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Guilty after six-year trial, Portugal's high-society paedophile ring


September 4th, 2010   by Grace

To most people Portugal's state-run orphanages seemed like a safe haven for thousands of children who had been robbed of their parents. They were called the Casa Pia, or Houses of the Pious.

But for an elite paedophile ring, which included a former ambassador and a prominent television celebrity, Casa Pia orphanages were something entirely different. They were supermarkets stocked with children to abuse. Yesterday, at the conclusion of the longest trial in Portugal's history, seven defendants were convicted of using the orphanages to rape and abuse scores of teenage boys in a case that has sent shockwaves through the country's political elite and raised serious concerns over the efficiency of Portugal's judiciary. Six of the seven were given jail terms of between five and 18 years.

The trial, in Lisbon's top criminal court, is thought to be the largest ever undertaken by Portugal's court system. Over five and half years, more than 800 witnesses, including 32 alleged victims, gave evidence detailing how a paedophile ring used the orphanages to source children for wealthy and influential clients. The sentencing document alone, of which judges spent most of yesterday reading a summary, runs to 2,000 pages.
Two of those found guilty included Carlos Cruz, a popular television chat-show host with 30 years in show business, and Jorge Ritto, a former ambassador once sent home in disgrace from a posting in Germany over allegations that he had been having an improper relationship with a young boy in a park.

Their co-defendants included Carlos Silvino, an orphanage driver who would ferry children to paedophile houses; Joao Ferreira Diniz, a prominent doctor who often deliberately picked out deaf and dumb children; Manuel Abrantes, a former deputy principal at an orphanage; solicitor Hugo Marcal and Gertrude Nunes, the only female defendant who allowed her house to be used by the paedophile ring. The successful convictions, eight years after the paedophile scandal was exposed, is a major victory for Portuguese police, under intense criticism over their handling of the investigation into the disappearance of Madeleine McCann. One of the lead detectives in the Casa Pia case, Paulo Rebelo, also investigated the Madeleine McCann disappearance after the original lead investigator was sacked. Rebelo and his team of forensic investigators – called "the cleaners" because they leave no stones unturned – are said to have played a pivotal role in securing the convictions.

drive from www.independent.co.uk

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Schnabel's true romance inspires tale of love across cultural divide


September 3rd, 2010   by Grace

The real-life romance behind the film could not have better advertised its subject matter: a Jewish American film director and son of a Zionist mother meets a Palestinian woman at an art exhibition, falls in love, reads about her traumatic childhood under Israeli occupation and brings her moving story to the screen.

It was clear as Julian Schnabel premiered his latest film, Miral, at the Venice Film Festival yesterday that deeply personal forces had led to its making.

His girlfriend, the Palestinian journalist Rula Jebreal, had written the screenplay (based on her 2004 autobiographical novel), and his daughter, Stella Schnabel, starred as an Israeli girl that befriends the Palestinian protagonist. Schnabel and Jebreal's cross-cultural union gave the film's implicit hope for peace in the Middle East an added emotional dimension.

Schnabel – who was an influential visual artist before turning to film – met Jebreal in 2007 at an exhibition in the Palazzo Venezia in Rome.

Seated alongside her yesterday, Schnabel conceded that before he met her, he had "receded" from the Israel-Palestine conflict and perhaps even his Jewish identity. "Maybe I spent most of my life receding from going to Israel, or my responsibility as a Jewish person ... maybe this [retreat] was my way of protecting something my mother [a member of Hadassah, a Zionist organisation in America] spent her whole life trying to build."

Jebreal said when they first started speaking about issues behind the occupied territories "I understood that Julian had little knowledge about the conflict, about who the Palestinians are or even why there is a conflict."

The film dramatises the stories of three generations of women living in Jerusalem during the first intifada in 1948 until the Oslo accords in 1994.

It begins as the Palestinian philanthropist Hind Husseini finds 55 orphans left destitute and traumatised by war in 1948, who become the first generation of thousands of girls she takes in to be educated at her school, Dar El-Tifl.

The tale of the passionate teenager, Miral, caught between violent struggle and Husseini's non-violent teachings is the thinly veiled story of Jebreal's early life. It stars the Indian actress Freida Pinto, who starred in Slumdog Millionaire, and includes Willem Dafoe and Vanessa Redgrave in its cast.

Schnabel enlisted Jebreal as a screenwriter and she also accompanied him on set to the occupied territories, becoming a de facto "assistant director" of sorts, he added.

"I couldn't have made it without her. It would have been impossible. We shot the film in Jerusalem and Palestine – in Jaffa, Ramallah, Haifa and many other places – including places where Rula had lived. Doors opened up as a result," he said.

The film's underlying message – for a peace agreement to be reached and honoured – might not lead intransigent politicians to alter their outlook on the conflict, but the film's producer, Tarak Ben Ammar, said he hoped that the public at least would be touched by it.

He called Schnabel part of a Jewish "silent majority" who greatly sympathised with the Palestinian predicament. Schnabel, he added, had received a letter by a "lover of Israel" who had thanked him for his portrayal of Arab suffering, and highlighted the idea that "justice for Jews [does not mean] injustice for Arabs."

The film has already been sold in the Middle East and Schnabel said he had every hope of selling it in Israel.

This is his fourth film. He turned to filmmaking in 1996 after a long and fruitful career as an artist, exhibiting work at the Tate in London, the Pompidou Centre in Paris and the Whitney Museum in New York.

His film Before Night Falls won the Grand Jury Prize at the Venice Film Festival in 2000 and earned its star, Javier Bardem, an Oscar nomination. In 2007, Schnabel was named "best director" at the Cannes Film Festival and awarded a Golden Globe for The Diving Bell and the Butterfly.

drive from www.independent.co.uk

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Californian health lobby sets sights on state rock


September 2nd, 2010   by Grace

Once upon a time, California's energetic public health lobby concentrated on trying to stop people from smoking, or drinking beer, or from making a daily pilgrimage to their local fast-food restaurant. Now, having presumably run out of other things to ban, they have launched a crusade against a naturally occurring green mineral.

Politicians in Sacramento, the state capital, are on the verge of approving a motion to strip serpentine of its status as California's official "state rock", on the grounds that it can contain chrysotile, a type of asbestos believed to cause an incurable form of cancer called mesothelioma if its dust particles are inhaled.

The move is backed by several well-funded charities and consumer rights groups, who point out that 2,500 Americans die from mesothelioma each year. A motion to "defrock the rock" has already passed the state Senate and is about to be considered by its other house, the Assembly.

"California is health conscious," Gloria Romero, the Democratic state Senator behind the motion, told reporters this week. "This is not about being anti-rock. But why do we need a rock? We know that California has the highest rates of mesothelioma deaths in the nation and we don't think it's appropriate to be celebrating as the state rock something which contains asbestos."

Senator Romero's efforts to downgrade the green mineral have provoked a furious response from historians and geologists. Serpentine was officially designated as the state rock in 1965 as it symbolised California's abundant natural wealth and the forward-thinking spirit of the Gold Rush era. It also had several important industrial applications.

The rock occurs across the Sierra Nevada mountains and has for years been used to make jewellery. It began to be intensively mined during the 1960s, when chrysotile was extracted from it and turned into fire-resistant asbestos, then widely used in construction.

Though asbestos now has a dirty name, geologists claim that serpentine is relatively harmless in its naturally occurring state. Lawmakers are merely vilifying the substance for political ends, they say.

"There is no way anyone is going to get bothered by casual exposure to that kind of rock unless they were breaking it up with a sledgehammer year after year," Malcolm Ross, a former employee of the US Geological Survey, told The New York Times.

"If they keep the asbestos issue bubbling, it means money for politicians, money for lawyers and money for scientists to investigate."

John Sullivan, president of the Civil Justice Association of California, said: "I believe that [compensation] lawyers would feel they've struck gold if they can also bring lawsuits over naturally occurring asbestos."

drive from www.independent.co.uk

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Lampard and Terry out as England go lame


September 1st, 2010   by Grace

Having put in a triple shift in the North-west yesterday, taking in games at Blackburn, Blackpool and Manchester United, Fabio Capello was stunned to learn that six of his potential England squad are expected to miss the opening European Championship matches against Bulgaria on Friday and Switzerland on Tuesday week. They are Chelsea's Frank Lampard and John Terry, who are definitely out, Tottenham strikers Peter Crouch and Jermain Defoe, and the Fulham pair Bobby Zamora and David Stockdale.

Terry is ruled out with injuries to his right hamstring and glute muscles, and "would benefit from a period of rest and rehabilition", according to the Chelsea website. Lampard needs surgery on his groin after being substituted in the 72nd minute of Chelsea's victory over Stoke, and the club medical staff decided he must undergo keyhole surgery as soon as possible. Manager Carlo Ancelotti said: "We had the same kind of thing with Didier Drogba earlier in the summer and he will be out for one or two weeks."

Crouch, who was due to be welcomed back into the fold after being dropped for the friendly against Hungary earlier this month, suffered a rib injury against Wigan, which the the Spurs manager Harry Redknapp said may be a break. Defoe was already lined up for groin surgery.

Zamora is the third striker likely to miss out, Fulham's manager Mark Hughes rating him "doubtful" after he took a knock to his thigh at Blackpool. In the same game Stockdale, who was due to be called up as the third goalkeeper, turned an ankle.

Darren Bent, Michael Carrick and Tom Huddlestone could all be beneficiaries and if Jack Wilshere and Newcastle's Andy Carroll stay with the Under-21s, there may be a reprieve for Gabriel Agbonlahor and Liverpool's Joe Cole, who also missed the Hungary game. At least Wayne Rooney should be fit, Capello having admitted, "I'm afraid [for him] because he needs to play", before watching him score for United last night.

Neither Paul Scholes or Everton's Spanish midfielder Mikel Arteta will be included when the squad is named at 8pm this evening. "The future is for young players," Capello said when asked about David Beckham. Scholes, who admitted he regretted not making himself available for the World Cup when he was given barely 24 hours to make a decision in May, finally told the England manager last week that he was too old for regular international football while playing in the Premier League and Champions' League for Manchester United.

Arteta's position is in abeyance because neither he nor the Football Association will make the first move. He must apply for a British passport, which will take several months, but last night his manager David Moyes said: "It can't be a cop-out by the FA. If they want him, they should say it."

drive from www.independent.co.uk

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A welcome promised in Hastings for disgruntled Lib Dem voters


August 31st, 2010   by Grace

Ed Miliband has much more than winning the Labour leadership in his sights. He is convinced he can complete the first realignment in British politics since the Social Democratic Party of David Owen and Roy Jenkins left Labour in 1981.

"There is a progressive majority in this country; we did not secure enough of it at this year's election," he told The Independent. "I am uniquely well placed to heal the split there was in 1981 with the SDP, and win back people from the Liberal Democrats to Labour.

"We have seen half of a realignment of politics, with what Cameron has done with Clegg. The other half can happen with me as Labour leader, because I think I can offer a home to former Liberal Democrats and bring together a social democratic economic policy, redistribution, greater equality and putting individual liberty at the centre of who we are."
Why is he so well qualified? Because he shares the Liberal Democrats' agenda on civil liberties, ID cards, the detention of terrorist suspects without charge and university tuition fees, he replies. "The Liberal Democrats are on a journey. Clegg is taking them in a direction a lot of Lib Dem supporters are deeply dismayed about," he said.

"I offer a home for Liberal Democrat voters in which they don't have to trade abolition of ID cards for a reactionary assault on the welfare state, and they can be true to their values on both civil liberties and economic policy."

We are speaking as he spends three hours on trains from London to Hastings and back, so that he can address 150 of Labour's 400 local members for just 75 minutes. It is typical of the gruelling, 24/7 schedules as the five candidates to succeed Gordon Brown criss-cross the country. They have spoken together at 50 hustings meetings and there are six more to come before the result is announced on 25 September. It is possible, Ed Miliband's team calculates, that he could speak to about half the party's 160,000 members during the campaign.

In Hastings, he gets a warm welcome in a sweaty, overcrowded seafront hotel room, with standing room only. He also gets some ammunition for his leadership fight with his elder brother David and his hopes of building that "progressive alliance". He is told that the Liberal Democrats have virtually collapsed locally since the Coalition Government was formed, and that Labour, which lost Hastings and Rye to the Tories in May, would win it today with just some of the 7,825 people who voted Liberal Democrat.

Moreover, Labour lost the seat because only 50 per cent of voters turned out in local council estates, compared to 80 per cent in more affluent parts of the constituency. "It wasn't just in Hastings," Mr Miliband tells his audience. "It was actually the least affluent voters we lost, not the more affluent voters."

drive from www.independent.co.uk

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Breast cancer screening saves two lives for every one misdiagnosed - study


August 30th, 2010   by Grace

A woman being screened for breast cancer. Photograph: Pete Saloutos/Corbis

Breast cancer screening saves the lives of two women for every one who receives potentially unnecessary treatment, research out today suggests.

Some cancers grow so slowly that a woman may die from another disease first while other cancers would cause no harm.

Experts are currently unable to distinguish between these less harmful cancers and some more aggressive types, meaning they are all routinely treated.

New research has found that for every case of overdiagnosis, two lives are saved as a result of the NHS breast cancer screening programme. The issue has been the subject of debate recently after other studies suggested the programme does little to save lives.

Last week, Danish experts cast doubt on the benefits of mammography, saying there were few differences in death rates between women who are screened and those who are not screened.

The latest research was led by experts from the Wolfson Institute for Preventive Medicine at Barts and the London School of Medicine and Dentistry.

It focused on data from some 80,000 women from the age of 50 and looked at Sweden and England before and after the introduction of screening.

It found 5.7 deaths from breast cancer were prevented for every 1,000 women screened over 20 years in England. The number of estimated cases of overdiagnosis was 2.3 per 1,000 women over the same period.

The authors, writing in the Journal of Medical Screening, said: "The benefit of mammographic screening in terms of lives saved is greater in absolute terms than the harm in terms of overdiagnosis.

"Between 2 and 2.5 lives are saved for every overdiagnosed case."

The researchers concluded the "benefits in terms of numbers of deaths prevented are around double the harms in terms of overdiagnosis.

"Analysis of both data sets shows a substantial and significant reduction in breast cancer deaths in association with mammographic screening."

Lead author Stephen Duffy said: "This shows that the benefits of screening outweigh the harms.

"Unfortunately, we haven't yet got a flawless screening test, and some cases that are picked up wouldn't have needed treatment.

"But for every case like this, screening saves two women who would have otherwise died from breast cancer."

More than 45,000 women are diagnosed with breast cancer each year in the UK and more than 12,000 die from the disease.

Women aged 50 to 70 are invited for NHS breast screening every three years across the UK. From 2012, this will be extended to include women aged 47 to 73.

Dr Lesley Walker, director of cancer information at Cancer Research UK, which part-funded the study, said: "The national breast screening programme saves lives, so we encourage women to go when invited."

She added: "As well as attending screening, we would encourage all women to be breast-aware and to go to their doctor if they notice any unusual changes to their breasts."

drive from www.guardian.co.uk

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Bottoms bring up the rear in suntan time trials


August 28th, 2010   by Grace

Sun-loving naturists, look away now: if you're soaking up the rays this summer with the aim of getting a perfect all-over tan, you're likely to be disappointed.

Different parts of the body go brown at different speeds, according to researchers at Edinburgh University, so achieving that idealised image of beauty is not going to happen.

Academics funded by the Medical Research Council say their findings explain why certain people find it difficult to get an even, consistent tan. The main problem, it seems, is people's bottoms, which take a lot longer to go brown than other parts of their anatomy.

Ninety-eight volunteers were given six doses of ultraviolet radiation on their backs and their bottoms from a tanning light, to see whether the effect was the same in both placesWhen the researchers examined the participants a week later, once the resulting redness had disappeared, they found that their backs had turned significantly browner than their buttocks.

"The research shows that instead of thinking that you have got one skin, or one skin type, in fact each of us has lots of different skin regions, each of which responds differently to UV light and so take longer than others to go red and then tan," said Jonathan Rees, a professor of dermatology, who led the study.

"If you shine sunshine on different parts of your body, the difference in how red they go varies by a factor of five for redness and two for tanning, depending on the body site."

The bum is not the only obstacle, though. Previous research by Rees has confirmed what sun worshippers already knew: that the upper back is much more likely to tan than the legs, and that the outsides of the arms go brown far quicker than the insides.

"What is burning for one body site is not for another. And the degree of UV protection that develops following ultraviolet radiation exposure may vary site by site," Reed added.

The study also found that those who had no freckles on their skin tanned more easily than those with freckles.

Rees and his team looked into why different types of skin cancer occur in different parts of the body. Usually they develop on ears, faces and the backs of hands and, among balding men, on the top of the head, rather than on the limbs. Melanoma, the less common but more deadly form, women often get on their calves but men on the shoulders. Different skin thicknessess may explain these differences, Rees said.

The findings show that most advice about how long it is safe to spend in the sun is worthless, because different body parts are more sensitive to the sun's damaging effects than others, he said.

drive from www.guardian.co.uk

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Kim's visit to China leaves Carter hanging


August 27th, 2010   by Grace

North Korea's reclusive leader, Kim Jong-il, is making his second visit to China this year in what is seen as an opportunity to present his youngest son and chosen heir to his main ally as he seeks to cement the world's only Communist dynasty. The timing of the visit was surprising as it coincided with a visit to Pyongyang by the former US president Jimmy Carter, who has been trying to secure the release of a Christian activist jailed for trespassing. It had been presumed that Mr Kim and Mr Carter would meet.

Mr Kim, who suffered a stroke in August 2008, last visited China in his custom-made train three months ago and, as usual, neither government confirmed his latest trip.

It was unclear who he would meet but there were reports that the Chinese Vice-President, Xi Jinping, was going to Jilin city in north-eastern China to meet him.

North Korea's economy is in a constant state of near-collapse, and aid from China is said to be keeping the country going. The North's nuclear testing has angered its only significant friend, and China has even co-operated with the United Nations in sanctions against the North.

Teachers at Yuwen Middle School in Jilin confirmed that Mr Kim had visited, although they could not say if he was with his son, Kim Jong-un. Mr Kim's father, the late Supreme Leader Kim Il-sung, attended the school from 1927 to 1930 after his family fled the Japanese occupation of Korea.

Identifying Kim Jong-un is no easy matter. Last year a Japanese television station showed a photograph of what was said to be Jong-un, but which turned out to be a South Korean construction worker.

The Swiss-educated Kim Jong-un was born in 1983 or 1984. Kim Jong-il has asked North Korea's main bodies and overseas missions to pledge loyalty to him, and his son is expected to be granted a key party position next month, when the new ruling Workers' Party leaders are due to be elected.

China is keen to restart six-nation talks involving both Koreas, Japan, the US, China and Russia on ending the North's nuclear programme. North Korea walked away from the talks last year in protest at international condemnation of a long-range rocket launch.

Tensions are high after a South Korean warship sank in March, killing 46 sailors. An international investigation blamed Pyongyang for torpedoing the ships. North Korea denies involvement.

Mr Carter was met in Pyongyang by the North Korean nuclear envoy Kim Kye-gwan and the country's second most powerful nuclear official, Ri Gun, a sign that this visit is as much about North Korea's nuclear ambitions as it is about releasing a US national.

Aijalon Mahli Gomes, 31, a teacher linked to the Evangelist Christian movement, was convicted in April of crossing into North Korea illegally from China. The former president had been expected to leave yesterday but his visit was reportedly set to extend into today.

drive from www.independent.co.uk

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Ban salt to save lives, restaurants in New York told


August 26th, 2010   by Grace

Four years ago New York City's health commissioners banned artery-blocking transfats in restaurants. Now, if a legislator has his way, the chefs at every eatery in the Big Apple and across the state will have to make do without salt.

The language of Bill A. 10129, introduced by Felix Ortiz, a representative from Brooklyn, in the New York State Assembly, could not be more specific. "No owner or operator of a restaurant in this state shall use salt in any form in the preparation of food for consumption by customers," it says, whether on or off the premises. The penalty for every violation would be $1,000 (£665).

Mr Ortiz, long a campaigner for healthier eating in the state's schools and for restaurants to display the nutritional content of that they serve, insists his proposal is designed only to save lives. The measure would be a "giant step" in the right direction. "We need to talk about two ingredients of salt: health care costs and deaths."

He cites a recent report by the World Health Organisation showing that at least three-quarters of the sodium consumed in the United States – where the average daily intake is 3,400mg, half as much again as the generally recommended maximum of 2,300mg – comes in pre-prepared or restaurant foods. "Studies show that reducing the amount of salt people eat, even by small amounts, could reduce cases of heart disease, stroke and heart attacks as much as reductions in smoking, obesity and cholesterol levels," Mr Ortiz maintains, arguing that billions of dollars and countless lives could be saved.

In fact, the New York Assemblyman is not the only local politician campaigning against salt. Michael Bloomberg, New York City's mayor, wants the salt content of pre-packaged and restaurant food to be reduced by 25 per cent over five years. The city estimates about 1.5m residents – out of a population of 8.3m – already suffer from high blood pressure, which excess consumption of salt tends to make worse.

Those alarmed at the relentless advance of the nanny state will moreover be pleased to learn that the proposed measure does not prevent the consumption of salt in restaurants. Cooks may be barred from using the stuff, but salt cellars will still be on the table for patrons.

But that has been scant consolation for the culinary stars of a city that likes to think of itself as the restaurant capital of the world. Salt or no salt, Mr Ortiz's idea has sent the collective blood pressure of the city's gastronomic establishment soaring.

drive from www.independent.co.uk

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Lewis Hamilton fined for 'behaving like a hoon'


August 25th, 2010   by Grace

British motor racing star Lewis Hamilton was fined 500 Australian dollars (£288) for "behaving like a hoon" and performing boy racer stunts.

The Formula One driver was caught by police executing a "burnout" and "fishtail" - tricks in which wheels are intentionally spun and skidded - in front of fans ahead of the Melbourne Grand Prix in March.

The 25-year-old former champion was not in court to hear his punishment today. But his lawyer, Sandip Mukerjea, said Hamilton would plead guilty to the charge of improper use of a motor vehicle.
He avoided conviction as it was a first offence, but will be forced to pay the 500 Australian dollar fine.

Mr Mukerjea said his client suffered "embarrassment, humiliation and distress" as a result of the incident.

Hamilton fell foul to Victoria state's so-called "hoon" laws on March 26, two days before the race.

The driver was in a borrowed Mercedes when he was seen performing stunts outside the Grand Prix track at Albert Park, Melbourne.

The car was impounded by state authorities. It marked the low point in an unhappy race meet for the British driver.

Starting 11th on the grid, he made his way through the field only to be bumped off the track by Australian Mark Webber with two laps remaining. He finished the race in sixth place.

Hamilton is due to compete in the Belgian Grand Prix this weekend and wrote twice to the court to explain his absence.

Magistrate Clive Alsop said the British racing driver was a role model to young people and as such should have known better.

"This is about somebody in a responsible position behaving like a hoon," he added.

drive from www.independent.co.uk

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