In Today's Papers

Wednesday 24 August 2005

Posted: 24 August 2005 | Subscribe Online


Asbo threat to man who races tides

A marathon runner who trains by racing the tide at an estuary could receive an anti-social behaviour due to sparking a number of calls to emergency services.

A number of passers by have become worried by Karl Fursey’s running at the Duddon Estuary, Cumbria. 

The local councillor, Frank McPhillips, said that an Anti-social behaviour order might be the only way to stop him. Fursey said he was fed up with people becoming concerned when he was fine.

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Source:- The Daily Telegraph, 24 August, Wednesday

No frills’ banking still fails the poor

Basic ‘no frills’ bank accounts are still failing to tackle financial exclusion among the poorest more than five years after their introduction, according to research from the National Consumer Council.

Source:- The Financial Times, Wednesday 24 August 2005, page 4

Probe on drowning

Gwynedd county council is to launch an inquiry into how a 12-year-old girl in care drowned on a day out with her foster family. A strong tide swept away Sarah Roberts after she swam from a beach which has no lifeguards.

Source:- The Daily Mirror, Wednesday 24 August 2005, page 8

Tot’s death ‘avoidable’

The death of a toddler who drowned in the bath could have been prevented, says a child protection committee report. Alcoholic childminder Wendy Barlow, 37, of Clithroe, Lancs, was jailed for the manslaughter of 19-month-old Joshua Massey-Hodgkinson. The CPC report said Ofsted should have refused her a licence as she confessed to drinking binges.

Source:- The Daily Mirror, Wednesday 24 August 2005, page 11

Anthony: two in court

Two men are charged with the axe murder of teenager Anthony Walker appeared in court via video link yesterday. Michael Barton, 17, and Paul Taylor, 20, spoke to confirm their names at Liverpool crown court.

Source:- The Daily Mirror, Wednesday 24 August 2005, page 12

Hunt is on for killer of Rory, 11

Schoolboy Rory Blackhall was murdered, police revealed yesterday. They have not ruled out the possibility that Rory, 11, was abducted or suffered a sex attack before being killed. His body was found three days after he vanished in West Lothian.

Source:- The Daily Mirror, Wednesday 24 August 2005, page 1

Gipsy ‘invasion’ to close school

A village school “taken over” by gypsies is facing closure. Every one of its 40 pupils is from a travellers’ family. Locals appalled by the “invasion” have moved their children to other schools. And education chiefs said the future of Braybrooke primary in Northamptonshire is being reviewed because of the “serious problem.” County council leader Jim Harker said he would not rule out closure so the gipsy pupils could be scattered fairly among other schools in the district.

Source:- The Daily Mirror, Wednesday 24 August 2005, page 11
 
Half of boys are unable to write properly at 11

Almost half of boys are unable to write properly when they leave primary school, the government revealed yesterday. Despite Labour’s flagship literacy hour to improve standards, rising numbers are struggling to spell, use basic punctuation and write legibly by eleven.

Source:- The Daily Mirror, Wednesday 24 August 2005, page 17
 
Tories want inquiry into ‘child snatching’

Tory MPs last night demanded a Commons inquiry into the adoption system. The call came from the three Conservatives on the education committee in the wake of allegations that children are being unfairly removed from loving families. Rob Wilson and his two party colleagues spoke out after the Daily Mail highlighted claims that social workers have taken away children deemed ‘not clever enough’ to raise them.

Source:- The Daily Mirror, Wednesday 24 August 2005, page 18
 
Asylum claims fall but deportation still a problem

The government looks set to miss a much-trumpeted target for removing failed asylum seekers, despite a sharp fall in the numbers claiming refuge in Britain. Asylum applications have dropped by 21 per cent over the past year to just over 2,000 a month and have fallen by three-quarters since their peak in 2002. But the fall was tarnished by the admission that only about 1,000 failed asylum-seekers were being deported a month, slightly below the figure a year ago.

Source:- The Independent, Wednesday 24 August 2005, page 6
 
Tearful father of Piano Man baffled by son’s behaviour

The story of the mysterious “Piano Man” moved from a Kent psychiatric hospital yesterday to a remote Bavarian farmhouse. Andreas Guest, 20, whose four-month silence in a British hospital spawned elaborate theories of a troubled musical genius, took refuge in his family home as the reality of his life story began to emerge.

Source:- The Independent, Wednesday 24 August 2005, page 7
 
Wealth gap between rich and poor has widened since 1997

The gap between rich and poor has widened under Labour, new figures revealed last night. A report by the government’s own statisticians shows the difference in disposable income between the richest and poorest has grown by £91 a week since the mid-1990s.

Source:- The Independent, Wednesday 24 August 2005, page 7
 
Disabled woman sets solo sailing record

Hilary Lister yesterday sipped and puffed her way into the record books, becoming the first quadriplegic to sail solo across the English Channel. Lister, who is able to move only her head, eyes and mouth, used two straws to navigate her eight-metre boat through one of the busiest and most dangerous shipping channels in the world.

Source:- The Guardian, Wednesday 24 August 2005, page 1
 
Family again faces deportation after minister rejects appeal

A new appeal against the deportation of a family of five asylum seekers from Malawi was last night rejected by the immigration minister Tony McNulty. Verah Kapetcha and her four children, Natasha, 21, Alex, 17, Tony, 16 and Upile, 11, now face being escorted by immigration officers to Heathrow tomorrow despite a passionate campaign by local people to let them stay in their adopted home of Weymouth, Dorset.

Source:- The Guardian, Wednesday 24 August 2005, page 2
 
Britons drink more alcohol as French cut intake
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The hard-drinking British increased their consumption of alcohol by 5 per cent over the past five years while the French and Germans were sharply cutting back their intake, market researchers reported today.

Source:- The Guardian, Wednesday 24 August 2005, page 7
 
Stage to be set for public sector reform

The government will today renew its efforts to push through a radical reform of public services. Cabinet office minister John Hutton will set the stage for this autumn’s white papers on education on health with a key speech to the Social Market Foundation, arguing that only by introducing competition and choice can Britain secure the values on which the welfare state was founded. He will also announced that league tables that compare public services based on consumer experiences are to be drawn up by the government in the next few months.

Source:- The Guardian, Wednesday 24 August 2005, page 9
 
TUC urges action on Muslim plight

Muslim communities in Britain have faced too many “cheap calls” to integrate since last month’s attacks and should instead receive government funding to tackle widespread poverty and poor health, TUC leader Brendan Barber said yesterday. Publishing a report saying that people of Pakistani and Bangladeshi origin are among the most deprived in the UK, Mr Barber warned that greater social inclusion was being jeopardised by high levels of poverty.

Source:- The Guardian, Wednesday 24 August 2005, page 10
 
Chemical neglect

Pharmaceutical heroin has helped some of the most hardened addicts rebuild lives and families. But a shortage of the drug is having a profound human cost.

Source:-  Society Guardian, Wednesday 24 August 2005, page 2-3
 
Befuddled by alcohol

Government ‘ignored’ overseas evidence on the real effect of extended drinking presented in a new study for the International Journal of Drug Policy led by Martin Plant, a professor at the University of the West of England’s Centre for Public Health Research.

Source:-  Society Guardian, Wednesday 24 August 2005, page 2-3
 
Recipe for activism

Members of Women’s Institute these days are more likely to be stirring protest than cake mixes, according to Barbara Gill, chair of the organisation.

Source:-  Society Guardian, Wednesday 24 August 2005, page 6-7
 
We can work it out

Residents in a deprived area of Derby have initiated a scheme to help their neighbours find employment.

Source:-  Society Guardian, Wednesday 24 August 2005, page 7
 
Behind the lines

The Daily Mail’s recent coverage of a controversial adoption case is both vicious and misleading.

Source:-  Society Guardian, Wednesday 24 August 2005, page 8
 
Youth crime can never be solved by locking up offenders, says Rod Morgan

Source:-  Society Guardian, Wednesday 24 August 2005, page 9
 
Boy in sex cases

A 12-year-old boy accused of two rapes was remanded into secure local authority care by magistrates at Wigan Youth Court, Greater Manchester. The boy, who cannot be named for legal reasons, is charged with sex offences against a boy aged 8 and a girl, also under 10, between April 1 and July 27.

Source:-  The Times, Wednesday 24 August 2005, page 2
 
Police powerless to stop late-night drinking without proof of disorder

Longer pub hours will bring more violence, say officers

Source:-  The Times, Wednesday 24 August 2005, page 6
 
Few Polish plumbers, but eastern influx tops 230,000

More than 230,000 Eastern European migrants have applied to work in Britain since the expansion of the European Union last year, according to a government report published yesterday.

Source:-  The Times, Wednesday 24 August 2005, page 29
 
Play recalling cellmate murder places Blunkett in the spotlight

The final hours of Zahid Mubarek, the Asian teenager beaten to death by his white racist cellmate, are being reconstructed in a play that will condemn the prison service and the home office. Tanika Gupta’s play will accuse David Blunkett, then home secretary, of refusing to hold a public inquiry.

Source:-  The Times, Wednesday 24 August 2005, page 30
 
Welsh News

Salt poisoning couple to appeal over sentence

A couple found guilty of killing a three-year-old boy they planned to adopt by feeding him too much salt are to appeal against the ruling.
Ian Gay and his wife Angela, who is originally from Merthyr Tydfil, were convicted of the manslaughter of Christian Blewitt in January and sentenced to five years in jail.

Medical evidence at the trial was not conclusive about how so much salt had come to be in Christian’s blood.

Source:- Western Mail, Wednesday, 24 August

Scottish News

Rory took the Black Path to Death

Police have stepped up their hunt to catch the killer of 11-year-old Rory Blackhall, whose body was found in woods three days after he went missing. Police are anxious to trace male strangers seen in the area, and Rory's missing rucksack. The force has called in an entomologist from the Natural History Museum to analyse insect evidence around the woodland crime scene, near the M8.

Source:- The Herald, 24 August

Don't imprison children through fear, say police

Police have advised parents to show restraint as they attempt to safeguard their children after the murder of Rory Blackhall. They said that while parents should take sensible precautions, the police presence in Livingston had been stepped up and children should not be ‘imprisoned’ as a result of the killing.

Source:- The Scotsman, 24 August



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