Euro crisis hangs over latest EU summit

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The eurozone crisis will dominate an EU summit on Monday, with an emphasis on growth and “smart” budget discipline.

The EU has more than 23 million unemployed people and there are fears that wide-ranging budget cuts will harm enterprise and training.

Cuts need to be “smart” – well-targeted – to allow room for future growth, the European Commission says.

Most member states – and not the UK – are expected to sign up to a new budget treaty, or “fiscal compact”.

The goal is much closer co-ordination of budget policy in the 17-nation eurozone.

Diplomatic wrangling continues over the influence of non-eurozone countries in the new institutional set-up.

The UK opted out, in a blaze of publicity last month, but did secure observer status in the discussions.

Poland is insisting that it and other countries preparing to join the euro should be fully involved in the eurozone negotiations.

Currently the draft treaty says signatories will hold summits at least twice a year. The attendance of non-euro countries is left to the discretion of the summit president, with the words “will invite when appropriate and at least once a year”.

The Czech Republic may delay joining the treaty because of a split in its ruling coalition and the Republic of Ireland may decide it has to put it to a referendum.

While France may be content with a eurozone-only membership, Germany is keen to include countries like Denmark, Poland and Sweden, not yet in the euro.

The Brussels summit coincided with a general strike in Belgium in protest at recent austerity measures, which has brought most of the city’s transport system to a standstill and disrupted international trains and flights.

Staff were asked to arrive for the 14:00 (13:00 GMT) summit at 05:30 to avoid the disruption.

Firewall bid

The summit comes a day after French President Nicolas Sarkozy announced a 0.1% tax on financial transactions.

The tax is part of a package of measures to promote growth and create jobs, and will be implemented in August regardless of whether other countries do the same.

Greece remains a big question mark hanging over this summit. Complex negotiations with private creditors have not yet produced a deal to prevent Greece defaulting.

The European Commission says it is confident a deal will be reached within days. But Greece could run out of money as early as mid-February.

Private investors are being asked to take a 50% “haircut” (loss) on their Greek bonds in a complex bond swap, with the aim of cutting Greece’s debt to 120% of gross domestic product by 2020.

A deal is crucial for the EU and International Monetary Fund to grant a long-awaited 130bn-euro (£109bn; $172bn) second bailout for Greece.

In an interview for the Wall Street Journal on Monday, German Finance Minister Wolfgang Schaeuble said only radical reforms in Greece could trigger the release of the funds.

“Unless Greece implements the necessary decisions and doesn’t just announce them… there’s no amount of money that can solve the problem,” he said.

The atmosphere remained tense at the weekend with a row over a leaked German proposal to put an EU budget commissioner with veto powers in charge of Greek taxes and spending.

Greece rejected the proposal outright, but its EU partners remain alarmed by its failure to meet tough fiscal targets.

The EU is trying to put in place a bigger, more resistant “firewall” to prevent contagion spreading from Greece.

The eurozone plans to launch a 500bn-euro permanent bailout fund – the European Stability Mechanism (ESM) – in July, a year earlier than first planned. It is expected to get the final go-ahead at the summit. The UK will not contribute to it.

The existing temporary fund – the European Financial Stability Facility (EFSF) – is reckoned to be worth about 300bn euros and it ends next year. Some experts say it should be combined with the ESM, rather than running in parallel.

Italy alone needs to refinance more than 300bn euros of debt this year and there are many voices urging the European Central Bank to boost the firewall to at least 1tn euros.

Recession clouds make it a gloomy start to this year’s EU summits. But the European Commission says 82bn euros of EU money is available for countries to spend on projects to boost jobs and growth.

EU leaders will exchange views on how best to tackle youth unemployment and support small and medium-sized enterprises (SMEs), many of which complain of excessive administrative costs imposed by Brussels.

BBC

Troops seize Damascus suburbs back from rebels

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AMMAN (Reuters) – Troops seized eastern suburbs of Damascus from rebels late on Sunday, opposition activists said, after two days of fighting only a few kilometers from the centre of power of President Bashar al-Assad.

Smoke rises from the suburb of Erbeen in Damascus, January 29, 2012. Around 2,000 Syrian troops backed by tanks launched an assault to retake Damascus suburbs from rebels on Sunday, activists said, a day after the Arab League suspended its monitoring mission in Syria because of worsening violence. Credit: Reuters/Handout

“The Free Syrian Army has made a tactical withdrawal. Regime forces have re-occupied the suburbs and started making house-to-house arrests,” an activist named Kamal said by phone from the eastern al-Ghouta area on the edge of the capital.

A spokesman for the Free Syrian Army of defectors fighting Assad’s forces appeared to confirm that account.

“Tanks have gone in but they do not know where the Free Syrian Army is. We are still operating close to Damascus,” Maher al-Naimi told Reuters by phone from Turkey.

Activists said earlier on Sunday soldiers had moved into the suburbs at dawn, along with at least 50 tanks and other armored vehicles. At least 19 civilians and rebel fighters were killed in that initial attack, they said.

Fighters had taken over districts less than eight km (five miles) from the heart of the city. The areas have seen repeated protests against Assad’s rule and crackdowns by troops in the 10-month-old uprising.

“It’s urban war. There are bodies in the street,” said an activist speaking from the suburb of Kfar Batna.

Residents of central Damascus reported seeing soldiers and police deployed around main squares.

The escalating bloodshed prompted the Arab League to suspend the work of its monitors on Saturday. Arab foreign ministers, who have urged Assad to step down and make way for a government of national unity, will discuss the crisis on February 5.

ARAB PEACE PLAN

Arab League chief Nabil Elaraby left for New York where he will brief representatives of the U.N. Security Council on Tuesday to seek support for the Arab peace plan.

He will be joined by Qatari Prime Minister Sheikh Hamad bin Jassim al-Thani, whose country heads the League’s committee charged with overseeing Syria.

Elaraby said he hoped to overcome resistance from Beijing and Moscow over endorsing the Arab proposals.

A Syrian government official said the Arab League decision to suspend monitoring would “put pressure on (Security Council) deliberations with the aim of calling for foreign intervention and encouraging armed groups to increase violence”.

Assad blames the violence on foreign-backed militants.

The opposition Syrian Observatory for Human Rights reported 41 civilian deaths across Syria on Sunday, including 14 in Homs province and 12 in the city of Hama. Thirty-one soldiers and members of the security forces were also killed, most in two attacks by deserters in the northern province of Idlib, it said.

State news agency SANA reported the military funerals of 28 soldiers and police on Saturday and another 23 on Sunday.

After mass demonstrations against his rule erupted last spring, Assad launched a military crackdown. Growing numbers of army deserters and gunmen have joined the protesters in a country of 23 million people regarded as a pivotal state at the heart of the Middle East.

The insurgency has crept closer to the capital. The suburbs, a string of mainly conservative Sunni Muslim towns, known as al-Ghouta, are home to the bulk of Damascus’s population.

One activist said mosques there had been turned into opposition field hospitals and were appealing for blood supplies. “They (the authorities) cut off the electricity. Petrol stations are empty and the army is preventing people from leaving to get fuel for generators or heating,” he said.

The Damascus suburbs have seen large demonstrations demanding the removal of Assad, a member of the minority Alawite sect, an offshoot of Shi’ite Islam that has dominated the mostly Sunni Muslim country for the last five decades.

In Rankous, 30 km (20 miles) north of Damascus by the Lebanese border, Assad’s forces have killed at least 33 people in recent days in an attack to dislodge army defectors and insurgents, activists and residents said on Sunday.

IRAN SAYS ASSAD NEEDS TIME

Iran said Assad must be given time to implement reforms.

Tehran at first wholeheartedly supported Assad’s hardline stance against the 10 months of popular protests. It has since tempered its rhetoric, but it condemns what it calls foreign interference in Syrian affairs.

“They have to have a free election, they have to have the right constitution, they have to allow different political parties to have their activities freely in the country. And this is what he has promised,” Foreign Minister Ali Akbar Salehi said.

“We think that Syria has to be given the choice of time so that by (that) time they can do the reforms.”

Syria has said it will hold a referendum on a new constitution soon, before a multi-party parliamentary election that has been much postponed. Under the present constitution, Assad’s Baath party is “the leader of the state and society”.

France, which has been leading calls for stronger international action on Syria, said the Arab League decision highlighted the need to act.

The United Nations said in December more than 5,000 people had been killed in the protests and crackdown. Syria says more than 2,000 security force members have been killed by militants.

On Friday, the U.N. Security Council discussed a European-Arab draft resolution aimed at halting the bloodshed. Britain and France said they hoped to put it to a vote next week.

Russia joined China in vetoing a previous Western draft resolution in October, and has said it wants a Syrian-led political process, not “an Arab League-imposed outcome” or Libyan-style “regime change”.

By Khaled Yacoub Oweis, Reuters

6.3 earthquake shakes Peru but no injuries or damage reported

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LIMA (Reuters) – A earthquake of 6.3 magnitude rattled the coast of Peru early on Monday, the U.S. Geological Survey said, but there were no immediate reports of damage or injuries.

The quake occurred shortly after midnight local time (1 a.m. ET) and was centered about 9 miles southeast of the city of Ica and about 170 miles south-southeast of Lima.

Witnesses said the quake shook buildings in coastal Lima, Peru’s capital. Although there were no reported injuries or damage, local radio said residents near the epicenter were alarmed and ran outside their homes when they felt the quake. Power was out in nearby Pisco, the radio said.

“We felt a terrible earthquake that’s really scared us,” Ica resident Blanca Cabanilla told the local radio. “It was similar to what happened to us in 2007.”

An 8.0 quake in 2007 killed more than 500 people in Ica and wrecked thousands of homes.

Reporting by Helen Popper and Patricia Velez, Reuters

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Deadly Bacteria Caused Closure Of Children’s Ward

Three children have been reported dead following an outbreak of a deadly bacterial infection called Methicillin-Resistant Staphylococus Aureus (MRSA) at the Korle-Bu Teaching Hospital, Ghana’s premier health facility.
The outbreak has necessitated the temporal closure of the Children’s Emergency Ward to prevent further infections.
The Public Health Physician Specialist at the Hospital, Dr. Philip Amoh, in an interview with Citi News said the hospital is doing its possible best to contain the disease.
Meanwhile, authorities at the Korle-Bu Teaching Hospital say they are not sure when the Department of Child Health will be reopened to the general public.
The block was closed down on Friday following the outbreak of the deadly bacterial infection MRSA, which has claimed three lives.

Raul Castro defends Cuba’s one-party system

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Cuban President Raul Castro has defended the one-party system in a speech at the conference of the ruling Communist Party.
Mr Castro said allowing other political parties would threaten Cuba’s independence and the socialist system established by the 1959 revolution.
But he said it was necessary to promote more democracy and open debate within the Communist Party.
He also reaffirmed plans to limit political terms to 10 years.
Mr Castro, 80, has launched widespread economic reform since taking over from his brother Fidel in 2008.
But in his address, he ruled out any change to the one-party system, criticising “those who hoped the conference would mark the start of the dismantling of the social and political conquests of the revolution”.
“Giving up the principle of one party would simply amount to allowing the party or parties of imperialism on national soil,” he said.
‘Past errors’
Mr Castro added that those who thought Cuba should return to multi party democracy ignored “the history of permanent aggression, economic blockade, interference and media siege” that Cuba had faced from the US.
However, he warned that corruption and a failure to eradicate “the errors of the past” represented the most serious threat to the future of the socialist system.
And he said the Communist Party should promote greater democracy and open debate within its own ranks and in the mass media.
President Castro also repeated his plan to limit leaders to two five-year terms, saying the measure would be implemented gradually without waiting for a reform to the constitution.
The proposal – first announced last year – represents a major change in Cuba where senior positions are dominated by veterans of the 1959 revolution, known as the “historic generation”.
Fidel Castro ruled for nearly half a century before handing power to his brother because of ill health.
Raul Castro did not say if his own term as president would be limited.

GSS Board: Dr Grace Bediako Performed Poorly As Gov’t Statistician

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The Board of the Ghana Statistical Service has attributed its decision to ask the Government Statistician, Dr Grace Bediako, to proceed on leave, to her poor management of some projects run by the Service.
The Board said a group of international partners comprising the World Bank, EU, and DFID who assessed the performance of the Service threatened to withhold funding to the Service.
A statement signed by the Board Chairman, Prof. Francis Duodoo, said the observations of the partners chimed perfectly with the Board’s own previous concerns.
The statement said in line with the Board’s efforts at restructuring the Service, Dr Bediako had to be asked to proceed on leave.
It added that while the Service was performing poorly, “Conversely, the international partners praised the delivery of the Multiple Indicator Cluster Survey (MICS), which had the Deputy Government Statistician, Dr. Nyarko, at its helm.”
This explains the Board’s decision ask Dr Philomena Nyarko to act as Government Statistician.
The statement denied claims that Dr Bediako had been forced out to allow for a manipulation of the census results for political purposes.
Read below the entire statement issued by the Board of the Ghana Statistical Service.
GHANA STATISTICAL SERVICE
Leader in the Production of Official Statistics in Ghana
PRESS STATEMENT
FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
Accra–January 26, 2012 (Statistical Service)
The attention of the Governing Board of the Ghana Statistical Service (GSS) has been drawn to misrepresentations of our actions in The Chronicle of January 24th, 2012, that received further mention in various other media, including yesterday’s Daily Guide, which erroneously purport to explain the Boards appointment of Dr. Philomena Nyarko to act in the stead of the Government Statistician, Dr. Grace Bediako, as the latter initiates her leave.
Among the host of inaccurate attributions were the suggestions and indications that:
– The Government Statistician is being hounded out of the Service
– She was replaced because she would not accede to a request to her to alter census results
– The untrue suggestion of desired alterations had something to do with the 2012 elections
– The norm would have called for the Government Statistician to hand over to Mr. Opoku Manu Asare, purportedly her “First” Deputy
– The GSS had set April 4th as the release date for the census
– Some individuals, presumably on or related to the Board, are eager to take over control of a World Bank fund allocated to the Service
There was also a suggestion that it was inappropriate to replace Dr. Bediako while she was out of the country.
The Board categorically rejects these pronouncements and is disappointed in the exhibition of journalism that, prior to publication, refused to even verify supposed “facts”, which stood to undermine confidence of domestic stakeholders and international partners in a very critical national institution, the GSS, at what is a very significant juncture in the census cycle.
This press release constitutes a rejoinder to set the record straight.
Here are the facts as the Board saw them:
1. With the Government Statistician taking her leave, Dr. Philomena Nyarko was asked to act in her stead and three additional temporary/acting appointments were made, effective immediately, in an effort to shore up upper management and address fundamental concerns about the effectiveness of the Ghana Statistical Service;
2. There is no hierarchy of first/second deputy in the Service and, indeed, Dr. Nyarko was already acting for the Government Statistician during the latter’s very recent trip to South Africa. Thus, the statement that Mr. Opoku Manu Asare should have been the rightful replacement is simply untrue.
3. No one on the Board has asked anyone in management to doctor any figures on the Census, for any reasons including the 2012 Elections. Also, and for the avoidance of doubt, there has been absolutely no request or directive from Government in this direction. The Service will continue to remain independent in the delivery of its functions. Likewise, the suggestion that anyone is trying to take control of a World Bank fund (presumably the MDTF) is categorically unfounded, and is effectively impossible, given the Bank’s tight system of controls.
The entire nation is aware of the challenges faced in the recent census, and the Board has been actively considering ways of resolving the issues that have delayed the release of the census, at the same that it oversees a restructuring of the Service. However, the immediate events that culminated in the Board taking action the above actions are as follows:
1. A group of international partners comprising the World Bank, EU, and DFID have extended support to the GSS and the broader National Statistical System (NSS) through a Multi Donor Trust Fund (MDTF) to the value of seven million dollars to support implementation of the Ghana Statistics Development Plan. These partners conducted a mission visit to the GSS beginning on January 9th, 2012 to assess the progress of implementation of the project.
2. On January 18th, 2012 they briefed the GSS Board on their findings, and reported that based on the “evidence of performance” and “poor delivery” of the project, the partners were inclined to recommend that funding flows from the Multi Donor Trust Fund be stopped; that meant the Government of Ghana would immediately lose more than $3.5 million in valuable support
3. Although she met with the mission at the beginning of their visit, the Government Statistician was at a conference in South Africa when the very disturbing findings were presented by the mission. The seriousness of the issues facing the MDTF was clearly outlined to the Government Statistician and her Deputies, and was reiterated at the beginning of each meeting with staff. Given the gravitas of the situation, a decision was made by the mission team to invite the Board Members to the planned debrief with the Deputy Government Statisticians on 18th January, 2012. As the Government Statistician was not present for the de-briefing, she missed the opportunity to give the head of agency response to the issues raised. Despite the ominous signal evident in the international donor’s request for Board members to attend the debrief, Dr. Bediako opted to remain at the conference in South Africa; the invitation to the Board members indicated that the partners had “extremely serious concerns about the future viability of the project” and were “considering no further disbursements and possibly even requesting unspent funds” be returned.
4. During the January 18th de-briefing, the partners not only outlined the real risk of losing funding from the MDTF, but also highlighted the more ominous view that the risk of loss of support transcended the MDTF, in that the likelihood that it would affect the follow-on $40m project (given the experience of the partners with GSS’ execution of the MDTF), and have wider implications beyond GSS to include other MDAs, was hardly trivial. So, this was not simply about saving the $3.5 million remaining to be disbursed in the MDTF, but also about salvaging more substantial, longer term support for Ghana.
5. In response to the Board’s question about what the international partners attributed the lack of progress and poor performance to, they referred to the lack of follow-up on actions through the entire organization, lack of delegation to staff and staff frustration with this, weak motivation and commitment of staff, disengagement of directors leading key assignments, etc. Essentially, the partners were explicit in their concern about the degree of centralized management and the lack of effective delegation, and particularly how these were inhibiting all MDTF activities.
6. There was also strong concern expressed about the insufficient and inconsistent responses the mission had received about the status of the census results and whether the Service would meet its March 31st (not April 4th) deadline; from their calculations, the pace of progress suggested to the partners that the results could not be completed before mid-April, and would most likely not come in before end of May.
7. Conversely, the international partners praised the delivery of the Multiple Indicator Cluster Survey (MICS), which had the Deputy Government Statistician, Dr. Nyarko, at its helm, and wondered how it could contrast so sharply with the delivery of the MDTF, given that both were being delivered by the same institution. The point was about how differently the MICS project had been set up and managed.
8. In response to the Board’s inquiry about what it might take to reconsider their position, the international partners indicated that after two weeks, they would have to complete their assessments and make final decisions, which could only be based on information they had at hand at that point.
9. The international partners’ findings reflected concerns the Board had already expressed to management (stemming from the Board’s own observations over time, information received from staff, the findings of the previous mission from July 2011, the MDTF memo of October 2011, etc.), and which the Board planned to address further through the ongoing restructuring of the Service. What was new from this most recent conversation about the mission was the urgency with which the findings had to be addressed; the Board interpreted all of this to mean that swift and decisive actions had to be taken in order to demonstrate our continued commitment to the Ghana Statistics Development Plan (GSDP) and the MDTF, and responsiveness within two weeks.
10. Thus, the Board’s actions should be seen as working in the direction of saving the MDTF for Ghana and the GSS/NSS, and to restore the confidence of the international partners so as to ensure continued support in the future. Right after the meeting with the international partners the Board convened an emergency session and took the decision to immediately implement certain changes in the way management is delivered, and regarding delivery of the census.
This is the extent of what has transpired at the Ghana Statistical Service over the last few days.
The Board wishes to express its appreciation to the general public for the support received over the years, and to state that the Service will work tirelessly to ensure the production of credible statistical information for national development. Most immediately, the Service will strive to release the 2010 Population and Housing Census results, by the stipulated goal of March 31st, 2012. All stakeholders, and particularly the press, are invited to lend their support to the Service to help it attain its national goals.
Prof. Francis Dodoo
Board Chairman

Nana Addo Turns To God To Win Election, But Ablakwa Advises Him

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The flagbearer of the opposition New Patriotic Party (NPP), Nana Addo Danquah Akufo-Addo has called on the Atta Mills-led government and the Electoral Commission (EC) to ensure a clean 2012 election.
According to him, this is the only way any misgivings concerning the outcome of the polls in Ghana will be dispelled.
The NPP flagbearer was speaking at the party’s prayer session held at the Essipong Stadium in the Western region on Sunday. The event, according to the party hierarchy, was organised to pray for a peaceful presidential and parliamentary elections in December.
Party bigwigs including former President John Agyekum Kufuor, Jake Obetsebi Lamptey among others attended the prayer session.
Addressing the large gathering at the Essipong stadium, Nana Akufo-Addo demanded that the ruling NDC ensures that there are no disturbances and violence prior and after the December elections.
He also entreated all political leaders to accept the outcome of the results for Ghana to maintain the peace and stability that it is enjoying now.
The theme of the event was ‘Setting forth with the hand of God”.
Nana Akufo-Addo expects the Electoral Commission to carry out its responsibilities devoid of any partisan considerations.
The defeated 2008 presidential candidate of the NPP stressed that: “Those who will be responsible for the organisation of the elections will do so in a transparent and clear manner so that at the end of the day, the victor will be the victor and the loser will accept his loss because it is not of manipulation or intimidation or wrong-doing.”
According to the NPP, it is the absolute conviction of the party that before they engage in any serious campaigning, they need to commit the presidential candidate, all the 230 parliamentary candidates, the campaign, the party and indeed the entire nation into the care and mercy of God for His Will to be done.
But, a Deputy Minister of Information, Samuel Okudzeto Ablakwa, has advised the NPP and its members to depart from their ‘all die be die’ and “win-at-all-cost” mantra if they have now accepted that God is the only one who appoints leaders.
The Deputy Minister was commenting on the NPP’s inter-denominational prayer session which was held in the Western Region.
 The Deputy Information Minister said though he sees no problem with a political party committing itself to the Lord in order to win an election that of the NPP is surely for political expediency.
“They want us to believe that they are more holy than the Pope… I do hope that as they do, they will remember that it is the Lord who chooses leaders and so it is incongruous to think about all die be die and we will win at all cost…” he told Citi FM, a local radio station.

Motivational Message Of The Week: Nothing Great Was Ever Achieved Without Enthusiasm

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How far someone can go with any project determines how much he/she can achieve. If how far you can go depends on ‘enthusiasm’, then how much or what you can achieve is also dependent on ‘enthusiasm’.

The above may sound complicated or silly, but it is a fact. Nothing great in this world has been achieved without enthusiasm. In order to achieve something great, you must go far with your efforts, run over disappointments and failure. The only way you can do this is to have ‘enthusiasm’ in what you doing.

You can only achieve anything substantial in what you are doing if you have the needed ‘enthusiasm’ to out run the various obstacles that will come your way. Without ‘enthusiasm’, you will never be able to achieve any greatness in what you are doing.

Greatness is when you find the limits of possibility by going beyond them into the impossibility. Getting to the door of the impossibility is therefore a long rough journey through ‘possibility’; this journey can only be fully taken with enthusiasm. And it is at the end of this journey that ‘Greatness’ dwells.

Look at the various individuals such as Albert Einstein who achieved greatness in their chosen fields and you will realize they had enthusiasm as the main pill which got them through all that was possible until they got to the doors of the ‘impossibility’.

Are you seeking for greatness in life? If you desire to achieve something great, then you must acknowledge that this can only be realized if you are enthusiastic about what you are doing.

All you need to be able to bring out the hidden greatness in you is enthusiasm. Stop wasting your time on things you are not enthusiastic about, you will certainty achieve nothing great by engaging in such enterprises.

Find where your enthusiasm lives and get into that…For that is the only way you can go through the journey of the possibility to find the door of the impossibility where ‘Greatness’ lies.

By: Chris-Vincent Agyapong Febiri/ ScrewLife.Com

……………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………

Chris-Vincent is an internet enthusiast & entrepreneur, web developer, web publisher and a blogger, a law student with special interest in Human Success, Personal Development and Achievements.

As a multi-niche blogger, areas of web development, internet entrepreneurship and marketing are a close heartfelt passion. He enjoys blogging and making money online.

 

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ORIGINAL HAPPY MONDAYS LINE-UP TO RE-FORM FOR TOUR

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Original Happy Mondays line-up to re-form for tour

Happy Monday star Shaun Ryder recently talked about “getting into the music game” on BBC Breakfast

The Happy Mondays will re-form for a month-long tour in May, singer Rowetta Satchell has confirmed.

Satchell, also an X Factor finalist, told BBC Radio Manchester the group had been in talks for a long time, but made the final decision to reform last week.

Although the Manchester band have reformed previously, this will be the first time the original line-up has played together since 1992.

“We want to put on a really good show,” Satchell told Darryl Morris.

All seven of the original line-up met last week to “see if they could sit in a room together”, Satchell said, referring to the band’s acrimonous past.

She said the drive to bring the original members back together had come from lead singer Shaun Ryder and his manager.

“We decided it would only be special and work if it was the total, original line-up,” she said.

“We’re all really excited.

“They are my family, these boys; I’ve really missed them… and I’m sure they’ve missed each other.”

Seminal
The rock band, who were at the forefront of the Madchester scene, formed in 1980, with Ryder as their frontman.

The original band also included Ryder’s brother Paul, guitarist Mark Day, Paul Davis and drummer Gary Whelan. They were joined by Mark “Bez” Berry and Rowetta Satchell.

Discovered by music impresario Tony Wilson, they went on to release the albums Squirrel And G-Man Twenty Four Hour Party People Plastic Face Carnt Smile (White Out), Bummed, and Pills ‘N’ Thrills And Bellyaches, before disbanding after 1992’s Yes Please!.

They reformed twice, most notably in 1999, but split again in 2001, with Paul Ryder vowing never to perform with his brother again.

A further incarnation of the band followed in 2004, with only Shaun Ryder, Bez and Whelan from the original line-up.

Satchell said the band would be rehearsing throughout April, but denied there were currently any plans for them to support the reunited Stone Roses at Heaton Park.

“It’s up to the Roses. As long as we’ve not killed each other by then, we’d be up for it.”

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DAVID TENNANT WINS BBC AUDIO DRAMA AWARD FOR KAFKA ROLE

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David Tennant wins BBC audio drama award for Kafka role

The musical production of Kafka was broadcast on BBC Radio 3.

Former Doctor Who star David Tennant has been named best actor at the inaugural BBC Audio Drama Awards.

The awards, which were also hosted by Tennant, aim “to celebrate and recognise the cultural importance of audio drama, on air and online”.

Tennant won for his role as Kafka in Kafka: The Musical. Rosie Cavaliero was named best actress as Ruthie, in Lost Property: A Telegram from the Queen.

Lost Property: The Year My Mother Went Missing won best audio drama.

It is the second in a trilogy of radio plays from acclaimed writer Katie Hims.

The trilogy began with The Wrong Label, spanned 60 years, and charted “one family’s tragi-comic history of heartbreak and redemption”.

The series was directed by Jessica Dromgoole. Cavaliero narrated the first two plays, before taking on the role of Ruthie in the final part, A Telegram from the Queen.

All three were originally broadcast on BBC Radio 4 in May 2011 and will be repeated next week.

Rosie Cavaliero and co-star Gary Beadle recording A Telegram from the Queen

Andrew Scott won the best supporting actor/actress award, in Nick Perry’s play Referee.

Tim Davie, director, BBC Audio & Music, said he hoped the awards would bring “wider recognition of the many talented people who work in the genre”.

Actor Richard Wilson presented writer Hugh Hughes with the award for best scripted comedy drama, and Stephen Wyatt’s Gerontius won the Tinniswood Award for the best drama script broadcast in 2010.

The Imison Award, for best radio drama script from a newcomer (broadcast in 2010), went to Michelle Lipton for Amazing Grace.

Other awards included best adaptation, for The History of Titus Groan, and best online drama, for Rock.

Best use of sound went to Julian Simpson’s Bad Memories, while The Unfortunates won the innovation award.

Stars attending the event, at BBC Broadcasting House in London, included Johnny Vegas and actresses June Whitfield and Niahm Cusack.

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