Wednesday, November 30, 2011

Saturday night becomes Sunday morning, the Hall of the Football League will raise serious questions about its sustainability

play Christmas season is here, and many of you, I imagine, will have an afternoon off to sit in uncomfortable chairs in a school hallway craning to catch an overview of the offspring in sheep or fourth "angel in the back and not long ago." It's an experience that can not be compared to trying to catch up with the progress of your favorite team on the spectacle of football league.

Bolton, Blackburn, Wolves fans, be warned. It's not just the ignominy of decline that threat - I am not pre-judge the matter by the way, my money (literally) is in the QPR and Sunderland - but in the end Saturday night with Manish Bhasin and Leroy Rosenior and frantically joke Clemmitt based brand, which still seems a little too decidedly gay, like a divorce again in a Christmas party, made four pins, to prove that he or she is above.

At the bottom of this program is a swirl of lights, half of which was unable to recover before the group semi-pointless goal keeper last semi-useless opposition. As Saturday night becomes Sunday morning, those of us whose teams are no longer living in the sunny uplands of the Premier League gather in the mantra: .. "Yes, we pause, press No, now Oh, wait, it's finished, press the back."

is particularly useless if his team were involved in a tie at 20 seconds of highlights might include his half-useless striker hit a post and a center that has seen better days is a second yellow with a series of untimely tackles.

must be a better way to cover three football leagues. Maybe everyone should migrate to the network because the program as a kind of shame. Sorry for journalists scripts featured packages, which may indicate an early goal in the sequence, and then find 27 ways to say it.

Show

Football League is the last refuge of the "graffiti on the rebound", "taken to restore the two goal cushion blade", "swept free of the relegation zone with a late goal. "And because journalists do not want to repeat the name of a computer very often, we'll talk about shrews or nicknames Spireites sometimes taking that have not been seriously considered since the 1940s.

The riddle, for example, placed in front of his guest, former international expert Igor Stimac in Croatia has become: "How can you promote something, but the implementation is quite another thing, n is not and "that seems a difficult concept to get my head around it, with my English, more or less the first language, then God knows what he is doing Igor.

To their credit, the old center, described as a somewhat fanciful Derby and West Ham "legend" (in the Derby, maybe, but I think you have to play for a team more than a couple of seasons have legendary status given to you), he smiled enigmatically, and he swatted away by the attackers as boring.


another expert, Peter Beagrie, treated similarly with interesting ideas about Thomas on loan Derby striker Tamas Priskin.


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An Amnesty International warned that the government's campaign against its critics could worsen in the new proposed legislation

The latest figures, Uganda has at least 250 private radio stations for most licensed 50 television stations and 50 newspapers and magazines regularly licensed. Impressive figures in a continent where the radio is still the main source of information, and where the authorities keep an eye suspect in the private media.

However, according to Amnesty International, these figures do not tell. In a report released last week, the human rights organization accused the government of Uganda, Yoweri Museveni, President of "critical pervasive official intolerance of certain government policies and practices, and repression of political dissent one. "

The report, suppress dissent: Restrictions on rights to freedom of expression and peaceful assembly in Uganda, covering the period 2007 to 2011. Several examples, which accuses the state to guide critical journalists, activists of civil society and political opposition leaders for "arbitrary detention, intimidation, threats and politically motivated criminal charges."

And according to the report, the situation could deteriorate further if the government pushes through the bill to stop the protests and repression of dissidents.

The report urges the international community to exert pressure on the government to return to the path of reform in the early 1990s, when Museveni was hailed as one of a new generation of progressive African leaders.

thirty journalists face criminal charges arising from their work, according to the report, which was released one day after another court appearance by two editors working in the independent newspaper Daily Monitor . The couple was accused of forgery two years ago after the publication of a letter written by Mr Museveni, the resolution of ethnic tensions in the region of Bunyoro.

The report also comes after four opposition activists were charged with treason for trying to organize a demonstration. Kizza Besigye, the leader of the opposition, was placed under house arrest, about 12 miles north of the capital, Kampala, the police dragged their cells every time they venture out.

Police said Besigye is in "preventive detention" - will block walk to work as a protest against rising commodity prices and inflation, which exceeded 30% months was attributed in part to irresponsible government spending. In April and May "walk to work" demonstrations to protest against the cost of public transport violently broken up by police, apparently killing nine people.



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compared with Japan, are in the middle of a public health crisis. It will take more pressure to get us out of it

Japan the life expectancy of the highest in the world. Girls born in Japan today can expect to live to 86. As children live to 80. In the UK, if you are a woman who expects to live until they are 82 men and only expect to live to 78. So how do we update?

new research in The Lancet suggests that Japan's success is due to three key factors. First, Japan has a universal health care system and has invested in public health. Second, the Japanese health and hygiene-conscious. They have a good balanced diet and generally take charge of their health.

. Third, and most importantly, Japan was not afraid to be a little more than a babysitter Japan has attempted to address the number of deaths from stroke by trying to reduce salt intake and prescription of appropriate medications for blood pressure under control. And encouraged a focus on prevention through screening programs, testing and get the government and local businesses on site.

So how do you compare? How to move up the table? Thus we have the National Health Service, which is free at the point of need and accessible to all. And we spend a similar amount on health such as Japanese. Therefore, we must not lose that. Removal of spending cuts or the NHS would lead us further down the table.

under considerable pressure, the coalition government has reaffirmed its commitment to the NHS and universal health care, and health to date has largely been replaced by the courts. This is good news. But we must also ensure that communities with greater needs of health are to get their fair share of NHS expenditure. Otherwise health inequalities worse.

plans of the coalition of public health also have some promise. The Government proposes that the new health and well-being should bring together the local authorities and doctors and to take joint decisions on how to intervene and promote early prevention.


If we do not start doing something, not only will fall behind Japan, health costs also go through the roof, which inevitably means more taxes. This was the warning from Derek Wanless in his review of the costs of health care for nearly 10 years.



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The death penalty in Iran Youcef Nadarkhani is an affront to universal moral values ??and a disservice to Muslims

In 1948, most Muslim-majority nations of the world have signed the Universal Declaration of Human Rights, including Article 18, "the right to freedom of thought, conscience and religion ", which includes basically the" freedom to change religion or belief. "Pakistani Foreign Minister, then, Muhammad Zafarullah Khan, wrote:" Belief is a matter of conscience and consciousness can not be forced. "

Fast forward to 2011

: 14 predominantly Muslim nations to convert away from Islam illegal, many - including Saudi Arabia, Afghanistan and Sudan - to impose the death penalty against the infidels. The so-called Republic of Iran has sentenced to death by hanging of a Christian pastor, born to Muslim parents, for apostasy. At the time of writing, Youcef Nadarkhani, head of a home network of Christian churches in Iran was sentenced to death for refusing to recant and to convert to Islam.

The decision to Nadarkhani unlikely. For starters, the decision of the judges in the city of Rasht house pastor a year ago, and confirmed by the Supreme Court of the country in June, is not only a flagrant violation of the Universal Declaration of Human Rights, but Iran's own constitution. Article 23 is clear: "The investigation into the beliefs of individuals is prohibited, and no one may be molested or simply to hold a certain belief."

leniency applications of the Archbishop of Canterbury, Foreign Minister of the International in the UK and amnesty, among others, have fallen on deaf ears in Tehran. Meanwhile, the silence of the Muslim world - particularly the Muslim organizations in the UK, usually voluble and self-proclaimed "community leaders" - was shameful. The irony is that I have not found one Muslim should present a believer who loses, adjust or abandon their faith should be hanged. However, few Muslims are willing to stand up against frustrating such medieval barbarism. We mumbled an apology, look away.

interesting decision in the case Nadarkhani not based on the Quranic verses, but the fatwa of Ayatollah different. Fatwas, however, differ. For example, the last Grand Ayatollah Hussein Ali Montazeri, a grand ayatollah and sole heir of Ayatollah Khomeini argued that the death penalty for apostasy was prescribed only to punish the political plots against the nascent Islamic community, Muslims Today's day Montazeri is considered the freedom to convert to another religion.

Nadarkhani The decision to run, therefore, is both an affront to universal moral values ??and a disservice to the cause of Islam. There can be no freedom without religious freedom to leave or change their religion. To try to control the mind of a person's heart, thoughts and beliefs, is the absolute negation of individual freedom. Is totalitarianism pure and simple.

does not work either. Another Iranian ayatollah end and high-profile ally of Khomeini, Murtaza Muttahari once wrote about the futility of any and all measures to compel the belief that the Muslim (or ex-Muslims!), Claiming it was impossible to force someone to maintain the level of rational faith inspired required by the religion of Islam. "You can not beat a child to solve an arithmetic problem," proclaimed Muttahari. "His mind and thought must be free to resolve. The Islamic faith is something like that. "Muslims must ask themselves: Do we love God so weak and in need that requires us to force our worship perfect? ??Our religion is so fragile and vulnerable who can not tolerate no absolute rejection why we are silent as an innocent Christian is sentenced to death in the name of Islam? To hang a man for refusing to believe in Islam is theologically and morally unjustifiable. It is not only anti- Islamic, but anti-Islamic


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Survival rates

cancer in the NHS are excellent. However, without the interference cost may be even better

A new piece of research that rates of cancer survival links with investment levels in the treatment shows that the NHS offers excellent value for money. Indeed, between 1979 and 2006, of the 10 countries studied (which also included Germany, USA, France and Japan), survival rates in England and Wales found that more improved, care service Health more effective in reducing cancer mortality.

So how does the health service was so good, when everything seems you hear bad news about cancer? So when our politicians claim that the NHS is defective, it is the objective evidence suggests otherwise?

In my 35 years working as a doctor, I tried all kinds of cancer patients - many successful and some, unfortunately, no. I was also involved in media campaigns to modernize and improve the treatment - some more successfully, at least -. And just completed a collection of stories of cancer patients and their doctors to help people better understand the disease and its treatment

There are two main reasons why the situation has improved: the first measures, public health, such as campaigns against tobacco, snuff and attempts to find cancer at an early stage and curable by screening "normal" people. A decrease in smoking rates over 40% of the population 25 years and 20% have had a fall in the incidence of cancer of the larynx, lung and bladder. And while the value of the consideration is always the debate no doubt that the cervical screening has reduced mortality by 50%, while mortality from breast cancer was reduced by 30% in 15 years, with about 3,000 lives saved each year.

messages on diet, however, do not pass. We are getting fatter, and fat is bad for health. Increasing obesity rates are particularly bad omens for the cancer rates in the future.

The other reason for the improvement of our cancer survival rates - and that's where politics is more - the better to treatment. In the 1950s, there was a seedy brigade of effective drugs against cancer, and now have a sparkling battalion, reinforced by the surprising new treatment operation at any time. In particular, therapies that target molecular genetic changes in cancer cells, can prolong life in patients with advanced cancer. In cancer of the intestine, where 10 years ago the survival of a patient with metastatic disease was nine months now, we can extend the life expectancy of about two and a half years - and the extension Life is good, too

I was struck by the hypocrisy of a director of Nice, at a recent public meeting, asked what he would do if he or someone in your family has cancer advanced kidney and need a drug prohibited by Nice. His answer was that it would pay for itself.

The reality is that very little spending on drugs against cancer - much, much less than, say, laxatives. Our politicians tell us they can not afford new cancer treatments, however, spending only 9.5% of our GDP on health is low on the list in the context of industrialized countries. This includes 9.5% of private health expenditures, and compares the cost of 17% in the U.S. and 14.5% in France.

The problem is that politics interferes with the treatment of our patients. And the cost of the policy for the NHS is enormous. It is estimated that the annual cost of running the primary care trusts around £ 5 billion - a cost of managing a large scale. And change the funding being introduced as a "GP consortia" is seen, most of us like to be a disaster even greater than the PCT -. A triumph of a political consensus on the creation Smart
Far


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Tuesday, November 29, 2011

Plan to scrap automatic access to legal aid lawyers is a large-scale assault on the universal right to representation

Kim Evans is a representative of the police station based criminal defense firm Goodall Barnett James. She spends two days a week and one in three weekends in the call as a lawyer to advise suspects in custody in Hastings and Eastbourne police stations.

A Metropolitan Police detective old, Evans spent 31 years working on the edge of the criminal justice system. "I would say 90% of my clients have a personality disorder, mental health and or addiction seriously the possibility that drugs or alcohol," she said.

Evans contacted me after my position in the controversy and did not consult Article 12 of the conviction and punishment of legal aid bill offenders. This provision is an automatic right to a lawyer for legal advice helped suspects in police stations.

The government's plan to means test suspects. For now, if you are arrested, you are entitled to free advice from a lawyer paid for courtesy of the legal aid system. Now, the Independent Legal Services is being scrapped and the ministers proposed that the agent will decide whether or not you can pay your own lawyer.

Evans

What plans? "Much of my work is done in four or five hours," he said. "It is difficult to get to talk about what they are there. They are anxious in front of the head, angry, aggressive. The chances of getting your financial data is scarce. "

Evans

concern is the impact of means testing on their customers, as it believes that most would be entitled to legal aid. But she is alarmed that the bill represents an aggression against any rule of the Law on Police and Criminal Evidence (PACE).

Pace

stored in the statute book of the universal right to representation by counsel at a police station. The legislation was introduced in response to a series of miscarriages of justice in the 1970s and 1980s, in which the suspects have not received the appropriate advice to police stations.

right suspect for the advice can not be taken for granted. Evans said that when customers ask why not get initial legal advice used to say they were informed by police that "it would take too long to get one," but would be interviewed and quickly go free "if it is not 't have one. " Evans said: "This is without the police even called me to see what my response time - which, 99 times out of 100 in 45 minutes for the police. Now throw them mix - "probably not entitled to legal aid or may not be able to afford a lawyer'."


mention this because Article 12 seems to anticipate the increased competition of CDS Direct. Ministers say the plan offers "a cost of output of high quality services."



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Gladbach Cologne shot with minimal effort and now have their eyes on the weekend following two derby Borussia

First crisis

Bayern's first home win of Augsburg, the return of the "Colts" returning champions. The weekend's Bundesliga action-packed stories delivered many new, interesting and also confirmed an ancient principle of our culture of football nostalgia is the equivalent of a 40m pass to the goalkeeper. A regressive fiscal cons-productive.

in Germany last lost most of its appeal after the Second World War and never recovered. "After the game before the game," was famous mantra former German manager Sepp Herberger. The whole country, generally similar adopted a pragmatic approach, without romanticism, being well aware of the dangers posed by those who idealize the costs of yesterday morning.

German football can be a bit brutal in this way. Ask the poor Lothar Matthäus, whose achievements as a number of sensational players exactly zero. Going back to the glory days is permitted only in a few special occasions each year, and only in geographically well-defined pockets in the western Federal Republic. When it's time to derby.

Week 14 had two derbies in the store and then a double portion of the accumulation of habit. No preview Köln vs Gladbach was complete without an anecdote Cup final in 1973, when Borussia long hair, Porsche driving, disco-dancing Günter Netzer joined as a sub on their own ("I'm going to play now ") and scored a winner with his second successful crack of the ball. times more gold was counted in the period before the derby between FC Schalke and Dortmund Ruhr. Friedel Rausch Defender S04 being bitten by a police dog in 1969 was probably the best of the bunch, in the light of the identity of the victim and the reaction of the legend of BVB Aki Schmidt. "Animals are very smart," Schmidt is quoted in the new book by Gregor Schnittke "nurse Derby. Geschichte Einer Rivalität "(story of a rivalry).

The problem is that even remotely game could meet the expectations raised attacks of nostalgia. In fact, all the games were all in the sense that one team was presented at each meeting. "It was a classic in the next stage could remember," wrote the Süddeutsche Zeitung, after the 2-0 win against the Blues in Dortmund feel royal. "There is no classic, without enthusiasm without encountering an equal footing, "agreed WAZ. Dortmund, who played his usual game pressing, were good. But Klopp's men appeared totally superior only because Schalke were so rubbish." We showed everything is wrong with football, "said sporting director Horst Heldt," which was football to sleep. "

"What comes out at the end", also briefly summarize the quality of the provision of Cologne against the gallant "Colts" Lucien Favre on Friday night. "It was amazing, the derby in Cologne was almost more annoying [that of Dortmund]" wrote NRZ. "The whole game was a demonstration of the supremacy of Gladbach and disappointment for fans of FC that many of them have given up the second half and left the stage after an hour. "Never miss a lot, to be fair. Visitors to this point was already leading 3-0 thanks to a brace from Mike Hanke traffic and Juan Arango free kick.


Arsenal scouts who were sent the reports Lukas Podolski must have eyes cursed their luck. The 26-year-old was a marginal figure, with the rest of his team, but sought to distance themselves from the mistakes of his colleague. "It's the same old story, for which I am not responsible," said the prince not so charming.


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dukes, water companies and charitable wildlife will be relieved to know the looting of agricultural subsidies in the Common Agricultural Policy can last at least until 2020

What would you do with £ 245? You: a) use it to buy food for the next five weeks, b) take a family vacation, c) is used to double their annual savings, or d) give the Duke of Westminster

Let me take the case of option D. This year, the Duke fell into relative poverty. Relative, ie, the three newcomers who have moved from the top of the list in the wealthy British. (Yes, not so bad in absolute terms, the value of their properties rose last year to £ 7 billion.) Is the culmination of the population of British origin in the list, and surely we have a patriotic duty if it does not. It is a splendid example of British society, to be enterprising enough to have inherited their land and the income of his father.

it must be a reason not to? Therefore, if households have to pay the money - the equivalent of five weeks on average on food and almost average annual savings (£ 296) - some of the richest men and women in the UK? Why, if this tithe of 21 th century, the tax return for the front cover Robin, will be perceived?

I talk about the payments that are large farmers through the Common Agricultural Policy. They swallow ? 55 billion (£ 47 billion) per year, or 43% of the EU budget. Despite spending crisis raging across Europe, the policy remains intact. Worse still, governments intend to maintain this level of spending during the next budget period, from 2014-2020.

all expenses of perverts in rich countries, agricultural subsidies must be one of the most regressive. In the EU are paid according to the size of their land: the larger the area, the more you get. Except in Spain, the system is nowhere grants the most unfair in the UK. According to Kevin Cahill, who is the author of Great Britain, 69% of the land here is owned 0.6% of the population. This is the group that the largest payments. The total budget, according to the government database is divided between only 16,000 persons or companies. Let me give some examples, starting with a group of old friends.

As chairman of Northern Rock, Matt Ridley has overseen the first run on a British bank since 1878, and helped precipitate the economic crisis that has impoverished many. This champion of free market economy and his family have received £ 205,000 of taxpayers last year by holding their assets appropriately called Blagdon. That falls shy of widespread public charity with Prince Bandar, Saudi Arabia fixative in the center of a corruption scandal Al-Yamamah. In 2007, The Guardian discovered that he had received a payment of up to £ 1 billion of arms manufacturer BAE. He used his wealth, earned by the purchase of the farm Glympton in Oxfordshire. This public service is paid £ 270,000 a year. Guv'nor grateful I am sure.


As the biggest beneficiary is a mystery. This is a company based in France, the UK called Syral Ltd. Its website describes it as a producer of industrial starch, alcohol and protein, but it says nothing about owning land or agricultural. However, you receive £ 18.7 m of taxpayers. Has not answered my questions about how it happened, but my guess is that money can take the form of export subsidies: the type of payments that have done much damage to the lives of poor farmers in the developing world ". / Aa>

In a sense, the government of this country is right. He lobbied the European Commission, so far without success, to "very important to reduce the CAP budget." However, maintaining enthusiasm. He also demanded that the fall of the EC, the only sound in the project proposal being negotiated by Member States: there must be a limit to the amount an owner can receive. Our government warns that the limitation of payments "to prevent the consolidation" of farms. It seems that 0.6% of the population owns 69% of the land is not fair.

enough
If subsidies are remaining profit is certainly to protect the most vulnerable small farmers. The British proposals would ensure that the budget is still monopolized by large landowners. With regard to payments for environmental protection, this option seems to me that you get when you refuse to regulate. The rest of us do not get paid for not flying the elderly. Why farmers should be paid not to destroy the biosphere? Why should they not be legally obligated to protect, like other companies are?


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do not know what caused two deaths nightclub last weekend, but a Dutch system of drug testing in the trust can help

Media

two deaths at the weekend at party headquarters were once again with suggestions to the police because the drug is ecstasy that can be a contamination "" Batch. Speculation about the cause of these tragic deaths is unnecessary, and recent experience has shown mephedrone preliminary comments are often very bad, we know the truth until toxicology results are reported.

designer drugs users are encouraged to attend the emergency departments of hospitals if they feel sick, which is generally good advice for anyone who feels ill after taking drugs, legal or of control. While the death of MDMA are very rare after the instigation of the rules of health promotion such as free water and chill-out rooms in the dance clubs, are still very regrettable and very worrying for the family and friends. So there is something you can do to reduce risks to users of this and other recreational drugs?

is a question independent of the Scientific Committee on Drugs (ISCD) has discussed in detail in recent years, in which we have evidence of good practice elsewhere. We must abandon the current approach to government based on fear of damage covered by the ignorance of that drug users are the main theme. This failed and will continue, so that girls are relatively few potential threats to health. You can even make things worse so often of young drug users are afraid to seek medical help for themselves or their friends because of threat of police harassment.


Unfortunately in the UK, do not apply to something as sophisticated and logical. Instead, we rely on a test purchase and some amnesty bin surveys to gather information - and no clear direction can be given to measure. The medical examiner system in the UK is slow, often months after the death for the analysis of drugs in the body from over and it's usually months before the final evaluation, the judge of the contribution of death is has been reported. The proposed reorganization of the current medical examiners and the dissolution of the Forensic Science Service, which provide most of the analysis tools for the detection of drugs will make the situation even worse. The new proposed early warning system announced as part of new drugs has not been made and, without investing in a structured approach is unlikely to be useful, except in retrospect.


when I was chairman of the Advisory Council on Drug Abuse, I wrote to then Minister of the Interior Smith, Jacqui, suggesting that the UK could benefit from conversation with Dutch experts on your system and the basis of evidence that has emerged from it during the last decade, I received a very clear message that the government had no interest in this approach.


Find best price for : --Media--

Labour MSP

among members of Scotland and the work of the Welsh Assembly refused to cross picket lines Nov. 30 in solidarity with the millions of public sector workers. As Labour MPs and Councillors are not to cross picket lines in the halls of Westminster or the city. Instead, he will join the picket lines to do the job politicians do:. Being on the side of labor
government attack on public sector pensions is totally unjustified and without any economic justification or actuarial. This is a gross attack on public sector workers who are already suffering a wage freeze, while many are facing the threat of losing their jobs. This is part of a broader attack on the government in public services and the welfare state, Labour must resist.
We are in solidarity with the workers on November 30, -. And politicians work to encourage our colleagues to do likewise
John McDonnell MP RSC President

Linda Riordan MP
Halifax
Ronnie Campbell MP Blyth Valley

Jeremy Corbyn Islington North

MP Paul Flynn
Newport West
Martin Caton MP
Gower
Charlynn Cllr Pullen
Islington
Cllr Kevin message Bury St Edmunds

Cllr Andrea Oates
Broxtowe
Cllr Geoff Lumley Island Wight

Cllr Andy Walker
Redbridge
Cllr Kieran Thorpe Welwyn Hatfield

Cllr Claire Traynor
Maghull
Cllr Mike Jones
Maghull
Cllr Kingsley Abrams
Lambeth

Cllr Dave Young

Calderdale


Cllr Clive
Grunshaw

Wyre / Lancashire


Cllr Mike Rowley
Oxford

Cllr Van Coulter

Oxford


Cllr Matthew Brown
Preston


Cllr Jenny Smith
Bristol


Cllr John McGhee
East Ayrshire

Cllr Jay Kramer

Hastings

Cllr Patrick Vernon

Hackney


Cllr John Tanner
Oxford


Cllr Tom Neilson
North West Leicestershire

Cllr Mick O 'Sullivan

Islington


Cllr Lynne Allen


Hillingdon



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Monday, November 28, 2011

query

left and right of the policy objective of social mobility is one thing clear: an adequate level is a boost

If more than two thirds of young women now go to university, this means that it is because they have elbowed out of the way young men to get there, because they or have been champing at the bit for generations? David Willetts, the minister of higher education, think it's because most of the increase in university attendance in the last government of the middle class advantage of the working class women and men. This may explain the enthusiasm for learning and history of technical degrees: Got to Give Something The son of struggling to do, huh?

geographer Danny Dorling social

The disagreement, and has evidence to prove it. His new book, Fair Play, which shows last term of Labour in the number of students of the working class in higher education began to increase at a faster rate than the middle class. The increase followed a sustained investment in schools and students, especially those who have qualified for free school meals and therefore for the Education Maintenance Allowance.

The beauty of the figures to prove that they Dorling which invests in people working. However, for each Willetts on the right, there is a number on the left to remind us that social mobility, meritocracy, as is an illusion - Because the supply of jobs at the top is limited, means "less able "Always have someone of privilege out of the way for a" brilliant "working class person to grow. Since the privilege of the tendon to accumulate over time, it's unlikely to happen without restraint.

Research conducted by the Foundation

resolution, and approved by Willetts, which shows the importance of having a degree has increased over time, contrary to the hypothesis that highly educated people are gone , the less valuable their qualifications. The zeros, the skills you had less, more it was good to maintain the gains. Higher education outcomes improve your chances of compensation to the line of work enjoyable.

power of social mobility have an idea that will always be there Suggests a working class and IST members should continue to experience them. Just work to make conditions in the working class better, rather than seeking the transformation of society as a whole so that individuals are not bound by the circumstances of their birth, suggests that people are happy with essentially the status quo.

Why is there a ASSUME
static, unchanging pool of people as static and unchanging With professional life? Is a sweeper to be a street sweeper for us all his life to be able to say, "It is a street sweeper and I to him for that?" Is it not the respect - not to mention pay a decent IT - whether for labor history HE is for six months or 60 years of funeral

thirty years ago, after massive layoffs in heavy industry, thousands of laid-off workers have returned to school manual, politics and many in the attempt to study sociology to understand how the collective power years THEY Marshalled as members of the Union in the 1970s so quickly could have dissipated. A significant number become teachers and social workers, while others have become self-employed, who did not necessarily living better salary goal for greater autonomy offered.
It is important to distinguish between the economic and social mobility, even if the train makes it easier to achieve. In a more open society would simply the chance to gain experience and professional education - if not always money - it was not that the private company, at present As It Is, so many talents Unused.



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The vicar trying to continue the Church of England for constructive dismissal is a curious attitude to his religious vocation World

David Cameron

idea that we are all too soft and self-pity, want to be treated as victims and feel the right to live on state benefits may be more than a little exaggerated, but it is a statement that seems to have infected the vicar of Worcestershire sauce, trying to continue the Church of England for constructive dismissal. The Reverend Mark Sharpe, a father of 44 years of age of four, said he and his family were harassed by four years of cruel, including potential claims several years, and having their dogs poisoned, manure spread on your car, tires,. Oil fell, cutting telephone lines and heating fly

All this took place in the idyllic rural village of Hanley Broadheath supposed to, and throughout the test, he said, was supported by the diocesan authorities. It is, therefore, request permission to a hearing in Birmingham before filing a claim to an employment tribunal. The church is very difficult request, resting his case in a law that the holders of church headquarters are "employed by God" and therefore not eligible to file a lawsuit against the unjustified dismissal of any authority less.

Although most villagers English is not so welcoming and sweet temperament, as city people to imagine the treatment alleged Sharpe seems extraordinary. What can be done to cause so much hatred? He says the harassment began after he denounced the bad administrative and financial management of the parish. He also says he was attacked by the beard (although no one has been criticized by the Archbishop of Canterbury for his facial hair).

seems that is not the first time that Sharpe has attracted hostility. He moved to England in the parish in 2005 after resigning as chaplain of the navy, where, he said, had been exposed to hardcore pornography and won a sexual harassment case against the Ministry of Defence. However, the Ministry of Defence is one thing and another the Church of England. If the Court accepts the case of Sharpe, the C of E (and all other churches, for that matter) would have to accept that the clergy had a right as any other worker in the ground for the protection of British law issues work such as health and safety, working hours, fight against discrimination, and so on.

What rights the court decides is due to Sharpe, who has an attitude of curiosity about the religious vocation in the world. He told the audience that he was supposed to be a church leader would give the same rights as any employee. "I always thought to be ordained in the cathedral of York which was a kind of employment contract," he said. If this were the case, it would mean that every person who has chosen to imitate the life of Christ and share his suffering was to be expected at each slap on the cheek, not to turn to one another, but to run a Labour Court, with the support of the Unite union "workers of the Faith" section.

Bolshie The Thief

far from apologizing, he wrote (spelling): "To be honest, I did not mind or that I was basically stolen from home of their own lack of Anyway.. "The victim, he said, had made several" stupid mistakes "as not to draw your curtains and leave the kitchen window." But somehow I feel sorry for you and I will not show any sympathectomy or obstacle. "

West Yorkshire Police did not send the letter to the victim, but she published as part of a campaign to encourage households to make their homes in safety during the Christmas period. They said they were surprised by its "coldheartedness." But that was not what I should be surprised. Thieves do not usually feel apologetic, and would have been strange if the offender was.


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This mixed system in the civil and criminal judges can create a crime to fit the facts is an urgent need for reform

most Western observers to understand that all legislation is derived from the Saudi religious law, Sharia. What we often fail to understand is that Sharia is not encrypted, but subject to individual interpretation by the clerks in each case.

What does this mean in practice? Sharia is the law applies only to criminal and personal status of the two tribunals, courts and summary courts - with the agreement of serious crimes and civil conflicts in large amounts. No coding or system of priority, each judge is free to interpret the Quran and prophetic traditions - the two sources of sharia deal - if they see fit, in general, the Islamic legal doctrines. With the exception of a half dozen crimes defined, Saudi judges characterization of a crime to fit the facts rather than to assess whether the facts of a crime as defined.

The arbitrary nature of justice extends to Saudi civil conflict. As Medieval Europe, Saudi Arabia maintains a mixed civil and criminal cases in the other that the prosecutor may apply to the criminal sanction, such as imprisonment for debt.

Saudi Sharia interpretations for particular legal doctrines such as the criminalization of acts to protect the common good,

al-al-masalih Mursal

or the prohibition of practices to prevent corruption,

dir 'al-Fasad

. This argument is used, in particular, women's rights, including the conduct, which, according to this doctrine, if necessary, putting women on a slippery slope of immorality.

Saudi judges often condemn those who are committed to promoting peaceful wave loads beyond the reach of obedience

Otherwise considered a terrorism trial, a special court to try more than a dozen people known for their political reform efforts, including former judges and lawyers, on charges of "termination the hand of obedience "to the sovereign and the cancellation of their allegiance to him. Mikhlif al-Shammari was in prison since June 2010 while awaiting trial in a court of state security in its articles critical of an institution of religious intolerance and corrupt officials. The charge is "disturbing others."



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the American public to be better than now, after the disastrous ATF Giffords gun shooting and tracking device

, when the Republican president of the SC House and State Reform, Representative Darrel Issa called for the resignation of ATF Director Kenneth Melson Acting, some political circles are controversial. Melson, after all, was responsible for overseeing the failed ATF tracing of weapons operations that led to the trafficking of thousands of weapons to Mexico and a number of deaths resulting -. Including the United States Customs agent Brian Terry

Before the Republicans took control of the House in the midterm elections, the new president Issa had threatened to take "seven hearings a week for 40 weeks" as a way to keep Democrats on the defensive . Since taking the chair, Representative Issa has held hearings on the canvas, the financial crisis and FDA, but with little success. With Issa finally find bipartisan support for his research on the ATF The Obama administration faces a unique opportunity to transform Issa witch hunt in a study of precious U.S. arms control and national security.

Every day 34 Americans die from guns and semiautomatic weapons, many of which are held or acquired illegally. Weapons like the Glock 9 mm pistol used by Jared Loughner for killing six and seriously injured U.S. Representative Gabrielle Giffords (and injuring 13 others) in January in Tucson, Arizona. Loughner Glock, capable of firing extended magazine 30 rounds in 15 seconds, was purchased at a sports shop in Tucson local and could legitimately be brought around the state without permission is a concealed weapon. As those who have finally addressed and submitted Loughner faith, if the shooter had to take a moment to reload his gun before, may have dispensed with some of the lives lost that day.

The shooting in Tucson, like others in the recent history of the United States, all Americans and has reignited the debate in the country as gun control and Second Amendment to the U . S. Constitution (which protects the right to bear arms). The recent scandal ATF shows a secondary but equally important in the treatment of national security. A report by the U.S. Congress these, 70% of guns recovered from crime scenes in Mexico in 2009 and 2010 came from the United States. Firearms most frequently recovered from the .22 caliber, in, 9 mm and 7.62 mm, the latter two commonly used, respectively, assault rifles, Glock Loughner as the property and assault rifles like AK-47 (capable of firing 600 rounds per minute) used by organized crime gangs in Mexico in the massacre of over 400 immigrants recently discovered mass graves in northern Mexico all the states of Durango and Tamaulipas.

As the Obama administration rejects speculation about the future of Melson, while at the same time meeting with candidates to replace him, the government would do well to accept the faults and the ATF U.S. Department of Justice, which oversees the agency, and instead, the current dynamics of public and political chain against the assault weapons to enhance American security and its partners in Mexico.

While the National Rifle Association (canon law leading U.S. lobbying group) spends more than the supporters of gun control by a factor of about 3 to 1 - to safeguard Congress to reform extremely difficult weapon - the president can use his executive powers to ban the import of assault weapons in the United States and increase the ability of ATF regulation (especially in states that provide the largest quantity of arms in Mexico).


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angered by government staff that will walk through what could be the biggest day of industrial action in recent decades

The police investigator

Nicola Ashley, 35, works for the Durham police as a financial investigator. He previously worked for Barclays for 13 years. He moved to his private pension in the pension plan of local government. Win £ 29,700, contributes £ 161 a month in his pension and faces having to pay an extra £ 80 per month.

"I have never taken industrial action before, but the government seems so determined to show total disregard stop and ask themselves what they will come back next year. I was in the financial sector can not say that pensions in the private sector are all bad, I know there are not very good ones out there for that employer pensions that people pay by the pound for pound ..

"My husband is a public sector worker, and that we are faced with an increase of two, and with child care costs increased, fuel, auto insurance if it is amazing. Try telling a young person is now trying to save a house should also contribute to their pension. They will be opting out.

"I have a girl of seven years. We can not afford another child and penny-pinching all the time, even if they work full time to do what we need to run two cars we. be able to afford a quality of family life, but we are not even standing, we return.

"I decided to return to work after my daughter had to keep my retirement and try to make things safe for her. Now they have moved the messages to make me work longer for less.

"I wonder if I made the decisions of life itself. I could stay home and spend more time with my son. I feel cheated."

social worker

Cathy

Roblin, 54, is a social worker for mentally handicapped adults. She lives in Southampton, and has two children of 21 and 16.

"I am very passionate about a pension that will cost more and pay less to women is particularly at risk of poverty, both now and in old age.

"I do not see the logic, the economy does not work for me - for anyone forced to live in poverty, which have an effect on your physical and mental health, if you are not and able to get out. 'visit friends because she has no money for the train ticket or putting fuel in the car, then the insulation will be a problem. All this will cost more to the government. They put people in a position more dependent on the NHS or social services than ever.

"If you allow people to retire with a decent pension in old age where they can fend for themselves, be able to maintain reasonable physical health, be independent and have a little dignity, then the People will be less expensive in terms of attention.

"I visit many older people with dementia and be part of the quality of life in old age is very, very poor, and I would try to stay as independent as possible with the support of my family. It makes no sense for me financially to force people to live below the poverty line because they simply can not fend for themselves.

"We had a pay cut, and now face losing another 100 pounds per month, with increased contributions. That's a lot to me. For many of my younger colleagues, is faced with having to opt for a full pension so they can put money to start a family or saving for a mortgage.

"These are the choices people have to do, and if people can not make any provision for the future, so how can it help the government? It's just another person that the government will look into the future.

"Then I'll be on strike, because it is a quick fix. If we do our voice heard by being there on the picket line, so we'll lose everything, but in this case I I tell my children that the best thing for my retirement could buy a ticket to Switzerland. "

The midwife

Yolande van de L'Isle, 38, a midwife in London and has three children.

"I became a midwife because I care passionately about women and children and we believe they deserve the best quality care. I feel I have the best job in the world. But I know that can provide the best care that women deserve when I'm over 60, 65 or 68. I will not be fit and able.

"There is a point in life where you need to step back, relax a little. I had thought I could go part time when he was 60. Now it seems that I will work and, and the freezing of wages and rising prices, not much to expect.


"I deal with the loss of an additional £ 50 per month, and when he does retire later, finally I go to £ 3,000 a year less. I was not able to enter the property ladder, and my oldest son out of college in the fall of 9000 with the pounds per year in fees. It's very, very strong.



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. First stage of voting for the Lower House of Parliament of Egypt

. early involvement reported high despite calls for a boycott

League Arabic, imposes sanctions against Syria

????????? ??????? - ????? ???


24:07 GMT / 7:07 ET

"It's chaotic and confused, but seems to work," says Martin Chulov Cairo

voters lined up for four to five hours before voting in the east of the city, Martin said. In some cases, they should vote for much longer, predicted Martin.

All parties have violated the law against campaigning outside polling stations, and no one tried to kill her, Martin said. But there have been numerous allegations of serious violations at the time of the survey is better than expected.

Everyone we talked to Tahrir Square along were very concerned about this election. They thought it might be sabotaged, they thought he was about to fail, people do not join, there was a liberal minority were identified on both sides. However, all parties have resulted in the city today. Most neighborhoods in most communities exercise their right to vote, you must be a good thing right now.

the real test will come when the polls closed and voters may be closer after the queue for hours, Martin said.

11:33 GMT / 6:33 pm ET polling stations that opened late have their extended hours, according to Al Jazeera Sherine Tadros.

Egyptian Chronicles reports that 74 polling stations were closed for nearly four hours after being opened.

A live blog of choice Ahram Online has received similar reports:

more common in the reports, indicating that several polling stations, or have not opened or opened late. The seasons were reported to the absence of phosphoric ink used to verify that the voter has voted only once, while other reports indicate that judges have sealed the ballot instead of signing to the dismay of many voters.


The National Council for Human Rights received 161 complaints since the beginning of the vote, says Ahram ..

11:23 GMT / 6:23 ET

The backdrop unstable for elections today were notable for two attacks on pipelines apparent Egypt, Jordan and Israel.

The two explosions occurred about 100 meters west of Al-Arish in the Sinai, witness stated that according to this video report.

11:08 GMT / 6:08 ET

Bambuser live video site has a collection of videos documenting the scene outside the polling Egypt.

This gives an idea of ??turning it into what appears to be an online vote for men only. The tail goes.

10:40 GMT / 5:40 ET

key members of the Twitterati Egypt kept an eagle eye on violations of election:

Egyptocracy

Ibn Hisham Mubarak

School N. City voters waiting in line at 8 am and staff arrived at 11:30. Via @ # EgyElections ezharwban

AymanM

polling station 347 in
Waili was closed because the vote was in place before a judge had come to oversee the process egyelections #


NevineZaki


If you see someone or leafleting campaign for his party, plz call 0800444800 or 08004440800 to complain

Sandmonkey @

Please let me know where rape is worse in Heliopolis MB so I can go to the fence. # EgyEelections

10:26 GMT / 5:26 pm ET:

This wonderful image (which appears on the blog Enduring America) gives an idea of ??the size of the ballots paper voters face.

Speaking after the vote, 23, Ahmed Eid, told Al-Masry Al-Youm:

was quite simple. The vote for the list was like two feet long - it took forever to find my candidate. But otherwise it went well, and I felt very safe and fair. Every five minutes, the presiding judge would change the locks on the boxes.

9:56 GMT / 4:56 ET

There are queues up to a mile long in the Heliopolis suburb of Cairo, according to Blog of a direct election of the Egyptian daily Al-Masry Al-Youm.

Here is a selection of new elections were recovered:

alleged vote buying in Old Cairo.

. fi

generalized rules against texting campaign, including the power of Egypt and the Reform and Development and the campaign inside the polling stations in the Assiut by the Muslim Brotherhood.

votes are not delivered to Assiut and Fayoum. The late arrival of election observers in Nasr City court.

. Polling at a rate of one person every ten minutes in a season, as the struggle of the voters to vote with a map of 73 names.


We have seen the claims of the judges [who act as observers of the elections], which did not go to the polls correct, voters who do not know where they are supposed to vote, people who come to the stations to the right and find the ballots are not there yet, and some campaign goes dark.


The ban on campaigning at the polling station is widely ridiculed, especially by the Muslim Brotherhood, reports Jack.



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Amelia Gentleman speaks to young people for whom some heady days of August have cast a shadow

Last week, Danielle Cal was sentenced to 10 months in prison for stealing a moment with his left foot two coaches during the riots in Wolverhampton. As he was sentenced, his mother Sharon started shouting to the judge to the public gallery: "You destroy the life of an innocent child ... How can we do this? "As she screamed, her daughter began to cry, and Sharon was quickly out of the room by security staff.

That night, waiting to know that the prison had been sent to Danielle, Sharon said that he thought his daughter could not be coping well with prison. "It's an experience harmful. It will never be able to erase from his mind. It should not have that experience. It is a criminal. It is very unfair the way it was handled. It is so bad. "

Now that we are deep into November, the heat and chaos of the summer feels like a distant memory, but for families of young people trapped in the riots, the events of August anarchic few days have melted long shadows.

For those who have never had trouble with the police before, and seem to have had a very short-lived involvement, the severity of the treatment they received came as a surprise. The time spent in courtrooms, where judges are still just beginning to go the consequences of these events, reveals how many lives have been ruined in an instant simply by deciding to go out to see what was happening on the street. Time spent on the family shows how the arrest of a person can have devastating consequences for the rest of the family.

Judges justify the sanctions more serious than usual, as we continue to give those guilty of crimes related disorders, citing its right to impose more severe penalties to deter. In this climate that two young men who created a Facebook page to promote a revolt (which have never been and never actually took place) were sentenced to four years in prison and a young mother of two - it is went to sleep -. was sentenced to five months to accept a pair of shorts, sacked by a friend (though was later released on appeal)

Immediately after the riots, the political signals are very clear. David Cameron said it was important that the judges sent a "strong message". Lord Chief Justice Lord Judge defending some of the most serious decisions, stating: "Given the general pallor of what is happening in the country, these statements had to be significantly higher." The judges concluded that the penalties should reflect the mood of public anger.

calluses

For people like Danielle, which has led to particular judgments, it is difficult to see what is happening in more than a waste of time and taxpayers' money

Two weeks before she goes to prison, I met with her and her mother, a caregiver working with the elderly at home in a quiet neighborhood on the outskirts of Wolverhampton.

Danielle, 19, dressed in the fashion and has blonde hair and bright, but it is so depressed that it is rarely discussed beyond monosyllables. Gradually, he said they were shopping in the afternoon at the start of Tuesday, August 9, buying clothes to celebrate the 18th anniversary of his cousin of the week (he bought a pair of pajamas and a robe). After an hour, his mother had to go home and business continuity is Danielle.

Sharon

relaxed on his departure, because no one expected the riots to break there, but soon left, Danielle watched, petrified, as groups of hooded youths arrived at the center of the city and began to throw through the windows of shops in the street. When the police tried to clear the main square, the crowd was in a side street and somehow they were swept into the fray.

As he tries to explain why people were attracted to the anarchy of the government-funded research on the motivations of young troublemakers points to the "party atmosphere, adrenaline and threshing. " Danielle said she was concerned about the violence and called his mother in tears to tell him what was happening in the city. "I've never seen anything like this before," he said. "It was horrible."

But a picture of her appeared in the local newspaper the next day, showing its position, apparently smiling in a crowd of masked men dressed in summer bright, distinctive and recognizable instant of time with blond hair and waving his hands around -. in ski gloves

was a strange decision to wear ski gloves, he said. He said a friend who had met by chance picked them up from the pile of loot that were scattered along the sidewalk and gave them to her, just wasting time, as if trying to hide their fingerprints may also have thought that covering your face. "Can not identify anyone, because everyone on the bells," he said. She went to the police when he was in the newspaper to tell them he had been there but was not involved in the violence.

The police response was reassuring. She said she said. "You can see that I have done nothing wrong ... will contact CID on a couple of weeks because we have more important things to do"

Tonight at 3:00, his house was searched by a dozen riot police, who searched the house, he found nothing and arrested her. She was charged with three counts of theft of jewelry local (or £ 50 000 worth of goods were stolen from that day), a phone shop and a clothing store, and sent to prison.

Two of the charges against him were later dropped (on closer inspection of CCTV footage, seen attacking the jewels of the blonde woman was not Danielle), but has found that it had entered a clothing store, which had already been largely looted and left 10 seconds later with the odd couple of trainers, after a moment of shoes left outside the store, went to the station Road and made its way so I was back in time for a change in the pizzeria where he worked from time to time.

His defense attorney tried to explain their role in the violent disruption was minimal, and said, "She did not play an important role in the violence and not to break his way into the store. "But the judge said the sentence of 10 months was shorter than I could give, and concludes:" The actions of criminals like you have contributed collectively and caused thousands of pounds of losses. "

clear that Danielle behaved stupidly, but the consequences now unfolding seems equally stupid. The cost to the taxpayer works 10 months of imprisonment of at least £ 40 000, and the cost of their education and career is even greater. She has 11 GCSEs and BTEC well, and this fall, he had thought of returning to college to study mathematics sixth, waiting to board examinations to join the RAF in January. In late August, the school said was not welcome because of the bad publicity. Her mother assumed that imprisonment has ruined his chances of joining the RAF and concerns about long-term consequences of having a criminal record. Before being sentenced, Danielle has been prescribed sleeping pills and received advice from major depression had happened. The neighbors of his quiet street stopped to talk to the family.

When she describes the six days he spent in prison before he was released on bail in August, he said, recalling his fear of meeting women imprisoned for murder and attempted GBH, surprise offered drugs.

Andrew Neilson, director of campaigns at the Howard League for Penal Reform, refers to how the decisions were "on ramp" and questions the logic behind the statement of deterrence and utility to send young people without prison, previous convictions.

Approximately three quarters of young people who are sentenced to less than a year will reoffend. "The experience of prison is itself criminogenic," said Neilson. "You spent time with other people who have committed crimes that are taken far from positive factors that prevent them from being employed -. criminal, family - and after spending time in prison is likely to be more difficult to get jobs to work. It is an environment that makes the strain of his mental health, and we know that people go to jail without addiction and come out with a drug addiction. "

calluses Sharon can not understand why her daughter is 10 months in which, as it includes other young people - the "plasma TVs really stolen and store boxes" - escaped . "Ten months to gather the coaches did not even take home? He was just being a teenager curious. I am angry against the system of justice. I am angry against the prime minister, "he said wearily, rather than anger." I talk to David Cameron to tell him to come to some of these cases to court and see what these children are doomed, children, no criminal record. " She says she will appeal.

In London, Maria Ramirez (real name) is also satisfied with the treatment received by his son 18 years received from the hands of the police, but if the consequences of their involvement in riots complicate life for all the family. Five days after being arrested (empty handed) in Currys and looted in Clapham, finally got to see his son in jail Feltham and institutionalization of children. This was his first experience of being in a prison, as it was for him, and she was so shocked to see him there, he collapsed outside the visiting room to leave the building.

"I love my son very much and see your child in these circumstances ... I tried to be strong, I do not want to see me as weak, Then I fainted, "he said.

When he arrived back at his apartment in Wandsworth in the afternoon, he found an eviction notice by the Council. In the days that followed the riots, a number of councils said they would try to evict tenants for the advice of your property if someone who lives there was found guilty of involvement in Riots. It was at the height of public outrage and government ministers have also been floating the idea of ??reducing the subsidies of the rioters. "

Mary was the first person to be served with a deportation order in relation to the riots, and his case has triggered an explosion of fury, human rights activists and politicians, who said that was against the basic principle of justice. instead of taking individual responsibility, the family received a collective punishment

Rental conditions

have been raped are extremely broad, and pointed out the letter, which explains why the housing authority tries to throw his work, among other things, a clause stating "You, your guests, friends, relatives, visitors and anyone else who lives in the property should not ... do anything that interferes with the peace, comfort or convenience of other people living in the District of Wandsworth and / or region. "

"What about people throwing fireworks out the window?" Mary says that when he found in his apartment on a rainy afternoon, just days after Bonfire Night. "If so, all the apartments here, may be empty."

Wandsworth hope to make an example of the family of Mary, who seem to have chosen an unfortunate target. Marie is known for its local charities and neighbors as a good community member. She works as a clerk in a hospital in central London, and in his spare time he has helped create a support group for single mothers vulnerable in the works to help women who are victims of domestic violence and is an active member the local church. It is extremely eloquent and angry and can not be reduced in a television interview judicial steps, from which the board described as "fascists" who have used the "dictatorship of the type" behavior.

If the Council decides to proceed with the eviction, Mary and her eight year old daughter were left homeless, and it is difficult to know where and how they would be relocated, or just thinking it would be a constructive development.

seems that his son, Samuel (not his real name), was also a bit silly, during the riots in London, but also sounds like he was mistreated by the authorities (although for the course legal proceedings, it is possible to explain why). Maria said that expressly forbidden to leave that night, but apparently received a call from a friend around 22:00 to ask him to come and escort her back because she was afraid of Clapham violence to erupt. Mary did not know he had come. "He always has to be the superhero," she said.

She knew there were problems, because about an upstairs window, he could see people drive their cars around the shopping area and download the things they had looted. At three, she received a phone call from a police officer told her that her son was in the hospital, somehow injured during the arrest. It does not give the name of the hospital and said he could not visit.

"My son was never arrested, never been in a fight, never had any problems at school, never been any problem at all. My son is well educated, but that was stupid and naive of the night. "He said later he entered Currys to look around but took nothing. He pleaded guilty this month to theft, because he was in the building, even if he stole something. He pleaded guilty to violent disorder, which was heard in December. He would begin a course in fine arts at Bournemouth in September, but the legal process under way means that he gave the place.

Mary describes the feeling that it is "in a bubble," see bad things happen to stand out. She tries to be philosophical about the prospect of losing their homes. "I think people who lived through the tsunami and have trouble completely. I think that's it. It's just a house. I lost my marbles." She stops because you start to cry and find it difficult to talk.

Your cat joins us in the kitchen, sitting on my laptop and purrs. Next door in the living room warm, your daughter is on the ground, surrounded by books, happily move on with your task. During the four years I've been here, who made this floor in a comfortable and safe family home, and obviously it would be painful to leave. Mary told her daughter about evacuation procedures.

"I am very angry, disgusted by the government," she said when she recovers. "I do not want to lose my house," "Do not deport the families of the rapists, right? Should be logical. They saw nothing about whether my son had a criminal record or had been complaints against the family. They should have checked my participation in the estate, and my charity work. "


But Charlie Masson-Smith, a spokesman for Wandsworth Council, said the Council based its decision on the outcome of the case of his son next month. He said that Marie and her daughter had done nothing wrong that it was irrelevant. "We need parents to show a part of parental responsibility," he said. "It is not suggested it would be if she was homeless deportation. May agreement and for rent in the private sector. The responsibilities of the Board to resolve their housing cease to exist."


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