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House fire parents on murder charge

Written By Unknown on Sunday, June 17, 2012 | 9:35 PM

Mick Philpott and wife House fire parents on murder charge www.spywenews.blogspot.com
The parents of six children killed in a house fire are due back in court charged with their murder.
Mick Philpott, 55, and his wife Mairead, 31, will appear at Nottingham Crown Court charged with murder following the blaze at the house on Victory Road in Allenton, Derby, on May 11.
Jade Philpott, 10, and brothers John, nine, Jack, eight, Jessie, six and Jayden, five, all died in the fire. Duwayne, 13, died in Birmingham Children's Hospital two days later.
Mr and Mrs Philpott will not be attending the funeral service for the six children to be held on Friday in Derby, church officials have said.
In a statement issued to local media, the Roman Catholic Diocese of Nottingham confirmed the funeral service would be followed by burials at Derby's Nottingham Road Cemetery.
Father Alan Burbidge, the family priest who will be conducting the service, said the funeral will take place at St Mary's Catholic Church at 11am.
"The family have chosen that church as a venue because they are Catholic children and they wanted a full Requiem Mass in a Catholic church," he added.
The Prison Service has not confirmed whether Mr and Mrs Philpott applied for leave to attend the funeral but said a risk assessment would be carried out if an application was made.
A spokeswoman said: "We do not comment on the movements of individual prisoners. Prisoners can apply for escorted visits to attend the funeral of a close relative, but it will always be subject to a strict risk assessment."
Mr and Mrs Philpott, who are in custody, will appear for a preliminary hearing at Nottingham Crown Court later today.
9:35 PM | 0 comments

Survey shows drop in spending power

Survey shows drop in spending power www.spywenews.blogspot.com

Spending power continued to decline last month, a survey has showed, although there were signs that the squeeze on household incomes was starting to ease.
Discretionary spending power fell by 0.3% in May, the Lloyds TSB spending power report said, which on average equates to almost £34 a month less than a year ago to spend on non-essential items.
However, growth in essential spending eased, suggesting consumers could be starting to feel the effects of falling inflation. The consumer price index (CPI) fell to 3% in April, from 3.5%, in March, and is expected to fall further in figures released this week.
The decline in spending power, after inflation, illustrates that conditions for consumers remain tough largely due to weak income growth, Lloyds TSB said.
Patrick Foley, chief economist at Lloyds TSB, said: "Weak income growth and stubbornly high inflation is ensuring that the squeeze on consumers is remaining in place longer than many thought it would.
"Growth in spending on essentials is now showing signs of moderating, which is positive. But the weakness in income growth is severely limiting the benefits for consumers."
Some 79% of people believe the current level of inflation to be "not good" or "not at all good", compared with 85% in April and 83% in May last year, Lloyds said. But greater affordability of essential items was a key factor in limiting the squeeze on consumers in May, Lloyds added, with annual growth slowing across nearly all measures.
Household finances showed some improvement in May, Lloyds said, with 54% of survey respondents stating that they lived comfortably or meet their bank or current account outgoings with some left over each month.
People aged 35-54 were found to be more likely to say they do not have enough money to meet monthly outgoings, while those aged 24 or under are least likely to feel financially restricted.
Jatin Patel, director of current accounts for Lloyds TSB, said: "Consumers are still under real pressure financially, but we are beginning to see some initial signs that the squeeze on household finances may be easing as affordability of essential items improves."
9:35 PM | 0 comments

Ukraine trouble worries 2012 fans

England fans Ukraine trouble worries 2012 fans www.spywenews.blogspot.com
England fans have expressed concern over possible violence in Donetsk tomorrow night if Roy Hodgson's side beat Euro 2012 co-hosts Ukraine.
There will be an intense atmosphere inside the Donbass Arena as Ukraine need a victory to reach the quarter-finals whereas a draw will be good enough for England to progress.
The head of the British police contingent at the tournament admitted it will be a "challenging operation" to ensure England fans are "appropriately policed".
In addition to the passionate home support, the number of Russians wearing England shirts also presents a problem.
Assistant Chief Constable Andy Holt, of the Association of Chief Police Officers, which is leading the 18 British officers in Ukraine, said he had prepared for the possibility of the match being an intense affair.
"We always knew that if England end up in the last game of the group stage playing Ukraine and both need something out of the game, it would be a very tense atmosphere," he said. "This will be the most challenging operation in Ukraine thus far and we'll be working really hard with our Ukrainian colleagues to do all we can to make sure that England supporters are safe and appropriately policed."
Mr Holt raised concern over the vast amount of Russians who are wearing England shirts at Euro 2012. Russian supporters were involved in violent clashes with Polish fans and riot police ahead of their match in Warsaw last Tuesday.
"It poses a challenge because some Russian fans throughout this tournament haven't behaved particularly well," Mr Holt said. "What I don't want is Russian fans wearing England shirts misbehaving, and then England fans being blamed."
Meanwhile, Uefa has opened disciplinary proceedings against the Football Association (FA) for the "inappropriate conduct" of England supporters during Friday's match against Sweden.
They are investigating an attempted pitch invasion by fans during the 3-2 win at the Olympic Stadium in Kiev. England's second and third goals resulted in a handful of supporters climbing over a barrier. But it is understood the FA will argue there was no intent to invade the pitch and it was simply supporters showing their exuberance.
9:34 PM | 0 comments

Pc to face Tomlinson death charge

Pc to face Tomlinson death charge www.spywenews.blogspot.com
The trial of a police officer accused of killing newspaper seller Ian Tomlinson during the G20 protests in central London is due to begin.
Pc Simon Harwood, 41, is set to appear at Southwark Crown Court accused of Mr Tomlinson's manslaughter during the demonstrations in April 2009.
The 47-year-old, who was homeless, collapsed and died near the Royal Exchange Buildings in the City of London after being hit with a police baton.
He was caught on CCTV and in film captured by police and members of the public falling to the ground and then staggering away.
Mr Tomlinson eventually collapsed and died minutes later.
Father-of-two Harwood, from Carshalton, Surrey, denies manslaughter.
9:33 PM | 0 comments

Cameron urges action from eurozone

Prime Minister David Cameron Cameron urges action from eurozone www.spywenews.blogspot.com
Europe's leaders must be ready to take tough political decisions to resolve the eurozone crisis, or face the threat of "perpetual stagnation" or a hugely damaging break-up of the single currency,David Cameron is to warn.
Speaking a day after crucial re-run elections in Greece, the Prime Minister will put the crisis in the euro area at the top of a list of "five big threats to the global economy" and step up pressure on Germany and the European Central Bank to respond decisively.
He will urge the leaders of the world's biggest economies, gathering in Mexico for the G20 summit, to take "bold steps" to restore growth, and will warn against "backsliding" on trade protectionismand reforms to financial regulation.
A failure to follow through on pledges made at previous summits to reform the banks would leave the world exposed to a repeat of the 2008 financial crash, he will warn. No corner of the world is safe from the threats of the eurozone instability, sovereign debt, low growth, protectionism and failure to regulate the banks, the PM will say. "These five threats are very real. And let's be clear - in a global economy, they threaten us all."
Eurozone leaders including German chancellor Angela Merkel, French president Francois Hollandeand Italian PM Mario Monti were expected to delay their departure until the morning in order to be in place as the shape of the new political landscape in Athens becomes clear.
Speaking to the B20 business summit in Los Cabos shortly after his arrival, Mr Cameron is expected to renew his call on the 17 eurozone states to take the steps towards closer fiscal and financial integration which he believes are necessary to restore stability.
He will call on "core" members like Germany, as well as the ECB, to "do more to support demand and share the burden of adjustment", warning that central banks cannot afford to "stand on the sidelines" in the current crisis.
Mr Cameron will say that the UK has a "clear vision" of the "stable, growing, competitive and dynamic" world economy, powered by trade and financed by strong banks, which it wishes to create.
But he will warn of five threats to this vision: instability and contagion in the eurozone; debt and the "muddle-headed" belief that indebted countries can spend their way out of crisis; the failure to deliver the monetary activism and structural reform needed to deliver sustainable growth; 1930s-style protectionist barriers to trade; and the failure to complete long-term banking reforms.
With its members representing 90% of the world economy, the G20 is "the right forum to work together to deal with these threats", he will say.
9:32 PM | 0 comments

Stiff winds fuel Colo. wildfire; looting a concern

Firefighters watch as flames leap Stiff winds fuel Colo. wildfire; looting a concern www.spywenews.blogspot.com
Crews in northern Colorado are facing powerful winds as they battle a blaze that has scorched about 86 square miles of mountainous forest land and destroyed at least 181 homes, the most in state history. Meanwhile, local authorities are focusing on another concern — looting.
The destructiveness of the High Park Fire burning 15 miles west of Fort Collins surpassed the Fourmile Canyon wildfire, which destroyed 169 homes west of Boulder in September 2010.
More than 1,630 personnel are working on the Fort Collins-area fire, which was sparked by lightning and is 45 percent contained.
Julie Berney with the Larimer County Sheriff's Office said firefighters can expect winds of 30 mph with gusts of up to 50 mph Sunday. Some rain moved through Saturday evening, but it wasn't enough to quell the fire.
"The problem is that when you have a fire like this, even if it rains it evaporates before it hits the ground," Berney said.
On Sunday afternoon, high winds prompted fire managers to ground all helicopters working on the blaze and to send 96 notices to residents, ordering the immediate evacuation of the Hewlett Gulch Subdivision in the Poudre Canyon area north of the fire. It was unclear how many homes were affected.
A red flag warning has been issued for the area until 8 p.m. Sunday, and temperatures could reach 90 degrees, the hottest day since the fire was reported June 9.
But incident commander Bill Hahnenberg said he was pleased with the firefighters' progress, while also acknowledging that high winds could be a test.
"A scenario could be we'll lose some line, and then we just go after it the next day and the next day," he said. "We're going to do everything we can to protect facilities, and we're prepared to do that."
As firefighters try to get the upper hand on the blaze, which has burned large swaths of private and U.S. Forest Service land, local authorities have dispatched roving patrols to combat looting.
On Sunday, deputies arrested 30-year-old Michael Stillman Maher, of Denver, on charges including theft and impersonating a firefighter. The sheriff's department said Maher was driving through the fire zone with phony firefighter credentials and a stolen government license plate.
His truck was later seen near a bar in Laporte, and investigators say they found a firearm and stolen property in the vehicle.
"There's a handful out there that are taking advantage of others," said Sheriff Justin Smith, adding that "if somebody's sneaking around back there, we're going to find them."
Also Sunday, a fire erupted in the foothills west of Colorado Springs, prompting the evacuation of some cabins and a recreation area near the Elevenmile Canyon Reservoir. U.S. Forest Service spokesman Ralph Bellah told The Gazette (http://bit.ly/MiQvne ) that the fire was reported at about 12:30 p.m. and quickly grew to up to 100 acres.
Meanwhile, a fire near Pagosa Springs in the southwestern part of the state has grown to 11,617 acres and is 30 percent contained. Hot, dry conditions Sunday are expected to fuel the fire, which was sparked by lightning May 13.
Across the West:
— California: Authorities are evacuating homes in eastern San Diego County as firefighters battle a 100-acre wildfire that has destroyed one structure. The California Department of Forestry and Fire Protection says the fire began Sunday afternoon in a rural area northeast of Campo and near the Golden Acorn Casino.
—New Mexico: A wildfire in southern New Mexico has destroyed 242 homes and businesses, and firefighters are working to increase containment and keep an eye out for possible lightning.
The 59-square-mile Little Bear Fire in Ruidoso is 60 percent contained. Dan Bastion, a spokesman for crews fighting the fire, says most of the fire is in the mop-up stage, but crews need to build more containment on the fire's active west side to deprive it of fuel.
— Arizona: Firefighters are focusing on protecting electrical transmission lines near a 3,100-acre blaze on the Tonto National Forest in northern Arizona. Officials say hot weather and steep slopes remain a concern, and firefighters are on the alert for thunderstorms and possible lightning strikes. The fire is 15 percent contained.
9:29 PM | 0 comments

Brotherhood claims victory in Egypt president vote

Brotherhood claims victory in Egypt president vote www.spywenews.blogspot.com
The Muslim Brotherhood declared early Monday that its candidate, Mohammed Morsi, won Egypt's presidential election, even as the military handed themselves the lion's share of power over the new president, enshrining their hold on the state and sharpening the possibility of confrontation with the Islamists.
With parliament dissolved and martial law effectively in force, the generals made themselves the country's lawmakers, gave themselves control over the budget and will determine who writes the permanent constitution that will define the country's future.
But as they claimed victory over Hosni Mubarak's last prime minister Ahmed Shafiq in the election, the Brotherhood challenged the military's power grab. The group warned that it did not recognize the dissolution of parliament or the military's interim constitution — or its right to oversee the drafting of a new one.
That pointed to a potential struggle over spheres of authority between Egypt's two strongest forces. The Brotherhood has campaigned on a platform of bringing Egypt closer to a form of Islamic rule, but the military's grip puts it in a position to block that. Instead any conflict would likely center on more basic questions of power.
At a pre-dawn press conference Monday declaring their win, officials from the fundamentalist group that was banned for decades and repeatedly subjected to crackdowns under Mubarak's rule were ebullient and smiling, as supporters chanted, "Down with military rule."
"Thank God who guided the people of Egypt to this right path, the path of freedom and democracy," Morsi told the crowd at his campaign headquarters in his first appearance since the victory claim. He promised to "to Egypt in all its factions, Muslims and Christians" to "be a president for all Egyptians ... a servant to them" and seek a "civil, democratic, constitutional and modern state."
Final official results are not expected until Thursday. The Brotherhood's declaration was based on results announced by election officials at individual counting centers, where each campaign has representatives who compile the numbers and make them public before the formal announcement. The Brotherhood's early, partial counts proved generally accurate in last month's first round vote.
The group said Morsi took 51.8 percent of the vote to Shafiq's 48.1 percent out of 24.6 million votes cast, with 98 percent of the more than 13,000 poll centers counted.
Morsi "is the first civilian, popularly elected Egyptian president," the group proclaimed on its website. There was no immediate comment from the Shafiq campaign.
The question now will be how a Brotherhood president will get along with the military generals who have ruled since Mubarak fell on Feb. 11, 2011 and who will still hold powers that can potentially paralyze Morsi. The Brotherhood has reached accommodations with the generals at times over the past 16 months, as it struck deals with Mubarak's regime itself — gaining it a reputation among critics as willing to sell out for a taste of authority.
But after a highly polarized presidential election and the miltary's arrogation of powers to itself, the Brotherhood presented itself as willing to get into a confrontation with the Supreme Council of the Armed Forces, the body of top generals headed by Field Marshall Hussein Tantawi, Mubarak's defense minister for 20 years.
Just before the election, the Supreme Council of the Armed Forces, which has ruled since Mubarak's fall, slapped de facto martial law on the country, giving military police and intelligence agents the right to arrest civilians for a host of suspected crimes, some as secondary as obstructing traffic. Then came Thursday's ruling by the Supreme Constitutional Court dissolving parliament, followed by the interim constitution declaration just after polls closed Sunday following two days of voting.
According to a copy of the document obtained by The Associated Press, the generals would be the nation's legislators and control the budget. They also will name the 100-member panel tasked with drafting a new constitution, thus ensuring the new charter would guarantee them a say in key policies like defense and national security as well as shield their vast economic empire from civilian scrutiny.
The president will be able to appoint a Cabinet and approve or reject laws.
Under the document, new parliament elections will not be held until a new constitution is approved, meaning an election in December at the earliest. In the constitution-writing process, the military can object over any articles and the Supreme Constitutional Court — which is made up of Mubarak-era appointees — will have final say over any disputes.
Earlier Sunday, the Brotherhood's speaker of parliament Saad el-Katatni met with the deputy head of the military council, Chief of Staff Gen. Sami Anan and told him the group does not recognize the dissolution of parliament, according to a Brotherhood statement that pointedly referred to el-Katatni by his title.
El-Katatni insisted the military could not issue an interim constitution and that the constituent assembly formed last week would meet in the "coming hours" to go ahead with its work in writing the permanent charter.
Still, the Brotherhood has no power to force recognition of the parliament-created constituent assembly, which already seems discounted after parliament's dissolution and is likely to be formally disbanded by a pending court ruling. Lawmakers are literally locked out of parliament, which is ringed by troops.
The generals, mostly in their 60s and 70s, owe their ranks to the patronage of Mubarak. All along, activists from the pro-democracy youth groups that engineered the anti-Mubarak uprising questioned the generals' will to hand over power, arguing that after 60 years of direct or behind-the-scenes domination, the military was unlikely to voluntarily relinquish its perks.
The presidential race was a bitter one.
Shafiq, a former air force commander and an admirer and longtime friend of Mubarak, was seen by opponents as an extension of the old regime that millions sought to uproot when they staged a stunning uprising that toppled the man who ruled Egypt for three decades.
Morsi's opponents, in turn, feared that if he wins, the Brotherhood will take over the nation and turn it into an Islamic state, curbing freedoms and consigning minority Christians and women to second-class citizens.
Trying to rally the public in the last hours of voting, the Brotherhood presented a Morsi presidency as the last hope to prevent total control by the military council of Mubarak-era generals.
"We got rid of one devil and got 19," said Mohammed Kanouna, referring to Mubarak and the members of the military council as he voted for Morsi after night fell in Cairo's Dar el-Salam slum. "We have to let them know there is a will of the people above their will."
But the prospect that the generals will still hold most power even after their nominal handover of authority to civilians by July 1 has deepened the gloom, leaving some feeling the vote was essentially meaningless.
"Things have not changed at all. It is as if the revolution never happened," Ayat Maher, a 28-year-old mother of three, said as she waited for her husband to vote in Cairo's central Abdeen district. She said she voted for Morsi, but did not think there was much hope for him.
"The same people are running the country. The same oppression and the same sense of enslavement. They still hold the keys to everything."
9:28 PM | 0 comments
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