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High-Tech Tissue Could 'Mend A Broken Heart'

Written By Unknown on Sabtu, 14 Februari 2015 | 16.12

Scientists are using new technology to create heart muscle patches that beat in sync with a patient's heart.

One of the major stumbling blocks with heart surgery is that grafted tissue does not always beat in sync with the rest of the heart.

But experts are now growing heart muscle cells from stem cells that contain proteins sensitive to light.

Light will then be used to control their beat.

This would reduce the effects of heart failure by cutting the chance of rhythm problems.

The groundbreaking research has brought together rival professors - Chris Denning from the UK and Lior Gepstein in Israel.

Prof Denning, from the University of Nottingham, said: "For years, Professor Gepstein and I have been competing to be the first in our field.

"But this project means that instead of each team doing the same things twice, we will be coordinating our efforts to ensure we can help heart patients as soon as possible."

The research is being funded by the British Heart Foundation and the British Council's Britain Israel Research and Academic Exchange partnership.

"The grant ensures we can work on a very promising technique for solving one of the major challenges in regenerative medicine to mend a broken heart," Prof Denning added.


16.12 | 0 komentar | Read More

Glasgow Bin Lorry Crash: Panic Inside The Cab

Glasgow Bin Lorry Crash: Panic Inside The Cab

We use cookies to give you the best experience. If you do nothing we'll assume that it's ok.

By James Matthews, Scotland Correspondent

Frantic attempts were made to stop a Glasgow bin lorry as it killed six people last December, Sky News has learned.

Two men were inside the cab with the driver at the time, desperately trying to rouse him after he had collapsed.

The pair, who Sky News has chosen not to name, shouted to him that he was killing people and shook him.

But their efforts were hampered by a metal rail inside the cab, which separates the driver and the crew, who sit on a raised bench in the rear.

It presented an obstacle and inflicted injuries on at least one of the pair as they were jostled by the erratic movement of the vehicle.

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  1. Gallery: Victims Of Glasgow Bin Lorry Crash

    Jacqueline Morton, 51, who had left work early to collect her granddaughters

Stephenie Tait, 29, was a teacher at St Philomena's Primary school

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Gillian Ewing, 52, was also killed in the accident

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Jack Sweeney, 68, from Dumbarton, was killed along with his wife and granddaughter

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Erin McQuade, 18, with her grandmother Lorraine Sweeney, aged 69

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A succession of collisions meant the driver's weight shifted on the steering wheel which, in turn, caused sudden changes in the lorry's course.

There was an air-brake in the cab which slowly reduces speed but neither of the two crew was trained in how to drive the bin lorry and so neither knew how to bring it to a halt.

The vehicle only came to rest after crashing into the Millennium Hotel in Glasgow's George Square.

The two crew members first realised something was wrong after they had stopped to make the penultimate pick-up of their round outside the Primark store in Queen Street.

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  1. Gallery: Images From The Scene In Glasgow After The Bin Lorry Crash

    The lorry crashed into the Millennium Hotel at the top of Queen Street in the city centre

One police officer said it first mounted the pavement 300 metres down the street

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Glasgow Bin Lorry Crash: Panic Inside The Cab

We use cookies to give you the best experience. If you do nothing we'll assume that it's ok.

By James Matthews, Scotland Correspondent

Frantic attempts were made to stop a Glasgow bin lorry as it killed six people last December, Sky News has learned.

Two men were inside the cab with the driver at the time, desperately trying to rouse him after he had collapsed.

The pair, who Sky News has chosen not to name, shouted to him that he was killing people and shook him.

But their efforts were hampered by a metal rail inside the cab, which separates the driver and the crew, who sit on a raised bench in the rear.

It presented an obstacle and inflicted injuries on at least one of the pair as they were jostled by the erratic movement of the vehicle.

1/5

  1. Gallery: Victims Of Glasgow Bin Lorry Crash

    Jacqueline Morton, 51, who had left work early to collect her granddaughters

Stephenie Tait, 29, was a teacher at St Philomena's Primary school

]]>

Gillian Ewing, 52, was also killed in the accident

]]>

Jack Sweeney, 68, from Dumbarton, was killed along with his wife and granddaughter

]]>

Erin McQuade, 18, with her grandmother Lorraine Sweeney, aged 69

]]>

A succession of collisions meant the driver's weight shifted on the steering wheel which, in turn, caused sudden changes in the lorry's course.

There was an air-brake in the cab which slowly reduces speed but neither of the two crew was trained in how to drive the bin lorry and so neither knew how to bring it to a halt.

The vehicle only came to rest after crashing into the Millennium Hotel in Glasgow's George Square.

The two crew members first realised something was wrong after they had stopped to make the penultimate pick-up of their round outside the Primark store in Queen Street.

1/11

  1. Gallery: Images From The Scene In Glasgow After The Bin Lorry Crash

    The lorry crashed into the Millennium Hotel at the top of Queen Street in the city centre

One police officer said it first mounted the pavement 300 metres down the street

]]>

16.12 | 0 komentar | Read More

Obese Could Lose Benefits Unless They Diet

By Jon Craig, Chief Political Correspondent

Obese people could lose benefits worth up to £100 a week if they refuse to diet, as a review into sickness payments is ordered by David Cameron.

Drug addicts and alcoholics could also lose benefits if they refuse treatment that would help them get a job, in a move aimed at stopping people claiming as a "lifestyle" choice.

"Too many people are stuck on sickness benefits because of issues that could be addressed but instead are not," said the Prime Minister.

"Some have drug or alcohol problems, but refuse treatment.

"In other cases people have problems with their weight that could be addressed, but instead a life on benefits rather than work becomes the choice.

"It is not fair to ask hardworking taxpayers to fund the benefits of people who refuse to accept the support and treatment that could help them get back to a life of work.

"The next Conservative government is determined to make sure that the hardest to help get the support they need to get them back to a fulfilling life."

Ministers estimate there are almost 100,000 people claiming sickness benefits on the grounds of treatable conditions such as drug or alcohol addiction, or obesity.

At present, there is no requirement for such people to undertake treatment, meaning it is possible to claim without making efforts at recovery.

Of the 2.5 million claiming sickness benefits, about 1.5 million have been claiming for more than five years.

Mr Cameron says he has asked Professor Dame Carol Black to undertake a rapid review in to how best to help those suffering from long-term yet treatable conditions back in to work.

"In particular, I have asked her to consider whether people should face the threat of a reduction in benefits if they refuse to engage with a recommended treatment plan," he said.

"It is vital that people who would benefit from treatment get the medical help they need."

Professor Black, a leading Government adviser on health, work and welfare, said: "I am deeply interested in trying to overcome the challenges these types of benefit claimants pose. 

"These people, in addition to their long-term conditions and lifestyle issues, suffer the great disadvantage of not being engaged in the world of work, such an important feature of society."

Explaining the reasons for the threat to axe benefits from the obese, drug addicts and alcoholics, a Government source said: "As well as the unwarranted expense, this represents an unproductive waste of human potential."

Tam Fry from the National Obesity Forum told Sky News: "Obesity is the issue which might bring down the NHS.

"We have the most appalling problem and so far the coalition government have done absolutely nothing serious about it. If this is a sign they are taking obesity serious then I think this is something they should be considering."

He added: "You've got to be very careful about how you do it because all those people who are fat because they have a metabolic and a medical syndrome attached to it, they have got to be protected.

"But for the people who just eat and eat and eat and refuse to take any kind of treatment, then I think there is a salvo that has to be fired across their bows."

However, disability campaigner Ellen Clifford was outraged by Mr Cameron's proposal, telling Sky News: "If you threaten taking away people's benefits that's not actually going to help people. It didn't work in the Victorian times, it's not going to work now.

"That isn't going to suddenly snap people out of an enduring condition. It's punitive and it's savage."


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Woman Charged Over Pensioner Care Home Murder

Written By Unknown on Jumat, 13 Februari 2015 | 16.12

A woman has been charged with the murder of an 81-year-old resident at a care home.

Heather Davidson is accused of killing the man at the privately run Sowerby House in North Yorkshire.

The 53-year-old is due to appear at Northallerton Magistrates' Court.

Detectives previously said Ms Davidson, from Thirsk, has no known connection to the home.

Police were called on Wednesday afternoon after the pensioner was found dead in his room.

Senior investigating officer DS Dai Malyn said: "We ask that consideration is given to the residents and the families connected to the care home at this time.

"The home has not been closed; however, there are areas within the home which are still being examined.

"Specially trained police family liaison officers have been deployed to support the deceased's family.

"At this moment we are not in a position to release the identity of the deceased."

Local councillor Mark Robson, who lives 50 yards from the care home, said: "We have not experienced this sort of thing before and hopefully we won't again.

"Our concerns have to be with his family but also our thoughts are with the staff and residents who must be going through an awful time."


16.12 | 0 komentar | Read More

'Anonymous' Hackers To Expose Child Sex Abusers

By Tom Parmenter, Sky Correspondent

Activist network Anonymous is planning a day of action to expose establishment child abuse and cover ups.

The group, best known for high-profile computer hacks, has codenamed its latest task 'Operation Death Eaters' and is demanding an end to secrecy around abuse networks.

It says it will collect and then publish mass information on abuse scandals in the UK and around the world in the hope of ensuring people are fully aware of "paedo-sadist" abuse. 

A London-based activist, who uses the pseudonym Jake Davis, told Sky News: "This isn't a situation where we are looking to create mayhem. It's about giving the public information so we can confront these problems that go back decades.

"The stories that are coming out are the torture and murder of children with our trusted politicians and that is unacceptable. 

"You have to ask: Why are they protecting them?"

The group has recently published videos to YouTube promising to expose "paedo-sadists" and warning abusers that they should have been "expecting us". 

There are concerns though about Anonymous' plan to expose abusers and whether its activities may hamper ongoing investigations - potentially putting children at further risk. 

Former head of the Child Exploitation and Online Protection centre (CEOP), Jim Gamble, told Sky News: "It's fraught with so many difficulties.

"If there are people that have skills and abilities within Anonymous who actually want to do something positive to help law enforcement and others to inhibit paedophiles operating so freely online, then coming forward and working in some kind of framework would be great.

"But in the absence of that framework then there is the chance there could be some reckless disclosure, and from that reckless disclosure lives, and innocent lives, could be ruined.

"People make mistakes. We, during my time in law enforcement, made mistakes.

"We had information that we thought meant one thing and when we got to the back end of it, it actually meant something different.

"So jumping to conclusions, sharing information that hasn't been verified and doing it in a mass public way is going to have a far bigger downside than the deterrents on the upside will be."

Anonymous said activists were due hand out flyers on its day of action at events later in Glasgow, London, Leeds, Rochdale and Birmingham.  

Co-ordinator Heather Marsh told Sky News the purpose of Operation Death Eaters is to open people's eyes to the scale of abuse networks.

She said: "We need the database to connect all news articles and court cases because we cannot visualise a beach if we are only ever presented with isolated grains of sand."

Earlier this week the group claimed to have closed down Twitter and Facebook accounts used by Islamic State (IS) terrorists, also known as ISIS.

Another new video posted to YouTube warned: "ISIS, we will hunt you, take down your sites, accounts, emails and expose you."

Its campaign against jihadists' websites started after the shootings at Charlie Hebdo magazine in Paris.

A National Crime Agency spokesman said: "We understand anyone wanting to help protect children, but would always urge against any action which might jeopardise existing law enforcement investigations or other public inquiries.

"Anybody who thinks they have information relating to child sexual exploitation or abuse can report it to the NCA's CEOP Command via our website."


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British Sons Plead For Guantanamo Dad's Release

By Ian Woods, Senior Correspondent

The British family of a prisoner in Guantanamo Bay have pleaded with the US government to send him home to London.

In their first interview, the teenage sons of Shaker Aamer told Sky News how their hopes of a reunion have been raised and then dashed.

Mr Aamer has been detained without trial inside the maximum security prison for 13 years - even though he was cleared for release in 2008.

The British government has lobbied on his behalf, and his case has attracted cross-party support, but there has been no explanation as to why he has not yet been freed.

Although he was born in Saudi Arabia, his wife and four children are British citizens. They barely remember their father; indeed his youngest son, Faris, was born on the same day as Mr Aamer arrived at Guantanamo on Valentine's Day 2002.

Faris celebrates his 13th birthday on Saturday and told Sky News: "It's upsetting and quite shocking that I've never met him in my entire life." 

His 15-year-old brother Micheal spoke of how their hopes have been dashed.

"We felt very happy," he said.

"We thought there might be a chance for him to come home, but it just kept getting delayed.

"We just felt more sad because nothing happened. We've seen other people with their parents... seen how they enjoy themselves, how they're so close to them.

"It's like there is a part of our heart that is missing because we've been yearning for him to come home for many years and nothing's happened yet."

Mr Aamer took his young family and pregnant wife to Afghanistan in 2001. He says he was working for a humanitarian charity.

But a few weeks later the 9/11 attacks put the country at the centre of America's so-called War on Terror.

His family escaped to Pakistan but Mr Aamer says he gave himself up to the Northern Alliance and was then handed over to US forces.

After detention at Bagram Airbase he was moved to Guantanamo.

The Pentagon compiled a lengthy list of allegations claiming he had ties to al Qaeda.

His lawyer insists the allegations are false and are the result of torture or false confessions to earn rewards.

And his supporters stress that if the Americans actually believed them, they would not have cleared him for release.

Guantanamo spokesman Lt Col Myles Caggins told Sky News: "In 2009 Shaker Aamer's detention status was reviewed. As a result he was placed in a category we call 'eligible for transfer'.

"At some point in the future we will find a new home for him to be repatriated or resettled to."

But Micheal was unimpressed when he saw the video.

"I feel very sad because the man said they were going to try to find him a home," he said.

"But his home is here in London with his family."

There have been various theories about the delay.

Some say the US may prefer to see him sent to Saudi Arabia, where he is less likely to speak publicly about allegations of torture. There is also the issue of compensation.

Lt Col Caggins said: "We make these moves after a rigorous inter-agency process between our security officials, law enforcement and intelligence officials to ensure that transfer will be to a place that can maintain security assurances and human rights protections for those former Guantanamo detainees."

Mr Aamer's lawyer, Clive Stafford Smith, scoffs at that.

"The most obvious person in the entire world to release is Shaker Aamer because he would be coming to the country with the best record of released prisoners, Britain," he said.

"And he would be coming to a place where we know his human rights are going to be respected, and he's been cleared for eight years, and he's got a wife and four children. What on earth is the argument against it?"

At least in recent years the family have been able to speak to their father. The International Red Cross has organised Skype video calls. Micheal remembers the first.

"We were all very excited," he said.

"We were very energetic. We couldn't wait to see him. And then when the call finally happened, we couldn't believe it was actually him.

"His voice. We hadn't heard it for such a long time.

"It was very surprising to hear his voice again. It was a shock. Skype has been very good at lifting our hopes up again because we've been able to speak to him, see how he's doing, and he's a very funny person.

"He always makes jokes. He lightens the mood a lot of the time. We talk about what's going on in our lives, how our education is."

Mr Aamer's wife and daughter preferred to stay in the background and not be interviewed. Because both boys are under 16, Sky News has agreed not to show their faces.


16.12 | 0 komentar | Read More

Three Held In Anti-Terror Operations

Written By Unknown on Kamis, 12 Februari 2015 | 16.12

A man and two women have been arrested on suspicion of terror-related offences.

The man, aged 31, is being held on suspicion of being concerned in the commission, preparation or instigation of acts of terrorism and his arrest comes as police search five addresses on Merseyside..

Officers from the North West Counter Terrorism Unit and Merseyside Police raided the houses after "intelligence received" from law-enforcement agencies.

Police said the searches were expected to take many hours or even days.

Detective Chief Superintendent Tony Mole from the North West Counter Terrorism Unit, said: "It is our intention to carry out a thorough, professional investigation to determine the circumstances and details of the activity reported.

"We are taking all measures necessary to ensure public safety, which is our primary concern.

"Members of the public will see a lot of police activity at a number of addresses in the coming hours and possibly days.

"However, it is absolutely vital to stress - and, I hope, at the same time, reassure the public - that there is no current threat or evidence of an imminent attack."

Anyone with concerns about suspicious activity should contact local police or the confidential Anti-Terrorist Hotline on 0800 789321.

Meanwhile, officers from the West Midlands Counter Terrorism Unit have arrested two women from Walsall in connection with Syria-related offences.

One, aged 23, was held on suspicion of preparing for acts of terrorism and the other, aged 33, is accused of failing to disclose information.

The arrests are the latest of dozens since the UK raised its international terrorism threat level to "severe" in August.


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'Uncaring' Paramedic Stood Over Dying Patient

A paramedic who stood over a heart attack victim for a couple of minutes as he lay dying outside hospital has been sentenced.

Matthew Geary, who had his hands in his pockets, wrongly assumed Carl Cope, 47, was drunk and CCTV footage showed he left him collapsed in the road, a court heard.

Geary, 36, failed to provide any help to the patient despite seeing him stumble and fall to the ground outside Walsall Manor Hospital, Wolverhampton Crown Court was told.

The paramedic, who had taken no equipment from his ambulance, was filmed apparently talking to Mr Cope, and was seen lifting and dropping his limp arm.

After two minutes he was seen walking away and then went to summon security staff who tried to rouse Mr Cope but the judge said "it was all too late".

The defendant, of Great Wyrley, Staffordshire, pleaded guilty at an earlier hearing to breaching health and safety laws by failing to conduct a proper examination of Mr Cope or to attempt prompt resuscitation.

Sentencing, Judge John Warner condemned the paramedic's actions as "callous and uncaring" and wholly at odds with his job, and gave him a suspended eight-month prison term.

He ordered Geary to complete 240 hours of community service and suspended his custodial sentence for two years.

Judge Warner described Mr Cope's treatment as a "truly lamentable" sequence of events.

Prosecutor Gordon Aspden told the judge that Mr Cope, from Bloxwich, near Walsall, was taken to hospital by Geary in June 2012, after he called an ambulance for treatment following chest pains.

Although Mr Cope was not in good health and had a heart condition, ECG tests conducted by ambulance staff suggested his symptoms were not cardiac-related.

He was then taken to Walsall Manor but decided to leave its accident and emergency department to buy a drink from a nearby shop.

But as he returned to the department, Mr Cope collapsed yards away from its main entrance in an area in full view of Geary and other ambulance staff.

Security camera video handed to a police inquiry into the incident showed four staff members walking past Mr Cope, and Geary standing over him for around two minutes before walking into the hospital.

The court heard Geary had handed Mr Cope over to nurses at the hospital and was later seen chatting about football as the patient was slumped beside a bin outside its Accident and Emergency department.

The judge criticised medical staff for discussing the "ownership" of Mr Cope as he lay dying, telling Geary: "It was almost as if he was some kind of chattel.

"Eventually you went over to him, not providing medical help and asked security to deal with it. Security eventually came out and tried to rouse Mr Cope but it was all too late.

"There was no excuse in my judgement for the way you failed to act. Without any justification you had obviously come to a view about him."

Geary has since resigned from West Midlands Ambulance Service.


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British Victims Sue Costa Concordia Operator

Lawyers for British passengers who were caught up in the Costa Concordia disaster plan to sue the cruise operator after captain Francesco Schettino was found guilty of multiple manslaughter.

Judges ruled Schettino, 54, was responsible for the deaths of 32 people after the ship struck rocks off Giglio Island in January 2012.

Schettino has been jailed for 16 years. He is expected to appeal the verdict, meaning it could be years before he is imprisoned.

Lawyers have begun issuing proceedings in Italian courts against cruise firm Costa Crociere Spa on behalf of four British crew members.

Proceedings have also been issued on behalf of six British expatriates living in Spain who were aboard the ship, and two passengers from Ireland and Canada.

They are seeking damages for injuries and psychological effects, including post-traumatic stress, flashbacks and nightmares.

Some passengers have already received compensation over the disaster.

Philip Banks, from law firm Irwin Mitchell, which is representing the victims, said: "All of our clients suffered a horrendous ordeal which some may never truly overcome.

"The trauma they have been through has left some of them needing specialist therapy and counselling to come to terms with what happened and enable them to begin to move on with their lives.

"Although nothing can turn back the clock, the settlements we have already secured will help those affected to access the treatments they need, cover their lost earnings from time they have had to have off work and replace the personal items they lost on board.

"It will also compensate them for pain and suffering."

Joe Stribley, 23, from Maidstone in Kent, was on the Costa Concordia when it struck a jagged reef near the Tuscany shoreline.

He worked on the ship as a dancer and was off duty in his cabin when he felt the vessel rock to one side.

"I looked out of my cabin door and could hear glasses falling off the shelves and smashing on the floor. Then came the signal to abandon ship," he said.

"I saw that the ship was starting to sink and extreme panic set in and I thought that I was going to die.

"People started to jump into the water and, feeling this was my only option, I did the same and managed to get to the shore."

Mr Stribley became withdrawn when he got home as he struggled to deal with shock.

He said: "Every time I closed my eyes I could see it all happening again and I couldn't sleep for several weeks as I suffered from terrible flashbacks and nightmares.

Schettino was not present as Judge Giovanni Puliatti read out the verdict at a theatre in Grosseto, which had been especially adapted into a courtroom so the victims' families could attend the trial.

In the long-running trial, which began in July 2013, prosecutors claimed that Schettino lured passengers into a false sense of security by not ordering an immediate evacuation.

They had been seeking a 26-year sentence for the disgraced seaman.


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Labour Denies Pink Minibus Is 'Patronising'

Written By Unknown on Rabu, 11 Februari 2015 | 16.12

Using a bright pink minibus to encourage women to vote is not "patronising", Labour's deputy leader has insisted.

Harriet Harman will head up the "woman-to-woman" campaign, which aims to visit more than 70 constituencies before the General Election.

But she was forced to defend the push at a briefing for journalists after questions were asked about the colour of the 16-seater vehicle.

Ms Harman denied suggestions the campaign was "patronising" to women, and said the colour showed it was "different".

"Is it not magenta or something?" she joked.

"We wanted to mark that this was something different.

"We wanted it to look conspicuous and therefore a white van was not going to do the job."

She added: "It is a very nice looking bus ... It is the correct colour. This is a One Nation Labour colour."

Conservative MP Caroline Dineage said: "The wheels have come off the Labour bus.

"Getting Harriet Harman to drive around the country in a pink van to try and attract the female vote is as patronising as it gets.

"This is clearly just another divisive gimmick that the electorate will see through."

Ms Harman said at the briefing the party doesn't want women to "give up on politics".

"If you look at the figures, the disaffection that there is with politics is even more pronounced among women," she said.

More than nine million women did not vote at the last election.

"We want women to feel that this is their democracy and politics is for them as well as for men."


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Four In Ten Schoolgirls Suffer Sexual Coercion

More than 40% of schoolgirls aged between 13 and 17 in England say they have been coerced into engaging in sexual activity, a study has found.

Most of the schoolgirls say they were pressured into having sex, although some also reported being raped.

The survey found many have also suffered physical attacks, intimidation and emotional abuse.

The study was carried out by researchers at the Universities of Bristol and Central Lancashire, led by the National Society for the Prevention of Cruelty to Children (NSPCC).

Researchers also carried out the study in Norway, Italy, Bulgaria and Cyprus.

It was the largest of its kind ever carried out in Europe.

It found that a high proportion of teenage boys regularly view pornography and one in five hold negative attitudes towards women.

Some 22% of schoolgirls reported suffering physical violence or intimidation from their boyfriends, including slapping, punching and strangling.

The NSPCC has called on the Government to help children learn about healthy relationships.

Claire Lilley, head of child safety online at the NSPCC, said: "The levels of victimisation revealed by this research shows action is urgently needed by the Government to make updated sex and relationship education a statutory right for every child and young person.

"There needs to be a greater focus in schools on topics such as sexual exploitation and violence against girls and young women, as part of a balanced curriculum.

"The high rates of sexual coercion discovered need to be addressed through education and awareness-raising that challenges attitudes and helps change behaviour.

"We need to nurture children to have positive relationships based on mutual respect."


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Driverless Car Trials Begin Across Britain

By Lisa Dowd, Sky News Correspondent

A project to test driverless vehicles is being launched today in the hope the UK will become a leading global supplier.

A shuttle is being tried out in the London borough of Greenwich and an electric pod will be used on closed roads and pedestrian areas in Milton Keynes and Coventry.

Vehicles trialled in Bristol will also help gauge public reaction to the cars and assess legal and insurance issues.

Business Secretary Vince Cable said: "The UK is at the cutting edge of automotive technology - from the all-electric cars built in Sunderland to the Formula One expertise in the Midlands.

"It's important for jobs, growth and society that we keep at the forefront of innovation, that's why I launched a competition to research and develop driverless cars.

"The projects we are now funding will help to ensure we are world leaders in this field and able to benefit from what is expected to be a £900bn industry by 2025."

The Government says there are no legal barriers to the testing of automated vehicles on public roads.

Dr Nick Reed from the Transport Research Lab, which is running the Greenwich trials, said the shuttles use sensors to avoid hazards.

"Safety is paramount in our research and the vehicle is detecting moving objects around it, and if pedestrians are moving into its path it will slow down, and if they continue into its path it will come to a safe stop ahead of the pedestrian," he said.

It is hoped £19m of Government funding will help British designers get ahead of competitors.

In the US, Google has been testing its version for several years and car companies have been showing off their designs.

For the UK trials, a qualified driver will be ready to take control if necessary.

Insurer David Williams said: "Currently whoever is driving the car, or cars, are responsible for the accident, but going forward what's it going to be?

"Is it going to be the manufacturer of the vehicle? The person who programmed the software? And it gets even more complicated - most of these vehicles, they're not driverless all the time, they have the ability for people to interact and take over."

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  1. Gallery: Mercedes Unveils Driverless Car At CES

    The Mercedes-Benz F015 Luxury in Motion autonomous concept car is shown on stage during the 2015 International Consumer Electronics Show (CES) in Las Vegas

The interior features a wooden floor and four futuristic armchairs covered in white Nappa leather, which rotate to face each other

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Man Due In Court Over Alan Barnes Mugging

Written By Unknown on Selasa, 10 Februari 2015 | 16.12

A man will appear in court later charged with assaulting disabled pensioner Alan Barnes outside his home.

Richard Gatiss, 25, from Gateshead, will appear at Gateshead Magistrates' Court after being charged with assault with intent to rob.

Mr Barnes, 67, suffered a broken collarbone when he was shoved to the ground during the attack in Gateshead on 25 January.

After reading about the mugging, beautician Katie Cutler, 21, set up an online fundraising page hoping to raise £500 to help Mr Barnes move into a new home.

The campaign went viral until it was finally halted with donations standing at more than £330,000.

Mr Barnes met the campaigner last weekend and described her gesture as "magic".

Chief Superintendent Andy McDyer, of Northumbria Police, said: "I'd like to reassure people that since this happened we've been relentless in our investigation and in following up lines of inquiry.

"In the early hours of Monday, officers made an arrest in connection with the investigation and this man has now been charged and is progressing through the court process."

The pensioner, who is 4ft 6in tall and visually impaired, has disabilities from birth after his mother contracted German measles when she was pregnant.

He is a well-known figure in Low Fell and is renowned for being able to quickly calculate how many days old someone is from their date of birth.


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Man Murdered Woman, 85, In Scissor Attack

By James Matthews, Scotland Correspondent

A man has been found guilty of murdering an 85-year-old woman by stabbing her seven times with a pair of scissors.

Robert Buczek, 24, killed Eleanor Whitelaw in her home at Morningside, Edinburgh.

During the assault, he dragged her through the house and dumped her in a room while he stole stamps, cameras and jewellery from the property.

After his conviction, the High Court in Glasgow heard that the Polish national had a previous conviction for the assault and robbery of a pensioner when he was 14.

In 2005, in his native Poland, he knocked over an 82-year-old woman and stole her handbag.

His trial for the murder of the Edinburgh pensioner was told how she was found lying covered in blood by her husband, 88-year-old Robert Whitelaw.

She had suffered a fractured skull during the attack and had been struck with the scissors on the neck and body.

Mrs Whitelaw was taken to Edinburgh's Royal Infirmary but died 17 days later.

Buczek denied the crime but was convicted unanimously by the jury.

The killer had left his DNA at the house and had also been spotted running in the street by a neighbour.

He will be sentenced on 17 March. 

Detective Chief Inspector Keith Hardie, of Police Scotland, said: "This was a brutal and sustained attack on an elderly lady in her own home and our dedicated enquiry team worked tirelessly to trace the perpetrator.

"Now that Robert Buczek has been convicted, I hope the family of Eleanor Whitelaw will be left with some closure."


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Police Probe Deadly Truck Crash Near School

Police Probe Deadly Truck Crash Near School

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Police are continuing to investigate the cause of a collision involving a tipper truck that left four people dead, including a young girl.

The 32-tonne truck, which was carrying aggregate, crashed into cars and pedestrians as it travelled down a steep hill in Upper Weston in Bath, Somerset, just after 4pm on Monday.

The girl, who was a pedestrian, and three adults in a car died at the scene.

Eyewitness accounts given to police suggest the driver of the truck had been trying to avoid an accident.

The area was busy with parents collecting children from school, and police have asked Weston All Saints Primary School to remain closed today due to the incident.

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  1. Gallery: Runaway Truck Hits Cars And Pedestrians

    The tipper truck - carrying gravel - turned over in the accident

Lansdown Lane in Upper Weston was closed over the accident

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The deaths happened outside a school. Pic: Peter Fletcher

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Witnesses said the driver of the truck was trying to prevent an accident

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The air ambulance was called to take the injured to hospital. Pic: Chris Lucas

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Police Probe Deadly Truck Crash Near School

We use cookies to give you the best experience. If you do nothing we'll assume that it's ok.

Police are continuing to investigate the cause of a collision involving a tipper truck that left four people dead, including a young girl.

The 32-tonne truck, which was carrying aggregate, crashed into cars and pedestrians as it travelled down a steep hill in Upper Weston in Bath, Somerset, just after 4pm on Monday.

The girl, who was a pedestrian, and three adults in a car died at the scene.

Eyewitness accounts given to police suggest the driver of the truck had been trying to avoid an accident.

The area was busy with parents collecting children from school, and police have asked Weston All Saints Primary School to remain closed today due to the incident.

1/14

  1. Gallery: Runaway Truck Hits Cars And Pedestrians

    The tipper truck - carrying gravel - turned over in the accident

Lansdown Lane in Upper Weston was closed over the accident

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The deaths happened outside a school. Pic: Peter Fletcher

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Witnesses said the driver of the truck was trying to prevent an accident

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The air ambulance was called to take the injured to hospital. Pic: Chris Lucas

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'Internet Asbos' For Hate Crime Perpetrators

Written By Unknown on Senin, 09 Februari 2015 | 16.12

People who persistently spread racial hatred online could be given "internet Asbos" banning them from sites such as Twitter and Facebook, under proposals to crack down on a "disturbing" rise in anti-Semitism in Britain.

A group of MPs has called on the Crown Prosecution Service to examine whether prevention orders, similar to those which can be used to restrict sex offenders' online access, could be applied to hate crimes.

The request follows an alarming rise in incidents against Jews which occurred during fighting in Gaza and Israel last year.

The issue has come under renewed scrutiny following the Paris terror attacks in which a Jewish supermarket was targeted.

The MPs' report says that "Hitler" and "Holocaust" were among the top 35 key words used on Twitter last summer.

Highly abusive posts on the microblogging site were singled out, including the hashtag "Hitler was right", which was trending in July, as well as the "presence of Hitlerian themes and imagery on Facebook".

The report said: "There is an allowance in the law for banning or blocking individuals from certain aspects of internet communication in relation to sexual offences.

"Informal feedback we have received from policy experts indicates that this is a potential area of exploration for prosecutors in relation to hate crime.

"If it can be proven in a detailed way that someone has made a considered and determined view to exploit various online networks to harm and perpetrate hate crimes against others then the accepted principles, rules and restrictions that are relevant to sex offences must surely apply."

It comes after Twitter chief executive Dick Costolo admitted they "suck" at dealing with abuse and so-called trolling, vowing in an internal memo to "start kicking these people off right and left".

The MPs' report said: "Given the scale of social media content produced on a daily let alone minute by minute basis, we have some albeit limited sympathy for the companies that are responsible for hosting it.

"Whilst there is rightly an expectation on those companies to act as there is on government, police and prosecuting authorities, so too civil society has a crucial role to play."

Other proposals in the report include setting up a government fund to cover the costs of security at synagogues and establishing an independent council on anti-Semitism.

Last week, figures released by the Community Security Trust - a charity that monitors anti-Semitism and provides security for the Jewish community in Britain - showed there were a record number of anti-Semitic hate incidents in the UK last year.

Data from the Metropolitan Police supplied to the panel showed that there were 306 anti-Semitic incidents and 236 offences in London between April and November last year.

Prime Minister David Cameron described the report as "hugely important", adding: "Tackling anti-Semitism goes right to the heart of what we stand for as a country."

Communities Secretary Eric Pickles said: "We remain staunchly committed to tackling anti-Semitism wherever it occurs and will continue to take a zero-tolerance approach.

"Those who perpetrate hate crimes of any kind will be punished with the full force of the law."

Chief Rabbi Ephraim Mirvis welcomed the report, saying it "could not come at a more opportune time".

He said: "The threat against the Jewish community is real and anxiety remains high following recent events in France and elsewhere."


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Sam Smith Triumphs At Grammy Awards

British singer Sam Smith has won big at this year's Grammy Awards, picking up four prizes, including best new artist and record of the year.

The 22-year-old eclipsed superstars Beyonce and Pharrell Williams, who each won three awards.

Smith was also named best new artist, beating fellow Brits Bastille, as well as Iggy Azalea, Brandy Clark and girl group HAIM.

"Before I made this record, I was doing everything to try and get my music heard," Smith said after his second win of the night.

"I tried to lose weight and I was making awful music and it was only until that I started to be myself that the music started to flow and people started to listen."

Smith's song Stay With Me, from his album In The Lonely Hour, has achieved success on both sides of the Atlantic, and he also took the prize for best pop vocal album.

But he lost out in the pop solo category to Pharrell Williams, whose song Happy earned him the award.

Pharrell said: "This is super-awkward so I'm going to moonwalk my way off the stage."

Taylor Swift, who presented the best new artist award to Smith quoted from one of her most recent hits as she offered him a word of advice.

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  1. Gallery: In Pictures: Grammy Awards

    British soul singer Sam Smith won four Grammy Awards including record and song of the year

Annie Lennox performed at the star-studded event in Los Angeles

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Labour Vows To Give New Dads Four Weeks Off

Labour will significantly boost paternity leave if it wins the election - doubling to four weeks the time fathers can take off and adding more than £100 a week to match the minimum wage.

The plans are expected to cost the taxpayer at least £150m a year if they succeed in raising the take-up by around a quarter, an amount the party says would be more than offset by savings in tax credits from extending free childcare.

Labour is launching what it has dubbed "Father's Month" as part of a coordinated push of family-friendly policies.

Leader Ed Miliband contrasted the paternity leave reform with the Conservative promise of a tax break for married couples.

"The Tories want to spend £700m on what they call a married couple's allowance but which in fact will go to just one in five families with children," he said.

"Instead, at the heart of Labour's plan is the belief that Britain succeeds when modern working families succeed.

"That means giving dads, as well as mums, the chance to spend more time at home in those crucial weeks after babies have been born."

Enacting the reforms, which were first proposed by the left-leaning IPPR think tank last year, would benefit up to 400,000 families a year, the party said.

Under the current rules, new fathers qualify for a statutory £138.18 a week, equivalent to £3.45 an hour for a 40-hour week.

Employers are encouraged to make up the gap between this and the employee's usual pay.

But only just over half of new fathers (55%) currently take it up.

Increasing the taxpayer-funded contribution to the minimum wage level would increase take-up to around 70%, the IPPR estimates.

This would cost the Treasury around £150m in 2015/16.

Labour also said House of Commons figures show its policy of extending free childcare to three and four-year-olds - funded by a levy on the banks - would save "significantly" more in tax credits than the cost of the increased paternity pay.

"The modern British family needs government to be more flexible in what it does to help," Mr Miliband said.

"Thanks to the last Labour government, fathers have two weeks' paid paternity leave.

"Millions of families have benefited, with parents saying this has helped them support each other, share caring responsibilities and bond with their children.

"But the money isn't great - and too many dads don't take up their rights because they feel they have to go back to work so they can provide for their family."

Deputy Prime Minister Nick Clegg defended the Government's record, saying the Coalition had introduced shared parental leave for mothers and fathers.

He told Sky News: "To really encourage the take-up of paternal leave, we need to provide it on a 'use it or lose it' basis.

"There's a lot of change going on and I think it partly reflects that mums and dads these days want to take their own decision, not be told by the Government what time they should take off."


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