In Today's Papers

Monday 16 February 2004

Posted: 16 February 2004 | Subscribe Online


By Natasha Salari, Amy Taylor, Clare Jerrom, and Alex Dobson.

Patient, 94, froze to death
An elderly woman froze to death after being left on a ledge near an open window for the night, it was revealed.
The incident happened when Maud Lever, aged 94, from Mill Hill, North London, spent some time at Kestral Grove home, in Bushey, Hertfordshire, to give her 75-year-old daughter a rest.
It costs £740 a week to stay at the home.
The Hatfield coroner recorded a verdict of death due to neglect at an inquest this month.

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Source:- The Guardian Saturday 14 February page 12
We are scapegoats says boss in cockle deaths investigation
A shellfish dealer who has been arrested on suspicion of manslaughter in connection with the deaths of the 19 Chinese cocklers who drowned at Morecombe Bay, claims he is being made a "scapegoat".
David Eden said both he and his father, who has also been questioned by police, were being made to take the blame for failings by the police and the government.
Eden said he had reported alleged violence against the Chinese by other cocklers to the police. but nothing had been done to protect them.
Source:- The Daily Telegraph Saturday 14 February page 6
Drummer is sentenced for sex assault
The former drummer of a rock band received a jail sentence of eight years yesterday for attempting to rape a teenage boy with learning difficulties who he gave drumming lessons.
David Holland, aged 55, who was the drummer with Judas Priest, was convicted of attempted rape and five charges of indecent assault on the 17-year-old, last month at Northampton crown court.
Source:- The Daily Telegraph Saturday 14 February page 13
Charity alert as conmen try new cheque fraud
The Charity Commission has issued a nationwide alert warning charities to beware of Nigerian conmen trying to trick them out of thousands of pounds.
The warning comes after a British charity that helps orphans in Bangladesh was targeted.
The scam involves a charity being approached by a "donor" who offers to make a large donation by cheque. The charity is later asked to repay half due to an "administrative error by the donor".
The charity involved did not lose any money as its founder decided not to send any money until the cheque had cleared. The cheque never cleared having been drawn on an account that had been closed.
Source:- The Times Saturday 14 February page 13
Cabinet chaos over curbs on new Europeans
Downing Street has guaranteed ministers that there will be no change in current policies that allow all EU citizens unrestricted access to the UK labour market when 10 new states join the EU on 1 May.
The policy is a partial u-turn with the prime minster stating that the government was looking at ways of restricting rights to work and claim benefits for immigrants from such states.
Source:- The Times Saturday 14 February page 1
UK gangmasters control 100,000 'slave' labourers
Tony Thompson reveals the scale of violent exploitation behind Britain's flourishing black economy
Source:- The Observer Sunday 15 February, page 4
Blair warned over migrant xenophobia
Fears of cheap labour from Eastern Europe flooding Britain's job market, are unfounded, a former government adviser said yesterday.
Nick Pearce, who is now director of the think-tank the Institute for Public Policy Research, made the comment in the midst of confusion over the government's policy when 10 new countries join the EU on 1 May.
He said the move would actually mean that the levels of cheap labour from the countries would fall in the long term, and warned Downing Street not to follow xenophobic arguments about the feared influx of eastern European immigrants.
Source:- The Observer Sunday 15 February page 13
Lunch-hour Aids test launched to combat soaring numbers
'Lunch-hour' HIV tests that will take an hour are being launched to tackle the increasing levels of sexually transmitted diseases.
The tests will be available on the high street in an attempt to stop people from unknowingly spreading the infection.
There was a 20 per cent increase in the number of people diagnosed with HIV in 2003, according to figures released last week.
Source:- The Observer Sunday 15 February page 15
Psychiatric use of force 'is racist'
The government's mental health tsar has said that male mental health patients from ethnic minorities are the group most likely to suffer an unnecessary use of force by psychiatric staff
Professor Louis Appleby criticised the heavy-handed treatment of some black mental health patients, which has led to a number of deaths.
His comments come in the wake of the publication of a highly critical report into the death of David "Rocky" Bennett, 38, a black mental health patient who was pinned to the floor for 25 minutes.
Source:- The Independent on Sunday 15 February page 10
New link between lead levels and schizophrenia
A high exposure to lead as a baby in the womb makes people more likely to develop schizophrenia in adulthood, according to new research by American scientists.
The study looked at blood samples taken from pregnant American women in the 1960s. It found that the babies of those who had a high level of lead in their blood were at a higher risk of becoming schizophrenic.
Source:- The Sunday Telegraph 15 February page 9
Police refuse to prosecute euthanasia doctor over death of farmer
Legal action against a retired GP who expected to face the first test case in which he would challenge the law against assisted suicide and voluntary euthanasia, has been dropped.
Dr Michael Irwin, the former chairperson of the Voluntary Euthanasia Society, had previously faced a 14-year jail sentence after admitting to police that he had conspired to help a terminally ill man to commit suicide.
The Attorney General's office and the police on the Isle of Man have refused to explain why they are no longer attempting to prosecute Irwin.
Source:- The Sunday Telegraph 15 February page 8
'I am a human being. You need to ask me what I want. No one can know what quality of life I enjoy apart from me'
Leslie Burke is taking the medical establishment to court to challenge guidelines that may one day let doctors end his life.
Source:- The Sunday Telegraph 15 February page 15
'I heard that Britain is the best place for us to go now. It doesn't treat refugees like animals'
Passions are running high in Holland as it prepares to expel 26,000 immigrants. But should the UK be following its example?
Source:- The Sunday Telegraph 15 February page 18
Cambridge's solution to its homeless crisis…give them a one-way ticket to Peterborough
Cambridge Council has been forced to defend its policy of giving homeless people free one way train tickets to nearby cities to clear them from the streets.
The policy came to light after officials in Peterborough and Norwich noticed an increase in the number of homeless people coming from Cambridge with one way rail tickets.
Source:- The Mail on Sunday 15 February page 47
Howard talks tough on asylum seekers
Michael Howard, leader of the Conservative party, has outlined a "tough" Tory immigration policy removing benefits from more "bogus" asylum seekers.
He said the money saved would be used to fund an extra 5,000 police officers a year.
Source:- The Financial Times Monday 16 February page 4
NHS staff with HIV to remain anonymous
NHS guidelines stating that patients must not be told they are being treated by HIV-carrying workers, are to be introduced.
The risk of patients being infected by HIV this way are regarded as small.
The guidelines are the first time that the practice of anonymity has been nationally codified.
Source:- The Guardian Monday 16 February page 9
Drive to get single parents into work has little success
An initiative to increase single parents likelihood of gaining employment has had little effect, according to new research.
Single parents have been forced to attend a job opportunities interview before getting benefits by the government since 1999.
The four-year research programme looked at the number of single parents making new benefits claims, and those already claiming benefit when the interviews became compulsory.
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It found that there was no change in the number of new claimants giving up benefit because of the interview. It also discovered that there was only a one per cent increase in the level of those already claiming who got off benefits and into work after a period of between nine to 12 months.
Source:- The Daily Telegraph Monday 16 February page 9
Council tax reform for poorer people
Council tax rebates for the poorest households will take place automatically under local government finance reforms later this year in an effort to tackle under claiming of the benefit.
The take-up of council tax benefit is as low as 30 per cent in some groups, such as older people.
Around 1.7 million people who are entitled to the benefit failed to claim it back last year.
Source:- The Times Monday, 16 February page 2
Scottish newspapers
Paedophiles to face jail for sex grooming

Paedophiles who use the internet to groom children in Scotland will face up to five years’ imprisonment under a tough new law to be pushed through parliament.
The measure is being fast-tracked by justice minister Cathy Jamieson in a bid to defuse growing public concern about the safety of the internet for children.
Source:- Scotland on Sunday 15 February
Roadside drug tests ‘could be flawed’ say researchers
The only method of catching people driving under the influence of drugs could be flawed, according to research.
Research in Glasgow has cast doubt on the mental and physical tasks that police have been using during roadside tests in the last three years.
Source:- Scotland on Sunday 15 February
Number of crack addicts rises to record level
A record number of Scots have been registered for treatment for cocaine or crack addiction, according to statistics.
Figures from the Scottish executive show that in the past year, the number needing treatment for addiction has increased by almost 50 per cent and last year broke the 1,000 barrier for the first time ever.
Source:- Scotland on Sunday 15 February
Exposed: ‘hypocrisy’ over Chancers axe
The Airborne Initiative for young offenders which featured in the television series ‘Chancers’, received a glowing Scottish executive report just eight months before the unit was shut down.
Deputy justice minister Hugh Henry announced last week that the controversial rehabilitation unit for persistent young offenders would no longer receive £600,000 a year funding from the executive, because it was too expensive and failing to meet targets.
However, it has emerged that in June last year, the justice department praised the initiative’s “important achievements” and told the projects retiring chairperson Alan Rutherford “the organisation has made significant progress and you leave it in good shape”.
The former chief inspector of prisons Clive Fairweather has branded the decision to close the Airborne Initiative “political hypocrisy…stupid and short-sighted”.
Source:- Sunday Herald 15 February
£1bn hangover of Scotland’s drink problem
Scotland’s leading alcohol experts have warned that government statistics on drinking levels are “plain wrong”, and said the true impact of alcohol consumption is far higher.
Alcohol-related deaths in Scotland have more than doubled in the past 15 years, and the Scottish executive believes that more than one million hazardous drinkers cost the economy around £1 billion a year.
However, the executive’s claim that alcohol consumption has remained stable for two decades has been rejected by health professionals, who claim poor data and an increase in smuggling have masked a sharp increase which isn’t showing up in official figures.
They also highlight a worrying rise in drinking by teenagers and young women.
Source:- The Scotsman Monday 16 February
Father set to fight council over care of daughter abroad
A father of a disabled daughter is considering taking legal action against his local authority after being told that her specialist treatment in Hungary will no longer be funded because she is no longer Scottish.
Victoria Shovlin, who has cerebral palsy, was sent to the Peto Institute aged nine because her local council agreed it did not have the facilities available to offer her the specialised treatment she required.
However, now she has turned 18, Fife Council claims it is no longer its responsibility to fund her education and provide living costs while she remains in Hungary.
Source:- The Scotsman Monday 16 February
Kirk orders ministers to confess any sex crimes
Church of Scotland ministers and elders are to be asked to confess any sex crimes in a bid to protect children.
All 1,200 Church of Scotland clergy and senior lay members have been written to, ordering them to detail any sex offences including spent convictions and unproven charges.
It is the first time the Kirk has approved a direct search for sex offenders among the clergy.
Source:- The Scotsman Monday 16 February
Faulty wiring may have caused care home fire
Faulty wiring may have caused the fire at a nursing home last month that claimed the lives of 14 older residents.
Detectives have claimed that the investigation into the fire at Rosepark Care Home in Uddingston, Lanarkshire, had already revealed a bare stretch of wiring which may have been responsible for the blaze.
Source:- The Scotsman Monday 16 February
Residents in another care home fire alert
A late night fire at a care home just a few miles from where a blaze took the lives of 14 older people last month forced staff to evacuate older residents over the weekend.
No-one was injured as a result of the fire at Abbey lodge care home, east Kilbride, but 15 residents were evacuated from their rooms and taken to a safe area within the building.
Source:- The Herald Monday 16 February
Civil servants in walkout over low pay
Up to 85,000 Jobcentre and benefit office workers at the department for work and pensions in Scotland, England and Wales will take part in a 48-hour strike today following the collapse of peace talks aimed at resolving a long-running pay dispute.
The Public and Commercial Service Union said thousands of offices dealing with job seekers, pensions and child support agency cases will be disrupted.
Source:- The Scotsman Monday 16 February
Hospital death inquiry
Two members of staff at a psychiatric hospital in Glasgow have been suspended after a teenage patient under 24-hour suicide watch was found dead.
Two medical personnel at Mackinnon House have been told to stay away from the unit until the results of an internal inquiry into the death of the 18-year-old man nine days ago are known.
Source:- The Scotsman Monday 16 February
Welsh newspapers
Speed camera plea by Welsh parents
Police forces in Wales are being inundated with hundreds of requests for speed cameras by worried parents.
Speeding traffic outside schools and children’s play areas is a major cause of concern in many communities across the principality.
Source:- Western Mail Monday 16 February page 1
Babies at risk in midwife shortfall
Babies’ lives are being put at risk by the shortage of midwives in the NHS.
A new report reveals that almost three-quarters of problems during what were described as “adverse events” in childbirth. occurred when there were not enough midwives present.
The study is the second part of a report by Brenda Ashcroft, a lecturer in midwifery at the University of Salford. The first part of the report was published last year in the British Medical Journal.
Source:- Western Mail Monday 16 February page 6



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