The children's mother escaped the fire and their father, a taxi driver, was at work at the time.

Mr Kayani said: "The whole family is in a state of shock, devastated. The whole community is in a sombre mood.

"Friends, relatives, we're all in huge, huge shock. It's a tragedy beyond imagination.

"Just in a matter of minutes the whole family has been destroyed. The whole family has gone.

"You can well imagine what the children's parents are going through. I don't have the words to describe how the family is feeling, other than shell-shocked, devastated.

"We are a close-knit family, there are enough people around to support the family.

"The children were looking forward to school, and we've lost the whole family, just a wonderful family, highly respected."

'Such a tragedy'

Four fire engines from Central, Rivelin, Lowedges and Mansfield Road stations, along with a crew using an aerial ladder platform, went to the scene.

The back of the house

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The BBC's Ed Thomas describes the scene in Sheffield

South Yorkshire Fire and Rescue said details about the fire would become clearer after specialist investigators examined the scene.

Abdul Kayum, from the nearby Wolseley Road mosque, knows the victims of the fire and said there were "no words" to describe the grief the family was going through.

People living near the scene of the fire were "absolutely devastated", he added.

Vicky Edwards, who lives in Wake Road, said: "It's a shock, of course it's a shock.

"I got up and saw the police tape and thought 'what is that about?' but it was only when I came outside and saw the police officers I realised it was something serious.

"It's a really nice neighbourhood, the sort of place where kids play outside."

Another neighbour, who asked to remain anonymous, said: "We were asleep, we did not hear anything or see anything.

"We know the family. It's such a tragedy, it's the saddest thing you can hear."


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Aleppo gripped by barrel bomb fears

28 April 2014 Last updated at 11:08 Ian PannellBy Ian Pannell BBC News, Aleppo
Devastating effects of air bombardment on Aleppo

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BBC crew witnesses devastation of air bombardment on Aleppo

A BBC team has witnessed the devastating effects of air bombardment on Syrian civilians after gaining rare access to rebel-held areas of Aleppo.

Emergency rescue teams told the BBC the city was living in "danger and fear".

Thousands of people are reported to have been killed or maimed in a campaign of aerial bombardment in northern Syria this year.

With cameraman Darren Conway, we were the first Western broadcasters in rebel-held Aleppo this year.

Continue reading the main story

"Start Quote

If these... weapons managed to hit a military target, it would be sheer luck"

End Quote Sarah Leah Whitson Human Rights Watch

Um Yahya wept. With two small children at her side, the young mother was standing in what until that morning had been her home. It was now a wreck: a tangle of rubble and cables and dust, with half the ceiling missing and parts of the building completely razed.

"My husband was sitting at breakfast. We heard the first blast: it sounded far away. But I asked him to go and get the kids off the street. And suddenly it hit us."

Consumed by shock and grief, she described the moment the barrel bomb landed on her street. "It was as if someone picked me up and threw me inside".

Her husband, who had gone to find their children, was badly injured and had been whisked off to hospital. Her parents have fled to Turkey and she is now alone with her children. "I have nowhere to go," she said. "I just want my husband and nothing else."

'I am so scared'

Outside, the emergency rescue team of the Civil Defence Force (CDF) scoured through the rubble. With little training and limited equipment from Britain, America and elsewhere, theirs is a task as grim as it is dangerous.

When there is an attack on residential areas, they race in to search for survivors and - as often as not - to recover bodies.

In the last year, eight crew members have been killed as they brave bombs and bullets to rescue others.

Khalid Al Heju, the head of the CDF in Aleppo, says it is their responsibility to help those who have no one else to turn to.

"Our humanity urges us to do this job, to save people from under the rubble and take them to hospital," he says.

But he admits to living with fear, like so many others in this battered city. "Yes, I am scared, I am so scared. The same position is often hit more than one time.

"This is creating the most danger and fear for us."

Like the people they save, they face attacks from the land and air.

'Indiscriminate, dumb weapons'

Since last September Aleppo, Syria's largest city and its former economic capital, has been at the receiving end of what the pressure group Human Rights Watch (HRW) calls "an indiscriminate and unlawful air war against civilians by the Syrian government". Last month HRW produced a study into the scale of the attacks.

Continue reading the main story

Analysis

Barrel bombs are just what their name implies - large cylindrical metal containers filled with explosive and shrapnel that are typically rolled out of the door of a helicopter. They were initially dropped from a low altitude, which afforded a reasonable degree of accuracy, but the possession of portable surface-to-air missiles by the rebels has forced the helicopters higher and any accuracy has disappeared.

The barrel bombs have become significantly larger over time and on occasion have had additional tanks welded to them with suggestions that these might contain inflammable fuel, additional explosives or even possibly chemicals, such as chlorine.

Despite being rudimentary weapons, their destructive power is considerable - though they are only one part of a Syrian government's arsenal that has been employed against civilian areas - and their use could well constitute a war crime.

HRW says the use of barrel bombs has "terrorised" Aleppo in recent months.

The bombs are crude devices, often made from oil drums or large gas bottles, packed with explosives and bits of metal, that are literally tossed over the side of helicopters.

The devastation they cause and the fear they instil has forced tens of thousands of people to flee the city this year, according to charities and NGOs working with displaced families.

"Satellite photos and witness accounts show the brutality unleashed on parts of Aleppo," according to Sarah Leah Whitson, Middle East director at Human Rights Watch.

"If these indiscriminate, dumb weapons managed to hit a military target, it would be sheer luck," she says.

In a rare show of unity over Syria, the UN Security Council adopted a resolution in February that called for an immediate end to "all attacks against civilians, as well as the indiscriminate employment of weapons in populated areas, including shelling and aerial bombardment, such as the use of barrel bombs".

The Violations Documentation Center, an opposition monitoring group, claims nearly 700 civilians have been killed across Aleppo province by warplanes and barrel bombs since the UN resolution was agreed.

The resolution also called for an immediate end to all forms of violence and called on both sides to cease attacking and besieging civilians as a tactic of war. That has also not happened.

President Bashar al-Assad insists his military is fighting to protect civilians, targeting what he calls "terrorists and foreign extremists". The armed opposition has also been accused of human rights violations and there have have been many cases where the rebels have killed civilians through bombardment, but on a very different scale.

World's 'indifference'

We have been coming to Aleppo since the battle began here, nearly two years ago.

Sigrid Kaag, head of the joint team from the United Nations and the Organisation for the Prohibition of Chemical Weapons

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Sigrid Kaag, who is overseeing the elimination of Syria's chemical weapons: "The biggest bulk of the chemical weapons material is removed but not yet destroyed"

The report of war is the soundtrack for a city that is a shabby imitation of its former self.

Whole neighbourhoods lie empty; the facades of buildings have been ripped off, piles of rubble lie where homes used to stand, and roads are blocked by the charred remains of buses that protect passers-by from the scopes of snipers.

Even in the still of night, in a city consumed by darkness, the war grinds on.

The battle for Aleppo sharply escalated a few weeks ago as different rebel groups launched a surprise joint attack on government positions.

Abu Bakri is a leader of the Abu Amara Brigades, one of the groups on the frontline, and claims the bombing has galvanised the rebels.

Continue reading the main story

"Start Quote

People here started to hate both sides. We don't want the regime forces or the FSA; [we] just want to live in peace"

End Quote Feras English teacher in Aleppo

"The regime has been threatening citizens with barrel bombs and airstrikes. It made all the armed factions in the city come together and form a joint operations room," he says.

"We are learning from our mistakes and trying to be more organised with weapons we have and use in better way."

As many as 70% of Aleppo's residents are thought to have abandoned the city to the two warring groups. "Life here totally sucks", says Feras, a young English teacher living in one of the neighbourhoods that has been attacked. He was afraid to give his family name.

Continue reading the main story

Aleppo facts

  • Major industrial centre
  • Population of 2.3 million in 2005
  • Mainly Sunni Muslim
  • Largest Christian population in Syria
  • Aleppo Old City is a Unesco World Heritage site
  • Became key battleground in July 2012

"It isn't a life: [we are] afraid of shells falling on our heads day or night. We don't know if we go this way, if it's safe or not."

There are no signs of an end to this war, despite President Assad's reported prediction it will be over by the end of the year.

A trickle of aid makes its way across the border but Syrians feel shunned by what they see as the indifference of the outside world. They are defenceless in the face of incessant attacks, caught between two sides determined to fight to the bitter end and with little hope of either respite or relief.

Feras supported the revolution when it began. People used to talk about freedom and democracy in Syria. Today the talk is only of bombs and bullets, of deprivation and despair.

"Many armed groups here are stealing houses, not doing good to people. That's why people here started to hate both sides. We don't want the regime forces or the FSA; [we] just want to live in peace."

Are you from Aleppo or have you visited the city? Do you have videos of the city before the civil war? You can email us at haveyoursay@bbc.co.uk using the subject line "Aleppo".

Send your pictures and videos to yourpics@bbc.co.uk or text them to 61124 (UK) or +44 7624 800 100 (International). If you have a large file you can upload here.

Read the terms and conditions


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Ecclestone avoids potential £1bn tax

28 April 2014 Last updated at 11:58 By Darragh MacIntyre BBC Panorama

Formula 1 boss Bernie Ecclestone has avoided a potential £1.2bn tax bill as a result of a secret deal with HMRC.

The deal involved a payment of just £10m, according to legal transcripts obtained by BBC Panorama.

Revenue & Customs spent nine years investigating the Ecclestone family's tax affairs before offering to settle in return for the payment from the family trusts in 2008.

Mr Ecclestone said he paid more than £50m in tax last year.

Mr Ecclestone, the chief executive of Formula 1, is currently on trial in Germany facing corruption charges. It is alleged he was behind a £26m bribe paid to a bank official.

Prosecutors allege the bribe was paid to ensure that Mr Ecclestone retained control of the sport.

Ecclestone admits paying former banker, Gerhard Gribkowsky, but says he was effectively the victim of blackmail as he was worried the banker would tell the tax authorities he had set up an offshore family trust.

Panorama's investigation goes back to 1995 when Mr Ecclestone secured ownership of the lucrative TV rights of Formula 1.

Shortly afterwards he moved this prize asset offshore, giving the rights to his then wife, Slavica.

She transferred them to a family trust in Liechtenstein, before selling them for a huge profit, free of UK tax.

It may be the biggest individual tax dodge in British history, and is legally watertight provided Mr Ecclestone did not set up, or control, the trust.

If he had done, Mr Ecclestone has admitted, he could have faced a tax bill of more than $2bn - or £1.2bn.

Barrister and tax expert Jolyon Maugham said this was a "pretty substantial" loss of tax.

"I'm certainly not aware of anything else remotely approaching that sort of magnitude, in my fairly extensive experience."

Continue reading the main story
  • Darragh MacIntyre presents Panorama - Bernie Ecclestone: Lies, Bribes and Formula One
  • BBC One, Monday 28 April at 20:30 BST
HMRC deal

UK tax authorities spent nine years investigating the Ecclestones' tax affairs before agreeing a settlement.

HMRC does not comment on individual cases, but Panorama has obtained evidence from the previously unpublished transcripts of interviews conducted by a German public prosecutor.

One of the lawyers who helped run the Ecclestone family trusts, Frederique Flournoy, told the prosecutor: "In summer 2008, the Inland Revenue offered to conclude the matter if we paid £10m. We decided to pay up."

According to Ms Flournoy's evidence, the Ecclestone family trusts earn around £10m in interest every six weeks.

Labour MP Emily Thornberry, the shadow attorney general, said: "Ten million may sound like a lot to some people but you have to look at it in the round.

"And if we're talking about a trust fund in which they are making huge amounts of money like this, then it isn't very much is it?"

Mr Ecclestone says he gave away his fortune to avoid inheritance tax laws that he considered to be "very unfair" at that time.

Having gifted the assets to his wife, Mr Ecclestone can't receive payments from his family's offshore trusts.

But Ms Flournoy told the German prosecutor he's been receiving payments from his wife since his divorce: "Mrs Ecclestone received disbursements from the Trusts. In other words, she also has a personal asset. That is also the basis on which the divorce ruling fixed the payment amounts to Ecclestone."

When asked how high the divorce payments were to Mr Ecclestone, she said: "I don't know the exact figure, however it must be around $100 million a year."

'More transparent'

Mr Ecclestone said his divorce was a "private matter". He says he has always paid his fair share of tax and that he is "proud to be British and proud to make my contribution by paying my taxes here."

Slavica Ecclestone's lawyer said her estate planning was based on legal advice and that she was entitled to privacy in her tax affairs.

A lawyer for the family trusts said Mr Ecclestone has not exerted any control over the management of the trusts. He said the transcripts from the German prosecutor contained errors.

A spokesperson for HMRC said: "The way in which HMRC settles and assures tax disputes has been completely overhauled in recent years, making the process more transparent.

"The effectiveness and propriety of such settlements is overseen by a Tax Assurance Commissioner, who publishes an annual report covering all large settlement cases."


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East Ukraine mayor shot and wounded

28 April 2014 Last updated at 12:47

The mayor of Kharkiv in eastern Ukraine has been shot and critically wounded amid continuing unrest in the region.

Hennadiy Kernes was reportedly shot in the back by unknown gunmen while out jogging, and is undergoing emergency surgery in hospital.

Monday also saw pro-Russian separatists seize a local government building in Kostyantynivka in eastern Ukraine.

The US and EU are preparing to impose fresh sanctions against Russian individuals and companies.

Western nations accuse Moscow of supporting separatist gunmen who are occupying official buildings in cities across eastern Ukraine.

The separatists continue to hold seven Western military observers who were seized last week in the region.

Mr Kernes used to be a supporter of the former pro-Moscow President Viktor Yanukovych. He then dropped his support for the ousted president in favour of a united Ukraine.

He has been described as a "mini-oligarch" - a successful businessman wealthy enough to launch a career in politics.

He has been accused of starting his business career as an organised crime boss, a claim he denied while acknowledging that he was once jailed for fraud - a minor offence "partly fabricated" by his enemies, he insisted.

The head of the hospital where Mr Kernes is being treated, the Surgery Institute in Kharkiv, described his condition as "very serious".

"Several internal organs have been injured. There's bleeding and shock. The bleeding has been stopped, and emergency doctors are treating him for shock," Valeriy Boyko told reporters.

Kharkiv was also the scene of clashes on Sunday when football fans marching for a united Ukraine scuffled with pro-Russia supporters. The authorities in Kharkiv said several people were injured.

On Monday morning, gunmen wearing uniforms with no insignias moved into the local administrative building in Kostyantynivka and raised the flag of the self-proclaimed "Donetsk Republic".

They were also reported to be in control of the police station in the town, which is located between the town of Sloviansk and the city of Donetsk, both also controlled by separatists.

'Not personal'

US President Barack Obama confirmed the stepping up of sanctions against Russia, which he said was part of a "calibrated effort" to change Moscow's behaviour in Ukraine, during a visit to the Philippines.

He said the measures were in response to Moscow's failure to uphold an international accord aimed at peacefully resolving the Ukraine crisis.

Barack Obama

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President Obama: "The aim is not to go after Mr Putin personally"

Mr Obama said the sanctions - which will be announced in detail later in Washington - would target individuals and companies, as well as some high-tech exports to Russia. But he acknowledged it was uncertain whether they would have any effect.

He said they were not aimed at Russian President Vladimir Putin personally.

"The goal is to change his calculus with respect to how the current actions that he's engaging in could have an adverse impact on the Russian economy over the long haul," he said.

Meanwhile, ambassadors from the 28 EU member states are meeting in Brussels to agree new sanctions against Russia.

Continue reading the main story

"It is time to tear down the masks: this is not separatism, this is terrorism… Our liberal treatment of the militants and the attempt to portray their activities as separatism amount to aiding the biggest evil of the 21st Century." (Ukrainian news website Obozrevatel)

"The EU's intentions are serious. The capture of the OSCE mission was a direct insult. Sanctions will hit Russia's interests. Russian decision-makers will have to think twice if they are denied access to their bank accounts in Europe." (Popular daily tabloid Segodnya)

"Against the background of the dramatic situation in Sloviansk and other cities... the patriotism of my regional compatriots is not that noticeable. But it is the pro-Ukrainian position of the unarmed majority - despite the weakness or corruption of local security forces - that inspires optimism: we shall overcome!" (Donetsk-based Novosti Donbassa website)

The US and EU already have assets freezes and travel bans in place targeting a number of Russian individuals and firms accused of playing a part in the annexation of Crimea last month.

BBC Europe correspondent Chris Morris says it is expected that the ambassadors will add another 15 people in positions of power to the list of those to whom sanctions apply.

Our correspondent says the White House wants a show of unity from the US and Europe, but there is little consensus within the EU at the moment for implementing broader economic sanctions against Russia.

Eight foreign observers - who were operating under the auspices of the Organization for Security and Co-operation in Europe (OSCE) - were led into Sloviansk town hall by masked gunmen and shown to the media on Sunday.

German monitor Col Axel Schneider, who spoke for the group, stressed they were not Nato officers - contrary to claims made by the separatists - nor armed fighters, but diplomats in uniform.

Later, one of the group - a Swede - was freed for medical reasons.

The fate of five Ukrainian military officers accompanying the mission is unknown.

Are you in Ukraine? How has the unrest affected you? You can email us your experiences at haveyoursay@bbc.co.uk, using the subject line 'Ukraine'.


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'New suspects' in Cyril Smith case

28 April 2014 Last updated at 13:01
Greater Manchester Chief Constable Sir Peter Fahy

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Greater Manchester Chief Constable Sir Peter Fahy: "I'd like to appeal for any victims of abuse to come forward"

Police have identified "a number of suspects" as part of an investigation into alleged sexual abuse at a school linked to the late MP Cyril Smith.

Greater Manchester Police (GMP) added more alleged victims had come forward over claims about Knowl View School in Rochdale from the 1970s.

The allegations related to at least 11 potential suspects.

Rochdale Council said it was launching an inquiry into a possible abuse cover-up at the residential school for boys.

'Victims appeal'

It is understood nine people have contacted police to say they were abused from the 1970s onwards by adults at the school, which closed in 1992.

No-one has been arrested.

GMP Chief Constable Sir Peter Fahy said: "I would like to appeal for victims of abuse to come forward.

"We recognise this is a hugely difficult decision for the people involved, particularly when they involve the events many years ago."

He said officers were also trying to trace a "significant" number of people in relation to the investigation.

In 2012, the force investigated claims Smith abused young boys in the 1960s while in his role as secretary of the Rochdale Hostel for Boys Association.

He had been accused of abusing eight youngsters at Cambridge Hostel in the town by spanking and touching them.

Cyril Smith

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Three separate files were passed to the director of public prosecutions and the Crown Prosecution Service, although on each occasion no prosecution was pursued.

Smith's family has said he always denied such accusations.

GMP has also said it is also carrying out an investigation into whether there is evidence of a criminal cover-up over the abuse allegations.

The claims were published in a book by Rochdale's Labour MP Simon Danczuk called Smile for the Camera: The Double Life of Cyril Smith.

Police, spies and politicians covered up the child abuse carried out by Smith, according to Mr Danczuk's book.

The former Rochdale Liberal Democrat MP was left free to abuse children as young as eight despite 144 complaints by victims, the author claimed.

Sir Peter said: "We are carrying out a review into those allegations and other matters of public debate around that book to see whether that justifies a criminal investigation into allegations of a cover-up."

Smith was MP from 1972 to 1992. He died in 2010 aged 82.


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UKIP man defends Lenny Henry tweet

Written By Unknown on Minggu, 27 April 2014 | 19.12

27 April 2014 Last updated at 11:56

A UKIP candidate has defended tweets in which he said comedian Lenny Henry should emigrate to a "black country" and compared Islam to the Third Reich.

William Henwood, who is standing in a council election, said he did not think the messages were offensive.

He tweeted after Henry said there should be more black and ethnic minority people in creative industries.

UKIP said it was a "non-racist, non-sectarian party whose members are expected to uphold these values".

Mr Henwood told BBC political correspondent Ross Hawkins: "I think if black people come to this country and don't like mixing with white people why are they here? If he (Henry) wants a lot of blacks around go and live in a black country."

'Disgusting'

On another occasion Mr Henwood tweeted: "Islam reminds me of the 3rd Reich Strength through violence against the citizens."

Continue reading the main story

One has to question why the other parties are spending hours behaving like secret police and trawling through the social media of UKIP candidates"

End Quote UKIP spokesman

Mr Henwood, who is standing in next month's local council elections in Enfield, north London, later declined to be interviewed on camera.

Conservative Health Secretary Jeremy Hunt described Mr Henwood's comments about Lenny Henry as "absolutely disgusting".

"I think it is for Nigel Farage to make absolutely clear that that isn't UKIP's official view but also to explain why so many people with those kinds of views seem to be attracted to becoming candidates for UKIP," he told BBC Radio 5 Live's Pienaar's Politics.

Asked if he thought the comments were racist, he said: "Yes I do and that's why I'd like to hear a very clear denunciation from Nigel Farage. I think it's totally unacceptable, and he is as British as you or I are."

UKIP's deputy chairman Neil Hamilton, a former Conservative MP, said Mr Henwood's comments were being investigated by the party but he claimed they were a "complete distraction" from the European election campaign and "every party" had "unknown" activists who "who may have said something unpleasant on social media".

BNP leader Nick Griffin was also asked if he considered Mr Henwood's comments about Lenny Henry to be racist.

'Not racist'

He said the "real racism" was the "bullying by the BBC and by the political elite of ordinary British people, of various parties, who stand up and say what most ordinary people think" that "we are going to be an abused minority in our own homeland".

Roger Helmer, a UKIP MEP for the East Midlands who is standing for re-election, said Mr Henwood's comments did not represent his party and were only being reported because of a campaign against it.

Mr Helmer told the BBC: "We have an individual who has made totally unacceptable comments but you will find individuals like that in all parties, and behaviour like that in all parties.

"I understand why the media and the other parties want to focus on those particular claims about UKIP.

"We will deal with this appropriately when the party has had time to look at the facts and in the meantime we are quite clear that we are not a racist party and we do not accept comments of that kind."

'Duly investigated'

A UKIP spokesman said: "Any breach of our rules will be duly investigated and action will be taken.

"However one has to question why the other parties are spending hours behaving like secret police and trawling through the social media of UKIP candidates who are everyday men and women, rather than actually doing politics.

"Perhaps if they did they would be better able to tackle us on policy, rather than having to rely on smear campaigns to try to undermine UKIP's increasing popularity.

"Were we to return the favour we would find an even greater wealth of embarrassment and disgrace in the other three parties' ranks to also spread across the media."

In the past week UKIP has been attacked by its political opponents for featuring an Irish actor on an election poster about British workers losing out to foreign labour.

And the party has also suspended a council candidate in south London for sharing "repellent" opinions on Twitter.

Builder Andre Lampitt, who featured in a party election broadcast, reportedly tweeted criticism of Islam and Nigerians.

Despite the attacks, a poll for a Sunday paper suggested UKIP was in the lead in the European election contest despite a week of controversies, including criticism of its campaigning and comments by activists.

The party recorded 31% support in the YouGov survey for the Sunday Times, three points ahead of Labour with the Conservatives third on 19%.


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Afghan crash 'a tragic accident'

27 April 2014 Last updated at 12:34

A fatal helicopter crash in Afghanistan which killed all five UK personnel on board appears to have been a "tragic accident", the MoD has said.

An investigation has begun into how the Lynx helicopter came down in the south of the country on Saturday.

Commander Joint Helicopter Command, Maj Gen Richard Felton, said it was a reminder of the risks UK troops still face as they withdraw from Afghanistan.

The prime minister paid tribute to the men, whose families have been told.

Three of the soldiers and an airman were stationed in Hampshire. The fifth, an Army reservist, was based in London.

Continue reading the main story

If the MoD is saying 'it's not been shot down, it's a technical problem', then I certainly believe that"

End Quote Col Richard Kemp Former commander, UK forces

It was the first fatal accident of the Afghan conflict involving a UK military helicopter and the third biggest loss of life of British troops in a single incident in the country since the invasion in 2001.

"Our heartfelt condolences go out to the families at this difficult time," Maj Gen Felton said outside RAF Odiham, in Hampshire, where some of the men were based.

"The investigation into this accident is ongoing but this is not the time now for speculation or comment."

An MoD spokeswoman said that the crash site had been cordoned off.

Speaking on Sky News, Foreign Secretary William Hague said: "This appears to have been a tragic accident," adding it was "a reminder of the work that our troops still do in Afghanistan".

Major General Richard Felton

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Maj Gen Richard Felton: "Our heartfelt condolences go out to the families"

Despite Taliban claims its fighters had shot the aircraft down, BBC defence correspondent Caroline Wyatt said sources had suggested the cause of the crash may have been "technical problems".

She said the crash site - close to the border with Pakistan - had also led to speculation that the helicopter could have been taking part in a special forces mission.

A former commander of British forces in Afghanistan, Col Richard Kemp, said: "The Taliban are masters of propaganda - they claim huge numbers of things that haven't actually happened.

"Of course it's a feather in their hat if they've managed to shoot down a British helicopter but if the MoD is saying, 'it's not been shot down, it's a technical problem,' then I certainly believe that."

Speaking to BBC Radio 5 live earlier he said retrieving the wreckage and ensuring the men's bodies could be repatriated would be a hazardous operation.

"This is a territory the Taliban operate in fairly extensively so it will require a large number of troops and they themselves will be at considerable risk."

David Cameron said the incident "brings home to us all once again how our armed forces continue to put their lives on the line to help the people of Afghanistan.

"I cannot pay high enough tribute to each and every one of them for the job that they do and the sacrifices that they make."

Labour leader Ed Miliband said it was a "tragic and poignant reminder of the sacrifices made by our armed forces in serving our country with bravery and distinction".

The deaths bring the number of British forces killed in the conflict in Afghanistan to 453.

'Exceptional record'

The Westland Lynx Mk 9 is used in Afghanistan for reconnaissance, evacuating casualties and moving UK troops.

Defence analyst Paul Beaver said the aircraft had an "exceptional record".

MOD handout shot of a Lynx helicopter

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Preliminary results of the crash investigation will probably be announced very soon, according to defence analyst Paul Beaver

"If enemy action is not suspected, which is what the MoD is saying, then you have to look at whether this might well be weather-related," Mr Beaver told the BBC.

Earlier he told BBC Breakfast he did not envisage other Lynx helicopters being grounded "because that notice would have gone out already".

The MoD said it did not know how long it would take investigators to report back on what happened.

Three of the soldiers on board the helicopter were from the Army Air Corps, based at RAF Odiham.

A fourth member of the crew was serving with the Royal Air Force and was also based at Odiham, while the fifth man was an Army reservist from 3 Military Intelligence Battalion, in London.

Their names have not yet been released.


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Ukraine gunmen show seized observers

27 April 2014 Last updated at 13:07

Pro-Russian gunmen in eastern Ukraine have shown seized European military observers to the media, amid attempts to secure their immediate release.

One of the observers presented in the city of Sloviansk said that none of the group had been harmed.

A team from the Organisation for Security and Co-operation is hoping to begin negotiations with the militia.

The gunmen continue to occupy official buildings in a dozen eastern cities, defying the government in Kiev.

In a separate development on Sunday, pro-Russian gunmen said they had captured three Ukrainian security services members overnight in eastern Ukraine. Kiev later confirmed a number of its officers had been seized.

This comes as the US and EU are preparing new sanctions against Russia, accusing it of destabilising Ukraine.

US President Barack Obama said the Kremlin had "not lifted a finger" to implement last week's deal in Geneva aimed at easing the crisis.

EU diplomats are expected to meet on Monday to discuss fresh sanctions against Russia.

The Kremlin denies supporting the militia in eastern Ukraine.

'Guests'

The observers from Germany, Denmark, Poland, Sweden and the Czech Republic were presented to reporters in Sloviansk on Sunday.

The monitors - who were captured in the flashpoint town on Friday - were led into the building by masked gunmen.

"All the European officers are in good health and no-one is sick," said German monitor Axel Schneider, according to Reuters.

"We have no indication when we will be sent home to our countries."

The observers were also quoted as saying they were "guests, not prisoners of war".

Earlier in the day, an OSCE source told the BBC that the group's negotiating team had been sent to Sloviansk to try to secure the release of the monitors.

The source declined to say how many negotiators were heading to the flashpoint eastern town.

Meanwhile, Sloviansk's self-declared mayor Vyacheslav Ponomaryov said there was the possibility of exchanging the monitors for militia members held by the Kiev government.

"It's the fundamental option," he told Reuters.

Russia, an OSCE member, earlier pledged that it would "take all possible steps" to secure the release of the observers.

Meanwhile, Kiev accused the militia of using the Europeans as a "human shield".

The West is accusing Moscow of leading a secessionist revolt in eastern Ukraine after it annexed Crimea last month. Moscow denies the claim.

Russian Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov said Ukraine must end military operations in the east of the country as part of urgent measures to defuse the crisis.

Ukrainian troops have carried out a number of raids to try to regain control of official buildings.

The crisis began when protesters toppled pro-Russian President Viktor Yanukovych in February and has since plunged East-West relations to their lowest point since the Cold War.

Russia has tens of thousands of troops deployed along its side of the border with Ukraine and has said it will act if its interests are threatened.

On Saturday, the G7 praised Ukraine for acting with restraint in dealing with the "armed bands" that had occupied government buildings.

But the group, which comprises the US, UK, Germany, Japan, France, Canada and Italy, condemned Russia's "increasingly concerning rhetoric and ongoing threatening military manoeuvres."

The G7 said it was committed to intensifying sanctions on Russia, ahead of Ukrainian presidential elections next month.

The US and EU already have asset freezes and travel bans in place targeting a number of Russian individuals and firms accused of playing a part in the annexation of Crimea.


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Britain is now 'post-Christian'

27 April 2014 Last updated at 08:54

Britain is now a "post-Christian" country, the former Archbishop of Canterbury has said.

Speaking to the Sunday Telegraph, Rowan Williams said Britain was not a nation of believers and that the era of widespread worship was over.

It comes after Prime Minister David Cameron said people in Britain should be confident of its status as "a Christian country".

Deputy PM Nick Clegg said the Church and state should be separated.

Writing in the Church Times, Mr Cameron said Christians made a difference to people's lives and should be more evangelical about it.

This prompted a group of 50 public figures to write a letter insisting that the UK was "a non-religious" and "plural" society and that to claim otherwise fostered "alienation and division".

'Committed believers'

Lord Williams, who retired from being the leader of the Church of England in 2012, said: "If I say that this is a post-Christian nation, that doesn't mean necessarily non-Christian. It means the cultural memory is still quite strongly Christian."

He added: "But [Britain is] post-Christian in the sense that habitual practice for most of the population is not taken for granted."

"A Christian nation can sound like a nation of committed believers and we are not that. Equally, we are not a nation of dedicated secularists.

"It's a matter of defining terms. A Christian country as a nation of believers? No.

"A Christian country in the sense of still being very much saturated by this vision of the world and shaped by it? Yes."

The current Archbishop of Canterbury, the Most Rev Justin Welby, has supported Mr Cameron.

On his blog he wrote it was a "historical fact (perhaps unwelcome to some, but true)" that UK law, ethics and culture were based on its teachings and traditions.


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Vatican declares two popes saints

27 April 2014 Last updated at 13:09
 Pope Francis leads the canonisation mass

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Pope Francis declares John Paul II and John XXIII as new saints

Pope Francis has declared Popes John Paul II and John XXIII saints, in front of a crowd of hundreds of thousands.

He praised his two predecessors as "men of courage" at the Vatican service, the first time in history that two popes have been canonised at the same time.

The Mass was attended by Pope Emeritus Benedict, who quit as pope last year, and roughly 100 foreign delegations.

Analysts say Francis is trying to balance the conservative legacy of John Paul with the reforming zeal of John.

Continue reading the main story

Analysis

The ancient rite of canonisation unfolded under grey skies in a packed St Peter's Square. In keeping with tradition, Pope Francis, was approached and requested to add his two predecessors to the long list of Catholic saints. And at the third time of asking, he granted that request.

Then ornate, silver containers holding holy relics of new saints were shown: a trace of blood from John Paul II, and sliver of skin taken from the body of John XXlll. Both men were hugely influential figures in the story of modern Catholicism.

The Italian Pontiff, John XXlll, is seen very much as a liberal, reforming figure. The Polish Pope, John Paul, on the other hand, was much more conservative. And their elevation to the sainthood on the same day is being seen as an attempt to draw together the liberal and the more traditional wings of the Church.

At the climax of the service, Pope Francis said in Latin: "We declare and define Blessed John XXIII and John Paul II to be saints and we enrol them among the saints, decreeing that they are to be venerated as such by the whole Church."

Relics of each man - a container of blood from John Paul and a piece of skin from John - were placed near the altar.

Pope Francis paid tribute to the two new saints as "priests, bishops and popes of the 20th Century".

"They lived through the tragic events of that century, but they were not overwhelmed by them. For them, God was more powerful," he said.

The Vatican estimated some 800,000 pilgrims had poured into Rome to see the two-hour ceremony first-hand.

For those unable to make it into St Peter's Square, giant screens were set up in nearby streets and elsewhere in the city.

"Four popes in one ceremony is a fantastic thing to see and to be at, because it is history being written in our sight," said Polish pilgrim Dawid Halfar.

The Vatican confirmed on Saturday that 87-year-old Benedict XVI - now officially titled Pope Emeritus - would make a rare public appearance alongside his successor.

Continue reading the main story

"Start Quote

"We've been counting down the days. This is a once-in-a-lifetime experience"

End Quote Polish pilgrim in Rome

Benedict XVI became the first pope to resign for 600 years when he quit for health reasons a year ago.

Papal politics

The process of saint-making is usually long and very costly.

St Peters Square

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The BBC's Robert Pigott in the crowd: "This has been a majestic, a solemn and a moving ceremony"

Cormac Murphy-O'Connor

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Cormac Murphy-O'Connor talks about Pope John XXIII and Pope John Paul II

But John Paul II, whose 26-year reign ended in 2005, has been fast-tracked to sainthood in just nine years.

Many among the huge crowds that gathered as he lay dying cried out "santo subito", which means "sainthood now".

By contrast Italian-born John XXIII, known as the Good Pope after his 1958-63 papacy, had his promotion to full sainthood decided suddenly and very recently by Pope Francis.

The BBC's David Willey in Rome says there was a political dimension to this.

By canonising both John XXIII - the pope who set off the reform movement - and John Paul II - the pope who applied the brakes - Francis has skilfully deflected any possible criticism that he could be taking sides.

Are you in Rome? Are you attending the ceremony? Tell us what is happening by emailing haveyoursay@bbc.co.uk with the subject heading 'Rome'. Or send your photos to yourpics@bbc.co.uk.

Send your pictures and videos to yourpics@bbc.co.uk or text them to 61124 (UK) or +44 7624 800 100 (International). If you have a large file you can upload here.

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G7 'to intensify Russia sanctions'

Written By Unknown on Sabtu, 26 April 2014 | 19.12

26 April 2014 Last updated at 10:25
Soldiers at Ukrainian army blockade

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Natalia Antelava in Donetsk says she saw evidence that some armed men in Sloviansk were from Russia

The G7 group of economic powers has agreed to intensify sanctions on Russia over its actions in Ukraine.

A G7 statement gave no detail of the sanctions, but US officials said they could announce measures by Monday.

The West accuses Russia of leading a secession rebellion in Ukraine's east, months after it annexed Crimea. Moscow denies the allegations.

Meanwhile, negotiators are trying to secure the release of international observers seized by pro-Russia gunmen.

Forces in the city of Sloviansk are still holding the eight European military observers and several Ukrainian army personnel who they seized on Friday and accuse of espionage.

The observers were taking part in a mission linked to the Organisation for Security and Co-operation in Europe (OSCE).

Jets 'violated air space'

Rebel militia continue to occupy official buildings in a dozen eastern cities, defying the government in Kiev.

Continue reading the main story

Analysis

It's all reminiscent of a game of poker, with Moscow intent on raising the stakes and G7 leaders forced to match the Russians step-for-step.

The G7 statement is unequivocal - it blames Russia for failing to implement the Geneva accord that offered a diplomatic path out of this crisis. Accordingly, Moscow has now been hit with more Western economic sanctions, the details to be revealed in a matter of days. The G7 is still holding in reserve broader sanctions against the Russian banking or financial sectors. That would be a last-ditch threat to try to avert further military action against Ukraine.

But with Russian aircraft flying into Ukrainian air-space and Russian ground exercises under way there is an ever present danger of this crisis escalating out of control. Moscow will now be weighing up the likely cost of sanctions, set against the central importance of its strategic interests in Ukraine.

Russia has tens of thousands of troops deployed along its side of the border with Ukraine and has said it would act if its interests were threatened.

The US accused Russian jets of violating Ukraine's airspace on Friday in a further sign of escalation.

Pentagon spokesman Col Steven Warren said Russian aircraft had entered Ukrainian airspace several times in the past 24 hours.

Meanwhile, the G7 praised Ukraine for acting with restraint in dealing with the "armed bands" that had occupied government buildings.

But the group, which includes the US, UK, Germany, Japan, France, Canada and Italy, condemned Russia's "increasingly concerning rhetoric and ongoing threatening military manoeuvres".

"Given the urgency of securing the opportunity for a successful and peaceful democratic vote next month in Ukraine's presidential elections, we have committed to act urgently to intensify targeted sanctions and measures to increase the costs of Russia's actions," said the statement.

The US and EU already has assets freezes and travel bans in place target a number of Russian individuals and firms accused of playing a part in the annexation of Crimea.

Pro-Russian militia

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Russia has denied involvement in the seizures of official buildings by pro-Russians in eastern Ukraine

Maps 'showed checkpoints'

On Friday, Ukraine's interior ministry said armed separatists had seized OSCE representatives, who were believed to be military observers from Germany, Denmark, Poland, Sweden and the Czech Republic.

Continue reading the main story

Crisis timeline

  • Nov 2013: President Viktor Yanukovych abandons an EU deal, sparking protests
  • 20-21 Feb 2014: Dozens killed in Kiev clashes
  • 22 Feb: Mr Yanukovych flees
  • 27-28 Feb: Pro-Russian gunmen seize key buildings in Crimea
  • 16 Mar: Crimea voters choose to secede in disputed referendum; Russia later absorbs region
  • Apr: Pro-Russia activists take over official buildings and police stations in eastern Ukraine

Pro-Russian leaders in Sloviansk confirmed the bus had been stopped near the town of Sloviansk and said they were checking the identities of those on board.

The self-proclaimed mayor of Sloviansk, Vyacheslav Ponomaryov, said at least one passenger had been carrying maps showing separatist checkpoints in the area, which suggested "their involvement in espionage".

Last weekend, Mr Ponomaryov broadcast an appeal to President Putin asking for Russian troops to protect the city from "fascists" after three of his men died in a gunfight.

Russia's OSCE envoy Andrei Kelin promised to take "all possible steps" to free the representatives, according to Russian media reports .


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Lib Dems 'face questions' over Smith

26 April 2014 Last updated at 12:26

Liberal Democrat president Tim Farron says his party needs to answer "serious questions" about who knew that its former MP, Sir Cyril Smith, faced allegations of sexual assault.

Police are investigating allegations that the former MP for Rochdale, who died in 2010 aged 82, sexually abused boys at homes and hostels in the town.

Mr Farron said the police inquiry was the best way to deal with the claims.

The Crown Prosecution Service has said Sir Cyril should have been prosecuted.

Legal action

It was alleged he raped boys at Knowl View residential school, which closed in 1992, and abused boys at the privately run Cambridge House children's care home, which closed in 1965.

He had a long association with Knowl View where he was on the management board when he was a councillor.

Sir Cyril was originally a Labour councillor in Rochdale, and later a Liberal then Liberal Democrat MP for the town from 1972 to 1992.

Mr Farron said: "The party absolutely, as the Labour Party must also... and indeed Rochdale civic society as a whole need to answer serious questions as to who knew what and when."

Last year, Lib Dem leader Nick Clegg described the allegations against Sir Cyril as shocking and appalling, and said they must be investigated "to the bitter end".

Lawyers for those who have made allegations of abuse said they were considering taking legal action against the Lib Dems.

New book

Sir Cyril's family have said he always denied such accusations made against him when he was alive and they were saddened that allegations were now being made when he could no longer defend himself.

Allegations against Sir Cyril have been made in a new book by the current Labour MP for Rochdale, Simon Danczuk.

He claimed Sir Cyril used his position of power to sexually abuse young boys and then escape prosecution.

Mr Danczuk said previously he asked police to re-examine the case after "a number of victims came to see me and raise concerns".

Mr Danczuk claimed in 2012 there was "little doubt" that Sir Cyril raped some of his victims.

Speaking to BBC News on Saturday, Mr Danczuk said: "This isn't about party politics - it doesn't matter whether Cyril Smith belonged to any particular party."

He added: "We need to get to the bottom of why and how he managed to get away with that and who was involved in the wider cover-up."

The Smith family said it would continue to co-operate with any further investigations.

Allegations about Sir Cyril's conduct were first published in 1979.

An independent review into the way Knowl View was run is due to report to Rochdale Council next month.


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