Sunday, 7 September 2008

Todays Headlines

UN chief: Give up meat to prevent global warming

The head of the UN's climate change panel has said that people should give up eating meat at least once a week in order to help prevent global warming. Economist Dr Rajendra Pachauri said reducing meat consumption was "the most attractive opportunity", and would be an easier way to make a dramatic impact in a short time than trying to change travel habits. He said: "Give up meat for one day [a week] initially, and decrease it from there." Meat production causes a fifth of global greenhouse gas emissions. (Observer)
Two years to climate change meltdown More
What happened to the climate change consensus? More

Pakistan shrugs as President Zardari sworn in

Benazir Bhutto's widower, Asif Ali Zardari, will be sworn-in today as president of Pakistan after winning an indirect vote in the country's National Assembly and four provincial parliaments. His election was not widely celebrated publicly, with a poll last week showing that 44 per cent of the population rejected all three candidates for the post. Yesterday, a bomb in the western city Peshawar killed 17 and injured many more. Mr Zardari looks set to remain head of the Pakistan People's Party, despite also becoming head of state. (Observer)
Musharraf's going will change less than you may think More

Reduce immigration, says Labour rebel

Labour rebel Frank Field is to team up with Nicholas Soames and other MPs to form the first cross-party immigration group, to call for a huge reduction in the number of immigrants settling in the UK. The move is a direct provocation to Gordon Brown. Field, who led the backbench rebellion over the 10p rate of tax, claims Britain's immigration policy is costing jobs and is deeply unpopular with voters. Meanwhile, another rebel MP, Rob Marris, backed down on the issue of a windfall tax on power generating companies, saying it was no longer a "deal-breaker". (Sunday Times, Independent on Sunday)

Obesity blamed on pollution

A major new scientific study says that pollution can make children fat. The research, conducted in Spain, found a link between exposure to chemical contamination, including pesticides, while in the womb and childhood obesity. One possibility is that a fungicide formerly used on wheat products, and which persists in the environment despite now being banned, could build up in the placenta or be passed through breast milk, causing fat cells to develop in the foetus. A fifth of all British children are now obese. (Independent on Sunday)

British lies over Kenya murder probe

The British authorities obstructed the investigation by John Ward into the death of his daughter Julie, who was murdered after almost certainly being raped in Kenya in 1988, a leaked report claims. The independent report, compiled for Lincolnshire police, says there is "clear evidence of inconsistency and contradictions, falsehoods and downright lies" by the Foreign Office and the British High Commision. Mr Ward suspects the authorities were trying to maintain good relations with corrupt Kenyan premiere Daniel Arap Moi. (Sunday Telegraph)

Also in the News

More bad weather is to hit the UK, with severe flood warnings in place across the north-east, North Yorkshire and Derbyshire. Forty homes close to the river Wansbeck in Morpeth, Northumberland were evacuated yesterday as water levels rose. Five people have been killed by the severe weather so far. (Observer)

A junior Government minister has apologised for bombarding a young female aide with suggestive text messages. Forty-one-year-old health minister Ivan Lewis (pictured), who had just divorced his wife at the time, sent so many messages to 24-year-old Susie Mason that she asked to be moved to another office. (Mail on Sunday)

The mother of Christopher Foster, the millionaire suspected of shooting dead his wife and 15-year-old daughter before setting fire to his home and taking his own life, said yesterday he had not told anybody he was in financial difficulties. Enid Foster said her son could not face telling his family "they were going to lose everything". (Independent on Sunday)

David Cameron has said he would like a general election "as soon as possible" as he held out fresh hope of tax cuts should the Conservatives get into power. Speaking three weeks before his party conference, Mr Cameron hinted he would bring in cuts for those who "put their backs into the British economy". (Sunday Telegraph)

Millions of people across the world are braced for extreme storms in one of the worst hurricane seasons in living memory. Haiti faces the threat of yet more bad weather as Hurricane Ike heads across the Caribbean with windspeeds of 120mph, while storm warnings have been issued all along the US Atlantic coast. (Independent on Sunday)
In pictures: Hurricane Gustav More

The Large Hadron Collider, a vast science experiment to be switched on in Europe on Wednesday, may bring spin-off benefits including advances in healthcare and research into climate change, it has been claimed. Last week a legal challenge was launched to stop the project, which it was claimed could create a black hole. (Sunday Times)

Foreign News

Sarah Palin, Republican vice-presidential candidate, is outshining her running mate, such is the enthusiasm generated by her first tour of middle America. Meanwhile, she has been accused, with her husband, of mounting a "vendetta" against her brother-in-law, a state trooper in Alaska who was investigated at their insistance. (Sunday Times)
Alexander Cockburn: Sarah Palin, Boadicea of the backwoods More
Sarah Palin 'affair': Media quiet as 'lover' named More

Speculation is mounting over the health of North Korean leader Kim Jong Il. The 66-year-old dictator, and self-proclaimed world's greatest golfer, has not been seen in public for more than three weeks. According to one report, five Chinese doctors are at his bedside. Mr Kim is said to have chronic heart disease and diabetes. (Independent on Sunday)

A former heavy-metal fan and computer nerd born in California who became al-Qaeda's propaganda chief may have been killed in a CIA-directed air strike on Pakistan's border, Western intelligence sources say. Adam Gadahn, who last year produced a DVD for Osama bin Laden, has not been heard from in months. (Sunday Telegraph)

Business

Alistair Darling, the Chancellor, is on the brink of suspending the Government's so-called "golden rule" under which the country can only borrow to invest and not to fund current spending. The golden rule is one of the fiscal principals which were the centrepiece of Gordon Brown's period as Chancellor. (Independent on Sunday)
The Business pages More

China's central bank, the People's Bank of China, has built up an estimated £9bn of shares in UK FTSE-100 companies, including HSBC, Tesco and Unilever - far more than analysts had previously thought. Most of the stake purchases have taken place during the past year. (Sunday Telegraph)

US mortgage banks Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac are to be put into 'conservatorship' today, in the biggest financial bail-out of recent history. The US government is expected to inject between $15bn and $20bn of cash into the banks, which hold most of America's mortgages between them. (Sunday Times)

Arts

Author Lynda La Plante, creator of Prime Suspect, has aroused anger from holocaust survivors after it was alleged parts of her 1993 novel Entwined bear striking similarities to a memoir by Auschwitz survivor Olga Lengyel, 1947's Five Chimneys. La Plante only admits she "used a researcher" while writing. (Independent on Sunday)

Robert Hughes, the Australian critic who is the world's best-known champion of modern painting and sculpture is to slam Damien Hirst's work as "absurd" and "tacky". In a TV essay to be shown this week, Hughes, famous for his 1980 series The Shock of the New, will protest at the over-commodification of art. (Observer)
Damien Hirst's brush with democracy More

The Venice Film Festival came to an end last night after a year in which glitz was in short supply, thanks to the Hollywood writers' strike. The relatively low-key event caused some Italian critics to ask what the point of the festival was, since publicity is so much more important than prizes, yet the festival generated so little. (Independent on Sunday)

People SP

Hugely influential TV presenter Oprah Winfrey says she won't have Republican vice-presidential candidate Sarah Palin (pictured) as a guest on her chat show during the US election campaign. Winfrey is publicly backing the Democrats. (Observer)

"Any culture which expects its women to hide their faces does not deserve our respect" - veteran foreign correspondent Kate Adie. (Independent on Sunday)

Scottish chanteuse KT Tunstall married her drummer boyfriend at a secret ceremony with kilted bouncers on the Isle of Skye yesterday. (Sunday Times)

Actor Ralph Fiennes says the marriage of the 5th Duke of Devonshire he helps portray in The Duchess "worked despite all the problems". The Duke famously lived in a menage a trois. (Sunday Telegraph)

Publisher Gary Pulsifer has been banned by Facebook for adding too many friends too quickly. Pulsifer admitted his 1,500 friend profile had become "a bit obsessive". (Observer)

Celebrity photographer Annie Liebovitz admits she now regrets including pictures of her lover Susan Sontag's corpse in a retrospective, saying "I would probably never do it again". (Independent on Sunday)

Actress Keira Knightley is so fearful for her security that she stays in the Dorchester rather than her own home when she returns to London. (Independent on Sunday)

Tory donor Sir John Beckwith spent more than £1m on a party for his sons at a nightclub near Cannes. Take That were booked to perform. (Sunday Telegraph)

Fertility expert Lord Winston is to breed genetically modified pigs to produce organs for human transplant. (Sunday Times)

TV chef Clarissa Dickson Wright has said that she wouldn't eat in a Jamie Oliver restaurant in case she was "poisoned". Rising to the bait, Oliver said he wouldn't welcome her "for fear of offending the other guests". (Independent on Sunday)

Former Python Michael Palin has written a grumpy letter to his local paper complaining that concerts at Kenwood House ruin the view. He admits to being a "miserable spoilsport". (Sunday Telegraph)

Amelia Bamberger, daughter of Cartier's MD, was entertained by two midgets dressed as Barbie and Ken at her birthday party last week, attended by Princess Eugenie in fake eyelashes. (Observer)

Former Sex Pistols manager Malcolm McLaren has lashed out at his son, Joe Corre, claiming that the Agent Provocateur founder was behingd fake punk clothing bought by Damien Hirst. (Independent on Sunday)

Michael Spencer, 53-year-old billionaire Tory treasurer, is having an affair with Sarah, Marchioness of Milford Haven, a former wife of the Queen's cousin. (Mail on Sunday)

red top world

American Olympic hero Michael Phelps, the eight-times gold medallist swimmer, has been photographed with his hand on the thigh of a go-go girl at the Playboy Club in Las Vegas. (News of the World)

Former England footballer Gary Lineker is to marry his model girlfriend, Danielle Bux. Danielle, who at 27 is 18 years younger than Gary, is the face and body of La Senza underwear. (Sunday Mirror)

X-Factor contestant Daniel Evans has spoken of how he is inspired to do well on the show by thoughts of his wife, who died after giving birth last year. Evans's story made two of the judges cry. (People)

Wayne Rooney is hooked on a football video game he plays online. Wayne, whose own picture is used on the box of the game, plays five times a night, to the frustration of his wife Coleen. (News of the World)

Former Atomic Kitten singer Kerry Katona celebrated her 28th birthday by buying her husband a £70,000 car, despite having been declared bankrupt. The couple now have a fleet of 20 cars. (People)