In Today's Papers

Wednesday 8 June 2005

Posted: 08 June 2005 | Subscribe Online


By Mithran Samuel, Clare Jerrom and Amy Taylor

Ministers booed by pensioners

Delegates at the National Pensioners Convention booed and slow hand-clapped the pensions minister Stephen Timms when he addressed the conference in Blackpool yesterday.

The NPC had published research suggesting one in five older people lived below the poverty line.

Source:- The Times  Wednesday 8 June page 2

Fathers 4 Justice split by infighting

Fathers 4 Justice has imploded following infighting, according to two of the organisation’s best known figures.

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David Pyke and Jason Hatch who scaled Buckingham palace dressed as Batman and Robin said that the campaign group had “fallen apart at the seams” four months ago.

Source:- The Times  Wednesday 8 June page 5

Dog fostering

Women fleeing domestic violence can now place their family dog with The Freedom project – a free animal fostering service. It was set up by the Dogs Trust in response to concerns from women that they were frightened to leave the dog behind when fleeing domestic violence in case it was hurt.

Source:- The Times  Wednesday 8 June page 29

Report to attack Labour anti-terror laws

The European human rights watchdog will criticise the government’s record on asylum and anti-social behaviour in a report out today.

Council of Europe human rights commissioner Alvaro Gil-Robles will also criticise the impact on race relations of the government’s anti-terror stance.

Source:- The Guardian Wednesday 8 June page 6

Europe steps up pressure to outlaw smacking

The government will come under renewed pressure to ban smacking today from the body responsible for human rights across Europe.

The Council of Europe will rule that children in Belgium, Greece and Ireland lack adequate protection from assault.

All three countries have similar regimes to Britain, giving parents a defence of “reasonable chastisement” for corporal punishment.

Source:- The Guardian Wednesday 8 June page 6

Asbo is unleashed as the new Fido

The anti-social behaviour order has made further inroads on the cultural landscape by becoming a dog’s name.

Poet Ian Killen caught an owner calling their Staffordshire bull terrier with the cry “Asbo! Here Asbo!” in a park in Hull.

Killen has been collecting dogs’ names to put on a tea towel commemorating the Hull literature festival. Unfortunately he could find no canine answering to “Hoodie”.

Source:- The Guardian Wednesday 8 June page 6

Baby’s body found in freezer

A baby’s body lay undiscovered for 18 months in a care home where his teenage mother worked, an inquest heard yesterday.
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Joshua Barrett was discovered in February 2004, 18 months after his mother Louise, then 17, had given birth to him in a flat above Town Moor care home.

A post-mortem failed to record the cause of death and Doncaster coroner Stanley Hooper recorded an open verdict.

Source:- The Guardian Wednesday 8 June page 10

Body politics

Ten years on and the Disability Discrimination Act is still being implemented. But campaigners remain sceptical.

Source:- SocietyGuardian  Wednesday 8 June page 2

Fighting back

Domestic abuse represents up to a quarter of violent crime in UK cities. Tina Orr Munro visits the Women’s Safety unit in Cardiff where securing more convictions is key to tackling the problem.

Source:- SocietyGuardian Wednesday 8 June page 10

What else can I do?

Angela, a senior planning officer in the Midlands, will profit from her profession’s shortage when she moves to the south-east.

Source:- SocietyGuardian Wednesday 8 June page 120

Welsh news

Youth centre set for go ahead

Councillors are set to recommend for a youth centre to be built on playing fields in Acton.

They will shortly make the case for the centre to the council’s executive board. Residents that live near the Rhosnesni playing fields were initially opposed to the idea but the councillors said that they had now warmed to it.

Source:- The Wrexham Leader Wednesday 8 June

I can’t believe our dad tried to kill us’

A Swansea family whose dad tried to kill them by setting fire to the family home have spoken out publicly for the first time.

Ruby Sidhu and six of her children had to jump out of a first floor window of their home in Bonymaen to escape the fire.

It had been started by Sidhu’s estranged husband Lal Singh Sidhu. He was found dead the next day after allegedly setting fire to himself.

Source:-ThisisSouthWales Wednesday 8 June

 



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