Tuesday, December 31, 2013

Colombian military kills 10 Farc rebels in bombing raid

BBC News

The Colombian military says it has killed at least 10 members of the left-wing Farc rebel group in an operation in central Meta province.

Among the dead was a regional commander of the rebels, known as Jhon 26.

Defence Minister Juan Carlos Pinzon said the attack had dealt a significant blow to the guerrilla group.

Government and Farc negotiators are holding peace talks in an effort to end 50 years of conflict but the government has refused to enter into a ceasefire.

The rebels declared a one-month unilateral ceasefire from 15 December but Mr Pinzon said the security forces would continue to target the rebels until a peace deal had been signed.

Extorting cattle ranchers

He said locals had tipped off the security forces about a rebel camp in a remote mountainous area of central Meta province.

Colombian air force planes found the camp and "neutralised" it, the defence minister said.

Army units have since searched the area and found six bodies, but they say at least four more rebels died in the attack.

They say Pedro Lain Parra Suns, better known as Jhon 26, was among those killed.

Jhon 26 - who had been part of the Farc for 15 years - was a key figure in the group's eastern command, officials say.

He is accused of extorting and kidnapping local cattle ranchers and businessmen for ransom.

Under his leadership, the rebel group he led became one of the main sources of income for the Farc's eastern command, the defence ministry said.

He is also accused of being the mastermind behind a number of attacks on police stations and civilians in the area.

Negotiations

The Farc rebels entered into peace negotiations with the government more than a year ago.

So far, they have reached agreement on two main issues - land reform and the political participation of the rebels - from their six-point agenda.

The Farc have repeatedly urged the government to enter into a bilateral ceasefire but Defence Minister Pinzon says the guerrilla would only use it to re-group and re-arm.

Victims' groups say more than 220,00 people have died in the five-decade long conflict.

Viewpoint: Human evolution, from tree to braid

By Professor Clive Finlayson
BBC News

If one human evolution paper published in 2013 sticks in my mind above all others, it has to be the wonderful report in the 18 October issue of the journal Science.

The article in question described the beautiful fifth skull from Dmanisi in Georgia. Most commentators and colleagues were full of praise, but controversy soon reared its ugly head.

What was, in my view, a logical conclusion reached by the authors was too much for some researchers to take.

The conclusion of the Dmanisi study was that the variation in skull shape and morphology observed in this small sample, derived from a single population of Homo erectus, matched the entire variation observed among African fossils ascribed to three species - H. erectus, H. habilis and H. rudolfensis.

The five highly variable Dmanisi fossils belonged to a single population of H. erectus, so how could we argue any longer that similar variation among spatially and temporally widely distributed fossils in Africa reflected differences between species? They all had to be the same species.

I have been advocating that the morphological differences observed within fossils typically ascribed to Homo sapiens (the so-called modern humans) and the Neanderthals fall within the variation observable in a single species.

It was not surprising to find that Neanderthals and modern humans interbred, a clear expectation of the biological species concept.

But most people were surprised with that particular discovery, as indeed they were with the fifth skull and many other recent discoveries, for example the "Hobbit" from the Indonesian island of Flores.

It seems that almost every other discovery in palaeoanthropology is reported as a surprise. I wonder when the penny will drop: when we have five pieces of a 5,000-piece jigsaw puzzle, every new bit that we add is likely to change the picture.

Did we really think that having just a minuscule residue of our long and diverse past was enough for us to tell humanity's story?

If the fossils of 1.8 or so million years ago and those of the more recent Neanderthal-modern human era were all part of a single, morphologically diverse, species with a wide geographical range, what is there to suggest that it would have been any different in the intervening periods?

Probably not so different if we take the latest finds from the Altai Mountains in Siberia into account. Denisova Cave has produced yet another surprise, revealing that, not only was there gene flow between Neanderthals, Denisovans and modern humans, but that a fourth player was also involved in the gene-exchange game.

The identity of the fourth player remains unknown but it was an ancient lineage that had been separate for probably over a million years. H. erectus seems a likely candidate. Whatever the name we choose to give this mystery lineage, what these results show is that gene flow was possible not just among contemporaries but also between ancient and more modern lineages.

Just to show how little we really know of the human story, another genetic surprise has confounded palaeoanthropologists. Scientists succeeded in extracting the most ancient mitochondrial DNA so far, from the Sima de los Huesos site in Atapuerca, Spain.

The morphology of these well-known Middle Pleistocene (approximately 400,000 years old) fossils have long been thought to represent a lineage leading to the Neanderthals.

When the results came in they were actually closer to the 40,000 year-old Denisovans from Siberia. We can speculate on the result but others have offered enough alternatives for me to not to have to add to them.

The conclusion that I derive takes me back to Dmanisi: We have built a picture of our evolution based on the morphology of fossils and it was wrong.

We just cannot place so much taxonomic weight on a handful of skulls when we know how plastic - or easily changeable - skull shape is in humans. And our paradigms must also change.

Some time ago we replaced a linear view of our evolution by one represented by a branching tree. It is now time to replace it with that of an interwoven plexus of genetic lineages that branch out and fuse once again with the passage of time.

This means, of course, that we must abandon, once and for all, views of modern human superiority over archaic (ancient) humans. The terms "archaic" and "modern" lose all meaning as do concepts of modern human replacement of all other lineages.

It also releases us from the deep-rooted shackles that have sought to link human evolution with stone tool-making technological stages - the Stone Ages - even when we have known that these have overlapped with each other for half-a-million years in some instances.

The world of our biological and cultural evolution was far too fluid for us to constrain it into a few stages linked by transitions.

The challenge must now be to try and learn as much as we can of the detail. We have to flesh out the genetic information and this is where archaeology comes into the picture. We may never know how the Denisovans earned a living, after all we have mere fragments of their anatomy at our disposal, let alone other populations that we may not even be aware of.

What we can do is try to understand the spectrum of potential responses of human populations to different environmental conditions and how culture has intervened in these relationships. The Neanderthals will be central to our understanding of the possibilities because they have been so well studied.

A recent paper, for example, supports the view that Neanderthals at La Chapelle-aux-Saints in France intentionally buried their dead which contrasts with reports of cannibalistic behaviour not far away at El Sidron in northern Spain.

Here we have two very different behavioural patterns within Neanderthals. Similarly, modern humans in south-western Europe painted in cave walls for a limited period but many contemporaries did not. Some Neanderthals did it in a completely different way it seems, by selecting raptor feathers of particular colours. Rather than focus on differences between modern humans and Neanderthals, what the examples show is the range of possibilities open to humans (Neanderthals included) in different circumstances.

The future of human origins research will need to focus along three axes:

  • further genetic research to clarify the relationship of lineages and the history of humans;
  • research using new technology on old archaeological sites, as at La Chapelle; and
  • research at sites that currently retain huge potential for new discoveries.

Sites in the latter category are few and far between. In Europe at least, many were excavated during the last century but there are some outstanding examples remaining. Gorham's and Vanguard Caves in Gibraltar, where I work, are among those because they span over 100,000 years of occupation and are veritable repositories of data.

There is another dimension to this story. It seems that the global community is coming round to recognising the value of key sites that document human evolution.

In 2012, the caves on Mount Carmel were inscribed on the Unesco World Heritage List and the UK Government will be putting Gorham's and associated caves on the Rock of Gibraltar forward for similar status in January 2015. It is recognition of the value of these caves as archives of the way of life and the environments of people long gone but who are very much a part of our story.

'Morale high' on stranded Antarctica ship

By Andrew Luck-Baker
BBC News

Morale among the scientists and research volunteers - or tourists - of the Australasian Antarctic Expedition 2013 is surprisingly high.

A new year is fast approaching and although that will not be accompanied by a new view for us from the ice-beset decks, preparations are underway for when midnight strikes off Cape De La Motte in east Antarctica.

A special song and dance routine is being written, choreographed and rehearsed for the dawn of 2014.

Meanwhile, expedition scientists have been deploying their instruments from the rear of the Shokalskiy, to measure water temperatures and salinity all the way from 10 metres below the ice to the sea bed.

At our briefing this morning, we discovered that we would be going nowhere for at least another 24 hours.

The Australian icebreaker, the Aurora Australis, is holding its position in clear water beyond the mass of pack ice trapping us. Its two attempts to reach us yesterday failed.

Plans to evacuate us by air are also on hold. Low cloud has made it too risky for the helicopter from the Chinese icebreaker, the Xue Long, to fly out and land next to us on the pack.

The winds are also up too now - blowing between 15 and 25 knots.

It was hoped that a helicopter evacuation could take place when the weather improved.

A hefty Chinese helicopter was to land next to us and ferry us in groups of 15 to the ice edge close to the Aurora, before we were transferred across clear water to an Australian icebreaker.

However, the Chinese ship, the Xue Long, may now be trapped itself. It has barely moved position in a day, according to one of the leaders of the Australian Antarctic Expedition 2013, Prof Chris Turney.

The Russian crew were expecting to stay on board the Shokalskiy for what could be weeks, until the ice has weakened enough for an icebreaker to break through. The rest of us may have to join them if the airlift plan falls through.

A huge US icebreaker, the Polar Star, should be in the area in a week to 10 days. We are told that the Polar Star can slice through sea ice six metres thick.

The mood of the Russian crew has also been affected by reports of the bombings in their home country.

Slovakia accepts three Guantanamo Uighur inmates

BBC News

Three Chinese Muslim Uighurs have been flown to Slovakia from the US military prison at Guantanamo Bay in Cuba, the Slovak interior ministry says.

The three are now in the capital Bratislava, a ministry official told the BBC. None of them are terror suspects, the ministry stressed.

Slovakia - a member of the EU and Nato - also accepted three inmates from Guantanamo in 2010.

The US says all the Uighur prisoners have now been released from Guantanamo.

Since 2001 the prison has housed suspects detained by US forces during operations against al-Qaeda and the Taliban.

"As in the case of the first transport, the persons in this transport have never been suspected nor accused of terrorism. The transport is a follow-up to the agreement of 2009 [with the US]," the Slovak ministry statement said.

A US Department of Defense statement named the latest three Uighurs as Yusef Abbas, Saidullah Khalik and Hajiakbar Abdul Ghuper.

"These three are the last ethnic Uighur Chinese nationals to be transferred," the statement said, adding that they "are voluntarily resettling in Slovakia".

The US refuses to repatriate Uighur detainees to China because of the risk that they could be mistreated. China has cracked down hard on Uighur dissidents who oppose rule from Beijing.

Prisoner transfers

The latest release brings down the total of Guantanamo detainees to 155. Many have been held there for more than a decade, and many were cleared for release years ago.

More than 100 inmates went on hunger strike earlier this year.

According to a prisoner list published on the Wikileaks website, 22 Chinese Uighurs were imprisoned at Guantanamo by US forces after capture in Afghanistan.

In April US President Barack Obama renewed his call to close the prison, saying "it is inefficient, it hurts us in terms of our international standing".

Previously six Uighurs have been sent from Guantanamo to the Pacific island nation of Palau, while 11 others have gone to Bermuda, Albania and Switzerland.

The Uighurs are a mainly Muslim, Turkic-speaking minority based in western China's Xinjiang region.

West Australia issues cyclone red alert

BBC News

Western Australia is braced for a powerful tropical cyclone, with winds of up to 200km/hour (120 mph) and flooding expected.

Cyclone Christine is set to make landfall on Monday night.

Red alerts have been issued for some coastal communities, including the towns of Port Hedland and Karratha.

Residents in the affected areas have been ordered to stay indoors. Mining companies in the region say they have scaled back operations.

"Very destructive winds with gusts in excess of 200 km/h (120 mph) are likely near the centre as the cyclone crosses the coast," the Bureau of Meteorology said in an alert.

"People on the coast between Pardoo and Wickham including Port Hedland are warned of the potential for a very dangerous storm tide tonight," it added.

Port Hedland Mayor Kelly Howlett told broadcaster ABC: "It's looking very ominous, certainly it's been very grey, we have been experiencing an increase in winds, we have been getting some strong gusts and we have been getting a little bit of rain."

Shortly before the cyclone was due to make landfall, winds up to 107km/h and heavy rain was reported in Port Hedland, BBC Weather reported.

Mining companies say they have suspended port and rail operations and secured their infrastructure on the coast.

The Australian cyclone season runs from November to April, and around two cyclones on average make landfall on west Australia each year.

China local government debt surges by 70%

BBC News

China has local government debts of 17.7 trillion yuan ($2.9tn), up 70% from three years ago, according to an official report.

China's government asked the National Audit Office (NAO) in July to do a round-up of the debts outstanding at a local level.

The report showed some local governments were using new loans to repay more than a fifth of their debt.

China has a total government debt of about 58% of its economic output.

Persistent fears over the level of non-performing bad debt have affected perceptions of the world's second-largest economy, as some worry whether the loans can be paid back.

The figure is still less than half the debt burdens in Japan - the world's third-largest economy - and Greece, but some analysts warn that China's debt cannot continue to grow at this pace forever.

"While China's total government debt remains low by the OECD standards, the pace of the rise is still alarming," said ANZ Bank economists Liu Li-Gang and Zhou Hao.

"This national debt audit result could indicate that China's local government debt almost doubled in about two-and-a-half years."

According to the China Banking Regulatory Commission, local governments took up 80% of total bank lending in China at the end of 2010. Local governments in China borrowed heavily after the global financial crisis, to try to sustain growth rates.

The Chinese central government has repeatedly stressed the urgent need to guard against financial risks, including the local government debt problem.

Abdus Subhan: Bangladesh Islamist charged over war crimes

BBC News

A leading member of Bangladesh's main Islamist party has been charged in connection with war crimes during the 1971 war of independence with Pakistan.

Abdus Subhan was arrested last September and the special war crimes court conducted an inquiry before finally framing charges.

The tribunal was set up in 2010 to investigate abuses committed in that war, but human rights groups say it does not meet international standards.

Mr Subhan has denied all the charges.

Bangladesh broke away from Pakistan after a war which saw killings on a mass scale, the exodus of more than 10 million refugees and military intervention by neighbouring India.

The government set up the special court to deal with those accused of collaborating with Pakistani forces who attempted to stop East Pakistan, as Bangladesh was then, from becoming an independent country.

While many Bangladeshis have welcomed the work of the ICT, Jamaat supporters say it is a politically-motivated attempt to eradicate its leaders.

Earlier this year Bangladesh executed senior Islamist leader Abdul Kader Mullah, convicted of atrocities committed during that war.

Four other leading figures in Jamaat-e-Islami have also been convicted by the ICT and face the death penalty.

Jamaat is barred from contesting elections scheduled for 5 January but plays a key role in the opposition movement led by the Bangladesh Nationalist Party (BNP).

Just last week opposition supporters clashed with security forces in Dhaka ahead of the election - they want to see caretaker government installed before polls, but the government has rejected this demand.

Romania dismisses UK 'invasion' fears

BBC News

The Romanian foreign ministry has dismissed talk in the British media of an "invasion" when work restrictions are lifted on Wednesday.

"The UK for now is not even the preferred destination for Romanians," said spokeswoman Brandusa Predescu.

Some British newspapers have predicted migrants will make the journey to claim benefits and even steal scrap metal.

Ministers have refused to predict how many migrants from Romania and Bulgaria might arrive.

Both countries joined the EU in 2007 but since then, their citizens have been able to work in the UK only under certain conditions, which come to an end on Wednesday.

On Tuesday, the Sun newspaper claimed the first coachload of migrants had boarded a bus bound for the UK, with some of them intent on begging for a living or living off the state.

Ms Predescu told the BBC some of the media coverage had bordered on racist and there had been an "outright campaign" against Romanians and Bulgarians.

"There isn't going to be an invasion of Romanians as of two days' time. Not all Romanians, young and old, are going to get on a plane.

"We don't have estimates, you don't have estimates. The UK will [not be] and is not the preferred destination of Romanians."

The Labour government vastly underestimated the number of people who would come to the UK after eight nations joined the European Union in 2004.

It used a prediction of 13,000 arrivals - a figure which was exceeded many times over with a peak net migration figure, from the EU and elsewhere, of 252,000 in 2010.

This time, with eight other EU countries - including France, Germany and Spain - lifting restrictions at the same time, ministers say forecasting numbers is difficult.

Campaigners for tighter laws have said 50,000 Romanians and Bulgarians a year for the first five years could come to the UK. Bulgarian and Romanian officials have previously estimated 8,000 year.

The government is tightening the rules from 1 January to ensure that migrants cannot claim out-of-work benefits for three months after arriving and will only qualify for support after six months if they had a genuine chance of employment.

Overseas visitors and migrants are also to face new charges for some NHS services in England.

Archbishop of Canterbury names Pope his 'person of the year'

BBC News

The Archbishop of Canterbury has said Pope Francis is an "extraordinary man" and his person of the year.

"He has changed the sense of direction and purpose of the Catholic Church with his personal example," the Most Reverend Justin Welby told the BBC.

He added that the Church of England was still working out how to dispose of £80,000 in shares which indirectly fund short-term loan companies, like Wonga.

When the investment emerged in July, the archbishop said he was embarrassed.

A review was conducted and the Church was now trying to dispose of those shares "without disposing of millions and millions of pounds of investment at a loss because they have a responsibility to pensioners", he said.

'Hugely effective'

The amount of Church money indirectly invested in Wonga was about £75,000 out of investments totalling £5.5bn, the archbishop said in July.

Pope Francis, who took over from Pope Benedict after his resignation in March, was named person of the year by Time magazine earlier this month.

The US publication said the Pope had pulled "the papacy out of the palace and into the streets".

Since his succession, Pope Francis has adopted a markedly less formal tone than his predecessor, underlining his reputation for simplicity and humility.

It has been suggested he plans to radically reform the Vatican bureaucracy and, in an unprecedented move, he has ordered a survey of lay Catholics' opinions on Church teachings on sexual ethics and family life.

'Loss of vision'

Archbishop Welby, who leads 80 million Christians in more than 160 countries, said he would not want to compare himself to the Pope whose reach was 20 times bigger than the entire Anglican communion.

"The Pope has been hugely effective. I would certainly put him as my person of the year," he said.

"Well, I'd probably have several, but if you want one, I'd put him there. He's extraordinary."

The comments were made during the archbishop's appearance on BBC Radio Four's Today programme, which was guest edited by Barclays chief executive Antony Jenkins.

Both spoke of the "similarities" between leadership of a bank and of the Church of England.

Asked about the banking industry, the archbishop said there had been a "progressive loss of vision" of what banks were for and its leaders urgently needed to move away from serving shareholders.

Mr Jenkins, who became Barclays boss last year, said he expected it would take five to 10 years to restore public trust in his bank.

Hackers knock League of Legends offline

BBc News

Hugely popular online game League of Legends (LoL) was knocked offline for a few hours on 30 December by hackers.

It was one of several games and social media sites targeted by the Derp hacking group.

Reports suggest the attack was more mischievous than malicious and was partly aimed at US pro-gamer James Varga.

The attack ended with police calling at Mr Varga's house in response to a fake call saying hostages were held there.

Armed response

The Derp hacking group claimed responsibility for the attack on League of Legends and Mr Varga, aka PhantomL0rd via its Twitter account.

The attack began early on Monday with the group bombarding US and European servers with huge amounts of data to knock them offline. Later in the day the game's Asian servers were knocked offline with the same tactic.

The group switched its focus to Mr Varga who had been documenting LoL's ongoing problems and the Derp group's claim of responsibility via his daily Twitch TV video stream.

Twitch TV is a streaming service that lets people share their live gaming experiences with others. LoL is by far the most popular game watched via Twitch.

Mr Varga's interaction with Derp led it to pursue him through every game he tried to play. By the time the attack was done, the Derp group had caused intermittent problems for people using EA.com. Blizzard's Battlenet, Dota 2, Quake Live, Club Penguin, Reddit and other sites.

The hacking group said it carried out the series of attacks for "the lulz" in a text chat with Mr Varga that took place while he was being pursued through different games.

During the attack Mr Varga's personal details, including his home address, were posted online. This led someone to place a prank call to his local police department claiming hostages were being held at Mr Varga's home.

More than a dozen armed police responded to the call, which resulted in Mr Varga being arrested and handcuffed. Police then searched his house, but he was released once it became clear that the call was fake.

"I'm still quite shaken up, but I'm good. I'm okay," he said in a YouTube video posted after he was released by police.

CAR conflict: Unicef says children 'beheaded' in Bangui

BBC News

At least two children have been been beheaded in the Central African Republic's capital as violence sinks to a "vicious new low", the UN has said.

About 16 children had been killed in Bangui since 5 December and an increasing number of them are being recruited into armed groups, it added.

The violence has mostly pitted Christian and Muslim militias against each other.

The UN said children were being directly targeted in revenge attacks.

The CAR is ruled by Muslim ex-rebel leader Michel Djotodia, who seized power in March forcing then-President Francois Bozize, who came from the majority Christian population, to flee into exile.

'Atrocious attacks'

About 100,000 people have been killed in tit-for-tat clashes in Bangui in December and about 370,000 people, nearly half the city's population, have been displaced, aid agencies say.

There were "unprecedented levels" of violence against children, the UN children's agency, Unicef, said in a statement.

One of the children who had been beheaded had also been mutilated, while another 60 had been injured in fighting since 5 December, it said.

"More and more children are being recruited into armed groups, and they are also being directly targeted in atrocious revenge attacks," said Souleymane Diabate, Unicef's CAR representative.

"Targeted attacks against children are a violation of international humanitarian and human rights law and must stop immediately. Concrete action is needed now to prevent violence against children."

Last month, the UN said the number of child soldiers in CAR had more than doubled to 6,000 as fighting escalated.

Many Muslim fighters belong to the former rebel group, Seleka, and Christians to militias called "anti-balaka", named after the local Sango language word for machete.

The African Union has sent nearly 4,000 troops to CAR while France, the former colonial power, has also deployed 1,600 soldiers there in an attempt to quell violence.

Many foreign governments have been evacuating their citizens from CAR.

MJF-L cadres protest against PR selection

KATHMANDU, DEC 31 - Cadres of Madhesi Janadhikar Forum-Loktantrik (MJF-L) staged a sit-in outside the party office in Sanepa, expressing dissatisfaction over the selection of lawmakers under the Proportional Representation (PR) category.

The party cadres protested against the exclusion of Kamleshwor Yadav, Chairman of MJF-L's student wing, from the party's list of PR lawmakers.

Office Secretary Parmananda Mahato informed that the cadres staged demonstration outside the party office, demanding correction of party's list of PR lawmakers. Party's central committee had entrusted Chairman Bijaya Kumar Gachhadar with the task of picking PR lawmakers.

MJF-L, which has 10 PR seats, picked educationist duo Geeta Rana and Baburam Pokharel and businessmen Subodh Pokhrel and Dinbandhu Agrawal, among others, as the PR lawmakers.


UCPN (M) cadres torch party office in Dhading

DHADING, DEC 31 -
Expressing dissatisfaction over the selection of final list of candidates under the Proportional Representation (PR) category, UCPN (Maoist) cadres torched the District Party Office, Dhading on Tuesday. Office furnitures and important documents were destroyed by the fire.

The irate cadres expressed strong reservations over the selection of former Inspector General of Nepal Police Rabindra Pratap Shah as one of the PR candidates of the party, excluding the cadres who had fought during the people's war.

The district headquarters became tense following the vandalism.

Restoring trust in Barclays 'to take five to 10 years'

BBC News

Barclays chief executive Antony Jenkins says he expects it to be five to 10 years before he can restore public trust in the bank.

Mr Jenkins said that people in large organisations, "want to do the right thing - it's sometimes that they perceive the right thing differently".

Mr Jenkins was guest editor of the Today programme on Radio 4 on Tuesday.

The Archbishop of Canterbury, Justin Welby - also on the programme- said that change would take "a generation."

Mr Jenkins made the comments in a session with students at Brooke House Sixth Form College in East London, at an event organised by the charity Speakers for Schools, which was founded by BBC business editor Robert Peston.

Archbishop Welby said that there had been a "progressive loss of vision of what banks are for".

He added that while many business leaders seemed to have realised the mistakes that had been made, some were clearly still "in denial", although he declined to name them.

He added that there was still refusal to accept the continued need for cultural transformation after the 2008 financial crisis from some in the banking sector.

"I came across senior members of the City who were still absolutely in denial about what happened in 2008," he said.

Speaking to the BBC's chief economics correspondent Hugh Pym, Archbishop Welby said that the failure to accept the need for change was still prevalent in remuneration, or pay practices, in the banking sector.

He said that it was a "generational" challenge.

When asked how far away banks were from serving society as a whole, rather than just the wishes of shareholders, the archbishop said that the challenge of leadership was to make clear the urgency of a "massive cultural change" away from serving shareholders.

Archbishop Welby and Mr Jenkins also appeared together on the Today programme, and spoke of the similarities between leadership of a bank and of the Church of England.

Mr Jenkins said that they shared views on "where banks need to go".

Helena Morrissey, chief executive of Newton Investment Management, was also invited onto the programme and asked about the role of business in the wider community.

She said that "responsibly managed" companies were more likely to perform well, and achieve a competitive advantage.

Mr Jenkins became Barclays boss in August 2012.

It has been a difficult year for banks, with growing compensation claims for mis-selling as well as investigations into rigging parts of the market.

Dumfries and Galloway flood rescue family speak of ordeal

BBC News

A man who was airlifted from his flooded farm, along with his four children, has spoken about their ordeal.

Sam Kennedy-Moffat and his children, all under eight, were flown to safety after being trapped in the farmhouse beside the River Nith at Closeburn, near Dumfries, for about six hours.

Two holidaymakers in a nearby cottage were also rescued.

Efforts to reach them by firefighters and an inshore rescue team both failed.

The group was picked up by a Sea King rescue helicopter from HMS Gannet at Prestwick at about 19:00. Two dogs were also rescued.

Mr Kennedy-Moffat told the BBC they realised at about lunchtime that there was no way out by road.

"I realised by about half past one that there was no way out by road," he said.

"Just looking at the way the river had knocked the fence over and how quick it was coming over the top of the road.

"We switched all the electricals off and shifted everything electrical upstairs. We got the kids upstairs and got their feet dried and into socks and warm clothes and jackets."

The children's mother Niky was on the other side of the floodwaters, facing an anxious wait to be reunited with them.

"I was more concerned about the kids, wondered how they felt, were they scared? Were they all right?," she said.

"But as it turned out they were quite happy. They played with their toys and kept calm.

"They took water up the stairs, and the sweeties to make sure they had clean water and food. So they did good."

Three people were rescued by firefighters at the Whitesands in Dumfries on Monday night after they were cut off by the deep floodwater and rising River Nith.

Firefighters used specialised equipment and carried one of them to safety after the family was cut off in their upstairs flat.

Earlier, electricity in the area was cut off because of the rising floodwater in the Vennel and Whitesands.

With more rain forecast on Tuesday morning, police said further flooding and disruption was possible.

The Scottish Environment Protection Agency has more than 30 flood warnings in place, mainly in Tayside and the Borders, and the Environment Agency has eight flood warnings and 126 flood alerts in place in England and Wales, mostly in the south east and south west.

Met Office amber "be prepared" warnings for parts of Dumfries and Galloway and Ayrshire have now been lifted but yellow "be aware" warnings for rain remain in place for these areas and much of central and southern Scotland.

There is also a yellow warning for Northern Ireland.

Scotland's Transport Minister Keith Brown told BBC Radio's Good Morning Scotland programme it was hoped the worst of the flooding had passed.

"We are going to see additional rain coming in that's going to mean that the recession of the current levels of flooding we've seen in some of the main rivers will be stalled," he said.

"But by and large, all the rivers are starting to reduce, with the exception perhaps of The Tweed, which will take some time to disperse further downstream.

"But that will mean there may be some pressure points around the south west and in the Borders."

Torrential rain led to disruption in several parts of Scotland on Monday.

Homes were evacuated at Kirkconnel, in Dumfries and Galloway, and New Cumnock in East Ayrshire.

Flooding caused disruption on the rail network and several road closures.

Homes in Port Logan and Newton Stewart also had to be evacuated.

Meanwhile, a number of tenement flats in Dundee are still cordoned off after heavy rain caused a landslip.

A wall at the rear of the buildings in the city's Gardner Street also collapsed and a number of residents were evacuated from their homes as a precaution.

No-one was injured and engineers have been assessing the damage. The road is closed to traffic.

Volgograd blasts: City on alert as death toll rises

BBC News

Thousands of police are patrolling public transport and checking traffic in Volgograd after two suicide bomb attacks shook the south Russian city.

The number of people who died in the attacks has risen to 34, the regional health authority told Russian media, with some 60 injured.

It is unclear if the toll includes the bombers, who attacked the rail station on Sunday and a trolleybus on Monday.

The first victim has been buried - a policeman killed at the station.

President Vladimir Putin has yet to comment publicly on the attacks, which came days before the New Year holiday, one of Russia's biggest celebrations, and just over a month before the opening of the Winter Olympics in Sochi.

Mr Putin is due to make his traditional New Year's speech to the nation at midnight (20:00 GMT).

No group has said it carried out the attacks, which Russian investigators believe are connected. However, the bombings are similar to previous indiscriminate attacks by Islamist militants operating from the North Caucasus.

Volgograd, a city of one million known as Stalingrad during World War 2, commemorated the 70th anniversary of the battle of the same name this year, in an outpouring of Russian patriotic fervour.

Reserves called in

More than 5,000 law enforcement agents were deployed on Tuesday morning, regional security spokesman Andrei Pilipchuk told Russian media.

Extra reserves and the "maximum number of police and interior ministry soldiers possible" were being brought in, he said.

As many as 600 police officers from the city were recently transferred to Sochi, 688km (428 miles) to the south-west, to help with preparation for the Games which begin on 7 February, Reuters news agency reports.

Events for New Year's Eve, such as children's parties, have been cancelled in the city, while residents have been asked not to set off fireworks.

In the immediate aftermath of the attacks, members of Russian Cossack organisations reportedly mounted vigilante patrols in the city.

The death toll rose overnight as a person wounded in Sunday's attack on the station died of their injuries, bringing the total fatalities in that attack to 18.

Another person injured in Monday's attack on a trolleybus also died, bringing that toll to 16.

Funerals

The first victim to be buried on New Year's Eve was transport policeman Dmitry Makovkin, 29, killed at a metal detector in the station, where the suicide bomber set off the device.

Hundreds of mourners attended the funeral, at which Inspector Makovkin was remembered by his commander as a hero, who possibly prevented greater loss of life by blocking the attacker or attackers from entering the station, the Russian government newspaper Rossiyskaya Gazeta reports.

The married policeman, who had a son, was buried in a closed coffin, as his young wife wept, the paper writes. His grieving mother fainted and was treated by doctors who were standing by.

A second victim was being buried on Tuesday and funerals are due to continue through the holiday period.

Investigators believe a male suicide attacker bombed the trolleybus and are studying fragments of his body in an effort to identify him. Police sources say the attack on the station may also have been the work of a male bomber, after initial speculation it was a woman.

Identical shrapnel was used in the bombs, according to Vladimir Markin, spokesman for Russia's Investigative Committee.

Analysts say the prime suspect for the attack is likely to be Doku Umarov, a fugitive Islamist militant leader from Chechnya.

He has orchestrated previous bomb attacks on Russian civilian targets, and vowed in July that his fighters would use "any means possible" to keep Mr Putin from staging the Sochi Games.

Mystery of new California crop circle

BBC News

California residents have been left puzzled by a mysterious crop circle which appeared at a farm over the weekend.

The pattern, in Salinas Valley, near Monterey, was reported by two friends in a YouTube post.

They claimed to have seen two bursts of light before dawn on Sunday.

No-one has claimed responsibility.

China's Yutu Moon rover pictured from orbit by Nasa satellite

BBC News

An American satellite has pictured the Chinese Yutu rover on the surface of the Moon.

The 150cm-wide wheeled-vehicle appears as a single pixel in the images from the US space agency's (Nasa) Lunar Reconnaissance Orbiter (LRO).

The lander that placed Yutu on the surface of Mare Imbrium (Sea of Rains) on 14 December is also visible nearby.

Both pieces of Chinese hardware are distinctively bright against the dark lunar "soil" and cast long shadows.

This made them easy to identify in before-and-after images of the landing location, which can now be given very precise map coordinates.

Nasa says its LRO satellite was not in the right position to capture the landing earlier this month. It was not until 25 December that the spacecraft's orbit brought it directly overhead.

The published images were taken from an altitude of 150km.

Yutu ("Jade Rabbit") is China's first landed mission at the Moon. After running down a ramp on to the lunar surface, Yutu trundled in an arc around its delivery lander.

Scientists were able to check the vehicles systems before putting the robot into hibernation for the long lunar night, which lasts two Earth weeks.

When revived, Yutu will explore its landing zone, studying the dusty terrain and its geology.

Cameroon gunmen free French priest Georges Vandenbeusch

BBC News

A French Catholic priest kidnapped in Cameroon on 13 November has been released, French President Francois Hollande said in an official statement.

Fr Georges Vandenbeusch, 42, was kidnapped by gunmen in northern Cameroon near the border with Nigeria.

The armed Nigerian Islamist group Boko Haram, which operates in the area, later said it was holding him.

Mr Hollande thanked the authorities in Cameroon and Nigeria for their help in getting the priest released.

His message expressed special thanks to Cameroon's President Paul Biya.

A French diplomat quoted by the AFP news agency said the priest was released early on Tuesday in northern Cameroon. "He is now on a plane with the Cameroonian army and will be handed over to the French ambassador in Cameroon," the source said.

There was no further explanation about his release.

Mr Hollande said French Foreign Minister Laurent Fabius would fly to Yaounde in Cameroon to bring Fr Vandenbeusch back to France as soon as possible.

The president added that six French nationals remain hostage in Mali and Syria, and he expressed support for their families, saying he would strive to win their release.

Earlier this year, seven members of a French family called Moulin-Fournier - four of them children - were abducted by Boko Haram in northern Cameroon and held hostage for two months.

Boko Haram was paid more than $3m (£2m) before releasing the family, according to a confidential Nigerian government report seen by Reuters news agency. There was no official confirmation of that ransom.

Syria crisis: Ships return as chemical removal slips

BBC News

Norwegian and Danish ships waiting to remove Syria's chemical weapons are returning to port in Cyprus, signalling a key deadline will not be met.

Bad weather, shifting battle lines and road closures are being blamed for the delay.

The international mission is waiting for Syria's most dangerous chemicals to be transported to the port in Latakia.

The deadline is the first milestone of a deal to rid Syria of its chemical weapons arsenal by the middle of 2014.

It was brokered by the US and Russia after rockets filled with the nerve agent sarin were fired at three towns in the Ghouta agricultural belt around Damascus on 21 August, killing hundreds of people.

Western powers said only Syrian government forces could have carried out the attack, but President Bashar al-Assad blamed rebel fighters.

'On high alert'

Under the international disarmament plan, US satellites and Chinese surveillance cameras are to track the progress of Russian armoured lorries as they carry the chemical weapons from 12 storage sites in Syria to Latakia, on Syria's Mediterranean coast.

Danish and Norwegian cargo ships will then transport the chemicals to a port in Italy, where they will be loaded on to the US Maritime Administration vessel MV Cape Ray and taken out into international waters before being destroyed by hydrolysis.

However, the BBC's Anna Holligan, who is travelling on board a Norwegian frigate HNoMS Helge Ingstad, reports that the European ships are docked in Limassol, Cyprus on the day they are supposed to be escorting Syria's most dangerous chemicals out of the country.

The vessels left Limassol on Saturday but turned back on Tuesday after the hazardous containers failed to arrive for collection in Latakia. Now the plan is to refuel in Limassol before returning to sea in the coming days.

"We are still on high alert to go into Syria," Norwegian defence ministry spokesman Lars Hovtun told the AFP news agency. "We still don't know exactly when the orders will come."

Our correspondent says the delay will be a disappointment to the international community.

Co-operation on the chemical weapons removal programme was seen by many of those involved as a potential catalyst for broader peace negotiations in Syria.

Failing to meet this ambitious target, our correspondent adds, will demonstrate the difficulties involved in operating in a country with constantly changing frontlines - even with an international mandate and co-operation from President Assad.

On Saturday, the Joint Mission of the Organisation for the Prohibition of Chemical Weapons (OPCW) and the United Nations acknowledged that while preparations continued, "at this stage, transportation of the most critical chemical material before 31 December is unlikely".

"A number of external factors have impacted upon timelines, not least the continuing volatility in overall security conditions, which have constrained planned movements," a statement said.

The joint mission also noted that the Syrian government had met the 1 November deadline to destroy critical chemical weapons production equipment, which meant it could no longer weaponise the chemical agents at its storage facilities.

On Monday, the US state department stressed that it was "the Assad regime's responsibility to transport the chemicals to the port safely, to facilitate their removal".

But deputy spokeswoman Marie Harf also acknowledged that it was a "complicated process", adding: "As long as we see forward progress, that what's most important here."

China doctor tried for trafficking babies

BBC News

A Chinese obstetrician is on trial for stealing newborn babies and selling them to child traffickers, a court and state media report.

Zhang Shuxia was accused of selling seven babies. She told the parents their infants were sick, and convinced them to give them up, reports said.

Ms Zhang admitted the charges in a court in Fuping, Shaanxi province.

The case emerged after two parents went to the police, suspecting their child had been abducted.

Ms Zhang sold seven babies to child traffickers between November 2011 and July 2013, including a pair of twins, an indictment posted on Weinan Intermediate People's Court's verified microblog said.

Six of the babies were rescued, but one baby girl died.

Ms Zhang worked in Shaanxi's Fuping Maternal and Child Healthcare Hospital.

In the most recent case, a baby born on 16 July was trafficked after Ms Zhang told his parents the boy had a serious congenital disease, and convinced them to give up the child.

Ms Zhang sold the baby to two other suspects, who sold the boy to a buyer in Henan province.

The parents reported the case to police on 20 July after they suspected that their baby had been trafficked.

The baby was found and returned to his parents in early August.

Ms Zhang and several other suspects were arrested.

Ms Zhang's defence lawyer said that the parents had voluntarily given up their babies, and that she had received several awards in her work, the court said.

Under China's strict population control policies, most couples can only have one child, and there is a strong preference for healthy baby boys.

Earlier this month, China's top legislature formally adopted a resolution easing the country's one-child policy, allowing couples to have two children if either parent is an only child.

Rescue for Antarctic ice-bound ship under threat

BBC News

A rescue mission for a ship stuck in ice in Antarctica is under threat as reports have emerged that one of the assisting vessels may itself be stuck.

Fifty-two passengers and four crew members were due to be evacuated by helicopter from China's Xue Long ship as soon as conditions allowed.

However, the Xue Long has barely moved in a day and may be stuck in the ice.

The research vessel Akademik Shokalskiy has been trapped for nearly a week with 74 scientists, tourists and crew.

The ship is stocked with food and is in no danger, the team on board says.

The planned air evacuation required that the two icebreakers in the immediate area - the Xue Long and the Australian Aurora Australis - be positioned close to each other in open water, clear of the pack ice.

However, the captain of the Xue Long has told the Shokalskiy that he is keeping his vessel in a "holding position".

The Aurora Australis, is now understood to be planning to carve through the dense thick pack to assist the Xue Long.

The initial plan had been for a helicopter from the Xue Long to carry people in groups of 15 up from the pack ice next to the Shokalskiy.

The airlifted passengers would then be transferred by a small boat, deployed from the Australian icebreaker, onto the Aurora Australis.

The expedition members would then have travelled to Australia's Antarctic base at Casey some four days' voyage away.

However, if the Chinese vessel is also stuck and the Australian vessel cannot help it reach clear water, there will be no airlift.

Under the initial plan, the remaining crew members would have stayed on board until another, more powerful US icebreaker arrived in up to 10 days' time, the BBC's Andrew Luck-Baker reports from on board the Akademik Shokalskiy

However, it may now be that all of those on board may have to wait for the US icebreaker, the Polar Star, he adds.

Earlier attempts by Chinese and French icebreakers to reach the ship were also foiled by the thick ice.

The Shokalskiy was trapped on Christmas Eve by thick sheets of ice, driven by strong winds, about 1,500 nautical miles south of Hobart - the capital of the Australian state of Tasmania.

Beyonce defends using Challenger disaster audio in song

BBC News

Singer Beyonce has justified her use of audio footage from the 1986 Challenger space shuttle disaster in a track from her recently released "surprise" album.

The pop star has faced criticism for incorporating a recording of an ex-Nasa public affairs officer on her XO track.

"My heart goes out to the families of those lost in the Challenger disaster," the singer said in a statement.

The song, she continued, "was recorded with the sincerest intention to help heal those who have lost loved ones".

The use of the footage, she said, was intended "to remind us that unexpected things happen, so love and appreciate every minute that you have with those who mean the most to you.

"The songwriters included the audio in tribute to the unselfish work of the Challenger crew with hope that they will never be forgotten."

XO, one of the 14 songs on Beyonce's self-titled new album, was written and produced by Ryan Tedder and Terius Nash.

Seven astronauts died on 28 January 1986 when the space shuttle Challenger disintegrated 73 seconds after launch.

The XO track begins with a recording of Nasa's former public affairs officer Steve Nesbitt referring to "a major malfunction" on the day of the tragedy.

June Scobee Rodgers, the widow of Challenger commander Dick Scobee, told ABC News she was "disappointed" that footage from an "emotionally difficult moment" had been used in the song.

Retired Nasa astronaut Clayton Anderson was also critical of the singer, calling the sample "simply insensitive, at the very least".

The former Destiny's Child member was born in 1981 in Houston, home to America's National Aeronautics and Space Administration.

In 2011, she recorded a special greeting for the Atlantis shuttle crew, telling them they "inspire all of us to dare to live our dreams".

New year celebrations begin to welcome 2014

BBC News

Celebrations are beginning to mark the beginning of 2014, with Auckland in New Zealand ringing in the new year at 11:00 GMT on Tuesday.

Crowds have gathered in Sydney, Australia, in anticipation of the city's famous firework display.

In Japan, Shinto priests gathered at shrines to prepare to usher in the new year.

Other cities globally are also planning big displays, with Dubai attempting a world record for the largest display.

The display will be streamed live on the internet and organisers say it will stretch over 30 miles (48km) of seafront, with the highest fireworks reaching more than one kilometre in height.

Later on, festivities will be held in European cities including Moscow, Paris and London.

New York will mark the new year with the traditional New Year's Eve countdown and ball drop over Times Square.

South Sudan rebel 'agrees to talks after taking Bor'

BBC News

South Sudan rebel leader Riek Machar has told the BBC he will enter peace talks, claiming his forces have captured the key town of Bor.

He had previously demanded 11 detainees accused of being co-conspirators in the coup plan be freed before negotiations.

He denies there was a plot - alleged by his rival President Salva Kiir.

Uganda's president has threatened the rebels with military action if they fail to agree to a ceasefire by the end of Tuesday, and begin talks.

In a BBC interview on Monday, President Kiir ruled out any power sharing with Mr Machar to halt violence that has killed at least 1,000 people in the last two weeks.

"These men have rebelled. If you want power, you don't rebel so that you are rewarded with the power. You go through the process," he said.

Mr Kiir has consistently refused to release Mr Machar's political allies, arrested when he made the coup plot allegations.

'Big fight'

It has not been confirmed whether Bor has fallen to Mr Machar's forces - a mix of mutinous soldiers loyal to him and an ethnic militia called the "white army", known for putting white ash onto their bodies as a kind of war-paint.

A UN spokesman said the town of Bor had come under attack at day break, not far from the town's UN compound.

A South Sudanese army spokesman confirmed a "big fight" had happened.

Later, Mr Machar told the BBC he was sending a delegation to Addis Ababa for peace talks.

The BBC's James Copnall in the capital, Juba, says talks in South Sudan's troubled history have often been preceded by renewed fighting, to allow the belligerents to go to the negotiating table in a position of strength.

In recent days, thousands of people have fled from Bor, the capital of Jonglei state.

The fighting initially broke out more than two weeks ago in Juba, and has now spread to many parts of the country.

At least 1,000 people have died and more than 121,600 are believed to have fled their homes.

Mr Machar was President Kiir's deputy until he was sacked in July.

What began as a power struggle between the two men has taken on overtones of an ethnic conflict. The Dinka, to which Mr Kiir belongs, are pitted against the Nuer, from which Mr Machar hails.

Schumacher's condition improves

BBC News

Former motor racing champion Michael Schumacher's condition has improved slightly after an operation to relieve pressure on his brain, his doctors have said.

A new scan taken overnight showed signs that he was "better than yesterday", but he was still "not out of danger", doctors said.

The seven-time Formula 1 champion suffered head injuries on Sunday in a skiing accident in the French Alps.

He was put in a medically-induced coma.

An initial scan on Monday night showed "an improved situation" and indicated a window of opportunity for a second operation, doctors said.

The family took the "difficult decision" to give consent for the procedure, and doctors operated on Schumacher for about two hours.

A subsequent scan revealed a "slight improvement".

"We can't say he is out of danger but... we have gained a bit of time,'' said Dr Jean-Francois Payen. "The coming hours are crucial.

"All the family is very much aware that his state is still sensitive and anything can happen."

Doctors said it was impossible to give a prognosis for his condition for tomorrow, six months' or even a year's time.

'Extremely shocked'

Schumacher had been skiing off-piste with his teenage son when he fell and hit his head on a rock.

He was first evacuated to a hospital in the nearby town of Moutiers.

Prof Chabardes said the driver was in an "agitated condition" on arrival in Moutiers and his neurological condition "deteriorated rapidly".

He was taken from Moutiers to the larger facility in Grenoble.

Messages of support have come from around the world.

A spokesman for German Chancellor Angela Merkel said she and her government were, like millions of Germans, "extremely shocked".

"We hope, with Michael Schumacher and with his family, that he can overcome and recover from his injuries," the spokesman said.

Former Ferrari teammate Felipe Massa, who recovered from life-threatening head injuries he suffered at the 2009 Hungarian Grand Prix, wrote on Instagram: "I am praying for you my brother! I hope you have a quick recovery! God bless you, Michael."

On Monday some fans had gathered outside the hospital in Grenoble.

Nuravil Raimbekov, a student from Kyrgyzstan who is studying nearby, described Schumacher as an inspiration.

"I'm worried, of course... but I still hope, and I will pray for him," he said.

Schumacher is held in a great deal of affection in the area, says the BBC's Imogen Foulkes in Grenoble. He is seen as a kind and generous man who has done a lot for charity.

The former champion, who turns 45 on 3 January, retired from F1 for a second time in 2012.

He won seven world championships and secured 91 race victories during his 19-year career.

The driver won two titles with Benetton, in 1994 and 1995, before switching to Ferrari in 1996 and going on to win five straight titles from 2000.

He retired in 2006, and was seriously hurt in a motorcycling accident in Spain three years later, during which he suffered neck and spine injuries.

Schumacher managed to recover and made a comeback in F1 with Mercedes in 2010.

After three seasons which yielded just one podium finish, he quit the sport at the end of last year.

Murder charge over death of mother and boy found at Bonnyrigg house

BBC News

A man has been charged with murder after a mother and her son were found dead at a house in Midlothian.

The bodies of 29-year-old Janet Lockhart and two-year-old Michael were discovered in Bonnyrigg at 20:30 on Saturday.

Officers went to the house in South Chesters Lane after a "family acquaintance" raised concerns.

Police Scotland said on Monday evening that a 32-year-old man had been charged with murder.

He is expected to appear at Edinburgh Sheriff Court on Tuesday.

Ch Insp Colin Brown said: "This is a tragic set of circumstances and our thoughts are with the families who have been affected.

"We are grateful to the support we are receiving from the neighbours while we carry out our inquiries."

Met Office chief scientist becomes Dame in honours list

BBC News

The UK Met Office's chief scientist, Julia Slingo, has become a Dame in the New Year Honours List.

Prof Slingo was recognised for her services to weather and climate science.

Prof Greg Whyte, the sports scientist who has coached celebrities such as David Walliams and Eddie Izzard for Sport Relief, has become an OBE.

Other science awards include a knighthood for Adrian Bird, a geneticist at Edinburgh University.

Before becoming Met Office chief scientist in 2009, Prof Slingo was the director of climate research at the National Centre for Atmospheric Science based at the University of Reading, where she is still a visiting professor of meteorology.

Notable landmarks in her career of more than 30 years include becoming the UK's first female professor of meteorology and the first female president of the Royal Meteorological Society.

Prof Slingo said she was honoured, adding that it was also recognition of the "excellence of Met Office research and those we partner around the world".

She said: "The UK has been at the forefront of great advances in this field and, with continued investment, we can continue to lead the way."

The Met Office's chief executive, John Hirst, has also been recognised in the New Year Honours List and has been made a CBE.

Celebrity coach

Recognised as one of the country's leading sport scientists, Greg Whyte becomes an OBE.

Before embarking on his research career, Prof Whyte competed as a modern pentathlete at two Olympic Games.

Previous roles included being the director of research at the English Institute of Sport and for the British Olympic Association.

He became well known for coaching celebrities undertaking challenges for Sport or Comic Relief, including David Walliams swimming of the English Channel and Eddie Izzard running 43 marathons in 51 days.

Among the other scientists recognised in the New Year Honours is Adrian Bird, a professor of genetics at the University of Edinburgh, who has been knighted.

Prof Bird is group leader of the Bird Lab in the Wellcome Trust Centre for Cell Biology, which has led research into the "biological mechanism" behind a rare type of autism known as Rett's syndrome.