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Freshers’ fair sees hundreds attend Burton and South Derbyshire College

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The start of the new academic year got off to a bang at Burton and South Derbyshire College when it hosted a Freshers’ Fair outside its Town Centre Campus this week.

The annual Freshers’ Fair is designed to welcome new full time pupils, giving them the opportunity to make new friends while gaining information on important student issues, covering everything from ersonal security to finance.

Freshers' Fair Sees Hundreds Attend Burton And South Derbyshire College

Hundreds of pupil’s attended the college’s freshers’ fair.

With music and live flash mob dancing from Performing Arts students, the lively event gave pupils a fun start to their college life. There were also a variety of activities for students to get involved with, including giant Kerplunk and Connect 4 games, didicars and a football shootout by Burton Albion. Meanwhile, the college’s Mulberry Bistro got involved during the event, giving out free food and hot chocolate.

Freshers' Fair Sees Hundreds Attend Burton And South Derbyshire College

Pupils having a go at the Didi-cars as part of Burton and South Derbyshire College’s freshers’ fair.

Emily Vinall, enrichment and wellbeing coordinator at Burton and South Derbyshire College said: “The Freshers’ Fair provided a great opportunity for new students to mix with each other and make friends in a relaxed, fun environment.

It also gave representatives from local services the opportunity to provide students with useful advice and information on a wide range of subjects, giving them an insight into what the college and local area have to offer.”


*Read more of today’s top news stories here.2

Follow the Burton Mail on Facebook and Twitter4
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Freshers' Fair Sees Hundreds Attend Burton And South Derbyshire College

References

  1. ^ Comments (0) (www.burtonmail.co.uk)
  2. ^ *Read more of today’s top news stories here. (www.burtonmail.co.uk)
  3. ^ Facebook (www.facebook.com)
  4. ^ Twitter (twitter.com)

Freshers’ fair sees hundreds attend Burton and South Derbyshire …

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The start of the new academic year got off to a bang at Burton and South Derbyshire College when it hosted a Freshers’ Fair outside its Town Centre Campus this week.

The annual Freshers’ Fair is designed to welcome new full time pupils, giving them the opportunity to make new friends while gaining information on important student issues, covering everything from ersonal security to finance.

Freshers' Fair Sees Hundreds Attend Burton And South Derbyshire ...

Hundreds of pupil’s attended the college’s freshers’ fair.

With music and live flash mob dancing from Performing Arts students, the lively event gave pupils a fun start to their college life. There were also a variety of activities for students to get involved with, including giant Kerplunk and Connect 4 games, didicars and a football shootout by Burton Albion. Meanwhile, the college’s Mulberry Bistro got involved during the event, giving out free food and hot chocolate.

Freshers' Fair Sees Hundreds Attend Burton And South Derbyshire ...

Pupils having a go at the Didi-cars as part of Burton and South Derbyshire College’s freshers’ fair.

Emily Vinall, enrichment and wellbeing coordinator at Burton and South Derbyshire College said: “The Freshers’ Fair provided a great opportunity for new students to mix with each other and make friends in a relaxed, fun environment.

It also gave representatives from local services the opportunity to provide students with useful advice and information on a wide range of subjects, giving them an insight into what the college and local area have to offer.”


*Read more of today’s top news stories here.2

Follow the Burton Mail on Facebook and Twitter4
3

Freshers' Fair Sees Hundreds Attend Burton And South Derbyshire ...

References

  1. ^ Comments (0) (www.burtonmail.co.uk)
  2. ^ *Read more of today’s top news stories here. (www.burtonmail.co.uk)
  3. ^ Facebook (www.facebook.com)
  4. ^ Twitter (twitter.com)

Why Donald Trump’s artful bluster at national security forum bodes ill for Hillary Clinton at the debates

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Democrats who suffered through the commander-in-chief forum on NBC on Wednesday night will have been reminded of how dangerous a candidate for president Donald Trump really is. I don t mean in the sense that he might start a nuclear war. Or that he is all over the shop on defeating Isis or curbing rape of women in the military. Or that he might give license to Vladimir Putin, his good pal, to invade which ever piece of territory he may now have his eye on. What we re talking about here is how dangerous he is as a political foe – to Hillary Clinton.

The evening offered a glimpse of how each of the two contenders might fare in the presidential debates that are just around the corner. The first is on 26 September on Long Island. One of them is going to have to approach them differently. And that s not Mr Trump. On Wednesday, they appeared separately and back-to-back – a coin-toss determined that Ms Clinton was forced to take the first half hour – on a lower deck of the USS Intrepid, a retired aircraft carrier that is now a floating military museum New York. They took questions on national security from NBC‘s Matt Lauer and members of an assembled audience.

Mr Lauer has been correctly excoriated by nearly every quarter for his handling of the event. (Well, not by most Republicans.) The complaint: he went easy on Mr Trump but repeatedly admonished Ms Clinton to shorten her answers and ensured that nearly all of her first ten minutes were devoted to her use of a private email server while she was Secretary of State.

Hillary Clinton answered email questions differently last night than she has in the past. She is totally confused. Unfit to serve as #POTUS1.

Donald J. Trump (@realDonaldTrump) September 8, 20162

Some of the viewers may have recalled that Mr Lauer used to share his gig as chief anchor of NBC s breakfast Today Show with Katie Couric, who these days resides at Yahoo! News and that it was she who single-handedly took down Sarah Palin after she was picked by John McCain as his running mate in 2008. (She saw Russia from her garden, remember?)

Where was Ms Couric on Wednesday night when the Democrats needed her? Mr Lauer came equipped with questions he was determined to ask each candidates in the time allotted.

He did not come equipped, apparently, with the mental dexterity – or sufficiently detailed knowledge of the topics at hand – to ask follow-ups or challenge many of the answers. This was especially true for Mr Trump, who, most notably, repeated the lie that he has always been opposed to the war in Iraq. He simply wasn t, but Mr Lauer let him say it anyway.

Donald Trump has proven over and over again that he’s unfit to be our Commander-in-Chief. https://t.co/uLoHJdzXte3

Hillary Clinton (@HillaryClinton) September 7, 20164

Equally flabbergasting was an exchange about Mr Trump s recent trip to Mexico to see President Enrique Pena Nieto. Hours before the forum, the Treasury Minister of Mexico resigned because of his part in inviting him. That s how well we did, Mr Trump boasted, as if destabilising neighboring governments was a good thing. Did Mr Lauer pick up on it? He didn t.

Will the debacle be a warning to the journalists who will moderate the presidential debates? They are Chris Wallace of Fox News, NBC s Lester Holt as well as Martha Raddatz of ABC News and Anderson Cooper from CNN will helm the one debate that will be town-hall in style. Possibly, but moderators are just that. They will not have the chance that Mr Lauer had to act as truth-tellers or to directly challenge. That will be left largely to the candidates themselves.

More even than on Wednesday, the candidates will rise or fall in the debates by dint of style as well as substance. And the depressing truth is this: Mr Trump s showmanship, combined with his dazzling ability to evade answering the questions put to him, will give him an edge. He weaves and boasts. He takes risks with his pronouncements, the less politically correct the better. He is not boring. Voters will see a performance and they will remember it. Ms Clinton severest problem is her gravity.

The lawyer that she is, she listens to questions and actually answers them. That has the effect of making her rather dull and it also frequently takes her deep into the weeds of topics she is better off avoiding just like Mr Trump does. Like that blasted email server and her vote to authorise the Iraq war when she was a senator. And things might get worse if she is left alone to do the Couric on Trump. Much has been said about the difficulties of being a woman candidate. Among them is this: taking too aggressive an approach with Mr Trump could be construed by some as being hectoring. That response would be unfair and, of course, sexist.

But when part of the job of a debate is to make voters warm to you, it is a risk nonetheless. They don t like a clever-clogs either. Which, of course, she is. Mr Trump does not change. We know that.

But Ms Clinton needs to find a way to do so.

Or the debates will not be the victories of experience and knowledge over ignorance that they should be.

Why Donald Trump's Artful Bluster At National Security Forum Bodes Ill For Hillary Clinton At The DebatesReuse content5

References

  1. ^ #POTUS (twitter.com)
  2. ^ September 8, 2016 (twitter.com)
  3. ^ https://t.co/uLoHJdzXte (t.co)
  4. ^ September 7, 2016 (twitter.com)
  5. ^ Reuse content (www.independent.co.uk)

London’s Fabric nightclub to appeal against licence revocation

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One of London’s biggest nightclubs will appeal against a council’s decision to revoke its licence, it has been confirmed. Fabric nightclub, based in Farringdon, faces closure after Islington Council found it had a “culture of drug use” which staff were “incapable of controlling”. A spokesman for the venue confirmed it had decided to appeal against the council’s decision, made in the early hours of Wednesday morning.

The closure of the club has been met with fierce criticism by both politicians and figures from the world of music. London Mayor Sadiq Khan said he was “disappointed” that an agreement had not been reached between Fabric, Islington Council and the Metropolitan Police. British DJ Goldie threatened to melt down his MBE in protest, while Saul Milton, one half of electronic duo Chase & Status, branded it “madness”.

The club closed temporarily after the deaths of two teenagers from suspected drug overdoses earlier this year, and last month the Met applied to the council for the licence to be reviewed. The venue had a previous licence review in 2014 following four deaths, Islington Council said. Following the announcement, Fabric said shutting the venue was “not the answer to the drug-related problems” and set “a troubling precedent” for London’s nightlife.

A spokesman for Islington Council said: “The problems seen during the 2014 review of Fabric’s licence have not been adequately addressed, which has resulted in further tragedy and crime.

“In light of all the circumstances, the sub-committee decided that revocation was both appropriate and proportionate.”

Teen sues off-duty cop who allegedly threw her to the ground and shocked her with a stun gun

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SEATTLE A teenager rode her bicycle through a mall parking lot when an off-duty officer working for a private security company pulled her down, threw her to the ground and shocked her with a stun gun.

Caught on surveillance video1, the 2014 encounter with the girl, who is black, drew outrage. She initially was charged with assaulting an officer before the case was dropped. Now, she s targeting his Washington state police department in a newly expanded lawsuit. It claims the Tacoma department s policies lead officers to attack residents, including minors such Monique Tillman, then 15, and violate their civil rights. Police supervisors routinely approve abusive, excessive and unnecessary uses of force and retain abusive officers, according to the expanded suit filed last week.

The original claim targeted Officer Jared Williams, who is white; the mall s owner; and the security company. It grew to include the department after it acknowledged that the officer acted within the scope of his police duties despite being paid by a private employer, said Tillman s lawyer, Vito de la Cruz. The lawsuit has not affected the department s policy of allowing officers to work for outside companies, a police spokeswoman said Tuesday. Off-duty officers wear their uniforms on those jobs and are officially police while they work private security or an event, she said. Police agencies across the country have different policies for off-duty work, experts say.

Editor’s note: The following video contains graphic content.

embedded content

The suit comes as law enforcement agencies nationwide are under fire for their treatment of minorities and as officers face increasing threats. Police shootings have sparked protests, recently from 49ers quarterback Colin Kaepernick, and retaliation from a man who killed five Dallas officers in a July sniper attack. In the Washington case, the girl s attorney said they believe the officer s actions were racially motivated that she now fears law enforcement. Tillman declined an interview Wednesday, de la Cruz said.

Officer Williams still works for the department, but it does not comment on pending litigation, said Officer Loretta Cool, a spokeswoman. The Associated Press attempts to reach Williams were unsuccessful. Tillman, then a 10th-grader, and her brother, Eric Branch, 16, were heading home from a fast food restaurant and cut across the Tacoma Mall parking lot on their bicycles on May 24, 2014. Williams, who was working for mall security, pulled up behind them in his police cruiser with lights flashing and an air horn blasting.

Another security officer pulled up. Tillman asked Williams why they were being stopped, and he said they were causing a disturbance and trespassing, the complaint said. Police have since declined to clarify what that disturbance entailed. As Williams took out a pad of paper, Tillman started to pedal away.

Williams erupted and began brutalizing this 15-year-old girl, the complaint said.

The video shows Williams grabbing the girl off the bike and pushing her against a car. He then grabbed her hair and threw her to the ground. He used his stun gun on her, sending painful electric shocks through her body, the lawsuit says. Tillman s brother tried to help his sister, and Williams threatened him with the device, the complaint said.

The other security officer grabbed or shoved the boy to the ground and handcuffed him. Both siblings were booked into a juvenile facility. Tillman was charged with assaulting an officer, resisting arrest and obstruction, but the counts were later dismissed, her lawyer said. Her lawsuit alleges that the department fails to train, investigate or discipline its officers who use force, so it s become a common practice to the point that it s encouraged.

Geoffrey Alpert, a professor of criminology and criminal justice at the University of South Carolina, said an officer s decision to use force should depend on how much the suspect resists and whether the suspect is a threat. Police departments should keep track of how officers assess those factors by looking at the number of complaints they receive, he said.

He needs to explain what threat she posed to him to justify the use of force, Alpert said. The question becomes what are they doing to manage the use of force? If they re doing nothing, it may appear they are encouraging excessive force.

The lawsuit seeks unspecified damages and asks the court to order the department to limit the use of reasonable force and discipline officers who use excessive force.

References

  1. ^ Caught on surveillance video (www.youtube.com)

Liberals launch security consultation

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OTTAWA The Liberal government’s promised changes to a controversial anti-terrorism law likely won’t come until next year, once officials have digested an array of public suggestions on revamping national security. The government opened an online consultation Thursday, soliciting feedback on everything from sharing information and preventing attacks to conducting surveillance and ensuring intelligence agencies are accountable. The consultation, which can be found at canada.ca/national-security-consultation, runs until Dec.

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Public Safety Minister Ralph Goodale told a news conference in Edmonton the government also hopes House of Commons and Senate committees will hold public hearings on the national security framework. It means any legislation flowing from these reviews would not be tabled until December at the earliest and more likely in late winter or spring 2017. In the 2015 election campaign, the Liberals promised to repeal “problematic elements” of omnibus security legislation, known as Bill C-51, ushered in by the previous Conservative government.

The bill gave the Canadian Security Intelligence Service explicit powers to disrupt terrorist threats, not just gather information about them. The legislation also created a new offence of promoting the commission of terrorist offences and broadened the government’s no-fly list powers. In addition, it expanded the sharing of federally held information about activity that “undermines the security of Canada.”

The Trudeau government has committed to ensure all CSIS warrants respect the Charter of Rights and Freedoms, preserve legitimate protest and advocacy and define terrorist propaganda more clearly.

The Liberals also plan to introduce new measures they say will do a better job of balancing collective security with rights and freedoms. Conservative public safety critic Erin O’Toole recently cautioned against tampering with the new CSIS power to derail threats at an early stage. Goodale defended the Liberals’ unhurried approach Thursday, saying the government wanted to take the necessary time to “get this right” after the Conservatives rushed legislation onto the books without properly consulting Canadians.

“A lot of people felt shut out, and we promised to give them the opportunity to be heard.”

Goodale, flanked by Justice Minister Jody Wilson-Raybould, released a “green paper” outlining 10 key areas of consultation as well as a lengthier explanatory document. But he stressed the discussion would not be limited to topics the government has flagged. “It’s up to Canadians to decide what they want to discuss.”

Civil society groups welcomed the public consultation, but stressed a need for a wide-ranging examination. When C-51 was introduced, Canadians took to the streets in the thousands to express concerns about new CSIS powers, said Micheal Vonn, policy director at the British Columbia Civil Liberties Association.

“We need serious, evidence-based reform, not legislative tweaking,” she said. “And we are confident that this is what the government will be hearing from the Canadian public and experts in the course of these consultations.”

The wording of the consultation appears far more focused on addressing the concerns of police rather than the needs of the public, said OpenMedia, a group that fights for Internet freedoms.

“Many of the issues are framed in a highly one-sided way that ignores the reasons why the public is so concerned about Bill C-51 in the first place, notably its impact on the health of our democracy,” said David Christopher, OpenMedia’s communications manager.

“That said, this consultation is a step in the right direction and we’ll be encouraging as many Canadians as possible to take part.”

Follow @JimBronskill on Twitter

By Jim Bronskill, The Canadian Press

Serious accident closes road in Cranleigh

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A road in Cranleigh has been closed after a serious accident.

It has happened on the B2130 Dunsfold Road – at High Loxley Road (Pratts Corner).

Surrey Police are at the scene.

The force tweeted to say the road is closed to traffic in both directions.

Keep up to date with the latest situation using our interactive travel map1

Or tune in for regular on-air updates2

#B21303 Dunsfold Road #Cranleigh4 currently CLOSED in both directions due to a serious RTC.

RPU – Surrey Police (@SurreyRoadCops) September 8, 20165 Serious Accident Closes Road In Cranleigh

References

  1. ^ Travel Map (www.964eagle.co.uk)
  2. ^ On air (www.964eagle.co.uk)
  3. ^ #B2130 (twitter.com)
  4. ^ #Cranleigh (twitter.com)
  5. ^ September 8, 2016 (twitter.com)

Local “Organised And Sophisticated” Crime Gang Jailed After 37 Burglaries – Wrexham.com

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Nine men who have been described as being part of an organised and sophisticated group were sentenced this morning following the theft of valuable Asian gold jewellery.

The sentencing comes after a large scale police operation in July 2015, which saw 18 addresses across north Wales and Cheshire raided in connection with the theft of Asian gold jewellery. Over 100 officers from North Wales Police, Chester, Greater Manchester and West Mercia forces were involved in the early morning raids. Three men from Wrexham were sentenced this afternoon:

  • Michael McGuire aged 47 of Homestead Lane was jailed for six and a half years.
  • John James Purcell aged 29 of Ruthin Road, was jailed for six years.
  • Miles Delaney aged 32, of Ruthin Road, received five years.

Others sentenced included:

  • John Purcell aged 24 from Connah s Quay, was jailed for five years.
  • Kevin Joseph McGuire aged 34 from Blackburn received six and a half years.
  • Stephen Berry received two years youth detention
  • Francis McGuire aged 32 was sentenced to five and a half years.
  • Miles Berry from Connah s Quay was sentenced to five years.
  • Mark Bowen aged 46 from Oswestry was sentenced to 27 months.
  • DI Lee Boycott from North Wales Police said; I would like to pay tribute to the victims who had the courage to be willing to cooperate with the planned court case.

    Burglary can have a traumatic effect and the nature of these offences was particularly upsetting for the victims. I hope they receive some comfort from these sentences.

    Early last year we began to see a link in burglary offences in Cheshire and North Wales where high performance cars, heir loom jewellery and cash were taken.

    Both police forces set up a Joint Investigation Team to deal with this particular organised gang who gathered information on the houses and people they wanted to target.

    Following a series of warrants throughout the region, the men arrested were charged with offences including, conspiracy to commit burglaries, handling stolen goods, money laundering and participating in the activities of an organised crime group. The latter offence only came into law two months before the charges.

    They pleaded guilty in the face of overwhelming evidence and must now pay the price for committing these crimes.

    It is an unavoidable fact in this case that all of the burglars emanate from the itinerant or travelling community around North Wales and Cheshire.

    I would appeal to that community to work with us to never allow this to happen again.

    I would also ask the public to remain vigilant and report any suspicious activity immediately and to take a common sense approach to home security.

    Dr Farookh Jishi, speaking on behalf of some of the Asian community affected by the crime, noted that a combination of money and gold jewellery had been stolen, saying: Most of the jewellery is high value gold and is inheritance and wedding gifts. It is a cultural thing among Asians who often wear them on ceremonial occasions.

    The Asian community is grateful to the police for taking the matter so seriously. There is lots of fear due to the specific targeting, people were afraid to go to school and pick their children up.

    A lot of the jewellery has sentimental value and cannot be replaced. The burglaries caused a lot of fear. Detective Inspector Boycott said described the group as organised and sophisticated and that they had targeted heirloom jewellery.

    He added: We gathered information on targets and planned meticulously, using overt and covert policing tactics to catch them.

    The nine gang members were jailed for a combined total of 42 years and nine months.

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Ireland has contributed 68000 individual "tours of duty" to UN peacekeeping missions

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Minister with Responsibility for Defence, Paul Kehoe, attended the United Nations Peacekeeping Defence Ministerial in London earlier today.

The event is a follow-on from the Leaders Summit on Peacekeeping held in New York on 28th September in 2015. Today s event focused on the commitment of resources to UN peacekeeping, the development of a coherent shared plan for how peacekeeping can play its part in implementing the Women Peace and Security agenda and a number of key challenges facing UN military deployments. Speaking at the event, the Minister said: I believe this summit provides a timely opportunity to consider the evolution of UN peacekeeping as we face new and more complex security and peacekeeping challenges across the globe.”

“A central tenet of Irish foreign policy is support for the multilateral system of collective security represented by the United Nations.

Ireland is committed to ensuring the continued effectiveness of UN operations and, in this regard, will increase its contribution to UN Missions with the deployment of an additional 150 personnel to UNIFIL, the UN Mission in Lebanon, later this year, he added. The Defence Forces Chief of Staff, Vice Admiral Mark Mellett DSM also attended the event.

Very interesting discussion at today’s UN Peacekeeping Defence Ministerial in London pic.twitter.com/tZuMWs2piK1

DF Chief of Staff (@DF_COS) September 8, 20162

Ireland has an unbroken, long and highly regarded history of participation in overseas missions mandated by the United Nations since 1958, which has comprised approximately 68,000 individual tours of duty. Currently, some 500 Defence Forces personnel are serving overseas.

References

  1. ^ pic.twitter.com/tZuMWs2piK (t.co)
  2. ^ September 8, 2016 (twitter.com)

Rodgers: Griffiths would be a big loss but others can fill the void against Rangers

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BRENDAN Rodgers admitted last night that his main striker Leigh Griffiths is a major doubt for tomorrow’s Old Firm diary. The 26-year-old, who has seven goals in nine appearances this season, was held out of training yesterday and instead spent the day getting a scan on the calf problem which saw him withdraw from international duty. While Rodgers will delay his final decision on the player’s participation until he sees those medical results, he appeared to be bracing himself for the worst. While the Northern Irishman, named Ladbrokes Premiership manager of the month, said the absence of Griffiths would be a “big disappointment”, he feels Celtic have already proven this season that they are no longer over-reliant on him and it is more important that no long-term damage is sustained. We ll see on that,” said Rodgers. “He s trained this week. We had a light day Thursday and he was just away getting a scan on the injury. We ll see how that is over the next 24 hours.

If he does miss the game, it will obviously be a big disappointment,” he added. But I go back when I first came in here and I mentioned the possible over-reliance on Leigh.

What I needed to get was goals from different people and different areas of the field. You can see Scott Sinclair has goals, James Forrest has three from three in the league, Moussa Dembele has played and scored, Tom Rogic is scoring and even Scott Brown!

That s important and, if Leigh doesn t make it for whatever reason, we have to ensure he is going to be ready for the season rather than put a big risk into him.”

While it is doubtful if the Celtic manager was in any doubt about the importance of his first Old Firm match – as participant or spectator – and the first league encounter between these sides for four years, he had that fact underlined this week when the Strathclyde Police visited the club’s Lennoxtown training complex. Rodgers, who has also experienced such police involvement when managing Swansea in the South Wales derby against Cardiff City, feels it is important that his players remember their discipline but also that the authorities remember that players are human beings and not robots.

“They had a chat with the players and then I had an individual chat with them and our security,” said Rodgers. “We generally hope in games between Celtic and Rangers or any games that it never ever comes to anything like that. It is a wonderful game, a great game to be involved in, but you have a responsibility. Sometimes emotion and the stress of playing in the game can override that. But I think it is important also to understand that players aren t machines, they aren t robots, they have emotion as well.”

Victory on Saturday would see Celtic assume a commanding position at the top of the Ladbrokes Premiership table, four points clear with a game in hand, albeit with it 34 games still to negotiate. Rodgers – whose side have already taken care of rival sides Aberdeen, Hearts and St Johnstone in a testing start to the campaign – admits there will be more than just three points at stake.

“Well, I think it is our rival, a big rival,” said the 43-year-old. “If you look at our first four games if you include this one, they were all going to be against rivals for us for the league. So yes, that makes it important.

Always, if you can get a win against one of your rivals early on it puts a good marker down. I think because of how Celtic were only a few months back in the semi final, for me it is a good measure to see where the team is at.

“I have said it openly – I think in the last match Rangers were the better team in the semi final,” he added. “But this is is a different team and certainly a different mentality. The team needed help and needed speed. A tempo. The players have responded to the work and confidence is massive. A huge factor. This will be a good measure of where we are at.”

While the loss of Griffiths would be a significant setback, new signing Cristian Gamboa in contention for an Old Firm debut after he returned yesterday from international duty for Costa Rica and Rodgers feels that the international break generally came at the right time for his side.

When the break came, it came at a good stage for us with everything we had been through and drew a line under a great start for us,” said Rodgers. “It let players recover and get real good work in.

But it will be the same for Rangers and you accept it.”

Nigeria postpones elections in Edo state over security threats

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ABUJA, Sept 8 (Reuters) – Nigeria’s Independent National Electoral Commission (INEC) has postponed elections in the southern state of Edo to Sept .

28 from Sept .

10 because of security threats, a government official said on Thursday.

Soyebi Solomon, the national commissioner in charge of voters, education and publicity, said after a meeting with police and security agents that a delay “is necessary in view of threats of terrorists activities in Edo State and other states of the federation during the election.”

The decision highlights another security hotspot in Nigeria, which is fighting Islamist militants of Boko Haram in the north and militants in the oil-producing Delta region in the south. (Reporting By Libby George; editing by Grant McCool)

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References

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Man dies after CS spray used during incident in Belfast

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Man Dies After CS Spray Used During Incident In Belfast

The Police Service of Northern Ireland is investigating

A man has died after police used CS spray against him during a violent incident in Belfast city centre. The Police Ombudsman said: ” The man who became unwell during an incident involving police officers in Belfast City Centre this morning has died.

“The incident, during which police officers used CS spray against the man, is currently being investigated by the Police Ombudsman’s office.

“The office will release the man’s name in due course.”

The trouble happened near the Grand Opera House at about 5am on Thursday and a defibrillator was left at the scene. The man received medical attention before he was taken to hospital.

The Police Ombudsman said police were called after a man was suspected of involvement in an altercation with taxi drivers. Ombudsman investigators have been at the scene from early morning. The area was cordoned off and a section of Great Victoria Street was closed for a time but has been reopened.

Investigators have mapped and photographed the scene, security camera footage has been recovered and inquiries are ongoing to acquire further footage.

A number of witnesses have been spoken to but the office has issued an appeal for anyone else who was in the area at the time and may have seen what happened to contact them.

Decent wages, job security and paid leave among workers’ top priorities, but reality falls short

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WORKERS want decent pay, job security, paid leave, a safe environment and a supportive manager but there are clear gaps between their priorities and reality, a new report claims. Work by Oxfam and the University of the West of Scotland (UWS) found quality of employment is critically important to people s lives and that policy is too focused on pay. The report was launched at the Scottish Parliament last night at an event featuring Economy, Jobs and Fair Work Secretary Keith Brown. Francis Stuart of Oxfam Scotland said: This research makes clear there is a significant job to do to improve the quality of work available in Scotland.

Researchers questioned more than 1,500 people across the country and identified 26 key factors determining what makes for decent work . Hourly pay came out on top, with one in five people paid less than the voluntary Living Wage of 8.25. Job security was second, with 138,000 workers on temporary contracts, and paid leave was third, with 118,000 not in receipt of the statutory minimum paid holidays. Researchers also said 88,000 workers reported illness caused or exacerbated by their job in the previous year.

The top five was completed by the need for a supportive manager, as 324,000 adult employees said their line worker did not provide the necessary back-up. Other elements identified include freedom from discrimination, work that provides a sense of purpose and opportunities for career progression. Dr Hartwig Pautz of UWS said: A large number of workers lack what should be basic features of a decent job such as a permanent, secure contract, paid holidays, and a supportive line manager.

We know that poor-quality work can affect people s health and general wellbeing quite adversely when it does not satisfy at least the basic characteristics of decent work .

For Scotland to have so many in this situation is very problematic, given that there is already immense health inequality in Scotland.

NASA’s Asteroid-Analysing Explorer Launches From Cape Canaveral

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An ambitious mission to collect dust from an asteroid and return it to Earth for scientific analysis has blasted off from Cape Canaveral in Florida. NASA s Osiris-REx spacecraft will take 23 months to reach Bennu, a 500m-wide asteroid which scientists believe contains perfectly preserved material from 4.5 billion years ago when it and the rest of the solar system was formed. Professor Dante Lauretta, the mission s principle investigator, said similar material on Earth has long since been erased.

He said: We are going to asteroid Bennu because it s a time capsule from the earlier stages of solar system formation, back when our planetary system was spread across as dust grains in a swirling cloud around our growing proto star.

Inside this region of the proto planetary disk there were bodies that were cumulating many of them were getting water, ice and organic material.

These are really critical because our Earth went through a major period of geological upheaval during the late heavy bombardment when millions of asteroids collided with the surface, sterilising our planet. Osiris-REx a handy shortening of the Origins, Spectral, Interpretation, Resource Identification, Security, Regolith Explorer will spend two years mapping the surface of Bennu at a resolution so high that scientists would be able to spot a penny. In July 2020 it will descend towards the asteroid at a speed of less than 10cm a second.

As it briefly touches down it will blow high pressure nitrogen gas into the surface, dislodging dust and rock which it will suck up and store in a sterile capsule. NASA hopes to collect between 60g and 2kg of material, which should return to Earth in 2023. Osiris-REx will return the largest amount of extra-terrestrial material since the Apollo moon landings.

Dr Jim Garvin, chief scientist at the NASA Goddard Space Flight Centre, told Sky News: This particular asteroid contains molecules that include carbon.

Those carbon-forming molecules are really important ingredients for what many scientists believe could be the building blocks, the origins for life on our planet and perhaps other worlds.

So getting to those elusive and sometimes fragile molecules where they are preserved back to Earth is a special engineering project with an incredible science potential. NASA also wants to understand the effects of the sun s heat on the asteroid s orbit. In 2035, Bennu is due to pass the Earth closer than the moon.

The combination of the heat effect and the Earth s gravitational pull means there is a one in 2,700 chance that it will smash into the planet 150 or so years later, creating a crater 5km wide and 500 metres deep. Meanwhile, the European Space Agency is working with Airbus in Stevenage to develop a road-sweeper type device to retrieve a sample of dust and rock from the Martian moon Phobos in a mission due to launch in 8-10 years. Ralph Cordey, head of science at Airbus Defence and Space said: The difference between a meteorite that falls from space and something that you bring back from an asteroid is context.

You know where it has come form, the processes it has gone through and you can do a lot more science about the object.

Trump corrects course on national security, exposing new contradictions

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While US election campaigns are rarely conducive to the making of coherent foreign and national-security policy, the febrile state of America’s political environment today seems especially fatal to the endeavour. In circumstances where electoral imperatives privilege point-scoring over policy and rhetoric over rigour, the necessary conditions for thoughtful evaluations of America’s place in the world simply do not appear to exist. By that desultory standard, Donald Trump’s latest speech1 on foreign and national-security policy, delivered in Philadelphia on Wednesday (and his follow-up appearance2 in a televised forum on national security which also involved Hillary Clinton), lived down to expectations. In many ways the appearances were in keeping with Trump’s previous tone and style. There were routine denunciations of Clinton’s recklessness, as demonstrated by her mishandling of sensitive emails, and Obama’s fecklessness, which, he argued, had telegraphed American weakness and emboldened China, North Korea and Iran.

There were the usual big pronouncements, for example on bolstering US defence spending at no extra cost to the American taxpayer, along with the trademark lack of detail about how such a policy might be achieved. The speech also rested, in at least a few cases, on dubious facts and analysis3. Yet there was an important difference, too. Throughout the speech, Trump appeared to adopt a more ‘normal’ vision of US foreign policy, marking a departure from some of the radically unorthodox views4 flagged during his bid for the Republican nomination. The US, he said, would promote ‘regional stability’ and ‘an easing of tensions throughout the world.’ It would ‘deter, avoid and prevent conflict through unquestioned military strength’. Having apparently banished his earlier ambivalence towards alliances, Trump resolved that the US should ‘make new friends, rebuild old alliances, and bring new allies into the fold.’ If any of this sounds familiar, it’s because these have been the ritual incantations of US foreign policy for much of the past century.

Of course, such a corrective will no doubt be heartening to some. But Trump’s gradual conformity has also exposed new tensions and contradictions in his worldview. His Middle East policy offers a case in point. On the one hand, Trump flagged an end to the kind of overly militarised adventurism he ascribes to Clinton, which he correctly identifies as having produced turmoil, suffering and disorder. Under a Trump Administration, he declared, action in Middle East will be ‘tempered by realism.’ Gradual reform, not sudden and radical change, would be the overarching objective, and ‘diplomacy, not destruction’ the approach.

In virtually the next breath, Trump then vowed that one of his first acts as President would be to summon his generals to produce a new plan to ‘defeat and destroy ISIS.’ This is problematic for at least three reasons. First, and most obviously, it would require precisely the kind of action in the Middle East he claims to reject. As Trump himself acknowledges, it will inevitably involve the deployment of greater resources. Though not militarily unachievable, it will not be easy, and it would entail a significant cost in American lives and treasure. Second, and more importantly, destroying ISIS would, like the infamous ‘surge’ in 2007, be unlikely to offer anything more than a temporary abatement of Iraq’s problems. ISIS is itself symptomatic of intractable sectarian schisms in Iraqi society.

Without a political arrangement in place which either ruthlessly represses Iraq’s Sunni population or somehow reintegrates it into the state, destroying ISIS would be like treating a machete wound with a band-aid. For someone vehemently opposed to ‘toppling regimes without a plan for the day after’, Trump has flagged a willingness to reprise the exact same mistake. And third, defeating ISIS would hand Iran yet another regional victory, allowing it to consolidate its influence in Iraq . This runs counter to yet another of Trump’s policies, articulated in his recent speech, of resurrecting a tighter containment policy that constrains rather than emboldens Tehran. Beyond the Middle East, there is another contradiction which revealed itself in Trump’s speech, and which already bedevils US foreign policy.

On the one hand, Trump flagged a commitment to address the problem of allied free-riding, albeit in more tactful language than he’s used in the past, ‘Early in my term,’ he noted, ‘I will also be requesting that all NATO nations promptly pay their bills. Additionally, I will be respectfully asking countries such as Germany, Japan, South Korea and Saudi Arabia to pay more for the tremendous security we provide them.’ At the same time, however, Trump has flagged an unequivocal commitment to America’s global mission, and to the unchallenged military superiority which supports it. If, as Trump claims, his foreign policy would seek to achieve ‘peace through strength’, why would other states willingly assume greater burdens on behalf of their security?

To this question, like so many others, he is yet to provide an answer.

References

  1. ^ Donald Trump’s latest speech (thehill.com)
  2. ^ appearance (www.nytimes.com)
  3. ^ dubious facts and analysis (www.nytimes.com)
  4. ^ unorthodox views (www.cbsnews.com)

What you should know about security at Saturday’s Battle at Bristol football game at Bristol Motor Speedway

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Q: What security measures do I need to be aware of?

A: Security will be at a higher level than races at BMS. There will be a security perimeter complete with metal detectors, fencing and checkpoints. Police dogs will be on site.

All bags will be searched. All attendees will be required to display their game tickets or credentials before accessing BMS property.

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Final call for papers

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Final Call For Papers

There are less than two weeks left to submit a paper for Facilities Management 20171. The annual exhibition, at the NEC from March 21 to 23, 2017, has already received proposals, but submission will close on September 19. Under the theme FM: the Business Enabler, the two theatres will showcase content to educate and excite delegates, say organisers. The FM Matters theatre will include keynote presentations while the FM Dialogue area promises panel debates where delegates can discuss the issues of the day with their peers. The sessions at both theatres will explore how FM can move from cost centre to business enabler.

They will give delegates the knowledge, tools and techniques to take back to their organisations and make an immediate impact on the business and bottom line. Conducting a seminar session at the Facilities Management 2017 exhibition will showcase your expertise. Anyone wishing to put forward a proposal should send a brief synopsis, together with details of the speaker and their conference speaking experience, to Cathy Hayward at cathy.hayward@magentaassociates.co.uk.

For more about Facilities Management 2017 visit http://www.fm-birmingham.com/Home2.

References

  1. ^ Facilities Management 2017 (www.fm-birmingham.com)
  2. ^ http://www.fm-birmingham.com/Home (www.fm-birmingham.com)

Preaching the wrong message?

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Preaching The Wrong Message?

After horrific terrorist events in Europe, and notably those in France, it is hard to deny that the frequency, targets, and methodologies being employed by religious inspired terrorists are ever changing and represent an increased risk to a much wider demographic than secular terrorist groups such as the IRA, writes Sarah Jeffery, Security Consultant at the consultancy BB71. In light of this, guidance has been prepared for many more places of congregation offering advice on best practice and prescriptive measures to reduce the overall risk to those that work, visit, and live in these places. The horrific attack in the Catholic Church in Saint-Etienne-du-Rouvray has been a particularly horrific example of how places of worship, their clergy and congregations, are potential targets of terrorist attack and as such the safety and security of those that visit, work, and administer these buildings has been the subject of high profile media publicity in recent days. Guidance has been issued by National Churchwatch, an organisation offering free security and safety advice to Churches throughout the UK that proposes a number of measures for Churches to adopt in order to reduce the risk posed by terrorist attack. Media interviews with the author of that advice, Nick Tolson2, suggest that rural churches are more at risk and any attack is likely to be carried out using bladed weapons rather than firearms.

What is the advice? Broadly speaking the advice can be broken down into the following four categories:

Surveillance The advice suggests that all churches should have CCTV.
Controlling access The advice suggests restricting the number of entrances into the building before, during, and after a service.
Situational awareness The advice suggests that Clergy, volunteers, and regular visitors should be aware of what is ordinary and question anything that is not.
Preparedness Brief all regular visitors to the Church so that they know what to do if they see something suspicious. Mostly sensible, so what s the problem?

Put simply, without specialist input the above could be a waste of money, do more harm than good and, at the extreme, put people at risk of physical injury or worse. Empowering people to challenge suspicious people can be a good thing but it must be balanced against the risk they are faced with. If this guidance s primary objective is to address terrorist incidents like those seen in France then the advice should be simple and should reflect that issued by the Government Run, Hide, Tell.
Also, restricting the number of entrances into the building, if not properly thought through could also make it easier for an attacker to injure more people as their escape route(s) are also restricted.
Increasing situational awareness is a good thing, but specialist training for those delivering the sessions should be recommended to ensure that appropriate and audience specific training is delivered.
Lastly, and perhaps the crux of the advice and certainly the subsequent media reporting is the suggestion that all Churches should have CCTV. This is the one area where the advice may not be helpful and may actually cost Churches money with little or no return.
CCTV in a nutshell
CCTV is the term used to describe technical surveillance, i.e. the use of technology to provide video images of areas of interest such as entrance doors, reception areas, and places where higher value items are stored. This is most commonly done by establishing a network of cameras that generate images on a screen as well as recorded images on a digital recorder. Value of CCTV

To be of value, the CCTV must be of use and this means that it needs to have a defined purpose.

In the case of a church that may be to deter would-be vandals from damaging property, or from petty criminals from stealing the collection fund; however, where terrorism is concerned the value of CCTV in deterring a would-be attack is very low. In fact, in the spirit of Jihad recognition and publicity after the event may actually be sought so CCTV may actually assist this goal. Further, CCTV provides no opportunity to detect unusual behaviour, such as planning and preparation or the carrying of weapons, unless someone is watching it or it has sophisticated software that can generate an alert or response independently. In short, to be of value the user s requirements need to be carefully planned and outlined in a report before a supplier is identified and commissioned to install a system. It may be determined that a CCTV system isn t the best option for the security objectives of a particular Church, so our advice here would be to set out your needs in a logical structure and then determine what the best way to achieve these are if you are in any doubt then you should consider seeking expert, independent advice. Cost of CCTV

CCTV, as established in the National Churchwatch3 guidance, can range in cost from a few hundred pounds to many thousands to purchase and install. But CCTV also requires maintenance, especially the cameras themselves, and operation all of which represents additional and on-going costs.

CCTV, unless designed correctly can generate a lot of unnecessary data that then needs to be stored in a way that protects the data from unauthorised access which again can add to the operating costs as well as unintentionally expose the Church to risks of non-compliance with the Data Protection Act which can, at the extreme, result in financial penalty. What do we suggest? Adopt a risk based approach to any security decision and then consider what the most effective way of achieving the desired outcome is.

You should also bear in mind that the likelihood of a terrorist attack taking place in your Church, versus the likelihood of low level criminality such as anti-social behaviour and theft, may be such that your finite resources will be better spent on crime prevention measures especially if they can serve as a counter terrorism measure should they be deemed appropriate.
We are preparing a series of free workshops for those responsible for places of worship if you would like to share thinking on some of the ways you can approach security both in terms of crime prevention and counter terrorism, please get in touch and we will let you know where your nearest event is.

Visit www.bbseven.com4.

References

  1. ^ BB7 (www.bbseven.com)
  2. ^ Nick Tolson (www.nationalchurchestrust.org)
  3. ^ National Churchwatch (www.nationalchurchestrust.org)
  4. ^ www.bbseven.com (www.bbseven.com)

Accused looked ‘like a God-damned zombie’ during B.C.sawmill shooting rampage: Testimony

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NANAIMO, B.C. A veteran security guard testified he watched a zombie-like man walking towards another man in the parking lot of a Vancouver Island sawmill with his right arm outstretched before hearing an explosion. Michael Lauder told a B.C. Supreme Court trial in Nanaimo that he ducked out of sight after hearing the blast, and seconds later emerged to find Michael Lunn on his back, motionless and suffering from a serious wound to his right side and the back of his head.

I knew from looking at him that he had passed, said Lauder, a 16-year employee of the Western Forests Products mill where the shooting took place. He was face up with his eyes open. It appeared that there had been damage to the back of his head.

Kevin Addison, 49, is on trial facing two first-degree murder charges and two charges of attempted murder. Mill employees Fred McEachern and Lunn died in the April 30, 2014 shooting rampage, while Tony Sudar and Earl Kelly were shot but survived. Addison, a former mill employee, was arrested at the mill office minutes after police received calls about an active shooter at the site.

Lauder told the jury that he saw a man approach Lunn from behind.

It seemed like a fraction of a second from the time I noticed the individual from the corner of my eye, he said. There was a bang and it was over. Under cross-examination by defence lawyer John Gustafson, Lauder testified he didn t recognize the man but described him as frozen. His face was frozen, expressionless. He seemed quite rigid. I said zombie from the standpoint the individual seemed quite focused.

Lauder later agreed he originally told police on the day of the shooting the man was like a God-damned zombie. Lauder testified he ran from his security office to the company office to warn others, but when he arrived mill manager Andrew Vanger had an individual pinned to the ground and yelled, call 911, call 911. The jury also heard testimony from an RCMP officer who responded to an active shooter call at the mill and found blood, bodies and an emotionless man sitting on top of a sawed-off shotgun in the company office.

Nanaimo RCMP Const. David Buchanan said it took him less than three minutes to arrive at the mill on Nanaimo s waterfront. The shooting had already stopped and shortly afterwards Addison was arrested without resistance, Buchanan said.

He was emotionless, quiet, said Buchanan. He was able to get up on his own accord. He said the only emotion shown by Addison was about 30 minutes later at the Nanaimo RCMP office when he threw his head back once and made a grimace.

Buchanan, the second officer at the scene, said he was expecting chaos. He said he stopped at the mill parking lot where he saw a man on the ground receiving aid. There was blood pooling on the ground, Buchanan said.

Crown prosecutors said the trial will hear evidence that Lunn was hit by a single shotgun blast to his back right arm moments after stepping out of his vehicle. Buchanan testified he then walked into the dark company office knowing his colleague Const. Paul Minkley was already inside.

He said he helped Minkley put handcuffs on Addison and walked him to his police vehicle. The trial has heard that McEachern and Kelly were shot in the back and Sudar in the face. The Crown said the trial will hear that McEachern, who later died, and two other employees, Ed Good and Vanger, were able to subdue Addison in the office.

The trial is scheduled to last for about three weeks.

Guard against cyber security complacency at breakfast event

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Cyber security expert Andy Hague has said companies need to understand what they ve got and protect it ahead of his appearance at a breakfast event on the subject1. Hague, managing director of Manchester-based security firm Secarma, says the biggest problem is that too many firms are complacent.

It s a great example of not appreciating what you ve got and protecting it, he says.

Most companies still don t think it will happen to them; that just because they don t hold any customer credit card details they aren t a target.

What they don t realise is that any aspect of your data can be monetised by an attacker.

Guard Against Cyber Security Complacency At Breakfast Event

Cyber security and the growing FinTech sector will be the subject of a BusinessCloud business breakfast in Manchester on November 2. Sign up for the event here.2

Tackling it is now a top priority of UK businesses as most have already fallen victim to an attack. As the criminals become more sophisticated, that figure is only going to rise.

Although most breaches won t be on the scale experienced by Mossask Fonseca the law firm at the centre of the Panama Papers hack3 the case served to highlight the clear and present danger posed by cyber attackers. Given the rash of high profile attacks it s staggering that the vast majority of breaches are caused by human error, highlighting that ignorance is acting as an open invite to the criminals. And all this at a time when the burgeoning financial technology sector known as FinTech, is going from strength-to-strength.

The UK is a magnet for innovative companies that use technology to make financial services more efficient. BusinessCloud s FinTech and cyber security breakfast, to be held on Wednesday 2nd November at the UKFast Auditorium, Manchester, will hear from some of the UK s most innovative FinTech firms and discuss the omnipresent danger of cyber security. UKFast-owned Secarma acquired Altrincham-based application security specialists Pentest Limited for an undisclosed sum in July4.

Pentest MD John Denneny, who spoke to BusinessCloud about ransomware recently5, will also speak at the event.

References

  1. ^ at a breakfast event on the subject (www.businesscloud.co.uk)
  2. ^ Sign up for the event here. (www.eventbrite.co.uk)
  3. ^ Mossask Fonseca the law firm at the centre of the Panama Papers hack (www.businesscloud.co.uk)
  4. ^ acquired Altrincham-based application security specialists Pentest Limited for an undisclosed sum in July (www.businesscloud.co.uk)
  5. ^ who spoke to BusinessCloud about ransomware recently (www.businesscloud.co.uk)
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