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Karen Koren: The good Sheppard tends his Assembly

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So, I was shouted at by Tommy Sheppard in a letter to the Evening News the other day. He wasn’t happy with my comments about his new venture in last week’s column.

For the record, it was not his organisational abilities I was remarking on, more the difficulties of setting up the newly refurbished Assembly Rooms and all that the area brings with it - road closures and Princes Street upheaval. I would have taken on the venue in a heartbeat had I been given the opportunity. However, that was not to be and I have no doubt that although running the Assembly Rooms as a Fringe venue will be difficult to pull off, it will ultimately be successful.

Over the weekend, the Diamond Jubilee celebrations were brilliant - not that there was much going on in Edinburgh. Personally, I think of it as a much more English thing, though my grandchildren loved all the pomp and ceremony and proceeded to draw and colour flags for most of Saturday and Sunday - the front door got a Union Flag, a diamond and the message, ‘Queen Elizabeth II Diamond Jubilee’ stuck on it.

The television coverage has been marvellous, which is great, unless you have no interest in the royals, as there was not much else on. I was drawn in by the choir singing their hearts out in the rain on Sunday, very admirable. Then I couldn’t stop watching. I kept trying to watch some crime drama or other but was drawn back by the sight of a stand-up comic I knew from their early years, people like Miranda Hart, Lee Mack, Jimmy Carr and Peter Kay.

I was crossing my fingers they didn’t make any inappropriate statements. Having said that, it was Lenny Henry who made a few gaffes telling Rolf Harris to stop singing and continuously asking the crowd to shout ‘Yeah!’ was all a bit cringe worthy!


Jonathan Melville: It’s time to trash movie trailers

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YOU could hardly miss the fact that Ridley Scott’s Prometheus, a sort-of prequel to 1979’s Alien starring Michael Fassbender and Noomi Rapace, opened in Edinburgh cinemas last week.

What with the teaser trailers, viral videos, sneak-peek photos and other hints at what the plot may or may not hold, this was a film that raised viewer expectations into the stratosphere, which is perhaps apt for sci-fi.

As a fan of the first two films in the Alien franchise, I followed the PR campaign as far as I could, until it felt as if I’d seen much of the first half of the film before stepping into the cinema.

Prometheus is by no means bad – it looks gorgeous and the cast all try their best to look as perplexed as the audience while Fassbender steals the show – it just wan’t quite what I expected from the hype.

Another film that could suffer from hype, or at least a very revealing trailer, is William Friedkin’s Killer Joe, which opens this year’s Edinburgh International Film Festival.

When announced, I watched some of the trailer online but had to stop as it was giving away most of the film.

Then, while waiting for Prometheus to start at the cinema, the Killer Joe trailer was shown in full and I couldn’t avoid it. So much for viewer choice.

Until film companies stop trying to ruin their own products through trailers we all need to be more vigilant. Or stick our fingers in our ears before the movie starts.

As for the Prometheus sequel, I’ll probably go and see it, though my suggestion is to get rid of everyone else, keep Fassbender and call the film David.

{http://twitter.com/#!/@jon_melville|@jon_melville}

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Scottish Fact of the Day: Robert the Bruce’s heart

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Whilst on his deathbed in 1392, Robert the Bruce requested that his heart be carried into battle against the ‘Infidels’ because he himself had not been able to go on a Crusade.

(Removing internal organs after death was rather commonplace at the time). Bruce’s body was buried in Dunfermline Abbey, and upon exhumation in 1818, the ribs were found to have been sawn through, suggesting that Bruce’s heart was indeed removed. It is said that Sir James Douglas took Bruce’s heart in a casket to Spain in 1330, but died in a battle against the Moors. Sir William Keith brought Bruce’s heart back to Scotland, and it was buried in Melrose Abbey. During excavations beneath the Chapter House at Melrose Abbey in 1921, a conical casket was found, measuring 10 inches high. The casket was reburied, but was once again removed in 1996 for further examination. Whilst impossible to prove that the heart was Bruce’s, Historic Scotland concluded that it was ‘reasonable to assume that it is.’ on June 22nd 1998, the casket was reburied (again) at Melrose Abbey, and on June 24th, the anniversary of the Battle of Bannockburn, a plaque was unveiled at the place where the heart now lies.

Walk of the week: Ben Venue from Leannach, Trossachs

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BEN Venue is a much-loved mountain, easily accessible from the Central Belt and with wonderful views over the Highlands.

Don’t be misled into thinking that, because it is a shade below 2,400ft, scaling it is little more than a gentle stroll.

To reach its gnarled ridge will keep the lungs working hard.

The views from the ridge are to be savoured, so take your time. Across Loch Katrine, the eye is drawn to Stob Binnein, partially obscuring Ben More. To the west are Ben Lomond and the Cobbler, while Ben Ledi lies to the east.

There are a number of ways up Ben Venue, but this route keeps the summit in view right from the start.

DISTANCE 9½ miles.

HEIGHT CLIMBED 2,150ft.

TIME 5½ to 6½ hours.

MAP OS Landranger 57.

PARKING About four miles north of Aberfoyle on the A821, Duke’s Pass, is the Leannach car park.

IN SUMMARY Go left at the track that leads to the car park and follow it for just over two miles. At a signpost, go left on to a path. This leads up to a track where you would normally continue on the other side but because of forestry work (due to finish in November), a diversion takes you left.

Follow the track up and, after dropping slightly and swinging to the left, take a narrow track on the right. This goes through young forestry and turns left. Go through a gate on the right, cross a plantation and go through a second gate.

The next section is hard to follow, with no discernible diversion signs. Go straight ahead for about 15 yards and turn right to walk parallel to the fence. Follow an old fence beyond the plantation and down to a burn. After crossing a tributary, cross the burn just after the forestry ends on the other side. Clamber up a grass bank to reach the usual path and go left.

The path climbs gently, then crosses a small burn and goes steeply to the left, over rocks. Once on more level ground, go straight on, past an old marker post.

Bear left, uphill, then go right to a cairn at a bealach on the summit ridge. Go right here, up quite steeply at first on a rocky path. The path levels out a little before climbing again and bearing left. As you descend a little, keep bearing left, ignoring a path that goes straight on.

The path rises up and swings to the right, through crags, to the first summit. Then drop down, following metal posts before making a short clamber to a derelict trig point – about 7ft lower than the first summit. Drop down and go left to take a path at the base of the first summit and join the route along the ridge. Retrace your steps to the start.

REFRESHMENTS Try Loch Katrine, further north, where there is a café and bar.

WHILE IN THE AREA David Marshall Lodge (www.forestry.gov.uk) has trails and wildlife information. In the other direction is Loch Katrine (www.lochkatrine.com), where you can go cruise on a steamship.

Legionnaires’ victim’s wife hits out over ‘disgraceful’ treatment

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A TAXI driver has been receiving treatment for Legionnaires’ disease at Edinburgh Royal Infirmary since the early hours of Monday morning.

When Ronnie Fraser, 50, developed a heavy cough on Friday, his wife Elayne was sure it was more than just a run-of-the-mill virus, but had trouble persuading the GP who came out to see him at their home in Gorgie.

Mrs Fraser, 47, said: “I would say about Wednesday he just didn’t feel right. One minute he was going cold and then the next he was sweating. The cough started on Friday and I thought ‘There’s something not right here’.”

At that stage, news of the outbreak was yet to spread, but Mrs Fraser was worried enough to call NHS 24.

She said: “On Saturday, my husband got worse. I called a doctor out and he said ‘It’s just a viral infection he’s got’. He was in and out of the house quickly, and said ‘Keep taking the paracetamol, you’ll have the virus for another three or four days.

“I’m really angry about that because I think they would have been told about this by then.”

On Sunday, as Mr Fraser’s condition worsened, she called NHS 24 again, and a second doctor came to see him at home. By this time, doctors had been alerted to the likelihood of a Legionnaires’ outbreak.

Mrs Fraser said: “He came out, and what a change. He said ‘You’re going in because you need to get an X-ray done’, and he said there was an infection in the lungs.

“He phoned the ambulance because I didn’t have transport and he said the ambulance will be one or two hours. Six and a half hours later it came.”

She said her husband’s breathing had been getting worse as they waited for the ambulance. “I was so angry, and he was moaning and groaning, as he had pains in his back,” she said.

Mr Fraser remains in the ERI, receiving antibiotics.

His wife said she was angry that doctors had not been put on alert for the symptoms of Legionnaires’ as soon as the first case was confirmed on May 31.

She said: “I think it’s disgraceful.”

Roger Cox: Tiree might be beautiful, but all I can think about is surfing

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One of the problems with an all-consuming passion like surfing is its all-consumingness. It doesn’t matter how strong-willed you think you are – once you’ve caught the bug, surf-related thoughts become a constant background hum, always lurking somewhere near the edge of your consciousness, tying up legions of little grey cells that could be employed more profitably elsewhere.

For most of the year, these thoughts bubble up to the surface only sporadically, and consist either of reminiscences about the most recent surf at the local beach or plans for the next one. But every now and then the surfer will embark on a surf trip – a bit like a holiday, a holiday where the only goal is to surf good waves as often as possible. At such times of indulgent pilgrimage, the surfer’s mind will be completely taken over by wave-related musings, to the extent that he or she will be almost incapable of thinking about anything else. “Obsessed” doesn’t quite cut it.

The popular stereotype of the surfer is the spaced-out dimwit, barely able to string a sentence together, but mostly we’re not thick but thinking about other things, like wave period, swell angle, tides and wind direction, then using them to build complex equations of agony and ecstasy in our heads.

Clearly, this lack of available brain space has its drawbacks. Members of the surfing tribe are usually sociable enough – we invented the beach party for crying out loud – but try talking to us on a surf trip, mid-way through a long, frustrating flat spell with good waves on the way, and you may feel as if you’re communicating with a call centre: all our operators are busy at present, but your enquiry will be dealt with as soon as someone becomes available.

That, by the way, is more-or-less where I am now: not in a call centre, but on a surfari to the wind-whipped, sun-kissed, wave-scoured island of Tiree, “the land below the waves”. We’ve been becalmed for the last few days but salvation is on the way, thanks to a sweet westerly groundswell due to arrive sometime tomorrow from its birthplace in the middle of the Atlantic. Right now, I have all the focus of a heavyweight boxer on fight night and even less in the way of social skills.

I had a quick surf at Balevullin earlier this evening – the purple-white sand beach in the northwest corner of the island. It wasn’t crowded – just me and a couple of body surfers to begin with, then me on my own, then me and a large, inquisitive seal, bobbing around about 20ft away, scoping me out. The waves were small – only a couple of feet – but felt as if they had more punch to them than earlier in the week. As I walked back to the car at high tide, the shore break snapping and hissing at my ankles, I was already looking forward to getting back in the water the next day. If this evening was the starter, then tomorrow will be the main course.

Having said that, tomorrow might not be the main course. The promised swell might not materialise, the wind direction might shift, and a million other things might go wrong. In the grand scheme of things, it could hardly matter less either way: the world will continue to spin on its axis whether I get to surf good waves tomorrow or not. Right now this minute, though, I honestly can’t think about anything else, and when you’re in a place as magical as Tiree, this kind of tunnel vision can be a bit of a curse. As I write this, I’m sitting in the gloaming in a farmhouse on the north coast of the island, looking out over a sheep field towards a sheltered little reef. Beyond the reef is the Sea of the Hebrides, and beyond that, barely visible on the horizon, are Barra and Sandray, Pabbay, Mingulay and Berneray – the most southerly of the western isles. In the field are occasional interlopers – greylag geese, lapwings and hares; on the telegraph wire that runs back up the rutted track to the main road, a flock of ten or 12 quarrelsome starlings, arrange and rearrange themselves like so many feathery abacus beads. Any normal person would be transfixed and delighted by all these goings-on, but me? I try my best to enjoy the birds, hares and distant islands, but my eye keeps being drawn back to the reef. Every time a wave washes over it, I’m convinced there’s a bit more whitewater than before – a tell-tale sign that the swell’s getting bigger. Lapwings schlapwings – tomorrow’s gonna be epic.

Rab Energy fund says yes to Parkmead’s bid for Deo

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PARKMEAD moved closer to securing its bid target Aberdeen-based Deo Petroleum yesterday after a major shareholder confirmed its backing for the deal.

The Rab Energy Fund has given an irrevocable undertaking over an 8.1 per cent stake in Deo. It means Parkmead, headed by Dana Petroleum founder Tom Cross, now has support from shareholders owning more than 56 per cent of the company. It needs 75 per cent approval for the all-share deal which is worth around £11.4m at the current Parkmead share price.

Meanwhile, Deo’s full-year results yesterday showed operating losses fell to £577,000 from £797,000 the previous year. The group had £2.2m of cash and cash equivalents as at 31 December 2011 and is debt free.

US suitor makes deal which will save 397 Clinton Cards stores

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A US buyer yesterday stepped in to acquire the remains of high street retailer Clinton Cards in a deal which will save 397 stores and 4,500 jobs.

Ohio-based American Greetings, which has been one of the group’s biggest suppliers, will take on the brands and assets of the retailer which collapsed into administration a month ago.

The sale includes 19 Clinton Cards stores in Scotland and two Birthdays outlets, in Glasgow and Inverness.

A further 19 Clinton Cards shops in Scotland and three Birthdays branches – in East Kilbride, Elgin and Kirkcaldy – are among the stores that remain in the hands of administrator Zolfo Cooper, which said last month that it would close outlets if a buyer could not be found.

Zolfo has announced the closure of around 350 stores, costing the jobs of nearly 3,000 full- and part-time staff.

American Greetings placed itself in pole position to buy the chain after it snapped up Clinton’s £35 million bank debt, making it a preferential creditor and giving it a strong position in sale talks.

The US company’s UK Greetings operation, which is based in Dewsbury, West Yorkshire, has the brands Camden Graphics, Hanson White, Forget Me Not and Xpressions and supplies outlets including major supermarkets.

The final number of stores acquired will be dependent on negotiations with landlords at each location.

American Greetings’ chief executive Zev Weiss said: “We believe that properly managed, and with the appropriate capital structure, Clinton Cards can be both an important and profitable retailer in the speciality channel of distribution over the long term.”

Zolfo partner Peter Saville said there was a strong underlying business at Clinton but that the company had paid the price for “excessively ambitious” expansion plans and the impact of intense competition.

“The significant number of credible expressions of interest we received for the business, from both trade and financial buyers alike, is testament to this fact.”

Zolfo said it would now focus its efforts on the store portfolio identified for closure three weeks ago. The first 44 stores out of 350 lined up for closure shut at the end of last month. The stores being sold made £212m in sales last year, out of a total of £360m across the two brands of Clinton Cards and Birthdays.


Mobile phone competitors join forces in push for 4G

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TWO of the world’s largest mobile network operators are to join forces in a bid to speed up the delivery of super-fast 4G services to UK households.

Vodafone and O2-owner Telefonica will continue to compete but will pool their infrastructure to operate and manage a single network grid across the country.

The companies said the move will see 4G mobile services, which should allow users to download music and film to their phones at the same speeds as home or office computers, delivered up to two years ahead of Ofcom’s requirement of 98 per cent coverage by 2017.

Guy Laurence, Vodafone UK chief executive, said: “This partnership will close the digital divide for millions of people and power the next phase of the smartphone revolution.”

The announcement comes amid strong demand for smartphones such as the BlackBerry, iPhone and Samsung Galaxy Note.

ADL strengthens overseas hold by buying Australian coachbuilder

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BUS builder Alexander Dennis Ltd (ADL) yesterday accelerated its international expansion strategy by snapping up an Australian firm in an estimated £25 million deal.

The Falkirk-based vehicle maker has bought Sydney-based Custom Coaches, which traces its roots back to 1955 and which holds a 24 per cent share of the Australian bus-building market.

The deal will add £55m to ADL’s turnover, pushing it through the £500m barrier and representing a trebling of sales over the past five years.

Taking over Custom Coaches, which employs about 400 staff in Adelaide and Sydney, allows ADL to rev-up its overseas presence, which already includes operations in Hong Kong and New Zealand. About half the company’s 1,800 staff are based in Falkirk.

Last month, the Scottish company unveiled a joint venture with Canada-based New Flyer Industries, which makes heavy-duty buses.

ADL chief executive Colin Robertson said: “This is another significant step in our strategy to diversify and grow the business. The Custom brand is an icon in the Australian bus body market, having been part of the transport landscape for 50 years. It has history, heritage and a reputation for quality products.

“It will build on the progress ADL has made in New Zealand in the past two years, where our manufacturing partnership with Kiwi Bus has established us as market leader and a major supplier to cities such as Auckland and Wellington.”

The ADL deal helps reverse a recent trend of Scottish firms being acquired by foreigners. In recent months those succumbing to overseas rivals include Robert Wiseman Diaries (by the German company Muller), healthcare firm ProStrakan (acquired by Japanese firm KHK) and oil explorer Dana Petroleum (bought by the Korea National Oil Corporation).

Finance secretary John Swinney said: “Scotland is recognised internationally for its excellence in engineering and it is fantastic news that ADL is establishing operations in North America and Australia.

“The global economic downturn shows how interconnected world markets are and it is welcome news that, despite the economic climate, an indigenous company like ADL has continued to grow and capitalise on new opportunities in overseas markets.

“I am confident the strengthening of this business will benefit the economy and build on Scotland’s attractiveness as a place for international trade and investment.”

The latest deals mark a pronounced reversal of fortunes for ADL following the financial difficulties of its ex-owner.

A consortium of senior figures from Scotland’s business community bought ADL from the collapsed remains of former parent Mayflower in 2004.

The investors, who paid £90m to bring the company out of administration, include metal magnate and former Rangers Football Club owner Sir David Murray; Stagecoach founder Sir Brian Souter; Souter’s sister, Ann Gloag; and merchant banker Sir Angus Grossart.

Paulo Sergio leaves Hearts after contract talks break down

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HEARTS have tonight parted company with Scottish Cup-winning manager Paulo Sergio.

The club confirmed the Portuguese coach had left Tynecastle three weeks after the Hampden success and said it was down to a failure to agree terms on a new contract.

• Paulo Sergio has left Hearts after failing to agree terms on new contract

• Sergio “deeply regretted” breakdown of talks

• First-team coach Gary Locke will remain at the club as search for new manager begins

Sergio said he “deeply regretted” the fact that talks had broken down.

He added: “I appreciate the road the club is now going down and respect what our board is doing. But I cannot accept the offer the club has made me.

“I want to say many thanks to everybody who worked with us, including our board, and special thanks to our supporters.

“I wish the very best to this great football club and I am now just one more Hearts supporter.

“I would also like to say thank you to all the players, who will be friends for life.”

A Hearts spokesperson said: “Paulo Sergio declined the offer of a new contract. We wanted to keep Paulo Sergio at Hearts and made what we believed was our best offer in the circumstances. The same terms will be available to other candidates willing to lead Hearts to new victories.

“We would like to put on record our appreciation of all his efforts, and those of Alberto Cabral and Sergio Cruz, in bringing the Scottish Cup back to Tynecastle.”

The club the search for a new manager was already under way and that first-team coach Gary Locke remained at the club.

Legionnaires’ symptoms to watch out for: headaches, dry cough and sore muscles

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DOZENS of people distributed more than 35,000 leaflets to homes and businesses across the south-west of Edinburgh yesterday to inform them about the Legionnaires’ outbreak.

Edinburgh city council said it was the biggest single distribution of public health information it had yet undertaken.

More leaflets are expected to be issued around the city later today. The information is being put through the letterboxes of all homes and businesses in south-west Edinburgh, including GP surgeries, shops and libraries.

The four-page leaflet entitled “Legionella Factsheet” is designed to alert people to the symptoms of the bug and advise them what to do if they think they have them. Symptoms include muscle aches, headaches, dry cough, tiredness and flu-like illness.

The leaflets says people aged over 50, smokers and those whose immune systems are suppressed are the most at risk.

Men are more likely to contract Legionnaires’ than women, and it is “extremely rare” in children.

It emerged yesterday that the youngest patient being treated for the bug is 19 and the oldest is 88.

The leaflet describes the risk as “low” and says there is no evidence to suggest people should not travel to south-west Edinburgh. It also explains that the bug is not contagious, and there is no need for people to boil drinking water.

It warns people that after exposure to the bacteria it can take between two and ten days for symptoms to show and in some cases up to two weeks.

• The leaflet was produced by NHS Lothian along with NHS 24 and the Scottish Government.

Image of Scotland: Horses walking through the water at Killiechronan

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THIS photograph of horses walking through the water at Killiechronan, taken by Sheila Shankie, really captures the beauty and serenity of the Isle of Mull.

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Analysis: Exiled dissidents’ right to return is key to transformation of China

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Western media describe my friend Chen Guangcheng as a blind activist who made a flight to freedom when China allowed him to travel from Beijing to the United States. What is essential about Chen is neither his blindness nor his family’s visit to the US, but the fact that he upholds a vision of universal human rights that can be fully realised only when, and if, China honours its promise to allow him one day to return home.

China has a history of forcing dissidents into exile. When the Chinese student movement broke out in 1989, I was pursuing a doctorate in mathematics at the University of California-Berkeley. I travelled to Beijing to participate in the Tiananmen Square protests, narrowly escaped the massacre and made my way back to the US.

China refused to renew my passport. So, when I returned in 2002 to help the movement for workers’ rights, I used a friend’s passport. China jailed me for five years, until 2007. For a year and a half, I was held in solitary.

On release, China renewed my passport on the condition I returned to the US. I have tried three times to go back home, only to see China block each bid at Hong Kong airport.

Chen’s case serves as a reminder that those who want to support Chinese activists’ struggle for human rights must support our right to enter and leave China freely. It also confirms that China’s top leaders can be moved when the international community puts cases like his on the table.

Human rights need not take a back seat to doing business with China. Many western observers thought Norway’s trade relations with China would be undermined when dissident Liu Xiaobo was invited to receive the Nobel Peace Prize in Oslo in December 2010. China complained, refused to allow Liu to collect the prize, and even threatened Norway with financial repercussions. The same month, however, one of China’s largest oil companies concluded a drilling contract with Norway’s Statoil, signalling that diplomatic tensions would not stop business.

So western diplomats who negotiate with China should call lower-level officials’ bluff and focus on the signal-to-noise ratio, bearing in mind that, ultimately, decisions are taken at a higher level by pragmatic leaders susceptible to pressure. After all, economic growth remains China’s best hope to keep the regime afloat and it is the main criterion for officials’ promotion through the ranks. So the last thing that officials want to do is jeopardise international trade.

The commitment of US in supporting Chen made a difference, and it will make a difference in other cases, too

The right of return and freedom of speech were uppermost in Chen’s mind as he engineered his family’s departure for the US. I know because I spoke to him as he negotiated his release. Exile is not freedom. For Chen, as for myself, the true flight to freedom will be made with a return ticket home.

l Yang Jianli is president of Initiatives for China.

SNP anger at Defence Secretary’s claim that a Scottish army would not be ‘sustainable’

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DEFENCE Secretary Philip Hammond has suggested an independent Scottish army would not be “sustainable”, saying it would struggle both to retain and recruit soldiers.

Speaking in London yesterday, Mr Hammond repeated claims that servicemen and women would prefer to remain in the larger UK force, rather than serve in a Scottish army.

The SNP has said an independent Scottish army would be made up of the current Scottish regiments, including the Royal Regiment of Scotland, the Scots Guards and the Royal Scots Dragoon Guards, with recruits allowed to choose, after independence, whether they want to serve in either the Scottish or UK armed services.

Last night, the SNP called Mr Hammond’s claims “absurd”.

The Defence Secretary was commenting as he warned that further cuts were on the way to the British armed forces in order to deal with budget cuts. Units will be scrapped or merged in the coming years, with the core strength of the army reduced from 102,000 to 82,000.

Asked about the SNP’s blueprint for a defending an independent Scotland, he said: “There seems to me to be a misunderstanding among some Scottish politicians expressed at its most extreme that an independent Scotland would still have the Scots Guards, the Royal Regiment of Scotland… and that would form a Scottish defence force of some kind.

“It isn’t clear to me that they would find it easy to recruit in such an organisation. It isn’t clear to me that such an organisation would be sustainable, and I don’t believe it would be in the best interests of the Scottish units of the army, or indeed in the best interests of Scots wishing to serve in an effective military force,” he said.

The SNP’s defence spokesman, Angus Robertson, last night hit back, accusing Mr Hammond of putting up a “smokescreen” to distract attention away from the cuts to the armed forces.

“The suggestion that Scotland, uniquely amongst nations of the world, would be unable to form its own defence force is absurd.”

The SNP intends to maintain an 8,500-strong mobile brigade in Scotland, with existing Scottish regiments maintained.

Former SAS commander Clive Fairweather said pay would be the crucial issue for soldiers weighing up whether to serve in a Scottish or UK force.


China’s surprise rate cut does not deflect Bank from steady course

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China’s central bank yesterday cut its benchmark interest rate for the first time since 2008 in a surprise move, as British policymakers held back from pumping more cash into the flagging UK economy.

Business leaders praised the Bank of England for maintaining quantitative easing (QE) at its current level of £325 billion while holding borrowing costs at their record low of 0.5 per cent.

Economists said the Bank’s nine-strong monetary policy committee (MPC) would have “seriously considered” additional money printing. However, yesterday’s no-change decision came just hours after a closely-watched survey of Britain’s powerhouse services sector revealed robust growth last month.

In China, central bankers moved to prop up economic growth by dropping the key one-year deposit rate to 3.25 per cent from 3.5 per cent. Chinese lenders were also given additional flexibility to set competitive lending and deposit rates.

Qinwei Wang, an economist at Capital Economics in London, said: “It’s obviously a very strong sign that the government wants to boost the economy, given the current weakness, especially in demand.”

Pressure on the Bank of England to launch fresh stimulus measures has been mounting after official figures showed the UK’s double-dip recession was deeper than previously thought.

Christine Lagarde, head of the International Monetary Fund (IMF), also called on the Bank to lower interest rates to help the UK weather the eurozone crisis.

At the same time, inflation has been coming off the boil, providing leeway for more QE.

David Kern, chief economist at the British Chambers of Commerce (BCC), which represents tens of thousands of UK businesses, said: “The MPC’s decision to maintain current levels of quantitative easing was the right one.

“Though the clamour for increasing the asset purchase programme has intensified with the worsening eurozone situation, and signs that the US and Asian economies are slowing, the benefits of additional QE would be marginal at present.

“However, if conditions in Europe worsen… then there could be a risk to the UK financial system. In that case, additional QE might be necessary over the next couple of months.”

The BCC renewed its call for alternatives to QE such as the introduction of a zero per cent or negative interest rate for deposits held by commercial banks at the Bank of England.

A run of dire economic data that has spooked the UK’s recovery hopes was halted yesterday with a decent performance by the services sector, which accounts for more than two-thirds of the economy.

The Markit/Cips’ purchasing managers’ index came in at 53.3 in May, unchanged from April and confounding expectations for a dip to 52.5.

David Tinsley, UK economist at French bank BNP Paribas, described the outcome as “positive”, saying that it pointed to momentum in the economy.

He added: “For the MPC to push the button on more QE in July we will most likely need to see some signs that external weakness is beginning to leech further into final domestic demand.”

Minutes from yesterday’s MPC meeting, detailing the votes, will be released later this month.

Trevor Davies: Forget making mistakes and feel for what’s real

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IT’S time politicians stopped trying to do the wrong things better and did the right thing, writes Trevor Davies

Yo-Yo Ma is one of the world’s great cello players. He’s at the top of his profession because, although he is incredibly expert, he doesn’t worry too much about making mistakes. “If you are only worried about making a mistake, then you will communicate nothing,” he says. “You will have missed the point of making music, which is to make people feel something.”

Same with politics. The point of political leadership is to make people feel something, to rouse their imaginations, to dig deep into stories and values that matter to the nation. Feelings are what change people’s behaviour – including voting. That’s why the appointment of Jon Cruddas to Labour’s front bench in Westminster is to be welcomed.

Neal Lawson, who has worked closely with Cruddas in the left-of-centre Compass group, says: “Jon has a grasp of an emotive, some would say romantic, human sense of politics – not a dry, arid, mechanical approach. So why give him a dry policy thing? Because he will make it come alive. He will give some kind of narrative and framework on which we can eventually hang dusty policy.” He knows that policy is not about “to-do” lists for this or that department of government. Policy is about people’s places and stories; a light on the hill.

It’s a tough job and one that really needs doing. If the credibility of policy on the political right, the neo-liberal policy dominant for the past 40 years, has now been destroyed by the biggest economic crash since the end of the 19th century, so has policy on the political left. The left in the UK and throughout Europe are being proved right about the failings of austerity, but all are searching for the way to create and talk about the alternatives that will resonate both with economic reality and the feelings people have about their lives. The policies that do emerge will have to be illustrations of a deeper and real story about our country and our people.

The left in Scotland has an equal challenge. Devolution, 13 years old now, and established with great expectations it would engender a better life for Scottish people, has failed to live up to those expectations. Not because the Scottish Parliament doesn’t have sufficient powers – it does. But because our MSPs simply continue to do in Scotland the same things in the same way they’d been done previously through Westminster – and they didn’t work well then. They are trying to do the wrong things better.So we still have the worst health in Europe, near the worst education, lots of poverty and some dismal places to live.

Those dashed expectations are the reason why the dangerous notion of complete separation from the rest of the UK has become more attractive, even though, in reality, like Ireland and Greece, it would mean real power over the big things that matter sitting, uncontrolled, with rich and powerful neighbours, not with us.

So the left in Scotland has a big policy job to do. But is it learning the lessons of Yo-Yo Ma? Am I the only one to suspect that many MSPs worry too much about making small mistakes and miss the point of political talk which is to make people feel something? That there is too much worrying about details of their “to-do” lists of policy? That sometimes the right people don’t get into the right jobs because of worries about small differences in policy or outlook (aka their “mistakes”)?

Detailed policy certainly can be important. But perhaps not now. A “safe pair of hands” is always valuable, saving face or holding to a line sometimes necessary and watching your, or a colleague’s, back an occasional requisite for survival. But perhaps now is the time to tolerate mistakes, which largely go unnoticed anyway, and concentrate on making the people feel something, which is always noticed.

I moved to Scotland from London as an adult over 40 years ago. I’ve contributed to public life and the common good over those years. A (native) friend once said to me my blood runs tartan by now. But I have family in England as well as here and I really don’t want to live in another country from them, which is what Alex Salmond offers me, turning my grandsons into foreigners.

There must be many people who feel the same as me and that needs to be given a voice. I know for sure, in a time of great uncertainty in our world, a time when the forces of money are so big that we need strong democratic powers to oppose them, it’s the height of folly for Scotland to think it’s right to turn its back on England, Wales and Northern Ireland and attempt to row against that storm on its own. And I want that said with louder voices than mine.

And I want those voices to speak of everyday things too. I have a friend who once had important work in public service; but poor health lost her the job and for years she’s stayed at home. I read what medical experts told us just a few days ago, something my friend well knows, that our health service has for so long been so concentrated on fixing sick people in hospital that it fails to help people at home with chronic conditions get back to be part of the world again. What those experts want, and what I know we really need, is a transformed health service that is local, close to home, helping us all be healthy, not simply waiting for people to turn up in hospitals sagging under the weight of ill-health caused by alcohol, smoking and the wrong food. I want us to stop trying to do the wrong things, better – and start doing the right things.

I need our politicians, with a loud voice, to imagine that future with me, to make me feel that politics is not just about avoiding mistakes. That talking politics is like making music.

• Trevor Davies is honorary professor in urban studies at the University of Glasgow and was a Labour councillor in Edinburgh

From the archive: 8 June, 1944 - Fascist danger

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“My heart fears for the near future, because the spirit of Fascism is not dead in countries now striving to destroy the military fruit of it in others,” said the Rev H. Taylor Cape, Knightswood, Glasgow, in presenting the report on Christian Citizenship at the General Assembly of the United Free Church of Scotland in the Ebenezer Church, Leith, yesterday.

The Rev Colin Macdonald, Burntisland, the Moderator, was in the chair. Fascism, said Mr Cape, had become a mere catchword used by many who had little conception of its deep and sinister spiritual significance. It was the spirit of racial contempt and discrimination. In Germany it had led to the massacre of millions of Jews and the enslavement of conquered neighbours. It was all so horrible. But was not the colour-bar in the USA of the same spirit? In parts of Africa the exploitation and suppression of native peoples was even more shameful.

Tom Miers: Death of military tradition

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PLANS for the armed forces in an independent Scotland spell the end of our fighting heritage, writes Tom Miers

Leaning against the wall downstairs is my great-great-grandfather’s sword. Thirty-four inches of steel, heavy but well-balanced, from the days when infantry officers were expected to fence in earnest. There’s a picture of him there too (or someone very like him) greeting Queen Victoria when she presented new colours to the Cameron Highlanders on designating them the “Queen’s Own” in 1873.

Mine is the first generation of my family for 150 years not to have a representative in this illustrious regiment or its successors, or indeed in any branch of the armed forces. Times are very different now from the noontide of Victorian Britain. But we still take pride in the achievements of our forebears and the glorious history of the regiment they fought for. Just last month I was telling my seven-year-old son the story of Piper Mackay, and how he stood playing outside the square to inspire his comrades to see off the French cavalry at Waterloo.

That same day I heard the latest political controversy concerning the future of the army in Scotland. My jaw dropped at the sight of nationalist politicians trying to gain political capital posturing as defenders of Scotland’s historic regiments.

For whatever you think of the debate about the Union, one thing is for sure. Independence would kill the Scottish military tradition stone dead.

The debate about how to reform the army to fit modern circumstances is very complex. We need to balance several factors that are often contradictory: The changing nature of modern warfare; the ever shifting geopolitical scene; the need to provide an attractive and rewarding career for soldiers; the desire to maintain an esprit de corps which draws partly on tradition.

Recent campaigns have required multi-functional, all-arms battlegroups in the field. This isn’t necessarily compatible with line infantry regiments in the traditional sense. Soldiers want and need to gain experience working in several different types of unit.

At the same time the UK’s military requirements are changing all the time. This is not just a question of a general decline in British influence. Geopolitical circumstances mean we need to operate more and more in conjunction with allies in complex but limited engagements that need specialised troops and advanced equipment.

All of this makes for some very difficult decision-making. Yesterday, Philip Hammond, the Defence Secretary, tried to move the debate on in a speech to the Royal United Services Institute. Under government plans, the regular army is set to be cut from 102,000 to 82,000 soldiers. Its position is constrained by the need to save money and get a grip of defence procurement costs. Some critics say that defence policy should not be budget-driven. Security, internal and external, is the primary duty of government, and its requirements should be met whatever the costs.

But military policy is an extension of foreign policy, and foreign policy always has options. Britain can choose to draw in its horns somewhat, relying on allies, luck and circumstance to fill in. So economies at home can be made to fit re-jigged priorities abroad.

According to Hammond the army will have to lose or merge units, but the regimental system will not disappear entirely (it has already been eroded by the realities of modern warfare). No minister wants to damage the historic roots of our armed forces without very good cause. As Hammond says, “history and heritage” provide tangible military benefits. Merging units with a strong heritage can damage their sense of identity and their capacity to attract new recruits. According to many, this is exactly what has happened to the Cameron Highlanders, which has been amalgamated three times since 1945.

This isn’t to say that the government’s proposals are necessarily right. The coalition has already shown lamentable indecision, not just on merging regiments, but on issues such as Trident and procuring the right planes for the new aircraft carriers. Experts are also worried about future over-reliance on reservists.

But the government deserves some sympathy as it faces these military dilemmas. It was not responsible for the financial crisis, nor for the appalling procurement habits that seem to have infected the Ministry of Defence. Responsible opposition should seek to find viable alternatives based on the strategic reality. So it is a shame that the government’s opponents have little to offer except the inevitable complaints about “cuts”.

In particular, the SNP’s plans for the military are a bad joke. It seems to regard the army as a cross between a job creation exercise and a living museum. Neither role is sensible or sustainable, either in the UK or as part of a separate Scotland.

Alex Salmond’s only interest in Scotland’s armed forces seems to be to gain political headlines from them. He vacillates according to circumstances. He opposes their involvement in meaningful alliances, yet offers them up for “humanitarian missions”. He objects to the submarine base, yet complains loudly when an air base closes. He opposed the last round of cuts, but says what we have now is “exactly the configuration” that Scotland needs. He threatens meltdown if Scottish shipyards don’t win UK defence contracts, but pretends they’ll survive under independence. Most ludicrous of all is the claim that, if he had his way, “our servicemen and women would not be dragged into illegal wars”. As if the evil Brits were conscripting them.

The truth is that, on its own, Scotland would have little international influence and no requirement for anything but a few fishery protection vessels and some ceremonial guards. No doubt Salmond would quickly renege on costly joint Anglo-Scottish obligations such as protecting the Falklands or underpinning security in Northern Ireland.

So there would be no need for aircraft carriers, fighter jets or tanks. Maintaining thousands of people in useless infantry regiments and subsidised shipyards would make no sense either strategically or economically. More jobs would be saved by using the money to cut taxes.

There is certainly a dividend to be had from letting other countries shoulder the security burden. Europe does not lack for nations with tiny defence budgets, hiding behind the shields of others.

But even before this remorseless logic took hold, the military would collapse as an effective institution. No serious person would want to pursue a career in such a hollow carapace. The Scottish army would become populated by strange men with moustaches and pony tails, just like the armies of other selfish little neutral countries. Bereft of a meaningful role, the forces would become a petri-dish of politically correct sensitivity.

Enough.

Serving soldiers are too professional to speak out about the disaster that would befall them on independence. But our military forebears must turn in their graves to see Alex Salmond trying to make political capital out of their legacy. My great-grandfather was killed by a German shell in 1914. No doubt “Wee Eck” would have kept us out of the Great War out of spite for the English, and so he might have been saved. But he would have found contemptible the idea that Scotland’s military tradition can be upheld by politicians at Holyrood with their tin-pot plans.

In a democracy it is inevitable that politicians seek to win points through exaggerating the problems of their opponents and glossing over their own flaws. But there has to be a limit. By all means, let us count the pennies saved from leaving defence to others. But nationalist politicians should not demean themselves by trying to claim the mantle of men whose bravery and patriotism puts them to shame.

M&S chief awarded £2.5m while retailer posted drop in profits

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The boss of Marks & Spencer, Marc Bolland, was awarded a £2.5 million pay deal despite the retailer recording its first fall in profits in three years.

While the total package is a marked reduction on the previous year’s deal, which totalled around £4.96m, it comes after a year in which the Dutchman was forced to slash his sales targets.

Bolland was awarded a salary of £975,000, an annual bonus of £332,000, the same amount in deferred shares and £500,000 left over from his golden handshake after joining from supermarket chain Morrison, as well as other cash allowances and benefits, M&S’s annual report yesterday revealed.

Shareholders will be given an opportunity to vote on the remuneration report at the high street giant’s annual meeting on 10 July.

A number of top-flight companies, from banks to pharmaceuticals, have faced investor anger over excessive boardroom pay in what was dubbed the “shareholder spring”.

A failure to meet pre-tax profit targets for the year was behind the drop in the total pay package, although he was rewarded for meeting other targets encompassing areas such as cost-savings and developing the business overseas.

M&S saw underlying pre-tax profits drop 1 per cent to £705.9m in the year to 31 March, while total sales grew 2 per cent to £9.9 billion.

Bolland set a target to grow revenues by between £1.5bn and £2.5bn over three years but, as a result of the harsh economic climate, he cut this target to between £1.1bn and £1.7bn.

Meanwhile, Sainsbury’s said chief executive Justin King had taken a 9 per cent cut in his overall pay package, despite Britain’s third-biggest grocer last month posting a 7 per cent rise in full-year profit that came in at the top end of City expectations.

King’s basic salary rose to £920,000 from £900,000 a year earlier but his annual cash bonus, share awards and long-term incentive plan all took cuts, reducing his total package to just under £3.4m from £3.7m a year ago.

King had been entitled to a cash bonus of up to 120 per cent of salary but received 55.9 per cent.

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