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Nurse

January 14, 2015

14 January 2015 Nurse

Mary a little better she could manage to get up for breakfast. Gout fading District Nurse comes.

Obituary:

Sir Jack Hayward, the owner and chairman of Wolverhampton Wanderers FC, in 2003

Sir Jack Hayward, the owner and chairman of Wolverhampton Wanderers FC, in 2003 Photo: Robert Hallam/REX

Sir Jack Hayward, who has died aged 91, was a philanthropist of uncommon generosity and a British patriot to the point of eccentricity.

A modest man with an unruly shock of white hair, Hayward listed his recreations in Who’s Who as “promoting British endeavours, mainly in sport. . . preserving the British landscape, keeping all things bright, beautiful and British”. He became known as “Union Jack”.

Although born at Wolverhampton, Hayward lived for most of his life in the Bahamas, where he flew the union flag on his Rolls-Royce and otherwise drove about in a London black cab. He liked being introduced as “a professional pioneer with Rudyard Kipling as his bible”.

Into Freeport – which he helped the American industrialist Wallace Groves to develop in the 1950s – Hayward imported London double-decker buses, red pillar boxes and GPO phone kiosks. Visiting seamen from the Royal Navy were always given dinner at a local restaurant “with the compliments of Sir Jack”. Back in Britain, Hayward drove a Range Rover bearing the bumper sticker: “Buy abroad — sack a Brit”.

In 1990 he bought his beloved Wolverhampton Wanderers football club for £2 million. He preferred to finance a home-grown team, and when asked in 1994 if he would have liked his manager, Graham Taylor, to have signed the German striker Jürgen Klinsmann, he replied: “I would have said, ‘Graham, you should be able to find 11 players good enough from the Midlands.’ ”

Wolves’ persistent lack of success often led him to suspect that his money was being misspent, and in 1999 he even sued his son Jonathan, a former chairman of the club, for alleged financial irregularities. “They think Golden Tit — me — will go on forever,” Hayward said on television. “It’s blackmail. Money has been wasted.” In 2003 his prayers were finally answered when Wolves won promotion to the Premier League via the play-offs final, only to be relegated the next season. He eventually sold control of the club, in 2007, to Steve Morgan.

Jack Arnold Hayward was born on June 14 1923 at Dunstall, Wolverhampton, less than half a mile from Molineux, the Wolves ground. His father, Sir Charles Hayward, had been a circus performer known as “The Living Head” before making his first fortune manufacturing motorcycle sidecars. He lost it all in 1929, but then amassed a second, much larger pile with his engineering group, Firth Cleveland.

Jack was educated at Stowe and in 1941 volunteered for the RAF. He trained as a pilot at Clewiston, Florida, then flew Transport Command Dakotas on the hazardous supply route to the Fourteenth Army in Burma. While in India he crashed his Tiger Moth when trying out a “my next trick is impossible!” manoeuvre. All that survived were Hayward and the propeller, which took pride of place in his office in Freeport .

Demobbed in the rank of flight-lieutenant in 1946, he joined Rotary Hoes, part of his father’s Firth Cleveland Group, and set about selling agricultural equipment from the back of a truck in southern Africa. In 1951 he founded the American arm of Firth Cleveland in New York. He lived there for five years until restrictions on foreign investment took him to Nassau.

Hayward was quick to see the potential to make money in the Bahamas, and persuaded his father to put £1 million into Groves’s scheme to develop Freeport. Groves had leased 50,000 acres of swamp and bushland from the Bahamas government to set up a tax-free industrial complex centred around a deep-water harbour — the government was to receive a cut of the revenues. Hayward became administrative vice-president of the new Grand Bahama Port Authority, overseeing the development. He became chairman in 1976, after buying Groves out.

Hayward threw himself into the life of island pioneer, working hard to transform the bush around Freeport into a city. He banked in a tiny hut called Barclays at the harbour; he did not see a telephone until 1960; and he needed to put down a sheet fastened by rocks to signal to passing aircraft that he wanted a lift to Nassau.

His investment instincts, meanwhile, were spot on: Freetown became the fastest growing industrial centre in the Caribbean, as international companies rushed in, excited by the tax advantages, tourist potential and proximity to America. The shares rocketed on the New York Stock Exchange and Hayward became very rich.

He resented any suggestion that he was a playboy or a tax exile, feeling that although he had inherited money, he had multiplied it through shrewdness and graft. He was also both publicly and privately generous. Indeed, of all his pursuits, he seemed to derive most satisfaction from giving his money away.

A vivid — and subsequently unfortunate — example of his beneficence was his gift of £150,000 to buy Lundy Island, a wildlife sanctuary off the north Devon coast, for the National Trust in 1969.

The campaign to save the island had been launched by three West Country MPs, including Jeremy Thorpe, the leader of the Liberal Party. Hayward read about it in The Daily Telegraph while sitting at home in the Bahamas. As he later recalled: “I had a bit of spare cash, so I telephoned Jeremy Thorpe and offered it to him.” When news of his generosity broke, Hayward remarked that he was “fed up with pieces of Britain going to foreigners”.

Sir Jack Hayward and his wife in 1982 (REX)

Three months later Hayward found himself sitting in a small church on Lundy, surrounded by grateful islanders celebrating its reprieve. In the pew behind sat Thorpe, whose smooth organisation of the day’s events made a big impression on Hayward. During the service of thanksgiving, Hayward leaned back and whispered: “God, Jeremy, you’ve done a super job, this is fantastic. You really should be prime minister if you can do a job like this.” “It’s on the cards, my dear fellow,” Thorpe murmured in reply. “But I might need some help.”

Over the course of the next day, Thorpe explained that the Liberal Party had an overdraft of £100,000. The next year, after meeting the Liberal MP Peter Bessell back in the Bahamas, Hayward was persuaded to part with another £150,000; the cheque was made out personally to Thorpe.

Feeling that Hayward was an easy touch, Thorpe made sure to cultivate their friendship. In the spring of 1973, shortly after Thorpe’s marriage to Marion, Countess of Harewood, the couple stayed with Hayward in the Bahamas.

Hearing that Hayward and his partners were thinking of selling Freeport, Thorpe offered to find them a buyer, in return for a commission. Thorpe asked Bessell to help . But before they could get a firm offer, Bessell became desperate for funds to cover up various frauds he had committed. He persuaded Thorpe that they should ask Hayward for an advance of $500,000 “to pay middlemen”. Hayward suspected something was up (albeit he thought Thorpe was being conned by Bessell) and told them they would first have to convince Wallace Groves, which they failed to do.

Undaunted, Thorpe again approached Hayward for money in April 1974. Thorpe now wanted untraceable money to enact his “final solution” to the problem of Norman Scott, his former lover. In his letter to Hayward, he apologised for the way “that bastard Bessell” had tried to con him the previous year, and asked Hayward for £50,000: £40,000 to go to the Liberal Party general election fund, and £10,000 to settle “election expenses” and to be paid to a man called Nadir Dinshaw.

Dinshaw was godfather to Thorpe’s son Rupert and, as Thorpe wrote, “conveniently resident in Jersey”. Thorpe explained to Hayward in the letter that he might carelessly have broken the rules governing a candidate’s general election expenses and that Dinshaw could safely pay the “ambiguous” bills which he had run up.

Hayward complied with both requests, so that when the election was called for October 10, Thorpe was able to splash out on a hovercraft which took him dramatically along the coast, until it was damaged when it sped up a beach in Devon. Their finances in rude health, the Liberals fielded a record number of candidates, although they ended up with just 13 MPs.

The next year, at Thorpe’s request, Hayward sent a further £10,000 to Dinshaw, in addition to £9,000 to the Liberal Party Direct Aid Committee. Neither Hayward nor Dinshaw knew it, but the money was to buy letters from Scott and to pay Andrew Newton, an airline pilot and now would-be hitman, for a “professional frightening job”.

Sir Jack Hayward celebrating Wolverhampton Wanderers win at the 2003 Nationwide Division One final (Getty)

The ensuing events, including the shooting of Norman Scott’s Great Dane Rinka by Newton on Dartmoor and the eventual arrest of Jeremy Thorpe and his co-conspirators, culminated in what is often described as “the trial of the century”.

During the investigation, Hayward was contacted by the police and asked about the £20,000 he had paid to Dinshaw in Jersey. With relief he remembered that he had kept the letters from Thorpe in a drawer by his bed at his house in Sussex. “They saved my bacon,” he told Thorpe’s biographer Simon Freeman. “If I hadn’t kept them, the police might have thought I knew where the money was going.”

The letters were the last piece in the jigsaw of the prosecution case, and at the trial at the Old Bailey in 1979, Hayward gave evidence for the crown. Judge Cantley called him “a nice, respectable witness” . But it was scant consolation for being dragged into the squalid affair. “I’m too trusting,” Hayward later admitted. “I like everyone. And Jeremy was very charming and amusing. But everyone was taken in by him, weren’t they?”

In the meantime, Hayward had continued to find patriotic causes on which to shower his money. In 1976 he gave £150,000 to pay for the salvage of Brunel’s SS Great Britain in the Falklands and return her to her original dock in Bristol; he later invited Paul Getty Jnr to match his £500,000 to complete the vessel’s restoration.

He funded three international racing yachts Great Britain I, II and III, spent £100,000 on saving the sloop Gannet (the Royal Navy’s only survivor of the transition from sail to steam) and contributed another £100,000 to help raise the Mary Rose.

After the Falklands conflict, he gave £1 million towards the replacement of the fire-damaged hospital in Port Stanley, and a further £1 million to the widows and orphans of those who had died during the fighting.

With his crumpled clothes and pockets stuffed with bits of paper, it was observed of Hayward that he looked “more like an absent-minded retired geography teacher than one of the richest men in the world”. He relaxed by watching cricket (he was a life member of Surrey CC) and taking part in amateur dramatics — he built an excellent modern theatre at Freeport for the local Players’ Guild, of which he was a leading actor. In addition to his home in Freeport, he owned a farm in Sussex and was Laird of Dunmaglass, a 14,000-acre estate near Inverness.

He was appointed OBE in 1968 and knighted in 1986.

He married, in 1948, Jean Forder, with whom he had two sons and a daughter. His relationships with his children were often fraught, and in recent years they had been involved in legal action.

Sir Jack Hayward, born June 14 1923, died January 13 2015

Guardian:

Shoppers on Oxford Street, London
‘Inequality drives competitive envy, the only solution to which is more stuff. And more stuff.’ Photograph: Bloomberg via Getty Images

Larry Elliott (If money can’t buy happiness, how are we all feeling as living standards fall?, 12 January), makes a number of salient points. We need, though, to reset the terms of the debate. As long as we continue to think about growth and wealth in purely numerical terms, we will continue to be stuck in contradictions. The wealth that each of us enjoys is not simply to do with the state of my bank balance, the things I buy, or even my share of GDP.

A large part of what makes each and every one of us rich is what we hold in common, and intangibles. I am rich because of the NHS, decent infrastructure, a tradition of the rule of law, democratic institutions, educational opportunities, voluntary support networks, family life, companionship, freedom to think my own thoughts and speak my mind, and confidence that all this is sufficiently important to others for it to be treasured and defended.

We need politicians and commentators to stop talking and point-scoring about who is going to put more (or less) into pockets, and to enter into a more fruitful debate about how we can work to ensure that all citizens are helped to flourish, and what that might mean in the 21st century.
Dr David Howard
Church Stretton, Shropshire

• Larry Elliot’s argument against degrowth is reductive and circular. As long as he believes that happiness depends on a constant stream of “the little pleasures in life”, he will be able to claim that we’re bound to be unhappy when the stream dries up. But once our basic needs for food, shelter and security are met – and, criminally, in the sixth-richest country in the history of the world they are not – a much wider, non-material, range of conditions for happiness come into play. The most important of these is equality. Inequality drives competitive envy, the only solution to which is more stuff. And more stuff. There is no reason why a small fall in “living standards” should make our quality of life any worse, once we have a society organised to meet the needs of everyone rather than the wants of a few.
Professor Andrew Dobson
Keele University

• First question: whose living standards? If one individual can afford to buy a thousand houses, while another hasn’t got the wherewithal to rent decent accommodation, are the living standards of both in freefall? Larry, why didn’t you mention inequality?
Dr Wiebina Heesterman
Birmingham

• People increasingly feel a lack of control over their futures (Anxious Britain will find no succour in a TV leader debate, Zoe Williams, 12 January). Research shows that more than half of UK consumers feel they have “little or no control” in markets fundamental to the cost of living, such as transport, energy and the cost of caring for the elderly.

But the current political debate is out of touch with the change that is happening on the ground. People are coming together to confront our faltering economic model. They are creating a social economy – setting up social enterprises which reinvest their profits to tackle social and economic problems, community energy schemes and co-operatives. These businesses are giving people more control over the economic forces which so often uproot lives. A new sort of economy built on principles of solidarity and co-operation already exists – it now needs the support of our leaders.
Dan Gregory
Director, Social Economy Alliance, London

• Many people are not just sick with worry about wages, housing, food, utility bills etc in a high-living-cost, low-income Britain, they are highly insecure and fearful about the future in what Zoe Williams calls an “anxious Britain”. We live in a fear-driven society, where everyone is on their own, with coalition government austerity policies enabling a massive wealth transfer to a kleptocratic plutocracy. This rules through a corporatocracy that has largely captured government and the state so as to extract our common wealth. For example, in 2012, 46 of the top 50 publicly traded firms in the UK had a British parliamentarian as a director or shareholder.

Understanding that Britain today is an anxious, fear-dominated society is crucial. It explains why the right is happy to use blame and fear strategies such as immigration to get votes. They well know that social insecurity can lead to authoritarian governments. So, to counter fear, building societal, human security is vital through things like secure jobs, affordable housing, free education and health, the civil bedrock of human rights and taxing the corporate tax avoiders fairly. Reclaiming democracy by pushing the market out of politics would help. For starters, why not require all parliamentarians who are sponsored by corporations to wear their corporate logos like Formula One racing drivers when at Westminster?
Martin Large
Stroud

Great White Shark Carcharodon carcharias Water level view in South Africa
A great white shark off South Africa. It looks pretty fearsome, but do toasters kill more people? Photograph: Alamy

Is economics relevant as a profession (Letters, January 8)? Just been watching BBC2’s The Super-Rich and Us, to the accompaniment of texts from my daughter. After an exchange of texts despairing at the growth of inequality and the conclusion of the experts, including Thomas Piketty, that there is no such thing as the trickle-down effect, my daughter concludes: “How many economists does it take to change an economy?”
Sue Gollop
Bridlington

Paul Mason (G2, 12 January) seems to believe that it was the French population who resisted and defeated the Nazis. Perhaps he should start reading books on history as well as economics.
Professor Alan Sked
London School of Economics

• Surely a much more vital role for HP sauce (Letters, 13 January) was in the introduction of the French language to us lower middle classes. Does anyone else remember the label on the bottle: “Cette sauce de haute qualité est une mélange…” etc? It proved of little use in France, sadly.
Frances Worsley
Whaley Bridge, Derbyshire

• In his discussion on the relative rarity of screen portraits of critics (Point of view, Review, 10 January), Anthony Quinn omits the brilliant portrait of Alexander Woollcott as Sheridan Whiteside in The Man Who Came To Dinner (1942), or again as Waldo Lydecker in Laura (1944).
Philip Clayton
London

• Polly Toynbee’s comments on our often irrational responses to threats (Opinion, 13 January) reminded me of the posters I saw in South Africa explaining that more people are killed by toasters than sharks.
Mathew Frith
London

• Now there seems to be a groundswell of opinion in favour of free speech, perhaps the heir to the throne could allow the BBC to screen Reinventing the Royals (BBC shelves show on Prince Charles’s former king of spin, 30 December).
Janet Guest
Woking, Surrey

Dulwich Picture Gallery
The Dulwich Picture Gallery. Photograph: Oli Scarff/Getty Images

The decision of the Dulwich Picture Gallery (Report, 13 January) to hang a fake painting may open the way for large galleries running blockbuster shows to do this more cheaply and at no risk to the originals. The very substantial cost of transporting and insuring pictures is a barrier to their being more widely seen, as is the certainty that they will be lost if the aircraft carrying them crashes; add to this the reluctance of galleries to lend their most precious pictures in an age where western icons may be increasingly at risk. People who have not yet seen one of these copies at close quarters will, I suggest, be amazed at their quality. Perhaps the gallery will publish not only the number of people who guessed correctly, but also the number who got it wrong.
Dr SJ Harris
Wrexham

Woman in a wheelchair
‘We are all one car accident or stroke away from disability.’ Photograph: © Uwe Anspach/dpa/Corbis

My heart goes out to Linda Cooksey, not only for losing her brother but for having to deal with the frustrations of getting the government to publish details of the review (Report, 12 January). It is terrifying that public funding cuts are being made to the third sector when they are the lifeline for vulnerable people. I am an unpaid carer and I could not cope without the support of carers’ organisations/charities helping me through the minefield of tribunals and applications for benefits. It is imperative that funding is not cut any more, as I fear more vulnerable people will feel bleak enough to do something drastic.

This government is so cocooned by privilege that its members cannot conceive of what it must have been like for Tim Salter to have no money in the bank, or food in the house. Westminster and the DWP need to take responsibility for the consequences of a cross on a form. We are all one car accident or stroke away from disability.
Name and address supplied

• The very fact that the independent case examiner report into the case of Tim Salter, who killed himself, puts the onus on Mr Salter to have used the complaints procedure, made clear the extent of his mental health problems, and given more information to Jobcentre Plus, shows that the system is not fit for purpose. Anyone with an ounce of common humanity, who was not seeking to defend the indefensible, would recognise that someone as vulnerable as Mr Salter would be totally unable to take the initiatives required for this.

This government is quick to trumpet its crusade against malingerers and benefit cheats. It seeks to do this by a system which wrongfoots and then blames applicants. However, those who understand the system can play it to their advantage. This no doubt applies to benefit cheats and wealthy tax dodgers alike.
JD Budden
Exmouth, Devon

• Does the DWP expect us to believe that only one out of 60 reviews of suicides related to “changes” to benefits resulted in an update to staff guidance? How is the very fact of 60 suicides since 2012, ie the real possibility of a fatal reaction to cuts in benefits, addressed in staff training? The peer reviews should be available to the bereaved families or a coroner, and overall there must be an independent inquiry.
Dr Graham Ullathorne
Chesterfield, Derbyshire

Agricultural worker and a crate of cucumbers
‘Migrants do not suddenly arrive out of thin air, but are mainly recruited by agencies, often gangmasters, retained by British companies to find cheap labour to work in Britain.’ Photograph: Rogulin Dmitry/ITAR-TASS Photo/Corbis

I agree with Philip Oltermann (Why Britain’s lovebombing of Berlin has failed, 7 January) that the UK will not solve the perceived immigration problem in Germany – but neither will it be solved in eastern Europe. The solution is here in the UK. Migrants do not suddenly arrive out of thin air, but are mainly recruited by agencies, often gangmasters, retained by British companies to find cheap labour to work in Britain. The gangmasters may advance the travel costs and organise accommodation, which results in a large number of people sharing a house or flat. The employer pays the gangmaster, but the gangmaster then deducts commission, travel, accommodation and sundry costs. If the government really wanted to reduce the number of migrants, it could ensure the minimum wage – preferably a living wage – is properly enforced. That enforcement should include companies employing and paying workers directly, not through gangmasters. If gangmasters have recruited the workers, then they should be paid a commission like any other employment agency, and that commission should be paid by the employer, not the employee. The main political parties do not want to solve the problem, but need to sabre-rattle because of Ukip.
Michael Gold
Green parliamentary candidate for Walthamstow

Vivian Wineman, right, president of the Board of Deputies of British Jews, with members of the Jewish Leadership Council during a meeting with David Cameron on 13 January
Vivian Wineman, right, president of the Board of Deputies of British Jews, with members of the Jewish Leadership Council during a meeting with David Cameron on 13 January. Photograph: Justin Tallis/AFP/Getty Images

Deborah Maccoby (Letters, 13 January) writes that the Board of Deputies of British Jews contributes to the rise in attacks on Jews because it claims “that the majority of Jews support Israel’s policies”. This is completely opposite to a report written by the Board, quoted on 8 May 2014 in the Jewish News, which notes “that communal surveys have pointed to overwhelming support for the two state solution and opposition to settlement construction”. Not to mention that the president of the Board, Vivian Wineman, is a former chair of the UK branches of Peace Now and of the New Israel Fund, each of which is prominent in promoting Jewish-Arab dialogue in Israel and the occupied territories.
Joseph Pearlman
London

• On the day that Jewish victims of a murderous terror attack in a Paris kosher grocery are laid to rest, we read a letter in the Guardian by an executive at “Jews for Justice for Palestinians”, holding Jews responsible for current levels of antisemitism. This is not only disrespectful to the victims at Hyper Cacher, but is also fundamentally wrong, based on the twisted logic that when Jews die, Jews must be to blame; 17 people died this week at the hands of jihadists, four of them simply for being Jewish. Rather than condemn the perpetrators, “Jews for Justice for Palestinians” choose to blame the victims. For shame.
Yiftah Curiel
Spokesperson, embassy of Israel

• Your report (Mentor of Charlie Hebdo gunman has been UK-based, theguardian.com, 11 January) says the Muslim Council of Britain is supporting the case of Sylvie Beghal. The truth is that she brought a legal action against the director of public prosecutions that raises a number of important issues with wide-ranging implications for the civil liberties of British citizens, and in particular for the Muslim community. The MCB, together with other human rights organisations such as Liberty, successfully applied to be joined as an intervener in this case. We have no involvement in the conduct of Beghal’s case. Despite the heightened sensitivities, your story states nowhere that the MCB has robustly and loudly condemned terrorism. Our interest in this case is purely for the upholding of human rights.
Nasima Begum
Muslim Council of Britain

TS Eliot
TS Eliot. Photograph: Express/Getty Images

In his celebration of the young TS Eliot (Review, 10 January), Robert Crawford writes at length about the modernity and the notable achievement of The Love Song of J Alfred Prufrock, but mentions only casually Eliot’s making friends with Ezra Pound. Perhaps he is not aware that Pound was the first to recognise the modernity and the achievement of Prufrock, and that he did this on first meeting Eliot in September 1914; that he overcame the resistance of the editor to get that poem published in Poetry (Chicago) in June 1915; that he printed all the poems Eliot had ready for publication in his Catholic Anthology in November 1915, for “the satisfaction of getting Eliot’s poems into print between covers”; and that he subsidised the publication of Eliot’s first slim volume, Prufrock and Other Observations, in 1917, then generously reviewed it. Later, of course, he edited Eliot’s drafts into the acclaimed The Waste Land. Altogether, young Eliot’s debt to young Ezra Pound seems worthy of note.
A David Moody
Pateley Bridge, North Yorkshire

Robert Crawford describes the first publication of Prufrock in 1915 as being “tucked away towards the back of a small magazine, probably because the editor did not greatly care for it”. Poetry magazine was indeed small (it had been founded, on a shoestring, only three years earlier). It’s also true that its founder and editor, Harriet Monroe, was befuddled by Prufrock and had to be pushed by Ezra Pound (a world-class nagger) into publishing it. But Poetry quickly became, and remained for decades, the major outlet for modern poetry in English, giving early exposure not just to Pound and Eliot but to Robert Frost, Edna St Vincent Millay, HD, Marianne Moore, Langston Hughes and many others. And now, of course, thanks to a $200m bequest from Ruth Lilly (who had submitted several poems to the magazine and apparently greatly appreciated the then editor’s courtesy in handwriting the rejection letters himself), the shoestring has become a cornucopia. I think the article should at least have given the magazine its name. Although, perhaps, I am biased; Harriet Monroe was my great-aunt.
Ann Monroe
Totnes, Devon

Arthur Butterworth conducting
Arthur Butterworth was passionate about the Yorkshire Moors. Photograph: Lewis Foreman

I first met Arthur Butterworth (in September 1960 when I was a very raw, newly qualified teacher and he was a peripatetic brass teacher for the West Riding of Yorkshire. I continued to follow his conducting and other musical activities, and later persuaded him to write a piece for the Huddersfield Singers, formerly the Huddersfield Glee and Madrigal Society, when they celebrated their 125th anniversary in 2000.

As the organisation’s president, I asked Arthur for one of his few choral works. He overcame his initial reluctance and chose a poem by Ann Brontë that reflected Arthur’s own love of the Yorkshire Moors. As far as I am aware, Haworth Moor has not been performed since its premiere by the Singers – they told me it was fiendishly difficult to sing.

campaigning.jpg
Patrician privilege … Illustration: Gary Kempston

Dangers of dynastic power

Jonathan Freedland’s article on Hillary Clinton is yet another example of a piece written from the point of view of an out-of-touch elite (9 January). The question isn’t whether Hillary Clinton can fight ageism, but whether the social base of the Democratic party can triumph over patrician privilege.

The Clinton administration of which she was a significant part exported working-class American jobs while doing nothing to stop the scapegoating of the US poor. Their economic policy was pro-Wall Street. The difficulties Al Gore suffered in campaigning for president were in no small part due to the fact that the Clintons had made the party irrelevant to its social base. It’s hardly surprising that many progressive votes from the left went to wild card Ralph Nader.

Americans once fought a war against unaccountable monarchical family privilege. Those parts of the Democratic party desperate to stop Hillary Clinton are right to resist the stench of vested interest that accompanies the return of unaccountable dynastic family power.
Gavin Lewis
Manchester, UK

The evils of xenophobia

It was disappointing to read of the strong anti-Islamic demonstrations in Germany, and heartening to learn of the impressive German opposition in response (9 January).

We know from the German experience in the 1930s and 1940s just how dangerous such popular xenophobia can be. Of course, the danger is not by any means confined to Germany. A history lecturer at Adelaide University in the 1960s – Peter Phillips – had spent some time in a German concentration camp. He told us students that he rejected the notion of the Holocaust as something uniquely German. Instead, he argued that these atrocities could have occurred in any country at any time in similar circumstances.

He was right – and we, the fair-minded majority in our respective nations around the globe, need to be on our guard, lest the xenophobic evil that exists in all societies run to an extreme should we once more encounter the kind of dire economic and social circumstances that gave rise to the Holocaust.
Terry Hewton
Adelaide, South Australia

Australia’s dark shadow

When did Australia – which we have experienced as a sunny and optimistic country – develop such a dark shadow? Indigenous Australians have long experienced the shadow of racism and discrimination but now the shadow has lengthened to include its treatment of refugees and asylum seekers.

Current government policy is deliberately cruel and lacking compassion. It is also defying UN conventions on refugees that were agreed to by Australia in the shadow of the second world war horrors. The public has been systematically fed misinformation that fuels a climate of fear and xenophobia.

Barbaric treatment of vulnerable refugees including the imprisonment of children in hostile environments with no hope of a fair legal assessment of their refugee claims is unacceptable. We are failing badly as world citizens compared to much poorer countries, which take a much larger share of the world’s refugees.

We would urge the international community to pressure our politicians to abandon these cruel and inhumane policies.
Margaret Wilkes
Perth, Western Australia

All human life matters

Are all humans born equal? The opposite is implied by the juxtaposition of articles Terror comes to Australia and News in brief (19 December). While the tragic attack in Australia is undoubtedly newsworthy, there is cause for reflection in how the marginalised people of Pakistan have been sidelined in the layout of the page. While the Taliban attack on a school in Peshawar killed at least 126 people, it was graced with just one-10th of the space that the two deaths in a Sydney cafe (not counting the terrorist) received.

Just because violence in Pakistan is more frequent, and more removed from the lives of most GW readers, that doesn’t mean that we should be less concerned about it. Please respect the value of all human life – not just rich westerners – in how you treat these stories.
Thomas Delaney
Brisbane, Queensland, Australia

• The heart-wrenching tragedy in Peshawar has truly, numbed us all – beyond borders, and boundaries – of caste, religion, language and age. As much as feel dazed – by the brutality and absurdity of it all – we are also inspired by a new resolve, to stand up for peace, friendship and harmony – even as we face newer challenges in this dizzying 21st century.

Strangely, events such as the one in Peshawar and earlier, the Nirbhaya tragedy in India in late 2012, unite us far stronger than borders or great power wars can ever divide. Let’s just hope that in this moment of reckoning, all nations – and peoples – rise together to strike a warm and beautiful beginning.
Isha Shah
New Delhi, India

• Editor’s note: Initial reports of the Peshawar school massacre emerged just as the 19 December edition of the Weekly was going to press. A full page was subsequently devoted to the story in our 2 January edition.

A better definition of hell

Meghan O’Gieblyn’s piece on hell (19 December) was fascinating but I feel that there is an easier definition: at primary school a teacher told us that we should imagine a place where everyone has to eat with enormous chopsticks, with those in heaven being completely happy because they feed each other, whereas hell is the same place but with everyone insisting on eating their own food with their own chopsticks, thereby resulting in hunger and distress.

I was pondering this and reflecting on Christmas advertising, and do wonder whether we have not somehow created our own consumerist hell here on earth. Each Christmas we are bombarded with ever-more aggressive advertising intended to create desire which adds the aspect of “amplified hunger” to the chopstick analogy, with everyone wanting private possession and yearning to reach a maximum satisfaction that can never be.

O’Gieblyn says preachers pander to their congregations by leaving out references to hell, just as “a clothes ad will [not] call attention to child labour”. The chopstick idea can be taken to a further level with us having the supposed means to attain the unattainable produced under sweat-shop conditions in distant countries. This makes hell multifaceted because not only is the west locked into a paradigm of insatiable desire but, on top of this, the burden of toil required to satisfy it is exported to the low-wage regions of the planet.

So, while we’re analysing ideas of hell in the hereafter, we should also spare a moment to consider whether we have not created a few aspects of hell right here on earth.
Alan Mitcham
Cologne, Germany

Great year in review

Your end-of-year issue was a vast and mostly successful attempt to draw the messy threads of the year together, and a credit to all your correspondents. I read all 15 pages of the Year in review, noted the comments that overlapped but never contradicted one another, and then sat back to try and digest it all.

Now it may have been too much of the excellent turkey stuffing or more likely the merlot that accompanied it, but those very same threads, so carefully analysed in your review, began to tangle, blur and merge. Dilma Rousseff got re-elected but was it Mexico, Bolivia, Venezuela or Argentina – oh no, dammit, Brazil.

And then there was Abdel Fatah al-Sisi in Egypt but somehow Hosni Mubarak is still there, now a free man, and Abu Bakr al-Baghdadi the caliph of the non-existent Islamic State, somewhere in Syria or is it Iraq? And all that before we reach Ebola and the war zones of Africa.

Quick, turn to Wenlock Edge to cool my brindled brain: as the little (sycamore) seed drones twizzle through the grey winter air, their keys are tuning the locks of the future.
Kenneth Cowan
Bozouls, France

Briefly

• Oliver Balch’s article, Disaster the new normal in Nicaragua (2  January), includes a prediction that if temperatures continue to rise, corn harvests there could drop annually by up to 34,000 tonnes by 2020. You also highlight this figure in an infographic, How the heat is on Nicaragua’s harvest. If, like me, you do not happen to have information on Nicaraguan crop yields at your fingertips, this conveys nothing about the seriousness of the projected downturn – are we talking about a 1% decline, or 5%, or 50%?

I found a figure on the internet for current production of 540,000 tonnes. This would mean a projected annual decline of something over 6% per annum: it does indeed look serious. But can I suggest that, to make more sense to readers, you include percentages when reporting data like this?
John Ansell
Thame, UK

Send letters to weekly.letters@theguardian.co

Independent:

 

Times:

Sir, First Milk’s announcement that it will delay payment to farmers (News, Jan 12) in some ways is not a surprise, but it highlights the deepening of the crisis facing British dairy farmers.

The number of milk producers in England and Wales has fallen below 10,000 and this number could halve by 2025. This is not because of farm inefficiency but due to the drive for ever cheaper milk, which means only a few farmers will be left standing. The use (or abuse) of milk by retailers as a loss leader amounts to playing with our food.

A perception of cows in fields maintained by those selling dairy products masks the steady march towards a future where milk and dairy products will increasingly flow from industrial sites.

I started a farmer-led movement called Free Range Dairy and the Pasture Promise label to promote the value of Britain’s seasonally grazed dairy herds and try to shift industry focus away from volume and towards value. We must all take responsibility for our food choices. That is why I would like to see labelling on milk cartons and packaging that will enable consumers to make a choice about the provenance of the dairy in their diet and reward farmers with a fair price.

Neil Darwent
BBC outstanding farmer of the year 2014, and director, Free Range Dairy Network

Sir, I congratulate Deborah Ross on her piece about cheap milk (Times 2, Jan 8). At last, an article showing the human side of the dairy industry crisis. We were fifth-generation dairy farmers, milking 250 cows, and our herd was in the top 10 per cent in the UK for herd health, milk quality and production. During the last round of low milk prices, we were receiving 16p a litre; it was costing 21p a litre to produce and this became unsustainable.

To remain on our tenanted farm we had to sell our herd. It was the worst day of our lives, as we loved our cows and knew them all by name. It was like selling our family, and for many months I could not bear to walk around those silent farm buildings.

Doreen Forsyth

Amble, Northumberland

Sir, The controversy over milk is just part of the problem in food retail marketing. For years now, supermarkets have driven down the prices as they strove to gain market share. My late father, who worked for the National Farmers Union in the Seventies, forecast just such a scenario, saying that it would lead to the British farmer being dictated to by the retailer. If we don’t pay a price that gives a sensible return for the producer, we may not have a farming industry left.

Brian Milner
Boston Spa, W Yorks

Sir, If farming was to return to the supposed utopia of small farms that you appear to advocate (leader, Jan 10) the world would not be fed. Britain has had to feed an extra 14 million people over the last 70 years but, at the same time, a huge area has been taken out of agriculture for development. Have shop shelves been bare? No, because British agriculture has risen to the challenge by embracing science while being mindful of welfare.

Richard T Halhead

Fellow of the Royal Agricultural Societies, Cockerham, Lancs

Sir, As late as 1976, when I joined the civil service, I was issued with a booklet intended to put the young bureaucrat out of his misery when opening and closing letters (TMS, Jan 9 and letters, Jan 11 & 12); I say his misery, because female bureaucrats were required to use “Dear Mr Wilson” and to be addressed as “Dear Miss Wilson”, regardless of comparative status. Their male colleagues started with the default “Dear Wilson”. If Mr Wilson was an equal or inferior and was known personally to the author, “My Dear Wilson” was acceptable, if hand-written. If he was broadly equal or inferior and a friend, “My Dear Harold” could also be hand-written.

Then there were rigid rules as to the use of “Yours sincerely”, “Yours ever”, or even “Yours aye”. Ah, happy days.
Norman McFadyen
Edinburgh

Sir, In 1959 on my first day as a schoolmaster, I addressed a senior colleague in the staff room as “Mr Smith”. He replied, crushingly, “I am Smith; Mr Smith is the caretaker”.
David Terry
Droitwich, Worcs

Sir, In La Dolce Vita, Anita Ekberg (obituary, Jan 11) is first seen descending from the steps of an aeroplane, playing to the paparazzi. It is worth mentioning that the word “paparazzi” stems from a character in the film named Paparazzo, a freelance photographer.
James Thom
Aberdeen

Sir, It was not Lance Percival’s impersonation of Sir Alec Douglas-Home on That Was The Week That Was which so upset the government (letter, Jan 10). It was a sketch, written by Stephen Vinaver, in which Roy Hudd played a ventriloquist and the dummy on his lap was a Douglas-Home lookalike.
David Lee
(Musical director, TW3)
Kingston upon Thames

Sir, Philip Collins’s comments on “the poisonous influence of religious belief” (Opinion, Jan 9) equates what he calls the “egregious history of the Christian church” with current Muslim violence. But this is not to compare like with like. The medieval world was much more violent — according to Steven Pinker you were more than 40 times more likely to be murdered in 13th-century England than today.

As David Martin points out in his book Religion and Power, it is only Christians (and Christian derivative humanists — including presumably Philip Collins) that should have a problem with religious violence. Unlike the other peoples of the book, they have explicit instructions from their founder to avoid it (Matthew 5-7). Notably, he practised what he preached. Religion is not a single phenomenon, but embraces radically different teachings. Perhaps we should have a bit more of “by their fruits ye shall know them”.
Stephen Prickett
Regius professor emeritus of English, University of Glasgow, Charing, Kent

Sir, A huge cheer for the engineers who are reconnecting the 100,000 homes left without power following the storms (News, Jan 13). They are still, as I write, out there, in what is now a blizzard, repairing the breaks that are left and will no doubt recur as January reminds us who she is. The fault lies with our infrastructure. Rather than bury cables we have stuck with erecting pylons, allegedly for cheapness. Considering the cost every time the wind coughs, how cheap are they really?
David Catto
Ardgay, Sutherland

Telegraph:

An armed guard stands outside a Jewish School in Paris

An armed guard stands outside a Jewish School in Paris Photo: Getty Images

SIR – The horrific events in France last week highlight the need for a fundamental change of government anti-terrorism strategy, rather than just throwing yet more money at the security service.

Over the past decade the lead in the fight against home-grown terror has lain with the security service, which (for fear of disclosing intelligence techniques and sources) has chosen to adopt a softly-softly and unsustainably labour-intensive approach of monitoring and surveillance, rather than direct confrontation and criminal prosecution of those identified in the commissioning of extremist terror.

The police (rather than the security service) should take the lead. A more aggressive use of police powers is needed, to wind in and disrupt those identified as peddling extremism or who have fallen under its influence. Police should intervene as soon as extremist behaviour becomes apparent, to the full extent allowed by the law, rather than just watching and waiting for terrorism to happen. People should be charged whenever there is evidence, even if protection of intelligence methods means it is unlikely things will progress to trial.

Only thus will the threat of home-grown extremism be driven to ground, to the true benefit of a multi-cultural Britain.

Mark Campbell-Roddis
Dunblane, Perthshire

SIR – So far, so idealistic – and indeed impressive. But the millions out on French streets on Sunday were not the ones with the Kalashnikovs and rocket-launchers.

Edward Thomas
Eastbourne, East Sussex

SIR – Britain is not equipped, culturally, to arm the police. In all countries where police are armed as a matter of course, people join them knowing they have to carry a firearm, and to use it, having been exposed to police sidearms in public from the earliest age. In Britain, applicants must apply to be a firearms officer, which calls into question their mindset.

When someone makes an application to carry the means to kill people, he or she is automatically suspect.

Stuart Cherry
Cheltenham, Gloucestershire

SIR – In the same week that the tragic death of 17 French people brought 40 of the world’s leaders on to the streets in a sign of unity against terrorism, more than 2,000 people were slaughtered by terrorists in Nigeria. And the world’s response?

Paul Francis
London W8

SIR – Mike Mahoney is wrong. You do not show respect for other people if you ridicule their beliefs. Sensible discussion is another matter, but it may make no difference to their beliefs, and mockery will probably strengthen them.

Ronald Phillipson
Brentwood, Essex

SIR – I have Muslim neighbours with whom I live in peace. I wouldn’t think of ridiculing their faith, as they wouldn’t mine, so what is Charlie Hebdo about?

There’s a difference between free speech and malicious speech.

Doreen Whittaker
Ilford, Essex

SIR – We will not defeat extremism without the wholehearted backing of the peace-loving Muslim majority in Britain. How can we realistically expect this support while we continue to ridicule their beliefs?

Anthony Haslam
Farnham, Surrey

SIR – Perhaps this is the time for the French to look in the mirror and reflect upon the way they treat the Jewish population in their country.

For different religions to live side by side there has to be tolerance and respect. Free speech is all very well, but mockery just lights the blue touch-paper and then everyone gets burnt.

Frances Henton
Salisbury, Wiltshire

SIR – It’s a bit rich of David Cameron to say of the Paris atrocities: “We must never allow the values that we hold dear – of democracy, of freedom of speech – to be damaged by these terrorists”.

If Charlie Hebdo had existed in Britain, it would have been shut down years ago and its editor charged with hate crimes.

Virginia Price Evans
Whitland, Carmarthenshire

SIR – Who can I offend and when? It was obviously not OK for Brenda Leyland to send offensive messages to the McCanns. It was not OK for Jessica Laney to be taunted to death by internet trolls.

Is it OK for me to offend black people, Jews, or immigrants, or is that racist? What about non-immigrant, non-religious white people – can I offend them?

Caroline Shaw
Painswick, Gloucestershire

SIR – Mr Cameron says: “Nothing we want to achieve will be possible unless we eliminate our deficit and deal with our debts.”

The events in Paris this last week should have reminded him he needs to assess the values of this nation’s foundational beliefs. They are more important than sound public finances.

Jonathan Longstaff
Woodford Green, Essex

SIR – The Joint Terrorism Analysis Centre says that the current terror threat is amber, that is, severe with an attack likely. Sir Bernard Hogan-Howe, the Metropolitan Police Commissioner, says an attack is possible but unlikely (two levels below the JTAC advice). I want to live near to him.

W K Wood
Bolton, Lancashire

Miliband’s NHS campaign focus may backfire

SIR – If it is Ed Miliband’s intention to “weaponise” the NHS and gain political advantage during the next few months, he may have to be careful that the fire is not turned on him – particularly given the abysmal record of the ruling Labour Party in Wales in running the NHS there.

Paul Pritz
Wolverhampton, Staffordshire

SIR – Andy Burham, the shadow health secretary, doesn’t believe in top-down reorganisation of the NHS. But isn’t he advocating exactly that when he talks about combining the social-care and NHS budgets?

Jonathan Midgley
Edinburgh

SIR – The Labour Party needs to be reminded of its previous attempts to interfere with the NHS.

While I was a GP manager the party ended fundholding – a scheme that had brought untold benefits to patients of my practice. Then Labour changed the GP contract to remove the onus on doctors to offer out-of-hours cover. This has led to a failed NHS out-of-hours service, a failed NHS Direct and increased problems for A&E. Will Mr Miliband and his party not listen and learn?

Nick Hawksley
Ashill, Somerset

SIR – It is surprising that Labour should want to make the NHS a major issue in the general election campaign.

It was the decision of the last Labour government to prioritise non-medical targets in hospitals that led to the premature deaths of more than 1,000 patients in Mid-Staffordshire.

John Gordon
Kingsbridge, Devon

Milking water profits

(Getty)

SIR – You report that milk is cheaper than bottled water. It is perhaps more interesting that bottled water is more expensive than milk.

Water prices regularly exceed £1.50 a litre. It costs more than petrol, which is transported halfway round the world, refined, and then taxed to the hilt.

Cliff Billington
Nottingham

Bumf harvest

SIR – I have just received, from the Department of Environment, Food and Rural Affairs, the sixth variant of the farmer’s guide to the new agricultural policy schemes. This version states that “the European Commission hasn’t finished all the guidance”, so presumably there is another document to come.

The weight of my paperwork so far is 1lb 14oz. With about 300,000 agricultural holdings in Britain, 250 tons of documents must have been distributed, outlining a scheme that has still not been finalised.

John Butler
Rowde, Wiltshire

Smart but inaudible

SIR – My ability to enjoy quality television sound using Bluetooth headphones and subtitles is under threat with the rise of the smart television.

Neither Sky nor Amazon provides subtitles and Netflix’s subtitles are poor.

Dr A E Hanwell
York

Same-sex weddings

SIR – My partner and I have converted our nine-year civil partnership into a marriage. We did not hold another celebration as we are awaiting the opportunity for a marriage ceremony in England’s established Church.

I understand the right of many religious organisations to claim exemption from carrying out same-sex marriage ceremonies, but it is a disgrace that the Church of England is allowed to do so.

Kevin Liles
Southampton

Queuing USA

SIR – As an American, Suzi LeVine is well placed to comment on queuing for ski lifts. More than 20 years ago, my wife and I learnt to ski in eastern Europe, enduring scrums for the lift every time. We even had to bribe the lift operator.

We then spent a week at the ski resort at Burke Mountain, Vermont. In America, everybody had to “get in line” – and it worked perfectly. Why Europeans find it so hard to organise a fair system of queuing is a mystery.

Robert Parker
Nottingham

On the rack

SIR – It’s not just the cost of commuting. I, a 54-year-old woman, count myself lucky to sit in the luggage rack occasionally rather than stand in the morning rush on the London train.

Jacqueline Heywood
Oxted, Surrey

The dangers to children of playing rugby

SIR – As Allyson Pollock notes, rugby is associated with rare but potentially catastrophic injuries, notably to the head and spinal cord.

No data exist to quantify the risk to schoolchildren playing rugby in Britain. Professor Pollock’s study of 470 school-age children in five Scottish schools found that there were 11 “time-loss” injuries – requiring an absence from the sport – per 1,000 hours of rugby played. She estimated that a “typical schoolboy” plays approximately 15 hours of rugby each year.

Many schoolchildren will feel disinclined to play rugby, and this should be respected. But others will relish the challenge that rugby offers and this, too, deserves respect.

Rugby authorities ought to commit themselves to a systematic reporting system for all injuries to children. This would set out the true risks and identify ways in which they can be mitigated, allowing parents and young people to make informed decisions about the sport.

Dr Adam Irwin
London SW1

 

 

Globe and Mail:

Michael Bell

To respond to terror, we must distinguish its three varieties

Irish Times:

Sir, – Surely it is proper, certainly no less than polite, to respect a person’s right to believe whatever they want – so long as that belief does no harm to others. Whether we should respect the belief itself is quite another matter. If some people wish to, and are free to, perpetrate fairy tales in the guise of truth, why should not others be equally free to ridicule those fairy tales? The plain fact is – and open any history book or today’s paper to confirm this – religion breeds zealots, and zealots breed bloodshed. The sooner the concept of blasphemy is discarded, the sooner we might laugh fanatics into their grave. But I don’t think it will happen soon, people being as they are. – Yours, etc,

HENRY van RAAT,

Beara,

Cork.

Sir, – I abhor the terrorism which has shattered the lives of people in Paris and previously throughout the world. Equally I am in wholehearted agreement with the finely balanced, non-confrontational views of both Edward Horgan and Richard Coffey (January 10th). Freedom of expression, yes; but freedom to provoke ill-feeling or insult, no. – Yours, etc,

DERMOT ASHMORE,

Elliac,

France.

Sir, – According to article 44.1 of the Constitution, “the State acknowledges that the homage of public worship is due to Almighty God. It shall hold His Name in reverence, and shall respect and honour religion”.

This clause does not differ at all from the fundamental tenet of Islam, namely, submission to Allah (the Arabic word for “God”).

If you accept article 44.1, you cannot logically object to the ban on blasphemy (article 40.6.1.i). – Yours, etc,

JOHN A MURPHY,

Cork.

Sir, – Una Mullally displays jaw-dropping double standards in her recent column (“Why a referendum on blasphemy is long overdue”, Opinion & Analysis, January 12th). She argues in favour of freedom of expression and correctly says that “sacred cows are there to be slaughtered”; however she clearly doesn’t believe that freedom of expression should apply to the upcoming referendum on same-sex marriage, judging by her recent columns on that issue.

For example, in January of last year she used your pages to call for the establishment of a body which would monitor the views expressed by those opposed to same-sex marriage, saying that “there is a need for an independent homophobia watchdog to monitor the inevitable destructive rhetoric that will colour one side of the debate” (“Homophobia watchdog needed before marriage equality referendum”, Opinion & Analysis, January 20th). She went on to say that to oppose same-sex marriage publicly, in any terms whatsoever, was to inflict “psychological trauma” on gay people. So clearly, the establishment of such a “watchdog” would lead to all opposition to same-sex marriage being removed from the airwaves.

How do such sentiments accord with her views on freedom of expression? Is it the case that only those views with which Ms Mullaly agrees are worthy of protection? – Yours, etc,

THOMAS RYAN,

Dublin 6W.

Sir, – Una Mullally’s article of January 12th is the first I’ve read since the Charlie Hebdo shootings that promotes the curtailment of free speech.

The author draws an unhelpful distinction between “freedom of expression” and “free speech” and takes solace from the fact that we don’t live in the US with an equivalent to their first amendment. Drawing the comparison to the United States should only be relevant to the extent that the American free speech provision is one to which we should aspire.

How is it justifiable, as Ms Mullally does, to call for freedom of speech for the ideas which you agree with and to insist on “hate speech” for those that you don’t? Or the position that the Catholic faith should be “knocked off its pedestal” but that “for some to criticise Islam, their enthusiasm is born from their own intolerance ”?

It’s clear that not only is the author comfortable to decide on what can and can’t be said, she also confidently intuits the real motivation informing what certain individuals actually say; criticism of Islam, she perceives, is an act of bigotry which bears no resemblance to the criticism of other faiths.

The correct response to Charlie Hebdo shootings should be to promote free speech to the greatest extent possible and to “knock off their pedestals” the illiberal liberals who wish to control it. – Yours, etc,

BRIAN KITT

Kilmainham,

Dublin 8.

Sir, – I appreciate the point Una Mullally was trying to make in her column of January 12th, and I agree with much of what she said. But she glossed rather quickly over the distinction between “infringing freedom of expression” and “protecting from hate speech”.

In this debate I, like many others, find it difficult to see the difference: when people are attacked on religious grounds, it is in the name of “freedom of expression”, but if people are insulted because of their sexual orientation, social class or race, it is “hate speech” and must be banned and punished. Who decides the difference? Do not all people, regardless of race, sexual orientation or belief, deserve equal respect? What am I missing here? – Yours, etc,

LUISON LASSALA,

Milltown,

Dublin 6.

Sir, – If there is still freedom of speech in this country isn’t it about time our Government taxed it? – Yours, etc,

IVOR SHORTS,

Rathfarnham,

Dublin 16.

Sir, – Following last Sunday’s show of unity in France against terrorism and the demonstration of strength in numbers, could the newspapers and TV stations of Europe show a similar unity against real and implied threats by publishing cartoons from Charlie Hebdo on an agreed date?

I feel that self-censorship is already in place and we must fight this. Murderers cannot dictate what we read. – Yours, etc,

JOE ROONEY,

Clonskeagh,

Dublin 14.

Sir, – After condemning the terror attacks in Paris, Dr Ali Selim bravely stated that he would seek legal advice if any sources in the Irish media published, or republished, an insulting image of Muhammad (“Ali Selim urges media not to republish Charlie Hebdo cartoons”, January 7th). This responsible act should be welcomed rather than berated. If an Irish media source knows that there will be a measured response to the publication of an insulting satirical image then perhaps it will think before it prints. On the other hand, if a senior Irish Islamic scholar is seen to be stepping up to defend a deeply held religious position in the face of a worldwide outcry in defence of “democracy and free speech”, then fanatical elements will also have reason to refrain from knee-jerk reactions. The question we should all ask ourselves is, what kind of society could possibly emerge when people request free rein to knowingly incite other sections of their community? – Yours, etc,

RICHARD KIMBALL,

Menlo,

Galway.

Sir, – Your online report on the latest issue of Charlie Hebdo – which depicts an image of Muhammad on its cover – is illustrated not by the cartoon but by a photograph of the magazine’s staff.

Would not a blank space have been more appropriate? – Yours, etc,

Dr JOHN DOHERTY,

Stratford-upon-Avon,

Warwickshire.

Sir, – There is much talk and comment lately on the so-called “right to offend”. I have always thought of this as a rather strange notion. I preface my comments by saying that, of course, publications such as Charlie Hebdo have a right to publish anything that they see fit.

However, surely there can be no such thing as a “right to offend” since offence is fundamentally something that is taken rather than given. One can no more insist on a right to offend than one can insist on a “right to amuse”.

I am not merely being pedantic here. If we insist on Charlie Hebdo’s “right to offend”, I think that we are legitimising the view that some of their images are objectively and universally offensive. This is nonsense, as many people, presumably including some who happen to be Muslim, will find nothing offensive about any of the aforementioned images. If other people desire not to take offence at Charlie Hebdo, they have a simple solution – don’t read the magazine. This is surely a much easier solution than attempting to kill everyone from whom you take offence. Of course, in reality the killings had nothing to do with the offensiveness or lack thereof of some images. – Yours, etc,

JAMES CRUICKSHANK,

Headford,

Co Galway.

Sir, – May I express concern at your report of an agreement on defence co-operation between Ireland and the UK, due to be signed later this month (“Ireland and UK agree historic defence agreement”, January 12th). Currently, there is a deployment of eight Army personnel as part of a joint contingent under the umbrella of the Royal Irish Regiment in Mali.

The presence of Army personnel operating under British command might be construed as conferring approval of current British wars overseas and must be considered repugnant to Ireland’s policy of neutrality. The formal presence of Army personnel alongside British soldiers blurs the independence and sovereignty of the Army and sends out the message that Irish and British armies are under single command and the State is just a devolved British administration. It amounts to a surrender of sovereign control over the Defence Forces to a foreign army. Indeed, some may interpret the State’s involvement with British forces as a further sign of incremental Commonwealth re-entry.

The Army is not an imperial army. It was born out of the struggle for independence from British rule. It is an Army that has proudly and honourably served on peacekeeping missions under a UN mandate and 84 of her soldiers have given their lives on these missions.

Army soldiers have served wherever required in the world in a selfless and heroic manner for more than 50 years, not as a predatory army but as peacekeepers, acknowledged worldwide for their impartiality and professionalism and are a source of pride to Ireland. Their independence and sovereignty should not be compromised by formal associations with British or any other imperial military forces. – Yours, etc,

TOM COOPER,

Templeogue, Dublin 6W.

A chara, – Regarding Prof Ted Hurley’s call for newly qualified maths graduates to be offered a bonus to pursue teaching, perhaps a more appropriate incentive would be the prospect of a career as a maths teacher (“Call to pay maths graduates bonus to go into teaching”, January 11th).

Unfortunately the reality for most recently qualified maths teachers is that they face years of career uncertainty in casual, part-time employment in our schools, often looking at unemployment at the end of May each year.

As a result, many take their degrees and education qualifications to England or the Middle East where there are prospects of full-time, permanent employment.

Others, disillusioned with the lack of opportunity for full-time employment in education, have changed direction and moved towards careers in finance or technology.

I wonder if the University of Limerick, which is offering courses in order to upskill maths graduates to teaching qualification standards, has compiled any data regarding the success of its own education and maths graduates in obtaining full-time employment in Ireland. Likewise, does the Teaching Council have any data on the types of contracts being offered to the 5,000 teachers on its professional register who satisfy the subject criteria for maths?

Prof Hurley makes the point that while almost half of the maths and education graduates of NUIG who went into teaching got permanent positions in the UK, those who stayed in Ireland were in temporary or part-time posts.

Ireland is losing its maths and education graduates simply because their career prospects here are very poor. A €5,000 bonus is no substitute for a full-time secure position in a school. – Is mise,

NUALA FLANAGAN,

Firhouse,

Dublin 24.

Sir, – Could we please be clear on one crucial point regarding the likelihood of Syriza winning the upcoming Greek election? The possibility that a Syriza victory might lead to Greece exiting the euro zone (a “Grexit”) is being used as a threat to persuade voters to support the existing government, as Syriza would allegedly cause further economic disaster. The Germans are saying it; the EU is saying it; Taoiseach Enda Kenny is saying it. It seems only one party is not saying it – Syriza. Its leader, Alexis Tsipras, has consistently said that he wants to remain within the euro zone. But he also wants to redress the unnecessary hardship caused to Greece by the current austerity measures, which would mean renegotiating the terms of the bailout.

Mr Tsipras wants to assert Greek identity and self-determination. Nothing disloyal in that. The issue, as even Mr Kenny admits, is one for Greek voters, not for puppet-masters and scaremongers outside Greece who use untruths to secure a phoney result. The wider issue – whether the euro zone is stable or even valid – is not a priority with Greek voters. Charity (in Greek, philanthropy) begins in the home. – Yours, etc,

RICHARD PINE,

Perithia,

Corfu.

Sir, – “This is not the person that was my late father. It was not the Sean Doherty that represented the people of Roscommon”, asserts his daughter Rachel in Steven Carroll’s piece on the Doherty family’s reaction to last Sunday’s drama Charlie (“Sean Doherty’s daughter criticises ‘salacious’ drama”, January 12th).

I beg to differ.

While not doubting for one minute that Mr Doherty was a loving father and husband who entered public life to do good by the people of Roscommon, he, like many other good and intelligent men, left their high ideals behind during the Haughty years.

The programme was not about the life of Sean Doherty but about Charlie and those who supported the low standards in high places at the time.

His daughter reminds us that she was 12 at the time of the events depicted. Well I was older . Old enough to feel like I was living in a South American dictatorship without the sunshine.

Mr Doherty played his part in creating that environment, and while eventually outing his former leader, his late intervention does not erase the events, which are a matter of record, for which he will be remembered.

If his daughter wants a career in politics, she will have to get used to that fact and move on to achieve better things in her career. In that I wish her well. – Yours, etc,

BERNARD LYNCH,

Malahide, Co Dublin.

Sir, – Michael Canney (January 13th) seems to suggest that uprooting our current economic system is a good idea in the context of the global threat of human-made climate change. While we all have to do our part, sadly it is not small nations like Ireland, but rather big ones like China, Russia, India and the United States, that are producing the most significant carbon emissions, and that need to get their act together.

With that in mind, it makes little difference to the polar ice caps whether we in Ireland elect a responsible government that will continue to expand our economy, reduce unemployment, and restore the public finances to some semblance of sanity, or whether we squander our hard-won “stability” by electing a smorgasbord of Independents in the hope that such TDs might coalesce around some shared policies and competently run the country. – Yours, etc,

DAVID McGINN,

Sandymount, Dublin 4.

Sir, – In response to Austin Savage’s call (January 12th) on schools to teach children “chivalry and courtesy”, most teachers are too preoccupied with maintaining a semblance of control over pupils whose parents have failed to instil these values – which is why on class trips, especially on public transport, teachers will usually insist that children remain seated at all times! – Yours, etc,

ALAN EUSTACE,

Marino,

Dublin 9.

Irish Independent:

French leader Francois Hollande said Islam was not to blame for the 'Charlie Hebdo' attack
French leader Francois Hollande said Islam was not to blame for the ‘Charlie Hebdo’ attack

I applaud the admirable endurance of French citizens and Francois Hollande for distancing Islam from the atrocious attack on ‘Charlie Hebdo’. The French president’s statement is clear evidence of the triumph of ethics and mores over moral depravity.

  • Go To

The unjustified killing of innocent civilians, mass violence and restrictions on freedoms are reprehensible.

However, we should not conflate freedom of expression with satirising the Prophet of Islam, offending in the process the sacred beliefs of over a billion people.

The French Revolution took place to bring societal and political changes and unleash the ideals of freedom and equality.

Also, those who argue for the right to ridicule Islam should ask themselves whether it is right to satirise the Holocaust and question the number of those who perished at the hands of Nazis.

We should stand united and steadfast in the face of provocative acts from anyone, under any assumption. Despite our differences, we, human beings, cherish an open intellectual dialogue and mutual understanding and strive for a lasting and just peace.

Dr Munjed Farid Al Qutob

Amman, Jordan

 

States kill more than terrorists

After seeing the sad events in France recently, I have become very concerned at the coverage then, and since. As is usually the case with these events, there is a serious overreaction, and the important questions are never asked. Questions like “why did this happen?” and “what do we understand of our foreign policies?”

Britain and France have an appalling history in regards to the Middle East and elsewhere around the world. They have carved up the world map through history for their own interests, created divisions amongst communities (especially in Palestine), and on top of this, are two of the biggest arms sellers on Earth.

As Noam Chomsky says, “if you want to reduce terrorism in the world, then we should stop participating in it”. The idea that terrorism is only committed by a few people with small arms and explosives is biased. Armies, or state terror, kill far more civilians than a few fanatics ever will. You’ve only got to look at Israel, and its recent slaughter of over 2,000 people in Gaza to see this.

Why are the words extremism and fundamentalism only ever used against Muslims?

We should all scrutinise our military, and how our government’s policies have a devastating effect on other nations around the world. Then, perhaps, things will start getting safer for everyone.

Colin Crilly

London, UK

 

No tax on free speech – yet

If there is still free speech in this country, isn’t it about time our Government taxed it?

Ivor Shorts

Rathfarnham, Dublin 16

 

Paris attacks a warning to us all

Most commentators miss the big picture. ‘Charlie Hebdo’ was just the rationale for this attack on our freedoms by radical Muslims, intent on destroying our way of life and replacing it with a Caliphate.

Whether it’s a cartoon, a Jewish supermarket, men at prayer, a video, a Coptic church, people waiting for a tram or running a marathon, there will always be a reason for Islamic terrorists to resort to violence and murder.

The target is incidental to the act. Just as Islam means “submission,” the focus of radical Islam is the submission of the rest of society to Islam.

This should be a warning to Ireland.

Len Bennett

Montreal, Quebec, Canada

 

Blasphemy and the Constitution

If the following content were to be removed from the Constitution, it might serve the Irish people better:

(i) The references to God in the preamble; (ii) The reference to God in Article 6 (All powers of government, legislative, executive and judicial, derive, under God, from the people…); (iii) Article 40.6.1.i (Blasphemy is a criminal offence); (iv) Article 40.3.3 (Acknowledging the right to life of the unborn); (v) Article 41.2 (The special position of the woman’s life within the home), which discriminates against fathers.

Furthermore, swearing on the bible could be replaced with the question “As a fellow human being, do you swear to tell the truth … etc.” Human fellowship is as powerful as the worship of any god, as was shown in Paris last week.

Alison Hackett

Dun Laoghaire, Co Dublin

According to Article 44. 1 of the Constitution, “the State acknowledges that the homage of public worship is due to Almighty God. It shall hold His Name in reverence, and shall respect and honour religion.”

This clause does not differ at all from the fundamental tenet of Islam, namely, submission to Allah ( the Arabic word for “God”).

If you accept Art. 44.1, you cannot logically object to the ban on blasphemy (Art.40.6.1.i).

John A Murphy

Douglas Road, Cork

 

From flour bags to silk shirts

As the RTE drama ‘Charlie” mentions Charles Haughey’s taxpayer-funded Charvet shirts, perhaps someone might be kind enough to donate one to the County Sligo Museum – that is if they have not all been discarded.

I mention Sligo because of its long association with the Pollexfen flour milling family, the ancestors of “Willy and Lily and Lollie” Yeats.

Pollexfen’s “Pride of the West” flour was used in every house throughout Connacht – didn’t CJ once claim to be a Mayo man?

At the Sligo Museum, CJ’s Charvet shirt could be displayed alongside a linen flour bag of the type used by Pollexfen’s flour mills – out of which the people of rural Ireland hand-made their shirts, sheets and pillow cases.

The contrast between the old and new Ireland will indeed be of historic importance to future generations.

What a boast for our generation: “We went from flour bags to silk shirts!”

Declan Foley

Berwick, Australia

 

Stephanie’s goal was no sham

Ivan Yates has said on radio that there is no way Stephanie Roche deserved to win the Puskas Goal of the Year Award and described her inclusion in the final three as “sham amateurism”.

If Ivan still had a bookie shop open, I would make a bet with him that if Stephanie moves to England, it is more likely to be as a professional footballer than it would be to declare herself bankrupt!

Seamus McLoughlin

Keshcarrigan, Co Leitrim

 

Tribunal process is in tatters

On March 29, 2011, you published a letter of mine arguing that establishing Tribunals to inquire “into certain matters” caused untold reputational damage to the parties being investigated.

I made the point that allegations could be made against anyone and the impugned party could have to wait months or even years to counter such allegations.

All this in the full glare of the media – and the media loved it!

I further argued that where criminal behaviour is suspected, only the normal criminal investigative procedure should be initiated together with the evidential burden that goes with such investigation.

Almost four years on, flowing from a recent Supreme Court decision, the Mahon/Flood Tribunal is now redacting “findings of fact” against certain parties and is paying their Tribunal-related costs.

And there are probably more redactions to come.

In my opinion, the conclusion that, after hundreds of millions in tax punts and euro, the entire Tribunal process in these matters is now in tatters is inescapable.

Innate humility would normally prevent me from saying “I told you so”. Not this time.

Larry Dunne

Rosslare Harbour, Co Wexford

Irish Independent

Shopping

January 13, 2015

13 January 2015 Shoping

Mary a little better though she could manage to get up for breakfast. Gout fading post office M&S, Tesco and Co op.

Obituary:

Frank Atkinson – obituary

Frank Atkinson was the creator of the Beamish Museum, in Co Durham, which provides the sights, sounds and smells of yesteryear

Frank Atkinson the man who created the world-famous Beamish Open Air Museum in County Durham

Frank Atkinson the man who created the world-famous Beamish Open Air Museum in County Durham Photo: North News / NNP

Frank Atkinson, who has died aged 90, was chief creator of the Beamish Museum in Co Durham and regarded as the father of the industrial museum movement.

Atkinson was working as curator of the Bowes Museum at Barnard Castle in the 1950s when, inspired by open-air museums he had visited in Scandinavia, he came up with the idea of creating a museum of “living history” that would preserve the way of life, customs, and speech patterns of the North East of England at a time when the region’s traditional industries – coal, shipbuilding and steel mills – were beginning to disappear, along with the communities which served them.

Convinced that there was an urgent need to preserve not only household objects but also everything from complete buildings to industrial structures before they disappeared, in the 1960s he began collecting on a grand scale.

A 15-ton steamroller was bought for £150 from Northumberland county council; a J21 locomotive built in Gateshead in 1889 was bought for £1,200; and when Atkinson discovered that Rowley Station near Consett in Co Durham (a classic example of a small North Eastern Railway company station) was awaiting demolition, he arranged to rent it at £10 a year until it could be dismantled and rebuilt. A cast-iron gents’ lavatory from Willington Quay in North Tyneside was also taken down and stored.

Meanwhile, members of the public were invited to ransack their attics. “You offer, we collect” was the slogan; and contributions, ranging from miners’ tin boxes to turn-of-the-century dental equipment, and from 19th-century adverts to hand-sewn baby clothes and old uniforms, poured in. Eventually the collection spilt out of the Bowes Museum attics into about 30 huts and hangars at the old Army camp at Brancepeth.

In 1966 a working party was established to examine the concept of the museum, whose entrance feature was to be Tiny Tim (a huge 1883 steam-powered hammer which had been used to forge ships’ rudder posts). Beamish Hall, on a 300-acre site eight miles south-west of Newcastle upon Tyne, was soon identified as a suitable location.

The Friends of Beamish was set up in 1967, and in 1970 Atkinson left the Bowes Museum to become director of the new museum — the first to be financed and administered by a consortium of county councils (Cleveland, Durham, Northumberland and Tyne & Wear).

A preliminary exhibition called Museum in the Making, which opened in 1971, set an instant record by attracting a two-hour queue on its opening day, and 50,000 people came to visit over 21 weekends. The museum began with just two members of staff, and until 1972 displays were confined to the hall; but as open-air aspects of the museum became accessible, Atkinson developed new techniques of interactive, entertaining and participatory display which have been influential on older museums.

Displays included a whole town constructed from the buildings that had been dismantled and re-erected, with terraced housing, shops, a pub, a park, a school, a newspaper office, a bank and a row of houses where professional people would have lived. There was also a drift mine, a farm with animals, a steam railway and trams to take visitors round the attractions.

A tram stops on an Edwardian street at the unique Beamish Open Air Museum (NNP)

However, while the exhibits were fascinating in themselves, it was the first-person interpreters (many of them local people who had experienced the life they described) who brought history to life. “Visitors to the museum can follow a coal miner into the eerie blackness of a 1913 drift mine; wait in a prim Victorian parlour to be called upstairs to a scary cast-iron dental chair flanked by a foot-pedal-powered drill; sample freshly baked bread in the kitchen of a miner’s cottage; watch cheese being made at the Home Farm; or shop for tea, treacle or fancy bloomers at the cooperative store,” remarked an American visitor who recommended a day at the Beamish as an antidote to “castle burnout”.

But, as Atkinson explained: “Beamish was established mainly to give confidence to the people of north-east England themselves. They tended to have a chip on their shoulder about their past, proud of it and yet feeling that it was undervalued. The museum was for them. Tourism didn’t exist up there when we first planned it.”

By 1986 the Beamish had been named British Museum of the Year. In 1987, the year Atkinson retired, it became European Museum of the Year. Today it attracts more than 350,000 visitors annually.

The son of a plumber and an infant schoolteacher, Frank Atkinson was born near Barnsley on April 13 1924 and began building up his own small museum of odds and ends as a boy. Aged 10 he took up fossil collecting and became the youngest member of the Museum of Barnsley Naturalist and Scientific Society.

A 1940s farm at the museum (NNP)

He was educated at Barnsley Grammar School, where he decided on a museum career, but after taking a Science degree at Sheffield University he initially worked at a coking plant, spending his weekends volunteering at the Wakefield Museum and Art Gallery. He eventually got a job there and became, aged 25, the country’s youngest museum director. Atkinson went on to direct the Halifax Museums before his appointment as curator of the Bowes Museum in 1958.

After retiring from the Beamish Museum, he worked with the Thomas Bewick Birthplace Trust and as a member of the (now disbanded) national Museums and Galleries Commission.

Atkinson published an autobiography, The Man Who Made Beamish, in 1999 and wrote several books about the history and traditions of the North East, including Victorian Britain: The North East (1989) and Life and Tradition in Northumberland and Durham (2001), in which gave delightful accounts of such traditional pastimes as pigeon fancying and leek growing.

He was appointed CBE in 1995.

In 1953 Frank Atkinson married Joan Pierson, who survives him with their three sons.

Frank Atkinson, born April 13 1924, died December 30 2014

Guardian:

Andrew Parker, Director General of MI5
Andrew Parker, Director General of MI5. Photograph: AP

Andrew Parker, head of MI5, used his 8 January speech after the Paris attacks to reinforce the agencies’ case for wide-ranging surveillance capabilities (Report, 10 January). This argument is driven by factors both technological – “we can collect everything so we shall” – and political: ministers and agencies fear they might miss somebody as they search for those who might threaten security.

But there is no evidence that mass surveillance will do any good. Parker’s speech gave examples where successful interception of communications led to convictions but both referred to forensic analysis of communications of people after their arrest; neither referred to bulk collection enabling prevention. Lee Rigby’s killers and the Kouachi brothers in France were known to the security agencies, and therefore their communications could be intercepted on the basis of targeting and warrants. But they were not high enough up the list of agency priorities for more intrusive surveillance and their crimes were not prevented. To use these as evidence to support an argument for yet more surveillance powers is nonsensical; the agencies are already overwhelmed with information and must make difficult judgments. The task is to improve their capacity to process and evaluate what they have in relation to known suspects.
Peter Gill
Honorary senior research fellow, University of Liverpool

• Over the past few days we have learnt that freedom has a price, which sometimes has to be paid in blood; and if the politicians manoeuvre us into a position where we are no longer paying the price, they may have manoeuvred us into a position where we are no longer free.
Barrie Dale
Wantage, Oxfordshire

• If the security services are given more powers to deal with terrorism, there is justifiable concern that these would be used to suppress legitimate dissent. In the past, special branch collaborated with employers’ organisations to compile a blacklist of trade-union activists; when the IRA was active, the security services used police spies to gain intelligence about its activities, and even used agents provocateurs to incite actions to discredit the organisation. Similar tactics were then used by police to infiltrate peaceful environmental protest groups; there is evidence that police spies encouraged activists to undertake illegal activities; one such spy is even suspected of planting an incendiary device. Recently this paper revealed evidence of the police trying to recruit informers on campuses to report on student activists, so there appears to be a continued abuse of power. Will a letter to the Guardian criticising the security services result in being placed on a police database?
Derrick Joad
Leeds

• Charlie Hebdo knew they were in danger; after all, they accepted police protection. But their actions have had tragic, and at least partly foreseeable, consequences, not only for themselves but for their protectors, all their families, and society at large. Ironically we may all now be subject to further limitations on our personal freedom and privacy as governments take the predictable opportunity to increase “security”.
Sarah Ashe
Modbury, Devon

• Congratulations to Simon Jenkins (8 January) for the wise advice not to overreact to the outrages in France. And right on cue, up pops Andrew Parker, the head of MI5, demanding “the assistance of companies which hold relevant data”.

No, Mr Nosey Parker, we are not going to let you have everyone’s data to sift through. Targeted surveillance is one thing. But bulk collection and retention of data is intolerable in a society that upholds the principles of liberty and freedom of speech, for which those poor French journalists paid with their lives.
Ron Mitchell
Coventry

• Over the past decade the fight against home-grown terror has been led by the security services, which (for fear of disclosing techniques and sources) have chosen to adopt an unsustainably labour-intensive approach of ongoing monitoring and surveillance, rather than direct confrontation and criminal prosecution of those identified in the commissioning of extremist terror.

A fundamental shift in approach is needed, whereby we have early police intervention, as soon as extremist behaviour becomes apparent, to the full extent allowed by the law, rather than just waiting for terrorism to happen.
Mark Campbell-Roddis
Dunblane, Perthshire

• I wonder if Edward Snowden is having second thoughts? After the recent multiple tragedies in France and the strong chance that they could happen in the UK and elsewhere, it must be obvious that trawling of electronic mail is necessary to try to prevent future jihadist plans.
Dr RV Dubberley
Bredwardine, Herefordshire

 

A man waves an Israeli flag during Benjamin Netanyahu's visit to Paris on 12 January 2015.
A man waves an Israeli flag during Benjamin Netanyahu’s visit to Paris on 12 January 2015. Photograph: Michel Euler/AP

Jonathan Freedland (First they came for the cartoonists, then they came for the Jews, 10 January), claims that Jews are targeted simply as “a kind of ultimate symbol of the west”, as a result of “a curious kink in the ultra-Islamist mindset”, or as the traditional scapegoat of European fascists.

But the Israeli government, with its new bill proposing to make Israel the nation-state of all the Jews in the world, and Jewish organisations such as the Board of Deputies, with their claim that the majority of Jews support Israel’s oppressive policies, contribute to the conflation of Jews with Israel and the subsequent rise in antisemitism and attacks on Jews.

To point this out is not of course to justify the conflation of Jews with Israel, just as it is wrong and unjustifiable to identify jihadis with Muslims. But the recent massacre in France of 16 people was purportedly carried out in the name of Islam; and the swift and powerful condemnation issued by Muslim groups all over the world will help to reduce anti-Muslim feeling and deter young Muslims from joining the jihadis.

This condemnation by Muslims contrasts strongly with the support given by most Jewish communal associations around the world to Israel’s massacre last summer of over 1,400 civilians, including over 500 children, in Gaza.

If world Jewish organisations were to learn from their Muslim counterparts and say loud and clear in response to Israeli atrocities “not in my name”, this could help to reduce antisemitism and make the recruitment of young Muslims by jihadis more difficult. Despite Freedland’s claim that Jews have “no control” over Israeli policies, such condemnation could also exert strong pressure on the Israeli government to stop its atrocities and enter into genuine peace negotiations with the Palestinian unity government.
Deborah Maccoby
Executive, Jews for Justice for Palestinians

Unison members at conference
Union members vote on a motion during the 2011 Unison delegate conference in Manchester. Photograph: Christopher Furlong/Getty Images

On the same day the government pledged to curb public-sector unions’ right to strike by introducing a 40% minimum vote threshold (Report, 10 January), it also pledged to cut the pay of health workers. This is no coincidence. The government fears strikes and knows that if it wasn’t for the unions and the right to strike there would be no barrier to moving millions of public-sector workers on to minimum-wage, zero-hour contracts. This government is out of touch. It believes that portraying unions as “the enemy within” will play well with the electorate. It could not have got this more wrong. There is more public support for unions today than there has been for many years. Especially when they take strike action to defend services and their members’ living conditions.

The public understands that working people need someone in their workplace who will stand between them and bullying managers. The hypocrisy of such attempts to further blunt the ability of unions to defend their members is not lost on the public. The same government that holds our pay down at 1%, while awarding itself 11%, unsurprisingly, doesn’t think voting thresholds should apply to it. If it were to apply a 40% threshold, then this government would not be in office. Once again the Tory-led coalition has one weapon: divide and rule. It blames migrants, people on benefits, public-sector workers and now trade unionists. We have four months to ensure that this government of class privilege is driven from office.
John McDonnell MP, Ronnie Draper General secretary, Bakers’, Food & Allied Workers Union, Billy Hayes General secretary, Communication Workers Union, Sean Vernell & Jane Aitchison Unite the Resistance, Ian Hodson President, Bakers’, Food & Allied Workers Union

• The principle that an important vote affecting the ordinary functioning of society should require the support of at least 40% of those eligible to vote seems fair enough – provided it is applied evenly; ie not only to unions, but also to parliamentary candidates and to parties seeking to share in governmental power. If unions are to be bludgeoned with this new rule, then any party which has not secured both 40% of seats in the Commons and the votes of 40% of the total electorate should be automatically denied access to the government benches.
Lawrence Buckley
Crieff, Perthshire

Depressed man
‘The treatment of depression involves antidepressants that help correct the underlying biochemical abnormality.’ Photograph: Garo/Phanie/REX

Depression is not an allergic reaction (Is depression a kind of allergic reaction?, G2, 5 January). Allergic reactions are appropriate immune responses against foreign materials. An autoimmune process may underlie some cases of depression, though we do not know how much of a role inflammation plays. Anti-inflammatory drugs have so far not yielded promising results in preliminary trials. The role of autoimmune inflammation in stand-alone depression is far from conclusive (Anti-inflammatory drugs ‘could fight depression’, 20 December). We know that depression is associated with impaired serotonergic and noradrenergic neurotransmission which impairs the brain’s ability to form new neural networks. The treatment of depression involves antidepressants that help correct the underlying biochemical abnormality. Adherence to medication regimens from your doctor is therefore important. Psychological and social intervention is also important: helping people make sense of their problems and devise strategies to overcome them. Cognitive behavioural approaches help retrain previously maladaptive ways of thinking. Further research into the neurobiological basis of mental disorders is needed. However effective psychological and social support is also needed.
Dr KD Jethwa
Nottingham University Hospitals NHS Trust

• Research has now shown that competitiveness and self-focused achievements operate through different brain systems than those for concern for others and altruistic motives. Indeed stimulating one motivational system can tone down the other. Understanding these basic facts about the human brain is essential if we are to move towards a more just and moral society. Basically if you overdrive the competitive system, focusing on high rewards which give a dopamine rush (such as bankers’ bonuses) you risk toning down altruistic motivation systems.

Some wealthy people are philanthropists, but many are not and don’t see the problem in taking a massive share of available resources because they’re locked into a competitive, self-focused (brain) system. In the case of politics, too, if people focus on developing arguments to destroy the arguments of others (rather than promote the good) they risk toning down their altruistic motivational systems. Individuals caught up in these basic motives systems can struggle to emotionally connect with the suffering of others. The problem for politicians is that audiences know whether they are presenting their arguments simply to beat their opponents, or actually to create good. Tricky, given the brain that evolution has given us.
Professor Paul Gilbert
Mental Health Research Unit, Derbyshire Healthcare NHS Foundation Trust

• Three cheers for Hilary Mantel’s dismissal of the simplistic concept of grief as an essentially linear process ( Review, 27 December). Many people’s experience suggests that Kübler-Ross’s “stages” of grief are rather aspects of grief, that may be experienced in different orders and different combinations. Indeed the co-existence of separate, and often conflicting, emotions is a part of what makes grief difficult to describe. For some people, it is like being in a small craft on a large ocean: sometimes there are calm waters and blue skies; on other days great grey clouds exclude all light. And occasionally it seems that terrible whirlpools are going to suck the sufferer down into extinction. Insisting that there is a “grieving process” and that at any one time any given sufferer will be at a certain stage and progressing towards the next is entirely counterproductive.
PB Alldred
Leverburgh, Isle of Harris

Memorial to Yvonne Fletcher
Memorial to British police officer Yvonne Fletcher, who was shot dead outside the Libyan Embassy in London in 1984. Photograph: John D Mchugh/AP

I have been campaigning for over 30 years for justice for Yvonne Fletcher, who was shot and killed outside the Libyan embassy in 1984 (The 30-year rule documents they don’t want you to see, 7 January). I was with Yvonne when she was shot and my words were the last she heard. Although some papers were released last year, I am especially interested in the report by Anthony Duff, who was ordered by Margaret Thatcher to hold an investigation into the failings of GCHQ, among others, in the death of Yvonne. I understand this report is highly critical of MI5 etc and has been withheld from public view. This document would prove, beyond doubt, that my request for an inquiry into the death of Yvonne and the various roles played by several government departments should be allowed. My repeated requests to date have all been refused. I wonder why?
John Murray
London

 

 

Independent:

The murder of the Charlie Hebdo journalists was shocking and repulsive, and has rightly been condemned. Nevertheless, it is undesirable that this tragedy should be elevated into a heroic defence of freedom of speech.

Such freedom is a privilege which must be exercised responsibly. It is not an absolute human right. The law of civilised nations does not protect defamation, plagiarism, blackmail, harassment and other forms of bullying. There has to be a sense of balance. It is legitimate to lampoon living public figures such as politicians and celebrities for their politics and lifestyle. It is also legitimate to criticise religious leaders for extreme beliefs, pomp and ostentation and perhaps, above all, for child abuse.

This is not the same as lampooning the founders of Islam and Christianity and other world religions. It is simply an insult to millions of sincere devotees, the majority of whom are totally opposed to fanatical terrorism.

All newspapers write about what they think their own audience wish to read. The journalists of Charlie Hebdo chose to write for self-proclaimed intellectuals who believe that their superiority justifies insult of lesser mortals who are seen (by them) as uneducated or unsophisticated. It is, in the case of the particular cartoons, the journalism of the snigger and the sneer.

The murder of the journalists is deplorable, but it is not appropriate to canonise them as martyrs to the cause of free speech.

Paul Honigmann
Beaconsfield, Buckinghamshire

 

It was sadly inevitable that someone would write suggesting that the journalists at Charlie Hebdo brought it on themselves, and that someone turns out to be Daniel Emlyn-Jones: “These writers should have known better than to insult Islam” (Letters, 9 January). Just like those rape victims, no doubt, who should never have gone out in their short skirts. What does Mr Emlyn-Jones expect us all to do? Censor ourselves and circumscribe our everyday freedoms lest some maniac feels justified in committing an outrage against us?

Duncan Torr
Maidstone, Kent

 

Not only was this latest carnage in Paris a brutal attack on freedom of expression in France, it was also an attack against our fundamental democratic values. There is absolutely nothing that can justify such cowardly and callous attack.

The military-like precision, extensive weaponry deployed and tragic targeting of pre-selected victims (where terrorists apparently knew the time of the editorial meeting at Charlie Hebdo) is alarmingly ominous – necessitating that we in Britain adopt a far more assertive stance against militant Islamism in the UK.

This involves more material and communal support for our intelligence services and the Counter Terrorism Command at the Metropolitan Police (SO15). The Home Secretary’s recent, courageous measures to counter British “jihadists” need to be applauded and espoused as the national minimum in our legal armoury.

For their part, British Islamic institutions are still woefully complacent, offering at best no more than rhetoric and well-rehearsed bouts of condemnation. They need to do much better in countering the pernicious ideology of radical Islamism, reinforcing on young impressionable Muslim minds that the security of this country is paramount – and instilling unmitigated pride in our British values and national institutions.

Dr Lu’ayy Minwer Al Rimawi
Peterborough

 

Charlie Hebdo took the hit because others in Europe were too cowed to satirise Islam. France took the hit because others in Europe were too craven to ban the burka. Now is the time for an emphatic display of solidarity to ensure our freedoms are upheld and no quarter is given to the evildoers.

Andrew Schofield
London SE17

 

The “Unity March” of one million people in Paris on Sunday reminded me of the Iraq anti-war march of two million in London and 15 million around the world in 2003. I wonder if the march in Paris would have been necessary if the 15 million had been listened to.

Chris Holden
London W4

 

The meaning of Auschwitz

Simmy Richman’s account of his trip to Auschwitz (8 January) reminds me of my own. In 1995, I boarded a bus at Victoria bus station and went overland (with some sea) to Krakow. Armed with a photocopy of the scrappily drawn map in Thomas Keneally’s Schindler’s Ark, I wanted to trace the Schindler story and did so before it became the tourist trail it is now.

I found traces of the ghetto wall in side streets, gardens and even a school playground. A local travel office offered a trip to Auschwitz, or Oswiecim, and yes, feeling uncomfortable in case I should be considered a ghoul, I booked it.

At the camp I met my guide, who explained that many guides had been Holocaust survivors, but as they were becoming too old, we in my group would have to put up with him, the mere child of a Holocaust survivor. The guide told us how important it was that people visited Auschwitz because the world must never forget what happened there in that period of history.

I think that Auschwitz stands as a symbol not of oppression, but of freedom. This camp symbolises what our world would have looked like if our forefathers had not given their all to defeat an evil, totalitarian ideology. It is a reminder of evil defeated.

Perhaps it might also encourage us to stand up against totalitarianism in all its forms whether political or claiming to be religious.

Eric Griffiths
Brampton, Cumbria

 

NHS: Listen to the accountants

During my time in the NHS, both as a surgeon and a trust chairman, the idea that privatising the service would bring the rigour and clarity to the NHS which its public service ethos lacked was popular with politicians

After two years managing Hinchingbrooke Hospital, Circle has backed out because of insufficient funding, an unprecedented clinical load, insufficient places to look after the elderly when they are ready to leave the acute wards, and the possibility of an unfavourable report from the Care Quality Commission.

Hundreds of hospital trusts throughout the UK face these problems but do not have the luxury of passing the buck to someone else.

Please let us have no more talk of privatising the NHS, but do let us listen to those Circle accountants who very succinctly state the reasons that the NHS is in trouble, and let us make the necessary changes to save the best and most cost-effective healthcare system in the world.

Andrew Johnson FRCS
Great Bourton, Oxfordshire

 

I live within the area served by Hinchingbrooke Hospital. I work with people who attend the hospital and my husband drives patients to attend clinics there.

Based on what people who use the hospital say to us, there is a general level of satisfaction and the most noticeable improvement since it moved from NHS management in 2012. We are therefore amazed at the recent news that Circle is withdrawing from its contract to run the hospital.

Prior to the Circle takeover, Hinchingbrooke was due to be closed and local people were desperately concerned that they would have to travel to Peterborough to receive care. My fear now is that the NHS will not take the hospital back into its management and we will be left with no local hospital. This will not only affect local residents but will affect the wider public because the hospital also provides accident and emergency services for frequent traffic accidents on the notorious A14, which passes nearby.

It’s incredibly sad and extremely frustrating that politics and electioneering cause situations in which we, the public, lose an excellent service, accessible care and committed staff. It’s happening in schools, colleges and councils, and is intended, I believe, to undermine the value of public services across the country. Hinchingbrooke Hospital is just the start. Where will it end?

Lizzie Clarke
Hilton, Cambridgeshire

 

Scotland’s very own ichthyosaur

Dr Steve Brusatte comments that the new type of ichthyosaur identified this week from a fossil found on the Isle of Skye means that “we’ve found a new species that was uniquely Scottish” (“First remains of new ‘shark-like reptile’ found on the Isle of Skye”, 12 January).

As the fossil dates from 170 million years ago I do think this is taking nationalism a step too far.

Phil Cole
Cardiff

 

Fish sauce for vegans

Mark Hix (10 January) offers a vegan recipe that includes fish sauce. As fish is apparently a vegetable, can he provide me with some seeds in order that I can grow my own?

Marianne Haylett
Barnet, Hertfordshire

Times:

Britain stands on the brink of a GM food revolution, but not everyone is pleased with the idea

Sir, Matt Ridley says that GM crops are “safer, cheaper and better for the environment than conventional crops” (“The argument’s over. Let GM crops flourish”, Opinion, Jan 12).

This will be news to farmers in the United States, who after 15 years of growing genetically modified crops are reported to be increasingly turning to non-GM seeds. This is because non-GM seeds are cheaper than GM, because non-GM crops fetch a higher price than GM crops, and because GM crops have led to resistant insects and weeds. As a result, according to the US department of agriculture, there has been an overall increase in pesticide use in the US since GM crops were introduced.

These inconvenient truths are why, if the EU changes go through this week, Scotland and Wales will be able to consolidate their non-GM position to protect the reputation of their farming industries, and maintain their ability to export uncontaminated food to other countries around the world.

In Scotland and Wales, farming plays a larger role in the economy than is the case in England, which is why English politicians have been able to indulge in the ideological promotion of GM crops, and to ignore the clear market signals, not just from other EU countries, but from the US, Russia, China and elsewhere, that getting a reputation for a GM-contaminated agriculture is not good for business.

Peter Melchett
Policy director, Soil Association

Sir, There is little doubt that GM crops need to be seriously considered as a route to producing healthy disease-resistant plants for human and animal consumption. For too long the idea of planting a crop in the soil and then bombarding it with chemicals to eliminate any potential pests or diseases had seemed an odd way to produce food. Using various chemicals — ending in – cides (fungicide, herbicides, insecticides — totally unbalances many natural processes that should take place in the soil. If the use of GM crops allows us to reduce inputs of pest and disease-control chemicals, this has to be a benefit.

However, I was concerned by the statement in your report (“Britain on brink of GM food revolution as minister says yes”, Jan 8) that maize, sugar and oilseed rape have been genetically engineered to withstand higher concentrations of herbicides. I presume this means that it will allow the grower to use larger amounts of herbicides to control weeds, thereby benefiting the crop, which would be impervious to the chemical.

The potential problem is that, while the crop will not be affected by the chemical, it will still be in or on the plant and at higher levels than previously, and therefore being passed into the food chain. The idea of genetic modification to increase resistance to the -cide chemicals may be one of the less attractive reasons to grow such crops.

The potential problem is that, while the crop will not be affected by the chemical, it will still be in or on the plant and at higher levels than previously, and therefore being passed into the food chain.

David Hudson
(Bioagronomist) Talke, Staffs.

Sir, Matt Ridley’s assumption that the debate is now over on GM crops must be challenged. While there may indisputably be benefits from this technology, these have to be carefully weighed against overtly commercial considerations that might in the long term not do the environment or people any favours at all. Further debate is most certainly needed.

Dr Robert Cassels
Whittlesford, Cambs

Sir, In the battle to produce more food while ensuring that we leave room for wildlife, it is crucial that we take the best from all farming methods to maintain a sustainable agricultural industry in the future.

Well-funded research is key to solving this dilemma. Research on our own Allerton Project farm has shown that reduced or no ploughing (no-till) can have overwhelming benefits to soil health and crop production. Less soil disturbance means more earthworms and soil fungi, and this in turn helps to improve soil structure — thus increasing its capacity to absorb water during heavy rainfall.

Importantly, carbon dioxide emissions are reduced by employing this system. This can all be achieved without necessarily having to use GM crops.

Dr Alastair Leake
Game & Wildlife Conservation Trust

My marksman badge for the Bren gun was mistaken for that of a squadron sergeant major – to my great satisfaction

Sir, As a young sapper I managed to acquire the marksman qualification with the Bren gun. With it went a badge of exactly the right shape, size and sleeve position to be mistaken for that of a squadron sergeant major (letters, Jan 9 & 12). It was an occasional pleasure to have a sergeant stand up and put his heels together for me — and to make my gracious response.

David Brancher

Abergavenny, Monmouthshire

Who, exactly, is responsible for the structure, format and style of broadcast general election debates?

Sir, Your report “Ukip is a ‘major party’ and can join television debates” (Jan 9) suggests that Ofcom’s consultation on major political parties would dictate the line-up of possible leaders’ debates before the election.

This is not the case. Ofcom has no role in determining the structure, format and style of any broadcast general election debates that might take place. This is up to broadcasters.

Ofcom’s role is to set rules governing the minimum allocation of party election broadcasts, a duty placed on Ofcom by parliament.

Tony Close

Director of content standards, Ofcom

A diagnosis of the condition is often the spur a child needs to boost his or her self-esteem

Sir, As a fully qualified teacher of dyslexic pupils over a long period, I believe that Dr Simon Gibbs’s study at Newcastle University (“Dyslexic label ‘harmful’ ”, Jan 8) has failed to recognise the effect of a diagnosis on the child himself/herself. Almost invariably it is the spur that the child needs to boost his or her self-esteem and efforts to learn, alongside appropriate literacy teaching, which can lead to rapid progress. “I was afraid I was stupid!” was the comment made by many who have since acquired degrees.

If teachers are failing dyslexic pupils it is down to ignorance and lack of training, not diagnosis.

Pamela Cheshire

Nottingham

Whitehall really ought to set a good example on prompt payments, as delays hurt small businesses

Sir, The government’s poor performance on prompt payment, as highlighted by the National Audit Office (report, Jan 8), could have a significant impact on the solvency of small businesses. In 2013-14, almost half of the insolvency practitioners working on corporate insolvencies reported working on a case where late payment was a major factor.

Late payment is one of the more frustrating causes of business failure: it has a disproportionate impact on smaller businesses. Ministers have been vocal about the need for prompt payment, and must set an example.

Giles Frampton

President of R3, the insolvency trade body

 

 

Telegraph:

To avoid the spread of fundamentalism, we have to improve the way we teach religion in schools

How to avoid more attacks from Islamists; protecting the Cornish pasty; funding cancer drugs; and superslow broadband.

Demonstrators gather in the Place de la Republique prior to the mass unity rally following the recent terrorist attacks in Paris, France

Demonstrators gather in the Place de la Republique prior to the mass unity rally following the recent terrorist attacks in Paris, France Photo: BERTRAND GUAY/AFP/Getty Images

SIR – One factor in the growth of Islamic fundamentalism in both France and Britain is the fact that religion is given such a low priority in the teaching curriculum and in the media.

As children are not being taught the difference between a rational and measured interpretation of sacred texts and a fundamentalist approach, it is not surprising that so many people are being snared by religious fundamentalism – and I include Christians in this.

As a vicar, I welcome involvement in my local secondary school, where I talk about the value of intelligent interpretation of scripture and respect for others, but I still feel the subject is not given the full importance it should be.

Let’s stop reducing religion to Songs of Praise and the early Sunday morning breakfast spot on local radio, and find a way to enable people to think intelligently about religion so that it becomes part of what it is to be British.

Rev Simon Tillotson
Whitstable, Kent

SIR – Max Jalil (Letters, January 10) draws a parallel between the cartoons in Jyllands-Posten and those depicting Jews in Thirties Germany. The former ridicule beliefs, the latter demonise people.

David Culm (Letters, January 10) states that we “should observe sensitivity and respect for other cultures’ beliefs”.

This is wrong. We should show respect for other people, not their beliefs. These should be fully open to criticism, ridicule and opposition; especially those that justify murder as a response to mockery.

Mike Mahoney
Tetbury, Gloucestershire

SIR – Watching the unity march of one million people in Paris yesterday reminded me of the Iraq anti-war march of one million people in London, and 10 million people in cities around the world, on February 15 2003. Would the march in Paris have been necessary if those 10 million people had been heeded?

Chris Holden
London W4

SIR – We did not see so many of the world’s leaders in London after the July 7 bombings, when many more people than those poor victims in Paris were murdered by Islamist extremists.

Were those deaths less tragic or are the French more patriotic?

Marion Armstrong
Peacehaven, East Sussex

Protecting the pasty

SIR – It is not only Cornish pasties that are threatened by the prospect of the free trade deal being promoted by the European Union and America (US could take slice of Cornish pasty market”, report, January 6). The proposed Transatlantic Trade and Investment Partnership would have huge consequences for national sovereignty across the board.

It would introduce sweeping new powers for American corporations to sue member states for introducing legislation that is detrimental to their profits. Instead of such disputes being dealt with in British courts, investor protection provisions under the partnership would mean such cases would be heard secretly outside our national legal system.

It is ironic that many in the business community who so bitterly resent the intrusion of Brussels in legislative matters seem so keen to lock us into a far-reaching trade deal that would so dramatically undermine Britain’s ability to regulate its own health, labour and environmental standards, let alone its baked goods.

Nick Dearden
Director, World Development Movement
London SW9

Same-sex marriage

SIR – Our Prime Minister states he is proudest of a piece of legislation (same-sex marriage) that, regardless of whether you support it or not, has lost his party huge support and could precipitate the disestablishment of the Church. This connection between Church and state is demonstrably important, set against the background of events in Paris.

It is difficult to decide whether the content of the remark or the fact he chose to make it is more damaging to him.

Is it really too late to install a new leader for the Conservative Party before the May election?

Mary Baxter
Ledbury, Herefordshire

TV hearing aids

SIR – My wife and I have a three-pronged answer to the challenge of following the mumbling on Broadchurch and Silent Witness (Letters, January 9): we wear Bluetooth earphones, turn on the subtitles, and we can both lip-read a little.

We always need a whisky before bedtime.

Michael A Mills
Chesham Bois, Buckinghamshire

SIR – And for which values will we British march?

Avril Newey
Earlsdon, Warwickshire

SIR – In all the comment about last week’s atrocities in Paris, there has been much said about the rights and wrongs of insulting Muslim beliefs, freedom of speech, why many feel we must stand with Charlie Hebdo, why others have some sympathy with the killers because of the provocation.

Extraordinarily, I have not heard or seen a single comment that questions the motive of a killer who enters a Jewish supermarket and kills random shoppers. It seems there is no need to explain. They were killed not because they said or did things that were blasphemous or provocative, but because they were probably Jews.

Is the world so inured to this that the question “Why?” is not even deemed necessary?

Frances Canning
Stanmore, Middlesex

SIR – During my teenage years, the law declared that I was entitled to read Lady Chatterley’s Lover. While I appreciated being given the choice, I have never chosen to exercise this particular right. Equally, there are times when I exercise my right to use the off button when certain comedians appear on television.

How much longer will I have any choice? When can I expect a visit from a politically correct jobsworth to inspect my bookshelves?

Polly Haselton
Horley, Surrey

Cancer Drugs Fund

SIR – We will soon learn the fate of more than 40 medicines available to English patients through the Cancer Drugs Fund. This special fund was intended to be a quick fix, required because the appraisal methods used by the National Institute for Health and Care Excellence, which reviews all NHS medicines, continue to prevent cancer patients from getting the medicines they need.

We know the fund is not a sustainable long-term answer. But while Nice remains broken, the fund and its medicines must exist so that cancer patients can access new, innovative treatments.

Medicines are vital in the fight against cancer. Fifty years ago, just one in five people with cancer had any hope of surviving for 10 years or more. Today, more than half will live for a decade.

The pharmaceutical industry, in partnership with British universities, charities, clinicians and the NHS, has developed and delivered these medical advances. But there is still more to do, and as cancer rates rise, doctors need to be able to prescribe the right medicines at the right time for the right patients.

We need fundamental reform of Nice. Its role must be to identify promising medicines that help patients lead longer and healthier lives, not to be the gatekeeper of the public purse. Nice must be granted the power to make the NHS a world leader in the use of the most innovative new medicines.

We know the NHS is under huge financial pressure. That is why, as an industry, we have committed to underwrite the spend on all medicines so that it cannot exceed a set amount. So far, we havne’t seen this deal result in greater uptake. We have already offered substantial NHS savings, and will continue to do so.

The NHS spends less than £1 in every £10 on medicine. Further cuts would be short-sighted and compromise patient care. Innovation in medicines is moving faster than the health system can deliver to patients. The NHS needs to catch up.

Jonathan Emms
President, Association of the British Pharmaceutical Industry
London SW1

If you think Switzerland is disorganised…

Avant-ski: flattening the snow before the men’s super combined slalom at Sochi last year

SIR – You report (telegraph.co.uk, January 7) that Suzi LeVine, the American ambassador to Switzerland, complained on social media that chaos reigns at Swiss ski lifts. She commented on Facebook: “We enjoyed a great day at Adelboden but I was so puzzled by the scrum heading to the lift (and the inefficiency in terms of how many people were on each lift).”

Has she ever been to Italy?

Dr John Doherty
Stratford-upon-Avon, Warwickshire

Helping the high street

SIR – You report that Tesco is to close 43 of its stores. We are keen to revive our high streets and independent retailers; surely, every little helps.

Dr Bertie Dockerill
Shildon, Co Durham

Superslow broadband in many rural areas
SIR – The Government’s claim that “We are now a superfast [broadband] nation” (advertisement, January 7) is a joke.

Here in rural Wiltshire, our maximum download speed is rarely above 2Mbps. In the evenings it often drops below 500Kbps, making our village website maintenance nigh impossible at that time.

We have been promised a high-speed connection, but not until late this year.

Andrew Blake
Shalbourne, Wiltshire

SIR – I live within a mile of our telephone exchange, in a large village 22 miles from Charing Cross; it’s not exactly the middle of nowhere. I am told that there is no prospect in the foreseeable future of replacing my very unreliable broadband connection with fibre-optic cable.

Why is the Government boasting about superfast broadband which I and so many others cannot have?

Norman Gerald
Radlett, Hertfordshire

SIR – I can assure those smug government ministers and civil servants in their ivory towers that our village internet connection is glacially slow, when it works at all, and there are no plans to upgrade the five miles of copper cable to the nearest exchange. It appears we live in two nations.

J B Grotrian
West Knoyle, Wiltshire

SIR – Here in the drab, dank, slow north, I have to share files by email with colleagues who live inside the M25 in a piecemeal fashion, and I am constantly obliged to remind them that we don’t all have the same super-duper broadband service.

Bill Thompson
Frankby, Wirral

Cut up the loyalty card

SIR – Brian Herbert (Letters, January 7) should be aware that detailed information about individuals and families is like gold-dust to marketing companies.

If he possesses a loyalty card he should cut it up, as they will know every intimate detail of his family’s life. That’s what loyalty cards are for: we are all just data.

Roy Hodgson
Northampton

 

Globe and Mail:

Jennifer Keesmaat

Greenbelts make cities more livable, affordable and transit-friendly

Irish Times:

Sir, – I read Joyce Hickey’s account of her overnight experience as a patient in an emergency department with a mixture of relief and despair (“A patient’s experience: my night on a hospital trolley”, January 10th). Relief that it is clearly not my department (based on the physical description), and relief that the staff described were doing Trojan work in heroic circumstances. Despair knowing that, while difficult to achieve, the solution is clear. Flow through emergency departments can, and must be, unblocked.

To suggest that improving primary care, or chronic disease management programmes, will take a huge part of the burden of unexpected, critical deterioration in health status is overly optimistic, and preventive public health, while also playing a part, takes decades, or even generations, to make its effects felt.

The description of the aggressive, belligerent person, interfering with the care and comfort of others, was very real to me and appears to be the widespread image of emergency departments, but it represents a relatively small proportion of the people present.

Much of the dysfunction in emergency departments is due to overcrowding by patients who do not fit the pejorative picture of the drunk, the worried-well, or the social misfit.

The patients who take up most space are those whose clinical problem cannot be dealt with in the community setting, and who require acute hospital admission to save their life, to prevent further deterioration of an already dangerous disease or injury, or simply to enable them to recover function. Because of lack of functional bed capacity, they must wait, in hope and increasing despair, for the bed to be vacated, cooled, cleaned, changed and declared available.

The average length of stay in Irish hospitals is about six days. But a small percentage of patients need longer. When they cannot leave for independent living, this creates a problem. For every week spent in an acute hospital bed, another person is denied access to that bed for their procedure or episode of illness. Some of these unfortunate long-stay patients, denied independence by their illness or injury, are young but most are elderly. And the elderly cohort is increasing dramatically in proportion. This problem will not simply go away.

The cost of keeping an elderly person in an acute hospital bed is significantly less than in a nursing home, speaking purely in financial terms. There is, however, a much greater personal cost in terms of sleep deprivation, loss of personal dignity and control, and loss of social networks.

Most people will cope with this for the average length of stay, which amounts to just under a week. On return home, they will need to recover from their episode of sleep deprivation, just as they would from jet lag after a trans-continental flight.

But the frail elderly person, often with some degree of dementia, will find this sleep deprivation to be even more terrifying than the fit young man with a leg fracture. They have no one with whom to develop a relationship, as the other patients constantly change and staff also change about. Those waiting – for three, four, or even more months – in these conditions to have central funding released to allow nursing home care might well be described as victims of institutional abuse. Remember that these people are also required to surrender 80 per cent of their liquid assets and continuing cash flow to obtain a “Fair Deal”.

We have been through a very lean period, and have now turned the fiscal corner, so to speak. We, as a nation, must invest in the infrastructure and running costs of the care of all our citizens.

The Minister for Public Expenditure and Reform has seen a marked reduction in staff numbers, a cut in salaries, an increase in hours worked and an increase in proportion returned to the exchequer, from those very staff who are trying desperately to work in these appalling conditions. Surely it is time for him to reform and to improve public expenditure?

Let us leave the blame-game behind us and work collectively and collaboratively to enable improvement in all parameters of health. But remember that bricks made without straw will crumble. – Yours, etc,

PATRICK K PLUNKETT,

Clinical Professor

of Emergency Medicine,

St James’s Hospital,

Dublin 8.

Sir, – I was obviously flattered that Prof Tom O’Dowd (January 10th) read my opinion piece “Australian emergency care the State’s best template” (January 8th). However I found many of his contentions not to accord with either the international evidence or my personal experience as a consultant in emergency medicine. Perhaps his continued use of the term “A&E” some 14 years after our departments were retitled emergency departments (EDs) suggests that he may not be fully familiar with the situation in EDs across the country in 2015.

I would expect an academic general practitioner to advocate strongly for investment in primary care; however the notion that better resourcing of GPs (and I agree that this is something that should be done in its own right) will have an impact on the current trolley crisis is misguided.

What Prof O’Dowd and your readers should appreciate is that the current crisis which is manifested in Ireland’s emergency departments is a problem of admitted hospital inpatients. These are patients who have had their emergency care and now require in-patient hospital care; therefore their care is beyond the capability of our colleagues in general practice (and indeed many have been referred to hospital by their GP).

The current trolley crisis has therefore little to do with the emergency departments – the plight of patients warehoused in our departments awaiting a hospital bed is simply a symptom of problems elsewhere in the healthcare system.

It is often stated as a fact that emergency medicine and primary care are interchangeable and that optimally resourcing primary care will obviate the need for emergency department care. The evidence contradicts this. Even where primary care-based alternatives with sophisticated diagnostics are provided, the number of patients attending local emergency departments inexorably rises. Australia is a particularly good example of this phenomenon.

The UK’s Primary Care Foundation report Primary Care and Emergency Departments published in 2010 suggests that 10-30 per cent of patients attending emergency departments could be treated in primary care, a figure which is far lower than the figure regularly trotted out.

Ironically, many of us working in Ireland’s emergency departments recognise that some of these patients are actually referred to emergency departments by our primary care colleagues.

Prof O’Dowd’s line that if we resources primary care we would be able to do with fewer, smaller emergency departments is not supported by the evidence. There is undoubtedly a need for some rationalisation of emergency departments, particularly in the eastern half of the country, but not for the reasons Prof O’Dowd suggests.

Primary care and emergency medicine are two distinct branches of medicine; Ireland needs both and both need to be adequately resourced to do their respective jobs – different but distinct with a small degree of overlap. – Yours, etc,

FERGAL HICKEY,

Consultant in

Emergency Medicine,

Sligo Regional Hospital,

The Mall, Sligo.

Sir, – My colleague Prof Tom O’Dowd somewhat misses the point: “What rightly upsets Dr Hickey and his colleagues are the vast numbers attending A&E that could be dealt with by general practitioners”.

It is true that some patients attending emergency departments could be better cared for in primary care.

However the 601 patients waiting for admission last week are not this group. These patients have been seen and assessed by both an ED physician and another admitting speciality who both concur that the patient requires hospitalisation.

These patients have heart attacks, strokes, pneumonias, collapses, fractures and many other conditions which require acute care in hospital.

Better resourcing of primary and community care is a must, particularly after hours. Like so many things in healthcare, the dividends of this will not be instantly apparent.

But the current crisis is one of flow. We need to be able to get those patients who need admission into hospital and that means we need to be able to get those whose care is completed back out. – Yours, etc,

Dr DAVID MENZIES,

Bray,

Co Wicklow.

Sir, – While condemnation of the murders at the offices of Charlie Hebdo has been universal, it is worth noting that many commentators have qualified that condemnation by referring to “responsibilities” that attach to freedom of expression.

Such responsibilities clearly exist. We should not defame, we should not bully, we should not incite hatred, but this protection should not extend to belief systems, religious, political or otherwise.

In particular, belief systems that seek to proscribe the actions of non-believers should be held up to scrutiny, including ridicule, regardless of the insult they cause.

To purpose of the attack of the offices of Charlie Hebdo was simple: to intimidate media organisations into obeying the Islamic rule regarding the depiction of Muhammad.

To suggest that media organisations have a duty to refrain from causing offence to belief systems is appeasement of that intent. – Yours, etc,

GARRETH McDAID,

Drumleague,

Co Leitrim.

Sir, – To me it seems incredible that the elite has rushed to support Charlie Hebdo’s “right” to publish material insulting a religious faith. Particularly in Ireland one would expect educated people to recognise the danger of inflaming sectarian divisions and violence, and the deaths of entirely innocent people, as in Paris.

The ideal of freedom of speech, like majority rule, is only safe when tolerance is universal. In the meantime limitations such as blasphemy laws are much the lesser of two evils and a rare symptom of wise government. – Yours, etc,

BILL BAILEY,

Ballineen,

Co Cork.

Sir, – The problem seems to me to lie not in religious fanaticism, but in religious ideology per se. Political parties come and go and, aware of their own transience, tend to retain a sense of humour about themselves. Not so religions. Believing they hold the answers to the fundamental questions of existence, their adherents tend to develop a sense of their own importance which goes far beyond arrogance. Let us be honest, no one really knows whether there is a god or not, or what he, she or it looks like. And perhaps if we all concentrated more on this world and less on the next, we might become a little more courteous to each other.

Until the State evolves beyond pandering to the narrow beliefs of any religious group, we will not truly be free and democratic. – Yours, etc,

SUSAN FitzGERALD,

Blackrock,

Co Dublin.

Sir, – The notion that there is such a thing as freedom of speech is patent nonsense and anyone who has travelled beyond the boundaries of their own comfort zones surely knows this as fact. Even if one accepts the concept expounded by those who promote the liberal concept of “freedom of speech” as a right, they would also have to concede that with such “rights” go obligations and common sense.

While I personally am happy to aspire towards French republican ideals, I have yet to see them practised in France or indeed anywhere else for that matter.

We are constantly reminded that we live in a globalised world. If this is actually true then such a world transcends national borders. In this new globalised and increasingly dangerous world, I’m afraid that cultural differences will have to find new solutions to old problems.

Extremism and fanaticism must certainly be tackled, but we will not succeed by deluding ourselves and ignoring valid cultural or religious differences. – Yours, etc,

Dr VINCENT KENNY,

Knocklyon,

Dublin 16.

Sir, – JD Mangan (January 8th) describes the sneering attitude of many critics of Charles J Haughey’s “big house” lifestyle, which he deems to be “a classic example of the begrudging attitude that the Irish do so well”. Perhaps if Mr Haughey had lived from the money he earned, there would be more focus solely on his “significant political achievements”. However, as the Irish taxpayer was the one paying for the handmade shirt on his back, I think we are entitled to begrudge a lifestyle we funded, but did not enjoy. – Yours, etc,

DONAGH McTIERNAN,

Mullingar,

Co Westmeath.

Sir, – Matthew Mac Gabhann (January 12th) lays the blame for Charles Haughey’s political survival on AIB’s failure to pursue his debt. That scenario was not really possible in the frantic maelstrom of events in those days. Anyway, all the bould Taoiseach would have done would have been to lean on his other sources of revenue to make up the shortfall. There were other deep pockets available to come up with the odd million. – Yours, etc,

A JONES,

Mullagh,

Co Cavan.

Sir, – Harry McGee is the latest in a long line of Irish Times journalists and commentators to warn us of the dangers of “instability” (“Why stable government needs the party whip”, January 10th).

We had the dubious honour of remaining “stable” throughout a financial meltdown. Not only has the status quo remained resolutely intact, it is even more embedded that it had been prior to 2007.

Who does this “stability” serve?

Rapid and intensifying climate change is the future. The “stability” of the current system actually impedes the change necessary to transition Ireland to an adaptable and resilient society and economy.

The opposite of stability in this context is not chaos – but it is fundamental change to our current economic system. That will involve the destabilisation of certain institutions.

The alternative is set out in clear terms in various UN climate change reports. – Yours, etc,

MICHAEL CANNEY,

Dublin 2.

Sir, – Although I agree with the sentiments expressed by Austin Savage (January 12th) regarding courtesy and older citizens, a conscious effort to be courteous is not without its hazards. A number of years ago I offered my seat to an elderly gentleman on the Luas and in response he pushed me backwards and ran down the carriage without saying a word! His wife indicated that I had offended his pride.

On a visit to my local cinema a few years ago to see the film Philomena, my wife and I found ourselves at the front of a queue made up in the main of senior citizens. When the doors opened we both felt we were participating in the Pamplona bull run as the elderly crowd pushed (that’s putting it mildly) forward and trampled on anyone in the way. I would encourage all to be courteous to our senior citizens but I would ask that they return the compliment! – Yours, etc,

GILES FOX,

Kilmacud, Co Dublin.

Sir, – After two weeks of dreadful repeats on the awful new UTV Ireland, how can I persuade my programme supplier UPC to restore the UK version to my package? It was changed without my authority or approval and I miss many of the former programmes. – Yours, etc,

STUART MURRAY,

Dún Laoghaire,

Co Dublin.

 

Irish Independent:

Monty Python’s movie ‘The Life of Brian’ poked fun at Christianity.
Monty Python’s movie ‘The Life of Brian’ poked fun at Christianity.

People who believe they are entitled to kill anyone who dares to mock their religious beliefs need to get a life, as distinct from taking lives. I feel uneasy about some of the more belligerent satirising of religion, but no amount of mockery or humorous comment can justify attacking or killing a fellow human being.

  • Go To

We can all be offended by attacks on our beliefs or by abrasive criticism of them. One’s person’s joke is another person’s blasphemy. The best response is a dignified rebuff, or simply to ignore the ridicule or criticism. I remember people who were shocked when the Monty Python film ‘The Life of Brian’ came out. There were protests and many Christians were understandably upset by the movie’s scathing depiction of their religion.

And yet in later years some of those who had objected to it most strongly said they’d like to have the song ‘Always look on the bright side of life’ played at their funerals, possibly forgetting it featured in the movie in a most irreverent context: a crucifixion scene.

Personally, I respect Islam, Christianity, Hinduism, Judaism and all the other great religions of the world and the right of followers to worship as they see fit. But people ought to be entitled to express their disapproval of religion too, regardless of how offended any of us might be.

A life without humour would be very dull indeed, and attempts to suppress joking and satire have never quite succeeded. Somebody somewhere will always find a way to poke fun and make at least one other person laugh.

In one of her last performances the brilliant Joan Rivers -who was Jewish – joked outrageously about Nazis in leather being attractive. Now there was a woman who understood humour. No section of society, no belief system, no mode of human behaviour escaped her savage wit.

Speaking of Nazis, in the Third Reich citizens had to be very careful about what they said, with spies and fanatics everywhere.

However, humour still managed to surface now and again, as with the story of the family that gathered to say Grace around the dinner table. The father said: “For what we are about to receive we thank God and Hitler.” The youngest boy asked: “Dad, what happens if Hitler dies?” The father winked and said: “Then we just thank God.”

We all need to lighten up about our religious beliefs or lack of them. As the Monty Python song cautioned, the last laugh could be on us.

John Fitzgerald

Callan, Co Kilkenny

Sinn Fein’s telling silence

The silence of Sinn Fein in the aftermath of the Paris shootings is deafening. It’s ironic that they didn’t try to hijack the ‘Je suis Charlie’ March in Dublin last weekend.

However, I suppose in the light of Gerry Adams’s recent comments regarding newspaper editors, it was probably best to keep a low profile. So much for free speech in Ireland if Sinn Fein are not challenged on this.

John Fagan

Collinstown, Co Westmeath

Jewish people must be defended

The world is reeling from yet another hate-filled attack on the Jewish people, this time at a Kosher supermarket in Paris in which unsuspecting and innocent victims lost their lives to the world’s oldest hatred – anti-Semitism.

World leaders have condemned the hostage-taking episodes in France and shown solidarity at this testing time, and that will give a modicum of encouragement while so many Jewish families will meet around their Shabbat tables to ponder the latest deaths that were perpetrated just because the victims were Jews.

The Hebrew word from where we get the English word ‘Jew’ is ‘Yehudah’ (Judah), which means ‘praise.’ The Jewish people have contributed greatly in the arenas of medicine, science and the arts, in banking and the world of commerce.

It is only fitting that we extol their virtues at a time when their very existence is being undermined by such targeted terrorist attacks.

We in the democratic nations must seek to always condemn and root out any anti-Semitism that raises its ugly head in the communities where Jews live, worship and work. The Christian nations take their Judeo-Christian traditions, laws and culture from the Bible and the history of the Hebrew people and we should acknowledge that by showing our gratitude and loudly condemning all anti-Jewish rhetoric and actions which must make families and individuals feel extremely vulnerable. History attests that hatred and even murder of innocent Jews is not new, but it must not be tolerated in European countries where Christian values have been inextricably linked to Jewish ones for centuries and where the contribution of the Jews has been a real blessing.

May we wish ‘shalom’ or ‘peace’ to the families in Paris and to the extended Jewish community world-wide. We have a common bond with the Lord God of Israel. Amen.

Colin Nevin

Bangor, Co Down

Hard lessons

I hope the outrages of the recent past will have opened the eyes of the more gullible among us as to what we could possibly encounter in the future and also what the Jewish people are suffering every day.

It also proves that there are those among us who would destroy everything we hold dear, even our religious beliefs. I just hope we desist from watering down – in any way – our Christian beliefs, and to show these people that, like the French, we still cherish our beliefs.

Remember, in this twisted logic we could be targeted because we helped an ally in the recent war effort in Iraq.

It goes without saying that we should assist in any way the constant struggle to keep this most serious threat at bay – or we’ll all pay the price.

John N Barry

Malahide, Co Dublin

Meditations on Mass

I recently attended Mass in my local church in Salthill. At the start of Mass the priest made reference to the terrible events in Paris the previous week and the way people had come together in solidarity to express their anger over what had happened.

I thought of loving-kindness meditations I had attended recently where participants were invited to send loving thoughts to people in their lives – friends and enemies alike. This can have huge benefits to the person – helping them to remove negative, energy-sapping thoughts from their mind.

Later, to coincide with the Feast of the Baptism of the Lord, which we were celebrating, the priest invited us to renew our baptismal promises. Don’t most organisations have initiation ceremonies?

The format of the Mass is the same every Sunday, except for specific readings.

There is actually a hypnotic quality to this, repetition of familiar phrases can have a relaxing effect, similar to playing bongo drums in a group setting. One of the purposes of Mass is to enable us to tune into our spiritual side, isn’t this what many meditation techniques are about as well? In Our Lord’s prayer we are urged to “forgive those who trespass against us.”

Many therapists are of the opinion that true healing cannot take place until a person is in a position to forgive someone who may have harmed them.

Don’t forget what I said earlier about sending loving thoughts to our enemies in loving kindness meditations.

Tommy Roddy

Salthill, Galway

Irish Independent

Lazy

January 12, 2015

12 January 2015 Lazing

Mary a little better though she could manage to get up for breakfast. Gout fading loaf around doing nothing.

Obituary:

Anita Ekberg in Back from Eternity (1956)

Anita Ekberg in Back from Eternity (1956) Photo: Allstar Picture Library

Anita Ekberg, who has died aged 83, was the statuesque former Miss Sweden who became a global film sensation after cavorting in Rome’s Trevi Fountain for Federico Fellini’s La Dolce Vita (1960). Although demure and innocent by today’s standards, the scene caused a scandal and made the 29-year-old Swede a household name.

Some gossip columnists sniffily nicknamed her “The Iceberg” due to her Scandinavian roots, yet her dramatic décolletage, glowering good looks and vivacious delivery proved an enticing and popular combination with cinema audiences of the Sixties.

Director Frank Tashlin, who directed her in the 1956 comedy Hollywood or Bust – the pun was intended – claimed that Anita Ekberg’s appeal lay in “the immaturity of the American male: this breast fetish. There’s nothing more hysterical to me than big-breasted women, like walking, leaning towers.”

Anita Ekberg was indeed a teetering tower. She was 5ft 7in tall and possessed a considerable bust, of which she once said: “It’s not cellular obesity, it’s womanliness.” Yet in the same year that Tashlin had typecast her, Ekberg showed that she could really act, if given the opportunity, when she played Hélène Kuragin, the unfaithful wife of Pierre Bezukhov (Henry Fonda) in King Vidor’s epic War and Peace. However, she was fully aware that her allure was centred on her physicality. “I have a mirror,” she said in the late Sixties, “I would be a hypocrite if I said I didn’t know I am beautiful.”

Kerstin Anita Marianne Ekberg was born on September 29 1931 in Malmö, Sweden, one of a large family (she had seven siblings). As a youngster she had no desire to be famous. She wanted to marry and settle down to a conventional life. A childhood pleasure was to draw and fashion clothes.

Out walking one day, a talent scout spotted her and persuaded her to enter the Miss Universe contest. Winning as Miss Sweden, she gained a trip to Hollywood. A screen test did not bring much work and she returned home disheartened. However, she was determined to make good as an actress and began saving for a return trip.

Her break came when Bob Hope chose her to accompany him on a Christmas tour of American air force bases in Greenland in 1954. Studio moguls soon heard about the roars of approval for Anita and offered her a contract. She had small uncredited roles in films such as The Mississippi Gambler, Abbott and Costello go to Mars and The Golden Blade, before winning supporting parts in Artists and Models (1955) and Blood Alley (1955; playing a Chinese girl). Her first lead came in Back from Eternity (1956). By this time she was being touted as “Paramount’s Marilyn Monroe”.

Anita Ekberg and Marcello Mastroianni in La Dolce Vita (Kobal Collection)

She moved to London in the mid-Fifties but was lonely and hardly left her hotel. Having refused dozens of invitations to premieres, something impelled her to finally accept one offer. Her escort turned out to be Anthony Steen, a matinee idol alumnus of the “Rank School”. They were married in 1956.

In her first British film, Zarak (1956), she met her match in Victor Mature. Playing a native dancer, with a few spangles and bangles judiciously placed, who falls in love with Mature’s hulking Zarak Khan. The film left audiences wondering who had the bigger chest. She teamed up again with Mature the following year for the thriller Interpol.

At this time her marriage to Steel was rarely out of the headlines, with reports of drunken driving, rows and violent recriminations. Eventually the union completely soured and they divorced after three years.

Anita Ekberg with her first husband Anthony Steel (REX)

She did not have time to mourn the marriage. Her performance in Fellini’s La Dolce Vita the following year made her a star. Shot in Rome at a time when the Italian obsession with celebrity was at its height, she played the starlet Sylvia opposite Marcello Mastroianni’s philandering paparazzo journalist. The part fixed her in audience’s minds as the European blonde “sex bomb” – stylish, sensual, shallow and ephemeral.

In the film’s most famous scene, she splashes with abandon in the Trevi Fountain, her black low-necked dress trailing in the frothy waters, cooing: “Marcello, come here.” In fact the scene had been shot in February and Mastroianni was doped up on vodka. “I was freezing,” she recalled. “They had to lift me out of the water because I couldn’t feel my legs any more.”

Following the success of Fellini’s masterpiece, Anita Ekberg appeared opposite Bob Hope in Call Me Bwana and Frank Sinatra in 4 for Texas (both 1963). She was also considered for the part of Honey Ryder in Dr No but lost out to Ursula Andress. When she did appear in a Bond film, it was both unwitting and unflattering: in From Russia with Love (1963) Sean Connery shoots a spy escaping through a gigantic Call Me Bwana poster featuring Anita Ekberg’s face. “She should have kept her mouth shut,” says Bond.

Anita Ekberg in the Trevi Fountain (Alamy)

Anita Ekberg’s on-screen persona – a freewheeling man-eater from overseas – soon spilt over into her private life. Sinatra was one of the many leading men she was rumoured to have taken as a lover, along with Errol Flynn, Yul Brynner, Tyrone Power and Gary Cooper.

She often played characters possessed of an untethered and wild spirit. As a “war lady” in The Mongols (1961) she indulged in torture and sado-masochism, striding in thigh-high boots among the slave girls cracking a bullwhip. For “The Temptation of Dr Antonio”, Fellini’s episode in the portmanteau feature Boccaccio ’70 (1962), she was once again the sex object, this time as the model featured on a “Drink More Milk” billboard poster who is brought to life to trap a puritanical doctor. Thus Fellini followed Tashlin in using her abilities for erotic satire.

In 1963 Ekberg married Rik Van Nutter (who later played Felix Leiter in Thunderball). They lived in Spain and Switzerland and in 1969 became entrepreneurs. “Rick and I have gone into the shipping business. We found a cargo ship and we’re in business with the captain,” she said (the couple also bought a Chinese junk). “Ours is a good marriage. There are so many good times in marriage, that the bad times are really unimportant. Anyway, I learnt from my parents that difficulties are there to be overcome.”

As with all sex symbols, age diminished her currency. By the end of the Sixties she was complaining about the lack of available roles. “I should be able to get work myself on the strength of my acting. I shouldn’t have to sleep with producers to get parts. It’s depressing to see parts going to actresses who can’t act their way out of a wet paper bag but who are friendly with producers,” she observed. “My life has changed quite a bit, of course. The Ferrari’s gone – now I have a Mini Moke.”

The downward spiral continued throughout the Seventies. She made films but they were more often than not B-movies with salacious titles such as The French Sex Murders (1972) and The Killer Nun (1979). Her scenes for Valley of the Dancing Widows (1975) were left on the cutting room floor. At home things also began to disintegrate: she accused Van Nutter of cheating her over a car-hire business they owned. The couple divorced in 1975.

Anita Ekberg in 2010 (AFP)

Two years later, her house was robbed, with the thieves stealing fur coats, jewels and silver, the fruits of her once-famous career. “My last 10 years have brought nothing but bad luck,” she stated.

After a second robbery in 2011, she appealed to the Fellini Foundation for financial help. It was a sad sign of decline from the Amazonian actress who had five decades earlier threatened paparazzi with a bow and arrow.

Her final years were spent living in semi-reclusion in a run-down Italian villa outside Rome, where her only companions were two great Danes.

Anita Ekberg, born September 29 1931, January 11 2015

A Muslim man holds a placard reading 'Not in my name', during a gathering in Saint-Etienne, eastern
A Muslim man holds a placard reading ‘Not in my name’, during a gathering in Saint-Etienne, eastern France, on 9 January 2015. Photograph: Jean-Philippe Ksiazek/AFP/Getty Images

Your editorial writers and commentators and most of your correspondents (9, 10 January) wring their hands in impotence over the Islamist massacre in Paris. In fact, there is a great deal citizens of the rich countries can do to combat Islamic fundamentalism. First, the western powers should withdraw politically and militarily from the Middle East. Every western intevention for the past 150 years has served to strengthen fundamentalist Islam. In particular, they should immediately cut military and political collaboration with Saudi Arabia, Qatar and Turkey, which are the principal backers of Isis and Wahhabism (whatever their recent protestations). Second, the people of the western countries should give every support we can to the brave and beleaguered secular and democratic political currents in “the Muslim world”, such as the Labour party of Pakistan and the trade unions in Iraq and Egypt.

Third, in Britain, we should be campaigning for state schooling which is completely secular, depriving the Church of England and the Catholic church as well as other smaller churches of their anachronistic control of state schools. This is the medieval and barbaric hangover that should concern us. Parents have (limited) rights to impose their religion on their chilrden, but a democratic state has no business indoctrinating children in any religion.Please stop wringing your hands and get involved in politics that can really change things.
Jamie Gough
Sheffield

• I was disturbed by the letters in Friday’s Guardian. The responses made me ashamed to be a Guardian reader. Rather than condemning the killings, almost all played them down, tried to excuse them, or suggested the victims had somehow brought them on themselves. What’s happened to us? Have the past 15 years been so bloody that some people have run out of sympathy, and have none left for innocent cartoonists being gunned down in cold blood?
Alasdair Murray
Richmond upon Thames, Surrey

• Some of your correspondents have argued that the right to free speech must be tempered by the avoidance of offence. Whilst I applaud the humane values underlying this claim, I must disagree. There is not – and never could be – any universal definition of what is offensive. we all have our own internal calibration of what offends; I cannot know what you think or might feel and so any stricture that bars me from saying something offensive will inevitably fuel a creeping self-censorship which is the antithesis of freedom of speech.

To live in a free society is to risk being offended. We can complain; we can retaliate; and we can shout aloud our discomfort. What we cannot do is shoot those who offend us. Je suis Charlie.
Kath Checkland
Hope Valley, Derbyshire

• Freedom of speech is a relative concept already limited by legislation. Libel, slander and incitement to racial hatred are crimes, as is denial of the Holocaust in Germany. Perhaps we should discuss whether figurative representation of Muhammad should be banned in the interests of public safety and social harmony, while continuing to tolerate satire of religion or any other belief or ideology. Such a limitation would hardly constitute a crippling assault on values that most of us hold dear, but might assuage concerns of many who are offended by images of the prophet.
Simon Sweeney
York

• Your editorial (9 January), which defends the decision to not publish the Charlie Hebdo cartoons by appealing to the faulty logic underlying the calls to publish them as a matter of freedom of speech, is misguided. The cartoons have now become part of a news story and for that reason alone should be published. It is the responsibility of a media organisation to keep its users well-informed so they can form their own opinions on these issues. We should not have to search for this information elsewhere.
David Lobina
London

• Has the Guardian taken all leave of its senses in donating £100,000 to Charlie Hebdo? The “war on terror” is fought on two fronts. One is the hard war in the form of bombs and tanks. The other is the soft war in the form of the ideological demonisation of Islam. Charlie Hebdo quite consciously played its part in the soft war. It is no Private Eye. And the claim it is left is a dubious one. For when it comes to Islam many parts of the French left have a shabby record, from the way the French Communist party opposed Algerian independence onwards. While the killings have to be opposed, is it any wonder that when petrol is poured on the raging fires of Muslim-baiting some people are liable to be burnt? By donating this money to a journal that the Guardian itself would condemn if its so-called satire were directed against Judaism, it seems to have learnt nothing.
John Curtis
Ipswich, Suffolk

• I too want to resist the language of “war” (Tariq Ramadan, 10 January), whether metaphorically or literally meant, and whether it refers to a fight against politically motivated killings, against a particular religion and its adherents, or against terrorism as a phenomenon. Safety and human rights cannot be protected by violent hostility. They can come only from the building of understanding and respect, locally and globally. It will be hard to escape the dynamic of spiralling action and reaction but it must be done. We need the language of wisdom and kindness, not the language of war.
Diana Francis
Bath

• Watching the Unity March of 1 million-plus people in Paris on Sunday, it reminded me of the Iraq anti-war march of up to 2 million people in London and 15 millon people in 800 cities around the world on 15 Februrary 2003. Would the march in Paris would have been necessary if the earlier march had been listened to?
Chris Holden
London

Unity rally in Paris, following the Charlie Hebdo attacks, 11 January 2015
Unity rally in Paris, following the Charlie Hebdo attacks, 11 January 2015. Photograph: David Ramos/Getty Images

For anyone committed to the ideal of a multicultural society, the murder of cartoonists who vulgarly ridiculed Islamic faith proves a complex matter to address in times of soaring Islamophobia. Joe Sacco approaches this explosive issue (10 January) in a respectful and differentiated way; at the cost, however, of ignoring the political meaning of the attack. Charlie Hebdo’s caricatures are indeed often offensive. But Sacco’s reflections on the use of stereotypes or on a previous controversy over anti-Semitism in Charlie Hebdo are highly problematic in the context of the shooting. What Sacco and many others who prefer criticism over solidarity fail to understand is that the Je suis Charlie manifestation does not imply an acceptance of the magazine’s caricatures. Quite on the contrary: the power of the statement lies in the identification with a magazine which many – including presumably the several French imams who declared their support – strongly disliked. The failure of prominent voices among the left to grasp the gravity of the attack is one of the most disturbing phenomena it has revealed.
Avner Ofrath
Oxford

• Joe Sacco’s humanity shines on this week’s dreadful events with a rare clarity and honesty. It’s only a starting point to defend the right to be offensive. We must also ask what greater good our offensiveness serves – if any. Sacco illustrates that, in reality, only some offensiveness is defended, and asks us to consider why. If powerful reactionary forces mock vulnerable and victimised groups, is that as valid as when the tables are turned? What happens if a group is weak in one arena and powerful in another, and the balance is constantly contested? Instinctively we are all aware, that if the pen/cil is mightier than the sword, it can also be as dangerous. Sacco’s cartoon alone justifies my Guardian subscription as a contribution to free and responsible speech.
Emma Laughton
Colyton, Devon

Syriza leader Alexis Tsipras at the party congress in Athens, Greece, 3 January 2015.
Syriza leader Alexis Tsipras at the party congress in Athens, Greece, 3 January 2015. Photograph: Wassilios Aswestopoulos/NurP/REX

Syriza’s potential victory in the forthcoming elections in Greece is of the utmost importance for all those who want Europe to change course. Such a victory would be an expression of the demand for dignity and justice: for hope. The threats and pressure applied by EU leaders, the troika and financial circles to influence the electoral choice of the Greek people are unacceptable.

Throughout Europe, we will defend the right of the Greek people to make their decisions freely; to break with austerity; to say no to the humanitarian crisis that has plagued the country; to pave the way for a real alternative for Greece – for a social and democratic reorientation.

We believe that such a change in Greece will not affect the future of the Greek people alone. A victory for Syriza will allow Greece to escape from the current catastrophic situation but it will also represent green shoots of change for Europe. Breaking with austerity policies would be a signal, a source of hope for those who want to stand tall. At the same time, if Syriza is voted into power, its government will need massive support from the people of Europe in the face of the pressures from the financial markets and political forces which fear any departure from the obsolete framework of capitalist globalisation.
Nicola Acocella Professor of economic policy, University of Rome, Matyas Benyik ATTAC Hungary, Nadezda Cacinovic University of Zagreb, Croatia, Mario Candeias Direktor des Institut fur Gesellschaftsanalyse, Berlin, Germany, John Douglas President, Irish Congress of Trade Unions, Elena Frangakis-Syrett Professor of economic history, City University of New York, Dan Gallin Global Labour Institute, Geneva, Switzerland, Adoración Guamán Hernández Professor of labour law, University of Valencia, Spain, Jean Ziegler Former member, UN human rights council and 327 other initial signatories. Full list and petition at with-the-greeks.eu

Infrastructure bill is a threat to the rights of the British public

Anti-fracking sign on a gate in Little Plumpton, Lancashire.
Fracking ‘anywhere in Britain’ could become ‘a legal objective’, says Canon Andrea Titterington. Above, anti-fracking sign on a gate in Little Plumpton, Lancashire. Photograph: Christopher Thomond for The Guardian./Christopher Thomond

The infrastructure bill now making its way through the Commons is yet another threat by this government to take away the rights of the public – not just in future developments but also in environmentally damaging activities such as fracking. It has already been passed by the Lords. If it becomes law the following will occur:

1) Any public land (apart from that owned by the royal family and now our forests) can be transferred to the government’s Homes and Communities Agency, to be passed on to private firms to use for any kind of development, with all rights of public access removed.

2) The recovery of gas and oil – including fracking, coal gasification, coalbed methane extraction and geothermal – anywhere in Britain to be a legal objective.

3) The right to dump and abandon any substance whatsoever under any land (including radioactive and gases).

4) The right to drill under any land, public or private.

5) Major projects (such as power stations, new towns, high-speed rail and motorways) to be decided on by government rather than councils, with communities also unlikely to be consulted.

6) Any species deemed non-native (including barn owls, red kites, goshawks) can be controlled or exterminated.

7) Councils given short time limits to enforce planning restrictions or their duties will be discharged by a panel of two government inspectors and a minister, giving developers free rein.

8) The Land Registry to be given major new powers to hold local registers, and be the judge, jury and executioner on land ownership disputes.

9) Anyone building fewer than 50 houses in a development will no longer need to ensure they are zero carbon or eco-friendly.

If this becomes law it makes a mockery of any democratic rights still held by the people of this country. There is a mass lobby of parliament on 14 January.
Canon Andrea Titterington
Preston, Lancashire

David Cameron On The Final Phase Of Local Election Campaign
Get greenery: ‘goodie bags’ containing a silver birch sapling await collection before David Cameron’s press conference on ‘green’ issues on 8 April 2006. Photograph: Peter Macdiarmid/Getty Images

Silly me. When Cameron said in 2010, “vote blue, go green” I didn’t realise he was referring to the TV debate in 2015 (Report, 9 January).
Alan Ford
Saltdean, East Sussex

• Would you please not use term bedblockers (Report, 7 January). This neoliberal language dehumanises people to commodities and treats them as a transactional contract, rather than humans. They are vulnerable people that need us to love them, care for them and provide them with a decent quality of life by paying a bit more tax.
Brian Keegan
Peterborough

• Whoaaa! Alex Hern (Why it’s smart to be dumb, 7 January) promotes more traditional alternatives to the latest gadgets – the apparently now antiquarian Kindle, instead of the iPad. If you want to read a book, get a book. To quote Hern: “They’re simple, they work.”
Brian Lake
President, Antiquarian Booksellers Association

Independent:

Times:

Sir, I once heard EM Forster give a Cambridge lecture titled “Did Jesus Have a Sense of Humour?” He thought not.

It would be possible to ask a Jewish audience if God has a sense of humour, even though the thin-skinned might take offence.

During the Islamic golden age it would have been possible to ask a Muslim audience the same about the Prophet, even though to many that was blasphemy.

In Britain (but not yet in Northern Ireland), parliament has abolished the crime of blasphemy, and our law allows offensive speech that satirises and ridicules religious beliefs and practices. That law protects our secular society.

In Britain, as in France, we have a right but not a duty to offend that belongs to all of us, of all religions and none. We are all Charlie.

Lord Lester of Herne Hill, QC
London EC4

Sir, There is a difference between the right to offend and being offensive. Expressing a contrary view about a faith or religious practice may well offend but deliberately being offensive to cause hurt, by using words or actions with the intent to cause distress, such as leaving a pig’s head on a doorstep, is clearly wrong. The two instances cited by Roger Harris (letter, Jan 10), the Public Order Act 1986 and the Offensive Behaviour at Football Matches Act 2012, clearly refer to deliberate use of words to insult or offend. I see no reason to repeal these acts.

Free speech has never been, and can never be, a licence to say absolutely anything in any circumstance.

Paul Packwood
Clevedon, Somerset

Sir, To call the vicious criminals who killed journalists and others in Paris “terrorists”, and imply they had some sort of strategic aim of destroying free speech as part of some Islamist plot, is to assign a level of abstract thought and clarity of purpose to people driven by narcissism and a search for personal significance. In our research interviewing convicted terrorists, it is only their leadership that have any distinct ideology or political objective. The people who carry out the shootings are much more like those spree killers who drive into McDonald’s or strafe their erstwhile workmates with automatic gunfire.

To call them terrorists is to give a grandeur to what are mean-minded despicable acts.

Emeritus Professor David Canter
School of Psychology, University of Liverpool

Sir, A clear contradiction stands between those who uphold free speech and those who seek to suppress it. I therefore take issue with Nabil Hanafi (letter, Jan 10) who writes that “defending free speech means defending the rights of even those who say that such a freedom should not exist”. This is an intellectual oxymoron. Common sense dictates that in giving intolerance a platform we effectively support our own demise.

Linda Bisol
Geneva

Sir, Ayaan Hirsi Ali’s criticism of the West’s complacency is spot-on (Saturday Interview, Jan 10). As leader of several African diaspora organisations, I have spent the past decade trying to secure the collaboration of government, media and universities to implement initiatives to counteract the spread of Salafi jihadism among African communities. My efforts have occasionally been met with stalling and, more often, outright rejection.

Tellingly, attackers such as the killers of Lee Rigby, the authors of the recent atrocities in France, and Umar Farouk Abdulmutallab, the “underwear bomber”, were all of African descent. Time to wake up and smell the coffee.

Sylvie Aboa-Bradwell
Director, Policy Centre for African Peoples

Sir, Saudi Arabia condemns the attacks in Paris as a “cowardly terrorist act” (report, Jan 10). How does this stance tally with the news, reported in the same edition, that a young Saudi blogger, Raif Badawi, was given the first 50 of 1,000 lashes, a ten-year prison sentence and £175,000 fine, for insulting Islam?

David Green
London

Sir, Further to Matthew Parris’s Opinion article (Jan 10), I wonder who, in the long run, is more likely to put the lives of my children and grandchildren at risk: his “murderous misfits”, or the people in this country who consistently oppose giving our security services the tools they need to keep them safe?

Rear Admiral Conrad Jenkin
West Meon, Hants

Sir, The article by Sajid Javid (“Killers want to offend but not be offended”, Opinion, Jan 10) was well-balanced. He is wrong, though, to state that the writings of Socrates “continue to be widely read”.

Socrates has no writings. It is the writings of his pupil, Plato, about Socrates that are widely read.

Sir, Maybe the non-saluting bemused soldiers at Sandhurst (letter, Jan 9) mistook Air Vice-Marshal Higgs for a bo’sun.

John Nolan
Corcullen, Co Galway

Sir, Paul Ackford’s belief that there is less respect for officials from rugby players today (Sport, Jan 10) reminded me of the instruction given to me by the senior games master in my first week at grammar school 50-odd years ago: Rule 1. The referee is always right. Rule 2. If the referee is obviously wrong, Rule 1 applies.

Jon Ryder
Sheffield

Sir, TMS (Jan 9) describes Harold Macmillan starting a letter to Harold Wilson in 1963 with “Dear Wilson” as “patronising”. Surely it was simply the way professional men addressed each other then, even ones they had known from school and university.

At that time I was a junior private secretary to a cabinet minister, and frequently had to write to the Queen’s private secretary, Sir Michael Adeane. Despite the disparity in age and status, we addressed each other as “Dear Adeane” and “Dear Martin”.

Stanley Martin
London SE22

Sir, The caption accompanying your picture of a leopard gecko (Jan 10) states that its feet have claws rather than sticky pads. The pads of most species of gecko are adhesive but dry, not sticky in the usual sense. They depend for their grip on short-range inter-molecular forces called van der Waals forces. An artificial fabric based on these forces can be used to enable a man to climb a vertical wall — a true-life Spider-Man.

Dr Richard J Bird
Middleton Cheney, Northants

Oliver Murphy
Bray, Co Wicklow

Telegraph:

12 people were killed on Jan. 7 in a terrorist attack at the Charlie Hebdo headquarters in Paris.

Workers install a poster reading ‘Je suis Charlie’ (I am Charlie) on the Palais des Festivals facade in Cannes Photo: EPA/SEBASTIEN NOGIER

SIR – According to Nick Clegg, we will win the struggle against terrorism “not by increasing our security but by protecting our liberty”. Doesn’t the murder of the Charlie Hebdo journalists show that liberty depends on security?

In order to protect the freedom of its citizens Britain should increase police action against terrorist suspects. Freedom also depends on the use of force against its enemies. If Mr Clegg had said we should beware of overreaction he would have had a valid point, but he is wrong to treat liberty and security as mutually exclusive concepts.

Dr David G Green
Director, Civitas
London SW1

SIR – Justice isn’t dispensed from a gun – that’s revenge. I’m not aware of any god that seeks revenge and only weak humans seek such recourse.

Duncan Anderson
East Halton, Lincolnshire

SIR – Freedom of speech does not confer a licence to indulge in bad manners and insensitive behaviour towards our neighbours.

What about fraternité? Surely that means living together in harmony.

Gillian Snoxall
Wallingford, Berkshire

SIR – Let the Fourth Plinth in Trafalgar Square now permanently carry a column in the shape of a pencil bearing the legend Je suis Charlie.

Simon Sharpe
Cobham, Surrey

SIR – The cry of “Allahu Akbar” from the terrorists as they stormed the Charlie Hebdo building has been used by extremists as they behead Christians and Yazidis in Iraq, bomb churches in Nigeria and separate out and kill those who can’t say a Muslim prayer in parts of Kenya.

Extremism can be found in any religion, and Muslims have been on the receiving end too, but a report released yesterday by our charity, Open Doors, shows that 40 out of the worst 50 countries for Christian persecution show Islamic extremism as the main driver of this oppression.

Something closer to home, like the terrible events in Paris, is particularly shocking. But we can expect more of this unless we fight extremism as an international community much more actively than we are doing.

Lisa Pearce
CEO, Open Doors UK & Ireland
Witney, Oxfordshire

SIR – The sad death of 12 people during an attack at the office of Charlie Hebdo magazine in Paris dominated newspaper, television and radio headlines last Wednesday.

A bomb killed 37 police recruits in Yemen on the same day, but received nowhere near the same degree of attention.

Both were attacks by terrorists, but I suppose it’s who you are and where you are that counts.

B E Norton
Royal Wootton Bassett, Wiltshire

SIR – Up until the moment Nigel Farage spoke out last week we had endured a succession of politicians mealy-mouthing their way around the carnage in Paris.

Of course we have a fifth column in our midst. It was the same in the Seventies and Eighties, when the source was the IRA. The difference now is that it stems from the headlong rush into the misguided policy of multiculturalism, fed by the unfettered immigration embraced by the Labour government of the late Nineties.

Not for the first time Mr Farage taken the pulse of the nation and spoken for the greater majority of it.

Edward Thomas
Eastbourne, West Sussex

SIR – It was galling to hear Anne-Elisabeth Moutet, a French journalist, having to correct a British television presenter on his offensive mis-use of the word “execute”, pointing out that there was no judicial endorsement of the Paris murders.

This is one of many similar solecisms currently in vogue throughout the media.

Christopher Egerton-Thomas
Hove, East Sussex

Tackle alcohol misuse to ease A&E pressures

SIR – The current A&E crisis is being compounded by the failure of policymakers to tackle the impact of excessive alcohol consumption. Approximately 20 per cent of all A&E attendances are alcohol-related. This increases to 70-80 per cent on Friday and Saturday nights.

Almost every family in the country has been adversely affected by alcohol misuse at some point, but successive governments have failed to enact evidence-based policies that would save lives and ease pressure on the health, policing and criminal justice systems.

A 50 pence minimum unit price for alcohol, regulation to protect children from alcohol marketing, improved alcohol labelling and the establishment of alcohol care teams with specialist consultants and nurses are simple measures – none of which would punish responsible drinkers – that must be adopted urgently in order to reduce pressures on A&E departments.

Kieran Moriarty
Alcohol Services Lead, British Society of Gastroenterology

Professor Sir Ian Gilmore
Chair, Alcohol Health Alliance
Former President, Royal College of Physicians

Dr Dominique Florin
Medical Director, Medical Council on Alcohol

Dr Adrian Boyle
Chair, Quality in Emergency Care Committee, College of Emergency Medicine

Linda Harris
Medical Director, Substance Misuse and Associated Health, Royal College of General Practitioners

Dr Carsten Grimm
Royal College of General Practitioners

John Ashton
President, Faculty of Public Health

Prof Frank Murray
President, RCP Ireland
Chairman, RCPI alcohol policy group

Shirley Cramer CBE
Chief Executive, Royal Society for Public Health

Jackie Ballard
Chief Executive, Alcohol Concern

Diane Goslar
Alcohol Health Alliance

Andrew Langford
Chief Executive, British Liver Trust

Dr Mark Hudson
President, British Association for the Study of the Liver

Shirley Cramer CBE
Chief Executive, Royal Society for Public Health

Paul Lincoln
Chief Executive Officer, UK Health Forum

Katherine Brown
Director, Institute of Alcohol Studies

Chris Record
Consultant Hepatologist, Newcastle University

Professor Linda Bauld
Deputy Director, UK Centre for Tobacco and Alcohol Studies
Chair in Behavioural Research for Cancer Prevention, Cancer Research UK

Hazel Parsons
Director, Drink Wise

Terry Martin
Trustee, AlcoHELP

The Duke of York’s public contribution

(AFP)

SIR – In response to Christopher Wilson’s article (“It may be time for the Queen’s second son to leave the public stage”, report, January 4) it is worth noting that Court Circulars show that last year the hard-working Duke of York carried out more than 300 public engagements. These often reflected his encouragement of science and technology as well as the British charities and other valuable causes of which he is patron or president.

The Queen and many other members of our Royal family who still selflessly carry out official duties are already over the usual retirement age. The extensive public work of our monarchy would be diminished if the Duke withdrew from national life, especially if it had an impact upon the participation of his charming daughters.

Jennifer Miller
London SW15

Saving British dairy

SIR – Milk and cheese consumption per capita has declined steadily since 1985. While the number of dairy cows has dropped dramatically over the last 10 years, the amount of milk produced by the British herd has barely dropped. With a shrinking demand and almost constant supply, the market price has only had one way to go.

Processors and retailers, rather than fighting for a greater share of the pie, should try to increase its size with innovative products like Arla’s Lactofree and Cravendale. As someone who works in the cheese industry, I also believe that more also needs to be done to promote cheese’s rich nutrition and health benefits.

Soya milk, almond milk and the rest of these ghastly impostors are nutritionally very disappointing. Don’t even get me started on low-fat spreads.

Ian Eyres
Llanyblodwel, Shropshire

Wind farm farce

SIR – Paying wind farms to switch off their turbines because the electricity network cannot cope with the power they produce is farcical.

It would be more logical to leave them generating, pay other producers to reduce output and actually conserve some non-renewable resources.

Peter Saunders
Salisbury, Wiltshire

Fool’s paradise

SIR – I was watching the horror show Necker Island Paradise on BBC Two last week when the spell was broken by the opening bars of Bob Dylan’s Desolation Row, playing on a nearby radio.

It is high time someone asked Dylan to put real names on the faces of the song’s “quite lame” people.

Liam Power
Bangor Erris, Co Mayo

Solving the mystery of the east-west buttonhole

Bright as a button: Pearly Kings and Queens celebrate the annual Harvest Festival in Covent Garden (Alamy)

SIR – Having manufactured shirts and pyjamas for over 60 years I can reveal that the last buttonhole on a shirt is placed horizontally (Letters, January 4) because it may take greater strain than the others when the wearer plays sports, moves across a seat, or simply sits with legs akimbo. All pyjama buttonholes are horizontal due to the greater stress placed on them during sleep.

The remaining shirt button holes are vertical, as this looks smarter and is easier to secure than the horizontal sort.

Derek Rose
London W1

SIR – The horizontal bottom buttonhole has appeared as a result of braces falling out of fashion. Trousers now need to be held up by friction between the waistband and the shirt, causing a vertical pull on the shirt.

Mik Shaw
Goring-by-Sea, West Sussex

SIR – Any dressmaker will explain that an east-west buttonhole stays closed, and is useful for those with beer bellies.

Jennifer Clezy
Beausale, Warwickshire

SIR – Short-sleeve shirts are worn casually outside the trousers during summer. The east-west buttonhole provides reinforcement for the inevitable pulling across the fabric when one slips one’s hands into one’s linen or chino trouser pockets.

Jules Bowes Davies
Pont Ceri, Carmarthenshire

SIR – I do up my shirt buttons from the top downwards and find a crossways buttonhole useful for letting me know that I have finished, thus avoiding the frustration of seeking out a buttonhole for the spare button sewn on below.

Michael Staples
Seaford, East Sussex

Grey squirrel cull

(Alamy)

SIR – If the grey squirrel cull goes ahead taxpayers will be paying for the wholesale slaughter of wildlife.

Can nobody see anything wrong with giving landowners money and the “requirement” to cull thousands of grey squirrels “using whatever method they prefer”? Even if it were acceptable to wipe out a species in this way, other animals – such as birds, bats, doormice and red squirrels – would also be put at risk from indiscriminate poisoning and snaring.

Ginny Martin
Bishops Waltham, Hampshire

SIR – In the Fifties funding was available for every grey squirrel tail taken to the offices of the Ministry of Agriculture. I believe it was sixpence.

I spent many hours shooting grey squirrels and was immensely pleased to be able

to supplement my pocket money. Our large ginger cat, Sherry, did valiant work bringing squirrels

back home too. She did not reap the benefits, as someone usually cut the tails off her catch before she reached home.

The proposed funding seems far less efficient, as it is not based on exact results.

Willum Butterfield
East Haddon, Northamptonshire

Luck of a generation

SIR – Before demonising the older generation for living through decades of prosperity and property boomswe should remember that average mortgage interest rates in the Eighties reached 16 per cent. They never fell below 8 per cent, and there was no Help to Buy scheme underwritten by the taxpayer.

Fred Clark
Liverpool

Facebook and fiction

SIR – Mark Zuckerberg’s resolution to read a book every fortnight is commendable, but he places too much emphasis on non-fiction.

Reading fiction enhances our ability to connect with different kinds of people and sharpens our emotional understanding – traits that would be invaluable in counteracting the oft-levelled criticism that the rise of social media has led to an increasingly self-obsessed society.

Andrew Copeman
London SW18

Love is in the air

SIR – Sorry chaps, you’re all wrong: the sexiest voice (Letters, January 4) belonged to the lady who used to read the Geneva Volmet weather reports. The wonder of the Alps at 36,000 ft and that voice…never forgotten.

Capt John Grogan
Congleton, Cheshire

SIR – I was posted to RAF Melksham as an education officer in 1958. One of the young ladies who did the station tannoy announcements had the most beautiful and alluring voice.

I managed to meet her at the weekly Scottish country dancing event and married her soon thereafter.

John Ross
Tenby, Pembrokeshire

SIR – One day in the early Seventies I gave up my lunch break when on turnround at Sumburgh to walk to the control tower in search of the Shetland approach controller with the honey-soaked voice.

Seated at her console was a lady about my mother’s age, knitting, feet on the desk, wearing brown corduroy trousers. I made an excuse and left.

Capt Martyn Johnson
Driffield, East Yorkshire

Weedy diet

(Paul Grover/The Telegraph)

SIR – If Gwyneth Paltrow wishes to detox on garden weeds she would be very welcome on my allotment at any time.

Fred Wilson
Newcastle upon Tyne

Globe and Mail:

Irish Times:

Sir, – We can’t all be in Paris to march in solidarity with the victims of terror attacks there. But we can make sure we stand by the values of freedom of expression and a refusal to be cowed by fanaticism. – Yours, etc,

JAMES O’KEEFE,

Crumlin, Dublin 12.

Sir, – I refer to Dr Ali Selim’s warning to the Irish media of legal action if they publish the Charlie Hebdo cartoon he finds offensive and which others found so offensive that they killed 12 people (“Ali Selim urges media not to republish Charlie Hebdo cartoons”, January 7th).

Dr Selim has in the past argued against the abolition of the offence of blasphemy from our Constitution which, disappointingly it appears, will not be the subject of a referendum this year. His contention that satirising religious beliefs should not be tolerated is incompatible with freedom of speech and freedom of expression. Free and open expression is not only part of – but also essential to – a healthy democracy.

Humour, irony and satire are an integral part of this freedom and (save, of course, where there is for example incitement to violence, hatred or racism) should be protected.

Do we really want to live in a country where being involved in the likes of a humorous cartoon, Father Ted or The Life of Brian could result in a fine of up to €25,000? The law against blasphemy is an anachronism and should be removed. Blasphemy laws have fomented intolerance, prejudice and violence elsewhere. One need only look to other countries where such laws survive. In Egypt, insulting Islam and Muhammad has resulted in the death penalty – seven Egyptian Christians were sentenced to death in 2012 for their role in the “anti-Mohammad” movie. In Afghanistan, Kuwait, Pakistan, Saudi Arabia and Yemen, blasphemy is also punishable by a penalty up to and including death. In Pakistan, two politicians, Salman Taseer and Shahbaz Bhatti, were assassinated because they called for reform of the blasphemy law.

Embarrassingly, Ireland belongs to the blasphemy club. There may have been no prosecutions in Ireland to date, but this may change. Furthermore, other countries have cited Ireland’s prohibition on blasphemy in support of their own poisonous activities.

The Convention on the Constitution recommended that the offence of blasphemy be abolished. Such an offence has no place in a democracy which values freedom of speech and freedom of expression. These fundamental freedoms cannot be sacrificed in the name of a prohibition on causing offence to certain people’s beliefs. Religion is open to question, scrutiny and humour, just like any other set of beliefs or ideology. Nobody has the right not to be offended. – Yours, etc,

ROB SADLIER,

Rathfarnham, Dublin 16.

Sir, – Richard Coffey writes (January 10th) that “satirists and cartoonists should not go so far as to intentionally offend, insult or incite people of other creeds and beliefs”. As the great Salman Rushdie, who had more cause than most to ruminate on the topic, declared “What is freedom of expression? Without the freedom to offend it does not exist”. – Yours, etc,

PAUL WILLIAMS,

Kilkee,

Co Clare.

Sir, – The review of the Leaving Cert applied maths course (“Plan for Leaving Cert computer science module ‘tokenistic’”, January 8th) is welcome indeed, as the current content is too narrowly focused on mathematical physics (beautiful as that subject is) and does little to portray the wide scope of modern applied mathematics, with applications in diverse areas in finance, fluid engineering, systems biology, climate modelling and so on. The new specification proposed by the National Council for Curriculum and Assessment (NCCA) aims to address this issue.

In a rather deft move on the part of the NCCA, the proposed new specification aims simultaneously to address a skills gap that has arguably opened up as a result of the (well-intentioned) introduction of Project Maths. Thus, the new specification aims to strengthen the mathematical capabilities of those second-level students who wish to pursue a Stem subject (science, technology, engineering and mathematics) at third level. From my own experience as a third-level lecturer, I anticipate that this would greatly enhance the students’ engagement with Stem subjects at third level and therefore soften the transition between second and third levels.

Finally, even the introduction of computational science may not be so problematic, so long as the focus here is on the connection between computation and applications in scientific modelling and simulation, leaving “pure” computer science to be introduced as a possible standalone subject in the future. Using open-source programming platforms and computer hardware such as the exciting (and very cheap) Raspberry Pi computer, a module along these lines could in fact be delivered in the vast majority of secondary schools with only modest investment in equipment. The open-source principle, while not only cheap and cheerful, also reflects current best practice in scientific computing.

Thus, there are many exciting possibilities in play, giving the NCCA an excellent opportunity to fashion an applied maths curriculum consistent with the needs of Irish students and society and better reflective of modern trends in applied and computational mathematics. – Yours, etc,

LENNON Ó NARAIGH,

Lecturer,

Applied and Computational

Mathematics,

School of Mathematical

Sciences,

University College Dublin.

Sir, – The irony of Lucinda Creighton TD’s new party being fronted by three individuals representing incompatible interests should not be wasted on the electorate.

Ms Creighton departed Fine Gael following her election in 2011 due to a matter of conscience, after years of dutifully supporting the governing Coalition’s reforms, and she continues to espouse conservative social values. Eddie Hobbs criticises the role of the State in people’s lives and advocates for its reduction. Cllr John Leahy from Offaly calls for State support for rural post offices, farming families and public services, which would involve a concomitant increase in the reach of the State.

These three platforms are each appropriate and stimulating contributions to the debate around political and social reform in Ireland.

However, they are completely incompatible with one another, and any “alliance” or “common ground” reached between such people will represent little more than an opportunity for individuals, interests and egos to be put before the national best interest.

Multiparty politics is a painful business of compromise involving the aggregation of needs and the allocation and distribution of limited resources among a multitude of competing interests, usually at the expense of sectional, local and personal interests.

Anyone who thinks that an alliance of such diverse “independent” individuals can bring about much-needed reforms and progress in the national best interest should carefully scrutinise the agendas of individual candidates, and what exactly it is that holds any such “alliance” together before choosing to give them their vote. – Yours, etc,

BARRY COLFER,

Department of Politics

and International Studies,

University of Cambridge,

England.

Sir, – Besides voting on the budget, there is no obvious reason why every single piece of government legislation, no matter how rushed or flawed, should be blindly supported by government TDs.

The suggestion that, without the whip system, TDs would not follow their party’s principles, or would be bombarded by lobbies, is incorrect. TDs are bombarded by lobbies anyway, and most victims of the whip system in recent times fell because they tried to uphold their party’s promises to the electorate, such as Róisín Shorthall or Lucinda Creighton.

As for political instability leading to economic instability, Belgium has often gone without a government for well over a year in recent times, with little economic ill-effect. And the relatively stable Fianna Fáil-led governments between 1997 and 2011 were responsible for leaving us in this mess. – Yours, etc,

TOMÁS M CREAMER,

Ballinamore,

Co Leitrim.

A chara, – We now know that the UN, a former minister for education, the chairman of the forum on patronage and pluralism, and various others wish to see fewer schools under religious patronage (“Segregation concerns over transfer of school patronage”, January 2nd). It all seems rather overwhelming. Except that the people on the ground aren’t as keen; in fact the reason that the idea isn’t progressing is because of “huge local hostility”.

Parents don’t like the plan and parents, as it happens, are the primary educators of their children. It even says so in the Constitution. Which tends to make, I would suggest, the forces behind the push to wrest the control of schools into other hands a lot more underwhelming than they might at first appear. – Is mise,

Rev PATRICK G BURKE,

Castlecomer, Co Kilkenny.

Sir, – My point in highlighting the misuse of the political label of “Independent” by the media and Irish people in general was to point out that there is no such available option on the ballot paper (December 24th).

Although I do not want to see large numbers of so-called Independents in the Dáil, their automatic regulation to the category of “non-party” candidates on the ballot paper is surely confusing and politically mischievous.

As your columnist Colm Keena pointed out (“Why Ireland needs positive party politics to tackle challenges of globalisation”, December 31st), we desperately need party politics in Ireland today and apart from the undesirability of having large number of Independents in the next Dáil, it would be equally disturbing to encourage a non-party/party division at a time when we need more rather than less coherence in Irish politics.

While I share Tom Neville’s bafflement (January 2nd) at the growing popularity of Independents in Irish political life, we cannot expect new party politics to emerge if we ourselves continue to maintain our old self-centred social, cultural and political habits.

That much quoted observation that to change the world you must first change yourself certainly applies to Irish people today. Is it too much to hope that we will see the emergence of new politics in Ireland during 2015? – Yours, etc,

Dr VINCENT KENNY,

Knocklyon, Dublin 16.

Sir, – JD Mangan (January 8th) baldly states “Eamon de Valera used the Irish Press newspaper which he’d set up himself to con shareholders investing in the company”. This is totally untrue. JD Mangan is entitled to his own opinions but not to his own facts. This falsehood has been propagated by others through misrepresentation, selective use of extracts from documents, suppression of facts and bolstered by the invention of purported “facts” which can be shown to be untrue.

Eamon de Valera did set up the Irish Press and over 10,000 people subscribed funds because it was he who had set it up. There was nothing underhand in any of what he did.

For example, in February 1930, Frank P Walsh, a noted Irish American lawyer, wrote to bondholders of Republican Bonds seeking to raise funds for the Irish Press in America by the assignment of bonds to my grandfather. Within this letter he stated: “Whilst these funds are being solicited by way of donations, Mr de Valera, will, of course, not derive personally any monetary profit from them. He intends to make the necessary and proper arrangements to ensure that if any profits accrue from the enterprise, or, if there should be any distribution of assets, such profits and the amount of any such distribution will be made available for the donors, according to their respective donations.”

I can vouch that such arrangement were put in place and the commitment honoured. – Yours, etc,

EAMON de VALERA

Dublin 2.

Sir, – Are the days of chivalry and courtesy in Ireland over? As a senior citizen I travelled by Dart from Blackrock into Dublin city centre recently. The carriage was full of students from at least three different schools (I’m not going to mention them by name) travelling to the BT Young Scientist Exhibition in the RDS. All the seats were occupied by the students and all the adults were left standing in the aisles. Not once was I or any of the other adults offered a seat!

By contrast, travelling by Tube in London recently, on two occasions I was offered a seat when standing in the aisle. Perhaps a little training in behaviour wouldn’t go amiss in our schools. – Yours, etc,

AUSTIN SAVAGE,

Blackrock,

Co Dublin.

Sir, – In reference to the letter written by Dr Andrew Kelly (January 2nd) in respect of the Arts Council, circuses and wild animals, I would like to point out that under the Arts Act 2003, the Arts Council has a duty to uphold circus as an art form. That includes all forms of circus, be they traditional or contemporary. Circus is one of our oldest art forms and one of our most socially inclusive.

The Arts Council currently supports only two traditional circuses, Fossett’s and Duffy’s, both which use animals as an integral part of their shows. Fossett’s works only with horses, while Duffy’s has worked with sealions in recent years. They do not, however, use lions and tigers. Both of these circuses are in full compliance with the Framework for the Welfare of Animals Presented in the Arts document, which the Arts Council implements, and they also have their own highly detailed animal welfare policies

Both of these circuses love and respect their animals and treat them with the greatest of care, something which not every human in our society is afforded today. – Yours, etc,

LUCY MEDLYCOTT,

Co-ordinator,

Irish Street Arts, Circus

and Spectacle Network,

c/o Irish Theatre Institute,

Eustace Street,

Temple Bar,

Dublin 2.

Sir, – The suggestion by Dr Gerry Burke (January 8th) for the requisition of private hospitals by the Government for the benefit of the “common good” is as laughable as it is foolish.

Such hospitals already serve the common good by removing strain on public provision of services. Given that he acknowledges their efficiency, surely he would be more in favour of government incentives for the construction of even more private hospitals and personal incentives making private health insurance less costly? Surely a better solution than leaving more helpless patients in the clutches of the seemingly hapless public system. – Yours, etc,

EANNA COFFEY,

Killarney,

Co Kerry.

Sir, – The real culprit in the Charlie Haughey affair is Allied Irish Banks (AIB). In 1979 AIB wrote off a debt in excess of £1 million which was owing by Charlie Haughey to the bank. If AIB had pursued Haughey for the amount owing and got a judgment against him, then if he was unable to pay, he would have been adjudged a bankrupt, disqualified from Dáil Éireann and his political career would have come to an end. – Yours, etc,

MATTHEW

Mac GABHANN,

Grand Canal Dock, Dublin 2.

Irish Independent:

People hold panels to create the eyes of late Charlie Hebdo editor Stephane Charbonnier, known as "Charb", as hundreds of thousands of French citizens take part in a solidarity march (Marche Republicaine) in the streets of Paris January 11, 2015.
People hold panels to create the eyes of late Charlie Hebdo editor Stephane Charbonnier, known as “Charb”, as hundreds of thousands of French citizens take part in a solidarity march (Marche Republicaine) in the streets of Paris January 11, 2015.

The recent attacks in France have shocked the world and especially those of us who value free speech. These murderers do not understand, nor do they care to understand, that the right to say what we want is a cornerstone of our civilisation and is intrinsically important in the social and political history of the West.

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It is what we call a human right, one of those rights given to us by nature, or God, or whatever higher power you believe in.

The right to freedom of speech has been long sought after and hard won over many centuries. It can in fact be traced back to the birthplaces of Western civilisation in Ancient Greece and Rome.

Both laboured under repressive tyrannies for hundreds of years before regaining their freedom and enshrining free speech in their laws. The theme of freedom borne from the sufferance of tyranny is one that is repeated throughout Western history.

England embraced free speech after years of Cromwellian dictatorship, during which theatres and other such places were shut. It then fended off attempts at absolutist monarchical rule.

The right to free speech is vital to the dialogue that generates the change we value so much.

Our whole attitude to this vital right can best be summed up in the line: “I do not agree with what you have to say, but I’ll defend to the death your right to say it.” The very fact that I’m writing this piece shows free speech in action.

Colin Smith

Clara, Co Offaly

 

Remembering ‘Charlie Hebdo’

I am a big fan of ‘Charlie Hebdo’ and will always buy a copy when visiting France. I do this for the laughs I get from the fantastic cartoons and witty scripts. In fact, I have a kept a few of these over the years so I can relive the laughs.

A particular favourite is from 2003 during the heat wave in France. It is signed Wolinski (RIP) and I am saddened to realise that I will no longer be able to enjoy his work.

There were no sacred cows in the magazine; it parodied religion, politics and even the French themselves.

I listened to the comments of Dr Ali Selim of the Islamic Cultural Centre, and he seemed to indicate he would have a problem with content from such a magazine being published here.

Is this man the self-appointed censor in Ireland?

Donal Deering

Kilkenny

 

Freedom means responsibility

In the wake of the terrorist killings in Paris the right to ‘freedom of expression’ has been heralded repeatedly, which strikes me as one of the Western world’s enduring myths.

We have never had to be more careful about what we say, rightly or wrongly, and mindful of ethnicity, gender, social background, sexual orientation, disability, colour and beliefs. At what point does ‘freedom of expression’ slide into offensive behaviour, defamation, blasphemy and downright racism? The atrocity in Paris must be condemned. However, satirists and cartoonists should not go so far as to intentionally offend, insult or incite people of other creeds and beliefs.

Everyone has the right to freedom of expression, however, the exercise of this right carries with it duties and responsibilities. In a world increasingly divided between religious extremism, with Islamophobia and disaffected Muslim youth going off to fight in the Middle East, we need to respect people of other creeds, promote tolerance and build bridges – not destroy them.

Richard Coffey

Terenure, Dublin 6

Free speech is a human responsibility, it is not a privilege, and the primary responsibility inherent in free speech is to speak truthfully and fairly. This implies honesty and the willingness to hear the meaning of those with whom we engage in discourse and to learn from that discourse.

A healthy family, community or society treasures honesty and fairness in all matters above all else, because we do live together and our action or inaction affects each other and feeds into the future to affect the lives of people as yet unborn.

This responsibility is a constant. It is a fundamental human standard. It’s the very essence of healthy adult maturity.

Free Speech is therefore both a social and a personal responsibility, as well as a ‘response ability’; it contains within it the hearing out of the response to what one has uttered as part of its essence. Antagonism is not free speech, and is in general, an immature approach to discourse.

Corneilius Crowley

Harrow, England

 

Poetic justice

Tom Gilsenan rhymes “Inda and Lucinda” (Irish Independent Letters, 07.01.2015). Perhaps Inda will be at a ‘looseenda’ if Lucinda wins?

Declan Foley

Berwick, Australia

 

Reboot or a kickstart?

If Lucinda feels like a “reboot” she might be better advised just to buy herself a new pair of boots.

Liam Cooke

Coolock, Dublin 17

I know a number of people who would love to “reboot” the political system. Regrettably, it involves sudden and sharp applications of force to the posteriors of certain public figures.

Of course, this is a pipe dream, a term which might be applied to Lucinda Creighton’s new party. Announcing the formation of a new party with only Eddie Hobbs and John Leahy in support was not impressive. Eddie Hobbs is better known as a financial journalist/advisor rather than a politician. John Leahy is apparently a county councillor but can hardly be described as a household name. This is not an inspiring start for a new party, nor is the news that €1m is being sought to enable the party to fight the forthcoming election.

Name and address with editor

 

Solving the crisis in A&E

I am a nurse in one of the country’s large regional hospitals and I believe there is a simple, cost-effective solution Health Minister Leo Varadkar could implement to help reduce hospital admissions and improve medical care.

Every day a significant number of elderly patients are referred from nursing homes to Accident and Emergency (A&E) departments, in particular those suffering with pneumonia and other respiratory ailments and severe urinary tract infections. These patients are typically referred to hospital having been seen and diagnosed by a GP. In almost all cases their key medical requirement is for intravenous antibiotics and intravenous fluids to be administered for a short period. However, sending these patients to A&E means taking elderly, vulnerable people out of a warm familiar environment and into busy and at times chaotic hospitals.

This could be avoided if nursing staff in long-stay facilities were trained to cannulate patients – a simple procedure that would mean intravenous antibiotics and intravenous fluids could be administered in nursing homes, in their own beds, under the care of a medical doctor.

Nursing home staff are medical professionals who are also familiar faces to nursing home residents – making for a less frightening experience for patients. I have no doubt that putting this relatively simple change into practice would mean recovery times would be much quicker for patients whose medical treatment would be a safer and a less daunting experience.

Joan O’Donovan

Co Limerick

Gout

January 11, 2015

11 January 2015 Gout

Mary a little better though she could manage to get up for breakfast. Clear out cupboards in kitchen annex, gout strikes again!

Obituary:

Rosemary Lowe-McConnell, pioneer in the study of tropical fish

Rosemary Lowe-McConnell

Rosemary Lowe-McConnell, who has died aged 93, was a pioneer in the study of tropical fish, a field to which she was introduced while studying the inland waters of Kenya and Uganda during the late 1940s.

In a career spanning nearly half a century, her contribution to ichthyology was immense, illuminating the zoo-geography, taxonomy, phenology and evolution of tropical fish. Working in the African Great Lakes region and the Amazon basin in South America, her studies focused on cichlids – the large and diverse vertebrate family of freshwater fishes that include angelfish, peacock bass, jaguar guapote and the red Texas. Her particular specialism, however, was the tilapia, which is so successfully farmed that it is said to draw an annual revenue of $1 billion and is known as “aquatic chicken”.

Rosemary Helen Lowe (known to friends as Ro) was born on June 24 1921 and educated at Howell’s School, Denbigh, before studying at the University of Liverpool ; she remained with the university for postgraduate and doctorate studies.

Her fascination with Africa was inspired by her godmother, a biologist, who gave her books on natural history. Initially she wanted to be an explorer, and in later life recalled being told: “Never mind, dear, perhaps you can teach.”

From 1942 to 1945 Rosemary was a scientific officer with the Freshwater Biological Association (FBA) at Windermere in Cumbria, but on applying to the Colonial Service for a position as an entomologist she was informed that they would not employ a woman. The relatively new tropical fisheries department, by contrast, had no such qualms, and in 1945 she left for Africa on an expedition for the East African Fisheries Research Organisation (EAFRO). While travelling on the train to Lake Nyasa, the first of the African lakes at which she worked, she learnt about the Japanese surrender. She was joined in 1950 by her friend and collaborator Margaret Varley (the pair later worked on projects in Brazil).

Rosemary remained in Africa for 12 years, collecting and recording fish, and working for various organisations and institutions, including the Natural History Museum. In addition to Nyasa she studied the fish at Lakes Albert, Turkana and Tanganyika, as well as in the Pagani river in Tanzania. She investigated the life cycles and feeding habits of fish, their life strategies, parenting methods and how the various species rubbed along with one another. She was briefly the acting director of EAFRO.

Fishermen on Lake Victoria (ALAMY)

In 1953 she married the geologist Richard McConnell, requiring her to leave EAFRO, which had a “marriage bar” under which married women were not allowed to hold permanent posts. She joined her husband in Botswana (where she collected fish in the rivers and ponds of the Okavango Delta) before the couple moved to British Guiana in South America, where her husband became director of the British Guiana Geological Survey. There she recorded the interaction between electric fish from America and Africa and carried out research in the Rupununi savannah – the first survey of the Guiana shelf between the West Indies and Brazil.

In 1962 she returned to Britain, settling into a research post at the British Museum, to which she had sent samples during her travels. The museum, she wrote, was “an ideal base for meeting people and a catalyst for ideas and information”.

But her work in the field did not end there. She visited the vast reservoirs of West Africa (including Lake Kariba and Lake Volta) in the late Sixties, and in 1968 was the ichthyologist on the Xavantina-Cachimbo Expedition to north-eastern Mato Grosso in Brazil, run by the Royal Geographical Society. In Brazil she filed reports on catfish and gymnotoids and marvelled at the region’s birds, plants and insects. A decade later she travelled to Gatun Lake in Panama where the species Cichla ocellaris had been introduced to the waters.

She arranged various symposia on fish studies and played an important part in establishing tilapia aquaculture. She believed that the species was a valuable food source in Third World countries and promoted its production with the fisheries administration of the United Nations Food and Agriculture Organisation and the International Centre for Living Aquatic Resources Management (now known as the World Fish Centre).

Red tilapia: the species is successfully farmed, and is known as ‘aquatic chicken’ (ALAMY)

In 1995, by then a freelance consultant, she helped to raise awareness of the ecological damage being inflicted on the fish stocks of Lake Victoria in East Africa. What was once a “treasure trove” of approximately 300 species of cichlid, many unique to its habitat, had in recent years suffered from disappearing stocks. At first the finger of blame was pointed at the carnivorous Nile Perch, introduced to the lake’s waters in the mid-Fifties. This, maintained Rosemary Lowe-McConnell, was only half the story; siltation was also a contributory factor. An estimated 200 species, she maintained, once present in the lake were now extinct.

Regarding the ecological future of Lake Victoria, she supported a unified policy between Kenya, Tanzania and Uganda, all of which border the lake, on the assessment of fish stocks (including the possibility of introducing species). “This is one of the largest experiments, albeit unwitting, that’s ever happened,” she said. “Now we must discover as much as possible about what is going on.”

She was a fellow of the Linnean Society of London (and its vice-president in 1967), the first editor of the Biological Journal of the Linnean Society and a member of the Association for Tropical Biology .

She wrote more than 60 academic papers and published several books, including Fish Communities in Tropical Fresh Waters (1975) and her memoirs, The Tilapia Trail: The Life Story of a Fish Biologist (2006), in which she noted the peculiarity of African traffic signs (such as those warning of wandering elephants).

In later life, at her home in Sussex, she enjoyed assisting young ichthyologists and fisheries scientists . In 1997 she received the Linnean Medal of Zoology – “Not bad for someone who hasn’t had a job since 1953,” she observed.

Her husband predeceased her.

Rosemary Lowe-McConnell, born June 24 1921, died December 22 2014

 

Guardian:

All children deserve to go to an excellent school.
All children deserve to go to an excellent school. Photograph: David Levene for the Guardian

I was struck by the juxtaposition of the state’s and the individual’s apparently contrasting perspectives on how to do our best by our children in your editorial, “We all want the best for our children: the state must help ensure we get it” (Comment). The state’s interest in creating “a more socially integrated education system [to achieve] a more cohesive, tolerant society…” was presented as conflicting with the challenge: “Who could criticise [middle-class] parents for wanting to do the best for their children?”

Well, I for one would certainly do so if “the best” for their children was conceived in essentially egocentric terms. We choose what values we wish to inculcate in our offspring. Some of those choices (those emphasising privilege, inequality, discrimination, perhaps) will conflict with the culture we each choose to continue to live in and benefit from (socially integrated, coherent, tolerant etc). Surely this leaves any of those “middle-class parents using their greater means to get what’s best for their children”, whose values fit such an egocentric conception, open to our “hectoring”, left wing or otherwise.

Mike Warwick

Holmfirth

W Yorkshire

Your editorial comments that “there are still too many mediocre schools” and that there is a need for “opening up access to the best state schools” deserve to be challenged.  The most recent Ofsted report says that 82% of primary schools are now “good or outstanding”. The other 18% are likely to be schools where many of the children come from culturally impoverished homes and so do not score high on some of the Ofsted criteria, notwithstanding the likely commitment of their teachers. These schools do not deserve the epithet “mediocre”.

The notion that there are “best state schools” is questionable: best buildings, best test results, best teachers, best leadership? What assurance can there be that over the six years of a child’s primary career the state of “bestness” will continue.

The idea of “opening up access” to designated schools is a sop to over-ambitious parents who inevitably will elbow out others: where is the social justice in that? If every school is a good school (which is the government’s aim) then choice is unnecessary.

Attending the local school contributes to community development: children’s friends live nearby and their parents interact. If prospective parents feel the local school is “mediocre”, they should talk to members of the governing body and try to discover whether their judgment is fair and, if so, ask what the community can do to improve the situation.

Michael Bassey Emeritus professor

Newark

You refer to Tatler’s list of good schools as “money-saving tips”. The list is more important than that. Of the 21 schools in England Tatler has picked out, five are grammar schools and 16 are comprehensive ones. Of those 16 comprehensive schools, nine used to be grammar schools, two were once secondary modern schools and five have always been comprehensive.

First, the reiterated claim that only grammar schools produce high standards is obvious nonsense. Second, the still widely held belief that, at some point in the past, all but 164 grammar schools were “destroyed” by leftwing zealots is equally absurd. In fact, almost all grammar schools were transformed and often enlarged.

There are several hundred schools that are as good as the ones listed by Tatler, many of them in the north of England.

It is equally obvious that both Roman Catholic and Jewish schools would rank high on any such list and that becoming directly dependent on funding from the secretary of state as academies has had little bearing on the achievements of schools that were already among the best in the country.

Sir Peter Newsam Former chief schools adjudicator

Thornton Dale

N Yorks

Frances O'Grady, General Secretary of the Trades Union Congress (TUC).
Frances O’Grady, General Secretary of the Trades Union Congress (TUC). Photograph: PHIL NOBLE/REUTERS

All of what Frances O’Grady has to say in her excellent article on our parlous economic state bears repeating (“A real recovery would mean better conditions for everyone”, Business). But for us a couple of points stand out.

First, the absurdly large expenditure going on in-work benefits and, second, Tory plans to further restrict trade union activities. In-work benefits effectively subsidise employers, boosting their notional profits by reducing their labour costs. Stripped of its modish accoutrements (learning how to bake one’s own cakes, volunteering for public service et al) “austerity” is what one gets when all other state activity has to be pared to the bone in order to finance this subsidy.

So to the second point. In the Tory vision of the future, austerity will not be coming to an end soon. As the anti-union plans show, they have in mind the low wage economy as the new normal, with all of its attendant financial risks (low paid workers still need to top up on unsecured debt) and widespread misery.

Dr William Dixon

Dr David Wilson

London Metropolitan University

London E1

Hearing aid cuts unjustifiable

Reports of NHS Clinical Commissioning Groups (CCGs) restricting the number of hearing aids they provide in order to save money and of other CCGs considering cuts to audiology services (“NHS accused of ‘cruel’ rationing of hearing aids”, News) prompts questions about how costs and benefits are weighed in the NHS. There is a danger that short-term savings can do long-term damage that leads to higher expenditure in other parts of the health system.

A realistic assessment of the benefits of hearing aids that takes into account the quality of life of the hearing-impaired person would mean that rationing access to them would be very difficult to justify. It is reassuring that NHS England is clear that hearing loss should be considered in terms of its impact on health and wellbeing. As CCGs review their expenditure plans, including on audiology services, they should be aware of the bigger picture.

Neil Small

Professor of health research University of Bradford

The right to be vulgar

Barbara Ellen is quite right about the reactions of some people to the decor of some celebrities (“Such bad taste to mock someone’s bad taste, darling”, Comment). If some stars want to live in a John Waters film-set, that’s their choice: rather glad I’ll never be asked round, though.

Steve Hayes

Leven

Fife

Migrants’ boost to Germany

Kate Connolly’s report on the Pegida movement in the German city of Dresden portrays the xenophobic, nationalist and anti-immigrant sentiments of its supporters well (“Dresden crowds tell a chilling tale of Europe’s fear of migrants”, News). However, her assertion that Germany’s economy “is straining to deal with a record intake of more than 200,000 asylum seekers in 2014” is simply wrong.

The German economy greatly profits from immigration. Connolly also claims that the link between Pegida and an arson attack on a home for asylum seekers and a graffiti attack on a mosque is “so far unfounded”. This might be true in a strict “legal” sense. However, there is an obvious political link between far-right groups, neo-Nazi organisations and xenophobic, anti-immigrant organisations such as Pegida.

Peter Skrandies

London N22

Putin’s not such a bad guy

In an otherwise perceptive leader on a perilous year ahead for Europe (“A year of living dangerously looms for Europe”, Comment), it was surprising to find your newspaper still harping on about the danger of Russia in the manner of a 19th-century thunderer at the time of the Crimean War. Russia poses as about as big a threat to the rest of Europe as Sheffield United does to Manchester City.

It is a recovering country driven into a self-defensive position by Nato’s expansion westwards and America’s obsession with keeping the rest of Europe under its military control and sway. Putin is not a pacifist saint, but nor are Obama or Cameron, who have much more blood than Russia on their hands from military interventions, and who bear some responsibility, through destabilising regime-change policies, for the plight of Mediterranean refugees depicted on your front page.

Richard Woolley

Pickering

N Yorkshire

Don’t scoff at what I scoffed

Barbara Ellen, as someone who has just booked a two-week stay in Portugal for a juice cleanse, may I explain the reason why I didn’t do this in September (“With my trusty Curly Wurly, I defy fitness bores”, Comment)?

1. Consumption of approx 20 mince pies over Christmas.

2. Consumption of approx 40 chocolate reindeers, snowmen and Father Christmases over Christmas.

3. Consumption of approx 20 chipolatas, 3 plates of left-over goose and sundry stuffing.

4. Christmas pud and cream x 6.

I have not been a bore about my cleansing and fitness trip, as it will only highlight my gluttony!

Carol-Anne Turner

London NW3

 

 

Independent:

Nuclear energy is neither renewable nor zero-emissions and it is extraordinary that a serious academic can make this claim (“Nuclear power is greenest, say top scientists”, 4 January). Recent research published by Stanford University estimates nuclear’s greenhouse gas emissions to be up to 25 times higher per unit than wind power.

The actual figure is unknowable since the emissions created by the mining and milling of uranium (the largest single factor in nuclear’s greenhouse gas impact) is dependent on the number of nuclear plants globally, and the corresponding level of demand for uranium. The higher the demand, the greater the emissions as miners exploit poorer quality ores requiring vastly greater processing. To talk of a “golf-ball-sized” lump of uranium is absurd; it is to ignore the tens or hundreds of tons of rock that are dug up and pulverised to extract a few grams.

The eminent biologists who have fallen for the nuclear industry’s PR rebrand as a “green” solution to looming climate catastrophe are doubtless well-motivated but they have been sold a pup. Nuclear is not the answer to climate change, only huge reductions in energy consumption and massive investment in renewables can do this.

John Hare

Norwich Green Party

Rupert Read

Green Party parliamentary candidate for Cambridge

Why not invest a tiny fraction of the money spent on research into “new” nuclear and techniques for its waste disposal, in less glamorous technology to reduce the 70 per cent of carbon dioxide (CO2) emissions not produced by electricity which all the nuclear power in the world will scarcely touch? How about universal free household insulation for example, or proper integrated public transport? Both much cheaper, more effective and with a greater positive impact on people’s lives.

Taking things further, how about increased investment in large-scale energy storage to counteract the intermittency of some renewables?

Nuclear power, at the very least, is a hugely expensive distraction of minimal benefit in the fight to lower CO2 emissions.

Ian Ralls

Friends of the Earth Nuclear Network, Cambridge

I was excited to read that “Nuclear power is greenest”. I thought perhaps a way had been found to overcome the hazards of nuclear waste, but no mention of waste was made. I cannot help wondering how many “top scientists” would buy a house without any facility to dispose of their toilet waste.

R F Stearn

Stowmarket, Suffolk

Yes, cigarette ends and chewing gum are bad, but for me the mile after mile of plastic bags, soft-drink bottles, cans and fast-food wrappings strewn along every lane, road and motorway verge is worse, often causing me, as a passenger, to close my eyes unable look upon yet more of this lovely country so blighted (“Pick up some of the £1bn litter bill, MPs tell businesses” 4 January). Yet by far the worst are the filled and tied carrier bags of rubbish thrown from a car by occupants who must have more pride in their vehicle’s interior than the world outside. How can it be, that what for me, is our beautiful countryside, is to them, a bin?

Mary Bolingbroke,

Bradford on Avon, Wiltshire

We are writing in response to your editorial “Common-sense rights” (4 January). We are proud of the coalition’s record on civil liberties.

It is not true that the Counter-Terrorism and Security Bill grants the power simply to remove the passports of suspected foreign fighters. There were calls from some during the summer for the power arbitrarily to strip suspected foreign fighters of their citizenship. Liberal Democrats opposed this potential breach of international law and, in fact, the new legislation provides something very different – a managed return process. This will enable the police to speak to those who have fought abroad, and make sure that if they try to return this is done safely and with support – to divert them away from extremist groups.

Simon Hughes MP

Minister of State for Justice and Civil Liberties

Lynne Featherstone MP

Minister of State for Crime Prevention

 

Times:

People are said to be marrying later in order to avoid the problems of inheritance tax

Actually, Prof, NHS treatment is our right — we pay for it

YOU report that “top doctor” Professor Angus Wallace thinks too many people see the NHS as a right rather than a privilege (“Greedy public think NHS care is their divine right”, News, last week). We pay for it through our taxes. Patients ought not to be seen as supplicants for charity but rather as customers who have earned their treatments. In reality not all health service treatments are available “free” anyway (dentistry, for example).

David Cooper-Smith, Bletchley, Buckinghamshire

FINE LINE

The reason the NHS has been failing is that its business model is broken. It has been overprotected by the government and it needs to do far more to ensure that its users — that’s every single one of us — take a more responsible approach to how and when we use its services. It could start by fining people for missing appointments.

William Wilson, London SW11

MINOR AILMENTS

Perhaps the best way to alleviate problems with A&E departments is to have a local 24-hour triage service that provides trained practitioners to deal with minor injuries and prescriptions for simple ailments as well as referrals for cases meriting further examination.

Peter Edwards, London SE25

BRAIN SURGERY

We need an intelligent debate on financing the NHS rather than the yah-boo politics that our MPs are able to muster. How do the Germans, Swedes, Dutch and the best of the rest fund their health services?

Ralph Marshall, Bournemouth

HERBAL REMEDY

With reference to the article “Malaysia, Brazil and China put UK to shame in war on cancer” (News, last week), what all those countries have in common is a strong indigenous tradition of herbal medicine. The NHS and the media should wake up to its benefits, especially in relation to cancer treatments, so they can be properly integrated.

Jonathan Chamberlain, Author, The Cancer Survivor’s Bible and Cancer? Don’t Panic!

SCREEN TIME

The Sunday Times’s NHS Beat Cancer campaign is very worthy and should lead to improvements in treatments of the disease but there is another area in which it could be influential, by promoting the uptake of national cancer screening programmes.

Fewer than 60% of people in Britain take up the offer of bowel cancer screening, a simple diagnostic test sent out by post for people to perform in their own homes. Screening rates for breast and cervical cancer are also suboptimal, so many early-stage cancers are remaining undiagnosed. By campaigning for the greater uptake of these screening programmes you could help improve survival and save lives.

Dr Gerald Sacks, Eynsham, Oxfordshire

With this ring, I dodge the exchequer

ONE prime reason for getting married later in life is to avoid paying George Osborne, the chancellor, two tranches of inheritance tax, so your report “No ring? No rights” (Focus, last week) seems naive in suggesting more romantic interpretations. It is of course iniquitous that those who prefer to cohabit because they disapprove of state intrusion into their private lives should have to compromise and wed or risk ruin. As Dame Jenni Murray said in 2003 after cohabiting for 23 years, “I did it because of inheritance tax.”

Phillip Hodson, Gloucestershire

MARITAL STRIFE

The position of informal cohabitants is indeed precarious, although it should be noted that those who are looking after their children after a break-up are able to apply for child support from the children’s non-resident parent. The former family court judge Sir Paul Coleridge’s emphasis on education is superficially attractive, but the limited effectiveness of past campaigns is demonstrated by your article. The empirical evidence about the stability of marriage compared with cohabitation, moreover, is not as clear-cut as Coleridge implies when other factors are taken into account.

In any case, and whatever one thinks about the benefits or drawbacks of marriage, attempting to encourage more people to wed is very unlikely to reverse the increasing prevalence of cohabitation to a significant extent. Reform to the law is needed.

Dr Brian Sloan, Lecturer and Fellow in Law, Robinson College, Cambridge

Ched Evans gets red card but guilty peers are forgiven

THE footballer Ched Evans was found guilty and has done his time (“In this sordid story there are no winners”, Focus, last week). Nothing in our legal system states that the convicted person has to apologise. In any case, Evans claims that he has been a victim of a miscarriage of justice so an apology is hardly going to be forthcoming.

Our legal system is meant to be about rehabilitation. We let peers of the realm who have spent time behind bars return to the House of Lords, so why should Evans be prevented from playing football? All this guff about being in the public eye is just that — 99.99% of the population had never heard of him until his conviction.

Terry Lees, Helpringham, Lincolnshire

CRIME AND PUNISHMENT

Evans committed a vile crime, was punished and has been released on licence, but he is being subjected to an unprecedented campaign that is effectively preventing him from finding employment and thereby impeding his rehabilitation. It is clear from this campaign that many believe, as I do, that the crime of rape — along with murder and terrorism — is not punished with sufficient severity. Will MPs who have jumped on the anti-Evans bandwagon now work to change the law to increase the penalty for rape?

Jeffrey Stevenson, Address withheld

EXPELLED FOR A REASON

Replace footballer with teacher and I doubt there would be any sympathy for a rapist who wanted to carry on teaching after a guilty verdict. Evans’s appeal has been refused thus far; his victim has been hounded.

Carolyn McGrath, Woodford Green, London

Duke’s dairy tramples over animal rights

RICHARD GIRLING writes that unlike René Descartes’s views on animals, modern anthropomorphism helps us to connect more directly with the creatures that share our space (“Look Grumpy Cat in her malevolent eye and tell me animals don’t feel”, Comment, last week). In the same newspaper there is an article (“Dairy Duke’s cows never see daylight”, News) about the inhumane “super-mechanised” farm operated by the Duke of Westminster, where dairy cows are kept inside a shed for 24 hours a day, 52 weeks a year, and are milked on a rotating treadmill and pushed to deliver a volume of milk beyond their normal capacity until being culled at an early age.

Since the Duke of Westminster clearly lacks any anthropomorphic beliefs, perhaps he should read the philosophy of Jacques Derrida, who emphasises that animal rights should be based on human ones and rails against man’s systematic cruel domination over animals.

Kay Bagon, Radlett, Hertfordshire

Love of democracy is Ukip’s raison d’être

ADRIAN WOOLDRIDGE’S column “Engineers rule China. Lawyers lead the US. We get bluffers and blaggers” (Comment, December 28) describes the aims of Ukip as “deep parochialism”. I have been a member of Ukip for 20 years and know that what drives most of its membership is not fear of foreigners or a sentimental wish to return to 1957 but a desire to maintain the principle of accountable government.

Some years ago I asked Vernon Bogdanor, an emeritus professor of government at Oxford, whether he agreed that our greatest political achievement was that the people had the power not just to elect but also to dismiss their government. He said that it was. I then asked where the comparable mechanism was in the EU, and he said that there wasn’t one.

Mike Lynch, Waterbeach, Cambridgeshire

NO VOTE WAS THE RIGHT ANSWER TO THE WRONG QUESTION

JENNY HJUL’S 2014 review of Scotland rightly points out the failure of the SNP and Alex Salmond in particular to deliver independence (“The saving of the Union should be lasting legacy of a memorable year”, Comment, December 28, 2014). She pointed out one of the startling achievements in bringing together Labour and Conservatives to fight the Better Together campaign. The political landscape since the referendum indicates that what might have been expected to be of great benefit to the unionist side has not really materialised.

The build-up to the referendum allowed the SNP two years to explain what it wanted for Scotland.Whether you agree with SNP policies or not, the people understood where the party stood, and were confused regarding Labour and the Conservatives.

The call for independence was a step too far. Had a third option been offered to maximise devolution of power from Westminster to Edinburgh, that would have carried the vote by a large majority. To vote for independence in September without any real indication of what that might mean for some 18 months was an unacceptable leap of faith.

The general election in 2015 and Holyrood election in 2016 present far less risk and uncertainty to an electorate that sees Westminster as remote and English-centric.

Mike Cottam, Aviemore, Inverness-shire

Try getting out more

Hjul obviously moves in such rarefied circles that she never meets the hordes that belong to the SNP or indeed the misguided from other political groups, also in favour of an independent Scotland.

Why is there a huge upsurge in membership for the SNP but also the Greens. Our English neighbours are looking for serious change as well, not just votes on English matters but devolved control from Westminster. Did Hjul attend the Women for Independence meetings, where the venue had to change location to accommodate more than 1,000 that wished to attend after the referendum? Did she attend Nicola Sturgeon’s sellout tour of Scotland? A large percentage of the “no” voters are sorely disappointed in the outcome and in the usual patronising response from Westminster.

Patricia Methven, Highlands

Independent thinking

If political parties were in the private sector they would immediately fall foul of two government regulators: Companies House and the Office of Fair Trading. First, for trading while insolvent, and second, for operating a cartel. They are currently incurring levels of debt way beyond our ability to service, let alone repay. However, anyone who dares challenge them is either ignored or traduced by their friends in the media. Rather than voting for them in May, we should be getting rid of them altogether by supporting only independent candidates.

Robert Durward, Biggar, Lanarkshire

DEGREES OF SEPARATION

Wooldridge laments the preponderance of PPE (philosophy, politics and economics) graduates in the top echelons of politics and society, while standing in for Dominic Lawson (PPE).

Those of us with useful degrees have long since given up wondering why successive governments peopled almost exclusively with arts and humanities graduates continue to make such a mess of things, aided and abetted by their peers in the media. Bluffers and blaggers indeed.

Dr Clive Nuttman, Department of Zoology, Cambridge

PRECISION ENGINEERS

The dozens of historians in parliament seem not to have learnt any lessons from the past. Not only can engineers count; they can distinguish between risk and uncertainty, understand scale and know what questions to ask.

Regarding the top two prime ministers of the past 100 years, Margaret Thatcher was a chemist and Winston Churchill did not go to university at all.

Hazel Prowse (double physics), Camberley, Surrey

SHACKLED SECURITY FORCES

Last week’s terrorist attacks in Paris have produced more empty statements from politicians. We need to empower our security services, police and military with the ability to fight terrorists without having their hands tied behind their backs. Recent investigations of the CIA and demands for the same within MI5 have weakened international security. Terrorists murder women, children and now cartoonists. They are not bound or deterred by human rights legislation. To ask the security services to keep us safe and then question the manner in which they do so is a failure to protect our democracy and human rights.

Malcolm McDonald, Kelty, Fife

BAD ATMOSPHERE

In October I travelled to China and with other group members suffered breathing difficulties and severe eye irritation from the air pollution, so it was with great concern that I read the article “Toxic air monitors may be scrapped” (News, December 28). It will undoubtedly result in a much more lax attitude to air pollution, as in China, and create severe health problems. I understand that air pollution in China has contributed to more than 1m deaths annually in recent years.

Alan O’Connor, Eastbourne

ISRAELI HAVEN

You published a justifiably gloomy report on the Middle East by Michael Sheridan (“Many Middle Eastern faiths, but one prayer: deliver us from persecution”, Comment, December 21). He wrote that “nobody has an exit strategy for their foes”, and then conceded that the persecuted Baha’i of Iran have found sanctuary in Haifa, Israel, before adding: “That is hardly a solution available to everyone.” Of course it isn’t, but is it not a remarkable model for other nations to follow? Israel has also offered asylum to Vietnamese boat people, Christians fleeing Lebanon and thousands of Russian non-Jews climbing onto the Jewish bandwagon. No other nation even approaches such benevolence. The once-hospitable UK balks at accepting even a few thousand persecuted Syrians while admitting some very tricky economic immigrants.

Denis Vandervelde, London NW11

QUOTATION MARKED

In your list of 2014 literary highlights (“The good, the bad and the grumpy”, Arts & Books, News Review, December 28) you quoted your chief fiction reviewer Peter Kemp’s claim that in a Sydney bookshop PD James once signed one of her novels “To Emma Chizzit” when she misheard a reader who inquired in a broad Australian accent about the price of the book. The author involved was Monica Dickens. I knew both ladies well for many years, Monica as a close friend, and it was she who told me the story when I interviewed her in 1970 after she had just returned from her first author tour to Australia. Phyllis, on the other hand, did not write her first successful book, Innocent Blood, until 1980 and did not make any tours until then.

Graham Lord, London SW15

Corrections and clarifications

Complaints about inaccuracies in all sections of The Sunday Times, should be addressed to complaints@sunday-times.co.uk or Complaints, The Sunday Times, 1 London Bridge Street, London SE1 9GF. In addition, the Independent Press Standards Organisation (Ipso) will examine formal complaints about the editorial content of UK newspapers and magazines. Please go to our complaints section for full details of how to lodge a complaint.

Birthdays

Mary J Blige, singer, 44; Ben Crenshaw, golfer, 63; Jasper Fforde, novelist, 54; Melvyn Hayes, actor, 80; Emile Heskey, footballer, 37; Jamelia, singer, 34; Phyllis Logan, actress, 59; Tom Meighan, singer, 34; Rachel Riley, TV presenter, 29; Bryan Robson, footballer, 58; Arthur Scargill, trade unionist, 77; John Sessions, actor, 62

Anniversaries

1864 London’s Charing Cross rail station opens; 1928 novelist Thomas Hardy dies; 1964 US health department publishes landmark report linking smoking to diseases such as lung cancer; 1973 first Open University graduates receive degrees; 1974 Briton Susan Rosenkowitz gives birth in South Africa to first sextuplets to survive infancy

Telegraph:

People hold up pens during a gathering in front of the city hall of Rennes following the attack

People hold up pens during a gathering in front of the city hall of Rennes following the attack  Photo: Damien Meyer/AFP/Getty Images

SIR – For a decade or more we have been subject to dictates of political correctness, against our saying or doing anything that might cause offence.

Now, in the light of the Charlie Hebdo atrocity, we are told that the freedom to offend is fundamental and to be defended.

Just what are we supposed to do?

Stephen Thomas
Tenbury Wells, Worcestershire

SIR – I admire immensely the stance that France has been taking, in the wake of the atrocities carried out there, on freedom of speech.

Will David Cameron, the Prime Minister, follow suit and allow freedom of speech to return to Britain, or will we still have to look over our shoulder before offering an opinion on race, religion, sexuality or any group to which our politicians pander for votes?

Lieutenant Colonel Ian Beck (retd)
Dearham, Cumbria

SIR – The attack on Charlie Hebdo was an attack on freedom of expression, as well as a horribly murderous attack on individuals. However, we must not allow the French Republic to bask in its own self-image as a bastion of freedom of expression. It is nothing of the kind.

The legal restrictions on freedom of expression are more encompassing in France than in any other country in Europe. A careless choice of word, in an off-the-cuff discussion (or even an attempt to avoid a discussion) can result in a peculiar hybrid criminal prosecution and civil action brought by private organisations.

Such actions might lead to criminal penalties and damages payable to campaigning organisations. Indeed, Charlie Hebdo was the target of such an action as the result of the re-publication of the Danish cartoons. While that action failed in 2007, its menace would have cowed many weaker editorial teams.

France’s repressive restrictions on freedom of expression in the areas of race, religion and ethnicity create a culture of expectation that dissent from the political class’s line will be stamped out. When legal actions fail, illegal action will be pursued.

Andrew Brons
Leeds, West Yorkshire

SIR – Je ne suis pas Charlie. I am appalled at the horrific terrorist attack in France. While I am a committed advocate of free speech and am deeply against the puritanical doctrinal path that some strands of Islam are taking, I am in no way a fan of Charlie Hebdo, in particular its unnecessary decision to reprint the 2005 Jyllands-Posten Mohammed cartoons.

I believe in mutual tolerance, respect and love. This sort of divisive hate-spreading incitement causes damage by radicalising and dehumanising both sides.

Am I alone in seeing parallels between these cartoons and those depicting Jews in Thirties Germany?

Max Jalil
Birmingham

SIR – The Oxford Dictionary defines phobia as “an extreme or often irrational fear of or aversion to something”: Islamophobia is defined differently, as “dislike of or prejudice against Islam or Muslims, especially as a political force”.

In the traditional sense of phobia, I am unfortunately, but undeniably, Islamophobic. Yes, I do fear Islam: I fear for my future, and my children’s, because of the danger that fundamentalist Islamic fanatics cause. I fear that until the Islamic hierarchy, political or religious, stands up to eradicate the fanatics among them, then my fears are indeed justified.

Gidon Stemmer
Salford

SIR – I follow no faith, but mainly observe Christian moral values. Many comments about the slaughter in Paris, by people who assume they are Christian, civilised, Western and cultured, condemn the actions of a fanatical cadre.

However, they do not seem uncomfortable about the uncivilised, insensitive, childish, intellectually presumptuous cartoons in Charlie Hebdo.

Anyone with any decency, even if agnostic, should observe sensitivity and respect for other cultures’ beliefs.

David Culm
Littleover, Derbyshire

SIR – The Paris shooting was ghastly, but why is so much attention given to it yet so little to repeated killings of this nature in Nigeria, where more people are murdered?

In Paris there had been provocation by some of those killed. In Nigeria there is none other than that of not being Muslim.

David Pitts
East Molesey, Surrey

Unprosecuted crimes

SIR – How disingenuous of Chris Grayling, the Justice Secretary, to say he wants to end the cautions culture. He is the architect of the latest and arguably the most savage cuts to both prosecution and defence funding, which have produced this unhappy state of affairs.

The drive to save costs has resulted in a culture of routinely charging people with less serious offences than would previously have been the charge, in order to encourage guilty pleas in low-profile, high-volume cases. If, despite this, the case seems to be heading for a trial, ludicrously lenient plea packages are increasingly agreed by the Crown, save in the most egregious cases, rather than suffer the time and expense of litigating the matter.

The sentencing judge is bound to sentence only on what an offender has pleaded guilty to. The net result is that many really quite serious offences go unprosecuted or underprosecuted.

Yvonne Coen QC
Stamford, Lincolnshire

A duty to the electorate

(Rex Features)

SIR – David Cameron, the Prime Minister, says he will not take part in the general election TV leadership debates unless the Green Party is included.

I believe that any candidate for political office has a moral duty to present himself or herself for public scrutiny. This is particularly important for those seeking leadership positions. Perhaps the time has now come when participation should be a legal requirement for those seeking office.

Doug Clark
Currie, Midlothian

Scrapheap of history

SIR – When I spent the year 1963-64 as Reuters’ (and the West’s) sole correspondent in East Berlin, I had a Wartburg (Letters, January 6). It was a disgusting pink colour but it was compulsory. This horror had one advantage: you could sneer at Trabants as you went past them.

On October 1 1990, reunification day, I watched the new masters from the west sweep past in their Mercedes and run the Wartburgs and Trabants off the road. I almost felt sorry for them.

Frederick Forsyth
Beaconsfield, Buckinghamshire

Telephone directories

SIR – High Wycombe is not the only place that BT has moved into another county (Letters, January 8).

In Cardiff, the eastern section with the postcode CF3 is deemed by BT to be situated in Newport and given a Newport telephone directory.

If we want a local directory, we have to buy one for £10.

I have challenged this over many years and am always told by the marketing department in Scotland that this part of Cardiff is deemed to be in Newport “for marketing purposes”.

It seems to have escaped BT that its directories are passé and have a diminishing marketing value.

Barrie W Cooper
Cardiff

Law unto Broadchurch

Olivia Colman in ‘Broadchurch’ (Patrick Redmond/ITV)

SIR – As often happens when screenwriters do not take authoritative legal advice when venturing into legal waters, Broadchurch, an otherwise excellent show (Letters, January 9), seems now to be talking nonsense.

I was a barrister in private practice in London from 1963 to 2006. The suggestion that the family of the victim would hunt out a QC to “represent them” or “take the prosecution on their behalf” is ridiculous.

It is not their case; it is the State’s case. Presumably the famous lady QC is expected to put pressure on the Crown Prosecution Service and the Director of Public Prosecutions, perhaps calling in a past favour or two, so that she is nominated by them as counsel for the prosecution.

I do not necessarily think nobly of those gentlemen, but I certainly do not see them being pushed into making such a choice; more likely involvement of the QC with the family would make it certain that she would not be selected.

Charles Lewis
London N2

Tough as old boots

SIR – Our tortoise lives in the garden and is more than 80 years old. The only medical intervention he has had followed a fox bite on his undershell, which drew blood. A little well-placed epoxy resin glue and he was good as new. That was 10 years ago.

Mary Whittle
Rochester, Kent

The scientific truth behind an old wives’ tale

Salad days: a 19th-century still life by the Belgian painter David Emile Joseph de Noter (www.bridgemanart.com)

SIR – It is in fact true that carrots “allow you to see in the dark”.

The carotene pigment that gives them their orange colour is both an antioxidant and pre-vitamin A. Converted to vitamin A in the body it combines with the opsin protein found in the rods at the back of the retina to form the compound visual purple. It is this compound that is responsible for the detection of light. Thus, the earliest clinical symptom of vitamin A deficiency is night blindness; the inability of the eye to adjust to dim light.

Dr Ruth Ash
School of Human Sciences
London Metropolitan University

A chance for young musicians to excel on stage

SIR – Ivan Hewett makes many appreciative comments in his review of the National Youth Orchestra’s concert at the Barbican, for which we thank him. We appreciate serious criticism because our high standards demand it.

Mr Hewett also questions the wisdom of fielding a double-sized orchestra. We do this primarily because NYO exists to give breakthrough experiences of orchestral music to teenage musicians and audiences, and we want as many talented, committed young musicians as possible to have the chance to play with NYO. For many it is a life-changing experience, and we have to turn away far more than we would like.

Our size has an added benefit. It helps keep the NYO culture of youthful brilliance in orchestral performance alive from year to year. Our standards rely not just on our teaching team and conductors such as John Wilson, but also on peer inspiration. New members learn a tremendous amount about how to excel as orchestral musicians by following the lead of our returning members.

There are limits to what you can achieve with an orchestra of 163 teenage musicians, more than half of whom are playing in a world-class orchestra for the first time. But those limits are set far higher than you might expect if you have never heard NYO perform. Readers who wish to decide for themselves can hear our Barbican concert that was broadcast by BBC Radio 3 yesterday, at any time in the next 30 days via BBC iPlayer.

Sarah Alexander
Chief Executive & Artistic Director, National Youth Orchestra of Great Britain
London WC2

 

Globe and Mail:

Doug Saunders

Europe threatened by its own ‘clash of civilizations’

 

Irish Independent:

Sunday 11 January 2015

Bankers can celebrate

Published 11/01/2015 | 02:30

  • 0 Comments

Sir – I write to you in response to the ‘Letter of the Week’ written by Mel Devlin, (Sunday Independent, 4 January).

  • Go To

He refers to “bankers” having a Christmas office party, but makes no reference to what bank is involved, whether the attendees paid for their own drinks and how many of the hundreds he says were there were actually bank employees.

Instead he took the word of the door security and then proceeded to put pen to paper.

Yes, I too have been stung by the financial crisis – mostly because of my own making and indeed with some help from the financial institutions, developers, accountants, solicitors and estate agents who drove the market wild at that time. And no I don’t work in a bank, but I do have a number of close friends who do at branch banking level, including my son.

I would not deny the right of any of these employees to have a get-together at Christmas in whatever shape or fashion they wish. Mr Devlin appears to have an issue with that.

But citing the tragic death of that poor homeless man was not in any way relevant to this so-called Christmas office party. That death was an extremely sad event and should not be used as a tool to make rash comparisons.

John Ryan,

Dublin 24

Thank to all the medics and jockeys

Sir – I want to thank two professional bodies who from time to time are linked together in the work they do.

My first thanks goes to the staff at James Connolly Memorial Hospital in Blanchardstown, who looked after me when I broke my leg during Christmas week, especially the orthopaedic team who work under what is obviously a section needing further funding.

Perhaps Minister Varadaker might visit his old Alma Mater where he trained as a doctor and see for himself the conditions that exist there?

My second sincere thanks goes to the great warriors who take part in National Hunt Racing.

When any one of these great sports people get broken up it’s the professionals from an orthopaedic team who put them back together and allow them to entertain us like they did me watching the Christmas racing festivals from Leopardstown, Limerick and Kempton. Fred Molloy,

Clonsilla,

Dublin 15

Sunday Independent

Thousands of people gather for a moment of silence to pay their respects to the victims of the deadly attack at the Paris offices of French satirical newspaper Charlie Hebdo, in Lyon, central France, Wednesday, Jan. 7, 2015.
Thousands of people gather for a moment of silence to pay their respects to the victims of the deadly attack at the Paris offices of French satirical newspaper Charlie Hebdo, in Lyon, central France, Wednesday, Jan. 7, 2015.

Sir – It’s over 25 years since the Ayatollah Khomeni issued the fatwa on Salman Rushdie for “blaspheming against Islam”. We are not ‘rushing to judgement’ when we say we are weary of this medieval barbarism and its relentless quest to stifle debate and censor commentary.

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In the aftermath of the Charlie Hebdo atrocity, sections of a cowed public express vague fears about the potential ‘Islamophobia’. This is a construct of the addled, fevered, post-colonial imagination.

What’s remarkable is not that the odd incident of anti-Islamic sentiment may occur after such a brutal assault on our way of life but how rare and isolated such incidents actually are. The civilised and dignified restraint being shown by the French public is remarkable.

Our own history is one of censorship and religious intolerance. We cannot let our liberal instincts carry us blindly towards appeasement, in the face of such evil. We should champion life and all the things that make it a bit more bearable and that includes satire and freedom of expression.

S O’Neill,

Clontarf,

Dublin 3

Pressure is on Creighton’s party

Sir – I do hope that Ms Lucinda Creighton and her political cohorts in this newly found party Reform Alliance are successful with their future endeavours.

And I can say with certainty that having politicians of the calibre of Shane Ross is a good platform too to begin with, as I respect him for his honesty.That’s a refreshing approach.

We need political honesty instead of this two-faced hypocrisy we have been enduring for decades. That type of intolerable underhanded deceitfulness infuriates me as the citizens of Ireland have been and will continue be the financial victims of too many unaccountable political regimes for far too long.

Therefore, I am hopeful that people like me can be assured that, all the members of this newly founded party will succeed in their endeavour to firmly invoke the true meaning of the word “reform”.

The present regime has wilfully failed dramatically to even begin the process of reform. Our politicians epitomise the true meaning of self-preservation, and that has been achieved through their abuse of power. That’s why the people have been let down too often and I do believe this country is in urgent need of serious political restoration.

Having said that, and owing to Ms Creighton’s previous political affiliations, I would have some reservations about her party policies on reform. But I shall remain an optimist in the hope it won’t become an over-ambitious party whose members will forget the principles on which the party has been founded.

Moreover, I don’t want to see or even hear of them entering into coalition or amalgamating with the big boys and ending up yet another failed statistic in the annals of political history.

In all honesty, no political party has even attempted to prioritise the future security for long-term employment for the people of this country despite all their pre-election reassurances and promises. Hence, I believe the pressure is already on Ms Creighton’s party to bring about a more trustworthy political establishment so that we’ve a more equal society for the good of all us Irish citizens.

Matthew J Greville,

Killucan,

Co Westmeath

 

Real change is what we want

Sir – Your front page last week made it clear why our country is still heading downhill fast on a greasy mattress of lies and deception in all areas, especially health, environment and finance.

FF and FG are now proving that they have never been in genuine opposition, except for photo opportunities. They are now planning to confirm that they have both been living from the trough of decent people’s taxes and wish to continue that party at all costs.

Integrity – no thank you.

For anybody to decry Lucinda Creighton or Sinn Fein is to deny what FF and FG have done to the country over the last 15 years. We desperately need real change in several areas and they might just bring it. To even consider electing a FF/FG coalition is the equivalent of contemplating taking two brands of headache pill for a broken leg.

Richard Barton,

Tinahely,

Co Wicklow

Stephen should’ve joined Lucinda

Sir, Stephen Donnelly (“Move to challenge the status quo is to be welcomed” Sunday Independent, January 4) welcomes Lucinda Creighton’s political initiative.

He appears to support her guiding principles and suggests that like her, he is working to positively change the political system.

Why did he choose not to join Lucinda’s political initiative where his talents could be best served in achieving their common goals?

Frank Browne

Templeogue,

Dublin 16

Lucinda is on a certified loser

Sir – New skin for the old ceremony wrote Leonard Cohen. New party, whispers Lucinda Creighton. Is she so far removed from the people that she assumes them to be desperate?

Eddie Hobbs was a poster boy for Celtic Tiger Ireland but is now a (re) visionary on how it went belly up. An unknown councillor, John Leahy, and that’s it. The rest to follow.

Ms Creighton, apart from a single issue has backed her countyman, Mr Kenny and FG. What’s new and radical about that – apart from keeping an each-way bet viable?

The next election will split four ways. Sinn Fein, FG, and FF will be the main parties. Probably a disparate number of Independents will equal if not surpass the Big Three. But Ms Creighton carries all the relevancy of a loser’s betting docket.

The Irish people have had a bellyfull of insignificant little parties screwing them. In that I include DL (alias Labour), Greens and the PDs.

Sad when we look back with tinted glasses at Charlie and Bertie and say ” Yerra were they that bad?” Ireland needs many things at the moment. An opaque talking shop fronted by Eddie and Lucinda is not one of them.

John Cuffe,

Dunboyne,

Co Meath

New centre-right party not needed

Sir – Lucinda Creighton, the ex-Fine Gael TD and junior minister, has decided to grace the Irish people with a new political party, yet to receive a name. She and her nameless party have yet to announce their economic and social policies.

However, based on her previous actions in Dail Eireann when she was a member of Fine Gael and supported the austerity measures, we may expect similar. She is on record (in the Sunday Independent of January 4) as stating that she favours the continuation of the incorrectly named property tax and the new water charges.

Although she has stated that she favours the abolition of the universal social charge, her previous actions in relation to this speak volumes.

She did not oppose it when it was implemented. The only difference that may be seen between this yet-to-be-named party and the party that she and some of her colleagues left is their opposition to the Protection of Life during Pregnancy Bill.

It may also be stated that Fianna Fail are no different.

In this country we do not need another centre-right party.

Dr Tadhg Moloney,

Gouldavoher,

Limerick

Let us have a new Proclamation

Sir – Since the 2008-2009 crisis, the Irish citizen pays significantly more in tax, whether it is the water charge, the LPT, the Universal Social Charge or the pension levy.

Throw in the 23pc in VAT now compared to the 21pc before the crisis and what have we got to show for it?

Better public services? More resources for education? A more efficient and effective health service? None of the above.

Add to this a stealthy reduction in government funding for registered charities, and the calculus is simple – we pay more, we receive less, despite the Government benefitting from its lowest ever borrowing costs.

Yet our semi-state entities and quangos still want the best of both worlds – private sector pay and public sector pensions and job security.

I no longer have faith in the Irish Government, having unfashionably supported the need for some measure of austerity when it was needed. With a booming economy, falling unemployment, and low interest rates, this much austerity is no longer needed.

I would love to see the political parties come together to produce a blueprint for Ireland’s social and economic future that provides a means for our children to live in a cohesive and economically viable society, punching above its weight internationally.

Gavin Dredge,

Killiney,

Co Dublin

Timely tips for the year ahead

Sir – This year, for other people: try a smile (it will make them feel good). For the mind – try to read more (it will encourage you to write more… which will mean more letters for the Letters Page). For the soul – try to pray more (nothing is impossible to God). For peace – ignore the bullies (they’re just very sad people). For the future – try to leave the past behind, and live and enjoy one day at a time.

Brian McDevitt,

Glenties,

Co Donegal

Cleaning

January 10, 2015

10 January 2015 Cleaning

Mary a little better though she could manage to get up for breakfast. Clear out cupboards in kitchen annex.

Obituary:

Lance Percival – obituary

Lance Percival was an actor and revue performer known for his ‘instant calypso’ on TW3 and appearances in British comic films

Lance Percival, actor

Lance Percival in an episode of ‘Jason King’ Photo: REX

Lance Percival, the comedian and singer who has died aged 81, was a regular cast member of Britain’s first topical satire show, That Was The Week That Was, and a stalwart over many years of British comedy caper movies.

TW3’s deviser Ned Sherrin plucked Percival from playing guitar at the Blue Angel Club in Mayfair, and during the show’s brief but hugely successful outing on the BBC in 1962-63, Percival featured in political sketches and performed a regular “instant calypso” inspired by the week’s events — in the manner of the West Indian singer Cy Grant.

Gangly, with an expressive, snaggle-toothed face and a good line in funny voices, Percival was the Tory leader Sir Alec Douglas-Home to Willy Rushton’s Harold Macmillan. He was also memorable as a civil servant detecting sexual innuendoes in bureaucratese in a 1963 sketch spoofing the controversy over the junior minister Tam Galbraith beginning a letter to the mandarin John Vassall (whose homosexuality had been used to blackmail him into spying for the Soviet Union) with the words “My Dear Vassall”.

In his calypso slot Percival would ask audience members to suggest possible subjects and would then launch into improvised topical calypsos, of which one, Shame and Scandal in the Family, an updated version of a calypso standard, reached No 37 in the charts in 1965.

Percival recorded several other novelty songs with George Martin at Parlophone, including The Beetroot Song (“If you like beetroot I’ll be true to you”, 1963) and The Maharajah of Brum (1967).

After TW3’s demise, two of the show’s writers, Peter Tinniswood and David Nobbs, created an unsuccessful television sitcom for Percival, Lance at Large (1964). More successfully, The Lance Percival Show, a sketch-variety format, ran for two series on BBC One (1965-66).

But Percival mainly became known as a jobbing actor on television and in film comedies such as Carry On Cruising (1962), into which he was drafted at the last moment to play a bilious ship’s cook by its penny-pinching producer, Peter Rogers, after Carry On regular Charles Hawtrey had the temerity to ask for a pay rise. Later Percival appeared in the Frankie Howerd vehicles Up Pompeii! (1971), Up the Chastity Belt (1971) and Up the Front (1972).

Lance Percival (second from right) and other members of the TW3 line-up in 1963 (GETTY/HULTON ARCHIVE)

John Lancelot Blades Percival was born at Sevenoaks, Kent, on July 26 1933. His parents sent him to Sherborne, where he became interested in music. He entered show business with a calypso group, and by the 1950s was performing in London clubs and on television shows. In 1960 he starred with Kenneth Williams and Sheila Hancock in Peter Cook’s stage revue One Over the Eight (for which he was understudied by Ken Loach).

He had made his (uncredited) screen debut in Three Men in a Boat in 1956, and went on to appear in more than 30 films. He had cameo roles in The V.I.P.s in 1963 and The Yellow Rolls-Royce (1964). In 1970 he appeared alongside Julie Andrews in the musical film Darling Lili and in There’s a Girl in My Soup, starring Peter Sellers and Goldie Hawn.

Lance Percival (left) with Kenneth Williams and Kenneth Connor in Carry On Cruising (REX)

He provided the voice of both Paul McCartney and Ringo Starr in the 1965 television cartoon series The Beatles, and that of the character “Old Fred” in the Beatles’ animated film Yellow Submarine (1968).

In late 1970, however, Percival was involved in a bad car accident in which he nearly lost his sight in one eye. Despite this, he appeared in several more films, including the Up Pompeii! series and similar British comedies of the period, among them Our Miss Fred (1972) with Danny La Rue, and Confessions from a Holiday Camp (1977).

He made a variety of television appearances both as an actor and personality, including in the series Up the Workers (1974-76); The Kenneth Williams Show (1976); and Noel’s House Party in the 1990s. On Radio 4 he was a regular panellist on Ian Messiter’s Many a Slip in the 1960s, and on Just a Minute in the 1980s. He also published two books of verse, Well-Versed Dogs (1985) Well-Versed Cats (1986).

Throughout his career, Percival also worked as a scriptwriter, contributing more than 100 episodes to the 1970s Thames Television game show Whodunnit.

Lance Percival (right) and Lord Montagu of Beaulieu (centre) on the London to Brighton Car Run, 1969 (REX)

In later life he launched a new career as an after-dinner speaker and a writer of humorous speeches for executives. “They always come back for more,” he told a friend. “They have to maintain their reputation as wits.”

Lance Percival was married but divorced, and is survived by a son.

Lance Percival, born July 26 1933, died January 6 2015

Guardian:

Accident And Emergency Figures Show Worst Performance In 10 Years
Outside the A&E department at St Thomas’ hospital London. ‘The NHS is too vital an institution to be left either to the binary war-rhetoric of politicians, or to the profit-driven private sector,’ writes Pen Keyte. Photograph: Dan Kitwood/Getty

You report (Cameron defends NHS in worst week for A&E, 7 January) the current intense difficulties in the NHS and the statement from the King’s Fund chief executive that “the NHS is fundamentally broken”. Earlier, Rowena Mason (Report, 1 January) highlighted the impact of the smaller political parties (Ukip, SNP, Greens) on the outcome of this May’s general election. She did not mention the National Health Action party (NHA), which is a national response to the long-term political failures that have inflicted this chaos and damage on the NHS.

We and many others vigorously back this newcomer to electoral politics, which brings these failures into focus: the waste, mismanagement and dishonesty of the major political parties. The NHS tops the political agenda in the minds of many voters. In order to attract votes, the big parties pay lip-service to its importance while simultaneously allowing it to be crushed by privatisation, ruinous private finance initiatives, harmful marketisation and dangerous fragmentation. The Tories and Lib Dems are clearly disingenuous in their claims to treasure the NHS, having effectively abolished it with the Health and Social Care Act. While the Labour party is focusing its campaign on the NHS, their track record is not reassuring.

The NHA is not just about the NHS in isolation. To pay for our medical care we need a strong, balanced and stable economy. Our health depends on social justice and a healthy environment and lifestyle. The NHS is badly served by the current big party system. It would flourish better in a healthier democracy, with proportional representation and more parties with focused agendas, among which the NHA has a vital role to play.

In Oxford West and Abingdon (Conservative majority: 176) there is a winnable seat and an excellent NHA candidate, who joins 11 NHA party candidates standing in other constituencies. These provide a unique opportunity to secure the presence of one or more MPs in parliament whose election would be symbolic of the public’s desire for a better political system and the need to truly protect the NHS, as a priceless national asset, from careless politicians and corporate predators. This is part of the current wider developments in new and alternative forms of progressive political expression. For the first time in decades, we and others can vote for a party that really matters to everyone.
Prof Chris Redman Emeritus professor of obstetric medicine, Iain Chalmers Health services researcher, Prof Klim Mcpherson Emeritus professor of epidemiology, Prof John S Yudkin Emeritus professor of medicine, Dr Oliver Ormerod Consultant cardiologist, Dr Peggy Frith Retired consultant opthalmologist, Dr David McCoy Senior lecturer in primary care and public health

• As is shown by the coincidence of the moving account of 24 hours in an A&E doctor’s life, with the withdrawal of Circle from its contract to manage Hinchingbrooke hospital (the guardian.com, 9 January), the NHS is too vital an institution to be left either to the binary war-rhetoric of politicians, or to the profit-driven private sector. Dr Clive Peedell, co-leader of the National Health Action party, flagged as long ago as 2013 that Circle would be likely to walk away from Hinchingbrooke once it had put £5m of its own money in. Once again, he predicted, the NHS would pick up the pieces, and local people would suffer.
Pen Keyte
Oxford

• NHS staff are working flat out to cope with unprecedented demands for care. More staff and A&E facilities in the NHS are not the only solution. Improving the “flow” of people into and out of A&E can potentially provide a more sustainable long-term solution, at no extra cost. All too often A&E has been looked at in isolation rather than exploring the root causes of A&E delays. By “flow” we are referring to approaches used widely by other sectors – such as airports – that manage high customer throughputs and have to coordinate multiple processes to get people to the right destination.

The Health Foundation has supported a programme at both South Warwickshire NHS Foundation Trust and Sheffield Teaching Hospital NHS Trust, examining flow and resulting in steps being taken to address the inefficiencies preventing patients from getting care promptly. This work has helped to keep waits for patients down, improve quality of care and reduce length of stay in hospital. Yet these “flow” techniques are not used widely across the NHS – in A&E or in general practices that are also experiencing high demands. They should now be. One way forward is simple training for frontline staff in “flow” techniques, and support from management to implement them.
Dr Jennifer Dixon
Chief executive, The Health Foundation

• You fail to mention the shortage of hospital beds in England (Editorial, 8 January). EU figures for hospital beds per 1,000 population for all specialities are: Germany 8.2, France 6.6, EU average 4.9 and the UK 3.3. Within the UK England has 2.7, which is only 55% of the EU average. No wonder hospitals are bursting at the seams. Beds may be a four-letter word, but it needs to be shouted out aloud.
Morris Bernadt
London

• As Richard Adams piece shows (Report, 9 January), there is a great demand from students wishing to study medicine and a shortage of suitably qualified British doctors, due in part to emigration. So we import doctors for A&E from Spain while exporting them to Australia. Demoralised doctors seeing increasing pressures put on them do not apply for A&E jobs or for partnerships in general practice, where bureaucracy prevents them from concentrating on patients. In addition, newly qualified doctors will shortly be faced with student debts of £45,000 for tuition and a similar amount for maintenance during their five-year course.

I hear on the grapevine that some students are planning to emigrate in the hope of avoiding repayments, since it is difficult to trace those who have no UK income. This could be avoided if there were to be an incentive scheme, rescinding part of the debt for, say, each of the first five years that a newly qualified doctor works for the NHS. The army have run this type of scheme for many years with great success.
Dr Margaret Safranek
London

• Professor Willett, NHS England’s current director of acute care, is quoted as saying that “We now have a ‘right now’ society; a population that expects to have immediate or very rapid solutions to their queries” (A&E crisis: experts diagnose the cause, 7 January). The point the professor is either missing or ignoring is that things used to be just that; if you felt ill a generation ago you could visit the GP, during surgery hours, wait a while, then be seen. Now, you have to call for an appointment – the end of next week if you’re lucky, or a couple of days if it’s urgent. That’s one of the main reasons for the current problems in A&E; yet if a top bureaucrat is unable to see that, there’s little hope of a solution anytime soon.
Charles Sawyer
London

Your editorial (5 January) shows a complete misunderstanding of the issues surrounding powering the country. In 2010, we inherited a legacy of underinvestment in the energy sector, with a number of power stations due to close by 2020 and ageing network infrastructure, a legacy that put our energy security at risk. To safeguard our energy supplies, we are implementing a long-term plan, though you appear to be totally unaware of this. Our radical reforms have stimulated more than £45bn of investment, mostly in renewable electricity.

You dismiss our capacity market, yet this has been extremely successful in securing electricity supply at the lowest cost for consumers, as fierce competition in our auction drove costs significantly below predicted levels. As well as unlocking new investment in flexible plants, we are getting the best out of our existing power stations, which provide reliable and cost-effective capacity, as always planned. We are also determined to make homes warmer and more energy-efficient. Average electricity consumption per person is down 10% from five years ago, largely down to schemes like the Green Deal and other regulations making household devices more energy-efficient. Bizarrely, your editorial ends by calling for more state intervention. You clearly do not understand that our reforms of electricity markets, both for clean energy and for securing supply, are significant state interventions in the free market.
Ed Davey MP
Energy and climate change secretary

• Re your article on the fall in oil prices (7 January), one possibility is the opportunity to painlessly raise extra revenue to reduce the deficit or provide additional funding to the health service etc. For the last few years the chancellor has frozen planned rises in fuel tax but now that we are paying 25p less per litre of petrol than we were six months ago, surely no one will notice or mind a 3p rise if the money raised is used effectively.
Brian Westcott
Chester

As a producer who has often taken part in “Classic Album Sundays” (on Nick Drake, Fairport Convention LPs etc), I was pleased to read John Harris’s excellent piece (Vinyl is enjoying an unexpected renaissance, 7 January). I have been boring friends for decades with rants about how analogue sound is so much better than digital, so it is gratifying to witness the surge in appreciation of the black stuff. One problem which Harris addresses only obliquely is that most disc-mastering is now from digital sources. Not only are many master tapes either lost or deteriorated, but most cutting lathes pass the sound through a digital device for adjusting the pitch of the spiral before the signal reaches the stylus. The enthusiasm of the recently converted masks the fact that current LPs – of both new recordings and back catalogue – effectively emit a digital signal, albeit often one of higher quality than that of a CD and certainly far higher than most downloads.

It is tragic that major labels failed to keep metal parts along with master tapes. If anyone found a treasure trove of matrices for classic albums and pressed vinyl from those, that really would be something to celebrate – and to pay those outrageous prices for.
Joe Boyd
Producer, and author, White Bicycles: making music in the 1960s

To the revival of vinyl LPs, along with other so-called out-dated technologies (In a virtual world we cling to what’s real, 31 December 2014), one could add the high-end valve amplifiers that hi-fi buffs so revere, also the valve guitar amps that many guitarists from all genres now use. The overall sound and tone of analogue sound reproduction is so much preferable to that of solid-state amps and the somewhat clinical results of digital processing.
Paul Freeman
Braintree, Essex

Timothy Garton Ash (5 January) asks: “What is Britain”? Any answer should take account of the US postal service, which has just returned to sender in California a parcel inscribed “England – no such country. Please specify a country”. Parcels to Scotland did not suffer this fate.
Roderick Floud
Haddenham, Buckinghamshire

• You report (Puppy Love, 8 January) that ITV’s debut of The Wonder of Britain had been viewed by 1.7m eyeballs. Could you clarify this? Was the programme watched by 850,00 people using both eyes or by 1.7 million people using just one eye?
Francis McCahill
Fraserburgh, Aberdeenshire

• When we have the new Magna Carta that Graham Allen MP calls for (Letters, 8 January) will there be a referendum?
Don Selway
Portsmouth

Independent:

As a French citizen and Charlie Hebdo frequent reader, I would like to congratulate M. Brown for his cartoon (front page, 8 January). It’s one of the few cartoons that succeeded in expressing all the horror of the situation while being faithful to the spirit of Charb, Cabu and the others. Man, you got it just right.

Thanks again, Dave!

Thomas Hautesserres
Massy, France

 

Four of France’s greatest living cartoonists, Cabu and Wolinski included, and their editor, have all been murdered in cold blood, for the purported crime of entertaining the people with satirical drawings. Unlike the gunmen, these cartoonists never hid their faces when they expressed their opinions, and this “bravery” means they are now dead. Should we really have to call it bravery, however? Should you have to be brave to publish a satirical drawing? Only,  it seems, when they are about religion.

Unfortunately, this is the inevitable consequence of our unwillingness to confront these attacks on freedom of speech. It entered the public eye with the kickback against Salman Rushdie, and continued with the scandal of the Danish cartoons, where many popular figures stood up and defended the violent protests against them because they attacked the so-called hallowed ground of religion.

For too long we have refused to condemn outrageous acts of attempted censorship, across a variety of countries, simply because their would-be censors claimed the right on religious grounds. It is time we ended that, which is why I call on the press to republish Charlie Hebdo’s cartoons; stand up for Charlie, and show that we will not be silenced by fear.

Benedict Nicholson
London SW14

 

Mark Steel (“If the gunmen were Geordies, would we want an apology from Newcastle?”, 9 January) forgets all the criticism that Catholics, the Catholic church, and the Catholic hierarchy came in for during the height of the Troubles. In those days commentators like himself thought the church able to control extremism, just by condemning the atrocities carried out by the IRA.

Ron Bird
Pinner, Greater London

 

The cry of “Allahu Akbar!” that the killers raised as they stormed the building is the same cry that extremists have been shouting as they behead Christians and Yazidi in Iraq, bomb churches in Nigeria and separate out and kill those who can’t say a Muslim prayer in parts of Kenya.

Of course extremism can be found in any religion, and Muslims can be on the receiving end of that too. But the stark reality is that in the report released yesterday by Open Doors, which tracks trends, scale and causes of persecution against Christians globally, 40 out of the worst 50 countries show Islamic extremism as the main driver of persecution – the vast majority of it going unnoticed by the media.

Something closer to home, like the atrocity in Paris, is particularly shocking. But we can expect more of it unless we fight extremism as an international community much more intentionally than we are now doing. It’s rising fast and affects all of us – those of no faith, those with a different faith, and ordinary Muslims who are as appalled by the attacks as everyone else. Surely we must recognise we are in extraordinary days and act accordingly?

Lisa Pearce
CEO of Open Doors UK & Ireland, Oxfordshire

 

Why is it that ridiculous religious extremists of all types believe that their own particular deity will be offended or perturbed by a little gentle (or not so gentle) mocking by journalists, cartoonists and others? Surely any deity worth believing in would have a sense of humour, in particular, a sense of humour about his, her  or its self?

Professor Brian S Everitt
Professor Emeritus
King’s College London

 

When Islamic migrants arrive we bend over backwards to make them feel at home but we also create a sense of entitlement which implies that they need not conform to our ways of life. Muslims insist we behave respectfully in their countries but do not reciprocate: in the West, for example, hiding one’s identity in a public place is not admirable – it is rude.

As a Christian cleric I believe the correct reaction to the Parisian outrage is for every Western newspaper to produce cartoons satirising all major religions, including Christianity and Islam.

Rev Dr John Cameron
St Andrews

 

Being afraid to cause offence makes our values toothless. Free speech is never frightened speech.

Collin Rossini
Dovercourt, Essex

 

There’s no way to avoid ‘booking fees’

I was pleased to see in Radar (3 January) that The Independent will continue its campaign against booking and other fees charged by performing arts venues.

Recently a band I follow performed in my town in a municipally run venue, but when I went to buy tickets, 10 per cent was added to the ticket price, even though I was at the box office tendering cash. When I asked if there was a way of not paying the surcharge I was told that that was possible by using a charge card I hadn’t heard of, which one preloads with money. Pointing out that my cash was preloaded with money didn’t help, and I walked away in anger.

Pretty well the whole of the retail trade manages to sell items at the marked price without adding a retail, handling or stocking fee, or a “voluntary” charitable donation. I know I would attend more live events if I did not have to traverse the surge of anger I experience on seeing added fees, and it is a shame that artists don’t do more to exercise pressure against this practice which is alienating their audiences.

Dennis Leachman
Reading

 

Woeful careers advice for the young

Given that young people are receiving inadequate careers advice, it is no surprise that we are seeing the number of people undertaking Government-backed apprenticeships fall (“MPs attack rise of ‘ill-equipped’ careers advisers in schools”, 8 January). The worrying evidence that has emerged of schools being forced to train receptionists as careers advisers is supported by research we commissioned from YouGov. It found that nearly two-thirds of 18-24-year olds at secondary school or college have not received careers advice on paid apprenticeships.

To reverse this worrying trend, we need a full commitment from the Government for schools to be required to build stronger links with businesses that can offer young people career advice.

It is logical that the future employers of teenagers have a role in signalling to young people where future opportunities might lie. Ultimately, offering the future workforce good careers advice is an essential component of a dynamic, successful economy.

Jackie Bedford
Chief Executive, Step Ahead
London EC1

 

In 1970 I was a 16-year-old in my last year of school and we had a half-hour lesson once a week entitled Careers. This was useful and explored various options and gave an outline of various jobs. We also had several visits to various workplaces to see at first-hand what work was like. Just after Easter we were interviewed individually by the careers master and someone from Youth Employment Services to try to ensure that we were placed in jobs in line with our abilities and preferences. Looking back, this was a good service.

However, the best piece of careers advice we received came from our English teacher who had been a bricklayer before becoming a teacher. He told us that life outside the school gates was hard and that we should be in no hurry to leave. I for one very quickly found out that he was right about that!

Jim Allen
Sheffield

 

Will Labour ditch tuition fees?

Sadiq Khan (5 January) is correct that young people are neglected by politicians and is right to want the voting age lowered to 16. But he does not go far enough. Politics needs to be a mandatory subject in secondary schools.

Furthermore, he needs to explain to those young people he so desperately wants to reach out to why his party introduced university tuition fees. He also needs to explain why, if Ed Miliband’s party is so different to Tony Blair’s (as he so claims), they don’t ditch the policy.

Forgive me if I don’t hold my breath.

Ben Saunders
Mitcham, Surrey

 

Hard-working rhetoric

As you rightly say in your editorial of 6 January, all political parties tend to claim to be the true defenders of “hard-working families”.

However, I for one have already decided not to vote for any party that makes this claim, not because I’ve anything against families, even hard-working ones, but because I don’t believe that any party that trots out this tired, tiresome, self-serving cliché deserves support. Whether this will leave me anyone to vote for remains to be seen.

Duncan Howarth
Maidstone, Ken

 

Times:

Sir, Has Peter Franklin visited Grosvenor Farms’ dairy (“Cows that never see light”, Thunderer, Jan 5), or any other dairy farm? Unlike hens, cows do not fall into categories such as free-range, barn or caged. Some farmers keep cows outside, some inside, and in between a spectrum of dairy farming is guided by weather, soil, farm layout and the market for milk.

Is outside optimum? Not always. Cows don’t like wind, wet feet or flies; they go hungry if it’s raining hard as they won’t eat, and at temperatures over 20C they can suffer heat stress. Is inside wrong? Not necessarily. Given the option in trials, many cows choose to be inside and prefer eating from a “canteen”. Virtually no cows have fresh grass year-round and modern housing is open to light, air and sun. The main reason supermarkets don’t label by production system is because there are no defined systems.
Amy Jackson
Nuffield scholar, Can We Learn to Love the Megadairy?, Witney, Oxon
Sir, Peter Franklin is right to highlight the welfare issues associated with factory farming, but it is also important to talk about broader impacts, including the damage caused by the massive concentration of nutrients in a small area and the waste of good vegetable protein that could be consumed by humans.
Natalie Bennett
Leader, Green Party of England and Wales

Sir, In a few months most dairy farmers will let their cows back on the fields after five months indoors. That on this first release these “old girls” run, jump and kick their back legs in the air speaks volumes.
Iain Davidson
Cumnock, Ayrshire

Sir, The time has come for the media to stop presenting atrocities (reports, Jan 8 & 9) with blurred pictures of wounded victims being shot; and failing to show the beheadings and aftermath of bombings, the bodies and body parts, the blood and the maimed. All of this should be seen in its horrible awfulness, uncensored.

By all means provide warnings, but until the public are exposed to the hellish horrors they will regard these as they did the images of the Boston marathon bombing last year — nothing more than a run interrupted by a bang and cloud of smoke.

Alongside this must be the uncensored images of the dead in the rubble of collateral bombing rather than just ruined buildings.

Only when the whole horror is presented in its graphic raw truth will there be an informed public to insist that governments and leaders bring these horrors to an end, now.
Douglas Martyn
Sandilands, Lanarkshire

Sir, David Aaronovitch’s assertion (Opinion, Jan 8) that “for the first time since the defeat of fascism a group of citizens were massacred because of what they had drawn, said or published” betrays a selective memory. On April 23, 1999, Nato — on our behalf — bombed the Belgrade HQ of RTS, Serbian State Broadcasting, killing 13 members of the media.

This attack was condemned by journalists’ organisations but the prime minister, Tony Blair, and Nato described RTS as an “entirely legitimate target”. It is never right to attack journalists, even if you disagree with the editorial position of their media outlet. We should uphold this defence of freedom, not apply it selectively.
Dr David Lowry
Stoneleigh, Surrey

Sir, David Aaronovitch said that those who don’t like the “deal for living together” should “go somewhere else”. Such a view, aside from being incendiary in tone, is proliferating the murderous ignorance that we are all trying to fight. Defending free speech means defending the rights of even those who say that such a freedom should not exist. Suggesting that people who think differently should effectively be exiled is an illogical intellectual tyranny.
Nabil Hanafi
London N1

Sir, In the wake of the Paris murders, David Cameron stated that Britain must stand up “against this threat to our values — free speech, the rule of law, democracy”.

Stirring words, but there is more than a whiff of hypocrisy when, less than two months ago, his home secretary, Theresa May, banned Julien Blanc, the so-called pick-up artist, from entering Britain on the grounds that it would not be “conducive to the public good.”

Britain is a mature democracy, with a deep-rooted tradition of satire. Surely we are robust enough to handle the scarcely threatening Julien Blanc and others who say things we don’t like. Mr Blanc’s exclusion is one of many examples of UK governments ducking the awkward question on free speech.
John Hesketh
Sheffield

Sir, Those politicians now blithely championing the “right to offend” may care to look at the Public Order Act 1986 which makes it a crime to use “insulting” words to alarm or distress someone, and the Offensive Behaviour at Football Matches Act 2012 which makes it a crime to be offensive at football matches in Scotland.

An apposite response to the Charlie Hebdo attack would be to repeal these antediluvian measures and restore free speech and the right to offend.
Roger Harris
Barrister, London EC4

Sir, Haras Rafiq of Quilliam (Opinion, Jan 9) states the case very clearly for theological reform within Islam. But such difficult processes demand extraordinary courage, and they often require external leadership. Voltaire was prepared to take that role for European Christianity. When will somebody of equivalent stature emerge to help deliver Islam from the dark ages?
Tom Foulkes
Fleet, Hants

Sir, Surely the decisions by BBC Newsnight and Channel 4 News not to air the Charlie Hebdo cartoon is a reflection of acting with responsibility rather than being cowardly. Should we not be more proud that as a nation we try to avoid flaming the sparks of discontent?
Simon Milton
London SW12

Sir, Elements of our press, exalting in their democratic freedoms, treat immigrants by our own standards and publish smug cartoons insulting all they have, which is what they believe in. I do not take sides but we asked for trouble and we are getting it. If Jesus was portrayed in the way of these cartoons I would hate it but I can take it. They can’t.
Lord Temple-Morris
House of Lords

Sir, Hardly a day goes by without my feelings being deeply hurt, but that’s the price I’m willing to pay for freedom of speech. There can be no serious discussion on any subject if we must restrain ourselves from offending anybody. The media could do a lot to restore sanity.
stephen vizinczey
London SW5

Sir, Had these terrorists been caught alive, they ought to have been jailed and allowed no books except Hobbes and Pascal. They might just have learnt something.
William Sibree
Chart Sutton, Kent

Sir, The Rev Christopher Green (letter, Jan 9) might call for cartoons that mock atheism, but we atheists will just laugh along with him. That is the difference.
Jim McAllister
Dubai

Sir, Islam teaches us to obey the law of the land. The Muslim cleric Anjem Choudary and others like him should be kicked out of Britain as they are destroying our beautiful religion. But at the same time we should realise that these jihadists have been created by America’s actions. We in the West should stop interfering in Islamic countries.
Dr Junaid Rafi
Ipswich

Sir, As a Parachute Regiment student at Fort Benning in the US in the Sixties, I wore British jungle greens, my beret and silver cap badge. As a colour sergeant I was surprised to be continually saluted (letters, Jan 7 & 9). Apparently, from 20 paces my cap badge resembled the US rank badge of “bird colonel”. I always returned the salutes.
Colin J Butcher
Llanfaes, Powys

Sir, I notice that Wallander is back on BBC4 (Viewing guide, Jan 3), with its white subtitles, a problem that it shares with Inspector Montalbano. Older viewers — and there are more of them these days, many with failing sight — much prefer subtitles in black print on a white or yellow background.
Emrys Rees
Luton

Sir, Like Sir Winston Churchill, in 1944, aged 2, I also had a siren suit (“Winnie and the birth of the onesie”, Jan 8). Mine was made by my mother from material unpicked from cast-off clothing in line with the wartime slogan of Make Do and Mend.
Lyn Baily
Bognor Regis

Sir, I wouldn’t be surprised to learn that copies of Churchill’s siren suit might be called the Winsie, or even the Win Winsie.
Michael Warshaw
Lond

Sir, Has Peter Franklin visited Grosvenor Farms’ dairy (“Cows that never see light”, Thunderer, Jan 5), or any other dairy farm? Unlike hens, cows do not fall into categories such as free-range, barn or caged. Some farmers keep cows outside, some inside, and in between a spectrum of dairy farming is guided by weather, soil, farm layout and the market for milk.

Is outside optimum? Not always. Cows don’t like wind, wet feet or flies; they go hungry if it’s raining hard as they won’t eat, and at temperatures over 20C they can suffer heat stress. Is inside wrong? Not necessarily. Given the option in trials, many cows choose to be inside and prefer eating from a “canteen”. Virtually no cows have fresh grass year-round and modern housing is open to light, air and sun. The main reason supermarkets don’t label by production system is because there are no defined systems.
Amy Jackson
Nuffield scholar, Can We Learn to Love the Megadairy?, Witney, Oxon
Sir, Peter Franklin is right to highlight the welfare issues associated with factory farming, but it is also important to talk about broader impacts, including the damage caused by the massive concentration of nutrients in a small area and the waste of good vegetable protein that could be consumed by humans.
Natalie Bennett
Leader, Green Party of England and Wales

Sir, In a few months most dairy farmers will let their cows back on the fields after five months indoors. That on this first release these “old girls” run, jump and kick their back legs in the air speaks volumes.
Iain Davidson
Cumnock, Ayrshire

 

on NW8

 

Telegraph:

Black ribbons bind flags at the Elysée Palace in Paris for Thursday’s day of mourning

Black ribbons bind flags at the Elysée Palace in Paris for Thursday’s day of mourning  Photo: AFP/Getty Images

SIR – Not only was the carnage in Paris a brutal attack on freedom of expression in France, it was also an attack against our fundamental democratic values in Britain. Indeed, we are all Parisians today in standing firm and steadfast.

The military-like precision, weaponry deployed and the targeting of pre-selected victims (with the terrorists apparently knowing of the editorial meeting at Charlie Hebdo) are alarmingly ominous.

This makes it necessary for us in Britain to adopt a far more assertively structured stance against militant Islamism here. The Home Secretary’s recent courageous measures to counter British “jihadists” need to be applauded and espoused as the national minimum in our legal armoury.

For their part, British Islamic institutions are still woefully complacent, offering at best no more than rhetoric and well-rehearsed bouts of condemnation. They need to do much better in countering the pernicious ideology of radical Islamism, by reinforcing to young impressionable Muslim minds that the security of this country is paramount and equally by instilling unmitigated pride in British values and national institutions.

Dr Lu’ayy Minwer Al Rimawi
Peterborough

SIR – The latest atrocity by “Islamist” terrorists, this time in Paris, invites us to look at the concept of jihad. It means struggle, fighting. Argument goes on about its two applications – whether within the mind of the believer against sin, or, far more usually in the history of Islam, as armed struggle against the “unbelievers”, which in turn means those refusing “submission or surrender” (Islam) to Allah, the Muslim concept of God.

Jihad, however defined, is a duty of Muslims. Since Western secular democracy is “submission” to the will of the people, it should be obvious that the two views cannot be reconciled, since such secular democratic ideals can only be seen by Islam as blasphemous.

Only when both sides wake up to this can there be any way forward, which, also on both sides, entails overcoming political correctness. Jihad means that a believer cannot be “moderate”. It demands all.

Roger Payne
London NW3

SIR – The attack on Charlie Hebdo could never have happened in Britain. The editors would long ago have been prosecuted under Section 5 of the 1986 Public Order Act on the grounds of publishing material that was likely to cause distress to others.

Professor Martyn Rady
Ramsgate, Kent

SIR – Bestial as the attack on Charlie Hebdo was, the response of the “international community” bears the hallmarks of both public and media selectivity.

How much can the French really value the editorial independence of a weekly magazine that sells fewer than 50,000 copies an issue?

Why weren’t Huw Edwards or James Naughtie despatched by the BBC to Amsterdam when the Dutch film director Theo van Gogh was murdered by a home-grown Muslim extremist?

With Germany’s chancellor and our own Prime Minister telling us that Islamic terrorism has nothing to do with Islam, we shouldn’t be surprised at anything.

Tony Stone

Oxted, Surrey

SIR – Freedom of expression, respect for the rule of law and religious tolerance are cornerstones of a free society, requiring vigilant defence against the perils of totalitarianism, censorship and terrorism.

The publication of material that insults groups or individuals of any faith or none must remain permissible in a free society. That does not, however, mean that such gratuitous behaviour should not be condemned as wholly disrespectful, offensive and provocative.

If such satire is designed to be humorous, I readily confess that I comprehensively fail to understand how.

Philip Duly
Haslemere, Surrey

SIR – The killing in cold blood of 12 people is a heinous crime; and clearly freedom of speech is an important part of democratic life in western Europe. But, as you indicate (Leading article, January 8), some of us avoid publishing things that would cause unnecessary offence to those who have firmly held religious beliefs.

We seem to be living in a society where destructive attacks, often disguised as humour, on anything that hitherto held society together and was the foundation of so much that is good, are becoming more and more prevalent.

But free speech is not just a right; it is a responsibility. Terrorism aims to destroy society from the outside, but, provided we are bold, we can have every hope it will not succeed. However, if we do not regard free speech as a responsibility, we may see our society destroyed from within.

Michael Sparrow
Marple, Cheshire

SIR – They say that the crime was an attack on free speech, but what is free speech?

The Oxford Dictionary says it is: “The right to express any opinions without censorship or restraint.”

English law allows free speech provided it’s not threatening, abusive or insulting, likely to cause harassment, alarm, distress, anxiety or a breach of the peace. That it isn’t racist, indecent, grossly offensive or defamatory. That it doesn’t incite racial, sexual or religious hatred, or glorify or incite terrorism. That it doesn’t contain obscenity, corrupt public morals, outrage public decency or break court restrictions.

We don’t have free speech. We never have done.

David Welch
Margate, Kent

SIR – At what point does freedom of speech become “Islamophobia”?

John Fisher
Cheadle Hulme, Cheshire

SIR – I do not condone what happened in Paris. I wholly support the concept of free speech. But surely it should be tempered by consideration of the consequences and common sense.

Cador Roberts
Woodford Halse, Northamptonshire

SIR – Tomorrow, journalists who dare not re-publish the Charlie Hebdo cartoons will be lecturing Israel on trusting Hamas.

Martin Sewell
Gravesend, Kent

SIR – The start to my day is always made brighter by Matt, but I did wonder how he would address the atrocity in Paris. I was not disappointed. His cartoon yesterday was not only amusing but clearly demonstrated how to stand up to terrorist extremists without fear or favour, as others of his profession around the world have done.

Frazer Walker
Tern Hill, Shropshire

SIR – Expressions of support for freedom of speech by our main political parties are resoundingly hollow. Public discourse in Britain is now entirely governed by what is deemed “acceptable” or “unacceptable” by the liberal-Left mainstream.

Miles Wynn Cato
Ludlow, Shropshire

SIR – David Cameron condemned the Charlie Hebdo murders as an attack on free speech. Is this the same David Cameron, who, a few months ago, advocated bridling the British press?

Nicholas T Oakden
Norwich

Paying for milk
SIR – As Tom Hind, director of agriculture at Tesco (“A fair supermarket deal for British dairy farmers”, Letters, January 7), is well aware, his employer’s promise to pay farmers “a fair price for their milk that is guaranteed to cover the cost of production” only applies to fresh milk sold in Tesco.

On many occasions Mr Hind himself, while working for the National Farmers’ Union, tried to persuade Tesco that this should also apply to milk for all dairy products, for example butter and cheese.

Until all the supermarkets stop driving down the price of milk with own-label imported products, the British dairy industry will struggle.

Derek Lomax
Kendal, Cumbria

Granny’s lore

SIR – My wife’s mother told our daughters: “If you run round the orchard too many times, you will end up with a crab apple.”

Richard Walford
Knowle, Devon

Too Silent Witness

Olivia Colman and David Tennant star in Broadchurch Photo: ITV

SIR – It is not only Broadchurch that I find impossible to follow (report, January 7). This week I watched an episode of Silent Witness and although I turned up the volume, I still could not hear distinctly. Next I watched Lucy Worsley’s history programme Fit to Rule and, although it was on a much lower volume, I didn’t miss a single word uttered by her or her interviewees.

I no longer blame my hearing for not being able to enjoy modern television drama.

David Statham
Stratford-upon-Avon, Warwickshire

Wild oats

SIR – The cereal aisle in my local Sainsbury’s has a subsection flagged “Adult Cereals”. Does this mean that we discover what that Scotsman wears under his kilt or is it that bran and oats (jumbo or otherwise) come in fairly plain packaging?

Eleanor Saunders
Chessington, Surrey


The public treatment of Ched Evans

SIR – The footballer Ched Evans was found guilty of rape, sentenced and served his time in prison (Sport, January 6).

Now he seeks to return to his gainful employment but his team has been bullied into declining his services.

Are we as a society saying that no convicted criminal can ever work again? Or is it just footballers, or perhaps just rapists?

Once a judge has handed down a sentence, that is the end of it: we cannot continue to persecute past offenders.

R T Britnell
Canterbury, Kent

SIR – Ched Evans and Geoffrey Boycott have both been tried, convicted and punished for the abuse of women, although both maintain their innocence.

One remains universally vilified and unable to ply his trade, while the other is feted by many, with demands that he be knighted.

The two crimes have many similarities but the gulf in public attitude towards them is considerable.

Roger Page
Peterborough

The high cost of sending criminals to court

SIR – I read with interest that Richard Monkhouse, chairman of the Magistrates’ Association, was concerned that police were giving too many offenders a “slap on the wrist” instead of sending them to court (report, January 7).

Since courts are now so reluctant to imprison people, especially for first offences, he evidently thinks it is the court’s duty to administer the slap on the wrist. But this incurs all the associated court costs and legal fees paid from the public purse solely for the benefit of those employed in the closed shop of our judicial system.

The result for the offender is likely to be the same, but at hundreds of times the cost to the taxpayer.

Andrew Vaughan
Ventnor, Isle of Wight

 

Globe and Mail:

  (Brian Gable/The Globe and Mail)

John Allemang

Satire is often nasty, harmful and grotesquely abusive

Irish Times:

‘Charlie Hebdo’ shootings and terror attacks in France

Sir, – The ambassadors to the US of the 28 EU member states and the EU delegation issued a joint statement condemning the attack on the staff of Charlie Hebdo. The statement reads in part: “Freedom of expression and freedom of the press are essential elements of any democratic and open society. Each is protected, on both sides of the Atlantic”. Did the Irish Ambassador or delegation struggle with the wording given that the type of expression engaged in by Charlie Hebdo is not protected in Ireland, since it would likely fall foul of section 36 of the Defamation Act 2009, which covers the offence of “publication or utterance of blasphemous matter”? I hope that the Act can be amended to align with our Ambassador’s view. – Yours, etc,

PADRAIC HENEGHAN,

Carpentersville,

Illinois.

Sir, – A culture of extreme and unjustified violence, combined with discrimination and racism, seems to be increasing in societies in the Middle East, the West, and in eastern Europe. The atrocities committed in France are the most recent example. There has been a significant increase in anti-Semitism and Islamophobia across Europe, as well as anti-Christian attacks and persecution associated with conflicts in several Middle Eastern states. In eastern Europe anti-Russian feeling is being fanned by the conflict in Ukraine and by western propaganda.

The right to freedom of speech is being cited as justification for the publication of materials that are deemed offensive to people of certain cultures. All rights and all aspects of freedom carry responsibilities, and it is essential that responsibility is exercised by all societies and by political leaders and media outlets, to avoid inflaming racism and discrimination.

The Huffington Post, in an article entitled “In wake of Charlie Hebdo attack, some media self-censor cartoons”, criticises such self-censorship. Responsible editing and common sense sensitivity to the feelings of others should not be labelled as unacceptable censorship. It is unduly offensive to Jewish people, and to most other people, to make jokes about the Holocaust. Similar sensitivity should be applied to all communities internationally.

It is essential that we should all do our utmost to improve relationships, and to promote peace rather than conflicts, between societies and communities both internationally and within our own countries. Racism and violence are two sides of the same coin. – Yours, etc,

EDWARD HORGAN,

Castletroy,

Limerick.

Sir, – It’s worth remembering that those champions of free speech, who paid the ultimate price for their art this week at the hands of fundamentalist wretches, would have been potentially subject to a fine of €25,000 for every one of their “blasphemous” cartoons from 2009 to today had they been operating in Ireland.

By voting to remove this restriction against the practice of free speech, the Irish public can show that our support for the brave voices at Charlie Hebdo extends beyond hashtags and that we truly believe in the principles of liberty, equality and fraternity. – Yours, etc,

JOHN HOGAN

Ballyneety,

Co Limerick.

Sir, – The dreadful killings in Paris bring to mind the words of Blaise Pascal that “men never do evil so completely and cheerfully as when they do it out of religious conviction”. There is implicit in these words a call for responsibility and moderation to the leaders of all world religions. Indeed the events in Paris remind us of the danger inherent in all kinds of absolutism. – Yours, etc,

DECLAN MORIARTY,

Finglas,

Dublin 11.

Sir, – Your report containing the words of Dr Ali Selim of the Islamic Cultural Centre of Ireland (“Dublin based cleric warns of legal action over religious depictions”, January 8th), to the effect that he would be prepared to pursue a legal action under blasphemy legislation if “an Irish media organisation or social media carried a depiction of Muhammad, an act which Muslims find offensive”, constitutes the best argument so far for the repeal of this ridiculous legislation.

Even the fact that such a thing can be contemplated here, in the light of the appalling attack on freedom of expression in Paris, a nursery of democratic republicanism, is calculated to earn Ireland the opprobrium of the rest of the developed world, and deservedly so. – Yours, etc,

SEAMUS McKENNA,

Windy Arbour,

Dublin 14.

Sir, – I was surprised that Pakistan should join the list of countries that have condemned the murder of 12 people at the Charlie Hebdo offices in Paris on Wednesday. Pakistan currently has about 13 people on death row for committing “blasphemy”, including Asia Noreen Bibi, a Christian mother of three. She was working as a farm labourer in the Punjab in June 2009 when she was wrongly accused of insulting Muhammad. She has been held in prison in appalling conditions ever since. Sean Kenny TD is the only politician to have even mentioned her case in the Houses of the Oireachtas. – Yours, etc,

KARL MARTIN,

Bayside,

Dublin 13.

Sir, – I commend The Irish Times for showing solidarity with Charlie Hebdo. In your editorial (January 8th) you characterised the attack as “not only a barbarous act of terrorism but an assault on freedom of expression, one of the fundamental human rights”.

Is it possible, however, to express true solidarity in Ireland, as your newsroom staff did, with the phrase “Je suis Charlie” when the publication of material satirising any religious beliefs is open to prosecution under our blasphemy law? It is a law that criminalises freedom of expression by giving preference to religious beliefs.

I agree with you that it is “one thing to argue about whether particular expressions of satire are appropriate or tasteful but quite another to claim a right not to be offended”. That is why the offense of blasphemy needs to be taken out of our constitution.

We need to be able to say “Je suis Charlie” and mean it. – Yours, etc,

GERARD GREGORY,

Stillorgan,

Co Dublin.

Sir, – The members of Al-Mustafa Islamic Cultural Centre Ireland wish to extend their deepest sympathy and condolences to the families of the victims and the people of France .

The killing of journalists in Paris on Wednesday was not only an attack on France but also an assault on Islam and the very freedoms that allow 30 million Muslims to prosper in the West.

Unfortunately there is a problem of extremism and radicalisation among a minority of Muslim youth in western countries. It is the responsibility of Islamic leaders to highlight the peaceful and just message of Islam in which there is no space for extremism. – Yours, etc,

Dr MUHAMMAD

UMAR AL-QADRI,

Al-Mustafa Islamic

Educational

and Cultural Centre,

Ireland

Blanchardstown, Dublin 15.

Sir, – The murder of the cartoonists in Paris brings to mind Lord Byron’s observation in Don Juan: “And if I laugh at any mortal thing, ’Tis that I may not weep.” – Yours, etc,

Dr JOHN DOHERTY,

Gaoth Dobhair,

Co Dhun na nGall.

Sir, – Irish PEN joins PEN International and 47 PEN centres worldwide, including French PEN, PEN Canada, English PEN and PEN American Centre, in condemning the unprecedented attack on the office of the French publication Charlie Hebdo in Paris in which 12 people died and seven were injured.

We were sickened and shocked by this savage attack and we extend our heartfelt sympathies to the families of the victims and all affected.

As PEN International states, in the face of such violence it is incumbent on all governments and religious leaders to strengthen their commitment to press freedom and to safeguard freedom of expression as a fundamental human right.

PEN stands for the principle of unhampered transmission of thought within each nation and between all nations. Irish PEN is part of PEN’s global community of writers, spanning more than 100 countries, which stands together to oppose any form of suppression of freedom of expression. – Yours, etc,

VANESSA

FOX O’LOUGHLIN,

Chairwoman,

Irish PEN,

c/o United Arts Club,

Upper Fitzwilliam Street

Dublin 2.

Sir, – Dr Fergal Hickey makes an eloquent case for more accident and emergency funding by citing the situation in Australia (“Australian emergency care the State’s best template”, Opinion & Analysis, January 8th).

What he doesn’t say is that Australia has invested heavily in primary care with GPs resourced to deal with much of the work that Dr Hickey and his colleagues currently see in their departments. Every A&E department that has been extended and better resourced here in Ireland is too small and too busy within 18 months because of a culture of attending A&E in our cities and consequent lack of development of out of hours care in the community. Dr Hickey is making a good case for emergency care for trauma such as serious road traffic accidents and acute cardiac and respiratory illnesses. These are relatively uncommon situations. Indeed to deal with such urgent cases we don’t need all our A&E departments. Our improved road access and increasingly professionalised ambulance service now makes this reduction possible with very sick patients having much better outcomes with such a specialized service. What rightly upsets Dr Hickey and his colleagues are the vast numbers attending A&E that could be dealt with by general practitioners. This is now happening nationally with GP co-operatives seeing over a million patients out of hours last year. I know of one long-established co-op that sees twice as many patients as does its local A&E department and another new co-op that sees nearly 30 per cent of the numbers seen at its local adult A&E. In an experiment in St James’s Hospital in Dublin some years ago, employing GPs in A&E meant far fewer patients were referred into the hospital system when compared with the usual care. The decision-making ability of the more experienced GPs led to more patients being discharged back to their own doctor for further care. A&E as it is currently functioning has senior staff trained to deal with trauma and very sick patients. The majority of patients don’t need that level of care. Our A&E departments are currently functioning as primary care facilities but with access to diagnostic and inpatient facilities denied to GPs. This puts GPs at a clinical disadvantage in terms of resources and in providing an appropriate level of care to patients. The country cannot afford more of the same in A&E departments which will never solve the problem. It needs to rationalise our existing A&E departments into a few well-placed trauma centres. But most of all the system needs to strengthen primary care to let Dr Hickey and his colleagues do what they have been trained to do in a few well-placed specialised centres. – Yours, etc,

TOM O’DOWD, MD

Professor of

General Practice,

Trinity College Dublin.

Sir, – Planning for emergencies should be done in advance. The annual crisis in our hospitals takes place each winter and planning should begin at least six months beforehand and all contingencies should be factored into the plan to be implemented as and when appropriate. When next winter arrives, as it will, perhaps Minister for Health Leo Varadkar and his handlers , advisers (special and otherwise), civil servants, etc, will be prepared? Probably not. – Yours, etc,

HUGH PIERCE,

Celbridge, Co Kildare.

Sir, – In future when our Defence Forces deploy overseas, will they be bringing field hospitals with them or will portable corridors suffice? – Yours, etc,

HUGH T HYNES,

Limerick.

Sir, – Reading Frank McNally’s “An Irishman’s Diary about Alan Turing and crossword-solving” (January 9th), I suggest even the Enigma codebreakers would be challenged by the Crosaire crossword. – Yours, etc,

BOB BARRY,

Ashbourne, Co Meath.

Of rubbers and robbers – An Irishman’s Diary about Victor Noir and James Joyce

‘Noir’s grave has been a shrine, although not just to press freedom’

Grave of French journalist Victor Noir (1848-1870)  at Père Lachaise Cemetery in Paris. Photograph: Joel Saget/AFP/Getty ImagesGrave of French journalist Victor Noir (1848-1870) at Père Lachaise Cemetery in Paris. Photograph: Joel Saget/AFP/Getty Images

Sat, Jan 10, 2015, 01:01

During quieter times in Paris, a few years ago, I visited the grave of a man called Victor Noir, who in his own way, like the victims of the Charlie Hebdo massacre, was a martyr for free speech.

Born Yves Salmon, he adopted the pseudonym when joining La Marseillaise, a newspaper opposed to the Second Empire regime of Napoleon III, in the late 1860s. And it was that paper’s publisher, Henri Rochefort, who provoked the homicidal wrath of the emperor’s cousin, Prince Bonaparte. But Noir was the one caught in the crossfire.

In the fashion of the era, the prince wrote to Rochefort inquiring, provocatively, “whether your inkpot is guaranteed by your breast”. This was a challenge to a duel, towards which end the letter also included Bonaparte’s Paris address, where the publisher was urged to present himself.

In the event, it was the 21-year-old Noir and a colleague who were dispatched there, as seconds, to arrange the duel. And the insult of having to deal with “underlings” only added to the prince’s ire. Details were subsequently disputed, with Bonaparte claiming Noir assaulted him. In any case, he shot the young newspaper man dead.

The killing became a cause célèbre for republicans, 100,000 of whom attended the funeral at Neuilly. Years later, in a post-imperial France, Noir was promoted to a more prestigious cemetery, Père Lachaise.

And ever since, his grave there has been a shrine, although not just to press freedom. For more mysterious reasons, possibly relating to the French sense of humour, which can be very earthy, the horizontal life-sized bronze sculpture of Noir, portrayed as he lay after the shooting, also became the focus of a fertility cult.

The idea is that touching his effigy in a certain place ensures good luck in procreative endeavours. So, as the sculpture’s conspicuously shiny crotch testifies, Père Lachaise may be the only cemetery ever to have had a problem with grave rubbers.

They tried fencing it off some years ago for decency’s sake. But even that was considered an infringement on free expression. The obstacle was removed eventually. As far as I could see, the rubbing continues.

These are troubled days in Paris, again. And among the many journalists covering events there this week, I noticed, was a Reuters reporter one called John Irish. It could almost be another pseudonym, but it’s not, apparently. Just to confuse the issue, according to his Twitter account, Irish is “French-English despite the name”.

I’m reminded of the mildly notorious plaque on one of James Joyce’s former Paris addresses, 71 Rue Cardinal Lemoine, which annoys at least some tourists by calling Joyce an “écrivain brittanique, d’origine irlandaise”.

Even allowing that Joyce was born under the empire, and that he carried a British passport, this seems wrong. It contrasts with – for example – George Bernard Shaw, who unlike Joyce spent most of his career in Britain but is an “écrivain irlandais” on his Paris plaque.

It’s a minor offence, I know. But on foot of mentioning it here some time ago, I received an interesting letter from London-based Brian O’Shea, who back in the 1990s co-authored a tourist guide to The Paris of Joyce & Beckett.

While compiling this, naturally, he wanted to include mention of the Cardinal Lemoine address, where Joyce completed Ulysses. So he wrote to the modern residents of No 71 (an apartment block) seeking permission. He was disappointed to receive a return letter from the “Le Propiétaire” urging him not to mention the building’s Joycean connection, in case it would attract burglars. There had been a series of “cambriolages” already, the person wrote.

And although taken aback, the publishers would have respected the residents’ wishes. But in a follow-up letter, O’Shea felt compelled to suggest that the incidence of burglary was very low among literary tourists.

Whereupon he received a further missive from No 71, this time from the “Président du Conseil Syndical”, who assured him that the residents would be delighted to have their address mentioned, and who was mystified as to the identity of the burglary-fearing imposter who had replied previously.

Who knows – maybe the phantom objector was himself a burglar who had intercepted the letter and wanted to deter tourists? In any case, the address was eventually included in the book, controversial inscription and all.

Whatever about robbers, it may be rubbers – Père Lachaise-style – that No 71 needs. In the meantime, I’m told the guide is still available from selected bookshops, or direct from the publishers, London Irish Literary Travel, The Busworks, North Road, London N7 9DP.

@FrankmcnallyIT

Irish Independent:

Author Salman Rushdie was the subject of a fatwa because his 1988 book ‘The Satanic Verses’ was considered blasphemous. Photo: PA
Author Salman Rushdie was the subject of a fatwa because his 1988 book ‘The Satanic Verses’ was considered blasphemous. Photo: PA

I refer to Dr Ali Selim’s threatening of the Irish media with legal action if they publish the Charlie Hebdo cartoon he finds offensive and which others found so offensive that they killed 12 people (‘Islamic cleric threatens Irish publications with legal action if they publish offending cartoon’, January 8).

  • Go To

First, how nice of Dr Selim to assure us that lives will not be in danger. It is reassuring that lives will not be in danger if a humorous cartoon is published in a democratic republic which upholds those essentials of democracy, freedom of expression and freedom of speech.

But, the reality is that people would have grounds to be worried if they were to publish the cartoon. We have been here before with the Danish cartoons, which were followed by hundreds of deaths and attacks on Christians, churches and European diplomatic missions.

When have also been here with the fatwa against Salman Rushdie in 1989, when the head of Iran’s hardline theocracy backed the murder of a foreign national. Why? Because he considered the writer’s work of fiction offensive. The book’s Japanese translator was stabbed to death in 1991. Its Italian translator was seriously injured in a stabbing in Milan in 1991. Its Norway publisher was shot three times in an attempted assassination in Oslo in October 1993. The book’s Turkish translator was the intended target in the events which led to the Sivas massacre in 1993, which caused the deaths of 37 people.

You reported that Dr Selim “insisted that he believed in freedom of expression and speech. However, he said that the image was offensive to equality”. An explanation of how the cartoon is offensive to equality is not proffered. Perhaps Dr Selim might enlighten us.

This brings us to the related issue of blasphemy. Dr Ali Selim previously argued in your newspaper against the abolition of the offence of blasphemy from our Constitution (‘Blasphemy offence is vital to our peaceful co-existence’, February 10, 2014).

Dr Selim said that blasphemy laws are “abused” in other countries. It would be more accurate to say that blasphemy laws are not abused – but enforced – in other countries. In Egypt, insulting Islam and Muhammad has resulted in the death penalty.

Do we really want to live in a country where being involved in the likes of a humorous cartoon, ‘Fr Ted’ or ‘The Life of Brian’ could result in a fine of up to €25,000?

The law against blasphemy is an anachronism and should be removed.

Rob Sadlier

Rathfarnham, Dublin 16

Aftermath of Paris attacks

The events at ‘Charlie Hebdo’ were shocking. Journalists and members of the public have showed solidarity with the journalists of ‘Charlie Hebdo’ by holding up “Je suis Charlie” placards. The sheer volume of people taking part in these acts of solidarity has been tremendous.

The deaths in Paris take place at a time when some divisions in society are increasing – yes, between peoples of different faiths (and none), but also between richer and poorer, between the older and the younger, between indigenous populations and newer migrants composed of a variety of colours, languages and creeds.

Europe finds itself in a tinderbox – the last week has seen demonstrations by the German far-right group Pegida, killings by people claiming to act for Islam, bombings and burning of mosques, and much else.

The principles of the French Republic are summarised in the slogan – Liberta, Egalite, Fraternite. There has been much talk about the first two, but what Europe and the wider world needs now is an emphasis on the third; we must as humans show humanity, and rise to be worthy of the acclaim we have granted ourselves.

We have been asked to show solidarity with those who died this week. Let us extend this idea further – let us show solidarity, and with it benevolence and restraint, to all participants of society.

Society can become stronger, but it will be tested before it becomes so. For it to become stronger, effort is needed. Or we can allow society to erode and fracture; and that requires good people to do nothing at all.

There will be a clamour from some portions of society to show ‘strength’ and solidarity in a particular way – by publishing offensive imagery and cartoons. I urge journalists and editors to not do so.

There is no doubt that we live in a society in which there is freedom of expression, but freedom of expression does not entail that there is a necessity of expression. We are already in a cycle of despair and hatred; we do not need to accelerate it. For those journalists and editors who are inclined to publish cartoons (of any subject matter), I urge them to engage in dialogue with those whom publishing will affect, and understand what the effects of doing so are.

Of course, dialogue requires a common language, hence those with whom such a dialogue will be undertaken need to be sought out – not the roughnecks, but the calm, quiet voices of wisdom which exist in every community.

Fraternite implies that we see others as having moral value; not that we see them as inferior, as the Other.

Dr Mobasher Choudhary

Northamptonshire, Britain

Following the threat issued to the Irish media by the Islamic scholar Dr Ali Selim of the Islamic Cultural Centre of Ireland – that the ‘Charlie Hebdo’ cartoons must not be republished – the Irish Government must immediately repeal the bizarre blasphemy law inexplicably foisted upon this state by Dermot Ahern and the Fianna Fail administration in 2009.

Bernard Guinan

Claremorris, Co Mayo

A culture of extreme and unjustified violence, combined with discrimination and racism, seems to be increasing in societies in the Middle East, the West, and in Eastern Europe. The atrocities committed in France are the most recent example.

There has been a significant increase in anti-Semitism and Islamophobia across Europe, as well as anti-Christian attacks and persecution associated with conflicts in several Middle Eastern states. In Eastern Europe, anti-Russian feeling is being fanned by the conflict in Ukraine and by Western propaganda.

The right to freedom of speech is being cited as justification for the publication of materials that are deemed offensive to people of certain cultures. All rights and all aspects of freedom carry responsibilities, and it is essential that responsibility is exercised by all societies, and by political leaders and media outlets, to avoid inflaming racism and discrimination.

‘The Huffington Post’ in an article entitled ‘In Wake Of Charlie Hebdo Attack, Some Media Self-Censor Cartoons’ criticises such self-censorship. Responsible editing and common sense sensitivity to the feelings of others should not be labelled as unacceptable censorship. It is unduly offensive to Jewish people, and to most other people, to make jokes about the Holocaust. Similar sensitivity should be applied to all communities internationally.

It is essential that we should all do our utmost to improve relationships, and to promote peace rather than conflicts, between societies and communities both internationally. It is essential that we should all do our utmost to improve relationships, and to promote peace rather than conflicts, between societies and communities both internationally and within our own countries. Racism and violence are two sides of the same coin.

Edward Horgan

Castletroy, Limerick

Irish Independent

Ankle

January 9, 2015

9 January 2015 Ankle

Mary a little better though she could manage to get up for breakfast. Right foot very sore arthritis!

Obituary:

John Chancellor

John Chancellor

John Chancellor, who has died aged 87, was a publisher, author and bibliophile, winning a reputation as a considerable scholar and eccentric in the literary world and among a wide circle of friends. He became better known in later life as the father of the actress Anna Chancellor.

Friends often said that he loved his books too much and might have enjoyed more financial success as an antiquarian book dealer if he had achieved a more rapid turnover. The truth is that he was a better collector than salesman, a luxury he could ill afford. Once he had acquired a treasured tome, he was reluctant to let go of it.

In his extensive and esoteric travels in Europe and North America he picked up an astonishing variety of literary works and did not know where to put them – as his younger brother Alexander Chancellor, formerly editor of The Spectator and now of The Oldie, learnt to his cost.

When Alexander was Washington correspondent of The Independent in the late 1980s, John filled a whole room of his house there with his volumes. More recently, when John rented a converted stable near Alexander’s house in Northamptonshire, a garage became chock-a-block with books. Last summer there was a successful sale in which about 3,000 were sold, releasing some space.

John Chancellor was born in London on July 1 1927, shortly before his parents moved to China, where his father, Sir Christopher Chancellor, was general manager of Reuters before the war and afterwards. Sent to board at a prep school in England (which he hated), John was separated from his parents for four years; and, although he was well looked after by his grandparents, some say this may have contributed to his anxieties and insecurities in later life.

He went to Eton and then to Trinity College, Cambridge, which he enjoyed. He did National Service at the end of the war with the 60th Rifles but was relentlessly teased as an effete toff. He once awoke to find colleagues urinating on his face, but swore at his assailants with such colourful barrack-room language that he immediately established credibility and authority. No one knew where it had come from, however.

After the war Chancellor tried a job in insurance but this soon bored him. He then started work with Purnell’s, the publishers, which produced part-work encyclopedias sold in instalments and assembled in binders. An edition called Knowledge sold 400,000 copies. There were also volumes on Discovering Art and The Masters.

After this he joined the publishers Sidgwick & Jackson, where he earned the distinction of being sacked by the chairman, Lord Longford. Chancellor set up his own business, Kew Books, because he happened to be living in Kew Green near the botanical gardens at the time. It specialised in botanical matters.

He married Alice Jolliffe, sister of the Liberal Democrat peer Lord Hylton and the writer John Jolliffe . After his marriage broke up, he moved to North America, first to New York state and later to Puerto Rico and Santa Domingo, where he enjoyed the sun and an exotic lifestyle.

“He was an enfant terrible who loved to make himself shudder,” said his sister Susanna, who is hoping to publish a book about him based on the huge supply of letters he wrote. “He loved making tactless, embarrassing speeches, such as the one he made on my 40th wedding anniversary when he said I’d have married the first man who came along. He could be formal and haughty, but he was hugely lovable, affectionate and scholarly. He wrote books on Wagner and Edward II. He could read in four languages and was especially fond of German and French literature.”

Chancellor and his wife had three daughters, Isabel, Katie (who married the writer Will Self, then the restaurateur Rowley Leigh) and Anna, and one son, Eddie (who is married to Martin Amis’s former wife Antonia).

On the night before he died Chancellor, who suffered from Parkinson’s disease, went across to his brother Alexander’s house for champagne and mince pies while watching his daughter Anna on television in Mapp and Lucia. He then went to bed and was found dead the next morning.

John Chancellor, born July 1 1927, died December 31 2014

Guardian:

Charlie Hebdo
Flowers and candles outside the office of Charlie Hebdo in Paris. Why does ‘the killing of 12 journalists in a conflict which has killed thousands of ‘other people’, mostly Muslims, commands shock and fuss out of all proportion to its importance?’ asks Edward Pearce. Photograph: Francois Mori/AP

The way in which liberal-left political satire is practised in France and Britain has long given the lie to the smug stereotype of Britain being brave and France cowardly in opposing fascism (An assault on democracy, 8 January). The tendency here, as epitomised most egregiously by Mark Steel and Jeremy Hardy, is to pick on soft targets, pandering to a “groupthink” audience of the so-called liberal left, laughing uproariously on cue, in what Howard Jacobson once identified as an “avidity of like-mindedness”. The endless recycling of Blair as the soft target fox to these “brave” hunters is a good example.

The self-righteous rant can so often in Britain pass for the true satire, based firmly in an authentic left, which Charlie Hebdo so courageously exemplifies in France. Even Steve Bell, who has spoken very movingly of his French colleagues, slaughtered by fascist thugs, has been circumspect about his targets; and Rory Bremner left satire behind when he chose to exclude religious extremists from his chosen objects of ridicule – and then wondered why he did not get “enough grief” over his output.

True satire is not just posturing, in a cosily collusive middle-class milieu, as “anti-establishment”. It is freedom laughing in the face of tyranny. That takes courage of an order demonstrated by the assassinated journalists at Charlie Hebdo, whose slain editor simply stated that he would rather die than “live like a rat”.
Hugh Hetherington
Sandwich, Kent

• As a Muslim, I strongly condemn the attack on Charlie Hebdo and those behind it. These terrorists do not represent me nor do they represent Islam. Their wicked ideology is an existential threat to Islam itself. Part of the problem is that these extremists and Islamophobes – responsible for burning mosques and attacking women wearing the hijab – need each other to exist. We, the majority of ordinary people of every faith, race and colour, should stand together to these extremists and say enough is enough.
Mohammed Samaana
Belfast

• What is the matter with journalists that the killing of 12 other journalists in a conflict which has killed thousands of “other people”, mostly Muslims, commands shock and fuss out of all proportion to its importance? The government of Israel recently responded to the deaths of three Israelis with almost 3,000 Palestinian deaths. Journalists noticed that event, clicked tongues and talked about the general problem. The staff of Charlie Hebdo gave gross affront and knew about extremist groups who kill. We all do. They knew that Muslims venerate the prophet and that extreme Muslims will die and kill for him. The Parisian journalists produced a smart, Muhammad-mocking cartoon and now witter on (like your columnists) about rights, liberty, eternal freedom of eternal expression and other abstractions. They should consider that the little lad who used a stick with a horses-head handle to poke a lion got eaten.
Edward Pearce
York

• In the aftermath of this tragic attack, many people, mainly journalists and politicians, have robustly and self-righteously defended “free speech”. Free speech is held up as a cornerstone of democracy even when some of those who have exercised it have been imprisoned or exiled and when, at the same time, it can be divisive, foment prejudice and hatred, feed anger, bitterness and otherness. Those who call for some restraint and respect in the media are labelled censorious.

Surely in any democracy the exercise of restraint and respect for others is imperative. Defenders of free speech suggest that anything goes, in which case it should be acceptable to call someone with learning difficulties a “retard”, or a person of Pakistani origin a “Paki” and so on. It is not acceptable to use such speech and it should not be acceptable to denigrate religion – even when one holds a superior intellectual position – where it is known to give offence. Mockery, even when dressed up as satire, is a poor substitute for honest debate. Let’s have more respect and less hypocrisy.
Susan Robinson
Ormskirk, Lancashire

• Guardian commentators – along with the rest of the media – have been as one in their framing of the French terrorist atrocities as a narrative of ‘“free speech v evil doers”. In this context, some dissenting opinion from secular liberals would not go amiss. At what point does the “right to offend” slide into Muslim-baiting and just plain old-fashioned racism? For example, I fail to see equivalence between the intelligent irreligious cartoon “Jesus and Mo”, which attacks the absurdities of belief, and pornographic portrayals of the prophet Muhammad.

Readers might want to check out the Charlie Hebdo cartoon “the Koran is shit” and reflect on how this compares with the lurid depictions of Jews in Der Sturmer in 1930s Germany. Given France’s anti-Islamic colonialist past we should be very wary of how it continues to inform present discourse on Islam in the guise of liberty.
Steven Garside
Manchester

• Freedom is always a dilemma. For me to be free to do anything I want, no one else can be free. We therefore have agreed to limit individual freedom to get a balance for us all to have some freedom. For freedom of speech, the same thing works. Should I be free to express all I think and feel even if it insults, hurts, degrades other people and their most precious beliefs? Freedom of speech only works if we show respect for other people. Disrespecting other people, their religion or foreign heads of state, and justifying it as free speech, should also be unacceptable. This does not stop rational argument or criticism, just abuse.
Jeffrey Butcher
Morecambe, Lancashire

• Free speech comes at a price; it even costs human lives. The bottom line for an open and free democracy seems to me to be that I have to accept that someone, somewhere, sooner or later, will say something that offends me. But I have to live with my feelings, and not assuage them in any violent way at all. In fact, we can all have a “right” to cause offence, if we do not also demand the “right” to take offence too. It is likely that some of those who reject this principle, whatever their religion, or lack of it, will continue to make martyrs of those who practise it.
Fr Alec Mitchell
Manchester

• Natalie Nougayréde (Report, 8 January) is quoted as saying that “the crucial task now is to defend the right to offend”. Why is such a right more important than the responsibility to resist the urge to abuse the treasured right to free speech simply to prove a point? What purpose is served?
Sierra Hutton-Wilson
Evercreech, Somerset

Charlie Hebdo: A crime by individuals not a community

Italy, tribute to the victims of a shooting at the French magazine Charlie Hebdo
A man pays tribute to the victims of the Charlie Hebdo shooting at French consulate in Milan. ‘What has happened since is that the Muslim community as a whole is being charged with ­collective guilt by association,’ writes Sasha Simic. Photograph: Michela Nava/EPA

The brutal slaughter at the Charlie Hebdo office was nothing but base criminality. But it was committed by three men NOT a community – still less a religion. What has happened since is that the Muslim community as a whole is being charged with collective guilt by association.

I do not recall white Norwegians being asked by the media to scrutinise their “values” and beliefs in the same way in 2011 following the murderous rampage by the neonazi Anders Behring Breivik, in which he murdered 77 people. Such an argument would have been absurd. It is equally absurd to condemn millions of people because they happen to be the co-religionists of three brutal murderers.
Sasha Simic
London

Yourtrenchant editorial against the criminal terrorism committed in Paris (8 January) asserts the “adjectives are simply not there to capture the horror unleashed by weapons of war in a civilian office”. Maybe not for the Paris outrage. However, we should not forget Nato – on our behalf – has twice unleashed just such weapons when it bombed media headquarters in its invasions of Serbia and Afghanistan respectively. The then prime minister Tony Blair described the attack on the Serbian state television headquarters in Belgrade, killing 13 members of the media, as “entirely legitimate”. But the then general secretary of the National Union of Journalists described the attack as “barbarity”, adding that “killing journalists does not stop censorship, it only brings more repression”. In 2001, just before the Northern Alliance marched into Kabul on 12 November, the US, acting for Nato, dropped a bomb on the studios of the Arab satellite TV station al-Jazeera, also damaging nearby offices of the BBC and the Associated Press. Colonel Rick Thomas, in an unconvincing apologia to CBS News for the US Central Command, insisted that the building was “a known al Qaida facility in central Kabul … We had no indications this or any nearby facility was used by al-Jazeera”. By chance, nobody was hurt, as the building was not occupied at the time by any of the 10 al-Jazeera journalists and technicians based there.

It is never right to attack journalists, even if you disagree with the editorial position of their media outlet, print or broadcast. We should uphold this defence of freedom, not apply it selectively.
Dr David Lowry
Stoneleigh, Surrey

• The last surviving British veteran of the first world war, Harry Patch, claimed rightly that war is organised murder. So-called terrorism is merely organised murder usually by non-state actors. There is no one method of killing or motive for killing that is always present in terrorism and never present in war. But even the Guardian does not seem to realise this, referring to the sanguinary wars waged by the west in recent times as “misadventures” and the sanguinary actions of the non-state actors at the offices of Charlie Hebdo as “murder”. Both are to be utterly condemned. To condemn the one and not the other is intellectually and morally dishonest.
Malcolm Pittock
Bolton, Greater Manchester

• This is a terrible tragedy for the families of the murdered journalists and their co-workers. Our condolences must go out to them. Amid the outrage about this act, there is anger about the offence against free speech and the question is asked “How can they do such a thing?” Which, of course, no one attempts to answer. From the point of view of the killers, they were merely attacking part of the propaganda apparatus of their enemies – perhaps considering it akin to the allies execution of Lord Haw-Haw after the second world war. But before the howls of whataboutery and the sanctity about free speech start, perhaps some people in the western media should ask themselves whether they raised sufficient concerns when the Americans killed an al-Jazeera journalist in 2003? This was far from being an isolated case as the US killing of ITN’s Terry Lloyd – described as a war crime by the National Union of Journalists – demonstrated. More recently, how many western news outlets are acknowledging that it is the US that is funding the Egyptian military that is imprisoning journalists on trumped-up charges?

Of course we could ignore the unequal power dynamic that is at work and fail to reflect on the forces that construct this conflict. The atrocity would then be used as an excuse to continue to kill more of them who in turn would enjoy greater recruitment to kill more of us.
Dr Gavin Lewis
Manchester

• We are continuing to pay a stiff price for Charlie Wilson’s war and arming Afghani tribesmen with Stinger missiles to down Soviet helicopters. It would have been as well to let the communists build infrastructure, sort out land ownership and secularise Afghanistan instead of the US continuing its decades-long jihad against communism. The Muslim jihadis are a byproduct of a superstitious holy war against the secular philosophy of communism.
DBC Reed
Thorplands, Northamptonshire

• Kidnapping, torture, rendition, illegal invasion, bombing, assassination, suspension of habeas corpus. Hundreds of thousands of non-combatants dead, men, women and children. How then shall we now with conviction resist the pernicious, toxic metaphysical ideology that left 12 tragically dead in a Paris office? Those who break the law cannot rely on its protection. To honour Charlie Hebdo we must live up to andby the fundamental principles it has taken us 2,000 years to embed in our democratic way of life. No exceptions. Or we will lose.
Keith Farman
St Albans, Hertfordshire

• I have always thought we were wrong to involve ourselves in Middle Eastern conflicts. However, the assassination of 12 cartoonists and journalists in their workplace is unforgivable. Our society and culture is based in the ability to rib and ridicule the pillars that hold us up, this is our check and balance, this is what keeps our people in power in their place. This extends to our god. I now fear that as a result of Wednesday’s events our journalists and cartoonists will still their pens for fear of retribution in the form of an AK47. If so, we have lost everything.
Jake Ridley
Saul, Gloucestershire

In the spirit of “Je suis Charlie”, I believe a suitable gesture of solidarity would be for the Guardian to publish one or more of the controversial Charlie Hebdo cartoons on the front page. If the paper feels unable to do this, the readers should be able to at least expect a personal statement from the editor as to why, and as to whether fear of violence from jihadist groups is part or all of the reason.
Andrew Dawson
Crowthorne, Berkshire

• Interviewed on BBC Radio on the evening of the Paris attack, cartoonist Martin Rowson said the cartoon he wanted to draw was one of the prophet Muhammad wearing a T-shirt bearing the message “Not in my name”. If we are not permitted to see images some hold sacred, your cartoon page should include descriptions of cartoons that an oversensitive and violent minority prevent us from seeing. We will have to use our imagination.
Dominic Rayner
Leeds

• One response to the despicable attack in Paris would be for newspapers throughout the world to come together and publish cartoons that gently poke fun at all religions – and none, including humanism. If we are cowed into not using our freedoms, including the freedom of the press to satirically challenge our beliefs, then we deserve to lose them.
Bob Scott
Glasgow

• I’m a cartoonist, author and one-time Guardian features contributor who had a book of cartoons on religions around the world, The Good God Guide, published in 2002. It included a handful of gentle, I felt not especially controversial, cartoons about Islam and was introduced by Spike Milligan, shortly before his death. The book merited a whole-page feature in the Times and a few of the cartoons appeared together in the Guardian. Some time after, the book was politely “disappeared” and years of work were wasted, with the publisher telling me it feared Islamic threats. My artistic endeavour was silenced. The widening Islamist attack on free speech and democratic values across the world – and not least one’s being able to enjoy a sense of humour, even a wildly satirical one – must be defied.
John Pepper
Lancaster

The killings in Paris were an affront to humanity and freedom. So was the picture you printed on your front page (An assault on democracy, 8 January). The last moment of a helpless person about to be shot should not be published, out of respect for that person and their relatives and friends, by a responsible newspaper. Freedom comes with restraints that are defined by humanity and ethics, as well as by legality. I believe you made a mistake publishing that photograph.
John Gaskin
Driffield, East Yorkshire

• The killing of journalists and police officers in Paris is utterly deplorable. The atmosphere in Brussels is one of deep sadness along with heartfelt sympathy for the families and friends affected. However, it is deeply regrettable that some groups and individuals, including some in the European parliament, are using the tragic events opportunistically to forward their own personal and political agendas. Fanning the flames of division in Europe at such a time is completely unacceptable. Now is the moment to promote, celebrate and unite around Europe’s great qualities of free speech and tolerance.
Molly Scott Cato MEP
Green, South-West England

• Some people take life and their beliefs seriously. You can make fun of them, but must understand there may be a reaction – and you have a choice whether to do so or not. But did the police officers ordered to protect the journalists at Charlie Hebdo have a choice? Shot like animals that were in the way, I hope they are equally mourned. We should remember them when we exercise our right to criticise those who protect us and our liberties.
Chris Hardy
London

• Protestors raised pens in the air in Paris as a symbol of freedom of speech. My Penguin Classic edition of The Qur’an (1974, pages 61-63) has a chapter entitled The Pen, which begins: “By the Pen, and what they write, you are not mad.” Without the pen there would have been no Declaration of the Rights of Man and the Citizen in 1789, and no Qur’an.
Ivor Morgan
Lincoln

• John Mortimer once said causing offence is important and beneficial to humanity. People should be offended three times a week and twice on Sundays.
Malachy Pakenham
St Albans, Hertfordshire

 

 

Yourtrenchant editorial against the criminal terrorism committed in Paris (8 January) asserts the “adjectives are simply not there to capture the horror unleashed by weapons of war in a civilian office”. Maybe not for the Paris outrage. However, we should not forget Nato – on our behalf – has twice unleashed just such weapons when it bombed media headquarters in its invasions of Serbia and Afghanistan respectively. The then prime minister Tony Blair described the attack on the Serbian state television headquarters in Belgrade, killing 13 members of the media, as “entirely legitimate”. But the then general secretary of the National Union of Journalists described the attack as “barbarity”, adding that “killing journalists does not stop censorship, it only brings more repression”. In 2001, just before the Northern Alliance marched into Kabul on 12 November, the US, acting for Nato, dropped a bomb on the studios of the Arab satellite TV station al-Jazeera, also damaging nearby offices of the BBC and the Associated Press. Colonel Rick Thomas, in an unconvincing apologia to CBS News for the US Central Command, insisted that the building was “a known al Qaida facility in central Kabul … We had no indications this or any nearby facility was used by al-Jazeera”. By chance, nobody was hurt, as the building was not occupied at the time by any of the 10 al-Jazeera journalists and technicians based there.

It is never right to attack journalists, even if you disagree with the editorial position of their media outlet, print or broadcast. We should uphold this defence of freedom, not apply it selectively.
Dr David Lowry
Stoneleigh, Surrey

• The last surviving British veteran of the first world war, Harry Patch, claimed rightly that war is organised murder. So-called terrorism is merely organised murder usually by non-state actors. There is no one method of killing or motive for killing that is always present in terrorism and never present in war. But even the Guardian does not seem to realise this, referring to the sanguinary wars waged by the west in recent times as “misadventures” and the sanguinary actions of the non-state actors at the offices of Charlie Hebdo as “murder”. Both are to be utterly condemned. To condemn the one and not the other is intellectually and morally dishonest.
Malcolm Pittock
Bolton, Greater Manchester

• This is a terrible tragedy for the families of the murdered journalists and their co-workers. Our condolences must go out to them. Amid the outrage about this act, there is anger about the offence against free speech and the question is asked “How can they do such a thing?” Which, of course, no one attempts to answer. From the point of view of the killers, they were merely attacking part of the propaganda apparatus of their enemies – perhaps considering it akin to the allies execution of Lord Haw-Haw after the second world war. But before the howls of whataboutery and the sanctity about free speech start, perhaps some people in the western media should ask themselves whether they raised sufficient concerns when the Americans killed an al-Jazeera journalist in 2003? This was far from being an isolated case as the US killing of ITN’s Terry Lloyd – described as a war crime by the National Union of Journalists – demonstrated. More recently, how many western news outlets are acknowledging that it is the US that is funding the Egyptian military that is imprisoning journalists on trumped-up charges?

Of course we could ignore the unequal power dynamic that is at work and fail to reflect on the forces that construct this conflict. The atrocity would then be used as an excuse to continue to kill more of them who in turn would enjoy greater recruitment to kill more of us.
Dr Gavin Lewis
Manchester

• We are continuing to pay a stiff price for Charlie Wilson’s war and arming Afghani tribesmen with Stinger missiles to down Soviet helicopters. It would have been as well to let the communists build infrastructure, sort out land ownership and secularise Afghanistan instead of the US continuing its decades-long jihad against communism. The Muslim jihadis are a byproduct of a superstitious holy war against the secular philosophy of communism.
DBC Reed
Thorplands, Northamptonshire

• Kidnapping, torture, rendition, illegal invasion, bombing, assassination, suspension of habeas corpus. Hundreds of thousands of non-combatants dead, men, women and children. How then shall we now with conviction resist the pernicious, toxic metaphysical ideology that left 12 tragically dead in a Paris office? Those who break the law cannot rely on its protection. To honour Charlie Hebdo we must live up to andby the fundamental principles it has taken us 2,000 years to embed in our democratic way of life. No exceptions. Or we will lose.
Keith Farman
St Albans, Hertfordshire

• I have always thought we were wrong to involve ourselves in Middle Eastern conflicts. However, the assassination of 12 cartoonists and journalists in their workplace is unforgivable. Our society and culture is based in the ability to rib and ridicule the pillars that hold us up, this is our check and balance, this is what keeps our people in power in their place. This extends to our god. I now fear that as a result of Wednesday’s events our journalists and cartoonists will still their pens for fear of retribution in the form of an AK47. If so, we have lost everything.
Jake Ridley
Saul, Gloucestershire

Independent:

Share

The Independent shows a confused response to the atrocity in Paris. Your 8 January editorial states that “all organs of the media must resist” this assault on free speech. Kim Sengupta claims that “self censorship cannot be the rule in a pluralistic, democratic society”.

Yet your publication has again proven to be at the heart of the problem and not the solution by refusing to print any of the cartoons that Charlie Hebdo produced. The British press has a lot to learn from Stéphane Charbonnier, the murdered editor of Charlie Hebdo who “would rather die standing than live on my knees”. If only our journalistic elite had the same concerns about standing up for what is right.

Jonathan Glass
London N2

 

Congratulations to Dave Brown and to the editorial decision to put his cartoon as a sole, unadorned front page (8 January). I do not remember anything with such punch since Zec’s wartime cartoon of a shipwrecked merchant sailor adrift, clinging to a piece of wreckage, with the caption: “‘The price of petrol has been increased by one penny’ – Official.” That one nearly got the Mirror shut down. Best  of luck.

P Hicks
London SW6

 

As a Muslim, I strongly condemn the attack on Charlie Hebdo and those behind it. These terrorists do not represent me nor do they represent Islam. Their wicked ideology is an existential threat to Islam itself. Part of the problem is that these extremists and Islamophobes – responsible for burning mosques and attacking women wearing hijab – need each other in order to exist. We, the majority of ordinary people of every faith, race and colour, should stand together to these extremists and say enough is enough.

Mohammed Samaana
Belfast

 

In the wake of the atrocity in Paris we are hearing a lot about freedom of speech, which strikes me as one of the Western world’s enduring myths. We have never had to be more careful about what we say, rightly or wrongly, and mindful of ethnicity, gender, sexual orientation, disability, colour, social background and belief. We all know the drill.

George Sharpley
Gloucester

 

The media have almost without exception framed the French terrorist atrocities as a narrative of free speech vs evil doers. In this context some dissenting opinion from secular liberals would not go amiss.

At what point does the “right to offend” slide into Muslim-baiting and old-fashioned racism? For example, I fail to see equivalence between the intelligent, irreligious cartoon Jesus and Mo, which attacks the absurdities of belief, and pornographic portrayals of the Prophet Mohamed. Readers might want to check out the Charlie Hebdo cartoon “The Koran is shit” and reflect on how this compares with the lurid depictions of Judaism in Der Sturmer in 1930s Germany.

Given France’s anti-Islamic colonialist past, we should be very wary of how it continues to inform present discourse on Islam in the guise of liberty.

Steven Garside
Manchester

 

Yet again we see the total insanity of Muslim terrorists in our Western civilisation, and we have to insist that our own press make a firm stand and show these fanatics that we simply do not accept their Stone Age ideas and actions. One way to do this is to just poke fun and generally ridicule them on a grand scale.

Every newspaper in the UK and Europe should agree on a date on which to publish cartoons ridiculing the three main religious groups, Muslims, Jews and Christians, with a banner heading saying: “If you live in the Western world you accept Western freedoms… these include the right to be critical of all religions without fear of reprisal. If you cannot accept this, then you should not live in Western society.”

Dave Simms Davies
Marlow

 

Kidnapping, torture, rendition, illegal invasion, bombing, assassination, suspension of habeas corpus. Hundreds of thousands dead including non-combatant men, women and children.

How then shall we now with honour and conviction resist the pernicious, toxic ideology that left 12 people tragically dead in a Paris office?

Those who break the law cannot rely on its protection. To honour Charlie Hebdo we must live up to and by the fundamental principles it has taken us 2,000 years to embed in our democratic way of life. No exceptions. Or we will lose.

Keith Farman
St Albans, Hertfordshire

 

The murders in Paris are inexcusable. However, these writers should have known better than to insult Islam in the way that they did. In a world increasingly divided by religious extremism, with Islamophobia and disaffected Muslim youth going off to fight in the Middle East, we need to build bridges, not destroy them.

Daniel Emlyn-Jones
Oxford

 

The Paris murderers were indeed cowardly and motivated by their perceived highest authority – Allah. The torturers in Guantanamo Bay and the safely ensconced directors of US killer drones were also cowardly and motivated by their perceived highest authority – god and country. This should remind us of the terrors that are unleashed when, instead of our moral sense being grounded in humanity and fellow-feeling, we understand it as determined by an all-powerful authority – be it god, the state or even the free market.

Peter Cave
London W1

 

All attention seems to be focused on the Charlie Hebdo staff who were victims of yesterday’s shocking atrocity in Paris.

Spare a thought for the families of the two policemen who were collateral damage from the needless clash of two fundamentalisms.

David Maughan Brown
York

 

The A&E crisis we could all see coming

Charlie Cooper’s “Why are we experiencing an A&E crisis now?” (7 January) identifies many of the salient roots of the growing A&E crisis. However, I find it baffling that there is no mention of Andrew Lansley’s disastrous 2012 NHS “reforms”. During a period of enormous financial strain on the NHS (Tory “efficiency savings” ), Lansley chose to introduce an intensely complex and costly (£3bn) reorganisation. The resulting chaos has been an increased burden on the NHS, and further demoralised already stretched nurses and doctors.

Whether or not one agrees with Lansley’s reforms is immaterial. David Nicholson (then the NHS’s chief executive) described the 2012 NHS reorganisation as being “so large it is visible from space”. To ignore its salience to the current A&E crisis seems remiss.

Jamie Register
London E17

 

I noticed that an article I was reading in an online South American newspaper this morning had been “sponsored” by the British National Health Service. Were I to be feeling depressed, I should contact them without delay. I was surprised to find that the NHS currently considers itself to be so short of business that it needs to tout for more.

Iain Salisbury
Birmingham

 

Why is everyone so unprepared for what is happening in the NHS? For ages we have known that people are living longer and, consequently, more hospital beds would be required.

Perhaps, when our MPs are old, they will be able to see what they should have done to avoid the present situation (I suggest scrapping Trident and building more hospitals). But, sadly, by then it will be too late.

Sarah Pegg
Seaford, East Sussex

 

Truly regional television

On Monday evening I enjoyed watching Broadchurch on television, set as it was by the golden west Dorset cliffs. What a surprise to find that Ellen E Jones (TV review, 6 January) must have seen a different version, which had “crumbling white cliffs”. Was hers perhaps filmed in Sussex? Are there other regional versions?

Alan Langley
Market Harborough, Leicestershire

 

The litter louts among us

Unfortunately, the littering habit observed by Rosy Curtis (Letters, 6 January) is not confined to her local cinema. Littering on trains appears to be increasingly common, not only in the form of discarded freesheets and other newspapers, but also cans, cups, and even banana skins and apple cores, which are particularly unpleasant for cleaners and for other travellers.

Probably the worst example I have seen was a used teabag being discarded on the floor of a train. Would these (middle-aged, professional) people do this at home?

John Armstrong
Southampton

 

Rosy Curtis is quite right to feel aggrieved by the litter left after a children’s screening of Paddington. But to say “I don’t know what the world is coming to” raises the question: did she not suffer from adults smoking in the cinema in the old days?

Peter Jones
St Albans, Hertfordshire

Times:

Sir, It is clear from the attacks in Paris (reports, Jan 8) that Britain needs to adopt a far more assertive and structured stance against militant Islamism in the UK. The home secretary’s recent courageous measures to counter British “jihadists” need to be applauded and espoused as the national minimum in our legal armoury.

For their part, British Islamic institutions are still woefully complacent, offering at best no more than rhetoric and well-rehearsed bouts of condemnation. They need to do much better in countering the pernicious ideology of radical Islamism, reinforcing to young impressionable Muslim minds that the security of this country is paramount, as well as instilling unmitigated pride in our British values and national institutions.
Dr Lu’ayy Minwer Al Rimawi

(Former visiting fellow, Harvard Law School, Islamic legal studies programme) Peterborough

Sir, As a Muslim I strongly condemn the attack on the staff of Charlie Hebdo and those behind it. These terrorists do not represent me or Islam. Their wicked ideology is an existential threat to Islam itself. Part of the problem is that Islamic extremists and Islamophobes need each other in order to exist. We, the majority of ordinary people of every faith, race and colour, should stand together and say: enough is enough.
Mohammed Samaana

Belfast

Sir, David Aaronovitch (“Our cowardice helped to allow this attack”, Opinion, Jan 8) speaks for the many of us who share his beliefs (but lack the journalistic skill and the platform to express them) when he says: “This is the deal for living together. The same tolerance that allows Muslims or Methodists freedom to practise and espouse their religion is the same tolerance that allows their religion or any aspect of it to be depicted, criticised or even ridiculed.” Those who indoctrinate Islamic terrorists are fond of stating that the West will never understand them. But we understand them all too well. Extremism is not new. It flourishes wherever reason is suppressed and freedom of thought discouraged. It will always wither under the spotlight of intelligent interrogation, which of course is exactly why it invariably attempts violently to suppress it.
Robert Sutton

Markham, Notts

Sir, David Aaronovitch is quite right that the need for mutual respect means the possibility of expressing a diversity of views. So I look forward to a long series of cartoons and articles mocking the intellectual pomposity and moral emptiness of atheism.
The Rev Christopher Green
London N10

Sir, The journalists at Charlie Hebdo knew that they were under personal threat and they knew what they were standing up for. Many of us share that commitment to the ideals of liberty and freedom, and it is easy to tweet and post our support online. However, I wonder how many of us really would stand up and say “je suis Charlie” if our own personal security was directly at risk? It is an uncomfortable question to ask oneself and demonstrates the courage of those who were murdered in Paris. The foundations of democracy in Europe seem a little less robust with their passing.
Nicholas Allan
Tunbridge Wells, Kent

Sir, The universal condemnation of the shootings in Paris is taking little account of causal factors. Under the cover of free speech, secularising societies such as France sanction the persistent antagonism of the faithful of many religions. To acknowledge violence as the inevitable consequence is not to condone it but it is to understand that effects have causes and that freedoms need to be asserted empathically.
Roger Homan
Professor emeritus of religious studies, University of Brighton

Sir, Je (ne) suis pas Charlie. The outrage in Paris can be neither excused nor forgiven. Nor must be it be forgotten, but it can be explained. Those who say, act or cartoon in the name of free speech often find it convenient to omit the attendant qualification — which is that while speech should be free it should also be responsible. It is a cliché that we do not have the right to yell “Fire! Fire!” in a packed theatre even if there is a fire, as orderly exits save more lives than mad panics.

In exercising freely what we may regard as our God-given right to insult people in our way, the risk is run that they will freely exercise their God-given right to retort in their way. Those who play with fire do undertake a certain risk; as we have learnt yet again, it can be terminally naive to assume otherwise.
Tim Flinn

Garvald, East Lothian

Sir, The attack on the staff of Charlie Hebdo is utterly abhorrent. However, is extreme mockery always appropriate? In France the law of laïcité is ruthlessly applied, as in the banning of wearing the veil in workplaces and school, and where, in Paris itself, segregation rather than integration is overtly apparent. Are liberté, égalité and fraternité only the prerogative of the born and bred Français de souche rather than of all citizens who try hard to embrace French culture while retaining their own religious beliefs?

As a past and occasional current reader of both Le Canard Enchainé and Charlie Hebdo, I enjoy satirical cartoons, which enable us to take a long hard look at ourselves. However, extreme satire may risk repercussions from disaffected, angry members of a sometimes xenophobic society which, at times, alienates rather than welcomes. A lethal recipe, perhaps.
Sarah Martinelli

(French teacher)
Letchworth, Herts

Sir, Violence against freedom of speech is nothing new. In 1559 the Vatican promulgated the first “Index librorum prohibitorum”. In 1632, Galileo was prohibited from publishing his support for Copernicus’s theory that the Earth goes round the Sun rather than being at the centre of the universe. He was handed over to the tender mercies of the Inquisition and forced to recant. The Vatican finally got round to abolishing the Index in 1966.
Peter Hassell

Budleigh Salterton, Devon

Sir, The order of service at a wedding I attended last week contained a version of the Lord’s Prayer which I had not seen before. It read: “Lead us not into temptation, but deliver us from email.” Amen to that.
Andrew Body
Ludlow, Shropshire

Sir, With regard to recognising ranks(letter, Jan 7), I was at Sandhurst for my son’s graduation and didn’t receive a single salute from the clearly bemused soldiers. We also confuse the public. Why is an air vice-marshal
(2 star) equivalent to a rear admiral when a vice-admiral is 3 star? Why do squadron leaders command flights, wing commanders squadrons and group captains stations?
Air Vice-Marshal Barry Higgs (rtd)
Cambridge

Sir, Tam Fry of the National Obesity Forum says (News, Jan 1) that the simplest advice to lose weight is “to take control of yourself”. Food firms spend millions of pounds to influence our associations. Dairy Milk is “joy”, Coca-Cola is “happiness” and McDonald’s is the backdrop to every meaningful moment. I would have more optimism about the UK’s diet if Mr Fry took every weapon in the battle for our minds more seriously.
Clare Dimond
Marlborough, Wilts

Sir, Melanie Phillips is correct (Opinion, Jan 5). By distorting the historical record (The Imitation Game being a case in point) the arts world is seriously misleading the public. Films often become fact simply because Hollywood says it is so. The BBC is as guilty. Its Castles in the Skypurported to tell the story of British radar. Like the Turing farrago it too had a spurious love interest and a spy. More importantly, Robert Watson-Watt was no “weatherman” nor was any member of his team. They were either from the radio research station at Slough or were engineers and physicists.
Dr Brian Austin
West Kirby, Wirral

Sir, Your leader (“Fortune Favours the Brave”, Jan 6) rightly applauds the beneficial effect of film tax reliefs while drawing attention to the absence of sufficient sustainable British film businesses supported by British investment. Investment is not the only factor. We have a wealth of creative talent — directors, writers, producers and actors — and potentially a large audience that wants to enjoy films that are different to those from US studios. The challenge, to connect the two, is one that we must work to resolve.
Andrew Chowns
Chief executive, Directors UK

Sir, The film 47 Ronin might have lost at the box office but the tax breaks ensured that 1,630 musician hours were spent on the film in the UK. In recent years, The Hobbit, Batman and the Harry Potter films have benefited from British musical talent. Tax breaks are working.
Peter Thoms
Sessions official, Musicians’ Union

Telegraph:

NHS, doctor, junior doctor

There is a mismatch between the number of able students willing to train in medicine and the number of university places available Photo: ALAMY

SIR – With a clearly overstretched National Health Service, surely it is time to look at the resources assigned to training doctors. There is a mismatch between the number of able students willing to work within this field and the number of places available.

My 17-year-old daughter is currently going through the admissions process, and it has been illuminating to discover how difficult it is for top students to gain places. University of Bristol received 5,500 applications for just 232 places this year.

In recent years the demand for medical services has increased and will no doubt continue to do so. It is therefore high time to look at expanding the availability of relevant university courses.

Louise Mayo
London W11

SIR – Some accident and emergency departments in hospitals have had to declare a critical incident in order to deal with serious over-crowding. This is partly the result of the inability of the NHS, and particularly acute trusts, to work with social care providers.

The care-home sector has enormous potential to deliver support services that will reduce hospital admissions, enable appropriate discharge and offer a better experience for the patient, as well as better value for the taxpayer.

There is another way in which we can deliver better outcomes and more efficiency in the system, and that requires that money be apportioned differently in order to sustain our existing services.

I call on the Government and the NHS to make all the rhetoric about integration real.

Professor Martin Green
Chief Executive, Care England
London E1

SIR – The service the public values the most, our nurses, seems to be the service the NHS hierarchy values the least, which is reflected in the pay structure. We are regularly informed of the executives receiving generous salaries plus bonuses. Common sense dictates that we should reduce these salaries and give the amount deducted, and the bonus, as pay to the nurses instead. The funds are obviously there, but are simply being channelled incorrectly. This way a nurses’ strike may be avoided.

John Batty
Middle Assendon, Oxfordshire

SIR – The easiest way to fix the current NHS problems is to make it mandatory for all ministers, MPs and peers to use the NHS exclusively.

Roger Hiscock
Hayling Island, Hampshire

SIR – The text function on my new smart phone is so intelligent that it automatically knew I was an NHS surgeon. When I tapped in the word “case”, it immediately predicted the next word as “cancelled”.

Richard Bickerton FRCS
Warwick

Terror in Paris

Francois Hollande (centre left) flanked by French Interior Minister Bernard Cazeneuve (right) outside the Charlie Hebdo office (Remy De La Mauviniere/AP)

SIR – Western leaders have condemned the Islamist terrorists’ attack on the Paris offices of the magazine Charlie Hebdo.

Well done. That’ll have the terrorists quaking in their boots.

Stuart Buxton
Haverfordwest, Pembrokeshire

SIR – Islam means “peace, purity, submission and obedience”. The perpetrators of the outrage in Paris have broken each of those.

David J Beck
Hinckley, Leicestershire

Defence funding

SIR – On The Andrew Marr Show on BBC One last Sunday, David Cameron announced that Britain was to purchase 80-90 F‑35B aircraft for HMS Queen Elizabeth and Prince of Wales, and that both carriers would be operational with air wings.

Previous talk had been of only enough aircraft being purchased to equip one air wing for HMS Queen Elizabeth, no role having been decided for HMS Prince of Wales. As the estimated fly-away cost for each F-35B in 2013 was $220 million, the increase from previous estimated costs during the 2015-20 Parliament would be at least $9 billion. Due to the Government’s cuts in the Royal Navy, it would be hard-pressed to find enough support ships for one carrier task force, let alone two.

Perhaps Mr Cameron will make clear how he is going to make up the extra £15‑20 billion in funding for the second carrier task force. I hope it won’t all be from reductions in welfare benefits.

George D Lewis
Brackley, Northamptonshire

Earned bonuses

SIR – Valerie Crews (Letters, January 5) seems to misunderstand how CEO reward packages are set. In a public company the directors are appointed by shareholders to run the company with the sole intention of creating shareholder value.

Reward packages for the CEO have to be agreed by the shareholders in order for the incumbent to be suitably motivated to increase shareholder value. What would be the incentive for a CEO to create value for the shareholders if they were not rewarded for doing so? Capping CEO bonuses would inflate base salaries, resulting in shareholders paying huge sums regardless of performance.

The real problem is that targets are based on short-term performance. This approach created the greed culture in banking where it is all about maximising profit now with little thought for the future. What’s more, the major shareholders in public companies are banks and pension funds, which are not going to vote for a package that “rocks the boat” as their own packages would have to change as well.

The financial system is a closed one, and until it is broken open to new entrants who can make a difference, the status quo will remain.

Andrew Holgate
Woodley, Cheshire

Recipes for a happy morning and a long life

Get your oats: a study from Harvard University has detailed the health benefits of porridge (Alamy)

SIR – Should one make one’s daily bowl of porridge with water, milk or cream to achieve longevity?

Sandra Miles-Taylor
St Albans, Hertfordshire

SIR – Three tablespoons of porridge oats combined with milk, preferably goat’s: cook for three minutes, then add a tablespoon of syrup with three tablespoons of mixed cereals.

David Le Clercq
Bournemouth, Hampshire

SIR – My late father-in-law, a dairy farmer, always poured a healthy serving of Jamaican rum on his porridge after milking the cows on a cold winter morning.

Donald Bradshaw
Banbury, Oxfordshire

SIR – Having previously experimented with various chopped fruits, I can find nothing finer than a few glugs of Baileys liqueur on my porridge. It makes mornings so worthwhile.

Alan Belk
Leatherhead, Surrey

Change of address

SIR – We live in High Wycombe, yet a weird boundary (Letters, January 6) imposed by BT means that our road cannot receive a High Wycombe telephone directory. We are given the Slough, Windsor and Maidenhead edition, which is not even from the same county.

BT says the boundary is at their discretion and will not enter into a discussion about a possible error. We may, however, purchase a High Wycombe directory for £10. The only form of protest I have been able to make is to change my telephone provider.

Linda Lancaster
High Wycombe, Buckinghamshire

Off on a walk

SIR – While in no way belittling the achievement of Levison Wood, who has walked the length of the Nile, we might consider that of Ewart Grogan, who walked from Cape Town to Cairo, taking two and a half years, between 1898 and 1900.

Unlike Mr Wood, he lacked television sponsorship, a film crew or any other backup. Grogan’s beloved Gertrude had been refused to him by her parents in view of his somewhat dissolute lifestyle, but he won her hand after his achievement. She is still remembered in the chain of Gertrude’s Children’s Hospitals in Kenya.

Peter Innes
Winchester, Hampshire

How’s it going?

SIR – As the former director of international news for an American TV news network, I was only ever addressed as “Bro” by one employee: our Afghan producer in Kabul, who invariably began his emails to me that way. I didn’t like to ask why.

Personally, I prefer to be called “Dude”.

Chris Hampson
Chesham, Buckinghamshire

All the fun of the fair

SIR – Boris Johnson makes the case for yet another underground line; but this will be too little too late. What is needed is a radical solution based on new technology.

We might consider an above-ground light railway, like the one in Sydney, Australia, or perhaps an ultra-light railway based on fairground ride engineering; passenger pods would soar above and through the city. Such a system would be cheaper, relatively quick to install, and much more exciting than rushing through the ground.

Brian Farmer
Chelmsford, Essex

Saucy school lessons in French courtesy of HP

(Alamy)

SIR – I read with nostalgia your report on the potential demise of HP brown sauce.

This condiment was my introduction to learning French, since in the Fifties the label on the back of the bottle was, for some strange reason, in French and read: Cette sauce de premier choix possède les plus hautes qualités digestives. C’est un assortiment de fruits d’Orient, d’épices et de vinaigre de ‘Malt’ pur. Elle est absolument pure, appétissante et délicieuse avec les viandes chaudes ou froides.

It was removed in 1980, prompting many sad letters at the loss of a French tutor to young schoolboys.

David R Grice
London SW14

SIR – Brown sauce was not launched by HP in 1903. The original recipe was devised by Frederick Gibson Garton, a Nottingham grocer, in the 1890s and was produced and sold at his shop in Sandon Street, New Basford.

Indeed, the 1891 census shows his occupation as a “pickle manufacturer”, rather than a grocer. After hearing that this sauce was popular in the Houses of Parliament dining rooms, he registered the name HP Sauce in 1895.

Garton was perhaps not the best businessman, however, and he settled his debts with the recipe for HP Sauce, which was taken back to Birmingham and relaunched by the Midlands Vinegar Company in 1903.

Sadly, this icon of Britishness is now produced in the Netherlands.

Brian Binns
Loughborough, Leicestershire

Testing Granny

SIR – Scientists have used mice to prove Granny was right to tell us to wear a scarf.

She also told us to tuck our vests into our knickers. How do you use mice to prove that?

Elizabeth Ross
Isle of Arran, North Ayrshire

Globe and Mail:

Timothy Garton Ash

Europe’s media must unite and stand against the assassin’s veto

Irish Times:

Sir, – The principles of liberté, égalité and fraternité which guide France and, in essence, the societies of all civilised nations cannot, and do not, exist in a vacuum.

They must be assiduously guarded and fought for when and where necessary.

Religious or ideological fanaticism either egregiously condones or actively perpetrates terrorist attacks.

Such fanatics all the while lambast the societies in which they live for lack of tolerance, understanding and acceptance of ideas and practices which trample on the cherished and hard-won rights and freedoms of most western countries. Such double standards must be identified again and again and be vigorously and consistently repudiated in word and action by politics and civil society at all levels.

Intolerance cannot be countered with tolerance.

All the wishful thinking, handwringing and misguided Kumbaya sentiment will not change this simple fact. – Yours, etc,

PATRICIA MULKEEN,

Ballinfull,

Sligo.

Sir, – The horrific murders in Paris must be roundly condemned. It should be possible to criticise and satirise both public figures and ideology without such actions from young men, alienated and angry as they may be.

It is equally important that the response to the attacks does not lead either to an increase in future terrorist attacks or a rise in attacks on Muslims.

Hatred and revenge are not the answer to the grief that the relatives of the victims are experiencing.

The French government could lead effectively in calming the widespread public anger and grief by reflecting on its own dubious foreign policy, which along with that of other western powers has fostered instability, sectarianism, oppression and hundreds of thousands of Muslims killed and injured, all of which has ultimately led to a rise in terrorism. We should remember that the response of the French government to the brutal suppression by Tunisian dictator Ben Ali to the calls for democracy by peaceful protesters was to offer to send 300 French paratroopers.

Serious reflection and positive actions on foreign policy by the French government would be the best response at this tragic time. – Yours, etc,

JIM ROCHE,

Irish Anti-War Movement,

PO Box 9260,

Dublin 1.

Sir, – I have little doubt that the horrific murder of Charlie Hebdo staff and the two police officers will leave a small but deranged number of Islamists rubbing their hands in delight. But let us take a deep breath before falling into their trap, where hatred, not love, dominates their souls.

The overwhelming majority of Muslims are ordinary decent people who just want to get on with their lives.

Like the Irish living in Britain during the IRA bombing campaign, undoubtedly they too feel under threat and suspicion.

Ironically, it may be Marine Le Pen’s far-right National Front that benefits from this atrocity. Who knows, perhaps that was one of the terrorists’ objectives – to drive a large wedge between ordinary Muslims and the wider community. There will always be terrorism in the world, but to minimise the threat of Islamic terrorism, both Muslims and wider society need to pull together towards the common good by fighting radicalisation. – Yours, etc,

JOHN BELLEW,

Dunleer,

Co Louth.

Sir, – Can we please have no self-hating apologies for the people who committed this act? The journalists who work for the magazine are entitled to poke fun at, ridicule and insult whomever they want. The hard-won freedoms which we wish to continue to enjoy are dependant on press freedom and the scrutiny of even the most satirical wags.

We must not fall victim to sham moral equivalency. An anti-enlightenment death cult has little to do with Islam but reflects a fascistic desire to undermine and destroy democracy. It cannot be appeased. – Yours, etc,

MACK LENNON,

Sutton,

Dublin 13.

Sir , – Yesterday’s cartoon by Martyn Turner demonstrated how all cartoonists must be free to bring a smile or a thought to our lives despite such horrendous intimidation from extremist groups. – Yours, etc,

MICHAEL STOREY,

Glencar,

Sligo.

Sir, – As a Muslim, I strongly condemn the attack on the French magazine Charlie Hebdo and those who perpetrated it.

These terrorists do not represent me nor do they represent Islam. Their wicked ideology is an existential threat to Islam itself.

Part of the problem is that these extremists and Islamophobes – responsible for burning mosques and attacking women wearing hijab – need each other in order to exist. We, the majority of ordinary people of every faith, race and colour, should stand together to these extremists and say enough is enough. – Yours, etc,

MOHAMMED SAMAANA,

Belfast.

Sir, – Almost every media organisation in the world will roundly condemn the Paris massacre and rant on about “free speech” but very few will take any action to negate the terrorists’ goals. All media organisations should immediately start publishing the “offending” cartoons. Otherwise the terrorists will win. – Yours, etc,

DICK KEANE,

Glenageary,

Co Dublin.

Sir, – Two crucial values for the future of the French republic were attacked. First, our freedom of speech as enshrined since 1789 in our Declaration of Human Rights.

According to article 11, “Free communication of thoughts and opinions is the most precious human right”.

It is interesting to see the debates that have arisen about the definition of “freedom of speech”, what it allows, what should or should not be said. Many people consider that decency, kindness or respect should be the limitations to freedom of speech.

To me, this makes no sense. These are extremely subjective values. The offence of blasphemy was abolished in 1791 in France. There must be no qualification of freedom of speech except by law.

Once we enter the debate of respect and decency, we curtail and chip away at this fundamental right. Whatever opinion or belief French law does not ban is allowed to be expressed no matter whether it is provocative, unpopular or offensive to a majority or a minority.

If you do not approve of this opinion, if it makes you uncomfortable, you have the choice to reply, express your own opinion or ignore the newspaper with which you disagree. This is freedom, freedom of expression, freedom to debate.

The 12 people who died on January 7th died for this freedom.

The second value that was attacked yesterday is that of fraternity, the idea that Muslim and non-Muslim French citizens can live together. France is at a dangerous crossroads. It is on the brink of choking on its fears of “the other” as manipulated by fundamentalists rather than sticking by its republican values and standing strong.

Politicians sensed the immense danger yesterday. President François Hollande and former Nicolas Sarkozy were exemplary in their condemnation of the barbaric act and their appeal to calm and cohesion, while not mentioning once the name of Islam so as not to stigmatise it.

Now is not the time to call for a reinstatement of death penalty, as Marine Le Pen is doing. Now is not the time to fuel fear, anger and hatred. The French republic needs to remain strong on its values of fraternity, solidarity, freedom and acceptance while engaging in an open and intellectually honest debate on the place of Islam in the republic.

The temptation to amalgamate Muslims and Islamic fundamentalists is very strong among French people. The climate of Islamophobia has never been more palpable.

And it is spreading across Europe. Look at Germany and the anti-Islam demonstrations taking place on a weekly basis in Dresden. Look at Sweden and the attacks against four mosques since October 2014. Fear of Islam and how it fits in our western societies cannot be denied.

This is enhanced by xenophobic and inward-looking political parties that play with our fears for their political benefit. Our duty as republicans is to answer those fears in a respectful, inclusive and democratic way. Democracy is genuinely at stake.

If we do not fight for our values of freedom and fraternity, we might as well have killed those journalists ourselves. – Yours, etc,

Dr EMMANUELLE

SCHÖN-QUINLIVAN,

Department of Government,

University College Cork.

Crisis in emergency departments

A chara, – Leo Varadkar will now spend the next few weeks being distracted by the media and politically misguided Opposition leaders firing a tirade of abuse at him for legacy issues.

Perhaps now might be the time for all the naysayers to start helping collectively with a view to sorting out the health service once and for all instead of playing the blame game. – Yours, etc,

JONATHAN WORMALD,

Sutton,

Dublin 13.

Sir, – Leo Varadkar wants consultants to do twice daily ward rounds, including at weekends. Such focus on inpatient care might lead to greater throughput of admissions and fewer patients on trolleys for a while but it would also mean fewer outpatient and day clinics, fewer procedures, less supervision, less teaching and training, less administrative input, less time for paperwork and audit, less communication with other aspects of the health service and less preventive medicine. Inevitably this would increase demand for emergency inpatient services while more broadly increasing the risk of adverse health outcomes. And when that risk is realised who will be to blame?

It is not the Minister’s fault, but many entrenched managers in the HSE view requests from staff for appropriate resourcing of patient care as hassle. Many do not see the provision of appropriate healthcare as their responsibility, rather they will exhaust all other possibilities before accepting that something might be their remit. I am familiar with a recent case of a young adult in which the primary problem was intellectual disability and it took 16 months, including eight in an acute hospital inpatient bed, for the disability services to accept her (they still haven’t actually seen her). So much time and effort is wasted, so much responsibility is avoided.

One gets a sense from the HSE that as long as some staff are in place it feels it is covered, even if there is gross understaffing or deficits in service provision. Many health professionals leave the country for better pay and conditions and the HSE does not attempt to keep them here but then bemoans the fact that positions cannot be filled and higher agency rates have to be paid. Those who make decisions on resources are too far removed from the patients these decisions affect. They should really have their own twice daily clinics for facetime with patients and staff alike. – Yours, etc,

DANIEL QUINN,

Killiney, Co Dublin.

Sir, – Is it not a fact that all the problems in the health services in this country have been signalled as far back as anyone can remember? It must have been a real kick in the teeth to those working at the coalface of this well-flagged disaster to listen to Leo Varadkar asking everyone working in the health services to put their shoulders to the wheel to solve this debacle, a debacle created by deliberate policy of Government since it came into office and the unmentionable government that came before it. This Government doesn’t care as long as the books are balanced and all social services will have to grin and bear it. The people don’t matter; it’s as simple as that. – Yours, etc,

KEVIN BYRNE,

Bantry,

Cork.

Sir, – So Minister for Health Leo Varadkar says that he predicted the overcrowding crisis (“Hospitals issue to be addressed, says Varadkar”, January 8th). He called a meeting on December 23rd and then went on holiday! His first act on his return was to brief the media on his foresight, his ingenuity in getting another €3 million of taxpayers’ funds and his posture of impatience with progress. If he and the Cabinet do not regard this as a cynical exercise in passing the buck then I fear for the future of the health service and the integrity of this Government. Meetings, announcements and media briefings are a poor substitute for action. We elect politicians to act, not to posture. – Yours, etc,

MICHAEL ANDERSON,

Baldoyle,

Dublin 13.

Derelict historic buildings

Sir, – You note that the problem of “dereliction and decay of historic buildings constitutes a serious problem of neglect, mainly by private landlords” (Editorial, January 3rd). It is a problem which is not restricted to Dublin nor just to historic buildings. Tolerating such a mindset of wilful abandonment is more than just a matter of aesthetics and civic pride, it also takes its toll on the cost of doing business, finding affordable accommodation, lost tax revenues and a missed opportunity to expand the construction industry.

In every town and village there are many private dwellings, offices and shops, and fine publicly owned buildings (unused or underused town halls, civic offices, court houses) standing vacant and idle for years. And without tenants these fall into dilapidation – lowering the volume and standard of the national buildings, monuments and housing stock. The crux of the problem (also as outlined in the editorial) being that responsibility is spread thinly among public bodies without consensus on what needs or can be done.

Within article 43, there is a constitutional imperative to regulate property for the common good, and therefore it would be perfectly appropriate to introduce an application of a progressive penal property tax (ie increasing by 25 per cent for every six months of dereliction or vacancy) on both historic properties and properties which were once used for dwelling or commercial purposes. This would encourage both public and private owners to renovate and renew properties, and then either sell them or put them on the rental market. This again would increase the market volume of usable properties, give employment to the construction industry, put downward pressure on rental prices and reduce the cost to taxpayers of subsidising rents.

If such a charge can be levied on water with the general aim of creating a conservation culture, there is no reason nor excuse as to why something similar could not be set against derelict and vacant property. – Yours, etc,

CIARAN WALSH,

Donard, Co Wicklow.

Sir, – An infant patient of mine is due to travel to the UK for a bone marrow transplant under the E112 scheme. This procedure could be carried out at Crumlin children’s hospital if a transplant physician were employed as all other necessary facilities and expertise are already in place. Instead, this child’s family will be disrupted and his siblings will be without their parents for months on end. The employment of a transplant physician at Crumlin hospital would lead to savings to the Irish taxpayer and would significantly lessen the burden for numerous families every year. – Yours, etc,

Dr ELLEN CRUSHELL,

Metabolic Paediatrician,

National Centre for

Inherited Metabolic

Disorders,

Temple Street Children’s

University Hospital,

Dublin 1.

Sir, – Further to “Paul Howard’s 44 life lessons” (January 6th), the elderly father of a one-time colleague had a maxim which I have recalled many times since first hearing it. “Work as if you’ll live forever and live as if you’ll die tomorrow.” A wise man indeed. – Yours, etc,

PADRAIG O’ROURKE,

Merrion Road, Dublin 4.

Sir, – Is it a reboot in the whole of the country or just in pockets of affluence? – Yours, etc,

BRIAN AHERN,

Clonsilla, Dublin 15.

Sir, – The Democratic Progressives? – Yours, etc,

BRIAN HODKINSON,

Reboge, Limerick.

Sir, – I thought that UTV Ireland was a new and additional station in Ireland rather than a replacement for UTV. Apparently not to UPC customers or Irish Times readers. – Yours, etc,

COLIN ROGAN,

Terenure, Dublin 6W.

Irish Independent:

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A child holds a poster at a service in Derry for those murdered at the Charlie Hebdo magazine offices in Paris
A child holds a poster at a service in Derry for those murdered at the Charlie Hebdo magazine offices in Paris

I am a Frenchman living in Ireland and I received some very kind and touching emails from Irish colleagues expressing their sympathy regarding the tragedy which took place in Paris yesterday.

However, I feel that the question of nationality is irrelevant on this matter. We should send these commiserating emails to ourselves who are supporting the democratic ideal, because when one kills the editorial team of a magazine it is the concept of democracy as we see it in the Western World that one attempts to kill.

This morning – along with the victims and their families – my sympathies go with the “Muslims of Europe” (an expression which I view as ridiculous considering the fact that if someone called me a “Christian of Europe”, I would feel like drawing his/her caricature).

In France, the majority of people who have Islam as their religion are French citizens, so were their parents and, in many cases, even their grand-parents. Still, some ignorant idiots continue to qualify them as “migrants”.

It is true that I am upset this morning, and I suppose this is one of the reasons why I am sending this email, as a form of catharsis.

The other reason is that it is time to react and, as Sartre stated, saying nothing is also acting. The victims included a well-known economist and four great cartoonists. I loved their work. I loved their irreverence. I loved their courage. I loved them. They taught me far more about life that all novelists or academics put together. Cartoons are revered in France; it is considered an art.

I listened to a cartoonist yesterday morning on RTE Radio 1 who said Wednesday’s event would stop him expressing himself on certain topics, because he has four kids. His four French colleagues also had families. However, despite the fact they had been under constant threats for the last eight years, they had not changed their satirical expressions regarding all social topics (the gods, the politicians, the average Frenchman and woman).

By limiting the choice of his topics because of an understandable and legitimate fear, this Irish cartoonist will lose his identity as an artist and will become a ‘drawing maker’.

These guys in ‘Charlie Hebdo’ did not take themselves or their work seriously. They knew the vital importance of laughs (cf. Freud).

Like most French people under the age of 60 I grew up laughing at the cartoons of two of the victims, who were superstars in France.

Cabu was a 77-year-old teenager, the epitome of gentleness and goodness, who also used to draw for children. Wolinsky – a 80-year-old spoilt, but bright child – was a ‘romantic pervert’. A few years ago a journalist asked him about his funeral plans. He replied using the traditional subtle and refined French humour. “I wish to be cremated; then I would like my wife to pour my ashes in the toilet, so as I can continue to admire her ass,” he said.

Could there be a better declaration of love? We should all have a word with our partners today on the matter.

Political correctness is another serious threat to the democratic ideal.

Gael Le Roux

Clontarf, Dublin 3

Islam is a religion of peace

Reports in the media are saying that what happened at the offices of the ‘Charlie Hebdo’ magazine in Paris yesterday was carried out by Islamic extremists, Islamic fundamentalists, religious fanatics…

I am writing because I feel I need to voice my opinion; as an Irish person and as a Muslim but, first and foremost, as a human being.

I am by no means a perfect Muslim, but I am a Muslim. I am also by no means a perfect Irish person, but I am an Irish person. Not a perfect woman, or wife or daughter or mother or sister or friend… (in no particular order). So, before your readers begin picking apart what I am about to write. I want that to be clear and, I want it to be clear that I know it. Also, I am not an Islamic scholar and in this letter I do not try to presume to speak on behalf of Muslims. I do however, want to take the time to make a few relevant and important points to all who read this: non-Muslims and Muslims alike.

Firstly, and most importantly, I condemn acts of violence against any defenceless person of any colour, race or creed. I abhor what took place at the offices of the ‘Charlie Hebdo’ magazine yesterday.

Islam is a religion of peace. Peace with Allah / God (Subhana Wa Ta’ a la, all glory be to him), peace with yourself, peace with those around you and your community and, peace in wider society. True followers of Islam do not carry out attacks like this. True followers of any religion do not carry out attacks like this.

Too often we ‘other’ people. By this, I mean we focus on what divides us or is different from us. By doing this we create barriers and distances. We miss out on all kinds of relationships. We miss out on knowing a person as a person. We miss out on understanding them: their lives, what they value and love, who they value and love, what are their disappointments, their struggles, their goals, their dreams…

However, we all, Muslims and non-Muslims, have more in common as human beings than we do differences. There is more that unites us than divides. Much, much more. Too often we forget that. All of us, too often and too easily. ‘Othering’ means we miss out on a chance of getting to know people and to understand them but, they too miss out on a chance of getting to know and understand us.

I urge all of your readers not to ‘other’ one another. Not to relate to or identify with one side and not the other because, what happened in Paris happened to human beings. It was done by human beings to human beings. People who are just like you and just like me. The whys and hows are not things I can even begin to understand. But I do know this; as long as we continue to find differences in one another and continue to separate ourselves from each other, then there is no hope that we can build relationships or know and understand each other.

And no hope that acts of violence like yesterday at the offices of the ‘Charlie Hebdo’ magazine in Paris won’t continue to happen.

Sarah Ryan

Co Cork

Moderates must unite

I have little doubt that the horrific murder of ‘Charlie Hebdo’ staff and three French policemen will have delighted a small but deranged number of Islamists.

But let us take a deep breath before falling into their trap. The overwhelming majority of Muslims are ordinary decent people who just want to get on with their lives. Like the Irish living in Britain during the IRA bombing campaign, undoubtedly they too feel under threat and suspicion.

Ironically, it may be Marine Le Pen’s far-right National Front that benefits from this atrocity. Who knows, perhaps that was one of the terrorists’ objectives; to drive a large wedge between ordinary Muslims and the wider community.

There will always be terrorism in the world, but to minimise the threat of Islamic terrorism, both Muslims and wider society need to pull together towards the common good by fighting radicalisation.

John Bellew

Dunleer, Co Louth

Pottering

January 8, 2015

8 January 2015 Pottering

Mary a little better though she could manage to get up fot breakfast. Potter around childrens books on Amazon, sweep some leaves tidy up’

Obituary:

Cabu was a cartoonist described by the film-maker Jean-Luc Godard as ‘the best journalist in France’

Cabu with his cartoon  character Le Grand Duduche

Cabu with his cartoon character Le Grand Duduche Photo: LYDIE/SIPA/REX

Jean Cabut, who has been killed in Paris aged 76, was better known as “Cabu”, a cartoonist who earned the wrath of Muslim fundamentalists with a depiction of the Prophet Mohammed, which became the subject of a court case in 2007; the film-maker Jean-Luc Godard one called him “the best journalist in France”.

In its issue of February 8 2006, Charlie Hebdo, the French satirical weekly in which Cabu was a shareholder, republished 12 drawings that had appeared the previous year in the Danish newspaper Jyllands-Posten, some of them representing Mohammed. Their original publication in September 2005 had provoked an outcry in the Muslim world and sparked violent protests in several countries, resulting in the deaths of at least 50 people.

On the cover of its reprint, Charlie Hebdo also published an original drawing by Cabu depicting a sobbing Mohammed with his head in his hands, saying, “It’s hard to be loved by idiots’’ under the caption “Mohammed overwhelmed by fundamentalists”.

Charlie Hebdo published the cartoons in solidarity with the Danish newspaper and to make a point about freedom of expression in France, which has the largest Muslim population in Europe. The previous week the republication of the Danish cartoons by the French daily France Soir had led to the dismissal of its editor, Jacques Lefranc.

Following the publication of the offending issue of the magazine the Paris Grand Mosque and the Union of Islamic Organisations of France sued its editor Philippe Val, arguing that the Cabu cartoon and two of the Danish images drew an offensive link between Islam and terrorism. They accused Val of “publicly abusing a group of people because of their religion’’ and requested €30,000 in damages. The charges could have resulted in a six-month prison term.

However, in March 2007, following hearings seen as a test case of freedom of expression, Val was acquitted by a Paris court. The ruling was hailed as a victory for freedom of speech, but it put Charlie Hebdo in the sights of radical Muslims. Journalists on the magazine reported threatening telephone calls and in November 2011 its offices were firebombed after it published a special edition featuring the Prophet Mohammed as a “guest editor”.

Yesterday gunmen armed with Kalashnikovs and a rocket-launcher opened fire in the offices, killing 12 people, including Cabu. Witnesses have claimed that they heard the gunmen shouting “we have avenged the Prophet Mohammed”.

Cabu at work (STARFACE/EYEVINE)

The son of a schoolmaster, Jean Cabut was born at Chalons-en-Champagne on January 13 1938. After studying Art at the École Estienne in Paris he began producing drawings for a local newspaper.

Conscripted into the French Army for two years during the war in Algeria, Cabu produced cartoons for the army magazine and also for Paris Match. But his experiences in Algeria turned him into a virulent anti-militarist and he remained a relentless campaigner for non-violence and critic of the French political establishment.

In 1960 he became one of the founders of Hara-Kiri, a satirical magazine which, after it was banned by president Charles de Gaulle in 1970, simply changed its name to Charlie Hebdo and appeared with the same cover the following week. Cabu also produced political cartoons for its rival Le Canard enchaîné and other magazines.

His best known characters were Mon Beauf (“My brother-in-law”), an incarnation of bovine French provincial complacency. On one occasion the notorious Gaullist mayor of Nice, Jacques Médecin (to whom the character bore a physical resemblance), sued Cabu for libel. (Médecin was later tried and convicted for corruption.)

Another popular character, Le Grand Duduche, was the eternal awkward adolescent, in love with the headmaster’s daughter and a naive observer of the law of the jungle that rules school life – and the grown-up world of politics.

Cabu’s work, which also featured in books and album covers, was the subject of a major exhibition in 2006-7 at Paris’s Hotel de Ville.

In the 1960s Cabu had a son with the Isabelle Monin, co-founder of the ecology magazine, La Gueule. The boy became better known in France as the punk singer-songwriter Mano Solo, who died of Aids in 2010.

Jean Cabut, born January 13 1938, died January 7 2015

Guardian:

The A&E crisis is an inevitable consequence of ideological cuts

uk ambulence service images. Emergency service reportarge.. Image shot 2009. Exact date unknown.
‘The crisis in A&E departments is a ‘dead canary in the coal mine’ for our public services,’ writes Andrew Judge. Photograph: John Sanders/Alamy

“Rationing by payment may offend tradition, but rationing by chaos is cruel,” says Simon Jenkins (The NHS can’t survive without payment for frontline treatments, 6 January). SImon Jenkins needs to consider some important questions. Why is it kinder to ration by pricing rather than a lottery? Is that because restricting some healthcare randomly potentially affects everyone, including the rich and powerful, making the problem more visible? Has Simon Jenkins taken into account the fact that charges mean additional costs in management, thus causing a further reduction in the resources available to actually deliver services ?

Perhaps Jenkins could also try to explain why the NHS is rated the most efficient health service across 11 major developed nations as assessed by the Commonwealth Fund. “The UK ranks first overall, scoring highest on quality, access and efficiency,” states the report. The US, despite the massive costs of its health system, ranks bottom. The Commonwealth Fund is Washington-based and respected around the world for its analysis of the performance of different countries’ health systems.

Of the 11 countries assessed, only New Zealand spends less per head of population than the UK, yet the NHS provides the best service. It’s obvious that the NHS model works well despite the lack of investment. The difficulties of the NHS are due not to the model of healthcare, but the lack of funding. The obsession with reorganisations and marketisation is what damages the NHS.
Ian Reissmann
Henley-on-Thames, Oxfordshire

• Simon Jenkins, in advocating co-payments for core NHS care, has resurrected what is referred to in health systems research as the classic zombie policy. The arguments against it are overwhelming: costing more to collect than it raises, deterring those in real need, and creating boundless perverse incentives, so that it has, quite rightly, repeatedly been killed off. Yet, like a zombie, there is always someone to bring it back to life. Clearly, the mass of evidence that many researchers consider to be the stake through the heart of this discredited policy is not yet adequately understood.
Professor Martin McKee
London School of Hygiene and Tropical Medicine

• The crisis in A&E departments is a “dead canary in the coal mine” for our public services (Report, 7 January). Not only is it evidence that the NHS is indeed broken, with money wasted on costly reorganisation and GP appointments increasingly difficult to obtain, it also suggests government-imposed cuts to local council social care services are leading to vulnerable people becoming unwell. Yet we haven’t seen half the cuts they intend yet. There is a harshness to Tory plans that requires public spending to be slashed unnecessarily by £27bn in pursuit of an ideological agenda. Labour plans to eliminate the deficit in revenue spending over a realistic period, but the Tories want to go much further to undermine public services and change the nature of government. The fabric of our society would be damaged for ever. The country now faces a vital electoral choice.
Andrew Judge
Labour parliamentary candidate for Wimbledon

• The coalition never mentions that it has presided over 30%-plus cuts to local authority social care, meaning frail elderly ill patients admitted to A&E and hospital beds cannot be discharged because the government has stripped community care back to the bone. No matter how much Mr Hunt tries to blame GPs or other parts of the NHS, there is no getting away from the fact that this is a crisis of his making and the electorate must be made aware of this gross political failure with our most vital public service.
Dr David Wrigley
Carnforth, Lancashire

• Though Britain desperately needs significantly higher levels of capital investment, I don’t know what Peter Hain MP was doing for 13 wasted years (A smaller state? It’s what got us into trouble to begin with, 6 January). During its time in government, New Labour failed to tax as much in terms of GDP as even conservative-led Germany, let alone France and Scandinavian countries. Between 2004 and 2012 this tax gap averaged 2·8% compared to Germany, according to Eurostat.

While in 2012, eurozone countries spent 10·7% of their national income on public and private medicine, the UK only spent 9·4% of our GPD on health, compared to a truly unsustainable 17·9% in the US, according to the World Bank. Clearly the NHS needs more taxation and not yet more untaxed PFI contracts of which Gordon Brown was so fond, when honours for tax exiles set the tone.

When it comes to crude Tory comparisons with socialist France, Labour can’t even talk their way out of a wet paper bag and explain that President Hollande inherited an economic mess from his rightwing predecessors.
RA Nowell
New Barnet, Hertfordshire

• Surely radical solutions are required for the ongoing A&E crisis to affect both supply and demand. So what about a small charge for those non-critical cases at A&E who are not on benefits or pensions, coupled with an additional ringfenced tax on alcohol to fund more care beds?
Don Macdonald
Social enterprise consultant, London

• You quote (Report, 6 January) the chief executive of Macmillan Cancer Support’s opinion that progress in cancer treatment is “a double-edged sword” with which “as numbers surge, the NHS will soon be unable to cope”. Would this be the same Macmillan which, as reported in File on 4 recently, made an £867,000 contribution to support the controversial £1.2bn Staffordshire outsourcing tender? This is not the kind of support most of us wish charities to offer the NHS; we do not contribute to them to swell the profits of private companies. Many of us have reason to be grateful for excellent cancer treatment from the NHS, and there are better ways of expanding NHS capacity than those insinuated and followed by Macmillan.
Dr Anne Summers
London

• There has been much criticism of the NHS, and especially A&E, over the last few days. There are, however, some excellent examples of their extreme proficiency. In November, by husband slipped out walking and fell 20ft on to rocks. Alerted by my screams, a passer-by called the emergency services. The first paramedic arrived within four minutes, assessed the situation was serious and within minutes help was on the way. We ended up with 21 emergency service personnel, including three doctors, an ambulance, a fire engine, mountain rescue services and a helicopter. My husband was taken by helicopter to Southmead hospital, Bristol. As a family, we have nothing but praise for all the rescue services and all the staff at the hospital. We must keep the NHS alive, otherwise we are going to suffer.
Margaret Kinsey
Chepstow, Monmouthshire

• In the week before Christmas 2013, A&E treated 390,000 people in under four hours. In the same week in 2014 they treated 6,000 more in under four hours. It was the same pattern in the week after Christmas: 4,000 more than the year before treated in less than four hours. They deserve congratulation but your headlines reads “Cameron defends NHS in worst week for A&E”.
John O’Brien
LondonUnited Nations Undersecretary-General fo

UN secretary-general for humanitarian affairs Valerie Amos will step down in March. Photograph: Fabrice Coffrini/Getty Images

Your editorial draws welcome attention to the process of selecting the next UN secretary-general (1 January). You also chide David Cameron for nominating Andrew Lansley to succeed Valerie Amos as the UN’s humanitarian chief. But, alongside questions about Andrew Lansley’s suitability for the job, there is another consideration that should persuade Mr Cameron to withdraw this nomination. Just as the UN secretary-general has never been a national of one of the five permanent members of the security council (China, France, Russia, UK and US), so it was recognised that emergency relief coordinators could also not be drawn from those countries.

In 2007, however, secretary-general Ban Ki-moon appointed British diplomat John Holmes to the post, and in 2010 Holmes was succeeded by Lady Amos. While both Holmes and Amos have shown great energy and commitment, it is widely acknowledged that the appointment of British officials has politicised the role and made it more difficult for the UN’s humanitarian work to be seen as impartial. The UN has appealed for more than £10bn for relief operations in 2015, the largest sum ever requested. The millions of people caught up in disasters deserve to know that the person charged with leading international efforts to assist them inspires the confidence of governments and humanitarian organisations everywhere.

The British government can rise above narrow national interests and embrace the idea of the best person for the job. In doing so, the government will earn credit far beyond the musty halls of the UN secretariat.
Martin Barber
London

• Cameron’s nomination of Lansley, a man who has failed to deliver the NHS reform he was appointed to deliver, is one of a long list of incompetents nominated by UN member states. You alluded to the rotation of the top post of secretary-general across continents rather than concentrating on competence. Rotation is not the core problem. Rather, it is that the candidate has to be agreed by all the permanent members of the security council. This means the selection of an individual who is unlikely to upset the interests of the major nations, including the US, China, Russia, France or the UK. The pool of talent has to be expanded from politicians and diplomats to those with significant and successful careers in business and the professions such as project management, engineering and accounting.
Jeremy Ross
Ashtead, Surrey

• Your proposed “more serious” approach to the appointment of the UN secretary-general fails to address the veto power of the five permanent members of the UN security council. It has 15 members, and each member has one vote. Yet the security council is a creature of the five permanent members.
Dr Alex May
Manchester

• The Commonwealth will be choosing its sixth secretary-general this November. Similar issues to those in your editorial have been raised about the selection. For a voluntary Commonwealth, required to prove its relevance to member states every few years, the stakes are high. Experience shows that only an active secretary-general, backed by a range of governments, can make a difference. Since 2003 two states have left, complaining at Commonwealth enthusiasm for human rights, and Canada has pulled out of funding the Commonwealth Fund for Technical Cooperation, in protest at permitting Sri Lanka’s president to chair the association – ie that the Commonwealth was insufficiently serious about rights. In the 1990s, Commonwealth ambassadors at Unesco successfully led a campaign to insist on a job specification and interviews prior to the appointment of its director-general. It is not too late to do something similar for the Commonwealth itself.
Richard Bourne
Senior research fellow, Institute of Commonwealth Studies, University of London

The Magna Carta on display at Bodelian Library in Oxford
Magna Carta on display at the Bodelian Library in Oxford. Photograph: Alamy

David Carpenter (Magna Carta, 800 years on, Review, 3 January) writes that in 1215 Magna Carta was “a divided and divisive document, often reflecting the interests of a baronial elite a few hundred strong in a population of several millions”. Our constitution still does not accord equal treatment to all. Power is massively over-concentrated and is in the hands of an elite few – our politics is dominated by wealthy, middle-aged, middle-class men, most of whom have followed a very similar education and career path. This lack of diversity is a major factor in a growing and widespread disengagement with politics.

David Carpenter is right to note that human rights are still trampled on in many parts of the world. But we must also recognise that the UK’s own reputation as a defender and promoter of human rights is under threat – the Conservative party’s proposals to repeal the Human Rights Act would have profound effects for our international reputation and would call into question our continuing commitment to the effective protection of human rights. I, too, hope that Magna Carta will be celebrated 100 years from now. It was a landmark in constitutional history, the foundation of the concept of rule of law and of limited government. But celebrating an 800-year-old document is no longer enough. We must also think about our present and our future. We need a new Magna Carta, fit for our modern democracy. We need a written document to set out the rules of the political game and the framework for the exercise of power.
Graham Allen MP
Labour, Nottingham North

• A sharp wake-up call for the Labour leadership from Timothy Garton Ash (What is Britain? The right answer could win the next election, Opinion, 5 January). Garton Ash’s highlighting of the practical, positive and radical proposal by Lord Salisbury to save the union partially via reform to a quasi-federal UK, with the Commons as the English parliament, and an elected upper chamber for the UK residual functions, mainly overcomes the major flaw in ideas from party leaders. None of those in office have a clue about the current second chamber. (I did not, when in 1980 I moved a 10-minute-rule bill to abolish it.) I have yet to hear a party leader address any issue other than composition, when all serious commentators realise the powers and functions have to addressed first. Lord Salisbury does have the advantage over current leaders, in that he has served in both Houses. Linking the union issue with reform at the centre is a masterstroke. We could end up with fewer politicians at Westminster and serious modern democracy. All the better coming from a Tory dynastic source to get a wagon rolling.
Jeff Rooker
Labour, House of Lords

James Dyson (No Theresa May, we need those foreign graduates, 5 January) rightly says that Theresa May’s proposal to train up then kick out brilliant foreign students would be a major barrier to progress. The home secretary’s proposal must be the first deliberate attempt by a mainstream UK politician to stop the brain drain operating in our favour. The creative sector would sustain particular damage were this proposal to go ahead. UK universities train a very high proportion of the world’s best graduates in creative disciplines. From film to fine art, design to fashion, the creative industries depend on international networks of practitioners and businesses. These industries now form one of the biggest sectors in the UK economy.

As James Dyson, himself an art-school graduate, argues in relation to science and technology, our borders must remain open to the world’s best to attract, train and retain highly skilled professionals and to protect our creative industries.
Nigel Carrington Vice-chancellor, University of the Arts London, Dr Paul Thompson Rector, Royal College of Art, Patrick Loughrey Warden, Goldsmiths, University of London, Professor John Last Vice-chancellor, Norwich University of the Arts

Price of oil shown on board above New York Stock Exchange
The price of oil is shown on board above New York Stock Exchange. Economists predict that ‘falling oil prices will be a shot in the arm for the global economy, unless they aren’t’. Photograph: Richard Drew/AP

The essence of democracy is the ability to speak freely without the fear of persecution (Paris terror attack: Huge manhunt under way after gunmen kill 12, 7 January, theguardian.com). This is an attack on the freedom of speech and on all freedom-loving people. It must be condemned in the strongest possible terms and the perpetrators must be punished.
Dr Michael Pravica
Henderson, Nevada, USA

• Nothing highlights more clearly the irrelevance of economics as a profession than the range of forecasts in your story about oil prices (Report, 7 January). Past forecasts of 2015 oil prices by economists range from $20 to $85 a barrel, as random as rolling dice and multiplying the result by 10. And the wisdom of economists is leading to definite forecasts that falling oil prices will be a shot in the arm for the global economy, unless they aren’t. Time to put them in the same category as astrologers and their views relegated to the back pages of the tabloids?
Karl Sabbagh
Newbold on Stour, Warkwickshire

• John Smith writes that the British establishment prevented a yes vote in the Scottish referendum (Letters, 2 January). I formed the impression Scots voters had rather more to do with the result.
Colin Armstrong
Belfast

• My granddaughter, 19, has gone from a zero-hours contract to a six-hour weekly contract, and is pleased. Is this is what George means by things are looking up? Expect nothing from the Tories and that is what you will get.
Doris Rose
London

• It was heartening to hear how community action has kept footpaths open (Country diary, 2 January), using the Rights of Way Act 1990. However, a change in the law due to come in in 2026 will prohibit access to paths not specifically designated as public rights of way. Who has proposed this, and how has it been accepted with no public outcry?
Nicola Grove
Horningsham, Wiltshire

• Stuart Jeffries writes in his Foyles War review that “the London on screen looked nothing like it” (G2, 5 January). That’s because it was filmed in the lovely city of Liverpool.
Alan Musa
Amersham, Buckinghamshire

Jim Hillier and his colleagues had to carry on at the BFI when they had no official manage

Jim Hillier played a pivotal role in ensuring the British Film Institute education department stayed on the track that it had been started on during the creative and dynamic headship of Paddy Whannel in the 1960s. Jim also made a substantial contribution to the development of a collective management style in arts educational organisations.

In 1971 a change of policy led to Whannel and his deputy, Alan Lovell, resigning from their posts. This left Jim and the other members of the education department, including Colin McArthur and myself, with no official manager, but we nonetheless set about maintaining the existing approach. The way Jim combined its main features – attention to practical detail, rigorous pursuit of ideas and their aesthetic implications, equal focus on popular and experimental forms, and responsiveness to educational needs – was our lodestone.

Independent:

 

Times:

Sir, Your leader “Hospital Pass” (Jan 6) misses one of the main problems affecting our NHS, which is that no politician will admit that the present system of commissioning and procuring services is hugely expensive and wasteful.

Healthcare, just like defence, needs to be planned and not left to market forces. There are good ideas in the NHS England five-year forward view, including the integration of health and social care, but these do not sit comfortably with the business culture which is responsible for some of the unsatisfactory attitudes and behaviour of staff.

Competition between health providers is accepted by most politicians, journalists and health economists as the best way to motivate people in the NHS and improve efficiency. It does not — and is hugely costly.
Professor Robert Elkeles
Northwood, Middx

Sir, Artificial targets that distort clinical priorities have beset the NHS since the Blair government. Instead of treating the sickest patients first, in line with hippocratic principles, staff are diverted to deal with patients whose need may be low or nonexistent, simply to fulfil artificial objectives. Nowhere is this more telling than in A&Es, where 20 to 30 per cent of attendees don’t need to be there. The quickest fix for the current crisis is to abandon a damaging target to see 95 per cent of patients within four hours. Patients attending A&E should be seen strictly according to clinical priority, with those who are not ill being told to expect a very long wait.
Adam P Fitzpatrick
Consultant cardiologist & electrophysiologist
Mottram-St-Andrew, Cheshire

Sir, Both Professor Suzanne Mason (Jan 7), who is quoted as saying “GPs . . . don’t have to open”, and your leader (Jan 3), which stated that GPs shut at 5pm, are misinformed. GP practices are contractually obliged to be open from 8am till 6.30pm on weekdays, and many offer extended hours. Furthermore, every part of the country has a GP out-of-hours service, although one recent report found that more than a quarter of the public did not know such services existed.
Dr Emma Rowley-Conwy
Chairwoman, South East London Doctors on Call

Sir, Katherine Murphy and Mike Smith from the Patients Association (letter, Jan 6) ignore the many out-of-hours GP provider organisations nationally that give good care to patients. They are safe, caring, effective, responsive and well led; not my words, but those of Professor Steve Field of the Care Quality Commission.
Dr Simon Abrams

Chairman, Urgent Health UK

Sir, Two ways to help the NHS are to contract all new doctors to work full time for a minimum of five years (this will help staff retention, stop new doctors working abroad straight after qualification, and repay the taxpayers whose money has trained them) and to give A&Es a financial incentive to direct inappropriate patients back to their GP or out-of-hours service.
Dr Stephen Brown
Beaconsfield, Bucks

Sir, The flooding of A&Es with unnecessary referrals from NHS 111 was widely predicted (News, Jan 7). Even experienced GPs find telephone triage challenging. These help lines are a huge waste of scarce NHS resources. There was never any evidence that these services would improve patient care — but this is what happens when patients are given what they want, rather than what they need.
Dr Bob Bury
Leeds

Sir, NHS 111 was piloted in my area of practice and was recognised by all clinicians to be unfit for purpose. Nevertheless, it was declared a success by the primary care trust overseeing the pilot. Its worthlessness is now plain for all to see.
Dr Edward Staines
Spennymoor, Co Durham

Sir, The ludicrous (but powerful) quasi-religious attitude towards the NHS crushes anyone who dares to say it is not perfect. Other countries have much better levels of health care and most are based on some sort of insurance or payment system. Try saying that and you will be shouted down and told you are evil. So the present shambles will go on, costing more and getting worse. It is the British way.
Francis Bown
London E3

Sir, While gardening, I got grit in my eye. My surgery said no one could help straight away and booked me to see a doctor. Within five minutes, a doctor rang to say the surgery didn’t have “the right equipment” and to go to A&E. A couple of hours later a doctor removed the grit with the “equipment to remove foreign objects in eyes”, aka a cotton bud. I saw five NHS staff, all to wield one cotton bud. What a waste of NHS money.
Dennis Clement
Barnham, W Sussex

Sir, Many of us who rely on the NHS — I have type 1 diabetes — do not enjoy witnessing its politicisation. The service seems to lack long-term strategic planning probably because the political parties tend to plan in blocks of five years or less. Knowing that the bubble caused by the postwar baby boom would have such a big effect, why did politicians reduce the number of district nurses by 10,000? The result is much greater bed blocking by elderly people because they cannot be treated at home.
Julian Rivers
Earls Barton, Northants
Sir, Prime minister David Cameron has said that part of the solution to A&E problems is to “get the elderly back into the community”. One way of doing this would be to reopen or re-create the “old-fashioned” cottage hospitals to act as staging posts and a buffer for the absorption back into the community.

These could be staffed by the many highly-trained but non-degree nurses who left the NHS when the use of “degree nurses” became the norm — and proper nursing went out of the window.
Dr JD Baines
Penpillick, Cornwall

Sir, Bertrand Duplat, cofounder of the company responsible for the new smart belt (News, Jan 6), claims that “the belt experience hasn’t changed in centuries”. I must inform M Duplat that there are now, and have only ever been, two belt experiences: No 1: your trousers stay up; No 2: your trousers fall down.
Ian Ferguson
Upper Quinton, Warks

Sir, I agree with Boris Johnson’s comments on migrants to the UK speaking English (“Boris attacks ‘multi-culti Balkanisation’ ”, Jan 7), but I trust he holds the same view on the estimated 800,000 Brits living in Spain speaking Spanish.
Jay Sanghrajka
Northwood, Middx

Sir, Channel 4 is not a “taxpayer-funded” organisation (Business, Jan 5) and never has been. It is publicly owned but entirely commercially funded. Revenues raised from advertising are spent on £600 million of high quality programmes each year. This investment, primarily with the UK’s world-class independent production sector, is a catalyst for innovation and helps to drive the UK’s fast-growing export earnings from programme and format sales.
Dan Brooke
Channel 4

Sir, A normal business invests in plant to produce more of a product for an anticipated rising market share. It does not campaign to persuade its customers to use less of its product. While asking energy firms to invest in generation and fracking (News, Jan 7), George Osborne is demanding that they pass on lower supply costs while assisting customers to use less of their product. Better energy policies are needed, not inappropriate demands.
John Busby
Lawshall, Suffolk

Sir, British citizens resident in the Irish Republic do have the vote just as Irish citizens, like myself, have in Britain (News, Jan 5). But this is not about reciprocity, it is the Tory right aping the tactics of the Republican party in seeking to disenfranchise groups unlikely to vote for them. I’d recommend one idea which the Republican right is fond of: “No taxation without representation.” If you want to disenfranchise me, I’d like a refund please.
Gerry Gaughan
Eastrington, East Riding

Sir, As historians, scholars and photographers we wish to express our concern about the effect of proposed cuts to the Library of Birmingham’s photography collections and axing of its staff. The library’s holdings, built since the 19th century, are of international importance, and contain major collections from pioneers of photography as well as the archives of contemporary British photographers.

In recent decades the collection has attracted more than £1 million in sponsorship in order to mount major exhibitions and undertake vital conservation. At a time when the government is encouraging such funding partnerships, we believe that the collections should be protected and used for the social, cultural and educational benefit of all.

The fait accompli abandonment of the collection is unwarranted. If Birmingham City Council feels unable to properly fund its internationally important collections then the government must step in.

Professor Elizabeth Edwards, Photographic History Research Centre, De Montfort University, Leicester

Dr Michael Pritchard, Director-General, The Royal Photographic Society, Bath

Martin Barnes, Senior curator, photographs, Victoria and Albert Museum

Colin Ford CBE, Founding Director, National Media Museum

Professor Amanda Hopkinson, School of Arts, City University, London

Anne M Lyden, International Photography Curator, National Galleries of Scotland

Magnum Photos, London

Dr Brian H May CBE, photo-historian and musician

Dr Christopher Morton, University of Oxford

Professor Darren Newbury, University of Brighton

Phillip Prodger, Head of Photographs, National Portrait Gallery

Jo Quinton-Tulloch, Director, National Media Museum, Bradford

Brett Rogers, OBE, Director of The Photographer’s Gallery, London

Matthew Butson, Vice President, Hulton Archive, Getty Images, London

Dr Patrizia di Bello, lecturer, Birkbeck, University of London

Duncan Forbes, co-director, Fotomuseum Winterthur, Switzerland

Chris Harper, Chief Executive, British Institute of Professional Photography

Paul Herrmann, Director of Redeye, the Photography Network

Professor Francis Hodgson, University of Brighton

Sir, My 7-year-old grandson muddled my name. From now on I shall be Gandalf (letters, Dec and Jan 3).
Alan Millard
Lee-on-the-Solent, Hants

Telegraph:

Hospital waiting times; fixed-term parliaments; anonymity in rape trials; war on grey squirrels; a fair supermarket deal for dairy farmers, and boozy breakfasts

Just two of Scotland's 31 A&E departments managed to hit four-hour target every month in 2012/13

Accident and Emergency departments have had their worst performance in a decade according to new official figures Photo: ALAMY

SIR – You call on doctors to make surgeries more “user-friendly” and accessible in the evenings and weekends, thus making it unnecessary for people to turn up at A&E.

Why not use the GP out-of-hours service, which is available the whole time surgeries are closed?

Those who attend A&E with non-urgent problems should think before wasting resources and increasing the wait for others who might have a genuine emergency.

Stop encouraging the demand for immediate non-urgent attention and the services might be able to cope better.

Rosie MacRae
Harwich, Essex

SIR – When I heard on the radio that NHS waiting times were the worst for 10 years, I thought things must be pretty bad. In fact, instead of a 95 per cent response target being achieved, the actual rate was 92.6 per cent. The population has increased in the past decade. I am sure most people would think the doctors and nurses in the NHS should be congratulated on doing such an amazing job in the face of such adversity.

Dean Yorwerth
Stockport, Cheshire

SIR – The main problem in A&E departments is the existence of targets such as waiting times. In the good old days, we just got on with our work with professional pride. We worked long hours and put the patients first.

We did not waste time chasing targets. Get rid of targets, managers and the increasing mound of bureaucracy so that beleaguered medical staff are not hampered by trying to fit into the boxes which must be ticked; just let them look after patients, exercising sound common sense.

If there are no meaningless target figures, then no one can fail to achieve them, and so morale, and consequently patient care, will improve.

Kate Mash
Salisbury, Wiltshire

SIR – Labour has promised to hire – not train – 36,000 medical staff to “save” the NHS (Letters, January 6). Which Third World country will be deprived of its valuable resource?

Alistair Bishop
Northwood, Middlesex

SIR – If, as seems likely, the increase of 20,000 patients a week visiting hard‑pressed A&E departments is an unintended consequence of the introduction of the 111 service, this helpline should be scrapped immediately.

Michael Stanford
London SE23

SIR – As a newly appointed consultant in 1981, I was both irritated and amused at politicians trying to impress voters by spending public money to make very modest savings in NHS expenditure when there was an enormous deficit.

The idea that £150 million can be saved by pharmacists policing patients’ entitlement to free care is redolent of this practice. Is this an attempt to distract attention from the enormous sums of money awarded in pay and bonuses to NHS executives?

Angus McPherson
Findon, West Sussex

Fixed-term parliaments

SIR – My case against the Fixed-term Parliaments Act is not levelled against its effects on this current Parliament; indeed, a measure of contractual security has worked as a way of cementing the Coalition. My concerns are for the future.

Philip Johnston believes Parliament itself should be able to respond to a vote of no confidence in one government by replacing it with another without calling an election. This is a recipe for increased public disfranchisement.

In my view, all parties should step back from early electioneering and repeal the Fixed-term Parliaments Act with effect from May 8. It is only by restoring the prime minister’s right to call an election that we can re-establish a tidy process for refreshing an electoral mandate. Otherwise, we could see years of internecine political jostling and unpopular coalition horse trading.

Unlike Mr Johnston, I think the ability to ask the voters to decide at any given moment is an essential power of the office of prime minister.

Sir Alan Duncan MP (Con)
London SW1

Squirrel feeders

(Bertie Gregory/2020VISION / Rex Features)

SIR – It’s about time we had a programme to control grey squirrels. Apart from the damage they do, these pests also interfere with wild birds in domestic gardens. They steal great quantities of bird food and, ultimately, destroy the feeders intended for birds.

Peter Wickison
Huntingdon

SIR – Each year we have to replace nets that squirrels have holed in order to get at our strawberries. Recently we were without broadband for a week after one chewed through our phone line. They also eat unripe apples and pears and dig up bulbs: but their most distressing activity is destroying the nests of garden birds and killing the chicks.

Malcolm F Symonds
Ashtead, Surrey

Anonymity and rape

SIR – The decision to take no further action in the Mark Pritchard MP case builds evidence in favour of reforming the law back to the 1988 position where both accuser and defendant had equal rights to anonymity.

I have recently spoken with a number of other high-profile individuals who confronted allegations over several weeks to a year before their case was dropped. In the meantime, their names are plastered across national and international media, ensuring the trauma, stress and stigma associated with such allegations are amplified to an unfathomable degree.

In some cases, the person does not work, costing them tens of thousands of pounds.

The publicity of the allegation in itself is a particularly sinister punishment meted out to the accused, which only dissipates on no further action with lingering consequences. The accuser rightly remains anonymous.

Once there is a charge, the name of the accused is made public. This then could lead to more people coming forward.

There might also be a new procedure whereby the police have the opportunity to go to a judge and request publicity prior to charge because they believe in this case the evidence is such to persuade them that more people will come forward.

What is simply not fair is that the current cruel default system continues to vilify and persecute people who are then told no further action will be taken. There is scant recognition that the process has a damaging and distressing impact on the accused.

The time has come for this experiment in lopsided judicial procedure to be reversed.

Nigel Evans MP (Con)
London SW1

The Prince of Wales

SIR – Clarence House has not been cooperating with the makers of the proposed programme “Reinventing the Royals” (Comment, January 5), and the Prince of Wales has not been involved in its development. The programme is not Panorama. Neither the BBC nor the programme makers revealed until December 19 that it was to be called “Reinventing the Royals”.

Clarence House has also and importantly neither blocked nor attempted to block the proposed programme.

The decision to broadcast – and when – is that of the BBC alone. Clarence House is solely interested in receiving assurances regarding fairness, accuracy and tone in accordance with the principles of editorial fairness and obligations under the BBC Editorial Guidelines and the Ofcom Broadcasting Code.

Kristina Kyriacou
Communications Secretary to HRH The Prince of Wales and The Duchess of Cornwall
London SW1

Preserving Nelson’s flagship for the long term

In need of a bail-out: emblazoned leather buckets on board HMS Victory in Portsmouth (Alamy)

SIR – As a boy I made several tours of HMS Victory in Portsmouth (report, January 3) and subsequently returned on a number of occasions during the Eighties and Nineties to dine on board and for private, more extensive tours.

The later visits were memorable for one specific reason: the gloomy prognostications about the condition of this magnificent vessel. With the nearby Mary Rose being so well housed, I often wonder why, if the progressively worsening state of Nelson’s flagship has been known for decades, no long-term preservation strategy of that sort has been implemented.

Maybe the potential short-term drop in tourist revenue if the latter were to be closed for some time has influenced the decision-making process?

Jeremy C N Price
Cromarty

Booze at breakfast

SIR – The healthy attributes of a bowl of porridge are again in the news.

After 60 years of testing, I’ve found the ultimate topping is prunes stewed in a quality red wine, honey and cinnamon.

Christopher Allen
Siddington, Cheshire

A fair supermarket deal for British dairy farmers

(PA)

SIR – I am disappointed to note that Clare Mutsaars (Letters, January 3) suggests that Tesco pays its dairy farmers below the production price for fresh milk; in fact, we pay them above the market average.

We offer our farmers stability and confidence in a volatile market. Over the past seven years we’ve worked in partnership with our dairy farmers, and have used an independent consultant, to deliver a fair price for their milk that is guaranteed to cover the cost of production.

I would like to assure customers that our farmers are paid that same fair price, whatever the competitive pricing in store.

Tom Hind
Director of Agriculture, Tesco
Cheshunt, Hertfordshire

SIR – I can’t understand why milk produced by British farmers is not sold under the Fair Trade label, something that the National Farmers’ Union should be pushing for.

I for one would be willing to pay an extra 10 pence per litre if it were sold under the Fair Trade scheme and I could be sure that this money was going directly to the farmer.

David Pattenden
Beverley, East Yorkshire

SIR – I suggest that the time will shortly come when all dairy products will come from the Continent. This will then place those overseas producers in a position of strength when negotiating wholesale prices with our domestic retailers, who in effect could be held to ransom.

While I would love to see supermarkets whipped into submission, I would far rather see a prosperous British dairy business – not only for the delights of fresh, locally produced milk but also for the pleasure of seeing meadows with cows grazing, rather than further urban sprawl.

Nicholas Fowle
Neatishead, Norfolk

None of your business

SIR – I recently purchased a new electrical appliance from a company, which invited me to complete a form for the guarantee.

It is not unreasonable that they require my name, address and the date of purchase: but can anyone give me a sensible reason why they need my marital status, my partner’s name and age, our dates of birth, number and ages of children and their dates of birth? They also ask for employment status, our total household income, whether we rent or own, the number of bedrooms, insurance and credit card details and details of our activities.

Brian Herbert
Yarmouth, Isle of Wight

 

Globe and Mail:

Nahrain Al-Mousawi

In the Mideast, as in France, satire is a weapon against extremists

Nahrain Al-Mousawi is a writer and academic based in Rabat, Morocco.

In the wake of the deadly attacks on the Paris satirical magazine Charlie Hebdo, some are portraying the current showdown as one between Western free speech versus an angry and intolerant Islamic world. In fact, it is the Islamic countries of the Middle East that have led the way in attacking the extremists of groups such as Islamic State using the instruments of satire. The use of mockery and caricature as a way of mocking Islamic extremism is, in fact, in some ways far more pronounced in the Middle Eastern media than it is in Europe.

Islamic State (also known as ISIS and ISIL) has slaughtered hundreds of Iraqi civilians and soldiers, raped and enslaved hundreds of women, held public crucifixions and stonings in Syria, and staged the executions of U.S. journalists and British aid workers. The group is revolting, abhorrent, and terrifying. But the region on which Islamic State has unleashed its sadistic campaign has responded producing a surprising volume of satire.

On Iraqi state TV, a satirical soap opera dedicated to mocking Islamic State, State of Myth, depicts the gruesome yet absurd “contributions” ISIS fighters and ideology unleash on a fictional town in Iraq, such as a green-energy car-bombing factory– cost-effective, reasonably priced, environment-friendly, and export-ready! All this information is provided by an IS engineer in a TV interview, where the female news announcer has resorted to wearing a sheet while asking questions.

While some claim humor is a way of taking back power – the power to name, to shame – on an uneven playing field, the show appears to be making fun of not only IS’s crude, fumbling, and sadistic methods to gain power, but also the strategic powerlessness of Iraqis trying to play along with, manipulate, and knowingly skirt the cruelty of that blundering power.

On another episode, the host of an Iraqi game show titled “Who Wants To Butcher a Million” asks an IS jihadi contestant what country will be the site of all this destruction and placatingly provides random, unrelated words in rhyme: “Daesh [Islamic State’s name for itself], Baesh, Maesh, Jaesh. The show offers not just an ironic treatment of IS, and thus the subversion of its authority; it also communicates to other Iraqis the recurring predicament in which they are yet again facing another form of tyranny (Saddam, foreign occupation, IS) and attempting to thwart its weightiness with humor.

Less astute in social criticism, but still aimed at the absurdity of ISIS fighters, is a musical parody video broadcast in October by Iraqi Kurdish KurdSat TV, featuring a group of goofy bearded men jerkily playing air guitar on rifles, pretending to sword-fight and fumbling with skulls, while belting out lyrics like: “We are ISIS. We are ISIS. / We milk the goat even if it is male. / Our music is without rhythm. And our leader is called Qaqa. / Our pockets are full of Qatari money. Our language is bullets and cutting.”

TV shows across the Middle East have dedicated a sketch or two to the group’s hypocrisies in adopting modern methods, such as Twitter and Facebook campaigns, to demand the return of medieval Islam. The popular Lebanese show Ktir Salbe showed a skit where a taxi driver picks up an Islamic State fighter who asks that the radio be turned off because this technology did not exist in the early days of Islam. When the driver suggests turning off the air conditioning because it did not exist in the early days of Islam, the fighter refuses and then starts talking on his cell phone, at which point the driver kicks him out and tells him to wait for a camel instead.

Even IS’s practice of gunning down innocents is apparently not off limits for comedic fodder: Palestine’s Al-Falastiniya TV broadcast a skit featuring three Islamic State fighters who reminisce about partying with Beirut’s beautiful women before shooting a Lebanese driver for not answering correctly a trick question about the number of times to kneel during prayers and upon entering a mosque.

Since then, a Jordanian play satirizing IS has been successfully touring theaters, while an Iranian animation mocking the foibles of IS is soon set to be released. Using satire to neutralize the threat of IS is not only the realm of network television, but social media, where the Twitter hashtag #ISISMovies played with popular film titles to mock the militants. Lebanese satirist Karl Sharro tweeted his own take on a news report claiming to outline the “anatomy of ISIS” – a haphazard napkin sketch of a chart mocking the group’s leadership and hierarchy: “the committee for oppressing women,” “the video guy,” “the Twitter fanboys body,” etc.

Although there is a tendency to dismiss the impact of social media, not to mention the role of humor, it is worth noting that this is where the networked Muslim majority might do the most damage in discrediting Islamic State – considering the Internet appears to be one of IS’s main battlegrounds (the group uses social media and YouTube for propaganda and recruitment efforts).

While the efforts highlighted above are organic, based on a shared community, other efforts appear to be more technocratically orchestrated. A recent article noted that Mr. Sharro’s satirical chart was widely shared, including by the U.S. State Department’s Center for Strategic Counterterrorism Communications. The CSCC has exhibited its own type of muted mockery in a video countering IS recruitment efforts. The integration of humor in U.S. counter-terrorism strategies has been ramped up since the development of social media and its snarky style of communication. A State Department program calling itself Viral Peace confronts and undermines online currents of extremism with “logic, humor, satire,” in its creator’s words.

But a government-backed effort does not necessarily make for an effective means of striking back (and can often be perceived as intrusive, stilted or awkward). After all, satire’s subversiveness can be an ill-fitting mask worn by government institutions, distinct from more organic efforts, produced in times of crisis by a shared, discursive community – at least, when that community itself is threatened. Still, if laughing in the face of the absurd reveals an ability to “dwell with the incomprehensible without dying from fear or going mad,” then that may be the first step in striking back – by having the last laugh.

Lysiane Gagnon

Will Couillard survive the cuts?

 

WHAT READERS THINK

Jan. 7: Total lack of judgment, and other letters to the editor


Lack of judgment

Margaret Wente defends the members of the Class of DDS 2015 Gentlemen as hapless pawns of “young male group behaviour” who have now fallen prey to a “witch hunt” (Dalhousie’s Dental Hysteria – Jan. 6). Spare me. They made their own decisions and they were bad enough ones to potentially end their dental careers.

I understand the university’s attempts at mitigating the suicide risk, but extending the process only slows the progress of the rest of the class through their own final year of school – already overwhelmingly stressful. Anyone, of any demographic, who spews forth violent hatred toward any other group has no place in a profession that requires dentistry’s level of caring and trustworthiness. Their futures are not necessarily “destroyed” – they’ll just be different.

Anita Jain, DDS, Vancouver

…….

As a mother of two university-age men, I think I can speak to that particular demographic. Absolutely, some of them can behave in ways that are juvenile. This should in no way be a defence – it has the ring of the old “Boys will be boys” defence of days past.

The young men, and they are young men, of the Dalhousie “gentlemen’s club” behaved grossly out of step with the collective conversations that are happening all around them in society.

I will agree with Ms. Wente to a point. When you are a juvenile and you engage in juvenile behaviour, you need to be corrected and guided. But university-age men are no longer juveniles and therefore should not be treated as such. Whatever their fate, I remain completely baffled at their total lack of judgment.

Paige Cowan, Toronto

……..

Ms. Wente concludes that “Despite all that misogyny, women seem to be doing just fine.” I would worry less about such men’s colleagues and more about their patients.

Surdas Mohit, Gatineau, Que.

……..

Congested

André Picard’s point about extending the hours of primary-care practices in order to divert people from emergency rooms (Don’t Blame Flu For ER Congestion – Jan. 6) is common sense, in times of flu or otherwise.

As a registered nurse in a family practice setting, I perform “telephone triage” through multiple daily calls to my patients. This results in keeping the majority of patients at home with expert advice on treating their symptoms (including red flags) and assessing which patients need to be seen urgently.

This nursing service provides continuity of care to patients, it fosters confidence that they can care for themselves at home and it frees up the ER.

Jane McLeod, Toronto

…….

Back in the 1950s, when I was undergoing my medical training in London, we used to moan about never having time off at Christmas. Our superiors told us, rather unsympathetically, that if we couldn’t take it, we shouldn’t have joined. We came to understand that a medical career involved service as well as making a living.

David Amies, Lethbridge, Alta.

…….

Green silks

I was disappointed to read that one of your best reporters and writers, Adam Radwanski, will be wasting his talents covering the horse race of federal politics. He should be writing about significant issues of public policy. The nuts and bolts of electioneering is way too much “inside baseball,” and in the big picture, of little importance to engaged voters.

But if we have to live it, why leave out the Green Party (Readiness For The Writ – Jan. 3)? If nothing else, including it would help legitimize its status as a viable political contender.

Brian Green, Thunder Bay

…….

Never simple

Thank you for Sandra Martin’s column (Let’s Talk About Death – Jan. 2) targeted at all the death-denying folks who instead prefer to refer to “passing” instead of “dying.” You did omit one of my favourite, or should I say most annoying, namely “She lost her husband,” to which I feel like replying, “Would you like me to help you find him?”

You have made me wonder what I would like said in my own obituary. Probably something like “Patricia died on this date. She is grateful to everyone who enriched her life while on this beautiful Earth. She hopes you will take good care of it. She loved and was loved by many wonderful people. If you wish to remember her, please be kind to someone who needs it.”

Patricia Houston, Victoria

…….

Ms. Martin says we’re “prudish” in the way we talk about death and then goes on to say we’re all misguided for continuing to talk about it in language that’s even mildly poetic.

When we grieve, we do not want to be reminded of the physicality of the loved one’s death. We are well aware that they have biologically expired. Poetic language, invoking comforting memories of the deceased, is a way we honour them. The words to describe this go far beyond what can be conveyed by frank language.

When my mother died last year, so did a part of me. But she remains alive in me, and the language I use to talk about that is deep from my heart. The words are never simple.

Paul Salvatori, Toronto

…….

Other rights

Humans and animals have rights, but not all the same rights (I, Orangutan – letters, Jan. 6). This reminds me of a debate after the 1972 publication of a collection of forestry articles, edited by Christopher Stone, titled Should Trees Have Standing.

Trees do have standing – legal standing, that is. Many municipalities have tree protection bylaws. Old-growth forests and other unique environments may also have legal standing to protect them.

Reiner Jaakson, Oakville, Ont.

…….

Bemused and irritated by Stanley Cunningham’s letter, I turned to a later page, where I found a picture of a group of men beating each other with sticks. Ecce Homo!

A.L. Doyle, Toronto

Irish Times:

Sir, – The situation at the A&E departments of the country’s main public hospitals is intolerable. But there is no such problem in the country’s private hospitals.

The obvious solution is for the State to requisition private hospitals for public use. At the same time, investment in step-down infrastructure needs to be accelerated.

There will be much squealing, of course, but the common good has to take priority over the private property rights of individual billionaire owners and investors.

Since the private pension funds of ordinary citizens have been dipped into by the State to pay for socialised bank debt, the private property taboo has been well and truly broken. It’s just a matter of focus and scale – and impudence.

The Mater private and St Vincent’s private are beautifully positioned on the sites of two major public hospitals that are experiencing overcrowding. They would be a very good place to start. – Yours, etc,

Dr GERRY BURKE,

Department of

Obstetrics and Gynaecology,

Graduate Entry

Medical School,

University of Limerick.

Sir, – Can I take it that the people of Ireland are going to sit back and watch underpaid and overworked nurses bear the burden of protesting against the scandalous situation in our hospitals? Are people who found their revolutionary fervour quickly enough when their pockets were being hit by water charges indifferent to the suffering and, I have no doubt, deaths that will occur until this situation is rectified?

If ever there was a time for the barricades to be built has it not arrived? If we sit quietly under this scandal then we should not dare to commemorate those who went out nearly 100 years ago to build an Ireland that “cherished all the children of the nation equally”. – Yours, etc,

MÁIRÍN de BURCA,

Dublin 3.

Sir, – It is shocking and unacceptable that in this day and age, elderly patients are kept waiting in chairs in A&E wards for lengths of time that are equivalent to multiple working days.

The fear, anguish and lack of dignity afforded to those who have given much to this country can only be imagined. That nursing staff stoically carry out their duties under such difficult and stressful working conditions is a credit to them. But this is not a problem that crept up on us. It was foreseen that with an ageing population and a lack of community care that this situation was inevitable.

As usual, we end up trying to solve problems rather than prevent them. – Yours, etc,

JOHN BELLEW,

Dunleer,

Co Louth.

Sir, – Older people in hospitals are often inappropriately the exclusive focus of the bed crises . While not majority occupants, younger trauma patients, for example, or younger chronic disease patients in need of rehabilitation, are rarely the focus of emergency discharge initiatives, even though they are less likely to have the complex co-morbidities or the predispisition to acute crises requiring the technology and interdisciplinary expertise of an acute hospital. Similarly many of our acute assessment initiatives favour fitter and younger patients to the exclusion of frail older people left on trollies to await an admission into the main hospital.

 Perhaps when discussing our hospital bed crises we might start with those who most need to be there and who are least likely to need an acute hospital bed on admission and discharge. – Yours, etc,

RONAN COLLINS, MD

Consultant Physician

in Geriatric Medicine,

Rathgar,

Dublin 14.

Sir, – Merely increasing beds and staff in hospitals will be costly and may not resolve the problem in the long term. The real question to explore is how many patients in hospital are delayed discharges and how can they be supported at home or moved to nursing home care in a timely manner.

While families and community-based services need to work proactively with hospitals in the discharge plans for all those who for a variety of reasons can not return home, prioritising available funding to primary care teams with a requirement to case-manage the most vulnerable in our community, both to prevent hospital admissions and effect timely discharges, may be the key response. – Yours, etc,

FRANK BROWNE,

Templeogue,

Dublin 16.

Sir, – Once again the annual outcry about people waiting on hospital trollies erupts and it’s all put down to funding problems and austerity.

We continue to ignore the fact that every single night 2,000 of our total 11,000 hospital beds are occupied by people with alcohol-related illness.

If our political and health leaders prioritised the public health issues of reducing our alcohol-soaked culture and provided effective alcohol treatment services, people would not have to wait on trollies. – Yours, etc,

CAROL MOORE,

Dublin 6W.

Sir, – Having worked in our hospitals for a number of years, and having also worked abroad, I have no doubt that this annual “winter surge” is primarily due to a lack of spare capacity within the hospital system.

However, it is worth pointing out that this annual problem follows the Christmas holiday period; a period of two weeks, during which our hospitals are run on a skeleton staff. I have attempted to contact staff in different hospital departments over the last few weeks, only to be told the department was either closed or staff were on holidays.

We all want a modern healthcare system. We cannot expect to run effectively our hospitals on a skeleton service for two weeks each December and not expect repercussions each January. – Yours, etc,

Dr IAN Mag FHEARRAIGH,

Dublin 7.

Sir, – The screening of RTÉ’s biopic of Charles J Haughey has provoked comment, once again, with the same old chestnuts about his flaws, covetousness and personal imperfections, which we’ve heard interminably regarding Haughey since light was publicly shone on these shortcomings over two decades ago.

For example, Kathy Sheridan’s piece (“Charlie’s devils: how Haughey era’s poisonous culture lives on”, Opinion & Analysis, January 7th) refers to Haughey’s “poisonous” culture and legacy and proceeded down the same well-worn path of clichéd criticism and invective.

If it wasn’t Charles Haughey it would have been someone else. It seems to have been practically in Fianna Fáil’s genetic make up, not to mention in politics in general (and not just in Ireland). The tendency to venality in the Irish body politic started as far back as the 1930s when Eamon de Valera used the Irish Press newspaper which he’d set up himself to con shareholders investing in the company at a time when Haughey was still in short trousers!

As with many of Haughey’s critics, Ms Sheridan refers to Desmond O’ Malley and his Progressive Democrats as a kind of counterbalance; a force for good set against Haughey’s malevolent Medici prince. I would argue that Mr O’Malley and his party’s neo-liberal economic ethos and legacy have done far greater damage to the fabric of Irish society than Charles Haughey ever did and, furthermore, this agenda and its deleterious effects still persist.

The other constant plank of criticism among many commentators relates to Haughey’s personal style and aspirations and describing his penchant for handmade shirts and a “big house” lifestyle in sneering terms. Apart from this being a classic example of the begrudging attitude that the Irish do so well, this particular form of snobbery implies that some in society are entitled to present themselves in this way whereas for others it only makes them look cheap and tasteless. Essentially, what this says is that Haughey was from a relatively modest, working-class background, therefore why would he crave and aspire to trappings considered luxurious? On the other hand, had he hailed from Dublin 4, Blackrock or Carrickmines, would we have heard this same scornful dismissal of his choice of apparel? I think not.

The other issue is the complete absence of balance in all this. What of Charles Haughey’s many and significant political achievements?

I am convinced that, at some point in the future, the Haughey era and his political career will come to be judged less harshly – in the same way that another taoiseach, voted the most popular in that role only about a decade ago, has surely found that status significantly revised! – Yours, etc,

JD MANGAN,

Stillorgan, Co Dublin.

Sir, – The RTÉ drama on the political life of Charles Haughey should come with a post-broadcast warning that anyone affected by the issues portrayed can call a counselling helpline. Personally, I couldn’t stick anymore than a few minutes of it. I didn’t need to watch it. I was there the first time round, when his rise to, and rapacious abuse of power, was played out in technicolour with full surround sound.

Charles Haughey’s sole legacy was that he encouraged a generation of acolytes in politics and public administration to reduce public administration to a tawdry racket, designed to enrich insiders and insulate them from any kind of accountability. All the rubbish about him “giving” anything to anyone is manipulative lying. Haughey was paid very well to administer legitimately the public purse. He cannot and should never have been thanked for doing the job he was paid to do.

What he was not paid to do was to seek every opportunity his elevated position of responsibility gave him to seek payments from businessmen, and to threaten those that opposed him, such as the behaviour he exhibited toward the AIB bank when it attempted to call in his debts.

There is only one thing I loathe more than Charles Haughey’s political and social legacy, and that is the degree to which some journalists at the time sat on their hands and consciences, when the heart and soul was ripped out of this nation by the godfather of Irish political corruption. – Yours, etc,

DECLAN DOYLE,

Lisdowney,

Kilkenny.

Sir, – There is no mystery about it. The new party is, quite simply, a Christian Democrat party. What is different is the personnel. This party is being set up by people who stood up for their principles, when many of their colleagues allowed themselves to be bullied into submission. In my book, that is a very good start. – Yours, etc,

JIM STACK,

Lismore,

Co Waterford.

Sir, – For a country with a proud history of producing great leaders on the sporting field, the lack of real leaders on the political stage is a profound worry, particularly in the context of an inexplicable rise in support for Sinn Féin.

I have no idea whether Lucinda Creighton is a real leader, but she is to be greatly admired for her willingness to give this her best shot. Fintan O’Toole, on the other hand, is happy to roll out his depressingly familiar condescending tone in his latest missive from the sidelines (“Reboot and be damned: a temporary little arrangement?”, Opinion & Analysis, January 6th).

If memory serves, having threatened to change the world before the 2011 election and enter the political fray, he quickly decided on the comfort and safety of his ivory tower. The great pity is that in deciding not to put up, he unfortunately chose not to shut up too.

It would be lovely, mind you, to see him focus on some more of his Christmas memories (“When I close my eyes and think of Christmas”, December 23rd). #RebootOToole. – Yours, etc,

ALAN KEALY,

Blackrock,

Co Dublin.

Sir, – Fintan O’Toole is quick to put the boot into Lucinda Creighton’s new party, but is factually wrong on one point at least, that of Ms Creighton’s supposed appeasement approach to trade unions. Ms Creighton is on record as saying unions need to be faced down, and that she had objected to Fine Gael going into coalition with Labour on the basis that this would compromise the Government’s ability to challenge unions and pursue a reform agenda. She cited the creation of the HSE and Irish Water as instances in which governments had capitulated to union demands, to the detriment of the State. – Yours, etc,

JOHN THOMPSON,

Phibsboro,

Dublin 7.

Sir, – If Lucinda reboots does that mean she will then be on an election footing? – Yours, etc,

MICHAEL O’DONNELL,

Dublin 9.

Sir, – Chris Johns’s “single transferable answer – more spending for me, higher taxes for you” can be applied far beyond his immediate concern with the unsustainability of taxpayer-funded pensions (“State faces stark arithmetic over future of pensions”, Business Opinion, January 5th). Since a general election is on the horizon it is probably expecting too much to hope that our politicians might do what is right for the country rather than what is most likely to get them elected. But the vast majority of us who are not politicians would do well to remember that spending increases and tax cuts – the staple of election promises – can be paid for only from one or more of additional taxation, spending cuts or additional borrowing.

The exchequer returns tell us that in 2014 we spent €8.4 billion in excess of our income. Apparently this is great news and is leading to calls – and promises – to restore the cuts made to public sector pay, to reduce or abolish the USC (which, by the way, is no longer “universal”) and to throw the usual additional billion or so at our health “service”. We must hope that print, radio and television journalists will up their game and insist that politicians tell us exactly how their promises are to be paid for. The old reliables of revenue buoyancy and efficiencies in the public sector should be given a very wide berth. – Yours, etc,

PAT O’BRIEN,

Rathmines,

Dublin 6.

Sir, – Further to reports of plans for the setting up of a new “Independent alliance” ( “TDs Shane Ross and Michael Fitzmaurice to form alliance”, January 6th), how is the extent of cooperation within such an alliance to be manifested? Presumably only one candidate from the alliance would be run per constituency, so a voting transfer pact between candidates would not apply.

It is very likely that the views among “participating candidates” (as opposed to “members”) would be starkly divergent. One candidate’s idea of an essential reform agenda could be totally incompatible with another alliance candidate’s viewpoint. If one set of elected TDs who are centre-right in mindset clashes with another set of elected TDs with a left-wing stance on a given policy, who would win out within the alliance?

General support given by the electorate to an incongruent hybrid grouping, presented under a gimmicky banner of convenience, could in practice lead to a significant element of instability in the event that such an alliance held the balance of power. Voters should always bear in mind that an incorporation of instability brings its own effective economic levies, given how dependent the perception of international markets of Ireland’s fiscal reputation is derived from the immediate cohesive level of domestic governance. – Yours, etc,

JOHN KENNEDY,

Goatstown,

Dublin 14.

Sir, – What a brave and insightful piece by Laura Kennedy (“The Yes Woman: I return to Mass and the room reminds me of a closed fist”, January 1st). I had virtually the same experience going to Mass this Christmas. And what a tragedy that the heart of the Christian message (and also the heart of all religions) has been hijacked by religious organisations. True religion should be a personal journey of discovery, certainly not anything dogmatic. – Yours, etc,

COLM STANLEY,

Castleknock,

Dublin 15

Sir, – Further to “Paul Howard’s 44 life lessons” (January 6th), may I add one of my late father’s? If you find a hobby you enjoy, don’t be afraid to spend money on it. – Yours, etc,

BRENDAN CROWE,

Skerries,

Co Dublin.

Irish Independent:

The crowded waiting room in Dublin’s Beaumont Hospital.
The crowded waiting room in Dublin’s Beaumont Hospital.

It would appear that, despite public hospitals including the word ‘University’ in their titles, the services provided have deteriorated significantly and are now nowhere near ‘university’ standard.

  • Go To

A university is described as ‘an institution of higher education and research’, so it is misleading, and inaccurate to apply such a word to the dysfunctional medical services being managed by the HSE.

When the professional nursing staff who provide 24/7 patient care are screaming for changes to hospital conditions, then it’s time for everyone to take notice.

It has become clear that the Government health policies, as provided by the HSE, are far from effective. The current systems have not worked for some time, despite additional resources being applied.

The HSE has proven to be an inefficient organisation and appears to spend a large amount of time and resources defending its position in the courts, which leaves it seriously short of any real credibility. Assuming that the Government will not be able to find a large amount of additional resources in the short term, perhaps it’s now time to consider adopting the Ryanair approach to our health services – ie provide a safe, low-cost service that achieves its objectives in the majority of cases and leaves no room for customers to be left on trolleys.

If hospitals have to include the name ‘university’ perhaps the HSE should give way and have the Higher Education Authority take over its responsibilities.

As the Department of Health and the Minister for Health also appear to wish to distance themselves from the day-to-day provision of health services, perhaps now is the time to ask what function they are paid to perform? And how are their results measured? Keeping a Government department close to budget is meaningless if it does not provide the basic public services required.

Owen Davin

Rockshire Road, Waterford

 

Patients pay price for holidays

As another January arrives, we encounter another overcrowding crisis in our country’s emergency departments.

The Irish Nurses and Midwives Organisation recently announced that the number of patients waiting on trolleys had surpassed 600 for the first time.

Having worked in our hospitals for a number of years, and having also worked abroad, I have no doubt that this annual “winter surge” is primarily due to a lack of spare capacity in the hospital system.

However, it is worth pointing out that this annual problem follows the Christmas holiday period; a period of two weeks during which our hospitals are run by a skeleton staff.

Over the last few weeks I have attempted to contact staff in different hospital departments, only to be told the department was either closed or staff were on holidays.

We all want a modern healthcare system. We cannot expect to effectively run our hospitals on a skeleton service for two weeks each December, and not expect repercussions each January.

Dr Ian MagFhearraigh

Arbour Hill, Dublin 7

 

Haughey and FitzGerald

In response to Robert Sullivan’s letter (January 7) I would like to point out that the “flawed pedigree” comment from the late Garret FitzGerald had nothing to do with Mr Haughey’s financial history. The comment was made in 1979 in the context of how Mr Haughey came to be elected leader of Fianna Fail.

Garret FitzGerald pointed out that his authority as leader of that party could legitimately be questioned because he got the position through a flawed process of threats, intimidation and bullying. The hallmarks of the thug he was and of the thugs he surrounded himself with.

Mr Sullivan is also factually incorrect to infer that the debt arrangements of Mr FitzGerald were in any way comparable to Mr Haughey.

Mr Haughey was in receipt of cash donations from various businesspeople for decades in return for which he shaped Irish government policy to meet their needs at the expense of the needs of the Irish public.

On the other hand Garret FitzGerald was stupid enough to place his entire life savings and money he borrowed into a single high-risk investment, which of course went bust. As a result he lost every penny and felt honour bound to sell his only asset, the family home, to repay as much of his debts as he could. There were no secret investments, offshore accounts or other assets and Garret never owned a property again for the rest of his life.

The reason AIB wrote-off the remaining debt was not because of some secret deal, it was because there was nothing left for AIB to take. Yes, it could have forced him into bankruptcy, but even then that wouldn’t have magically produced any more money.

Desmond FitzGerald

Canary Wharf, London

 

Foresight needed in health care

It is shocking and unacceptable that in this day and age, elderly patients are kept waiting in chairs in A&E wards for days.

The fear, anguish and lack of dignity afforded to those who have given so much to this country can only be imagined. That nursing staff stoically carry out their duties under such difficult and stressful working conditions is a credit to them.

But this is not a problem that crept up on us. It was foreseen that with an aging population and a lack of community care that this situation was inevitable. As usual, we end up trying to solve problems rather than preventing them.

John Bellew

Dunleer, Co Louth

 

Licence fee must be reformed

Colette Browne states that RTE is in need of reform (“Broadcasting charge is wrong – what’s needed is reform of RTE”, Irish Independent, January 6).

As has been recognised by a number of independent reviews, RTE has reformed and transformed itself radically over the past few years: operating costs have reduced by over 30pc (€130m) since 2008; staff numbers have fallen by over 500; remuneration to top-paid presenters has reduced by over 30pc.

And yet RTE has maintained over 25 public services, from orchestras to children’s channels to Irish-language services.

RTE continues to invest in the type of home-produced content that commercial competitors simply will not touch; important investigations such as the recent ‘Inside Bungalow 3’ or ‘The Torture Files’ programmes, high-quality Irish drama such as ‘Love/Hate’, ‘Amber’ and the ‘Charlie’ series, and factual programming such as David Brophy’s ‘High Hopes Choir’ series, are just a few recent examples.

RTE is dual-funded because in 2013 it cost €330m to run the full range of its public services; licence fee income accounted for only €186m.

At 17pc Ireland has one of the highest licence fee evasion rates in Western Europe. RTE has achieved substantial reforms over the past five years, and that process of change continues. It is now time for the licence fee to be reformed, too.

Brian Dalton

Managing Director,

Corporate Development, RTE

Out

January 7, 2015

7 January 2015 Out

Mary a little better though she could not manage to get up fot breakfast. Out to tip, Tesco’s and the Co op.

Obituary:

Professor Martin Brasier in 2009

Professor Martin Brasier in 2009 Photo: Andrew Cowie / Retna Pictures

Professor Martin Brasier, who has died in a car accident aged 67, was a palaeobiologist and expert in “microfossils” – cell-like structures found in ancient rocks which are thought to represent the earliest forms of life.

Earth formed about 4.5 billion years ago, but no one knows when life arose and the search for fossils that would help to answer this question has been a highly contentious field, both because of the difficulties of proving fossil-like structures are truly biological in origin, and because of the scientific glory at stake.

By 2002 the honour of having found the most ancient microfossil had been held for several years by J W Schopf, a palaeobiologist at the University of California, Los Angeles. In 1993 Schopf reported his discovery of microscopic worm-like structures in the Apex chert, a 3.465 billion year-old rocky outcrop in Pilbara, Western Australia. Schopf described the structures as microfossils of 11 species of photosynthetic microbes similar to cyanobacteria, and sent them to the Natural History Museum in London as examples of the Earth’s oldest fossils.

When Brasier, a scientist from Oxford, visited the museum in 1999 to photograph the specimens for a textbook, however, he was stunned to see, besides the cell-like structures that Schopf described, complex branching and folding structures very unlike microbial forms.

Brasier collected samples of his own from the Apex chert and spent hours tracing the structures inside the rocks with his son Alexander, a geology student at the University of Edinburgh. “We began to see that the ‘microfossils’ were part of a wide spectrum of odd-looking structures, most of which were far too chaotic to be called fossils,” Brasier recalled. Rather than being relics of early life, he concluded, the structures were mineral artefacts and the “shells” of the supposed microfossils were probably volcanic glass, ejected from a hydrothermal vent .

In 2002 Brasier launched an attack on Schopf’s Apex chart fossils in the journal Nature in which he concluded that the “purported microfossil-like structures” were mere “secondary artifacts formed from amorphous graphite”.

In his book, Genesis: The Scientific Quest for Life’s Origin (2005), Robert Hazen reported a bizarre face-off between the two men in April 2002 at a scientific symposium, where they shared a stage. As Brasier spoke, Hazen wrote, “an agitated Schopf stood up and began to pace distractingly a dozen feet behind the podium. Back and forth he walked, hunched over, hands clasped firmly behind his back – a tense backdrop to Brasier’s staid delivery…

“As Brasier calmly outlined his arguments, the scene on stage shifted from awkwardly tense to utterly bizarre. We watched amazed as Schopf paced forward to a position just a few feet to the right of the speaker’s podium. He leaned sharply toward Brasier and seemed to glare, his eyes boring holes in the unperturbed speaker.”

Luckily that was as far as it went, but in 2011 when Brasier himself published a paper in Nature Geoscience (co-authored with David Wacey ), claiming to have found microfossils in rocks 3.4 billion years old – 20 miles away from Schopf’s discovery – he and his co-author were at pains to provide chapter and verse to prove their biological rather than mineral origins.

The Wacey/Brasier microfossils were found in sandstone deposits bracketed by layers of volcanic rock in an arid region known as the Strelley Pool Formation, dating from the early, oxygen-starved era known as the Archean. The microfossils, the researchers suggested, were the remains of ancient microbes similar to bacteria which exist today in places like hydrothermal vents and which live off and metabolise sulphur rather than oxygen for energy.

Microscopic plankton shells (foraminifera), found in Tanzania, dating from the Eocene – Oligocene boundary (REUTERS)

To rule out natural geologic processes, the scientists subjected their samples to a battery of tests, using the latest spectographic and electron microscopic equipment. They concluded that they satisfied three crucial tests of biological origin: they were precise cell-like structures all of a similar size; the cells were clustered in groups, attached to sand grains; and the chemical make-up was consistent with a sulphur-based metabolism.

The most convincing evidence was the discovery of tiny deposits of the iron-sulphur compound pyrite, known as “fool’s gold”, near, and in some cases on top of, the microfossils. Brasier and Wacey surmised that the ancient organisms had probably lived on pyrite and belched hydrogen sulphide – which smells of rotten eggs.

The Nature Geoscience article did not claim discovery of the earth’s oldest microfossils (though the claim was made in a press release by the University of Oxford). Schopf, meanwhile, maintained a dignified silence, though a colleague explained that he “very strongly defends his original claim, and is working to validate it”.

Martin David Brasier was born at Wimbledon, London, on April 12 1947 and educated at Oxford University and London University, where he took a PhD.

His interest in the fossil record developed during a year spent as ship’s scientist aboard the naval survey ship Fawn in the Caribbean in 1970. “From this,” he recalled, “I could see that it is the analysis of interconnections between and within systems that may provide a valuable key for decoding the early history of life.”

From then on he focused on the investigation of big transitions in the fossil record, pushing his researches ever deeper in geological time.

After posts as a lecturer at Reading and Hull universities, in 1988 he returned to Oxford as a lecturer in Geology at the university’s Life Sciences department, with a tutorial fellowship at St Edmund Hall. In 1996 he was appointed reader in earth sciences and, in 2002, professor of palaeobiology.

Brasier, whose other interests included music, archaeology and the history of science, was a popular lecturer and tutor, many of whose graduate students have gone on to faculty and research positions in leading universities around the world. His influence was celebrated last year with a gathering of his colleagues, organised by his recent graduate students.

Brasier served on numerous international bodies, including Nasa panels on life on Mars. Last year he won the Geological Society of London’s Lyell Medal for his research on early life.

He published more than 200 articles and papers in scientific journals and his books include Darwin’s Lost World: The Hidden History of Animal Life, published in 2009 as part of the Charles Darwin centenary celebrations.

He is survived by his wife, Cecilia, and by their daughter and two sons.

Professor Martin Brasier, born April 12 1947, died December 16 2014

Guardian:

James Dyson, wearing glasses
‘Voters across the political spectrum believe [like James Dyson, above] that student migration benefits Britain.’ Photograph: Adrian Sherratt/Rex Features

The home secretary’s continued defence of her proposal to make international students leave immediately at the end of their university course and apply for a UK work visa from their country of origin is seriously misjudged – politically and economically (May defends plan to expel non-EU students, 6 January).

The general public are against unfair immigration, not immigration per se. Most people believe fairness is about making sure people who work hard and contribute are suitably rewarded. International students contribute enormously to this country, adding an estimated £8bn annually to the UK economy.

Little wonder most people – including an overwhelming majority of Conservative voters – believe we should not be reducing international students and should be encouraging them to stay and work in this country after their studies.

International graduates already face rules which are tougher than comparable countries: they have four months after their studies to find a “graduate” job of at least £20,300 per annum to stay in the UK. The home secretary’s latest proposal will make it even more burdensome for foreign students to stay in the UK. We risk losing talent that will enrich this country. Time to take students out of the government’s net migration target, ensuring that they become a priority for UK business and education rather than a Home Office fixated on lowering the number of immigrants whatever the costs.
Ryan Shorthouse (@RyanShorthouse)
Director, Bright Blue

• In his challenge to Theresa May’s plan to make sure foreign students leave the UK when they graduate, James Dyson needlessly conceded that this could be a “short-term vote winner” while arguing that it “leads to long-term economic decline” (No, Theresa May, we need those foreign graduates, 5 January).

In fact, the attitudes evidence clearly suggests this proposal would be a rather unpopular form of political populism, which fails to reflect the nuances in public attitudes towards immigration.

British Future’s detailed study found that voters across the political spectrum believe that student migration benefits Britain. Indeed, Conservative voters prove particularly supportive. Overall, only a fifth of voters believe it makes sense to count students in the immigration statistics at all. Three-quarters are in favour of graduates being allowed to stay in the UK after they graduate, at least for a period of time.

Most people think it’s good when Chinese and Indian graduates stay here to help British firms win business, rather than taking their skills back home to help international competitors. As Conservative MP Mark Field has said, “a welcoming approach to international students can clearly be seen to reflect British public opinion, rather to challenge it”.
Sunder Katwala (@sundersays)
Director, British Future

• I find James Dyson’s beliefs to be unbelievably selfish. He suggests we train foreign youngsters and then keep them employed here otherwise they may go home and create competition overseas. I have recently travelled through eastern Europe and heard the same thing said by every adult – “the brain drain of our youngsters to the UK and the US is killing our countries. No one will invest in us if we don’t keep our next generation of graduates.”

We should be proud that our education system is sought after by so many – but let’s train those who want it and then actively encourage them to go home and help develop their own countries. At the same time we need to work out just why we are so short of “home-grown” scientists and engineers and try to sort that out.
Gill Young
Houghton, Hampshire

• James Dyson makes informed and detailed criticisms of Theresa May’s plan to expel international students on graduation, and make them apply for a new visa from overseas. But the situation is actually much worse than that described by Dyson. Theresa May’s plan assumes that overseas UK visa units are efficient and competent in issuing visas. This is not my experience with the UK visa unit located in the Beijing embassy. Rather, I would rate it as lazy and incompetent. Its decisions are actively hindering high-level UK-China scientific collaborations.

Here is an example from 2013. A highly qualified Chinese scientist with a recent PhD from the UK wishes to visit the University of Manchester at her own expense for two or three weeks to complete research started here. The research is deemed to be of world-class importance by the two UK funding agencies which support it. But her visa application is rejected by the Beijing visa unit.

Their reasons were not based on the facts of the case, but on false guesses and erroneous speculations. The facts were easily obtainable from me. Probably there are many other similar examples.
Professor emeritus Jonathan Connor
University of Manchester

• How refreshing to read James Dyson’s views on the government’s misguided attempts to curtail student visas in an attempt to limit immigration. As a member of HOST, for many years I’ve welcomed international students into my home, and very often we keep in touch after graduation. What impresses me is the huge amounts of money they contribute to UK universities. After their degrees some have gone home, but others have stayed here, using their expertise, knowledge and language skills to contribute to the success of British companies in international markets. How can we put the government in touch with the reality that limiting student visas is only harming the British economy?
Viv Scott
Belper, Derbyshire

Independent:

So the election campaign has started with lies, damned lies and statistics. The main parties wonder why the electorate is so removed from the whole process when they manipulate figures, are less than honest, and use data and research so selectively.

This government appears to believe the only way forward is “cut, cut and more cut”.

Surely the reason why we still have a huge deficit is because they are not able to understand that, as with a household budget, there needs to be income maximisation.

There may be more people in work but many of those are on minimum wage, low incomes and zero-hours contracts so there is no increase in taxes. For many it also means help is needed with housing and council tax.

The freezing and reduction of incomes in real terms, particularly in the public sector, means that there is less spending power and as a consequence less income from VAT.

Let us hope that, in the run-up to election day, one party is prepared to be honest about how they will balance the public and private sectors, support those who genuinely need it, and have a fair society and not one which is run for the powerful and vested interests.

Graham Jarvis
Leeds

 

So the first casualty of the election campaign is truth. Thank you, George Osborne, for setting the tone. It’s going to be nasty.

David Penn
Kendal, Cumbria

 

The opening Conservative poster for the 2015 election reminded me that the greatest confidence trick I have encountered in the past 35 years is the claim that taxation is far lower when the Tories are in power. The opposite is true; the only tax they have reduced is income tax; all other forms of taxation have been raised.

In April 1979, when the last Labour government was in power (New Labour was in effect a Conservative government), the standard rate of income tax was 34 per cent, but VAT was only 8 per cent, a great deal lower than the current 20 per cent. Rents, council tax, utility bills and rail fares were only allowed to rise in line with the rate of inflation, and when we had pay restraint utility prices did not increase at all.

For several years now we have suffered price increases in all these services at well above the rate of inflation. The reality is that overall taxation levels are not much different; all that has happened is that poor people have had to pay more to finance tax concessions for the wealthy.

Malcolm Howard
Banstead, Surrey

 

Sarah Forster is spot on with “Road to Nowhere” (letters, 6 January); the Tory campaign poster reminds me of the film The Wizard of Oz. You can assign the characters to taste, but a Tin Man without a heart, a cowardly “Lion” looking for courage, and red shoes all look promising.

Professor Guy Woolley
Nottingham

 

After Evans rape case, yes can mean no

The Ched Evans affair is undoubtedly a sordid one and nobody emerges from it with any credit. However, the legal consequences of his guilty verdict must be of wider concern.

This is what was decided. A person can drink copious quantities of alcohol (an amount that would floor most of us) and then pick up a sexual partner and accompany that person to a hotel and engage in consensual sex with that person and another. This can be considered rape if one of the parties decides retrospectively that it has been. There need be no accusation of “getting someone drunk”, or administering a date rape drug. There need be no coercion or violence.

This means that not only does no mean no, yes means no as well. Regardless of the gender of the participants, in future everyone should be required to sign a “consent to sex” form in case they forget that they had consented. Of course it might be a good idea for people not to drink so much that they cannot remember what they were doing, but to suggest that now seems to imply interference with human rights.

Those who argue that rape convictions are too low should be aware that this is the legal territory that is now being debated, and the introduction of a consent form is not a flippant response.

Nigel Scott
London N22

 

As a grandmother of a football-playing granddaughter I should like to explain why I believe no footballer convicted of rape should ever be allowed to play with a club again.

My granddaughter is 12 years old and has spent time at Shrewsbury Town Football Club workshops for juniors. Any thought of a convicted rapist at the same club would be abhorrent, so Ched Evans needs to be kept away from all football clubs, especially those with junior departments.

Pippa McNickle
St Albans, Hertfordshire

 

I do want to see someone ask Ched Evans this to his face: if he gets legless and wakes up to find he’s been shagged by a guy he’s never met, would he be fine with that? Because he did that to this woman, and maintains it wasn’t rape.

Merlin Reader
London SE13

 

When HMRC was helpful and efficient

I am sorry that Janet Street-Porter (3 January) sees the problems at HMRC as an issue of the public sector versus business. Customer service at HMRC has not always been this poor.

In 2006 both my parents died within months of each other. HMRC, as well other public bodies such as the DWP and the local council, were always easily contactable and very helpful to me as executor in the rather complex administration of their overlapping estates.

By contrast, many private-sector organisations, such as solicitors, financial institutions and utility companies, were hopeless, causing great stress at this difficult time. Some made so many mistakes that I dubbed them “systemically incompetent”. It was no surprise to me that the worst disappeared, or had to be bailed out in the 2008 crisis, and others still regularly feature in the problem pages of your Money section.

What has changed since that time is that the Coalition Government has waged a war on public services, cutting numbers and reducing pay and benefits. This has reduced the numbers of staff available to answer queries and also resulted in some  of the most talented leaving. It is therefore not surprising that customer service is worse.

One might think that this would be a particularly perverse policy in that it damages the department responsible for bringing in the taxes that might help reduce the deficit. Perhaps, however, there is a cunning plan behind it to ensure that the damage done to HMRC will result in ministers’ rich cronies not being held to account for taxes they owe?

Nigel Long
Bristol

 

A fair selection of candidates

Your report “Labour shuns black and Asian candidates in winnable seats” (31 December) raises once again the thorny question of positive discrimination.

The Sex Discrimination (Election Candidates) Act 2002 makes it lawful to have women-only shortlists. The Labour Party does make use of this legislation, which is due to expire in 2015, under a sunset clause, unless Parliament approves an extension. If there is a genuine desire among all parties to ensure that Parliament is representative of the population as a whole, then it is difficult to resist the argument that ethnic minorities and those with disabilities should be entitled to the same degree of positive discrimination.

There should be a cross-party debate about this. I have always wondered whether the Labour Party practice of imposing all-women shortlists might not indirectly discriminate against black and minority ethnic (BME) male potential candidates. This, of course, would be outweighed if there had been a significant number of BME women elected to Parliament; it would be interesting to know how many have been included on all-women shortlists.

I have always opposed positive discrimination, but I have reluctantly come to the view that political parties will only select fairly if they are forced to do so. But that must apply to BME and disabled candidates as well as to women.

John Orton
Bristol

 

Compassion for terminal patients

Neil Dawson (letter, 5 January) asks whether, in declining to help with assisted dying, he was letting unimportant concerns about principles prevent the compassion his friend so desperately needed. I can help him here. Yes, he was. Another example of the stupidity and heartlessness of religious belief.

Jim Bowman
South Harrow, Middlesex

 

Seriously great headline

The Independent is a wise and balanced newspaper. However, it can take itself a little too seriously on occasion. So it was wonderful to see the headline writers enjoying their time “in the sun” with “Decline of the herd reich” (6 January). Excellent.

Debbie Jones
Newcastle upon Tyne

 

Times:

 

Telegraph:

Despite bitterness on both sides, the future of Britain’s energy supply is one of the few issues that must transcend narrow political considerations - This energy debate threatens to tear the Coalition apart

Four months to go until the general election, and the campaigning has already begun Photo: Getty Images

SIR – The election campaign has started far too soon. Four months of boredom ought to ensure the lowest turnout ever.

There is plenty of unfinished business the Government could be concentrating on – notably “English votes for English laws”. Let us stick to the traditional three-week campaign. This is not America.

Elizabeth Spooner
Wokingham, Berkshire

SIR – Three weeks should be plenty of time for the parties to communicate their manifestos to the electorate.

I will vote for the first major party that pledges to repeal the Fixed-term Parliaments Act.

Nicholas Moate
Flushing, Cornwall

SIR – Pantomime politics is back in full swing. Will the Tories destroy the NHS? Will Labour destroy the economy? Will Ukip destroy the EU? Will the Lib Dems destroy everything?

Britain deserves better than the same old negative sniping of insular politicians going through repetitive pre-election

dust-ups.

Peter Kyle
Letcombe Regis, Berkshire

SIR – We are to be force-fed dubious facts and figures for months from politicians. I wish I could hibernate until May.

I do worry about the economy, which is delicate and at least has improved in the past five years. One thing is sure: a Labour government has never left the economy in a good state.

Phyllis Jones
Oakley, Bedfordshire

SIR – I think David Cameron came across very well on The Andrew Marr Show on Sunday morning. He gave assurances that the NHS was in good hands under a Tory government and I believed him.

Doug Fowler
Clevedon, Somerset

SIR – A Conservative Party spokesman has commented on Labour’s “chaos of unfunded spending promises”. What do the Tories propose to do about the largest unfunded promise of all – the unfunded public-sector pensions that are kept off the balance sheet?

Bill Parish
Hayes, Kent

SIR – David Cameron’s wish to bring forward the in-out EU referendum will appeal to a huge number of voters. But to insist that Eurosceptic ministers toe the government line and campaign to stay within a reformed EU before anyone has the faintest idea what reforms will be achievable undermines his credibility.

Gabriel Jaffe
Bournemouth, Dorset

SIR – I think I can trust Mr Cameron to promise to do something about the EU.

Graham Smith
Marlow, Buckinghamshire

Recruiting teachers

SIR – Charlie Taylor, the chief executive of the National College for Teaching, should not underestimate the discouraging effect various factors have upon teacher recruitment in Britain. These include the low standard of state education, the lack of discipline in schools, acceptance of disruptive pupils in classrooms, putting children of all abilities in the same classes, inadequate and useless subject matter and the egalitarian attitude of many teachers and administrators, who refuse to advocate competition or excellence in anything.

These problems should be addressed before any improvement in the numbers or quality of recruitment can be expected.

Peter Wedderburn-Ogilvy
Froxfield, Hampshire

Dumbed-down history

Terry Deary’s ‘Horrible Histories’ series is popular with children

SIR – I was glad that Robert Peal expressed his concerns about Terry Deary’s Horrible Histories series.

Dumbing down history to the extent that this series does is neither necessary nor justifiable. For those pupils who are likely to take an intelligent interest in history, the approach is patronising and presents a barrier to a rounded study of a subject which has been presented both accurately and attractively by other authors.

Chris Corrin
Sevenoaks, Kent

Emergency landing

SIR – The “non-standard landing” at Gatwick Airport last week revealed the folly of closing Manston Airport. The Virgin Atlantic flight could have landed on one of the longest and widest runways in the country, just 65 miles away, avoiding the closure of the world’s busiest single-runway airport for over three hours.

I K Simcock
East Grinstead, West Sussex

SIR – Steve Donovan notes that Lydd Airport has been renamed “London Ashford”. Kidlington Airport, which is 62 miles from London, was renamed “London Oxford” in 2009.

David Alexander
Towcester, Northamptonshire

SIR – Robin Hood Airport in Doncaster is nowhere near Sherwood Forest, the supposed home of the legendary law-breaker, and not even in the same county.

Ted Shorter
Hildenborough, Kent

Prince’s friendship

SIR – Why did the Duke of York visit Jeffrey Epstein, the American multi-millionaire and convicted sex offender, knowing that the connection would look bad?

Peter Cresswell
Enniskillen, Co Fermanagh

SIR – We must give the Royal family our collective support in times of difficulty.

The media should spend its time scrutinising politicians and show the Royal family deference as unifiers of country and Commonwealth.

John Barstow
Fittleworth, West Sussex

The NHS is in a mess after Labour’s blunders

SIR – Ed Miliband tells us that only the Labour Party can save the NHS. He appears to have forgotten the last Labour government’s record.

It allowed the NHS to squander millions of pounds on a computer system that did not work. It oversaw the expansion of an inefficient NHS bureaucracy, whose fat-cat leaders flit from NHS trust to NHS trust hoovering up taxpayers’ money in pay-outs and pay-offs on the way.

It virtually doubled the pay of GPs without extracting the necessary extra efficiencies from them, hence the current chaos in A&E departments.

It mismanaged the recruitment and training of nurses, forcing the NHS to recruit staff abroad to make up the shortfall.

The NHS cannot afford another Labour government.

Alan Moss
Cheadle, Staffordshire

SIR – I wonder just how much of the current NHS budget is used to repay the debt loaded on to it by Gordon Brown with his shifty Private Finance Initiative.

Ian Bruce
Solihull, Warwickshire

Earning their honours

SIR – The “pen-pushing civil servant” Michael Goddard no doubt did good work for his country on radio frequencies for mobile phones. No doubt he drew an equally good, state-funded salary for his excellent work and received an even better state-funded pension.

I wonder if any of this work was done in his own time, on a voluntary basis. All the people I know who have received the OBE have earned it by volunteering to help those less fortunate or less able than themselves.

Don Riseley
Gawsworth, Cheshire

SIR – Apparently Geoffrey Boycott’s suspended sentence precluded him from obtaining the much-deserved honour of a knighthood.

It seems ironic, then, that we are still required to use the title “Lord” for various criminals who have actually been to prison.

Adrian Waller
Woodsetts, South Yorkshire

Wartburgs and all

SIR – My father was the very proud owner of a Wartburg model 311, purchased in 1965. He owned many cars during his lifetime but this was the only one he could ever afford to buy brand new. It was his pride and joy, despite being somewhat unreliable.

He became an expert at changing the cylinder-head gasket (he always travelled with a spare in the boot).

Judy Hart
Warrington, Cheshire

SIR – I took a test drive in a Wartburg in Northampton in the late Sixties. I remember the puzzled expression on the face of the young salesman when he first experienced the free-wheel feature of the car when he decelerated.

It was a very quiet car, in spite of the two-cylinder two-stroke engine, but the body was heavy, so performance and handling were horrible. I bought a Mark 1 Vauxhall Viva instead.

Richard Gould
Sutton St Nicholas, Herefordshire

SIR – If Mr Launert had been in St Helens in the Sixties he would have spotted a Wartburg Knight saloon trundling around town. It was a boring faded beige colour and seemed to be a cross between an old Volvo and a rusty tank.

Allan Dockerty
St Helens, Lancashire

Darkest Surrey: a postcode lost in the woods

Historic round, octagonal and fluted pillar boxes at a Royal Mail depot (Alamy)

SIR – We recently moved house. The next day it became apparent that any delivery driver using satnav could not find us using the given postcode.

It transpired that, because our road was divided halfway along by woods through which it becomes a bridle path, satnav systems were sending drivers to the other end only. The postman said it had been a problem for years.

We asked the council to email us a change-of-address form enabling us to change our postcode to that of an adjoining road. We have added the name of this road to our address, and people can now find us.

Mary Pannell
Banstead, Surrey

SIR – It has been possible for about 25 years to pinpoint (to within one metre) every letter box in the country with a 12-digit grid reference and to describe this location uniquely with a two-digit extension to the postcode. This is useful for the delivery of goods and also for the emergency services.

In 1990 I consulted the Post Office national HQ and began to create a database for my local authority area. A few months later a senior officer of the Ordnance Survey paid me a visit and a national project began.

We soon ran into the problem of who “owns” an address description – the local authority rates department, the street-naming department or the local historians who clung to ancient county names?

I gave up after 10 years.

Isabel Page
Oldmeldrum, Aberdeenshire

Double bubble

SIR – The “Baby Cycle” on Anne Brooke-Smith’s new washing machine allows for a 9kg load.

This is clearly designed to assist after multiple births, for which one used to require a twin tub.

Keith Macpherson
Houston, Renfrewshire

 

 

Globe and Mail:

Hassan and Stark

Phones are more private than houses – so shouldn’t be easier to search

Irish Times:

Sir, – Those looking for a name for Lucinda Creighton’s new party should note, as Enda Kenny may ruefully reflect, that the name of the former Fine Gael junior minister contains the letters which spell out “Chagrin Uncoiled”. – Yours, etc,

Dr JOHN DOHERTY,

Gaoth Dobhair,

Co Donegal.

Sir, – I can’t help but wonder if Lucinda Creighton has missed the boat in her decision to launch a new political party. It reminds me a little of the launch on January 1st of UTV Ireland. After a five-minute promotional video, we were treated to an hour-long episode of a programme set on a Yorkshire farm.

UTV Ireland won’t be in top gear for a few months until some of its new programmes start, seemingly a bit like Lucinda’s as yet unnamed party.

Last year when I attended the “monster rally” in the RDS, there was an undoubted air of anticipation and energy in the hall that something exciting was afoot. Since then, however, we have had the local elections and the marked increase in support for Independents and Sinn Féin.

While large numbers of people have turned away from the heretofore large parties such as Fianna Fail and Fine Gael, they now consider Independents to be a viable alternative. People such as Shane Ross and Michael Fitzmaurice talk about forming an alliance of Independents as opposed to a new party.

The present supporters of Independents will not necessarily move to a new party unless they are offering something very radical which people can identify with. So far I don’t see much evidence of this with Lucinda’s new party.

Let’s hope we get something more substantial soon, otherwise I for one will be waving goodbye to this particular boat. – Yours, etc,

TOMMY RODDY,

Galway.

Sir, – Lucinda Creighton is quoted as saying, in the context of the pre-launch of her new political party, that the party wants to make Ireland “a great place to innovate, to grow, to build and expand a small business, to employ people, to work and to be a consumer”.

The choice of the word consumer, as opposed to citizen, is revealing. As a citizen of this republic, I will not be marching behind the flag of the new party, which already suggests a prioritisation of business over people and a preference for an economy rather than a society.

The much-heralded party promises much of the same, I’m afraid. – Yours, etc,

NESSAN VAUGHAN,

Baldoyle,

Dublin 13.

Sir, – Rehash(tag)? – Yours, etc,

DES SHAW,

Templeogue,

Dublin 6W.

Sir, – Reboot Ireland. Control? Alternative? Delete. – Yours, etc,

MICHAEL O’LEARY,

Monkstown,

Co Dublin.

Sir, – A “new” political party is being set up to “reboot” the old system, which in computing terms simply means restarting the old system as it is. If this new party was genuinely about reform shouldn’t it be called “Upgrade”?

Ms Creighton loyally voted in favour of every single cutback imposed by this Government on the most vulnerable in society and not once in her entire career as a Fine Gael TD did she do a single thing to affect the removal of even one of the many allowances and tax reliefs that allow the well-off to minimise the amount of tax they pay. – Yours, etc,

DESMOND FitzGERALD,

Canary Wharf,

London.

Sir, – How about the Pip (pig in a poke) Party? – Yours, etc,

TOM KELLY,

Malahide,

Co Dublin.

Sir, – Old-style politics prevails; the new party has not even been named and we have promises to reduce or eliminate USC already tabled. What the electorate wants is real and sustainable change to both the way the Government and the Civil Service is managed.

This is what we were promised at the last election and one has only to look back at 2014 to see a chaotic Government, stumbling from crisis to crisis, with absolutely no change of any significance. I say to the new party, take care, great care, and be aware that the electorate is demanding change and will no longer be fooled by promises of largesse. – Yours, etc,

PAUL KEENAN,

Killiney,

Co Dublin.

A chara, – The provision of accommodation to the homeless in Dublin shows what can be done when the political will exists. The lack of a similar response for the most vulnerable in our healthcare system is appalling (“Number of patients on hospital trolleys at record high”, January 6th).

It is a failure of successive governments and ministers for health that they are still trying to manage “an emergency” now ongoing for a decade. – Is mise,

Dr CATHAL NUGENT,

Loughrea, Co Galway.

Sir, – Could someone who knows about these things explain what they do better in smaller European countries that don’t have a trolley crisis? Could we adopt some of their more successful strategies rather than annually agonise over ours? – Yours, etc,

JOHN COLLINS,

Skeaghvasteen,

Co Kilkenny.

Sir, – How many more years of this new year hospital bed crisis will have to happen before it dawns on people. You cannot have your Christmas pudding and eat it. Our hospital services slow down from mid-December to early January.

People continue to become ill during this period. Not to mention the countless people stuck on waiting lists. The usual conveyor belt of clinical assessment combined with diagnostic imaging and laboratory tests slows down. Then there is the slowing down of effective physiotherapy and occupational therapy services to minimise hospital stays. The usual multidisciplinary meetings do not take place, and therefore discharges do not take place at the usual rate.

Unless we look at the Christmas holiday as a shorter period, we will always have this January problem. So, no more surprises then. – Yours, etc,

JOAN BARRY,

Glasnevin,

Co Dublin.

Sir, – Perhaps the Minister for Health is in A&E himself with a score throat? I say this due to the deafening silence from the normally very vocal Leo Varadkar. – Yours, etc,

MARGARET TREANOR,

Sutton,

Dublin 13.

Sir, – In his analysis, Mark Weiss warns of “brinkmanship on both sides” (“Israelis and Palestinians play risky game”, January 5th). How is attempting to hold Israel to account through the International Criminal Court “brinkmanship”? How is using multilateral mechanisms such as the UN Security Council to end the occupation of Palestine “brinkmanship”? How is calling for Israel to take full responsibility, as the occupying power, for the people it controls under a brutal military occupation “brinkmanship”?

Mr Weiss’s “dangerous scenario” of “a diplomatic vacuum” is a direct result of Ireland and the EU failing to fulfil their obligations under international law and the UN charter. Shamefully, the EU and Ireland (and the US, of course) have also failed to impose any kind of meaningful economic sanctions on Israel. Ireland and the EU must do everything possible to ensure that the Palestinian people attain their full human rights to self-determination, justice and freedom. Without significant external pressure, Israel’s occupation of Palestine will not end, Palestinian refugees will never return home, and we will have been complicit in one of the most terrible injustices the world has ever seen. – Yours, etc,

HILARY MINCH,

Dublin 2.

Sir, – I read with some dismay of the seemingly unstoppable advance of JD Wetherspoon pubs in Ireland (Una Mullally, “Protect the uniqueness of Irish pubs from JD Wetherspoon’s inexorable advance”, Opinion & Analysis, January 5th).

While I have to admit that the attraction of cheaper pints has a certain obvious appeal, having visited a few Wetherspoon pubs in the UK, I have to say that the word average could have been invented for them. Average in every way, exceptional in none.

If the arrival of this chain results in the loss of many traditional pubs, community hubs which have evolved over generations, then that will be very expensive cheap drink indeed.

The jobs argument holds no water either if every Wetherspoon pub that opens costs the jobs of those who work in every old-school pub that closes as a result. – Yours, etc,

VINCENT HEARNE,

Nabinaud,

France.

Sir, – Maybe the Weatherspoon pubs are revenge for all the similar-looking Irish pubs all over the world. – Yours, etc,

BRIAN HODKINSON,

Reboge,

Limerick.

Sir, – I believe that Charles Haughey instituted the style of always sitting beside the driver when in State cars, thus letting the populace know that he was essentially just one of us. Since then, not one government minister has had the courage to sit in the back! – Yours, etc,

PADRAIG J O’CONNOR,

Rathfarnham, Dublin 14 .

Sir, – One thing is certain. Charles J Haughey will not have his many good deeds listed in the pages of The Irish Times, nor will its snooty readers acknowledge that, as leaders go, Mr Haughey was good for Ireland, despite all the old and new muck raked up. – Yours, etc,

ROBERT SULLIVAN,

Bantry, Co Cork.

Sir, – May I dissent, in one respect only, from the unqualified praise for Aiden Gillen’s portrayal of the titular character in the RTÉ drama Charlie? The actor reincarnated “The Boss” for his TV audience in looks, hooded eyes, walk, etc. CJH’s vocal quality was wonderfully conveyed by Gillen, except that the register wasn’t deep enough.

In Olivier’s preparation for Othello on stage (1964), he managed to lower his natural tenor register by a whole octave to perform the Moor. Similar vocal weight was needed for the “black prince of Irish politics”. – Yours, etc,

OLIVER McGRANE,

Rathfarnham, Dublin 16.

Sir, – Is the withdrawal of medical cards from vulnerable people to maintain pay levels for medical professionals not a conscience issue? What about increasing taxation on market-variable contributory private pensions to fund guaranteed public pensions?

People vote for parties rather than individuals because they believe a collective working together consistently is more effective. Questions are debated and policy agreed within the party. Opinions within the group may vary, but that is beside the point. With “free voting”, there is no collective, and thus no point in voting for a party.The hypocrisy of taking advantage of a party’s supporters when it comes to getting elected, only to take an opposing position when difficult decisions need to be made is glaring. The members who canvassed in all weathers, put up posters, distributed leaflets, helped write speeches, organised public appearances, maintained websites, prepared press releases and social media updates, and who ferried voters from their homes to the polling booth on election day are cast aside in favour of the sudden appearance of a “conscience” once the candidate is safely in office.

The last notable point is the total silence of Sinn Féin in the debate. As it stands, the party line is held so tight that its members do not appear to be permitted even the free expression of their individual views. That they would have a free vote in accordance with their individual consciences is obviously out of the question. – Yours, etc,

JOHN THOMPSON,

Phibsboro, Dublin 7.

Sir, – The report “Road Safety Authority says 42% of those killed in vehicles not wearing seat belts” (January 2nd) is numerically inaccurate and misleading.

What your reporter seems to have done is to add the percentage of drivers not wearing seat belts (16 per cent) to the percentage of passengers not wearing seat belts (26 per cent) to get 42 per cent. Basic arithmetic would say that you should add the numbers in each category to get 23/118 or 19 per cent, a less dramatic figure but a true representation of the percentage of vehicle fatalities not wearing seat belts.

What you published is equivalent to saying if 50 per cent of men read The Irish Times and 50 per cent of women also read The Irish Times, then 100 per cent of the total population read it. – Yours, etc,

TOM FULLER,

Glasnevin,

Dublin.

Sir, – One of Fintan O’Toole’s cultural lows of 2014 was the “Government’s malign neglect of the arts and culture: not a red cent extra in the budget” (December 27th). At 0.46 per cent of the national budget, the percentage of Irish government spending on the arts is one of the lowest in Europe, and less than a third of the European average. Let’s hope that 2015 will bring real recognition of the crucial role the arts play in our society. – Yours, etc,

JIM CULLETON,

Dublin 7.

Sir, – Now that Christmas is well and truly over, how many penalty points will be issued to those people caught driving with antlers and red noses attached to their cars? – Yours, etc,

BRIAN QUIGLEY,

Bettystown,

Co Meath.

Irish Independent:

A&E departments are now experiencing record levels of overcrowding
A&E departments are now experiencing record levels of overcrowding

I returned home from the States for Christmas and on December 31st, my father, an 86-year-old man, was rushed to St Vincent’s Hospital after suffering from what appears to have been a stroke/seizure.

  • Go To

I have to commend every healthcare worker I came in contact with. Their concern, friendliness and approachability were reassuring in a time of stress. From ambulance workers to receptionists and porters, the catering staff, nurses and resident doctors, all went about their jobs with quiet resolve and concern.

Yes, it was disheartening to see the A&E area resemble a M*A*S*H unit at full capacity rather than a hospital on a regular day.

I know that if the same were to happen in the US there would be hell to pay. There is only one way to change the system – get the politicians involved. Make it an issue in the upcoming election and vote.

So, before we chastise health workers who are doing a great job in difficult circumstances, let’s remind those who can influence the system that it is their responsibility to seek the welfare of their fellow countrymen.

James Houton

Address with editor

 

Haughey – ‘flawed’ but still good

Charles J Haughey was a man who was a politician, and he was much more of a man than many who come to the fore yet again to dance on his grave.

He was not a monster who cared for nobody but himself, yet the real truth is not in the interests of writers and film-makers, who pretend it is only themselves who have special insight and the inner track on the story of Mr Haughey.

He was once accused by Garret FitzGerald of having a “flawed pedigree” in the cut and thrust of party politics, yet it later came to light this could have meant he’d got a large bank debt written off, as did Mr FitzGerald around the same time.

One thing is certain.

Mr Haughey will not have his many good deeds listed. But he was good for Ireland, despite all the old – and new -muck raked up to sling at his close family.

Remember them?

Robert Sullivan,

Bantry, Co Cork

 

Lowering the tone in ‘Charlie’

May I dissent, in one respect only, from the unqualified praise for Aidan Gillen’s portrayal of the titular character in the RTE drama, ‘Charlie’?

The actor reincarnated ‘The Boss’ for his TV audience in looks, hooded eyes, walk, etc. CJH’s vocal quality was wonderfully conveyed by Gillen, except that the register wasn’t deep enough (‘Scrap Saturday’ in the 1990s did it better).

In Olivier’s preparation for ‘Othello’ on stage (1964), he managed to lower his natural tenor register by a whole octave to perform the Moor. Similar vocal weight was needed for the “black prince of Irish politics”.

Oliver McGrane

Rathfarnham, Dublin 16

 

In the name of God . . .

Having had more than my usual amount of socialising during the Christmas season, one realisation dawned on me: how so many people use the word ‘God’ in every second exclamation they make. Otherwise, the favourite is ‘you know like …’

“Oh my God, isn’t her dress a show?; “Oh God, I’m late.”; “Oh God, he’s drunk.”

Few people can explain the word ‘God’. Long ago, in Ireland, there was respect for the name of God but nowadays there is a growing disrespect and an absurd feeling that it is somehow clever and glib to refuse to bow to the omnipotent creator.

None can explain the mystery and awesome concept behind the word.

When they try to argue about the existence of God, many become lost in a plethora of pseudo-intellectual nonsense.

Because no one else understands the mystery either, it usually happens that the one with the most elaborate words wins.

Of course, for many people, the exclamation ‘Oh God’ has become utterly unintentional now. Yet, with some thought, we could educate ourselves.

Can we not humbly accept our limitations vis-a-vis the existence of a superior reality which is beyond our own comprehension?

At least, let’s stop disgracing ourselves, by denigrating the sacred with our ignorant misuse of the word ‘God’.

Even the meaningless exclamation ‘Wow’ is more according to our worldly nature.

Angela Mac Namara

Churchtown, Dublin 14

 

Famine and ‘The Producers’

Dr John Doherty (Letters, Irish Independent, January 6) draws a false analogy between the Mel Brooks movie ‘The Producers’ and the proposed TV sitcom set during the Famine.

‘The Producers’ is an hilarious movie that uses the rise of Hitler in a totally mocking way, coupled with the aim of making the play become a complete and almost instant flop to defraud the play’s investors.

One of the climactic jokes is the stunned reaction of the audience to being unexpectedly presented with a play about Hitler’s rise to power and his plans to conquer the world.

There are no jokes aimed at the persecution of Jews.

In complete contrast, the reality of the Famine will be the central context for the proposed “comedy”, and not simply the events of the years leading up to it.

Had ‘The Producers’ been located in an extermination camp it would never have been released, let alone “produced”.

Ivor Shorts

Rathfarnham, Dublin 16

 

Rhyming couplet

Inda and Lucinda …kinda rhymes?

Tom Gilsenan

Beaumont, Dublin 9

 

Crippling cost of childcare

Since Charlie McCreevy introduced tax individualisation in 2000, staying at home to take care of the children has been effectively penalised by the state. Professional childcare now, on average, absorbs a salary of around €30,000 for just two children.

The question of whether the Government (by which I mean the taxpayer) will now be tapped to subsidise the divestment of responsibility for raising one’s own children is the stuff of which socialist dystopias are made. Cut out the middle men: raise your own children.

Mark Hickey

Sandymount, Dublin 4

 

All’s fair in classroom wars

As a teacher of some 41 years I would like to see myself as being as fair and unbiased as the next.

If it should come to grading the following groups I feel I may be already hotwired towards favouring them: my own immediate and extended family; the children of friends and colleagues; children experiencing adolescent wobbles; children experiencing trauma or bereavement; children from dysfunctional backgrounds; children of families with severe financial problems; children who feel low or depressed; witty and chirpy guys; guys who try hard but never quite get it; gifted athletes; gifted musicians; academically gifted children and the children of the local mechanic who would never see a neighbour stuck.

Gearoid O Ciarain

Dublin 12

Irish Independent

Sharland

January 6, 2015

6 January 2015 Childrens books

Mary a little better mussels for lunch. Sharland comes to call.

Obituary:

Alla Sizova was a Soviet ballerina who danced with Nureyev just before he defected and was part of a golden generation at the Kirov

Alla Sizova as Princess Aurora in Sleeping Beauty by Tchaikovsky

Alla Sizova as Princess Aurora in Sleeping Beauty by Tchaikovsky  Photo: alamy

Alla Sizova, the Soviet ballerina, who has died in St Petersburg aged 75, sprang to instant fame at the age of 18 when performing with her classmate Rudolf Nureyev in a school graduation film . Performing the Le Corsaire duet, the teenage Nureyev prowled and leapt like a hungry panther and Sizova was dubbed “the flying Sizova” as she soared into jumps that seemed to hover mid-air. The two prodigies were immediately hired into the Kirov Ballet as soloists, skipping the usual corps de ballet start.

Paradoxically, Nureyev thoroughly disliked his partner, dismissing her as “cold and dull”. When the Kirov administration allocated them an apartment together, he declared that if it was an attempt to marry him off to her, it would fail. Both dancers moved family members into the two rooms with them, to ensure that they did not cross paths too often when they were off-duty, even as their on-stage miracles of lightness, grace and athletic dynamism together were assumed to reflect a mutual respect.

Nureyev’s low opinion of his partner was not shared by the British, when Alla Sizova and her remarkable generation at the Kirov were first unveiled in the West on their celebrated tour in 1961. On June 16 that year, as the company flew on to London from their opening venue, Paris, Nureyev – who was being sent home for antisocial behaviour – had defected.

Alla Sizova, like Nureyev’s colleagues, had no idea what had happened, but as his partner she found herself under suspicion. Back in St Petersburg her mother was confronted by KGB officers and put in such fear for her daughter that the experience resulted in her spending weeks in a psychiatric hospital.

However, the young ballerina, although having to make her debut in The Sleeping Beauty on the Covent Garden stage, in which she should have been partnered by Nureyev, conquered her anxieties to give a glowing performance. The eminent critic Clive Barnes wrote that the joyful 21-year-old was “rather more to the English taste than her colleagues”, and showed “all the incipient nobility of a coming prima ballerina. Her extensions seemed to travel up to infinity and beyond in a curiously poetic and non-athletic manner… I find it difficult to envisage a more remarkable debut in the greatest ballerina role of the classic repertory.”


Alla Sizova with Nureyev in in Le Corsaire, Leningrad, circa 1958

On return to the USSR, Sizova was asked to condemn Nureyev, but stated that on the contrary she admired his “strength of will and fearlessness” in pursuing “his artistic growth”, though she could not understand what he would find in the West with its inferior ballet training. She went on to become one of the nation’s quartet of superstar ballerinas, alongside Irina Kolpakova, Alla Osipenko and Natalia Makarova, her captivating charm and virtuosic brilliance being soon enriched with a touching expressiveness that would be noted approvingly on subsequent Kirov tours to London in the 1970s.

Sizova suffered long treatment for a spinal injury, reportedly linked to her landings from spectacular jumps, which caused her to miss the 1966 tour to London. Having lost Nureyev as her partner (his name was erased from records at the time), she created an equally famous pairing with the brilliant Yuri Soloviev, whose jumps were more refined than the forceful Nureyev’s. It was said that Soloviev and Sizova showed the ultimate possible in the Kirov’s classical training, a fusion of natural gifts and stylistic polish.

Sizova suffered no jealousy from her peers: Makarova, her contemporary, praised her “enticing radiance”, and the older Kolpakova, regarded as the leading classical stylist of this golden group, once told an American interviewer that when someone had told her he preferred Sizova in a role to her, “that hurt. It made me want to do better.”

Alla Ivanovna Sizova was born in Moscow on September 22 1939. Her family moved to Leningrad and she studied at the prestigious Vaganova ballet school, where according to another of her classmates, Valery Panov, the young girl was known as the “ugly duckling”, an “anaemic-looking complainer with red eyes and a voice that nagged whenever she stopped crying”. Panov would acknowledge that she was “a striking example of the caterpillar who becomes a ballerina butterfly”.

Regardless of the good opinion of the boys in her class, Sizova sped into the Kirov Ballet, performing 14 major roles in her first three years. Her lightness, musicality and Kirov delicacy made her a supreme Giselle as well as Masha in Vasily Vainonen’s traditional The Nutcracker, and with her growing talent for showing vulnerability she also became a touching Juliet, Katerina in The Stone Flower and Maria in The Fountain of Bakhchisarai. The Kirov’s choreographers showered her with new roles, ranging from the leading part in Igor Belsky’s powerful tribute to Russian wartime suffering set to Shostakovich’s Leningrad Symphony, to story heroines such as Konstantin Sergeyev’s Cinderella and Ophelia in his Hamlet, and Princess Rose in Oleg Vinogradov’s The Prince of the Pagodas (using Britten’s score), among other creations, many not seen in the West.

As well as her legendary partnerships with Nureyev and Soloviev, she also brought all her technical brilliance and gaiety to performances with the marvellous young Mikhail Baryshnikov in Don Quixote that are still said to have set the Kirov’s standard in that ballet.

In 1983 Alla Sizova was awarded the top Soviet honour, People’s Artist of the USSR. She last performed in the Kirov’s version of Les Sylphides (called Chopiniana) at the age of 53, but latterly her life became unhappier. Her husband, the television sports producer Mikhail Serebrennikov, had died while covering the Moscow Olympics of 1980, leaving her with their only son.

In 1991 she moved with the son to the US to work alongside her Kirov colleague Oleg Vinogradov at his new Kirov Academy, Washington, where she was a much-loved teacher of American ballerinas. But in 2004 she returned to Russia after her son unexpectedly died while fishing.

Alla Sizova, born September 22 1939, died November 23 2014

Guardian:

Detail from The Judgement of Adam and Eve by William Blake, from his illustrations for John Milton's
‘It is Blake’s anger, at injustice, at cruelty, at abuse of power, that we in Albion need’ … detail from The Judgement of Adam and Eve by William Blake. Photograph: Barney Burstein/Burstein Collection/Corbis

Martin Kettle (English radicalism needs to recapture the spirit of Blake, 2 January) is so right that progressive politics is these days instrumentalist and lacking in vision – if anyone was in any doubt about the truth of this, they just needed to read the adjacent article by Ed Balls (Osborne is at the margins, Labour is the centre ground, 2 January). Where can we look for such a progressive vision? Kettle suggests that for William Blake politics is a form of religious faith, and it is instructive to hear Justin Welby, in his new year message, talk of sacrifice and self-giving, turning outwards and bringing hope to the poor and suffering of the world, arguably plagiarised from Jesus’s own words in Luke (4:18-19). How might this vision play out in practical politics? Can I suggest raising taxes on the better off and diverting resources to the poor, ill and needy of this country and the wider world? Some of this of course Ed Balls was suggesting as Labour policy, and perhaps all Labour needs to do is to marry policy with the proclamation of a vision – and so engage both the soul and brain of the electorate.
David Wyatt
London

• Martin Kettle’s point that William Blake was not someone you’d want running today’s railways or NHS is sound. Yet from 1976 to 1983, Blake was helping to run British Rail. It was during these years that BR’s chairman, Sir Peter Parker, maintained his long-standing devotion to Blake’s poetry and painting. From 1997 until his death in 2002, Parker was president of the Blake Society. A radio documentary on the life of Blake scholar Kathleen Raine said Parker “won’t go near the negotiating table without a copy [of Blake’s work] close at hand”. Might this add weight to Kettle’s suggestion that, through Blake’s vision, the realms of the practical and the imagination might come together in a “progressive organism”?
Stephen Batty
Poole, Dorset

• How moving for Martin Kettle to remind us of the power and importance of political imagination and vision in these immensely unstable times. Had he chosen a later period to look at the emergence of “politics as a form of religious faith”, he might have alighted on the Independent Labour party. Among the many names who come to mind here are Keir Hardie and Philip Snowden (whatever his later failings at the Treasury), the first a Scot who for many years was MP for a Welsh constituency, the second a Yorkshireman. You could also include the middle-class Katherine Bruce Glasier, whose speeches profoundly moved her audiences. Or the working-class Hannah Mitchell, suffrage campaigner and Manchester councillor, who had only two weeks’ schooling. They all embodied vision and ethics in their politics.

Any progressive politics today would be enriched if, among other sources, it draws from this rich ILP tradition.
Barry Winter
Leeds

• It was as a student, reading Bronowski’s A Man Without a Mask, that I met William Blake, and he has been my companion for the last 60 years. Blake not merely had an imagination and was a dreamer, as Martin Kettle says; he also possessed a blazing anger. And it is that anger, at injustice, at cruelty, at abuse of power, that we in Albion need. As his contemporary Francisco Goya put it: “Divine Justice, do not spare them!” It is the voice of anger that needs to speak for Britain.
Lionel Burman
West Kirby, Wirral

• As EP Thompson noted, William Blake belonged to a “long popular tradition” which was not just visionary but also concerned with opposing the monarchy and organised religion. Martin Kettle may well have a point that reclaiming Blake is one way to forge anew a genuine English radical tradition, but it would be one considerably to the left of what passes for official politics in 2015.
Keith Flett
London

• Imagination and vision are essential, as Martin Kettle says. But to describe the current state of Scottish political thinking as one that broadly reflects the view that Scotland’s problems will be solved by throwing off the English yoke is wrong. I voted for a “progressive” Labour party in UK elections for 50 years, but am unlikely to do so again. This in part because of its stance on the referendum, but mainly because it appears unable or unwilling to articulate an economic vision based on something other than global capitalism as currently practised. People see wages falling in real terms and their conditions of employment being reduced by employers drawing on the larger EU pool of labour. Some misleadingly translate this into a question of immigration or EU membership, rather than face up to the downside of globalisation and ensure that the global market works for the many not the few. In an independent Scotland the case for radical alternatives would be argued against a backdrop free from the needs of London as a global financial centre, from “special relationships” and from an unrealistic view of our place in the world.
Roderick McCallum
Annan, Dumfries and Galloway

Some of the hundreds of Syrian people rescued by the Italian navy after being abandoned on the Ezade
Some of the hundreds of Syrian people rescued after the Ezadeen was abandoned off Italy’s south coast, 3 January 2015. Photograph: Reuters

Isn’t it time we stopped using the word “migrant” to describe people risking their lives to flee a war that has killed 200,000 Syrians, wounded millions (physically and mentally), and made millions more homeless (Vessel abandoned with 450 migrants on board, 3 January)? Surely they are refugees and/or asylum seekers. Defining them otherwise turns them into cannon fodder for our own economic, political and racial xenophobes.
Ivan Rendall
Kings Green, Worcestershire

• Ian Bostridge’s reflections on “crossovers” between classical and popular performance (Cold comfort, Review, 2 January) remind me of the surprising example in Richard Whorf’s film It Happened in Brooklyn: Sinatra singing an English version of Don Giovanni’s Là Ci Darem la Mano. Quirky, but not at all unpleasant.
Martin Brady
London

• Bill Gabbett (Letters, 3 December) refers to English public school boys who (some people think) “won the Battle of Britain”. Just for the record, of the 3,000 fighter pilots recorded as having flown sorties in that encounter, 600 (20%) were known to have attended a public school.
John Prance
Preston

• Young independent filmmakers Shut Out The Light have produced a powerful short film Still Ragged: 100 Years of The Ragged Trousered Philanthropists (Letters, 1 January), which they have been touring and is available via their website.
Dr Nicola Wilson
University of Reading

• Mary Gildea calls for an experiment where the country is run by non-male people (Letters, 5 January). We ran that experiment – we called it Thatcherism – and we’re still paying for it now.
PA Chalmers
Southwick, West Sussex

• A few years ago I passed a sign outside a church in Bradford: “Prayer – the original Wi-Fi” (Lloyd Webber calls for Wi-Fi for all churches, 5 January).
John Comino-James
Kingston Stert, Oxfordshire

'Coriolanus' film photocall at the 61st Berlinale Film Festival, Berlin, Germany - 14 Feb 2011
Admirable British citizen: actor Vanessa Redgrave turned down an ‘Empire honour’. Photograph: Action Pres/Rex Features

Reading the lists of “honours refuseniks” (Editorial, 3 January) I am struck by how admirable they are: some of our best painters, novelists and playwrights, to name but a few. They deserve to be honoured, and perhaps refusal is honour enough. But how about an honour that does not come from the establishment, let alone the British empire or royal family? The ABC (Admirable British Citizen) should be offered to all refuseniks. Those who accept would vote for a nomination committee from among their number. Those who have already accepted empire honours should have the opportunity to be considered for an ABC. The committee would consider nominations from anyone. It would be elected, by the body of ABCs, every two years. One small but significant step towards a British democracy.
Ray Brown
Leeds

Alun Jones, the first male head of the Girls' Schools Association, and headmaster at St Gabriel's sc
Alun Jones, the first male head of the Girls’ Schools Association, and headmaster at St Gabriel’s school, Newbury. Photograph: Felix Clay for the Guardian

Alun Jones’s comments (Labour accused of class war by top private school head, 31 December) about the sacrifices that parents make to send their children to fee-paying schools would have carried more weight had the article included the cost of sending a child to his school, St Gabriel’s in Newbury, for their entire school career. According to the school’s website this would cost more than £170,000 per child – putting the average cost (£21,000) that other relatively well-to-do parents might incur moving into a catchment area into perspective.

It is revealing, as the rich line up to protest about being asked to make their contribution to society through independent schools sharing their resources, or those living in the most expensive houses in the country paying a new mansion tax.

The suggestion that most people, through sacrifice, can afford a privileged education for their children is ridiculous – the majority have no choice about where their children are schooled and the privileged don’t even want to share a portion of the advantages handed to them on a silver tray. “We’re not all in it together” might have been a better headline for the article.
Diana McAuley
Whitstable

You report that the new president of the Girls’ Schools Association, Alun Jones, has accused Labour of class war because of its plans to limit tax breaks for independent schools. Why is it relatively common to find the term “class war” in statements made by the rich and privileged attacking leftwing ideas and policies, while it is rare to find the phrase used about rightwing policies and ideas? Surely it is stating the obvious to say that the current government is waging class war on the poorest members of our society through unremitting cuts to public services? This asymmetry demonstrates clearly where power lies in Britain.
Jennifer Coates
Emeritus professor of English language and linguistics, University of Roehampton

The people conducting a class war via the education system are the Letwins, the Maudes and co, all of them privately educated, and Alun Jones, who believes that free Latin lessons and occasional access to his playing fields will resolve the problems created by the educational divide. Let them play croquet.
Alan Shelston
Bowdon, Cheshire

Of course! It’s so obvious when it’s pointed out. Private schools are clearly the victims in a class war. Thank you, Alun Jones. A further benefit of that splendid headline and copy is that it reminded me of my favourite Guardian letter (published on 20 June 2008), incidentally illustrating the importance of Mr Jones’s Latin classes. The correspondent referred to a local private school sending out a request for payment of fees, asking for “£X be paid per anum”, and one parent writing back that he would prefer to pay through the nose as usual.
John Airs
Liverpool

So, a “top” headmaster who runs an elitist school for the children of the rich is participating in yet another attempt by the wealthy to dodge their share of taxes. Private schools are very successful businesses and they should be stripped of their charity status and taxed as fairly as possible, because they can afford to pay. Let’s hope Labour is ready to face the challenges and deliver on this one.
Prebendary Neil Richardson
Braintree, Essex

So the Guardian considers the remarks of the president of the Girls’ School Association to be front-page news. I would have thought the immortal words of the late, lamented Mandy Rice-Davies were an appropriate and sufficient response.
John Wilson
London

Computer generated image of a DNA strand
‘Genetic testing is very important in cancer prevention as it identifies individuals at high risk because they have inherited a gene mutation.’ Photograph: Zoonar GmbH/Alamy

As a clinician with over 17 years’ experience in medical genetics I disagree with Dr David Levy’s assertion that funding the 100,000 genomes project is not worthwhile (Letters, 30 December). In fact the genomics revolution is already upon us. For example, 10 years ago it took over 12 months and cost over £1,000 to analyse BRCA1 and BRCA2 (the two most important genes for hereditary breast and ovarian cancer), but today we can do this as an NHS service for less than half the cost in a matter of weeks. This type of genetic testing is very important in cancer prevention as it identifies individuals at high risk because they have inherited a gene mutation. Moreover, a targeted drug for BRCA1/BRCA2-related cancers has just been authorised by the European Medicines Agency, 20 years after the discovery of these genes. We are rapidly moving beyond single-gene analysis for complex genetic conditions and we now have the ability to simultaneously analyse 4,300 disease-causing genes for less than £1,000. The 100,000 genomes project will accelerate this process and provide much-needed data that will allow better clinical interpretation of the genetic code. Equally important, it will engage the public in an area of medicine where many technological hurdles are fast being overcome, but where significant ethical and societal challenges remain.
Dr Marc Tischkowitz
Department of medical genetics, University of Cambridge

Professor Bert Vogelstein of Johns Hopkins University asserts: “All cancers are caused by a combination of bad luck, the environment and heredity” (Report, 2 January). His thesis appears to hold that cancers that he cannot attribute to a cause must therefore be down to no cause – ie “bad luck”. I suggest that the professor might not actually know all there is to know about the causes of cancer.
Kevin Bannon
London

Mother helping daughter with her home schooling homework in kitchen.
Home schooling: ‘British law places children’s education as a parental responsibility.’ Photograph: Brownstock Inc./Alamy

You report that Westminster council in London wants to impose annual visits on home schooling families to “ensure welfare of children” (We don’t need no education inspectors, insist home educators, 1 January).

British law places children’s education as a parental responsibility, with the state providing schools for those that choose them. Local authorities, repeatedly, find this concept difficult.

Calls to regulate home educationin the different British jurisdictions in recent years have all failed due to protection afforded to families by the Human Rights Act, which enshrines the “right to respect for private and family life”. Parents rightly fear local authorities for the bad decisions they make about the children they gain access to.

The Westminster education committee inquired into home education in 2012. It found no child protection issue. The chair, Graham Stuart MP, recently wrote that “the conflation of home education with a child safeguarding risk amounts to a serious stigma against parents” and that he had never seen either “any credible evidence that home education is a risk factor … nor … evidence that home education effectively hid abuse from the authorities”.

Only the Isle of Man requires children not in state schools to be entered on a database. This achieves nothing for children but has the consequence of damaging relations between parents and the education authority due to failures of bureaucracy.

Home-educating families may face bullying by prejudiced local authority officials. This feeds into the wider community, creating frustration and tension for families trying their level best for their children.
Tristram C Llewellyn Jones
Ramsey, Isle of Man

It is easy to sympathise with parents who educate their own children feeling their rights are being infringed by local authority monitoring. However, the rights of children must also be upheld, and the UN convention on the rights of the child defines an education as the child’s right (articles 28 and 29), and restricts the rights of parents over a child in light of the evolving capacities of the child (article 5) and the right of the child to express their views and have them given due weight (article 12). While parents may legitimately campaign to ensure inspectors limit their activity, the state has a duty to promote children’s rights, perhaps especially where they may conflict with what parents see as their own rights.
Roy Grimwood
Market Drayton, Shropshire

Jane Bown's self-portrait taken in a mirror in the 1980s.
Jane Bown’s self-portrait taken in a mirror in the 1980s. Photograph: Jane Bow

I met Jane Bown in the 1990s when she opened her studio in Alton, Hampshire, for charity. As a fan of her photographs in the Observer from the mid 50s, I decided I must not miss it. Jane showed me a series of her photographs with stories of when and how they had come about. I decided that I would like a copy of her photograph of Harold Macmillan and Lady Diana Cooper, and she said she would find the negative and send me the picture. We had a correspondence about my photograph, largely about how delighted she had been to find the negative. She wrote on postcards of her photograph of Nye Bevan and Hugh Gaitskell walking together in Brighton, taken in 1957. A wonderful day, and her last note to me invited me to come again. She was kindness itself.

 

Independent:

Times:

Sir, Ross Clark fails to recognise the evidence linking the removal of lead from petrol with the fall in violent crime (“Murders are down and we don’t know why”, Jan 3). Lead burden is most dangerous in utero and infancy, so high levels of exposure can be expected to manifest themselves in dysfunctional behaviour among teenagers and young adults 20 years later. In the US, lead was removed from petrol in the late Seventies and violent crime fell dramatically in the Nineties. In the UK lead was removed between 1985 and 1995 and we are seeing the benefits two decades later.
Dr Robin Russell-Jones FRCP FRCPath
Former chairman, Campaign for Lead Free Air

 

 

 

Telegraph:

Letters: Air crash investigations are hindered by out-of-date black box technology

Training pilots and tracing aircraft; commuters paying the price; in defence of Horrible History; and Tom Jones’s kind of motor

A flight data recorder (L) and a cockpit voice recorder (R) Photo: NTSB/GETTY

SIR – The limitations of black box flight recorder technology, which dates back to the Sixties, are all too evident when aircraft are lost at sea. This has been demonstrated by the Air France flight 447 in 2009, the Malaysia Airlines flight MH370 in 2014 and AirAsia flight QZ8501 at the end of last year.

The potential of satellite technology has long since rendered these flight recorders obsolete. The US Navy has used ejectable recorders, which transmit position, since 1993. An upgrade of airliner flight recorders seems long overdue.

Doug Landau
St Albans, Hertfordshire

SIR – Initial investigations into the AirAsia crash suggest that the pilot “ascended sharply to avoid a storm”. As a retired Boeing 747-400 captain, I have to question the wisdom of this decision.

Storm clouds can extend to above 50,000ft in equatorial latitudes; most modern passenger jets can’t climb that high. Extreme levels of turbulence may render the aircraft out of control and the only option would be descent. Autopilots may well disengage or command a descent that the crew did not demand. Confusion and panic can result in a complete loss of spatial awareness as the aircraft starts to descend into the very weather that was being avoided.

Bad weather should always be avoided laterally, not vertically. We should never try to out-climb Mother Nature.

Christopher Adams
Wappenham, Northamptonshire

SIR – With all due respect to Mr Ord-Hume for his profound knowledge of aircraft design and great contribution to aviation, I cannot help feeling that he is dwelling on the past.

Training pilots in today’s full motion simulators exposes them to the complete range of conceivable emergencies and malfunctions. Inevitably, there will be those who become complacent and rely too heavily on automated systems – but these are the types who will benefit most from simulator training.

David Warren
Berkhamsted, Hertfordshire

SIR – I had the good fortune to serve in the Royal Air Force during the early days of the jet era. Many hours in the air were spent practising for technical failures, fires and deteriorating weather conditions. The result was an instinctive ability to fly the aeroplane manually and without all the technical advantages that pilots expect to enjoy today.

Many airlines now offer cut-price fares. I believe they can only do this at the expense of pilot training. The airlines have a moral responsibility to ensure that their crews have the innate ability to revert to flying by basic principles. Flight safety cannot be sacrificed for commercial expediency.

J J Mudford
Plaistow, West Sussex

Public-sector pay-outs

SIR – The Tories’ proposal to cap public-sector severance packages is long overdue. MPs should also review their own termination packages, especially for those who resign under dubious circumstances and then pick up a handsome pay-off, courtesy of the taxpayer.

Ken Smith
Wokingham, Berkshire

SIR – In the interests of fairness, bonuses paid to bankers and CEOs should be similarly capped. We are all paying in austerity measures for casino banking, and shareholders are paying the lucrative packages of CEOs.

Valerie Crews
Beckenham, Kent

Cost of commuting

SIR – Patrick McLoughlin, the Transport Secretary, says that if people choose to commute by rail they have to accept the fares charged (report, January 3).

Most people do not choose to commute; they have no option because they can’t get houses near where they work and they can’t get jobs near where they live.

Les Sharp
Hersham, Surrey

SIR – Does Mr McLoughlin really think that anyone chooses to spend a significant part of their life crammed into overcrowded transport as a lifestyle option? Does he also not understand that commuters are part of the taxpaying public who fund the railway systems?

Lynne M Collins
Hadleigh, Essex

It’s time Britain placed more value on its milk

(Dave Thompson/PA)

SIR – We have seen two of our local dairy farmers give up in the past two years, so we no longer get our thrice-weekly delivery in glass bottles.

Milk is part of the mainstay of our daily diet. Why is it so undervalued and the producer so downtrodden?

Our beautiful countryside will soon be covered with yet more houses, while meadows full of grazing cows will be a distant memory.

Rebecca Cook
Cranfield, Bedfordshire

SIR – Tesco is not the only culprit. Asda is currently selling a container of four pints of semi-skimmed milk for just 89 pence.

Carolyn Melville-Smith
Cheltenham, Gloucestershire

SIR – I now pay Dairycrest 95 pence for a pint of organic milk delivered to my door. Something is very wrong with this.

Nola Armstrong
Shalford, Surrey

SIR – Most shoppers would have little idea what they pay per litre of milk. Retail prices could easily be increased by three to four pence per litre, and few would notice or care. This would be more acceptable to the producer yet still represent fantastic value for the consumer.

As retail price maintenance has long been illegal, it is only the supermarkets that can rescue this dire situation.

Bob Kingsland
Brownshill, Gloucestershire

SIR – A few years ago, bread was simply a cheap, white-sliced basket-filler, but it has undergone a marketing revolution to become a high-quality, high-priced nutritious food.

We need to take a fresh look at milk and transform the perception of it from cheap white liquid into wholesome staple food. And we need to act fast, or fresh British milk might become a thing of the past.

Colin Leggat
Hollingbourne, Kent

Out in the cold

SIR – Your report “ ’Now or never’ to save HMS Victory” (January 3) is a timely wake-up call to the nation.

I have never understood how the most iconic naval vessel in the world is still parked outdoors at the mercy of the elements. Surely, in this age of glass and steel, a suitable structure can be crafted to bring Victory in from the rain.

Gerard Somers
Atherstone, Warwickshire

Not-so-horrible history

SIR – I have to disagree with Robert Peal, who says that the Horrible Histories series has “turned study of the past into a joke”. The Birmingham Stage Company has been producing Horrible Histories live on stage for 10 years, regularly sending children out of the theatre buzzing with questions about the history they’ve seen. Families who write to us are astonished at how fascinated their children have become by the subject. Our touring shows are two hours long, debunking the growing myth that children can’t concentrate.

The fact that Terry Deary’s books have made history a medium for entertainment should be welcomed as the perfect vehicle for getting children to love the story of how we got here and who we are.

Neal Foster
Manager, Birmingham Stage Company
London W1

SIR – Horrible Histories are not textbooks to be “studied”. Students read these books of their own free will and anyone who accuses the franchise of “dumbing-down” history is, frankly, a snob.

Deary presents history in a quicker and more enjoyable way than Robert Peal’s beloved Seventies schoolbooks. Volumes such as The Groovy Greeks and The Slimy Stuarts aren’t supposed to be academic, but interesting for children to read.

Emilie Lamplough
Trowbridge, Wiltshire

SIR – Our two privately educated daughters, both with 2:1 degrees, disagreed with my assertion that history is now only narrowly taught and is dumbed down.

I challenged them with “Who was Joan of Arc?” The reply of “Noah’s wife” left me feeling I had won a hollow victory.

Richard Will
Middleton, Hampshire

For Benson’s Lucia, a Bentley simply wouldn’t do

Georgie Pillson strolls with Mapp and Lucia in the BBC television adaptation (BBC / Nick Briggs )

SIR – No matter how splendid the BBC’s television adaptation of E F Benson’s great Mapp and Lucia novels, in one respect it is defective.

In the programme, Lucia has a Bentley motor car, of the sporting sort made by W O Bentley before Rolls-Royce took over his firm in 1931. This is completely wrong – Lucia would never have had such a brutal, “masculine” machine.

Indeed, in Mapp and Lucia, Benson states explicitly three times that Lucia had a Rolls-Royce. For example, in Chapter Two: “ ’We must ask where the house is,’ said Lucia, leaning out of the window of her Rolls-Royce.”

Those of us who drive Rolls-Royces need the record to be put straight.

Francis Bown
London E3

War and Peace

SIR – I enjoyed the BBC radio broadcast of War and Peace. When I first read the book, aged 16, I struggled with the Russian names, so I was pleased to hear them correctly pronounced. The characters became real for me as I listened and followed them through their struggles.

In a year when we will be remembering all those who died in the Napoleonic wars, culminating in the Battle of Waterloo 200 years ago, I thought the broadcast was a very courageous step for the BBC to take.

Sue Woolliscroft
Alsager, Cheshire

SIR – January 1 was not the most convenient day to listen to the complete reading of War and Peace. My telephone rang so many times with friends wishing me a Happy New Year that the exercise had to be abandoned.

Margaret Clark
Linton, Cambridgeshire

Good things come in…

SIR – I recently received a cardboard box from a well-known retailer stuffed with three bags of protective padding. The box measured 648 cubic inches and contained a camera memory card measuring 1/8 cubic inch.

Is this a record for wasted space?

Madeleine Page
Southwater, West Sussex

Express bathtime

SIR – Upon acquiring a new washing machine recently I was intrigued to see that it boasted a “Baby Cycle”.

As the drum holds a 9kg load, presumably it could accommodate a fairly large infant.

Ann Brooke-Smith
Letchworth Garden City, Hertfordshire

My, my, my car

SIR – Our car came with the registration YYY 41M and was immediately christened Delilah.

Frank McCallum
Westerton, Dunbartonshire

Globe and Mail:

Lackenbauer and Lajeunesse

More ships in the Northwest Passage will boost our Arctic claim

P. Whitney Lackenbauer is a fellow of the Canadian Defence & Foreign Affairs Institute and associate professor and chair of the department of history at St. Jerome’s University; Adam Lajeunesse is a postdoctoral fellow at St. Jerome’s University and a research associate of the Centre for Military and Strategic Studies at the University of Calgary

In October, 2013, the Danish bulk carrier Nordic Orion completed the first ever commercial transit of the Northwest Passage. After decades of melt, the once impenetrable Northwest Passage seemed to be on the verge of becoming a viable sea-route. This prospect resurrected longstanding fears of what heightened shipping activity could mean for Canadian sovereignty. Would a navigable passage encourage other countries or shipping companies to challenge Canada’s position on our Arctic internal waters?

Behind sensationalist headlines and some over-zealous punditry, the reality of Arctic shipping is far less dramatic. There were no commercial transits of the passage in 2014. Heavy ice effectively cancelled the shipping season.

Variability from year to year, and even from day to day, will continue to make scheduling a transit through the Canadian Arctic both difficult and dangerous. International shipping is a business built on tight schedules, and schedules are hard to keep when a ship’s speed and route cannot be predicted with a high degree of certainty.

In spite of nearly seventy years of modern exploration and mapping, Canada’s Arctic sea-routes are still dangerously uncharted. At present, only 12 per cent of the region is mapped to modern standards – a deficiency starkly demonstrated by the 2010 grounding of the cruise ship Clipper Adventure in Coronation Gulf, about 100 km east of Kugluktuk, Nunavut.

These factors, along with high insurance costs, limited navigational aids, and a complete lack of salvage and repair infrastructure, make regular shipping through the Canadian Arctic an uncertain proposition. Although there will be more Nordic Orions in the years to come, they are likely to be niche voyages and government-supported operations, not the uncontrollable flood of transarctic shipping that still dominates popular imagery.

The future of Arctic shipping is likely to remain destinational traffic, made up of resource carriers, resupply ships, and cruise liners moving in and out of – not through – Canada’s Arctic waters. Rather than undermining Canadian sovereignty, these vessels confirm it.

Canada considers the Northwest Passage as historic internal waters, a position in law that requires the acquiescence of foreign entities interested in the region. While this recognition has been hard to win from foreign states, it will be easier to secure from private corporations operating in Canada’s waters. Why, after all, would any company with business interests in Canada risk challenging sovereignty and precipitating popular and political backlash?

Rather than fixating on the political ramifications of Arctic shipping through a sovereignty lens, the government can better serve Canadians by focusing on the practical requirements of developing and maintaining safe sea routes. There remains much to be done in hydrographic surveying, building marine infrastructure, and enhancing search and rescue capabilities.

Investments in these areas will help to ensure that future shipping is safe and beneficial for Inuit, whose traditional hunting-grounds and highways will have to double as transit routes for resource carriers and cruise liners. These priorities lay at the heart of Canada’s chairmanship of the Arctic Council and its Northern Strategy. They are also priorities for Inuit, as the Inuit Circumpolar Council has documented in recent studies like The Sea Ice is Our Highway (2009) and The Sea Ice Never Stops (2014).

It is important to note that Inuit, despite their concerns about the human and environmental impacts of shipping, generally look forward to the prospect of increased maritime activity. More shipping will reduce the costs of supplies and improve standards of living in a region where limited resupply options have led to $7 litres of milk and $40 packs of diapers. Alleviating Canada’s highest levels of unemployment is equally important, and good paying jobs in the resource sector are predicated on cost-effective access to these resources and an ability to carry them to market. The risks inherent in Arctic shipping must therefore be considered alongside these new opportunities as well.

When it comes to the prospect of shipping activity in the Canadian Arctic, safety and security – not defence or sovereignty – should be primary areas of focus. The long-standing questions of sovereignty and jurisdiction are well managed and, as counterintuitive as it may seem, more activity is only likely to strengthen Canada’s position.

While the Northwest Passage is unlikely to emerge as a new international sea route, Canada will have to prepare for increased destinational traffic. As such, new investments in marine infrastructure and monitoring will be necessary to mitigate many of the dangers inherent in Arctic operations. However, if managed properly, this shipping could be a powerful enabler for northern development and all the regional benefits that would flow from it.

DAVID MCLAUGHLIN

Memo to Harper: A five-point plan to attract more voters

Irish Times:

Sir, – Lucinda Creighton and her band of merry men are even more out of touch with reality than the current ruling elite. She should spend more time worrying about her own fragile chances of re-election than trying to offer a backward, conservative vision of a country no one wants to see exist. – Yours, etc,

HUGH O’DONNELL,

Sandymount,

Dublin 4.

Sir, – John Leahy of Reboot Ireland says “This new movement will embrace the views of rural Ireland” (“Lucinda Creighton joined by Eddie Hobbs in new party”, January 2nd). That’s great. As an atheistic, socialist supporter of a woman’s right to choose and living in rural Ireland, I look forward to seeing my views reflected in the party’s manifesto. – Yours, etc,

DOMINIC CARROLL,

Ardfield,

Co Cork.

Sir, – If this new party is to adhere to its aversion to the whip system, the formulation of policies is unnecessary. Each member of the party who is elected to the Oireachtas will be guided by his or her own view on any proposed legislation, with the interesting exception of Finance Bills. For instance, one member may be convinced that nuclear power is desirable, another may abhor such a notion; another member may strongly believe in the unselfish patriotism of small business people and that they should be afforded every opportunity to flourish, while another may regard them as money-grubbing chancers.

If there is then to be a free vote in order to respect the opposing views of such members, why bother with policies at all?

As to the Finance Bills, I am quite bewildered that such proposed legislation, which impinges so directly on our well-being, is not deemed to be a matter of individual conscience. – Yours, etc,

PETER KENNY,

Dublin 14.

Sir, – We now know that Lucinda Creighton and others are setting up a new political party that wants to make Ireland “a great place to innovate, to grow, to build and expand a small business”.

This sounds very like Enda Kenny’s Fine Gael, which wants to make Ireland “the best little country in the world in which to do business”.

I am sure these are worthy, if similar, aspirations but I look in vain for a political party that wants to make Ireland the best little country in the world to be born in, the best little country in the world to be sick in, the best little country in the world to be disabled in, the best little country in the world to grow old in, the best little country in the world to be educated in, the best little country in the world to be an immigrant in, the best little country in the world for equality, the best society in the world.

It is clear that these reasonable aspirations are beyond the imaginations of Lucinda Creighton, Enda Kenny, Joan Burton, Gerry Adams, Micheál Martin and most, if not all, of their colleagues in Leinster House. – Yours, etc,

BRENDAN LYNCH,

Dublin 7.

Sir, – A nameless new party ranging about for members and supporters, with a Corkman, Eddie Hobbs, at the top table. What better working title than the Nemocratic Rangers? – Yours, etc,

DENIS O’DONOGHUE,

Killarney,

Co Kerry.

Sir, – Lucinda Creighton has announced that a new political party will be launched “within eight weeks”. The new party does not yet have a name. Based on what Ms Creighton has said to date, may I suggest that the party be called “Profit before People”? – Yours, etc,

MARTIN MELAUGH,

Coleraine,

Co Derry.

Sir, – Reboot. Start PDs/Libertas 2.0. Press the usual buttons to continue. – Yours, etc,

SIMON COMER,

Galway.

Sir, – So Lucinda Creighton has finally made her move to establish a new party. While I cannot see anything new in her position on economic matters which distinguishes her from the other right-of-centre parties in this State, I do wholeheartedly agree with the new party’s focus on political reform.

Ms Creighton is now in position to push for the most practical way to make a serious start at this reform in a way she could hardly have done as an Independent. This is to change radically the Irish electoral system. It is the current PR-STV system that is delivering the localist and clientelist politics that even after the disasters that have befallen this country after 2008 is continuing to do so much damage.

And things are going to get worse. If successive opinion polls as well as the local and recent byelections are any indication, the current system is going to produce such a high number of Independents in the next Dáil that forming a stable government may only become possible if local interests are privileged even more over the common good.

There are excellent alternative systems on offer, perhaps the best a mixed system of first past the post and party lists (also known as additional members system or personalised proportional representation), which Scotland, New Zealand and Québec all introduced over the last 10 years and Germany has had since 1949.

One consequence of a new system along these lines would be the likely elimination of Independent candidates at national level, which in my view would be one of its most beneficial side-effects as it would force all those intelligent and competent voices among the Independents into parties, into negotiations and compromises, and into national responsibility. I trust this ambition also underlies Ms Creighton’s venture.

Coupled with real meaningful decentralisation and devolution of power to local authorities, the new electoral system will actually deliver what it is currently only pretending to deliver, national politicians for national politics and local politicians for local politics.

I sincerely hope Ms Creighton will aim to make a real difference to the way politics is conducted in this country and give the issue of electoral reform the focus it deserves in the run-up to the next general election.

Or is it really the immutable law of Irish politics that disaster has to strike first before politicians and citizens wake up? – Yours, etc,

JOACHIM FISCHER,

Ballina, Co Tipperary.

Sir, – A terrible rebooty is born. – Yours, etc,

CONAN DOYLE,

Pococke Lower,

Kilkenny.

Sir, – My enjoyment of the opening part of the Haughey story was diminished by the necessity of identifying politicians by their hairstyles. Myself and my wife spent more time arguing about who was who than following the storyline. For the opening instalment, could the makers not have briefly provided the characters’ names with a small strapline or subtitle? – Yours, etc,

A JONES,

Mullagh, Co Cavan.

Sir, – I enjoyed the Charlie drama thoroughly and commend all those involved, particularly the actors and writer, for their efforts. The fact that I enjoyed the show is all the more remarkable in that I had forgotten what a depressing dump this country was in the 1980s. – Yours, etc,

PAT O’RIORDAN,

Bray, Co Wicklow.

Sir, – Well that’s my nominee for best wig sorted. Joking aside, Aidan Gillen was excellent. – Yours, etc,

JAMES O’KEEFE,

Crumlin,

Dublin 12.

Sir, – Prof Ronan Fanning’s lucid opinion piece (“Why should we mark 100 years since the Rising?”, Opinion & Analysis, January 3rd) reminds me of an exchange of correspondence which I had with the late Dr Garret FitzGerald in the Letters column of this newspaper in 2006, on the occasion of the 90th anniversary of the Rising. We discussed precisely the point that Prof Fanning has highlighted, viz, that in Dr FitzGerald’s opinion, we got out from under the clutches of the British proto-welfare state just in time, else we would have been seduced by such as a proper health service, social welfare provision, decent public infrastructure, investment in education, mitigation of clerical domination, and so forth.

It brings into focus the fundamental question as to what the purpose of independence was – and, indeed, is. If it was to achieve the greatest happiness of the greatest number, then it was, by virtually any measure, a spectacular failure. Ireland was amongst the top European nations in terms of relative prosperity in the early 1900s. Half a century later, despite avoiding direct involvement in the second World War, we had slipped badly back relative to other countries. Again, if the purpose of independence was to achieve political “freedom” and the dawning of a new polity, then it could be argued that we merely swapped a British-run centralised Dublin Castle administration for an even more centralised Irish-run one – one which, moreover, enthusiastically used the machinery of the previous regime.

Perhaps we rather enjoyed the warm glow of being screwed by native politicians rather than by foreign ones.

Our so-called sovereignty was always, and still is, an illusion. As soon as we achieved it, we began surrendering it. A most important illustration of this was the failure to establish our own independent currency policy until 1979, when the link with sterling was broken. We then promptly exchanged oversight by the treasury in London for that by our gallant allies in Europe. A cultural and social abjection to Rome from the 1920s was followed by a similar subservience to the US and colonisation by its multinationals.

Latterly, we have become no more than a province of the EU and the ECB, not Ireland “secure in its perception of its sovereignty”, as Prof Fanning claims, and bailouts that Dr FitzGerald seemed to think would have subverted our pure desire for “freedom” in the first place. – Yours, etc,

IAN d’ALTON,

Naas,

Co Kildare.

Sir, – Prof Ronan Fanning’s piece on the centenary of 1916 is shot through with contradictions. He begins by complaining about the “self-indulgent whatiffery” of the commemoration last year of the centenary of the Home Rule Bill and asserts that recognising the historical reality of the violence that accompanied the Irish revolution is not to approve of it. True enough, but he then seeks to justify that violence, citing Dr Garret FitzGerald’s argument that without it Ireland would not have become sovereign and independent as soon as it did and might well have ended up like Northern Ireland or rejected early membership of the EU. If that is not “whatiffery” then I don’t know what is.

The problem is that not everyone agrees – nor did they at the time – with the violent secessionism that led to Irish independence or that its consequences were as benign as Prof Fanning suggests. There are plenty of people who believe, as I do, that there was a peaceful, democratic and constitutional alternative in 1916, just as there was in Northern Ireland throughout the Troubles of the 1960s-1990s.

Unlike Prof Fanning, the Irish Government seems intent on an even-handed commemoration of 1916 that will recognise and respect different points of view. This is not the “politically correct mania for inclusiveness” derided by Prof Fanning but essential for the pluralistic society that is contemporary Ireland. – Yours, etc,

Prof GEOFFREY

ROBERTS,

School of History,

University College Cork.

Sir, – Stephen Collins seems to be consumed with fear at the prospect of a surge in support for Independents, Sinn Féin and smaller parties at the next general election (“New party will fuel narrative that all is to change – utterly”, Opinion & Analysis, January 3rd). He believes voters who consider the consequences of such a result may come to their senses and “pull back from the brink”, instead of landing the country in apparent “political chaos”.

Mr Collins obviously has not given thought to the view advanced by one Minister in an article in the same paper, “Varadkar sees splintering of support”. Mr Varadkar predicts the fragmentation of Irish politics at the next election, similar to the situation which exists in the Benelux and Nordic countries, where no party has anything close to an overall majority. However, even a country like Belgium, which went five months without a government last year, did not experience the “political chaos” to which Mr Collins refers.

Mr Collins needs to stop giving the impression that such a vast chasm exists between the views of our main political parties. Is he not aware that Sinn Féin has just agreed a deal in the North which will result in the privatisation of many public assets and a mass layoff of public servants? Despite many of the party’s slogans, Mr Collins must accept that Sinn Féin’s populist appeal is put to one side once government beckons.

What Mr Collins fails to address is the constraints which the EU will impose on any future government, between the deficit break, the debt-to-GDP ratio and the proposed banking union. On closer inspection, the choices available to voters in this country at the next election do not offer any real alternative. Those who really pull the strings over in Brussels have the eventualities covered. – Yours, etc,

SEÁN Ó DEORÁIN,

Clondalkin, Dublin 22.

Sir, – Further to your editorial “Dereliction and decay” (January 3rd), it is not just in central Dublin that the problem of derelict buildings exists. Within 300 metres of where I live there are three abandoned and derelict dwellings. The centre of this otherwise picturesque village is blighted by the burned-out remains of a hotel.

I have been in contact with Dr Tom Cavanagh of Irish Business against Litter (IBAL), who has taken an interest in the problem of derelict buildings nationally, and I understand that he has been in contact with the Department of the Environment about the matter.

What’s wrong with Irish consciousness? Do we as a people want to live continuously in the presence of squalor? – Yours, etc,

BRENDAN F LOGUE,

Julianstown,

Co Meath.

Sir, – To start in the teaching profession and become registered with the Teaching Council, the aspiring teacher pays out a €90 registration fee, a €200 teacher education qualification assessment and €100 for one curricular subject assessment. Additional assessments are optional at a fee of €100 per subject, yet many teachers at a postprimary level teach more than one subject. Translation costs for documents, foreign police vetting, postage, etc, are all borne by the unemployed aspiring teacher. All in all the aspiring teacher can pay over €400 in his or her quest for registration. Féilte, the Teaching Council’s festival (where no expense was spared), was in stark contrast to the misery and stress in the lives of young aspiring teachers in their tortuous quest to become registered. And after all this, where are the jobs? – Yours, etc,

GERALDINE

FitzGERALD,

Blackrock,

Co Dublin.

Sir, – Tom Neville (January 2nd) states that he can think of “no truly independent TD and cannot think of a single policy ideal held by an independent which is not shared by one (or more) of the parties”.

Really? How about Luke “Ming” Flanagan, Michael Fitzmaurice and Stephen Donnelly? What parties were they affiliated with?

What about Ming’s support for cannabis legalisation, or the opposition to the needlessly restrictive party whip systems that the major parties use? I don’t recall any of the parties getting behind those positions. – Yours, etc,

TOMÁS M CREAMER,

Ballinamore,

Co Leitrim.

An Irishman’s Diary: Jack Harte on William Meredith’s pilgrimage to Yeats’s Sligo

‘I am 87, and I am in Ireland. I am a happy man’

Jack Harte and former poet laureate of the United States William MeredithJack Harte and former poet laureate of the United States William Meredith

He was an icon of world literature. Former poet laureate of the United States, winner of the Pulitzer Prize, the National Book Award, and just about every other accolade worth acquiring. Intimate friend and confidante of Robert Frost and WH Auden. John Berryman dedicated one of his “Dream Songs” to him.

His friendship and interaction with the other major American poets of the 20th century was legendary, including Richard Wilbur, Robert Lowell, James Merrill and many many more.

And he was sitting across the room from me at a writers’ conference in Sofia in 2005. He had a special relationship with Bulgaria, having visited that country many times during the cold war, and having introduced many Bulgarian poets to the US public both in person and through the translation of their work.

William Meredith had a gift for friendship. And he radiated what I can describe only as an aura of humanity. He was in a wheelchair, having had to claw his way back to some mobility and some command of his speech after an extremely severe stroke 22 years earlier. Yet he attended every session of the conference, and also joined in the informal sessions in the lounge of the hotel every evening.

And one of those evenings I was sitting beside him. For want of a better opener, I asked him if he had ever been to Ireland. I was surprised not only by the answer but also by the emotion that welled up in his eyes.

“No”, he said, “and I have always intended to visit Ireland. Yeats was my favourite poet.”

“What age are you now, William?” I asked.

He laughed. “I am 86.”

“Don’t you think it is time you made the trip?” I joked.

He laughed too.

“I am from Co Sligo,” I said. “So if you come, I will give you the guided tour of Yeats’s country.”

I thought no more of it. Such invitations are cheap currency at writers’ conferences. However, shortly after the conference, I had an email from Richard Harteis, William’s life-long partner and fellow poet. Richard had been heroic in carrying William through the trauma of the stroke, and through his rehab. And he was still ensuring that William led a full and happy life.

“If we could take you up on the invitation to visit Ireland,” he said, “it really would be the fulfilment of a life’s dream for William.”

I organised invitations for them to give readings at the Irish Writers’ Centre in Dublin and at the Yeats Memorial Building in Sligo. That enabled Richard to secure sponsorship from the US state department for the visit. And in the summer of 2006 they arrived.

William was beaming. Every time I looked at him, his face lit up, and he said over and over: “I am 87, and I am in Ireland. I am a happy man.”

After the reading in the Writers’ Centre we headed west where I hosted them in my little cottage near Easkey. And from there we explored all the places associated with Yeats – the Lake Isle of Innisfree, Glencar Waterfall, Lissadell, etc.

But I also wanted him to see the place where Yeats watched the “Wild Swans at Coole”. William had written his own poem about Yeats and the swans, noting that if they flew off lover by lover, there was one left out – the 59th. It was a wet windy day that we took the trip to Coole. The lake is quite a distance from the site of Lady Gregory’s house and there is a nice walkway to it. However for a wheelchair pushing through oozy mud, it was a challenge.

But we were determined to reach it even if we had to carry William on our backs, and William delighted in the visceral determination to reach the place he had already visited in his imagination. We got there. The swan count was three, but William was nevertheless a happy man.

The following summer I was to join William on a reading tour in Connecticut. However he was now in hospital, and, tragically, my visit to New London was to say farewell. He died a few days after I returned to Ireland.

A documentary film that was compiled to celebrate his lifetime achievement ended with a beautiful photo of William sitting inside the window of Thoor Ballylee, with a beaming smile, and I could see what was on his lips. “I am 87, and I am in Ireland. I am a happy man.”

Irish Independent:

How Charlie Haughey made my father’s day

Let me tell you about the day I visited Charlie Haughey in his house, Abbeville in Kinsealy, Co Dublin.

My father was about to turn 80 years of age. As usual, I had my head wrecked with trying to think of something different for him as a present. I had gone through the ties, shirts, jumpers, technology stuff and just wanted something different for him. I knew over the years he had been a great supporter of Fianna Fail so I decided to write to Charlie Haughey and see would he meet my father for his 80th birthday.

My colleagues laughed at me in my place of work in the HSE in Thomas Street and said that could never happen. I had a gut feeling that it could.

So I wrote and told Charlie about my father’s support of him and the Fianna Fail party and I registered it just to be sure he got it.

A few days later I got a call to the office from Charlie’s secretary, inviting my father, my father’s friend, my son and myself to meet him in his beautiful house.

In the meantime, I phoned Rom Massey undertakers in the Coombe and told them where I was going, and I asked them for a limo to drive my father to Kinsealy. Well, as true Dubs they pulled out all the stops, and threw in a chauffeur as well, all for a meagre sum. I was amazed at their generosity. As the Lord says “Ask and you shall receive”!

Of course, this was a surprise. As we drove towards Kinsealy, he thought we were visiting my sister in Malahide. When ever we were passing Charlie’s house my father always said: “Let’s call in to Charlie for a cuppa”. I dearly hoped he would say it on that day. Well, true to form, he did. The surprise and shock that was on his face when we drove down Kinsealy Lane was second to none. I had, of course, tipped the driver to turn.

Charlie came down the steps to welcome us when we arrived. It certainly was a treat. He welcomed us into his vast mansion, which was replete with antiques. He was so kind to my father and to all of us, regaling us with stories about Dublin, Sean Lemass and Eamon de Valera. He had us in stitches.

We took many photos of him and my father and I treasured them.

Ms Terry Healy

Kill, Co Kildare

The people have had enough

In trying to further discredit participants who have taken part in the wave of recent protests across the country the government have tried to label them as members of Sinn Fein.

In fact very few, if any, of the protests have been organised by Sinn Fein.

This is because Sinn Fein seem to be happy to observe from the wings without any real involvement, and appear to be reaping the political benefits created by others.

It is my experience that the vast majority of the protesters range from middle-age to elderly pensioners, really genuine decent people who have had enough of being downtrodden and talked down to by the political elite while they and their children are expected to live on the crumbs from the masters’ table while the golden circles and the cosseted elite continue to be catered for.

Many of the people that the Government are now trying to discredit are the very people who put their trust in the promises made by Enda Kenny at the last election, but alas, they were misled.

They are people who certainly could not be labelled as fascists, unless Enda wishes to label past Fine Gael supporters as fascists.

They are a people who see their Government pandering to bankers, bond holders and the wealthy elite.

They see a country where the cost of balancing the books is being disproportionally borne by the lower to middle-income levels of society.

This is being done through cuts in benefits and services and regressive taxes and charges, without any regard for the resultant social consequences involved.

They see a country where the minimum wage has become the new standard, while those dictating the laws are on super-star salaries and benefits along with guaranteed gold-plated pensions.

They see a country where its people are saddled with an odious banking debt not of their making, but created by the greed of self-serving politicians and others.

They see a country where the traditional parties have betrayed its people down the years so that those politicians can continue to stay on the political gravy train and the government jet.

The reality is that this Government expects the ordinary people to not live, but to barely exist.

The government promised a political revolution involving change and openness. They can blame themselves for the present situation.

Christy Kelly

Templeglantine, Co Limerick

Famine sitcom plans

Critics of plans to develop a sitcom based on the tragedy of the Great Famine should see the hilarious 1968 film ‘The Producers’, written and directed by Mel Brooks, about an attempt to stage a play called ‘Springtime for Hitler: A Gay Romp with Adolf and Eva at Berchtesgaden’.

Mel Brooks, who is Jewish, won an Oscar for Best Original Screenplay.

As Lord Byron observed in ‘Don Juan’: “And if I laugh at any mortal thing, ‘Tis that I may not weep.”

Dr John Doherty

Gaoth Dobhair, Co Dhun na nGall

No thanks, Lucinda and co

It seems the “re-boot” is to be put into Ireland, again, by yet another right-wing, conservative movement. Perhaps Lucinda Creighton’s group should adopt the slogan “times are a-changin-back” as her party’s rallying call. There would seem to be two evident foundation principles.

First, the Creighton doctrine, which suggests that elected members of parliament should have a free conscience on private morality, so long as it’s a right wing and conservative one. Second, the Hobbs doctrine, that we didn’t do enough damage to the country by giving the free market Progressive Democrats several years of placing rapacious capitalism at the heart of public policy – leave this floating voter cold. No thanks, Lucinda Creighton. No thanks, Eddies Hobbs.

Please go and join any one of the number of established right-wing political movements here. May I suggest Fine Gael, Fianna Fail, or the so-called Labour Party, as entirely suitable homes for your political and social outlook? And, please, put your egos away before they explode and do even more damage to our country.

Declan Doyle

Lisdowney, Kilkenny

Alligator warning

With reference to your editorial (January 2) ‘Realism needed in relation to pay’ could I just say in the words of the old adage “It’s all very well trying to remember that we first set out to drain the swamp, but right now we are up to our arses in alligators”.

Mike J Moore

Kingscourt, Co Cavan

Gay marriage referendum

The people of Ireland are being asked to vote on gay marriage this May. The vast majority of Irish people are not gay, and the outcome of this referendum has no effect on their lives. I fear people will not turn out to vote, but I urge them to make the small effort.

There is a high risk of gay marriage being rejected. Not because the Irish people are against it, but because of low voter turnout. A ‘No’ vote will be a huge knock to the gay people and families of Ireland who deserve this basic civil right in their own country. Let’s do it for them.

Please Ireland, commit now to casting your vote in the May referendum.

Donal O Conghaile

Boyle, Co Roscommon

Irish Independent

Childrens’s books

January 5, 2015

5 January 2015 Childrens books

Mary a little worse sore tummy and cake not mussels for lunch. I get a box of children’s books on Freecycle.

Obituary:

Lady Kennet was a writer and commentator whose founding of the Hawksmoor Committee saved Christ Church, Spitalfields, for the nation

Lady Kennet

Lady Kennet

Lady Kennet, who has died aged 91, was a poet and artist and a prolific commentator on architectural and defence matters; the survival of the great London churches of Nicholas Hawksmoor perhaps owes more to her than to any other single individual.

Elizabeth Kennet wrote seven books, some of them with her husband, Wayland Young, on matters ranging from London churches, Italy, nuclear weapons and arms control, and learned articles on a wide range of subjects.

Their book Old London Churches (1956) praised these buildings as “heroic, monumental, and unconstricted: utterly without meanness or gaudy pride; occasionally with a soaring certainty”, and Elizabeth was instrumental in setting up the Hawksmoor Committee, in response to a real threat to demolish Christ Church, Spitalfields. Having attracted influential sponsors, the purpose of this committee – which included John Betjeman, Ian Nairn and Hawksmoor’s biographer Kerry Downes – was “to bring the architecture of Nicholas Hawksmoor before the public eye, and to ensure that money will be found to secure the future of his two great Stepney churches, Christ Church, Spitalfields, and St Anne’s, Limehouse”; and, eventually, it was.

Arthur Koestler then invited her to found the Tibor Dery Committee, to promote the release of Hungarian writers following the Soviet invasion of Budapest.

Her military knowledge was inspired by her father, Captain Bryan Fullerton Adams, a naval expert with the disarmament section of the League of Nations in Geneva before the Second World War.

Lady Kennet was born Elizabeth Ann Adams in London on April 14 1923. She lived in Geneva and attended school there, becoming fluent in French, before going to Downe House and winning an exhibition to Somerville College, Oxford, where she read PPE.

In 1948 she married Wayland Young, later the 2nd Lord Kennet, who became a housing minister under Richard Crossman in the Wilson government of the late 1960s. Soon after her marriage Lady Kennet started writing, with an article for Vogue on the island of Giglio in 1950. She also covered arms control, disarmament and maritime matters. Old London Churches was John Betjeman’s Book of the Year, and her book on Northern Lazio, co-written with her husband, won the 1990 European Federation Tourist Press Book Prize. Her 1958 book of poems Time is as Time Does was chosen by Geoffrey Grigson as his Poetry Book of the Year.

Christ Church, Spitalfields

Lady Kennet was an active member of many boards and organisations, including the Advisory Board for Redundant Churches; the Advisory Committee for the Protection of the Sea; the Royal United Services Institution; the Royal Institute for International Affairs, Chatham House; and the International Institute for Strategic Studies. The former US secretary of state Henry Kissinger and the former foreign secretary Lord Owen were among her friends.

As a housing and local government minister, Lord Kennet played a leading role in saving St Pancras Station and in devising the new department for the environment, which encouraged the blue plaque scheme in London. So it is appropriate that there is a plaque on their house in Bayswater honouring a previous occupant, J M Barrie, who wrote Peter Pan there.

There is a proposal for another plaque on the house, honouring Lord Kennet’s half-brother Sir Peter Scott, the naturalist, artist, glider pilot and America’s Cup skipper – the first Lady Kennet’s first husband was Captain Scott of the Antarctic. Elizabeth Kennet also worked with Sir Peter Scott in the early days of the Severn Wildfowl Trust (later the Wildfowl and Wetlands Trust), which he started at Slimbridge.

For many years Elizabeth Kennet was the guardian of the historic Barrie house, so close to the Peter Pan statue in Kensington Gardens. With her death, and steeply rising house prices in the area, there must be doubts about how it can be preserved for the nation.

Recently Lady Kennet was involved in saving Stonehenge as a World Heritage Site. At the time of her death she was at work on a new book, Preemptive Mourning.

Lord Kennet died in 2009. Lady Kennet is survived by her son, Thoby, and five daughters, Easter, Emily, Mopsa, Louisa and Zoe.

Lady Kennet, born April 14 1923, died November 30 2014

Guardian:

Lenny Henry, race, class and the media

Media Diversity
Lenny Henry, as guest editor of Radio 4’s the Today programme. ‘There aren’t many people of ethnic origin at the very top of broadcast journalism like Lenny Henry (factory worker father, secondary modern) from the working-class streets of Dudley.’ writes Catherine Pepinster. Photograph: Jeff Overs/BBC

As someone who is a regular visitor to the Today studio as a contributor to the Thought for the Day slot, I share Lenny Henry’s concerns about the production team being very white, male and middle class (We had one day of diversity on R4. Now for the other 364, 1 January).

However, when he repeats diversity campaigner Simon Albury’s comment that the only person of colour on Today was the one bringing the tea and coffee, he and Albury are not spotting the hope for the future. In my experience, if you talk to the runners who collect Today guests from reception and bring you coffee, you find that they are young graduates beginning their broadcasting careers and are starting on the production and/or journalism road, and I’ve undoubtedly met quite a few who are of minority ethnic origin. Some of them are women too. So the next generations of executives may well be more diverse.

The biggest current problem is class. There aren’t many people of minority ethnic origin at the very top of broadcast journalism like Lenny Henry (factory worker father, secondary modern) from the working-class streets of Dudley. The best tend to be like Mishal Husain (doctor father, private school, New Hall, Cambridge) and Rageh Omaar (wealthy businessman father, private school, New College, Oxford).
Catherine Pepinster
Editor, The Tablet

• While racism is experienced across all classes, our media’s class bias is overwhelming. Most British journalists went to private school. Radio 4 is dominated by cut-glass accents. While 6.5% of the UK school-age population attend public schools, 64% of the most influential people in the media industry were privately educated. Seven of the nine BBC employees on the Media Guardian 100 list were privately educated. Most prominent British comedians, come to that, seem to have attended public schools.

Recruitment from within the posh crew is all too often via dinner party and other personal connections. An emphasis on racism as personally rather than systemically constructed is in danger of feeding this: while transparent recruitment and selection policies would be better than accessing a posh BAME crew for now, in the long run we need to look to the class base – to economic democracy and the redistribution of wealth – in order to root out structural racism.
Peter McKenna
Liverpool

• I was distressed to read that Lenny Henry had been called “racist” for his choice of subject matter when he guest-edited the Today programme. Personally I found it refreshing and thought-provoking. I enjoyed listening to it, despite being a white woman in her 70s.

However, I had the privilege of working for the Greater London council, under the leadership of Ken Livingstone. I taught history and careers education in London schools to black, Asian and minority ethnic pupils. I learned as much – possibly more – from them as they learned from me.

As staff inspector for careers education, in the final days of the Inner London Education Authority, my team of schools industry liaison officers worked through the London compacts to develop the employability skills of pupils of all races and genders. These experiences made me aware how deeply entrenched racism is, in English society, along with the pernicious class system. Can we all make a new year’s resolution to eradicate racism and prejudice, wherever we find it – even in the BBC?
Anne Dart Taylor
Honeybourne, Worcestershire

• Lenny Henry admirably highlights the white male bias in the Today programme. His plea for more “black people, Asian and minority ethnics” may not include Gypsy and Traveller minorities. I have regularly acted as expert witness against anti-Gypsy racism.

Before the catastrophic Dale Farm eviction, I accepted an invitation to be on Today the next morning. Before ringing off, I naively asked for the presenters’ names. I commented that one had fronted a documentary where he argued that foreign migrants were imported for seasonal work in Wisbech solely because the locals were psychologically “lazy”. No recognition that, for decades, the work was all done by Gypsies before the 1994 legislation restricted travelling. Minutes later, the BBC representative rang back: my Today participation was cancelled. Seemingly, even a white female professor, also with a PPE degree, was too threatening if she dared critique a white male presenter.
Professor Judith Okely
Author, The Traveller-Gypsies

• To follow on from Lenny Henry’s version of Today (Henry’s Today takes on ‘devil’s avocados’, 31 December) presented by non-white people, could we have an experiment where the country is run by non-male people, just to see how it goes?
Mary Gildea
London

Monday demonstrations in Leipzig, East Germany - 1989
Demonstrators form a human chain after a service in the Nikolaikirche, Leipzig, in 1989 to demand free elections and the right to travel. ‘A clear example of the church at the dangerous forefront of a historic battle against epic political injustice,’ writes John Summers. Photograph: Focus/Rex Features

Zekria Ibrahimi writes of the disastrous impact of Christianity on the world (Letters, 30 December). I am an atheist but cannot let this nonsense pass. For a start Christianity has given us some of the most exquisite art, architecture and music. The Bible is indeed full of inconsistencies, but it contains many valid exhortations to moral behaviour, such as “love thy neighbour”. Without the Bible our literature would be much the poorer.

Non-believers have drawn attention to the fact that Christianity and other religions are often best placed to respond to social need because they are so organised that they can respond quickly. Much that has been done in the name of Christ over the centuries is indeed deplorable, but that does not negate the positive contributions that this and other religions have made to today’s societies. It is the ultimate irony that Ibrahimi says liberalism is the guarantor of tolerance whereas his letter exhibits a lack of tolerance worthy of the late Rev Paisley in his heyday.
Joseph Cocker
Leominster

• David Rainbird (Letters, 29 December) asks which dictatorships Christianity has fought and toppled. One of last year’s most moving moments for me was spent sitting in the Nikolaikirche in Leipzig, listening to the stories of the part that that church and its pastor Christian Führer played in the collapse of the GDR in 1989. The critical mass of non-violent popular opposition to the totalitarian regime grew out of gatherings of worshippers at Führer’s weekly prayers for peace. Holding these and facilitating the associated gatherings was an astonishingly brave public stand. Stasi officers sent to spy on the services are said to have been won over to the pastor’s message of peace and understanding. Is this to say that the church alone toppled the GDR? Absolutely not. Is this to say that no other body (religious or otherwise) might have done similar? Absolutely not. But it is a clear example of the church at the dangerous forefront of a historic battle against epic political injustice. What a shame it would be if quiet stands like these were to be lost in the bombast of religious intolerance.
John Summers
Cambridge

• Your editorial about the persecution of Christians in the Middle East (26 December) contained the bizarre statement that “even Israel, which presents itself as a beacon of religious liberty, is a dreadful place to live for Christian Arabs, caught between an occupying army in the West Bank and Muslim fundamentalism in Gaza”. But Israel is the only place where Christian Arabs are safe from persecution. They would not be as safe in any surrounding Muslim area, including Gaza and the parts of the West Bank controlled by the PA. You might as well say that a lifeboat is a dreadful place because it is surrounded by deep water.
Sarah Lawson
London

***BESTPIX***  ESA Attempts To Land Probe On Comet
The surface of the 67P/Churyumov-Gerasimenko comet as seen from the Philae lander. ‘The ESA has access to expert astronomers, and might just know what it’s talking about,’ writes Professor Ian Stewart. Photograph: ESA/Getty Images

John Bowler (Letters, 31 December) is puzzled why the European Space Agency keeps saying that 67P is a comet. He claims it is an asteroid and objects to the ESA’s poor science.

A few clues. The ESA has access to expert astronomers, and might just know what it’s talking about. The name 67P/Churyumov–Gerasimenko is typical of comets; asteroid names have a different format. The P means “periodic comet”. It is listed as 67P/1969 R1 in the Planetary Data System Small Bodies Node table of comets. Asteroids are mostly rocky or metallic, comets are thought to be mainly ice. The Philae lander confirmed that 67P is icy: it looks like a rock because it is covered in dust. Most asteroid orbits are approximately circular; 67P ranges between 1.24 and 5.68 AU from the sun. When comets approach the sun, the ice turns to vapour, creating a haze (or “coma”) that sometimes develops into the characteristic tail. The main purpose of the Rosetta mission is to follow 67P as it undergoes this process. When discovered in 1969, 67P had a coma and a tail one arc-minute long. Its 1996 appearance showed a slightly larger coma. Although the best-known comets have highly eccentric long-period orbits, there are also many short-period comets that stay closer to the sun, and 67P is one of these.

Mr Bowler apparently can’t tell his comet from his asteroid.
Professor Ian Stewart
University of Warwick

Peter York (Point of view, Review, 3 January) correctly skewers multiple forms of “authenticity” as a modern form of salesmanship, trying to “add value” to otherwise indistinguishable products.

But he leaves out the biggest exploitation of the lot – in art. Even if art historians and other “experts” cannot differentiate originals from copies (“fakes”), establishing the “authenticity” of an art work, its provenance – that it was done by some now celebrated artist – adds millions to its value. Art dealers are the supreme sellers of “authenticity”.
Jack Winkler
London

Summer holiday … Bondi Beach in Sydney, Australia, on Christmas Day.
Antipodean summer holiday … Bondi Beach in Sydney, Australia, on Christmas Day. Photograph: Ross Hodgson/Rex Features

Sophie Heawood says she used to buy only academic year diaries as she thinks a new year should begin at the end of summer (Weekend, 3 December). She lives in the wrong hemisphere. In New Zealand academic and calendar years coincide. One winds down towards Christmas, goes on the summer holiday, then comes back refreshed some time into the new year.
Ian Dunbar
Warrington, Cheshire

• A picture with your piece on homelessness in Victorian London (3 January) allegedly shows “coffin beds”. A coffin bed was coffin-shaped (wider at the head end) so more could be fitted in by placing them alternately head to foot. Actual coffin beds can be seen at the Gressenhall Farm and Workhouse museum in Norfolk.
Felicity Randall
Fakenham, Norfolk

• Own goal? In the Tories’ poster (Conservatives fire starting gun for 2015 election, 3 January) I saw a beautiful, tranquil countryside rent asunder by a dark, dismal road/austerity. Perhaps they should have added them/us on either side.
Sally Holliday
Ledbury, Herefordshire

Why aren’t the black boxes on aircraft designed to float to the surface after an accident at sea (AirAsia plane may have sunk after sea landing, 2 January)?
Rob Watling
Radcliffe-on-Trent, Nottinghamshire 

• Spotted in my veg patch on 1 January: cabbage white caterpillars munching on the overwintering purple sprouting broccoli. Winter must be over now.
Margaret Fernandez
Llangrove, Herefordshire

• First sighting of hot cross buns in the local supermarket, 3 January.
Holly Anderson
Cambridge

Independent:

The death of Debbie Purdy (obituary, 31 December) has once again highlighted the tragic situation of people whose experience of life is so awful that they want it to end. Whatever we do leaves us with a feeling of loss; it is not as simple as a decision between right and wrong.

I have been involved twice in decisions like this. I was “buddy” to a friend dying of Aids whose situation was desperate. He felt horribly ill, had become little more than a skeleton and did not have the strength even to feed himself. He wanted to die and asked me to help. I had to say no, not because of the fear of legal proceedings but because, as a priest, I just did not feel able to do so.

The next day I went to his flat to see him and, as I expected, to call the doctor and undertaker. He had not died, though drugs he had taken had made his situation even worse. I found him on the floor. An ambulance was called and he lingered another week in hospital.

The second time concerned my mother. At 87 she was suffering from osteoporosis and was in great pain in hospital. She felt her life had run its course. The doctor suggested that she have morphine but warned that by so doing her life could be shortened. She and I agreed, and my mother died four days later without regaining consciousness.

In neither case was I left feeling I had done the right thing. Was I letting unimportant concerns about principles prevent the compassion my friend so desperately needed? Was I putting my own conscience before his need? Above all should I have talked of the Christian hope of resurrection and prepared him for his death? And with my mother, did she really hope that I would say no, and prove to her that I still cared and wanted her to stay alive?

There are no answers to these questions, and after thirty years in the case of my friend, and twenty in the case of my mother, I am still left with feelings of guilt.

Neil Dawson
London SE27

 

How refreshing it is that a medical expert has for once advised us on what to die of, rather than what not to die of (“Cancer is ‘best death’, so don’t try to cure it, says doctor”, 1 January). Whenever I am threatened by the health police or government that I shall die of this, that or the other unless I change my lifestyle, I want to respond: “What do you want me to die of, then?”

As it happens, I don’t want to die of cancer, but would rather die in my sleep, while still (in all other respects) in good health and of a sound mind. Can the experts advise me on how to change my lifestyle so as to make this the most likely outcome?

George Macdonald Ross
Leeds

 

We can welcome more refugees

Your editorial of 3 January rightly identifies the solution to the refugee crisis in the Middle East as a long-term political settlement. This, however, will be years ahead, and in the meantime, as you say, “hundreds of thousands of refugees have to subsist in the quiet squalor of border camps with inadequate shelter, food and water”.

I understand that our government has done more than most with regard to financial support, and has match-funded charitable contributions. It has, however, provided shelter here in the UK for only about 100 refugees. Surely our common humanity should dictate that this country offers shelter to more refugees, proportionate to our position in the family of nations. I am sure that with the assistance of charities, local authorities and volunteers, temporary accommodation and support could be found for more of these poor people.

The leaders of our political parties and churches should be at the forefront of demands for this country to shoulder its fair share of the refugee burden; instead we are met with a deafening silence.

Geoff Webber
Harrogate, North Yorkshire

 

The plight of more than 1,000 refugees abandoned in the Mediterranean sea on board the merchant ships Blue Sky M and Ezadeen is regrettably the tip of an enormous human tragedy that will continue to unfold for decades.

Regardless of the measures taken by governments to control EU immigration, I would suggest that a bigger, longer-term threat to Europe lies in developing countries. With an estimated 220 million women having no access to contraception, is it any wonder that the world’s population, having tripled since 1950, continues to grow by 240,000 a day?

Until this problem is comprehensively addressed the relentless growth of the world’s population will continue to be the driving force behind the mass immigration, as millions seek to escape a life of grinding poverty. Who would do otherwise?

Mike Wheeler
Gosport, Hampshire

 

Now to settle the West Lothian Question

The wiseacres have been busy with their New Year prophecies. However, one important question still remains to be answered: will 2015 be the year when Britain finally resolves its crisis of governance?

Ever since Tam Dalyell raised his West Lothian question we have been waiting for a workable answer. It must be full-blown federalism. By giving Wales and Scotland assemblies, Tony Blair, for understandable reasons, created a hybrid arrangement in place of the unitary constitution we had previously. We now need to finish the job. “English votes for English laws” would just be a stop-gap solution which  would lead to further complications.

Three things would seem to be needed: first, the creation of that till now elusive English parliament; second, a properly federal assembly on the lines of the American Congress or the German Bundestag; and last but certainly not least, a new, written constitution  to apportion to the different parliaments their appropriate roles and ensure even treatment of their respective electorates (which of course does not at present obtain). Clearly also the opportunity should be taken to address undemocratic anomalies such as the House of Lords.

The May election is unlikely in itself to solve our political discontents. Indeed it is likely merely to exacerbate them.

Andrew McLuskey
Staines, Surrey

 

The government’s proposals for “English votes for English laws” fall far short of what is needed to address the political crisis facing the UK as a result of greater devolution to Scotland and the disintegration of the two-party system. The way forward is to decide what should be devolved to Scotland and then to ensure that all regions of the UK have the same powers.

Any parliament should not be elected on the first-past-the-post system as this disenfranchises a large (and increasing) number of people. The way forward is to establish regional assemblies in England and for all devolved administrations to be represented in a Senate which would replace the House of Lords. Regional representation in a Senate should mean that future budgets have to adopt policies that reflect the economic diversity of the UK as a whole, not just London and the South.

The only way to resolve these issues is through a Constitutional Convention, as Labour proposes, but it must be wide-ranging and not focused on making the current system work. Perhaps a starting point would be to look at the German constitution. It seems to work for them.

Andrew Baker
Harrow, Middlesex

 

What Tracey Emin’s art tells us

Richard Charnley haughtily informs us (letter, 3 January) that great art tells you something about yourself and that Tracey Emin’s art fails this test as it only tells us about her. I think this is silly.

Emin is certainly part of a long artistic tradition in giving a personal response to the artist’s own experience.

It is not true that great art necessarily tells you something about yourself. Most people would consider Michelangelo’s David to be great art, and I do too, but apart from the trivial recognition that my own body suffers by comparison to David’s, I don’t really see that it tells me anything about myself.

The truth is that art can be great for all sorts of different reasons and in many different ways.

Jonathan Wallace
Newcastle upon Tyne

 

British Jews and Israel

John Dorken (letter, 27 December) is correct insofar as he attributes some anti-Semitism here to hostility to Israel’s Gaza actions. However his conclusion is outrageous:  “Surely then the solution lies in leaders of the Jewish community in Britain taking a more considered and independent line on Israel’s action.” In other words, if they don’t, they’ve asked for it.

Graham Everett
Watford, Hertfordshire

 

Benjamin Netanyahu is quite indignant about the Palestinians wanting to join the International Criminal Court, saying that it is the Palestinians who should fear war crimes prosecutions (report, 1 January). So you would expect him to encourage them to join. It’s interesting to consider why he doesn’t.

Fabian Acker
London SE22

 

Times:

 

Telegraph:

Letters: We must not allow the Nationalists to dictate Scotland’s future

The post-referendum relationship between Scotland and the Union; Catholic Bishops in the House of Lords; improving Britain’s care record; and disorientated buttonholes

A pro-independence poster is pictured with pro-union graffiti in a window in the town of Selkirk

A pro-independence poster is pictured with pro-union graffiti in a window in the town of Selkirk Photo: Lesley Martin/AFP/Getty Images

SIR – Bruce Anderson has a point when he says that there is no reason why, in a future referendum, Scottish areas which vote No to independence should not be allowed to stay in the Union.

In north-east Scotland, where there is a culture of canniness, hard work, enterprise and honesty, many feel they have little in common with fellow Scots in the Central Belt who espouse the Nationalist cause. This attitude was summed up by some graffiti spotted in the lavatories of an Aberdeen pub some years ago which proclaimed: “Home rule for Scotland, but not by Edinburgh lawyers and Glasgow crooks.”

Peter Myers
Oldmeldrum, Aberdeenshire

SIR – Mr Anderson highlights two changes that must be implemented should a second independence referendum take place.

I would add one more to this list: all people born in Scotland should be eligible to vote, irrespective of where they live. Surely these people have more right to vote than my grandson, who has no connection to Scotland other than the fact that he happens to attend Edinburgh University.

M G Bateman
Grayshott, Surrey

SIR – Mr Anderson’s insightful article on the Scottish referendum campaign points out how Nationalist-leaning citizens used intimidation to achieve their ends. They were, of course, reflecting the demagogic outpourings of Alex Salmond and his rabble-rousing crew.

In her Christmas address the Queen called for reconciliation, although it is difficult to see how that could happen in such a poisoned atmosphere.

Alec Ellis
Liverpool

SIR – I disagree with the suggestion that Scotland is being held back by those who would “run a mile” from a job offer. Even if it were true I fail to see how this sets it apart from the rest of the United Kingdom.

It is also important to note that not all Scots are “stalkers, ghillies and keepers”, rolling in the heather chasing grouse. Scotland has universities that are at the forefront of research, and some of the world’s best scientists, doctors, economists, artists, writers and musicians.

A failure to understand this is exactly the reason Scotland was almost lost in the referendum.

Angela Drennan
Dunfermline, Fife

SIR – Fifty-five per cent of those who cast their votes elected to remain in the United Kingdom in September, after hard campaigning by a large number of very loyal ordinary Scots. Comments like those made by Christopher Booker (“The insecure Scots have turned in on themselves – and against us”) encourage those who want to see the break-up of the Union.

Norman J Jack
Edinburgh

SIR – Some three months after the referendum, anti-English rhetoric is still evident from many Scots. The promised implementation of “English votes for English laws” has stalled. The outcome of the general election next year is impossible to predict and the emergence of another coalition government with the SNP holding the balance of power is a probability.

It is becoming more apparent by the day that it would have been better if Scotland had voted to separate.

Don Bailey
Helsby, Cheshire

SIR – There is a distinct air of uncertainty about the future organisation of Britain. To get a more rounded, unbiased view on the subject, we should assemble an assessment committee comprising not only British members but representatives from countries such as Canada, America, Australia and Germany, who have seen and operated federal systems and can assess the advantages, drawbacks and unintended consequences of ideas put forward for constitutional reform.

John Hannaford
Lymington, Hampshire

Catholic bishops have no place in the Lords

SIR – Matt Showering makes a no doubt well-intentioned call for improved Roman Catholic representation in the House of Lords by granting seats to Roman Catholic bishops. This would not be the way to go.

Over the Catholic Church’s long history, it has discovered that mixing clerical and legislative offices can lead to problems. There are many famous examples where the seduction of temporal power diminished and obscured the pastoral mission of ordained ministers, or where the Gospel suffered instrumentalisation at the hands of passing ideologies.

The Catholic Church instead challenges its laity to enter the public sphere and to work through a variety of political parties and structures to see Christ’s teaching reflected in public life. As Catholic politicians, we believe that is the right way to go.

Rob Flello MP (Lab)

Jonathan Evans MP (Con)

Mike Kane MP (Lab)

Stephen Pound MP (Lab)

Cllr Chris Whitehouse (Con)

Isle of Wight County Council

Lord Hylton (Crossbench)

Lord Balfe (Con)

Don’t cull; vaccinate

(PA)

SIR – Had the money wasted on badger culling (which gives no hope of a permanent solution) been invested in research and development, a TB vaccine for cattle would be available by now. Once vaccinated, all calves and imported livestock would be safe; in time the TB reservoir in wildlife would also diminish.

As vaccination of cattle against TB is presently prohibited by EU law, the issue could be added to the list of gripes for the forthcoming treaty negotiation.

Dr David Smith
Clyro, Radnorshire

Caring ought to be a vocation, not just a job

SIR – Thank you for highlighting the urgent need for more rigorous mandatory training for care workers, which is long overdue.

In light of present job shortages, people are being drawn to apply for care jobs simply because they need the money, however poorly paid the job may be, and not because they really want to undertake such work.

Caring is, and always has been, a vocation, not just a job. It is hard work and not always pleasant but, when carried out properly, brings its own rewards.

Ann Robertson
Tenterden, Kent

SIR – As a parent of a middle-aged, profoundly disabled daughter, I welcome your Justice for the Elderly campaign, which seeks to get better care for both the elderly and the disabled.

Richard Hawkes points to a lack of funding, which is of course a major issue, but he fails to mention that the charity Scope, of which he is CEO, is closing residential homes and evicting nearly 200 profoundly disabled people, many of whom have lived in these homes for years. Their communities will be broken up and they will be put in the care of the local authority. The cost to the state will increase, putting the care system under even greater pressure.

Frank Lindsell
Ely, Cambridgeshire

SIR – There have been so many negative reports of care for the sick and elderly that I feel compelled to report on my positive experience.

My husband suffered from dementia and heart problems for two years. During this time Positive Horizons home care, based in Derbyshire, provided excellent care. My husband always looked forward to their visits and the carers were cheerful and kind. When my husband died suddenly at home, the carer stayed with me while a senior carer took over her duties.

Having had this experience I intend to stay in my own home should I become incapacitated.

Zita Roscoe
Ashbourne, Derbyshire

SIR – My mother developed dementia in her seventies. In the early years of her illness she may have “lived with dementia”, but I can assure Toby Williamson that she suffered too. In later years dementia controlled her life and dominated that of her immediate family.

Mr Williamson’s criticism of Joan Bakewell for using the term “dementia sufferers” trivialises the suffering of those in the later stages of dementia.

Sheelagh A James
Lichfield, Staffordshire

Suffer the children

SIR – Andrew M Brown moans about noisy children in church. Not everyone has a retinue of staff to look after their offspring, as the Duchess of Cambridge has, and most churches are glad to get anyone through the door – especially children.

Penny Sedgwick
Springthorpe, Lincolnshire

Railway chaos

SIR – The debacle on Britain’s railways over the Christmas period was a sorry tale of appalling management.

Even sorrier are the calls for huge fines for Network Rail – not helpful because such fines remove potential funding for infrastructure investment – and calls for re-nationalisation of the railways. I commuted 65 miles to work by train for 28 years in the latter days of British Railways and through privatisation. The prospect of a return to a state-run system, controlled by trade unions and with zero focus on the customer, is appalling.

The Government needs to get a grip on Network Rail, give it sufficient funding and ensure the money is spent wisely.

Richard Holness
Herne Bay, Kent

Toil and trouble

SIR – The Great War (“Theatre can make the dead walk before you”) provided the backdrop for the best open-air production of Shakespeare I have ever seen – a version of Macbeth, by Heartbreak Productions, set in a rehabilitation hospital at the end of the First World War.

Shakespeare’s story of tyranny and abuse of power was used as a metaphor for the horrors encountered in the trenches. The carnage was interspersed with an exemplary choice of First World War songs and such clever touches as the witches emerging from a cloud of mustard gas wearing gas masks.

Jeremy Brien
Bristol

Party problems

SIR – The failings of the Labour Party go much deeper than simply having a lame-duck leader.

Labour’s record on the economy, immigration, education, the NHS and crime is woeful. When it comes to policies or personalities, Labour has neither.

Mick Ferrie
Mawnan Smith, Cornwall

The Queen speaks for Britain across the world

The Queen stands with the band of the Blues and Royals at Horse Guards Parade (Alamy)

SIR – Harry Mount is right to praise the Queen for her remarkable success in the “art of giving voice to a nation”.

The Queen was tutored from the age of 12 by her father to become monarch, which she did in 1952 aged just 23. She has never uttered a comment out of place which could be used controversially by the media. Consequently, she has so grown in stature and reputation that statesmen and women from the Commonwealth nations as well as countries further afield, know that they can say anything to her or seek her advice and it will never be repeated.

Who else would be both wise and discreet enough to fulfil this role? The current system may not please constitutional purists, but it works.

Of course the barometer of public opinion about the Royal family can swing positively and negatively. When the Prince of Wales succeeds the Queen, he will bring with him plenty of baggage arising from public comments on a wide range of matters.

John Lidstone
Sutton Scotney, Hampshire

SIR – In his excellent analysis of the Queen’s broadcast, Harry Mount did not mention her unwavering faith. She referred to Jesus Christ, “the Prince of peace”, as her strength and support. In seeking reconciliation, the Queen reflects the forgiveness that Jesus taught.

Morwena Williams
Pentraeth, Anglesey

Button it

SIR – On about half of my short-sleeved shirts the bottom buttonhole runs east-west instead of north-south like all the others. Is this a manufacturing aberration or is there a purpose, perhaps lost in antiquity, behind it?

Bruce Denness
Whitwell, Isle of Wight

Flying high

SIR – The sexiest voice, in my opinion, belonged to the Dutch lady who read out the airport weather reports for Dutch and southern UK airports. When I was a co-pilot the captain couldn’t understand why it took me so long to get the weather.

Capt Jim Passmore
Trebetherick, Cornwall

SIR – Apparently, the young lady at RAF Hullavington who used to man the navigational equipment was known as “The Angel of Hullavington”.

So alluring was her voice that pilots would divert miles off course to place themselves within range of her equipment, providing an excuse to call her for a navigational fix.

Neville Cullingford
Eastleigh, Hampshire

Globe and Mail:

Konrad Yakabuski

Can this captain right Quebec’s ship?

Irish Times:

Sir, – Further to “Lucinda Creighton unveils new party and calls for a ‘reboot’ of Ireland” (January 2nd), when did anyone under the age of 30, and without the word “administrator” as part of their job title, last “reboot” anything?

So much for a modern Ireland. – Yours, etc,

ULTAN Ó BROIN,

Dublin 8.

Sir, – May I suggest a name for Lucinda Creighton and Co’s proposed new political party – “Right On”? –Yours, etc,

JACK O’CONNELL,

Ballydehob,

Co Cork.

Sir, –In a democracy, one cannot be compelled to vote against one’s conscience on major moral issues, such as abortion, gay marriage or euthanasia. Enda Kenny should apologise to Lucinda Creighton, et al, and invite them back into the fold. He will need them. – Yours, etc,

JIM O’SULLIVAN,

Model Farm,

Cork.

Sir, –I was intrigued by the launch of Lucinda’s new party. It appears to be a case of “out with the old, and back in with the old”. It should make for amusing reading, if nothing else. – Yours, etc,

FRANCIS McNICHOLAS,

Kiltimagh,

Co Mayo.

Sir, – Lucinda Creighton referred on radio to our “toxic whip system”. Perhaps her new political party should be called “The Whippersnappers”? – Yours, etc,

OLIVER McGRANE,

Rathfarnham,

Dublin 16.

Sir, – I wish Lucinda Creighton well in her efforts to form a new political party, but my heart is full of trepidation when I think of the Greens and the PDs. – Yours, etc,

OLIVER DUFFY,

Bishopstown,

Cork.

Sir, – I am curious, as we seem to be on a journey in this country to replicate all the most undesirable aspects of American culture, as to whether tea was served at the launch of the “new” political party in Dublin last Friday. – Yours, etc,

JOHN KANE,

Limerick.

Sir, – Much of what Bill Bailey writes about footpaths in the UK is very true (December 22nd). There are, however, two quibbles with what he says.

By the end of the second World War, in the UK, under emergency orders thousands of paths had been closed, obstructed, or ploughed up, with little public protest. The government of the day became so concerned that in 1949 it passed the National Parks and Access to the Countryside Act. This Act required each (then) county council, rural district council and parish council to compile and keep a definitive, up-to-date map of the paths in their areas. This is where the public began to guard seriously their access rights. A newer and definitive map was published under the Wildlife and Countryside Act 1981. These Acts were a major factor in how rights of way are viewed in the two countries.

Most Irish country people of 70 years or so can clearly remember dozens of paths and laneways. These took the form of Mass paths, church paths, fishermen’s paths and well paths, now mostly gone. Our forefathers were not idiots and had no intention of walking five miles if they could use a path and do the journey in two. – Yours, etc,

KEN WARD,

Gorey,

Co Wexford.

Sir, – Michael J Donnelly (December 27th) claims Terence O’Neill, the prime minister of Northern Ireland during the nascent campaign for civil rights in the 1960s, initiated no reforms until after the second civil rights demonstration which took place in Derry on October 5th, 1968.

This is true but there were sinister forces at work at that time which prevented O’Neill from initiating reform. The Irish Times of January 15th, 1965, reported on the visit of taoiseach Sean Lemass to Belfast, who had been invited by O’Neill to Stormont for talks. Both Mr Lemass and O’Neill were confronted by the Rev Ian Paisley and some supporters who rejected any dealings with Dublin.

A further report by Fergus Pyle in The Irish Times of December 12th, 1967, notes taoiseach Jack Lynch, on a visit to Stormont for talks with O’Neill, suffered a similar fate when a mob led the Rev Paisley again denounced O’Neill’s attempts at cross-border talks.

Following the formation of the Northern Ireland Civil Rights Association in 1967, O’Neill, prepared to consider mild legislative change, looked favourably on the introduction of more moderate policies which included “one man one vote” for all in local elections. This political accommodation of Catholics was regarded as appeasement to civil rights demands and enraged the virulently anti-Catholic shadowy figures in loyalism.

Calls were made for O’Neill to resign.

Although not yet prepared to fall on his own sword, sinister forces within loyalism were about to apply the final push. If political pressure alone would not force O’Neill to stand aside, then a few strategically placed bombs might, especially if republicans were believed to be responsible.

A decision was taken by a coalition of loyalist organisations to attack Belfast’s electricity and water supplies in an attempt to cause maximum political damage to O’Neill, who would be unlikely to survive the consequences if these bombings were shown to be the work of republicans.

The first target was Castlereagh electricity substation, which was bombed by members of the UVF and the Ulster Protestant Volunteers.

The following day Rev Ian Paisley’s newspaper the Protestant Telegraph reported, “This is the first act of sabotage perpetrated by the IRA since the murderous campaign of 1956 . . . the sheer professionalism of the act indicates the work of the well-equipped IRA. This latest act of terrorism is an ominous indication of what lies ahead for Ulster . . . Loyalists must now appreciate the struggle that lies ahead and the supreme sacrifice that will have to be made in order that Ulster will remain Protestant”.

Four days later the loyalist co-conspirators changed targets and, confident that the IRA was the primary suspect, bombed Belfast’s main water supply at Dunadry and two weeks later another explosion destroyed the pipeline between the Silent Valley reservoir in the Mourne Mountains and Belfast.

A further four explosions on pipelines carrying water supplies from Lough Neagh to Belfast quickly followed, all reportedly carried out by the IRA.

O’Neill knew he could no longer survive and resigned just days later. O’Neill later said the explosions “blew me out of office”.

The deaths, injuries and appalling suffering inflicted on thousands of innocent people in the following decades could have been prevented if O’Neill had been supported by moderate unionism. – Yours, etc,

TOM COOPER,

Templeogue,

Dublin 16.

Sir, – 2015 is the centenary of the Armenian genocide that cost the lives of up to a million Armenian men, women and children.

What makes the Armenian genocide so important is that because it was so “successful” from an Ottoman Turk point of view it became a sort of blueprint for further acts of genocide in the 20th century. Infamously, Adolf Hitler is reported to have said: “Who, after all, speaks today of the annihilation of the Armenians?”

The relative success of the Armenian genocide encouraged others, including Hitler, Idi Amin, Pol Pot, and the Rwandan government to carry out further acts of genocide.

Acknowledgement and recognition by the international community that the atrocities committed against the Armenian people between 1915 and 1922 amounted to genocide is vital in order to ensure justice and accountability for the Armenian people, and to strengthen global jurisprudence toward preventing further acts of genocide.

France, Russia, the US congress and the European Parliament have already recognised the Armenian genocide but many other countries, including Ireland and the UK, have yet to do so.

The present Turkish government must be pressurised by the international community into accepting that its predecessors perpetrated genocide against the Armenian people. Turkey has aspirations to membership of the European Union, and Europe needs Turkey as a positive bridge toward the Middle East and toward Islamic communities.

The European Union should make it clear that recognition of the Armenian genocide must be a prerequisite for EU membership, and perhaps lead to EU membership for both Turkey and Armenia. – Yours, etc,

Dr EDWARD HORGAN,

Castletroy,

Limerick.

Sir, – The psychologist Stephen Hart, a world authority on risk assessment tools and the co-developer of a number of the main risk assessment tools in current use, regularly reiterated the fact that these tools can only estimate risk; they cannot predict specific events and do not claim to do so.

I have contributed to the early introduction of risk assessments in both prisons and mental health settings through the clinical administration of formal, structured, risk assessment measures. One clear but often unacknowledged benefit in general mental health settings is that such structured measures can help to give a more accurate and often a lower estimate of a service user’s risk; thus in a number of cases it has supported long-term service users having greater periods (and/or degrees) of independent living than they had previously enjoyed.

Had such measures existed in the 1960s, they would have contributed significantly to lower numbers of people being assessed to needless detention in psychiatric institutions at a time when we had one of the highest rates of institutionalisation in the world.

This State could benefit by going in the direction that Northern Ireland has by introducing forensic psychiatric community teams to areas throughout the country as the focus should be on building upon current local risk-management strategies that would benefit from more accessible, integrated specialist knowledge and resources. The introduction of such teams would go some way in helping reduce the frequency of violent incidences perpetrated by the small minority of mental health service users who engage in violence at a level that may lead to very significant harm. Unfortunately there are no (and may never be) “crystal balls” to predict or “magic wands” to prevent a number of terrible events; such extreme violence as seen in Cobh will still occasionally occur, with devastating consequences for those affected. I send my condolences to the Greaney family at this very sad time. – Yours, etc,

EMMET MURRAY,

Forensic Clinical

Psychologist,

Letterkenny, Co Donegal.

Sir, – May I remind your readers that in 2005 Israel withdrew all its military and civilians from Gaza. Israel’s border with Gaza was such that many Gazans crossed over into Israel to work on a daily basis.

Then several years later the terrorist group Hamas took over Gaza. The Hamas charter calls for the worldwide destruction of Jews.

Since 2005 over 13,000 rockets have been fired into Israel, together with many Hamas terrorists infiltrating Israel.

As a result, Israel closed its borders with Gaza, only allowing humanitarian aid in and people with medical emergencies out so that they can be hospitalised in Israel. Israel has no control over Gaza’s border with Egypt. Egypt could have provided all Gaza’s needs but it also has chosen to close its border most of the time to protect its citizens.

Your correspondents, Dermot O’Rourke and D Flinter (December 31st), offer no suggestions as to how Israel should respond.

So I ask them and your other readers, what would the Republic of Ireland do if it were subject to thousands of rockets requiring its citizens to seek shelter often with only 15 seconds warning; and what would they do to prevent terrorists infiltrating their homeland? – Yours, etc,

RAYMOND SOLOMON,

Manchester,

England.

Sir, – Your correspondent Anne Strahan (December 31st) cannot get her head around John Fitzgerald’s problem with foxhunting (December 29th). I suspect that the vast majority of people, by the same token, cannot get their heads around the fact that some human beings think it’s okay to hound and kill wild animals for “sport”, even if they do, as she says, “clean their horses and dress themselves appropriately”.

She says that the fox is a pest that kills lambs and chickens, and that hounds are behaving naturally in pursuing them and tearing them apart, but in fact they are trained by the hunters to hunt and kill as a pack, and are “blooded” during the cub-hunting season on young and inexperienced fox cubs.

Statistics available on fox predation belie claims by hunters that the fox is a pest. A pilot study undertaken by the Department of Agriculture’s veterinary lab (1992) showed predation (including all kinds of predators) and misadventure (accidents, drownings, etc) combined accounted for 5 per cent of all lamb mortalities, while the British ministry of agriculture found much the same, citing predation at a mere 1 per cent, adding that it did not consider foxes to be a significant factor in lamb mortality.

Meanwhile, eminent zoologistDr James Fairley (NUI Galway), author of An Irish Beast Book, states: “A great deal of the many allegations of lamb killing are based on insufficient or even non-existent evidence. When interviewing farmers, I found that in some cases, a dead, unwounded animal or the mere disappearance of a lamb were attributed to the work of the fox.”

The fox is under constant persecution, much of it utterly cruel and barbaric, based on scant or little evidence of its threat to farm livestock, as the statistics show, but like every myth, it continues to be perpetuated, mostly by recreational hunters in whose interest it is to demonise the fox. Foxhunting has been outlawed for the past 10 years by our neighbours in England, Scotland and Wales, while hare coursing has also been banned in these jurisdictions and in Northern Ireland, leaving Ireland as a last outpost for barbarism, thanks to successive governments that have consistently turned a blind eye to the cruelty. – Yours, etc,

AIDEEN YOURELL,

Irish Council Against

Blood Sports,

PO Box 88,

Mullingar, Co Westmeath.

Sir, – The falling price of petrol and diesel is to be welcomed. However the mechanics as to how, why and when these reductions occur is often the subject of justifiable complaint and debate, not only in this newspaper but many other media outlets.

The disconnect between a reduction of the barrel price and the price at the pump is the stuff of mystery. On New Year’s Eve, I passed my local petrol station and noted another welcome decline of some three cent per litre. This morning in passing the same station the price had risen again by two cent.

Somehow in the passing hours through the new year the fuel held in the tanks under the forecourt had acquired a new cost and value which just had to be passed on to the public.

Perhaps some kind gentleman from the fuel industry might explain this miracle of economics. – Yours, etc,

DEREK MacHUGH,

Foxrock,

Sir, – Further to “Jack’s the lad, while Sophie is top girl in Irish Times baby names chart” (Front Page, January 2nd), whatever happened to Jill? – Yours, etc,

JOHN O’BYRNE,

Harold’s Cross, Dublin 6W.

Sir, – I see the “Francis effect” has yet to create a wave of Franks and Frankies. But it’s still early days. – Yours, etc,

PATRICIA O’RIORDAN,

Dublin 8.

Irish Independent:

Letters to the Editor

Published 05/01/2015 | 02:30

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The Famine Memorial on the north quay in Dublin. Niall Carson/PA
The Famine Memorial on the north quay in Dublin. Niall Carson/PA

I agree with David McGuinness’s disgust at the report that British TV station Channel 4 has commissioned a sitcom on the topic of the Great Famine (‘Famine is no laughing matter’, Letters, Irish Independent January 3).

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Defending its decision to commission this show, a Channel 4 spokesperson said that “brilliant humour can come out of times of terrible hardship.”

If this proposed comedy on the starvation and forced emigration in coffin ships of more that two million peasant Irish people draws sufficient audiences to please advertisers, perhaps Channel 4 might consider doing a trilogy of comedies on related themes.

Suggested topics to be considered might include the Holocaust, in which six million Jews were incinerated, or one on Aids.

Think of the laughs to be had on the Aids epidemic, in which almost 78 million people have been infected with the HIV virus and about 39 million people have died. Globally, 35 million people were living with HIV at the end of 2013.

Indeed, why not one on a current topic, say the Ebola outbreak? Just think of the “brilliant humour” that could be engendered by live interviews with Ebola victims on their deathbeds.

Tom Cooper

Templeogue, Dublin 6

Scraping the barrel in ratings war

The response of the British Government of the day to the great 19th century Famine in Ireland was so shamefully inadequate that no words can ever appropriately cover its grotesque and cynical nature.

That a British broadcaster, Channel 4, is now developing a sitcom set during that horrific, anti-Irish travesty and calling it ‘Hunger’ is both racially insensitive and extremely insulting. The Famine is no more suitable sitcom material than the Holocaust – this project should be nipped in the bud.

Is there no low to which some broadcasters are prepared to stoop in their ratings wars? Imagine a German broadcaster developing a sitcom called ‘Gas’ and basing it on the Nazi death camps.

No matter how harmless sounding the justification, it won’t deflect one iota from the fact that this proposed Famine sitcom, ‘Hunger’, is just about as a sick as it gets.

Eugene Cassidy

Co Cavan

Hold a poll on compulsory Irish

Ian O Doherty’s article on the Irish language (Irish Independent, January 1) reflects the thoughts of many citizens of the Republic over the years.

The Language Freedom Movement of the 1960s, a leading member of which was the playwright John B Keane, were holding a meeting in the Mansion House when Gaeilgeoirs came running in and pulled the Tricolor off the speaker’s table.

The message was that if you are not in favour of compulsory Irish, you are not truly Irish.

Over the years I have spoken to some members of the major parties, with the exception of Sinn Fein, who said they would like to see a change on the issue from compulsion to consent. However, they say such a proposal would cost their parties seats in certain constituencies.

Therefore, it seems to me that we should take the issue away from party politics and let it go to the people by way of a referendum. If the majority wants the status quo to remain, I, for one, will accept that decision and stay chiuin (silent) from then on.

Tony Moriarty

Harold’s Cross, Dublin 6

Lucinda has missed the boat

I can’t help but wonder if Lucinda Creighton has missed the boat in her decision to launch a new political party within the next eight weeks – or was that the launch, I’m not too sure?

It reminds me a little of the launch on New Year’s Day of UTV Ireland. After a five-minute promotional video, we were treated to an hour-long episode of a programme set on a Yorkshire farm. UTV Ireland won’t be in top gear for a few months when some of its new programmes commence, seemingly a bit like Lucinda’s as yet unnamed party.

Last year when I attended the “monster rally” in the RDS there was an undoubted air of anticipation and energy in the hall that something exciting was afoot. However, since then we have had the local elections and the marked increase in support for Independents and Sinn Fein.

While large numbers of people have turned away from the large parties such as Fianna Fail and Fine Gael, they now consider Independents to be a viable alternative.

The present support for Independents will not necessarily move to a new party unless they are offering something very radical which people can identify with. So far I don’t see much evidence of this with Lucinda’s new party. I believe there was a definite appetite for a new party this time last year but things have moved on since then.

I assume RTE and TV3 aren’t worried by UTV Ireland yet. Similarly, I suspect that the current politicians of whatever hue aren’t too worried about Lucinda’s new party. Let’s hope we get something more substantial in eight weeks’ time, otherwise I, for one, will be waving goodbye to this particular boat.

Tommy Roddy

Salthill, Co Galway

The tide went out long ago, Lucinda Creighton, and you have been left adrift without a paddle. The people have no interest in another blustering political party which would deliver more of the same, but with perhaps a softer voice.

The time has come and gone when the electorate naively depended on self-serving politicians to do the right things for them. We’re all broke now, and to have more boring, flashy political rhetoric shoved down our throats by the well-suited and booted, is to add insult to injury.

Robert Sullivan

Bantry, Co Cork

Those looking for a name for Lucinda Creighton’s new party should note, as Enda Kenny may ruefully reflect, that the name of the former FG junior minister contains letters which spell out “Chagrin Uncoiled”.

Dr John Doherty

Gaoth Dobhair, Co Donegal

Solar power is the future

A nuclear power station is one of Energy Minister Alex White’s suggested clean energy solutions for little Ireland (Irish Independent December 31). In mid 2005, a similar proposition was put forward to combat increasing energy costs. The idea is as regressive and repulsive today as it was then.

For over 40 years, communities living near the east coast were in constant dread of leakages or sabotage at Sellafield, a nuclear plant not even on this island.

Despite dozens of huge wind turbines and pylons erected, efforts on marine energy, bio-fuel crops and extensions to National Grid, how have we fared in reaching our energy targets over the past 10 years?

Of all energy sources, from fossil to renewable, solar is the most sustainable, inexhaustible, pure and consistent means of power.

The sun will perpetually bombard us with 9,000 times more power than is needed to run every car, heat all homes and energise every electrical gadget and factory on this planet.

All Europe’s requirements could be provided by lining just 0.2pc of the Sahara Desert with concentrated solar power technology – costing, maybe, €50bn – according to Professor Anthony Patt (Irish Independent, September 24, 2009).

This is not a colossal sum compared to the €14bn the Irish Wind Energy Association (IWEA) is prepared to spend, just to meet 40pc of all electricity needs for renewable sources by 2020!

Rather than saddling each country with targets, a European Union Solar Energy Company should be established to administer the development of and operate an inter-Euro Grid supplying power to all members at a fixed price.

We cannot afford another Irish Water fiasco; time, money and creation of jobs are precious – our educated youth are leaving in their thousands!

James Gleeson

Thurles, Co Tipperary