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UK denied visa to Obama’s brother over ’sex assault’

LONDON: US president Barack Obama’s half brother was denied UK visa after being accused of sexually assaulting a group of young girls in Berkshire

last November.

Samson Obama was headed for Washington via Britain to attend the historic inauguration that saw his brother become the US president in January. But he came under the scanner of immigration officials at East Midlands airport when the hi-tech database revealed Samson had been taken into custody by British cops after trying to sexually attack a group of young girls, including a 13 year-old.

He was later fingerprinted and not charged before leaving the country but not without providing his details, which were recorded on the Home Office’s new database of prints and biometric details.

A Home Office spokesman confirmed Samson, one of the President’s 11 half brothers and sisters was stopped from entering the country after immigration officers detected a false document with his visa application. Samson was believed to have reached Washington through a connecting flight from East Midlands to the US.

Filed under: UK, sex , , , , , , ,

Andy Flower to be named England director of cricket

Interim coach Andy Flower is set to be appointed England’s permament director of cricket on Wednesday just as the domestic cricket season gets under way.

 
 ECB set to appoint Andy Flower as head coach

Full-time? ECB set to appoint Andy Flower as head coach Photo: GETTY IMAGES

Hugh Morris, England and Wales Cricket Board’s managing director, will announce its new team director at 1230 BST tomorrow with Flower the overwhelming favourite.

However, Flower will be given a far tougher test in his first full summer in charge as England attempt to reclaim the Ashes from Australia.

Flower, 40, took over from Peter Moores in January following the Lancastrian’s dismissal and forged a strong work ethic with captain Andrew Strauss during England’s tour to the Caribbean – despite a largely forgettable 11 weeks.

According to reports, Flower will be paid around £250,000 while his first act as head coach will be to sit on England’s selection committee for the first Test against West Indies, which starts at Lord’s on May 6.

His next decision will be to decide whether Michael Vaughan has a future for England this summer.

England’s hunt for a successor to Moores has been well-documented in recent months.

High-profile candidates such as Tom Moody, Western Australia’s coach, and Kent’s coach Graham Ford had been mooted, as well as Mickey Arthur, Gary Kirsten and Warwickshire’s Director of Cricket, Ashley Giles.

Flower retired from international cricket in 2003 after scoring 12 Test centuries in 63 matches for Zimbabwe at an average of 51.54.

Filed under: UK , , , , , ,

World Bank warns of deep slowdown

The World Bank says the world economy will contract by 1.7% this year, the first decline since World War II.

The Bank says that the world’s richest countries will contract by 3%, while world trade will fall by 6.8%.

Developing countries will grow by 2.1%, half the forecast six months ago, and some areas will fall into recession.

And it predicts that those countries will need $1.3tn in external financing to repay debt and cover balance of payments problems, and may fall short.

What began six months ago as a massive deleveraging in financial markets has turned into one of the sharpest global economic downturns in recent history
World Bank

The Bank warns that a weak recovery in 2010 would be at risk as “new waves of tension in financial markets could lead to stagnation in global GDP”.

The figures are broadly compatible with earlier projections from the IMF for a decline of 0.5% to 1% in world output, which were based on giving developing countries a bigger weighting in the overall figure.

Global summit

The gloomy news comes as the world’s leaders are gathering in London for the G20 summit, aimed at co-ordinated action to counteract the downturn.

G20 LONDON SUMMIT
World leaders will meet later this week in London to discuss measures to tackle the downturn. See our in-depth guide to the G20 summit.
The G20 countries are Argentina, Australia, Brazil, Canada, China, France, Germany, India, Indonesia, Italy, Japan, Mexico, Russia, Saudi Arabia, South Africa, South Korea, Turkey, the United Kingdom, the US and the EU.
Q&A: G20 Summit

“What began six months ago as a massive de-leveraging in financial markets has turned into one of the sharpest global economic downturns in recent history,” the World Bank says.

The World Bank’s President, Robert Zoellick, warns that the crisis could have devastating effects on developing countries.

“These events could next become a human and a social crisis, with political implications,” he said in a speech in London. “People in developing countries have much less cushion: no savings, no insurance, no unemployment benefits, and often no food.”

Further action

And he warns that the G20 needs to take further action to boost spending – an issue on which they are deeply split.

“There is a greater risk in doing too little than in doing too much,” he says.

“No one can be certain whether these [stimulus] packages offer enough stimulus for a long enough time,” he added. “Global crises require global solutions.”

The IMF and the World Bank say that there needs to be at least a 2% boost to the world economy, while the plans announced so far amount to 1.8% of GDP in 2009 and just 1.3% in 2010.

The World Bank also wants funding for a $50bn global trade financing programme, and has called for tougher monitoring of world trade to make sure that countries do not resort to protectionism.

And it calls for a bigger role for developing countries in the international financial institutions, led by an alliance between the US and China – the G2.

‘Deep recession”

The World Bank says that high income countries have fallen into a deep recession, as the tight links between trade, exports and investment have now led to a “vicious circle”.

As a result, Japan is forecast to suffer the deepest drop in output, with a decline of 5.3%, while the eurozone will contract by 2.7% and the US by 2.4%.

Among developing countries, the hardest-hit region is Eastern Europe and central Asia, where growth is predicted to fall by 2% this year.

Latin America is also likely to fall into negative growth, with the region contracting by 0.6%.

Growth in sub-Saharan Africa is projected to fall by half to 2.4%, barely above the growth of population.

And even East Asia, which has had an export-led boom, is likely to slow sharply, with growth in China projected at 6.5%, 50% less than last year.

The Bank says that developing countries will face serious problems with balance of payments, and may need external financing help of between $270bn and $700bn, depending on how quickly Western capital flees those regions.

Another key proposal on the table at the G20 would increase the resources of the IMF by up to $500bn to help bridge this gap.

Filed under: UK, World Bank , , , , , ,

UK Google boss escapes cameras

THE £2m home of the UK head of Google, the internet search engine, is not visible in the company’s new Street View service.

The web function allows users to view photographs of thousands of UK streets and houses, with the option to swivel 360 degrees and zoom in on homes.

The Google boss Dennis Woodside’s West London town house is not one of them. His residence is situated in a private gated development in Kensington, where the 40-year-old American lives with his wife and two children.

Google’s staff spent months photographing millions of high-resolution images in 25 UK cities using a fleet of car-mounted cameras.

Last night a Google spokeswoman, Laura Scott, said Woodside’s house had not been omitted on purpose but was not included because it was on a private road, and no private roads were included.

The company has said it will remove or blur images of homes if people feel their security or privacy has been breached. Home owners can fill in a form on the website.

The launch of the service sparked controversy because of some of the images included. Shots of a man emerging from a Soho sex shop are among those removed after complaints.

Images of naked toddlers enjoying a family picnic in a quiet London square were also removed after they were discovered by a newspaper.

Richard Thomas, the information commissioner is considering an investigation into the new service if similar images are found. Google is facing threats of legal action in Germany as its image mapping threatens privacy laws.

Google uses face-recognition technology automatically to blur most faces and number plates captured by its cameras.

Some close-up shots of Downing Street and the House of Commons have also been removed, though last night images of policemen guarding the London home of the former prime minister, Tony Blair, were still on the site.

source – http://technology.timesonline.co.uk

Filed under: Google, UK , , , , , ,

North to weather recession best in UK – report

The North will weather the recession best among the regions of the United Kingdom, according to a report published today.

The PricewaterhouseCoopers report published today forecast the North’s economy would contract by 3 per cent and warned the economy may shrink even further if the recession worsens and the banking crisis continue.

However, the latest PwC Economic Outlook and Northern Ireland Economic Outlook said the North is still expected to perform better in 2009 than any of the remaining 11 UK regions. Some – such as the Midlands, North and North West of England – are forecast to suffer contractions of up to 4 per cent.

PwC expects the recovery in the North to start around the 3rd quarter of 2010 – but with average growth for 2010 slightly above zero.

In the short-term, PwC expects the UK economy to contract by 3.3 per cent in 2009 and to stay in recession until the third quarter of 2010, “although there is a significant downside risk that the recession could be even deeper and more prolonged”.

The quarterly report says that 2008 saw the largest annual rise in unemployment since 1971, with the jobless total up by 7,400 in the final three months of the year and by 14,700 over the full year.

However, according to PwC chief economist Philip McDonagh, the labour force data also indicates the North is performing well relative to other UK regions and in historic terms.

Northern Ireland unemployment, at 5 per cent, is still well below the UK average of 6.3 per cent and remains the lowest of the UK’s 12 regions,” Mr McDonagh said.

“While unemployment will rise sharply in 2009 – possibly to over 50,000 with the number of employees in employment also continuing to decline – we are not approaching anything like the levels of unemployment that Northern Ireland has experienced in the past,” he said.

“Grave as the problems are, Northern Ireland is less impacted than other regions of the UK or the Republic of Ireland and there are genuine opportunities to be grasped,” he said.

“The greatest challenge over the next few months is to restore confidence and not to become paralysed into doing nothing by the prevailing mood of gloom and doom.”

The report also suggests that although average house prices fell by 28 per cent in 2008 – the worst fall since the 1980s – the end to this trend could be sight.

“Average house prices are now approaching the cost of construction, while the ratio of average house prices to average earnings has fallen sharply to the levels of the early part of the decade.” Mr McDonagh said.

“Although the volume of transactions remains extremely low, they did increase in the last quarter of 2008, with over half of all sales relating to properties priced at less than £150

Filed under: UK , , , ,

India and Pakistan to allow UK police to interview Mumbai siege

Brown meets with India's premier on Sunday before heading to Pakistan for terror talks.
Gordon Brown, who met counterpart Manmohan Singh in New Delhi and Pakistan’s President Asif Ali Zardari in Islamabad, said three quarters of the most serious terrorism cases investigated by British police have links to al Qaeda in Pakistan.

Brown said he asked both Zardari and Prime Minister Singh to allow British police to interview any Mumbai terror suspects arrested in their countries, saying “we all have an interest in discovering what lay behind the attacks.”

He said he proposed to Zardari a new pact between Britain and Pakistan to “break the chain of terror that links the mountain of Afghanistan and Pakistan to the streets of the UK and other countries around the world.”

for more info http://edition.cnn.com/2008/WORLD/asiapcf/12/14/india.mumbai.suspect/index.html

Filed under: India, UK , , , ,

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