National News
Big brother collecting fingerprints
THE Civil liberties watchdog Liberty last week condemned plans by the Home Office to expand a scheme of on-the-spot fingerprint scanning.
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Police face huge bill after
private forensic company fails
Thirty police forces around the country have been forced into a multi-million pound bailout of a private forensics company, Key Forensic Services (KFS), after its collapse threatened to bring turmoil to the criminal justice system.
The company folded last Friday whilst it was carrying out work in 2,000 cases, including a number of serious offences such as murder and rape.
The company, which handles everything from DNA testing to firearms examination and drug testing, went into receivership weeks after the collapse of Carillion, the construction company.The development will raise questions over the Government’s decision to privatise to target undocumented migrants.
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Labour launches new policy on animal welfare
The Labour Party on Wednesday announced a new raft of policies on animal welfare that would look at introducing a ban on the live export of animals for slaughter, consult landlords on giving tenants the right to keep a pet, strengthen the ban on hunting with dogs, enshrine the principal of animal sentience in law, end the badger cull, implement a review of animal testing and expand affordable vet care for people on low incomes.
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British state pensions the lowest in the developed world
Pensioners in Britain face poverty and hardship in retirement with the lowest rate of pensions in the developed world, according to an assessment made by the Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development (OECD).
The OECD calculated that a typical British worker will at retirement receive a state pension and other benefits worth around 29 per cent of what they had previously been earning. That compares with an average of 63 per cent in other OECD countries, and more than 80 per cent in Italy and the Netherlands.
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Campaign on safety for McDonalds staff
THE Bakers. Food and Allied Workers’ Union (BFAWU) last week launched a petition as part of a campaign to force management at restaurants that are part of the giant McDonalds chain to take staff safety more seriously — and in particular to protect staff from abusive customers.
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Oxford students celebrate Chinese New Year
Gu Zhenqiu
HOLDING high a sanxian, the three-stringed plucked lute, in his hand, Oxford student Mike Skelton on Sunday night explained to a full house of more than 400 that the Chinese musical instrument was brought into existence nearly 2,000 years ago.
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Scottish Political News
by our Scottish political affairs correspondent
THE SCOTTISH National Party (SNP) are fond of posing as an anti-militarist party. They are against nuclear weapons but that must not be taken too far. They still want non-nuclear submarines to be based at the Faslane naval base, even demanding that NATO’s Atlantic Command is based in Scotland. Its devotion to the European Union implies signing up plans to form part of the planned European Army. Nothing is more guaranteed to get a nationalist in a tizzy than the suggestion that the numbers of the armed forces based in Scotland should be reduced.
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Council Workers on the March
by our Scottish political affairs correspondent
Across Scotland council service workers have been taking to the streets in protest at the actions (and inactions) of their employers. On Saturday hundreds of UNISON women members took to the streets for a march to Glasgow’s George Square to demand equal pay from the SNP-run city council. Led by women dressed as suffragettes, they had won a decade long legal case to secure equal pay when the council decided not to appeal a court decision.
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Attacks on Democracy
by our Scottish political affairs correspondent
Hundreds of students have made a stern protest at a decision by University of Aberdeen authorities to deny a potential candidate a place on the ballot that would give him a chance to follow in the footsteps of Herbert Asquith, Winston Churchill and Andrew Carnegie by becoming Rector of their university
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Red Salute to Kim Jong Il!
New Worker
correspondent
Friends of the Korean revolution have been commemorating the anniversary of the birth of dear leader Kim Jong Il throughout the month at events in the capital and other parts of the country. And last week comrades and friends gathered to mark the Day of the Shining Star at the John Buckle Centre, the HQ of the Revolutionary Communist Party of Britain (ML) [RCPB(ML)] in London.
Kim Jong Il steered the Democratic People’s Republic of Korea (DPRK) through the difficult times that followed the death of great leader Kim Il Sung in 1994. He devoted his entire life to serving the Korean people in the cause of building a human-centred society, a cause that is espoused by the democratic and anti-imperialistf orces the world over.
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The truth about Korea in north Wales
by Ray Jones
ABOUT 20 people gathered on a cold evening last week in St John’s Methodist Hall in Llandudno to hear what was happening in Korea.
At the invitation of Conwy Peace Group, Dermot Hudson from the Korean Friendship Association (KFA) and Lindis Percy from the Campaign for Accountability of US Bases, both of whom have recent experience of Korea, reported to the meeting.
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The Strange Death of Liberal England
BOOK REVIEW
by Literary Correspondent
AS I BROWSED the shelves of my local Waterstones bookshop I noticed a 1935 book amongst an array of more modern ones. This well written treatise, with its imaginative prose, has considerable relevance today. The Strange Death of Liberal England by George Dangerfield covers the period from the Liberal landslide election victory in 1906 to the outbreak of the first World War. These years are sometimes referred to as the late Edwardian era.
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International News
US strategy on Afghanistan triggers Taliban surge
by Abdul Haleem
ANTI-GOVERNMENT militias in Afghanistan recently conducted a series of deadly attacks in the capital city of Kabul. The attacks have left more than 120 people dead, mostly civilians, and injured more than 250 others whilst causing widespread panic amongst Afghans.
The Taliban, the major anti-government fighting force in the country, claimed responsibility for the deadly attack on the luxury Intercontinental Hotel on 21st January, which killed 22 people including four Americans.
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South Korean leader invited to Pyongyang
Democratic Korean leader Kim Jong Un has invited south Korean President Moon Jae In to Pyongyang at the “earliest date possible” in a letter delivered during an informal lunch meeting yesterday at the presidential palace in Seoul. Kim Yo Jong, the north Korean leader’s sister, hand-delivered the letter to Moon as the North Korean delegation met with southern officials.
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African refugees protest against Israel’s racist deportations
Radio Havana Cuba
Thousands of African migrants have staged a protest outside the Rwandan Embassy in Israel against a “racist” Israeli plan to deport them to the African country. During the protest, the demonstrators urged Rwanda and its President Paul Kagame not to co-operate with Israel on the plan. “Kagame — We are not for sale,” said one banner held by the demonstrators. “Prison or Deportation? What would you choose?” said another.
Features
One Belt and One Road
a Chinese project of global benefit
Prensa Latina
Since it was proposed in 2013, the ‘“One Belt and One Road’’ (OBOR) has attracted international attention for its ambitious objectives of creating a community with shared interests, destiny and responsibility under the win—win strategy.
Its source of inspiration is the old commercial routes of China and now it seeks to link it to numerous countries through a great platform of exchanges, modern infrastructures and coordinated policies that lead to the balanced growth of the planet.
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SPYCOPS: messing with the wrong people
by Kit Klarenberg
The official investigation into the long-raging ‘Spycops’ scandal refuses to disclose the cover names of police officers who spied on activists for half a century. A number of individuals and groups are battling the official conspiracy of silence — one campaigner explains why they refuse to give up their crusade.
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Black Liberation and the Vietnamese struggle
by Abayomi Azikiwe
DURING THE height of the genocidal war waged by the USA against the people of Vietnam during the 1960s and early 1970s, African-Americans were involved in a life-and-death campaign in the USA aimed at reclaiming their national identity, human rights and racial dignity.
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