Thursday 29 September 2011

Article for the 4th of October


European Commission head Jose Barroso backs EU tax on City deals
European Commission head Jose Barroso backs EU tax on City deals
European Commission President Jose Manuel Barroso adresses the assembly of the European Parliament in Strasbourg
Photo: Patrick Hertzog/AFP/GETTY IMAGES
By Robert Winnett, Deputy Political Editor
Last Updated: 6:27AM BST 29/09/2011
The head of the European Commission yesterday backed calls for a Europe-wide tax on financial transactions which the Tories believe would damage the British economy.
José Manuel Barroso said the European transaction tax should be introduced in the wake of the financial crisis.
Mr Barroso’s move comes amid growing tension within the Coalition over Britain’s relationship with Europe.
Nick Clegg will today warn that Britain should not seek to distance itself from the EU.
Mr Barroso said Europe was “facing the greatest challenge in the history of our union”.
“If we do not go for further integration, we risk fragmentation,” Mr Barroso told the European Parliament. “We need to complete our monetary union with an economic union.” However, George Osborne, the Chancellor, has said that Britain will veto the tax plan, which was proposed by the French and German governments, amid fears over the damage it will cause the City.
In a speech, the Deputy Prime Minister will say it would be a “disaster” for the EU to become more “fractured” and “fragmented”, and will call for new European-wide defence co-operation.
The remarks put Mr Clegg at odds with his Conservative ministerial colleagues who are hoping to use the euro crisis to return control of some policy to Britain.
In an interview published last night, William Hague, the Foreign Secretary, describes the eurozone as a “burning building with no exits”, and calls for Britain’s relationship with Europe to be renegotiated and watered down.
“The EU does have too much power,” Mr Hague says in this week’s Spectator magazine. “I haven’t changed that view since being in government, in fact if anything, being in government has reinforced that view. There should be powers that are returned to this country. I think we should be clear in the Conservative Party that that is where we are heading.”
More than 100 Conservative MPs have backed a group putting pressure on David Cameron to loosen Britain’s ties with Europe, and the issue to set to be one of the key issues at next week’s Conservative Party conference.
Mr Clegg, a former member of the European Parliament, will travel to Poland today for talks with other European leaders, including the German Chancellor Angela Merkel, and give a major speech on the future of the EU.
He is expected to say: “The danger we face, which I will address today, is of change leading to fragmentation. That we become divided, turning away from each other, both within the European Union and with our partners who are not, or not yet, members of it … that would be a disaster.” The europhile Deputy Prime Minister will also call for pan-European defence co-operation after the British and French operation in Libya, putting him on a collision course with Dr Liam Fox, the Defence Secretary.
Today, is set to be crucial for the future of the Eurozone with Germany’s lower Parliament voting on whether to back European plans to bailout Greece and other beleaguered countries. Although German politicians are expected to back the plan, the financial markets are likely to scrutinise the level of support to establish whether future rescue packages may be blocked.
Yesterday, Citigroup, the world’s biggest bank, said that it predicts the European economy to contract in size next year.
Willem Buiter, the chief economist at Citigroup and a former member of the Bank of England’s monetary policy committee, said there was a risk that the debt crisis spreads to France and Belgium.

Article for the 4th of October


Nicolas Sarkozy visits Morocco for TGV rail-link launch

TGV train in France (file image)High-speed trains, similar to this, will link Tangiers and Casablanca via Rabat

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French President Nicholas Sarkozy is due to arrive in Morocco to oversee the start of construction on a new TGV high-speed rail link.
The line will connect Casablanca with Rabat and Tangiers.
The agreement between France and Morocco to build the line was signed during Mr Sarkozy's first state visit to the country in October 2007.
The project's budget is estimated to be $4bn (£2.5bn) and the trains are due to start running by 2015.
The Moroccan government says the project will further enhance economic relations between the two countries. Officials also hope the 350km (219-mile) rail link will boost infrastructure.
However, Morocco's former finance minister Mohamed Berrada says the project is simply a waste of money.
He says the funds should be spent on more important issues such as fighting the high illiteracy rates and poverty in the country.
Morocco had to borrow an estimated $2bn from French banks and Saudi Arabian development funds for the project.
According to Karim Tazi, a sociologist, the rest of the borrowed money will have to be paid for by future generations.
Some analysts question whether or not it is really worth Morocco going into further debt in order to reduce the train time between Tangiers to Casablanca from five hours, to two hours and 10 minutes.

Article for the 4th of October


Dominique Strauss-Kahn confronted by rape accuser Banon

The BBC's Christian Fraser: "Tristane Banon said she wanted to look into the eyes of Dominique Strauss-Kahn"

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Ex-IMF chief Dominique Strauss-Kahn and the French writer who accuses him of attempted rape have confronted each other as part of a police inquiry.
Police are investigating Tristane Banon's complaint before prosecutors decide whether to press charges.
Mr Strauss-Kahn is said to admit making "an advance" on Ms Banon, but denies any violence, and is suing for slander.
She made the allegations in June, when Mr Strauss-Kahn was accused of rape in New York; that case was later dropped.
The confrontation took place at a Paris police station without lawyers present, but with police officers in the room.
Police confrontations are held when two people in a case give different versions of events.
Mr Strauss-Kahn left the police station a couple of hours after arriving without making any comments.

At the scene

After the confrontation, it will be up to the court to decide which way to take it. They can either decide there is no case to answer. They could decide that this was a case of less serious sexual abuse, but in that case, eight years on, under the statute of limitation, the case would be put to one side.
Or they could decide that on the evidence of the investigation that has been going on since July, there needs to be further investigation and an investigating judge would been appointed.
But you can imagine for Dominique Strauss-Kahn, who is trying to relaunch is political career, he is very keen for this to be put to one side and he will be hoping that the police believes his side of the story.
Both parties have been interviewed by police over the alleged incident.
Ms Banon, 32, has said she is keen to confront her alleged attacker.
"I want him in front of me so he can look into my eyes and say to my face that I imagined it."
Ms Banon alleges she had to fight off Mr Strauss-Kahn, 62, "with kicks and punches" when he tried to rip off her clothes during an interview at Paris flat in 2003.
Ms Banon first made the allegations in a TV chat show in 2007, when Mr Strauss-Kahn's name was bleeped out.
The former International Monetary Fund director, who was once tipped as a future French president, recently returned to France.
He also still faces a civil suit by his alleged victim in New York, Nafissatou Diallo.

Monday 26 September 2011

Article for 27th of September.


Talking bins trial set up in London and Liverpool

A Loop the Litter binBins, which have a basketball-type hoop, will also be on the streets

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Famous people could be congratulating you for throwing your rubbish away responsibly in talking bins.
The 25 litter bins will be installed in central London in October and some will be set up in Liverpool.
Actress Amanda Holden has recorded a message saying "Yes! Do that again!" and former cricketer Phil Tufnell calls out 'Howzat!'.
The project has been created in a partnership between Keep Britain Tidy and the arts organisation Sing London.
The bins can also burst into song when you throw you littler away, with tunes including "I'm singing in the bin" and "Rubbish keeps falling on my head".
Others who have recorded messages include, the voice of The X-Factor, Peter Dickson, comedian Gina Yashere, rugby player Kenny Logan and opera singer Janis Kelly.

Start Quote

We wanted to find a way to make bins enjoyable”
Colette HillerDirector of Sing London
Additional messages will be adapted to suit each location, the organisers hope.
For example, Liverpool will have a Beatles Bin, Covent Garden's bin is operatic and the bin by Lord's Cricket Ground is filled with sport-related sounds.
The bins will installed from 13 October and remain in London for two months, after which time they will tour the UK, returning for the Olympic Games in 2012.
If successful, the bins could become a permanent fixture.
The bins are being brought to the streets by Keep Britain Tidy's Love Where You Live campaign.
The project has been produced in partnership with Sing London, which in the past has put pianos and ping pong tables on the streets of London.
"We wanted to find a way to make bins enjoyable," says Colette Hiller, director of Sing London.

Article for 27th of September.


When Your Therapist Is Only a Click Away

THE event reminder on Melissa Weinblatt’s iPhone buzzed: 15 minutes till her shrink appointment.
She mixed herself a mojito, added a sprig of mint, put on her sunglasses and headed outside to her friend’s pool. Settling into a lounge chair, she tapped the Skypeapp on her phone. Hundreds of miles away, her face popped up on her therapist’s computer monitor; he smiled back on her phone’s screen.
She took a sip of her cocktail. The session began.
Ms. Weinblatt, a 30-year-old high school teacher in Oregon, used to be in treatment the conventional way — with face-to-face office appointments. Now, with her new doctor, she said: “I can have a Skype therapy session with my morning coffee or before a night on the town with the girls. I can take a break from shopping for a session. I took my doctor with me through three states this summer!”
And, she added, “I even e-mailed him that I was panicked about a first date, and he wrote back and said we could do a 20-minute mini-session.”
Since telepsychiatry was introduced decades ago, video conferencing has been an increasingly accepted way to reach patients in hospitals, prisons, veterans’ health care facilities and rural clinics — all supervised sites.
But today Skype, and encrypted digital software through third-party sites like CaliforniaLiveVisit.com, have made online private practice accessible for a broader swath of patients, including those who shun office treatment or who simply like the convenience of therapy on the fly.
One third-party online therapy site, Breakthrough.com, said it has signed up 900 psychiatristspsychologists, counselors and coaches in just two years. Another indication that online treatment is migrating into mainstream sensibility: “Web Therapy,” the Lisa Kudrow comedy that started online and pokes fun at three-minute webcam therapy sessions, moved to cable (Showtime) this summer.
“In three years, this will take off like a rocket,” said Eric A. Harris, a lawyer and psychologist who consults with the American Psychological Association Insurance Trust. “Everyone will have real-time audiovisual availability. There will be a group of true believers who will think that being in a room with a client is special and you can’t replicate that by remote involvement. But a lot of people, especially younger clinicians, will feel there is no basis for thinking this. Still, appropriate professional standards will have to be followed.”
The pragmatic benefits are obvious. “No parking necessary!” touts one online therapist. Some therapists charge less for sessions since they, too, can do it from home, saving on gas and office rent. Blizzards, broken legs and business trips no longer cancel appointments. The anxiety of shrink-less August could be, dare one say ... curable?
Ms. Weinblatt came to the approach through geographical necessity. When her therapist moved, she was apprehensive about transferring to the other psychologist in her small town, who would certainly know her prominent ex-boyfriend. So her therapist referred her to another doctor, whose practice was a day’s drive away. But he was willing to use Skype with long-distance patients. She was game.
Now she prefers these sessions to the old-fashioned kind.
But does knowing that your therapist is just a phone tap or mouse click away create a 21st-century version of shrink-neediness?
“There’s that comfort of carrying your doctor around with you like a security blanket,” Ms. Weinblatt acknowledged. “But,” she added, “because he’s more accessible, I feel like I need him less.”
The technology does have its speed bumps. Online treatment upends a basic element of therapeutic connection: eye contact.
Patient and therapist typically look at each other’s faces on a computer screen. But in many setups, the camera is perched atop a monitor. Their gazes are then off-kilter.
“So patients can think you’re not looking them in the eye,” said Lynn Bufka, a staff psychologist with the American Psychological Association. “You need to acknowledge that upfront to the patient, or the provider has to be trained to look at the camera instead of the screen.”
The quirkiness of Internet connections can also be an impediment. “You have to prepare vulnerable people for the possibility that just when they are saying something that’s difficult, the screen can go blank,” said DeeAnna Merz Nagel, a psychotherapist licensed in New Jersey and New York. “So I always say, ‘I will never disconnect from you online on purpose.’ You make arrangements ahead of time to call each other if that happens.”
Still, opportunities for exploitation, especially by those with sketchy credentials, are rife. Solo providers who hang out virtual shingles are a growing phenomenon. In the Wild Web West, one site sponsored a contest asking readers to post why they would seek therapy; the person with the most popular answer would receive six months of free treatment. When the blogosphere erupted with outrage from patients and professionals alike, the site quickly made the applications private.
Other questions abound. How should insurance reimburse online therapy? Is the therapist complying with licensing laws that govern practice in different states? Are videoconferencing sessions recorded? Hack-proof?
Another draw and danger of online therapy: anonymity. Many people avoid treatment for reasons of shame or privacy. Some online therapists do not require patients to fully identify themselves. What if those patients have breakdowns? How can the therapist get emergency help to an anonymous patient? “A lot of patients start therapy and feel worse before they feel better,” noted Marlene M. Maheu, founder of the TeleMental Health Institute, which trains providers and who has served on task forces to address these questions. “It’s more complex than people imagine. A provider’s Web site may say, ‘I won’t deal with patients who are feeling suicidal.’ But it’s our job to assess patients, not to ask them to self-diagnose.” She practices online therapy, but advocates consumer protections and rigorous training of therapists.
Psychologists say certain conditions might be well-suited for treatment online, including agoraphobia, anxiety, depression and obsessive-compulsive disorder. Some doctors suggest that Internet addiction or other addictive behaviors could be treated through videoconferencing.
Others disagree. As one doctor said, “If I’m treating an alcoholic, I can’t smell his breath over Skype.”
Cognitive behavioral therapy, which can require homework rather than tunneling into the patient’s past, seems another candidate. Tech-savvy teenagers resistant to office visits might brighten at seeing a therapist through a computer monitor in their bedroom. Home court advantage.
Therapists who have tried online therapy range from evangelizing standard-bearers, planting their stake in the new future, to those who, after a few sessions, have backed away. Elaine Ducharme, a psychologist in Glastonbury, Conn., uses Skype with patients from her former Florida practice, but finds it disconcerting when a patient’s face becomes pixilated. Dr. Ducharme, who is licensed in both states, will not videoconference with a patient she has not met in person. She flies to Florida every three months for office visits with her Skype patients.
“There is definitely something important about bearing witness,” she said. “There is so much that happens in a room that I can’t see on Skype.”
Dr. Heath Canfield, a psychiatrist in Colorado Springs, also uses Skype to continue therapy with some patients from his former West Coast practice. He is licensed in both locations. “If you’re doing therapy, pauses are important and telling, and Skype isn’t fast enough to keep up in real time,” Dr. Canfield said. He wears a headset. “I want patients to know that their sound isn’t going through walls but into my ears. I speak into a microphone so they don’t feel like I’m shouting at the computer. It’s not the same as being there, but it’s better than nothing. And I wouldn’t treat people this way who are severely mentally ill.”
Indeed, the pitfalls of videoconferencing with the severely mentally ill became apparent to Michael Terry, a psychiatric nurse practitioner, when he did psychological evaluations for patients throughout Alaska’s Eastern Aleutian Islands. “Once I was wearing a white jacket and the wall behind me was white,” recalled Dr. Terry, an associate clinical professor at the University of San Diego. “My face looked very dark because of the contrast, and the patient thought he was talking to the devil.”
Another time, lighting caused a halo effect. “An adolescent thought he was talking to the Holy Spirit, that he had God on the line. It fit right into his delusions.”
Johanna Herwitz, a Manhattan psychologist, tried Skype to augment face-to-face therapy. “It creates this perverse lower version of intimacy,” she said. “Skype doesn’t therapeutically disinhibit patients so that they let down their guard and take emotional risks. I’ve decided not to do it anymore.”
Several studies have concluded that patient satisfaction with face-to-face interaction and online therapy (often preceded by in-person contact) was statistically similar. Lynn, a patient who prefers not to reveal her full identity, had been seeing her therapist for years. Their work deepened into psychoanalysis. Then her psychotherapist retired, moving out of state.
Now, four times a week, Lynn carries her laptop to an analyst’s unoccupied office (her insurance requires that a local provider have some oversight). She logs on to an encrypted program at Breakthrough.com and clicks through until she reads an alert: “Talk now!”
Hundreds of miles away, so does her analyst. Their faces loom, side by side on each other’s monitors. They say hello. Then Lynn puts her laptop on a chair and lies down on the couch. Just the top of her head is visible to her analyst.
Fifty minutes later the session ends. “The screen is asleep so I wake it up and see her face,” Lynn said. “I say goodbye and she says goodbye. Then we lean in to press a button and exit.”
As attenuated as this all may seem, Lynn said, “I’m just grateful we can continue to do this.”