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4 August 2014 Tomatoes

I jog around the park I still have arthritis in my left knee, but I manage to get round the park. A warmish day

Scrabble Mary wins, but gets under 400. perhaps I will win tomorrow.

Obituary:

Norman Cornish – obituary

Norman Cornish was a coal miner and artist whose paintings celebrated the industrial past with humanity and warmth

One of Norman Cornish's scenes of the industrial north-east

One of Norman Cornish’s scenes of the industrial north-east

5:48PM BST 03 Aug 2014

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Norman Cornish, who has died aged 94, spent more than three decades working as a coal miner before making a successful career as an artist; he was the last painter from the so-called “Pitman’s Academy”, a pioneering arts community established in north-east England in the 1930s.

Cornish recorded the now largely forgotten environment of the north-east’s mining communities, portraying its knife-grinders and fish-and-chip vans; its vendors with their horse-drawn carts; men relaxing in the pub after work; and children skipping in the street. Motor cars do not feature.

Norman Cornish’s ‘Two Mean at Bar with Dog’

Unlike the work of LS Lowry (whom Cornish knew), his pictures carry no sense of alienation; rather, they radiate a mellowness and warmth (his pub interiors are usually bathed in an amber glow) and a nostalgia for an era in which, despite its terrible deprivations, there was a rich feeling of community. They are not only works of art, but also socio-historical documents.

Cornish once observed: “If you see a street and it’s not terribly interesting, you don’t draw it. But then something happens. Some interesting people come in or a couple of dogs start fighting or some kids start playing with skipping ropes, and suddenly it enlivens the place and I want to draw it.”

One of Norman Cornish’s street scenes

Norman Cornish was born on November 18 1919 at Spennymoor, in the Wear Valley, Co Durham, and he and his three younger brothers grew up in a terraced house next to the old ironworks, with no bathroom or lavatory. He would later retain vivid memories of the deprivation caused by the General Strike of 1926, and at the age of seven he contracted diphtheria.

Spennymoor had been a coal mining town since the 19th century (the first pit was dug in 1839), but by the time Norman was growing up most of the men were employed at nearby collieries such as Ferryhill, three miles distant. When Norman was 14 his father lost his job, and his eldest son — already passionate about painting and drawing — had to abandon his dreams of further education and start work.

Inevitably he went down the mine, and on Boxing Day 1933 he had his first shift at Ferryhill’s Dean and Chapter colliery (notorious for accidents, and known locally as “The Butcher’s Shop”). Cornish later wrote of his mining experience: “The dangers of gas, stone falls, the darkness and the restricted space, were all to shape these men into industrial gladiators.”

Norman Cornish: a self-portrait

Not long after starting work Norman Cornish learned that there was a sketching club at Spennymoor, run under the aegis of the Spennymoor Settlement, which had been established in 1930 to give working-class families and the unemployed access to the arts; it also offered classes in practical skills such as joinery and shoe repair.

Cornish became an enthusiastic participant, showing some of his work in the Settlement’s annual art exhibition, and became a close friend of another member, Sid Chaplin, later well-known for his novels, short stories and television screenplays.

Gradually Cornish began to exhibit, but he was unable to acquire a set of oil paints until a well-off local woman (who lived in “a big hall”) admired one of his watercolours and asked why it was not painted in oils. When he said he could not afford to buy any, she wrote out a cheque.

Norman Cornish’s ‘Miner on Pit Road at Night’

A number of gifted artists worked at the Settlement — among them the slightly younger Tom McGuinness (1926-2006), who would make a name as a painter of striking scenes of mining life — and collectively they became known as The Pitman’s Academy. In time they began to exhibit further afield, including at the Laing Art Gallery in Newcastle upon Tyne, sometimes described as the “Royal Academy of the North”.

Cornish continued to work in the mines during the Second World War, and also served as a fire-watcher. In his spare time, though, he painted; and when the war came to an end he put on his first one-man show, at the People’s Theatre in Newcastle . In 1947 five of his paintings were purchased by Reg Revans, Director of Education for the newly-formed National Coal Board, for display at the Coal Board’s London office. On the back of this, Cornish was invited to help organise an exhibition in London entitled Art by the Miner .

In 1950 he graduated to more exalted company, showing alongside Henry Moore and others at a West End gallery in an exhibition called The Coal Miners. Throughout the Fifties he continued to show his work regularly in the north-east, forming an enduring relationship with the Stone Gallery in Newcastle, which also showed LS Lowry and the Cumbrian artist Sheila Fell. The Conservative Prime Minister Edward Heath bought two of Cornish’s works — a source of wry amusement to the artist with his staunch socialist background.

Detail from Norman Cornish’s ‘Convivial Company’

In 1962 Cornish was commissioned by County Hall in Durham to produce a 30ft mural depicting local life. The project brought his work to wider attention, and the following year he was featured in a programme in the BBC television arts series Monitor, introduced by Sir Hew Wheldon and entitled Two Border Artists (the other subject was Sheila Fell).

Throughout this period Cornish had remained working in the pits, but in 1966 — increasingly suffering from back problems — he left his job. Although he was allowed to remain in his National Coal Board house, he clearly had to continue to support his family (his wife, Sarah, and their son and daughter), and he was not confident that he could do so from painting.

But with his wife’s encouragement, he gave it a try, and he succeeded in making a living selling his paintings, while supplementing his income with a visiting lectureship at Sunderland College of Art.

In 1974 he was awarded an honorary MA by Newcastle University.

Cornish published, in 1989, an autobiography, A Slice of Life, with an introduction by Melvyn Bragg. In the same year he had a major retrospective at the University of Northumbria Gallery, and in 1992 a one-man exhibition at the same venue. In 1997 he presented a substantial number of his pictures to the University for its permanent collection.

He continued to paint into his nineties, and in 2009 he was the subject of a book, The Quintessential Cornish, by Robert McManners and Gillian Wales.

The story of north-east England’s miner/artists was turned into a play, The Pitmen Painters, by Lee Hall, author of the screenplay of the film Billy Elliot. It opened in Newcastle in 2007, and has since enjoyed successful runs at the National Theatre in London and on Broadway.

An exhibition of Norman Cornish’s work opened in March at the Kings Place Gallery, north London, and is scheduled to run until August 22.

Three years ago, in an interview with the BBC, Cornish recalled a conversation he had had with Lowry: “I remember we talked about what happened to an artist when he died. His work — was it forgotten or was it going to be cherished?”

Norman Cornish, born November 18 1919, died August 1 2014

Guardian:

Flanders Fields 100 Years Since The Great War

Congratulations to the Guardian for publishing a front-page article commemorating the work of peacemakers in the first world war (In memoriam: A century on, time to hail the peacemakers, 28 July). On Monday 4 July, Women’s International League for Peace and Freedom (WILPF) will stage events throughout the UK to commemorate the start of the war. In London, the event will recall the suffragists, meeting at Kingsway Hall, who delivered a plea to Downing Street, beseeching British political leaders to use their political skills to avoid the war. Sadly the plea was ignored.

The WILPF centenary congress at The Hague in April 2015 will bring together women of 43 countries to commemorate the work of women who met at The Hague in 1915. Then, 1,200 women from 12 countries met and passed 20 resolutions on war and its causes. Five elected delegates visited 21 heads of state in war-stricken Europe and America to inform statesmen of the resolutions and to urge them to implement continuous mediation.

In 2015, WILPF women at The Hague will acknowledge the efforts of all women who have continuously worked toward peace for 100 years and will formulate strategies that might inspire world leaders to resolve international disputes by peaceful methods.
Helen Kay
Edinburgh

• The bloodfest reported from conflict zones around the world no longer makes me weep. That alone is telling and sad. I do despair at times – but despair is manageable; the death of a child, lover, father – under a crumbled building, shot, blown up – how is that managed day in, day out? Thank you, Adam Hochschild and the Guardian. Front page news remembering and commemorating the peacemakers past and present. Peacemaking is a heroic activity – let us have a “Provide for Peace” to run alongside Help for Heroes.

Thousands said no to the call-up and killing of the first and second world wars – many were tortured and some died as a result of their stand. Bravery is not limited to aggression in the face of opposition, it is often about refusing to be aggressive. It is when you and I agree to fight that war ensues. You and I need to learn the far harder and braver skill of agreeing to make peace. We allow war to happen; when will we determine to make peace the norm?

Quakers do not have all the answers but they do know some pathways to a solution: courses, literature, peacemaking experience, exhibitions, activists available for anyone interested.
Anne McGurk
Bromley, Kent

• Adam Hochschild bemoans the lack of peace museums in Britain. On Monday, the market town of Thirsk is opening a week-long exhibition called “Choices 1914”. We have tried to preserve a balance between the pity of war and the objections to it. Over 80% of Thirsk’s young men joined up. As visitors enter, they will see the names of the 137 local men who gave their lives, with where and when they died. But the majority of the other exhibits will be by or about women and children. One room will be about the advocation and experience of war: the other about its objectors. We will even be displaying the original letter setting out the aims of the Union of Democratic Control, signed by the future Labour prime minister Ramsay MacDonald and Charles Trevelyan, one of the three Liberal ministers who resigned over the use of the royal prerogative to send Britain into war.
Jeremy Shaw
Thirsk, North Yorkshire

• Your article on the Manchester Guardian’s opposition to the 1914-18 war (‘If we rush into war it will be both a crime and an act of supreme folly’, 2 August) reminds me that HG Wells, in a number of articles from 1914 onwards, had optimistically predicted that it would be “the war to end war”, a phrase that was to be widely adopted throughout the conflict. Wells had hoped that the war would usher in the potential to realise his utopian ideas for social and political reform. The second world war and the current horrific events in Gaza and elsewhere prove how misguided Wells had been. As his 1932 novel The Bulpington of Blup testifies, Wells was to become extremely embittered when it became clear that the war had changed nothing. However, he went on to have a significant influence on the 1948 universal declaration of human rights. Wells was a remarkable man in remarkable times.
Professor Linda Dryden
Edinburgh Napier University

• Your piece about Jill Gibbon (The woman turning arms fairs into art, 28 July) inexplicably fails to mention that her drawings appear regularly in Peace News. I write a regular column for PN and I’m proud to be a contributor alongside her and its other excellent writers, cartoonists and photographers. In all your coverage of the first world war, I can’t remember any reference to Peace News, which was founded in 1936 as a reaction against the nationalism and patriotism of 1914-18. It remains a politically unaligned pacifist paper and the only such voice in the UK.
Jeff Cloves
Stroud, Gloucestershire

• Your leading writers (The front lines, 26 July) missed the diary entry by Violet Bonham-Carter who recorded Winston Churchill as saying in 1915: “I love this war. I know it’s smashing and shattering the lives of thousands every moment, and yet – I can’t help it – I enjoy every second of it.” Oh, what a lovely war, indeed!
Jamie Dockery
Clydebank, Scotland 

• One of the untold stories is the Scottish women’s hospital on the western front. The hospital was unique because all the personnel, surgeons, doctors, nurses, orderlies, stretcher bearers and ambulance drivers were women. It was situated in the abbey at Royaumont, 30 miles north of Paris, and came under the auspices of the French government and French Red Cross. When the British government had been offered the hospital in 1914, they turned it down because it was to be run by women! The French were very glad to have it and the hospital soon gained a good medical reputation under the leadership of Frances Ivens. My mother was a doctor there during the last year of the war.
Ann Fox
Port Sunlight, Wirral

• Ironically, one of the best ways of getting accurate information about events on the western front was to be an imprisoned conscientious objector (How state and press kept truth off the front page, 28 July). According to Fenner Brockway, it was the Walton Leader, a tiny underground prison journal produced by conscientious objectors in Walton prison, which published an exclusive account of the slaughter at Passchendaele, brought into prison by an objector who had shared a guard room with a survivor of that particular bloodbath.
Ann Kramer
Hastings, East Sussex

• Thank you foryour comprehensive article on the Manchester Guardian’s “vehement campaign against Britain’s involvement in the first world war”. While there have been programmes on TV on some of what is reported by you on the disagreements among cabinet members of the government at the time, I do not remember it being said that we had no legal responsibility any more to defend the neutrality of Belgium.

I deduce from the article that an important reason we went to war was the fear that if we did not the current government would be swept from power; and that the decision to go to war was not fully debated by MPs. I think the article should be included in the curriculum for all pupils in secondary schools, and be discussed along with the implications for the organisation of society today and the nature of decision-making.
John Haworth
Visiting research fellow, Manchester Metropolitan University

• The dust has almost settled on the 100th anniversaries, with the case for British war entry, depressingly, having dominated. But there is one more to go. This is the 6 August war credit debate in the House of Commons, when the prime minister, Herbert Asquith, in asking for the first of a succession of loans to fight the war, at last made the government’s case to parliament for its declaration of war on Germany. This was two days into the war – which says it all about that war and democracy.

This debate, like the adjournment debate which Liberal backbenchers forced on the evening of 3 August, after foreign secretary Sir Edward Grey’s afternoon speech, which sent the Conservatives and Irish Nationalists into raptures but stunned his own party, of course has not featured in the sanitised patriotic histories. When I researched the Hansards of this time, I found them crackling with the anger of government backbenchers about the revelations of the pre-existing military commitment to France. They are well-thumbed pages – they have evidently been carefully read down the years. In the 6 August debate, one contribution stands out. It was made by Liberal Sir Wilfrid Lawson: “We have heard in the last few days a great deal about honour; we have heard something about morality and something about self-interest. As to honour, I see nothing honourable whatever in our present proceedings; surely the most supreme of British interests lies in peace, and not in war. As far as the morality is concerned, when we are engaged, as we are now, in organised murder, I think the less said about morality the better. I was sent to support – as I understood – a policy of peace, retrenchment and reform. Where are they all now? All swallowed up in the bloody abyss of war!”

The horrors of the consequences of the first world war with Britain in it, which have included the Nazis and much more, continue to evolve, with the Iraq/Syria and Israel/Gaza turmoil as today’s post-first world war hotspots (deriving from the Sykes-Picot agreement, 1916, and the Balfour declaration, 1917, respectively). What a pity the Guardian was not listened to.
Duncan Marlor
Matlock, Derbyshire

• Your correspondent Adam Hochschild rightly mentions several persons who stood against the collective group-think that propelled the nations of Europe into the maelstrom of the summer of 1914 I believe that there is one other figure that Mr Hochschild could have mentioned, namely that of Germany’s ambassador to Britain, Prince Lichnowsky. It was he who, in those days of late July 1914, made repeated pleas to his government in Berlin to get behind Sir Edward Grey’s plan to hold a roundtable conference of all the powers involved, which would have averted disaster. I have read that Lichnowsky was so well-respected that he was given a guard of honour when he departed Britain after war had been declared. He sat out the war years in Germany in disgrace for his alleged sympathetic attitude to Britain, until his death in 1928.

At least dying when he did he didn’t bear witness to the ultimate degradation, when his country fell into the hands of criminals five years later.
Nigel Baldwin
Portsmouth

• Alan Travis’s report repeats the old canard that people in Britain in 1914 believed that the war would be over Christmas. In fact this is a fabrication of post-war myth, and estimates in the early months of the war differed enormously. “From three weeks to three years have been suggested as the probable duration, with every variety of intermediate estimate,” one military correspondent reported that August.
Mark Bostridge
London

• Reading Hans-Ulrich Wehler’s obituary (2 August) days before the anniversary reinforced the view that the Great War was the fault of a few aristocratic, monarchist, nationalist, very rightwing, anti-democratic old men, especially in Germany and Austria-Hungary. Millions sacrificed their young lives fighting for these incompetent people. The war was not the responsibility of the citizens of the various powers – and certainly not the women.

How typical that rightwing nationalist and anti-democratic men are behind the conflicts of 2014. How unsurprising that in August 2014 so few British people can identify names such as Berchtold, Conrad, Bethmann-Hollweg, Moltke, Jagow, Sukhomlinov and even Sir Edward Grey. It is no consolation to discover on recent visits to Vienna and Munich that some locals were similarly ignorant, blaming every nation other than their own for the 1914-18 war.

As a result, I dread the nonsense that will be written and spoken about the period after the end of the war.
Jeff Dunn
Crosby, Merseyside

It was with great pleasure and pride that we read your article on Pumeza Matshikiza and her opening performance at the Commonwealth Games (Puccini and Swahili, G2, 28 July). As you point out, Pumeza is a graduate of our Opera School at the University of Cape Town. She – along with many others such as Pretty Yende and Musa Ngqungwana – is literally changing the face of opera. Not only here in South Africa, but globally, they are giving a new relevance and meaning to opera against the outdated perception of it as a Eurocentric elitist artform. Opera taps into a rich tradition of choral music in our country which not only has huge transformative potential, but which is providing unparalleled opportunities for many talented young people from our townships to reshape their lives. The impact of this on their families and communities is profound.

But our Opera School is vulnerable. For the past decade, it has received generous funding from an international donor, making it possible for us to unearth such exceptional talent. However, as of the end of 2014, we will no longer be receiving this international funding. We are in the midst of a fundraising drive to secure the immediate sustainability of the school and its long-term future. We have a commitment from an international funder of a challenge grant of $500,000, contingent on us raising the matching amount. We want to put all these funds into an endowment and use the return on this to fund bursaries and scholarships for talented, historically disadvantaged opera students like Pumeza. May I urge your readers to support our campaign? Further information about it and about our school is readily available from UCT’s alumni department, from the UCT Trust in the UK, or on the Opera School’s Facebook page.
Dr Russell Ally
Executive director, development and alumni department, University of Cape Town

In order for the Commons to more accurately reflect the social/cultural diversity of the UK, alongside ethnic and gender considerations (Parliament failing to represent UK’s ethnic diversity, 1 August), surely each party must also restrict the number of its MPs who were privately educated to 7% of its overall total.
Pete Lavender
Nottingham

• Mike Selvey describing Chris Jordan’s approach to the wicket (Sport, 2 August): “he grips the ball as if he were a life model for the claw feet of a Regency commode”. With weekly gems like this, have we found John Arlott’s natural successor?
Mike Fox
Richmond, Surrey

• I wonder if the 10 pea recipes and “Back to basics” feature in your Cook section (2 August) will tempt former prime minister John Major to subscribe to the Guardian.
Tim Barnsley
London

• Instead of disparagingly referring to Aldi and Lidl as discounters (Report, 30 July), shouldn’t we call the big supermarkets extortionists or incompetent?
Naseem Khawaja
Yateley, Hampshire

• Surely you have heard of “Up north, down south” (Letters, 2 August)? “Up south, down north” doesn’t ring right.
Kay Smith
Burnley, Lancashire

• To coin a phrase, I agree with Nick (Israel has to talk to Hamas, 2 August).
Caroline Cawston
London

You ask: “Is vaping a smoking cure or a new hazard?” (News). The answer is clear. It is a new hazard and a great business opportunity for those who wish to profit from addiction. When I was a community pharmacist in the 1990s, we supplied nicotine replacement therapy (NRT) to those trying to quit. Those using forms of NRT that gave a “hit” similar to a cigarette remained users of this for years. Skin patches, on the other hand, deliver a small constant dose, which reduces the craving. Between a third and a half of those using patches managed to quit, unlike their fellows on chewing gum, inhalators and so on. Why we should even consider allowing the unregulated sale of highly addictive products is completely beyond me.

Brian Curwain

Christchurch, Dorset

Unborn children need help too

As a paediatrician, it has long felt strange to me that we strive to identify child abuse in its many guises, yet antenatally that same rigour often seems lacking (“Alcohol abuse in pregnancy could be a crime”, News). No one would question that inflicting a daily tipple on an infant is abusive and that appropriate action should be taken. It raises the question as to why the same should not apply to a foetus. Criminalisation may not always be appropriate but greater attention must be applied to foetal protection.

John Trounce (Dr)

Hove, East Sussex

Fat cat pay is not inflationary?

Your Business Analysis reports that the Bank of England’s rate setters are anxiously watching wage rises, because “inflation-busting pay is… a trigger for higher rates”. Why are the very much higher salary increases (and bonuses) regularly awarded to senior bankers and company bosses never considered inflationary?

Pete Dorey

Bath

We undervalue parental role

In your editorial (“It’s time to think more creatively about time”, Comment), you argue that we may yet be “forced to reshape work”. Indeed so, but to suggest that “doing nothing bar domestic duties [and] entertaining children…” is liberating underscores the dominant societal view that caring for children – and indeed domestic duties – is not work and, worse, is unskilled. If children are to be valued, society must reflect the work and skill involved in bringing them up and the huge contribution made to future generations by parents and carers who stay at home.

Richard Bridge York

Time for a new social contract

Spreading the work available and shortening the working week make eminent sense in today’s over-populated and underemployed world (Commen.) It would require, however, a radical overhaul in which governments, international institutions, corporations, employers, workers and consumers play their part: corporations to pay adequate rewards, even for shorter hours, governments to enforce and consumers to vilify those who don’t. What we need is an updated social contract for our postmodern world.

John Browne

Exeter

US holds answer to Gaza peace

Israel gets away with bombing schools, hospitals and water and electricity supplies because of the unconditional support of America. The US could stop this conflict by immediately ceasing to fund Israel, but Obama lacks the political courage. Israel will not accept a two-state solution to solve the Israeli-Palestinian problem and thinks it can bomb its way to victory while all it does is breed more hatred. If the influence of Isis, a terrorist organisation so extreme it has been expelled from al-Qaida, is not to spread, America has to act now to ensure Israel accepts the two-state solution as the only way to achieve lasting peace.

Valerie Crews

Beckenham, Kent

The military reality of Ukraine

Nick Cohen is, in the economic terms in which he sets his case, right that “Britain can afford to defy Tsar Vladimir” (Comment). No doubt deliberately, this rather ignores the military reality, which is relegated to the aside that “Russia is Nigeria with nuclear weapons”. The Russian conventional forces alone are probably sufficient to negate any forceful response by the EU states. Add nuclear and Putin holds the winning hand. Just ask Ukraine.

David Jones

Nottingham

Envy that drives our attitudes

The current tendency towards treating sexting as a crime (“Is it right to criminalise sexting?”, New Review) matches many others over the past 25 years that have sought to criminalise youthful actions and youths themselves. Society, politicians of almost all persuasions and the police are active and outspoken in their pursuit of charging or cautioning. This “criminalising” preference in the adult world is more bankrupt than most of the targeted activities. For many adults in the UK, taking their lead from the US, there is a deep envy of and hatred towards adolescents that drive these attacks.

Richard Rollinson

Witney, Oxon

Independent:

The stated targets for Israeli artillery and missile attacks in the Gaza Strip are Hamas combatants and their tunnels and rocket sites.

The figures for assessing the accuracy of their efforts are 1,500 civilians killed, 8,000 civilians injured, 400,000 civilians displaced from their homes. and swathes of suburban Gaza laid waste and reduced to rubble.

Israel has not disclosed how many Hamas fighters have been killed nor how many tunnels have been destroyed. It also appears likely that one Israeli soldier was killed by Israeli shelling during efforts to respond to his alleged capture.

These figures speak for themselves when trying to calculate the accuracy of the ordnance being used and to evaluate the assertion by Israel that “civilians are not being targeted”.  Two UN-run installations have been hit by Israel in its attempt to kill Hamas fighters nearby, resulting in many civilian deaths. Israel has defended its actions by saying civilian casualties are inevitable in this sort of operation. Which prompts the question: “What sort of operation is this?”

This is no surgical strike with pinpoint accuracy on individually identified targets. Bunker-busting bombs are not being used to destroy underground facilities. The best efforts of the Israeli bombardment have not stopped Hamas firing rockets or using tunnels to ambush Israeli soldiers inside Gaza. So what is the point of all this slaughter and destruction?

Before ground troops were sent into Iraq, the US bombed the country “back to the stone age”, so this “shock and awe” tactic is not new. We will have to wait and see if the outcome of this latest application of overwhelming military superiority is any more constructive than it was before. I doubt it.

Peter DeVillez, Cheltenham

Perhaps I can suggest at least a partial solution to Brian Eno’s puzzle about the US’s “blind support” of Israel (“How can you justify images such as this?” 2 August 2014).

As Brian hinted in the article, most Americans are blissfully unaware of what goes on outside their borders and care even less. My wife and I have been to the States a few times and think that it is a beautiful country full of friendly people – but whose knowledge of the world stops at Mexico and Canada. And who has the most to gain from the US supporting Israel in a military conflict? The US armaments industry – which will keep donating gratefully to representatives, senators and presidents.

Barry Lees, Greenock, Scotland

 

There have been three wars between Gaza and Israel in the past six years. If nothing is done to stop Hamas, the only certain future for the area is that there will be another war in the not too distant future.

While many world leaders recognise the necessity of eliminating Hamas – both for the benefit of Israel and for the Palestinian civilians who suffer negatively from the decisions made by Hamas – few have the foresight or vision as to how to accomplish this.

The Palestinian Authority does not have the will or capability to eradicate Hamas. Israel has the capability to get rid of Hamas, but the world accuses Israel of being too brutal in doing it. The Western countries that could do it know that if they did, they would behave as “brutally” as they accuse Israel of being.

Michelle Moshelian, Givatayim, Israel

 

After weeks of bombing, devastation and slaughter of children in Gaza, I am ashamed to call myself British. And I am ashamed at our Prime Minister’s eerie silence. My children ask me repeatedly why the world is allowing this to happen? I have no answer.

The mantra of Israel’s right to defend itself continues. Don’t the Palestinians have a right to defend themselves? Since the world has refused to take measures against the illegal land grab and building of settlements, since it has allowed Gaza to suffocate and die a slow death, what are they expected to do? Wait another 30 years while the world turns the other way?

If the international community took Israel to task for broken UN resolutions, the Palestinian people would not have to resort to firing rockets. As the world does nothing, it is the Palestinians who have the right to defend themselves

Mostahfiz Gani, Kingston upon Thames

A play about more than a plane crash

David Lister (“How the news turned a comedy into plane-crash theatre”, 2 August) asserts that we should have censored our production of Tom Basden’s play Holes by pulling it in response to the shooting down of MH17. I would like to object to the suggestion that we have been “downright disrespectful”.

Holes is not about plane crashes, in the same way that One Flew Over The Cuckoo’s Nest is not about asylums. It is merely the setting, a jumping-off point for an exploration of how we are living now. It is not about a plane crash, any more than The Tempest is about a boat crash. And we began work on Holes in 2010. MH17 happened the day after the first preview.

I’m willing to wager that between here and the crash site of MH17 more children have been killed by their mothers in the past two weeks than died in that plane crash. Is David Lister suggesting the National Theatre closes Medea?

Holes is a poetic and absurd response to these dark times. How are we supposed to act in the shadow of such a welter of information about so many enormous acts of violence. What are we actually supposed to do? It seems to me we don’t know how to make the world better.

So much great comedy is at root a cry of despair. Like Chaplin responding to the Great Depression, Beckett to the A-bomb, and the absurdists to communism. Absurdity juxtaposed against unimaginable horror seems to me a deeply appropriate response to the zeitgeist.

Just because the play makes people laugh, it doesn’t mean that it is not saying something profound.

The one thing we do agree on is that some lines take on a certain electricity in light of recent events. “Planes just don’t go missing” is one.

David Lister’s view that the play is uncomfortable is shared by many critics. But his view that the play be closed is not.

Phillip Breen, Director of ‘Holes’. Luddington, Warwickshire

Driverless cars  are on their way

Driverless cars have huge potential to transform the UK’s transport network. They could improve safety, reduce congestion and lower emissions, particularly CO2.

There is already a level of automation in our cars, with cruise control, and many people will be unaware that automation is already widespread on planes and on underground trains.

Driverless cars could be particularly beneficial in helping to keep older people or those with disabilities mobile.

From 2015, we will see trials in some of our cities that will address some of the issues around public acceptance, liability and safety of driverless cars. In the longer term, driverless vehicles are set  to be a common sight on our roads.

Paula-Marie Brown, Head of Transport, Institution of Engineering and Technology, London WC2

If two driverless cars meet on a single-track country road, which one reverses back to the passing place?

And if two of these cars collide (which at some time they will), how will it be possible to say which one was at fault for the insurance claim?

H Kilborn, London SE12

Let’s have a legacy from these games

The Glasgow Commonwealth Games have been a great success, but if there is to be any lasting legacy in sporting terms, this should be stimulated and encouraged by scrapping all entry charges to sporting centres and swimming pools, as they are currently far to expensive for the pockets of poorer people.

The London Olympic Games were also very successful, but recent assessments have shown there has been no meaningful increase in sporting activity to be claimed as a legacy.

We have very serious health problems in Scotland, and with life expectancy down to 64 in some parts, it is time to get the nation motivated in sport of any kind, and scrapping all entrance fees could be the first step.

Dennis Grattan, Bucksburn, Aberdeen

 

Unlike D Sawtell (letter, 1 August) I cannot comment on the suitability or otherwise of “Jerusalem” as the Team England anthem, but as a Scot living in Wales I am pleased that Team England have chosen not to use “God Save The Queen”, which applies to all the home nations, as well as to members of the Commonwealth, and is not the English national anthem. I look forward to a time when other English sporting teams follow this example – the year of the Scottish independence referendum is as good a time as any.

Gordon Middleton, Creigiau, Cardiff

Will the anachronistic and backward-looking Commonwealth Games be followed by the Nato Games?

David Freeley, Clonard, Wexford, Ireland

Times:

Rex Features

Last updated at 12:01AM, August 2 2014

Some feel we should use the past tense when talking about the past, and some disagree

Sir, I am reading Melvyn Bragg’s piece (July 30) on the use of the historic present tense and am surprised to note that he does not give any examples. Perhaps he should in future.

Ian Cherry
Preston

Sir, The historic present is confusing and awkward. Melvyn Bragg, in his confession, proved his point that it is here to stay, within one paragraph: ‘Chaucer employs it at will’.

Douglas McQuaid
Oxhey, Herts

Sir, The usefulness of the historic present is that it gently emphasises that the protagonists were not aware of what happened next. It suggests a step into the then unknown; the past tense records a step towards a known outcome.

Will Wyatt
Middle Barton, Oxon

Sir, Melvyn Bragg hosts a radio show called In Our Time that has discussed such contemporary topics as Abelard and Heloise, the battles of Bannockburn and Bosworth Field, and the Abbasid Caliphs. Is it any wonder that he favours the historic present? As a historian I’m happy with it in small doses. I think of it as a kind of submerged direct speech.

The Rt Rev Professor NT Wright
St Andrews

Sir, I disagree with Melvyn Bragg about the use of the historic present. I find a book using this tense highly annoying (including Wolf Hall). If I persevere I am jarred by occasional lapses. Leave the past where it belongs — in the past tense.

Sheila Taylor
Pevensey Bay, E Sussex

Sir, As TS Eliot says in Burnt Norton: “Time present and time past / Are both perhaps present in time future / And time future contained in time past.” On that basis, could we persuade John Humphrys, Melvyn Bragg and Matthew Parris to shake hands and defuse the tense argument about the historic present?

Yanka Gavin
London SW11

Sir, You would think that Melvyn Bragg and John Humphrys have read no fiction. Hilary Mantel, who won the Man Booker prize two years in a row, uses the historic present (as I do now) almost continuously, and to the ultimate point of the Immediate Present: here, now, he stands before you.

David Tipping
Sherborne, Dorset

Sir, The present historic is used by people who need to make an uninteresting subject more exciting. They often fail, but by so doing make themselves sound pretentious, thus further devaluing their subject. In the real world — anywhere not in academia, the media or literature — the present historic is used rarely.

Charles Vaughton
Retford, Notts

Sir, Lord Bragg rightly refuses to de-demonise “wicked”, but the real threat to our language and culture comes from the interrogatory uplift. There are few more troubling experiences of linguistic vandalism than hearing academics resort to the cadences of Antipodean populist soaps. Since we live in an age when parliament is happy to legislate against thought crime can we expect a law to prohibit giving the impression a question is being asked when no actual question is intended?

Canon Dr Gavin Ashenden
Villedieu-les-Poêles, Normandy

The first casualty of this year’s festival seems to have been an Israeli theatre group

Sir, Whatever the rights and wrongs of the conflict between Israel and Palestine, it is wrong that an Edinburgh Fringe entertainment by Incubator Theatre of Jerusalem has had to be cancelled because of a Scottish Palestine Solidarity demonstration (report, July 31).

The Fringe embraces many points of view, and there is no reason why any aspect of that healthy democratic complex should be swept aside. It is a dangerous threat to artistic innovation and essential testimony.

David Day

Ackworth, W Yorks

Sir, It was disturbing that the police allowed the protesters to dominate the two access points to the venue, obliging ticket-holders to file past protesters . When one stuck his camera in front of my face and I pushed it away a policeman rose from his torpor and blocked my entrance. He said I was liable to be arrested for assault and so I would not be allowed in. His stance did not alter when a water bottle thrown from the crowd hit me in the chest.

I am a member of the Foreign Office’s advisory group on freedom of religion or belief. Currently, there is a debate about how far religion motivates protesters who are usually

remarkably composed about violence in Iraq, Syria and Nigeria, much worse in kind than that occurring in Gaza. Perhaps the Scottish government might match the Foreign Office with an initiative to protect artistic expression in Scotland and the rights of audience members to have some minimal protection from the police to attend a cultural event. A shadow hangs over the Edinburgh Festival as long as the police wink at mob rule .

Tom Gallagher

Emeritus Professor of Politics

University of Bradford

Sir, I am ashamed of my city. A group of young performers in the Festival Fringe has been forced to close — because they are Israeli.

The venue, Underbelly, Bristo Square, has given in to intimidation by a currently popular pressure group. Since when do demonstrators who seek to go beyond their lawful right of demonstrating receive the support of the law rather than their targets? How pathetic that “the logistics of policing and stewarding the protest” meant that the theatre group had to cancel — rather than the protestors being limited to protesting peacefully.

This is a slippery slope — from bullying protesters closing down any show they don’t like (“Second Fringe show is in danger from anti-Israeli protest”, Aug 1) — to a potential growth of antisemitism.

The situation in Gaza is emotive but complicated, and thanks here go to Catherine Philp for her excellent and balanced overview (“No water, no electricity . . .” July 30) and to Deborah Ross (“We Jews are always bracing ourselves for more antisemitism”, July 31). Views on this or indeed any other issue should not affect the shows produced at the Edinburgh Fringe, and it is up to Festival organisers to ensure this — something at present they seem to be manifestly failing to do.

Everyone in this country has the right to free speech. I therefore look forward to hearing about the new venue for The Incubator Theatre and its show The City and I hope it receives massive support for its courage in the face of adversity if the show can indeed go on.

Sylvia Gray

Edinburgh

How much did he contribute to the beginning of the hostilities in 1914?

Sir, Professor Röhl (letter, Aug 1) hopes we will ignore revisionist works suggesting the Kaiser was not solely responsible for the Great War, but who to blame for our own entry is far from clear.

The British cabinet remained calm in the aftermath of continental mobilisation with most opposed to involvement in the Balkans or the provision of aid to France and Russia.

The great exception was the First Lord of the Admiralty, Winston Churchill, who off his own bat mobilised the British Navy and placed the First Fleet on war alert in the North Sea.

If mobilisation is what really tipped a nation into the conflict, Churchill’s pre-emptive actions are more blameworthy than Foreign Secretary Edward Grey’s specious diplomacy.

To the dismay of Prime Minister Asquith, Churchill was outrageously bellicose in cabinet and Lloyd George noted that he dashed around with the “radiance of really happy man”.

Of course, when it was over and 16 million were dead, Churchill contacted Beaverbrook as he wrote Politicians and the War, hoping he would not be portrayed as a “warmonger”.

Dr John Cameron

St Andrews

Elderberries are lusciously ripe early this year but they are toxic to humans

Sir, At the risk of causing another corncockle panic, may I remind readers of Derwent May’s Nature Notes (July 30) that elderberries, eaten raw, are poisonous to human beings. One or two will do no harm, but members of a family in Sweden who each consumed a bowlful died. We must respect our elders.

Dave French

Bath

Fracking in the Weald ‘cannot’ threaten chalk aquifers, says drill company boss

Sir, You report (“Park fears fracking will pollute water”, July 29) that more than a million people in the South Downs and surrounding cities such as Chichester and Brighton rely on the chalk aquifer for drinking water. This chalk is not present under the centre of the Weald area, where Celtique is seeking permission for exploratory drilling, so our operations could not contaminate the chalk aquifer.

The absence of this chalk has been confirmed by independent geological and hydrological studies, as well as in a report from the British Geological Survey and Environment Agency published in July. We hope that this latest study gives the Mineral Planning Authority and people in the area greater confidence that onshore exploration can be undertaken safely in the South Downs National Park.

Geoff Davies

Celtique Energie

A bit of so-called humour in a German newspaper prompted a range of responses but not much laughter

Sir Your headline “German tabloid opens fire on ‘drunk, stupid Brits’” (July 31) was misleading. The word used by Bild is englisch.

Eva Tyson

Dalgety Bay, Fife

Sir, Whatever happened to the Scottish “Anyone But England” brigade? One heart-warming aspect of the Glasgow games was the way the home audience enthusiastically cheered not only their own competitors and those of Wales and Northern Ireland but also the English. I wonder what Alex Salmond made of that.

Barry Norman

Datchworth, Herts

Telegraph:

Saint-Symphorien cemetery near Mons in Belgium Photo: © Arterra Picture Library / Alamy

6:57AM BST 03 Aug 2014

CommentsComments

SIR – Tomorrow, on the centenary of Britain’s entry into the First World War, the eyes of the world will be on the St Symphorien cemetery, near Mons in Belgium, a few miles from where we work at the Supreme Headquarters Allied Powers Europe (Shape).

From there, Nato’s military operations are planned and run. St Symphorien is remarkable because, unusually, buried there are the fallen from both sides in the battles that raged in and around Mons, first in 1914 and then 1918. It also contains the graves of the first and last British soldiers to die in the War.

Although defence against the threat of the Soviet Union was the catalyst for Nato, earlier conflicts still cast a long shadow. At Shape one can see the lessons of St Symphorien put into practice in an alliance of 28 nations, including almost every combatant in the First World War. The enemies of Mons are now the closest of colleagues.

Nations have often switched between being friends and foes, but there has never been anything like Shape, with its decades of integration of core defence staffs. The nationality of staff here goes virtually unnoticed. This is symbolised by us as Shape’s three senior commanders, one American, one British and one German. We remain proud of our nations, but in Shape we are one team.

So tomorrow, those of us standing at St Symphorien and contemplating the events of a century ago will be determined to continue applying the lessons our nations have so painfully learned. To our brothers in arms we want to say “Rest in Peace”. They fought for what they believed in and were united in death. We, those that followed them, are united in life to defend our shared values and united nations.

General Philip Breedlove
(United States)
Supreme Allied Commander
General Sir Adrian Bradshaw
(United Kingdom)
Deputy Supreme Allied Commander
General Werner Freers
(Germany)
Chief of Staff, Supreme Headquarters Allied Powers Europe

A barmaid’s revenge

SIR – When I worked in bars in my youth, there was nothing more annoying for us bar staff than being unable to see over or round the half-dozen backs leaning against the bar.

The solution was to pour a jug of water onto the counter, which seeped slowly through the layers of clothing of the offenders, by which time one was at the other end of the bar, deep in conversation.

Jane Cullinan
Padstow, Cornwall

Blame planning laws for poor architecture

SIR – As a long-retired town planner who spent 25 years in development control in my local planning authority I was infuriated by Dame Jenny Abramsky and her views on planning.

Planners are not the problem. Politicians meddle with the system in the mistaken belief that planning causes economic stagnation and that relaxing controls on development will miraculously create more development and thereby cure the country’s economic woes. This hasn’t worked under previous governments, and it won’t under the current one.

Secondly, it is not the case that planners cause degradation of the built environment. This is the result of weak planning legislation. The provisions of the Town & Country Planning (General Permitted Development) Order, which planners are required to enforce, have changed in recent years and now give licence to mediocre architects often driven by ego and the blinkered desires of their clients.

Frank D J Smith
Wolverhampton, Staffordshire

SIR – Dame Jenny Abramsky says that communities should stand up for themselves on planning issues. But if one does so, one is accused of Nimbyism.

If the developers, who are there only for their own profit and not for the benefit of the community, are turned down at local level they can appeal to the Planning Inspector, whose decision cannot be challenged further by the community. If their appeal is turned down, developers have the right to take it to a higher authority. The decision by then is irrevocable.

Stand up and be discounted?

Alyson Persson
Henfield, West Sussex

Ken the Europhile

SIR – I am unable to share your sunny view of Kenneth Clarke’s nature.

He has spent decades arguing for the absorption of this country into a European superstate. If it had been up to him, Britain would have joined the euro, experienced all the economic problems associated with it, and perhaps ended up electing parties that make Ukip seem like the Liberal Democrats.

Peter Davey
Bournemouth, Dorset

SIR – One hopes that the end of Kenneth Clarke’s career as a Cabinet minister will also see the end of his airtime on the BBC’s Today programme. This wouldn’t have been so bad if the people there to question his views had done so as rigorously as they do those of eurosceptics.

Carole Taylor
New Milton, Hampshire

Too-liberal Tories

SIR – Iain Martin, in his analysis of the next Tory leadership battle says “Members of the Conservative Party…could be forgiven for asking whether or not they get a say”.

He is absolutely right. The elite at the top of our party need to be reminded that it is not theirs to do with as they wish.

I will be extremely dissatisfied if, when David Cameron steps down, the only choices are George Osborne, Boris Johnson and Theresa May, all of whom have espoused the same “Liberal Conservative” policies that Mr Cameron has forced on us.

John Waine
Nuneaton, Warwickshire

Children of the Blitz

SIR – Sheila Williams is to be congratulated on surviving the war years and growing up to be “normal” .

But in her day, attitudes to mental illness were far less enlightened than they are today, with unfortunate sufferers often facing the stark choice of “getting on with it” or risking incarceration in mental health institutions largely unchanged since the Victorian era.

Eve Corbett
Blaenau Ffestiniog, Merioneth

SIR – Perhaps Sheila Williams is made of sterner stuff than I, but my recollections of the Blitz and its aftermath are somewhat different from hers.

I was bombed out in 1940 after a prolonged period of day and night raiding, and it was more than two years into evacuation in Devon before I stopped shaking.

Returning to London after the war, I was aware of classmates who had not escaped the trauma of the Blitz. Some could not speak without stuttering continually. A bit of professional counselling might have been very useful.

Peter Holloway
Brighton, East Sussex

SIR – I am of the same generation as Sheila Williams. All we needed for stress was a stiff upper lip, but nowadays if one child is subjected to some form of stress, the whole school needs counselling.

Are we breeding a nation of wimps?

Norman Baker
Tonbridge, Kent

The shale revolution

SIR – If the myriad of “green” pressure groups had existed centuries ago, we would have had no coal or iron ore mines, no hydroelectric power, and no Industrial Revolution.

The Government is right to ignore the doomsayers and grant licences for fracking. The benefits far outweigh the risks.

Frank Tomlin
Billericay, Essex

El error

SIR – Some years ago, on holiday in Menorca, our walks took us past a church where I spied the word “iglesia” and assured my wife that this meant “English”.

She duly attended the church that Sunday and waited, ever more impatiently, for the English section to begin. On her return I discovered from the phrase book that the word I wanted was ingles (English) and not iglesia (church). I didn’t bother looking up the Spanish for “doghouse”.

Desmond Eccles
Sheffield, South Yorkshire

Island hopping

SIR – Andrew Marr is not the only one who takes a strange route to work.

Jim Bergerac always seemed to drive past Gorey Castle (on the east end of Jersey) on his way from St Helier (centre of the island) to Jersey Airport (the west of the island). I put this down to a lack of satnav; but Mr Marr surely has one of those.

John Newbury
Warminster, Wiltshire

SIR – I read with interest the article about jazz by Lord Coe. Perhaps if, as he tells us, he is such a great supporter of jazz he could have had some of it played at the Olympic opening ceremony as well as the mind-numbing pop music.

And if he likes quality music, why did he allow Rowan Atkinson to take the mickey out of the London Symphony Orchestra with his one-finger piano playing and unfunny facial expressions?

Charles Sherwood
Tatsfield, Kent

SIR – Janet Daley reflects on Europe’s ignominious failure to rise to the most serious threat to world stability in a generation – namely, Russia’s actions against Ukraine.

The situation bears an uncanny resemblance to the attempts by the League of Nations to impose sanctions on Italy for its invasion of Abyssinia (now Ethiopia) in 1935.

Then as now, Britain was the only major power to impose sanctions which actually cost its economy anything. Then as now, the other major powers continued to trade with Italy – America shipping oil, France refusing outright to impose sanctions and Germany, as now, continuing to sell its machinery and cars.

Like Putin today, Mussolini took no notice of the sanctions. After nine months, Britain recommended to the League of Nations that they should be lifted. Italy now saw Britain as its main opponent in the world at a time when the Mediterranean was a key British interest.

With two key British interests – BP and City finance – under threat from the Russian response to sanctions, is history about to repeat itself?

Professor Stephen Bush
University of Manchester

SIR – Ukraine is a classic example of a young state that doesn’t naturally command the allegiance of all its peoples.

Other examples abound. The Slavs of Transdniestria, which abuts Ukraine, don’t feel any affinity with the Romanian-speaking Moldovan authorities and fear that Romania will eventually absorb Moldova. Nor do the Armenians of the Nagorno-Karabakh enclave wish a return to rule by Azerbaijan. Then there are the Abkhazians and South Ossetians of Georgia who distrust Tbilisi rule.

To treat these cases solely as instances of Russian imperial rule is unhelpful. The EU needs to tread carefully. Don’t make a bad situation worse.

Yugo Kovach
Winterborne Houghton, Dorset

SIR – The Russians have denied involvement in the downing of MH17. They have published their radar findings, claiming that Ukrainian warplanes had been in the vicinity. They have been asking Washington and Kiev to publish their data, and still no conclusive evidence has been supplied by either government.

Families of the victims deserve a full explanation as to why Western governments have failed to demand this vital information from America and Ukraine.

It is possible that American intelligence cannot come up with any evidence that pro-Russian separatists were responsible. Other explanations for the crash may involve a bomb inside the aircraft or Ukrainian warplanes. Either way, we need evidence in order to establish that the main players are not concealing the truth by blaming one another.

Christopher Booker’s article is very well balanced. We need to be more cautious, avoid Cold War tactics, and wait until data from the black boxes reveals new information. In the meantime we ought to show respect for the families involved.

Constantine Louis
London WC1

SIR – I usually agree with Christopher Booker but I do not understand why he is pointing the finger at President Obama.

The finger should be pointed at the imbecile who pulled the trigger, the person who gave the order to fire and the person who supplied the missile launcher. It is evident the people responsible did not check to confirm the target before deciding to shoot it down.

With a simple PC, they could have identified the aircraft and realised how many lives they were about to destroy. Virtually every civil aircraft in the world is tracked in real time and there is a website putting information out to the public: departure airfield, destination, airline, height and speed of the aircraft and its type and call sign.

If the murderers were incapable of operating a PC they should have telephoned me; but they did not care to find out what the target was.

I D Batten
Bridgend, Glamorgan

Irish Times:

Sir, – Since the second World War, the West, led by America, has devised an updated legal code of human rights and international behaviour in peace and war. It insists on the world observing this code by – among other things – making accountable and punishing those who breach it. It has established international institutions charged with policing the code.

It has, however, persistently prevented it being enforced in the case of Israel, which in the same period has repeatedly, in peace and war, offended against it. In recent weeks it has been doing so again in Gaza and the West Bank. This persisting impunity of Israel has made of the code in question a capricious and cynical charade. It deprives the nations of the world of a common code of behaviour deserving respect and makes any prosecution or punishment based on it a rank injustice. – Yours, etc,

DR DESMOND FENNELL,

Sydney Parade Avenue,

Dublin 4

Sir, – On July 24th, it was reported that 15 children had been killed by a missile landing in the UN school in which they were billeted. The Israeli reaction was to claim that it was a Hamas missile that had fallen short of its target. Israeli spokespeople maintained that line, even as they said the killings were being investigated. That remained their position.

So, since then, does anyone have a clear idea what happened? Or, as was predictable, have the Israelis buried the story in the rubble and the hundred times that number of dead since? I presume each of those children had a name, parents, siblings, that made them the individuals they were; easily forgotten though, it would appear. – Yours, etc,

EOIN DILLON,

Ceannt Fort,

Mount Brown,

Dublin 8

Sir, –Recent comments by the Israeli ambassador in Ireland denying attacks on medical facilities and staff in Gaza are repugnant. To date over 25 medical facilities have been targeted, including the Gaza European hospital and Al-Aqsa hospital, where one patient was killed and 20 medical personnel were injured. Numerous ambulances evacuating patients have been sniped at or shelled, killing doctors, nurses and patients alike. Rehabilitation hospitals, paediatric hospitals and primary care clinics have been bombed, killing patients and staff. Even Red Crescent and UN staff are being killed by Israel aggression.

Medical neutrality ensures the protection of medical personnel, patients, facilities, and transport from attack or interference and unhindered access to medical care and treatment and the humane treatment of all civilians and nondiscriminatory treatment of the injured and sick. These principles are enshrined in international human rights law, humanitarian law and medical ethics. To target medics and hospitals is to purposely dismantle the health care infrastructure with the effect that the wounded also die. In Gaza the wounded are predominantly innocent civilians who have no escape from the conflict zone. – Yours, etc,

PROF DAMIAN

Mc CORMACK FRCS Orth,

Eccles St,

Dublin 7

Sir, – Whatever one’s views on the war in Gaza there is no doubt that that territory is governed and presided over by one of the most ruthless terrorist groups in the Middle East. Israel is blamed for overkill in its response to unprovoked attacks from Hamas. Meanwhile, Sharia fundamentalists see the war in Gaza through the soft focus of a Western media much of which appears to have sided with Hamas.

A constant stream of one-sided comment on how Israel deals with rocket attacks on its citizens would suggest that Hamas is, at least, winning the media battle. The only truly democratic State in the Middle East is now seen in many quarters as the Great Satan. Europe’s first line of defence in the fight to contain the onward march of Islamic fundamentalism has been seriously compromised.

There is no doubt that Israel is currently well able to contain attacks from Hamas and its backers from throughout the Middle East. But it is a small country and is surrounded by many sworn enemies – and many of those are growing stronger and bolder and will undoubtedly gain access to more sophisticated weaponry. The bottom line is stark. If Israel falters under pressure from united fundamentalists, the West won’t be too far behind. European Christianity is already on life support. – Yours, etc,

NIALL GINTY,

Killester,

Dublin 5

Sir, – I trusted that Friday’s front-page picture of the President speaking at Glasnevin on July 31st would lead to a full report within the paper of an event which was of monumental significance in every way within these islands. However, instead of showing any image of the Cross of Sacrifice, on your Home News page we saw the backsides of a tiny crew of protesters whose limited verbal taunts were reproduced faithfully in Peter Murtagh’s report. No mention was made of Dr Edward Madigan’s historical reflection, or of any words HRH the Duke of Kent spoke.

The excitement in your report comes from the noise and objections of as few as two protesters, rather than from the feeling of friendship and emotion from the hundreds, which, as someone down from the Wee North, I can personally report was history being made in the truest sense. The protesters have scored a victory in the way The Irish Times has given prominence to their objections. The plus is that in a liberal democracy the head of state and distinguished guests can be verbally abused by protesters when at an official function, broadcast live on national television. The minus is that in aiming to achieve balanced coverage of the event, your paper and its story headline favoured those outside the railings as much as those within. – Yours, etc,

CHRIS SPURR,

Ballygowan,

Co Down

Sir, – It seems that every day when I open my Irish Times I have to relive the first World War, from the murders in Sarajevo to the first volleys being fired. My wife says not to worry, it will be all over by Christmas. Yours, etc,

DENIS O’DONOGHUE,

Ardnapondra,

Co Westmeath

Sir, – Conor Gearty is missing a number of points in his article (“Human rights best hope for mankind”, August 1st) on human rights and equality. First, democracy did not start with “the labour and suffragette movements” or with political independence. It goes back to ancient Greece. Second, all members of the churches may not, as he says, always practise the love of neighbour ethic which they preach. The fact that they do not always live up to the ideal, however, does not render the ideal “irrelevant”. Third, his statement that “the conditions that drove democracy in the past no longer pertain” is just not true. We still need the ideal of the equality of citizens to be enshrined in our political and legal institutions.

The fact that some citizens do not exercise their rights and that other citizens use their wealth and/or privilege to undermine that equality makes it all the more necessary for democracy to be defended. The fact that women, who are a majority in the electorate, are so badly represented in the Dáil is a challenge to democracy. The fact that those in control of mass media can determine public opinion is a challenge to democracy.

Despite all that, however, Conor Gearty is right when he says that “the drive for equality must inevitably return” and that “the democratic advocacy of human rights” is our best hope for the future. – Yours, etc,

ANTHONY LEAVY,

Shielmartin Drive,

Dublin 13

A chara, – As a (now semi-retired) Irish-language journalist could I assure PD Goggin that I am one of those who regularly uses the Irish-language versions of official documents and laws.

I worked for nearly 20 years reporting on the Dáil for Raidió na Gaeltachta, and needed official versions of public documents as a necessary part of my work. Necessary because I was reporting for the Irish-language community, which may be small but which does exist, contrary to Mr Goggin’s prejudices.

I want no more than my English-language counterparts get – a version of official documents in my own language, which incidentally is recognised in the Constitution as the first official language of the State.

But perhaps Mr Goggin is a subversive who doesn’t recognise our Constitution and who wants to bully us through compulsion into accepting his monolingual English-speaking version of Ireland. Who indeed is the bully? And who indeed uses compulsion? – Is mise le meas,

EOIN Ó MURCHÚ,

Ascaill Ghleanntáin

na hAbhann,

Cluain Dolcáin,

Baile Átha Cliath 22

Sir, – Geoff Scargill’s response (July 30th) to Maeve Halpin’s letter stretches credulity. Ms Halpin cited “on the record” evidence of a severe failure to prosecute so-called white collar crime in this country. Factor in the reality that the individuals in question have not, in the main, endured drug- and violence-ridden childhoods and we are looking at a virtual apartheid in the dispensation of justice in this country. That is not “emotion” but evidenced-based reality, as indeed was Ms Halpin’s excellent commentary on Conor Gearty’s article. – Yours, etc,

JOHN SULLIVAN,

North Circular Road,

Dublin 7

Sir, – John Bowman, in his article “Time for us to remember first World War fallen” (August 2nd), claims that more Irish died as a result of that war than any other in Irish history. This is far from the truth. While the first World War was indeed a tragedy, far more Irish people died during the Confederate War in Ireland, which resulted in over 600,000 deaths.

This is not to include the 200,000 to 300,000 men, women and children sold as slaves to English plantation-owners abroad. The Confederate War saw Ireland’s population half: no comparison whatsoever to the first World War. – Yours, etc,

DECLAN WAUGH,

Riverview,

Bandon,

Sir, – The word “mansplaining” is used to describe a man talking down in a patronising, condescending way to a woman. My four-year-old granddaughter tells me in a patronising, condescending manner “Grandad, you know you might die soon ’cos you’re old?” or “Grandad, you know all your hair is falling out ’cos you’re old?” Is this “girlsplaining”? Yours, etc,

TOM FARRELL,

Hawthorn Park,

Swords,

Co Dublin

Irish Independent:



Clinic

$
0
0

5 August 2014 Clinic

I jog around the park I still have arthritis in my left knee, but I manage to get round the park. A warmish day

Scrabble Mary wins, but gets under 400. perhaps I will win tomorrow.

Obituary:

Obituaries from the First World War

The Telegraph obituaries of those who fought and survived tell the story of the war from a very personal angle, whether it is the ornithologist spotting birds in the middle of a battle or the captain who rose from the dead only to be captured by the Germans.

British troops newly arrived in France in the early days of the Great War in August 1914

British troops newly arrived in France in the early days of the Great War in August 1914

Harry de Quetteville

By Harry de Quetteville

7:00AM BST 02 Aug 2014

On November 12 1912, in the Hetzendorf Palace in Vienna, a boy was born whose string of forenames reflected the multitude of European royal bloodlines that mixed and flowed in his veins: Franz Josef Otto Robert Maria Anton Karl Max Heinrich Sixtus Xavier Felix Renatus Ludwig Gaetan Pius Ignatius. The newborn was the scion of an all-powerful dynasty whose dominion encompassed 11 nation states. For Otto, as the boy was known, was a Habsburg, and third in line to a throne that had endured 650 years. One Viennese newspaper suggested that the baby boy would eventually be called on ‘to steer the future of Europe in the last quarter of the 20th century’.

Crown Prince of Austria-Hungary Otto von Habsburg

That moment never came. Before his second birthday, his great-uncle Archduke Ferdinand was assassinated in Sarajevo, and when, in 1916, his successor, Emperor Franz Josef, died, it was Otto’s father, Charles, who became the new emperor and Otto Crown Prince. In November 1916 he walked, clad in a white-trimmed tunic, between his parents as they followed the hearse of the late emperor. It was his first public appearance and he harboured memories of those monumental events all his life.

When he died, on July 4 2011 at the age of 98, we on the obituaries staff of The Daily Telegraph recounted these memories once more: memories born of personal experience, of proximity to the action, rich in detail, and suffused with the hopes and fears that we all feel, no matter what our station in life. Thus we learnt how, in November 1918, with the war only a few days from its end, Otto and his siblings found themselves trapped in a shooting lodge near Budapest, and how they were smuggled to Vienna. Of how, in 1919, when the Habsburg royals were eventually ferried to safety in Switzerland on the orders of our own King George V it was a certain Lt Col Edward Strutt who was given the task of making sure they arrived in one piece. Strutt managed to reassemble the imperial train for the journey. As our obituary of Otto von Habsburg noted, ‘Whenever he heard in later life complaints about British indifference to the Habsburgs’ fate he would reply, “Yes, but there was always Strutt.” ’

Such is the power of obituaries. They are lenses that focus events through the existence of one man or woman, and so render those events more immediate, more comprehensible and more human. If Otto von Habsburg’s life symbolised the vast tectonic shifts of power that played out during the conflict, there were countless individual tremors, no less important. And these stories too ended up in the obituaries column of the Telegraph.

Ian MacAlister Stewart (died March 14 1987, aged 91) was the first British officer to land on French soil on August 11 1914. He was 18, a platoon commander with the Argyll and Sutherland Highlanders. When the young officer led his men in a charge he soon fell to the ground. His sergeant leant over his prostrate form and uttered the words, ‘Poor kid’ – only to receive Stewart’s caustic retort that he was perfectly unharmed, and had simply tripped over his sword. After the battle of Mons in August 1914 Stewart was part of the 200-mile Great Retreat, that valiant rearguard action that eventually halted the German advance and established the lines of the trench warfare that would play out until 1918.

Also in the thick of that retreat was Nigel Somerset, later known as ‘Slasher’ Somerset (died February 7 1990, aged 96). He was a platoon commander with the 1st Gloucestershire Regiment and had his first contact with the enemy just south-east of Mons. Shot crossing the Aisne river (though the bullet was safely stopped by his pack), he was less lucky the next day, when he was hit in the head by shrapnel. Far from the set-piece trench warfare of years to come, Somerset remembered that at that stage the gap between the defensive dug-outs of the opposing forces was only a few yards. His part in almost continuous action, on both the Western Front and Mesopotamia, saw him awarded the MC and DSO – he later served with distinction in the Second World War, too.

The next month Capt Bertie Ratcliffe (died 1992, aged 98) was left for dead at the Chemin des Dames. But when some German soldiers later picked over the battlefield they found that he was still alive. Ratcliffe was sent behind their lines as a prisoner-of-war – which entailed a three-day march with a bullet in his lungs. He was imprisoned in Ingolstadt Castle, where he was operated on and restored to health, before embarking on a series of escape attempts. He finally got away in 1917, making it first to Holland then England; the first British officer to make a ‘home run’, he was rewarded with an MC and a lunch date with the King, who wanted to hear exactly how he had done it.

Far away off the coast of West Africa Arch Clough (died January 5 1989, aged 100) was part of the Franco-British naval force seeking to capture the colony of German Cameroon. In August 1914 he was a sapper and surveyor attached to a party of Marines engaged in raiding coastal villages when, returning from one such trip, he and his men saw an open boat carrying the Senior Naval Officer from the government yacht Ivy capsize in heavy surf. With the help of a ‘clever coxswain’ Clough and his boat managed to rescue the SNO and four others. Though an Army officer Clough was awarded the Sea Gallantry Medal. The naval campaign was so successful that the Germans retreated to the interior, where most of Clough’s fighting came along a railway line. His job was to creep through the bush at night and ambush the German positions. He returned to the UK in 1916 but on health grounds was not allowed back to the tropics. Instead he was sent to the Somme, and survived two years in the trenches eventually ending up with the rank of brigadier.

Back on the Western Front the battle for control of the strategic lynchpin of Ypres was renewed in late April 1915. Harry ‘Hutty’ Hutson (died in 1991, aged 98) had been commissioned as an officer and was awarded an MC during the battle. A sapper, he continued to work at demolishing German barricades despite being wounded. The award stressed his sangfroid. Indeed, Hutty was almost bizarrely cool under fire. So composed was he that he was able to indulge his naturalist’s talents in the thick of battle, usually going in for a spot of bird watching. He later became the chairman of the British Trust for Ornithology. Such disdain for danger helped ensure that he was mentioned in dispatches on six separate occasions – three times in each world war, rising to the rank of major-general.

Cpl Ted Matthews was the longest surviving member of the Anzac troops who landed at Gallipoli on April 25 1915

At almost exactly the moment that Hutty was being awarded his MC (he would also pick up a DSO) Cpl Ted Matthews (died December 9 1997, aged 101) was splashing ashore at Gallipoli. He was the last survivor of the Anzac troops who landed there on April 25 1915, the first day of that disastrous invasion. He could count himself lucky: as he waded towards land, he was hit by shrapnel, only for it to lodge in his pocket book – a present from his mother. Many of his comrades were drowned in deep water by the weight of their heavy gear. ‘Nobody knew what was going on. Blokes were shot all around me. They were screaming out. Blood came spurting out everywhere. It was terrible.’

Offshore, AB Jack Gearing (died 1997, aged 102) was trying to reassure hundreds of green young reinforcements from the East Yorkshire regiment. ‘We knew that the 400 men of the East Yorks were mostly fresh from training,’ Gearing recalled, ‘and few had seen action. We gave them our hammocks, made sure they ate well, and gave them our rum. You see, we knew that where they were going would be like Hell on Earth, so we gave them all the love we could, because they were going to need it.’

From his warship, Theseus, Gearing was able to track the progress, or lack of it, of the campaign. By the autumn it was clear that it was failing comprehensively. ‘Each day when there was a lull we’d go in and collect the wounded. Some of them were terribly badly wounded, and all so young. We weren’t succeeding at all. All we were doing was losing a lot of men and ships. Every day we were bringing in different men, different faces, all tired, all beaten.’ In December 1915 and January 1916 Theseus took part in the two evacuations, which were about the only successes of the whole campaign, when more than 120,000 men, their guns, vehicles, horses and equipment were spirited away by night, with only a handful of casualties.

The scene at the Battle of Jutland, the only meeting of the two fleets, where Henry St John Fancourt fought.

But it was not until the end of May 1916 that the two fleets faced each other for the first and only time in the war. Henry St John Fancourt (died January 8 2004, aged 103) fought at the Battle of Jutland as a midshipman on the battlecruiser Princess Royal. His view through the gunsights of the ship’s 13.5in ‘Y’ turret was limited, and when he emerged during a lull in the firing he and others cheered when they saw men clinging to the bows of a wreck: only later did he learn that the men were British; the ship was the battlecruiser Invincible.

Henry St John Fancourt

‘We were firing as fast as we could,’ he recalled. That meant at two or three shells a minute, at ranges of eight to 10 miles. ‘No one really doubted the outcome of the battle. The Germans were good, and their gunnery was hot; but there just weren’t enough of them.’

A month later Monty Westropp (died 1991, aged 94) was preparing to go over the top at the Somme. Westropp was a 20-year-old 2nd lieutenant with the Devonshire Regiment. In the course of the attack all his senior officers were killed. Meanwhile he was confronted by a major from an adjacent unit who was fleeing, terrified, and causing widespread panic. As the man rushed past him, Westropp drew his pistol and shot him. Then ‘with the aid of my stick and my good sergeant-major, I readdressed the company’s attention towards the enemy.’ His conduct was certainly formidable in the line but it was equally vigorous away from the trenches. His favourite form of recreation was to perform Cossack dances on restaurant tables, accompanied by Olga, his Russian girlfriend.

Wg Cdr Gwilym Lewis in his single-seater biplane

High above these battlefields was ‘the cherub’, otherwise known as Wg Cdr Gwilym Lewis (died 1996, aged 99). Flying a single-seater biplane, he served with No 32 Squadron, having convinced his father to help him join the Royal Flying Corps by shelling out for private lessons. After four hours in the cockpit (all of them solo) he was issued with a Royal Aero Club certificate and immediately posted to France, where he went on to notch up 12 kills.His training appears to be just as haphazard as that of Bentley Beauman, who was commissioned in the Royal Naval Air Service in 1914, a day before the war began. Two days later, on August 5, he arrived on the Isle of Sheppey to report to one Cdr Samson, whose welcome left an indelible impression.

‘Can you fly a Caudron?’ Samson asked.

‘No Sir.’

‘Do you know the way to Hendon?’

‘No Sir.’

‘Very well. At dawn tomorrow you will fly a Caudron to Hendon.’

Beauman somehow did make it to Hendon (surviving a forced landing), where he reported to the director of the Air Division at the Admiralty, Capt Murray Sueter, who told him, ‘You are now the defence of London from Air Attack.’

‘I haven’t got an observer or any armaments. What could I do if a Zeppelin does come over?’

‘I leave that to you.’

Second Lieut Archie Binding (died 1992, aged 105) was up in the air but in an airship. He eventually logged 3,000 hours on convoy escort and anti U-boat patrols. ‘It was pretty hard work,’ he recalled. ‘Starting every day at 4am and lasting until sunset. We were in open cockpits and the only food for the day was Horlicks tablets.’

Away from Europe, in the shadow of the mountain where Moses received the commandments, Allied forces were pushing through Palestine and Egypt. The Battle of Rafa in January 1917 completed the capture of Sinai. Signals Officer Frank ‘Monocle’ Morgan (died 1992, aged 99) had initially enlisted in the Pembroke Yeomanry, but he subsequently served with the Imperial Camel Corps, which he described as being a union of aristocrats and complete ruffians. As evidence for this theory, he would tell the tale of asking for a volunteer bugler. A particularly blackguardly fellow stepped forward. ‘Oh no,’ he responded on being further quizzed about his musical talents. ‘I thought you said, “burglar”.’

For the most part, however, there was little to laugh about in 1917. Pte Arthur Barraclough (died August 25 2004, aged 106) arrived on the Western Front in January of that year, following only four months’ training. British dugouts, he said later in life, were ‘pigsties’ in comparison to their German equivalents, some of which had electric lighting and beds.

Pte Arthur Barraclough of the Duke of Wellington’s Regiment.

Barraclough, who enlisted on his 18th birthday and weighed only eight stone, was thrice wounded during his service with the Duke of Wellington’s Regiment, twice being repatriated to recover. On one occasion he was standing next to an officer who was struck by a bullet that passed through both cheeks, leaving a neat hole in each. Anxious to escape further shooting, they both made a run for it.

The war in the air was developing, too. In May 1917 Cecil Lewis (died 1997, aged 98) led his 11-strong squadron over the Channel to fight the world’s first mass air battle. Lewis’s initiation into the Royal Flying Corps had comprised 20 hours’ flying (without any map reading, Morse or formation training) before he was posted to No 9 Squadron. There he piloted BE2cs. ‘If ever there was an aircraft unsuited for active service,’ he wrote, ‘it was the BE2c.’

He was the first to admit that the life of a pilot was more comfortable than that of the men in the trenches, but he knew that it was no less dangerous. Life expectancy was measured in weeks, and in an era before parachutes a disabled plane could take an agonisingly long time to plunge to earth. Lewis had managed to survive eight months of flying in 1916 before being rested. Back in the fray by May 1917, he found himself in the mass air battle, facing an enemy ‘more than double in number, greater in power, and fighting with skill and courage [that] gradually overpowered the British, whose machines scattered, driven down beneath the scarlet German fighters.’ Only five of the 11 British aircraft in his squadron returned. It was an experience that made Lewis burn with indignation. As he wrote in his autobiography, the war ‘deprived me of the only carefree years’.

Pte Harry Patch (died July 25 2009, aged 111) felt the same. Patch was destined to become the last surviving British soldier to have gone ‘over the top’. For all his remarkably long life he remembered the constant danger, the noise, the rats, the lice – even the biscuits at Passchendaele that were too hard to be eaten. Most of all he remembered the fear of attacking, crawling through the mud because to stand up meant the certainty of being mown down by the German machine guns. As his battalion advanced from Pilckem Ridge, near Ypres, in the summer rain of 1917, the mud was crusted with blood and the wounded were crying out for help. ‘But we weren’t like the Good Samaritan in the Bible, we were the robbers who passed them by and left,’ Patch said. His unit came across a man lying in a pool of blood, ripped open from shoulder to waist, pleading to be shot. But before anyone could draw a revolver, the man died with the word ‘Mother’ on his lips. ‘It was a cry of surprise and joy,’ Patch recalled, ‘and I’ll always remember that death is not the end.’

Pte Harry Patch was wounded at Passchendaele and was the last surviving British soldier to have gone over the top

At 10.30pm on September 22 his five-man Lewis gun team was crossing open ground, single-file on the way back to the support line, when a shell exploded, blowing the three carrying the ammunition to pieces. Patch was hit in the groin by shrapnel, and thrown to the ground. Waking in a dressing station he realised that, although very painful, his wound was little more than a scratch. The following evening a doctor explained that he could remove a two-inch piece of shrapnel, half an inch long with a jagged edge, but that there was no anaesthetic available. After thinking over the prospects Patch agreed to have the sliver removed, and was held down by four men as it was extracted with tweezers.

Reinforcements only seemed to get younger. Staff Sgt Albert Alexandre (died January 14 2002, aged 100) was 16 when his regiment, the Guernsey Light Infantry, which had recently lost 700 men, moved back into the line at Passchendaele. The experience was worse even than the tales of his battle-hardened comrades had led him to expect. Even the elements seemed to conspire with the horrors of war to make life hellish. In icy conditions and under constant bombardment, with men being blown to pieces around them, Alexandre’s battalion lived in waterlogged trenches that regularly caved in, forcing them to take cover in mud-filled shell holes that were no cover at all. Respirators had to be worn for long periods against the persistent threat of gas attacks (whose effects Alexandre did not wholly escape).

Reinforcements were getting smaller, too. Sgt William Parkes (died October 7 2002, aged 106) was one of the last survivors of the Welsh Bantam Brigade, formed for troops between 5ft and 5ft 3in. The Bantams were often used for night reconnaissance patrols in no man’s land, because it was believed that their small stature made them harder to see. The toughest action in which Parkes was involved came during the taking of the ravine at Gonnelieu in 1917, by the end of which all of his officers had been killed, leaving him in command.

This was a war that witnessed the extraordinary military transition – from the age of the horse to that of the tank. In the Negev desert Lieut Darcy Jones (died January 11 2000, aged 103) was part of a combined force of the Worcestershire Yeomanry and the Warwickshire Yeomanry – a total of 181 men, in three squadrons – which charged and routed a 2,000-strong force of Turks and Austrians armed with machine guns and artillery. The charge, on November 8 1917, was an astonishing feat. Gen Allenby had decided that the ground in front of the Huj Ridge, 10 miles north-east of Gaza, was unsuitable for an infantry attack but that it could be crossed by cavalry, although there was no covering fire available. Trotting briskly in a flurry of dust, the Yeomanry saw the Turkish guns being wheeled round to face them. ‘Now then boys, for the guns,’ Jones remembered an officer calling out.

Cecil Lewis, who took part in the world’s first mass air battle in May 1917

Breaking into first a canter and then a full gallop, they rode down a steep slope of some 1,000 yards and then up another 150 yards under heavy fire. Shortly before his 100th birthday Jones recalled how he and his fellow Worcesters had split into groups of twos and threes to cut down the enemy gunners and machine-gunners with their sabres. He would forever consider it the most exhilarating experience of his life.But at Cambrai on November 20 1917 a short battle showed where the real power now lay. Basil Groves (died March 4 1992, aged 95) led his section of tanks through the vast pools of liquid mud (into which even huge tanks could disappear). To do so to best effect, he got out to direct the tanks on foot, exposing himself to rifle and machine-gun fire. The assault was a great success and the Immediate MC that Groves won was a Bar to an earlier award. He reached the rank of colonel.

To exploit the breach forged by the tanks a large force of cavalry had been kept in reserve. John Harris (died May 4 1996, aged 99) was ordered with his comrades in the 2nd Lancers (Gardner’s Horse, Indian Army) to charge. As they galloped down a shallow valley, the Lancers came under German machine-gun fire from right and left. After 3,000 yards, and more than 100 casualties, the charge came to a halt in a sunken road. Harris, a nephew of Maj Gen James Harris of Indian Mutiny fame, later won the Salmon Cup for pig-sticking at Gujerat and served in the Second World War before being ordained in 1946.

In August 1918 the future Air Cdre Freddie West was flying a two-seater Armstrong Whitworth FK8 reconnaissance machine in the recently formed RAF. Hedge-hopping over enemy lines he was hit by an explosive bullet, partially severing one of his legs, which obstructed the instruments and rendered the machine uncontrollable. West managed to extricate his disabled leg, regained control, and though wounded in the other leg too, manoeuvred so skilfully that his observer was able to open fire on surrounding enemy aircraft. When he died (in July 1998, aged 102) West was the last surviving holder of the Victoria Cross from the First World War.

Frank Morgan, who had been posted back to France after the major objectives of the Palestine campaign had been achieved, was the first man in the trenches to learn of the Armistice. He was an expert in communications and had overseen the laying of hundreds of miles of cable, sometimes using horses, sometimes using dogs with small drums on their backs. In November 1918 he intercepted instructions from the German GHQ, which ordered their generals to lay down their arms.

Cpl Ted Smount was one of the last surviving Australians who fought in the Great War, having lied about his age to enlist in 1915

When news of the ceasefire reached the men, joy was unconfined. Cpl Ted Smount, who had served with the Australian Army medical corps through the worst of the fighting in 1917 and 1918, drank himself silly and headed for Paris. But his heroism had come at a lasting cost. When Smount (who died on June 22 2004, aged 106) was chosen as Brisbane’s citizen of the year, he dived for cover at the sound of the artillery salute.

He was 100 years old at the time.

Guardian:

The ceaseless use of overwhelming military force on Gaza by Israel’s military in complete disregard for any reasonable interpretation of international humanitarian and human rights law is an outrage of unspeakable proportions (Outrage after third strike on Gaza school, 4 August). The massive loss of civilian life in the last four weeks includes over 400 children, over 200 women, over 70 elderly people, three patients killed in their hospital beds, and two severely disabled adults residing in a care centre.

An acutely abhorrent practice at the forefront of Israel’s brutally destructive military campaign is the deliberate targeting of family residential homes in apparent grave violation of international law. Since the launch of this Israeli military operation, it is estimated by the United Nations that over 900 houses have been totally destroyed or severely damaged, causing vast civilian casualties, including multiple members of the same families. By the end of 30 July 2014, at least 76 families had lost three or more family members in military attacks against family homes.

This deliberate and systematic targeting policy is an obscenity against humanity and clearly appears to amount to the commission of war crimes, and further to crimes against humanity, due to its apparent serious violation of the basic laws of war principles of distinction, proportionality and precaution.

We urge the UK government to publicly condemn Israel’s policy of directly targeting family homes in Gaza, and indirectly targeting whole families, confirming such actions as being unlawful, given that no such homes constitute a legitimate military target. We further urge the UK government to lead the international community in ensuring that credible investigations and full legal accountability is secured for all serious violations of international humanitarian law during this horrific conflict. A thorough implementation of independent investigation and judicial processes is critically important to provide justice for innocent victims, accountability for grave criminal wrongdoing, and deter the types of atrocities which characterise this terrifyingly cruel conflict from being repeated.
Tareq Shrourou Director, Lawyers for Palestinian Human Rights, Daniel Machover, Michael Mansfield QC, Professor Bill Bowring, Rachel Waller, Andrea Becker, Charlotte Dollard, Hannah Rought Brooks, Claire Jeffery, Nusrat Uddin, Alicia Araujo Mendonca, Sumiya Hemsi, Laila Hamzi, Geoffrey Bindman QC, Tom Short

• Geoffrey Robertson is absolutely right (International law might yet punish Gaza’s war crimes, 2 August). In present circumstances, the crucial requirement is justice: a lasting peace cannot be established if justice is denied, and therefore taking the warring parties to the international criminal court is essential. The Rome statute – at article 8 para 2b (iv) – defines as a war crime “intentionally launching an attack in the knowledge that such attack will cause incidental loss of life or injury to civilians or damage to civilian objects … which would be clearly excessive in relation to the concrete and direct overall military advantage anticipated”.

Israel claims its response to the alleged storage and launching of Palestinian rockets close to or from UN-declared safe zones is justified but, as the Rome statute specifies unequivocally, the benefit to Israel of destroying a few Hamas rocket launchers must be sufficient to justify the civilian damage caused. Moreover, the reportedly highly effective Iron Dome system gives Israel a means of protecting Israeli citizens without any civilian damage. As Robertson points out, there can be no possible advantage to Israel that would justify the knowing killing of so many children. In the horse-trading that preceded the successful Palestinian application for statehood, it seems that the Palestinian Authority agreed with the US not to take Israel to the ICC: the subsequent horrific events amply justify abandoning that undertaking and the PA making a request to the ICC for an investigation of war crimes in the Gaza war.
Professor David E Pegg
York

• Nick Clegg’s article is accurate and even-handed (Israel has to talk to Hamas, 2 August). A political solution is the only answer, but what incentive does Israel have to enter such a process when the US provides $3bn worth of arms to it annually while posing as a broker of peace? Europe should make a combined effort to put pressure on America to stop being Israel’s arms dealer and rather to insist on Israel leaving all occupied Palestinian territory. Europe will fail, of course, but will be seen at least to have done what is right and may just strike a chord somewhere that will lead to peace.
Jacqueline Warner
Yarmouth, Isle of Wight

• “The Jews under siege in the Warsaw ghetto” did indeed “dig a network of tunnels” (Letters, 2 August), but the comparison with Gaza ends there. The Jews of Warsaw were not facing a siege, they were facing total extermination. They had no rockets to launch at German civilians. Hamas, by contrast, uses rockets and tunnels to attack Israeli civilians, both Jewish and Arab (Israeli Bedouin have come under fire) as part of its campaign to destroy the country whose very existence it refuses to recognise, hence the siege.

While a negotiated settlement is clearly essential and the suffering and loss of life deeply disturbing, it is difficult to see how any resolution can be effected so long as Hamas eschews the route of dialogue in favour of its stated objective of eliminating Israel.
Jeremy Beecham
Labour, House of Lords

• Ed Miliband is right to criticise David Cameron for not sending out “a clear and unequivocal message to both sides in the conflict” in Gaza (Miliband rounds on PM’s failure to condemn Israel, 4 August). Israel’s indiscriminate and disproportionate use of military force, and the terrible suffering of the people of Gaza, well documented in recent weeks, has been met with government silence.

Unlike many countries in Latin America, which have recalled their ambassadors from Tel Aviv to protest against the continuing slaughter of innocent people in Gaza, the UK government has not even summoned the Israeli ambassador to the Foreign and Commonwealth Office to express concern.

Surely the time has come for Britain to take more robust action. It should consider an immediate recall of Matthew Gould, our ambassador to Israel. Politicians might pretend his continued presence is necessary if Britain is to have any influence in securing a ceasefire. Surely the opposite is true. The withdrawal of our ambassador would send out a strong signal that would clearly demonstrate the disgust felt by the majority of UK citizens.
Judy Cumberbatch
London

The tragic rise in the numbers of self-inflicted deaths in custody is the most vivid of the warning signs of a prison service placed under unprecedented strain (Report, 1 August). Ministers must heed what the figures are telling them. Slashing prison budgets while warehousing ever greater numbers in larger prisons overseen by fewer and less experienced staff is no way to transform rehabilitation. Good people have worked hard to make prisons safer and more constructive places. In less than two years of thoughtless change and headline-grabbing policy, sharply rising levels of suicide and violence show just how far their work has been set back.
Juliet Lyon
Director, Prison Reform Trust

• Laura Barton worries about driverless cars ruining the romance of driving (Comment, 1 August). I worry that they might not only ruin but entirely remove the manners of driving. Often the only way to cross a busy road is to rely on drivers slowing down and waving you across, while the pedestrians usually wave and smile in thanks. How can we hope to catch the eye of a driver who doesn’t exist?
Catherine Rose
Olney, Buckinghampshire

• In relation to the anachronistic, and slightly ridiculous, Commonwealth Games (After the gold rush, 4 August), wouldn’t a European Games, in the same date slot, be altogether more relevant, and more respectful, to the 1914-18 tragedy we are currently remembering?
David Freeley
Wexford, Ireland

• War is organised murder (Harry Patch); sport is war without shooting (George Orwell).
Sylvia Ayling
Woodford Green, Essex

• Two writers meet in the street. One says: “I’m writing a novel.” The other says: “Neither am I.” (#mynovel and the art of literary procrastination, G2, 4 August). PS: I am working on my novel. Really.
Charles Harris
London

• Here in Buxton we go down to London, down to Manchester, down to Sheffield, down to most places (Letters, 4 August). It is a question of altitude.
Nigel Moss
Buxton, Derbyshire

I am a great admirer of the work of Cambridge economist Ha-Joon Chang but his claim that privatisation was halted under Labour (End this privatisation dogma, 1 August) is an over-simplification too far. True, Labour only sold 51% of air traffic control, but that means they privatised over half of it. They also continued Norman Lamont’s policy of private financial initiatives, using them to finance the London Underground, hospitals and schools. Most of these contracts turn out to be greatly in the favour of the private contractors, and we the public are lumbered with disproportionate repayments over as many as 30 years. Large sections of the work of the NHS were also “outsourced” to the private sector, and they even tried, but failed, to flog off the Royal Mail.

The truth is that the neoliberal nonsense that the private sector exudes efficiency and the public sector is inevitably a bumbling bureaucracy has been accepted by all three major parties and dominates the media. Ha-Joon Chang is right to attempt to expose the myth but wrong to claim that Labour is or was untainted by it.
Peter Wrigley
Birstall, West Yorkshire

•  Because of their incompetence, Joseph Chamberlain, mayor of Birmingham in the 1870s, forcibly purchased the privately run Birmingham Gas Company and the Birmingham and Staffordshire Gas Company; his new municipal gas company made a profit of £34,000 in a year. He did the same with the privately run waterworks, creating Birmingham corporation water department, telling a House of Commons committee: “We have not the slightest intention of making profit … We shall get our profit indirectly in the comfort of the town and in the health of the inhabitants.” The new municipal company turned the city’s water supply into a healthy one, replacing the dangerous and expensive private ones that left the poor without clean, safe water. It took Thatcher to undo his good work.
Fred Lowe
Dublin

•  I am surprised that Ha-Joon Chang, who is usually so insightful about economics, did not realise that Network Rail was set up as a private not-for-profit company so that its massive liabilities, inherited from the collapse of Railtrack, and future borrowing did not count as national debt. Just like Gordon Brown’s fondness for unsecured PFI contracts, which allowed untaxed profits to be diverted into holding companies based in offshore tax havens. Naturally such debts are much more expensive to service than government bonds, and we are all paying the price.
David Nowell
New Barnet, Hertfordshire

•  It’s no longer the public enterprises which Ha-Joon Chang lists that are privatisation targets. Everything we’ve ever had has already been sold, its future cashflows discounted to zero. Today, it’s the mega-corporations themselves – the ones that own everything – that are being privatised. Shell (Report, 1 August), IBM, Coca-Cola, General Motors, Starbucks, Microsoft are all frantically buying back publicly available shares so as to increase returns to the chosen few remaining shareholders. Capitalism is eating itself in a gigantic Ponzi scheme funded by the free money of quantitative easing. Welcome to privatisation, 2014-style.

The chancellor of the exchequer, meanwhile, is just hoping that the feast lasts until the general election and that enough voters mistake it for a booming economy.
John Smith
Sheffield

As an obese GP (BMI 33.1) struggling to heave my enormous bulk on the sweaty coalface of the NHS, I was appalled to read Christina Patterson’s extremely unhelpful support for the NHS chief executive Simon Stevens’ decision “to take a stand” against all us chip-guzzling lazy lard-arses who go around telling people to stop doing everything we clearly do ourselves, while also rising to the challenge of diagnosing and treating illness in an obesogenic society (Nurses must be fit to fight, 2 August). All this with the ever present spectre of expectations continuously hiked up by politicians despite the reality of diminishing resources.

If she really wants the NHS to do better, perhaps she could put her undoubted talents to asking why food in hospitals is so poor, especially out of hours, or why people overeat or don’t do enough exercise, or maybe why the fast food and fizzy drinks multinationals have a seat reserved at any forum to protect their interests, or why poor people are so much fatter than rich people.

I know that when I am struggling with the difficulties and self-loathing associated with being regarded as lazy and greedy due to my weight, I would much rather have someone guiding me who has trodden that path themselves than someone with Christina Patterson’s obvious prejudices.
Dr Carolyn Lott
Nottingham

•  Simon Stevens is right to say there should be fewer chips in hospitals. But chips – and burgers, and crisps, and cakes, and cookies, and fizzy drinks, and confectionery – are what staff in our hospitals are offered.

Why? Because the NHS is being forced to operate like a business, outsourcing services such as catering. And light-touch legislation, in the form of the voluntary “public health responsibility deal”, doesn’t require these companies to provide food that promotes healthy living. As Prof Terence Stephenson, chair of the Academy of Medical Royal Colleges, has said, “asking the food and drink industry to voluntarily promote healthy living is … like asking petrol companies to encourage people to cycle and walk rather than use their car.”

If Simon Stevens is serious about tackling obesity and diabetes, he’ll need to challenge the notion that the NHS exists not to make people well but to provide business opportunities for private profit-making companies.

And then figure out how to pay the exit penalties written into catering contracts by exceedingly clever corporate lawyers.
Rochelle Parker
Reigate, Surrey

I cannot believe I am alone in feeling outraged and appalled by Nicholas Lezard’s assertion (Review, 2 August) that dogs are inherently fascistic whereas cats are independently minded. Speaking as someone who has nearly always shared his life with both, it is unmistakable that dogs are community-minded, socialist, eager to make the world a better place. Now look at cats: smug, entitled and clearly interested only in themselves and their I’m-all-right-Jackery.

There will always be some dogs who are corrupted, misled and – like Stalin – born to the left but end up on the fascistic right. Just as there must be rare examples of cats who have abandoned their life of comfort – Che Guevara comes to mind – and given their lives to the betterment of others (though I am yet to meet one). Which brings us to the one undeniable truth shared by anyone, of any political persuasion, who has ever canvassed door-to-door: dogs vote Labour, cats vote Conservative.
Jonathan Myerson
London

Independent:

It is encouraging to see Ruth Hunt, the new chief executive of LGBT charity Stonewall, calling on the Department for Education to tackle homophobic bullying in schools by teaching children about same-sex relationships as early as nursery.

It is perhaps equally reassuring to see your paper giving gay rights news prominence on the front page (“‘Teach preschool children to celebrate being gay’”, 2 August).

A recent survey by Teacher Support Network found that more than two-thirds of staff in schools (68 per cent) do not feel adequately prepared to teach same-sex marriage and LGBT-related issues. A similar percentage of staff said they had witnessed homophobic harassment in school, and just under half had been personally discriminated against because of their sexual orientation. This is preventing an open and tolerant environment for teachers and students alike.

The focus on LGBT policy in schools has tended to be on students, but teachers need to be equally supported. It is important that schools have policies and training in place so that all staff are able to offer support to pupils and colleagues, and are able to talk openly about LGBT issues.

Teaching children as young as three and four about gay rights is a radical and welcome step to nurturing a non-discriminative society from the outset.

Poppy Bradbury
PR Officer, Teacher Support Network and Recourse
London N5

 

I write in the spirit of Stonewall. I was 14 at the time of the New York Stonewall riot, which is seen as a landmark in the pride and visibility of gay people.

The organisation that has taken that proud name is appointing as figurehead a practising Catholic, who passes as straight in church, and who admits that she and her civil partner uncouple their hands when they cross beyond London Transport zones 1 and 2. Hardly “Out and Proud”, as the T-shirts say.

On the website, they boast as at May 2014 “76 per cent of our staff were 34 and under”. There’s a long way to go before it represents the community it purports to serve. Valuable though the Stonewall charity has been, in my opinion, like the Catholic Church, it now exists to perpetuate itself.

Could the noise problem Ruth Hunt’s neighbours complain of be loud hypocrisy? I agree there is much to be done in tackling homophobia, but Stonewall should either change name or exemplify true pride and visibility.

Chris Payne
London NW1

 

Corrosive homophobia is all too endemic and remains so, despite many legislative advances. This is principally because of a series of legislative reversals, reinforcing and legitimising homophobia, passed with the active support, mainly, of the last Labour Government after lobbying by the Church of England and Roman Catholic Church in particular.

These favours pandered to a homophobic agenda and had the deliberate effect of condoning discrimination on grounds of actual or perceived (homo)sexual orientation by Christian and other faiths.

This state-sanctioned homophobia, limiting employment and equality rights, helps foster a legal and moral framework in many schools and faith-based bodies, including charities, whose sole aim is preventing lesbian and gay people being able to grow up, compete and live on equal terms.

Until Parliament revokes all the opt-outs and concessions granted to religions that feel the need to discriminate against us, there will always be entrenched homophobia.

Alternatively, if religion insists on maintaining the right to act homophobically, charitable status should be withdrawn. Then at least it would be clear that such faiths were not acting in the public interest or to the benefit of society as a whole.

Rev Richard Kirker
London E1

Dangers of denial  and justification

When governments deny, justify, excuse or defend transgressions by their military or security services, it sends a message to the more extreme elements within their own forces that they can do whatever they think is appropriate, regardless of international law or human rights.

America did this over torture of prisoners, and Britain did it over extraordinary rendition, and both did it over the illegal surveillance practices of their intelligence services.

Israel is doing the same over Gaza, and Russia may be doing it over the actions of pro-Russian militias in eastern Ukraine.

I don’t believe the Israeli government directly ordered its tank commanders or pilots to deliberately target Palestinian hospitals or UN schools – any more than I believe that Putin would have ordered the deliberate shooting down of a Malaysian airliner.

However, by failing to immediately condemn and act against those responsible, but instead blaming Hamas, the Israeli government sends a message to its troops that such acts are acceptable.

In the frenzy of hatred being whipped up by the Israeli government against Hamas, it is inevitable that more trigger-happy elements of the Israeli armed forces will take this as a signal to do whatever they like to exact revenge.

Julius Marstrand
Cheltenham

The fallen might see more dark than light

It is of course hugely important that the First World War is commemorated, particularly the sacrifice of millions with the forfeiture of their own, usually very young lives.

Such commemoration is equally laudable in the case of all other wars of national conscience. The services and parades are apt and highly respectful, but I have distinct reservations about the dousing of domestic lights and their temporary substitution by myriad single candles as a method of symbolic sympathy.

If the religious beliefs of many of us are based on truth, and our fallen are indeed looking down on us from a place of serenity, it is possible that they will be momentarily gratified by the Government’s chosen symbolic display of condolence.

However, I cannot escape the feeling that their efforts and sacrifice would perhaps sadden them were they to realise that some of the legacy of hideous conflict has failed to progress our society in some rather important areas.

Examples that might seriously disappoint them would include the continued lack of justice for the victims of paedophilia in high places, the obscene wealth and income inequality that dominates our society, and the lack of a real and protected right of employees to speak out about wrongdoing in the workplace.

I Christie
Dersingham, Norfolk

Perhaps a fitting commemoration of the outbreak of the First World War would be for the present leaders of the belligerents of 1914-18, learning from the failure of diplomacy in 1914, to commit themselves to work collectively and intensively, over the next four years, at the resolution of the world’s current conflicts, many of which, ironically, have their roots in the First World War and its peace settlement.

The Middle East – Israel/Palestine, Syria and Iraq – and eastern Ukraine might be good places to start.

Then we might be able to go on to address the urgent social and environmental issues that face us.

John Seabrook
Lyme Regis, Dorset

I wonder how organised religion can take it upon itself to oversee commemorations of the outbreak of the First World War. All I have ever read shows that the churches (on both sides and each worshipping the same God) supported wholeheartedly their respective war efforts and encouraged their troops, throughout the four-year long butchery, to believe they were acting in accordance with God’s will.

Tribalism took over, as has happened in wars since then. Commitment to patriotic group loyalties easily trumped any commitment to the message of Jesus. It is a little late now to climb on the compassion bandwagon.

John Phillips

London SW14

Howard, you do make us laugh

Talk about women’s laughter… Howard Jacobson (“A woman’s power is in her laughter”, 2 August) gave me the best laugh I’ve had in ages when he stated: “Is it not a matter of common observation that the partner wanting the quiet life is, more often than not, the man.”

That’s not been my experience nor that of most of my female acquaintances. I would say: “As a matter of common observation from the female perspective, the reverse is indeed the case.”

Penny Joseph
Shoreham-by-Sea,  West Sussex

Try a different field of battle

The Israelis and Palestinians should play a game of football.

Eddie Peart
Rotherham, South Yorkshire

Will there just be  an angry silence?

If I’m involved in an incident with a driverless car, on whom do I vent my road rage?

Bernard Payne
Cheste

Times:

Refugees in Ukraine. World leaders should learn from the failure of diplomacy in 1914

Last updated at 7:41PM, August 4 2014

Sir, Perhaps a fitting commemoration of the outbreak of the First World War would be for the present leaders of the combatants of 1914-18, learning from the failure of diplomacy in 1914, to commit themselves to work together collectively and intensively over the next four years to resolve the world’s current conflicts. Many of these have their roots in the peace settlement of the First World War. The Middle East — Israel / Palestine, Syria and Iraq — and eastern Ukraine might be good places to start.

Then we might be able to go on to address the urgent social and environmental issues which face us as we share this planet.

John Seabrook
Lyme Regis, Dorset

Sir, The denigration of Winston Churchill has begun. Dr John Cameron (letters, Aug 4) will doubtless be followed by many more. Could I refer Dr Cameron to your leading article of August 4, 1914 in which Churchill was referred to as the one minister “whose grasp of the situation and whose efforts to meet it have been above all praise”. It would also be fair to point out that The Times had not been one of his supporters.

There was also a little matter of some treaties between England and France to which we adhered.

Gerald Funnell
Hastings, E Sussex

Sir, Is it feasible to add the names of those who died of their wounds to war memorials? (report, Aug 2). My uncle, Willie Hugh Skilling, was shot in the neck in the last week of the First World War while serving with the Black Watch. As a result, he died three years later but his parents had a struggle to have his name put on the memorial in St Columba’s Church, Glasgow.

Perhaps a small symbol, such as the Commonwealth War Graves Commission tombstone, could now be authorised to be attached to the tombs of those wounded who died, to recognise their own sacrifice?

Gordon Skilling
Guildford

Sir, We Serbs had already been fighting for a week against the numerically superior Austro-Hungarian army, Austria-Hungary having declared war on Serbia on July 26, 1914. As an ally of Britain in the Great War, I think this needs to be remembered.

Anthony Shelmerdine Boskovic
Saddleworth, Lancs

Sir, I have just read an article in my local history magazine about holders of the Victoria Cross from the First World War. The article has a quote from an ancestor of someone who won the medal saying he had never seen his relative’s VC as it is held in the Guards Museum in London.

Would it not be a gesture, as part of the commemorations of the war, from all military services to allow the medals to be displayed in cities, towns and villages where the recipients live?

TA Wilson
Wigan, Lancs

Sir, We were asked to extinguish lights last night at 11pm to mark the moment in 1914 when the British ultimatum to Germany expired and this country was therefore at war. However, in 1914 there was no daylight saving or summer time, so that the commemoration should have taken place at 10pm.

Kenneth Stern
London W2

Sir, I read with interest the article headlined, “Don’t sack heads for low grades, exam boards plead” (Aug 2) The fact is that this government is determined to adopt a top-down approach, which is inappropriate.

One reason is that 52 per cent of children overall in the Early Years Foundation Stage (EYFS) gain a good level of development as they enter year one, with only 44 per cent of boys doing so. Consequently, such children are ill prepared to meet the demands of the next stage of their education, let alone for examinations later in their school life.

Tinkering with examinations is not the way to remedy this situation. It ignores the need to deploy our best teachers in the EYFS, so that children have the very best start possible.

It is essential that we recognise that we lag far behind our European counterparts at each stage of education and that we take the necessary steps to redress the situation. Blaming the head teachers at the penultimate stages of young people’s progress would point to yet another fundamental flaw.

UM Stevens
Educational Consultant
Winchester

Sir, On whose authority did the presenter at the medal ceremonies of the Commonwealth Games announce that Jerusalem was “the English national anthem”. It is not. We are part of the UK whose national anthem is God Save the Queen. As a gesture we could agree to not sing the fifth verse. The English medal winners looked as bemused and embarrassed as I am annoyed.

Dr Thomas King
London SW15

Sir, I will concede that Jerusalem does have a good tune but how could the name of a foreign city be used as England’s anthem at the Commonwealth Games? And who in their right minds would even want to build the troubled Jerusalem in our “green and pleasant land”?

At least it’s not God Save the Queen, which the football and rugby authorities seem to think is the sole property of England.

Surely Land of Hope and Glory, which was composed here in the heart of England, would be far more appropriate.

Brian Rushton
Stourport-on-Severn, Worcs

Sir, Surely I am not alone in thinking it odd, sad and maybe macabre that Jerusalem was chosen as the “national anthem” of England for the Commonwealth Games at this particular time.

Mair Dinnage
Cheam, Surrey

Sir, Ros Altmann (report, Aug 4) asks: “Why would you want to stop working, stop using your talents and have a lot less money to live on?” Perhaps because you’ve had enough of your boss, commuting, what you do, think you can use your talents elsewhere and manage on less income.

I was fortunate 20 years ago, aged 53 and after 35 mainly happy years with one company, to opt for early retirement, accepting the reduced pension for going early. One woman told me it was disgraceful to “pack up” so young, until I told her that my deputy was ready to be promoted. Thus I made way for a younger person. There are now numerous young people desperate for work, while older ones hang on to their jobs.

In the past two decades, I have worked for a number of charities, unpaid or for a small retainer. I now work unpaid looking after my grandchildren and love it.

Enjoy your job? Not keeping anyone back? Carry on by all means. There is however, a world beyond the workplace which no one should tell you is inferior or unsatisfactory.

Barry Hyman
Bushey Heath, Herts

Telegraph:

Life in the slow lane: meandering along a country road in Normandy with the daily bread  Photo: John Elk III / Alamy

6:58AM BST 04 Aug 2014

CommentsComments

SIR – I am one of those women who enjoys pootling on a bicycle and am currently enjoying a leisurely ride down the banks of the river Loire (“Poo-pooing the pootle”, Letters, August 1).

The road surfaces are smooth and there are side channels for cyclists to avoid the speed bumps and chicanes in the villages as they ride through.

While I expect to be overtaken by packs of “lycrists”, it can be embarrassing to be overtaken by elderly Frenchmen on antique bicycles.

But then, they are not admiring the scenery at the same time.

Jane O’Nions
Saumur, Maine-et-Loire, France

SIR – Some gentlemen cyclists also prefer to pootle. The problem is the choice of machinery and clothing.

I dream of a rent collector’s bike made of lightweight carbon fibre, a bowler hat and a pinstripe suit made of lycra. Thus, I look like a pootler, but without the annoyances of a heavy bicycle and a hot set of clothing.

Dr A W Taylor
Grasscroft, West Yorkshire

Crowds in the streets of Berlin following the declaration of war against Russia

6:59AM BST 04 Aug 2014

CommentsComments

SIR – Today we mark the tragic centenary of the start of the First World War. This is also the centenary of the last day of peace: we seem to have had war ever since 1914.

Let us mark this occasion with a day of prayer for peace.

Andrew Harding
Haywards Heath, West Sussex

SIR – Many years ago we announced in The Daily Telegraph the birth of our daughter, in Beirut, Lebanon.

Shortly afterwards, we received a letter from a reader asking us to visit her husband’s grave. Having obtained directions from the embassy, we found a small, immaculately maintained garden with three or four Commonwealth War Graves Commission headstones.

The old caretaker was so pleased to see us and insisted that we drink a small glass of very sweet tea with him. We sometimes wonder whether that restful spot has survived the local conflict.

Quentin Peck
Falmouth, Cornwall

SIR – Sir Robert Garran’s order to fire the first shot of the First World War (Letters, August 2) must have been one result of my father’s stroll up Whitehall through the crowds to the all-night Strand post office, where he handed some 90 cypher cables across the counter shortly after 1am on August 5 1914, declaring war on behalf of the Colonial Office. It had taken a couple of visits to 10 Downing Street to confirm this action, to allow for the time difference and any unforeseen delays, but eventually the ultimatum was considered to have elapsed. The first reply came from Fiji, where they were awake. So, it would seem, were the Australians.

He forgot to ask for a receipt.

Lord Davidson
Hatfield Peverel, Essex

SIR – My father, who died in 1975, only mentioned to me once his time as a soldier during the 1914-18 War. It was a Sunday and we were going to have roast pork for lunch with sage and onion stuffing, when he suddenly said to me, “Your mother has never understood that I do not like sage: it puts me off my lunch.”

I asked him why, and he replied, “During the war I was pinned down for two days in a field of sage, and the smell brings back to me the smell of dead bodies.”

I could tell this was not up for discussion, but he was an honest, uncomplicated man, not given to flights of fancy, so I believed him.

I would love to know where this could have been. Sage always reminds me of him and I wish now that we had talked more about his past.

Pat Gourlay
Cropston, Leicestershire

A mother load

SIR – Taking pets on holiday is nothing new (Features, August 1). In the Sixties my father would load the following into his Humber Super Snipe: mother, four children, one dog, one tortoise, one budgie, several guinea pigs, two goldfish, some stick insects and, on one occasion, a ferret.

He would deposit us at our holiday home and then, very sensibly, would return home to seek the sanctuary of his bank in the City before collecting us at the end of the holiday.

Alexis Granger
Bracknell, Berkshire

Pipe down in front

SIR – In the driverless car (Letters, August 2), does the back-seat driver sit in the front?

Alan Sabatini
Bournemouth, Dorset

Interpreting Gaza

SIR – The war in Gaza has somehow escalated into an international condemnation of not only Israel, but of Jewish people worldwide. This is exactly what the Hamas leadership wants.

The press and social media play a big role in this conflict, and have incited much anti-Israeli and anti-Jewish feeling. This is not only frightening, but also encourages a defensive position that leaves many Jews united in defending Israel’s actions.

The overused word “disproportionate” reflects the terrible human tragedy of so much loss of life. Shielding women and children from harm’s way should be a major priority for the Palestinians. A protected area that has been deemed safe by both sides must be initiated for women and children.

The annihilation of Israel must also rate as “disproportionate”. Until Hamas is ready to accept Israel has a right to exist the battle will never end.

Jo Scorah
Manchester

SIR – The daily reports and analysis suggest that Hamas only has to stop hurling ineffective bombs at Israel, which Israel responds to with massive force, in order to enforce a ceasefire.

Israel appears to make huge efforts to protect its citizens. Why does Hamas consistently put the lives of civilians on both sides at risk?

Kevin Rowen
Lower Penn, Staffordshire

SIR – Why cannot the Israelis focus on detecting and destroying the tunnel exits rather than destroying countless homes and families in Gaza?

Lee Challenor-Chadwick
Burn Bridge, North Yorkshire

Now playing

SIR – Cinema-goers have too many options when deciding what to see, according to the British Film Institute.

Nonsense. Film-goers have hardly any choice unless they want to see the latest blockbuster, running in five cinemas for a month or more, while the remaining venues are showing teenage flicks. With so many cinemas, one would think it would be easy to find a lesser-known European, Australian or Asian film. No such luck.

Besides the problem of finding a film I want to see, when I get to the cinema, I’m surrounded by people who eat, talk, make phone calls and play games on their mobiles.

Marilyn O’Neons
Epsom, Surrey

Preserving Britain’s architectural heritage for all

SIR – Two years ago, due to ill health, we sold our lovely Grade II listed cottage, which was built in 1642. We had cared for this building for 27 years, surrounding it with colourful cottage gardens, which we loved, but which could be enjoyed also by passers-by. We understood that we were just caretakers of our home and that it was a legacy for future generations.

Last month I was dismayed when I passed by to find that the cottage and gardens had disappeared from view, hidden behind 12ft-tall trees. It can now be enjoyed only by its occupants.

I feel there should be the equivalent of a CRB investigation into the worthiness of potential owners of our old buildings to ensure they will preserve them for the admiration of the entire community.

Molly Hendon
Abbots Bromley, Staffordshire

SIR – Jonathan Ruffer (Features, July 14) concludes that “the social benefits of heritage are not ancillary – they can be its purpose”.

Nowhere is this more true than with churches. By funding repairs and the installation of modern facilities such as kitchens, lavatories and disabled access, historic religious buildings which have been at the centre of Christian worship for hundreds of years also become community hubs.

Unlike other countries, in Britain neither church authorities nor the state directly support the upkeep of churches. We must work together to bring real social and economic benefit to communities and to ensure their survival for future generations.

Claire Walker
Chief Executive, National Churches Trust
London SW1

For more than a decade, motorists buying diesel cars have enjoyed tax breaks because the cars produce lower levels of carbon dioxide and are more fuel efficient Photo: Alamy

7:00AM BST 04 Aug 2014

CommentsComments

SIR – The anti-diesel tax is yet another example of politicians claiming “it’s a green tax” to disguise unfair revenue-gathering from motorists.

They hit us all with “green” taxes to persuade us to buy lower-CO2 vehicles and now they are losing revenue because we’ve done that, while cars are also ever more economical and less polluting.

It is indefensible that someone in a petrol car that is so old it doesn’t even have a catalytic converter will pay less than someone who has invested in a new diesel, with a particulate filter, that complies with the latest emission regulations.

My biggest worry is that the tax won’t stay in the cities. In the past, one-size-fits-all attitudes have meant we rural dwellers, who don’t have the alternative of viable public transport and whose cars rarely sit in jams, usually end up paying vehicle taxes allegedly brought in to fight urban problems.

John Henderson
West Row, Suffolk

SIR – The only fair method would be to abolish the “road” tax and recover the cost through fuel duty, which can gradually be adjusted to favour petrol over diesel. Those that cover the highest mileages would pay the most tax.

John Micklethwaite
Huby, North Yorkshire

SIR – I have just returned from a pleasant six-week holiday drive around Germany, France, Belgium and Luxembourg. In all of those countries there appear to be more diesel vehicles than petrol being used. Furthermore, all fuel stations sell diesel fuel at lower prices than petrol, thus encouraging the use of diesel-powered vehicles.

It is about time we found some leaders who can stand up to the European Commission rather than penalising their own citizens for any arbitrary transgressions the EC dreams up.

J G Prestwood
Pontesbury, Shropshire

SIR – Boris Johnson seems to have forgotten that the capital’s buses and taxis are diesel-operated and have been for many years. Perhaps he intends that they should all be re-engined.

Spencer Holtom
Barton Stacey, Hampshire

SIR – I turned to a diesel estate car because its fuel consumption was 40 per cent lower than the two-litre petrol equivalent I had been using. Even with higher diesel prices, it made more economic sense.

John Nutting

Edenbridge, Kent

SIR – So diesel cars have joined statins, aspirin, butter, eggs and red wine on another bad today/good tomorrow cycle of uncertainty. It seems the more expert these government advisers get, the less they seem to know. Or is it that politicians just don’t know what questions to ask?

Brian Christley
Abergele, Conwy

Irish Times:

Sir, – John Bowman (“Time for us to remember first World War fallen”, Opinion & Analysis, August 2nd) restates the current orthodoxy with regard to the Great War. Despite widespread evidence to that contrary we are being asked to believe that nationalist Ireland somehow discarded all memory of that event for over 50 years.

This simplistic notion is playing its part in turning what should be an opportunity for reflection on Ireland’s role in the carnage of 1914-18 into a celebratory nostalgiafest. I agree with him when he states that it “remains the historian’s task to analyse the past with as open a mind as possible.” In that spirit it is well to remember that many Irish veterans of the war felt that they had been betrayed and drew the conclusion that their service had been a mistake.

Your article was accompanied by a photograph of the victory parade in Dublin during July 1919. Earlier that month 2-3,000 members of the Irish Nationalist Veterans’ Association gathered at the Mansion House in Dublin, where they voted to boycott that event. Speakers from the floor stated that they returned from service abroad to find in Ireland a “larger army of occupation than Germany found necessary to keep down Belgium”.

The veterans were addressed by Mary Kettle, whose husband, Tom, had died on the Somme in 1916. She complained that “soldiers were asked to march past College Green, their own House of Parliament, where their rights were bartered away, to salute Lord French (who) as Lord Lieutenant and head of the Irish Executive was responsible for the rule of coercion in this country and for the betrayal of every Irish nationalist soldier who fought and fell in the war …” She hoped “ in honour of her husband’s memory, not a single Dublin Fusilier would march in the procession. If it had brought about an Irish settlement they would march proudly; such was not the case; but, on the contrary, they were asked to join and unite with the army of occupation.”

Tom Kettle’s death is often held up as emblematic of Irish nationalist sacrifice in the war; his widow’s words help remind up of why memory of this conflict remains so problematic. – Yours, etc,

DR BRIAN HANLEY,

Dunmanus Road,

Dublin 7

Sir, – Regarding the hoopla currently under way concerning our participation in the Great War some thoughts come to mind. Interestingly, this conflagration was not started by Germany, not looked for, not provoked. Neither was there any reality to the manias of the time about “poor little Belgium” or Germany’s wish to “conquer the world”. Both were mythical. Another curiosity was that the largest, most powerful, most feared army in the world at the time was not that of Germany but of France.

The fact is that during the countdown to August 1914 the “warmongering” Kaiser was frantically casting about among Europe’s chancelleries for any expedient that might head off the catastrophe he, more than anyone, could see looming ahead. In the Wilhelmine era, Germany had risen immensely in the world, artistically, scientifically, industrially, so much so that as early as 1906 there existed high up in His Majesty’s Government a group determined to have Britain declare war on Germany for the express purpose of crushing it the moment a suitable casus belli presented itself.

Poor deluded Redmond, crooning about the promised paltry bauble of “home rule”, can hardly be blamed here. It was of their own volition that large numbers of Irishmen flooded into Britain’s armies to further a cause as unworthy as any in history, ie to annihilate the finest, most active, creative and honourable people the world has seen since the fall of Rome, a people with whom we had never had any quarrel. Mark the event by all means, but, recalling Kipling’s words “should any ask you why we died tell them – because our fathers lied”. Mark it for the tragedy it was. Yours, etc,

JOHN CULLY,

The Cedars,

Monkstown Valley,

Co Dublin

Sir, – I was taken with the photograph of the Great War victory parade past the old Irish parliament house in Dublin’s College Green in 1919, a building used in many recruiting posters and and postcards addressed to Irish nationalists, who thought they would advance Irish self-government by joining the British forces.

I think it only fair to point out that on the morning of that parade, three members of Ireland’s first democratic parliament, and that parliament’s clerk, were arrested by British agents and later sentenced to jail terms for conducting an illegal assembly – Dáil Éireann. – Yours, etc,

DONAL KENNEDY,

Belmont Avenue,

London N13

Sir, – James Connolly saw the first war as one of imperialist rivalry and spoke and voted against it in the Socialist International. Many young Irishmen who joined up were seeking an escape from grinding poverty In some cases even those in employment were to go at the behest of their employers and to keep their jobs. I see nothing in this to justify military celebrations or indeed commemorations. In human terms WW1 was a dire failure for all sides. – Yours, etc,

MAIRIN DE BURCA,

Upper Fairview Avenue,

Dublin 3

Sir. – I accept the worthiness of commemorating the many thousands of Irishmen who died in the first World War, but I am beginning to have doubts about the plethora of said ceremonies involving our Government. It smacks of retrospective embarrassment. Last week’s event at Glasnevin cemetery seemed to me to be a step too far. If the past 100 years has been characterised by a failure to pay tribute to the fallen, we are now perhaps going overboard now. This is especially true of your paper, although with your history as the voice of the unionist tradition this can be excused. I am not in any sense a rabid republican, but the pomp in Glasnevin made me uneasy. By all means have events to remember the dead, but so many? Yours, etc,

A JONES,

Mullagh,

Co Cavan

Sir, – Perhaps an antidote to the “imperialist” coverage of the centenary of the first World War might be a comparison of recruitment figures for parts of the British Isles during the war. According to JM Winter’s “Britain’s ‘lost generation’ of the First World War”, quoted in JJ Lee’s Ireland 1912-1985, 26 per cent of Scottish men of serving age joined the British army during the war and 24 per cent of Welsh men, but only 10 per cent of Irish men. A high of 43,000 Irish men who volunteered between August and December 1914 (half of them from Ulster) shrank to a low of 12,000 between August and March 1915 and figures fell further as the war progressed. Perhaps the war was not as popular here as some current studies would have us believe. Yours, etc,

JOHN HANAMY,

Ballinacurra Gardens,

Limerick

Sir, – I welcome the inclusion in the Decade of Commemoration of those Irish who fell in the Great War, but object to the Cross of Sacrifice ceremony held at Glasnevin last week given the presence at it of members of the British army. It seems that decades of propaganda with the specific purpose of incrementally deconstructing the narrative of the Irish State and restoring a British dimension here are bearing fruit. While it is appropriate to honour the Irish dead, what is not acceptable is the persistent efforts to confer a new respectability on the British army under the guise of honouring the Irish war dead. Sooner, rather than later, Irish society must make fundamental decisions regarding its political identity, ethos and future policy directions. Will we continue along the path of nation-building, asserting a distinct post-colonial Irish identity or do we instead see ourselves as part of the so-called “Anglosphere”? Yours, etc,

TOM COOPER,

Templeville Road,

Dublin 6W

Sir, – Now more than ever is the time to expose that 2000-year-old obscenity Dulce et decorum est pro patria mori (it is sweet and dignified to die for your fatherland). There is no glory in luring naive young men and women to kill and be killed. A veritable deluge of commemorations of the first World War is upon us, politicians, aristocrats and bemedalled elites disporting themselves with pomp and ceremony to mark the beginning of that most horrendous sacrifice of the innocent youth that goes by the name of the Great War. It was wrong when Horace said it 2,000 years ago and it was wrong in 1914, 1916, 1939 and for all the “wars to make the world safe for democracy and freedom”. Yours, etc,

MICHAEL ANDERSON,

Moyclare Close,

Dublin 13

Sir, – Thank you, President Higgins, for your more than wise words. We have, as you said, a multilayered sense of belonging. Our Irish Defence Forces continue to nurture, give pride and service to our country. I will always stand to attention when they pass. – Yours, etc,

ROBIN GILL,

Church Hill,

Carrigaline,

Co Cork

Sir, – I have watched the reports from Gaza and on the demonstrations about the bombing. And now I need to speak out, as a supporter of human rights, as a Jew, a rabbi and a citizen of the world. I condemn the Israeli government for its treatment of Palestinians on the West Bank. I condemn the Israeli government for its incessant bombing, the death of children and the destruction of Gazan society. And I support those who are as heartbroken as I am over this carnage.

But I do have a question. Where were the demonstrators, the reports in The Irish Times, when thousands of Israelis and Jews were murdered through suicide bombings, missiles, guerrilla attacks in Israel, Western Europe and around the world? Where were the demonstrations, the calls for human rights, when every country in the Arab League expelled Arab Jews in 1948?

Where were the demonstrations when Black September blew up school buses in Kyrat Shemonah or the cafeteria at Hebrew University, or the cafes in Tel Aviv, or the 23 bus in Jerusalem? Nowhere.

To the clerics who have spoken from the pulpit about the war crimes committed against Gazans, my question is where was your church, your clergy during the terror attacks in Israel, during the murders in Munich, during the Shoah and, oh yes, during the Inquisition? Nowhere.

From the safety of Ireland it is easy to blame, to point fingers, to claim a righteous position when it isn’t your home, your children, your parents and relatives being bombed or dying in the IDF. It is easy to accuse without coming to terms with the situation in Israel/Palestine, a situation that is at once complex and deadly. And it is extremely naive to think that some of the rancour and anger directed at Jews (in France, Germany, the US and, yes, here in Dublin) is anything other than anti-Semitism.

The horror in Gaza is just that – horrific. It needs to stop. We need to make it clear that “never again” means never another Gaza, or Munich, or Rwanda, or Belfast, or Warsaw, or Darfur or Gorta Mór. It means that all human beings must be treated with dignity and respect. It is time to stand for all humanity … even for those whose homes are the targets of Hamas’s missiles. – Yours, etc,

PROF KRIS

MCDANIEL-MICCIO,

Orwell Rd,

Dublin 6

Sir, – Who could deny the righteous momentum that brought the Jewish people after the Holocaust and after almost two millennia of diaspora and persecution to seek a return to the old homeland of Palestine?

The dilemma was how to accomplish this justly and in a manner that did not deny the rights of the homeland’s perennial inhabitants, the Palestinians. In this Israel and the international community (who also bear massive responsibility) have sadly failed and in the process the Israeli state has, in its peripheralisation, dispossession and destruction of the Palestinians, perpetrated a fate similar to that which was unleashed upon Jews during the endless and centuries-old persecutions and pogroms of Europe, Russia and the Middle East.

People of goodwill across the world are watching the current situation unfold with great sadness given the appalling history of Jewish suffering, and therefore – and perhaps unrealistically (given the the developing aggression of Islam around them) – expected more evolved and humane solutions to be pursued by the Israelis in solving the problems of co-habitation in shared territories.

As for Eamonn Mc Cann’s naive belief (Opinion & Analysis, July 31st, in reference to Jon Snow’s conjecture about Hamas’a motives) that there would not be Hamas extremists willing to stand by and see the cause bolstered by the pile-up of Palestinian bodies, including those of children, I find his lack of cynicism difficult to understand given his age and our observation of similar strategies pursued in the past, eg the IRA’s ruthlessness in letting young men die on hunger strike, boosting the organisation’s position. Extreme situations breed extremism.The Palestinians have a just cause, corrupted by extremism. Likewise the Israelis. Will the human community never learn the lessons of history? Probably not. And in the meantime children are dying. – Yours, etc,

CYNTHIA CARROLL,

Portryan,

Co Tipperary

Sir, – I see another letter describing Israel as “the only true democracy in the Middle East”. Perhaps we should pray that this model of democracy spreads no further: the undertakers would never be able to keep up. Yours, etc,

CAPT JOHN DUNNE,

St Georges Street,

Douglas,

Isle of Man

Sir, – Finally, with Karl Deeter’s excellent article (Pricewatch, August 4th), we have some insightful commentary on the current housing problems affecting Dublin. Media analysis of housing problems has unfortunately been very poor. While it is perhaps inevitable in Ireland that those with a vested interest in high house prices will dominate the airwaves, it is unfortunate that their views are subjected to so little analysis.

A case in point is the extraordinary amount of space that the Irish Mortgage Holders’ Association and New Beginnings are regularly given. Representatives of these organisations are rarely asked hard questions, nor are their interests questioned. Meanwhile, the hundreds of thousands of citizens who rent (at very high prices and often in very poor housing stock) and those who would like to buy a reasonable house or apartment for a reasonable amount of money have absolutely no voice and are largely excluded from the debate.

More robust pieces like that from Deeter will go some way to addressing this deficit. Yours, etc,

BILL CALLAGHAN,

Seafield Road East,

Clontarf,

Dublin 3

Tue, Aug 5, 2014, 01:10

First published: Tue, Aug 5, 2014, 01:10

Sir, – Breda O’Brien (Opinion & Analysis, July 2nd) once more highlights how underrepresented women are in politics and business, reminding us that we rank 60th in the world for women holding ministerial positions, a ranking just slightly altered by the recent reshuffle.

I agree with her that failing to put a financial price on the carer’s contribution can lead over time to feelings of lack of self-worth and erode confidence. The choice to be a home-maker needs to be valued and respected; choosing career and politics over being a home-maker is only possible for many women because other women are available to perform this role, allowing mothers like me the choice to work outside the home.

We need to encourage and motivate, we need more strong female role models (we have them but we need to hear their stories). We need more awareness as to how underrepresented the 51.8 per cent of women in Irish society are. Awareness, quotas, encouraging girls to be competitive at school, these are all positive first steps, but we will need more. – Yours, etc,

CLLR ANNE-MARIE

DERMODY,

Solicitor,

Butterfield Avenue,

Dublin 14

Sir, – I welcome your editorial (August 2nd) highlighting the findings of the study conducted by the Clinton Institute at UCD that deals with emigration. This is an important study, as it officially emphasises what those of us involved with Irish emigration have been suggesting for years. At last, it is admitted that emigration is caused by dysfunctional institutions. Preparation is needed to deal with departure, arrival, culture shock, integration and the need to associate with networks at destination. To accomplish this, available objective information is essential.

It is mistakenly assumed that with the apparent shrinking of distance and effective modern communications emigration has changed.

That is so, but the pangs of loss experienced by the human heart remain, both for the left and the bereft. Migration breaks primary relationships. Unresolved loss lingers in isolation.

Emigration is the human heart on a journey of hope. It should be incumbent on states like Ireland, which cannot offer all their people work at home, to help make that hope a reality abroad and to facilitate a return if so desired. – Yours, etc,

BOBBY GILMORE,

SSC Migrant Rights

Centre Ireland,

Dame Street,

Irish Independent:

The exorbitant prices for Irish water will cost others their jobs, as householders cut back on other basic items to meet this extra cost – along with their property tax and increases in gas or electric bills. It will cost the bread man his job. It will cost the paper boy his job. It will cost the milk man his job. It will cost hotel and restaurant workers their jobs, along with local jobs in local shops as people cut back on all of these to meet their water charge payments.

So while ministers and politicians can afford to bathe in milk and champagne, we won’t be able to afford a carton of milk for our tea/coffee, at the same time I could not even drink the tap water during the very hot spell due to the amount of fluoride in it. The smell and taste was making me sick, so I had to buy better-quality bottled water to drink instead.

You can’t get blood from a stone. We are stone broke. Our well has truly run dry paying for the mistakes of others who left the Irish people with a thirst for the recent European/local election bashing of government parties. Water/property charges will finish them at the next elections. They are not waterproof.

Kathleen Ryan

Dublin

Israel defends its people

Shame on Hamas. Shame on you for slaughtering the innocent Palestinian people, by provoking Israel.

Then again the ideology and fundamental ideas you endorse has no place for shame. I for one would not put money in a collection bucket for fear that Hamas might receive a single penny of it.

Hopefully Israel will go through every house in Gaza to get rid of the rats who are the real threat to the society we live in.

They have every right to defend their people and live in peace.

Mike Niland

Co Galway

Medical card abomination

Hubert H Humphrey, a former vice president of the United States, once said: “The moral test of government is how that government treats those that are in the dawn of life, the children; those who are in the twilight of life, the elderly; those who are in the shadows of life, the needy and the handicapped.”

If our current government had any aspirations to govern by this maxim, then they have failed miserably. Having witnessed, first hand, the injustices perpetrated by this administration on the sick and elderly, I felt compelled to pen this letter.

My mother-in-law is almost 90 years of age, has many physical ailments, advancing dementia and lives in a nursing home. She is about to lose her medical card. It’s an abomination and all so that our financial institutions and big business can be protected and safeguarded. I ask you, what sort of society have we become to allow such a thing to happen? It is obviously “no country for old men” or women either for that matter.

Brendan Prunty

Dublin 13

Respecting the anthem

Several letters have referred to the disrespect shown to the pre-match playing of the national anthem by GAA players. Surprisingly, none that I am aware of, mention the very same disrespect shown by GAA fans/supporters. The Gaelic Athletic Association, more especially in the North, deems itself to be the foremost guardian of all that is good (or bad, depending on how you look on it).

Yet their members repeatedly show disrespect for that prime symbol of nationhood, the Irish National Anthem.

Never yet have I heard it played out to the end without it being totally drowned out three-quarter ways through by spectators cheering for their respective teams.

So why solely blame the players? They are only doing as their supporters do so well.

It makes one wonder why players and spectators of “foreign” games as rugby and soccer can give total respect until the last note of the national anthem. Is it to much to expect the same level of respect from GAA players and supporters? I’m sure it would be a satisfying and uplifting experience for us GAA followers.

Paddy Ryan

Cappamore

Limerick

HSE drug payments advice

Many patients who recently lost their medical card were driven back onto the Drug Payments Scheme, and now have to pay at least €144 per month for prescribed medicines, an increase of at least €119 every month.

Some GPs only prescribe for 28 days medication each month, and medicines are often boxed in 28s, even though we have seven 31 day months, four of 30 days, and February has 28 days in three out of four years, with one 29-day month every fourth year.

Twelve months x 28 prescription days is only 336 days.

Patients should ask their GPs to prescribe monthly by the number of days in each month, to avoid having to pay 13 times instead of 12 each year.

Sean Hennessy

Dublin 24

Remembering the dead from World War I

Last week (Thursday, 31 July) Glasnevin cemetery had a ceremony for Irish service men and women in World War I and World War II and for WWI’s 100th anniversary. Some 4,500 Irish nurses worked in WWI. A special cross was unveiled near the graves of 200 WWI Irish servicemen by the Glasnevin Trust – with the Commonwealth War Graves Commission, which looks after the war graves and cemeteries worldwide of those who were in the British, New Zealand, Australian and Canadian armies and from other Commonwealth countries in both wars.

It represents all faiths and none.

President Michael D Higgins spoke of how we today eliminate all the barriers that have stood between those Irish soldiers whose lives were taken in the war, for whose remains we have responsibility, and whose memories we have a duty to respect.

We cannot give back their lives to the dead, he said, nor whole bodies to those who were wounded, or repair the grief, undo the disrespect that was sometimes shown to those who fought or their families, but we can honour them all now.

Patrick Arnold, whose father William J Arnold from Dublin was a career soldier with the Dublin Fusiliers in the British army in WW1 and WWII, said after the ceremony that, although his father died of natural causes, he was very psychologically and emotionally wounded by the war.

He never mentioned it, because the memories, noise and stench were too powerful. He lived with guilt that he survived. He hoped the cross will give a central point, spanning all religions and all classes across the island and he hoped in 10, 50, or 100 years, people will gather together in their memory. The Northern Ireland Secretary of State for Health also attended.

Ceremonies on WWI’s 100th anniversary in Ireland are seen as remembering Irish men and women who died or survived and returned to a different Ireland after the 1916 Rising and War of Independence.

They believed WWI was a moral one as they were told this with reports of atrocities in Belgium in 1914 invaded by Germany en route to France. Nine million men killed in four years sent by leaders not at risk themselves, with the exception of Russia’s Tsar and family tragically executed in July 1918.

They had thought the war would be a short one. It tragically wasn’t.

Mary Sullivan,

College Road

Cork

Irish Independent


Sharland

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6 August 2014 Sharland

I jog around the park I still have arthritis in my left knee, but I manage to get round the park. A warmish day. Sharland comes to call.

Scrabble Mary wins, but gets under just 400. perhaps I will win tomorrow.

Obituary:

Peter Marler – obituary

Peter Marler was an animal behaviourist who showed that birds learn to sing and decoded the meaning of their songs

Peter Marler with a Jameson's wattle-eye

Peter Marler with a Jameson’s wattle-eye

5:55PM BST 04 Aug 2014

CommentsComments

Peter Marler, who has died aged 86, was a British-born animal behaviourist who became known as the “father” of the field of bird song study in the United States.

At the time he began his research, the general view among scientists — promoted by Konrad Lorenz and Niko Tinbergen — was that the patterns and structures of bird communication were arbitrary and instinctive. As such, they were thought to be particularly valuable for taxonomic purposes (determining a species’ place in the evolutionary tree) because they were not subject to “convergence” — the process whereby organisms not closely related independently evolve similar traits as a result of having to adapt to similar environments or ecological niches.

Marler came to almost the opposite conclusion, showing that most birds must learn to sing, as humans learn to speak, by hearing and memorising the distinctive songs of their species, and he went on to shed light on the process and to show how the quality of bird calls are adapted to suit the functions they fulfil.

He became interested in bird song in the 1950s when he was studying for a PhD in Botany at University College London. His thesis involved taking mud cores to reconstruct the history of Esthwaite Water in the Lake District. But while he travelled around the country, he also noticed that he could hear differences between the songs of chaffinches in different locations.

Male Chaffinch (Alamy)

After taking his PhD he went to work for the newly-founded Nature Conservancy; but he could not stop thinking about the chaffinches, and eventually his employers awarded him a fellowship to do a field study of the birds for a PhD in Zoology under William Thorpe, Professor of Animal Ethology at Cambridge, at his new field station in Madingley.

Thorpe, a pioneer in the use of sound spectrography for the detailed analysis of bird song, had also been working on the song of the chaffinch, and the two men joined forces to pursue their research. In a series of classic experiments they found that when individual young chaffinches were brought up in acoustic isolation, the song of the adult bird was abnormally simple. When they put isolated acoustically-deprived birds together they stimulated each other to produce more complicated songs, although they were still comparatively simple and far from normal. When the isolated birds were introduced to wild chaffinches, however, the result was that they soon learned to sing perfectly.

Marler went on to examine the battery of functions performed by bird song. He noticed, for example, that, when threatened by a predator, both the chaffinch and the great tit uttered a high-pitched alarm call that other birds nearby could hear easily but predators such as hawks found difficult to locate. By contrast, “mobbing” calls, designed to recruit help in chasing a predator away, seemed to be pitched to make the caller easy to locate. The quality of the calls, he suggested, was clearly related to function, and thus could be seen as an example of evolution at work.

Thorpe was not an easy man to work with — Marler described him as a “typical Cambridgian” who “didn’t recognise my PhD from University College London and never called me Dr Marler until I got a PhD from Cambridge”. After seven years under Thorpe’s shadow, Marler accepted an offer of a teaching post at the University of California at Berkeley, bringing with him a cage full of jackdaws and a whole new field of bird song studies.

His early research in the US was on the song of the white-crowned sparrow, Zonotrichia leucophrys. In an early paper which became the most cited in its field, he showed that sparrows at Sunset Beach, California, had a different “dialect” from their neighbours in Berkeley and that birds at Inspiration Point, just two miles down the road from Berkeley, had a different dialect from both the other groups. He concluded that local dialects may evolve through cultural influences, observing in 1997 that the different dialects were so distinctive that “if you really know your white-crowned sparrows, you’ll know where you are in California”.

White-crowned sparrow (Alamy)

In other research, he found that young male swamp sparrows reared in isolation and exposed to song only through tape recordings, commit song material heard in the first two months to memory, but keep it in storage for around eight months until they have reached early adulthood; in the meantime they experiment with a great variety of “plastic song” — like the pre-speech babbling of human infants — before the adult pattern is adopted. This triggering of some sort of “pre-recorded” memory, he suggested, might help to explain why, after the initial babbling phase, human babies are able to pick up language so quickly: “The bird apparently practises what he has heard in infancy and, in the process of rehearsal, so to speak, selects out the final, mature song of its species” he said in 1980.

But Marler conceded that genetics, too, had a role to play. In another experiment he reared male song sparrows and swamp sparrows in isolation and exposed each to songs of both species.

While the song sparrows learned some parts of the swamp sparrow’s simple song, the swamp sparrows learned almost none of their close cousin’s elaborate melody.

Clearly, Marler concluded, birds are strongly influenced but not necessarily bound by innate preferences. Like children, they learn songs from their elders. But unlike children, who can learn any language they are exposed to, the musical language of most birds is constrained by their genetic heritage. He went on to assemble evidence that birds that do not mimic others have a kind of “filter’’ in their brains that keeps them from learning or imitating alien vocalisations.

Marler had been intrigued by birds from his early years in Slough, where he was born, the son of a toolmaker, on February 24 1928. His father kept tropical cage birds and, while studying at Slough Grammar School, Peter co-founded the Slough Natural History Society.

He also ran a rescue centre for injured wild birds in the family home. Among the patients were a barn owl, greenfinches and a rook called Grip which would sit on Peter’s mother’s shoulder while she was knitting, occasionally “helping” by pulling on the threads; it would also fly into neighbours’ houses, returning with shiny trinkets and knick-knacks. From time to time Peter would have to tour the neighbourhood, returning people’s belongings.

At school, Peter was interested in all scientific subjects — chemistry being a favourite. Among other things he concocted a paste, largely consisting of nitrogen triiodide, a distant cousin of TNT which becomes unstable when dry. When his grandmother came to call, he would sometimes put a small spot of paste on the garden path, where it would explode with a satisfactory “crack” when she stepped on it, making her furious.

After nine years at Berkeley, Marler moved to Rockefeller University in New York, where he remained until 1989. He then moved to the University of California in Davis, where he helped to establish a new Center for Neuroscience and subsequently became an emeritus professor in the department of neurobiology, physiology and behaviour.

As well as his work on bird song, Marler also led investigations, working with Jane Goodall among others, into how monkeys and chimpanzees communicate. He found that vervet monkeys vary their alarm calls to indicate the sort of predator at large. An alarm call for a leopard, for example, would send nearby monkeys scrambling into the tree tops, while an alarm call for an eagle would send them deep into the undergrowth.

Vervet money (Alamy)

In 1971 he was elected a member of the US National Academy of Science, and in 2008 a foreign member of the Royal Society.

Peter Marler is survived by his wife, Judith, and by their son and two daughters.

Peter Marler, born February 24 1928, died July 5 2014

Guardian:

It is far too soon after the iniquity of the default retirement age was brought to an end to be wishing for a return to enforced retirement (The have-it-all generation has to be told when to quit, 5 August). We and others fought long and hard to articulate the strong business case for age-diverse workforces. It is retrograde to see older workers referred to as “desk-blocking new talent”. There is much evidence across business of the benefits that younger workers derive from having older workers around as mentors and contributing their skills and experience – and indeed, in a fast-paced technology-driven world, of the benefits older workers derive from having younger workers around.

Organisations benefit from having workforces that reflect the demographics of the customer bases they serve, and with a diversity of thoughts and ideas. By 2030 the EU working-age population will have shrunk by 4%. So it’s a business imperative to encourage age-diverse employment – we need as many people as possible, young and old, to be active in the labour market if our economy is to be healthy and competitive.

The economics of longer working lives are about more than the cost of pensions. We all benefit from retaining the skills and contribution of both eager older workers and eager younger workers. And we’re all the poorer if we consign people who still have much to contribute to the sofa through an unfounded belief that this will automatically benefit younger generations.
Susannah Clements
Deputy chief executive, CIPD

•  Ros Altmann, the older workers’ champion at the Department of Work and Pensions, suggests that people of pensionable age should quit and start their own businesses, leaving jobs for younger people. Has she considered what this would do to younger people who already run businesses? As a second-hand bookseller for 37 years, I often felt that colleagues looked at me askance because they knew that my husband had a good job and would never let me starve. Similarly, all these people quitting to start a business would have a pension to fall back on, and could afford to undercut those already in the field or take work from people who were already finding it hard to survive. The average income of a self-employed person has fallen from £15,000 to £11,000 since the beginning of the century. Think again, Ros.
Margaret Squires
St Andrews, Fife

•  Every time you publish another article designed to bash the “have-it-all” generation I am angered at the assumption that life has been a bed of roses for those of us now in our 60s and that (apparently) our comfortable existence has been achieved at the expense of the younger generation. Whatever truth there may be in this, it is doubtful whether many youngsters today, in order to achieve their ambitions, would swap their current existence to live life under the conditions that prevailed in the 1950s (details on request if needed!).

The point is that while we rightly sympathise with the difficulties they experience, we must also concede that, from a material point of view, they are much better provided for than was the generation being accused of causing all their problems. Many of us in our 60s may be relatively comfortable after a lifetime of hard work, but most of us grew up with damn all. The Guardian really should cease stoking up intergenerational conflict – surely there are more constructive ways to address today’s problems.
Robert Ramskill
Coventry

•  The reason the have-it-all generation continue to have it all is that they are the ones who vote. That is precisely why the under-30s, the unemployed and those on low wages, who tend not to vote, suffer most under current government policies. Our politicians may be sociopaths but they are not stupid sociopaths. They will go on shuffling goodies in the direction of those likely to get them re-elected. It is clearly time to introduce compulsory voting, which probably needs to be linked with compulsory voter registration and with making it easier to cast a vote. We need political parties to make the case, which is unanswerable, and commit to include it in manifestos. There’s no point in a level playing field if one side fields far more players than the other. The Tories are unlikely to vote for Christmas, so I look to Labour and the Lib Dems.
Alan Healey
Milson, Shropshire

•  “People with good jobs, professional and managerial, will keep them,” says Anne Perkins. “But teachers, or those who do hard manual work, will not.” I was planning to say that, as I understand it, teaching has always been a profession, and even the coalition, with its penchant for downgrading the status of teachers, hadn’t so far aligned teaching with “manual” work. But a couple of pages later, in the Education section, I read the experiences of a dedicated teacher and a committed teaching assistant who had just left the teaching profession on account of the appalling impact of current unprofessional education policies and practices on their working lives. I realised I had overestimated the coalition.
Professor Jennifer Jenkins
Southampton

• When Anne Perkins reaches retirement age, will she take her own advice and let a younger journalist be employed?
Maggie Johnston
St Albans, Hertfordshire

Where has this ridiculous tendency to describe any example of more than two objects as a “curated collection” come from? A trawl through the weekend’s papers produced an embarrassment of riches; a curated collection can mean any careful arrangement of pictures on your living room wall or a random selection of car-boot tat that you throw together. It’s what’s left in a house that’s up for sale when you’ve taken out all the family photos that could frighten prospective buyers, or the stock of a shop (I quote from a rival broadsheet: “a beautifully curated collection of hard-to-find fashion labels”). I’d have thought that the Guardian house style would avoid this, but there it is in your advert: “Shop our curated collection of DVDs, merchandise and T-shirts.” It’s not a curated collection – it’s a selection of things you think we might like to buy.
Anne Cowper
Swansea

• The illustration comparing a “British man” standing between a smaller emperor penguin and larger mega penguin (Giant penguin fossil found, 5 August) shows the smaller beast looking up to the Brit, Ronnie Corbett style, but the larger bird is ignoring both of them. The prehistoric past was clearly a foreign country, at least in respect of class.
Brian Smith
Berlin, Germany

• Here in Burley-in-Wharfedale (Letters, 5 August) we go along to Ilkley and Otley, in to Leeds and Bradford, over to Harrogate and out to Filey and Whitby. Oh! and once in a while we just go to London.
Angus MacIntosh
Burley-in-Wharfedale, West Yorkshire

• Here we even go up to Barnstaple. We know our place.
Stuart Mealing
Holsworthy, Devon

• Our cat, Gerald, was shocked to be labelled a Conservative voter (Letters, 5 August). He’s from a classic working-class background, having been abandoned on a building site in Stoke-on-Trent, has overcome undeserved prejudice against his name, and has always been left-leaning. The latter may be due to his gammy leg.
John Cockell
Congleton, Cheshire

• Rabbits vote Green.
Norma Laming
Ipswich, Suffolk

Martin Kettle’s dystopian and all too credible prediction of the disastrous consequences of a majority for independence in the Scottish referendum in September (Remember 2014, the last summer of the old Britain, 31 July) suggests two possible variants of his scenario. First, David Cameron’s coalition government would surely have to resign immediately following such a catastrophic defeat. The incumbent government that had presided over the disintegration of our country as a direct result of its failure to offer Scotland a credible alternative to independence could hardly carry on as if nothing terrible had happened; and anyway there would be a pressing need for a new government with an electoral mandate to open and lead the negotiations with Edinburgh on the detailed terms of Scotland’s secession. 

Second, the negotiations between Scotland and the rest of the UK (rUK) on the terms of secession would be quite likely to get bogged down in failure to agree on some key issues. If the best terms that the government at Holyrood was able to extract fell significantly short of the SNP’s demands, there might well be justified pressure from the Scottish people for a fresh referendum to establish whether those who had voted in 2014 for independence still favoured it on the only terms on offer following the negotiations. Come September, Scots will have to decide whether to buy a pig in a poke. They may well find that they don’t like the pig when it eventually emerges. However, it would be risky for Scots considering a yes vote in September to assume that they will have an opportunity later to change their minds if they don’t like whatever may emerge from negotiations with rUK.
Brian Barder
London

•  In broad outline, Martin Kettle’s depressing scenario of a fractured Britain is by no means implausible. But put it together with George Monbiot’s article (The rich want us to believe their wealth is good for us all, 30 July) and you begin to get an idea of why some of us are still finding it hard to decide how to vote. Most Scots probably take Alex Salmond’s starry-eyed vision of an independent Scotland with more than a pinch of salt. But where is the uplifting unionist alternative? A dystopian Tea Party Britain with the Tories, with Ukip driving it ever further into the Atlantic? A Labour party so hesitant that it barely dares to defend its past record, let alone to challenge the prevailing neoliberal, consumerist paradigm? The potential king-makers, the Lib Dems, now exposed as a party not so much of protest but of two irreconcilable ideological strands?

Of course there isn’t political unanimity in Scotland either. But we are maybe – just maybe – a little bit closer to agreeing what makes a society civilised. With a decent choice of futures, the independence pool might well look too deep to take the plunge. But faced with the sort of political prospectuses now on offer to a united Britain, who can be surprised that it has some appeal?
John Thomson
Gelston, Dumfries and Galloway

• On Sunday the Observer reported that Tuesday’s independence debate “is only available in England via STV Player”, but I found it in the BBC Parliament schedules for Wednesday – admittedly a day late.
David Barnard
Cholesbury, Buckinghamshire

Peter Wilby’s remark about Indians only being allowed to play cricket in India after a “prolonged struggle” (Sticky wickets, Review, 2 August) is an example of the freedom-struggle revisionism that now often passes for history on the Indian subcontinent. For the greater part of the 19th century, Indians took no more interest in cricket than did the British in, say, kabaddi, which like so many local sports had its roots in the martial arts.

The first Indian community to take an interest in cricket was the most Anglicised: the Parsees of Bombay, who in 1879 played a cricket match against the British members of the Bombay Gymkhana (founded in 1875 on part of what is now the Azad Maidan).

The “prolonged struggle” that Wilby refers to was a brief squabble about parity, which ended in 1884 with the Parsee, Hindu and Muslim communities each being given land for their own gymkhanas. Thereafter the Parsees and British regularly played an annual fixture, although the Parsees refused to play the Hindus for some years, just as the Hindus discriminated against untouchables. The young MK Gandhi enjoyed his cricket and is on record as having watched a game between the town of Rajkot (Indians) and the local military cantonment (British) while a schoolboy in the late 1880s.
Charles Allen
London

• England has won 58 gold medals at the Commonwealth Games (England’s record tally shows young the way ahead, Sport, 4 August). And so Jerusalem has been played 58 times as, to quote the stadium announcer, “the national anthem of England”. Furthermore, each home cricket Test match now starts with a rousing rendition of Jerusalem. Isn’t it time for England’s rugby and football teams to follow suit, abandon the illogical singing of the UK’s God Save the Queen, and let Blake and Parry on to the field of play?
Michael Elwyn
London

Ragwort on the RSPB reserve at Sandy.

Here at the British Horse Society, our 81,000 members have never denied that ragwort has its place in Britain’s ecosystem (Country diary, 31 July). What is critical, however, is that its spread is monitored and controlled, or its positive impact on insect life will be negated by the destructive effect it has on livestock, and horses in particular.

The fact that we’ve already received over 11,000 replies to our ragwort survey (bhs.org.uk/ragwort) suggests that our concerns are shared by a huge number of people across Britain. We are keen to gather as much information from as many people as possible to find out the best way forward for everyone who cares about horses and bio-diversity. It is important that we explore the extent to which ragwort is a problem so that we can deal with it appropriately. We do not want to destroy all ragwort, but it is imperative that we protect our animals from its deadly effects by controlling to some extent where it grows.
Lee Hackett
Director of equine policy, British Horse Society

While we welcome opening up the debate about parties, your article on Young Independence (Not all rich, not all white, totally Eurosceptic: meet Ukip’s youth, 4 August) ignored the real third force in youth politics right now – the Green party. The Young Greens, the youth branch of the Green party, has grown by 70% since March this year alone, now standing at well over 3,000 members – more than Young Independence – and we have 60 branches in dozens of towns and cities across the UK.

This puts us ahead of the Liberal Democrats and catching up with Labour to be a highly significant force among young people, both within the student movement and outside. Poll after poll puts Green party support among young people at over 15%, more than the Liberal Democrats and Ukip combined.

Young Greens are at the forefront of campaigns across the country opposing the politics of the hard right and fighting for decent housing and jobs for all, free education, a living wage and publicly owned services – and opposing austerity, which hits young people incredibly hard. In contrast to the mainstream parties, we are also proud to be against the scapegoating of migrants and the refusal to tackle climate change.

This October we will be holding our convention in Brighton. We welcome all those who similarly value social and environmental justice to come along.
Siobhan MacMahon and Clifford Fleming Young Greens co-chairs, Josiah Mortimer, Laura Summers, Thom French and Fiona Costello National committee members, Charlene Concepcion National treasurer and London Young Greens co-chair, Amelia Womack Lambeth Green party, deputy leader candidate, Bradley Allsop Chair of Northampton Young Greens, Howard Thorpe Green party campaigns coordinator, Sahaya James Gloucestershire Young Greens chair, Karl Stanley Co-convener Young Greens North, Hannah Ellen Clare, Co-convenor Young Greens North, Joseph Clough Manchester Young Greens treasurer, Jantje Technau Canterbury Young Greens chair, Deborah Fenney Leeds University Union Green party secretary, Pete Kennedy Coordinator, Doncaster Green party, Samantha Pancheri Chair Milton Keynes Young Greens, Jo Kidd Chair Canterbury district Green party, Ross Campbell Liverpool Young Greens chair, Benjamin Sweeney Co-chair Dudley Green party, Mani Blondel North Staffordshire Green party, Keele University Young Greens, Rory Lee Bath & North East Somerset Green party, Darren Bisby-Boyd Peterborough Young Greens, Alex Bailey Peterborough Young Greens, Jack Tainsh Peterborough Young Greens, Emma Carter Leeds Young Greens, David Stringer Teesside Young Greens organiser, Alexander Catt Blackwater Valley Green party, Glen Marsden Manchester Young Greens, Duncan Davis Nottingham Young Greens, George Blake Keele Student Greens, Mike Lunn-Parsons North Staffordshire Green party and Keele Young Greens, William Pinkney-Baird Durham Young Greens, Harriet Pugh Manchester Young Greens, Merlin Drake Ceredigion Green party, Lisa Camps York Green party, Grant Bishop Birmingham Green party, Sam Peters Surrey Green party, Matthew Genn Sheffield and Rotherham Young Greens, Lucy Bannister Manchester Young Greens, Rustam Majainah Surrey GP, Matthew Maddock Keele University Young Greens, Huseyin Kishi London Young Greens, Portia Cocks Mid Sussex, Crawley and Horsham Greens, Graham Bliss Rugby Greens, Andrew Iredale Young Greens, Andrea Grainger Keele University Young Greens, Julia Lagoutte Durham University Young Greens, Lee Burkwood Waltham Forest and Redbridge, Alan Borgars Welwyn Hatfield Green party, Miles Grindey South East Hampshire Green party, Merryn Davies-Deacon South West Young Greens

We shouldn’t look away

Jonathan Freedland’s Sifting through the wreckage (25 July) lacks clarity. His point that the MH17 disaster makes us examine ourselves while the Gaza crisis makes us feel compassionate towards others is well-taken, but the juxtaposition of these two events makes it seem that either MH17 was a premeditated murder or that the Gaza situation is an unlucky accident. Neither is the case, and comparing these events ultimately interferes with a clear understanding of them.

In confronting these two events, Freedland seems to want to avoid assigning blame, perhaps even preferring the option of throwing up one’s hands and saying “life is … terribly fragile”. But to blame is not necessarily to think in terms of “goodies and baddies”. Blame should be apportioned according to responsibility, and the greater the responsibility the greater the blame. Hamas must take some of the blame for what is happening.

But, in the case of Gaza, Israel, by the fact that it is far and away more powerful than Gaza, and is the occupier of that territory, has a greater responsibility than do the Palestinians. Equating the destruction that Israel has visited upon the civilians of Gaza with a somewhat abstract Israeli fear of a missile falling deflects from a rational understanding of the situation. While Palestinians are running from bombs, Israelis are watching from beach chairs.

Freedland comes close to making the US at least partly responsible for this situation, but steps away from what he considers a passionate, rather than “coolly analytical”, argument. But one can reproach the US for supplying arms, money and political support to Israel while not reining them in. One can do this without blaming the US for all the world’s troubles. The US, as well as other western nations, has a major responsibility in ending this conflict. If we should not look away from Syria, as Freedland suggests, by the same token we should not look away from the terror that the citizens of Gaza are subjected to.
Michael Taft
Ottawa, Canada

• Owen Jones’s analysis (25 July) of the collective mentality behind the Israelis’ infliction of yet another campaign of seemingly random slaughter on the inhabitants of Gaza is timely. He writes of the Jewish perception of themselves as the eternal victims: a feeling built up over centuries of very real victimisation culminating in the Holocaust. But Binyamin Netanyahu and others claim the victim position even while unleashing overwhelming military force on a comparatively defenceless population.

Jones also discusses the moral corruption and erosion of empathy that comes to any group occupying other people’s land. However, neither he nor many other commentators mention religion.

The Orthodox and the ultra-Orthodox don’t constitute a majority of the Israeli population. But they remain a minority with a disproportionate influence. Any regular synagogue-goer encounters repeated assurances from God that all the land from the Jordan to the Mediterranean was for the children of Israel, and instructions from the same source for the slaughter of one group after another who were in the way.

As Jones argues, it’s important to understand the thinking in the background of Israel’s treatment of its subject-neighbours. But what are we to do with this understanding? That is hard to see, but it is certainly not what the governments of Australia, the US, the UK and others have been doing for decades by giving continual assurances to the Israelis of our undying support regardless of what they do, tempered by mild expressions of hope that they will treat their victims as humanely as seems reasonable.
John Watt
Busselton, Western Australia

• Just two questions: why are there no bomb shelters in Gaza? They build tunnels and smuggle in weapons, but there’s no protection for homes and buildings. They receive warnings to evacuate and still the death toll rises. Why doesn’t Hamas protect its people? My heart goes out to all those whose lives are put in danger by the people they elect.
Annette Leckart
Paris, France

• It is now obvious that only serious pressure from the rest of the world can ever end the Israeli/Palestinian conflict. There will be no peace or two-state solution until the 47-year-old Israeli occupation of the West Bank and East Jerusalem, and the siege/blockade of Gaza, is ended.

The international community should up the stakes, and send in a peacekeeping force to oversee the withdrawal of the Israeli military from the West Bank. History will judge it to be as clear as that.
Bill O’Connor
Beechworth, Victoria, Australia

• I hope and believe that neither the Israeli Defence Force nor Hamas will emerge victorious from the current Gaza conflict. The true victors will be the Palestinian people. Through 70 years of violence and oppression, they have doggedly maintained their claim for the return of their traditional homeland. Their ability to suffer and endure has been remarkable, but the international community cannot allow such suffering to continue indefinitely. Eventually, the steadfastness and courage of the Palestinian people must win its just reward in the form of a viable and independent Palestinian state.
John East
Greenslopes, Queensland, Australia

Shakespearean dilemma

Edward Snowden – hero or villain? The masterly interview by Ewen MacAskill and Alan Rusbridger (25 July) once again proves the Guardian’s incomparable depth and objectivity when dealing with contentious issues.

The picture that emerges is one of a man who found his conscience and his underlying concept of patriotism to be in conflict with his role in the needlessly intrusive covert surveillance of both the innocent and the politically powerful.

This is a Shakespearean dilemma that has no apparent resolution, combined with the dramatic irony of the protagonist being voluntarily confined under the protection of a state with a record in human rights transgression even worse than present-day America, Snowden’s spiritual home.

What verdict will history pass on Snowden? As ever, that will depend on who is writing it.
Noel Bird
Boreen Point, Queensland, Australia

Carbon tax repeal a shame

The repeal of the carbon tax legislation is a matter of deep shame for many Australians (Australia kills off carbon tax, 25 July). We have gone from being a leader in climate action to an international pariah. Only Canada matches our recalcitrant stance on the issue.

Nevertheless, while the three Palmer United party senators voted for the repeal, their leader Clive Palmer, who holds a seat in the lower house, has been instrumental (we hope) in saving the Climate Change Authority that advises on targets, the Clean Energy Finance Corporation (Cefc) that provides funds for renewable energy projects and the Australian Renewable Energy Agency (Arena) that promotes the uptake of renewable energy. It is paradoxical, to say the least, given Palmer is a billionaire coal baron.

Meanwhile, the Abbott government called for yet another review of the Renewable Energy Target (20% of electricity to come from renewables by 2020 – mainly large wind projects), putting climate sceptic Dick Warburton at its helm. Just having the review has brought the wind industry to a virtual halt. We expect Warburton will kill the target or reduce it significantly. No doubt, the fossil-fuel industries will stand by and applaud as they, and certainly no one else, will be the beneficiaries.

Thankfully, some jurisdictions are taking climate change seriously. For instance, the Australian Capital Territory government is building large solar and wind farms in the region such that it can source 90% of its electricity from renewables by 2020. These initiatives go some way towards offsetting the despair we feel at the actions of our federal representatives.
Jenny Goldie
Michelago, NSW, Australia

Greece is still suffering

Tourists rescue ailing Greece (11 July) was not Helena Smith’s finest piece of work. We rely on Smith to inform us about what is really happening in Greece. German chancellor Angela Merkel, Greek PM Antonis Samaras and the banks may think the crisis is over – maybe it is for them. Here in Apokoronas, Crete, out of a population of 15,000, 256 families including more than 400 children – nearly 1,000 people – rely on food parcels provided by a local charity. Those numbers are increasing, not falling.

Jobs that pay €3.50 ($4.70) per hour in the tourist industry here “in a country where trickle-down economics begins with tourism” may be preferable to a daily visit to a soup kitchen, but they hardly lay the basis for balanced economic and social development. This is not a drop, never mind a trickle.

If the EU and the ECB and the IMF would really like to help Greece, perhaps they could send some experts in combating tax avoidance and tax evasion among the very wealthy. Then the holiday spending of our visitors might really be put to work on behalf of the whole society.
Pete Sheppard
Apokoronas, Crete, Greece

Is it safety or profit?

Following other tales about airport security confiscations (Reply, 25 July), I can add a story about wine. Last year, I was unable to take two bottles of rather special wine through security at Paris Charles De Gaulle because of a “new regulation”. I could have put them in the hold in my suitcase but no one told me that at check-in, and I was not confident that baggage handlers would treat my precious cargo with due care, judging by the many bumps and dents my luggage has suffered over the years.

My indignation might have been tempered if it were not for the fact that, metres from security, in a so-called secure zone, there were dozens of shops selling me all kinds of liquids, alcoholic or not, and at sometimes hugely inflated prices, of which I could buy as much as I wanted and take on to the plane.

Now, if all those bottles had presumably been screened and were deemed safe by the use of appropriate technology, how come the same technology and screening could not have been used on my two bottles of wine?

Is security about safety or profit?
Trevor Rigg
Edinburgh, UK

Briefly

• Sarah Wheeler in her review of the book How to Ruin a Queen: Marie Antoinette, the Stolen Diamonds and the Scandal that Shook the French Throne by Jonathan Beckman (25 July), finishes her article by saying “What a film it would make.”

But a film based on this theme was made in 2001 by director Charles Shyer, The Affair of the Necklace, which starred Hilary Swank and Jonathan Pryce. It is a film worth seeing.
Rose Lapira
Attard, Malta

Independent:

Reading the reports marking the start of the First World War, what repeatedly haunts me is the feeling that we should also take a close look at our own time and ask ourselves whether there are any “avoidable catastrophes” that are happening now and about which future generations will say: “How could they let that happen?”

Of course Gaza, Ukraine and the conflicts raging across the Middle East are prime examples, but we also have creeping catastrophes such as climate change, depletion of resources, pollution and the death of the oceans, which will not only have historians scratching their heads at our stupidity but will also significantly impact on the wellbeing of future generations.

While we commemorate past tragedies, maybe we should consider the catastrophes of the future we are currently building.

Alan Mitcham
Cologne, Germany

 

Prince William and others have of late been delivering the opinion that in the First World War we, the British, were “fighting to preserve our freedom”. Certainly we declared war on Germany to try to protect Belgium’s – and possibly France’s – freedom but, to be fair to the Kaiser and his bellicose advisors, there is no evidence that they wished to subjugate Britain too.

It is important, even at this distance in time, to get our facts right.

Andrew McLuskey
Staines, Surrey

 

If only the British Commonwealth and German soldiers, laid to rest in St Symphorien’s graves, could have talked sense into their leaders in 1913, then 17 million lives might have been saved.

What’s done cannot be undone. However, it taught those who send us to war absolutely nothing. In the Treaty of Versailles the French demanded more than their “pound of flesh”, which allowed Hitler to command German pride to rebel against punitive sanctions, which led to the Second World War.

France again tried to restrain Germany in 1951, with the creation of the European Coal and Steel Community, to tie up the “sinews of war”. Then 1989 saw the reunification of Germany, and they never looked back, as European Economic Community morphed into European Union, with the wealth of Germany controlling all of the eurozone. A recalcitrant Britain, despite not joining the euro, is subservient to the EU. Germany’s victory was finally won by – who would have thought it? – peaceful means.

Ronald Rankin
Dalkeith, Midlothian

As with John Lichfield (“How memories of the Great War live on”, 31 July) my own great uncle, Cyril Gutteridge, died in the carnage of the First World War as a British soldier.

I’ve been riveted by that war since I was 10, but what I didn’t know for years is that the reason millions of English, German and French ordinary people cheered when war was declared has a cause that is in me and in every person, and it needs to be studied.

Eli Siegel, the founder of Aesthetic Realism, identified the cause of all cruelty thus: “The greatest danger for a person is to have contempt for the world and what is in it. Contempt can be defined as the lessening of what is different from oneself as a means of self-increase as one sees it.”

Contempt is as common as mocking someone else inwardly, or a husband riding over his wife’s opinions, thinking she’s too emotional to be rational. But “ordinary” contempt leads to cruelty in social life, economics and between nations. When we rob another person of their humanity, there is no limit to our cruelty.

The study of contempt – which can finally end the thirst for war – is urgent for the world today as we mark the centennial of the First World War.

Christopher Balchin
Brooklyn, New York

The commemoration of the outbreak of the First World War has been moving but lacking in political context. Listening to some, it would seem that the ludicrous propaganda that this was the war to end all wars is still believed. What the past century has really marked is the evolution of ever more deadly weaponry.

By 1939, war could be taken much further into civilian centres. And out of the Second World War came the nuclear bomb.

The progression of ever more dangerous weaponry continues with drone warfare. This technology allows the leaders of the aggressor nation to operate even more easily in their own moral vacuum. Unless checked, drone warfare will make the slide to total war even quicker to achieve.

The final great irony of this commemoration is that it came when hundreds of people were being slaughtered in Gaza.

Maybe the real reflection should be: what has changed in 100 years, other than the sophistication of weaponry?

Paul Donovan
London E11

Palestinian football star is dead

Eddie Peart’s suggestion of a football match between Israel and Palestine (letter, 5 August) would have a better chance of coming to pass if Israel had stopped targeting Palestinian footballers. The latest of many killed was Ahed Zaqout, former star player and popular TV sports commentator, killed in his bed on 30 July by an Israeli air strike.

John O’Dwyer
Steeple Claydon, Buckinghamshire

 

Miliband has shown some backbone

Whether or not Ed Miliband is prime ministerial material, he had the backbone to condemn David Cameron’s silence on Gaza. He is showing an independence of thought and morality that has been lacking in recent leaders of the Labour Party.

It contrasts with “Middle East peace envoy” Tony Blair, who regaled his faithful acolytes at a recent lecture with the fact that estimates of his wealth were grossly exaggerated (£20m not £100m).

John Pinkerton
Milton Keynes

Labour leader Ed Miliband rightly criticised David Cameron for not speaking out against the slaughter of Palestinian civilians.

But surely Mr Miliband should not have attended the lavish 60th birthday party Tony Blair threw for his wife, Cherie, at their £6m grade I-listed mansion on 25 July, while Palestinians were being slaughtered in Gaza.

Cherie’s birthday actually does not fall until 23 September, so Mr Blair could easily have postponed the event and concentrated on essential mediation in Gaza, from his Jerusalem base of the so-called Quartet representative, whose role includes “promoting economic growth and job creation in the West Bank and the Gaza Strip and supporting the institution-building agenda of the Palestinian Authority”.

Mr Blair finally returned to Jerusalem on 29 July. He has visited Ramallah in the Palestinian Authority territory on the West Bank and Cairo since Israel began its devastating attacks on 8 July but has not once visited Gaza. Why not? And why does Mr Miliband not loudly complain about Mr Blair’s lack of intervention?

Maybe he did at the lavish party, but I doubt it.

Dr David Lowry
Stoneleigh, Surrey

 

Are gays actually being persecuted?

Perhaps Ruth Hunt doth protest too much (“People say it’s fine now – it’s not”, 2 August). Is dislike of homosexuality really as rampant as she suggests? Many of us think it is wrong, but I have never met anyone who would be deliberately rude. Does Ruth perhaps have a persecution complex?

As regards infiltrating infant and nursery schools with homosexual material, has she stopped to consider views of parents or teachers? Have they not a right to object? In any case, children of that age are far too young to be thinking about this.

S M Watson
Princes Risborough, Buckinghamshire

I feel saddened by the news that Jeremy Pemberton is unable to work as a priest in Nottinghamshire as a result of his brave decision to marry his partner.

The Church of England should embrace single-sex marriage as an example of loving commitment; instead it is enforcing a dogmatic, unloving view of Christian ethics. In doing so, it jeopardises its claim to be the established Church in this country; it also risks losing many of its members who believe that endorsing single-sex marriage would be the right thing to do.

John Dakin
Toddington, Bedfordshire

 

A council cutback that drivers need

English councils are coping with budget cuts of almost a third (report, 4 August). One cut not made by some councils is of the vegetation near road signs. In some cases nothing has been done for two summers, leading to direction information and speed limits being obscured. It will be interesting to learn the courts’ attitude to defence evidence that a sign was not visible, or that driving without due consideration for other road-users was due to attempts to read a half-covered direction sign.

Peter Erridge
East Grinstead

 

It really must be the silly season

August often throws up unusual news stories, but a Government minister resigning on principle still falls in the area of the unexpected.

Keith Flett
London N17

Times:

Readers tell us what uses and abuses of the English language most annoy them

Sir, John Humphrys (Aug 2) asks what irritates us most about the abuse of English. What irritates me most (ly) is the bad use of grammar.

N Waller
Brockworth, Glos

Sir, John Humphrys accepts that he may have to concede defeat in the War of the Historic Present and ask what irritates us about the abuse of English. How about “concede defeat” rather than “concede victory”?

Christopher Nott
London E11

Sir, I agree with John Humphrys (and Oliver Kamm) about the pointlessness of the “rule” against ending a sentence with a preposition. My mother’s favourite rebuttal was the lament of a small boy at bedtime: “Mummy, what did you bring that book that I didn’t want to be read to out of up for?”

Anthony Golding
Letchworth Garden City, Herts

Sir, Last week I heard a senior Conservative say: “the last government borrowed far more than us”. “Us” do not borrow. It should have been “more than we are (borrowing understood)” or “more than we have (borrowed)”; but never “us”. Similarly, the use of “me”, as in “he is taller than me”, makes my hair stand on end. I fear that so many people use “me” and “us” iniquitously that it may become standard English before too long.

Kenneth Duncan
Edinburgh

Sir, On at least four occasions in his article, Mr Humphrys begins sentences with ‘But’; two of these also were at the start of paragraphs.

Sean Perry
Newmarket, Suffolk

Sir, John Humphrys might have included a request for fewer abuses in several other areas but certainly not less of them.

Frank Mackay
Plush, Dorset

Sir, I would add two “wince factor” irritations to John Humphrys’ ejector-seat list: the overuse by politicians and academics of the adverb “incredibly”, and the mispronunciation of the letter H as haitch which still grates with many of us septuagenarians. So it’s incredibly irritating!

John E Jones
St Albans

Sir, John Humphrys and several of your readers referred to the “historic present tense” as used by Melvyn Bragg in his BBC radio show. The word that your writers were looking for is “historical”.

Simon Walters
London NW7

Sir, We should think more carefully about the view of humanity that media reports endorse when they say “women and children” to mean “the helpless” or “the powerless”. This lazy usage is a disservice to vulnerable men, and to the many women who, against the odds, have empowered themselves. Gender should be used as a descriptor only when it is truly valid to do so.

Sir, TV newsreaders, presenters and weather forecasters seem to have launched an “er” craze. We hear “bubberling”, “tumberling”, “burgerling”, “sizzerling” and a host of other examples.

John Colbert
Walsall, W Midlands

Sir, John Humphrys might add to his list “moving forward” and that most overused word, “iconic”.

George Healy
London N16

Sir, Blow the historical present. What about the present participle? The phrase “I’m sat” seems to pop up everywhere.

Jilly Ashley Miller
Sherborne, Dorset

Sir, Currently, at this moment in time, my list of pet hates is so long that I am bored of thinking about it. Perhaps I should concentrate on growing my business.

Maureen Ann Peacock
Oxford

The Times’ Balkans correspondent knew the region inside out and did not hesitate to speak out about injustices

Sir, It is good to see James Bourchier among the great correspondents in your supplement (Britain at War, Aug 4). One of the most knowledgeable correspondents in the Balkans, he was on good terms with kings and presidents, and admired by their peoples, despite being astringent in his criticisms of their follies.

His efforts to get the victorious allies to behave less punitively towards former enemies in the Balkans were largely ignored. Later generations had cause to regret their wilful dismissal of his counsel.

He was a man whom, a century later, we can appreciate, admire and like: Irish (not English), of course; warm in his sympathies for peoples under the cosh and their aspirations for self-determination; espouser of unpopular minority causes; unafraid of stating unpalatable truths to those rulers with whom he enjoyed close relations. He was also gay.

He was a decent pianist. But he was very deaf: for a journalist, having to conduct confidential briefings at the top of his voice was a handicap — especially with Princess Clementine the Queen Mother of Bulgaria. She, too, was deaf, so their private conversations were eavesdropped by all kinds of courtiers, charlatans and spies, glued to keyholes. Some of his confidants took the precaution of insisting they spoke only in remote spots outside, so that their bellowed exchanges could not be overheard.

The Times was variable in supporting its correspondent. After the Great War the paper was clumsy in retiring him and lukewarm in appreciation of his gifts. Allegations of “localitis” or even disloyalty to the allied cause circulated.

You mention his love of Hellenic history, but neglect to mention that he retired to Bulgaria, the country in his beat that he knew best, whose errors during the war brought him unhappiness, and, by association, some cost. He was buried at his own wish beside Rila Monastery, where he was known to locals as “Uncle James”. Only the last Exarch of the Bulgarian national church had a more magnificent funeral.

Bourchier lies still at Rila. The present British ambassador and his wife, conscious of Bourchier’s gifts as reporter and as a quasi-diplomat, took their family and guests on pilgrimage to the grave in June. That coincided with their commemoration of the opening of the British residence in Sofia 100 years ago.

Sir Edward Clay

(Second Secretary in Sofia, 1973-5)

Epsom, Surrey

eenagers but the admission prices should penalise disruptive children instead

Sir, I see you illustrated Jake Chapman’s view that getting children to understand art is a waste of time (Aug 4) with a photo taken at the Matisse exhibition at Tate Modern. A ticket for a child over 12 for that exhibition is £14.50. My 14-year-old daughter and her two friends had been inspired to visit by the reviews and by a guide from Goldie on the BBC iPlayer, but the cost is equivalent to two week’s of her allowance. That is a great pity as they are at an age to be absorb much from the exhibition.

I also have a seven-year-old boy who generally detracts from gallery contemplation. I wonder whether the Tate might charge for children on a sliding scale: the £16 full cost for a babe in arms to £0 for a 17-year-old?

Helen Clark

Tunbridge Wells

Law may be hotly competitive profession to join but would-be lawyers need to approach it carefully

Sir, Given the hot competition for training contracts at law firms and pupillages it is surprising that some students do not put more thought into their application letters (report, Aug 5).

I have had letters from applicants who have wanted to pursue a career in “soliciting”, and under experience one put that she had “attended a few lectures at university”. The application was completed by saying she had “interned” a judge at a local Crown Court. I suppose that demonstrates initiative.

David R Pickup

Aylesbury, Bucks

If scrapbooks are coming back into fashion, it would help if publishers stuck to one-page pix

Sir, You report (Aug 4) that scrapbooks are back. For some sports fans like myself they have never gone away. However, the biggest problem is that too many sports pictures run over two pages; pasting them into a scrapbook requires high-level joinery skills. Now scrapbooks are back for others, can we have the sports pictures back on just one page?

Tony Elgood

Treasurer,
Gloucestershire County Cricket Club

Winford, Somerset

Telegraph:

The dangerous practice of lightening skin

Many skin-lightening products are unregulated and can have serious health consequences

Vera Sidika photographed in october 2013 (lt) and July of this

Vera Sidika photographed in october 2013 (lt) and July of this Photo: @vee_beiby

6:58AM BST 05 Aug 2014

CommentsComments

SIR – Skin lightening is not only popular among dark-skinned African women, but is undertaken by women and men in various parts of the world, including South America, Asia, the Middle East, North America and Europe.

The vast majority of products used for skin lightening are dangerous, especially when used at high concentrations and over prolonged periods. Many are obtained illegally, and fail to meet international safety standards for cosmetics.

Poor or inaccurate labelling also means that users may not be fully aware of the exact active ingredients. Skin-lightening products include topical steroids (such as clobetasol), mercurial salts and hydroquinone. Home-made concoctions, with battery fluid or cement, are also used, with devastating consequences.

As practising dermatologists working in Africa and multicultural European cities, we have observed and managed many of the consequences of using unregulated skin-lightening agents, including stretch marks, paradoxical hyperpigmentation and induction or exacerbation of other skin disorders. Kidney problems associated with the use of substances containing mercury have been reported, as well as diabetes mellitus in relation to use of topical steroids. Although relatively safer lightening products are being marketed, these agents are never as efficacious as topical steroids, hydroquinone or mercury salts.

Although Miss Alonge employs the argument of “personal choice” in relation to skin lightening, it is important to understand the influence of social standards of beauty and the global cosmetic industry. Even when personal choice is taken into consideration, the hazards associated with skin lightening, and its economic impact on the healthcare services of resource-poor countries, cannot be ignored.

Dr Ophelia E Dadzie
London N12

Dr Antoine Petit
Paris, France

Dr Ncoza Dlova
Durban, South Africa

For ripe and ready fruit, head to the market stall

SIR – David Benwell (Letters, August 2) asks if there is a foolproof method of discovering which melons or peaches are ripe and ready at the point of sale. Having spent a lifetime in the fresh-produce industry, I can tell him the answer is “No”.

Quality controllers in supermarkets are trained to reject any produce that shows signs of being edible until at least a week beyond its sell-by date. Some items, such as “ready-to-eat” pears, require a set of stainless steel gnashers to penetrate their brick-hard and tasteless flesh.

Peaches and nectarines will eventually ripen at home but require monitoring to catch them at the right time. They all ripen in unison, so be ready to eat them quickly.

Buy melons at least a week before you intend to eat them and you have a good chance of enjoying properly ripened fruit.

But there is a much greater likelihood of finding ripe produce on market stalls than in a supermarket.

George Wilkie
Hemingford Grey, Huntingdonshire

SIR – To judge the ripeness of a melon, hold it to the ear and tap it with the knuckles. The fruit that sounds hollowest is the most ready to eat.

David R Jackson
Henley-on-Thames, Oxfordshire

We must resist Whitehall’s centralised database

The Human Rights and Data Protection Acts are the most effective barriers to the proposed database of personal data

ID documents

ID documents Photo: Alamy

6:59AM BST 05 Aug 2014

CommentsComments

SIR – When David Cameron came to power he quickly repealed Labour’s Identity Cards Act. He clearly appreciated the intrusive power of the underlying National Identity Register which linked the ID cards to other Whitehall databases. Now we hear (report, August 4) that the Cabinet Office is again planning a centralised database of all our personal data.

Our personal privacy is protected by Article 8 of the Human Rights Act (the right to respect for private and family life) and specifically by Schedule 3 of the Data Protection Act, which requires that our explicit consent is obtained by a public authority before our sensitive and personal information is stored and shared.

Without the Human Rights Act it would have been more difficult to get the Identify Cards Act repealed, the Contact Point child database shut down and plans for a centralised medical database halted.

The Conservatives have made great play of their dislike of the Human Rights Act and it appears that senior Whitehall mandarins, clearly piqued at their powers being repeatedly challenged, are now fully on board with its repeal. Whitehall is well aware that the new data-sharing projects cannot proceed unless the Human Rights Act is repealed and the Data Protection Act amended to remove any requirement to obtain our consent before sharing our sensitive and personal information.

This point was confirmed in a recent Human Rights Act judgment (R v Secretary of State) preventing the needless release of trivial information on spent convictions. The Supreme Court commented on the “growing concern about surveillance and the collection and use of personal data by the state” and that the “protection offered by the common law in this area has, by comparison, been of a limited nature”. We must maintain our Human Rights and Data Protection Acts as a barrier against Whitehall aggregating all our personal information under central control.

Tristram C Llewellyn Jones
Ramsey, Isle of Man

SIR – You report that “ministers believe they could save up to £37 billion a year in error and fraud if they were able to harmonise thousands of databases”.

If this is the case then the Government is grossly negligent in not effecting such harmonisation.

Robert Smart
Eastbourne, East Sussex

SIR – Would it not be much simpler if Whitehall took all our money and gave us weekly pocket-money?

Eric Howarth
Bourne, Lincolnshire

Durable diesels

SIR – I use diesel cars (Letters, August 4) because they provide me with up to 200,000 miles’ driving, compared to the 90,000 or so achieved by petrol cars. This is important for me because of the special adaptations required by my disabilities — costing £3,000 each time I change car.

Rob Mannion
Bournemouth, Dorset

Phone-sized pockets

SIR – The design of men’s shirts once responded to the need for a pocket which could comfortably house a cigarette packet. The decline in smoking has coincided with the rise of the mobile phone.

Can we persuade shirt manufacturers to change pockets so that they are deeper than they are wide, enabling a mobile phone to sit upright and accessible rather than becoming diagonally wedged in a pocket of inappropriate dimensions?

Tony Jones
London SW7

Trade with Russia

SIR – The sanctions being imposed by the EU and America on Russia will not deter the Russian government from involvement in Ukraine. Indeed, the sanctions will be blamed by the Russian government for poor economic performance and be used to justify its strong anti-Western stance.

The shooting down of MH17 was a crime and those responsible should be tried in a court of law. However, the ordinary people of Russia and Western businessmen who have worked hard to build up trade with Russia are not responsible for this tragedy.

Through trade and contact, a trust develops leading to reliance and openness between countries. There is no better basis for establishing a better understanding between Russia and the West.

Steven Landes
Senior Partner, S H Landes LLP

Barry Martin
Chairman, The Russia House

David Gardner
DG Leadership

Michael Lightfoot
Managing Director, Classical Brands

Timothy Jelley
Founder, Export Explorer

John Metcalfe
Director, RFIB Group

John Bonar
Focus on Russia

Scottish questions

SIR – A question for Alistair Darling to put to Alex Salmond: how would an independent Scotland plan to set up its own embassies and diplomatic missions round the world, and what would it cost?

Roger Gabb
Bridgnorth, Shropshire

SIR – Does Lulu get a vote in the Scottish referendum?

Neil Withington
London S

Francis Maude responds: ‘This Government is not interested in building large databases’

The Cabinet Office Minister responds to Philip Johnston’s concerns about private data.

‘We will not weaken the Data Protection Act’ Photo: Rii Schroer

By Telegraph Comment

1:16PM BST 05 Aug 2014

CommentsComments

SIR – Citizens rightly have concerns about privacy and how personal data is handled. We share such concerns: one of this Government’s first acts was to cancel the illiberal ID card scheme.

We are not interested in building large databases. We will not weaken the Data Protection Act. Nor will we collect more data about people, or use information in ways beyond those that the public already assume we do.

At present, the data Whitehall holds is divided between departments. There is no simple way to cross-reference it, if indeed it can be done at all.

This means that the public miss out on more effective, tailored services, and that the taxpayer loses billions to fraudsters.

So we think it’s worth exploring, in a very open and transparent way, whether we can use the data we already have more effectively.

We have said from the start of this process that if civil liberty and privacy groups do not find our proposals proportionate and sensible, we would find it difficult to go ahead.

Francis Maude MP (Con)

Minister for the Cabinet Office

London SW1

W20

Irish Times:

Sir, – For a country which produces so many clever people, the Israeli government has been behaving very stupidly. It is winning the battle (undoubtedly) and the intellectual arguments (largely), but it is losing in the court of world opinion (indisputably).

I used to be a strong supporter of Israel, but on the present conflict I ask myself a simple contemporary question: does it pass the “smell test”? And the answer is a resounding no. Its disproportionate response looks wrong, sounds wrong and feels wrong. There is no taste involved, but even my “sixth sense” tells me it is wrong. After John Kerry used the apartheid word a few months ago, I told an Israeli friend I thought his country was heading for the place pre-1992 South Africa occupied. Now I suspect late July 2014 will go down as the Soweto moment. – Yours, etc,

DAVID STEWART,

Ahoghill Road,

Randalstown,

Co Antrim

Sir, – Canon Patrick Comerford has strongly attacked Israel (“Israel denounced by senior Irish cleric”, August 4th), partly based on what he sees “night after night, on television screens and impartial news outlets”.

Since Canon Comerford is a former Irish Times journalist I would have expected him to have a more insightful view of the media’s coverage of Gaza. The UN’s John Ging told the Canadian Broadcasting Corporation last week that Hamas “are firing their rockets into Israel from the vicinity of UN facilities and residential areas. Absolutely.”

Why, with so many journalists in Gaza, have none ever bothered to capture even one image of Hamas launching rockets from civilian areas or close to UN schools and camps? The media in Gaza are in effect “embedded” with Hamas. Yet strangely, this is the first conflict where Western journalists never take any photographs or TV footage of the fighters they are embedded with. Why?

Why do journalists spend so much time loitering around Gaza’s hospitals like ghoulish “stage-door Johnnies”? Why do the media film suffering children in these hospitals in an exploitative manner that would not be tolerated in the West? Why do the media blindly accept that every wounded civilian is a victim of Israeli fire and and not Hamas’s misfiring rockets, booby traps or exploding arms dumps? These same journalists fail to report that Hamas uses Gaza’s main hospital, Shifa, as a base. They also fail to point out that the figures they use for Gaza’s dead and wounded are actually supplied by the Hamas-controlled health authority.

Unlike Canon Comerford, I am not convinced that the media are “impartial” when it comes to the world’s only Jewish state. – Yours, etc,

KARL MARTIN,

Bayside Walk,

Dublin 13

Sir, – Capt John Dunne has stated that he hopes the political and economic model that is Israel does not spread to its neighbours as “the undertakers would never be able to keep up”.

He is in for a shock the day he decides to read about what is happening in the countries which border Israel, not to mention the whole Middle East. He might notice that Isis has almost completed the murder and removal of Assyrian Christians from Iraq, one of the oldest sects of Christianity. – Yours, etc,

DERMOT COOPER,

Leighton Road,

Causeway Bay,

Hong Kong

Sir – When 170,000 Muslims are killed by other Muslims, as in Syria, nobody gives a damn. When one percent of that number is killed by Israelis defending their country the “international community” gets bent out of shape. – Yours, etc,

KEITH DAVIES,

South Eagle Rd,

Newtown,

Pennsylvania

Sir, – Your correspondent Niall Ginty (August 4th) tries to argue, ridiculously, that the actions of the Israeli military against the defenceless population of Gaza are part of a defence of Christianity against Islamic fundamentalism.

This, and every other argument offered in favour of what Israel is doing to the imprisoned population in the Gaza ghetto, rings hollow. There is a very simple solution to the problem Israel has with the ineffectual Hamas rockets — give Palestine back to the Palestinians! – Yours, etc,

GERRY MOLLOY,

Collins Avenue,

Whitehall,

Dublin 9

Sir, If John Cully (August 5th) is correct,the German president made a fool of himself yesterday by admitting that his country’s invasion of neutral Belgium was wrong and by admitting the terrible atrocities committed against the Belgian people by the German army in August 1914. Whatever faults the Germans may have, they are not noted for making fools of themselves.

Any student of Leaving Cert history would be aware of the record of German aggression against France. Bismarck in 1870 provoked France into declaring war with the aim of using this war to unite the states of the newly formed German Empire in a common cause. Germany, not France as stated by Mr Cully,was the strongest military power in Europe in 1914.

German generals knew that a war was likely in the future, so in 1902 the Schlieffen Plan was drawn up, with the invasion of France through neutral Belgium as its main strategy. Many historians have accepted the “blank cheque” theory, whereby Germany promised full military aid to Austria in the event of a European war. This emboldened Vienna to send a harsh ultimatum to Serbia following the assassination of Franz Ferdinand. Mr Cully is wrong in stating that the war was neither wanted nor provoked by Germany. He would seem to be in urgent need of a non-partisan book on this period. Might I suggest one by Niall Ferguson,The Pity of War. Yours,etc,

JOAN CANTY,

Ivy Grove,

Ballina,

Co Tipperary

Sir, – Listening to and reading about wars in the media, from the first World War to the current Israeli/Gaza one, one must observe a common strand in all cases. All of these terrible wars and their attendant atrocities were/are waged by men. It makes one cringe to look at any of the footage of these events and see all the power-seeking males (and not a woman in sight) who seem to defy all forms of common sense and reason when it comes to making caring, sensitive and logical decisions for the good of humankind.

They have created a dangerous, materialistic world where power and economics takes precedence over normal decent human life. Is it not now time to boot them all out and let the women take over? Do you think for a minute that, for example, the constant firing of rockets into Israel resulting in the terrible retaliatory bombing of Gaza would happen if women were in charge? I don’t think so. So men please back off and let the women take charge. No matter how badly they perform they could not make a bigger mess of the world than you have done. – Yours, etc,

MARY O’DOWD,

Mt Charles,

Kilkee,

Co Clare

Sir, I do not question the good faith of many in the Government and in the media in their efforts to promote the decade of commemoration on which we have embarked. I hope it’s not cynicism on my part then which causes the attendant extensive media coverage and many State functions to provoke in me a sour taste of lip service, a whiff of opportunism.

It is, I hope, prompted rather by the contrast between, on the one hand, this apparent concern to recover and debate our past and, on the other, the downgrading of the status of history by its effective axing from the curriculum by former minister Ruairí Quinn, the degradation of the depositories on which so much of the writing of history depends by the chronic underfunding of our museums and archives and the failure of the media to expose to significant investigation these decisions and their probable consequences.

With the absence of sustained critical comment on these issues the media may be seen to collude with the Government, unwittingly or otherwise, in regarding our history as of interest mainly for its potential as another commodity to be packaged and peddled, a desirable part of the cultural veneer, in this great little country to do business in.

Our selective amnesia regarding our participation in the first World War is now rightly deplored. Will it make us a more balanced people when our amnesia becomes total – our ignorance and indifference to be occasionally challenged by state ceremonial and newspaper supplement? Yours, etc,

EAMON SHEPPARD,

Foxes Grove,

Shankill,

Co Dublin

Sir, – I note with interest Archbishop Martin’s statement (August 4th) concerning the involvement of Irish men and women in the first World War and their “idealism” and “valour”. I may not live to see it but I hope the archbishop of the time might make a not dissimilar statement on September 1st, 2039 in relation to the men and women of Ireland who volunteered to fight Nazism for similar – if not greater – ideals. Yours etc,

SAMUEL WALSH,

Member of Aosdána,

Cloonlara,

Co Clare

Sir, – If Bill Callaghan believes that media analysis of our housing problems has been very poor (August 5th) I can only suggest that he has been in hibernation for the last couple of years.

Media scrutiny from every angle of the equation has been intense and no stone has been left unturned in the desire to find a new perspective on every situation pertaining to this issue. If there is a gap, it is in consideration of the position of the much maligned landlord.

The latest measure being mooted in various circles appears to that of rent control. You cannot squeeze landlords from every angle – with property taxes, PRTB charges, annual maintenance charges, management and running costs, as well as reduced tax breaks, owning rental property is far from an attractive option in the current climate. Mr Callaghan talks about “vested interests” in high house prices. Perhaps these are the landlords who are queuing up to get out of the market as soon as their negative equity disappears.

One of the reasons we have housing crises is that the squeeze on landlords has made rental property an unattractive proposition, thereby ultimately reducing the supply to the rental market which would have kept rental prices low. It will eventually dawn on someone that responsible landlords are the solution, not the problem. – Yours, etc,

GEOFF SCARGILL,

Loreto Grange,

Bray,

Co Wicklow

Sir, – Firstly, despite the address from which this letter is sent, I write this as an Irish citizen.

No country is as close to us in cultural, ethnic, historic or geographical terms as is Scotland. On September 18th, Scotland will vote on whether or not to remain part of the United Kingdom. It has been asserted that if it votes for independence it will risk its membership of the European Union.

Should the Irish Government not make clear that it will support Scottish membership of the EU, so long as that is the wish of the people of Scotland, regardless of the result of the independence referendum? This would seem to be the friendly, decent and neighbourly thing to do. – Yours, e tc,

SEAN SWAN PhD,

Gonzaga University,

Washington State

Sir, – With reference to Gus Jones’s letter (July 30th) regarding passport control facilities at Dublin Airport, the Department of Justice and Equality, Irish Naturalisation Immigration Service (INIS) has sole responsibility for the operation of self-service passport control facilities at the airport.

INIS is currently trialling the self-service passport control kiosks between the hours of nine and five, but it is planned to extend the operation of the trials to cover the period 7am to midnight. The Dublin Airport Authority works very closely with INIS to facilitate passenger improvements in this area. – Yours, etc,

SIOBHÁN O’DONNELL,

Dublin Airport Authority,

Dublin Airport,

Co Dublin

Sir, – I can empathise with your correspondent Tom Farrell (August 4th). Back in 2001, I found myself a first-time father-in-waiting at the tender age of 42.

I asked my brother-in-law if he thought I was too old. “Not at all,” he replied, adding helpfully: “All kids think their parents are ancient, but in your case they’ll be right!” – Yours, etc,

KIERAN McHUGH,

Woodcliff,

Howth,

Dublin 13

Sir, – If Tom Farrell frustrates his granddaughter’s prediction and survives another 10 or 15 years, I’d advise him to avoid showing her that letter of his that you published on August 4th. She would be apt to be witheringly condescending about the glossarial foot in mouth whereby he dared to use the word ‘”girl” instead of “woman”.

Permit me to “mansplain”: the word he wants in this instance is “womansplaining”, best abbreviated to “womplaining” to reflect the grumble and grouse with which the explication is frequently pickled. – Yours , etc,

FRANK FARRELL ,

Lakelands Close,

Stillorgan,

Co Dublin

Sir, – Following your newspaper’s recent article (“Never been North”, Weekend Review, July 26th) highlighting the positive experiences of different individuals travelling back and forth between the North and South of Ireland, I write to inform you of my own family’s (11 of us) trip from Dublin to Belfast and environs (Giant’s Causeway, Carrick-a-Rede, Antrim coast, Ballymena, the beach at Ballintoy, Newry and many more lovely locations too numerous to mention in this short letter).

However, the most delightful and uplifting part of our lovely excursion came when we cautiously engaged a local Portstewart lassie in a short conversation about the bygone “Troubles”. “Ah yes,” responded 19-year-old Simone, “we heard about that and we went over it a wee bit in history class at school.” Enough said – until we eagerly return for our next visit. – Yours, etc,

CHRISTIAN WITTER and

BUNDA MacDONNELL,

Limekiln Road,

Dublin 12

Sir, – In recent days it has come to light that our Government plans to charge citizens even more than originally anticipated for household water usage. The ensuing discussion has largely been dominated by the price, and there remains little commentary on the product: water. Eskimos surely wouldn’t be as caught up in the price of a cubic meter of ice.

Though the rate varies dramatically between regions, Ireland receives on average more than 1,000mm of rain per year, which equates to 1,000 litres per square metre. The roof of my parents’ house measures about 80 square metres. At an estimate, about 80,000 litres of rain fall on the house per year. While the water may not be potable, and the once-off cost of a harvesting mechanism might be significant, it could be used for bathing and handling waste.

Eighty thousand litres at the rate of €4.88/1,000L, is €390 or so. Money might not grow on trees, but with the right set-up it could fall from the sky.– Yours, etc,

NIALL MURPHY,

35 Shrewbury Road,

Dublin 18

Sir, – Jacky Jones (Second Opinion, August 5th) conflates the Catholic doctrine of the Immaculate Conception (Mary born without “original sin”) with the Virgin Birth (the belief that Jesus was conceived in the womb by the Holy Spirit), when she asserts “It is as if no fathers were involved in these pregnancies.” Perhaps this common schoolboy error could be labelled the immaculate misconception? – Yours, etc,

GARY J BYRNE,

Achill House,

IFSC,

Dublin 1

Sir, – Congratulations to your Berlin correspondent, Derek Scally, on his fascinating interview with Georg Friedrich, prince of Prussia (“The Man who Would be Kaiser”, Weekend Review, August 2nd). At a time when we commemorate the fateful events of 100 years ago, seeing them mainly from the Irish and British perspectives, it is most interesting to learn something of how these events are perceived through the eyes of the great-great-grandson of Kaiser Wilhelm II. Keep up the good work on reporting from Berlin. Yours, etc,

RAY BATES,

Gilford Road,

Dublin 4

Irish Independent:

The band played Waltzing Matilda, and I’m sure there will be many more poignant pieces of music played with moments of silence observed in remembrance of the men women and children who died.

Some gave their lives fighting for what they thought was right, while the others were casualties of this senseless battle.

This all may have happened 100 years ago, so are we any the better off as a result of it?

While it is right and proper to remember the dead there is somehow a sense of hypocrisy felt when we watch the various dignitaries bow their heads in memory of those who gave their lives in this game called war.

While at the same time they stand silently day by day witnessing the butchery between Israel and Palestine.

Will all those who have fallen in this terrible conflict will they also be remembered in 100 years time?

If so, I’m sure it will bring a lot of comfort to those who have lost loved ones in this war of hatred.

The world we now live in is governed by money. Humans do not count anymore. The world’s leaders are mere puppets who dance to the tune of the power lords of finance.

Yes, indeed, let us bow our heads today while the butchery continues between two neighbouring countries, while the silence throughout the rest of the world is deafening.

Fred Molloy

Clonsilla

Dublin 15

Recalling Irish soldiers

Lest we forget, many Irishmen who were working in England at the outbreak of World War I enlisted in English regiments there.

One such was Thomas Kedian of Moneymore, Ballyhaunis, Co Mayo, my grand-uncle. He was a lance corporal with the Lancashire Fusiliers and was killed at the Somme on 7 July, 1916. His body was never recovered and is commemorated on the Ulster Tower at Thiepval.

Anthony J Jordan

Sandymount

Dublin 4

The hottest parts of hell

The words of Dante come to mind when I think of Enda Kenny and Charlie Flanagan’s decision to abstain on a vote establishing a commission of inquiry into ‘Operation Protective Edge’ at the UN Human Rights Council and I quote: “The hottest places in hell are reserved for those who in times of great moral crises maintain their neutrality.”

John McDonagh

Westport

Co Mayo

Self-defence in Gaza

I read David Quinn’s piece on the rise of anti-semitism sentiment in Europe, although I would say it’s more like almost world-wide.

With the strongest condemnation of the anti-semitism, I am disgusted that you blame it on defenceless people of Gaza and Hamas.

You, without any shame, give absolute right of defence to Israel without any consideration of innocent lives.

Are you calling the shelling of UN schools self-defence?

Are you calling bombing of hospitals self-defence? Are you calling the shooting of children playing on the beach self-defence?

Are you calling the genocide carried out by second-largest army in the occupied land self-defence?

All the above are, in any book, war crimes. On the other hand, you might need lessons in English or humanity.

When you lock 1.8 million people into one area, how can you distinguish between military and civilian zones?

You have no idea how it is living in those conditions and – although Israel uses the rockets as an excuse for the killing of close to 2,000 people, of whom 30pc are children, in the last three weeks – it is shameful that you use your Israeli media as your reference. Shame on you.

Mahmoud Zahedi

Trauma and my tooth

Getting my tooth out recently was a piece of cake. It was with some trepidation I approached the dentist’s surgery, as it was the first time in over a quarter of a century that I had undergone this procedure.

Initially, the dentist put me at my ease by engaging in some light-hearted banter. He explained the procedure to me by saying I would hear certain sounds much louder than I would expect, as well as informing me that if there were problems he would have to carry out a different procedure.

He did all of this in a calm and confident voice. He talked to me throughout the procedure and, while the whole operation took around a half an hour, my tooth was out before I realised it.

A couple of follow-up phone calls in the days after the operation put my mind at ease regarding the dangers of getting a “dry socket,” a particularly painful condition that affects a small minority of people who get teeth out. Thankfully, that never happened to me.

The whole procedure put me thinking of how adversity affects us in our lives. Many of us experience trauma and often the trauma isn’t even acknowledged by the person themselves or those around them. The person is left to just get on with things. All of this just adds to the original trauma.

Getting a tooth out is traumatic. The dentist informed me that it is the only such operation where the person remains completely conscious throughout.

Appropriate attention during the procedure and follow-up after-care promoted healing both physically and mentally.

Now I’ll have to cut down on the cake to ensure I don’t have to go through this again!

Tommy Roddy

Galway

Ivan Yates and loyalty

Ivan Yates in a previous role as a Fine Gael TD talked about loyalty when there was a heave against his then leader John Bruton.

He thought it was disloyal that four members of the frontbench – Jim Higgins, Jim O’Keeffe, Alan Shatter and Charles Flanagan – would try and oust his leader. As things turned out – thanks to Michael Ring, Mayo West, and Eric Byrne, Dublin South Central (winning seats in by-elections), – Mr Bruton did become Taoiseach and Mr Yates’ loyalty was repaid by being appointed Minister for Agriculture.

When, out of choice, Mr Yates left the political stage in 2002, he departed after 21 years of Dail service with a ministerial pension and a Dail deputy’s pension payable at a certain time.

It might not be any harm if Ivan Yates in his writing showed a little bit of loyalty to this party that saw him elected a county counsellor at 19 and a TD at 21 and a senior government minister at 34.

I don’t know anybody in the public sector that acquired incremental payment at such a youthful age and retired at such a young age and then acquired more work.

So Ivan, show a bit more loyalty to the party that gave you such great opportunities at a young age and spare a thought for the poor struggling public sector workers like teachers, gardai and the nurses who the country can’t be run without.

Thomas Garvey

Clairemorris

Co Mayo

Unique advice

Just recently I read two brilliant quotes which I would like to share with your readers. “Each of us is unique, we all have something that only we can offer the people in our lives and even the world at large.”

“Be yourself – everyone else is already taken.”

Brian Mc Devitt

Co Donegal

Irish Independent


Rain

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7 August 2014 Rain

I jog around the park I still have arthritis in my left knee, but I manage to get round the park. A warmish wettish day.

Scrabble Mary wins, but gets under just 400. perhaps I will win tomorrow.

Obituary:

Chapman Pincher – obituary

Chapman Pincher was a journalist who specialised in spy-hunting and enraged Harold Macmillan with his scoops about defence

Chapman Pincher in 1946

Chapman Pincher in 1946 Photo: GETTY/HULTON ARCHIVE

1:48PM BST 06 Aug 2014

CommentsComments

Chapman Pincher, who has died aged 100, was an outstanding journalist who specialised in mole-hunting in the dark tunnels of MI5 and MI6. Skilled in destroying reputations, he once fell under suspicion of being a murderer himself.

At a time when the police were hunting a Jack the Ripper-type killer of prostitutes in the West End of London, one of the many people who had no cause to like Pincher reported a suspicious car — his — parked in the area of the murders.

It was indeed suspicious, for the boot of the car was stained with the blood of pheasants which Pincher had recently shot. After checking the registration number the police contacted the much-respected crime correspondent of the Daily Express, Percy Hoskins, and told him that they suspected his colleague of committing the murders.

Hoskins was able to reassure them that Pincher was a slayer of pheasants but not of prostitutes, and chemical analysis of the blood proved him correct.

Pincher afterwards made capital out of the incident, claiming that the KGB had set him up in order to discredit him.

It is a story that sheds light on Pincher’s life in that (typically) he had been shooting; someone bore him a profound grudge; an influential colleague helped him; and he presented it as a tale of Bondish espionage with himself at the heart of it.

The son of a major in the East Surrey Regiment, Henry (Harry) Chapman Pincher was born in Ambala, India, on March 29 1914. He was educated at Darlington Grammar School and King’s College, London, taking a BSc in Botany and Zoology. He was on the staff of the Liverpool Institute before joining the Royal Armoured Corps in 1940.

Chapman Pincher testing for radioactivity in 1949 (GETTY/HULTON ARCHIVE)

His scientific training led him to the Rocket Division of the Ministry of Supply, but he remained a soldier until 1946 and was still in uniform when he joined the Daily Express as defence, science and medical editor.

At that stage Pincher was still very much the scientist, writing books such as The Breeding of Farm Animals and A Study of Fishes, and running (with Bernard Wicksteed) a splendid series called “It’s Fun Finding Out”.

He soon caught Lord Beaverbrook’s eye, and the Old Man, feeling his years upon him, sent Pincher chasing round Europe to investigate a variety of methods to ward off old age and death. Beaverbrook believed in God, but was markedly reluctant to meet Him.

Pincher, despite his failure in this quest, blossomed in the sunshine of the Beaver’s favour. He treated his subjects, previously regarded as being of specialist interest only, as being full of news. Assiduously cultivating those young experts with whom he had served, and who were now heading for the top in their various fields, he was able to tap into their world.

He never lost that ability. He acquired his stories not in Fleet Street pubs or from ministry handouts but on the grouse moors and the dry-fly rivers where his companions were the experts and the makers of policy. He was candid about his pursuit of the leak: “I took up shooting, which has been a marvellous introduction to high-level people who know things.”

He was also a great believer in going out for lunch, his preferred venue being L’Ecu de France in Jermyn St (said to have been bugged both by MI5 and the KGB). In an interview on the occasion of his centenary Pincher claimed to have “pioneered a kind of investigative journalism” by meeting all the most important people over lunch, “because that’s where the stories lay”.

In May 1959 the Prime Minister Harold Macmillan wrote in a personal minute to his minister of defence: “I do not understand how the Express alone of all the newspapers has got the exact decision that we reached at the cabinet last Thursday on space. Can nothing be done to suppress or get rid of Mr Chapman Pincher? I am getting very concerned about how well informed he always seems to be on defence matters.”

At the same time Pincher was a voracious seizer of other journalists’ copy, especially that of foreign correspondents who filed defence stories which he judged to fall within his province. So quick was he to grab these stories that he became known to disgruntled colleagues as “Harry the Pinch”.

Chapman Pincher with Prime Minister Harold Wilson in 1967 (GETTY/HULTON ARCHIVE)

Like many journalists, he arrived at his speciality by accident. The physicists Alan Nunn May and Klaus Fuchs were unmasked as Soviet spies in the early post-war years, and, with his scientific expertise, Pincher was assigned to the stories. He soon embarked on that part of his career which brought him fame, honours (Journalist of the Year in 1964, Reporter of the Decade in 1966) — and many enemies.

In Who’s Who, Pincher listed his interests as “spy-hunting, ferreting in Whitehall and bolting politicians”. In 1967 he fell foul of the government with a story about the security vetting of private cables. It led to a review of the “D” Notice system which put editors on their honour not to publish stories considered to be harmful to the nation’s security.

Pincher was accused of misleading the amiable Colonel Sammy Lohan, Secretary of the “D” Notice Committee, about his intention to publish the story , and from that moment onwards the battlefield of espionage writing was littered with the debris of his campaigns — most of which he won, for he was a doughty fighter. He would never accept criticism of his books, but would pursue his detractors through the letters columns of the newspapers and, after he became a freelance, would earn handsome fees writing features in defence of his own cause.

There were many casualties in these campaigns. Pincher revealed that “my friend” the late Sir Maurice Oldfield, former “C” of MI6, was a homosexual. He was one of the leading protagonists for the (discredited) theory that the late Sir Roger Hollis, former head of M15, was a traitor.

Like a number of other journalists, Pincher was aware of Sir Anthony Blunt’s treachery. Curiously, it was one story he did not tell.

Chapman Pincher out shooting (REX)

Pincher was, however, heavily involved in the “Spycatcher” affair, for the former MI5 counter-intelligence officer Peter Wright provided Pincher with inside information for his bestselling book Their Trade is Treachery (1981).

Wright had been put in touch with Pincher by Lord Rothschild, who was anxious to clear his name of innuendos that he had been involved in the “Cambridge Comintern” spy ring. Wright, living on a miserable pension from MI5, was delighted with the half-share of the royalties he received and this gave him the impetus to write Spycatcher, which was largely a rewrite of the information he had given Pincher.

One of the key points in Wright’s case against the government’s determination to ban his own book was that no attempt had been made to stop Pincher’s book. The Attorney General, Sir Michael Havers, explained that no action was taken because it was written by a journalist and not by a former MI5 officer such as Wright. What Havers did not know was that Wright was Pincher’s own mole.

No one could explore this difficult field without making some enemies. Lady Clanmorris, well-versed in the ways of the secret services, once said of Pincher: “When there exist such people as… Mr Chapman Pincher, the KGB does not need a disinformation department.” Professor MRD Foot, official biographer of the intelligence services, was sure that Pincher was being used: “My view on the man would be sulphuric. The stuff he produced on the intelligence services was almost totally inaccurate. Don’t doubt his loyalty, but he was woefully used.” (In fact, the Soviets once attempted to recruit Pincher as an agent, but were immediately rebuffed.)

The historian EP Thompson, writing from a different political standpoint in the New Statesman, was similarly unimpressed: “The columns of the Daily Express are a kind of official urinal where high officials of MI5 and MI6 stand side by side patiently leaking… Mr Pincher is too self-important and light-witted to realise how often he is being used.”

Thompson was quite wrong. Pincher knew very well when he was being used. He simply did not care: what mattered to him was the story.

He once told The Daily Telegraph: “Attempts by foreign agents to undermine my country and ripen it for revolution or invasion have always outraged me, and, in my seventies, I still feel driven to pursue subversives and traitors whether they be alive or dead.”

Chapman Pincher on the riverbank (REX)

Pincher was a prolific author. His books include Too Secret Too Long (1984); The Secret Offensive (1985); Traitors — the Labyrinths of Treason (1987); A Web of Deception (1987); The Truth about Dirty Tricks (1991); and Treachery (2011).

Among his novels are Not with a Bang (1965); The Penthouse Conspirators (1970); The Skeleton at the Villa Wolkonsky (1975); The Eye of the Tornado (1976); Dirty Tricks (1980); The Private World of St John Terrapin (1982); and Contamination (1989).

A modest drinker and lifelong non-smoker, Chapman Pincher remained active till the end of his life. In February this year he published a memoir, Dangerous to Know.

He is survived by his wife, Billee, whom he married in 1965, by his son and daughter of a previous marriage, and by three stepchildren.

Chapman Pincher, born March 29 1914, died August 5 2014

Guardian:

In resigning in protest at the government’s policy towards Gaza, Sayeeda Warsi has demonstrated a tremendous degree of courage and principle (Warsi attacks ‘morally indefensible’ stand on Gaza as she quits coalition, 6 August). Like Robin Cook and Clare Short who resigned from their ministerial positions in protest at the UK’s role in the Iraq war, Warsi believed it was unconscionable to continue to participate in a government that remains equivocal about the slaughter of innocent civilians in the Gaza Strip. While her resignation will inevitably be viewed with cynicism from certain quarters, it must not have been an easy decision for someone who holds the honour of being the first female Muslim member of cabinet.

By putting principles above politics, Warsi has sacrificed much of what she has dedicated a decade of her life to achieving. Her stance should be applauded and should instil courage in other conscientious politicians to take similar stances.
Fahad Ansari
Birmingham

•  Sayeeda Warsi has to be congratulated for her principled stand on the Palestinian-Israeli issue. Philip Hammond is wrong to say the UK government is doing everything to bring peace to this region. Efforts to establish a free and secure Palestinian state as demanded by the UN have continued without success for over 60 years. The last seven years have done nothing to dismantle illegal settlements. Warsi’s frustration is justified. It is not enough to say Israel needs a secure state. Palestinians too need a secure state. The arms and military equipment supplied by UK government should not be used against civilians.
Ali Syed
Glasgow

•  Sayeeda Warsi is resigning on a point of principle; the first time this has happened since Peter Carrington did over the Falklands war in 1982. Most ministers in all parties have to be dragged kicking and screaming from office, clinging to it like limpets. She is to be congratulated. If we are truly to honour the dead of the first world war we should limit the production and sale of arms with none being sold to Israel or to either side in Syria or Ukraine.
Valerie Crew
Beckenham, Kent

•  Any resignation on a point of principle is to be applauded but the principles of Sayeeda Warsi would appear to be limited. She chooses to ignore one of the root causes of the conflict, which is the Hamas charter. The charter calls for the elimination of the Israeli state and its replacement by an Islamic one. This would involve the expulsion or killing of all Israeli Jews, so that instead of viewing 1,800 Arab deaths we could be viewing up to 5,000,000 Jewish ones.

The genocidal intent of Hamas obviously finds no place in Warsi’s consideration, and in choosing to ignore that intent her views are as morally indefensible as those of whom she accuses.
Paul Miller
London

• Handwringing by Jimmy Carter and Mary Robinson (The blockade must go, Comment, 6 August) is not enough. Time to call for unilateral recognition of Palestine as a state by the UK, then the EU and US, with Sayeeda Warsi as our first ambassador.
David Wheatley
Margate, Kent

• You describe Sayeeda Warsi’s resignation “as the act of a representative of Muslim Britain” (A matter of principle, Editorial, 6 August). Warsi represents her country, not her community. Moreover, your description places a question mark on her integrity – it implies that if Gazans were non-Muslim, Warsi would have thought twice before resigning.

It is a pity that the British media is not averse to ghettoising Britain’s Asian politicians to the confines of their religious community. Why can’t it accept that they too can rise above ethnicity and religion? Moreover, Britain’s ethnic politicians belong to many racial and religious groups, some with deep-rooted inter-communal rivalries. Any attempt to link their presence in government to their religion is bound to open up a Pandora’s box of sectarianism and communalism in British politics.
Randhir Singh Bains
Gants Hill, Essex

•  Sayeeda Warsi’s departure from government may have left the cabinet even more dominated by a clique of “posh white men” from Eton but at least they were elected, unlike Lady Warsi (and her successor).
Malcolm Thick
Harwell, Oxfordshire

•  Since Sayeeda Warsi no longer has a role in government perhaps she could be appointed Middle East peace envoy. The current incumbent appears to have little interest in the job.
Keith Flett
London

Your report (Women’s refuges forced to shut down by funding crisis, 4 August) puts a welcome spotlight on a deteriorating situation which is reaching crisis point for many families affected by domestic abuse. Your columnist Owen Jones also pointed this out recently (Britain is going backwards on violence against women, 31 March) because those that need a safety net most are almost entirely absent from any discussion in the media. Recent research commissioned by Scottish Women’s Aid has identified the dramatic impact that domestic violence has on the outcomes for children in these situations, with high levels of anxiety, the loss of personal belongings and familiar surroundings, trouble sustaining friendships and missing long periods of school.

Against the trend of dwindling resources in this critical area of need, Buttle UK is proud to have formed a partnership with the City of London Corporation’s charity, City Bridge Trust, to provide individual grants to children and families across Greater London over the next three years to support the emotional and material needs of the child or young person affected by domestic violence. A first tranche of £470,000 was awarded by City Bridge Trust in May this year.

We trust the evaluation of this more holistic approach will show improved outcomes for children and their parents in the resettlement stages of their lives, serving as a model of best practice which can be replicated across the country.
Gerri McAndrew
Chief executive, Buttle UK

• Mike Bedford, domestic violence programme manager for Splitz, is wrong to say “we shouldn’t need refuges any more”. Alongside perpetrator programmes for men, who, I agree, are the problem, women still need refuges in which to recover from abuse that may have gone on for years. Specialist domestic abuse workers help women to regain their health and confidence in order to lead enriched lives.

I was a founder member of Taunton Women’s Aid that opened the Taunton refuge in 1977. Through the specialised work of its staff, hundreds of women and their children have gone on to live without the fear of daily debilitating abuse.  But women need to get away from abusive partners in order to begin the process.
Jean Hole
Taunton, Somerset

• In 2012-13 alone there were 171 female homicide victims in England and Wales. – 117 killed by their intimate “partner” or another family member (eg a violent parent). Just as we organise statutory places of safety for suicidal people at risk of death, clearly we need an accessible system for women and children at risk of homicide in their own home. Violence at home typically builds up over time and can involve several family members, so refuges need staff with professional skills and experience.

However, there really is scope for developing “prevention measures”. There is little evidence perpetrators with a long history of violence against women can change, but male violence often emerges in the late teens and there is good evidence that mental health promotion in secondary schools reduces later violence. I belong to the alcohol and violence interest group of the Public Health Association, and some young men (under 20) just starting to hit their girlfriend when drunk, can make it a goal of their alcohol treatment to stop such violence. The average age of murdered women is 41 – prevention with men has to start much, much younger.
Woody Caan
Editor, Journal of Public Mental Health

The Home Builders Federation pronouncements (Letters, 28 July) attempt to deflect attention from its members’ practices by pointing the usual fingers of blame for the housing crisis at the planners or what it calls the anti-development lobby. Its suggestion that the holding of strategic land is “hardly worth close inspection” is at odds with the way in which the same major housebuilders hold options on very large amounts of potential housing land in advance of submitting planning applications. This strategic landbank monopolises the effective ownership of land and can exclude other providers for many years ahead. Moreover, the reference the federation makes to sitting on land being uneconomic also conflicts with their strategy of stimulating or maintaining local sale values by limiting build-out rates to keep up prices. The slow trickle of new housing on large sites under their control is itself a significant form of land hoarding. The big housebuilders have far too much control over what gets built and when. What is required is a different regulatory environment that can reward a wider range of housing providers who are not driven by price manipulation and land hoarding. New housing development is jealously guarded as an effective monopoly by the housebuilders – a situation comparable to other industries causing public concern, like the energy suppliers and the major food retailers. We need an Ofbuild for housebuilding.
Martin Field and Bob Colenutt
Institute of Urban Affairs, University of Northampton

• Ministers talk and act tough on capping the costs of welfare, while underwriting the income of private landlords who pitch their otherwise unfeasibly high rents at levels that they know the state will pay them via housing benefit (Help for housing costs is forcing up the benefits bill, warns Labour, 5 August). Labour should now talk tough – with a view to acting tough when elected – by promising to end this subsidy to property owners who have been encouraged to buy-to-let, rather than to use their savings to buy premium bonds and other benign savings products.
Les Bright
Exeter, Devon

The Brics bank (Report, 16 July) posed a challenge to advanced nations whose financial architecture has failed to adjust to the reality of the new economic order. It asserts overtly that if global public institutions – specifically the IMF and the World Bank – are not going to reflect the new power structures in the globalised economy, they will simply become redundant. So will the Argentinian “default” (Report, 2 August) be a turning point in private financial markets. Argentina is being held ransom by a few, grossly self-interested vulture funds. However, equally important in the long-term consequences, is that so are the other investors and that this is being enforced through the legal jurisdiction of the US.

Sovereign issuers – including those far more powerful and assertive politically, and with large domestic capital surpluses compared to Argentina – as well as investors will demand bond issuance in alternative jurisdictions that allow for payouts to investors in the event of minority hold-outs. If New York or London won’t adapt, then the financial markets and legal jurisdictions of Sao Paulo, Hong Kong and Shanghai will. Globalisation is radically restructuring public institutions that fail to recognise and respond to the new power structures. The question remains open as to how this will take shape in relation to private markets, including in financial markets where New York and London remain the dominant global centres. But the Argentina default opens the door to speculation.
Judith Tyson
Research fellow, International Finance, Overseas Development Institute

• Larry Elliot writes that states should be able to seek some protection against creditors (States must be allowed to go bust, 1 August) But at least the ruling about Argentina’s debt was given in open court, with rights of appeal. Under the investor-state dispute settlement provisions of the proposed transatlantic trade and investment partnership, cases like this would take place through an unaccountable international arbitration process, outside any existing legal systems, with no rights of appeal. It’s no surprise that TTIP is being negotiated in secret between the EU and US, if it is intended to transfer so much power away from democratic control into the hands of private corporations. It should be stopped.
Steven Thomson
London

I would like to point out that – contrary to the widely publicised information about the televised independence debate – there were a large number of Scottish viewers, like those in those rest of the UK, who were unable to view the debate live (Report, 6 August). Perhaps the Scottish government and STV are not aware that the (approximately 110,000) residents in the Scottish Borders do not receive STV, but ITV Border. As a result, this sizeable minority of voters were disenfranchised last night. I trust that the organisers will give this some consideration before the next debates are scheduled.
Christine and Peter Clarke
Innerleithen, Tweeddale

• It was not easy to locate this critical debate on radio in England, Wales or Northern Ireland, nor could I find it on TV – eventually found it online on STV. What does it say about transparency etc that many had to rely on news reports rather than be able to decide for ourselves. Who made the decision not to have the debate easily available to all in the UK?
John Roberts
Colwyn Bay, Conwy

• So, Bernie Ecclestone pays £60m to have bribery charges dropped (Report, 6 August). Doesn’t that sound like a… oh, what’s the word?
Jim Watson
Stroud, Gloucestershire

• If Nigel Moss were right (Letters, 5 August), where would students sent down from Cambridge go to?
David Barnard
Cholesbury, Buckinghamshire

• Wherever your destination, go there by East Coast or Cross Country train and, bizarrely, you’ll arrive into it.
Michael Ayton
Durham

• Both correspondents (Review, 2 August, Letters, 5 August) are wrong. The dog votes slavishly for its master’s preference, while the cat is the classic swing voter, offering itself to whoever offers most.
Brendan Martin
London

• I am surprised to see that your correspondents have such politically minded cats. Ours just sits on the fence.
Ken Forman
Manchester

A lot has been written and said about Top Gear (Rows over Top Gear prompt BBC inquiry, 6 August). Let me make the situation clear. It’s no secret that there have been some significant issues on Top Gear in recent months. The BBC has taken them seriously and has left no one associated with the programme under any illusion just how seriously. I instigated a health check on Top Gear to ensure that there were no further issues. Top Gear is an extraordinary television programme, loved by millions of viewers around the world. I want Top Gear to maintain its unique take on the world but more controversies of this nature would serve no one well. While Jeremy [Clarkson] and I disagree on the language some have recently found very offensive, I do not think he or anyone on the Top Gear team are racist. The focus now is on the future and continuing the great success of Top Gear with audiences. I’m confident the hard-working, high-quality production team will deliver this.
Danny Cohen
Director, BBC Television

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Girl Summit 2014

British prime minister David Cameron speaks at the Girl Summit 2014 in London. Photograph: Will Oliver/EPA

The article by Naana Otoo-Oyortey “Where were the grassroots voices at the Girl Summit?” on Wednesday 30 July, strikes a poignant note when we also consider that the scale of female genital mutilation (FGM) means that current funding is unlikely to do much more than scratch the surface, unless there is support on a large scale inside communities.

Its not just a question of who is leading the conversation in development events, where often the impact is not clear and the attention on the issue can be temporary.

It relates to the whole development dilemma where programme managers want ownership to go to communities (in theory) but simply don’t manage to release control and continue to steer most projects through external consultancies. Placing development researchers, experts and project administrators at the centre of the conversation about FGM inevitably shifts communities to the periphery.

I think that an internal conversation needs to take place among communities, and that conversation can be reflected at large development events [like the Girl Summit], but these one-off events themselves should not be a major focus for grassroots organisations.

There are multiple parallel conversations on FGM on various African social-media platforms and many young Africans (diasporans and residents) participate, using smartphones. These kinds of conversations can be a good input from communities to larger development events.

In parallel, it’s no longer sufficient to call for participation from communities. Tougher criteria for participation need to be defined that give communities a steering role in defining and monitoring objectives. Projects should not be funded if they don’t meet the criteria. I have just finished a three-year project on how to implement participation in decision-making in Uganda, where this approach worked quite well. The report is available here.

Clementine Burnley is a governance expert with a special interest in participatory rural development.

Independent:

Times:

Sir, Melanie Phillips misses the point (“You’re not getting the real truth about Gaza”, Aug 4). Ever since the start of the Israeli incursion into Gaza, we knew Hamas would use UN schools, hospitals and flats to hide and fire its weapons. It’s also safe to assume that Gazans have been killed by Hamas rockets and that Hamas manipulates public opinion. However, these are the very facts that Israel’s defence strategy must take into account when responding. Can a country with an intelligence service as skilled and resourceful as Israel’s not find, in 2014, a better way of disabling those attacking it with rockets and through tunnels than shelling guilty and innocent alike?

Professor Anthony Glees
University of Buckingham

Sir, Melanie Phillips wrote that “Israel has stuck to every ceasefire; Hamas has broken every one”. How chastening it must be for her to read your headline the next day: “Israel admits it broke Gaza truce”.

John Samuel
Coulton N Yorks

Sir, Melanie Phillips supports a two-state solution between Israel and Palestine in theory, because she believes the West Bank would turn into an Islamist Iranian proxy state overnight, but she does not support an independent Palestine. I think that she should be more worried about Isis than Iran — and neither Hamas nor Iran support Isis. Israel has been illegally expanding its territories ever since 1948, firstly by occupying Gaza, the West Bank and the Golan Heights in 1967, and by the spread of settlements across the West Bank. Cynically, Israel plans to continue building houses in the Arab areas that it illegally occupies and it continues to imprison Gazans in concentration camp conditions. Melanie Phillips chastises some of our politicians for condemning the Israeli slaughter of Gazan civilians, simply on the alleged basis that Hamas is deliberately sacrificing its civilians.

That policy will lead to a new generation of what she and Israel may call terrorists, but others freedom fighters.

Richard Waughman
Cambridge

Sir, What Melanie Phillips says about Gaza and Hamas may be true, but it is only the tip of the iceberg. Until Israel’s leadership stops bullying its neighbours and illegally trying to take over the final 20 per cent of Palestine, ie, the West Bank, there will be no peace, as it is not in Israel’s interests. Palestinians will only recognise Israel if it withdraws to its 1948/1967 borders, in accordance with several UN resolutions ignored by Israel, backed by the US.

J Swift
Crawley, Sussex

Sir, There are many parallels between the plight of the Palestinians and that of black South Africans under apartheid, the main one being that a whole people were made to feel second class and with very limited rights and next to no hope. In South Africa the response to the Sharpeville Riots — when 69 people were shot — seemed to mark a turning point when world opinion began to think that things had to change. Will the attacks on Gaza — in which 1,700 have been killed — mark a similar turning point?

Robin Woodd
Hemel Hempstead, Herts

Sir, Those lining up to condemn Israel should recall who danced in celebration when Londoners were slaughtered on their streets by Islamic extremists.

Kenneth Herman
Somerton, Somerset

Sir, It not fair to describe UK foreign policy towards the Middle East — and Israel in particular, which faces a threat from a terrorist group bent on its destruction — as “morally indefensible”. However, Baroness Warsi’s resignation highlights the dilemmas which abound in this area, and not all on the Western side. I do not think it politically impossible for the UK to back Israel’s efforts to defend itself, but be able still to say that decisions which target a known Hamas threat of an individual or weapons store with the certainty or extreme risk that deaths of civilians, especially children, will result, are wrong. Subsequent claims that Hamas is solely responsible for such consequences compounds an inexplicable moral judgement, and leaves high ground, absurdly, for the terrorist.

I tried over the past four years to advise Israelis and the Palestinian Authority that unless the chance of a second-term US president to revive the Middle East peace process was taken seriously, sooner or later something would happen which would run out of control. I also told both that support for them without progress was wearying among friends.

Gaza will not be settled without an overall agreement. The efforts and restraint of President Abbas and the West Bank, despite imperfections in the PA, deserves recognition; Hamas’s few remaining friends must tell it its war is over, and both Palestinians and Israel must make the concessions they knows they have to make to secure the peace, security and prosperity its own children have died for. It is not too late. But it soon will be.

Alistair Burt, MP
Minister for the Middle East 2010-13

Sir, As Islamic nations embrace their own battles against militant Islamic terrorist groups, it is perhaps a good thing that Baroness Warsi has resigned from our government. Their fight could easily become ours, given the terrorist group’s methods of infiltration and attack. Britain needs to know that our government is united in its resolve to resist terrorist tactics, in whatever form it takes, wherever that might be. Although we may march on the streets of Britain in support of Hamas, with little understanding of what the word ‘Palestine ‘ really means, Arab nations do not share our sympathy.

Barbara Etchells
Horsham, W Sussex

Sir, Baroness Warsi was right to resign. For at least part of her tenure as a Minister for Foreign Affairs, the UK gave large sums, via the EU, to Gaza for the benefit of its citizens. Her department should accept some responsibility for how that money was spent, not on roads, buildings or hospitals, but on building tunnels for the purpose of entering and attacking Israel.

Barrington Black
London NW3

Fracking can cause subsidence, which can be very expensive – so who is going to pay?

Sir, In the discussions about fracking in the UK I have seen no mention of subsidence. Examples of subsidence after subterranean mineral extraction have been noted at Groningen, in the Netherlands, and at one North Sea oilfield, where the sea bed subsided by around 10 metres. The oil companies involved had enough money to deal with the problem. However, if we do get subsidence on land, with consequential damage to buildings and infrastructure, who will pay?

Dr Peter Broughton

Camberley, Surrey

Competition to be a lawyer is scorching but there are other excellent career options for a law graduate

Sir, Your report “Law students’ toughest brief is finding a contract” (Aug 5) assumes that the only career for law graduates is in the legal profession. However, just as graduates in philosophy do not become professional philosophers, an academic training in the law equips graduates with skills relevant to a range of careers. Those skills include: research techniques; the ability to assimilate and analyse complex material and to judge its relevance; attention to detail; problem solving and the precise use of language.

I always urged my students to be guided by their interests and to consider a range of career options and not automatically join the queue for the legal profession. Law graduates can bring a great deal to many non-legal careers and with it achieve success and personal satisfaction.

John Bridge

Emeritus Professor of Law, Exeter

The infrastructural costs of largescale immigration are often overlooked

Sir, Professor Rowthorn provides necessary balance to the immigration debate by drawing attention to the “capital” costs — homes, roads, water supply, sewerage and so on (“Mass immigration is bringing down living standards, economist claims”, Aug 1).

What should concern us even more is the question of whether it is right to rob poorer countries of their talented people. A country robbed of its talent and enterprise will be hampered in its economic, social and political development. It will be a place from which we can expect a continuing flow of immigrants. Worse, such deprived countries also export unrest, extremism and terrorism.

Mark Griffiths

London W8

GPs’ surgeries are going to fill up with middleaged patients wanting to know about the benefits of aspirin

Sir, I have 467 patients aged 50-65 (report, Aug 6). They have been advised, through the media, to see me to discuss whether they should be taking aspirin. May I apologise in advance to all the ill people who I will not be able to see during this time.

Dr James Hickman

North Curry, Somerset

Telegraph:

SIR – Placing an additional burden on diesel is neither justified nor “green”.

Diesel vehicles use much less fuel than the petrol equivalents and thus should enjoy some incentive, since a reduction in consumption of fossil fuels is a fundamental ecological objective. The Government’s attempt to justify increased charges for diesel vehicles as if such charges were “green” is cynical and destroys trust.

Iain Wolsey
Bristol

SIR – The proposal to charge extra on diesel vehicles in London is no more than a revenue-raising exercise. The payment of £10 will not make the least difference to emissions from the car.

G M E Barber
Sudbury, Suffolk

SIR – Is this another case of politicians introducing a new policy without thinking it through? Britain is already one of the most expensive places in Europe for diesel.

Out of 22 countries there are 20 where it is cheaper and France, our near neighbour, is 39p per gallon cheaper. Making diesel even more expensive would hit retired people and country dwellers especially hard.

David Spencer
Fen Drayton, Cambridgeshire

SIR – London ought to impose a time limit rather than a full clampdown on emissions from idling diesel-powered vehicles.

There is a sharp increase from the idling emission value when the car is switched on and during warm-up, meaning it is probably preferable not to turn off just for a few minutes. Crawling traffic and gear-changes produce increased levels of all kinds of pollution as the raw fuel is not completely combusted.

B V Maher
Shrewsbury, Shropshire

BBC talent

SIR – I was the head of science and features with the BBC between 1976 and 1979, when Jonathan Miller made The Body in Question for BBC2.

We had a team of six – producer, director, research and PA staff – to make 13 50-minute programmes on the history of medicine. The line of command was direct from “the talent” (Jonathan), through producer, to head of department and finally channel controller.

None of us had read media studies. Draw your own conclusions.

Paul Bonner
London SW19

Blown away

SIR – I’m afraid the main factor that keeps me, my wife and many of our friends away from the cinema is the shocking volume of the soundtracks.

I try to time my entry to avoid the deafening adverts but then have to grope through the dark. One should not have to wear shooting ear-defenders for an evening’s entertainment.

James Barr
Milnathort, Kinross-shire

Adult viewing

SIR – According to the artist Jake Chapman, it is a waste of time taking children to art galleries.

Personally I do not think I will ever be old enough to “understand” artists such as Mark Rothko. Maybe he should advocate banning some adults as well.

John Billing
Chatham, Kent

Arab Spring legacy

SIR – Can I offer my congratulations to David Cameron, Barack Obama and Nicolas Sarkozy on their success in bringing democracy to the nations of the Middle East.

As a result of their encouragement of the Arab Spring, Libya is now in the same position as Syria and Egypt, where a stable government has been replaced by either civil war or a military coup.

John Stewart
Terrick, Buckinghamshire

Getting shirty

SIR – The problem with men’s shirts is not the design of the pocket, but finding a shirt which has one.

Rob Dowlman
Heighington, Lincolnshire

SIR – Tony Jones would do well to heed the advice of my godfather when I was in my early twenties: “Shirts come from Jermyn St, failing that, Marks and Spencer. Have a full-cut collar, double cuffs and never, ever have a pocket.” Sage advice that I have always heeded.

Ali Wilkerson
Alness, Ross-shire

Let patients act as guides for bipolar research

SIR – In her moving article about the suicide of her daughter, who was suffering from bipolar disorder, Melanie de Blank calls for a raft of things that no grieving parent should have to request, including more and better-funded research into the condition.

We will be carrying out a nationwide survey to identify the research questions that matter most to those with bipolar disorder, their carers and the professionals who treat them.

People at the sharp end of a condition, rather than, as is so often the case, industry or research professionals who often never even see patients, should be the ones to influence the research expenditure of major charities and the Government.

It’s tragically too late for Polly, but we hope to offer a powerful voice to people who are too seldom heard.

Dr Sophie Petit-Zeman
Director of Patient Involvement, National Institute for Health Research
Dr Jennifer Rendell
Research Fellow, Department of Psychiatry University of Oxford
Dr Tom Hughes
Consultant Psychiatrist, Leeds and York Partnership NHS Foundation Trust

The time is ripe for a rest under the shade of a watermelon stall in Savannakhet, Laos  Photo: Alamy

6:59AM BST 06 Aug 2014

CommentsComments

SIR – The proprietor of my local high street fruit and veg shop told me that the stronger the smell of melon at the point where the fruit was attached to the plant, the riper it is.

David Jones
Malmesbury, Wiltshire

SIR – Keep them for up to three weeks, preferably alongside a ripe banana, until you can smell the delicious perfume of ripe melon.

Rosemary Pears
Ventnor, Isle of Wight

SIR – To check if a pineapple is ready to eat, pull out one of the inner leaves at the top while it is still growing. If it comes out easily, it’s ripe and ready for breakfast. I am not sure if this works for already-harvested pineapples.

Pam Maybury
Bath, Somerset

SIR – Has anyone else noticed how fat, juicy blueberries defy gravity and appear on the top of the clear plastic containers, whereas the tiny ones are all on the bottom?

Joyce Chadwick
Stratford-upon-Avon, Warwickshire

SIR – David Benwell’s problem with melons and peaches is minor compared to mine with avocados.

Somehow they manage to go from rock-hard to rotten without passing through ripe.

David Sayers
Fern, Angus

Tributes to the war dead continue across the country

Flowers are placed around the 'Grave of the Unknown Warrior' ahead of a candlelight vigil marking the start of WW1, at Westminster Abbey in London

Flowers are laid at the Tomb of the Unknown Soldier ahead of a candlelit vigil to mark the start of the conflict Photo: Dan Kitwood/Getty Images

7:00AM BST 06 Aug 2014

CommentsComments

SIR – Having taken some years to find an uncle’s grave, I went on Sunday to Smisby, a small village in Derbyshire. In the village is a stone remembrance cross with, I think, five names of villagers who had died fighting in the First World War, including my uncle’s. The total population then must have been around 200.

We left a red rose at the memorial, and then went into the pretty, well-kept churchyard to visit his lonely, tree-marked grave. I must admit to feeling intensely sad, not just because of my 21-year-old uncle, but because of the three or four similar gravestones that no one seemed to have remembered.

Ray Smart
Bottesford, Leicestershire

SIR – I would like to reassure Eileen Savage that there will be ample coverage of the Gallipoli campaign next year, particularly on the centenary of the landings in April 1915.

Every year since its foundation in 1969, the Gallipoli Association has kept the memory fresh each year on April 25 by laying wreaths at the Gallipoli memorial in the crypt at St Paul’s Cathedral. We are also represented at the Cenotaph and Westminster Abbey later that same day.

I have no doubt that the sacrifices of the 50,000 Allied personnel killed and the 559,000 involved will be suitably remembered by our association.

James Watson Smith
Secretary, Gallipoli Association
Ascot, Berkshire

SIR – As we commemorate the sacrifices made by so many during the First World War, is it not ironic that the horror and futility of war continue still today?

Man seems incapable of learning the lessons of time.

Mary Dovey
Great Missenden, Buckinghamshire

SIR – I doubt whether I was the only person dismayed by the theme of the Dean of Westminster’s opening homily at Westminster Abbey on Monday night. His theme was “repentance” – repentance for what? Courage, heroism, selflessness, duty and patriotism?

Other than this, the service was appropriate and moving in every respect.

Sir William Cash MP (Con)
London SW1

SIR – My father rarely spoke of his experiences serving in the Royal Navy during the First World War.

He did tell me, however, that when he volunteered it was a requirement that all recruits could swim. Because he and five others could not, they were marched off to the gymnasium and instructed to lie across a long bench.

They were then shown how to move their arms and legs if they fell into the water and were issued with certificates of swimming competency.

Christopher Bolton
Glossop, Derbyshire

Irish Times:

Sir, – Your editorial of August 6th under the heading “The mantle of 1916” aspires to deal with the “political ownership of the events” of that period in “the national narrative” of today and its relevance to “modern Irish realities”.

Leaving out the personalities involved, the argument whether home rule, promised in 1914, would in time have become 32-county independence or whether “the Rising and the violence of the War of Independence” was necessary is one of the “what-ifs” of history. Your conclusion seems to be that the case is “not proven” on either side and that the argument will “run and run”.

That is all very civilised. But the modern Irish reality is that there is a much more uncivilised national narrative on this topic running elsewhere, especially in various online forums. A flavour of the level of debate there can be judged from the fact that they want the proponents of one side of the argument “cleared out” in “the not too distant future”. The attitude to mainstream media in the debate online is that the civilised debate represented by your editorial is “gibberish”. The people who express these opinions also look forward to the not too distant future when, they hope, papers such as yours will be “facing extinction” – to which they say “good riddance”.

None of these totalitarian ramblings come under the remit of the press ombudsman, but we should be aware that they are part of the national narrative nonetheless. As your editorial says, the argument/debate on the mantle of 1916 will run and run. How extreme this debate will become in the years ahead is unforeseeable at this stage. How much influence it will have on the political ownership of current events only time will tell. But it could be considerable. – Yours, etc,

ANTHONY LEAVY,

Shielmartin Drive,

Sutton,

Dublin 13

Sir, – I haven’t seen much coverage in national media of the inspiring role of anarchists and conscientious objectors, on all sides, during the abominable obscenity called The Great War. If it’s heroes you’re looking for, look no further. Yours, etc,

GABRIEL ROSENSTOCK,

Gleann na gCaorach,

Co Átha Cliath

Sir, – I have great respect for Éamon Ó Cuív and the tradition that he represents (Opinion & Analysis, August 6th). However, his repeated insinuation that the movement for a united Europe is not the world’s most edifying peace process is disappointing. Is Ireland to stand back in the face of violations of human rights, disease and poverty in the Third World and in emerging powers such as China, or are we to have the courage of our convictions and unite with our European partners to be a powerful force for good – and for peace – in the world? It is our moral duty to engage in the world, and not to stand idly by. – Yours, etc,

EOGHAN PEAVOY,

Millmount Avenue,

Drumcondra,

Dublin 9

Sir, – Your editorial of August 6th misses the opportunity to lay claim to what should be at the centre of all our centenary remembrances over the next several years. Outside of very formal occasions and sporting events we as a nation have very little pride in our flag. This is primarily due to it having been hijacked by men of violence in Northern Ireland in 1968/69 and thereafter. As a nation, we should use the next number of years to take it back permanently from them. Your average reader, myself included, should be able to promote our flag without people thinking he or she has Provo leanings. The men of violence past and present will not give it up voluntarily; we need to take it back. Yours, etc,

HENRY COUNIHAN,

Taney Crescent,

Dublin 14

Sir, – There is a continuing effort by some commentators to minimise by comparison the deaths of the women and children of Gaza, bringing in the argument that “Sure there’s worse going on in the Middle East” and “Sure far worse happened in Central Africa”.

The death of any innocent child by deliberate military action should call forth the anger of everyone. To try diluting the Gaza atrocities by drawing up some sort of perverse league table is simply not good enough. Trying to draw our attention away from the Gaza crisis by pointing to further atrocities that have been or are taking place elsewhere will not minimise the suffering of the orphans and widows of the bombed-out towns of Gaza.

As many have pointed out, this situation will not improve until we look at the root causes. Time and again, those who have been to Gaza and the West Bank report on the appalling discrimination and hardships which are visited daily upon the Palestinian people by the methods and policies used by the Israelis to keep them in check. To expect that no consequences will issue from this deliberate quotidian oppression is unrealistic.

Every Israeli citizen deserves to live in uninterrupted and secure peace, free from the despicable rocket attacks being perpetrated by Hamas. Palestinians also deserve the equivalent peace.

It is obvious at this stage that the creation of a Palestinian state will be the only true long-term solution to the problem. Those with the power and the means to properly start working in that direction should waste no further time. Too much blood has already been spilled. Too many infants’ lives have already been obliterated. – Yours, etc,

CAPT JOHN DUNNE,

St Georges Street,

Douglas,

Isle of Man

Sir, — It was with no small sense of amazement that I read a letter from David Stewart (August 6th) and wondered at his comments. Mr Stewart appeared to defeat his own purpose in his first paragraph when he wrote that the Israeli government was certainly winning “… the intellectual arguments (largely), but losing in the court of world opinion (indisputably)”.

Therein lies the rub. If reason is ignored and then replaced by the wishy-washy “looks wrong, sounds wrong and feels wrong”, in Mr Stewart’s words, then I suggest that he and others with a similar line of thought would lead us down a path where reason and logic (and also the rule of law, for what is law but reason and logic?) are to be ignored in favour of what Mr Stewart described as a “smell test”. Is this to be how international law shall be defined?

As to the rest of his letter, Mr Stewart chose to describe the state of Israel as being the same as the pre-1992 apartheid South Africa. I trust that I was not the only reader who found such a sentiment to be a travesty rather than a truth. Israel is still the only truly democratic state in the Middle East whereas we should all be aware that apartheid South Africa was controlled by a white minority, unlike now. – Yours, etc,

NOEL LEAHY,

Knockbrack,

Abbeyfeale,

Co Limerick

Sir, – Further to your report “Dublin requires 60,000 houses by 2021” (August 6th), I wonder does the Economic and Social Research Institute really mean space-wasting “houses”, or does it mean housing? There can be significant differences between what those two terms imply and it is unclear from the article whether the term “houses” comes from the ESRI report, or from a (mis)interpretation of it.

In my opinion the last thing Dublin and its environs need is 60,000 more “houses” in the vein of urban sprawl. What I hope the ERSI means is that Dublin and its environs need 60,000 residences and households by 2021, predominantly in the form of apartments and other high-density dwellings, in the spirit of well-planned continental European cities. – Yours, etc,

NIALL O’DONOGHUE

Lempäälä,

Pirkanmaa,

Finland

Sir – I read with dismay the proposal from the Society of Chartered Surveyors for the construction of “European-style” apartments for families. Those proposing the construction of such dwellings ignore the fact that Irish families (by and large) desire to live in houses. Properly planned towns and suburbs with medium-density developments of family houses and good services are what’s required to solve our housing crisis. This is not Tokyo or Singapore and cajoling families into high-rise hamster cages is not a solution. We’ve actually got plenty of space on this island. Perhaps it’s time to survey it properly? – Yours, etc,

PADDY JOYCE,

Barnageeragh Road,

Skerries ,

Co Dublin

Sir, – Once again Geoff Scargill weighs in on the housing debate with a tale of landlord’s woe. He bemoans a property tax which is in situ in every developed property market and cites such mundane expenses as “annual maintenance charges, management and running costs” as if they were the Government’s fault. Landlords’ difficulties arise from a low yield on their “investments”, from their having borrowed excessively and paid too much for their assets. Perhaps people who find themselves in such a situation should realise they are not the sophisticated investors they thought they were and that the policies of the democratically elected government are not to blame for their difficulties. Meanwhile, prudent families who sat out the madness are once again struggling to buy, while speculators, defended by the Irish Mortgage Holders’ Organisation and other media-savvy vested interests, retain assets which they are not paying for. Who will speak for those families?   Yours, etc,

PAUL KEAN,

Conyngham Rd

Dublin 8

Sir, – Surely it is time the canny Scots broke loose from the London bean-counters. They have ability galore, as they have demonstrated over the centuries: their doctors, engineers, shipbuilders, not to mention financial wizards, helped build the British empire. They are quite capable of applying that talent to run their own country.

Perhaps also it is time the English stood on their own feet. Having spent many centuries meddling in other people’s affairs, they now seem to have an identity problem. They have awesome ability, as they demonstrated during the industrial revolution, but have since frittered away their inventive and productive talents in favour of bean-counting in the City. As is well known, the City looks down on “trade” and sees manufacturing as beneath it. It needs to be put in its place. An independent, more focused, England could attend to that.

Rugby has led the way. The Scots and the Welsh play their own anthems and hand the queen back to the English, with whom she rightfully belongs. – Yours, etc,

TED O’KEEFFE,

Sandford Road,

Dublin 6

Sir – My English colleagues and friends are certain Scotland will vote No to independence on September 18th. In one discussion with them I was told there were no reasons for Scotland to leave the UK, just a few small internal issues that could be ironed out.

I thought this a narrow view of the debate. I asked if it was not important for Scotland to consider the EU question, given that England is edging towards an exit, and since it is home to around 80 per cent of the UK population, its electorate will surely determine the outcome of the 2017 referendum promised by the Tories. Two colleagues agreed but one thought the Tories would convince the electorate to stay in.

The EU has chosen to side with Westminster in an effort to keep the City of London in the bloc. However, had it supported an independent Scotland’s membership it could have demonstrated to Westminster just how isolated it could be if decides to quit the EU. That is, after all, the hard line approach Westminster has taken towards Scotland. – Yours, etc,

NATASHA BROWNE,

Woodford New Road,

London E17 3PT

Sir, – GPs nationally welcome Leo Varadkar’s plans to defer universal health insurance. As talks about it progress, it is looking more and more like the US healthcare system, where up to 30 per cent of all healthcare costs are swallowed up by insurance companies in administration costs, legal fees and profit-taking, with no regard to the cost-effectiveness of the service.

However I am surprised that the new Minister considers free GP care an option in the near future. He is obviously not aware of the current problems caused by the advantage taken of the Financial Emergency Measures in the Public Interest (FEMPI) by his two predecessors.

Between 2002 and the 2013 FEMPI/Haddington Road reduction the average State funding per HSE employee had risen by 50 per cent, due to increments for time in service, grade inflation and extraordinarily generous pensions; the consumer price index had increased by 24 per cent but the payments to general practice per GMS patient were lower in 2013 than they were in 2002.

The 2013 FEMPI resulted in a further €34 million being taken out of general practice. The recently published OECD earnings data for Irish GPs indicate that had the Haddington Road cuts been applied fairly to general practice, less than €5 million would have taken.

Massive underfunding of the most cost-effective element of the health service, in association with the culture of prioritising political and bureaucratic gains over patient-centred outcomes, are guaranteed to stall any further progress in this area of healthcare. Yours, etc,

DR WILLIAM BEHAN,

Cromwellsfort Road,

Dublin 12

Sir, – Our family recently vacationed in Ireland, driving over 1,000 miles, and were amazed at the beauty of the land and the friendliness.

After over a week away, it was somewhat depressing to come back to the States – with all its problems. While we did not see much news in Ireland, we did occasionally switch on the television in the evening before going out.

My wife and I are seriously thinking of moving to Ireland – it would be very nice to live in a country where seemingly the only significant issue is whether Garth Brooks will be allowed to hold a concert. We are truly envious. – Yours, etc,

STAN BREON,

Lawrenceville,

Georgia

Sir, – I long believed the only things men were better at than women were boxing, rugby and weightlifting. After Katie Taylor’s achievement at the London Olympics and now the great victory of the women’s rugby team over New Zealand it looks like we are down to one. – Yours, etc,

TOM GREALY,

Threadneedle Road,

Galway

Sir, – It was interesting to learn that in regard to waste we now “recover more through incineration and recycling than goes to landfill” (August 6th). Just wait until the water charges kick in. The cost of recycling will go through the roof when householders stop rinsing bottles, jars etc, before placing them in their green bins. The recycling depots will incur enormous cleaning costs, which will in turn make recycling uneconomical. Now, who would have foreseen such a turn of events? Certainly not this Government, which seems to operate on a cell basis, where each Department does its own thing. So, back to landfill we go. – Yours, etc,

LAURENCE HOGAN,

Braemor Grove,

Dublin 14

Sir, – Ivor Callelly’s solicitor, Noel O’Hanrahan, writes (August 5th) that he could have pleaded not guilty. He would then, of course, have been lying. To state that one has been dishonest does not absolve one of a crime. It is arguable that with no lies left, a cunning player knows when to stop digging and start currying favour with “honourable” truth. Mr O’Hanrahan goes on to suggest that more public funds now be spent on investigating all expenses by all politicians, past and present, a measure which would principally benefit the legal profession. Callelly was not “sacrificed on the altar of political expediency”; he was found guilty of committing a crime and is serving time for it. – Yours, etc,

SHANE O’TOOLE,

Clarinda Park,

Dún Laoghaire

Sir, – May I be permitted to add a short postscript to Michael Moriarty’s appreciation of Michael O’Halloran (August 4th)? As Church of Ireland chaplain in St Luke’s Hospital for over 16 years during the 1970s and 1980s I was deeply conscious of two interrelated aspects of Prof O’Halloran’s work – his bedside manner and his capacity to give comfort to so many patients (including this writer) at times of great anxiety. These, in addition to the professional ability outlined in the appreciation, produced a unique operator in his chosen field of medicine. He was indeed, as Michael Moriarty writes, a “caring doctor”. – Yours, etc,

RT REV ROY WARKE,

Kerdiff Park,

Naas,

Co Kildare

Irish Independent:

GPs nationally welcome Leo Varadkar’s plans to defer Universal Health Insurance. As talks about it progress it is appearing more and more like the US healthcare system, where up to 30pc of all healthcare costs are swallowed up by insurance companies in administration costs, legal fees and profit-taking – with no regard to the cost-effectiveness of the service.

However, I am surprised that the new minister considers free GP care an option in the near future. He is obviously not aware of the current problems caused by the advantage taken of the Financial Emergency Measures in the Public Interest (FEMPI) Act by his two predecessors.

Between 2002 and the 2013 FEMPI/Haddington Road reduction, the average state funding per HSE employee had risen by 50pc due to increments for time in service, grade inflation and extraordinarily generous pensions; the consumer price index has increased by 24pc, but the payments to general practice per General Medical Service patient were lower in 2013 than they were in 2002.

The FEMPI Act resulted in a further €34m taken out of general practice. The recently-published OECD earnings data for Irish GPs indicate that had the Haddington Road cuts been applied fairly to general practice, less than €5m would have been taken. Massive underfunding of the most cost-effective element of the health service, in association with the culture of prioritising of political and bureaucratic gains over patient-centred outcomes, is guaranteed to stall any further progress in this area of healthcare.

Dr William Behan, General Practitioner, Walkinstown, Dublin 12

 

Down-to-earth minister

Regarding Health Minister Leo Varadkar’s article in Tuesday’s Irish Independent and the revision of the timelines for Universal Health Insurance, as a GP registrar, it is nice to see that we now have a Health Minister who has, at least at some point, visited planet Earth.

Cllr Paddy Smyth (FG), Members’ Room, City Hall, Dublin 2

 

‘War crimes’ in Gaza

Mahmoud Zahedi (‘Self-defence in Gaza’, 6 August) asks: “Are you calling the shelling of UN schools self- defence?”

“Are you calling bombing of hospitals self-defence? Are you calling the shooting of children playing on the beach self-defence?

“Are you calling the genocide carried out by the second-largest army in the occupied land self-defence?

“All the above are, in any book, war crimes.”

May I draw his attention to the provisions of the Geneva Convention, which make the placing of military forces in civilian areas a war crime.

Furthermore, the incidental killing or injuring of civilians is not, provided they have been given warning to leave areas used for military purposes, as the Israeli army has done. That Hamas tries to prevent such evacuation is in itself a war crime.

He may not be aware that Hamas uses schools, hospitals, mosques and apartment blocks for the storage of munitions, the digging of cross-border tunnels and rocket launching, with the deliberate intention that, in any conflict, there will be civilian casualties – proven by its policy document captured by the Israelis in Shejaiya this week. Furthermore, its command centre is located in the basement of the main hospital in Gaza.

Finally, his claim, “When you lock 1.8 million people into one area, how can you distinguish between military and civilian zones?” creates the impression that Gaza is so densely populated that civilians have nowhere to go, which is untrue. The population density of the Gaza strip is lower than that of London. I concede that most of the population is concentrated in a few urban areas, but there are many sparsely populated areas, where there is no military activity, to which they could be evacuated, but for Hamas’ insistence that they are not.

In view of the above, I would suggest that Mr Zahedi should be calling for the condemnation of Hamas for its undoubted war crimes rather than Israel, which makes every effort to minimise civilian casualties.

Martin D Stern, Salford, England

 

Smoking out anti-vapers

I am an avid vaper who never vapes where I wouldn’t smoke. This is a personal choice and I am disgusted and irritated by the anti-vaping brigade who would like to ban everything that makes them feel “uncomfortable”. I am also allergic to cheap perfume, which causes me to sneeze and plays havoc with my sense of taste, but I don’t seek to ban it.

Tom Farrell, Swords, Co Dublin

 

Let’s celebrate Home Rule

I wish to support John Bruton‘s call that we celebrate September 18, 1914, as the day Home Rule for Ireland became law. Not alone was it a game changer for us it was also a game changer for the Commons, as henceforth the House of Lords could only delay a bill for one year.

The House of Lords was most likely to veto Home Rule; now the power of veto was gone. Home Rule is what we got in the Treaty of 1921, but with the additional power of raising customs. This extra power proved a disaster. We have now relinquished this power to the EU (children and fools should not be given dangerous tools). De Valera used tariffs to wage a trade war with the UK and made speeches that the British market was gone forever, thank God.

The poverty of farmers led to militancy and forced common sense to return. Despite this costly learning, the Irish Government went on to set up, behind tariff protection, hat making and car manufacture; known as fools’ production. They destroyed our egg industry, pig and cattle fattening by keeping out cheap animal foodstuffs.

Next we should celebrate ‘The Statue of Westminster 1931′, which was the result of a Commonwealth conference of friends, a pay back for supporting Britain in World War I. It was given out of goodwill and the power of love.

World War I had ended the love of power – as in imperial ambition. Full independence, or as much as they wanted, was given to the Dominions: Canada, Australia, New Zealand, South Africa and Ireland.

Britain gave away more territory than the whole of Europe. Its goal in World War I was not empire building but to make the world a safe place for democracy and defend human rights. De Valera used his increased independence to remove the governor, the oath and to bring in the 1937 Constitution.

Noel Flannery, South Circular Road, Limerick

 

Undercover garda work

Was the garda who left his laptop in a Dutch brothel doing undercover work under the covers?

John Williams, Clonmel, Co Tipperary

 

Our Dickensian justice system

I would like to compliment your journalist, Eamon Delaney, for his piece ‘Let us now get real about crime and start to reform our overindulgent legal system’ (Irish Independent, 5 August). He hits the ‘proverbial nail on the head’ in his description of our judicial system.

Our judges and the Garda Siochana are limited in what they can and cannot do in a court of law.

The Irish system is in serious need of a major overhaul as it is quite simply, Dickensian.

James Campbell, Carrick-on-Shannon, Co Roscommon

Irish Independent


Books and tomatoes

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8 August 2014 Books and tomatoes

I jog around the park I still have arthritis in my left knee, but I manage to get round the park. A warmish day. I get some books and replant some tomartoes

Scrabble Mary wins, but gets under just 400. perhaps I will win tomorrow.

Obituary:

Gerallt Lloyd Owen – obituary

Gerallt Lloyd Owen was a prize-winning Welsh poet who used the ancient metre of cynghanedd to project nature and nationalism

Gerallt Lloyd Owen

Gerallt Lloyd Owen

4:58PM BST 07 Aug 2014

CommentsComments

Gerallt Lloyd Owen, who has died aged 69, was the foremost Welsh poet of his generation, and a master of the ancient metre of cynghanedd, which to this day confers a Shakespearean grandeur on the poetry of Wales.

Owen inspired a new cohort by his prize-winning verse, and also functioned almost as a national coach as referee of Talwrn y Beirdd, a long-running poetry contest on BBC Radio Cymru which draws followers in their thousands at the National Eisteddfod.

He began as a poet of nature, faith and the angst of love, but caught the gale of nationalist protest that swept Wales in the late Sixties. He won the National Eisteddfod chair twice, in 1975 and 1982, and was three times winner of the Urdd National, the fiercely-contested youth eisteddfod, between 1962 and 1969.

His was a precocious talent. He recalled shaping his first cynghanedd at 12. By 1966 he had published his first volume, Ugain oed a’i Ganiadau (Songs by the Age of 20), perhaps the first published collection of verse written by a schoolboy. He displayed not only versatile poetic skill with sonnets, englynion (short rhyming verses) and other poetic forms, but also a striking emotional maturity.

In the prologue he writes that his poems “grew like an embryo, but in the soil/ among old and ancient roots/ and then in the ripeness of the night/ they were born to live or to die”. There follows Am Hanner Awr (For Half an Hour), a meditation on a hospital visit and false hope. By the end of the volume, the language of the sonnets is so dense as to defy translation. Thus early masterpieces such as Hen Gariadon (Old Lovers) are closed to the world beyond Wales.

Gerallt Lloyd Owen was born on November 6 1944 on a hill farm at Sarnau, near Bala in Meirionethshire, the heartland of Welsh culture and the purest strain of spoken Welsh.

He was educated at Ysgol Ty Tan Domen — whose closure he recorded in a memorable epitaph — and trained as a teacher at Bangor Normal College. Owen then taught at Bridgend and Trawsfynydd before setting up a printing company in Caernarfon in 1972. He published and illustrated two Welsh-language comics, Yr Hebog and Llinos, as well as books for children.

In the late Sixties the protest movements sweeping student campuses in Europe and America morphed in Wales into a battle for the language and a strident nationalism, and Owen gave poetic voice to these sentiments. Along with Dic Jones, a west Wales farmer, and Alan Llwyd, a native of the Llyn peninsula, he formed a triumvirate that reinvigorated the art of cynghanedd.

In 1972 he published Cerddi’r Cywilydd (The Poems of Shame), which included Fy Ngwlad (My Country), a poem which railed against the Investiture of the Prince of Wales at Caernarfon in 1969.

The poem refers to the slaughter by the English of Llywelyn the Last at Cilmeri in 1282, an ancient sore exhumed and rubbed raw by the nationalist awakening. Owen returned to the theme in Cilmeri, which he considered his greatest work. “It nearly killed me,” he said — but it won the Chair at the National Eisteddfod in Swansea in 1982 and also the Welsh Book of the Year prize.

Owen often reworked medieval imagery to project the new nationalism, and his method of work resembled the vaticinatory poets, the medieval bards who wandered from manor house to castle keep composing verse for their supper. “I’ll sit there and recite the line, and repeat it and think, and try and draw out the line, rather like the way we used to make toffee,” he said, recalling the Welsh custom around Christmas where boiling toffee would be poured on to the slate hearth and stretched to a smooth slab. “When I hit upon a good line it sends a shiver down the spine, and I hope the reader gets that same shiver,” he said.

Like Dylan Thomas, whose work carries echoes of cynghanedd in its alliteration, Owen’s poetry was perhaps best savoured by listening to his slow, dry, monotone declamation. But for all his verbal dexterity, Owen stood apart as a poet who did not surrender clarity of thought to rhythm and sound. “No one needs a degree in Welsh to understand Gerallt’s poetry, and that was one of his greatest achievements,” said chaired bard Meirion MacIntyre Huws.

Despite his tone of protest, Owen did not come across as loud or bitter; rather, he was a quiet, reflective man. “I am the coward in the library,” he confessed in one poem.

In later life he lived in a tidy, light-filled cottage near Caernarfon, often starting the day with an egg, hard-boiled.

But he suffered years of poor health, and was rarely without a cigarette in hand, his skin paper-thin and as pale as his shock of white hair.

Owen personified the difference between poetry in Wales and in England, where composition is a rarefied activity. In Wales it is more widely practised, and among aficionados is more akin to a sport than the rather precious academic exercise in the Anglo-Saxon world.

Owen showed that writing verse is not necessarily a serious business. For more than 30 years he chaired Talwrn y Beirdd, a verbal jousting contest on BBC Radio Cymru in which teams write short pithy verses to clinch the best lines, or as often as not, the best jokes.

The format translated well to the National Eisteddfod, where hundreds packed into the Literary Tent to savour the wit and skill of the teams and Owen’s verdict — a nod, or a sigh and the ghost of a smile to denote rare perfection.

Gerallt Lloyd Owen imbued a generation in Wales with a new-found sense of self-confidence and a sense of worth in their ancient culture. He asked that donations at his cremation be given to the Yes campaign in Scotland.

Gerallt Lloyd Owen was divorced from his wife Alwena. He is survived by his son and two daughters.

Gerallt Lloyd Owen, born November 6 1944, died July 15 2014

Guardian:

Israelis take part in a protest against Israel's military operation in the Gaza Strip

Giles Fraser raises an eyebrow at the concept of protesting against a war when it is over (Movement that dare not speak its name in Israel, 7 August). When a nation is under attack from an enemy on its borders, is it any surprise that the majority of people would support its armed forces? Gaza is not thousands of miles away, unlike those nations attacked by British forces in order to “defend” our security. Israeli troops are often an hour’s drive from their homes and most people in Israel have or have had a member of their family serving in the IDF. Emotions understandingly run high and only time will tell how the Israeli public will assess the situation they find themselves in.

As for the ordinary Israeli not knowing what is happening in Gaza, this is a travesty of the truth. Every home I have been into in Israel has satellite television and looking at the urban skyline there is a forest of satellite dishes. Israelis watch CNN, Sky News, BBC World, NBC and Middle East TV (Jordan), and internet news. What do the British public see? BBC, ITV and Channel 4 beaming one-sided reports that are more commentry than news or analysis. An absence of images of one Hamas fighter or one missile launching site should raise eyebrows. Hamas has been airbrushed out of the conflict by the narrative spun by the British news media. The irony is that none of these journalists or film crews would be in Gaza if it was not for Israel allowing them safe entry into the region. Israel after all is an open democratic society. The conflict has been presented as the might of a modern army attacking unarmed, innocent people.

Yes the innocent have suffered horribly, but the moral responsibility lies firmly with Hamas. It is about time the Guardian published Hamas’s charter in order for the public to see what worries Israelis and Jews everywhere.
Freddy Shaw
London

•  There are many more quiet opponents than Giles Fraser might realise. It is the same here in Britain. When I speak in support of the Palestinians’ case, particularly at Jewish meetings, there is rarely open support, but a number of individuals from the audience after tell me privately that they agree.

Given the inevitable pressures on Jewish dissidents in Israel it is up to the Jewish diaspora to speak out, as a number already do. They will always be more influential than non-Jews, and if Israel is to be rescued from the international consequences of its disastrous actions, and if antisemites are not to be given encouragement, British and American Jews need to be brave.
Michael Meadowcroft
Leeds

•  Can we now look forward to Giles Fraser’s visit to Gaza to interview even one journalist whose articles oppose Hamas and its mission statement/covenant to destroy Israel? While there, he might also like to identify any newspapers and TV channels that are not “simply cheerleaders” for the Hamas line.
Gunter Lawson
London

• You focus on differences between Israel and apartheid South Africa (The politics of the cultural boycott, G2, 7 August), but similarities drive the demand for boycotting Israel. That the remnant of Palestinians who managed to cling on in their birth country have a vote does not outweigh the fact that the great majority were driven into exile. After all, black South Africans often had votes in the Bantustans where they theoretically had citizenships. “Democracy” is a very flexible  concept, often used to disguise highly oppressive realities, and both South Africa and Israel are examples.
Kevin McGrath
Harlow, Essex

•  The London borough of Brent is one of the most diverse and tolerant parts of the UK, with a rich cultural heritage compromising many ethnicities and religions, including the Jewish faith. As local residents, we can say that the Tricycle Theatre, whose cinematic and theatrical repertoire is broad and inclusive, reflects this diversity, demonstrated by eight years of hosting the UK Jewish film festival as well as works on Palestine by comedian Mark Thomas, and by MUJU, the Muslim-Jewish theatre company.

We support the theatre’s decision to refuse funding from the Israeli embassy. The theatre’s position cannot be construed as antisemitic, anti-Jewish or political, but is instead a cultural boycott of a belligerent sponsor.
Martin Francis Brent and Harrow Palestine Solidarity Campaign, Sheila Robin Jews for Justice for Palestinians, Aisha Maniar London Guantánamo Campaign

•  I’m greatly upset about the decline of the Jewish film festival based on Israel funding. I feel that this was an attempt to boycott. In 2012 pro-Palestinian protesters attempted to disrupt performances of Batsheva Ensemble. As Jackie Kemp wrote: “Surely it would make as much sense to blame the ballerinas of the Mariinsky for Putin’s human rights abuses,” (Opinion, 2 September 2012). People in the arts are normally quite liberal. Government officials, who people should be angry at, hide back at home creating war/hate/death and are not affected at all by these boycotts.
Victoria Drew
Leeds

•  The Tricycle Theatre is not boycotting the UK Jewish film festival. It is boycotting funding by Israel. The Tricycle offered to provide alternative funding from its own sources, the UKJFF declined. Surely, it is the UKJFF that has its head in the sand in seeking to politicise this event, and it is the Tricycle that is honourably distancing itself from such politicisation.
Ian Lowery
Kensworth, Bedfordshire

Anne Perkins writes (Comment, 5 August) that older workers need to be “told when to quit” in order that their jobs can be given to young people. It’s an argument that fails to make economic sense. Numerous studies have found no evidence to support the theory that keeping older workers in jobs limits the opportunities for younger people. On the contrary, all the evidence shows that helping people in their 50s and early 60s to stay in the workplace is essential – not only for their own long-term financial prospects but also for the wellbeing of the economy as a whole.

We face a fundamental demographic shift in this country. In the next 10 years, there will be 700,000 fewer people aged 16-49 in the UK workforce, but 3.7 million more aged between 50 and state pension age. If business fails to wake up to this undeniable reality, then our economy will contract, employment will fall and young (as well as old) people will suffer. Contrary to the article’s suggestion, working longer is not somehow the preserve of the better off. It can help our lowest earners to guarantee themselves a more secure and comfortable retirement.

Dropping out of the workforce early can have a devastating effect on a person’s retirement income. An average earner retiring 10 years early could see their pension pot shrink by a third, and spread over a much longer retirement. Old stereotypes of fiftysomethings blocking opportunities for the younger generation are exactly that – they are not supported by evidence.
Steve Webb MP
Minister of state, Department for Work and Pensions

• Too much of the debate about our ageing society pits one generation against another and is based on a misreading of the facts. Anne Perkins rightly highlights the challenges facing young people today, but overlooks the economic evidence showing that older workers do not prevent young people from getting employment. A big challenge over the next few years is to create the conditions under which older people can work if they want and need to, while ageing healthily. Among other things, this must mean providing more flexible working opportunities, not least of all since in 2012 the UK lost £5.3bn from carers who had to stop work to care for loved ones. This would benefit millions of people of all ages, and their families and our economy too.
Caroline Abrahams
Charity director, Age UK

• Anne Perkins appears to buy in to the idea that people born between 1946 and 1964 are the “lucky” generation. How lucky were women in the 60s and 70s, who earned less than their male counterparts and could be sacked for daring to get pregnant? Annual leave was a mere two weeks for many. My wage packets in the 70s were taxed at 35%. My first mortgage had an interest rate of 15%, and I had to wait three months to get it. Yes, university education was free, but only 15% of young people went to university. Today, Labour and Conservative governments want 50% of young people to go to university, with the absurd notion that, somehow, 50% of jobs will require a degree if more and more people get one.

The vast majority of my “wealth” is because of a geographical accident – I bought a house in London – and is unavailable to me unless I move. But my “unlucky” children will get it.
David Reggiori
London

Coventry Cathedral

The chancellor’s announcement that the regeneration of the north of England would be central to his autumn statement (Report, 6 August) is a promising escalation in the political duelling over this issue. So too is his endorsement of the One North report, developed by a coalition of five Northern cities – indicating the Government is listening to the leaders closest to the problems they are trying to solve. One North argues that better connections between northern cities will improve their labour markets and opportunities for trade, delivering benefits for the entire national economy. However, without cities having the powers and funding to adapt and connect local transport systems to these new cross-city links, the true potential of the investment will never be realised. Nor will transport itself solve the economic underperformance of the north. The next government must ensure it is integrated with environmental, housing and jobs policies.

Funding without devolution will only achieve so much. Cities will face tough decisions about which benefits from investment first. Long-term success will depend on their capacity to collaborate, putting competition on the backburner.
Alexandra Jones
Chief executive, Centre for Cities

• I don’t know whether Robert Ramskill of Coventry (Letters, 6 August), who bewails his lot growing up in the 50s, lived in that city. I did. New purpose-built comprehensive schools with acres of playing fields and committed staffs, well-planned council housing estates, full employment for our parents in the booming car industry, a new civic theatre, the best rugby team in the country, a magnificent new cathedral under construction and pride in a city which had at least done its fair share for the war effort – these are just some of the hardships we endured. Oh, and the prospect of ourselves enjoying a rising standard of living and retiring on a decent state pension at 60 or 65 ( in the event many of us retired long before that). Bliss it was in that dawn. I wish my own children could look forward with the same optimism.
Martin Brayne
High Peak, Derbyshire

Lawyers demonstrate in March 2014 against legal aid cuts

Liberal Democrat justice minister Simon Hughes’s disregard for the vast rise in people forced to represent themselves in court proves the Ministry of Justice is in cloud cuckoo land on the impact of their legal aid reforms (Family court system at ‘breaking point’ after cuts in legal aid, says lawyers’ body, July 30). Far from cutting costs, the government’s approach to civil legal aid reform has seen costs rise as judges spend more time helping unrepresented litigants and delay becomes part of the everyday process. Despite this abject failure, justice secretary Chris Grayling’s reforms to legal aid in criminal courts are continuing apace. The profession has always accepted that reform is necessary and provided alternative proposals to not only save money, but simultaneously preserve access to justice and equality before the law. Now is the time for the Ministry of Justice to come to the table and listen.
Bill Waddington
Chairman, Criminal Law Solicitors Association

What a sick and sorry state our politics is in when we see the hundreds of column inches across the press devoted to analysing the latest pronouncements of a man who thinks that it is attractively eccentric not to comb his hair, impishly impressive to lard his bombast with “apt” Latin aphorisms and morally acceptable to lie about his true and cynical intent to manipulate our political future in his own interests (Tory team divided over the return of ‘star player’ Boris, 7 August).
Gillian Dalley
London

• I’d be more convinced of Danny Cohen’s defence of his programme (Letters, 7 August) if there was one non-white face in his line up. Lenny Henry for Clarkson perhaps? At least he’d be funnier.
John Evans
Stroud, Gloucestershire

• Michael Elwyn makes a fair point about the illogicality of God Save the Queen sung by England’s rugby and football teams (Letters, 6 August), but as a Welshman I’d prefer the status quo to continue. Mae Hen Wlad Fy Nhadau (Land of My Fathers) is one of the world’s most stirring national anthems and is worth six points when sung at the Millennium stadium. We don’t want the stiffer competition Jerusalem would offer.
Michael Emrys-Jones
London

• If Brendan Martin (Letters, 7 August) thinks a dog will do something slavishly for its owner, he has clearly never owned a west highland terrier. Islay, our Westie, spends a lot of time trying to get us to do things slavishly for her.
Kirsten Elliott
Bath

• My old, sadly deceased, dog was definitely an anarchist. He loved peace camps, festivals and demonstrations and was keen on animal rights. Never voted, probably on principle. He did nip a Trotskyist’s wagging finger at a Troops Out meeting once, the only one in the room brave enough to do what we all wanted to do.
Ross Bradshaw
Nottingham

• Good to see a new addition to the Guardian weights and measures lexicon, the “newborn elephant” or 100kg (Rosetta mission, 6 August).
Alan Pearson
Durham

Students sitting exams

Eton’s headteacher Tony Little is right to warn of the severe limitations of our outdated exam system (Report, 5 August). Particularly, to highlight the irony in our politicians’ attempts to copy highly academic models, when those countries are now changing their practice. Both South Korea, number one in the world, and Finland, number one in Europe, recognise that the demands, challenges and opportunities of the 21st century require radical innovation in education. South Korea, desperate to break out of its massively stressed system, is prototyping a “free semester programme” in the middle years of secondary schooling, providing a space free of exams where students can experiment. Finland is exploring ways of transforming teaching and learning to deepen student engagement, confident that this practice significantly enhances educational attainment and life opportunities. In England, 37 schools, supported by Innovation Unit, and sponsored by the Education Endowment Fund, are working to develop rigorous project-based learning that does exactly this – engaging students in work that has meaning for them, develops over time and allows them to work with the wider community, including businesses.
David Albury and Valerie Hannon
Directors, Innovation Unit

• It’s encouraging that an eminent voice undermines reliance on exams as an adequate means of learning assessment. In adult education, particularly through Open College Networks in collaboration with tutor-organisers, we realised the inadequacies of exams in the 1980s. Assessment processes, as opposed to the events of exams, were far more effective as a means of judging whether agreed learning objectives had been achieved. In appropriate circumstances, assessment of groups of learners acknowledged the importance of collaborative learning and achievement in the real world. And in community-based learning these assessment processes were very appropriate in terms of acknowledging people learning and working together to improve and develop their local situations.
David Browning
Huddersfield

Independent:

The encounter of the European Space Agency’s Rosetta spacecraft with Comet Churyumov-Gerasimenko has generated a wave of media excitement that is surely well justified.

However, science reporters and commentators who have described the comet as a “hurtling lump of dust and ice” have unwittingly downgraded the importance of the mission. They take no account of discoveries spanning more than three decades, indicating a large carbonaceous content of comets that gives rise to their dark, coal-like surfaces. Consistent with the theories of the late Sir Fred Hoyle and the present writer, the connection between comets, life and evolution has developed to the point that a life-detection experiment on the Rosetta lander would have been amply justified.

However, for mainly cultural reasons, such an experiment was not included in the mission, and in the event only indirect support of a comet-life connection can be expected from this mission.

The rendezvous with the comet that was achieved on 7 August 2014 has led to stunning close-up images of its surface. Rough terrain of low reflectivity appears to be interspersed with smoother areas that could represent recently exposed subsurface lakes that were laden with microbial life.

The high rate of outgasing that has been observed from early June points to the action of microbial life within such sub-surface lakes.

More evidence – albeit indirect evidence – pointing to our cosmic cometary ancestry is likely to be unravelled from experiments to be conducted in the Rosetta mission in the months that lie ahead.

Professor Chandra Wickramasinghe

University of Buckingham

 

The ‘right’ to make a noise

I find it strange that the well-respected Julian Baggini spent three pages (6 August) defending the “rights” of the noisy over those of the silent in the battle of the quiet coach on our railways.

I would have thought that, like me, he would embrace the wonderful opportunity that train travel presents to catch up with a backlog of unread books. There can be few places better for a read with an occasionally glance through the window while reflecting upon a statement or incident in the book brought for the journey.

Yes, some iPhone enthusiasts are reasonably quiet when chatting, but many still feel they have to speak up when proclaiming their personal or business messages to those electronically connected, and object if spoken to on the matter.

In other circumstances one can walk away from noisy or offensive people, but here in the confines of the train it is a blessing to retire to the sanctuary of the quiet coach to read, sleep or otherwise enjoy the journey.

John Gamlin

East Bergholt, Suffolk

 

Julian Baggini surely underestimates the extent of public resistance to selfish use of mobile phones on trains and elsewhere, and of dismay at the asocial, bubble-enclosed behaviour he so eloquently describes, whose broader political roots in neoliberalism he seems not to recognise.

As a result, he havers uneasily between weary invocation of King Canute and protestation that the idea of social space can yet be rehabilitated. But the idea is in no way superseded, and needs powerfully asserting more than it does rehabilitating.

As regards trains, what’s required is not the temporary creation of completely silent “library coaches”. They would share with existing “quiet coaches” the drawback that they would seem to sanction unrestrainedly antisocial behaviour in the other coaches, as Baggini himself acknowledges.

What is needed is just permanent no-phone coaches, properly maintained as many rail passengers want and expect.

Michael Ayton

Durham

 

Buffoon heads for the Commons

Most people I know weren’t surprised to learn of Boris Johnson’s political ambitions, and most just shrugged. The fact that David Cameron appears to view his return as some sort of public relations game-changer goes some way to illustrating the chasm between the government of this country and those who live in it.

I don’t know that Johnson’s calculated buffoonery, transplanted to the Commons, will make any difference to the lives of ordinary Britons. Mr Cameron’s point would seem to be that Johnson has entertainment value. How is this relevant to anything?

Mike Galvin

Tewkesbury, Gloucestershire

Within 48 hours of the departure of the state-educated, northern, ethnic minority origin Baroness Warsi from a Conservative-led government, step forward the middle-aged and very white and South of England Old Etonian Boris Johnson. So much for modern Conservatives.

Anthony Rodriguez

Staines, Middlesex

Secret of business in one sentence

As a former market stall trader I have been taking a keen interest in recent letters about business-school education and MBAs. My only advice would be: buy low, sell high, all the time. Hope this is not too difficult to grasp for the business types among my fellow readers.

Jonathan Cox

Norwich

Make your Scottish friends feel wanted

I heartily endorse your editorial “If you can’t vote, shout” (7 August). As an Englishman who has visited Scotland many times, I shall be very sorry if Scotland leaves the Union.

During the last few months when a suitable opportunity has occurred, I have spoken to good friends who will have a vote in the Scottish referendum  about my keen hope that Scotland will remain in the United Kingdom, and asked them about their views. I would urge others to do  the same.

My unscientific sample of four produced two who will vote No, one who will vote Yes (for reasons which I respect) and one (an Englishman who has only lived in Scotland for a few years) who will abstain. I hope this majority for the Better Together campaign will be reflected in the result on 18 September.

Gordon Kuphal

Brightlingsea, Essex

 

It is reassuring that the newspaper I have bought since it started supports the Better Together campaign and sympathises with us Scots who are temporarily removed from our nation, and are disenfranchised in the referendum.

However, it is less pleasing to note your Londoncentricity, whereby the editorial on Scotland comes second, below the one about Boris Johnson possibly standing as an MP.

Brian Mathieson

Plymouth

Heart-warming though your passionate support for the Union is, do you realise that part of the problem is the idea that decisions affecting Scots are best taken for them by others, and that the tone of your leader makes this clear?

For an expat Scot like me, reading a newspaper called The Independent, published, I supposed, for a UK readership, it feels uncomfortable to be told that “we” should make “the Scots” feel wanted, and that “we” must not lose Scotland without mounting any resistance “ourselves”. Who exactly do you think “you” are?

Richard Jeffcoat

Birmingham

The argument over what currency an independent Scotland might use makes for lively political debate but illustrates a major flaw in the referendum process.

Surely fundamental matters like this – not only currency, but EU membership, and what devolution can be expected if Scotland remains in the Union – should have been settled in principle before the referendum. This would enable the Scottish people to make an informed decision based on what independence actually means.

As it is, the partisans on each side are able to exploit the uncertainty and lack of clarity to suit their own purposes. How can the Scots make a sensible choice when they do not know for certain what they are voting for?

Robert Smith

Keyworth, Nottingham

You report Alex Salmond as saying: “Our moment, let’s take it.”

Scottish independence is not a highland charge against the English; Scottish independence would be the first day of the future of Scotland.

Scotland needs leaders with a clear understanding of the effort and commitment involved in running an independent nation. Scotland does not need a “one mighty bound and we’re free” politician.

Martin London

Henllan, Denbighshire

 

Alex Salmond complains that, in the Union, Scots have been governed by parties they did not elect. I am now in my eighties and for all my life, until 2010, I have been governed by parties I didn’t elect. I suspect that goes for a good many other voters too. Isn’t that what is called democracy?

Gillian Cook

Market Harborough, Leicestershire

Times:

Some of the international legal groundwork for deciding who owns the Moon has been done

Sir, Your report on China’s plans to mine helium-3 on the Moon and your leader debating who owns the Moon (Aug 5) fail to ask the more important question: does mankind have the right to mine the Moon?

The Moon is the next rainforest; it exists in a near-perfect vacuum and contains a record of the history of the solar system. Mining operations will destroy both things. In order to get one tonne of helium-3, a million tonnes of the regolith, the dust that covers the Moon’s surface, has to be heated to 800 degrees celsius. Once under way, the effects of this strip-mining will soon be visible from the earth.

Sixty years ago the US reacted to the Russian Sputnik satellite by spending billions of dollars on manned Moon missions. It hoped to harness the magic of the Moon to thwart the chimera of world domination by the Soviets. The programme succeeded in bringing a mere 800lb of moonrock back to earth, the most expensive stones in the world.

We are now on the brink of spending many times the cost of the Apollo missions to mine a substance that we cannot even be sure will be viable as a fuel.

Mankind has better things to do with its time and money, like making sure that we can supply every inhabitant of earth with clean water. Mining the Moon is a profligate displacement activity, perhaps best described as lunacy.

Rick Stroud
London SW10

Sir, Your leader referred to “the strangely named Jade Rabbit”, a Chinese Moon probe which landed last year. In fact the name comes from a very old myth about a moon rabbit which is based on markings on the Moon and, in Chinese folklore, is said to be constantly mixing the elixir of life in a mortar and pestle.

Whether or not the Chinese have a stake in the helium-3 on the moon, the technology to efficiently create fusion reactions, let alone mine and transport He-3 from the moon, is far out of our reach and the related costs are extremely high.

Jo-Yan Yu
Isleworth, London

Sir, You ask (leader, Aug 5) who owns the Moon. The 1967 Outer Space Treaty, a treaty accepted by all the space powers, bars “outer space, including the Moon and other celestial bodies” from “national appropriation”. Article vii makes states responsible for national activities whether carried on by governmental agencies or non-governmental entities or through international organisations.

The 1979 UN Moon Treaty declares that celestial bodies and their resources “are the common heritage of mankind” but does not prohibit the appropriation of their natural resources. It distinguishes between exploration and exploitation. No moratorium appears to be declared for either. Rules are established governing exploration. Parties agree that, when exploitation becomes possible, they would set up an international regime to ensure their proper development and management, as well their equitable distribution.

It is high time for all the nations involved to give this treaty or a revised version of it their serious consideration so that the natural resources of the Moon and all the other celestial bodies could be explored and eventually exploited in cooperation and harmony and not become a source of discord.

Emeritus Professor Bin Cheng
Author of Studies in International Space Law (1997)
London NW11

Israel may be defending itself from Hamas but Israel also has the initiative to make a lasting peace

Sir, Clearly Israel has a legal right to defend itself against Hamas’s rockets. Not so clear is whether her self-defence is proportionate, in the sense either of “strictly necessary” or of “instrumentally apt to the end”.

Provided Israel targets enemy combatants and that such targeting is necessary, there is no upper limit to the number of civilian casualties that may be incurred, tragically, as collateral damage.

But to what end are these means necessary? If it is to defend Israeli civilians, the Iron Dome missile system already achieves that with, officials say, 90 per cent efficiency. Arguably, however, the end should not stop at deflecting the harmful effects, but should extend to uprooting their cause. This would justify military action against Hamas.

Military means alone do not suffice. The Gaza bombardment has weakened Hamas’s military power, it hasn’t uprooted it. Without a political solution, it will simply revive to fight again.

It is within Israel’s power to take diplomatic, confidence-building initiatives without waiting for reliable Palestinian interlocutors. Unilaterally, Israel can end the illegal settlements in the West Bank. Until then, its assaults on Gaza will remain inapt and so disproportionate.

Nigel Biggar

Regius Professor of Moral and Pastoral Theology, Oxford

Sir, The government is correct that Israel has a right and an obligation to defend its citizens while ensuring that all action is proportionate. We share the government’s concerns at events in Gaza and Palestinian casualty figures. Gazans have a right to live in peace and security but Israelis also have a right to live without fear of rocket attack or terrorist incursion.

The government’s view that the conflict was triggered by Hamas firing rockets indiscriminately at Israeli towns is correct. For this reason, Hamas bears principal responsibility for starting the conflict.

In calling for an immediate and enduring ceasefire, a permanent end to rocket attacks from Hamas and for renewed negotiations between Israel and the Palestinian Authority, the British Government has responded to the current crisis in the right way.

Baroness Neville-Jones

Lord Trimble

Sir Richard Ottaway, MP

Sir Malcolm Rifkind, QC, MP

James Arbuthnot, MP

Dr Liam Fox, MP

Mark Hoban, MP

Bob Neil, MP

Conservative Friends of Israel

The life and determination of a female pilot were an inspiration to those who followed her

Sir, Your obituary of Lettice Curtis (Aug 2) reminded me of a very yellow newspaper cutting which is on my noticeboard to this day reporting that at 78 she had qualified as a helicopter pilot. She said it was much more fun than flying Spitfires, and if the engines fail, you have three seconds to get the rotation speed down before you fall out of the sky — “but it’s not frightening”.

I was learning to fly a Cessna at the time, the early 1990s, and was at the stage where progress was nil. Her words inspired me and I went on to gain my private pilot’s licence.

Jane Hanley

Redhill, Surrey

A female interviewee who prepared herself for a predictable line of questioning

Sir, In 1985 I was the only female on a shortlist of six invited for interview for a local government post. The appointment panel comprised three male senior officers but I was surprised when I was asked whether I was planning to start a family, their having noted that I was a 30-year-old married woman. I asked whether the same question was being put to all the candidates which produced a swift change of subject. I was offered the job and spent the next 14 years having to confront the same sort of thinking.

June Parkinson

Amport, Hampshire

The obituary of Chapman Pincher is a reminder of past journalistic pretensions

Sir,The Beaverbrook-era Daily Express’s fondness for “pretentious names” (“The Sharpest Pincher”, TMS, Aug 7) was surely underscored by the byline of a fellow Expressman of Chapman Pincher’s, Sefton Delmar. His other given name was “Denis”. It was Sefton Delmar who once wrote that on entering a Berlin nightclub, he was overcome by a sense of “libidinous concupiscence”.

Alexander Morrowsmith

Leigh on Sea, Essex.

Telegraph:

SIR – Despite being denied the opportunity to catch Tuesday’s televised debate on the proposed dissolution of the United Kingdom, I watched sneakily online.

While I was moved by Alistair Darling’s point that Scotland currently benefits from some of the highest per-capita public spending in the UK, the argument began to seem futile in the face of Alex Salmond’s assertion that an independent Scotland would stand several rungs above the remainder of the UK in world GDP per capita rankings.

Since I am also denied a vote, I wonder if any Westminster politician can guarantee that the remainder of the UK will neither continue to subsidise the Scottish state, nor retain a liability to bail it out, should the ayes have it on September 18.

William Major
Wincanton, Somerset

SIR – It is incredible that the televised debate was not made readily available live across the UK, when the issue is of vital importance to all citizens in all four countries.

The case for Scottish independence by the Scottish National Party is based purely on sentiment, speculation and the usual plethora of unfounded political promises.

Jim W Barrack
Beaconsfield, Buckinghamshire

SIR – The only Scottish broadcast seen across Britain on Tuesday night was a match between Rangers and Hibernian.

Can the media believe the match to be more important than the debate, or are we non-voting British considered irrelevant?

Alan Belk
Leatherhead, Surrey

SIR – Given that an independent Scotland will likely be unable to use the pound sterling, can I suggest that a suitable alternative would be the “Tunnock”.

Chris Williamson
Worksop, Nottinghamshire

SIR – ITV/STV explained that, as only those in Scotland were entitled to vote, no one else in Britain could view the debate.

Will ITV use the same criteria when the American elections are in progress? I, for one, hope so.

Lt Col Glenn Waltham (retd)
Chipstead, Kent

Collecting data on us

SIR – Philip Johnston asks if we should trust Whitehall with all our details. Francis Maude MP (Letters, August 6) seems to accept concerns about data protection.

But what of data being collected elsewhere? I have a seller’s account with Amazon, which already has quite a lot of information about me, including my bank account number. It has now told me that under EU regulations it needs a great deal more, including full details of my passport. I do not intend to comply. I assume our leaders approve of these requirements.

E M Griffin
Colyton, Devon

SIR – The Government’s plan to “harmonise databases” looks like another government IT fiasco in the making, and another few billion pounds down the drain.

In the improbable event of the project succeeding, there would be an even bigger haystack to lose a needle in. IT systems are only as good as the people using them.

Professor Derek Pheby
Harnham, Wiltshire

A ripe idea

SIR – David Benwell (Letters, August 2) may be pleased to learn that a device does exist in supermarkets to measure the ripeness of melons and other fruit. He may be less happy that he will need to travel to Japan to use it.

The device uses near-infrared (NIR) spectroscopy to measure constituents that indicate ripeness. This technique has a huge range of applications, from farming to the pharmaceutical industry. It has been neglected by the British science community, compared with other parts of the world, particularly the Far East.

Interestingly, there are two companies currently working on key-fob-sized devices for the consumer market that may be able to solve Mr Benwell’s problem. They use NIR spectroscopy, are due for commercial launch in 2015, and are likely to cost between £100 and £200.

Ian Michael
Chichester, West Sussex

Bridal trains

SIR – The change in the marriage laws gives couples the opportunity to marry in unusual places and breathes life into buildings that have seen better days. My daughter’s wedding on the concourse at St Pancras station was unique and personal – and the magnificent building was an ideal backdrop to a perfect day.

Charlotte Chesyre
St Albans, Hertfordshire

Pulling a fast one

SIR – Bernie Ecclestone, the Formula 1 billionaire, will pay a relatively paltry £60 million to walk free from the German court where he faced trial for bribing a German banker to the tune of £26 million.

Is there any difference in the nature of these two transactions, both of which allow a very wealthy man to pay whatever is required to suit his own interests?

Sam Horscroft
Hove, East Sussex

SIR – Truly, Germany has the best justice that money can buy.

John Harris
Martyr Worthy, Hampshire

First World War legacy

SIR – Last Saturday, prior to any First World War commemoration events, the final two Royal Tank Regiments (RTR) amalgamated with a moving parade at Bulford Camp.

The tank was the most significant land weapon development ever, allowing for the breakdown of static trench warfare, and perhaps hastening the end of the First World War. Today’s RTR soldiers are the proud successors to those of the Tank Corps who demonstrated such courage and professionalism when they smashed through the German lines at Cambrai on November 20 1917.

Alongside the Cavalry, the one remaining RTR has a vital role to protect our nation and our friends. I am confident that, if called upon, the surviving RTR soldiers will demonstrate the same fine qualities as those of their predecessors.

Lt Col Richard Seaton Evans
Guilsborough, Northamptonshire

SIR – We must not forget the contribution of the Chinese in the First World War. When China declared war on Germany in August 1917, the British signed an agreement with the Chinese to recruit Chinese labourers to fill a shortage at the front. A hundred thousand Chinese served in the British Chinese Labour Corps and 40,000 served with the French. Others, mostly students, served as interpreters. Although these men were not engaged in front-line action, it is estimated that between 10,000 and 20,000 died.

Trevor Yang
British Chinese Soldiers’ Benevolent Association
Hong Kong

Competitive cinema

SIR – While I was a National Serviceman in Malta 60 years ago, there were six cinemas in Valletta and they all showed different films (Letters, August 4).

Two of these were on the upper and lower floors of the same building. I recall seeing Rumer Godden’s The River in the Ambassador while the noisy soundtrack of a cowboy film filtered through the air conditioning system from the Embassy.

Alan M Pardoe
Malvern Wells, Worcestershire

Pursuit of happiness

SIR – My late father had a useful saying about happiness (Comment, August 6): “Blessed is he who expecteth little, for he shall not be disappointed”.

Susan M Walton
Gateshead, Co Durham

Ugly and redundant: production ended at the Shoreham cement works in 1991  Photo: Alamy

6:59AM BST 07 Aug 2014

CommentsComments

SIR – In view of the enthusiasm generated by the proposed demolition of flats in Glasgow and cooling towers at Didcot, I wonder when action will be taken to blow up the redundant cement works near Shoreham, in Sussex, which are surely the ugliest feature of the entire South Downs.

K L Parsons
Helston, Cornwall

Baroness Warsi has resigned over the Government’s “morally indefensible” policy on Gaza Photo: REX FEATURES

7:00AM BST 07 Aug 2014

CommentsComments

SIR – Baroness Warsi is right to condemn the harm to children in Gaza.

But as she complains to David Cameron about Israel, is she similarly criticising the policies and actions of Hamas, which seem to be the proximate cause of the children’s suffering, and the inability of the United Nations to stop Hamas using the children in the way it does?

Jonathan Longstaff

Woodford Green, Essex

SIR – When Israel, one of our true allies in the Middle East, responds to rocket attacks from Hamas, it is roundly condemned; but when Muslims kill fellow Muslims in Iraq, Syria and Libya in far greater numbers, no one seems the least bit concerned.

Hugh Foster

Farnborough, Hampshire

SIR – Baroness Warsi conveniently omits to mention the thousands of Hamas rockets fired into Israel over the past few years.

What does she imagine they were intended to do? Has she spoken out against this?

John Tilsiter

Radlett, Hertfordshire

SIR – Three lessons our Government must learn are these: that interfering in countries they do not understand only exacerbates their suffering and ours; that our supposed allies only act in their own interests and not according to any moral agenda; and that vested interests both at home and abroad do not care about democracy or stability but only about profiting from their absence.

Rev R C Paget

Brenchley, Kent

SIR – Whether there is any underlying reason for Lady Warsi resigning may become clear once we learn of her next job and what she will be paid.

Robert Vincent

Wildhern, Hampshire

SIR – Lady Warsi could have used her political talents to far better effect if she had persuaded Hamas to accept the ceasefire agreement proposed by the Egyptians three weeks ago, before the Israeli army’s land incursion into Gaza.

Hamas’s rejection of the proposal then led directly to the tragic consequences we have all seen for the people of Gaza.

For Lady Warsi to resign now, using the current situation in Gaza as her reason, leads one to question her political loyalty. Hamas’s callous disregard for the safety of the civilian population of Gaza should be obvious to all.

Alf Allenstein

Barnet, Hertfordshire

SIR – All is well with the world. Sepp Blatter is in charge of Fifa, Bernie Ecclestone returns to Formula 1 and Baroness Warsi resigns on Twitter before she tells the Prime Minister.

Martin Greenwood

Fringford, Oxfordshire

Irish Times:

Sir, – Praise the Lord, the Irish economy is surging back to rude health, with the ESRI telling us that Ireland can expect no less than 3.4 per cent growth this year (Business + Technology, August 7th) making our country “the fastest-growing economy in the euro sector”. Does anyone remember when we heard this before? Well, about a decade ago. However, every silver lining has a cloud and it seems that, according to the Construction Industry Federation and its spokesperson, Tom Parlon (Progressive Democrat and Minister in the FF/PD coalition that banjaxed the Irish economy in the first place) Dublin is experiencing a “crisis” with an “urgent” need for new houses to be constructed. Mr Parlon explains that construction is a “no brainer” (arguably recent history has proven that) and that if only the funding and legislation were in place we’d be entering another era of milk and honey with masses of jobs and billions flowing to the cash-starved exchequer. Finally, the ESRI is concerned that house prices are undervalued by up to 27 per cent. Examining statistical models from 1981 to 2013, it finds prices languishing well below their “fundamental” values. My understanding is that the intrinsic value of any item, including property, is a value in constant flux and dependent purely on the prevailing market situation at a given time. So please, what on earth is the “fundamental” value of a house? Yours, etc,

JD MANGAN,

Stillorgan Road,

Co Dublin

Sir, – If there is a shortage of houses in Dublin, and houses are lying empty in other parts of the country, as stated by the ESRI, then the building of more houses in Dublin only addresses one aspect of the problem. Towns and villages in Mayo, Sligo, and Roscommon will continue with the blot on their landscape of empty houses and apartments until 2021 and beyond.

What about an alternative that encourages people to move out of the major urban centres and breathes life back into those areas still struggling to recover from the most glaring errors of the building boom? Technology has moved leaps and bounds in recent years, but instead of using this technology to encourage employee mobility and remote working, most employees are desk-bound in the cities, many of them with long commutes from rural locations.

While there are many jobs that would not be ideally suited to having employees off site, for some companies there may be benefits to not maintaining expensive office space for workers who could work efficiently from home. Central hubs in small towns where workers share facilities when needed could also be an option and could bring economic and social benefit to those towns. What about a tax break for employers who facilitate employees working from home? It’s time to question the notion of having employees on-site under the eye of bosses and begin to move towards smarter working that benefits employees, smaller towns and communities and brings life back into the ghost estates. Yours, etc,

MAIREAD HEFFRON,

The Old Distillery,

Beresford Street,

Dublin 7

Sir, – Many groups are suffering to some extent in the current housing market – homeowners, first-time buyers, landlords and tenants. It would seem better to deal with each group’s difficulties on their own merits and to be non-judgmental and sympathetic to everyone’s circumstances, but all too regularly one group in particular is singled out for abuse. This time the attack on landlords comes from Paul Kean (August 7th).

Owners of investment properties purchased at the height of the boom are in considerable difficulty, at least some of this can be blamed on Government policies. Yet they get little sympathy because they are misrepresented as being foolish, imprudent and greedy.

Many ordinary people who invested in houses were indeed “not the sophisticated investors they thought they were” but most were trying to make investments that they thought would work out. We thought we were being prudent, but we were not. We too occasionally use the term “investment” in inverted commas by way of irony, and in lighter moments might refer to the property as an “asset” no matter how mired in debt it (and we) may be.

Some expenses that landlords face are indeed the Government’s fault, for example the portion of mortgage interest that is not recoverable as a tax expense, uniquely for a business expense and which means that many landlords end up paying tax on a loss. And there is a real point about the property tax. While Mr Kean notes that such a tax exists in every developed property market it is not often the case that the tax is payable wholly by the property owner. Usually the occupants of a house pay the tax (they, after all, are the ones receiving the local services that the tax is supposed to pay for).– Yours, etc,

PAUL CARROLL,

The Cloisters,

Clane,

Co Kildare

A chara, – The current debate about “the mantle of 1916” (Editorial, August 6th) and where it sits in the national narrative has the potential to be a positive development. In 1966, as a schoolchild, I was chosen to read the Easter Proclamation as part of the 50th anniversary celebrations.

Rereading it recently I have to say it still packs a powerful rhetorical punch. Its call to Irishmen and Irishwomen to rally to its message of religious and civil liberty, its guarantee of equal rights and equal opportunities to all its citizens, and in particular its promise to cherish all the children of the nation equally – these ideals still have a powerful relevance in an Ireland beset by problems of social inequality and alienation.

If we leave aside the militaristic overtones which inevitably arose from its contemporary context, we can also find renewed relevance in the message of the need for reconciliation between our nationalist and unionist communities. The current debate needs to focus on these issues rather than which party may emerge as the true heirs of 1916. – Is mise,

JOHN GLENNON,

Hollywood,

Co Wicklow

Sir, – It’s a little sickening to see the politicians and the military people commemorating (almost to glorification) the 100th anniversary of the debacle that was the first World War. These commemorations imply that wars are inevitable and that the participants (those who do the fighting, killing and dying as opposed to those who direct operations from a safe distance) have been engaged in something useful and beneficial to humankind. In reality wars only serve to expose all the base instincts of humankind. Humans have shown that civilised behavior and democratic practices can resolve disputes peacefully without resorting to war. Enough of these commemorations. Yours, etc,

TOM McCABE,

Offington Drive,

Dublin 13

Sir, – Henry Counihan (August 7th) derides the men of violence circa 1968/1969 for hijacking the national flag while simultaneously proposing that we use events commemorating the men of violence circa 1916-1921 as a means to take it back. – Yours, etc,

CÍAN CARLIN,

Lausanne Road,

London N8 0HJ

Sir,-Capt John Dunne is completely justified when he claims that other atrocities in the Middle East and on the African continent should not detract from the suffering of the Palestinian people in Gaza (August 7th).

However, he also completely misses the point that more objective commentators are attempting to make, that the acts of genocide being carried out against, for example, the Christians of Iraq by Isis are virtually ignored by the western media.

Of course this does not minimise the terrible suffering of the people of Gaza, but when these issues are raised they seem to draw down the contempt of individuals like Capt Dunne, who glibly dismiss them as attempts to deflect attention from the current crisis. This is not so; it is merely an attempt by fair-minded people to raise a pertinent question. Why is this so? Why is any attempt at objectivity deemed to be anti-Palestinian? – Yours, etc,

DR KEVIN McCARTHY,

Sean Hales Terrace,

Kinsale,

Co Cork

Sir,– Noel Leahy (August 7th) should be careful in calling Israel “the only truly democratic state in the Middle East”, as if democracy automatically confers virtue . In the words of Benjamin Franklin, “Democracy is two wolves and a lamb deciding what to have for lunch. Liberty is a well-armed lamb contesting the vote.” – Yours, etc,

ALAN EUSTACE,

Annadale Drive,

Dublin 9

Sir, – Permit me to briefly clarify my points for the benefit of Noel Leahy (August 7th). To adapt Bill Clinton’s phrase “it’s the economy, stupid”, it’s the death toll, Mr Leahy: some 65 on one side of the ledger, over 1,800 on the other. Is that logic enough ? Only Mr Leahy knows if he is deliberately misinterpreting my point on apartheid South Africa: boycotts, isolation, as the world got fed up. It has already started in the theatres of north London and Edinburgh. – Yours, etc,

DAVID STEWART,

Randalstown,

Co Antrim

Sir, – For years I had convinced myself that I was unable to understand Irish.Then I discovered Raidió Na Gaeltachta, or rather I heard Áine Hensey presenting a late night radio programme called An Ghealach Ghorm and my ears were opened.

Suddenly, I was transported back over 50 years to a time when I had spent a short spell in a local school in Glencastle, Co. Mayo, before I moved to Dublin. I do not know why this is so, but Ms Hensey’s Irish and enunciation are so exquisite as to make understanding almost unnecessary, yet I suddenly found that all the Irish I had picked up in those few short months came flooding back to me.

She now presents a daily programme – Binnneas Béil – on RnaG. I would recommend anybody with the least interest in hearing simple Irish spoken well to tune in; her choice of music is also eclectic and exceptionally good.

For myself, I park the car at Dún na mBó point, opposite Eagle Island lighthouse and tune in for the two hours; watching nature, hearing Áine speaking Irish and listening to the music is as near to a naturally induced mystical experience one is likely to encounter this side of the grave.

Gazing past the island in the direction of America, I count my blessings that I only had to spend a month working in Manhattan, unlike a lot of Irish people who lived and died there, without ever seeing home again. Yours, etc,

LIAM DE PAOR,

Srahanarry,

Bangor Erris,

Co Mayo

Sir, – I hope Ted O’Keeffe’s letter (August 7th) was tongue in cheek, for it contained far too many simplistic statements to avoid serious rebuttal. The break-up of the union is too monumental an event, in political, social and economic terms, to turn on cheap, and factually unsound, stereotypes. I would like to know upon what evidence Mr O’Keeffe bases his strange assertion that the English “have frittered away their inventive and productive talents”. His comment regarding the City’s alleged disdain for trade might be a reasonable inference from a Jane Austen novel but seems bizarre in a 21st century economic debate. Finally, his statement about “handing the queen back” is frightfully silly. Elizabeth II is constitutionally queen of the United Kingdom, and her close relationship to all her realms, not just England, is evidenced in the fact that even the diehard Scottish nationalists have stated they would retain her as head of state. – Yours, etc,

Dr SEAN

ALEXANDER SMITH,

Calahonda,

Spain

Sir, – It is with some dismay that I read of Dublin City Council’s plans to restore Mountjoy Square to its “original Georgian design”. Mountjoy Square is part of a dense inner city neighbourhood, a neighbourhood with a distinct lack of accessible recreation spaces.It is a travesty to spend €8.1m to remove active spaces to restore a “beautiful and refined garden with formal planting and defined paths”. It won’t be long before the “keep off the grass” signs are up and people will be expected to wear top hats and carry walking canes. It is a shame that the elitist conservation lobby gets to dictate how inner city public spaces should be. These public spaces should be the lifeblood of their communities, not fossilsed relics of an imagined past. – Yours, etc,

WILLIAM COOGAN,

Ballinteer,

Dublin 16

Sir, – Conor Pope’s article “No use crying over spoiled milk – remember the chill chain” (July 7th) is helpful in highlighting how we can increase milk’s shelf life, but Irish people, descended from thrifty farmers who knew how to make food last, ought to know that sour milk isn’t necessarily spoiled. It can be used to make cottage cheese, ricotta, soup, scones and panna cotta.

Indeed a quick online search for “left over milk recipes” will return all sorts of uses. Added to the satisfaction of using something productively rather than wasting it is the joy of engaging yourself in creating something in the kitchen. At the end of one’s efforts one might even feel rather satisfied that milk is souring extra speedily this summer. – Yours, etc,

MARY NAUGHTON,

Clonturk Avenue,

Drumcondra,

Dublin 9

A chara, – The attempt made by Mary O’Dowd (August 6th) to argue that the removal of men from positions of power would end war, left me incredulous. As well as being a shameful trivialisation of the horror of war, it is an example of a kind of spurious and virulent reasoning which any rational feminist would surely distance herself from. When I concluded that it was actually written in earnest, I immediately thought of some lines from Crime and Punishment, in which Dostoyevsky writes of the character Svidrigaïlov: “He was one of those innumerable simpletons who become infatuated with new fleeting ideas – who, by their silliness, throw discredit on the cause they may be greatly infatuated with.” – Is mise,

DR GARETH P KEELEY

Gneisenaustrasse,

Düsseldorf

Sir, – I have a two-word response to Mary O’Dowd: Margaret Thatcher. – Yours, etc,

PAT ROONEY,

St John’s Court,

Dublin 22

Sir, – How many people does it take to install a water meter? Anyone still reeling from the cost of the drinking water (the supply of which we mistakenly believed we had been paying for all along through central taxation) may be interested to know that – with the arrival of Irish Water – the answer is about 18. That many appeared in our street today, about half working for contractor GMC-Sierra, the rest with Uisce Eireann logos on their shiny new hi-viz jackets. Most stood around idle while one or two installed meters.

When I asked why so many, an Irish Water woman replied “It’s a trial.” To all of us still grappling with the astronomical fees paid to “consultants” to set up a body for which there was no need in order to impose higher taxation by stealth – it most certainly is. – Yours, etc,

GRAHAM STONE,

Richmond Row,

Portobello,

Dublin 8

Sir, – Reading John McAuliffe’s piece (Weekend, August 2nd) about Valentin Iremonger’s poetry reminded me of another side to the man. In the early 1970s, as one of three students hitchhiking around Europe, one of our number had an accident in Luxembourg which meant that the plan to continue the road trip was not possible.We went to the Irish embassy to seek assistance; a rather gruff Luxembourger was not very sympathetic. We asked to speak to a “higher authority” and soon Valentin Iremonger arrived on the scene, listened to our story and went on to pay for flights. He spoke to us for some time and I will always remember him as a kind and gentle man who helped a fellow countryman in need. – Yours, etc,

PAUL ARTHERTON,

Lenaghan Crescent,

Belfast BT8 7JE

Fri, Aug 8, 2014, 01:00

First published: Fri, Aug 8, 2014, 01:00

Sir, – Recent commentary about former minister Pat Rabbitte has been a little ungenerous.His parliamentary leadership during the 26th Dáil on practices within the Goodman companies that affected ordinary workers and ordinary farmers was a singular contribution to Irish society.For that alone we should graciously applaud this pre-eminent Teachta as he retreats from ministerial office.– Yours, etc,

PAUL HICKEY,

Gamehill,

Castlecoote,

Irish Independent:

Reading Daniel McConnell’s article on the falling cost of the bank bailout (Irish Independent August 5), I cannot help but ask, why should we follow the Government’s narrative on the cost of the bailout?

For starters, while it is true that the banks have paid out €4.3bn in fees for the bank guarantee, we should not regard these fees as repayments towards the €64bn bailout.

The bank guarantee was, and is, an insurance policy, not a loan repayment scheme. After all, these same banks do not accept life and home insurance premiums as part-payments on a homeowner’s mortgage.

If we cast our minds back to that infamous night of September 30, 2008, we will recall that the executives of Allied Irish Bank and Bank of Ireland met with government and state officials to argue that if Anglo failed, it would bring them down with it.

The bank guarantee and subsequent bailout was thus for the Irish-owned banking sector as a whole, not for each individual bank. The surviving banks, therefore, are collectively liable for the whole €64bn bailout, not just their own portion of it.

Each of the surviving banks, not the taxpayer, should be made to pay their share of the Anglo Irish and Irish Nationwide bailout cost. Plus interest.

The only money the banks have actually paid towards the bailout is the €6bn received from the sale of assets and the approximately €4bn Bank of Ireland has paid back.

There is still another €54bn plus interest to go, not €40bn, as the Government would like us to believe.

On no account should the Government accept the value of its holdings in the banks as down-payments on the bailout.

The Irish banks owe the people of Ireland a huge debt for the damage they caused to both the economy and people’s lives.

Whenever the Government cashes in these holdings, it should divide the money raised between each citizen as compensation 
for the damage caused by the banks.

After all, they owe us big time.

Henry Gaynor

Tralee

Co Kerry

FG should rebrand as ‘FF Nua’

Although I would normally heartily concur with Thomas Garvey’s views (Letters, Irish Independent, August 6) regarding a TD’s loyalty to the party on whose ticket he or she rose to power, may I respectfully suggest that the party to which he refers is, de facto, no longer in existence?

Ivan Yates was a member of the Fine Gael Party, with the ethics personified by Garret the Good, among others – integrity, honesty, and trustworthiness among them.

Nowadays, Fine Gael in power is nothing better than the corrupt Fianna Fail of the Haughey, Ahern, and Cowen eras which it replaced – indeed, it may as well rebrand itself as ‘Fianna Fail Nua’.

D K Henderson

Dublin 3

Are Daly et al anti-war or not?

I do hope one of your readers can explain the following to me: Clare Daly TD; John Molyneux, secretary of the Irish Anti-War Movement; and others posed for pictures proclaiming that the Irish people should remember lost lives and not glorify war (Irish Independent, August 6).

And yet each of these people has been publicly associated with supporting Hamas in the Middle East.

One cannot be “anti-war” and for peace and non-violence and yet support terrorist organisations or wars generated by duly-elected governments.

If one is truly anti-war, one must begin by saying: “I will not kill and I will not associate my name with those that do.”

Vincent J Lavery

Chair, Peace and Justice in the Middle East

Dalkey

Co Dublin

1916 leaders had no alternative

The revisionist contribution of John Bruton (Irish Independent August 4) is worrying and shows that a cohort of individuals still believe that 1916 was totally unnecessary, suggesting Home Rule was inevitable.

Therein lies the deceit. Mr Bruton, as a former Taoiseach, is well aware that the British have never moved on issues unless it’s in their own strategic interest. The 1916 leaders had no alternative but to initiate an armed rebellion in the face of perfidious Albion.

No doubt, the debate will continue during the centenary of commemorations, but we are where we are and a debt of honour is owed to a previous generation who made the ultimate sacrifice.

Peter Mulvany

Clontarf

Dublin 3

A sanitised view of fox hunting

The lavish spectacle that is the Dublin Horse Show is again attracting huge crowds and showcasing our multi-million-euro equestrian industry. Sadly, this annual event also serves as a major PR boost to fox hunting.

We see representatives of various hunts in action, jumping fences and negotiating natural obstacles that replicate to a degree the rugged 
and challenging sweep of the Irish countryside.

We are also treated to displays of traditional hunt pageantry: packs of hounds on their best behaviour, wagging their tails as they canter before the horses in ceremonial postcard fashion, with the evocative, haunting sound of a hunting horn added for effect.

A benign image…but something is missing from the pretty picture: the fox.

He fails to make an appearance at this high-profile event.

In a true-life hunting scenario, the pomp and pageantry quickly descends into a frenzy of blood lust and mayhem as the pack closes in on its prey.

Instead, we get the sanitised version of fox hunting, neatly packaged and presented to whitewash one of the world’s most barbaric blood sports.

John Fitzgerald

Callan

Co Kilkenny

Taking on the Russian bear

So little old Ireland is punching above its weight?

We (just 4 million) have declared 
economic warfare on Russia (142 million). I wonder who will starve first?

Austria has done a deal for oil 
with Russia, but it has a government 
which puts its citizens first.

William Ryan

Dublin 7

Hugs more hygienic for peace

I was very surprised to read that the Vatican has ordered Catholics to replace hugs and kisses with handshakes when they are offering the Sign of the Peace.

Pope Francis is banning hugs and kisses at Mass and has told bishops to draw up strict guidelines.

The circular said churchgoers should be offered “practical measures” to help them perform the gesture with more sobriety.

Anyone would think that Mass-goers were having a love-in every time they attended Mass.

It’s much more hygienic to hug and kiss than to shake hands. We all know shaking hands can spread germs everywhere.

And what about the holy water fonts? They are a breeding area for 
germs.

I’d prefer a kiss or a hug any day.

Pope Francis, I’m afraid you’re losing it – and I was just getting to like you.

Terry Healy

Kill

Co Kildare

Irish Independent


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9 August 2014 Prescription

I jog around the park I still have arthritis in my left knee, but I manage to get round the park. A warmish day. I get some books and replant some tomatoes

Scrabble I win, but gets under just 400. perhaps Mary will win tomorrow.

Obituary:

Tony Bray – obituary

Tony Bray was a stockbroker who, as a young Army cadet, became Margaret Thatcher’s first boyfriend

Tony Bray in a photograph which he sent to Margaret Roberts from Germany in 1946

Tony Bray in a photograph which he sent to Margaret Roberts from Germany in 1946

5:48PM BST 05 Aug 2014

CommentsComments

Tony Bray, who has died aged 88, was a stockbroker who was identified, last year, as the first serious boyfriend of the young Margaret Thatcher (or Margaret Roberts, as she was before her marriage to Denis Thatcher).

Before Charles Moore published the first volume of his authorised biography of the former Conservative Prime Minister, the line taken by previous biographers had been that, until Denis came along, she had had no romantic friendships with men. This was never likely, as Margaret Roberts had been an undeniably pretty young woman at Oxford at a time when female undergraduates were heavily outnumbered by men, many of whom were servicemen just back from the war.

When Moore asked Lady Thatcher about her early romantic life, she initially maintained the fiction that she had had no boyfriends before she met her husband. But Moore had evidence that she was not telling the whole truth. First, there was her old schoolfriend, Margaret Goodrich, who recalled the young Oxford undergraduate turning up at her 21st birthday party in December 1944 clutching a carnation which “seemed very precious to her” and which had been given to her by an “Oxford boyfriend”. Then there were the letters written to her sister Muriel, which bore witness to an intense romantic attachment to a man named Tony Bray.

Moore tracked Bray down to his home in Sussex and found him happy to speak about the days at the end of the war when he had danced with the future Prime Minister — though he was anxious that his wife, Valerie, who died before the publication of Moore’s book, should not know of his inquiries.

Tony Bray outside the Radcliffe Camera, Oxford

Bray, then an 18-year-old Army cadet, and Margaret Roberts had met through the Oxford University Conservative Association some time in the autumn of 1944 when he was up at Oxford on a six-month military training course. Though short and not especially good-looking, he was, by his own account, “not half bad as a dancer”. Margaret Roberts, who was nearly two years older, he recalled as “a plump, attractive girl in a well-built way” who was always smartly, if not particularly stylishly, dressed. He found her to be “very thoughtful and a very good conversationalist”, and was impressed by her enthusiasm for politics. Though she was “a bit bluestocking”, he liked the fact that she was well-read and enjoyed music. Another reason they got on so well, he felt, was that “she had a degree of loneliness”, which he responded to.

The two had fun together, going out to dances and the theatre. Following the rules of the time, they never slept together. In March 1945 Margaret wrote to her sister about a “marvellous” evening with Tony at the Randolph Ball at which she had worn a blue frock: “[Before going to the ball] Tony hired a car and we drove out to Abingdon to the country Inn ‘Crown and Thistle’. I managed to borrow a glorious royal blue velvet cloak which match [sic] the blue frock perfectly.” Tony, she wrote, had presented her with a spray of eight carnations “sent for me from London… I felt absolutely on top of the world as we walked through the lounge at the Crown and Thistle and everyone looked up and stared.” Reminded of the occasion, and of the blue dress, 60 years later, Tony Bray broke down in tears. “It was a very special evening,” he said.

At the end of the Hilary term of 1945, Bray whisked her off for a day in London, which included lunch at the Dorchester, a matinee performance of the Strauss operetta A Night in Venice and a tea dance at the Piccadilly Hotel, before Margaret got the train to Grantham and Bray returned to Oxford. That Margaret Roberts regarded their relationship as serious is shown by her inviting him to stay the weekend with her parents in Grantham soon afterwards.

Margaret Thatcher (then Margaret Hilda Roberts), right, pictured with her parents and sister Muriel in 1945 (TOPFOTO)

But it was at this point that Bray began to get cold feet. Still in his teens, he was not looking for commitment, and he thought of their relationship as that of “just a boy and a girl who thoroughly enjoyed each other’s company”. Meanwhile, he found the Roberts household “slightly austere”. During what was clearly a somewhat awkward weekend, he and the Roberts family attended Methodist chapel together. For a public-school-educated boy from a solidly bourgeois background, it was not a jolly occasion.

At the same time Bray was about to undertake full military training at Bovington Camp in Dorset. The following year he was commissioned into the 5th Royal Inniskilling Dragoon Guards and posted to Germany. He and Margaret continued to correspond, but his replies to her letters began to peter out and eventually stopped altogether.

Margaret’s sister Muriel attributed Bray’s cooling off to “snobbishness” about her family; but Bray insisted that, while the Roberts ménage did make him uneasy, it was not because of its relatively modest circumstances, but because of its austere seriousness. He wanted to have fun and doubted that a life with Margaret Roberts would offer it.

Three years later, in 1948, Bray — having returned from military service in Germany and now doing a full degree in Law at Oxford — got in touch with his old girlfriend and the two met on several occasions.

In another letter to Muriel, Margaret, affecting an insouciance that she clearly did not feel, reported that he had given “a full-blooded apology — which I must in all fairness say sounded very sincere”, after which he had “steered the conversation into a lighter vein”. They continued to meet from time to time and in 1949 he sent her a Valentine’s Day card, but the renewed relationship came to an end again that summer. The following year Tony Bray announced his engagement to Valerie Randall, whom he married in 1951.

The story had a curious footnote in the 1970s when Bray, then making a career as a stockbroker, became involved in a study of the housing market and formed the view that it might be a good idea to give council tenants the right to buy their own homes. In 1974 he sent a paper to the Tory Party leader Edward Heath, then in opposition, who suggested that Bray should discuss it with Margaret Thatcher, the party’s spokesman on the environment. She invited him to the House of Commons and he immediately noticed a change in her personality: “She was more the grande dame, aware of her own presence, a little bit condescending.” After making only the briefest of references to their former acquaintance, she got down to the policy, towards which she was very receptive.

When Charles Moore informed Lady Thatcher that he had unearthed the story of her romance with Bray, “She said something like, ‘Well, that may have been the case’” but otherwise refused to be drawn.

The son of a businessman, Anthony John Bray was born at Brentford, Middlesex, on April 13 1926 and educated at Brighton College. After leaving school he became an articled clerk to a solicitor.

After graduation, Bray trained as an accountant and went on to pursue a successful career as a stockbroker, moving from Brighton to Coulsdon in Surrey and later to Rustington in Sussex. He remained a staunch Conservative, active in his local party throughout and beyond his former girlfriend’s time at No 10 .

A keen traveller, Tony Bray enjoyed family holidays on the Continent and in later years he and his wife made annual visits to Tunisia and Corfu. After his wife became ill he cared for her devotedly until her death in 2006.

He is survived by his four daughters .

Tony Bray, born April 13 1926, died July 2 2014

Guardian:

Giles Fraser’s report on Gideon Levy and the enthusiasm of 95% of Israelis for crushing Hamas in Gaza (Report, 7 August) is not merely “depressing” but truly alarming for Israel’s future – not just for its commitment to democracy and free speech, both clearly in peril, but for Israel’s own existence. There is indeed a deadly power threatening Israel, but it is not Hamas, which despite its hopes and intentions has actually managed to kill very few Israelis. The imminent danger is the truly terrifying Islamo-fascist Isis caliphate, which occupies an area the size of Britain. The recent fighting in Lebanon and Syria shows that Isis territory is now only a hundred miles from Israel’s borders.

Isis is famous for its hatred of Shia Islam, but its members hate equally the adherents of all faiths other than their own barbaric Sunni fundamentalism. Isis counts Sufi Islam, Christianity and of course Judaism as enemies to be destroyed or forcibly converted. In June this year Isis soldiers, having gone through the Iraqi army like a knife through butter, took Mosul, Iraq‘s second city, and promptly forced out Mosul’s ancient Christian community. Offered a choice between conversion, an unaffordable tax and death, the Christians of Mosul fled. Isis hates Jews just as much, Israeli Jews even more. The recent victories in Iraq have hugely strengthened Isis, not only by supplying  weapons and munitions abandoned by the routed Iraqi army, but by confirming its soldiers’ belief that they are undefeatable because God is on their side.

I am appalled by the wicked destruction in Gaza, but I am even more appalled by the seeminglytotal blindness of Israelis and their government to this far more savage and as yet undefeated enemy, so close at hand. Netanyahu’s policy of bombarding powerless civilians in Gaza while ignoring the real threat of Isis’s increasing power and expanding territory risks something far worse than making his nation internationally unpopular. Israelis and their government appear to be sleepwalking into catastrophe.
Professor Janet Montefiore
Kent University, Canterbury

• Only Sid James and Kenneth Williams would have appropriately captured the US’s consistent cruise missile diplomacy in the Middle East by producing a film: Carry on Striking Them, Mr President (Report, 8 August). The present crisis in Iraq, which Obama says is “holding the potential for genocide”, has its roots in the big business-led foreign policy of successive US administrations, Democrat and Republican alike. First the US supplied Saddam Hussein with lethal weapons, including chemical weapons, which he used to wage an eight-year war on Iran, killing almost a million people on both sides.

Then the US led 1990’s Operation Desert Storm to dislodge Iraq from Kuwait, which Saddam had allegedly been encouraged by the US to invade. And in 2003 the US, supported by Britain, launched Operation Iraqi Freedom, which destroyed the country’s social and economic infrastructure. The war did not only leave over a million Iraqis dead or wounded, it also opened a sharp and almost irreconcilable division between the majority Shia and their minority Sunni counterparts. The almost daily revenge suicide bombs are enough testimony.

The latest US air strikes on Iraq will not be the last because war has become an international business. International arms dealers, private security firms, chequebook journalists, reconstruction experts, people traffickers are making millions from the war in Iraq and elsewhere in the Middle East and Africa. The only losers are innocent men, women, children and other vulnerable people that the US-led wars are supposed to save.
Sam Akaki
London

• Rajeev Syal (Report, 8 August) writes that: “A black flag with white Arabic writing, similar to those flown by jihadist groups” was seen flying in Poplar. The piece then goes on to describe the aggression of the Muslim youths at the front of the housing estate toward the suspicious journalists and passers-by. The flag pictured is patently not the flag of Isis, as the Guardian previously labelled it when the piece was first published, as anyone who is able to read Arabic or who understands Muslim culture would understand. “Arabic writing” on a flag alone is not sufficient evidence to report on or accuse young, marginalised Muslim youths of allegedly supporting jihadist, murderous or dangerous movements.

This kind of reporting serves to fan the flames of anti-Muslim racism, particularly at a time in which Muslims in Britain are being criminalised and vilified daily by both banks and the government. With the possibility of disenfranchised young Muslims finding media-savvy jihadist groups like Isis appealing, inflammatory articles contribute to the hysteria surrounding the “Muslim scare” and risk pushing isolated Muslims closer to radicalisation.
Reem Abu-Hayyeh
London

Further to your coverage of the sad and wasteful death of David Clapson (‘No one should die penniless and alone’, G2, 4 August), today (9 August) marks the anniversary of the discovery of the emaciated body of Mark Wood, a vulnerable sufferer from severe mental health problems, in David Cameron’s Oxfordshire constituency. Mr Wood had been erroneously and incompetently declared fit for work by Atos (on behalf of the DWP) and the consequent cutting of benefits was a clear “accelerating factor” in his death by starvation. The architects of deaths like these remain in charge of the DWP. There have of course been other well-attested deaths-by-DWP and there will be more (especially among the vulnerable disabled), as current reforms roll out their panoply of delays, despair and effective victimisation across the country. The real human costs of sick government must never be forgotten.
Stewart Eames
Cambridge

• David Clapson’s death is a sad reflection on the impact of government policies. I was fortunate enough to be able to work from the age of 15 to 70, paying all due taxes. Should we really care if a few people manipulate the system, if it means that no one is unfairly penalised and slips below the safety net necessary to provide a reasonable standard of living? I am not religious, but I do think that this heartless government should consider “there, but for the grace of God, go I”.
Wendy Collins
Batley, West Yorkshire

• The harrowing comments on benefit sanctions (G2, 6 August) didn’t discuss the political basis for these punitive measures. People mostly vote on a tribal basis, for “our sort of people”. When people become afraid of falling into poverty they take comfort in the hope that it only happens to the “other sort of people” and vote Conservative as an act of faith. This is the same mechanism that unites a country under threat of war and persuades dirt-poor Americans to oppose Obamacare rather than admit to themselves that they might one day need it.
D Sewell
Driffield, East Yorkshire

• Shame on the Guardian for describing out-of-work benefit recipients as “the idle poor” (Report, 5 August). On the basis of what evidence do you write them off as idle? Are those caring for children or infirm relatives, volunteering in the community, actively seeking work or simply working hard just to get by on a low income idle? Language matters and it is the use of othering language such as this by the media and politicians that has contributed to the “draining away of public support” for social security.
Ruth Lister
Labour, House of Lords

Today (9 August) is the 10th anniversary of the death of 14-year-old Adam Rickwood in Hassockfield secure training centre. Hours before Adam was found with a ligature around his neck, he was violently restrained. At the second inquest into his death, the government and Serco admitted Adam had been unlawfully restrained. Adam left a note asking what gave officers the right to hit a child in the nose – referring to the “nose distraction” used on him. This authorised technique involved an officer swiping a child’s nose to induce severe pain. It was eventually banned in all child prisons. However, a third of all methods in the coalition government’s new system of restraint for child prisoners rely on the deliberate infliction of pain. Last year, the UN committee against torture said the UK must prohibit all techniques designed to inflict pain on children. Adam’s brave note should have been enough to end this uncivilised treatment a decade ago.
Carolyne Willow
Nottingham

The issue of the pound and an independent Scotland is surely a unionist scare (Report, 8 August). Ireland kept the pound from 1921 until 1979. Only at that point did the then Irish taoiseach, Charles Haughey,, owing largely to issues of spite, break the link and enter the European monetary system, the Snake, not necessarily to Ireland’s economic advantage. The scare tactics of current unionists over the pound are largely illusionary and irrelevant.
Dr Oliver Rafferty
Boston College, Massachusetts, USA

• Once again the Guardian seems to delight in giving space to an oldie from the chattering classes to support a yes vote in the Scottish Referendum (Deborah Orr, 7 August). It is the next generation who will inherit this decision and have to live with it. From the opinion polls the majority of young people will vote no. Let us hear why.
Patricia and Robert Dark
London

• Mark Lawson asserts (8 August) that Edinburgh “will cease to be part of the UK cultural scene” after independence. Why would independence make any difference to the status of these festivals (and as an Edinburgh resident they would not be “foreign” to me). Culture knows no borders.
Iain Black
Edinburgh

• More than 200 celebrities sign an open love letter to the people of Scotland urging Scots “don’t leave us” (Report, 8 August). And where was it launched? Outside London’s City Hall. Says it all, really.
Stephen Ward
Arnside, Cumbria

• Alex Salmond must be devastated. If only they had added Jeremy Clarkson, surely that would have taken us over the line?
Tom McFadyen
Glasgow

My colleague’s guide dog Sasha was very good at judging the mood of a meeting (Letters, 8 August). She worked in an educational establishment and often attended union meetings. She seemed to listen carefully and was generally well behaved, but on occasions she would suddenly stand up, ready to leave, or bark, in the middle of a speech, in disagreement. Once she left a little puddle on the floor after the principal made a particularly outrageous statement.
Kate Clayton
Birmingham

• Our visiting cat has one blue eye and one yellow; does she support the coalition?
Janette Smith
Birmingham

• I have just received my new Co-op bank debit card (Report, 8 August). All previous cards carried the words “The Cooperative Bank good with money”. I notice the last three words have now been removed. Should I be worried?
Sian Lerwill
Oswestry, Shropshire

• Anne McElvoy remarks (A staged surprise, 7 August) that Boris Johnson will be returning “to the Premier League”. An appropriate metaphor: over-paid, over-indulged, under-skilled – he’d fit perfectly into the senior echelons of English football.
John Rowe
Rochdale, Lancashire

• I look forward to reading Constance Briscoe’s Guardian columns when she completes her prison sentence, following her involvement in the Chris Huhne case (Judge jailed in Huhne points case is sacked, 7 August).
Michael Lee
Stockton

• Those who live “across” from the Isle of Man may be interested to know (Letters, 7 August), that due to the topography, Manx people go down north and over south.
Bob Chorley
Manchester

• Those of us travelling between the Wirral and Liverpool go over the water (though mostly we go under it). Incidentally, we live on the Wirral, not in it.
Ian Welsh
Heswall, Wirral

Independent:

And so it rolls on, the Boris bandwagon, with the full acquiescence of the metropolitan press, the Tory grassroots and the people of London.

The London mayoralty has become something of an indulgence to the people of London as it bounces from the grand old man of the hard left, Ken Livingstone, to the darling of the gilded right, Boris Johnson. The rest of the country looks on in disbelief as reality in our capital city is suspended. While Ken’s best political days are behind him, and he has no reason to burst out of the London bubble of fantasy, Boris is taking baby steps in that direction.

He is in for an almighty surprise when confronted with the reality of opinion in the bulk of the country. Aside from the utter contempt of people on Merseyside and the bewilderment of the Celtic fringe in Wales and Scotland as to how he ever became such a magisterial figure, he will quickly have to face up to the truth that the majority of people in this country recognise the need for a serious, thoughtful and inclusive figure at its head.

Meantime the people of London will presumably move the carnival on and elect another political celebrity to bang the London drum.

J Stanley

Dunfermline

 

Boris has bounced back on to the stage, providing us with the prospect of watching the antics of two jolly jokers in the pack in the run-up to the election next year.

It will be intriguing to see who trumps whom and whether Boris can single-handedly neutralise Nigel’s anti-European appeal with some of his casual, throwaway witticisms, and so induce Tory voters to return.

In the meantime, you give us the pleasure of reading Nigel’s weekly musings on various subjects, not one of which suggests that he has any meaningful policies to offer. Could Boris be persuaded to make a similar appearance on the same page? It would be extremely diverting to compare these two cheerful chappies.

David Hindmarsh

Cambridge

 

I’ve just heard a radio programme concerning a Kurdish community in Turkey, and was amazed and gratified to hear that they now have co-mayors, always one man and one woman.

What a great idea. We are way behind. Just think who could be a female co-mayor with Boris.

Sue Nicholas

Cranleigh, Surrey

 

Ancient community faces a grim fate

Your readers have been aware for some time of the terrible plight of the Christians and Shi’ites of northern Iraq following the occupation of Mosul by Islamic State (IS) forces. Now they will also have read about the parallel fate faced by the Yazidi community after the IS capture last weekend of the town of Sinjar, the subsequent reported cases of murder and abduction, and refugees dying of exposure in the open.

The Yazidi religion is an offshoot of ancient Iranian beliefs, with later Islamic and Christian influences. Once widespread across the region, it now flourishes only in Sinjar and Sheikhan, where their holiest site of Lalesh is located.

Yazidis have long lived in harmony with their neighbours, but for the IS they are not “People of the Book”, and thus have been singled out for particularly violent oppression and murder.

Yazidis have been protected in recent years by the Kurdistan regional government (KRG) and its peshmerga forces, but their retreat before IS leaves the Yazidis exposed to forced conversion or death, and their sacred shines subject to certain destruction.

We call on the policymakers of the UK and its allies, and on all concerned NGOs, to take all possible measures to assure the survival of the Yazidi community in its ancient homeland, and to channel all possible humanitarian aid to the KRG.

Professor Christine Allison

Exeter

Professor Dr Andreas Ackermann

Koblenz

Professor Hamit Bozarslan

Paris

Rt Rev Dr Christopher Cocksworth

Bishop of Coventry

Professor Clive Holes

Oxford

Professor Philip G Kreyenbroek

Goettingen

Professor Gareth Stansfield

Exeter

Emeritus Professor Sami Zubaida

University of London

and 28 others.

An Israeli challenges the Galloway ban

I note that George Galloway has declared Bradford an “Israel-free zone”.

I’m an Israeli citizen intending to come to Bradford (when I’m in England) this October to visit my grandmother’s grave. My grandmother was the child of Jews who fled anti-Jewish violence in Eastern Europe just a little over 100 years ago and settled in Bradford, where she met my grandfather and lived there till her death.

May I respectfully ask if Mr Galloway’s “Israel-free zone” is permanent or temporary? When I come in October, will he be blockading Bradford and checking those who come in and go out? Should I apply to him for a special dispensation to visit the Shalesmoor Jewish cemetery? Let me know so I can make my travel plans.

Obviously, I’m aware that he won’t respond, as I’m Israeli. However, I also hold British citizenship, so he doesn’t need to get nervous or worried about responding.

Simon Ben David

Tel Aviv

 

Presumably those calling for an arms ban on Israel will also be asking for a similar ban on all the Gulf states funding Islamist extremism, including Saudi Arabia.

Given that the Islamists currently murdering their way across the Middle East are causing far more death and suffering than the Israelis, it would surely be inconceivable to target only Israel, unless of course those UK politicians involved are cynically seeking the Muslim vote.

Andrew Brown

Derby

 

David Cameron strongly feels that any country is entitled to “defend itself”. Does he feel that any people under occupation also have a right to resist that occupation?

Satanay Dorken

London N10

Educated view of gay marriage

SM Watson (letter, 6 August) believes that Ruth Hunt of Stonewall may have a “persecution complex”, and knows nobody who “would be deliberately rude” to a homosexual. However, the letter comes across as dripping with homophobia – phrases such as “infiltrating infant and nursery schools with homosexual material” are a dead giveaway.

Infant children should be educated in the fact that a minority of people are homosexual and may marry people of their own sex, and that these relationships are legal and acceptable. One day, those children might have friends, family members or colleagues who are gay, or they might be gay themselves, and they need to see this as a source of joy rather than pain.

I am as delighted today to hear that two close male friends are to marry as I was last week to see the wedding photos of two other friends, a man and a woman.

Catherine Rose

Olney, Buckinghamshire

 

Children in an art gallery

I can’t believe the pretentious claptrap that’s being written about young children visiting art galleries (Rosie Millard, 5 August).

I have taught children of all ages and from varied backgrounds and, many years ago, came to the conclusion that most have an intuitive appreciation for contemporary art – and the more art they are exposed to the better. Does it matter if they “understand” what they’re seeing? Shame on anyone who might quell an early interest by a didactic approach which fosters the boredom of a child like Rosie Millard’s.

Taking 60 children aged four and five to Tate Modern when it was newly opened convinced me of the necessity of art in children’s lives: they were overwhelmingly stimulated by the experience, and, through their talk, opened my eyes to different aspects of exhibits I had previously just walked past.

The last word should go to a seven-year-old boy I was teaching many years ago who, unable to find words to express his feelings, blurted out: “When I grow up I want to be Jackson Pollock!” He would be in his late twenties now: I hope he’s retained his excitement and hasn’t had it beaten out of him by an intellectual view of what art is “really” about.

Sharman Steel

Chislehurst, Kent

 

Japanese way to remember

Japan has got something right. What a lovely picture of lanterns floating in the Motoyasu River in commemoration of Hiroshima (7 August). How much more serene and respectful than the loud fireworks that so many countries see fit to let off to commemorate just about anything.

We should float lanterns instead. They look beautiful and promote quiet meditation.

Julie Mayger

Worthing, West Sussex

Times:

Some of the international legal groundwork for deciding who owns the Moon has been done

Sir, Your report on China’s plans to mine helium-3 on the Moon and your leader debating who owns the Moon (Aug 5) fail to ask the more important question: does mankind have the right to mine the Moon?

The Moon is the next rainforest; it exists in a near-perfect vacuum and contains a record of the history of the solar system. Mining operations will destroy both things. In order to get one tonne of helium-3, a million tonnes of the regolith, the dust that covers the Moon’s surface, has to be heated to 800 degrees celsius. Once under way, the effects of this strip-mining will soon be visible from the earth.

Sixty years ago the US reacted to the Russian Sputnik satellite by spending billions of dollars on manned Moon missions. It hoped to harness the magic of the Moon to thwart the chimera of world domination by the Soviets. The programme succeeded in bringing a mere 800lb of moonrock back to earth, the most expensive stones in the world.

We are now on the brink of spending many times the cost of the Apollo missions to mine a substance that we cannot even be sure will be viable as a fuel.

Mankind has better things to do with its time and money, like making sure that we can supply every inhabitant of earth with clean water. Mining the Moon is a profligate displacement activity, perhaps best described as lunacy.

Rick Stroud
London SW10

Sir, Your leader referred to “the strangely named Jade Rabbit”, a Chinese Moon probe which landed last year. In fact the name comes from a very old myth about a moon rabbit which is based on markings on the Moon and, in Chinese folklore, is said to be constantly mixing the elixir of life in a mortar and pestle.

Whether or not the Chinese have a stake in the helium-3 on the moon, the technology to efficiently create fusion reactions, let alone mine and transport He-3 from the moon, is far out of our reach and the related costs are extremely high.

Jo-Yan Yu
Isleworth, London

Sir, You ask (leader, Aug 5) who owns the Moon. The 1967 Outer Space Treaty, a treaty accepted by all the space powers, bars “outer space, including the Moon and other celestial bodies” from “national appropriation”. Article vii makes states responsible for national activities whether carried on by governmental agencies or non-governmental entities or through international organisations.

The 1979 UN Moon Treaty declares that celestial bodies and their resources “are the common heritage of mankind” but does not prohibit the appropriation of their natural resources. It distinguishes between exploration and exploitation. No moratorium appears to be declared for either. Rules are established governing exploration. Parties agree that, when exploitation becomes possible, they would set up an international regime to ensure their proper development and management, as well their equitable distribution.

It is high time for all the nations involved to give this treaty or a revised version of it their serious consideration so that the natural resources of the Moon and all the other celestial bodies could be explored and eventually exploited in cooperation and harmony and not become a source of discord.

Emeritus Professor Bin Cheng
Author of Studies in International Space Law (1997)
London NW11

Leading British Jewish supporters of Israel call for a permanent ceasefire in the Gaza conflict

Sir, We write as passionate and proud supporters of Israel. This past month we have witnessed devastating loss of life on all sides, so many of whom are civilians, as Israel has again been thrown into conflict with her neighbours and tried to deal with the missiles and tunnels used by Hamas. We have watched with great sadness as communities in the region and beyond have become embroiled in anger and hatred towards the other.

As we write, the violence is renewed after rockets were fired from Gaza at the end of the 72-hour cease-fire. In the interests of the people of both Israel and Gaza we implore both parties, and the international community to do all they can to find a way to restore the ceasefire.

As soon as the ceasefire is secure, all parties, the international and diaspora communities, must unite in a renewed effort to support a lasting peace between Israel and the Palestinian people, guaranteeing both the security and self-determination they have a right to. This is the only way to ensure this war will not be repeated, and we must all redouble our efforts to achieve it.

We wish to see a long-term durable solution for the peoples of the region, and we believe that a ceasefire, and immediate efforts towards a long-term peace, are both essential to make this happen. We remain dedicated to Israel’s character as a Jewish and democratic state, and the values of social and political equality for all citizens, alongside freedom, justice and peace as envisaged by the prophets of Israel, and as enshrined in its Declaration of Independence.

Rabbi Charley Baginsky, chair, Liberal Judaism Rabbinic Conference; Lord Beecham; Professor David Cesarani, Holocaust Research Centre, Royal Holloway University; Rabbi Laura Janner-Klausner, Senior Rabbi, Movement for Reform Judaism; Rabbi Deborah Dr Kahn-Harris, Leo Baeck College; Rabbi Sybil Sheridan, chair, Assembly of Reform Rabbis UK; Rabbi Jonathan Wittenberg, Senior Rabbi, Masorti Judaism; Lord Woolf

We can aim a satellite accurately at 405 million km but we can’t get a mobile phone signal in rural Britain

Sir, Rosetta, travelling at 55,000kph, has rendezvoused with a comet 405 million km from Earth at the end of a decade-long journey.

This marvel of modern scientific and technological advances is in stark contrast to the rural areas in the UK which are still without the simple technology of good broadband and phone signals.

Rosemary Bashford

Brilley, Herefordshire

Will the new boss of William Hill tackle the company’s dependency on the most addictive kind of betting?

Sir, Apropos the comments by James Henderson, of William Hill (Aug 2), the betting industry’s problems stem from a single product: fixed-odds betting terminals. FOBTs offer casino games such as roulette at high speed — they can take bets of up to £100 every 20 seconds. They have led to increased crime, abuse by money launderers and a rise in gambling addiction. They account for over half the betting industry’s profits, and over 80 per cent of its turnover.

FOBTs are the most addictive form of gambling, and bookmakers like their fixed rate of return — “the house always wins” instead of the risks of race and sports betting.

Mr Henderson’s predecessor at William Hill, Ralph Topping, oversaw the unwelcome transformation. We hope Mr Henderson will steer William Hill in a different direction.

Derek Webb, Adrian Parkinson
& Matt Zarb-Cousin

Campaign for Fairer Gambling

Anti-German sentiment during the First World War extended even to popular drinks

Sir, You refer to the mineral water Apollinaris (Rose Wild, “Advertising and the War”, Aug 2). Apollinaris came from a Rhine valley spring and was subject to anti-German feeling.
It had a shop in Oxford Street whose windows were smashed and it had to close. One of the most popular drinks before the war was “Scotch and Polly”, and its sales plunged.

Philip Sober

Amberley, W Sussex

Comments about Mrs Merkel’s clothes prompt readers to want to be told more about male politicians’ suits as well

Sir, Why should Angela Merkel get rid of her silky jacket? It is gorgeous.

Alison Welton

Elstead, Surrey

Sir, Perhaps you could investigate how often other European leaders have worn an outfit more than once. I’m sure it would be fascinating.

Dr Hannah Quirk

University of Manchester

Sir, Next time David Cameron appears in Parliament I look forward to the details of previous occasions at which he wore his suit.

Diana Wainman

Ashe, Hants

Telegraph:

The Kaiser (right) sketched by W L Wyllie on board his first yacht, Meteor, at Cowes in 1893  Photo: National Maritime Museum

6:58AM BST 08 Aug 2014

CommentsComments

SIR – The future Edward VII dominated Cowes week in the early 1890s, through his prowess in sailing the first Britannia, which later passed to his son (“Britannia to rule the waves once more”, report, August 2).

In 1896, however, the Kaiser gained the upper hand sailing the giant Meteor II, a bigger ,faster version of Britannia. “The regatta used to be a pleasant relaxation for me”, his British uncle lamented. “Since the Kaiser took command, it is a vexation.” In this early round of hostilities, victory went to Germany.

After the First World War, George V gave Britannia a second glorious era, undimmed by competition from abroad. In 1934 he calculated that it had sailed in 569 races, winning 231 first prizes and 124 others.

Lord Lexden
London SW1

SIR – The Government’s consultation on whether to require cigarettes to be sold in standardised, “plain” packs has ended. The regulations needed to introduce the policy must be notified to the European Union before Britain can go ahead, which will take six months. So time is now short.

Every argument that the tobacco industry has put forward to try to block progress has been shown to be wrong. Smoking rates have fallen in Australia since the policy was introduced, and the industry’s threat that there would be a flood of illicit tobacco has proved untrue.

The tobacco industry has to encourage children and young people to start smoking, as existing customers quit or die from smoking-related diseases. The evidence shows that standardised packaging makes this more difficult. That is why it is supported by the public, health professionals and a majority of parliamentarians from every political party.

Paul Burstow MP (Lib Dem)
Kevin Barron MP (Lab)
Bob Blackman MP (Con)
All-Party Parliamentary Group on Smoking and Health
London SW1

SIR – Since passing a plain-packaging law two years ago, Australia has had increased cigarette sales, trademark violation charges filed against it by other governments and increased black-market sales. This is not a model that Britain should follow.

Every corporation relies upon its branding and logo to identify and market its products, and by denying cigarette makers the right to do so, the Government would be starting down a slippery slope to selective enforcement and stripping trademark rights from any business with which it disagrees.

Professor Edward Peter Stringham
Texas Tech University
Lubbock, Texas

Threats over Gaza

SIR – Peter Oborne takes a balanced view of the tragedy in Gaza. While Hamas, dedicated to the destruction of the state of Israel, must bear its share of responsibility for civilian casualties by stockpiling weapons at UN sites, Israel, with its arsenal of precision weapons, has no excuse for taking out UN buildings, despite being warned of the proximity of their shelling. (I left the Conservative Friends of Israel when Stuart Polak, its chairman, was unable to explain the reasons for a similar incident in 2006).

Mr Oborne implies that Conservative foreign policy is influenced by the Jewish lobby. However, others are demanding that Britain should tailor its foreign policy to reflect the diverse community that has resulted from years of mass immigration.

I received a deputation of Kashmiri Muslims at my constituency surgery last Saturday, keen for me to denounce Israel. As I explained, we must have a British foreign policy, determined in the interests of the United Kingdom as a whole.

Furthermore, threats by a minority community in Britain that pursuit of a certain foreign policy will so alienate that community as to lead to violence are nothing short of blackmail.

Sir Gerald Howarth MP (Con)
London SW1

Downhill sledging

SIR – My 10-year-old grandson is cricket-mad and his hero is Jimmy Anderson.

What sort of example does Anderson set when he calls the opposing captain a f–– fat c––? If this is how cricketers behave, I may have to encourage my grandson to become a football supporter.

Richard Bloomfield
Rogate, West Sussex

Boris stands again

SIR – Boris Johnson and Alistair Darling as leaders of their respective parties would provide a meaningful choice and an interesting election.

Maybe next time round.

John Pankhurst
Nottingham

SIR – May I suggest that it would save a great deal of faffing about if Boris Johnson stopped being so self-effacing and contested the seat for Witney, Oxfordshire, at the forthcoming general election.

That course of action, together with a firm pact with Ukip, is the only hope the Tories have.

Lance Warrington
Northleach, Gloucestershire

SIR – My wife said something was up a fortnight ago, when Boris Johnson had his hair cut.

Geoff Chessum
London EC2

SIR – What significance should one attach to the fact that, in your front-page photograph of Boris Johnson (August 7), he is saluting with his left hand?

Graham Plumbe
Crookham Village, Hampshire

Not just Margaret’s boy

SIR – Tony Bray should be remembered for setting up the London Computer Group, later to become the British Computer Society, as well as for his romantic liaison with Margaret Thatcher.

In the late Fifties, he and a few others decided there should be a forum to enable users of computers to meet and exchange views.

Tony and another accountant, John Hough, set up headquarters in a cramped office in a creaky old building off Jermyn Street. They organised membership and meetings and published a news bulletin.

I was one of two female staff in those offices. We were a good team, and we remember Tony well.

Jane Donaldson
Hinton St George, Somerset

A mite healthier

SIR – In addition to making the washing smell fresh, sunshine kills off the myriad of mites and bugs that survive warm washing and that can cause respiratory problems.

Pamela Wheeler
Kenley, Shropshire

How to be socially pigeonholed by a shirt pocket

SIR – In my search for shirts with pockets (Letters, August 6) I discovered that I was working class. A shop assistant told me that middle-class and upper-class men did not wear shirts with pockets.

Ron Kirby
Dorchester

SIR – My husband, when it seemed that a shirt could not be bought without a pocket, disliking them, meticulously unpicked the stitching to remove them from his new long-sleeved shirts. When washed there is no sign that the pocket was ever there.

Elizabeth V Ainsley
Chipping Sodbury, Gloucestershire

SIR – The ability accurately to assess the capacity of a shirt pocket is a much coveted skill. Our young grandson, bored recently with his food in a posh hotel, correctly gauged that my husband’s shirt pocket would snugly accommodate the six chips he did not wish to eat. He quietly stashed them there, his grandfather, absorbed in conversation, remaining oblivious.

Lindsay Watkins
Helensburgh, Argyll

SIR – I smiled wryly at Ali Wilkerson’s comment (Letters, August 5) that men’s shirts should have no pockets. This is why their wives must carry such capacious handbags. However, I am always happy to accommodate my husband’s wallet.

Wendy Strathdee
Burnham, Buckinghamshire

SIR – I would like makers of ladies’ handbags to change the position of the mobile-phone pocket. Placing it in the centre of a compartment, instead of to one side, restricts what else can be easily accommodated.

Myra Spalton
Macclesfield, Cheshire

SIR – The irritation of not being able to watch the Salmond-Darling confrontation on Tuesday on television in England was nothing compared with the massive disappointment when I did manage to listen to this travesty of a debate.

For those of us south of the border, with no vote in the coming referendum, yet a real vested interest in the outcome, it was an opportunity to hear both sides expose and analyse the important problems facing an independent Scotland. Instead, we were exposed over a two-hour period to a level of political point-scoring that at times barely rose above that of a bar-room spat.

How voters in Scotland will understand the pros and cons of major issues such as defence, EU membership and, most of all, the future currency, is beyond me.

Richard Martin
Mylor, Cornwall

SIR – Though unable to watch the Salmond-Darling debate, I was astonished to read the remark of Douglas Alexander, the shadow foreign secretary: “Alex Salmond thought this debate would be his Bannockburn – it’s turning out to be his Waterloo.”

The first poll after the debate did show Mr Salmond’s defeat as “damn close run”, but Mr Alexander, a Scot, would have been more accurate to compare the outcome to the Scottish defeat at Solway Moss of 1542. Certainly, the poll does not suggest the Scottish disaster 29 years before at Flodden.

Patrick Williams
London SW4

SIR – It is now clear that Alex Salmond does not understand the difference between currency usage and currency union.

While many countries use the US dollar, for example, they are not in a currency union with the United States, so any debt they incur is not underwritten by the US Federal Bank.

Scottish usage of sterling after independence would similarly be without support of the Bank of England, either as protector of private deposits up to £85,000 or as lender of last resort in a crisis.

Mr Salmond actually wants currency union, which is like divorcing your partner, but retaining use of the joint credit card and bank account, plus their joint liability for any debts.

No chance.

Malcolm Parkin
Kinnesswood, Kinross-shire

SIR – Your report “Sir Mick Jagger joins 200 public figures calling for Scotland to stay in the UK” makes me proud to be British – and I say that as a Scot.

The opinion of our British family matters to me, I care what they think, and the sentiments expressed in this open letter to the people of Scotland go far to confirm the decision I had already made to vote a resounding “No” on September 18.

Marina Turner
Glasgow

Irish Times:

Sir, – Of course the spat between John Bruton, Éamon Ó Cuív and Gerry Adams “will run and run” (Editorial, August 6th).

Bruton says the British 1914 Home Rule Bill would have created a peaceful momentum towards freedom. He is right. Adams and Ó Cuív say that 1916 was necessary as an expression of republican aspirations. They are right. It is not merely political posturing by all three of them – although it most certainly is that too. The dichotomy at the heart of this argument, which proves the point of your editorial, is that Bruton and Ó Cuív are both right.

But are their postures reconcilable or mutually incompatible? The key to this dichotomy is the role of selective memory, and the significance of commemoration. To remember is not necessarily to glorify, yet “keeping faith” with the men (and women) of 1916 does imbue them with a tinge of glory. How much tinge depends on your political perspective. To believe in constitutional processes is far less glamorous, but perhaps more realistic. 1916 was a calculated failure, a rhetorical flourish, backed up by Pearse’s idea of blood sacrifice. The Free State achieved its stability by very dull constitutional means, with Fianna Fáil acceding to power only after de Valera had accepted the need for such stability, in a similar way to the IRA’s decision to disarm.

There will always be different versions of history, depending on how much hurt the historian wishes to inflict and how much blame to attribute. A historian is, after all, a politician by other means. Forgetting is as important as remembering. The knack, as every politician knows, is the ability to forget well. – Yours, etc,

RICHARD PINE,

Perithia,

Corfu,

Greece

Sir,  – However one interprets the case for or against the 1916 rising, its long-term cost to Ireland’s cultural landscape should be acknowledged.  The senseless destruction of Ireland’s national archives at the Four Courts was matched nation-wide by an equally regrettable series of attacks on country manors, with priceless collections of historic Irish manuscripts, artworks and artefacts reduced to ashes.

Subsequent alienation of Southern Protestants has resulted in a divided society in those areas where that minority were not forced out entirely.  When will we reconcile ourselves to these self-inflicted wounds? – Yours, etc.,

TOM JORDAN,

Windmill Road,

Summerhill South,

Cork

Sir, – I note your headline (August 8th) “British urgently want the blood of Irish people”. No change there then. – Yours, etc,

STEPHEN MacDONAGH,

Sonesta,

Malahide,

Co Dublin

Sir, – While I readily agree with Dr Kevin McCarthy (August 7th) that the actions of Isis in Iraq are not getting much media coverage, I am not sure that a plea to keep the Gaza crisis firmly in focus amounts to a lack of objectivity.

Isis, interestingly enough, is progressing in its objectives partly by being well-armed and well-equipped, using the ordnance and weaponry originally supplied to it by western powers in support of its actions against the Assad regime. Perhaps this embarrassing fact might go some way to explaining the lack of press coverage. – Yours, etc,

CAPT JOHN DUNNE,

St George’s Street,

Douglas,

Isle of Man

Sir, – Noel Leahy (August 7th) trots out the oft-repeated comment that Israel is a democracy. Yet he seems to exclude Gaza and the West Bank from his definition of that state. De facto Gaza is part of Israel – it is controlled by Israelis and they decide who and what goes in and out of it. It is cut off from the outside world. It has approx 1.4 million Palestinians who have no vote in Israeli politics. A further 2.4 million Palestinians live in the West Bank, which is being absorbed, on a daily basis, into Israel. They too have no vote in Israeli politics. A further 1.3 million Palestinians are classified as Israelis. They do have a vote in Israeli politics. Out of a population of 10.8 million, for the whole of the territory effectively controlled by Israel, 3.8 million people (35 per cent) have no vote and 1.3 million (12 per cent) are locked in as a permanent minority. On the above figures, 5.1 million (47 per cent of the population) are excluded from having a say in what happens to them. Some democracy! Mr Leahy might also consider the difficulties countries in the Middle East have in setting up democracies. The US-backed military junta removed the democratically elected government of Egypt last year, with full US and Israeli approval. Yours, etc.

JOHN KELLY,

Clanricarde Gardens,

London W2

Sir, – In response to your report that the Tricycle Theatre in Kilburn, London has refused to host a Jewish film festival, I would like to add my voice to those who are against a boycott of the arts in general and of Jewish theatre in particular. I have two points to make here. Firstly, it is a Jewish film festival. Those who are opposed to Israel’s political and military policies are always at great pains to insist that they have nothing against Jews or Judaism.

Jewish communities have made a rich contribution to social and cultural life in Europe. Why stifle this? Jewish and Israeli arts festivals offer a wide range of works dealing with challenging and often difficult questions. Many Israeli films and plays present a very pro-Palestinian viewpoint and raise uncomfortable issues for their audience. Throughout history, it has always been the artists, writers and musicians who have sought to question , to provoke, to take the broader view. We should give them a hearing, not silence them. Yours, etc,

HEATHER

ABRAHAMSON,

Roebuck Lawn,

Clonskeagh,

Dublin 14

Sir, – I don’t know if William Coogan missed the part of Olivia Kelly’s article (August 6th) about the restoration of Mountjoy Square where it stated that the current facilities are to be relocated nearby and that restoration of the eastern part of the square would take place “only after alternative community facilities are provided in the vicinity of equal or higher quality”. Or that the current 1930s/1960s buildings are nearing the end of their useful life and would require replacing in the near future.

You don’t have to be a top-hatted “toff” to appreciate that the restoration of Mountjoy square would be a boon to the area, is long overdue and would be appreciated by all. But perhaps it’s a case of never letting the facts stand in the way of a chance to bash “the conservation lobby”. – Yours, etc,

RORY J WHELAN,

Roschoill,

Drogheda,

Co Louth

Sir, – I write to add my support to William Coogan (August 8th) on the Mountjoy Square plan, and I do so as one who has long been a supporter of preserving the heritage of Georgian Dublin.

The proposed works are a total waste of money at a time when homelessness is starkly on the rise in this country. What could €8.1 million do to refurbish some at present unused publicly owned buildings to provide emergency shelter, for instance? Meanwhile, the extremely badly needed facilities of Mountjoy Square are going to disappear, to be “relocated elsewhere,” according to your news report in Wednesday’s edition.

This is a daft idea; it is crazy that Dublin City Council, with its recently-elected left-wing majority, should approve such a scheme. Has it done so, or is this just bureaucratic folly? Yours, etc.,

PETER THOMPSON,

Ferrybank,

Arklow,

Co. Wicklow

Sat, Aug 9, 2014, 01:30

First published: Sat, Aug 9, 2014, 01:30

Sir, – I see An Post’s new stamp collection features four aspects of the Irish Prison Service: care and custody, rehabilitation, restorative justice and education (News, August 7th). I await future stamps highlighting drugs, overcrowding and mobile phones. – Yours , etc,

NIALL McARDLE,

Wellington Street,

Eganville,

Ontario

Sir, – I enjoyed Frank McNally’s diary on the use of language (August 8th), with particular reference to its use in the northern counties, so I did. Perhaps in some future piece he might cover the speaking style, also peculiar to those counties, of adding a qualifying “so” to the end of each sentence, so he might. – Yours, etc

TONY CORCORAN,

Fairbrook Lawn,

Rathfarnham,

Dublin 14

Sir, – Liam de Paor (August 8th)refers to Raidio na Gaeltachta and how it brought his love of our beautiful language back to him. I have lived in South Africa for nearly 50 years and have very seldom met anybody to whom to speak Irish. However, I have retained my knowledge mainly by saying my prayers in my own language.

Some years ago I found that I could get Raidio na Gaeltachta on the internet. I am old and decrepit and cannot attend Mass but I listen to it from RnaG every Sunday. Mar a deireann an t-amhrán: “S’í teanga bhinn ár sinsear í, an caint is milse glór.” – Yours, etc,

BRIAN P Ó CINNÉIDE,

Essenwood Road,

Durban,

South Africa

Sir, – It is with some sense of irony that I, and presumably most other parents around the country, read Liam de Paor on his enjoyment of the “sweet sound of Irish”.

At this time of year most of us are having to “enjoy the sweet sound” of fumbling in a greasy till for the money to pay for Irish textbooks in the secure knowledge that they will not be appreciated by children who do not enjoy having to learn a compulsory language that the vast majority of them will have no use for once they leave school. Yours, etc,

ANDREW DOYLE,

Lislevane,

Bandon,

Co Cork

Sir, – The fundamental problem for wavering Scottish voters is the fact that this referendum requires them to write a blank cheque for their negotiating team, and indeed for its opposite numbers from Westminster.

The Better Together campaign has managed to hold onto an almost impregnable lead through negativity and scaremongering, while producing no meaningful vision to counter the Scottish government’s white paper, which actually makes a good and generally sound case for independence. A recent BBC programme by Robert Peston featuring a variety of heavyweight figures from the worlds of business and finance arrived at the conclusion that Scotland’s economic fate would be largely the same in the event of a Yes vote. Indeed, the point was well made that an agreement on the UK’s national debt is just as important to London as the issues of currency and resources are to Edinburgh.

Thus it seems to me that Scottish voters actually need to make a decision of the heart every bit as much as one of the head. The evidence is that they have been well governed since 1999 and that those parties who originally opposed devolution have played their full part in operating it since then. And if the economic argument still niggles strongly, they might recall the UK’s rush to provide financial assistance to Ireland in 2010. The UK’s economic interests in Scotland are such that a good deal will have to be brokered and in that sense Scotland’s representatives are actually holding very strong cards. Yours, etc,

BARRY HENNESSY,

Turvey Walk,

Donabate,

Co Dublin

Sir, – Paul Kean’s concise dismissal of the special pleading of the landlord class is long overdue. Ireland’s rental supply has long been less than was required and marked by low quality, small-time landlords and a distinct lack of professionalism. As the bubble has deflated many are left exposed by excessive borrowing, for both personal and buy-to-let property, and the consequences must be dealt with transparently.

Instead however, we have back-room deals facilitated by unaccountable organisations such as the presumptuously titled Irish Mortgage Holders Organisation [IMHO]. No journalist has seriously analysed the motives of this organisation and its personnel. Do the founders stand to benefit from debt forgiveness? Already the CEO has sought to parlay his high profile into a Dail seat, backed by a bizarrely eclectic mix of high-profile supporters. Why does this organisation get so much free air time and press space? Those getting on with paying down our debts deserve to know – particularly when many of us made conscious decisions to take smaller mortgages and live in less fashionable areas so that we could cope with unforeseen economic setbacks. Yours, etc,

MATTHEW GLOVER,

Griffeen Glen Ave,

Lucan,

Co Dublin

Sir, – As from August 1st a new regulation requires a novice driver who has just passed the driving test to display an “N” plate. Nothing more.

Speed is acknowledged to be the major contributor to road traffic accidents, yet there is no requirement imposed on the novice driver as to a personal maximum speed limit. The Road Safety Authority regards 100,000km driven to be the necessary level for full driver experience, yet imposes no personal restriction on a novice suddently free from the company and control of a mature qualified driver. Yet that new driver ranks as a major accident risk.

A restriction to a moderate speed limit for all “N” plate drivers for a period of at least a year would seem to be a prime necessity. Such an arrangement used be in operation in Northern Ireland some years back, and resulted in a significant reduction in road traffic accidents. Why hasn’t this been done here? – Yours, etc,

DAVID GRANT,

Mount Pleasant,

Waterford

Irish Independent:

MY stomach turned as I read for the third time in three weeks about an attack on an innocent citizen going about their business in our fair city. I understand how I may be coming across to hardcore city-slickers as an innocent Kerry girl who never adapted to city living, but perhaps I can chronicle some of my experiences from living in Dublin for the past five years.

Last October, I was walking between Camden Street and Harcourt Street at 11pm with my friend when a heroin addict set upon me to take my bag. His weapon of choice – an umbrella.

This poor misfortunate was not having a good day, as he committed his crime in front of an undercover garda car, occupied by four undercover gardai, who luckily jumped to the rescue of me and my handbag. I was shaken, but not deterred from enjoying the rest of my night out.

A phone call the next morning told me that the guy had a string of previous convictions, that he would be locked up for what he did and they would call me later for a statement. Two months later I was informed that the case would be brought no further, as he was murdered by another drug addict for sleeping in the wrong bed.

My walk to work each morning frequently brings me past the Custom House on the quays, which I think is one of the most beautiful buildings in Dublin, perfectly situated along the quays, whose bold pillars represent its strength and resilience in our city. These pillars are now used to shield the drug addicts as they inject their heroin every morning, usually around 8.45am. Many now just place a sleeping bag over their head and turn their backs to the road in their attempt to find a vein. Once finished, the needles are just thrown on to the street, as I frequently need to step over them on my walk to work.

The shame that is O’Connell Street, Abbey Street, Westmoreland Street, Rathmines, Dame Street and College Green – all of which are the epicentre of our beautiful city – are riddled with drug addicts, drunks and violent criminals, who lie in wait for the next innocent to come along and take their opportunity, with no deterrent. Why not?

Now, I took a few sociology classes in university but not enough to come up with solutions to our social problems. Neither did I study enough criminal law to analyse the ridiculously light-touch sentencing that is being applied. I want to highlight the unease, safety concerns and disgust that I experience on a daily basis walking around this city. Enda, Joan and friends, I dare you, just for giggles, to come up with a solution.

Name and address with editor

Defending Armagh’s record

I take issue with Martin Breheny’s column (August 7). He states that Armagh are maintaining a media ban to “settle a few perceived old scores with people who don’t know what it’s all about”.

The reason that Armagh have not spoken to journalists is because of their biased and sensationalised reporting of the incidents during the Cavan and Tyrone games. The blame for each incident was laid squarely on Armagh’s shoulders. The media did not point out the fact that in the Cavan incident it was the Cavan players who charged Armagh, and that the Cavan player broke his hand hitting an Armagh player.

In the Tyrone game the two Armagh midfielders were knocked down as soon as the ball was thrown in. While I do not condone violence, when faced with incidents like this do you expect players, who have given up their free time to train hard all year in all weathers, to stand by and not react? The strange thing is when Dublin are involved in an incident and accused of biting, not the first such incident, there is virtually no mention in the media or blame apportioned.

Armagh’s brand is not damaged by the media ban. Their supporters would love to see them speak to the media but understand completely why they do not do so and admire them for their stance. The more you have reporters taking cheap shots at amateur players without trying to understand the problem, the longer the problem will continue.

Armagh are not throwing a “sulk” as Mr Breheny believes, but are simply choosing not speak to a media who seem unwilling to print a simple and unbiased version of incidents but chooses to apportion ALL the blame on to one team. After all, it takes two to create a row.

Perhaps, in wondering if Armagh will speak to the media in the near future, the media should reflect on and consider their own part in the ‘ban’.

M Russell

Co Monaghan

 

Kick out Israeli ambassador

There are many who would gladly see the Israeli ambassador kicked out of the country but if he is legally here, what purpose would it serve? On the other hand, what country is he the ambassador of? Is he the ambassador of a country whose borders are defined by UN agreement? Is he the ambassador of a country which has expansionary goals in contravention of the UN? We, as citizens of this country, are entitled to know which it is. If it is the latter, he should not be in our country in the first place.

Hugh Doyle

Lagore Road

Dunshaughlin

Co Meath

In praise of Pat Rabbitte

The commentary about Pat Rabbitte this summer is a little ungenerous. His parliamentary leadership during the 26th Dail on practices within the Goodman companies, which affected ordinary workers and ordinary farmers, was a singular contribution to Irish society.

For that alone we should graciously applaud this pre-eminent Teachta as he retreats from ministerial office.

Paul Hickey

Castlecoote

Roscommon

Make more rapists public

I see Anthony Lyons is in the news again over his sexual assault, but why is he so regularly in the news when other attackers get very little or no publicity? For instance; the rapist who got a suspended sentence for breaking into a woman’s house at night and raping her while she was asleep with her small children. There was no publicity at all regarding the handicapped girl who was raped by a non-Irish person — are these victims somehow less worthy of mention?

David Kelly

Crumlin

Dublin 12

Obama cheer turns to discontent

I must admit that over the past few weeks and months, I have become increasingly dissatisfied with the foreign policy of Barack Obama. Inaction over Syria and Ukraine, his recent bullying of Ireland for its low corporation tax and now his ridiculous assertions about bombing Iraq – but no “troops on the ground” – leave me wondering why I was so happy to see him get elected.

I think it shows a very bad side to an American liberal icon that he will push around small states, but his response to Putin’s modern expansionist ideas is toothless appeasement.

I admit it. When Obama was first elected, I cheered. I was swept up in “Yes we can”, a statement that we can do great things and the future can be better if we try. But now I am disillusioned with him. Now, I think: “Yes we can? Can what, Mr President?”

Colin Smith

Clara

Co Offaly

More advice with a tooth in it

The ‘words of advice’ letter from Brian Mc Devitt (Aug 6) reminded me of the fella who considered getting all his teeth out, and sought the advice of a friend who had undergone the same procedure. His friend replied: “Yes, I had them all out. . . never again!”

Tom Gilsenan

Beaumont

Dublin 9

Irish Independent


Tomatoes

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0
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10 August 2014 tomatoes

I jog around the park I still have arthritis in my left knee, but I manage to get round the park. A warmish day. I get some books and replant some tomartoes

Scrabble Mary wins, but gets over just 400. perhaps I will win tomorrow.

Obituary:

Ken Tickell – obituary

Ken Tickell was an organ builder who made instruments for Eton and Keble College, Oxford

Ken Tickell

Ken Tickell

4:53PM BST 07 Aug 2014

CommentsComments

Ken Tickell, who has died aged 57, was a leading British organ builder whose instruments can be found in Eton College, Worcester Cathedral, and at Keble College, Oxford, where the pipes were painted to match the chapel’s spectacular colouring.

Over the past three decades Tickell had built up a team of dedicated craftsmen at his workshop in Northampton, where he was renowned for his perfectionism and for being able to visualise how an instrument would look and sound even before it was built.

The new organ for the lower chapel at Eton was built in 2000 inside the original (c. 1700) Father Smith case. Meanwhile, Worcester Cathedral’s new organ, which was heard in the recent Three Choirs Festival , was inaugurated by Dame Gillian Weir during the festival there in 2008.

For many years Keble College had relied on an electronic organ. Here the challenge for Tickell was not only matching the sound to the ambience of the Victorian chapel, but also ensuring that the architectural integrity of William Butterfield’s magnificent building was not compromised.

Tickell was the first to admit that organ design – and sound – was a very personal taste and that pleasing such disparate groups as congregation, clergy, choir and organist could be a near-impossible task. “My philosophy has always been that good organs result from pursuing a single-minded purpose,” he once said, and with his quiet determination he built up an impressive reputation for his small company.

Kenneth Hugh Tickell was born at Orrell, Lancashire, on August 25 1956, the elder of two brothers. His father was a teacher who moved the family to Coventry when Ken was two. He learnt violin as a child and, despite not having a keyboard at home, became a young church organist. He entered Coventry School of Music, where he studied with Robert Weddle from Coventry Cathedral, before winning an organ scholarship to the University of Hull, where his teachers included Simon Lindley.

One summer, while he was still a student at Hull, a friend was helping a vicar’s son to install a second-hand organ in his parish church. Tickell was roped in to help with what turned out to be a more complicated job than the vicar had anticipated.

He quickly spotted the opportunity to marry his practical nature with his musical talent, and, after completing his Fellowship at the Royal College of Organists, became a trainee with Grant, Degens and Bradbeer, the organ builders based in Northampton. He struck out on his own in 1982. His first instrument, which was displayed at St Albans organ festival, was acquired by All Saints’ church, Preston Bagot, in Warwickshire.

Tickell’s first workshop was in outbuildings on a farm, where he was often irritated by the presence of a goat watching him constantly as he assembled his instruments. In 1986 the company, by now taking on staff, moved to an old bakery, where he lived with his young family above the shop. On one occasion he had to cut a hole in the bakery ceiling and into his living quarters to accommodate a particularly large organ pipe.

Over the next 32 years Tickell built or rebuilt instruments around the country, as well as several overseas. From the outset he was adamant that, while many organ builders are required to renovate existing instruments to make ends meet, he would build only new instruments, albeit sometimes in existing cases.

Today his instruments can also be heard in Sherborne Abbey, Dorset, and Lincoln’s Inn chapel, Holborn — which, he said, was his favourite because it was one of those rare venues where everything comes together both visually and acoustically.

Tickell was a founding member of the Institute of British Organ Building. For a number of years he was organist at St Mary’s Church, Northampton.

He is survived by his wife, Philippa James, whom he married in 1977, and by their daughter.

Ken Tickell, born August 25 1956, died July 24 2014

Guardian:

Pictures/Corbis

There is a question missing from your leader on tax (“On tax, our politicians are just too cowardly“, Comment). It should be asked of every member of parliament elected in 1979 and since. How did this nation arrive at a byzantine system of national government paying social security, intended to secure the lawful survival and shelter of the poorest citizens and then allowing local government to tax it? A national administrative army pays a very inadequate £72.40 a week jobseekers’ allowance to individual adults; then the local army taxes it an average of £149 a year council tax.

Unsurprisingly, given that £72.40 now has to pay some of the rent and that other laws have reduced its value, while the prices of food and fuel rise, there are late and non-payers of council tax. Byzantium expects a third army of magistrates, court and council enforcers to be paid for, even by the poorest citizens, by charging up to £125 on top of the arrears and more for the private army of bailiffs

Sadly, you subscribe to the conventional wisdom that raising income tax to a 50p rate for the highly affluent and an additional £1.2bn a year from a mansion tax is mainly symbolic.

Not so; £1.2bn would pay all the average £149 a year council tax of the 2.3 million working-age families claiming social security, saving them £348m a year, with £852m left over and saving admin and enforcers’ costs.

It was estimated in 2009 that a 50p tax rate above £150,000 a year income would raise a further £1.3bn in 2010/11, rising to £3.05bn in 2011/12. Think what that could do for the common good.

The Rev Paul Nicolson

Taxpayers Against Poverty

London N17

Your editorial on NHS costs and taxation says that the latter is “a system filled with anomalies… council tax bands based on a valuation of properties last done in 1991 and fiscal drag (increasing numbers… caught in higher tax bands as average wages increase)”. Surely the biggest anomaly is corporation tax? With numerous HMRC concessions, tax havens and tax avoidance, this tax brings in much less than it should. The total revenues lost because of these flaws are disputed. But even, on HMRC’s own, conservative (2011) estimate of £4.1bn, more rigorous regulation, enforcement and collection could eliminate the NHS deficit and lighten the burden of personal taxation.

John Ingham, Bryn Jones, David Lucas

Tax Justice

Bath

Your editorial on tax is timely, certainly, but while you accuse politicians of being too cowardly, aren’t you approaching the issue somewhat timidly?

No mention of a land value tax, the idea of which some politicians are at least toying with. And what about the bold, even radical, citizen’s income proposed by Compass and one or two Green and Labour MPs?

Then you restrict your central discussion of income tax to that paid by individuals. In 2013, UK corporations were sitting on a £750bn cash mountain. How much of that was taxed and how much was buried on Treasure Islands?

You seem to dismiss “increasing yields by cutting evasion” as a mere technocratic diversion.

I know you are talking about what the spin doctors will allow but a serious debate about tax cannot afford to be so cautious.

John Airs

While someone as unfit as I am might be in awe of Will Hutton’s achievement at riding a bicycle 700 miles at a rate of 70 miles per day, his claim that the peloton offers a reminder of the benefits of co-operation ought not to go unchallenged (“What my 700-mile bike ride taught me about togetherness“, News). True, it draws attention to the fact that we can frequently achieve more as a group than we can as individuals, but it does so by providing us with a badly flawed model.

Members of the peloton have a single goal and under such circumstances co-operation is unproblematic, but when that model is applied to the real world, in a context where there are profound differences of direction as well as of individual goals, it is often used to ride roughshod over potentially valuable individual contributions to social goals. The peloton model can lead to forced “co-operation” and it can lead to the suppression of the voice that feels something is wrong with the direction taken.
Tony McWalter
Labour and Co-operative MP (1997-2005)

Glasgow Games above politics

Nicola Sturgeon has spectacularly misread the public mood in Scotland over our success at the Commonwealth Games, in imagining it will increase the yes vote (“‘The momentum is with the yes campaign“, News). Has she even noticed that Scotland has done well without being independent? Hearing Scottish crowds cheering on English competitors, and the total lack of the sort of tribal narcissism on which the independence movement will heavily rely, makes me more confident than ever that we will vote no.
Ian Close
Paisley

Unite the railways

As a potential Labour voter and retired railwayman, I became quite excited after reading your article on Labour’s plans for the rail network (“Labour’s proposed rail shake-up leaves nationalisation off the agenda“, Business). Then I read that Mary Creagh rules out one body for running trains and the infrastructure and this left me aghast! Does Labour not realise the cost of our railways won’t be reduced until we unite trains and track?
Peter Tattersall

Phones in theatres

Having read “Stephen Fry backs theatre charter to ban use of mobiles“, (News), I am left wondering why, as a regular concert-goer at the Bridgewater Hall in Manchester, I have never once heard a mobile ringtone in the concert hall. Is it that the environment commands more attention and respect from the audience or perhaps that, unlike theatres, concert auditoria are rarely plunged into the anonymity of darkness? Put the lights up and shame the culprits!
Janet Brindley
Stockport

Max Mosley: the real reason I am taking on Google

When my lawyers put out a very short announcement that I was suing Google in the UK for showing illegal images, they said: “This is not a case about the ‘right to be forgotten’ or freedom of speech. Nor does it require Google to act as an arbiter of what is lawful and what is not. All that Google is being asked to do is to take practical measures to give effect to that decision of the court.”

That could not be clearer. Yet Catherine Bennett claimed I was trying to use the recent case in the European Court of Justice to “airbrush” my past (“And just when you had forgotten all about Max Mosley…”, Comment). Moreover, she added the untrue claim that I have “already exploited” the ECJ judgement. My case is nothing to do with the right to be forgotten or airbrushing the past; it is about Google continuing to publish pictures that it knows have already been ruled illegal by the high court.

In relation to the right to be forgotten, it is absurd to suggest it “must rankle” with me that Google is itself deciding which links to take down. The opposite is true. Google earns vast amounts by making information available on the internet. I think it entirely right that it should spend some of its money on trying to make sure it does so lawfully. If it gets it wrong (which it may do from time to time), the information commissioner or the courts can decide.

Apart from making me part of Hacked Off (which I’m not, though I agree with most of what it says), the writer goes on to make the blindingly obvious point that suing will increase searches for the pictures. She should try to understand that sometimes people do what’s right even when the consequences are unpleasant. Six years ago, I took on the bullies and criminals at the News of the World despite knowing I would have to endure days of embarrassing reports of the court proceedings.

But I won and in doing so I hope I have helped deter tabloids from causing similar unnecessary misery to others. The choice between what’s expedient and what’s right is an age-old one. Governments make it all the time and often (in my view) get it wrong. When something is clearly wrong and you have the means to act, you should.

Max Mosley

London

Independent:

Children benefit enormously from visiting art galleries (“A gallery visit? Leave the children at home, says top artist”, 3 August). If anything, children of primary-school age have more to gain from early engagement with high-quality art, as it can help them better engage with learning, develop their creativity and imagination, encourage communication and language skills, and most of all, inspire them.

Children may not “understand” a complex artwork (who can claim they do?) but they quickly develop an appreciation for what they’re seeing and the thoughts, ideas and feelings it can stimulate. The more they see, the better; so the opportunity to visit an art gallery is hugely valuable. We work with children from disadvantaged backgrounds, and have seen the transformative effect that regular visits to galleries can have on children’s lives.

Jeremy Newton

Chief executive The Prince’s Foundation for Children & the Arts

London E1

Why does John Lichfield feel it is appropriate to smear Sir Edward Grey (Comment, 3 August)? There are extensive published documents about the lead-up to war, for instance The Origins of the First World War: Diplomatic and Military Documents, by Annika Mombauer. These generally support the case that Grey behaved honourably and worked hard to try to prevent war.

Peter Brooker

West Wickham, Kent

John Ashton (“They’d find a cure if Ebola came to London”, 3 August) is very unfair when he says that it was only when “innocent” groups were affected by Aids that the scientific community took notice. It was scientists at the Centers for Disease Control in Atlanta who worked out its epidemiology from its beginning, showed its risk to blood transfusion recipients, and fought to make it a public health priority. They also went to Zaire in 1976 and investigated every case of Ebola fever in the outbreak that gave it its name, worked out its transmission and identified its cause as a new virus.

Professor Hugh Pennington

Aberdeen

Stan Labovitch asks why atrocities other than Gaza don’t readily attract similar protests (Letters, 3 August).The reason for me is that it is such an obscenely one-sided conflict, in which the Middle East’s superpower has serially inflicted devastation on a captive impoverished people, who see their homeland continually diminish, where electricity and water are cut off, where homes, hospitals, schools and their inhabitants are routinely destroyed, where women and children form the greater proportion of deaths and injuries. Israel is protected at the UN by the US veto and funded by the US financially and militarily: these are my reasons.

Eddie Dougall

Bury St Edmunds, Suffolk

There is always a gaping hole at the centre of Hamish McRae’s analysis (3 August). The “rising productivity” he desires can be fed only with a voracious increase in the use of energy and resources. Ultimately, even renewable energy will be finite but other resources, including many of the basics of modern civilisation, will run out much sooner.

A tiny handful of economists, most notably Fritz Schumacher and Herman Daly, have shown the breadth of vision to engage with this most pressing and fundamental problem. But how often is it even mentioned by classical economists who seem to live on another planet of their theoretical imagination?

Steve Edwards

Wivelsfield Green, East Sussex

Countries such as Poland are not part of a Western campaign of “encirclement and humiliation since communism fell in 1991″ (“The West cannot keep poking the bear”, 3 August). They are merely doing everything possible to preserve the freedom they’ve gained after decades of dictatorship, repression, poverty, brutality and incompetence under puppet governments told what to do by Moscow which, now a mafia state instead of a communist one, continues to show disdain for decency, democracy and human rights.

Jan Wiczkowski

Prestwich, Manchester

Times:

Calculating Salmond only out to cherry-pick devolved powers

I HAVE a Scottish wife and have travelled to Scotland for 45 years. While it does seem, delightfully, to be a different country when I am there, I am just as fiercely proud of sharing our joint heritage and our future as one nation as AA Gill is of going it alone (“I’d vote for independence if I could”, Magazine, last week). If I had a vote, I would vote to stay as one nation even though I believe England would be financially better off separated.

I suspect Alex Salmond has never wanted total independence. He’s a very clever politician who wants a big minority “yes” vote in order to cherry-pick responsibilities for the Scottish parliament to manage — mainly fiscally determined.

I am not alone in England in hoping for a resounding “no” vote, but there are many here who would probably vote “yes”, given the chance, to see just how competent Scotland would be as a single nation.
Tim Burton, Wokingham, Berkshire

Isolated incident

Gill displays a confusion between separateness and independence — they are not the same. In extremis, Scotland would be easily isolated. In Salmond’s presumed currency union, why would the Bank of England and the Treasury take any account of the interests of a little foreign country called Scotland?

How much clout will such a tiny, remote country carry within the EU, the UN, Nato or the World Bank? If the Scots vote to secede, the 2015 general election will be won by the party that promises the hardest exit deal.
Larry Rushton, Maignaut, France

Aye stakes

Gill and his fellow “ayes” would rather not admit to the enjoyment they get from feeling perennial victims of English domination and exploitation, or the masochistic pleasure they derive from carefully nurtured feelings of hurt and injustice.

Most of us English, for practical and sentimental reasons, don’t want the Scots to swap a union with us for one with the EU. The language of the debate, though, as exemplified by Gill’s article, is causing a hardening of attitude south of the border that could sour future relations.
Ted Shore, Bristol

Independent spirit

Why isn’t anyone getting to grips with the emotional subtext of independence? I hear economic and political arguments when much of the desire for independence is driven by a heartfelt and deeply ingrained cultural wish to be free of English rule.
Michael Partridge (retired psychotherapist), Brocton, Staffordshire

Ending it all

I am not eligible to vote on whether I want Scotland to sever its allegiance to the UK, but if it ends the continual carping and whining, let them have the place.
Chris Greenwell, Darlington, Co Durham

Poms and circumstance

Gill reminded us why English migrants to Australia were labelled “whingeing Poms”. If it came to the Scots needing Scottish passports, I seriously doubt he would be offered one. Do his hand-wringing Highlanders not realise that the generosity of the EU comes from a fund financed partly by the UK’s massive contributions? Unfortunately articles such as his cause many English people to say, “Go for it,” when in reality we all know we are better together.
Robin Wrigley, Verwood, Dorset

Home result

I think I understand from Gill’s impassioned and well-reasoned feature that he will be among the first to move home if they vote for independence. But why does he not move back now and work for this result?
Pam Dobson, Welwyn Garden City Hertfordshire

Union vote

I fear Gill’s article is somewhat premature. He should keep his powder dry until the next referendum, to be conducted in England and Wales in a year or two’s time, about whether to let an impoverished country back into the union.
John Samuel, Coulton, North Yorkshire

So last century

Gill’s article was an evocation of a childhood in a long-lost, mid-20th-century Scotland and was clearly written for English readers who wanted to read a self-exculpatory potted history of Scotland. Gill needs to get into the 21st century.

Talk about the 1690s Darien scheme — Scotland’s attempt to bypass dependence on trade through and with England by forming its own colony — and the alleged (but never proved) bribing of Scottish aristocrats to sell out for “English gold” is like a Scottish National party (SNP) flyer from the 1960s.

He may claim Edinburgh as his city but it bears little similarity to the place I have lived in for a number of decades. If he wants to be ruled by the SNP, he is welcome to it. If he moves north, we could swap houses.
Andrew HN Gray, Edinburgh

Treating burns

Unlike Gill, no Scot would say Robbie Burns. It’s Rabbie Burns. Gill was born in Scotland and brought up by his English parents in England from the age of one. As the Duke of Wellington said: “If a gentleman happens to be born in a stable, it does not follow that he should be called a horse.”
Eric Brown, Bromley, London

Forth degree

Adam Boulton (“Not debating on Scotland is canny, PM — and a kick in the kilt for voters”, Comment, last week) stated that the Queen cracked a magnum of best Bowmore Surf Islay whisky on the bows of her new namesake carrier on the banks of the Clyde. It was launched at Rosyth on the River Forth.
Douglas Tott, Isle of Islay, Argyll and Bute

City needs EU for business to prosper
BUSINESSES across the UK need confidence in the domestic environment if they are to plan with any degree of certainty. Now the economy is showing signs of a sustained recovery, the political debate around Britain’s relationship with the EU is becoming a risk factor when it comes to investment and location decisions for internationally mobile firms (“Boris warns PM: be ready to leave EU”, News, last week).

London’s success as a global financial centre is underpinned by access to the single market. The reason why many large financial institutions base their operations in the capital or other parts of the UK is that we serve as a gateway to bigger markets in Europe and beyond. According to our polling, the vast majority of businesses favour staying in the EU.

Of course the City wants reforms to make Europe more competitive. These include completing the single market in services, cutting needless red tape and making the EU far more efficient. The government and MEPs of all parties should engage with the new European Commission to deliver this reform agenda.

A successful and reformed EU is a prize worth fighting for. The future prosperity of London and the country depends on it.
Mark Boleat, Policy Chairman, City of London Corporation

Hands off anti-whaler Pamela Anderson
YOUR headline “Pammy’s here to harass whalers in Faroes Baywatch” (World News, last week) was juvenile. Calling Pamela Anderson “Pammy” was rude — and she did not harass anyone. She came from Copenhagen on a scheduled flight, not in a private jet as you claimed, and she was not roped into the campaign — like all the other activists she is a volunteer and a longtime supporter of Sea Shepherd’s efforts to defend life in our ocean.

Your reporter Josh Glancy’s description of passionate volunteers who have come to the Faroe Islands on their own time and at their own expense as “a motley collection of international misfits” reveals he does not understand the concept of marine conservation. Glancy says the pilot whale is not endangered. There is no scientific validation of the number 800,000 that the Faroese throw around as no one knows what the numbers are.

The Canadians said the same thing about pilot whales in Newfoundland right up until 1966, when their populations crashed and the pods stopped returning to the coast.
Captain Paul Watson, International Director, Sea Shepherd Conservation Society

Points

READ MY LIPS
Jeremy Clarkson says: “For reasons I can’t explain, I’m especially troubled by people who have thin lips. They can appear to be amusing and kind, but I’ll have already decided that actually they are not” (“Heathrow’s a hole. Our new runway must be at London Hogwarts”, News Review, last week). Very perceptive and spot-on, which is presumably why he always gives David Cameron a very wide berth.
Huw Beynon, Penybanc, Dyfed

OUT OF DATE
I was saddened that your headline “Ben Whishaw: why I came out” (Magazine, last week) is felt to be relevant in this day and age. I can’t wait for the day people don’t have to “come out” and can just be accepted.
Nicola Denson, Guiseley, West Yorkshire

OPEN PLAN
In the event that the UK votes to leave the EU, why doesn’t the government publish its contingency plans — the essence of wise management (“Cameron’s Euro fudge is Boris’s opportunity”, Editorial, last week)?
Bob Woodman, Aylesbury, Buckinghamshire

UNIVERSITY CHALLENGE
Your article “Students face £16,000 fees for Oxbridge” (News, last week) suggested a panel set up by Universities UK to look at the fees and loans system in England is “likely to include a push to raise tuition fees”. This is not the case. The panel — which includes people from outside the university sector — has only just started its work and nothing has been decided, least of all its final recommendations. It will continue to take evidence from a wide range of organisations and individuals, including groups such as the National Union of Students.
Nicola Dandridge, Chief Executive Universities UK, London

BETWEEN THE LINES
In your excellent article “One hot mother” (Style, last week”) the model Lara Stone is quoted as saying: “I did worry about the impact [of pregnancy], because my body is my job and my livelihood.” It is to be hoped that her intellect will suffice when the wrinkles inevitably appear.
Adrian Mann, York

TELLTALE SIGNS
Your breathless headline informed us that “Ed’s cousin prefers David” (News, last week). Now the secret is out and we wait anxiously for the next insider to trash the Labour leader, Ed Miliband. I have it from impeccable sources that Florence Pendlebury from Pratts Bottom in southeast London saw him once in the high street and thought him arrogant. My own cousin in Australia, Dippo Brown, says that Miliband wouldn’t shout if a shark bit him. These testimonials do not bode well for Miliband. I hope he resigns to make way for “Gromit Balls”, whom no one can mock.
Terry Aulich, Tasmania

PEACEFUL PATH
I agree with Mick Davis, the chairman of the Jewish Leadership Council, that Israel has a right to defend itself (“Three basic rights Gaza’s death toll won’t change”, Comment, last week). But the country does not have a right to kill innocent bystanders, or those seeking shelter in UN schools. As for Davis exhorting us to choose Israel or Hamas, I choose peace.
Barclay Davies, Gelli, Rhondda Cynon Taff

CRITICAL VIEW
Eyewitness accounts from Iraq tell us about the thousands of Christians, many of them women and children, who have been killed by the jihadist group the Islamic State in Iraq and al-Sham (Isis). Others fleeing from the militants are trapped in the mountains. Where is the condemnation of Isis from those political leaders quick to criticise Israel’s attempt to defend itself?
Jeff Caplan, Hale, Greater Manchester

ROUTER OF ALL EVIL
Rod Liddle’s reporting of the Pope’s modern-day take on the Ten Commandments fails to mention “Thou shall not covet your neighbour’s wi-fi” (“I am the Lord thy Rod; now listen up”, Comment, last week). This is a big issue in the country.
Roger Foord, Chorleywood, Hertfordshire

Birthdays
Ian Anderson, singer and flautist, 67; Rosanna Arquette, actress, 55; Antonio Banderas, actor, 54; Riddick Bowe, boxer, 47; Baroness Butler-Sloss, judge, 81; Suzanne Collins, Hunger Games writer, 52; Lawrence Dallaglio, rugby player, 42; Charlie Dimmock, gardener, 48; Roy Keane, footballer, 43; Ronnie Spector, singer, 71

Complaints about inaccuracies in all sections of The Sunday Times, including online, should be addressed to editor@sunday-times.co.uk or The Editor, The Sunday Times, 3 Thomas More Square, London E98 1ST. In addition, the Press Complaints Commission (complaints@pcc.org.uk or 020 7831 0022) examines formal complaints about the editorial content of UK newspapers and magazines (and their websites)

Anniversaries
1519 Ferdinand Magellan’s five ships leave Seville to circumnavigate globe; 1793 the Louvre officially opens in Paris; 1977 David Berkowitz (“Son of Sam”) arrested for six murders in New York; 1990 Magellan space probe reaches Venus; 2003 highest temperature yet recorded in the UK — 38.5C (101.3F) in Faversham, Kent

Telegraph:

America needs active suport from Britain and Nato in Iraq

A no-fly zone over northern Iraq would help to protect Kurds and other minorities

Displaced families from the minority Yazidi sect, fleeing the violence, walk on the outskirts of Sinjar, west of Mosul, August 5, 2014.

Displaced families from the Yazidi sect walk on the outskirts of Sinjar, west of Mosul Photo: Reuters

6:57AM BST 09 Aug 2014

CommentsComments

SIR – The desperate situation in northern Iraq requires a rapid response from the West, to prevent a massacre of Kurds and minorities by Isis.

The situation is similar to 1992, when Saddam’s army pursued the Kurds into the same mountains, to starve and kill them. To his credit, John Major, prime minister at the time, advocated designated safe areas for the Kurds and the whole of northern Iraq was successfully protected by a no-fly zone until the invasion of 2003.

Nato should again impose a no-fly zone and actively interdict Isis wherever it threatens the Kurdish area and those of minority groups. Fortunately, America has started to act, if only in a limited way, but Britain and Nato should actively support America in defending these people.

Nicholas Watkis
Gloucester

SIR – The turmoil, death and destruction in Iraq and Afghanistan resulted from intervention by Tony Blair and Gordon Brown. David Cameron intervened in Libya (and almost in Syria).

What is particularly galling is that none of these three seems able to accept responsibility for their decisions.

Trevor Jones
West Chiltington, Sussex

SIR – On Radio 4 news an eye witness from a Christian town in northern Iraq spoke of the dead bodies, many of women and children, who had been killed by Isis terrorists.

Where is the emotive condemnation from the likes of Ed Miliband, Nick Clegg, Baroness Warsi, and George Galloway against Isis, such as they voiced against Israel’s attempt to defend itself?

Jeff Caplan
Hale, Cheshire

A modest proposal

SIR – Eric Howarth (Letters, August 5) suggests that it would be simpler if the Government took all our money and dished out a little weekly pocket money.

He must know that such a proposal would be totally unacceptable to all the major parties: if we were given cash we might spend it on something of our choice.

Coupons might be acceptable. Our five a day could be specified, and we might be entitled to half a teaspoon of salt and sugar a week, and a small portion of butter or margarine, depending on whether they were in medical vogue.

Jeremy Lousada
Sledge Green, Worcestershire

Top Gear change

SIR – I was editor of Top Gear in its original format between 1986 and 1991, when it was made at BBC Pebble Mill. By the time Jeremy Clarkson first appeared in 1988, Top Gear already had an audience of more than five million and was regularly the most popular programme on BBC2.

We had nine staff in total, with extra “volunteers” drafted in when needed. My line of command was through my local Head of Television straight to the Controller of BBC2. As Paul Bonner suggests (Letters, August 6), budgets, formats, chains of command and staffing numbers haven’t half changed.

Tom Ross
Tanworth-in-Arden, Warwickshire

How are you?

SIR – My late father’s invariable reply to the question “How are you?” was “Better in health than in temper.”

I now know exactly what he meant.

Simon Edsor
London SW1

Ageing Britain

SIR – Your leading article about the impact of an ageing population on economic growth fails to mention what criteria Moody’s, the credit ratings agency, used in its assessment.

Presumably these predictions don’t include services provided by retired people that do not receive a financial reward. How would the National Trust, the RSPB or community transport services – to name only a few examples – cope without unpaid volunteers, most of whom are retired? And then there are those grandparents who are providing child care in many families.

I am not qualified to put an economic value on any of this activity, but surely it is not negligible.

Martin Sage
Westhay, Somerset

SIR – England will need to build 840 primary schools by 2017, as between 2000 and 2010 our population increased rapidly.

Much of this is due to a mass influx from within the EU. The pressure this has caused on Britain’s infrastructure will outweigh the benefits that migrants have brought to our economy. Still no major party is prepared to fight Brussels on this.

G P Dipper
Leominster, Herefordshire

Air pockets

SIR – If one isn’t wearing a jacket, the shirt pocket (Letters, August 8) is the best place to carry a boarding pass and a pen.

Only one pen, of course.

Rodney Touche
Holmwood, Surrey

Blackberry breakfast

SIR – For ripe and ready fruit, available free, surely now is the time to head to the hedgerows (Letters, August 7).

I have just picked the first of this season’s blackberries, and am enjoying them for breakfast.

Geoffrey Treloar
Cranage, Cheshire

A fateful day

SIR – It was on August 9 1945 that Kokura was nominated as the second atom bomb target on Japan.

Fortunately for this city, the cloud cover was too great, so the bombers were redirected to Nagasaki, the secondary target.

Peter Ashcroft
Sapley, Huntingdonshire

The British Empire in the First World War

SIR – I am irritated by the BBC’s use of the anachronistic term “Commonwealth” in its programmes about the commemoration of the First World War. The Commonwealth did not come into being until 1948. In 1914 people in the five dominions, India or the colonies, were part of the British Empire.

Wg Cdr G L D Alderson RAF (retd)
Stamford, Lincolnshire

SIR – As a gesture of goodwill, could the Government repay the 3.5 per cent War Loan so patriotically bought to fund the Great War by our grandparents, who all died waiting for their promised money?

John D Scatchard
Batley, West Yorkshire

SIR – My father came home from the First World War a nervous wreck, but was nursed back to health by my grandmother, who made him promise never to mention the war again – a promise he kept.

Geoffrey Down
Padbury, Buckinghamshire

SIR – How sad it is that war graves are now omitted from the new Michelin maps. Are they trying to forget?

David Cardwell
Les Houches, Haute-Savoie, France

SIR – Is this celebration of the First World War not just emotional indulgence? Surely we should concentrate on all the present-day atrocities throughout the world, or maybe we have learnt nothing from the Remembrance celebrations in the past.

Rosemay Ostick
Upton-upon-Severn, Worcestershire

Billowing washing on the line in ‘Early Spring’ by Gilbert Spencer (1892-1979)  Photo: http://www.bridgemanart.com

6:59AM BST 09 Aug 2014

CommentsComments

SIR – I was interested to read of the benefits of hanging washing outdoors in helping prevent respiratory problems (Letters, August 8). I also find the sunshine works a treat in bleaching out the inevitable stains that find themselves on the clothes of my two young children.

Alexandra Beynon
Church Crookham, Hampshire

SIR – While I appreciate the environmental objective, the problem with wind-drying laundry is that it leaves towels like sandpaper, no matter how much conditioner is used.

Chris Whitehouse
Totland Bay, Isle of Wight

SIR – My mother’s advice was to dry washing outside, as it kills germs. I have always followed her dictum, but is there any scientific proof of this?

Elisabeth Chaston
Enfield, Middlesex

SIR – Alex Salmond is now saying that Westminster would have to respect the “sovereign will” of the Scottish people to keep the pound in the event of a Yes vote.

In my opinion Westminster should now make a firm commitment to the people of England, Wales and Northern Ireland that it will not agree to a currency union with an independent Scotland without determining, by a further referendum of the remainder of the British people, that they would be willing for their taxes to be used to bail out a foreign Scotland.

Such a commitment should convince Scottish voters that Westminster politicians are serious in saying No to a currency union despite Mr Salmond’s insistence that they are bluffing.

Lionel Steele
Coventry, Warwickshire

SIR – The main problem with choosing a currency to use in the event of a Yes vote is that all of our mortgages are denominated in pounds sterling. That means that we have to pay them back in pounds sterling. If we don’t know the currency we’ll be paid in, when working in an independent Scotland, then repaying a sterling mortgage might be difficult.

If Scotland took its own, new currency then it would have to weaken relative to the pound in order to keep Scotland competitive relative to the rest of the United Kingdom (and everywhere else, too). We’d be earning Scottish buttons and still repaying debts in pounds sterling.

If Scotland continued to use the pound sterling outside a currency union, then Scotland would also need to undergo an internal devaluation. Wage levels would fall in order to maintain Scottish competitiveness relative to everywhere else. So we’d be earning fewer pounds, but still repaying the same amount in pounds on our mortgages.

Given that the SNP has had seven years to work towards the referendum, how come they’ve not had currency, banking and taxation systems all planned and running in parallel for a smooth switchover? That would have removed much of the uncertainty.

It’s hard to believe that we Scots could do a worse job of running our country than the Westminster incumbents but I really do have my doubts.

Stuart Kelly
Innellan, Argyll

SIR – Jim Barrack (Letters, August 7) does not understand the Scots’ wish for independence. It is certainly not built on speculation or sentiment. We Scots are confident in our abilities, as we administered the British Empire and have made significant contributions in science and the arts.

If we attain independence we will be able to decide our own government – which won’t be Labour. It is unlikely in England that a Labour government will be elected either.

John M Scott
Shefford, Bedfordshire

Irish Times:

Irish Independent:

Madam – It’s almost here. In October the water charges will begin, so who will raise their hands to show that they fully understand the billing system and in turn are content to pay when the water authorities tell you how much you’ve used and how much you must pay for it.

If you happen to be one of those who fully understands all of the above then I congratulate you. I must admit that I am one of the people who do not understand any of it at all.

What I do know however is that when I stop at any garage to buy fuel, I insert the nozzle, press the lever and it immediately shows me the amount I am getting and the cost per litre. I do not have to ask or enquire from the assistant behind the counter how much I owe because I already know.

The same should apply when I turn on my tap or have a shower or use the toilet.

Surely every household is entitled to have a similar meter installed inside of their home to show what water is being used and the cost per litre.

The water charges will sweep over us like a tsunami but unlike that freak happening which quickly disappears, the water charges will remain with us forever just like the bin charge, the household charge and the property tax.

Once a charge comes in it will never be removed, but it will change – it will increase. The only things likely to go in the other direction are pensions, social welfare benefits, and medical cards.

The water board do have an advisory section on line dealing with many of the questions that may be asked. There are some 40 headings, each heading having several pages. To understand any of it you will probably need the help and advice of a Senior Counsel and a team of reputable accountants. You will also need some time off work if you are one of the few who have a job.

For far too long we citizens have been fobbed off by our elected representatives with jargon that most of us do not understand until we are finally told “well that’s the law! You have to pay it.”

Now is the time to stand up and demand that we are made fully aware of the total cost of what I consider to be a human right. And I want to be told in plain English exactly what is the position.

Fred Molloy

Clonsilla,

Dublin 15

Let them collect levies

Madam – In your Letters Page (Sunday Independent, August 3) A Leavy disagrees with your previous editorial in which  you stated bureaucrats were responsible for the austerity forced on us today and he suggests that it was just a few powerful people.

Can I mediate by suggesting you are both wrong – and that our downfall was caused by having inept fools, bureaucrats and powerful people (all rolled into one), in jobs they sometimes had no qualifications to hold.

Last year there was an outstanding €750m in uncollected planning levies. Developers built these costs into the purchase price of homes. We are now paying Local Property Tax to fund the services that these planning levies should have provided.

Of the €750m outstanding in planning levies, most of it is now owed by banks or their receivers as attached liability to businesses they took possession of. Planning permission under which a lot of hotels and pubs are being operated by receivers is subject to the planning levies being paid and if they are not paid the premises should be closed down by the local authorities. If they are not, then why should we pay LPT to fund services for them?

Tom Fennelly,

Firhouse, Dublin 24

First World War was a just cause

Madam – I disagree with Anthony Cronin’s article on the first World War (Sunday Independent, August 3).

In August 1916 Germany was de facto under the control of General Ludendorff when the Third Supreme Command took over. Sultanate Turkey was a pyramid power and it carried out the first holocaust by the massacre of one and half million Armenian Catholics.

We should remember that Roger Casement recruited Irish prisoners of our “gallant allies” – Turkey, Germany and Austria-Hungary. Both Germany and Austria-Hungary had used poison gas by this stage.

President Woodrow Wilson stated his war aims: “we do not want territory or sovereignty but the world must be made safe for democracy… we are but one of the champions of the rights of mankind”.

After the war the Allies set up the League of Nations to promote democracy and preserve peace. Most right thinking people now consider the use of force in defence of human rights as a “just war”.

Noel Flannery

South Circular Road

Limerick

Bruton was right about Home Rule

Madam – I would like to respond to Mr. Gerry Adams and his inane and predictably drone-like attack upon ex-Taoiseach Mr. John Bruton, and his courageous, and wholly justified analytical and ethical critique of the 1916 insurrection – and by implication its myriad apologists for those six days of blood sacrifice instigated by its chief ideologue Patrick Pearse.

The year 1916 saw the sequel to the 1867 insurrection which within a year had degenerated into outright terrorism. This represented the first wave of a nightmare of murderous Fenian insurgency directed against liberal democracy in Ireland, and in what was then mainland Britain.

This relentless fanatical campaign lasted for 19 years ending in 1886. Had the Irish Constabulary been as well trained, and as well equipped as they had been from 1867 to 1886, the 1916 terrroists would have been crushed, and deposited into the proverbial dust-bin of history – a place incidentally where Mr Adams together with his Sinn Fein-IRA comrades belong.

Mr Bruton believes in political evolution (an alien concept to Mr Adams ) and in respect for civilized political institutions inside a liberal State, and in real politics of which 1916 was an arrogant and contemptuous denial as was all of the insurgent violence that followed up to 1921-23 – a denial of the option of politics.

It might be salutary to reflect that Pearse’s Fenian Programme which he announced in 1915, over the grave of O’Donovan Rossa was on the verge of extinction before the great blood-bath propaganda of the event of 1916. Home Rule secured by John Redmond on September 18 1914 for most of Ireland (placed in abeyance until after the war) was a stepping stone to any future narrative course including that of independence – if so wished by the people for most of the island.

The six counties of Ulster would always be problematic and quite understandably so, owing to – among many other rational reasons – the power of the Catholic Church in the South.

Pierce Martin,

Celbridge

Co Kildare

Spirit of 1916 is needed today

Madam – Mr John Bruton is incorrect and lacking in empathetic understanding when he disparages the fundamental importance of the 1916 Easter Rising in our country’s history.

Tom Clarke,Pearse, Connolly, MacDiarmada, MacDonagh, Eamonn Ceannt, Plunkett -these men were not thugs. They were to a man high-minded idealists, whose desire to see Ireland free of British rule was fostered from their youth by a resurgence of pride in our language, culture, games and ancient history which kicked in from the late 19th century.

At their mothers’ knees their mental development was shaped in reactionary mode, by stories of the woeful annihilation of the recent Great Famine. They were men who embodied the old Fenian belief – that England’s crisis was Ireland’s opportunity to strike for independence.

They lost their gambit, they lost their lives, but their republican spirit electrified the Irish people, very evident in the ecstatic welcome for the surviving freed Irish prisoners by hundreds of thousands in Dublin on June 1917.

We need that spirit now and ever, to fight for justice, truth, fairness, honour and safety in Irish, European and World societies.

Eileen McGough,

Author, ‘Diarmuid Lynch a Forgotten Irish Patriot’

Cork

Better chance for more female TDs

Madam – In your paper on Sunday last (August 3) both Roger Jupp and John Drennan highlight the fact that women are dissatisfied that too few women were promoted in the recent government reshuffle.

Women are more than 50 per cent of the electorate but only 15 per cent of TDs are women.

The Government has imposed a quota which penalises the public funding of political parties with less than 30 per cent female candidates – a great opportunity to increase in the next election.

Governments will then not have the excuse of having too few women available for high office when choosing ministers and junior ministers..

A Leavy,

Sutton, Dublin 13

Antonia’s heroin article worthwhile

Madam – Antonia Leslie’s article about heroin, (Sunday Independent, 27 July ) was the best I have ever read explaining the mind-set of those unfortunate people who get trapped using heroin.

This article should be read out to students in every school in Ireland, to show the terrible consequences of this killer drug.

Antonia, if your superb article stops just one person from using heroin, it will have been worthwhile. Well done.

Maurice Curtin,

Co Cork

Letter writers should keep at it

Madam – Brian Mc Devitt praises the Letters page (Sunday Independent, 27 July, 2014).

Since I began to speak publicly three years ago, mostly about depression, through the letters pages, I receive regular contacts from people in distress or their relatives. Letter writers keep doing your thing and papers keep publishing them.

Tommy Roddy,

Galway

Good wishes to the journeying swifts

Madam – What an appropriate piece on swifts by Joe Kennedy (Sunday Independent, August 3). Swifts come to Ireland to breed in late April and leave to head back for the African continent in late July and early August. So basically they are here for the creme-de-lá-creme of our insect hatch.

They spend all their life on the wing and only touch down to breed. They are amazing to watch as they glide, twist, bank, and fly like an aerial acrobatic show.

However they are decreasing in number due to modern building methods where all cracks and crevices are sealed. Thankfully this summer of fantastic weather has been good to them. Long may we enjoy their skyfest. We wish them well on their challenging journey southwards and look forward to their return next spring.

Tom Lynch,

Ennis, Co Clare

These screamers are no devil birds

Madam – The title “Scythe-shaped screamers” caught my eye in last week’s paper and, with it, came another enlightening article from Joe Kennedy’s Country Matters.

The screamers, of course, are our welcome summer visitor, the swift – the bird equivalent of a Japanese bullet train. The screaming, although shrill and piercing, does not cause alarm or fear. Rather it denotes all is well with nature.

Like Joe I have had the good fortune to rescue a bird which had temporally become grounded and I hope it brought me good luck!. ‘Devil Birds’ they most certainly are not.

Damien Boyd,

Cork

Cry of despair over Gaza war

Madam – I despair. I despair at the absence of courage among our World leaders. I despair reading the accounts by Norwegian Dr. Mads Gilbertof, who is battling to save innocent civilians in Gaza’s crumbling hospital. I despair looking at the countless pictures of lifeless children. They could be my children. I despair seeing the destruction of a people, by machines paid for by a great nation, one that values liberty and equality.

How can the Western World champion universal human rights and the rule of law while standing by watching the brutal deaths of civilians in Palestine? That I voice this opinion does not make me anti-Semitic. I do not condone the actions of Hamas.

Róisín Lawless,

Áth Buí,

Contae na Mí

The hypocrisy of calls for boycott

Madam – I am becoming more and more annoyed, frustrated and saddened by the daily clamour for boycotts of Israeli goods by every little organisation, disaffected person and trade union as a result of the war in Gaza.

I am not an apologist for Israel but the stench of hypocrisy from all the “anti-Israeli” voices in becoming rank and pitiful.

A friend just posted on Facebook that he is proud to be working for SuperValu/Musgraves as they had announced a boycott of Israeli goods, but he and Musgraves are not calling for a boycott of Syrian, Iranian or ISIS area goods and they are killing far more innocent people and kids in those areas than in Gaza.

There are as many reasons for what is happening in Gaza as there are proponents for each side. Israelis (Jews) grabbed the land after the Second World War (after being nearly exterminated in Europe), but not all of it Palestine – Palestine used also contain parts of what is now Egypt, Jordan and Syria, but nobody is calling for those areas to be returned.

The Israelis have maintained a blockade of Gaza for the last few years, to reduce the amount of weaponry reaching Hamas, who have sworn to annihilate each and every Jew – kids too.

I for one won’t be bullied by the loudest screamer demanding a boycott but I will be boycotting any retail outlet who announces their own boycott of Israeli goods and denying me my rightful choice – and that starts today with SuperValu.

Robert Daly,

Cork

Condemnation from here is easy

Madam – The Palestinian people are oppressed.No right thinking person can think otherwise. However they are as much if not more oppressed by Hamas as Israel.

Like so many peoples and nations their rulers are to blame for so much of their troubles. Like it or not, Israel was created as a state by the United Nations in 1948. Within hours it was invaded by all its neighbouring Arab countries with one intent – to wipe it off the map.

Israel is the only truly democratic country in the Middle East that gives all its citizens protected equal 
rights under its basic laws whether they be Jew, Muslim, Christian or Dissenter. It must 
be protected.

As time moves on people naturally tend to forget the horrendous murderous suffering the Jewish people endured as a race all through history. That hatred and murderous intent is still with us. Its easy from a distance to condemn Israel.

Thankfully Israel has a defence system that can and has destroyed most of the thousands of rockets that have been fired indiscriminately into Israel with one aim – to kill as many Israei citzens as possible.

John Naylor

Dublin 12

Do not fight in the name of God

Madam – We watched Simon Scharma on Charles I last evening and then we watched the news. Israelis, Muslims, all fighting in the name of God.

Oh, merciful God, save us from those who think they are inspired.

Cal Hyland,
West Cork

Sunday Independent


Rain

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11 August 2014 Rain

I jog around the park I still have arthritis in my left knee, but I manage to get round the park. A wettish day. I get some books

Scrabble Mary wins, but gets under just 400. perhaps I will win tomorrow.

Obituary:

Zohra Sehgal – obituary

Zohra Sehgal was an actress who helped to bring a burnish to Bollywood and a sparkle to The Jewel in the Crown

Zohra Sehgal

Zohra Sehgal Photo: REX

8:11PM BST 10 Aug 2014

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Zohra Sehgal, who has died aged 102, was a Bollywood actress who made her name internationally in films such as My Beautiful Laundrette (1985), Bend It Like Beckham (2002) and Bhaji on the Beach (1993).

She spent 25 years of her life in Britain, where she made her breakthrough with her portrayal of Daphne Manners’s “Aunt” Lili, Lady Chatterjee, in The Jewel in the Crown (1984) the BBC’s adaptation of Paul Scott’s Raj Quartet.

Lili Chatterjee is a Rajput noblewoman, the widow of a prominent Bengali industrialist and a leading figure in Indian society in the town of Mayapore. It is at a party at her home that Daphne (Susan Wooldridge) meets Hari Kumar (Art Malik), setting in motion the tragic course of events that shape the story, played out against the background of the last years of the British Raj and the Partition riots that followed.

Lady Chatterjee’s sympathy for Kumar, the young English-public-school-educated Indian out of place in his own country, is mixed with a strong element of disapproval of his developing relationship with Daphne — a sentiment related to something they both share: identities that blur the accepted social and ethnic divides.

Zohra Sehgal in The Jewel in the Crown (REX/ITV)

Zohra Sehgal was more than 70 years old when she played the role, and perhaps the subtlety of her portrayal owed something to the fact that throughout her own life she had steadfastly resisted the religious and cultural straitjackets that others sought to impose upon her.

The third of seven children, she was born Sahibzadi Zohra Begum Mumtaz-ullah Khan on April 27 1912 into a well-to-do Pathan family in Saharanpur, in what is now the northern Indian state of Uttar Pradesh. Although she was brought up, near Dehradun, in the Sunni Muslim tradition and lost the sight in one eye as an infant, she was determined from the outset to live life on her own terms.

“I saw my older sister, who was married off early, going through an unhappy marriage, and I told my father: ‘I don’t want to get married,’ ” she recalled. Her father was equally horrified when she announced that she might become a pilot.

In 1917 she was sent to boarding school in Lahore, after which, in 1930, she donned a burka and set off for Europe by road — crossing Iran, Syria, Palestine and Egypt — with her uncle, who had moved to Edinburgh to pursue a career in Medicine. There was a tacit understanding that she would marry his son, then an undergraduate at Oxford. Instead, she got off at Dresden where, though she had never danced, she was admitted to the Mary Wigman’s ballet school, a centre of new, expressionist dance in Weimar Germany. She stayed there for the next three years, living in the house of a German countess.

On her return to India, Zohra was sent to Queen Mary’s Girls College, Lahore, where strict purdah was observed, though such restrictions did not prevent her being inspired, by her many British women teachers, with the idea of women having careers.

In Dresden she had seen a performance of the dance troupe of Uday Shankar, brother of the sitar player Ravi Shankar. Uday was a pioneer of modern dance in India, fusing European and Indian classical and tribal dance traditions. He promised her a job and, after leaving school, she cast aside her burka and joined his troupe on a tour of Japan. For the next eight years she toured the world as one of Shankar’s principal dancers, and in 1940 became a teacher at his dance institute in Almora.

In 1942 she defied family disapproval and married Kameshwar Sehgal, a scientist, fellow dancer and Hindu eight years her junior. After the school in Almora closed down, she and her husband founded a cultural centre in Lahore, where they tried to promote understanding between Muslims and Hindus; but growing tensions in the run-up to Partition forced them to move to Bombay. There, in 1945, Zohra joined the Prithvi Theatre, a travelling company founded the previous year by Prithviraj Kapoor, the patriarch of the Kapoor acting dynasty, touring with them for 14 years.

She made her film debut in 1946, appearing in the Hindi film Dharti Ke Lal (Children of the Earth), the first venture of the film director Khwaja Ahmad Abbas, which was acclaimed for its searing depiction of the 1943 Bengal famine. Her second picture, Chetan Anand’s Neecha Nagar (1946, Lowly City), a pioneering work of social realism, became the first Indian film to gain international recognition after it shared the top prize at the first Cannes Film Festival.

Partition in 1947 split her family, with many members migrating to Pakistan — among them her sister Uzra, who would herself become known as an actress. Zohra was shocked. “I hated Pakistan. We all thought it was just a small thing,” she recalled.

In 1959 her husband committed suicide, leaving her to bring up their daughter and son on her own. After his death she moved to Delhi, where she taught dance to a Hindustani theatre group. In 1962, however, she won a drama scholarship to travel to Britain.

In her memoir Stages: The Art and Adventures of Zohra Sehgal (1996), she wrote about how, after her scholarship ended, she struggled to make ends meet as a dresser at the Old Vic, while taking small parts in the theatre and on television. In 1964 she appeared in a BBC adaptation of a Kipling story, The Rescue of Pluffles, and the same year made the first of two appearances, alongside William Hartnell, in Doctor Who (she would become the longest-lived actress ever to appear in the series).

In the 1970s, as the BBC began to grapple with multiculturalism, she began presenting programmes aimed at new migrants, and appeared in the 1977 serial Padosi (Hindustani for Neighbours). Her role as a former courtesan in James Ivory’s docudrama The Courtesans of Bombay (1982) helped to pave the way for her role in The Jewel in the Crown.

When Zohra Sehgal had first arrived in Britain, “it was such that if we were sitting in the bus, the British did not sit next to us. Unconsciously in the minds of white people, there was a hesitation. But after Jewel in the Crown, they would ask permission: ‘Lady Lili Chatterjee, may we sit next to you?’ Children would run up and ask for my autograph.”

In the 1980s she became a reliable fixture on many British Asian television productions, including Channel 4’s comedy series, Tandoori Nights (1985-87).

She was in her 80s by the time she moved back to India, but she went on to revive her career, playing salty old matriarchs in Hindi films, most notably in Cheeni Kum (2007), in which she played the mother of the Bollywood star Amitabh Bachchan.

Zohra Sehgal in Bhaji on the Beach in 1993 (ALLSTAR/SPORTSPHOTOLTD/FILM 4)

She continued to appear in English language films, often as the traditional Indian grandmother struggling to come to terms with a modern, alien culture as her children and grandchildren abandon the old ways. She was the disapproving elderly member of a party from a Birmingham women’s centre who gradually relaxes during an outing to Blackpool in Bhaji on the Beach, and a fun-loving grandmother in Bend It Like Beckham.

Zohra Sehgal, who described herself as “agnostic” (“Religion is only a book”) was known for her mischievous sense of humour. One friend recalled her claiming that she had to go home early from some outing because “My parrot’s waiting for me” — though everyone knew she never had a parrot (only a dog called Short Circuit). Asked in an interview last year what she had enjoyed most in life, the 101 year-old replied: “Sex! Sex! And more sex!”

Zohra Sehgal in Saawariya (2007)

She was nonplussed when her daughter Kiran, an Indian classical dancer, published her own memoir of her mother under the title Zohra Sehgal: Fatty. “I tell them, you see me now when I’m old and ugly, you should have seen me when I was young and ugly,” she said.

In 2012, she was happy to be photographed at her 100th birthday party, grinning toothily and brandishing a knife over the cake in the manner of Norman Bates.

Her children survive her.

Zohra Sehgal, born April 27 1912, died July 10 2014

Guardian:

I hope that no reader would disagree with your editorial (9 August) that attacks in western Europe on Jewish schools, shops and synagogues indicate “vile and contemptible racism” which “cannot be excused by reference to Israeli military behaviour”. But there are two issues which the editorial and Hadley Freeman (Please don’t tell me what I should think about Israel, 9 August) both ignore. One is that Palestinian civil society has called for a boycott, divestment and sanctions campaign against Israel as the best nonviolent way to oppose the occupation; the other is that the Israeli government requires touring arts companies to act as ambassadors for Israel and funds them accordingly.

These are the issues which Tricycle theatre was presumably trying to weigh up when it made its decision about the funding by the Israeli embassy of the Jewish film festival, in the middle of a brutal assault by Israel on Gaza. How you support the call for BDS is not straightforward – refuse to buy any Israeli goods, or just those from the settlements? – but you shouldn’t slate Tricycle for at least trying. The wider context is that Israel practises, and has done since 1948, “vile and contemptible racism” towards the Palestinians – in Israel itself, through the occupation, and in its refusal to recognise justice for the refugees. Israel may be “the Holocaust’s happy ending”, as Hadley says, but it is built on and sustained by terrible injustice. Perhaps the best summary is Edward Said’s, who said that the Palestinians are victims of victims. How to do something to help move towards a just outcome for both Israelis and Palestinians, based on human rights and equality for all, is one of the great issues of our time, and Tricycle in its small and perhaps fumbling way was at least trying to address it. It’s wrong to conflate their decisions with the fire-bombing of synagogues.
Richard Barnes
Windermere, Cumbria

• Excellent article by Dorian Lynskey on the artistic boycott of Israel (7 August). The idea that “art is intrinsically political” and so gives its practitioners the right to preach to others is not one which truly great artists would adopt or lesser folk should take notice of. I happen to think that Israel’s policy has been misguided for a long time and two wrongs do not a right make. But I have to ask when Sinead O’Connor and fellow boycotters are going to express concern about the enormously greater human suffering caused by the Syrian government and Isis, not to mention Islamic extremists in Nigeria and North Africa? Or to condemn the antisemitism reported by Jon Henley and your correspondents the same day (8 August)? It may make them feel good, but the treason of the would-be thinking classes is all too alive and ill. Might they start the day by reading the Hamas charter and deciding if it merits a boycott, too.
Jonathan Fenby
London

• It is sad to see someone normally as astute as Hadley Freeman criticise those of us who have called for a boycott of Israeli theatre groups and cultural activities in protest at the horrific violence being inflicted on the people of Gaza by the Israeli government and army (2,000 dead, more than 10,000 injured at the last count – a figure nowhere mentioned in Hadley’s piece). It is even sadder to see her repeat the old slander that such calls in response to the barbarous action of the Israeli government somehow involve being soft on, or even encouraging, antisemitism (“Watch yourself Europe, some of your roots are showing”).

As she must be aware, the Israeli government, like the South African apartheid government before it, is only too willing to use the cover of cultural activities to try to legitimise and normalise its brutal oppression of another people. Far from being a knee-jerk reaction, the recent call for a boycott of the theatre group Incubator at the Edinburgh Festival by a large group of people including national poet Liz Lochead, the writer Alasdair Gray and the group Scottish Jews for a Just Peace was a carefully considered and proportionate response to a group which is funded by the Israeli state. No one is telling Hadley what to think. The fact, however, that so many Jews around the world (including a small number of very courageous Israelis) have been prepared to stand up and say “not in my name” strengthens, not weakens, opposition to rising antisemitism across Europe.
Professor Iain Ferguson
Glasgow

• Heartfelt thanks to the Guardian for bringing sanity into this increasingly frightening situation for all Jews throughout Europe. With this kind of support from the British media we can perhaps hope that the madness of previous centuries will not be allowed to rise again and our growing fears for our children and grandchildren might prove unfounded. Racism in any form and by any name is unacceptable and cannot be explained away or disguised by the leftwing “intelligentsia” any more than by the rightwing neo-Nazis. As you rightly point out, this has nothing to do with politics, and one’s opinion on the Middle East is a totally separate issue. Having read your editorial today I can feel happy once again that my grandparents chose this country for refuge from persecution in eastern Europea hundred years ago and am reassured that here reason and tolerance will again prevail.
Helen Mordsley
London

• As members of Independent Jewish Voices, we support the Tricycle theatre’s decision not to accept Israeli embassy funding for the Jewish film festival and we reject accusations that this decision is in any way antisemitic. The Tricycle is taking a principled stand regarding a bloody conflict, for which they should be applauded. In addition, by offering to make up the shortfall of monies that would have come from the Israeli embassy, the Tricycle has demonstrated its continued support for the festival, which it has hosted in Kilburn for the past eight years.
Merav Pinchassoff, Prof Adam Fagan, Dr Nadia Valman, Prof Jacqueline Rose, Lady Ellen Dahrendorf, Emma Clyne, Dr Anthony Isaacs and Ann Jungman
Independent Jewish Voices steering group

• Whatever the facts about the rise in antisemitism in Europe – and it is clearly taking place – there are two points that must be made about Jon Henley’s article. First, in his eagerness to list as many incidents as possible, he conflates antisemitism with anti-Israel protests, by including the burning of an Israeli flag and hostility to an Israeli football team, which are not, by definition, antisemitic. Second, in talking about anti-Jewish protests, he fails to mention the fact that in recent years Israel has vigorously promoted itself as “the Jewish state”, even insisting that the Palestinians recognise it as such, although its population is 20% Palestinian Arab. Israel and Jews can hardly complain that the actions of the self-identified Jewish state are sometimes criticised as Jewish actions.
Karl Sabbagh
Author, Palestine: A Personal History

The advances by Isis across parts of northern Iraq are blowback from US intervention in Iraq and the Middle East in general (Report, 9 August). Isis has been able to move across areas so quickly because of the lack of justice for various groups in Iraq and Syria and some old remnants of Saddam’s regime wanting influence again through a temporary alliance with a jihadist grouping. Western reporting has been alarmist and stereotypical of any group which is opposed to US and western interests. The temporary gains by Isis would fade very quickly if Sunni tribal leaders in Iraq were brought into serious discussion about the future of the area. In Syria, all western powers should stop intervening at will. This may lead to its disintegration, but this may be the only realistic future. The Palestinian catastrophe must be addressed. Alternatively Obama can drop bombs and hope for the best; I think his predecessors tried this.
Derek Fraser
Manchester

• Religion is the cause and not the symptom of this nightmare in Iraq (This nightmare is not a holy war but an unholy mess, 9 August). When these people say they want an Islamic caliphate they actually mean it. The fact that there happen to be power vacuums is good fortune. Military strategy is not to be confused with overriding motives.
Henry Bradshaw
London

• What a blessing it is that Messrs Bush and Blair brought lasting peace and democracy to Iraq.
Ross Johnson
Worthing, West Sussex

Bookshop shelves

While it is always good to see reviews of the quality of writing in forthcoming novels (Legends of the fall, Review, 9 August), the material quality of the books themselves rarely get a mention. It cannot escape reviewers notice that, whilst the cover price goes up, the physical quality of new novels is pathetically poor. The cheapest paper and cheapest bindings are used, leaving the reader with an item that will not survive in pristine form for very long. Collectors of first editions will return to their shelves in a couple of years to find the pages yellow and the bindings brittle. It seems a shame that while the quality of the writing will last, the books themselves may not.
Guy Cooper
Scarthin Books, Cromford, Derbyshire

• Twenty-two life peers have been appointed (Report, 9 August). If they all attend for 100 days a year and claim their daily allowance, travelling expenses etc, the cost to the taxpayer will be in the region of £750.000. The prime minister, when proposing to reduce the size of the Commons, claimed he was wanting to reduce the cost of politics.
Councillor Brian Selby
Leeds

• My cat is a true socialist (Letters, 9 August). He believes in claws four.
Veronica Porter
London

• Our retired greyhound is the only one in the household to have private health insurance.
Sarah Reed
Bourne, Lincolnshire

• War (Syria, Iraq, Libya, Gaza, Ukraine etc), famine (Sudan etc) and death (Ebola) – is this the run-up to the Apocalypse?
Michael Miller
Sheffield

Independent:

From the perspective of international human rights law, all countries have the same legal obligations to protect the human rights of their citizens, irrespective of their mode of governance.

Democracies do a vastly better job of doing so than any other form of government. Indeed, as a democracy, Israel does provide strong protections of a wide range of civil and political liberties, such as freedom of religion, expression and assembly, protection of the rights of women, and democratic participation along with social and economic rights.

Archie Bland (7 August) argues that a higher standard of behaviour is expected of Israel. This is wrong legally and wrong morally.

Low expectations of non-democratic countries enable dictatorships that systematically and egregiously violate the rights of their citizens to thrive. Individuals living in such repressive states are only likely to have realistic hope for change in their societies when the same universal standard of human rights is demanded of their leaders and countries as is of democracies.

Not to do so is to consider those individuals, many of whom have clamoured for freedom in the Arab Spring revolts, as less rights-bearing and less deserving of freedom than those living in democracies.

Noam Schimmel, New College, Oxford

Andrew Brown (letter, 9 August) asks whether those calling for an arms ban on Israel will also be asking for a similar ban on all the Gulf states funding Islamist extremism, including Saudi Arabia.

Abso-bally-lutely! It’s human rights abuses we object to, whoever they are carried out by. That and the hypocrisy of our government, which promotes arms sales then wrings its hands when the arms are used.

Come and join us on the demos, Mr Brown.

Bill Linton, London N13

I was petitioning in Dalston, east London, for Gaza recently, when an elderly lady stopped to sign the petition to lift the blockade and for sanctions against Israel.

An agitated young man in a kippah rushed up and started repeatedly screaming “You should be ashamed of yourself!” at her before he stormed off.

“Ignore him,” she said calmly. “He’s my grandson.”

Not every Jewish person is a Zionist – even in the same family. It’s not anti-Semitic to be anti-Zionist.

Sasha Simic, London N16

Children in an art gallery

Unlike Sharman Steel’s seven-year-old pupil (letter, 9 August) I never wanted to be Jackson Pollock, but after a teenage school visit to the Tate I felt moved by Turner’s sea pieces, and never got over it.

A couple of years ago, in the Prado in Madrid, I stood among a crowd of school children before Velázquez’s Las Meninas – some of the children sitting, some lying on the floor, some in wheelchairs, some vocally cogent, some with “special educational needs”.

These Spanish kids were acting as well as they could the parts of the figures in the painting: the royal couple; the small blonde princess; the maids of honour; the two dwarf attendants; the brush-wielding painter.

I was grateful to be not just in front of a great work of art but in the presence of children being wonderfully affected by it.

Anthony Bailey, Mersea Island, Essex

Blair’s debt to the people of Iraq

In response to the many criticisms on his illegal war in Iraq, Tony Blair has always responded that history will vindicate him.

History is unfolding in the most cruel fashion imaginable in Iraq now, not at all in a manner that he had foolishly imagined.

I suggest that Tony Blair should have the guts to  emerge from his hideout to contribute some of his many millions towards humanitarian aid in Iraq. This would be but a drop of conscience money.

And he should also use his oft-touted comfortable special relationship with George W Bush to urge his accomplice to do likewise.

Rosa Wei-Ling Chang, Sheffield

President Obama is careful to cite the fact that the Iraqi authorities requested US assistance by way of air strikes in their fight against Isis, going on to point out: “When we have the unique capabilities to help avert a massacre, then I believe the United States of America cannot turn a blind eye.”

Perhaps Hamas should pick up the telephone and sound him out about Gaza.

Jeremy Redman, London SE6

Secrets of success in business

With regard to business secrets (letter, 8 August), the best advice I ever received was from a retired retailer: “Empty shelves don’t sell; there’s no such thing as bad stock, only stock that’s too expensive; and if you’ve got a manager who puts most of the takings in the till, praise the Lord!”

Roger Hewell, Holcombe Somerset

Referendum squabbles baffle young Scots

We have had a fascinating two weeks in Scotland, travelling right up to the north of the Outer Hebrides. We took a straw poll as we went, asking people how they were going to vote next month. Of 17 we asked, the numbers of answers “Yes”/ “No”/ “Don’t Know” were 3/7/7.

Only men said “Yes”. Several of our contacts were business owners, and they all said how independence was an impediment that they simply did not want. An IT consultant said he would lose 50 per cent of his business overnight, and, correspondingly, 50 per cent of his employees.

But we were struck again and again by the “Don’t Knows”, many of whom were young people, who were genuinely frightened for their futures, and who simply don’t know enough about the issues.

They said they needed simple, unbiased information so that they could understand how they will be affected. We were in Scotland the night of the first televised debate, and what a disaster we found it.

It may be so important to Alex Salmond that Alistair Darling does, or does not, agree with David Cameron, but I could not help thinking that, so far as the young people we met were concerned, this is simply not what they need to know.

How hard it is for them to make a cool, logical decision if their politicians simply shout at each other. What a wasted opportunity.

Gillian Perkins, Cambridge

I fully understand your anxiety at the possibility of Scotland choosing to be independent and breaking up the Union. But there is a consequence which you have not yet considered. The SNP is determined to remove Trident from the Clyde soon after Scotland becomes independent. What would that mean ?

The Ministry of Defence would inform Westminster that the cost of creating a new facility for storing and servicing Trident submarines and missiles would be enormous – and politically difficult. Who wants that in their backyard?

The choice would be:  (a) cancelling huge projects for new railways, new cities and technology innovation,  reducing the size of the Army, Navy and RAF even more than already planned; or (b) blame Alex Salmond and abandon Trident as the basis of British national defence. A face-saving presence of a few nuclear weapons on airfields could be comforting to the right wing.

This would be a bitter pill to swallow for any Tory government, but privately many would be relieved. A surprising number of retired generals and admirals  have never liked our present policy of having an unusable weapon in a modern world where the greatest danger may come from within cities in the UK. The Treasury would rejoice at the release of billions of pounds for stimulating the economy.

Above all, blame the Scots! Does that possibility have some attractions in the real world?

Ainslie Walton, Glasgow

Let those on both sides of the Border who seem to fear dire consequences, should Scotland vote Yes in a few weeks’ time, rest at ease. Those who are our neighbours now will still be our neighbours, with no reason for estrangement.

Those who wish to reclaim Scotland’s identity as a fully self-governing nation do indeed believe we will be “better together”, but as independent fellow members of the various international bodies to which nationhood would entitle us, including the United Nations, the Commonwealth and the European Union.

We will still have many common interests with our neighbours: rather than be weakened by division, let us consider the possibility that, yes, when it really matters, two voices will be stronger than one.

Aonghas Macneacail, Carlops, Peeblesshire

The “No” campaign has benefited greatly by celebs from elsewhere in the UK saying, “Please stay.” So should Alex Salmond be drumming up support for the “Yes” campaign by finding another group to say: “Please go”?

Roger Allen, Nottingham

TimesSir, Melanie Phillips misses the point (“You’re not getting the real truth about Gaza”, Aug 4). Ever since the start of the Israeli incursion into Gaza, we knew Hamas would use UN schools, hospitals and flats to hide and fire its weapons. It’s also safe to assume that Gazans have been killed by Hamas rockets and that Hamas manipulates public opinion. However, these are the very facts that Israel’s defence strategy must take into account when responding. Can a country with an intelligence service as skilled and resourceful as Israel’s not find, in 2014, a better way of disabling those attacking it with rockets and through tunnels than shelling guilty and innocent alike?

Professor Anthony Glees
University of Buckingham

Sir, Melanie Phillips wrote that “Israel has stuck to every ceasefire; Hamas has broken every one”. How chastening it must be for her to read your headline the next day: “Israel admits it broke Gaza truce”.

John Samuel
Coulton N Yorks

Sir, Melanie Phillips supports a two-state solution between Israel and Palestine in theory, because she believes the West Bank would turn into an Islamist Iranian proxy state overnight, but she does not support an independent Palestine. I think that she should be more worried about Isis than Iran — and neither Hamas nor Iran support Isis. Israel has been illegally expanding its territories ever since 1948, firstly by occupying Gaza, the West Bank and the Golan Heights in 1967, and by the spread of settlements across the West Bank. Cynically, Israel plans to continue building houses in the Arab areas that it illegally occupies and it continues to imprison Gazans in concentration camp conditions. Melanie Phillips chastises some of our politicians for condemning the Israeli slaughter of Gazan civilians, simply on the alleged basis that Hamas is deliberately sacrificing its civilians.

That policy will lead to a new generation of what she and Israel may call terrorists, but others freedom fighters.

Richard Waughman
Cambridge

Sir, What Melanie Phillips says about Gaza and Hamas may be true, but it is only the tip of the iceberg. Until Israel’s leadership stops bullying its neighbours and illegally trying to take over the final 20 per cent of Palestine, ie, the West Bank, there will be no peace, as it is not in Israel’s interests. Palestinians will only recognise Israel if it withdraws to its 1948/1967 borders, in accordance with several UN resolutions ignored by Israel, backed by the US.

J Swift
Crawley, Sussex

Sir, There are many parallels between the plight of the Palestinians and that of black South Africans under apartheid, the main one being that a whole people were made to feel second class and with very limited rights and next to no hope. In South Africa the response to the Sharpeville Riots — when 69 people were shot — seemed to mark a turning point when world opinion began to think that things had to change. Will the attacks on Gaza — in which 1,700 have been killed — mark a similar turning point?

Robin Woodd
Hemel Hempstead, Herts

Sir, Those lining up to condemn Israel should recall who danced in celebration when Londoners were slaughtered on their streets by Islamic extremists.

Kenneth Herman
Somerton, Somerset

Sir, It not fair to describe UK foreign policy towards the Middle East — and Israel in particular, which faces a threat from a terrorist group bent on its destruction — as “morally indefensible”. However, Baroness Warsi’s resignation highlights the dilemmas which abound in this area, and not all on the Western side. I do not think it politically impossible for the UK to back Israel’s efforts to defend itself, but be able still to say that decisions which target a known Hamas threat of an individual or weapons store with the certainty or extreme risk that deaths of civilians, especially children, will result, are wrong. Subsequent claims that Hamas is solely responsible for such consequences compounds an inexplicable moral judgement, and leaves high ground, absurdly, for the terrorist.

I tried over the past four years to advise Israelis and the Palestinian Authority that unless the chance of a second-term US president to revive the Middle East peace process was taken seriously, sooner or later something would happen which would run out of control. I also told both that support for them without progress was wearying among friends.

Gaza will not be settled without an overall agreement. The efforts and restraint of President Abbas and the West Bank, despite imperfections in the PA, deserves recognition; Hamas’s few remaining friends must tell it its war is over, and both Palestinians and Israel must make the concessions they knows they have to make to secure the peace, security and prosperity its own children have died for. It is not too late. But it soon will be.

Alistair Burt, MP
Minister for the Middle East 2010-13

Sir, As Islamic nations embrace their own battles against militant Islamic terrorist groups, it is perhaps a good thing that Baroness Warsi has resigned from our government. Their fight could easily become ours, given the terrorist group’s methods of infiltration and attack. Britain needs to know that our government is united in its resolve to resist terrorist tactics, in whatever form it takes, wherever that might be. Although we may march on the streets of Britain in support of Hamas, with little understanding of what the word ‘Palestine ‘ really means, Arab nations do not share our sympathy.

Barbara Etchells
Horsham, W Sussex

:

Sir, Baroness Warsi was right to resign. For at least part of her tenure as a Minister for Foreign Affairs, the UK gave large sums, via the EU, to Gaza for the benefit of its citizens. Her department should accept some responsibility for how that money was spent, not on roads, buildings or hospitals, but on building tunnels for the purpose of entering and attacking Israel.

Barrington Black
London NW3

Is it time to address the whole subject of state education properly and in depth?

Sir, The retiring head master of Eton describes our failing education system as “Victorian” (“Our relentless exam system deserves to fail”, August 7). He could better have described it as Thatcherian.

Everything we have now was constructed some 30 years ago without any debate as to the purpose of state provision. Should it be to service the needs of industry and commerce, or to foster personal growth? What is the place of spiritual awareness in a national system, when the RE syllabus is designed locally? What about the transmission of the culture to the next generation, which has only now come to the fore, and when no one knows what “British” values are? If personal and social relationships are to be emphasised, why were primary school governors allowed to decide whether sex education should take place? Cookery was replaced by food technology, which involved almost no production of food. The curriculums for English and maths have been scrapped and completely rewritten at least three times. Ofsted inspection of an average primary school used to involve half a dozen inspectors for a week; now it’s a couple, for a day or two. Course work in GCSEs is out, to be replaced by end of course exams. Our cumbersome special educational needs provision was devised by a committee led by Lady Warnock. She later described their deliberations as “naive to the point of idiocy”. A new system will be in place in a couple of months

Subsequent ministers have tinkered with bits and pieces, but aren’t around to answer for their results, as the average shelf life of that postholder is in the region of two and a half years.

In the 1970s James Callaghan’s great debate sought to address the whole issue of the philosophy of the state education system, to little apparent effect. Is now the time to try again?

David Brown

Pontefract, W Yorks

Sir, It’s ironic that employers and the CBI should be calling for “rounded and grounded young people”. What do they think schools are intent on providing for the labour force but exactly that? Since we are all in such striking agreement about what matters, it cannot be beyond us to dismantle the unhelpful emphasis on a limited and unimaginative exam system. The Times could take an influential first step by refraining from publishing exam performance tables this summer and instead cover some of the worthwhile projects young people have been involved in during the long break. The academic year could begin with a healthy rebalancing of priorities.

Clarissa Farr

High Mistress

St Paul’s Girls’ School, London

Sir, The Victorian era is far too many-sided to be used by the head master of Eton, supported by Jenni Russell to characterise the defects of our educational system. Indeed, if we take the varying views on English education adopted by the German educationist Dr Ludwig Wiese.

In the 1850s we find the good doctor complaining of the “reign of caprice and chaos” with the English terrified of bureaucracy and authoritative state guidance. By the 1870s Dr Wiese is calling as it were for a good Prussian top-down authoritarian regime in the schools. Surely he would have admired Mr Gove’s reforms?

Peter Wood

Stainton, Cumbria

We remember those who died in the war, but what about the crippled and the maimed who lived on in pain?

Sir, Amid the heartfelt tributes to the fallen of the First World War over the past weeks, there is another group that we should honour too.

They did grow old as we that were left grew old, Age did weary them and the years condemn — they returned, many maimed and crippled for life. I remember our grandfather, gassed as a teenager and his lungs partially destroyed, gasping for breath for his remaining 50 years.

Pat Notley

Hunston Suffolk

Prostate screening could be better and cheaper, but cancer screening in general is never 100 per cent reliable

Sir, I took the prostate screening test (Aug 7) when enrolling with a GP. It showed high PSA levels, and I was referred to a consultant who offered a biopsy. This carries some risk and can miss a tumour, so I opted instead for a better test, PCA3, which is carried out on a urine sample and so is simple and risk free. It does not claim to be 100 per cent accurate but is believed to be an improvement over the PSA test. It is not available from the NHS so I had it privately. It indicated a low probability of cancer, which was confirmed by an MRI scan. The scan did indicate an enlarged prostate, not a major problem. I would ask why is this test not available from the NHS?

I was also invited to take part in a colon cancer screening programme and provided samples for several years, all negative. One year following the last sample I was diagnosed with colon cancer and had surgery to remove a large tumour. Six months of chemotherapy failed to prevent a secondary tumour, but my surgeon is reasonably confident that this too can be removed, which should effect a cure. I have seen little about the effectiveness of this screening programme, which in my case failed to give the essential early indication. I await more surgery.

Jeff Puttick

As night follows day, so reports of bumper harvests are followed by intimations of doom and despair

Sir, Your report (Aug 8) on the early, heavy harvest is accurate but gives an erroneous impression that farmers will enjoy a bumper financial reward. Yields will be good, but prices have dropped dramatically in the past year — prices for the main cereal crops have almost halved since the peak in December 2012. Costs of production have remained static or, as a result of the blackgrass problem, have risen, so an average lowland farm producing 1,200 tonnes of cereals is likely to see net profits falling by over £40,000. Livestock prices are also down and the traditional “down corn, up horn” model is not evident. Farmers are often accused of “crying wolf” but on this occasion it is justified.

David Missen

Themelthorpe, Norfolk

Baby-boomer generation should not add to its faults the bad habit of appropriating the achievements of other eras

Sir, Deborah Ross (“Scumbag baby boomer? That’s me”, Aug 8) claims achievements for the baby boomers which should be credited to people born well outside her 1945-65 window. The pill to Gregory Pincus (b 1903), the internet to Bob Kahn (b 1938), the mobile phone, as Ms Ross notes, to Martin Cooper (b 1928), IVF to Sir Robert Edwards (b 1935). Even comprehensive schools, introduced as Ms Ross says in 1965, were brought in by Anthony Crosland (b. 1918) when even the oldest baby boomer was barely out of education themselves. Should we add shameless attempts to grab others’ achievements to the list of “scumbag” baby boomers’ sins?

Thomas Barry

Tunbridge Wells, Kent

Telegraph:

SIR – The Mayor of London is considering standing as an MP, intending, if elected, to do both jobs. The mayoral post has a salary of £137,579; while the parliamentary salary is £67,060.

These posts should be full-time, serving the constituents. If they can be done on a part-time basis, presumably half of each salary should be returned?

Steve Mitchell
Rothley, Leicestershire

SIR – If David Cameron, or any other prime minister, can do his job and be an MP as well, what is the problem with Boris being Mayor of London and an MP?

David McIntosh
Great Missenden, Buckinghamshire

SIR – One of the reasons people voted for Boris Johnson for Mayor of London was his promise that he would not, unlike Ken Livingstone, take on another job during his term of office.

Edward Huxley
Thorpe, Surrey

SIR – Boris Johnson has some odd ideas on marriage but otherwise he is that unusual combination of intellectual heavyweight and popular performer. His bumbling, dishevelled persona hides a clarity of thought and genuine Conservative principles which seem totally absent in the present Tory leadership.

Ironically it is David Cameron whose electoral prospects could improve by the presence of someone who differs so much from himself.

Rodney Atkinson
Stocksfield, Northumberland

SIR – When Boris Johnson returns to Parliament next year and the inevitable leadership challenge follows soon after, it will be the blond Goliath who prevails over David.

Dominic Shelmerdine
London SW3

SIR – If Boris Johnson has ambitions to become Prime Minister one day, he should buy a comb and start using it now.

Ted Shorter
Hildenborough, Kent

Nato and the EU

SIR – Following Nato’s apparent hibernation, during which time strife came to Gaza, Ukraine, Syria, Iraq and Libya, the Supreme Allied Commander Europe’s statement of resolve and preparedness from the heart of Belgium’s old battlefields is reassuring (Letters, August 3).

Whether the 28 nations’ politicians can match that determination remains to be seen. The events of 1989 promised almost to negate the alliance’s raison d’être. Yet despite much talk of developing a European Union military capability, response to subsequent crises fell largely to Nato.

Recent meddling in Ukraine did nothing to boost faith in an EU long on bluster but wholly lacking in Shape’s “decades of integration of core defence staff”. Indeed, the EU’s pursuit of unelected, central power seems the antithesis of independence and those shared values which our formerly sovereign states paid so dearly to guard.

Robert Stephenson
Henley-on-Thames, Oxfordshire

Grey’s reputation

SIR – Edward Grey, the Foreign Secretary in 1914, was a man who hated war. He should not be described as “one of the architects of the disaster” of the First World War.

Germany was intent on marching through Belgium, whose integrity had been guaranteed by large European states, including Britain. Grey believed that Britain should honour this guarantee, if only for her own reputation, and the Cabinet agreed.

As for Grey’s “repellent belief in his own decency”, what is repellent in believing one has acted decently? He was certainly aware of the talks between General Wilson and the French military for the better organisation of British troops to be sent to France, but always insisted that the Cabinet must be informed before any action was taken. He in no way committed Britain to enter the war.

A B Ingledow
Camberley, Surrey

Scottish pipedream

SIR – Apropos this week’s “debate” on Scottish independence, it strikes me that Alex Salmond is propounding a plan not for independence but for a change of dependence, retaining those aspects of the Union that he can’t do without.

Scottish independence is a pipedream, and it’s probably not tobacco in the pipe.

David Thomas
Llandybie, Carmarthenshire

SIR – Of the four nations in the UK, Scotland has contributed far more than its fair share, yet gets back far less than it deserves.

Take oil: it’s mostly in Scottish waters yet oil revenue is spread across the whole of the UK economy.

Ron Pearse
Watford, Hertfordshire

SIR – After 25 years my eldest son has moved out. It was sad but it would have ultimately caused me more pain and expense if he had stayed and I wish him every happiness.

I find myself experiencing similar emotions about Scottish independence.

Jonathan Cox
Sandhurst, Berkshire

Strange journey

SIR – On the subject of strange commuter journeys undertaken by television characters (Letters, August 3), how come Bart and Lisa Simpson go to school on a yellow bus but come home on a skateboard and bicycle?

Rhoda Lewis
London N14

Don’t dictate what to sell in NHS cafés

SIR – The spiralling rate of obesity in this country is of huge concern and has to be addressed in a clinically intelligent manner.

However, as an ex-NHS catering manager, I wish to defend the service offered by many of the high-street quality coffee outlets on NHS premises. They provide an excellent service for patients and their relatives and a welcoming reprieve from the austere facade of a typical hospital.

There is a good argument for increasing the range of healthier options in all catering outlets, but not for arbitrary, Big Brother-style restrictions.

It surely remains the right of individuals to decide whether they wish to have a chocolate muffin or a piece of fruit with their cappuccino as part of a balanced diet.

Billy Cunningham
Ayr

SIR – Rather than suggesting that NHS managers become food police, Simon Stevens, the head of NHS England, would do much better to stick to the simple message that if you are going to choose a sweetened drink, then it is far better to have one made with low-calorie sweeteners.

This would make the biggest difference to public health at minimal cost to the Treasury, with no need for legislation or the diversion of precious NHS resources towards sampling the menus on their premises.

Chris Whitehouse
Totland Bay, Isle of Wight

The wretched of Gaza

SIR – The conflict in Gaza will never be resolved until the basic needs of the Palestinians have been taken into account. These wretched people cannot, year after year, generation after generation, be expected to live and die as displaced persons. Common humanity forbids it.

The problem will only be solved when the Jews, the most intellectually and spiritually gifted people in the world, whose religion is based, above all, on justice, realise that it incumbent on them to take the moral lead. Killing and maiming defenceless women and children is not the answer. Such atrocities simply play into the hands of Hamas.

Edward Celiz
Holt, Norfolk

Give ’em an inch

SIR – During the Commonwealth Games I shuddered to hear the commentator say, about a triple-jump competitor, “That was millimetre-perfect”.

Soon, no doubt, in running events, it will be correct to “go a country kilometre”.

John Buggins
Sutton Coldfield, Warwickshire

SIR – Michael Vaughan writes that there is not much wrong with sledging and that it is a useful weapon in the bowler’s armoury.

Why then, if it so much part of the game, is it not clearly audible to the spectators?

Chris Harding
Parkstone, Dorset

SIR – Sledging seems to be the antithesis of sportsmanship. How can abusing your opponents be an acceptable part of sport? Could you imagine tennis players insulting each other when they change ends, or golfers taunting each other between holes? Is this the way to introduce children to sport?

Jane Bubb
Esher, Surrey

SIR – I am grateful to Geoffrey Boycott for his condemnation of sledging. While Michael Vaughan and others try to defend the indefensible, sledging brings nothing but shame and disgrace on the players that indulge in it.

Back in the Fifties, cricketers played with passion without having to resort to cheating by goading and intimidating opponents. The time is long overdue for the cricketing authorities to stamp out this vile behaviour.

John O’Neill
Harrow, Middlesex

SIR – Contrary to the assertion of Frank D J Smith, a retired town planner (Letters, August 3), I believe planners have much to answer for, having dealt with them over 30 years in many local planning authorities.

They usually have no design training and yet impose their own aesthetic views on developments. It can be almost impossible to have a rational discussion with some of them, while others can be obstructive from the beginning.

Clients, particularly those who are less well-funded, often cave in to them to avoid refusal and appeal costs, with appeals being an absolute lottery, dependant upon which inspector is appointed. This often results in poor-quality development – which is what planning policies specifically try to avoid.

The whole planning and appeal process requires a radical overhaul: as it stands, it’s not fit for purpose.

Arthur Bayley
Tyldesley, Lancashire

SIR – Frank D J Smith, a seasoned local authority town planner, blames politicians for meddling in a subject that he feels should be left to the professionals.

This “We know better” attitude is, sadly, rife amongst planning officers in local government. Left unchecked, it will result in town planning being taken out of the democratic process, as well as undermining the Government’s ability to manage economic and social policies across the nation.

The Government is therefore right to seek to counter this both through the National Planning Policy Framework and the recent modifications to permitted development rights.

There is nothing in this legislation permitting design or environmental standards to be compromised. At its most basic, all this legislation does is remove a number of arcane and damaging misconceptions that have spread over the years among local authority planning officers: proof that planning cannot be left to local authority professionals alone.

Richard Thirkell
Groombridge, East Sussex

SIR – In claiming that the nation has changed its attitude to planning thanks to the Government’s NPPF, Brandon Lewis, the new planning minister, would seem to be as naïve as his predecessor, Nick Boles.

The people of the Ribble Valley are under siege from developers seeking approval for speculative schemes, either from the local council or planning inspectors at appeal.

It is the NPPF that is ensuring that they succeed. It is not true that “local people have a bigger say over where housing goes”, as Mr Lewis claims. The Neighbourhood Plan only provides for sites where housing should go over and above the targets being set by the Government and enforced by the Planning Inspectorate. People are tired of being told half-truths or untruths. They are waiting for the election to have their say.

Nick Walker
Whalley, Lancashire

SIR – Alyson Persson (Letters, August 3) need not be quite so depressed about the planning process. If developers, having had plans turned down by the local authority, then appeal and have the decision reversed, this is not the end of the road for the local community.

Here in Shropshire, a group of local residents sought a judicial review when trying to prevent a wind turbine being built in the village. The judge found in our favour. The case was sent back to the Inspectorate for redetermination and the developer’s original appeal was eventually refused. The wind turbine was not built and, so far, the case has contributed to the withdrawal of plans for about 10 other turbines in this beautiful, unspoilt corner of Shropshire.

Pamela Wheeler
Kenley, Shropshire

SIR – Why should Alyson Persson or anyone else be afraid of being accused of Nimbyism? Much of what people do not want in their own back yard could be avoided if everyone were Nimbys. The country might be the better for it.

J F Lambert
Liverpool

Irish Times:

Sir, – President Higgins’s comments on his idea of republicanism, in his interview with Stephen Collins (August 5th), deserves a lot more coverage and analysis. It could hardly be more timely as interested parties wave “the flag we republicans claim” in the run-up to 1916 commemorations.

Each faction, from the handful who tried to roar down the President at Glasnevin, to Éirígí, via Sinn Féin to Fianna Fáil – The Republican Party, presents itself as the true, sole inheritor of the title republican. None seems capable of the breadth, depth or generosity of President Higgins’s perspective. He rightly rejects the notion that “nationalist” and “republican” are interchangeable and speaks of a “true republicanism [with] a glowing centre of egalitarianism”.

Most challenging for many of your recent correspondents is his suggestion that it cannot be truly republican “to ignore the deaths, the injuries and the families of the working people of Ireland and Britain who were sucked into” the first World War. His intention to expand on his notion of republicanism gives hope that in the middle of so much vacuous sloganeering and balderdash, there may be room for some reflection – and reassessment. – Yours, etc,

PADDY McGOVERN,

Clarence Mangan Road,

Dublin 8

Sir, – The recent debate between John Bruton, Éamon Ó Cuív and others over how necessary, or otherwise, the 1916 rising was for achieving independence may be focusing on the wrong event.

One of the benefits of the historical analysis that has accompanied recent commemorations of the start of the first World War is that it has allowed events leading up to foundation of the State to be viewed against a wider global backdrop.

In this context it would appear that first World War was the event that killed home rule and led to the violent path to independence. It has to be remembered that the 1916 rising was staged by the IRB and the Irish Citizens Army as a response to Britain going to war with the Central Powers.

Also, another war-related issue, the 1918 conscription crisis, served to undermine home rule and contribute to the rise in support for Sinn Féin and full independence.

Finally, a war-weary Britain probably did not have the stomach for the repressive measures necessary to quell the rebellion associated with the War of Independence and was therefore amenable to granting something that went beyond home rule.

Another noteworthy thing arises from viewing events in this broader context. When the great and the good, along with devout nationalists and possibly some members of the British royal family, gather on O’Connell Street in late April 2016, they will in effect be commemorating another battle of the First World War – in this case one fought on Irish soil. – Yours, etc,

ROBERT HALLIGAN,

The Friary,

Castledermot,

Co Kildare

Sir,– Prof Ian O’Donnell’s article on death row (Opinion & Analysis, August 8th)is erudite, compassionate and enlightened. It is intriguing that prisoners develop coping mechanisms while on death row but, overall, capital punishment is still cruel, unusual and barbaric.

Amnesty International reports that, despite positive moves towards abolition in many parts of the world, the number of reported executions rose by almost 15 per cent in 2013. In that year at least 778 people were executed worldwide. This figure excludes the numbers executed in China, which are estimated to be in the thousands. Almost 80 per cent of reported executions occurred in Iran, Iraq and Saudi Arabia.

Japan and the US were the only G8 countries to perform executions in 2013. Even in the US, the practice is in decline: Maryland became the 18th abolitionist state in May 2013. Nevertheless, there were 39 executions in the US last year, in Alabama (1), Arizona (2), Florida (7), Georgia (1), Ohio (3), Oklahoma (6), Missouri (2), Virginia (1) and Texas (16).

Our research group at UCD (with Dr Sharon Foley) has demonstrated that, in Texas, execution is usually preceded by over 10 years spent on death row, with strong evidence of prisoners experiencing high levels of psychological suffering. Most have mental illness and virtually all have histories of severe head injury. The suicide rate on death row is up to five times that of the general US male population.

While prisoners who are executed have usually been convicted of exceptionally cruel and unusual crimes, resulting in death and inestimable suffering, it is utterly illogical and morally repugnant to use such cruel and unusual acts as justification for further cruel and unusual acts, such as killing the prisoner. In addition, the possibility of judicial error is as real as it is horrific.

Against this background, recent hand-wringing in the US over what are perceived to be cruel and unusual execution methods appears to be a primitive defence mechanism used to protect human consciences from an even more cruel, unusual and utterly irreducible fact: another human is being killed. – Yours, etc,

PROF BRENDAN KELLY,

Department of

Adult Psychiatry,

University College,

Dublin

Sir, – Noel Leahy (August 7th) scoffs at the comparison made by David Stewart between Israeli control of the occupied territories and the apartheid system in pre-1992 South Africa.

Mr Leahy obviously is an authority in this area and no doubt knows best. But what other word better describes a situation where two peoples dwell on the same land yet are forcibly segregated from each other, and where one group dominates the other?

When Nelson Mandela and Desmond Tutu visited the holy lands they immediately recognised the Israeli apartheid system, and called it as such, as have many prominent Israelis, including a former attorney general, scholars, legislators, newspaper editors and representatives of human rights organisations.

Mr Leahy might read Jimmy Carter’s book entitled Palestine: Peace Not Apartheid, in which the former president also clearly identifies the Israeli apartheid system.

But Mr Leahy might be able to set him straight on this. – Yours, etc,

GERARD FINN,

Kelly’s Bay Moorings,

Skerries,

Co Dublin

Sir, – Observing Saturday’s march to the Israeli embassy, one thing was noticeable by its absence: calls for Hamas to accept a ceasefire. In the last few days Hamas has continued to reject ceasefire proposals and has persisted in firing rockets. By refusing to condemn Hamas these protesters are tacitly endorsing these actions. Ultimately, it is the ordinary people of Gaza who will suffer. Yours, etc,

COLM O’CONNOR,

Lower Rathmines Road,

Dublin 6

Sir, – In the last 12 years, 30 Israelis were killed by missiles from Gaza, while a further 4,000 died on the roads. – Yours, etc,

DR JOHN DOHERTY,

Cnoc an Stollaire,

Gaoth Dobhair,

Co Donegal

Sir, – Weekend news reports suggested that Brendan Howlin and his Government might begin to reinstate the losses suffered by public sector pensioners since the financial bust. That is probably consistent with the Howlin contention back in 2011 that pensions are a “property right”. However, Mr Howlin and his fellow Ministers showed when they introduced the notorious pensions levy that it was a roperty right only for the public sector.

Many, many private sector workers (me included), who have suffered the impact of the pensions levy, have had to content themselves with a permanent pension reduction – or put it another way they have had to look cheerful while their life savings have been taken from them. Mr Howlin and his friends have kept a deathly silence about this.

Good luck to the public sector pensioners if they get their money reinstated, but Mr Howlin should be assured that private sector pensioners like me will be waiting in the long grass at the next general election. The Grey Revenge could be fierce. – Yours, etc,

MARTIN FITZPATRICK,

Howth Road,

Dublin 5

Sir, – I enjoyed Frank McNally’s Irishman’s Diary (August 8th) on the strangulated speech patterns of teenagers. It is a familiar and frustrating experience for most parents, though one which may now perhaps be put to bed as normal as a result of the research of the University of Texas.

But the behaviour of today’s teenagers seems quite innocuous compared with those of the late fifties and early sixties. Teenage girls in south county Dublin and possibly elsewhere at that time developed their own language, in which they conversed in the presence of boys and were thus able to express their views on the available “talent” to the utter bewilderment of the lads.

From recollection it consisted of inserting an extra syllable in every word and speaking very rapidly. The result was a completely new language unintelligible to the non-adept : if you were a teenage boy in the vicinity of girls you knew to your bewilderment and embarrassment that your attributes were being being discussed and dissected.

I can’t recall the syllable which was inserted nor when this form of speech died out but I do know every teenage boy of the era lived in fear of it. Perhaps some of your readers can throw some light on the subject. – Yours, etc,

DEREK Mac HUGH,

Westminster Lawns,

Foxrock

Sir, – The Road Safety Authority is currently running an ad campaign on television, asking us, where cyclists are concerned, to “respect their right to the road”.  I would ask that it run a campaign to ask cyclists to “respect the right of pedestrians to the footpath”. – Yours, etc.,

JEAN DUNNE,

Upper Glenageary Road,

Dún Laoghaire,

Co Dublin

Sir, – Your correspondent Eoin Burke-Kennedy (August 8th) is too pessimistic about the dangers for the Irish economy of deflation. While price inflation at 0.3 per cent is running well below the ECB’s “close to but less than 2 per cent” target, this should be seen in the context of real GDP growth in Ireland of nearly 3.5 per cent. Overall, this implies a growth of nominal GDP of nearly 4 per cent.

The big downside with deflation is when nominal income falls, making debt service more burdensome. This is especially true in respect of the impact on the public finances.

Irish price and wage inflation have been significantly lower than in most euro zone economies since the onset of the present crisis, which is exactly what is required to help improve Irish competitiveness.

Given what has been happening to money wages and near zero returns on savings, the present very low inflation has saved many people from even more severe cuts in their real purchasing power. Deflation is much more of a danger to economies with near-zero real growth, such as France and Italy. – Yours, etc,

JOHN SHEEHAN,

Willbrook Lawn,

Sir, – In response to the debate on the restoration of Mountjoy Square, there is no question but that the square needs renewal: the question is for whom and by whom.

Mountjoy Square has the potential to attract lots of people and drive social and economic renewal of the north inner city. New approaches in public space renewal have proven to be highly successful at Times Square in New York, the People’s Park in Malmo in Sweden and the Granby pop-up park experiment in Dublin.

Problems in public spaces often occur when they are dominated by single interests (be it heritage values or drug dealing).For a small fraction of the €8.1m and some creative local energy, Mountjoy Square could become the next placemaking success story. – Yours, etc,

WILLIAM COOGAN,

Ballinteer,

Dublin 16

Irish Independent:

I refer to your editorial (Irish Independent, August 9) ‘Planning for the end of the ‘Emergency”.

I quote the essence of the message conveyed. “Eventually, the ‘Emergency’ will have to be declared to be over. The bailout has ended, the Troika have departed, economic growth is rising, unemployment is dropping – albeit never at a fast enough rate.

“The country won’t go back to the largesse of the Celtic Tiger era, but a sustainable economic model is the goal. Therefore, ‘Emergency’ measures come up for discussion.”

How can such a statement be made without taking account of the transformation of the whole economic model by extraordinary technological advance? It is what caused the economic upheaval, but it has never been addressed – it has never even been discussed.

The “bailout” has not ended; we just changed the name to “bond sales”, a much more innocuous term for borrowing.

How can economic growth be sustained? Economic growth is producing more – and one of the great problems of the 21st century is that the world already produces way too much.

It is what causes business failure all over the world. Restraint is needed, not growth.

How can unemployment drop? Automation is rampant: work is being eliminated on an unprecedented scale yet we talk of job creation as if work was as vital to production of goods and services as ever. Work is dead; we should rejoice and generate employment from the little that remains.

The present ‘Emergency’ is the failure to recognise the huge transformation at the core of economics – from shortage to abundance and from work to leisure. There will be no end to or escape from the “Emergency” until we realistically discuss these things and adapt to them.

Padraic Neary

Tubbercurry

Co Sligo

Israeli-Palestinian conflict

◊ If you were to check the DNA of all involved in the Israeli and Palestinian conflict, you will find that they are all cousins, related to Abraham and his sons, Isaac and Ishmael, and his grandsons, Esau and Jacob.

This whole Middle East conflict was caused by family rivalries about land. Sound familiar?

Kevin Devitte

Westport

Co Mayo

◊ I wish to congratulate your writer Gerard O’Regan for his very balanced article (Irish Independent, August 9) on the Palestinian question and the current carnage of the Israel-Gaza conflict.

He is right that a state of denial exists at the very heart of Israeli life.

Furthermore, many of us in the Western world are in denial too over the fact that had the British not left the Middle East in a mess in the late ’40s, and had the Palestinians’ case been resolved once and for all with the help of the ever-reluctant USA, we would possibly not have had the likes of Osama bin Laden, 9/11, Hamas and all the rest which proliferate from the persistent marginalisation of people entitled to their own state.

With due respect for the historical plight of the Jews as victims of the Nazi Holocaust, it seems that Israelis have now gone beyond their right to the so-called promised land, with over four million Palestinians living under their thumb.

Concetto La Malfa

Dublin 4

◊ The world doesn’t seem to give a damn about the pain of the unfortunate people of Gaza.

The Israeli Prime Minister, Benjamin Netanyahu, should be charged with war crimes and crimes against humanity.

What makes it all the more shocking is that the behaviour of Mr Netanyahu’s bellicose, right-wing government has not been condemned by US President Barack Obama and by Britain.

There is no condemnation from the US, or from Europe. Ban Ki-moon is less than useless. The UN is merely a talking shop devoid of morality.

I have no difficulty in understanding Hamas. They are fighting for rights for their people. Gaza is an open-air prison. The people are trapped there. They cannot leave. They have no hope, no dignity, no future for their children.

This carnage and slaughter perpetrated by Israel has taught me so much. It brings home to me just how indifferent the world is to the suffering of the poor people of Gaza.

How many little children have been killed in Gaza? Will the horrible carnage ever end? Will the blockade ever end? Will the unfortunate people of Gaza ever be able to live a life of dignity and self-respect?

Anthony Redmond

Dublin

Bruton owes debt to 1916 leaders

◊ May I remind John Bruton that the position he held as Taoiseach was due wholly to the sacrifice of the men and women of the 1916 Rising.

Rory O’Callaghan

Dublin 8

Don’t reverse pay cuts

◊ It is alarming to hear ministers liberally using words such as “reversing”, “restoring” or “recovering” in relation to pay cuts.

One of the lessons we learnt from the troika was that we were largely overpaying ourselves.

Having absorbed that lesson, we should move on. Salaries should be considered mainly in terms of productivity and what is affordable, rather than structural adjustments which took place in the past.

John F Jordan.

Brussels

Belgium

Being true to yourself

◊ I found the ‘Words of advice’ letter from Brian McDevitt (Irish Independent, August 6) quite insightful.

Living a life true to oneself is something we all struggle with to a greater or lesser extent, as we balance personal and professional commitments and relationships in our lives.

Bronnie Ware, an Australian nurse who spent several years working in palliative care, recorded the regrets people had in their dying days. The number one regret was,”I wish I’d had the courage to live a life true to myself, not the life others expected of me.”

For people struggling with being true to themselves, I say, be the person you are meant to be and the only person you can be.

What a precious gift you will bring to the many people you encounter on this wonderful journey called life.

Tommy Roddy

Salthill

Galway

Legalising surrogacy a mistake

◊ I am shocked to learn that Ireland is about to legalise surrogacy. France, Germany, Italy, Spain and Portugal have banned all forms of surrogacy, so why is Ireland entering this legal minefield?

Our airwaves have been saturated in recent years with stories of adopted children searching for their roots – will the children of surrogates be given the information that they have been created perhaps by donor sperm or donor eggs and developed in the body of a stranger?

These children will have problems identifying who they really are.

I have watched couples on television trying to normalise surrogacy and I noted their sense of entitlement, which is a big feature of our present society.

I sincerely hope that there are enough TDs with a backbone to object strenuously and demand an outright ban on surrogacy.

E Murphy

Cavan



Bank

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0
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12 August 2014 Bank

I jog around the park I still have arthritis in my left knee, but I manage to get round the park. A wettish day. I get go to the bank and the Co op

Scrabble I win, but gets under just 400. perhaps Mary will win tomorrow.

Obituary:

Elaine Sturtevant – obituary

Elaine Sturtevant was a forerunner of ‘appropriation art’ who produced unerring ‘repetitions’ of works by Warhol and Duchamp

Elaine Sturtevant

Elaine Sturtevant  Photo: Getty Images

6:05PM BST 11 Aug 2014

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Elaine Sturtevant, the American artist who has died aged 89, prefigured the “appropriation art” movement by some two decades with her exact “repetitions” of 1960s masterworks by such leading conceptual artists as Andy Warhol, Marcel Duchamp and Roy Lichtenstein.

Long before the internet gave rise to a mass culture of image-sharing, Sturtevant (as she preferred to be known) set out to challenge ideas of originality and ownership with “repetitions” – not, she was quick to insist, copies – of her contemporaries’ output.

Beginning in 1964 with a series entitled Warhol Flowers, completed just months after Warhol’s first exhibition of flower paintings in New York, she went on to produce “Sturtevants” of Segal sculptures, Rosenquist’s spaghetti and Lichtenstein’s dots, all recreated from memory and sold as her own.

Elaine Sturtevant with her take on Warhol’s ‘Flowers’ (AFP/Getty)

She even turned her hand to an eight-hour re-enactment of Warhol’s Empire (1964), his single-shot black-and-white film of the Empire State Building. In a cultural world increasingly focused on surface image , her concern was with what she called the “understructure” of contemporary art; the “invisibilities under that surface”, which conveyed artistic value on what was outwardly worthless or absurd.

Sturtevant’s skill in “repetition” was such that Warhol (who himself derived the images for his flower paintings from shots in Modern Photography magazine) was said to have answered any questions about his technique with “I don’t know — ask Elaine.” Yet the initial reaction to Sturtevant was often one of bafflement and occasional hostility.

Though some critics praised her work for its subversive approach to notions of copyright and artistic integrity, to others it seemed straightforward theft. Her 1967 recreation of Claes Oldenburg’s elaborate shop installation The Store so enraged Oldenburg’s dealer that it was rumoured he had bought several of Sturtevant’s pieces in order to destroy them. (“I believe it,” she said simply.)

And though Warhol gave her one of his silk screens on which to replicate his celebrated prints of Marilyn Monroe, Sturtevant herself cautioned against reading too much into the gesture. “Everyone says, ‘So, Andy really understood!’ Well I don’t think so. I think he didn’t give a f—. Which is a very big difference, isn’t it?”

Tired of seeing her work misconstrued, Sturtevant embarked on a self-imposed hiatus in 1974, eventually resurfacing a decade later with a show at White Columns in New York. This time the art world received her more readily. During the interim, artists such as Sherrie Levine and Richard Prince, part of an emerging group dubbed the “Pictures generation”, had been reproducing others’ work through the medium of photography.

While Prince had begun to garner interest with his “rephotographs” of commercial imagery, such as Marlboro advertisements, Sherrie Levine’s appropriation of famous Depression-era photographs for a series entitled After Walker Evans (1981) had been widely hailed as a landmark of postmodernism . In 2013 Prince mounted a successful argument in court that his appropriation of several photographs by Patrick Cariou constituted “fair use” of the other’s work.

(Rex Features)

The ruling came just weeks prior to the opening of “Leaps Jumps and Bumps” at the Serpentine Gallery, Sturtevant’s first solo show in Britain. Much of her work from these and other late exhibitions combined media images with her own film material, creating repetition of a different kind on a continuous loop. One animation had the 1980s video game character Pac-Man embark on a circular quest for food, forever ending in his being eaten in turn; while Finite Infinite (2010) consisted of footage of a Labrador running through grass again and again. The multiple “feedback loops” incorporated into “Leaps Jumps and Bumps” reflected Sturtevant’s conviction that the rise of the digital age marked the end of authenticity as an artistic concept.

Yet even while her work gained wider relevance, Sturtevant retreated further from view, as ill health confined her to her Paris apartment. Her primary concession to modern communications technology was an iPhone, which she refused to pick up – “even when it rings”.

Little is known about Elaine Sturtevant’s early life. She was born Elaine Horan in Lakewood, Ohio on August 23 1924, and studied Philosophy at the University of Iowa, where a graduate seminar introduced her to the writings of Nietzsche. “Every once in a while someone will say to me, ‘Oh but you’re so negative!’,” she once told an interviewer. “And I say, ‘Well, I come out of Nietzsche’. ”

‘Peinture à haute tension’, after Martial Raysse (Alamy)

Following her 12 years away from the art scene – during which, as she put it, the “mental retards” caught up with the thrust of her work – Sturtevant relocated to Paris and branched out into video and other media. At the Venice Biennale in 2011 she received the Golden Lion award for lifetime achievement, and in November this year the Museum of Modern Art in New York plans to stage the first major American overview of her work.

In later life Sturtevant embraced her own fearsome reputation among fellow artists. She would silence any unwanted queries at interview with a brusque “dumb question”. “I am difficult,” she admitted. “If I don’t like somebody, I tell them.”

She is survived by a daughter.

Elaine Sturtevant, born August 23 1924, died May 7 2014

Guardian:

Owen Jones’s article (Anti-Jewish hatred is rising, 11 August) is a helpful and articulate addition to an important debate. Antisemitism and anti-Zionism are not the same, but neither are they mutually exclusive. He highlights instances when antisemitic actions are hidden under the guise of anti-Zionism. It is in this vein that the lack of mention of Hamas’s antisemitic rhetoric is disturbing. In its charter, Hamas says: “The time will not come until Muslims will fight the Jews (and kill them)” (article 7). It also espouses the crudest forms of caricature: “As regards local and world wars, it has come to pass … that they [Zionists/Jews] stood behind World War One, so as to wipe out the Islamic Caliphate… They obtained the Balfour Declaration and established the League of Nations in order to rule the world by means of that organisation” (article 22). Jews in Britain are nervous and scared by what they see happening around them. There are pro-Palestinians who seem oblivious to the company they keep and have not acted against antisemitism. Taking action now would calm those fears and allow sensible discussion, not to mention showing Israelis and Palestinians how peaceful dialogue could lead all sides down a different path.
Ashley Harshak
London

• Israeli politicians often try to justify their actions by saying the Hamas charter calls for Israel’s destruction (Letters, 11 August). No such phrase exists in the charter although there is criticism of Zionism. In practice the charter is rarely referred to by Hamas leaders now and we should look at their recent statements for a guide to their thinking, which has become more politically sophisticated since the charter was published in 1988, including some leaders talking about a two-state solution. The lifting of the blockade and release of prisoners are two of their key demands now. As both Daniel Barenboim and David Grossman have argued, ways need to be found of bringing Hamas into meaningful discussions and demonising them as “terrorists” does not help.
Gerald Conyngham
Crediton, Devon

Rather than doing a “Lords abuse” piece masquerading as comment, Chris Huhne (Let’s halt the ermine factory, 11 August) could have addressed a more serious aspect of what is going on. One consequence which has not really been explored is that under the present arrangement, the coalition has an inbuilt majority in the revising chamber. Between 2000 and 2010 the Labour government did not have a majority in the Lords and week by week ministers and business managers made arrangement with opposition Lib Dems or Tories to secure business. This meant compromise and lots of defeats.

It also resulted in better quality legislation, as ministers in the Lords reported to their secretaries of state what could be achieved and at what price. In some cases defeat would mean the loss of the legislation, so it was to be avoided with a deal. In most cases I found the price was worth paying as it improved the legislation. This has not been the case since 2010. Issues we could have settled by negotiation have been rammed through because each part of the coalition has told Labour “we have written agreement with the other coalition party and we cannot do a deal however much we would like to”. This is not the way a revising chamber, however constituted, should work.

So for the next parliament, when planning for a hung Commons and possible coalition in that House, why cannot we exclude the Lords? We could simply have the largest coalition party in the Lords providing the ministers and no commitment from the smaller coalition partners’ peers other than to look at the issues on their merits. An alternative would be for three grown-up party leaders to say that all votes in the Lords would be free votes, so leaving backbench members of the governing coalition partners and opposition to make their own minds up. This would avoid the obvious distress that some Lib Dems have suffered as they kept their part of the bargain.

I prefer the latter course, but it does require three grown-up party leaders.
Jeff Rooker
House of Lords

• Smuggling out in August the news of 22 more appointments to the Lords tells its own story (Peerages for two more Conservative donors, 9 August). The concern over cash for peerages is justified, but is only part of the problem. The fundamental point is that an appointed house lacks the legitimacy to do its job properly, since its members represent nobody. At present, the electorate is shut out of the second chamber, except as visitors. Electing the members of a reformed chamber need not threaten the primacy of the House of Commons, as opponents of reform claim. Solutions exist, although the present government fumbled the issue in its bill. The only answer to the long-running question of who should be in the second chamber is to allow the people to choose who makes the laws on their behalf.
Damien Welfare
Co-ordinator, Campaign for a Democratic Upper House

• Surely the quick and easy way to eradicate the incentive of a peerage for party donors is to remove the lordly title. Entitlement to sit in the chamber for hours on end is not the attraction – use of the title most certainly is.
John Saxbee
Haverfordwest, Pembrokeshire

Roy Greenslade is wrong to say I deliberately “withheld” from the Press Complaints Commission and the Leveson inquiry “vital information” about how some Mail on Sunday journalists’ phones were hacked by the News of the World (Report, 2 August). We were contacted by police in October 2006 and told some of our journalists’ phones had been hacked. The police recommended our journalists improve their phone security, but did not want them to make statements, nor suggest the hacking had involved anyone other than Goodman and Mulcaire.

In fact they said the hacking had ended at the time of Goodman and Mulcaire’s arrests, which strongly suggested they were responsible. We were satisfied the police were dealing with the issue, which was of course sub judice. It was already known that Mulcaire had hacked the phones of people other than the Royal household – he admitted five further offences at his trial in November 2006. It was hardly surprising he should have hacked phones of staff on a rival newspaper. I joined the PCC in May 2008. Had it occurred to me, when the PCC was discussing the fresh allegations made by the Guardian in July 2009, that the hacking of our journalists’ phones was anything other than a minor part of the series of offences for which Goodman and Mulcaire had already been convicted, I would happily have shared it with other commissioners.

I have never made any secret of it, nor had any reason to – after all, our journalists were victims of these crimes just as much as anyone else. Indeed it was common knowledge in the industry that Mail on Sunday phones had been hacked. As far as Leveson is concerned, it was widely reported in the Guardian and elsewhere in summer 2011 that the police had contacted our journalists again and asked for statements – so much for Greenslade’s claim the hacking “remained a secret for eight years”. Had Leveson chosen to ask me about it when I gave evidence in January 2012 I would readily have answered any questions.
Peter Wright
Editor emeritus, Associated Newspapers

Chapman Pincher in 1987. Photograph: Jane Bown

My father was a nuclear physicist working at the Atomic Energy Research Establishment at Harwell between 1948 and 1956. The scientists there used to read Chapman Pincher to discover the secrets of what was going on at Harwell. It was also a standing joke among them whenever a light plane or helicopter flew near Harwell that it was probably Pincher spying out his next story. They could never work out how he got his information, given the strict security at Harwell and the fact that they had all signed the Official Secrets Act agreement.

Guardian anti-Hamas advert

We write to condemn the Guardian’s decision to print a wildly inaccurate and inflammatory advert from supporters of the state of Israel branding the Palestinian resistance as “child killers”. This is especially sickening when Israel’s latest bombardment of Gaza has killed close to 400 Palestinian children. Amnesty International has condemned the deliberate targeting of schools and hospitals by Israel as a war crime.

Among the advert’s very many inaccuracies is the claim that those forces opposing Israel do not have the support of Palestinians, when the current Israeli offensive is against a united Hamas-Fatah government which commands the support of the majority of Palestinians.

Sadly, the decision to print this advert, rejected by the Times newspaper, is another sign of the increasingly pro-Israeli bias of the Guardian’s editorial policy, including the gross underestimate of the size of last Saturday’s Gaza protest demonstration. You are repeatedly running the slur that those who campaign in support of Palestine are antisemitic when the very many Jews in the movement, and the movement as a whole, have repeatedly made it absolutely clear that this is not the case.

We call on the editor to redress the balance in future coverage.
John Rees Co-founder, Stop the War Coalition
Lindsey German Convenor, Stop the War Coalition
Jeremy Corbyn MP
Sarah Colborne Director, Palestine Solidarity Campaign
Kate Hudson General secretary, Campaign for Nuclear Disarmament
David Hearst Middle East Eye
Tariq Ali Writer and broadcaster
Barnaby Raine Organiser of the Jewish Bloc on demonstrations for Gaza

• The advertisement you carry today by This World: The Values Network accuses Hamas of using children as a human shield. This is a highly contentious accusation which has been widely refuted, but in this advert this accusation, for which there is no evidence, appears to be compared with the activities of Nazi Germany (“I have seen Jewish children thrown into the fire”).

It then goes on to call Hamas “worshippers of a death cult”. In the interests of Israeli propaganda, this seems to me to be simply an attempt to draw attention away from the real situation in Palestine and set up a spurious distraction from the central issue and motivation for opposition to Israel: dispossession, persecution and illegal occupation of Palestine by Israel.

You presumably invoke free speech to accept this advert. However, I would be interested to know whether you would accept a similar advertisement from a pro-Palestinian organisation comparing the behaviour of Israel with that of Nazi Germany. I suspect not. Would you still invoke the free speech argument or would you recognise that accepting for publication this type of propaganda in the context of the situation in Palestine is reprehensible?
Lorie Harding
Swanage, Dorset

• My once dear Guardian, I have just learnt that despite the Times refusing to run this advertisement, the Guardian has. As a regular reader – I buy the paper from my local newsagent every day, weekends included – I am appalled by your decision to run this inflammatory and blatantly racist ad. There is absolutely no evidence to support the claims and the fact that a newspaper such as yours in willing to allow this racist propaganda frankly baffles me. After 25 years buying your newspaper daily, I will no longer be purchasing my daily copy.
Nigel Osborne
London

• I have not signed Stop the War Coalition’s open letter to the Guardian, condemning your decision to accept a full-page advert seeking to justify Israeli war crimes in Gaza, but this doesn’t mean that I am any less appalled at your decision. The only reason that I haven’t signed Stop the War’s letter is that it chose to make its central point the issue of whether or not Hamas has the support of the Palestinian people. To my mind this is irrelevant, since Israeli war crimes would still be war crimes whomever a majority of Palestinians supported and many of Israel’s victims have been too young to support anyone, anyway.
Malcolm Hunter
Leicester

• I have never seen a political advertisement as mendacious as that which appeared above the photograph of Elie Wiesel in the Guardian today. Nor one more certain to effect the opposite of what it hopes to achieve.
Malcolm Pittock
Bolton, Lancashire

Independent:

The bombing of Islamic State forces by Obama is yet another foolish course of action by the US supported by Britain.

The turmoil brought into the Middle East by Bush and Obama has meant death and displacement for millions and untold future deaths. The 40,000 Iraqis  stranded on a mountain top without water, awaiting death at the hands of the IS, are there because of US/UK meddling.

The consequence of Washington and London’s reckless interventions in Iraq, Libya, and Syria has been to unleash evil. The various sects that lived in peace under the rule of Saddam Hussein, Gaddafi, and Assad are butchering one another, and a new group, IS, is in the process of creating a new state out of parts of Iraq and Syria.

The reality in the Middle East stands in contradiction to the stage-managed landing of George W Bush on the US aircraft carrier Abraham Lincoln to declare “mission accomplished” on 1 May 2003.

The mission that Washington accomplished was to wreck the Middle East and the lives of millions of people and to destroy America’s reputation in the process.

Blair and Clinton’s attack on Serbia set the pattern. Bush upped the ante with  naked aggression against Afghanistan. Britain and America brought ruin, not freedom, to Afghanistan. After 13 years of blowing up the country, they are now withdrawing.

The policy of “humanitarian intervention” is a fraud which has killed far more than it has helped. It should be consigned to the dustbin of history.

Alan Hinnrichs
Dundee

The United States and Britain should both be warmly congratulated for standing up against the newly emerging bully of the Middle East, calling itself the Islamic State. The atrocities and the genocidal agenda of this terrorist group are not only an attack on the magnanimous principles of Islam; they are an attack on all our brothers, whether Christians, Jews, Yazidis or others.

The magnanimity of the Prophet Muhammad can never be in doubt and should serve as a lesson to all those who claim to follow his Sunna or path. He emphatically and publicly forgave all his enemies (including those who had murdered his own uncle) upon his conquering Mecca in a rare bloodless victory in AD 630.

The first ever “Islamic state”, the Umayyad state (661-775), and the Abbasid state (750–1258), were equally well-known for providing conditions in which Jewish and Christian communities flourished and prospered in peace and security.

Whether in Iraq, Syria, Gaza or Israel we should all stand firmly against the politicisation and manipulation of civilians’ plight. Given its historical ties to the region, we should stand firmly behind a United Kingdom which serves as a beacon in its decisive moral orientation – delivering the message that we in Britain will never waver in asserting the equal rights of Christian, Jewish and Muslim children who, together with children of all other ethnic and religious denominations in the Middle East, deserve a better and more secure future.

Dr Lu’ayy Minwer,  Al Rimawi
Peterborough, Cambridgeshire

Mark Holt (letter, 7 August) asks when we are going to adopt an ethical foreign policy in relation to Saudi arming of Islamist rebels. When we are no longer reliant on their oil or other resources.

Mike Lynch
Lincoln

 

Dangers of laughing gas

While the article about the dangers of using laughing gas recreationally correctly states that users face the danger of oxygen deprivation, it fails to point out that one of the most alarming consequences of inhaling nitrous oxide is that it severely depletes the user’s Vitamin B12 (“Councils warn about dangers of using laughing gas”, 9 August).

People with pernicious anaemia are unable to absorb B12 from food and therefore know only too well the consequences of B12 deficiency. The symptoms are wide-ranging and insidious, often taking many years to develop before the user will feel continually tired, undergo personality changes, lack concentration and ultimately suffer serious and irreversible nerve damage.

While the deaths mentioned in your report were more or less instant, the long-term effects of B12 deficiency caused by inhaling nitrous oxide will take many years to develop before manifesting themselves as a long list of symptoms, some extremely serious, before the B12 deficiency is identified as the cause of the user’s malaise.

Members of this society are unable to produce B12: to destroy your B12 by inhaling nitrous oxide for short-term euphoria is sheer folly.

Martyn Hooper
Chairman, Pernicious Anaemia Society, Bridgend

Indian soldiers in the great war

In the commemorations of the centenary of the First World War, it was hugely disappointing that the role played by soldiers from the Indian sub-continent has been largely ignored.

More than 1.2 million Indians, including those from what is now Pakistan, volunteered to fight for king and country in the conflict. More than 74,000 were killed and 65,000 wounded in the line of duty. These were Sikh, Hindu and Muslim soldiers, dedicated to the cause and receiving 13,000 medals for gallantry.

By acknowledging the great sacrifice made by Indian soldiers, sailors and airmen, including members of my own family, in both World Wars, perhaps we can move towards greater acceptance of each other’s differences and recognise that there is a shared history that must not be forgotten.

Javed Majid
Yarm, North Yorkshire

What an ‘Israel-free zone’ means

Simon Ben David (letter, 9 August) asks what George Galloway’s “Israel-free zone” means and whether he can visit his grandmother’s grave in Bradford. I suggest it means a politician’s rhetorical point. No more.

He will of course not be prevented from going to the cemetery, unlike the millions of descendants of Palestinians ethnically cleansed in 1948 from their historic homeland who very definitely cannot go to their ancestors’ graves in Palestine, let alone have the right of return and their stolen lands and houses back.

Richard Twining
London SW11

I would like to express my support for British Jews who have recently become the target of hatred from certain groups protesting against Israel’s actions in Gaza.

I don’t believe that this vocal minority represents the feelings of the majority of British people towards either the Jewish people or the state of Israel.

There is an unpleasant undercurrent of anti-Semitism among certain Muslim and right- and left-wing groups which any right-minded person should speak out against.

Andrew Brown
Derby

A magnificently mad trombone

The saxophone has always been contentious, viewed as either a bona fide musical instrument or a fashion statement. What it has never been, though, is a member of the brass family.

One of the photographs accompanying your article on the bicentenary of Adolphe Sax (11 August) is captioned as “a variation on his invention”.

It could do with rotating just a tiny bit towards the viewer. This would reveal the cup-shaped typical brass mouthpiece of the magnificently mad trombone à sept pavillons, or seven-cylinder trombone, which had a valve, tubing and bell flare to take the place of each of the slide trombone’s seven slide positions. Sort of seven separate mini-trombones rolled into one.

Heaven alone knows what it weighs, but it never caught on. The instrument is indeed by Sax and resides in the excellent Brussels museum.

Roger King
St Ives, Cambridgeshire

Don’t be blasé about abortion

Gillian Orr’s article of 5 August implies that abortion is quick, painless and easily recovered from. I am no anti-abortionist, but I suggest she reads the section on the NHS Choices website entitled “Abortion: how it is performed” and she will see that it can potentially be a long, painful and distressing experience.

Fine to be so blasé about it if performed with no complications at less than nine weeks; a very different story for someone enduring the procedure at 20-plus weeks.

Sue Allen
Glastonbury, Somerset

Sport that tolerates vicious play

If a footballer were to make a wild two-footed lunge on an opponent, it is promptly red-carded. If a boxer hits below the belt, he is instantly penalised. The same kind of rules exist for most sports.

So why is it, only in cricket, that bouncers, which are intended to hurt and maim, and bowled with deliberate vicious intent, are encouraged?

Ramji Abinashi
Amersham, Buckinghamshire

Times:

The proposal for a statue of the Indian civil rights leader in Parliament Square has split opinion

Sir, Kusoom Vadgama (“Gandhi statue ‘would be an affront to women’ ”, Aug 9) is right to point to Gandhi’s experiment about his celibacy in which he involved young women. But she is wrong that it was hushed. Details of his experiments with his chastity were revealed by Gandhi himself in his weekly newspaper Harijan and in his extensive correspondence.

Gandhi has also been denounced as a racist for his remarks about his fellow prisoners in South Africa who were Zulu. Dr Ambedkar excoriated him for his insistence that Dalits do not get separate electorates, as had been offered by the government after the Round Table Conference. He was called an arch-imperialist for recruiting soldiers during the First World War. Orthodox Hindus criticised him for blending Christianity and Islam with his Hinduism.

Yet Gandhi inspired hundreds in South Africa and millions in India to stand up for their rights and fight injustice. Women entered public life in their thousands when he gave the call. His non-violent methods of struggle not only toppled an empire but also inspired Dr Martin Luther King Jr to wage his struggle for civil rights for black Americans.

Gandhi was human like the rest of us, and as such imperfect, but he changed our world, as Nelson Mandela has acknowledged. Gandhi should join him, Lincoln and Churchill in Parliament Square.

Lord Desai
Trustee, Gandhi Statue Memorial Trust

Sir, In her attack on Mahatma Gandhi, Kusoom Vadgama ignores all that Gandhi did to enhance the status of Indian women. He was born into a caste system where the most menial tasks were carried out by the so-called “untouchables”. Gandhi renamed them Harijans — “children of God” — and took on the menial tasks himself. And millions followed him.

In his old age he tested his chastity in a way which many of us find bizarre, but let that not detract from his massive contribution to overcoming discrimination against women in India.

John Bond
Oxford

Sir, Dr Vadgama condemns the proposed statue of Gandhi in Parliament Square as “unspeakable and absolutely unacceptable” because of his sexual exploitation of women. So would it be to the Sikhs — Gandhi refused to recognise their faith and derided their loyalty to the British crown. Sikhs, a proud people, would not accept the Hindu supremacy that Gandhi preached as a condition of uplift of the untouchable and minority races in India.

Dr Surinder Singh Bakhshi
Birmingham

Sir, Gandhi was not a “seditious Middle Temple lawyer” (“Peace and love”, Aug 9), as Churchill put it. He was an Inner Temple man (called June 1891).

Jonathan Teasdale
Haywards Heath, W Sussex

Landing a job is not always easy, let alone straightforward — as our correspondents make plain

Sir, In 1981 I was interviewed for a two-day-a-week post in a hospital, as a radiographer in an X-ray department (letter, Aug 11). The (female) superintendent radiographer asked me what I would do if one of my children became ill on one of my work days. I replied that I would stay at home and look after the child. I was appointed, and my children were told that they could never be ill on a Tuesday or a Friday — and it mostly worked! I asked my (teacher) husband if he was willing to share this duty and his reply was that his headmaster would consider it to be absolutely out of the question.

Catherine Harden

Reigate, Surrey

Sir, In the 1970s I went for an interview for a job as a solicitor in a firm that had two senior partners. One of them asked me just a single question. I replied I was an Evertonian and straightaway got the job. The other partner came in and he also asked me which team I supported. I was then told that if he had been the interviewer, I would not have been successful. I think he meant it too.

Keith Robinson

Hoylake, Wirral

What on earth does the word ‘explainer’ mean, written on the back of a high-vis jacket?

Sir, I have just seen a high-vis jacket on Clifton suspension bridge with “Explainer” printed on the back.

Means guide, I suppose.

Sally Sparks

Bristol

There seems to be no end to the long list of broadcasting habits that seemingly cause offence

Sir, My pet hate is “particuly” which is “reguly” used by presenters on Radio 4 and on television.

John Collins

East Grinstead, W Sussex

Sir, Has anyone got round to “drawring” and “thawring” yet?

Derrick Scholey

Sheffield

Sir, Further to Philippa Hutchinson’s letter (Aug 9), I too have noticed the proliferation of “so” at the start of answers by radio interviewees. It seems to be particularly rife among scientists. An explanation for this is offered on the website The Celestial Monochord, which suggests that the scientist’s “so” is an audible “therefore” at the end of an inaudible explanation that the scientist has to think through — but which he/she isn’t allowed time enough to share.

Judith Raftery

Royston, Herts

True or false: if a job’s worth doing, it’s worth getting someone else to do it…

Sir, Further to the letter “Maxim fun” (Aug 9), I am ever grateful for the wise advice of former Chaplain of the Fleet, Archdeacon Barry Hammett, who, seeing me struggling with the complexities and heavy workload of chaplaincy in a busy Royal Navy air station, sagely remarked: “If a job’s worth doing, it’s worth getting somebody else to do it.”

Simon Springett

Portsmouth

Sir, My art teacher at school used to say, “If you’re going to make a mistake, make a jolly big one”. Alas, none of my paintings ever graced the walls of the art room.

Elspeth Evans

Chalfont St Giles, Bucks

Successive chancellors have failed to raise the threshold for higher-rate income tax in line with inflation

Sir, In your leading article (Taxing Times, Aug 11) you correctly highlight several problems with taxation. Successive chancellors have found it convenient to raise more funds by failing to increase the threshold for higher-rate income tax in line with inflation. This has been referred to as a “stealth tax” and has, as you say, resulted in many who are not wealthy being caught by the higher rate band.

The government should legislate to ensure that the higher-rate threshold should automatically rise with inflation. The chancellor should include this proposal in his autumn statement.

John S Burton

Cheltenham, Glos

Telegraph:

An adult basking shark’s dorsal fin protrudes above the water off St Kilda, Outer Hebrides Photo: ALAMY

6:58AM BST 11 Aug 2014

CommentsComments

SIR – I was rather surprised to see basking sharks included among Scotland’s new wave of “exotic sealife” (Nature Notes, August 6). Although these giant fish have admittedly become quite rare visitors to British waters, until fairly recently they supported a thriving fish-oil industry in the Hebrides.

I first encountered basking sharks in the Sixties off Torbay in Devon. My father and I were out with a Brixham fisherman collecting his lobster pots when we were suddenly surrounded by gigantic triangular dorsal fins. Even at four years old, and almost a decade before Peter Benchley published Jaws, I suddenly felt we needed a much, much bigger boat.

However, the fisherman’s assertion that the sharks, though terrifying, were harmless, proved correct.

Hadrian Jeffs
Norwich

SIR – In resigning from the Government, Baroness Warsi called Britain’s policy on the Israeli/Palestinian conflict “morally indefensible”. I, too, am appalled by the loss of life in Gaza and particularly so by the death of hundreds of innocent children. I share the pain of their families, particularly as my own son was killed by Hizbollah terrorists.

There are some who argue that the number of Palestinian casualties is disproportionate to the number of Israelis killed in the present round of fighting. I agree. As rockets rained down on our cities and kibbutzim, we huddled in concrete bomb shelters, which our government demands that we build as a condition for receiving building permits.

I cannot help but wonder how many Palestinian lives could have been saved if Hamas had used its steel and concrete to build bomb shelters rather than constructing underground tunnels for the purpose of infiltrating Israel and killing and kidnapping our civilians.

Our detractors argue: “Gaza is a prison. Gaza is under siege.” They are right. I would love the people of Gaza to have a seaport and an airport of their own. However, I have the right to know that they will not be used to import sophisticated weapons to destroy my country. If the people of Gaza are really interested in peace, why should they possibly object to a demilitarised Gaza as a condition for lifting the blockade and opening their borders?

We saw plenty of heart-rending pictures of dead Palestinian children, but why did we never see any dead Hamas fighters, even though we know that close to 1,000 of them were killed over the past month?

Rabbi Michael Boyden
Hod Hasharon, Central District, Israel

SIR – I used to be a strong supporter of Israel, a small country surrounded by hostile neighbours. I am now surprised that a people who suffered as they did during the Second World War can be so brutal and inhumane to another oppressed people. The corralling of Palestinians into a small area causes predictable civilian deaths when it is bombarded. The long blockade of Gaza has inevitably led to the strengthening of Hamas.

John Clark
Selling, Kent

SIR – While America is now supplying vast amounts of arms to support the Israeli bombardment, it will be the first to make large contributions towards the rebuilding of the infrastructure in Gaza and mourn with great sincerity the heavy loss of Palestinian lives; hardly a position from which it can take any high moral stance in other theatres of conflict.

Barry Bond
Leigh on Sea, Essex

Plain packaging

SIR – I read the letters (August 8) reporting opposite results from Australia’s plain cigarette packet law. To whom should I give more credibility, a university professor or a bunch of politicians?

Derek Gregory
Castle Cary, Somerset

SIR – I do hope that cigarette companies start selling their wares in nice little flip-top tins with their brand name and logo on them so by the time we are forced to buy our cigs in their horrible wrappers, we can simply decant them into our smart little tins and carry on as usual.

Wendy Alexander
Polegate, East Sussex

SIR – Once plain packaging is introduced for cigarettes, presumably this will double the space available for impromptu schemes to be drawn up?

Helen Forman
Birchington, Kent

Naval affair

SIR – I am deeply concerned by the way Cdr Sarah West has been publicly humiliated by naval disciplinary procedures (report, August 9). As the first woman to captain a front-line warship in the Navy’s 500-year history, she was hauled off her ship in a manner that must have pleased many reactionary old sea dogs.

The military’s antiquated codes of social conduct are enforced with variable severity, and this matter should have been handled with greater sensitivity and a lot less masculine glee.

Rev Dr John Cameron
St Andrews, Fife

SIR – As this alleged affair took place between two officers, one could argue that it did not compromise “operational effectiveness” or undermine “trust and cohesion”, which it would have if the unnamed party had been a rating.

However, the worst thing is that the “married third-in-command” not only retains his posting, but also his anonymity, while Cdr West is thrust into the spotlight.

Mark Donkin
South Normanton, Derbyshire

SIR – If Cdr West had been found to have had an affair with a female member of her ship’s company, would she have been dismissed, or would her human rights have ensured she stayed in command?

Chris Hodge
Gosport, Hampshire

A bitter pill

SIR – Like thousands of others, I have to take tablets on a regular basis, the prescriptions for which have been issued on a two-monthly basis, 56 tablets each time.

On applying for a renewal of my prescriptions, my surgery has told me that I can now only have one month’s worth at a time (28). This is due to a government edict to try to reduce wasted medicines.

So now I have to make twice as many visits to the surgery and chemist, involving twice the fuel and parking charges, the doctor has to issue twice as many prescriptions, and the chemist has to make up twice as many parcels of tablets. What incompetent dreamt up this policy?

David Cable
Hartley Wintney, Hampshire

Bedtime reading

SIR – Our new pillows come with 48 pages of instructions. Why is life so complicated?

Kate Graeme-Cook
Tarrant Launceston, Dorset

How a big cat’s stink can deter the smaller ones

SIR – Dr Clive Mowforth should know that, unlike dogs, cats are classed as wild animals and their owners are not responsible for their actions. If he does not like them, rather than wasting time and effort sending letters to his neighbours, he should use lion-manure pellets. They are available online at very low cost.

John Brandon
Tonbridge, Kent

SIR – Is it not time that there was equality in the treatment of pet owners in this country? If I were to allow my dog to foul anywhere it liked, I would be subject to a fine or prosecution. Yet local cat owners allow their animals to use my garden as a lavatory with impunity.

If I were systematically to kill the birds that visit my garden, I would soon be reported to the RSPCA and prosecuted. Yet British cats get away with 55 million such killings every year (RSPB figures). Despite this, cat owners still trot out the same old nonsense that there is nothing they can do.

Anthony Hall
Downham Market, Norfolk

SIR – It is up to Dr Mowforth to protect his property, but not by threatening criminal damage to other people’s property, namely, their cats. Issuing threats to his neighbours could be construed as harassment.

David E Hockin
Portishead, Somerset

SIR – There is a cheap and effective answer to this problem. Put some used teabags in a screw-top jar and spray liberally with an aerosol can of Deep Heat. Shake well, then place the tea bags where the cats normally enter. They do not like it.

I have used this to deter squirrels from destroying my bird feeders as well.

David Craddock
Radstock, Somerset

Displaced Yazidi people rush towards an aid helicopter Photo: RUDAW

7:00AM BST 11 Aug 2014

CommentsComments

SIR – Having visited the Holocaust Memorial in Yerevan, I cannot fail to notice the striking parallel of what is happening today in northern Iraq to what happened in Armenia nearly 100 years ago.

In 1915, under the Ottoman Empire, Armenian Christians and Assyrians were targeted by the Islamic extremists of the day. Men were slaughtered and women and children forced to go on “death marches” into the Syrian desert without food or water, where they died of starvation. Children who remained were forcibly converted to Islam and given to Muslim families.

Under President Roosevelt, America was one of the few countries to offer humanitarian help, raising some $100 million. In 1918, Roosevelt described the mass murder that took place as “the greatest crime of the war”.

Britain cannot now stand by in the aisles and allow another genocide to take place.

Dr Robert Balfour
Ogmore-by-Sea, Glamorgan

SIR – In ordering air strikes in an attempt to prevent the genocide of the Yazidi religious minority, Barack Obama has said that there will be “no boots on the ground”. Surely this is a vain hope if Islamic State is to be eliminated for the sake of Muslims, Christians and others.

This looks like being the latest Western involvement in failed wars against fanatics.In Iraq and Afghanistan, the conflicts failed to secure either stability or democracy. In Syria, the Islamic State fanatics are fighting President Assad, so whoever wins will prove unpalatable for the West. Saddam Hussein and Colonel Gaddafi may have been monsters, but they provided stability.

Clark Cross
Linlithgow, West Lothian

SIR – In June 1941, Churchill had to make a terrible decision to support one deplorable regime in order to defeat another. However much we may abhor aspects of the regimes in Egypt, Syria, Saudi Arabia and elsewhere, we surely need to engage with them now to defeat the new Nazis whose influence is spreading through the Middle East.

John Birkett
St Andrews, Fife

SIR – Abu Bakr al-Baghdadi’s Islamic State has much in common with Pol Pot’s Khmer Rouge. Both were, or are, evil cliques trying to force a utopia on their own people, prepared to torture or murder any who do not fit their ideal. Both came about because the legitimate governments they displaced were destabilised by third parties.

Lionel Uden
Paignton, Devon

SIR – There will not be peace in Iraq for many years. The invasion in 2003 will long stand as one of the most terrible abuses of power by the supposedly civilised West. I hope Tony Blair and George W Bush are hanging their heads in shame.

William Statt
Snarestone, Leicestershire

Irish Times:

Sir, – Paddy Joyce (August 7th) bemoans the proposal from the Society of Chartered Surveyors for the construction of “European-style” apartments for families and my coincidental letter espousing same (August 7th). He cites Tokyo and Singapore (as examples not to be followed), but one need only go as far as Barcelona, Brussels, Copenhagen or any other continental European city to realise that these smartly planned and attractive urban centres have long histories of predominantly apartment-type residences.

Apartments make efficient use of limited physical space by building upward rather than outward. They reduce urban sprawl so distances to amenities, parks and shops are shorter. They have greater heating and water supply efficiencies and more efficient internet connectivity and other technology supply. They are often air-conditioned. They have professional service-managed maintenance and landscape care so residents have more quality and quantity time. In most cases they have better security than houses.

Of course the quality of apartment construction matters for quality of life; dire lack of planning and construction quality and an historical association with slums and deprivation may contribute to reticence in Ireland.

It is because of their obvious benefits that so many Europeans and Asians choose to live in apartments. Of course people should still have choices, but the choices in Ireland for a long time were almost wholly restricted to a house of one kind or other. – Yours, etc,

NIALL O’DONOGHUE,

Pirkanmaa,

Finland

Sir, – Paddy Joyce is adamant that Irish people do not want to live in continental-style apartments, which he describes as “high-rise hamster cages”. I can only surmise that Mr Joyce is not overly familiar with continental Europe or its apartments. Apartments in the continental style are spacious and well-designed family homes with floor spaces easily the equivalent of any mid-density suburban semi-detached. Furthermore, they rarely reach above the fifth floor. Large numbers of Irish people and families want to live in our cities, and not in suburban or semi-rural settings. High-density living is the only way to achieve this and larger, more comfortable apartments are the best method of providing for this possibility. – Yours, etc,

GARRET LEDWITH,

Tudor Road,

Dublin 6

Sir, – Olivia Kelly (August 8th) indicates with respect to Dublin’s housing construction challenge that “the plan to test the interest from developers for council-owned tracts of land has obvious appeal”. Meanwhile this week, Tom Parlon, speaking on behalf of the Construction Industry Federation, again highlighted the ongoing difficulties faced by developers in terms of securing bank funding for construction projects. One better proposal would be for Dublin councils to create a scheme whereby citizens formally expressing a wish to buy property within a certain geographical radius could be linked provisionally to possible future land development within that area. A pool of those demonstrating an active potential to achieve pre-mortgage approval could then each be assigned a housing unit, on a preliminary basis, within a given construction project outlined for council-owned land. Local authorities in the capital will have to become more active in contemplating new thinking with respect to addressing what is now a drastic housing shortage. There is very strong demand within Dublin for homes that simply don’t exist and the extent of this demand needs to be formalised so that funding can become more readily available. – Yours, etc,

JOHN KENNEDY,

Knocknashee,

Dublin 14

Sir, – There has been a great deal of focus, following the recent ESRI report, on whether or not we are in a property bubble and whether further price rises can be justified in terms of economic variables. In my view this is not the real issue. Property prices (and rents) in Dublin are driven by a dysfunctional system, which is characterised by a chronic inability to match demand and supply efficiently at internationally competitive prices. This dysfunctional system produces a “fantasy market” which has already destroyed our competitiveness, which drove our economy onto the rocks and led to us becoming one of the most indebted countries in the world. We have been licking our wounds since 2008 and there are now finally signs of stabilisation. However, property prices are once again moving out of line in terms of value with comparable cities in the UK and other countries and driving up our already high wages and salaries. It seems amazing to me that there is so little focus on solving this problem once and for all. I think it’s time to change the system. – Yours, etc,

RONAN DEIGNAN,

Knocksinna Crescent,

Dublin 18

Sir, – In his letter (August 9th) praising Paul Kean’s criticism of property investors, Matthew Glover exhibits an ancient and, one might have thought, now defunct philosophy when he refers to the “landlord class”.

For some reason Mr Glover assumes this so-called “landlord class” is the beneficiary of some debt forgiveness bounty while others are “getting on” with paying down their debts. In what misguided “power to the people” world does Mr Glover live? The so-called landlord class are the ordinary investors who hoped to safeguard their future by attempting to prudently invest in bricks and mortar.

One might also include holders of a pension in which funds are invested in property and investors in any stocks where property is a constituent of that company’s investment portfolio. Is there anyone left?

I heartily congratulate Mr Glover for his foresight and sacrifice in taking on a smaller mortgage so that he could cope with “unforeseen economic setbacks” (oh for such wisdom!) but he should understand that the debt-forgiveness utopia of which he writes is a merely a figment of his imagination. – Yours, etc,

GEOFF SCARGILL,

Loreto Grange,

Bray,

Sir, – Carl O’Brien’s excellent report “Lives in Limbo” (August 9th) paints a disturbing picture of the treatment of asylum seekers in direct provision: their poverty, isolation and demoralising lack of power to take important decisions for themselves.

The whole system needs to be changed so that no one has to spend more than a few months in such conditions and so that anyone whose asylum/protection application takes more than 12 months to determine is given the right to work here. But in the meantime one measure that would immediately improve the position of the around 1,650 children currently in the system would be to restore the payment of child benefit. This is a non-means-tested payment, described by Government as a “universal” benefit, that is paid in respect of all children, rich and poor, and whether they need it or not. Except that it is not paid in respect of the children of asylum-seekers, who definitely do need it.

Children in direct provision, including these born in Ireland, currently receive the Scrooge-like sum of €9.60 per week, totally inadequate to pay for games, treats, school excursions etc, which marks them off from the other children at school or elsewhere, whose parents can afford these things. Child benefit is only €32.50 per week; not a large sum, but it would make a big difference to these children. And since the number of children involved is only 1,650, it would not impose a huge burden on the State.

Successive justice ministers have justified not paying regular social welfare benefits to asylum-seekers on the basis that it would create a “pull” factor, attracting greater numbers to our shores. But in the case of children in the direct provision system, who are deprived of something all their peers in the country are getting, it appears that they are being punished not for anything they did but to deter others. That cannot be right. Child benefit should be restored to them now. – Yours, etc,

MICHAEL FARRELL,

Free Legal Advice Centres,

Lower Dorset Street,

Dublin 1

Sir, – May I thank your paper, and in particular Carl O’Brien, for drawing attention to the degrading, dehumanising and inappropriate manner in which the Irish State holds 4,360 asylum seekers. A new system, which prioritises the human rights of this group of people, rather than profit and convenience, needs to be introduced as a matter of urgency. – Yours, etc,

DONAL MOORE,

Ferrybank,

Waterford

A chara,   – In a recent interview newly appointed Minister for Transport Paschal Donohoe calls the imminent strike action by Irish Rail workers a “slap in the face” for taxpayers. If that is the case, how should we characterise the Government’s treatment of taxpayers? Grievous bodily harm?

While nobody would welcome the disruption that such action might bring to the country, it is the lesser of two evils when compared with the constant damage done to public services by this privatisation-obsessed Government. Since taking office in 2011, Fine Gael and Labour have cut the annual subvention to CIÉ companies by over €53 million, that is back to 1998 funding levels. In the same period, staff at all three CIE companies have taken wage cuts. As the Government annually cuts the funding, the staff is called on to take pay cuts to bridge the funding gap.

As a taxpayer, I have no issue whatsoever with my taxes being used to funding public services such as transport. Using taxes to fund public services is what is supposed to happen. The Government needs to fund public services, including transport, to match the level of service required, without expecting those services to make a profit.

It is extremely disappointing to hear Mr Donohoe criticiising workers for refusing to take repeated cuts in pay to compensate for this Government’s abdication of its responsibilities to public transport funding and its insidious ideological attempt to inch towards privitisation of that sector. – Is mise,

SIMON O’CONNOR,

Lismore Road,

Dublin 12

Sir, – Heather Abrahamson claims (August 9th) that the Tricycle Theatre in Kilburn “has refused to host a Jewish film festival”. This is not an accurate account of the situation. The Tricycle requested that the festival refrain from accepting funds from the Israeli embassy because it did not wish to be associated with either side in the current conflict. It offered to make up the funds, so that the festival could go ahead. The festival refused.

In this situation, would it not be more accurate for Ms Abrahamson to summarise what has occurred as the JFF refusing to disassociate itself from the Israeli state, and hence its actions in Gaza, in order for the film festival to go ahead? – Yours, etc,

CAHAL McLAUGHLIN,

Professor of Film Studies,

Queen’s University,

University Square,

Belfast BT7 1NN

A chara, – John Kelly’s assertion (August 9th) that Israel is in control of Gaza doesn’t square with reality. How can anyone claim that Israel is “in control of” a territory which has fired thousands of missiles at it in the last few weeks. Nor is it in occupation of the area – a fact conceded by senior Hamas official Mahmoud al-Zahar. Gaza is bordered to the south by Egypt, which is free to allow in anything it wants. In reality, far fewer foodstuffs get in via Egypt as a result of that country’s far tighter blockade on the territory. The vast bulk of goods, water and power supplies come from Israel; this was the case even during the recent crisis when 300,000 Israelis were being displaced by rocket attacks from Gaza. – Yours, etc,

CIARÁN Ó

RAGHALLAIGH,

College Street,

Cavan

A Chara, – Andrew Doyle (August 9th) presumes to speak for “most other parents around the country” who have to pay for Irish (language) textbooks for their children “who do not enjoy having to learn a compulsory language that the vast majority of them will have no use for once they leave school”.

I would like to ask Mr Doyle what use will they make of subjects such as history, geography, religion, or much of what is prescribed on their English (also “compulsory”) courses? Mr Doyle talks of “fumbling in a greasy till” for the money to pay for Irish textbooks. But surely we Irish are more than a nation of shopkeepers. – Le meas,

PÁDRAIG Ó CÍOBHÁIN,

Bóthar na Ceapaí,

Bearna

Sir, – I have recently returned from a holiday in Italy. Before leaving Dublin I got a prescription from my doctor for some of my usual medication which I wished to get while in Italy. During my stay I called to a local pharmacy and purchased this medication. The manufacturer was the same, the strength and dosage were the same and the packaging was the same. The only difference was the price.

In Italy I paid €14.95 for it and in Dublin I pay €31.71. I would be glad if someone could tell me in simple terms the reason for this discrepancy. – Yours, etc,

M MARKEY,

Whitebeam Road,

Clonskeagh,

Dublin 14

Mon, Aug 11, 2014, 01:45

First published: Mon, Aug 11, 2014, 01:45

Sir, – President Higgins’s comments on his idea of republicanism, in his interview with Stephen Collins (August 5th), deserves a lot more coverage and analysis. It could hardly be more timely as interested parties wave “the flag we republicans claim” in the run-up to 1916 commemorations.

Each faction, from the handful who tried to roar down the President at Glasnevin, to Éirígí, via Sinn Féin to Fianna Fáil – The Republican Party, presents itself as the true, sole inheritor of the title republican. None seems capable of the breadth, depth or generosity of President Higgins’s perspective. He rightly rejects the notion that “nationalist” and “republican” are interchangeable and speaks of a “true republicanism [with] a glowing centre of egalitarianism”.

Most challenging for many of your recent correspondents is his suggestion that it cannot be truly republican “to ignore the deaths, the injuries and the families of the working people of Ireland and Britain who were sucked into” the first World War. His intention to expand on his notion of republicanism gives hope that in the middle of so much vacuous sloganeering and balderdash, there may be room for some reflection – and reassessment. – Yours, etc,

PADDY McGOVERN,

Clarence Mangan Road,

Dublin 8

Sir, – The recent debate between John Bruton, Éamon Ó Cuív and others over how necessary, or otherwise, the 1916 rising was for achieving independence may be focusing on the wrong event.

One of the benefits of the historical analysis that has accompanied recent commemorations of the start of the first World War is that it has allowed events leading up to foundation of the State to be viewed against a wider global backdrop.

In this context it would appear that first World War was the event that killed home rule and led to the violent path to independence. It has to be remembered that the 1916 rising was staged by the IRB and the Irish Citizens Army as a response to Britain going to war with the Central Powers.

Also, another war-related issue, the 1918 conscription crisis, served to undermine home rule and contribute to the rise in support for Sinn Féin and full independence.

Finally, a war-weary Britain probably did not have the stomach for the repressive measures necessary to quell the rebellion associated with the War of Independence and was therefore amenable to granting something that went beyond home rule.

Another noteworthy thing arises from viewing events in this broader context. When the great and the good, along with devout nationalists and possibly some members of the British royal family, gather on O’Connell Street in late April 2016, they will in effect be commemorating another battle of the First World War – in this case one fought on Irish soil. – Yours, etc,

ROBERT HALLIGAN,

The Friary,

Castledermot,

Co Kildare

Sir,– Prof Ian O’Donnell’s article on death row (Opinion & Analysis, August 8th)is erudite, compassionate and enlightened. It is intriguing that prisoners develop coping mechanisms while on death row but, overall, capital punishment is still cruel, unusual and barbaric.

Amnesty International reports that, despite positive moves towards abolition in many parts of the world, the number of reported executions rose by almost 15 per cent in 2013. In that year at least 778 people were executed worldwide. This figure excludes the numbers executed in China, which are estimated to be in the thousands. Almost 80 per cent of reported executions occurred in Iran, Iraq and Saudi Arabia.

Japan and the US were the only G8 countries to perform executions in 2013. Even in the US, the practice is in decline: Maryland became the 18th abolitionist state in May 2013. Nevertheless, there were 39 executions in the US last year, in Alabama (1), Arizona (2), Florida (7), Georgia (1), Ohio (3), Oklahoma (6), Missouri (2), Virginia (1) and Texas (16).

Our research group at UCD (with Dr Sharon Foley) has demonstrated that, in Texas, execution is usually preceded by over 10 years spent on death row, with strong evidence of prisoners experiencing high levels of psychological suffering. Most have mental illness and virtually all have histories of severe head injury. The suicide rate on death row is up to five times that of the general US male population.

While prisoners who are executed have usually been convicted of exceptionally cruel and unusual crimes, resulting in death and inestimable suffering, it is utterly illogical and morally repugnant to use such cruel and unusual acts as justification for further cruel and unusual acts, such as killing the prisoner. In addition, the possibility of judicial error is as real as it is horrific.

Against this background, recent hand-wringing in the US over what are perceived to be cruel and unusual execution methods appears to be a primitive defence mechanism used to protect human consciences from an even more cruel, unusual and utterly irreducible fact: another human is being killed. – Yours, etc,

PROF BRENDAN KELLY,

Department of

Adult Psychiatry,

University College,

Dublin

Irish Independent:

There has been much exposure given to Mr Bruton’s unusual interpretation of the Home Rule episode in Irish History.

I would suggest Mr Bruton read Alvin Jackson’s essay ‘British Ireland: What if Home Rule had been enacted in 1912?’ It is in Niall Ferguson’s book Virtual History.

Jackson points out that the efforts of politicians from Daniel O’Connell to John Redmond to achieve “Irish self-government with loyalty to the British Crown” failed because of the refusal of successive British governments to recognise and accommodate this distinctive tradition.

The Home Rule movement neither successfully wooed nor subjugated its Northern opponents, nor the Protestant attitudes which would have been crucial to the movement.

Without the failure of the Buckingham Palace Conference in July 1914, Home Rule would have been enacted for the whole of the island. Asquith’s Amending Bill introduced in 1914 and proposing the temporary exclusion of Ulster, was widely seen as unsatisfactory and was lost. The prospect of a European war was certainly the mechanism by which the unionist leaders and the liberal ministers escaped from the Ulster crisis.

By August 1914, the eve of the Great War, Ulster unionists had gone a considerable way to creating a provisional government for the North, with the uncompromising support of their British conservative allies and, most importantly, the British Army in Ireland (the Curragh Mutiny). The traditional judgment that Ireland was spared a civil war only by the German invasion of Belgium seems hard to fault.

In his book, ‘The Fatal Path’, Ronan Fanning points out that Robert Blake – who Fanning describes as the doyen of historians of the conservative party – said in August 1914: “The British Constitution and the conventions on which it depends were strained to the uttermost limit; and paradoxically, it was the outbreak of the First World War which, although it imperilled Britain’s very existence, alone saved British institutions from disaster.”

In the opinion of Jackson, Home Rule “far from inaugurating a new and peaceful era in Anglo-Irish relations, might well have introduced a period of bloodshed and nagging international bitterness”.

Finally, in response to Mr Bruton’s claim that Bonar Law approved of Home Rule; Law is recorded as saying: “Ireland under Home Rule might well have proved to be not so much Britain’s settled democratic partner as her Yugoslavia.”

Hugh Duffy, Cleggan, Co Galway

Muslims need to break silence

I wonder can we expect demands for a recall of the Dail and Seanad from its two-month summer holiday, so that TDs and Senators can blame Israel and the West for the humanitarian crisis in northern Iraq – which in the past few weeks 
has seen more people killed 
than in the current Middle East conflict?

But, of course, there’s no way to blame Jews for what’s going on in northern Iraq.

And who would dare make a speech pointing out that the savagery of Muslims in that region and elsewhere has nothing to do with wanting various different political outcomes for the region, but is instead due to flaws within Islam itself, which people are too scared to mention. Far easier to just have a go at Israel.

The reason there are still people like the Islamic State and Boko Harem in the modern world is not because of America or Russia or any other geopolitical reason, it’s because the people who lead these groups are never challenged by normal, moderate Muslims – if there is such a thing.

Moderate Muslims and their religious leaders need to explain to the world that the version of Islam we are seeing in places like 
northern Iraq and Nigeria is a distortion.

Or can the silence from the various Muslim councils around the world be taken to indicate that actually, the level of unease within the Muslim world is not what might be reasonably expected?

The onus needs to shift onto Muslims themselves to explain why they have failed to confront the extremists within their community.

Irish people had to confront extremism when faced with SF/IRA terrorist claims that they were killing innocent civilians “in our name” for the sake of a united Ireland.

It wasn’t easy, but we did it and now those same terrorists have had to publicly accept that their goal of a united Ireland can never be achieved by violence.

The blame for ISIS and the existence of other Muslim extremists does not rest with the West, it is the fault of Muslim communities who failed in their responsibility to challenge such extremism in the first place.

Desmond FitzGerald, Canary Wharf, London

Our affinity with people of Gaza

In my opinion, the Gaza conflict offers many Irish people the perfect opportunity to jump in and gain the high moral ground, which helps to mitigate the effects of a deep-rooted inferiority complex caused by centuries of colonisation and subjugation in which they feel an affinity with the people of Gaza.

The Gazans are fairly recent occupants from Egypt and Jordan, having arriving in the 19th century about the same time as the Jews began returning to this part of the world.

They still mostly consider themselves as Egyptians and Jordanians, etc.

In other words, there is no country called Palestine that they have lost through colonisation by Israel and therefore this feeling of affinity is not on solid ground at all.

The above mentioned inferiority complex is made worse by the shame and guilt of one’s nature inculcated by the church, along with the racial intolerance and the bias against the Jews.

Paddy O’Connor, Edmonton, Canada

Putting water out to tender

I read the intriguing article (Irish Independent, August 11) regarding the need to go to tender over postcodes with interest, and wonder why the same ruling does not seem to have applied to Irish Water?

I strongly object to paying bills that may be issued from an illegal company – if indeed Irish Water has been set up without competition, as it appears at this time.

If Irish Water was set up against EU law, then perhaps it begs the question: are we still legally bound to pay?

Caitriona McClean, Lucan, Co Dublin

Bankers, witches – silly season

We know it is the silly season but our former Taoiseach John Bruton may be losing the run of himself.

We are now informed that blaming the bankers is like blaming witches in former times.

The analogy with witches may in fact not be that far-fetched. Consider the range of obtuse and misty financial machinations used in the bankers’ brew. They surely amount to financial wizardry.

Coverage of Mr Bruton’s speech made it clear that he was speaking without notes.

He might like to reconsider that approach when he is dealing with matters so sensitive to public opinion.

John F Jordan, Brussels, Belgium

 

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Irish Independent


Wendy and Susan

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12 August 2014 Wendy and Susan

I jog around the park I still have arthritis in my left knee, but I manage to get round the park. A wettish day. I get go to the Post office and the Co op Wendy and Susan come for lunch

Scrabble: I win, but gets under just 400. perhaps Mary will win tomorrow.

100 Games: Mary wins 52 John 38 Mary Average score 346 John 340

Obituary:

Dame Kathleen Ollerenshaw – obituary

Dame Kathleen Ollerenshaw was an eminent mathematician who overcame childhood deafness, fell in love over a slide rule, and became an education adviser to Margaret Thatcher

Kathleen Ollerenshaw with Margaret Thatcher

Kathleen Ollerenshaw with Margaret Thatcher Photo: Manchester Evening News Syndication

11:23AM BST 12 Aug 2014

CommentsComments

Dame Kathleen Ollerenshaw, who has died aged 101, was one of Britain’s most eminent mathematicians, an influential educationist and a former lord mayor of Manchester, where she led the city council’s Conservative group. She achieved all this, and more, despite being almost totally deaf from the age of eight until she acquired an effective hearing aid at 37.

Dame Kathleen — who published her autobiography at 93 — wrote that maths was “the one subject in which I was at no disadvantage. Nearly all equations are found in textbooks or shown on the blackboard as the teacher speaks. Mathematics is a way of thinking. It requires no tools or instruments or laboratories. It may be convenient to have a pen and paper, a ruler and a compass, but it is not essential: Archimedes managed very well with a stretch of smooth sand and a stick.”

An Oxford hockey blue and champion skater in her youth, she was also a keen astronomer — Lancaster University named its observatory after her.

As an adviser to Margaret Thatcher , she was a trenchant supporter of independent schools . Her warnings in the 1970s about falling standards in state schools were taken up by James Callaghan when he launched his “great debate” on the issue.

Dame Kathleen Ollerenshaw

Throughout her career she was supported by her husband, Robert Ollerenshaw, whom she had met at school when she was six. In the sixth form Robert gave her his slide rule: “He had made a leather case for it and I counted this as the mark of true love.” They married in 1939 and had two children, both of whom she outlived. Robert Ollerenshaw became a distinguished military surgeon before going into academia .

Kathleen Mary Timpson was born on October 1 1912, a granddaughter of the founder of Timpson Shoes . In 1921 a viral infection and inherited otosclerosis left her almost deaf, and she learned to lip-read. At St Leonard’s School, St Andrews, she was told she could not take maths in the sixth form as she had not attended applied maths classes; she threatened to leave, then achieved outstanding grades.

Having spent a year studying higher algebra and geometry with JM Child at Manchester University, Kathleen won a scholarship to Somerville College, Oxford, graduating in 1934 .

In 1937 she went to the Shirley Institute, which undertook research for the cotton industry, but soon met the German mathematician Kurt Mahler, who had come to Manchester University. He mentioned an unsolved problem on critical lattices, an aspect of number theory and geometry, and she solved it within days. Mahler suggested she return to Oxford for a DPhil; she produced five original papers which qualified her without the need to submit a thesis. After Robert was demobilised, she lectured at Manchester University.

Kathleen Ollerenshaw was co-opted on to Manchester education committee in 1954, and two years later elected a councillor, serving almost continuously until 1980. After telling the National Council of Women of the poor state of Manchester’s older schools, she was asked for a detailed report, which found that 750,000 British children used schools built before 1870; this led to the government releasing extra funds for school buildings. In 1958 she published a Conservative Political Centre pamphlet, Education for Girls, which insisted on more than “a diluted or merely modified version of the traditional education provided for boys”. Girls, she wrote, must be educated for work as well as marriage, with greater encouragement to study maths and sciences. She became chairman of Manchester’s education committee when the Conservatives took control in 1967, serving for three years before Labour regained it. She was appointed DBE in 1971.

When Stanford University published research showing that attainment in maths by Japanese children was far higher than elsewhere, Kathleen Ollerenshaw persuaded the British Council to send her to Japan to ascertain why. She found class sizes much larger than in Britain, but a high standard of discipline and an expectation of success.

Dame Kathleen was Manchester’s lord mayor in 1975-76, and during her term of office wrote a children’s book, The Lord Mayor’s Party, as well as First Citizen, in which she told how she would play Frisbee with her secretary in the main hall . She dispensed with the lord mayor’s dining room, because “My husband and I have no time for entertaining”. She led the council’s Conservative opposition from 1977 to 1979 .

In 1978 she succeeded the Duke of Edinburgh as president of the Institute of Mathematics and its Applications, which she had helped found. Under her leadership it conducted the first national tests in basic maths, and she was appalled by the results: fewer than nine per cent of children obtained anywhere near full marks on an extremely simple paper, and 15-year-olds in inner London were a year behind those in Cleveland.

One of the first mathematicians to solve the Rubik’s Cube (her efforts resulted in her having to undergo an operation for “cubist’s thumb”), Dame Kathleen published her Rubik’s Cube paper in 1980. To solve the puzzle in 80 moves, she said, you did the bottom face first, then the top corners, then the middle slice edges and finally the top edges.

She went on to study the theory of magic squares — in which the numbers 1 to 16 are arranged in a 4×4 array so that the sum of each row, each column and the two diagonals add to the same. With the cosmologist Herman Bondi she verified 17th-century calculations that there were exactly 800 different such squares, and in 2006 she published Constructing Magic Squares of Arbitrarily Large Size.

In 2004 Dame Kathleen brought out a memoir, To Talk of Many Things. In 2008, Sir Peter Maxwell Davies dedicated his Naxos Quartet No 9 to her.

Among her many posts, Dame Kathleen Ollerenshaw was a Pro-Chancellor of Salford and Lancaster Universities; and chairman of the courts of the Royal Northern College of Music, Manchester College of Commerce and its successor, Manchester Polytechnic, and Manchester University.

She was president of Manchester Statistical Society and Manchester Technology Association; vice-president of Manchester Astronomical Society and of the British Association for Commercial and Industrial Education and the City and Guilds; and chairman of the Association of Governing Bodies of Girls’ Public Schools and the St John Ambulance Council for Greater Manchester. She was appointed a Deputy Lieutenant for Greater Manchester in 1987.

Robert Ollerenshaw died in 1986, and both their children predeceased her.

Dame Kathleen Ollerenshaw, born October 1 1912, died August 10 2014

Guardian:

Calculus on blackboard

The Council for the Mathematical Sciences, which represents the learned societies for mathematics in the UK, (CMS) takes issue with most of Simon Jenkins’s article (The maths mechanics, 8 August). But at this time of the year, when young people are concerned about A-level choices and university options, his statements about the employability of mathematicians have the potential to cause the greatest damage.

Jenkins uses the latest data from the Higher Education Statistics Agency (Hesa) to argue that employment prospects for mathematicians are worse than those for, eg, historians. While it is true that 9% of mathematicians were unemployed six months after graduating compared with 7% of historians, the tables are turned in the longer term. The same annual Hesa reports used by Jenkins show that three years later in their careers:

(a) 2.3% of mathematicians were assumed unemployed compared to 3.8% of the historians;

(b) 75% of mathematicians thought their degree was good value for money, and 63% of historians thought theirs was;

(c) more than half the mathematicians in employment were earning more than £27,500, while this was true of only a quarter of the historians (92% of mathematicians were classified as being in “professional” employment compared with 77% of historians).

We leave it to your readers to do the maths.
Professor Paul Glendinning
University of Manchester, writing on behalf of the CMS

•  While referring to weak computer science graduates as unemployable, Simon Jenkins seems to think that all science and engineering graduates are worthless. Specifically, he calls them inarticulate. Not able to “speak well, write clearly”. He has a point. There is a problem. Too many weak students are recruited to these disciplines. I agree with him that education in this country needs a radical restructuring. But it’s not that we should be teaching weak science students to be more articulate, it’s that education in schools should be made more liberal. Maybe then the brighter students who are currently attracted to arts and humanities would find themselves drawn towards science and engineering. Then industry would get what it apparently wants, broad knowledge, specific skills and an articulate workforce.
Peter Henderson
Sherborne, Dorset

•  The misfit is with the economics, not the science. Two-thirds of new jobs are in services, and that is our folly; we need to produce the goods we use. Plessey used to lead the world in the semiconductor industry. We led the world with nuclear reactors. We had highly experienced engineers and scientists.

Britain needs to get back to doing productive jobs and rely less on services, the volatile markets and the City for its profits. A sound economy is what will avert another crash in the markets. Teaching has changed. Read Science Inside the Black Box for insight into how innovative teachers are improving the attainment of all. There are no productive jobs for the scientists.
Catherine Dunn
St Andrews, Fife

•  My impression from reading Simon Jenkins’s article is that he has something of an inferiority complex with regard to science and maths. CP Snow talked about the two cultures of science and the arts. This was always a misunderstanding, as the culture of those who have studied science generally includes the arts – often as notable practitioners. This is rarely the case the other way round.

Making the effort to understand science and maths leads to an appreciation of the counterintuitive rather than the merely intuitive. This requires truly creative and imaginative thought, even for those of us who are not innovative geniuses.
Keith Evans
Pwllheli, Gwynedd

•  Simon Jenkins argues for a broader education than at present found in our schools. His final sentence, however – “But try telling a British school that etiquette is more use than algebra” – is aimed at the wrong target. Tell the Department for Education, tell Ofsted.

Teachers would love the chance to provide the education their pupils need. In a Maidstone secondary modern school back in the 70s, we provided one day a week work experience for year 11, and took year 10 off timetable one day a week to do drama, music, adventure courses and initiative-developing schemes. One lesson a week each of careers education, social education and religious education is now regularly squeezed into one lesson. These courses prepared pupils for the world outside, as Jenkins wants.

If we are to prepare pupils for the world of work, we need to do so much more than the narrow curriculum envisaged by Michael Gove. This does not mean we should be doing industry’s job for them. Companies love to talk about a skills deficit, but schools need to be given the opportunity to train the mind, to encourage individual initiative, to facilitate problem-solving skills, even good manners.

There was a time when countries from the far east would come to this country to learn from our primary schools. Schools are trying their best to provide a broad-based curriculum with a skills approach but the system is against them. A Japanese teacher would learn little from this country today.
Brian Thomas
Marden, Kent

•  Once again, Simon Jenkins points out the folly of government education policies. As he says, “What could be more important to young people than learning to live at peace with themselves and others.” Yet, ever since the Education Reform Act of 1988, schools have been bedevilled by inspections, league tables, restrictive curricula and a competitive focus on test and examination results.

Politicians rarely stop to reflect on what education is – or should be. At the risk of engaging in professorial pomposity, I offer this description of education. First: education is the experience and nurture of personal and social development towards worthwhile living. Second: education is the acquisition, creation, development, transmission, conservation, discovery and renewal of worthwhile culture. Third: education is the acquisition, development, transmission, conservation, discovery, and renewal of skills for worthwhile survival. I call it a “framework definition” because it leaves teachers and local communities to determine what is “worthwhile”.

My first part is exactly what Jenkins refers to and should be in the forefront of any school’s thinking. He cites the expressed concerns of industry about the skills of school leavers, and it would seem that it is personal skills that are criticised. Schools should have the time and freedom to ensure that their leavers are well-balanced individuals ready to contribute to and enjoy the wellbeing of their world, while industry should provide training in any specific skills needed by their workforce.

The second part is about the culture that should provide a meaningful background to the forthcoming lives of pupils as citizens engaged in work and play, in family life and in the pursuit of individual interests – hobbies as they were once called.

The third part is a sombre reminder that we live on a fragile planet and that mankind’s survival depends upon taking good care of it.

Sadly, our education system is a long way from this ideal.
Professor Michael Bassey
Author of Education for the Inevitable

I was lucky enough to chair at least three press conferences for Robin Williams (Report, 12 August) when he came to London for the launch of films such as Mrs Doubtfire and Hook. After just one question, though, he was usually off and running on an inspired stint of standup before a group of my fellow journalists who were only too happy to let him riff brilliantly if ever more vaguely on the subject for which we were all officially gathered. It was like having a front-row seat at an exclusive comedy club. Trouble is, his fellow panellists – the likes of Dustin Hoffman, Chris Columbus and Steven Spielberg – were generally blitzed into a stunned if mostly admiring silence as this comic genius worked the room.
Quentin Falk
Little Marlow, Buckinghamshire

• The resignation of Sayeeda Warsi on a matter of principle was profoundly disorientating. So the fact that she’s been followed through the exit door by Mark Simmonds (Report, 12 August), aggrieved that he can’t make ends meet on his generous expenses, is a reassuring return to Tory normality.
Paul Bream
Wallsend, North Tyneside

• Our three garden nest boxes are each producing their third consecutive broods of sparrows. Together then with our feeding table, we think we’ve provided full board and lodgings for upwards of 30 new sparrows this year.
Peter Francis
Leicester

• I have always prided myself on not being able to do any sport whatsoever. I’m dismayed to see that sudoku is “the most all-encompassing sport in the world” (Report, 12 August). As I always turn to the back page of G2 first and throw away the sport supplement unread, what should I do? Order a tracksuit?
Marion Kuit
Kendal, Cumbria

• Here in Cornwall we refer to the rest of the UK as “up country” – indicating some otherworldly, slightly mysterious place that few have reached and from where even fewer return (Letters, 9 August). The classic train announcement crawling through eastern Cornwall towards Paddington (nearly five hours away at the best of times) was “we apologise for the delay in this service; it’s caused by some signalling problems in England”. And a few years ago, Truro City supporters at a pre-season friendly in Plymouth sang about “you dirty northern bastards” – which did seem to leave the Argyle fans a little confused.
Roderick Clarke
Truro

• I have shared my life with several cats over the years and all of them knew the name of the founder of the Chinese Communist party (Letters, 1 August).
Joe Corbett
London

Nigel Osborne will no longer buy the Guardian (Letters, 12 August); others have written to condemn the printing of the advert supported by Elie Wiesel as an increasingly pro-Israel bias of your editorial policy; as mendacious; and a travesty of free speech. From all this, one could conclude they disagree with the content, which therefore they state should not be published. Who are these thought police? Are they the same ones who urge the Tricycle Theatre to boycott Jewish films? And urge British universities to boycott Israeli academics? So much for free speech. Was it not Voltaire who said “I disapprove of what you say, but I will defend to the death your right to say it?” There is much in the Guardian’s coverage of the Israeli-Gaza conflict with which I disagree, but that has not stopped me from continuing to buy it and to read articles like that by Karma Nabulsi (Out of the carnage a new spirit, 12 August).
Rose Rachman
Totland Bay, Isle of Wight

I’m glad you printed the advert because I want to know what these people are saying and I don’t want them to be censored. • I say, take heart to the Guardian reader who is giving up the paper after 25 years. My reaction was quite the opposite, although of course I was similarly appalled by the nature of this propaganda. However, we need to know the mindset of Israel and this advertisement gave that in very bleak detail. The Israeli people must indeed be in a dark place if they believe that Elie Wiesel sets forth a just cause.
Carol Knight
Salisbury, Wiltshire

I’m glad you printed the advert because I want to know what these people are saying and I don’t want them to be censored. • While revolted by the ad’s specious posturing, I was not unhappy for the Guardian to publish it. I credit the Guardian’s readers with enough nous to see through it. Besides, it acts as a donation from This World to help the finances of the free media – and incidentally simply strengthens readers’ disgust with the worst aspects of fundamental Zionism.
Michael Miller
Sheffield

I’m glad you printed the advert because I want to know what these people are saying and I don’t want them to be censored. • One question intrigues me. Do those who write to the Guardian stating they will never buy another copy, buy one the next day to see if their letter has been published?
Terence Hall
Manchester

• I began my friendship with you in 1982, the same year I went to a kibbutz and discovered the truth about Israel. You taught me about politics and culture. You were there for my dad when he died and for my mum when she was in prison. Each week I invest £12.30 in you. But no longer. What you have done in carrying Elie Wiesel’s ad is appalling. I’m unfriending you and urging all those I know to do the same until you apologise.
Jake Arden
London

I’m glad you printed the advert because I want to know what these people are saying and I don’t want them to be censored. • It’s strange to see your correspondents condemning the Guardian. The ad, trenchantly critical of Hamas though it is, does not contain a word of hate speech directed against Palestinian people or against Arabs or Muslims in general; how, then, is it illegitimate for the Guardian to run it? Part of the process of resolving any long-term problem is to see the world for what it is, not as those who yell loudest would wish us to see it. It is clear that Hamas is not a political movement pure and simple, nor is it a liberationist group – it is a terrorist organisation, every bit as much as the IRA, the Lord’s Resistance Army or the Stern Gang. What is more, it is a group that has convinced its supporters that random military attacks against civilian targets in Israel are somehow a great idea, even though they are guaranteed to produce a violent over-reaction from Israel. This is immorality and stupidity of the first order – it needs to be recognised in plain sight and resolutely opposed.
Roger Fisken
Bedale, North Yorkshire

I’m glad you printed the advert because I want to know what these people are saying and I don’t want them to be censored. • You often print messages from governments or organisations. I never believe what they are telling me. Does anyone?
Norma Laming
Ipswich

I was delighted to read the article by Shane Hickey (Changing lives: The ‘Electronic Couple’ who gave power of hearing to the deaf, 11 August) about cochlear implants and my friends the Hochmairs, whom I and others involved in the field of cochlear implantation have known since their Vienna days, as well as those scientists in Paris, California and Australia who worked around the same time developing the original versions of the other currently available brands of cochlear implant.

You mention the fact that health systems in the EU, unlike those in Latin America and south-east Asia, allow children to receive a cochlear implant early in life, ideally before their first birthday, if they have been born severely deaf. This is correct for most EU countries and the UK, as described in a supplement published last year by the journal I edit, Cochlear Implants International. Another fact also mentioned in this supplement was that while in these countries the state-financed health systems have allowed around 95% of children who will benefit from a cochlear implant to receive one, the comparable figure for the United States is a mere 50%.

In the 1980s, when the first commercially available cochlear implant, made by Nucleus in Australia, became available, these devices were not funded by the NHS. A group of us, with the very effective assistance of the late Jack Ashley MP (Lord Ashley of Stoke), formed the British Cochlear Implant Group, whose initial target was to persuade the government of the day that cochlear implants should be funded by the NHS. By the early 1990s this aim had been achieved.

Thirty years later, a comparable organisation, the American Cochlear Implant Alliance, has now been formed in the US, with a similar purpose. It seems ironic that the world’s richest nation still has a health system that denies cochlear implants to some 50% of those children who would benefit from them.
John Graham FRCS
London

Palestinian boy walks through debris

Nine protesters last week occupied an arms factory based in Staffordshire and it was closed down for two days. The factory is owned by Elbit Systems, Israel’s biggest arms company (Report, 6 August). The drone components they make are allegedly used by the Israeli military to assault Palestinians in Gaza. This factory symbolises how strongly the UK is linked to Israel’s military. Over £190m of UK arms have been exported to Israel over the past five years. These nine protesters, who drew attention to UK complicity with Israeli violations of international law, are being charged with aggravated trespass for stopping this “lawful” factory operating. But selling these weapons to Israel is what is criminal here.

All charges against the protesters should be dropped and a two-way military embargo should be imposed on Israel immediately.
Alice Walker, Ahdaf Soueif, Miranda Pennell, Breyten Breytenbach, John Pilger, Miriam Margolyes, Nick Cave, Noam Chomsky, Richard Falk, Victoria Brittain

We are writing to express our opposition to Peter Fahy’s suggestion that police should have greater access to confidential medical records, irrespective of a patient’s own wishes (Report, 11 August). The confidentiality of medical records, and the trust that it engenders, is a cornerstone of the doctor-patient relationship. Vulnerable people may have particular concerns about the confidentiality of their health information, and weakening their rights here may deter them from seeking vital medical support.

Medical professionals acting in accordance with Sir Peter Fahy’s beliefs would also face potential action by the General Medical Council for breaching confidentiality. As doctors working in police custody we have “dual responsibility” in terms of our ethical responsibilities. The duty owed to the criminal justice system requires us to disclose findings that assist the police in their investigation, such as relevant injuries, and to ensure that custody staff have sufficient information to provide safe care for detainees. Our duty to the detainee or patient is to protect the confidentiality of information that has no relevance to the reason for arrest. This information can be provided on the basis of the patient’s informed consent or a court direction.

We agree that the police detainee population is characterised by a high level of vulnerability, mental illness and substance abuse. The British Medical Association and the Faculty of Forensic and Legal Medicine is working with NHS England to improve integration of medical databases, so that relevant healthcare workers can access sensitive information, and divert patients detained in custody to appropriate treatment and support without the need to drive a coach and horses through their rights to a confidential health service.
Dr Rachael Pickering Co-chair, Forensic Medicine Committee, BMA, Dr Victoria Evans President, Faculty of Forensic and Legal Medicine, Royal College of Physicians of London, Dr Michael Wilks Vice-president, BMA

It was refreshing to hear a farmer expressing the sensible view that farms should be used for producing food (Report, 7 August). In my part of Essex, if they can’t sell land for redevelopment, farmers are busy sowing such fine edible crops as turf and solar power. Custodians of the countryside.
Peter Smith
Manningtree, Essex

•  The ruddy duck must not live because it is non-indigenous and infecting the “purity” of the native white-headed duck – which presumably doesn’t care that its progeny is not “pure” (Shooters set their sights on UK’s last remaining ruddy ducks, 9 August). Meanwhile the human species causes devastation throughout this once diverse planet. And surely bird lovers like nothing better than when a migrating non-indigenous bird flies off course and lands somewhere in the UK.
Sara Starkey
Tonbridge, Kent

• Zoe Williams is critical of conflating faith and community (Best foot forward as the godless put their faith in soles rather than souls, 9 August): quite right. However, she, like many others, conflates secularism, humanism and atheism. They are different, and people cross “the lines” in various ways. It is possible to be religious and want a secular state; to be an atheist but not a humanist; to be a Christian humanist etc.
Pat Bailey
Birmingham

• Louise Osborne and Maev Kennedy trace the battle for beach or poolside space back to a Carling Black Label advert in 1993 (Wake-up call for Brits as Germans refuse to take towel jibes lying down, 9 August). The Germans, albeit with the help of a British advertising agency, got there about 10 years earlier: “If you want to get on the beach before the Germans, you’d better buy an Audi 100!” (Report, 18 September).
Stuart Handysides
Ware

• What a pity Nigel Farage and Boris Johnson will not be fighting for the same seat in the general election (Farage on Ukip shortlist for South Thanet, 9 August) – and that Gilbert and Sullivan are not around to make a comic opera out of it.
Rob Parrish
Starcross, Devon

Independent:

I was disappointed to read that the Tory minister Mark Simmonds is quitting the Commons because the expenses system is “too meagre” for him to afford London rents.

Simmonds is able to claim £20,000 a year for rent, plus an additional £2,425 for each child (he has three). This works out at a rental budget of £524 per week, not counting his £120,000 ministerial salary, the £25,000 he pays his wife to be his part-time secretary or his second jobs such as the chairmanship of chartered surveyors Mortlock Simmonds.

As a solution, I wondered if Simmonds had considered the delights of moving to Brent? We’re far from the cheapest borough, but a three-bedroom flat can still just about be found for £400-£500 a week in areas like Kensal Green – a hugely diverse community where he could enjoy delicious cuisine from the four corners of the world (perhaps that’s why his government sent UKBA guards to check passports at the Tube station and drove “Go Home” vans through the streets).

As a local councillor I’ve written to Mr Simmonds offering to show him around the area. Of course he would have to embark on a 45-minute commute to Westminster every day, but I wonder if sharing the experiences of those who pay his wages might help him become less out of touch.

Cllr Matt Kelcher
(Labour, Kensal Green Ward)
London Borough of Brent

Mark Simmonds resigns. Can’t “afford” to live in London with his family.

I wonder if MPs who think they are having such a hard financial time ever wonder how the waiters, bar attendants, cleaners, handymen, secretaries and other staff who keep the Palace of Westminster going manage to have a life, on far less pay then the average MP with all their extra directorships.

If Mark Simmonds thinks his life, as an MP, is intolerable he obviously has no idea what so many others have to put up with. He sounds like a spoilt brat.

Sara Starkey
Tonbridge, Kent

Red-hunter of old Fleet Street

Your celebration of the late Chapman Pincher in both a column and on the Obituary page (7 August) should not be allowed to slip by unchallenged.

He certainly broke some stories that Labour governments in particular found embarrassing, but he was far from a courageous “lone wolf”.

The late E P Thompson was much closer to the truth when, in Writing by Candlelight, he described Pincher’s columns as “a kind of official urinal” in which various security establishment figures “stand patiently leaking in the public interest”.

That “public interest” was a particular, nastily partisan, right-wing, often institutionally self-interested view which saw “Reds” everywhere and never met a weapon it didn’t like.

It also, as your obituarist admits, led him to suppress stories when he saw fit, and print others he knew to be false. He did not deserve to be honoured by those who believe in honest journalism.

Laurence Lustgarten
Oxford

 

The obituaries of Chapman Pincher have tended, without endorsing all his charges of Communist subversion in the Civil Service and Labour Party, to give him a high reputation. There should be more regard for the irresponsibility with which he suggested wider guilt.

His stress on Communist fellow travellers being reliable voters for Harold Wilson, made clear intimations of worse. On one strange occasion, I got full-blast his undeclared and raging view of Wilson. In 1977, I had just joined the Daily Express when, in a corridor, an angry Harry Pincher stopped me, unknown to him and unprovoking, to proclaim of the Prime Minister: “I will get that little man if it is the last thing I do.”

Yet he was to be heard  recently saying what a splendid, delightful good thing dear old Harold had been. Doubtless both positions were sincerely, if severally, taken. However they mark the man readily holding both as a febrile personality not to be taken as seriously as he has been.

Edward Pearce
Thormanby, North Yorkshire

 

Keep the UK family together

Your editorial of 7 August calls on people across the UK to make their voices heard before Scots vote in their referendum next month. Unless those who support the Union outside Scotland speak up, we could face a situation in which fewer than 2 million Scots voting Yes cause the dismemberment of the UK, with a population of 63 million.

In fact, grassroots campaigns are now emerging to give a say to those who want to keep the Union. Independent, non-political projects such as To Scotland With Love, Let’s Stay Together, and Hands Across the Border are providing those without votes the chance to show that they care about the UK family staying together.

Andrew Colquhoun
Hastings

Ed Miliband has made a “pledge” that there will be no formal currency union with Scotland in the event of a Yes vote in the independence referendum. Mr Miliband and his Unionist colleagues should have the decency to explain the outcome of this to the up to 120,000 employees in the rest of the UK who would be set to lose their jobs as a result of transaction costs between the remaining UK and an independent Scotland.

In addition, the loss of oil and gas and whisky revenues on the UK’s balance of payments would have a major impact on the pound.

A formal currency union is the only logical solution benefiting both Scotland and the rest of the UK.

Alex Orr
Edinburgh

Not all Londoners love Boris

J Stanley from Dunfermline (letter, 9 August) made many good points about London’s mayor, but highlighted again some readers’ misunderstanding of our democratic process.

Not all Londoners voted for Boris Johnson, nor do we all think he has done much for London. Quite the opposite, in fact: so the suggestion that Boris has “the full acquiescence of … the people of London” is not something that I, as a Londoner, recognise. I too am bewildered by his apparent popularity and puzzled by his positive press coverage.

(Perhaps The Independent could be less indulgent towards him, particularly given his lack of any obvious policies or achievements other than self-advancement?)

Similarly, as many readers have pointed out in the context of Scottish independence, not all of us in England voted for the current government, but hope for a better outcome next time.

How often does the outcome of our current democratic process have to be explained or justified?

Beryl Wall
London W4

Holding the police to account

You say that the Crown Prosecution Service’s decision that the evidence provided by the Independent Police Complaints Commission was insufficient to bring any prosecutions of police for their part in the death of Habib Ullah “raises serious questions about the willingness of the watchdog to confront officers” (report, 9 August).

Those questions have been asked by families and campaign groups such as Inquest for many years now. The independence of the IPCC has been more a matter of assertion than reality.

But its not just the IPCC. When the CPS opened its local office in Stoke Newington police station in north London, the local paper carried the headline “Singing from the same hymn sheet”.

These compromised and threadbare agencies should be replaced by a truly independent, properly empowered and staffed system to hold properly to account those who are allowed to use violence.

Nik Wood
London E9

Cut down the noise on trains

I empathise with your correspondents about noise on trains (letters, 8 August). I also seek the seclusion that the quiet coach grants (sometimes).

A while ago, I had found a table seat, by a window, bliss. Next, a youth sat opposite and plugged head phones into his ears, which leaked the trish-trash noise. I gestured to turn it down, he replied with a two-finger gesture.

I had a delve in my briefcase and pulled out a pair of pliers and gestured to cut his wires. He got up and moved on. Nothing like the threat of direct action! Moral: always carry wire cutters with you.

David Carter
Wakefield

A dozen first-class Attlees, please

The Post Office will issue in October a set of stamps with the heads of British Prime Ministers. One trusts that they can be purchased individually according to one’s political allegiance. Heaven forbid that in order to distinguish one’s correspondence with the face of Attlee one has to buy as many Thatchers.

Peter Forster
London N4

Times:

Antisemitism is increasing in the UK, and it is not only British Jews who are concerned

Sir, Libby Purves’s account of the cancellation of the Jewish Film Festival (“Be indignant, yes, but ditch the days of rage”, Aug 11) would have had far more credibility if she had mentioned the vitriolic antisemitism that has erupted in Britain over recent weeks.

Given the profoundly disturbing chorus of such gems as “Hitler was right” and “kill the Jews” in social media and on many of Britain’s streets, it is underwhelming to be charged with the age-old “Jewish sensitivity” and also accused of a “violent reaction”.

Remarkably, Purves draws a parallel with Oscar Pistorius who is accused of murdering his girlfriend; to my knowledge nobody in the Jewish community has so much as hurled a paper cup during their recent protestations.

I couldn’t agree more that “anger does not heal an angry world” and that “spewing insults” helps nobody. Indeed, the words “vengeful” and “violent” — as directed at those who protested against the Tricycle Theatre — are less than kind. By all means decry the protests — but please, spare a line for at least a token acknowledgment of the terrifying new reality facing the UK’s Jewish community.

Suzy Glaskie
Bowdon, Cheshire

Sir, Hugo Rifkind (“Suddenly it feels uncomfortable to be a Jew”, Aug 12) is discovering what many of us have long known: antisemitism in this country and elsewhere (even where there are no Jews) is a constant; the only variable is the impunity with which antisemites feel able to express themselves, and the flavour of the day: political, religious, racial, commercial, anti-Zionist, anti-Israel — on occasions even envy or fear.

Literature and historical scholarship bear eloquent witness. Reading the papers, watching television provides reminders. It is becoming difficult to pretend that all is well.

Victor Ross
London NW8

Sir, So Hugo Rifkind is suddenly feeling uncomfortable to be a Jew. I too am very uncomfortable and have been for some time.

It is not clear whether his discomfort springs from the fear that he will be recognised as somehow responsible (although of course he is not) for Israel’s actions in seeking security for its people, or if he believes there is another way that could be found to counter the years of hostility coming from Hamas whose charter clearly states their aim to wipe Israel off the earth.

Either way, may I, a fellow Jew, welcome him to the real world. I see no good reason why any Jew should be comfortable, nor indeed any other decent human being who is sensitive to the all too many ghastly happenings in our world today.

Sadly, Mr Rifkind, we are in a very uncomfortable world and some very uncomfortable decisions will have to be taken, if we are to act responsibly. The issues requiring such tough decisions will, regrettably, not go away because we choose to be blinkered and take a comfort pill.

Jack Lynes
Pinner, Middx

Co-operation between two forces is saving money without jeopardising performance

Sir, Your report didn’t really do
justice to the alliance between Warwickshire and West Mercia police forces (“Too many chiefs prevent police mergers”, Aug 11). Operational integration and collaboration extend much further and deeper than in other forces. Ours is across all areas of policing, whereas other forces have specific, function-by-function collaborations.

Another issue is answerability to the public. Our two forces cover an area of 3,600 square miles, with more than 1.8 million people, and there is a danger that the police leadership becomes increasingly remote from citizens.

The merger of eight forces into one in Scotland was achieved by ignoring the expressed opinion of the majority, and by setting up a government appointed police authority — thereby effectively abandoning the principle of local democratic accountability.

The 2010 and 2013 spending reviews called for our two forces to save £34 million. These savings have been made while maintaining performance, satisfaction and local accountability. I believe our alliance is an imaginative alternative to simplistically lumping forces together and producing over-large forces with no local identity.

Ron Ball

Police and Crime Commissioner,

Warwickshire

If art dealers were stricter about provenance they might find fewer pieces coming to market …

Sir, Gerald Fitzgerald (letter, Aug 12) misses an important point when calling for a tiny levy on art sales to fund an independent centre for provenance research. Although such a levy might cost only .05 per cent of annual art sales, currently standing at some $60 billion, if effective, such a centre could reduce the supply of works on the market by something like 40 per cent — at least in the view of the late Thomas Hoving, a former director of the Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York.

The art world is very quick on its feet: when calls were made in the 1930s for an independent centre of art restoration research, then director of the National Gallery in London, Kenneth Clark, promptly established a department of conservation science in order, as he later confessed, to “have in the background what purported to be scientific evidence to ‘prove’ that every precaution had been taken”.

Although self-policing may be an unrealistic ambition, governments could help considerably and at little cost by making it a statutory requirement that vendors should disclose all that is known and recorded about the provenance and the restoration treatments of works of art. As things stand, it can be safer to buy a second-hand car than an
old-master painting.

Michael Daley

Director, ArtWatch UK

Barnet, London

4

It is easy to lose a pub to developers but a good pub increases the value of its surroundings

Sir, It is all too easy to change a pub’s commercial use, which can then lead to smoother transition for conversion to a home.

A good pub in a village probably increases the value of homes, offices and shops in the vicinity.

Pubs are one of our best tourist attractions; to allow them to go at the current rate is very short sighted.

Tougher planning restrictions on commercial change of use would be a good start.

Iain Sinclair

Hildersham, Cambs

Car alarms which cannot be turned off are the bane of neighbourhoods – can no one do anything?

Sir, The strong winds here have activated the burglar alarm of a nearby parked car. It’s been sounding for two days now. Surely electronics manufacturers can come up with a device that automatically cuts out after an hour or so?

It would be lovely to hear a loud explosion that signalled the end of the constant noise and demise of offending car. The onsite security team say they can do nothing. I’d gladly blow it up myself if it didn’t mean a prison sentence.

Billie Pearce

Brighton

Telegraph:

SIR – The Government’s proposal to demand “accelerated payment” of inheritance tax is the latest way of making HM Revenue and Customs judge, jury and executioner on all tax matters, coming in the wake of plans to allow a “direct dip” into bank accounts to recover supposed debts.

Our tax system has become so complicated that even HMRC cannot properly administer it, hence the 5.5 million people who were incorrectly taxed last year. The latest proposals attempt to address a problem that exists only because the tax code is so complex.

Instead of adding further complexity and giving HMRC more powers, the Government should simplify the tax code and eliminate the loopholes that have dented public confidence in the system.

It should start by abolishing the immoral and unfair inheritance tax altogether.

Jonathan Isaby
Chief Executive, The TaxPayers’ Alliance London SW1

Emigration drain

SIR – Jeremy Warner fails to mention one of the most disturbing aspects of immigration: the disastrous effect that the loss of thousands of young and able people must inevitably have on the developing countries of the world.

While there are, of course, many genuine refugees seeking entry to the West, there are probably even more deserters.

I fail to see how the developing countries can make sound economic progress while significant numbers of their people leave.

Jeffrey Pearson
Heswall, Wirral

Off their trolley

SIR – My 93-year-old mother attempted to buy a new shopping trolley from Argos in Crawley last week. Since she is blind, she asked if the staff could kindly assemble it for her. They were prepared to put everything together but not to fix the wheels on, owing to “health and safety”. Because of that, she was unable to buy it.

What on earth did they think she was going to do with this trolley? Stand inside it and roll down the nearest hill?

Graham Masterton
Tadworth, Surrey

Monthly prescriptions

SIR – David Cable (Letters, August 11) is right to be frustrated by his GP issuing prescriptions for only 28 days’ supply.

There is no absolute bar to GPs issuing prescriptions for whatever time frame they wish. It is possible, however, that Mr Cable’s local clinical commissioning group is offering an incentive payment for the policy to be enforced – another example of the NHS treating its customers as feckless and irresponsible by not trusting them to look after their medication for more than a month at a time.

There is, however, a scheme whereby Mr Cable can ask his GP to issue prescriptions for 12 months. They are deposited with the local pharmacy and he can collect the medicines as they are required.

Dr Robert Walker
Great Clifton, Cumberland

Narrow boat, long face

SIR – My business partner and I operate horse-drawn boat trips on the Montgomery Canal and sponsor a gurning competition at the local canal festival. We have been asked to submit a risk assessment.

Where do we begin?

Stephen Rees-Jones
Dulverton, Somerset

Radiation damage

SIR – As your obituary of Captain Ian Wright mentioned, the Ministry of Defence continues to deny that the early deaths of many of the crew of HMS Diana (in which he served) and the deformities in some of their children are a consequence of exposure to ionising radiation.

That sad fact is, however, only a part of the story. Shamefully, as evidenced in the recent case in the Upper Tribunal before Mr Justice Charles, Britain is the only nuclear power not to acknowledge the exposure of its servicemen to radiation, something which the Isle of Man has had the grace to remedy for its residents.

The MoD maintains its posture despite the promises of successive prime ministers that the government would consider compensation claims if cogent scientific evidence became available. That evidence has long existed, not least in the authoritative study in 2008 by a team led by Dr R E Rowland of the New Zealand Institute of Molecular Biosciences. Using a technique called mFish (multicolour fluorescent in situ hybridisation), which “paints” chromosomes, making breaks and rearrangement visible, the team examined the damage to the chromosomes of 49 New Zealand veterans who had served on board two frigates positioned between 20 and 150 nautical miles upwind of explosions that were part of Britain’s nuclear test programme.

The Rowland study found that, on average, the crew members had three times as many chromosomal aberrations as 50 people who had not taken part in nuclear tests. The MoD steadfastly refuses to commission a similar study to take Dr Rowland’s peer-reviewed work further.

Nuclear test veterans of the Cold War are as deserving of recognition and pensions as those who served in other wars.

Group Capt Andrew Ades RAF (retd)
Camelford, Cornwall

Fluffy secret

SIR – If Chris Whitehouse (Letters, August 9) runs a hot iron over his “sandpapery” towels once he has brought them in off the washing line, their fluffiness will return.

Diane Turner
Swanton Morley, Norfolk

Thistle anxiety

SIR – What, revered Editor, will you do with the two thistles currently adorning the device above the leading article, should Scotland decide to become independent?

Alasdair Fairbairn
Watlington, Oxfordshire

How am I? You really wouldn’t want to know

SIR – After an accident left me with limited mobility, I learnt to be cautious in replying to the apparently solicitous: “How are you getting on?” (Letters, August 9). This was often a prelude to uninvited, interminable accounts of “when I had my operation”.

Therefore, my reply, with as big a smile as I could muster, was always to say that personal health problems were very boring and I did not want to bore anyone with mine.

Unspoken was the determination not to allow anyone to bore me with theirs.

Raymond Barry
Laytham, East Yorkshire

SIR – My late stepfather’s response was usually: “Another day nearer death.”

Jan Reeks
Gloucester

SIR – At Grimsby Baptist Church we are encouraged to respond: “Better than I deserve.” This reflects God’s grace, which by definition and experience gives us far more than we could ever merit.

Andrew Gulliver
Grimsby, Lincolnshire

SIR – My father would often reply: “Not much better for your asking, thank you.”

Graham Spencer
Hereford

Instead of burning trees, we should plant them

The rate of tree planting across Britain is far below Government targets

Contractors planting deciduous trees at Worston Farm on behalf of the Woodland Trust South Devon England

Seeing the trees for the wood: planting saplings in south Devon for the Woodland Trust  Photo: ALAMY

6:59AM BST 12 Aug 2014

CommentsComments

SIR – Yet another official report, this time from Dr Anna Stephenson and Professor David Mackay, for the Department of Energy and Climate Change, states that burning trees for electricity generation is “less green” than burning coal. It is hardly a surprising conclusion.

Professor Mackay, the Government’s Chief Scientific Adviser on Energy, also emphasises that trees are required to absorb the greenhouse gas emissions from this combustion process.

If it was not bad enough to burn trees instead of coal in power stations (and this is not only at Drax), news that the rate of tree-planting and restocking of timber crops across Great Britain is far below government targets is equally alarming. The case for increased tree planting is more compelling than ever.

David Sulman
Executive Director, United Kingdom Forest Products Association
Stirling

Britain has been rendered militarily ineffective in its response to atrocities committed by the Islamic State

Iraqi Yazidis, who fled their homes a week ago when Islamic State (IS) militants attacked the town of Sinjar

Displaced people from the minority Yazidi sect, fleeing violence from forces loyal to the Islamic State in Sinjar town, get help from a member of the Kurdish People’s Protection Units (YPG)  Photo: REUTERS/Rodi Said

7:00AM BST 12 Aug 2014

CommentsComments

SIR – As we tiptoe around the sidelines of potential genocide in Iraq, the Foreign Secretary must be cursing the last defence secretary, who signed off such savage cuts to the front line, thereby rendering Britain militarily ineffective.

Philip Hammond must by now realise that without a clear foreign policy there can be no defined military strategy. Furthermore, however loosely defined, any foreign policy without a “big stick” behind it is unlikely to be effective.

Wg Cdr Jeremy Parr RAF (retd)
Suckley, Worcestershire

SIR – As a British Muslim I must express horror and condemnation of the atrocities committed by the Islamic State in Syria and Iraq.

In light of the chaos we are witnessing, is there anyone left with the audacity to defend the intervention policies of America in Iraq, Libya and Syria? America claimed that it was intervening to promote democracy and to combat extremism. Instead it has created the environment, just as it did in Afghanistan, for these extremists to sprout and flourish, when previously they were non-existent.

S W Hussain
Bradford, West Yorkshire

SIR – With terrible events unfolding in Iraq, is it not time also to go after the paymasters of the Islamic State? It would need leaders with backbone, but if you cut off the flow of money and equipment to the Islamic State, the violence would stop.

James Wallis
Ely, Cambridgeshire

SIR – I applaud the involvement of Britain in delivering humanitarian aid to Iraq. I am a simple soul, but may I just ask why representatives from the United Nations are not being sent in? Surely there should be a dedicated team that can drop aid into troublesome regions.

Why do we as a nation seem to lead these initiatives? I would like to think that we are doing this for the best of reasons, and not because our leaders want to keep us on the world stage.

Anne Bolland
Purley-on-Thames, Berkshire

SIR – The Islamic State is the most dangerous development of recent times.

Reluctant as Western political leaders are to get mired in this tragic situation, the only answer is serious military engagement to eliminate the IS, in order to avoid worse consequences later.

John Edstrom
Basingstoke, Hampshire

SIR – I heard a sad-sounding Archbishop of Canterbury on the radio on Sunday, bemoaning the way everyone says “Something must be done”, but without saying what. I have a suggestion for him: follow the example of King George VI and call a National Day of Prayer.

Brian Foster
Shrivenham, Oxfordshire

Irish Times:

Sir, – Simon O’Connor’s concern about the future of our public services (August 11th) is well-founded. Public services are like the spinal column of a country – inconspicuous, but providing the essential underlying structure that allows everything else to function. The provision of vital services such as healthcare, education, transport, telecommunications, waste disposal and basic utilities by the State creates an enduring framework of stability and social inclusion that helps counter inequality, reduces social divisions and supports individual access to opportunity. The privatisation of public services will inevitably erode social cohesion by penalising those who can’t afford to pay, exacerbating disadvantage and storing up further problems for the future.

An insidious power shift is happening below the radar: as service delivery decisions are determined by “market forces”, the economic, political and ideological influence of the financial sector has been steadily increasing. For example, with privatisation, management salaries inflate rapidly while demands for “productivity” and “efficiency” mean that frontline workers are subject to salary cuts and poorer working conditions. Private companies assume no responsibility for citizens who cannot pay, or for those whose location, age or health make it “unprofitable” (in purely financial terms) for the service to be provided.

Many privatisation decisions abroad have been reversed, due to poor quality of services, lack of value for money and the degrading of working conditions for staff. On average, US federal governments contract back in four services for every six they contract out. In the UK, services that have reverted to being sourced in-house by local authorities include housing management, information and computer technology services and recycling. We should look carefully at international experience before we commit to undermining the social fabric of society by dismantling our public services. Yours, etc,

MAEVE HALPIN,

Ranelagh,

Dublin 6

Sir, – I sat my Leaving Certificate just shy of a decade ago. It seemed accepted at the time that the system was outmoded and that change was both necessary and inevitable. Leaving school, I couldn’t have predicted the knowledge revolution which lay ahead. Neither could I have predicted that the Leaving Cert would change so little.

In an age where information is so accessible, the Leaving Cert’s focus on rote learning and memorisation is, at best, a questionable use of student and teacher time. At worst, the system inhibits students from developing the creativity and self-directed learning skills the 21st century demands. This seriously undermines the rhetoric which presents Ireland as a “knowledge economy”.

The delay in meaningful reform is puzzling. Proposals mooted to date are mostly slight modifications rather than constituting a fundamental overhaul. It is argued that the current system, warts and all, is at least one in which there is public trust.

Articulating and implementing change that meets the challenges of the 21st century isn’t easy. But the education of our nation is an area in which we should have high ambitions. Repeatedly failing our students like this is too high a price to pay for the devil we know.– Yours, etc,

GRÁINNE CONROY,

Barclay Court,

Blackrock,

Co Dublin

Sir, – Given the proposal to give points for higher-level grades below 40 per cent (August 12th) to take the risk out of doing higher level, why not abolish ordinary level altogether and allow every student to do higher level? The benefits would be enormous. The transformative raising of higher-level participation would be the envy of the world, the multinationals wouldn’t find enough space for their new premises, the universities would be full, youth unemployment would be a thing of the past etc. Why not begin by giving five points for writing your name on a higher-level answer book (bonus if you write it in Irish and include a mathematical formula), 10 points if you write out all the questions, your name in Irish and include a mathematical formula etc. Bring it on! – Yours, etc,

JOHN HURLEY,

Clarina,

Co Limerick

Sir, – The HSE has recently assured the Irish public that our nation is capable of dealing with any global outbreak of the Ebola virus. As a medical practitioner, I find it hard to accept this assurance.

The truth is that the HSE struggles to cope with such regular occurrences as cold weather, excess rainfall or seasonal influenza. Whenever these somewhat predictable events occur, our health service quickly degenerates into chaos, with hundreds of people on trolleys, cancelled operations and a frantic scramble to deposit elderly people into short-stay nursing homes.

Moreover, thanks to the ongoing HSE policy of protecting clipboard-wielding managers at the expense of sick patients, our nation continues to have a shortage of intensive care beds, which are somewhat important in dealing with severe illnesses.

In spite of all this, we are assured that in the event of an Ebola outbreak the HSE has everything “under control”. Indeed, it seems part of the current plan is to tell people suspected of being infected to attend their GP, or as the authorities like to put it, “to seek medical attention”.

Perhaps I am missing something here, but what exactly can any GP do to treat Ebola? Since when do small surgeries have the facilities necessary to deal with contagious viral haemorrhagic fevers? Does such an approach not run the risk of primary care staff and other patients also contracting infection, and the disease spreading more rapidly?

Perhaps a better strategy might be for any suspected case of ebola to be dealt with by a mobile specialist team, equipped with the necessary protective clothing and equipment to deal with this lethal illness. Patients at risk of being infected could be thus be assessed and treated in their own homes, before being transferred securely to an isolation unit in a hospital. Or is this too sensible for the HSE? – Yours, etc,

DR RUAIRI HANLEY,

Gibbstown,

Co Meath

Sir, – The biblical episode concerning the Tower of Babel ends with God cursing mankind with the affliction of many languages. His motivation for this act is to prevent mankind from achieving its full potential by impeding people’s ability to communicate with each other. While some enthusiasts might revel in the notion of linguistic diversity, the world would clearly be a more peaceful and happier place if there were fewer languages not more. Proponents of compulsory Irish need to accept that the majority choose not to learn what is essentially a redundant tongue in order to focus their energies on more productive endeavours. It must be strongly asserted that holding or expressing this opinion does not make one any less Irish or less patriotic, as is implied by the constant pejorative undertone of the debate. – Yours, etc,

JOHN THOMPSON,

Shamrock Street,

Phibsboro,

Dublin 7

Sir, – Pádraig Ó Cíobháin (August 12th) responds to my letter with a number of valid questions. Here are my answers. The difference between Irish and the subjects he listed (history, geography, religion, etc) is that (i) Irish is compulsory to Leaving Cert while these are not and (ii) I use history and geography almost everyday across a wide range of activities.

Mr Ó Cíobháin misunderstood my fumbling in a greasy till reference. I agree that we are much more than a nation of shopkeepers: we are leaders in computer science and high-technology startups, pharmaceuticals, high quality foods, and much more. If he reads further in the referenced poem he will remember the last line “Romantic Ireland’s dead and gone / It’s with O’Leary in the grave.” Which is as true now as it was in Yeats’s time. Yours, etc,

ANDREW DOYLE,

Lislevane,

Co Cork

Sir, – In response to Derek Mac Hugh’s letter, I do indeed remember the insertion of the syllable into words which made speech all but unintelligible to the uninitiated. But with a little patience it was possible to break the code. Egin fegact egit wegas egeasegy. Gottit? Gegottegit? Yours, etc,

DAVID MONKS,

11240 Alaigne,

France

A chara, – While the boys of south Dublin may have had difficulty understanding English with an added syllable (August 11th), we Waterford boys and girls had no such difficulty. We babbled happily away adding “eg” to every syllable, blithely thinking no adult could understand us. Of course, everybody quickly cottoned onto it, egexcegept egof cegourse thege pegoor begoys egof segouth Degublegin. – Is mise,

RÓNÁN DE PAOR,

Whitefield,

Annestown,

Co Waterford

Sir, – Derek Mc Hugh’s letter regarding teenage language patterns reminded me of first hearing (many moons ago) one young chap saying to another “I’ll give you a bell.” I subsequently telephoned one of them to ask him to “translate” … ahem. – Yours, etc,

TOM GILSENAN,

Elm Mount,

Beaumont,

Dublin 9

Sir, – In former taoiseach John Bruton’s judgement, bankers’ actions and their successful lobbying to ensure little or no market regulation (lobbying which continues to the present day) were not responsible for the financial crisis of recent years and bankers were some sort of innocent bystanders in relation to the enormous damage done by that crisis to our country and its citizens. So we now know precisely how much weight to give to Mr Bruton’s other judgement – that the Easter Rising was “unnecessary” and that genuine and real independence (although with no given time frame) was “inevitable”. Exactly zero weight. – Yours, etc,

MAURICE KING,

Inistioge,

Co Kilkenny

Sir, – Patsy McGarry (August 12th) quotes Dr Diarmuid Martin, who remarks that a curate in Dublin is “not at all happy” with some of the utterances of Pope Francis, which were “not in line with what he had learned in the seminary”. It occurs to me that Pope Francis wants to make changes so that the Church is there for the people. The article starts with Fr Ahearne’s view that a priest needs “humour, humanity and honesty” – qualities this pope has in abundance, more than any previous one, and which are sadly lacking in so many of the clergy. – Yours, etc,

MARY LOVATT,

Bere Island,

Co Cork

Sir, – Martin Fitzpatrick’s letter of August 11th will strike a chord with many of your readers. This inexplicable levy of €600 million on private pension funds was imposed against the backdrop of the decimation of such funds following the crash of stockmarkets in 2008. I wrote to Mr Bruton and my local TD at that time and, unsurprisingly, did not receive even an acknowledgment. It seems that there are no votes in private pensions. This annual levy was supposed to be for a duration of four years but was, with typical cynicism, extended indefinitely by Mr Noonan.

There is no such levy on public service pensions, because there is no fund to levy. If private sector criteria were applied, contributions in excess of 30 per cent of salaries would be required. Future liabilities would exceed €100 billion.

Public sector workers cannot be blamed for seeking a reversal of the cuts imposed on them, but I am sure they are reasonable enough to appreciate the plight of private sector workers, half of whom have no pension at all.

Mr Howlin’s recent utterances on the possible reversal of cuts in public sector benefits and the easing of the tax burden should be treated with contempt. It will take a lot more than tokenism to assuage public anger at the crushing burden of taxation, levies and charges imposed by this administration. If the local election results have been a wake-up call for the Government, they are just a foretaste of what is coming. Your correspondent will have plenty of company in the long grass. – Yours, etc,

JOHN WHELAN,

Seaview Park,

Shankill,

Dublin 18

Sir, – Should the Road Safety Association prove imaginative enough to run Jean Dunne’s proposed campaign to ask cyclists to “respect the right of pedestrians to the footpath” (August 11th) I hope they can get around to adding a note to the same effect for motorists parking on our rightful space, often forcing elderly pedestrians, schoolchildren, buggy-pushing parents, wheelchair-users and others into heavy traffic; and often when there is unused free parking within strolling range. – Yours, etc,

DAMIEN FLINTER,

Castleview Estate,

Headford,

Co Galway

Sir, – Jean Dunne would undoubtedly disapprove of my daily habit of cycling on the footpath. In my defence, it’s the only safe way to overtake pedestrians walking on the cycle path. – Yours, etc,

MICK McMULLIN,

Granville Road,

Dún Laoghaire

A chara, – I agree with Cllr Michael Gleeson’s call (News, August 12th) for cyclists to start making themselves audibly noticeable again. But it might take more than bells.

When I cycled in Dublin I found that a polite “ding-ding” was generally insufficient to overcome the background traffic noise or dissuade that strange and incautious breed of jaywalkers who like to fling themselves into every break in motorised traffic with the abandon of lemmings heading for the cliff. So I added to my repertoire a horn which was activated ed by squeezing a black rubber bulb.

A sharp double toot of that not only made them jump out of their skin but, more importantly, back onto the safety of the pavement. It was, I think, a far better way of blowing them off the road than using my front wheel and handlebars. – Is mise,

REV PATRICK G BURKE,

Castlecomer,

Co Kilkenny

Sir, – While I agree with Peter Crawley that “[a]nything’s better than doing nothing about Gaza” (Culture, August 9th), I detect a desire on his part to suggest that charity events like the Liberty 4 Gaza fundraising concert and an initiative like the Ireland-Palestine Solidarity Campaign’s “Artists’ Pledge to Boycott Israel” are somehow mutually exclusive. On the contrary, they complement one another; the IPSC fully supported the fundraising gig, and many artistes performing in it are signatories of the pledge.

The latter campaign was launched on August 12th, 2010 with 140 signatories and celebrated (if that’s the right word) its fourth anniversary with over 460. Almost half of these have signed up since the inception of Israel’s latest campaign of death and destruction in Gaza. – Yours, etc,

RAYMOND DEANE,

Lower Baggot Street,

Dublin 2

Sir, – I write to express my dismay at the behaviour of GAA players before a big match during the playing of the national anthem. Matters reached a new low on Sunday at the All-Ireland hurling semi-final. Not only was there the usual exhibition of “St Vitus Dance” by both teams but a player on each team took a swig out of a bottle during the anthem. It is strange that the GAA, an organisation which prides itself on being a leader in matters relating to national pride, should tolerate such behaviour.

I have not seen players of any other sporting code acting in this way. As a matter of fact, I can say without exaggeration that I have seen more respect being exhibited by a pub half-full of intoxicated people when the national anthem is played at closing time following the conclusion of a band performance on the premises. This is something the GAA should tackle without delay. – Yours, etc,

EDMUND CANNON,

Stepaside Hill,

Co Dublin

Sir, – M Markey (August 12th) asks why his or her prescription medicines are half the price in Italy that they are in Dublin. The answer is simple: one country is run by a nexus of incompetent politicians and shady businessmen; the other is Ireland. – Yours, etc,

DR JOHN DOHERTY,

Cnoc an Stollaire,

Gaoth Dobhair,

Co Donegal.

Irish Independent:

In Ian O’Doherty’s defensive, vitriolic and misleading column about PETA this week (Irish Independent, August 11), I came across one lonely thought worthy of reply: “If meat is murder, then should we criminalise tigers?”

The difference is this: tigers kill for food because they are what’s called “true carnivores” and could not survive without meat, whereas eating animals is leading humans to an early grave.

The president of the American College of Cardiology, Dr Kim A Williams, like many more cardiologists and other physicians, recommends adopting a vegan diet. Dr Williams asks: “Wouldn’t it be a laudable goal (of the American College of Cardiology) to put ourselves out of business within a generation or two?”

The Irish Independent regularly reports on the findings of many studies highlighting the link between meat and the Western world’s top killers, such as heart disease, strokes, diabetes and various types of cancer.

Scientific evidence indicates that the model diet to follow is that of our closest primate relatives, and they are purely, or mostly, vegan.

Any moral person will feel sympathy for the human victim whose limbs were found at the recycling plant in Dublin.

But a moral person should also have sympathy for the animal victims who are forced to live in their own waste, mutilated without painkillers and killed and butchered, all for a fleeting moment of taste. So why is Mr O’Doherty so angry at the suggestion we should extend our compassion to animals? Instead, he trivialises their pain and insults those who seek to end it.

Mr O’Doherty might acquaint himself with the examples of vegan boxer David Haye, mixed martial artist Jake Shields, long-distance racing champion Brendan Brazier and former US President Bill Clinton, who suffered a near-fatal heart attack and now credits switching to a vegan diet with saving his life.

Ben Williamson

People for the Ethical Treatment of Animals (PETA)

London, N1

Insulting the diaspora

Bravo to Ian O’Doherty for his article on the Government’s “remarkably unbecoming” bestowal of Certificates of Irish Heritage on various celebrities (Irish Independent, August 1).

Equally unbecoming is the Government’s hawking of this “ludicrous document” online for €40 (unframed) or €120 (framed) to individuals of Irish descent.

What a gross insult to the diaspora, what a disgraceful come-all-ye.

Patricia Phelan

Freeport, NY

USA

United Ireland, united services

Now that commemorations for political events that took place a century ago are beginning, debate on a united Ireland will be in the mix.

In the event of a united Ireland, one wonders would the Northern Ireland local government’s provision of services be reduced to the standards of the Republic, or vice versa?

As they say, it’s the little things that make the difference.

Declan Foley

Berwick
 Australia

Dangers of revising history

I grew up sliding in to my grandmother’s bed at unearthly hours of the morning, listening to the terrible worries that were present when my grandfather was out on a mission with the old IRA.

I do not believe in violence and neither did my grandmother.

But I understood that she felt there was no other way to give us a life that was free from intimidation and misery.

She was right.

Ireland now, despite all her misfortunes, educates her children and prepares them where possible for a decent place in the world order.

I am extremely interested in what my grandfather did and how it affected him. I know that he handed out weapons, he definitely shot them, and those acts constitute acts of violence.

Nonetheless, I was shocked to see the vilification of Gerry Adams when I was last home.

I don’t agree with a lot of what he did, and whatever his role, he, like my grandfather, was automatically tied to the Troubles.

When I argued the point, I was more than shocked to see my grandfather likened to a role in an old Irish farce like The Irish RM, as if independence was not won but could have been asked for instead and it would have been granted immediately.

To say Irish freedom, like World War II, would have been won without violence now that it’s over, doesn’t stand up against history.

Revisionism is dangerous.

I don’t like violence. But pretending it didn’t happen, didn’t need to happen, or that it wasn’t us, creates a sanctimonious and delusional nation.

To reach peace, you must understand what it was that first led us to war.

Pauline Bleach

NSW

Australia

Time we acted over Gaza

Recalling Winston Churchill’s slight on Ireland’s neutrality at the end of World War II, Eamon de Valera in his reply rightly reminded him that Britain’s right to exist should not mean trampling on the rights of others.

Churchill’s bravado in saying it would have been “quite easy and quite natural” to take us over, rings true for many dictators around the world today, and it would also appear to be the attitude of Israel towards the people of Gaza.

Cromwell’s land acquisitions in Ireland come very much to mind. Dispatch the remaining homeless natives that are left (the old Irish) “to Hell or to Connacht”, to live on wild berries and honey, and for those Palestinians still in their ancient homeland, Gaza must surely be Hell.

A population of 1.8 million people live in a hell hole a fraction of the size of Connacht and are locked in by land, sea and air, with water and electricity rationed and dished out at the discretion of a draconian neighbour.

Isn’t it way beyond time for our Government and our back-slapping, craw-thumping partners in the EU to stop their pious platitudes about slaughter of the innocents and come up with something much more positive?

America’s surrogate child in the Middle East is armed to the hilt with the most sophisticated war weapons on earth.

Knowing there is no military solution to this problem doesn’t mean a solution can’t be found. There can be an effective one, a moral one and a bloodless one.

For starters, our own little country could call in the Israeli Ambassador and demand an account for the disproportionate amount of death and destruction in Gaza.

Political twins Enda and Eamon had no problem closing the Vatican Embassy overnight for an awful lot less.

Christy Wynne

Boyle

Co Roscommon

GP fee could be barrier to access

The possible introduction of a fee to control the number of visits an individual makes to their GP whenever government-subsidised access to GP services is achieved raises a number of issues.

Age Action welcomes the intention to exclude the over 70s, as well as those already on medical and GP visit cards. The problem is that the road to hell is paved with good intentions and once the principle has been introduced and accepted, nobody can guarantee that such noble exclusions and exemptions will stand.

Nor can anyone predict how high this fee will creep before it becomes an obstacle to people accessing the GP services. Before such a fee is introduced, we should try to think of other options.

Gerard Scully

Spokesperson For Age Action Ireland

Irish Independent

Former Taoiseach John Bruton

More in Letters (2 of 20 articles)

Letters: Bruton’s revisionism… Read More


Post office

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14 August 2014 Post Office

I jog around the park I still have arthritis in my left knee, but I manage to get round the park. A wettish day. I get go to the Post office and the Co op

Scrabble: I win, but gets under just 400. perhaps Mary will win tomorrow.

101 Games: Mary wins 52 John 49 Mary Average score 346 John 340

Obituary:

Lauren Bacall – obituary

Lauren Bacall was the actress whose partnership with Humphrey Bogart brought a new allure and electricity to the big screen

Lauren Bacall's Hollywood career spanned seven decades

Lauren Bacall’s Hollywood career spanned seven decades Photo: Rex Features

12:09PM BST 13 Aug 2014

CommentsComments

Lauren Bacall, the actress, who has died aged 89, brought a new style of sexual equality and allure to the Hollywood cinema in the 1940s by co-starring in four films with Humphrey Bogart; the couple fell in love while making Howard Hawks’s To Have And Have Not (1944) and were married by the time they made the same director’s The Big Sleep in 1946.

Tall, slim and sultry, with a hoarse voice and a cryptic personality, Miss Bacall was the perfect match for Bogart’s rugged cynicism, “a leggy, blonde huntress,” as one critic noted, “whose cat’s eyes never blinked before Bogart’s scowls”. In each film they created a special atmosphere of dry, terse comedy and tough-guy talk which masked their underlying affection for one another and seemed unique in popular cinema for the balance of power their roles created between the sexes.

Sensual but never sentimental, insolent, sharp-witted, laconic, cool and above all sophisticated, they seemed, as another observer put it, even to kiss out of the corners of their mouths.

Higher brows were moved to compare the tone of these mating games with that of Beatrice and Benedick in Much Ado About Nothing, though the style owed more to Raymond Chandler or Hemingway than to Shakespeare. At all events, they brought a new and personal chemistry to the screen which made the partnership refreshingly equal at every level.

Although Lauren Bacall was an actress of accomplishment in her own right, it was her acting in only four films with Bogart and their enduring marriage that turned them as a couple into the stuff of legend, and enhanced her own dramatic reputation more than any anything she did elsewhere in films or on stage.

Lauren Bacall in 1946 (REX)

One of her most famous lines was in To Have And Have Not when they were about to go their separate ways after bidding each other goodnight. At the door she turned and said: “You know how to whistle? You put your lips together and… blow.”

As the American critic James Agee wrote: “Whether or not you like the film will depend almost entirely on whether you like Miss Bacall. I am no judge… It has been years since I have seen such amusing pseudo-toughness on the screen.”

Lauren Bacall, who was born in New York City as Betty Joan Perske on September 16 1924, was the only child of William Perske, a salesman of medical instruments from Alsace, and his wife Natalia, of Romanian and German-Jewish extraction. They divorced when their daughter was six. The mother adopted the name Bacal; the daughter added an “l” to stop it rhyming with “crackle”. She always disliked “Lauren”, the name bestowed on her by Hollywood, preferring to be known as Betty.

Educated at the expense of wealthy uncles at a private boarding school, Highland Manor, Tarrytown, New York, and at the Julia Richman High School, Manhattan, Betty intended to be a dancer, having attended ballet classes since infancy. But in adolescence she was drawn to acting.

Inspired by Bette Davis films, she enrolled at the American Academy of Dramatic Arts when she was 15, dating Kirk Douglas, who was there on a scholarship; but as the academy precluded scholarships for girls, she was obliged to leave after a year before bluffing her way into a job modelling sportswear.

Sacked for being Jewish, or flat-chested (or both), she took another job modelling gowns for a Jewish dress shop and in the evenings worked as an usherette. In 1942 she made her stage debut at the Longacre Theatre, New York, as a walk-on in a melodrama called Johnny 2 X 4, and played the ingénue in a pre-Broadway tour later that year. Then she took a job modelling for Harper’s Bazaar.

Leafing through the magazine in 1943, Mrs Howard Hawks, wife of the Hollywood director, drew her husband’s attention to the girl on the cover. Hawks cabled the magazine asking if she was free; she subsequently turned up on their doorstep.

After a screen test she signed a seven-year contract with Hawks and the producer Jack Warner for $250 a week, changing her name from Betty to Lauren. Hawks went to work on her voice. Taking her to some waste ground, he made her shout Shakespeare and other writers for hours every day in order to lower the tone of what he called her high nasal pipe.

After the daily exercises in the open air her voice became for him (and for the rest of the world) what he called “a satisfactorily low guttural wheeze”. He then insisted that in future she should always speak naturally and softly. Above all, she should ignore suggestions for “cultivating” her voice.

Within a year of her discovery on the front of Harper’s, Hawks had cast her with Bogart in To Have And To Have Not and directed her in such a way that her acting, with its insinuating sexuality and offhand independence, caused a sensation.

Hawks had urged her to play each scene exactly as she felt her character would behave: to act as if she were living the part. If she were true to her own feelings, she would be true to the film.

One scene sprang entirely from her imagination. After an emotional episode in a hotel room with Bogart’s Harry Morgan, Bacall’s Marie left him, according to the scenario, and returned to her own room. Between takes, Bacall grumbled to Hawks: “God, I’m dumb.”

“Why?” he asked. “Well”, she replied, “if I had any sense I’d go back after that guy.” So she did.

At 19 she had become, in her first film, one of Hollywood’s most sensational, relaxed and dominating newcomers: husky-voiced, aloof and shrewdly impervious to insult. This was Bogart’s most interesting screen partner for years, in an otherwise hazy melodrama about the French Resistance at Martinique with Bogart as a sea skipper, edgy, grey-voiced, unsure of this strange girl called Marie.

Lauren Bacall and Humphrey Bogart in ‘Dark Passage’ in 1947 (ALLSTAR)

Some of her lines entered film mythology: “Was you ever bit by a dead bee?” and, after Bogart has kissed her for the second tentative time: “It’s even better when you help.” To everyone’s astonishment, she also sang (or rather croaked and growled, like a trombone) a suggestive song in a seamen’s bar.

She was promoted by Warner Brothers, her studio, as “The Look” because of her way of looking up suggestively with her lynx-eyes from under a high forehead (and through a haze of cigarette smoke) at the rugged, appreciative Bogart.

In 1945 she became his fourth wife; she was 25 years his junior, and the partnership endured until his death nearly 12 years later. Along with her husband, she actively campaigned for the Democrats and protested against Hollywood’s blacklist of suspected Communists.

Lauren Bacall was miscast in Confidential Agent (1945), a thriller derived from Graham Greene’s novel about the Spanish Civil War with Charles Boyer as a Spanish agent; she was, as one critic put it, about as English as Pocahontas, although her “very individual vitality made up for her deficiencies”. The following year, Hawks brought her back with Bogart in The Big Sleep.

Lauren Bacall and Humphrey Bogart in ‘The Big Sleep’ (REX)

The level-pegging of their partnership was curious, unusual and, in those days unexpected in films. One theory was that Hawks’s dislike of Bogart was behind it. Before The Big Sleep, the director was reputed to have said to Bogart: “You are about the most insolent man on the screen and I’m going to make the girl a little more insolent.”

And so it proved. In their second film together, in which she played the rich antagonistic daughter of Bogart’s employer, in a fine adaptation of the Raymond Chandler novel, she proved every bit as cool and independent as she had been in To Have And Have Not.

Neither of their other two films together was a patch on their predecessors. In Dark Passage (1947), Lauren Bacall sheltered a heavily-bandaged Bogart in his attempt, as an escaped convict, to prove that he had not murdered his wife. All that Delmer Daves’s screenplay proved was that without sharp dialogue, an element of sexual rivalry or a more intelligent scenario, Bogart and Bacall were not themselves.

Lauren Bacall and Humphrey Bogart at a Paris cafe in 1950 (GETTY)

John Huston’s Key Largo (1948) was a far better film, but it still failed to find any of the old style of banter for them to exchange in its tense tale of a bunch of gangsters who invade a hotel run by Miss Bacall, a war widow.

It was as if, having awakened public interest in the pair as a screen partnership, Warner Brothers could not find material to keep their characters effectively together. This was the film in which, to get the right facial expression from Lauren Bacall, Huston twisted her arm. He got the right expression but he never got her into another of his films. Key Largo was also her last film with Bogart who, unlike Lauren Bacall, went on to make some of the finest films of his career.

In 1950 she was the socialite who married Bix Beiderbecke (Kirk Douglas) in Young Man With A Horn, and appeared with Gary Cooper in Bright Leaf. Her gift for acid comedy came out nicely in Jean Negulesco’s How To Marry A Millionaire (1953), with Marilyn Monroe and Betty Grable, and in the same director’s A Woman’s World (1954).

Betty Grable, Lauren Bacall and Marilyn Monroe on the set of How to Marry a Millionaire (REX FEATURES)

As an occupational therapist and Richard Widmark’s mistress in Vincente Minnelli’s Designing Woman (1957), she was miscast as a scatterbrained fashion queen opposite Gregory Peck.

In Douglas Sirk’s Written On The Wind (1957) she was supposed to have been swept off her feet by an oil millionaire. Was the baby his (Robert Stack’s) or his best friend’s (Rock Hudson’s)? Nobody much cared, least of all Miss Bacall, for Bogart died that year .

Two years later, after playing a tough-talking American governess in the British melodrama North-West Frontier, with Kenneth More, Lauren Bacall decided to return to the stage after an absence of 17 years. As Charlie in Goodbye Charlie (Lyceum, 1959), the story of a man’s return to earth after death as a woman, she played with considerable success opposite Sidney Chaplin.

In 1961 Lauren Bacall married the actor Jason Robards. (There had been earlier talk of marriage to Frank Sinatra, “but Frank just couldn’t cope with the idea” she said years later).

In the 1960s her films became less reliable . In Shock Treatment (1964) she played a batty psychiatrist; in Sex and the Single Girl (1965) a squabbling neighbour (with Henry Fonda); and in Jack Smight’s Harper (1966) a vindictive wife in a film which paid homage to Bogart, with Paul Newman as a private detective.

Lauren Bacall (REX)

After that she worked mostly on Broadway. Apart from more than a year’s run as Stephanie, the nurse, in Abe Burrows’s comedy Cactus Flower (Royale, 1965), which some admirers considered the best role of her career, she spent three years as Margo Channing, a stage star threatened by a young rival, in the musical Applause, first in New York (Palace, 1970), for which she received a Tony award, then in Toronto, Chicago and on tour, before making her London debut in the same part at Her Majesty’s (1972).

Her role in Applause was the one Bette Davis had filled more flamboyantly in the film All About Eve. Lauren Bacall’s stage acting showed the same agreeable insouciance as her film acting .

She returned to the screen in 1974 in the Agatha Christie derivation, Murder On The Orient Express; and two years later faced, with admirable and stylish antagonism, John Wayne in Don Siegel’s The Shootist. This brought together one tough hombre and one tough cookie, and was the sharpest match since Bacall had first met Bogart.

As an indefatigable journalist in the musical Woman of the Year on Broadway in 1981, she took a slight story, according to the The Daily Telegraph’s John Barber, and injected into it “all the dynamism of a fascinating personality”.

In 1985 she was back in the West End in Harold Pinter’s revival of Tennessee Williams’s Sweet Bird of Youth (Haymarket).

The Fan (1981) brought her back to the screen as a successful actress entangled with a young man in her first Broadway musical, and seven years later she contributed to another all-star Agatha Christie film, Appointment With Death. She also stole a child in a psychological film thriller, Tree of Hands (1989).

Of her many television appearances the most notable included Blithe Spirit and The Petrified Forest in 1956 and a role in the Frederick Forsyth Presents drama series.

Lauren Bacall was, perhaps, an actress more famous for whom she was thought to be than for what she actually did. “It was those pale eyes framed by a tawny mane, a way of walking that suggested a panther in her family tree, and a husky voice that could set a spinal column aquiver,” noted one reviewer.

She kept up the image of a sharp-tongued, no-nonsense feminist in interview after interview down the years. Journalists were slightly scared of her. But in truth — and unlike, say, Katharine Hepburn — she did not go on to create a substantial body of work. Her fame continued to rest largely on the early films with Bogart.

Lauren Bacall in later life (GETTY)

Her memoir, By Myself, appeared in 1978, followed in 2005 by And Then Some by way of an addendum. In this she described working visits to Paris making Robert Altman’s satirical Prêt à Porter (1994) and to Britain, where she starred in The Visit at the Chichester Festival in 1995.

Lauren Bacall received a Golden Globe and an honorary Oscar. In 1996 she was nominated for an Academy Award for best supporting actress for her role as Barbra Streisand’s mother in The Mirror Has Two Faces. She continued to make occasional appearances on screen, including, in 2006, appearing as herself in an episode of The Sopranos. In 2004 she had a supporting role alongside Nicole Kidman in Birth, a psychological drama directed by Jonathan Glazer.

Her marriage to Jason Robards ended in divorce in 1969. In 1983 there had been talk of her marrying Harry Guardino, a former film co-star, but it came to nothing. She had a son and a daughter with Humphrey Bogart and a son with Jason Robards.

Lauren Bacall, born September 16 1924, died August 12 2014

Guardian:

anti-jewish graffiti

Owen Jones is right to point out how public discourse on anti-Jewish hatred has been muddled (Anti-Jewish hatred is rising – we must see it for what it is, 11 August). But he fails to apply his normally astute understanding of power to the analysis. Whose interests are served by bracketing off anti-Jewish hatred into its own special category of racism, with its own special word? Are incidents of anti-Jewish hatred rising more sharply than incidents of other kinds of race hatred? Jones does not question the dominant idea that this evil form of hatred is different from, and more pernicious than, other manifestations of racism. This plays directly into the exceptionalism that has sustained systematic institutionalised persecution on the one hand, and the impunity of contemporary Zionism on the other.

All racism must be opposed, but we must be aware of the ideological work performed when we privilege one form of racism above others.
Barry Stierer
Brighton

•  Owen Jones seems comfortable with the rhetorical stitch-up that means only members of a white ethnic group can be victims of antisemitism. This means differences between white Catholics and Protestants are sectarian. But black or brown Muslim Britons are to be regarded as racist for disputing with white Jewish Britons?

It’s only a matter of weeks since Israel began its attacks on Palestinian civilians, and Jones has immediately acted to pre-empt any abuses that might be aimed at white ethnic British Jews. However, it’s widely accepted that, since Tony Blair’s Iraq war, race relations in Britain have plummeted. There have been racist attacks on mosques and individuals – including the murder of 82-year-old Mohammed Saleem. Black Britons of all diasporas have also had to put up with selective institutional practices like racial profiling. To this we can add the phenomenon of black deaths in police custody, disproportionate arrest and incarceration – even in middle age I’ve averaged a stop and search every two years – plus institutional barriers to continuing education and economic ghettoisation. But can you get columnists and letters editors to accommodate this issue? We’re supposed to accept these conditions as the norm, but when a fraction of the black British experience risks being replicated among a white ethnic group it becomes an outrage. Apparently the narrative that only white people can be victims is still acceptable.
Dr Gavin Lewis
Manchester

•  A virulent antisemitism, fanned by Mosley’s fascists, re-emerged in Britain shortly after the end of the war against Nazi Germany. Fresh from serving in that war, my father became the full-time anti-fascist organiser for the Association of Jewish Ex-Servicemen. My earliest political memory is of him speaking from a platform on a street corner on Ridley Road in London’s East End. Mosley’s cavalcade arrived, stones began to fly, and the chant “The Yids, the Yids, we’ve got to get rid of the Yids” roared out. So I reckon I know something about antisemitism. Antisemitism faded later in the 1950s when a newer and more easily identifiable group, West Indians, arrived in England and racism was redirected. Of course Owen Jones is right that hate speech and acts are on the rise. But Jews are not a special case or the main victims. Try being a Muslim in much of western Europe today, or Romanian, or a Gypsy in England (or, for that matter, a Palestinian in Israel) and let’s get a sense of proportion.
Steven Rose
London

•  I agree entirely with much of what Owen Jones writes, but I take issue with his claim that to object that Arabs are also Semites is “a sinister piece of pedantry”. There are strong historical reasons why, in the European context, “antisemitic” has become synonymous with “anti-Jewish”; in the Israel-Palestine context to continue with that use is an act of linguistic genocide which writes a whole people out of the story. That is sinister. If we mean “anti-Jewish”, let us use that term, and, indeed, see it for what it is.
Barry Tempest
Dorchester, Dorset

•  I hope that those who campaign so vociferously against Israel, but insist that they are not antisemitic, are aware of the atmosphere they contribute to. Yesterday a young Algerian man shouted at me “He is a Jew, he has a Jew face”. It’s the type of abuse I have not received for about 40 years. I would like to think that all the campaigners would have intervened on my behalf, and did so too at the march on Saturday if they heard any antisemitic remarks. If they did not, they need to ask themselves why.
Paul Sinclair
London

At least the Tory Julian Lewis (Britain boosts role in battle with militants, 13 August) articulates a reason why he opposed armed intervention in Syria last year and supports intervention in Iraq this year. It is that in Syria there was a real risk that weapons would get into the hands of al-Qaida and its allies, while in Iraq it would be a question of assisting “the people” to resist a “totalitarian death cult”. However, it ignores the participation of “the people” of Syria in resisting the murderous regime of Assad and his Hezbollah allies and fighting for a halfway decent democracy. What non-intervention in Syria also meant was abandonment of any perspective to build up a “third force” in Syria that was for neither the regime nor the jihadists but for democracy.

Whether there should or should not have been intervention was a matter of judgment, but turning non-intervention into a principle is not only wrong but has proved full of unintended consequences. Behind the principle of non-interventionism is an alliance of “right” and “left”. The right is generally governed either by the imperialist notion that “the Arabs” are not capable of democracy or by the narrow realpolitik notion that British interests are not directly and immediately affected. The left is generally governed by a mix of social isolationism (what really matters is welfare and employment at home), Christian pacifism (the “west” is warmongering), cultural pluralism (they have their ways, we have ours and ne’er the twain shall meet), and a deformed “anti-imperialism” (that is blind to all violence and all human suffering that is not caused by the “west”). It is time we had a more intelligent debate on interventionism than we have had – in minor part because the space for such a debate was, and continues to be, tainted by the actions and words of one, Tony Blair.
Robert Fine
Emeritus professor of sociology, University of Warwick

•  So, we are arming the peshmerga of the Kurds of northern Iraq? But which peshmerga? The peshmerga of which political party, of which sectarian division, which linguistic group are we arming? And are we making sure we give arms to all the different peshmerga, in order to keep the balance that has kept the peace between all these rival peshmerga since their civil war of the 90s? And, if we are arming peshmerga, then why don’t we make sure we arm the peshmerga who’d be most effective against the Islamic State (IS)? No, that would mean arming the PKK operating out of northern Syria. They are officially a terrorist group. And if we really want to help the Kurds, we need Turkish bases to operate from – but the more rifles we put into the hands of Kurds, the more we lose Turkey as an ally. And we also cannot expect to arm the Kurds and then receive the assistance of the Baghdad government in tackling IS. It gets messy arming the Kurds. The Kurds need to be protected – not armed.
Dr Rod Thornton
Defence studies department, King’s College London (formerly of University of Hewler-Kurdistan, Irbil, Iraq)

•  Those armchair strategists who see the horrors in Northern Iraq as “the blowback from US intervention in Iraq and the Middle East in general”, and in particular blame “Messrs Bush and Blair”, display a disproportionate response.

Surely only extreme pacifists and anti-Americans would deny just cause for the current military intervention (Letters, 11 August). And to suggest that “western reporting has been alarmist” also suggests the western media cannot be relied upon when ordinary members of the public form their own judgment. For most of us, America is the beacon for democracy, freedom and liberal values. However, no democratic system can guarantee to throw up leaders with perfect judgement. If and when military mistakes are made in good faith, such mistakes should not be allowed to feed the forces of evil: whether they revitalise Saddam, or sustain those who have inherited his same capacity for inhumanity, the consequence is not good.
Mike Allott
Chandlers Ford, Hampshire

When I was growing up, “consumerism” was the bogey. Later, it was “individualism”. Now it’s “neoliberalism” (George Monbiot, 6 August). But these ideas mask the truth: if I move my mortgage or my savings from one bank to another to get a fractionally improved rate of interest, then I, too, am screwing the economy, and, ultimately, the planet; and, uncomfortably for Guardian readers, it’s the hundreds of millions of people like us, worldwide, who do most of the damage – not the super-rich.

We’re not neoliberals, nor selfish, nor acquisitive, just ordinary people, doing our best to eat, live, and pay the salary of whoever sold us the cover we took out, so we don’t have to pay a week’s wages to get the boiler fixed. Widespread belief in the neoliberalism myth, like others before it, leads to widespread disempowerment: the larger and vaguer the abstraction, the less able we feel (and are) to take effective action.

We can change our habits, influence others and reform institutions (radically as well as incrementally), whether alone or jointly, in response to specific wrongs, abuses and injustices, but the idea of neoliberalism does not help. And Monbiot himself acknowledges a further problem: if the neoliberal condition actually exists nowhere – and not even its alleged advocates believe in it, or want it – then it cannot be the enemy we have so collusively and easily settled on.

He is right about the pervasive bureaucratic juggernaut, but neoliberalism does not explain it: we need a better theory.
Jon Griffith
School of social science, University of East London

•  “Market-based society” is an oxymoron because market free-for-all destroys society. Rather, “society” is formed from the interaction of politics, culture, community and economy, which make up our “commonwealth”. This traditional word for society is still used by some countries like Canada, and offers a more fertile narrative than market fundamentalism.

Yes, the market fundamentalist narrative has largely captured government, state, business and culture so that we live in a corporatocacy. And mental ill health gets worse the more that people are reduced to commodities to be bought and sold on the market. The successful rich become the righteous. The poor are the market failures, social parasites in a nightmare of all against all.

However, it’s up to us to push back the market from government, schools, health service and planet to co-create a prosperous, healthy, equitable commonwealth.
Martin Large
Stroud Common Wealth

Jeff Rooker (Letters, 12 August) is getting his maths wrong. The coalition does not “have an inbuilt majority in the revising chamber”. There are 774 peers at present; after all the latest recruits take their seats there will be 796. To have a majority (“inbuilt” or otherwise), the coalition parties would have to number 388 now and 399 in future. The actual figures for the Conservative and Liberal Democrat groups combined are 317 today, and 335 after the new peers come in. This would explain why the government has been defeated in the Lords on 90 occasions since 2010. Meanwhile, the gross overpopulation problem in the Lords could have been sorted. Had Lord Rooker’s Labour colleagues in the Commons taken their cue from Damien Welfare (Letters, 11 August) instead of playing party games with the Lords reform bill in July 2012, prime ministerial appointments would have ceased. Next year the public would be choosing the first 120 elected peers. Protections in that same bill would have made it all but impossible for parties to gain an overall majority in the Lords. Yet Labour chose to reject democracy and retain patronage: why bleat now at the results?
Paul Tyler
Liberal Democrats, House of Lords

depressed man

Your editorial (Mind the gap, 13 August) was right to identify the paucity of treatment options available to those with mental illness in the UK. A recent BMA report examined the evidence and called for action to tackle another factor affecting the care of people with mental illness and those with intellectual disabilities – that less emphasis is put on their physical health, leading to preventable premature mortality.

This is down to a lack of recognition that those with mental-health problems and those with intellectual disabilities may also have physical health needs, which we signally fail to address as well as we could. We need to see people as whole people who are not defined by one diagnosis, recognising that they might need a different approach to preventing and treating their physical illnesses.

Discrimination does not need to be deliberate to cause damage; shaping services without thought for those whose lifestyles make it difficult for them to access services can cause harm, as can casually assuming that patients with a mental-health problem will not respond to some interventions, and then denying access to that intervention – such as smoking cessation.

We need to seek out ways to ensure that equal value is placed on patients’ mental and physical health. Making this a key part of commissioning services will make a real difference to those who die early not from their mental-health disorder but from an illness neglected as we fail to see the whole complex person.

The death of Robin Williams is a tragedy; but a similar loss is faced by families every day in the UK. It brings into focus the need for practical steps to change treatment models so that those with mental-health issues and intellectual disabilities are as likely as those without to lead long and fulfilling lives.
Professor Sheila Hollins
Chair of the BMA Board of Science

Extending public-sector pensions to surviving spouses even when they re-partner takes the “pensions for life” scheme to its – unaffordable – logical conclusion (Pension rules ‘condemn police widows to lonely life’, 9 August). Those of us who remain single pay the same level of contributions as married colleagues but without benefiting from the ability to pass our pension rights on. It would be an even greater injustice for singletons to have to pay increased contributions in order to extend “pensions for life” for Ms Fulton and her fellow petitioners.
Val Carroll
Silsden, West Yorkshire

•  So, Claire Smith, president of Stay Blackpool, is objecting to the Reclaim the Power Camp because it may “seriously harm the reputation of Blackpool as a holiday destination” (Anti-fracking protesters set up camp outside Blackpool, 12 August). If fracking continues to develop, Blackpool will be surrounded by a gas field with far more dire consequences to tourism than a temporary protest camp. Perhaps Clair and her members will consider objecting to that.
Jayne Watson
Misson, Nottinghamshire

•  “Was it not Voltaire who said ‘I disapprove of what you say, but I will defend to the death your right to say it’?” asks Rose Rachman (Letters, 13 August). In fact it wasn’t Voltaire, and it wasn’t in the spoken word either. This unfettered defence of free speech is from Evelyn Beatrice Hall’s 1906 biography of Voltaire.
Steve Moore
Leumeah, New South Wales, Australia

•  In more than 50 years’ canvassing, door-knocking and delivering literature on behalf of the Labour party, I have never been bitten or attacked by a cat. Dogs are another thing, however, and I bear the scars as evidence. Dogs are definitely Tories (Letters, 13 August).
John Sullivan
Oldbury, West Midlands

•  Did Joe Corbett’s “several cats … all of [whom] knew the name of the founder of the Chinese Communist party” prefer Li Ta-chao or Ch’en Tu-hsui?
Professor Alan Knight
St Antony’s College, Oxford

• Now the ruddy duck has been sorted (Report, 9 August), any chance of the Himalayan balsam being next on the list?
Paul Gleave
Manchester

Independent:

Following the sudden death of our police and crime commissioner in the West Midlands, a by-election has been called for 21 August. The first I knew of this was when the voting card arrived, there having been no advance publicity. As I am on holiday then I have applied for a postal vote.

The ballot paper has four names on it: one candidate from each of the main parties plus Ukip. There are no independents and they are all men of a certain age; though thankfully one is from an ethnic minority.

Persistence was required when searching the internet to find some information about these people, there being no printed material. What I finally found was an extremely brief document with barely half a page per candidate, containing a few predictable platitudes and the usual political statements, on which basis I am supposed to determine who will be best placed to oversee policing in a region containing over three million people.

We have ended up with the inevitable politicisation of local policing predicted when this ill-advised system was introduced. The process discourages independent candidates and excludes those with no access to the internet, while the timing of the election will result in a turnout even lower than the lamentable 15 per cent we managed last time.

The sooner we do away with this travesty of democracy the better.

Ian Richards
Birmingham

 

Discover the real Cambridge

Rosie Millard’s experience (11 August) at the Cambridge University open day is disappointing. As a comprehensively educated recent graduate at Robinson College, who worked the open days tirelessly trying to dispel myths and welcome prospective students, I find it very frustrating to read that poor management and apparent complacency put her daughter off applying.

It is quite possible to have a great experience studying and living there, meeting fantastic people from all over the world and of all backgrounds. I’d encourage anyone to talk to “real” Cambridge students, who can provide honest appraisals of uni life, and to have the confidence to take with a pinch of salt the pretensions of some of the unhelpful people who presented the university in such an unappealing and elitist fashion to Rosie and her daughter.

I survived three years without playing a single game of croquet.

Laurie Dudley
Newcastle upon Tyne

Stranded at Orpington

Probably many readers will be in sympathy with Oliver Wright’s suggestion (Inside Whitehall, 13 August) that the nation’s main railways should be mutualised. But I wonder if it was entirely fair of him to accuse a Southeastern Trains employee of “surly indifference”?

“No one’s in charge here”, he said, when challenged. “They’re all at home in bed.” He was probably at least as angry as the passengers – frustrated at his inability to help them. Who could blame him?

Things used to be different. Faversham is a junction. Like Orpington, where Oliver Wright and other passengers were understandably put out, it sports sidings where electric multiple units are stabled between turns.

My memories, from commuter days, are that staff would work heroically to meet the needs of passengers in an emergency. On one occasion no up trains were coming through from either Dover or Ramsgate. To ensure that commuters still got up to London, the station master (there were such in those days) simply summoned up three multiple units from the sidings and found a driver and guard to run them.

In the absence of station masters at most stations, initiatives like that are now virtually impossible. They will become quite impossible once the present process of closing even quite modern signal boxes and replacing them with “regional operation centres” is complete.

Arthur Percival
Faversham, Kent

Why on earth did Oliver Wright go back to Sevenoaks by bus when he was stranded at Orpington station? Even if the “surly” Southeastern station staff were unhelpful, surely it would have been sensible to continue towards London. In fact there are two bus routes, 61 and 208, from Orpington station to Bromley South station, where trains would have been running.

By all means blame un-cooperative staff – I have been on the receiving end of misleading information on Southern at West Croydon – but Mr Wright should have used a bit of initiative.

John French
London SE21

 

Oliver Wright doesn’t think a nationalised rail service would work. I beg to disagree.

I travel the East Coast rail line regularly from Darlington to Edinburgh and Aberdeen. The services are usually punctual and the staff both on board and at the station are helpful and friendly. This service is nationalised in all but name, but it is to be sold off before the next election by this government despite making £250m a year profit. Such is their determination to prove that nationalisation doesn’t work.

Ken Twiss
Low Worsall, Cleveland

 

Gunfire over the moors

The grouse season is with us and once more some of our most beautiful moorland is being trampled by people who enjoy murdering and maiming beautiful birds which have been raised solely for the so-called sport of driven grouse shooting.

Not only are large areas of heather being cut and burned, despoiling wonderful views, but raptors are being persecuted to make grouse more available for the guns. While it is part of nature for hen harriers to attack grouse to feed their young, it is not part of nature for humans to rear grouse just to have them blasted out the sky for pleasure.

On Sunday nearly 600 people gathered in the Peak District to protest peacefully against this illegal killing of hen harriers and other birds of prey merely to enhance the chances of more grouse being shot. It is hoped that those organisations who own or manage moorland will now do more than just talk and take action to stop the killing of raptors and maybe, in time, even to stop driven grouse shooting.

Tony Hams
Tideswell, Derbyshire

 

The various fates of fish

Grace Dent is too eager to support the RSPCA’s bully-boy tactics (12 August), if the experience of my tyre fitter is anything to go by.

He has two tanks in his office with a splendid selection of tropical fish. One of the tanks contains a single, large, ugly specimen. A customer complained to the RSPCA and he was visited and told that the fish was lonely and needed company.

“I put other fish with him, but he ate them”, he said.  He was then told that the sides of the tank should be painted black so that the fish did not feel intimidated by visiting customers.

“You should go to the shop down the road,” he told the officer. “They dip their fish in batter and fry and eat them.” He was told that this was not a laughing matter.

Nigel Scott
London N22

Let the wine speak for itself

Countries with a long tradition of wine making sell it in bottles designed for functionality according to the type of wine, and for elegance.

The latter characteristic invites consideration of the wine as it is poured and as it is tasted – be it alone or as a component of a meal. The labels of long-established châteaux are themselves the result of careful composition.

Having first become acquainted with wine while living in France many years ago, I am sure that I am not alone in being horrified at the thought of flashing a health warning under the noses of friends and guests as I address their glasses (“Put health warnings on beer and wine labels, say MPs”, 11 August)

The nasty label round the back already reiterates the volume of the bottle, and informs them of the concentration of alcohol and the number of “units” they should not exceed . I feel that I owe it to the wine and to my guests to remove this vulgar impertinence by soaking and scraping before my bottles reach the dinner table.

If we are to be insulted with even more information on these labels, or on third labels, might I request that they be attached to the bottle with a glue which yields to the gentle insertion of a thumb nail, to leave the bottle in its original unsullied condition.

Sidney Alford
Corsham, Wiltshire

 

Dominated by England

Yasmin Alibhai-Brown asks (11 August) why England holds contradictory opinions on Europe and Scotland, wanting to leave the former but stay in union with the latter. It’s a good question, but the answer’s easy, and to do with dominance.

England cannot dominate Europe (witness the recent election of the president) but feels it does dominate Scotland. Dominance is its idea of a relationship.

Brian Palmer
Edinburgh

Times:

Improvement in the economy is a chance to tackle welfare changes and housing benefits

Sir, Iain Duncan Smith is correct that getting the economy working means getting the state safety net right (“Broken welfare system drove up migration, claims Duncan Smith”, Aug 11).

The overall positive trend in the economy is good news and is the chief determinant of whether families can make ends meet. However, trends in the labour market, including more unstable working hours, rising self-employment and stalled wages, are making home life more insecure for many workers. Positive policies of support to help people save for retirement, make pensions decisions and afford childcare must reflect the reality of this new economy.

The secretary of state is right when he says that welfare reforms are first and foremost about people. As the economy continues to grow, ministers must tackle the major welfare challenges of fixing the broken systems of support for disabled people and safely delivering the flagship Universal Credit.

Gillian Guy
Citizens Advice

Sir, May I suggest a moratorium on the word dependency in the context of the welfare debate (“Beveridge’s Bequest”, leader, Aug 12). In February 2013 there were 5.1 million claimants of housing benefits in the UK. Tenants in particular totally depended on that benefit to keep a roof over their heads. Come April 2013 and the poorest large families (£26,000 annual limit) and single people (spare room supplement) had their housing benefit cut, leaving rent unpaid and eviction threatening.

Low-paid single people, widows and widowers, around 50 to 60 years old, becoming ill or unemployed for the first time in a long, working, tax-paying life could no longer depend on the rest of us to keep them in their family home among vital community support. The policy is to force them to move to make a better use of affordable social housing. Large families with young children suffer the same fate just because they happened to be large on April 6, 2013.

A very small minority of benefit claimants might be dependent on benefits to such an extent that it is corrosive to the wellbeing of individuals. Most need them but wish they did not. Yet all are publicly branded and their incomes reduced, even though the fault lies with the lack of any governmental policy to provide enough affordable housing for many decades.

The Rev Paul Nicolson
Taxpayers Against Poverty
London N17

A Sussex reader reports seeing an Orthodox Jew who felt he had to conceal his religious identity in public

Sir, Hugo Rifkind’s insightful article (Aug 12) merits a long pause for thought. While enduring the lengthy queue at Eastbourne’s central post office this week, my patience was shared by a gentleman and his young daughter. Having lived in Israel for a while, I recognised them as orthodox Jews, but what struck me — for the first time in this country — was that this man had felt it necessary to mask his appearance. His skull-cap was hidden under a cap while his payot (long side-curls) were twisted behind his ears and tucked underneath.

We have reached a new low in Britain when citizens of any religious minority fear identification in a public place.

Anne March

Eastbourne, E Sussex

Sir, Growing antisemitism is another unforeseen consequence of Europe’s departure from Christianity.

Notwithstanding certain times and places, Christianity has offered protection to Jews and Judaism over the centuries due to shared scriptures, theology and ethics. Proactive atheistic campaigning to destroy the Judaeo-Christian basis of European society will continue to increase Jewish vulnerability.

Into the spiritual vacuum has stepped Islam with its specific credal antisemitism. As the prophet Jeremiah said, “ ‘Peace, peace,’ they say, when there is no peace.”

The Rev Dr Robert Anderson

Blackburn, Lancs

Inefficiencies in the collection of the TV licence prompt calls for a different system

Sir, I was not surprised the BBC sends 100,000 letters each day demanding payment of the licence fee. Quite a few of them came to me (Aug 13).

My late mother’s house was empty for 18 months before we sold it at the end of last year. Every few weeks I received a letter from TV licensing. Every time I received a letter, I rang and explained that the house was unoccupied and had been cleared, so there was no TV in it. All of these calls were ignored.

Joanna Martin

Hitcham, Suffolk

Sir, While paying for the licence by direct debit we received a barrage of increasingly threatening letters which stopped only when we said we’d see the BBC in court.

Martin O’Keeffe

West Chiltington, W Sussex

Sir, As the owner of a property with neither a TV nor broadband connection, I received over 140 TV licence reminders.

Mark Haslam

Malvern, Worcs

Events far from Britain prompt some to call for military intervention – or at least for foreign policy clarity

Sir, As a naturalised Briton of Iraqi Christian origin, I am horrified by the plight of Christians, Yazidis, Jews and other minorities in northern Iraq.

Why do moderate Muslims in the UK not condemn the acts of Islamic extremists in the Middle East, and why do churches not urge the government to intervene?

In the Gulf wars Britain and the US toppled a secular regime and brought instability to a volatile region. It is therefore our responsibility to take a tough military stance, using air strikes and arming the Kurds. Kurdistan is a secular Muslim country and is an ally in a region dominated by religious extremism and corruption. Terrorist states such as Isis threaten not only the future of the Middle East but eventually the safety of all of us.

Nora Emmanuel

London, SW1

Sir, Most Britons feel threatened by Islamic terrorism, and many want to attack Isis forces thousands of miles away (Aug 13). Yet Israel is vilified for trying to defend itself when Hamas, the terrorist Islamic organisation that has vowed to annihilate Israel, is raining rockets down over its border.

Over 250,000 Muslims have been killed in Syria; Isis forces are attacking Christians in their tens of thousands. Why are the Muslims not protesting about the thousands of Muslims attacked by Islamic terrorists such as Boko Haram? Why is it only Israel that is singled out for such hatred in their protests?

Mindy Wiesenberg

London NW4

A reader took to heart a maxim from his school maths teacher and now his garage is very untidy

Sir, Written around the wall of my maths teacher’s classroom was the exhortation “Never work anything out until you have to” — sensible advice for calculations.

It is a maxim I have successfully adapted in later life to include doing things, which, over the years, has avoided a lot of blind alleys and much rework. It does, however, lead to a rather untidy garage.

Christopher Martindale

Wicken, Bucks

Telegraph:

SIR – Excessive alcohol intake damages health. Minimum pricing could reduce the harm to many heavy drinkers, but I think that the all-party parliamentary group on alcohol misuse is risking alienating responsible drinkers.

People under-report or deny their use of harmful substances. Simple biochemical tests can verify and measure the smoking habit. With alcohol this is not the case.

There is evidence that light to moderate drinkers have a lower cardiovascular risk than non-drinkers. While warnings should be given about the dangers of chronic, excessive drinking, those who drink sensibly should be assured that their intake poses no major risk to their health.

Dr Graham F Cope
Birmingham

SIR – The committee on alcohol misuse has, once again, raised the prospect of reducing the drink-drive limit from 80mg per 100ml to 50mg – meaning that one pint would put you over the limit.

This would be the death of the country pub, one of the few remaining institutions that gives England its singular character.

Tony Speechly
Rickmansworth, Hertfordshire

SIR – Does it not seem ironic that MPs are calling for dire warnings on booze bottles when so much tax is raised from this source and taxes are used to subsidise Westminster bars and restaurants?

David Allen
Cley, Norfolk

Help manual

SIR – I have bought a vibro-sonic jewellery cleaner but am struggling with the instructions (Letters, August 11). No 4 reads “uft tray and place into tus”.

Joy Leach
Peterlee, Co Durham

One thing never to say when asked how you are

SIR – When faced with the question “How are you?” (Letters, August 12), it is polite to respond with, “Very well, thank you,” or even “Fine.” The answer should certainly not be “I’m good”.

The question is in relation to one’s state of health or wellbeing, not one’s moral behaviour.

Garry Petherbridge
Leigh-on-Sea, Essex

SIR – When my mother was asked how she was, her response was either, “Up and down like Tower Bridge,” or, “All right, down one side.”

Angela Weallans
Worcester Park, Surrey

SIR – My friend’s late mother always replied, “One foot in the grave and the other on a banana skin.”

Patricia Evans
Sandhurst, Berkshire

SIR – A common response around here is “Right side of the turf.”

Michael Glover
Dinton, Wiltshire

SIR – I sometimes borrow a line from Lieutenant Commander Data, the android of Star Trek: “My biological and psychological systems are functioning within normal parameters”.

Derek Cheeseman
Broadstone, Dorset

SIR – Depending on who’s asking, my usual response is, “How long have you got?”

Neil Buchan
Newcastle-under-Lyme, Staffordshire

SIR – A bore is a man who, when you ask him how he is, tells you.

Bernard Kerrison
London SW4

SIR – K L Parsons draws attention to the redundant cement works near Shoreham in Sussex.

The Campaign to Protect Rural England has recently started a campaign entitled “Waste of Space”, drawing attention to the enormous number of brownfield sites such as this. By putting land back to better use and providing the opportunity to regenerate certain areas, local planning authorities and developers could remove some of the blots on our rural and urban landscapes.

A dream? Probably, since developing a greenfield site is so much easier.

Stuart Derwent
Brighton, East Sussex

SIR – It must be wonderful to live in an area where eyesores are up for demolition. Here in the western Lake District we are constantly fighting the building of new ones. Plans for a second nuclear power station on a greenfield site have been abandoned, but now we are confronted with a nuclear dump and a line of pylons going down the coast. The horizon is already studded with offshore turbines.

No doubt many will consider this “nimbyism”: but if local communities do not look after these lovely areas, who will?

Frances Rand
Silecroft, Cumbria

SIR – The derelict Shoreham cement works are not pretty but their offence is relatively localised. The ugliest feature of the South Downs is the Glyndebourne wind turbine, which destroys the view for miles around.

Philip Styles
Cheddar, Somerset

Last post

SIR – I live some 500 yards from a postal sorting office. Now that the Royal Mail has decided to have postmen perform my local collection as part of their delivery rounds they seem to have delayed the arrival of my post to match.

I received today’s postal delivery at 11 minutes to six in the evening.

Keith Appleyard
West Wickham, Kent

SIR – If the collections are to be early and only once a day, it is essential that details of the next collection are displayed on the post box.

Paul Eward
Ross-on-Wye, Herefordshire

Respect for Bach

SIR – While we are still treated to plenty of good music on daytime Radio 3, the obsession with the modern piano and any kind of transcription, however silly, is utterly frustrating – especially as the main victim is J S Bach.

Bach wrote music to suit the resources for which it was intended, and the compositions for organ are written like little else in his output. Scales abound, well-placed dissonances are carefully planned, and the sustaining feature of the organ is utilised frequently.

A Steinway does little for them, and a romantic symphony orchestra produces hardly more than a parody.

This greatest of composers deserves to be treated with more respect.

Robert Lightband
Dundee

‘My name is Pincher’

SIR – The obituary of Chapman Pincher brought back memories of my time as an engineer at Windscale (now Sellafield). I started in 1949, to work on what are now called nuclear reactors.

As can be imagined, this work was top secret, yet Pincher seemed to be able to publish details in a roundabout way.

I think his best achievement was when the reactor was being gradually raised to full power for the first time. The telephone rang. A voice said: “My name is Pincher. I believe something big is happening.”

The boss, well-known for his colourful language, took the phone and saw him off. There was obviously a source in the organisation, but he was never identified.

Allan Kitchen
West Kilbride, Ayrshire

The eureka moment

SIR – During the Second World War, scientists developing radar found that their cooling mugs of tea reheated when left on a particular piece of equipment. This phenomenon resulted in the ubiquitous microwave – good, clear, logical development of a casual observation.

So how on earth did David Craddock (Letters, August 11) discover that spraying used tea bags with Deep Heat was a good cat deterrent?

Robert Warner
West Woodhay, Berkshire

An ungenerous offer

SIR – I have just been contacted by a Nigerian gentleman expressing the warmest indications of friendship. Unfortunately, he has only transferred $3.8 million to my bank account.

Other friends that I did not know from the region have apparently sent far more in the past. Why is my worth declining, year on year? Should I blame the Coalition?

Tim Arnold
Slough, Berkshire

The Government must be prepared to send in warplanes and troops to prevent the slaughter of innocents

An Iraqi Yazidi child, whose family fled their home a week ago when Islamic State (IS) militants attacked the town of Sinjar, looks on at a makeshift shelter in the Kurdish city of Dohuk

A Yazidi boy in the Kurdish city of Dohuk, after fleeing the town of Sinjar with his parents  Photo: Getty Images

7:00AM BST 13 Aug 2014

CommentsComments

SIR – Britain must do more than send an RAF cargo plane to help the minority religious groups of Iraq. We must send in warplanes and, if necessary, troops. In fact every country in the civilised world must come to these people’s aid. They are begging the world to help.

How can we stand and watch as barbarians are slaughtering men, woman and children? These people are not only the enemy of Christians, Yazidi, Kurds and other Muslims, they are the enemy of humanity, and must be destroyed.

Michael Ford
Bocking, Essex

SIR – What determines our Prime Minister’s support for British values and Christianity?

The Kurds have a democratic government, a great tolerance for Iraq’s Christian minorities and are prepared to fight terrorism.

Antony Snow
London SW3

SIR – Invading Iraq was a mistake, getting involved in Libya was a mistake, to have interfered in Syria would have been a mistake, but to do nothing but drop water and food to the Yazidi and other minorities would be a shameful error.

The humanitarian case for assistance is overwhelming. The aim must be the military destruction of Isis, and if that requires boots on the ground – hopefully in coalition – then so be it. Do it, then leave.

Use the aid budget if necessary. Recall Parliament and make a bold decision.

Cdre Malcolm Williams RN (rtd)
Southsea, Hampshire

SIR – Like Frankenstein, George Bush and Tony Blair created a monster – and their successors don’t know how to get rid of it.

Morton Morris
London NW2

SIR – Boris Johnson may well want to protect and support the Kurds, but he must have noticed that David Cameron has been cutting our Armed Forces to the bone, so we would have great difficulty mounting an operation in Iraq.

Some Tories seem to think that our ever-increasing overseas aid budget will earn us future goodwill and greater security, but they really should remember Kipling’s comments on the Danegeld. In practical terms, in international relations, we have lost our status and we are no longer a worthwhile friend to our allies or a threat to our enemies.

David Wragg
Edinburgh

SIR – As the West struggles lamely to form some kind of joint response to the anarchic events across Syria and northern Iraq, perhaps this might be the time for the Nato nations to take a lead by deploying the ready-formed Allied Rapid Reaction Corps.

In theory, this ought to demonstrate joint political resolve – assuming, that is, that there is any political resolve.

William Pender
Stratford-sub-Castle, Wiltshire

Irish Times:

A chara, – The announcement by the Minister for Justice, Frances Fitzgerald, of the Government’s decision to establish a working group next month to review the operation of the direct provision system is very welcome. While a review of direct provision conditions is important, its remit must extend to the biggest single issue facing asylum seekers, which is the excessive length of time spent awaiting a final determination of their claim.

One in three asylum seekers has been waiting at least five years since first applying for asylum in Ireland. One in 10 has been waiting seven or more years, during which time they cannot work and endure a de facto barrier to third level and further education, while living on €19.10 per week.

But fixing a broken asylum system is not easy. Successive governments have promised and failed to introduce a single procedure where all applications for different forms of protection are lodged together. The announced fast-tracking of this long-awaited legislation will constitute a significant step forward. But a single procedure will not address the situation of the 1,600 asylum seekers stuck for more than five years at different stages of the asylum process. In particular, it will not resolve the impasse arising because of the large number of asylum cases before the courts for judicial review.

In the light of the backlog and the lack of available court resources it is estimated that it will take many years to resolve the existing caseload. Thus it is critical that the terms of reference for the proposed working group include identifying durable solutions for applicants stuck in the asylum process, who have been “living in limbo” for years. – Is mise le meas,

EUGENE QUINN,

Jesuit Refugee

Service Ireland,

Limerick

A chara, – Over the years there has been a plethora of reports, many funded by the Government, there have been conferences, academic courses, films, newspaper articles, TV programmes, legal cases, reports of international human rights organisations and videos similar to those currently being aired by Carl O’Brien on the Irish Times website. Yet people still linger in these appalling direct provision centres. People should have their own homes, should be allowed to work or have an education or claim normal social welfare. Their children should have the normal life a child deserves There is no justification for this system and it must stop now. Surely we are better than this? – Is Mise,

GERTRUDE COTTER,

Ballyregan,

Co Cork

Sir, – Some of the comparisons between Ireland and Sweden in their dealings with asylum seekers (Lives in Limbo, August 12th) are quite misleading. It is said that in Sweden “Those who apply for asylum are immediately allowed to work”. At an EMN Ireland conference in Dec 2012, a senior official of the Swedish Migration Board made it clear that, in fact, that right was conditional on the asylum seeker co-operating with the authorities in the matter of establishing their ID, 90 per cent having provided no such documentation. The great majority prefer not to co-operate and as a consequence only 19 per cent work. The most important reform of the system will be the single procedure and Ms Fitzgerald is to be congratulated for facilitating this. – Yours, etc,

ÁINE Ní CHONAILL,

Immigration Control

Platform,

PO Box 6469,

Dublin 2

Sir, – Carl O’Brien’s excellent reports on the subsistence conditions which people fleeing their own countries have been forced to endure here show how urgent a change in Government thinking is on the right to seek paid work. How could we, as a society, have tolerated this cruelty for so long without protesting? How can our Government not hang its head at being paired in this infamy with Lithuania, a much poorer country, as the only two European states still refusing asylum seekers the right to earn a wage. Shame on us all! – Yours, etc,

ELISABETH GUINNESS,

The Coppins,

Dublin 18-

Sir, – Almost every major western state, with the exception of Sweden, underwent revolution as part of its modernising process. Southern Ireland, not a major state, nonetheless underwent revolution as part of its formative process, and eventually became a republic. Revolution, however traumatic at the time, is a normal part of western state formation; people may not want it, feel deeply ambiguous about it, but they want the alternative less – in southern Ireland’s case continued domination and exploitation by the metropolitan centre with attendant, it was believed, economic underdevelopment.

Those who are either opposed to or ambivalent about revolution, believing that southern Irish participation in the first World War, together with the essential fairness of the British parliamentary system, was bound to bring about independence, have a difficult case to make: the subordination of the interests of the dominions to the needs of the metropolitan centre until quite recently being not the least of the obstacles to the case they seek to make.

Had there been no radical discontinuity in Irish history it would of course have been quite easy to imagine a Redmondite John Bruton sitting at Westminster, where he might even have become vice-chairman of the agriculture committee. However, given what did occur, he became taoiseach of an independent republic. Yours, etc,

EOIN DILLON,

Ceannt Fort,

Mount Brown,

Dublin 8

Sir, – It is probably unlikely that Fintan O’Toole’s cogent critique will disturb John Bruton’s sangfroid. One is reminded of Upton Sinclair’s observation that “It is difficult to get a man to understand something when his salary depends on his not understanding it.” Yours, etc,

PAT ROONEY,

St John’s Court,

Clondalkin,

Dublin 22

Sir, – I find myself half-agreeing with Fintan O’Toole (August 12th). John Bruton sums up why Fine Gael is just another power-hungry party. But Bruton is correct when he says governments will have to start reneging on current welfare entitlements.

There are now only a handful of properly run democracies that are living within their means. Increasingly governments gain and retain power by promising people a standard of living they are not earning. This ratchets up the national debt, which is then left for future generations to pay for. In Ireland, approximately 150, 000 people have never worked, yet we continue to import labour and we pay hospital consultants approximately two and a half times as much as their German equivalents. We still have the third-highest-paid prime minister in the EU and an army of senior civil servants and former politicians whose pension pots each cost more than €1 million each. This suits the lobby groups, minority groups and vested interests who now control government policy. The only people it does not suit are Joe and Mary Taxpayer, and the future generations of working and middle class Irish. We are witnessing the steady death of meaningful participatory democracy. – Yours, etc,

GERRY KELLY,

Orwell Gardens,

Dublin 6

Sir, – Fintan O’Toole’s column (August 12th) is quite unfair to John Bruton. There is no basis for the assertion that former taoisigh receive their pensions on the condition that they will not engage in paid work. The pension scheme may be in need of reform, but if so this applies to all retired office-holders, not just to John Bruton. Given that he was aged 50 when he ceased to be taoiseach, it’s not surprising that he has had a career subsequently. – Yours, etc,

TOM SHEEDY,

Seapark,

Malahide,

Co Dublin

A chara, – If, as John Bruton reportedly believes, governments are going to default on their commitments to healthcare and pensions, when, in his judgement, should we default on our income taxes and social charges? – Is mise,

CORMAC SHERIDAN,

Aughrim Street,

Dublin 7

Sir, – I refer to former taoiseach John Bruton’s wish (News, August 13th) that the British government might transfer the Westminster statue of John Redmond to us since we have none of our own. Lest he wonder why Westminster has seen fit to honour Redmond, the content of an election pamphlet issued in support of Count Plunkett, standing for election after the Rising, might enlighten him. It is headed “John Redmond and the Executions” and reads: On the evening of the 3rd May 1916, after the English Premier had announced – amid the cheers of the English Whigs and Tories and the Redmondites – that Pearse, MacDonagh and Clarke had been shot that morning,and while Joseph Plunkett, Edward Daly, Cornelius Colbert and Michael O Hanrahan were lying in the condemned cell, John Redmond rose in the British House of Commons and said: ‘This outbreak happily seems to be over. It has been dealt with with the firmness which was not only right, but it was the duty of the Government to so deal with it … I do beg the Government not to show undue harshness or severity to the great masses of those who are implicated, on whose shoulders lies a guilt far different from that which lies upon the instigators and promoters of this outbreak.’ Redmond thus signified his approval of the execution of the leaders. Redmond uttered this speech at 4pm in the British House of Commons on May 3rd. Eleven hours later Plunkett, Daly, O’Hanrahan and Colbert were shot by the British Government’s orders. Who will vote for the nominee of Redmond the approver and inciter of the execution of Joseph Plunkett?”

The pamphlet was issued by JB Boyle, Solicitor, Boyle, election agent for Count Plunkett in the 1917 Roscommon North by-election. – Yours, etc,

JAMES CONNOLLY HERON,

Oxford Road,

Ranelagh,

Dublin 6. mob

Sir, – I wonder did Cahal McLaughlin (August 12th) check with the Tricycle Theatre in Kilburn if it reviewed the funding of every single event it hosts or just the Jewish Film Festival (JFF).

Did it check what events received funding via Russia or China, or from rich people who use such events as a way to avoid tax? Do its facilities use any products produced by companies like Apple, and if so did it have no regard to the labour practices employed by that company? How does it decide which states it will allow to fund events and which it won’t.

The real question to ask is who exactly started the conversation at the Tricycle Theatre about how the Jewish Film Festival was funded. The only reason to single out a Jewish event is because the person who first raised the issue is anti-Semitic, because otherwise the theatre would have simply announced that it would accept no events directly funded by any embassy.

Did it never occur to Mr McLaughlin that the JFF might be an opportunity for the Jewish, Muslim and Christian communities to come together and set an example of inter-religious friendship? –Yours, etc,

DESMOND FitzGERALD,

Canary Wharf,

London

Sir, – Medical researchers recently told us that early treatment of stroke symptoms provided a better outcome than late intervention. Now educational researchers tell us that, basically, children who come from comfortable backgrounds have a better chance of attending university than their poorer peers. I suppose Isaac Newton needed researchers to tell him that his apple did not float in the air. – Yours, etc,

EUGENE TANNAM,

Monalea Park,

Dublin 24

Sir, – Now that we have a report telling us that the children of middle class parents are more likely to go to college than those of working class parents how soon can we expect a report telling us that happily married people are least likely to get divorced? – Yours, etc,

LOUIS O’FLAHERTY,

Lorcan Drive,

Dublin 9

Sir, – In 2013, 16 per cent of Leaving Certificate students took higher maths, while in 2014, 27 per cent took it. Newspapers and radio immediately report that this represents a 10 per cent rise. Rounding from 11 to 10 would be fine in the interests of telling a simple story. However, a change from 16 per cent to 27 per cent represents a whopping 68.75 per cent increase from one year to the next. Would that journalists – any journalists ever – could master simple percentages. – Yours, etc,

FRED CUMMINS,

School of Computer Science

and Informatics,

University College,

Dublin 4

Sir, – I would take issue with John Thompson’s suggestion (August 13th) that the existence of multiple languages is intrinsically harmful. I cannot speak a second language fluently, so I’m not a linguistic enthusiast myself. Thompson gives no evidence that linguistic diversity is intrinsically harmful to peace and happiness. After all, Switzerland, with four official languages, is one of the most peaceful and prosperous societies that ever existed. In contrast, monolingual America has among the highest levels of income inequality and violence in the developed world. It could be argued that linguistic diversity is a force for happiness and peace. When you take that into account, along with all the proven personal benefits of multilingualism, it’s hard to see on what basis Thompson assumes such diversity is a bad thing. – Yours, etc,

TOMÁS M CREAMER,

Aushnasheelin,

Ballinamore,

Co Leitrim

A Chara, – It is difficult to afford any credence to the assertion that a world with fewer languages would be a more peaceful one. Correct me if I’m wrong, but were not the participants on both sides of the American Civil War, one of the bloodiest on record, for the most part English-speakers? Some of the latest thinking values linguistic diversity as highly as biodiversity. Certain concepts, thoughts and meanings embedded in one language are often difficult to translate or transpose into another. Maintaining this diversity is believed to contribute to enriching human thought and imagination. A language lost entails an entire culture and ways of imagining the world lost. If anything, a greater tolerance and respect for the diverse languages and cultures of this world would help us all lead a more peaceful existence. Yours, etc,

ROB MAC GIOLLARNÁTH,

Simonsridge,

Sandyford,

Dublin 18

y Meany (August 12th) on the noise levels at Croke Park. I’ve noticed an increase in volume over recent years, although this was generally confined to advertisements from GAA sponsors being shown on the big screens. Now we have music of all kinds constantly being played at full blast. Not only does this racket affect those attending, it could be heard clearly during sideline interviews on the TV coverage of last Sunday’s hurling semi-finals. It appears to me that referees, on occasion, have to hesitate before throwing in the ball or sliotar, as if waiting for the music to be turned off. Surely the game and those playing it are the priority here, not the soundtrack which someone in GAA headquarters has decided must be inflicted upon all present?

To paraphrase a popular anthem, while the GAA may have envisaged “counting dollars” this summer, some of us just look forward to “counting (all-)stars”. And not being deafened in the process. – Yours, etc,

JA BROSNAN,

Headford,

Killarney,

Co Kerry

Sir, – Regarding the Government’s laudable plan to introduce plain packaging for tobacco products, according to tobacco multinational Philip Morris that strategy would cost the Exchequer €125 million a year in lost revenue (News, August 12th). Did you ever hear the like? Smoking-related illness costs the State some €2 billion a year. The tobacco industry should be made cough up more in taxes to ease the burden that smoking imposes on State coffers.To the Government I say this: take no notice of these brazen purveyors of carcinogenic products. – Yours, etc,

PAUL DELANEY,

Beacon Hill,

Dalkey

Sir, – Well done to the Minister of State for Gaeltacht Affairs, Joe McHugh, for telling the Seachtain na Gaeilge gathering: “Tá mé ag dul ar ais ar scoil” (News, August 13th). Somehow it reminds me of those “An bhfuil cead agam dul go dtí­ an leithreas?” moments in high babies when I was seven years old. – Is mise,

PATRICK O’BYRNE,

Shandon Crescent,

Phibsborough,

Dublin 7

Irish Independent:

There can be no justification for the mayhem and merciless assault on innocent life in Gaza. The charge of anti-Semitism is disingenuously used to silence all critics. Many Jews seek to disassociate themselves from what is happening in their name – they too are opposed to the current drift of Zionism, particularly the settlement expansion on the West Bank and the continued medieval-type siege of Gaza.

The branding of the justified assertion of our basic rights as terrorism has been the psychological weapon of choice by states that have a lot to hide.

This tactic was used by Margaret Thatcher in her dismissal, as terrorists, of Nelson Mandela and his fellow opponents of Apartheid. In our own country, one of the greatest political misjudgments was the refusal to address the glaring injustice raised by the civil rights movement in Ulster.

This allowed the IRA to use violent means as all peaceful means had been suppressed. The Israelis have persistently failed to acknowledge the depth of injustice felt by the people of Gaza.

There has been similar blindness to the inevitable consequences of the inequitable distribution of power between Sunni and Shia Muslims in Iraq.

The drift to the right in Israeli politics has closed the door to genuine rational debate. The unshakeable belief that God decreed that a wandering semi-nomadic people would inherit a land of their own is a myth of origin that sits uneasily with reasoned discussion.

It is sometimes tempting to think that the creation of Israel was a monumental mistake, in that there seemed to have been little done to secure the rights of all affected.

The overwhelming international support for a two-state settlement seems to be the only constructive way forward. Sadly, this is opposed by the USA and Israel.

Meanwhile, the antipathy towards Israel has intensified with the real possibility of it becoming a pariah state.

Philip O’Neill

Oxford

UK

Egypt’s closed doors

Christy Wynne (Irish Independent, Letters, August 13) says about the Gaza Strip that “a population of 1.8 million people live in a hell hole a fraction of the size of Connacht and are locked in by land, sea and air, with water and electricity rationed and dished out at the discretion of a draconian neighbour.” But it’s not clear whether he’s referring to Israel or Egypt.

Gaza has a 30-mile border with Egypt, its fellow Arab state, so why does Egypt refuse to open its border with Gaza? And why do people like Mr Wynne not call for the Egyptian Ambassador to be expelled or arrange marches to the Egyptian Embassy?

Perhaps he might like to comment on why there are 1.8 million people in the Gaza Strip, or why there are no female doctors or nurses in Gaza. In case he isn’t aware, it’s because women in Gaza live under Sharia Law.

Desmond FitzGerald

Canary Wharf

London

Where there’s a will . . .

Mary Kenny gave me a good laugh recently (Irish Independent, August 9), when a chest infection made her think it was time to run down to her solicitor to change her will, seeing it as “call up time from God”. The best will I ever heard of was: “Being of sound mind, I spent all my money while living.”

That shook them.

Kathleen Corrigan

Cootehill

Co Cavan

The enemy of the State

“If you tell a lie big enough and keep repeating it, people will eventually come to believe it. The lie can be maintained only for such time as the State can shield the people from the political, economic and/or military consequences of the lie.

“It thus becomes vitally important for the State to use all of its powers to repress dissent, for the truth is the mortal enemy of the lie, and thus by extension, the truth is the greatest enemy of the State.”

This quote attributed to Joseph Goebbels says it all about the state of affairs in every single country; the only solution is to ensure a situation where the truth is given preference to the lie – big or otherwise.

Liam Power

Bangor Erris

Ballina

Co Mayo

Ireland as ‘Britain‘s Yugoslavia’

Hugh Duffy, (Irish Independent, Letters, August 12), says: “In the opinion of Jackson, Home Rule ‘far from inaugurating a new and peaceful era in Anglo-Irish relations, might well have introduced a period of bloodshed and nagging international bitterness’.

“Finally, in response to Mr Bruton’s claim that Bonar Law approved of Home Rule; Law is recorded as saying: ‘Ireland under Home Rule might well have proved to be not so much Britain’s settled democratic partner as her Yugoslavia’.”

Are we to understand that Ireland, following 1916, experienced no “period of bloodshed and nagging international bitterness” and never became “Britain’s Yugoslavia”? My understanding of what ‘actually happened’ is that from 1917 until 1923 there was indeed “a period of bloodshed” – including a Civil War in which the mutual reciprocation of atrocities paralysed and divided the South for two generations.

Far from ignoring the long constitutional struggle led by O’Connell, Butt, Parnell and Redmond for what was effectively the repeal of the Act of Union, the British Parliament finally passed a Home Rule Act. ‘Exclusion’, (of the six counties), may have been a bitter pill to swallow but nobody with a smidgen of realism could argue that blanket Home Rule could have been forced, (without ‘a bit’ of trouble), onto a powerful and armed unionist minority, (whose conservative allies had behaved with utter and grotesque cynicism, if not sedition and treason).

Maurice O’Connell

Tralee

Co Kerry

Leaving Cert and ‘game of life’

Leaving Cert results = OMG.

Matt Kavanagh

Whitecliff

Dublin 16

* * *

Is Ireland the only country that sets so much store by ‘results’ before the game of life has really even begun for our young adults?

I wish them all well, but earnestly hope they will set their own compass.

Ed Toal

Dublin 4

America loses its smile

Robin Williams smiled though his heart was breaking; America has lost its funny face.

A Jones

Sandycove

Co Dublin

* * *

Robin Williams was 63. I am 63. Words fail me.

What an awful waste, the world is a poorer place without such wonderful talent.

God love him, he struggled hard with his demons and lost.

Thank God we still have Mrs Doubtfire and many more besides. May he find contentment and peace now.

Brian McDevitt

Glenties

Co Donegal

* * *

It’s sad that someone who gave so much happiness to so many people wasn’t happy himself.

Kevin Devitte

Mill Street

Westport

Co Mayo

Irish Independent


Clinic

$
0
0

15 August 2014 Clinic

I jog around the park I still have arthritis in my left knee, but I manage to get round the park. A wettish day. I get go to the clinic, twice.

Scrabble: Mary wins, but gets under just 400. perhaps I will win tomorrow.

101 Games: Mary wins 53 John 49 Mary Average score 346 John 340

Obituary:

John Blundell – obituary

John Blundell was a head of the Institute of Economic Affairs who outdid Margaret Thatcher in his free-market radicalism

John Blundell, former Director General of the Institute of Economic Affairs

John Blundell, former Director General of the Institute of Economic Affairs

5:40PM BST 14 Aug 2014

CommentsComments

John Blundell, the author and former Director General of the Institute of Economic Affairs (IEA), who has died aged 61, was a leading proponent of libertarianism .

John Blundell was born on October 9 1952 at Congleton, Cheshire, and educated at the King’s School, Macclesfield, and the London School of Economics.

His early political background was within the Conservative Party, though later he saw the championing of free markets, property rights and individual liberty as best pursued beyond the constraints of party politics. However, he remained a close friend of David Davis, the former Conservative leadership contender, whom he met in the early 1970s when both were members of the Federation of Conservative Students. In 2009 Blundell recalled making student predictions with his friends that one day he would run the IEA; Michael Forsyth would be Secretary of State for Scotland; and Davis would be leader of the Conservative Party. “I got two out of three right, and I’m still looking forward to the third,” he said.

Blundell served as a Conservative councillor in Lambeth between 1978 and 1982, when the Labour council was led by “Red Ted” Knight. As an opposition councillor under such circumstances Blundell had limited power, although he did make a point of refusing to claim his allowances.

He also objected to the council spending £800 sponsoring a Notting Hill Carnival float with a “highly militaristic and decidedly revolutionary theme”. “Lambeth doles out an amazing amount of money to Marxist-oriented groups,” he added. “One can only hope that savage cuts in the rate support grant in the next financial year will put an end to this nonsense.”

During roughly the same period Blundell was the press and parliamentary officer for the Federation of Small Businesses, also organising FSB evening classes for people wishing to start their own businesses. During the “Winter of Discontent” in 1979 he arranged for FSB volunteers to clear tons of rubbish while council workers were on strike. The National Union of Public Employees denounced his “gross provocation”.

While at the FSB he arranged for the publication of An Inspector at the Door — jointly between the FSB and the Adam Smith Institute. It estimated that there were 201 kinds of government inspector with 252 different powers of entry, employing some 100,000 officials. The report caused a media sensation, inspiring articles about Britain’s “Society of Snoopers”. Margaret Thatcher expressed her concern in Parliament and set up a commission to review and curtail some of those powers.

Although he was a confidant of Margaret Thatcher, to describe Blundell as a “Thatcherite” would have understated his radicalism. For example in 1978 he suggested to the Tory leader that local authorities should be instructed to mail all council house deeds to sitting tenants for nothing. When, during a fire brigade strike, Blundell proposed that the fire service should be privatised, the Metropolitan Police warned him that the strikers were enraged. “They advised me to vary my journey to work,” he recalled.

He spent 11 years (1982-93) working for free market think tanks in the United States. Such was his energy for the cause that he ran several of them at a time. He was president of the Institute for Humane Studies (1988–91); of the Atlas Economic Research Foundation (1987–91); of the board of the Congressional Schools of Virginia (1988–92); and of the Charles G Koch and Claude R Lambe Charitable Foundations (1991–92).

But it was during his 16 years as head of the Institute of Economic Affairs in Britain that he made his biggest ideological impact. He took the helm in 1993 after a difficult period when there was concern that the IEA had become too close to the Major government and too preoccupied by short term policy “quick wins” rather than the long-term battle of ideas.

While Blundell did not seek the limelight, the scale of the Institute’s output under his leadership was impressive. “I felt I had come home, in every sense,” he said. He had first come across the IEA as a schoolboy considering taking A-level economics and had picked up an IEA reprint of George Stigler’s The Intellectual and the Market Place, which had a profound impact. “The IEA had just gone through a deeply unhappy patch,” he said. “But it was too important to fail and it was being cloned more and more around the world. It was the home church of free market capitalism, the place that preached personal freedom and responsibility under the rule of law.”

He himself added several important works to the IEA’s output, including Regulation without the State (with Colin Robinson, 2000) and Waging the War of Ideas (2005). In Policing A Liberal Society (2007), he observed: “The average beat officer is outdoors well under 20 per cent of the shift, usually in the company of another officer discussing pensions, holidays, partners and superior officers. Just doubling that amount of time and making all officers patrol alone (unless extraordinary circumstances dictate otherwise) would quadruple their presence.”

Blundell’s other books included Margaret Thatcher: A Portrait of the Iron Lady (2008) and Ladies For Liberty: Women Who Made a Difference in American History (2011).

In 2010 Blundell moved to Florida . He lectured extensively in North and Central America as well as in the Caribbean.

In 1976 John Blundell married Christine Lowry, who survives him with their two sons.

John Blundell born October 9 1952, died July 22 2014

Guardian:

hmrc tax return letters with logos and cash

With tax receipts 3.5% lower in the first three months of the financial year compared with 2013-14, Larry Elliott concludes that “Britain is becoming a Del Boy nation” (Report, 11 August). “Low-level tax evasion is large”, but the government is reducing the number of inspectors at a time when it declares that all tax avoiders must “smell the coffee”. Could the “efficiency savings” of £235m at HMRC last year have something to do with the reduced sums arriving in the Treasury’s coffers? The number of HMRC staff in enforcement and compliance fell by 1,529 in the years 2010-12, and the trend still continues, with another 2,000 jobs currently under threat.

All the “morally repugnant” rhetoric and such like is clearly a pretence, deliberately achieving little so that friends in the City and in the corporation boardrooms can continue to fleece the rest of us. It has done next to nothing about tax havens where trillions are squirrelled away, rather than paid to the Treasury; the British Overseas Territories, according to War on Want, together “rank as the most significant tax haven in the world, ahead of even Switzerland”.

The focus now is on Greene King, whose “purely artificial” tax avoidance schemes are to be considered by the court of appeal (Report, 11 August). The scheme in question was bought from Ernst and Young for 10% of the tax saved. The fact that one of the “big four” audit firms is allowed to market such devices and be paid according to the amount of tax avoided is deplorable, and in any decent society would be criminalised. The success of the scam depended, according to the QC representing HMRC, on “certain accounting treatments” (Report, 2 December 2013) and Greene King’s accounts were signed off by auditors from Ernst and Young!

Not only is it time to end the practice whereby representatives from the big four sit on Treasury committees advising on tax structures, it’s time to punish them, alongside their clients, in the courts. It’s not just banking that needs a culture change.
Bernie Evans
Liverpool

• Without wishing to contradict Larry Elliott, there is one other factor to consider. Britain has an increasing trade deficit, which has a negative impact on both VAT and corporation tax. The deficit is balanced by oligarchs buying property in London and the south-east. As untaxed monies are unlikely to wave an arm saying “here I am”, labour-intensive renovation work can be expected to be outside the tax system. As cash paid into a bank will be reported to HMRC, retail sales can be expected to grow. Vehicle sales will be benefiting from low interest rates. Everybody believes everyone else is cheating on tax and benefits, so everybody cheats any way they can. A citizen’s income would have to be paid by taxpayers, which would encourage tax evasion/avoidance.

Fundamentally, inward investment erodes a nation’s economy and independence. The only way out is more national private-sector value-added employment; but governments of all parties prefer giving taxpayers’ money to the private sector to “manage” “public” services. We have a trade deficit because we don’t create enough to pay for our imports. We don’t like work; we prefer to manage. So IDS continues to manage poverty.
Martin London
Henllan, Denbighshire

• Katie Allen quotes Ian Brinkley of Lancaster University as saying “most employers will be very reluctant to increase wages much until we see faster productivity increases” (Report, 13 August). This is to put the cart a long way in front of the horse. It is precisely because employers have been relying on being able to draw cheap labour from a large pool of unemployed that the economy has been stagnating. The current recovery is based on low productivity because simply using more labour without any extra support in infrastructure is bound to ratchet down the rate of growth, as well as making a lopsided economy even more unbalanced. That is why we find that although we are eventually back to pre-recession levels of output, it is taking almost a million extra jobs to do it.
Harvey Cole
Winchester, Hampshire

• Time to stop protesting that the government’s economic plans for recovery are not working – because they are. Thousands no longer unemployed, albeit not working; thousands in ridiculously low-paid, insecure jobs; and thousands who are attempting self-employment. The government must be delighted – a cheap and flexible workforce, benefits budgets cut, and the bankers escaping untouched. Maybe we should, rather, be protesting at the real intentions of this so-called plan.
Christine Midgley
Northampton

The faculty of child and adolescent psychiatry strongly supports the Local Government Association’s call for an overhaul of child and adolescent mental health services (Report, 13 August).

The problems are complex and longstanding. Child and adolescent mental health (CAMH) has faced a double whammy – lack of parity of esteem with respect to both age and mental health, with only 6% of the mental health spend while representing 20% of the population. Complex commissioning arrangements, with health, social care and education all acting as commissioners, have been compounded by changes arising from the health and social care bill and significant cuts in funding, particularly to services commissioned by social services.

We hope that the forthcoming Department of Health CAMH taskforce will address these problems. In order to be successful it must lead to: restoration of cuts to funding; recognition of the longstanding underfunding of CAMH services; and reforms to commissioning to create joined-up, integrated services. Perhaps then we can truly say that we can meet the mental health needs of some of our most vulnerable young people.
Dr Peter Hindley
Chair of the faculty of child and adolescent psychiatry, Royal College of Psychiatrists

• I have a 15-year-old daughter who has had serious mental health difficulties since she was 12. Initially she did not meet the threshold criteria for CAMH, even though she was seriously depressed and unable to leave the house. Nothing else was offered. She continued to deteriorate until she eventually did meet the criteria. Requests for a referral to an eating disorder specialist service were denied on financial grounds.

Recently she has been signed off from CAMH as “she is not an immediate danger to herself” despite being bulimic, self-harming and severely depressed. I was told to call Samaritans if I was worried. I am left watching my daughter slide into even more severe mental illness which may then open the door to specialist help.

The thresholds at each tier of support are already so high as to preclude any early intervention work. At every review of the CAMH service the thresholds for support are raised even higher. This is leaving vulnerable teens and families in an impossible situation – having to reach severe mental illness until they are seen in even the most limited way. My daughter’s care will ultimately cost the state far more as she is unlikely to get better on her own and will be unable to function in the adult world with a very limited educational experience. The cuts are brutal and a nonsense.
Name and address supplied

• My daughter died in Manchester last month, a drug-related statistic. She was a troubled young lady with mental health issues exacerbated by substance misuse. As a teenager, when self-harming badly, she was in and out of Styal prison. They were fantastic, they invited my wife and me to the secure unit and they were just awesome. One comment, from a senior prison officer, will stick for ever: “This is a prison, not a hospital. We are just not equipped or trained to deal with these girls’ issues. I have 400 prisoners, 95% are not bad people, they just suffer from mental illness of one sort or another.” At my daughter’s funeral, her community psychiatric nurse told me the budget for mental health support in Manchester is already spent.

It takes a superstar with severe mental issues exacerbated by substance misuse to get the issue of mental health on the front pages, if only briefly (Report, 12 August). How many dying Emma Jenkinsons will it take before governments accept that this issue is costing millions, causing untold misery and needs urgent attention? Prison is not the answer.
Mike Jenkinson
Altrincham, Cheshire

Mark Simmonds is probably in the top 1% of household income recipients of over £160,000 a year (Minister quits over ‘intolerable’ expenses, 13 August). He still complains that not sufficient of taxpayers’ money comes his way as an MP. I recently visited a friend in her 50s who worked until stricken with severe angina. She was refused sickness benefit, told to seek a job and got £106 a fortnight. This month she has experienced two heart attacks and an operation. Back home, her income and work status has not yet been changed. These two people illustrate that Britain’s problem is not just poverty but inequality. With the next general election in sight, will my Labour party specify by how much it intends to redistribute income and wealth from the top 1% to the bottom 10% in order to promote greater equality?

Next year will mark the 100th anniversary of the death of Keir Hardie. How about an official Labour conference to resurrect the principles which he claimed were central to the party?
Bob Holman
Glasgow

• No doubt Mark Simmonds is aware the maximum housing benefit for a three-bed flat in inner London, the largest for which he’d be entitled to claim, is £350.95 a week, or £18,249.40 annually, just over half of the £35,375 he can claim as a rental allowance on a second home as an MP.
Louise Lewis
London

• The piece about poor Mr Simmonds is reinforced by something I learned from a respected banker. Apparently, the British government will grant passports to foreign nationals and their families if they invest over £10m in this country. Such “investments” are likely to be in London’s bloated property market. The capital’s major law firms and accounts have departments busy applying for passports for these important new citizens. If this is a policy of the government, might it not, among others, attract those who gained their wealth less than honestly or honourably?
Graham Cooper
Smethcott, Shropshire

Law library at University College London

Your editorial and associated article (11 August) on the position of the Warburg Institute in relation to the University of London do not fully reflect one feature of the institute. It consists of the library, the photographic collection and the archive, all representative of the Aby Warburg legacy. The third of these is also a cultural treasure, reflecting not only the history and development of the institute both in London and before but also cultural life in Europe and, after the 1933 move to London, in Britain. Its holdings reveal the effort expended by the director, Fritz Saxl, Edgar Wind and other members of the staff in negotiating the transfer from Germany and establishing the institute in its new location. Contacts had to be made with British academics and institutions, and money sought to maintain staffing or to initiate major new publications.

Above all, Saxl placed his trust in Britain to provide a continuing basis for the work of the institute across its areas of interest as a reflection of the Warburg legacy. In December 1944 its gift to the university was welcomed as “the nation’s greatest Christmas present of the year”. Were it to leave London or Britain as a result of the current dispute, it would surely be a betrayal of that trust.
Graham Whitaker
Honorary research fellow in classics, University of Glasgow

• The worst thing about the appalling news that the University of London is even contemplating the destruction of the Warburg Institute is that it comes as no surprise. For the past few decades the universities have been worse than supine in face of the onslaught of neoliberal barbarism, for, rather than resisting it, defending the civilised values they are supposed to embody, they have colluded in their own destruction. They wallow in pseudo-managerialism; pretend to be about everything except what they should be; and, rather, glory in aims, objectives, outcomes, whatever these actually are. You seldom happen upon such words as “scholarship” or “learning” in the promotional material any university publishes, for these ideals are incompatible with what they have become. The University of London is not alone in being living proof of this.
Professor Michael Rosenthal
Banbury, Oxfordshire

Richard Dawkins trots out yet again his mantra about certain beliefs being “without evidence, without the need to justify” (Dawkins: I once fantasised about angels – and God, 14 August). I guess he’s comfortable with complex numbers – involving the non-existent square root of minus one – and with the big bang, a jokey name given to the inexplicable origin of the universe and of time itself. The truth is that much human deliberation and understanding depends on things incomprehensible to the human mind – mathematics, engineering and astrophysics depend on the “unjustified” concepts above. Religions, on the other hand, have probably been the sources of most human imagination, fellow-feeling and creativity: arts, music, design, language, courage, and interpersonal and formalised love. I look forward to Dr Dawkins leaving behind something as telling and lasting as the Sistine Chapel. His refusal to share platforms with those who think differently from his own limited certainties is, in a word, bigotry.
Ian Flintoff
Oxford

What an inspired choice to have Russell Brand write about Robin Williams’s suicide (‘His genius was defined by irrationality’, 13 August). He could take us to places most people wouldn’t think about. His insight helped to shine a light into dark corners that he, and Williams, have experienced and we can only imagine. May he, and we, mourn Williams’s loss but learn from Brand’s insight.
Terry Johnson
High Kelling, Norfolk

• Mark Lawson’s theory of differing generational longevity in Hollywood (Analysis, 13 August) doesn’t bear scrutiny. There were of course contemporaries of Kirk Douglas, Angela Lansbury and Clint Eastwood respectively who died in middle age: Betty Grable at 56, Audie Murphy at 45, Steve McQueen at 50. Nobody can know that all movie stars of the Robin Williams generation (63 and under) will not live to be centenarians, but some of them will certainly outlive Mr Lawson.
W Stephen Gilbert
Corsham, Wiltshire

• Bad news for nut-munching diplomats (Report, 14 August), but whatever happened to our once-thriving native hazelnut crop? In late Elizabethan times, a dearth of decent Castile soap caused by hostilities with the Spanish, inspired the Southwark soap yard to set up production of hazelnut-based soap in such quantities that the resultant industrial waste of crushed shells was used to create hard floors for the Bankside playhouses.
Austen Lynch
Garstang, Lancashire

• After the elimination of the ruddy duck, I fear Paul Gleave’s plea (Letters, 14 August) to next tackle Himalayan balsam will be unsuccessful. Japanese knotweed has already netted all the resources down here in Cornwall and I would not be surprised if the same applies upcountry.
Roger Brake
St Austell, Cornwall

• Cats sneeze, too (Letters, 14 August).
Margaret Waddy
Cambridge

• Years ago we had a dog that knew who wrote Mrs Dalloway and To the Lighthouse.
Reverend Tony Bell
Rochester, Kent

We must move beyond war

We all seem paralysed by the hideous inevitability of the wars – Gaza, Ukraine, Libya – that fill your first eight pages (1 August). War is the most necrotic of all fundamentalisms, a brutal lie that obliterates every narrative but its own. What gives this psychopathy such power over us? How do we recover sanity in the face of normalised mass murder?

If war were a killer virus like Ebola or bird flu, we would mobilise to grapple with it. We arraign predators such as people traffickers, drug barons, corporate criminals; why are arms dealers, those cannibals feeding on human flesh, not indicted for crimes against humanity?

What does the UN security council mean by security when its five permanent members massively manufacture and export weapons? Three-quarters of the world’s arms originate in the US. Is the first step in reducing war a radical overhaul of an economic system whose only yardstick is profit?

Who designed the missile that brought down MH17? Who invested in its development, mined its components, manufactured, sold, bought, transported it? The hand that pulled the trigger is almost incidental. We are all complicit, all accountable.

We must move beyond this institutionalised, obscenely profitable and largely patriarchal violence that debauches sentient beings. What can I as an ageing woman do, apart from wielding my pen and working to extirpate the roots of war? How do I bequeath my children’s children a robust and doughty peace, grow more love than warmongers make hatred and fear?
Annie March
West Hobart, Tasmania, Australia

• Jonathan Freedland’s article (Gaza war is a lesson in utter futility, 1 August) deplores the actions of the leaders of both Israelis and Palestinians. Neutral observers can only wonder, in bewilderment, why both sides are so intent on such self-destructive behaviour.

The answer, perhaps, lies in another article on the Imperial War Museum (Military echoes bearing messages for the new world, 1 August). This reports, regarding the first world war: “Visitors always ask, ‘With all those casualties, why didn’t they stop?’

But, if you look at the evidence from the time, that’s the very reason people can’t stop – you need a justification for such terrible loss and that can only be victory.”
John Wood
Cheltenham, UK

• Despite John Kerry’s valiant efforts, I would question whether America can be an honest broker in peace negotiations in the Israeli-Palestinian conflict when it funds the Israeli side so heavily. The Israelis have helicopter gunships, drones, the Iron Dome and bomb shelters, all of which are assisted by US dollars.

The Israelis would be appalled by Iran being included in the negotiations, saying they support and fund Hamas – even though Iran is now discussing its nuclear programme, while Israel refuses to acknowledge its own nuclear installation.

Maybe more neutral countries such as Finland, the Netherlands, Ireland and Uruguay, would be better placed to take a fresh look at the underlying issues of peace with justice. On the smaller world stage, ordinary mortals can boycott and disinvest in Israeli goods until a more humane justice prevails.
Ruth Crowch
Reading, UK

• What may open a road to ease the despair of Palestinians is for those government leaders who have repeatedly reminded us that Israel has a right to defend itself to give a thought to the question of what a person living in Gaza or the West Bank has a right to.

Why not give these people the same right the Scots have to decide, by referendum, if they want to maintain the status quo or form their own country?
André Carrel
Terrace, British Columbia, Canada

Indonesia and West Papua

The newly elected president of Indonesia, Joko Widodo, is a cleanskin and it is understandable that people are hoping for a genuine break with Indonesia’s authoritarian past (1 August). A major hurdle in the way of genuine democratic change is the unaccountable power of the Indonesian military. Next year it will be 50 years since the overthrow of President Sukarno and the bloody purge of some half a million people considered to be communists or communist sympathisers.

Joshua Oppenheimer’s film The Act of Killing put the perpetrators in the spotlight and showed us that the militia killers and their military backers have lived free lives unhindered by their crimes. What is more, in some circles they are even considered heroes.

It is also just over 50 years since Indonesia assumed control of West Papua against the wishes of its people, but with the connivance of the US. The colonial Dutch knew they could not face down Indonesia militarily and were persuaded to abandon their plans to prepare the people for independence. Today West Papua is largely closed to international journalists and the military and police operate with impunity.

The new president will face strong opposition if he takes steps to examine the past. However, for those of us in the western club it is our past also. New Zealand, for example, welcomed the 1965‑66 changes in Indonesia and strengthened its diplomatic and trade ties with President Suharto’s regime.

My government knows that the West Papuan people have always wanted self-determination but finds it convenient to talk instead about Indonesia’s “territorial integrity”.
Maire Leadbeater
Auckland, New Zealand

Gluten causes real problems

This is in response to the article Backlash has begun against gluten-free dieters (18 July). I am a primary-care physician with a speciality in gastrointestinal disorders. We have known for more than a decade now that gluten intolerance is a continuous spectrum ranging from minimal response to gluten exposure to maximum symptoms at the extreme, called coeliac disease. There are copious studies indicating that any level of gluten intolerance seems to correlate with many autoimmune conditions such as Hashimoto’s thyroiditis, Sjögrens disease, rheumatoid arthritis, lupus etc.

Anyone who thinks these issues are “a bunch of nonsense” are at best poorly informed, or just plain ignorant. Before people express opinions on such a technical issue, a quick Google search could prevent them from embarrassing themselves.
Joanne M Hillary
Spokane, Washington, US

A little help from our genes

I met my best friend in the bathroom of our university residence when it turned out we had both chosen the same washing cubicle, which we would share for the rest of the university year (25 July). As we got to know each other, we discovered we had a lot in common: for example, both our fathers had the same first name, her birthday was the same day as my mother’s and we lived in similar houses. The interesting thing was that, although we had met wearing our pajamas, we both had some clothes which were identical. While I am not sure that we share the same “genes”, we did have the same “jeans” (or at least dresses and shoes).

Although our initial meeting was “by chance”, we have remained friends for almost half a century.
Avril Taylor
Dundas, Ontario, Canada

Briefly

• I enjoyed Ewen MacAskill and Alan Rusbridger’s interview with Edward Snowden (25 July). Congratulations to Snowden on infiltrating one of the world’s most powerful “intelligence” and living to tell the tale. So far so good. But he should watch his back!
Jonathan Vanderels
Shaftsbury, Vermont, US

• I found Laura Barton’s piece on the joy of the stick (8 August) to be a sad commentary on our apparent techno-dependency. Has she either forgotten or perhaps never experienced the liberating physicality of motorless activity, such as cycling, walking, swimming, skiing, sailing and gliding, or a host of similarly invigorating pursuits?

If the introduction of the driverless vehicle frees us from our obsessive need for speed achieved through an external power-boost, thereby allowing the car to be seen as it should be, simply a means of transport from A to B, so much the better, both for our own health and for that of our planet.
Noel Bird
Boreen Point, Queensland, Australia

• I was sickened by the report on Cambodia’s terrible trade in virginity (1 August). Only human beings would behave like this. We are certainly primitive and should be ashamed of all the vile sex trade that goes on around the world, as well as all the human slaughter we engage in. No other species has ever behaved as we do; it’s high time we matured.
Alan H Morley
Bryn Dyffryn, UK

Independent:

I’m just an ordinary middle-aged Londoner.

I work in an office. I go to football. I like eating out. I enjoy the arts. I am a proud family man. I give up time for charity work. I try to be a decent contributing member of society. I pay my taxes honestly. But there appears to be something that sets me and my kind apart.

At park gates in East London a friend of mine gets told to f**k off for photographing a flag. At a pub in Bath my wife gets called scum when she mentions her background.  In a student hall in Manchester a friend’s son is asked to leave as the specially prepared food he chose to eat is not permitted because it carries a label written in a language used by a country that is “banned” by the student union.

In Belfast a historic blue plaque is removed to deny part of my history.  In theatres in Edinburgh and London I am told to denounce my opinions or lose the right to perform.    A sportsman in Ireland tweets if he sees my kind he’ll punch us in the face and recommends others follow suit.

Protesters across the country show no shame in shouting that my historical persecutors were right and social media is rife with vitriol towards me (even from so-called friends). And in Bradford I’m told that I am not even permitted to enter the city.

What is this? Racism.  Where is this? Britain and Ireland. When is this?   Now. Who am I? I am a Jew.

Never again, we say, never again.

Stephen Spencer Ryde
London N3

As a Jewish grandfather I recall going to school without guards outside to protect us. I recall walking to the synagogue with my dad, without guards to protect us. And I recall after the Second World War my dad saying to me: “They will not hurt Jews again.”  What has happened to our green and pleasant land?

Jeff Bracey
Great Budworth, Cheshire

Why Ebola is so hard to treat

Your Editorial “Treating Africa” (16 August) was spot on in saying that there is no magic bullet for Ebola, and that the lack of a cure or a vaccine is related to its status as an African problem. But this is a big oversimplification.

Scientists have been studying Ebola virus intensively for 35 years without finding a weak spot to attack with drugs. And if a vaccine had been developed, a very big issue would be testing its efficacy. The opportunities to do this would be rare, because outbreaks are very infrequent and occur without warning.

Far more difficult would be getting it to those who need it. In large part the current outbreak has got so big because the affected populations do not trust the medical systems in their countries, prefer traditional remedies, and care for the sick at home, where we know from previous outbreaks that carers have a 25 per cent chance of being infected.

And it’s not just Ebola that has a vaccine problem. Local polio vaccinators are being assassinated in Nigeria and Pakistan.

Hugh Pennington
Aberdeen

RSPCA faces hunt supporters’ fury

I wonder if Grace Dent (12 August) would consider becoming the new chief executive of the RSPCA. Since the much-lamented departure of CEO Gavin Grant, the vacant post has been crying out for someone who has the guts, like Grace, to stand up to the vicious and concerted hate campaign conducted against the charity by hunt supporters and their friends in the media.

I am one of the monitors who collected the evidence of repeated illegal fox hunting by the Heythrop Hunt, which was used by the RSPCA in their successful prosecution.

The massive animosity hunt monitors routinely suffer is now directed at the RSPCA, by people who do not give a damn about puppies and cats, but who simply want to so damage the confidence of the charity that they will stop prosecuting illegal hunting.

This would leave this one large group of animal abusers absolutely above the law, because the police and CPS have demonstrated only too clearly over the past nine years that their will to do the job is virtually non-existent.

Penny Little
Great Haseley, Oxfordshire

I hear first hand of the animals rescued from the uncaring, uninformed, and downright ignorant. I watch my stepdaughter work long hours for little pay because she cares. I listen to the RSPCA-knockers and rage.

How many times has she been called out by time-wasters wanting the removal of a squirrel from their conservatory, a pigeon from the front room or a cat from a tree instead of being left to get on with the neglect and cruelty cases of which there are too many.

I see her come home exhausted, filthy and disheartened, but she will never give up the job because she cares.

The people on the ground who work for the RSPCA do the very best they can with the time and resources they have – give them a break.

Barbara Rainbird
Isleworth, Middlesex

 

Yazidi link to the origins of religion

The fate of the Yazidi has bought to public attention this ancient people whose strange beliefs in the Peacock Angel and the process of tribal reincarnation are said to date back to Zoroastrian times of ancient Persia (letter, 9 August). In fact they are far more significant and older, dating back to pre-Neolithic times.

Over recent decades excavations into the monumental structures at Gobekli Tepe, Cayonu and Nevali Cori (all in this region of northern Iraq), dating from some 14,000 years ago, have enabled us to gain an insight into an ancient ritual world dominated by the cult of the vulture as the intermediary agent/angel/psychopomp (“soul carrier”) between the living and the dead.

Murals from the site of Catal Hoyuk depict the vulture/angel ferrying the souls of the dead and the foetuses of the pre-born within a tiered cosmos which has echoes of the still more ancient cave art of Western Europe, such as at Lascaux and Chauvet, which take us back 35,000 years to the very dawn of religious consciousness in humans.

The Yazidi are a unique link in this chain of human religious development, a point to which most later religious beliefs can be traced, including Islam, which also claims to have been revealed by an angel.

It is amazing that they have survived to this day, and they must be protected, for their anthropological and historical significance as well as immediate humanitarian need, from the clutches of monomaniacal and moronic Islamists.

Dominic Kirkham
Manchester

 

Action needed on cyberbullying

So much has been said about the internet and social media, and few would disagree with your thoughtful and balanced editorial (11 August).

I feel parents and schools in particular need to educate children more forcibly about how thoroughly nasty, vindictive and cowardly anonymous cyberbullying is, and try to discover why children feel the need to indulge in it.

Parents have a big responsibility to emphasise all the dangers of social networking, if children really must participate in the inherent narcissism implicit in self-advertisement.

The sites have a responsibility, too. Search engines’ handwringing must be translated into positive and meaningful action. We have seen far too little of this. Search filters are, by themselves, insufficient and always  will be.

There has been far too much talk and far too little action quickly enough. Perhaps some hard government legislation is necessary, as this is a big problem which is not going to go away.

Brian Diffey
Gosport, Hampshire

 

Misanthropy on the train

David Carter’s misanthropy knows no bounds (letter, 13 August). The “trish-trash noise” from his youthful fellow traveller’s headphones may not be to Carter’s taste, but compared with the general noise of a moving train this headphone spill is minor. And pulling a pair of pliers from one’s briefcase and threatening another person’s property is a criminal offence, as well as demonstrating that Carter is a curmudgeonly bully.

Ronan Breslin
Glasgow

 

The blame for jail suicides

For the avoidance of doubt, the words of the headline “Grayling’s policy ‘responsible for prisoner suicides’ ” (12 August) are not words I used, and I would not make a personal remark about the Secretary of State in that way.

Nick Hardwick
HM Chief Inspector of Prisons, London WC2

 

Sporting victory

What a delight to see the dignified finish of the European 10,000 metre race by Jo Pavey – quite different from the ugly antics of the male winners who do not seem to know what to do with themselves on lesser achievements.

Valerie Pitt
London SE3

Times:

Terrorism is not specific to one religion or ideology but it is always divisive

Sir, It is certainly true (letters, Aug 13) that British Jews are distressed by reactions against them because of the Gaza conflict — but we have been here before: in the 1980s over the Phalangist massacre of Palestinians in Sabra and Shatila; in the 1970s with the UN resolution equating Zionism with racism; in 1946 when the King David Hotel, Jerusalem, was blown up.

If antisemitism seems to be rising, it may simply be due to new methods of communication — in social media such as Twitter people are much more outspoken than they are in print.

Whatever the case, why should British Jews be blamed for events in the Middle East? Those who oppose China’s policy in Tibet do not hound Chinese restaurants in London and Bradford.

It is vital for national cohesion that we do not import the problems of the Middle East and make Britain a proxy warzone. The good
relations between most British Muslims and Jews should be used as evidence that there is no inherent antagonism between the faiths, that Israel/Gaza is a political problem that requires a political solution, and we can best help by showing how it is possible to live side by side in harmony. If we cannot achieve that here, what hope for those there?

Rabbi Dr Jonathan Romain
Maidenhead Synagogue, Berks

Sir, You report (Aug 13) that most Britons feel threatened by terrorists. This is hardly surprising, as in the same article you report that in Oxford Street, London, Isis supporters were openly handing out terrorist material to passers-by and are being investigated under anti-terrorism legislation.

One wonders, therefore, how it is that, if threatened they feel, so many Britons in London, Manchester and elsewhere spend their weekends on demonstrations openly supporting the terrorist organisations, Hamas and Hezbollah — or do they become “un-terrorist” when their victims are Israeli (whether Jewish, Christian or Muslim)?

Terrorism is the same the world over and we must all stand united in fighting it, whether the lives being defended are the citizens of Israel, or the Christians or Yazidis in Iraq.

Anthony Levy
Woodford Green, Essex

Sir, Terrorism is not exclusively linked with any religion and ethnicity — in past centuries almost all peoples have experienced terrorism at the hands of other religions and ethnicities. However, Britain throughout those centuries has been a humane and civilised sanctuary for those fleeing religious and political persecution. Ethnic and religious minorities have enormously contributed to British civilisation and economic prosperity.

Terrorism has no religion. We should be united, especially when we are faced with problems of biblical proportions such as climate change.

Dr Munjed Farid al Qutob
London NW2

A review of a Prom concert reminded one reader of an entertaining concert under the same baton nearly 60 years ago

Sir, Classic FM often announced performances by our beloved nonagenarian as being under the baton of “Snevill Marriner”. Mind you, a current Radio 3 announcer says “Om” and “Ov” for “I am” or “I have.”

David Oldbury

Dartmouth, Devon

Sir, It is hard to believe that I first saw Sir Neville Marriner, still going strong at the grand age of 90 (Arts First Night, Aug 12), in 1966. The concert was on a cold winter night in a tiny village hall in Clevedon, Somerset, and he was in charge of a chamber ensemble drawn from the Bournemouth Symphony Orchestra. Rodney Senior, the BSO’s principal trumpet, had just finished playing the first movement of the Haydn concerto. Seated in the middle of the front row was an elderly lady dressed head to toe in black (think the Giles cartoon Grandma). In the brief pause between movements her voice rang out. “Hear, hear” she cried. The audience giggled and poor Mr Senior took a while to regain composure and find his embouchure. Meanwhile Mr Marriner (as he then was), his back to the audience, could be seen shaking uncontrollably with laughter. It is an abiding memory even after all these years.

Martin Furber

Cardiff

Readers continue to flood the email folders with instances of linguistic abuse – and hilarious novelty

Sir, It would be refreshing to have a change from all those “sea changes” we hear about, which are rarely either rich or strange.

W Roy Large

Newcastle-upon-Tyne

Sir, When I recently rang my car insurer to question the cost of the breakdown cover I’d been quoted, the person I spoke to expressed his surprise at the rather large sum by exclaiming “Yowser!” I’m all for informality in phone calls, but a few days later someone at a government office ended our phone conversation by signing off with “Laters!”

Dr Matin Durrani

Bristol

Villages whose names suggest a historic beauty which may be at odds with their reality – or not

Sir, I’ve always loved the name Ryme Intrinseca, having been born within five miles of the village (letters Aug 11 and 13), but I’ve since decided that Whitchurch Canonicorum takes the biscuit.

Alan Millard

Lee-on-the-Solent, Hants

Attitudes towards women among Sikhs have changed over the centuries

Sir, As a Sikh woman, I know only too well that Sikhs are “a proud people” (letter, Aug 12). So proud, indeed, that early descendants of Sikh gurus, the Bedis, would prefer to kill their daughters at birth than allow them to marry someone outside their privileged status.

Mercifully, under the British, this ancient custom largely disappeared from Punjab, and remained so until the 1980s, when its modern version — abortion of female foetuses — returned with a vengeance under the Sikh government.

Given a choice of a Gandhi-inspired “Hindu supremacy” or an undiluted male-oriented Sikh rule, I know which one I would choose.

Simren Kaur

Jalandhar City, Punjab, India

Village pubs can be converted to useful social hubs, or they can be rescued and helped to thrive once more

Sir, The closing of a village pub can be a win-win situation for all (letter, Aug 13). I recently converted a run-down village pub with a three-bedroom flat above into three shops with two one-bed flats above.

One of the shops is a baker’s, which I’m sure brings more pleasure to more locals than the pub had done for many years. The other two shops were taken by people already trading on the outskirts of the village. Both report an increase in trading from their central village location. The flats have been taken by young local people wanting to stay in the village.

Tim Mascall

Hatfield Heath, Essex

Sir, All is not lost. Our village pub — the Tally Ho at Littlehempston — was put up for sale by the landlord, and change of use to a home was looming.

So the villagers got together and bought it, and six months later it is very successful. Shares are still available.

Jennifer Galton-Fenzi

Littlehempston, Devon

Telegraph:

Drinkers should be clearly informed about the risks of alcohol, according to an ‘alcohol manifesto’ from MPs Photo: PA

6:56AM BST 14 Aug 2014

CommentsComments

SIR – The all-party group on alcohol misuse is right to question the labelling of alcoholic drinks.

Under current legislation, the alcohol content has to be on the label; but it might be on the front, facing you on the display, or it might be on the back, making it necessary to inspect every bottle. It might be on the little label wrapped round the neck of the bottle; in bold type or quite faint, in a plain typeface or a fancy script. Imagine how ineffective tobacco health warnings would have been if the manufacturers were able to choose where and how to print the information.

The next move should be to encourage consumer interest in lower-alcohol wines and beers. At the moment, the labelling is a barrier to informed choice.

Geoff Dees
Alford, Lincolnshire

SIR – An unintended consequence of the edict that alcoholic drinks should be labelled with a warning may be an increase in daily wine consumption.

No one is going to put a bottle of wine, replete with dire predictions of consequent ill health, on the dinner table – so we’ll have to decant the bottle. And as we all know, a decanted wine has to be finished off during the meal.

Captain Kim Mockett
Littlebourne, Kent

SIR – Each year there are thousands of deaths and serious accidents involving cars and other forms of road transport. Should a commission be set up to consider health warnings on all vehicles?

Leonard Macauley
Staining, Lancashire

SIR – George Bernard Shaw had it right in Major Barbara when it came to alcohol and government: “Alcohol is a very necessary article. It makes life bearable to millions of people who could not endure their existence if they were quite sober. It enables Parliament to do things at eleven at night that no sane person would do at eleven in the morning.”

Seamus Hamill-Keays
Brecon

Naval justice

SIR – Commander Sarah West’s case is another example of the injustice created when suspects are named in advance of a full investigation following unproven allegations.

Television “feeding frenzies”, not only in high-profile cases, have destroyed careers, trashed reputations and ruined family lives, even after the accused has been cleared of wrongdoing. We need a return to the old English principle of innocent until proven guilty.

Commander Alan York RN (retd)
Sheffield, South Yorkshire

SIR – As a naval wife for 35 years, I think the Rev Dr John Cameron (Letters, August 11) has an odd idea of naval discipline.

Commander West was well aware of the rules, which exist to ensure the effectiveness and safety of a small number of people locked up together for a long period of time. She chose to ignore those rules, thus setting a bad example to her ship’s company. She has been justly punished.

Lady Coward
Torpoint, Cornwall

Nanny knows best

SIR – It is entirely correct that Stephen Rees-Jones and his business partner should be required to submit a risk assessment for their gurning competition (Letters, Aug 12).

I have it on my old nanny’s authority that if the wind changes, the contestants’ faces will stay like that.

It might also help if the horses on the horse-drawn boat trips wore high-visibility jackets in case any strollers on the footpath failed to notice them.

Shirley Puckett
Tenterden, Kent

Basis for change

SIR – I think it’s about time that you caught up with current English usage. May I suggest a change of title to The On-a-Daily-Basis Telegraph.

Paul Burrington
Surbiton, Surrey

Simmonds resignation

SIR – I can almost feel the sympathy for poor old Mark Simmonds from my fellow commuters, who travel for hours every day, at their own expense, in order to keep themselves, their families and indeed the country ticking over.

We would jump at the chance of a housing allowance enabling us to stay at least part of the working week in London.

Charles de Roeper
Pewsey, Wiltshire

SIR – Surely the Government could provide flats for MPs to use when they have to be in London. The rest of the time they should live in their constituencies.

Members of our Armed Forces spend weeks separated from their families, as do many other workers. Can our MPs not learn to live within the same constraints?

Christine Cole
Maesbrook, Shropshire

Anomalous midge

SIR – The one British insect that still appears to thrive is the Scottish midge, judging by the torture endured by anyone who ventures into the Highlands during still or unsunny weather.

Where there is agriculture we have gradually been eliminating other insect species through pesticides. Sixty years ago, there were many more “pests” such as houseflies and bluebottles about, but they made up an important part of the food chain for birds. Subsequently there has been a dramatic reduction, particularly in small birds and songbirds, to say nothing of the bee, butterfly and moth populations.

T G Booth
Bolton, Lancashire

A surprising cure

SIR – Bryony Gordon can stop the vitamins – pregnancy itself is well recognised as a (sometimes temporary) cure for alopecia. For some reason, it’s never caught on as a treatment.

Dr Jim Finlayson
Beauly, Inverness-shire

Happy returns

SIR – This week I have been training my daughter’s labrador, Clarence, to respond to the question “How do you do?” (Letters, August 13) by offering me a paw to shake.

I got an extra shake yesterday: perhaps he’d remembered it was my birthday.

Peter Waine
Pewsey, Wiltshire

tness and balance – as well as being enjoyable

A senior citizen enjoys a tea dance at the Glasgow Club in the Gorbals on January 28, 2010 in Glasgow, Scotland

Step to it: an elderly couple enjoy a tea dance at the Glasgow Club in the Gorbals  Photo: Getty Images

6:57AM BST 14 Aug 2014

CommentsComments

SIR – Your report “Make gym more fun to attract over-50s” (August 8) rightly pointed out that exercise should inspire a sense of joy in people if they are to be encouraged to do more of it.

A recent BBC documentary showed a group of women in Japan, aged from 55 to over 80, dancing with pom-poms. They looked happy and wore smart matching dresses. Japan has a long life expectancy.

Many older people in Britain enjoy ballroom dancing, which improves fitness and balance. It would be lovely if there were more opportunities for it.

Ann Wills
Ruislip, Middlesex

We must approach religious education in a way that is both inclusive and sustainable

The Government must commission an inquiry into the place of religion and belief in schools, say clerics and academics

Schools must hold a

The law governing the teaching of religious education has remained essentially unchanged since 1988

6:59AM BST 14 Aug 2014

CommentsComments

SIR – The findings of the various reports into Birmingham schools are highly disturbing. They found schools providing an education that narrows horizons, reinforces a cultural and religious identity to the exclusion of others, and fails to prepare pupils for a diverse society.

Meanwhile, the Bishop of Oxford and the National Governors’ Association have called for an end to compulsory worship in schools that are not faith-based. In practice, religious education has become increasingly diverse and inclusive of all faiths and none, but the law governing its teaching has remained essentially unchanged since 1988.

As a society we must treat religion and belief in schools in a way that is fair, inclusive and sustainable. Yet there has been no over-arching review of the place of religion in schools since the 1944 Education Act, which marks its 70th anniversary this month. We call upon the Government to commission an inquiry into the place of religion and belief in schools so that a consensus may be forged about this pressing social issue.

Rabbi Dr Jonathan Romain MBE
Chairman, Accord Coalition for Inclusive Education
Andrew Copson
Chief Executive, British Humanist Association
Tehmina Kazi
Director, British Muslims for Secular Democracy
Jonathan Bartley and Simon Barrow
Co-Directors, Ekklesia
Professor Clyde Chitty
Editor, FORUM
Professor Ted Cantle CBE
Chairman, Institute of Community Cohesion (iCoCo) Foundation
James Kempton
Chairman, Liberal Democrat Education Association
Maajid Nawaz
Co-Founder & Chairman, Quilliam
John Bolt
General Secretary, Socialist Educational Association
Derek McAuley
Chief Officer, Unitarians
Professor Jim Al-Khalili
Dr Julian Baggini

Professor Simon Blackburn
Dr Susan Blackmore
Baroness Tessa Blackstone
Minister for Education (1997-2001)
Professor Sir Colin Blakemore
Peter Cave

Revd Jeremy Chadd (CofE)
Revd Marie Dove (Methodist)
Baroness Flather of Windsor and Maidenhead
Professor Chris French
Professor Anthony Grayling

Lord Howarth of Newport
Minster, Department for Education (1989-1992 and 1997-1998)
Revd Richard Jones (CofE)
Sir Harold Kroto
Revd Iain McDonald (URC)
Brian Pearce
Former Chairman, Buddhist Council of Wales
Professor Alice Roberts
Revd Professor Christopher Rowland (CofE)
Dr Adam Rutherford
Dr Simon Singh
Joan Smith
Professor Lord Smith of Clifton
Vice-Chancellor, University of Ulster (1991-1999)
Peter Tatchell
Revd Stephen Terry (CofE)
Janet Whitaker, Baroness Whitaker
Zoe Williams
Revd Simon Wilson (CofE)

Kurdish Peshmerga load aid onto an Iraqi army helicopter that will be taken to displaced Yazidis on Mount Sinjar Photo: SAM TARLING/THE TELEGRAPH

7:00AM BST 14 Aug 2014

CommentsComments

SIR – As your Letters page is proving, whereas there was deep scepticism about Britain’s military adventures in Iraq, Afghanistan and Libya, the current deliberate persecution of a religious minority by the Islamic State represents a justifiable instance where Western intervention can restore the balance. Colonel Tim Collins speaks for many of us.

David Cameron’s and Europe’s ponderous reaction suggests that neither can recognise the right thing to do when it is in front of their eyes. If we were to trust in Europe, which I doubt we could, the coordinated European response should have been rolled out within hours. If we cannot do that now, what hope a European federation?

Philip Congdon
La Bastide d’Engras, Gard, France

SIR – It would indeed be an utter tragedy if we did not defend the Kurds (Comment, August 11).

I have had the privilege of visiting Erbil a number of times. In July 2012 I signed a memorandum of understanding with the Kurdistan regional government for the development of relations in a number of areas between Northern Ireland and the autonomous region of northern Iraq.

President Barzani visited us in Belfast last year and we had a number of companies doing business in what was then the most stable area of Iraq. I trust that one of the oldest civilisations in the world will be protected against vile extremism and allowed to blossom again.

Arlene Foster MLA
Minister for Enterprise, Trade and Investment in Northern Ireland
Belfast

SIR – I fear that our politicians are delaying, just as they did during the floods of last winter, until the crisis becomes too large to solve. With overwhelming air superiority and one of the best-trained armies in the world (in spite of the savage cuts) we should be protecting the Yazidi refugees. The British public only opposes unjust interventions.

Major John Kelly (retd)
Oxford

SIR – George Bush and Tony Blair did not create a monster (Letters, August 13). They destroyed one, but failed to learn from the French and Russian revolutions that bad regimes are often succeeded by worse.

The treatment of Germany after the First World War produced the Nazis, while more enlightened policies after the Second produced a modern democracy.

Geoffrey Hodgson
Shadwell, West Yorkshire

SIR – The Good Samaritan didn’t just pour oil and water on the stranger’s wounds and leave him by the side of the road. He lifted the man on to his own animal and brought him to an inn and took care of him.

Sara Hewins
Marlow, Buckinghamshire

Irish Times:

Sir, – The recent hints from Brendan Howlin, the Minister responsible for the control of public sector pay, that some public sector pay cuts may be reversed in the near future shows how little attitudes have changed in our political system.

The country has a deficit of 136 per cent when measured in gross national product (GNP) terms. A real danger sign is that current expenditure has to be financed by borrowing, which indicates that Ireland is a long, long way away from financial independence. It’s not rocket science, but borrowing for current expenditure has to be stopped – any overdrawn consumer finds that out the hard way. But the coalition Government which came in on promises of a new way of politics, assuring us that Fianna Fáil auction politics were finished etc is now reverting to the good old bad old ways.

Since the drubbing they got in the local elections both the coalition parties have been making soothing noises about easing up on the agreed plan with the Troika. Income taxes are to be reduced, expenditure is to be increased. They claim that the anticipated increase in growth will cover all these expenditures. The most optimistic view possible is being taken. To listen to some politicians you might think that we are back in the black and the crisis is over.

All the relevant agencies – ECB, EU, IMF – are recommending that we stick to reducing expenditure by €2 billion, the agreed amount under the agreement with the Troika. Our brave Government is backtracking on this commitment, the same Government that came to power promising no let-up until Ireland was saved from financial damnation and the bad influence of those dastardly Fianna Fáilers who got Ireland into this situation in the first place.

What have we now? We have the coalition indulging in good old-fashioned Fianna Fáil-type auction politics. And they don’t even have the good grace to blush. Could we bring back St Patrick? Maybe this time he’ll get rid of the snakes he missed the first time. – Yours, etc,

LIAM COOKE,

Greencastle Avenue,

Coolock,

Dublin 17

Sir, – It is surely not beyond the logistical and technological expertise of the “international community” to organise an immediate massive airlift of the terrified, stranded Yazidi community from Mount Sinjar, given its displays of military prowess in bombing poor countries into the middle ages over the last eleven years. Such an airlift should however be carried out under the aegis of the UN and NGOs given the discredited legacy left by the US and Britain, that has killed as many as one million Iraqis, displaced four million and whose policies have fostered sectarian tensions in the country and wider region which have directly led to the rise of the Islamic State forces.

The response by the US of more air strikes at “selective targets” is a last desperate act of futility to mask its failed foreign policy as, in the words of journalist Patrick Cockburn, “a new and terrifying state is born”. This bombing, as recent history shows (look at Libya), will only make matters worse and inevitably lead to more civilian deaths.

We must question also the different approaches taken by the US and Britain to Iraq and to Gaza. Gazans have suffered an appalling military barrage in four weeks that has left almost 2,000 dead, including 460 children, and 400,000 displaced (that’s the equivalent of 4,900 dead and one million displaced in Ireland). No calls here for air strikes against an invading army that wilfully targets women and children or no humanitarian airdrops for the starving, displaced and exposed people of Gaza. Such hypocrisy should warn us of the imperial intentions behind the US and British calls for “humanitarian intervention”. – Yours, etc,

JIM ROCHE,

PRO,

Irish Anti War Movement,

PO Box 9260,

Dublin 1

Sir, – Concerning the Tricycle Theatre in Kilburn and its decision not to host the Jewish Film Festival, Desmond FitzGerald claims (August 14th) that “[t]he only reason to single out a Jewish event is because the person who first raised the issue is anti-Semitic, because otherwise the theatre would have simply announced that it would accept no events directly funded by any embassy”.

This ignores the oft-clarified point that the boycott of events funded by the Israeli embassy (ie the government of Israel) has been called for by Palestinian civil society itself in response to the world’s governments’ failure to sanction Israel for its occupation and colonisation of Palestinian land. Mr FitzGerald’s contention is merely an attempt to smear opposition to Israel’s crimes as anti-Semitism, and thus to equate all Jews, whether they like it or not, with the state of Israel. – Yours, etc,

RAYMOND DEANE,

Ireland-Palestine

Solidarity Campaign,

Dublin 2

Sir, – Desmond Fitzgerald states that the only reason to single out a Jewish event is “because the person who first raised the issue is anti-Semitic”. This conjecture is entirely unsubstantiated. Decision-makers at the Tricycle were happy to host the festival for the previous eight years, and they even offered to replace the Israeli embassy’s funding contribution with money from the Tricyle’s own resources so that they could host the 2014 festival with a clean conscience.

Mr Fitzgerald makes a contrast between the boycott of Israel and the supposed lack of willingness of people to boycott countries like Russia. There is indeed a contrast: in the case of Russia’s actions in the Crimea, the West’s political leaders exerted pressure, including sanctions. Thus it wasn’t necessary for grassroots human rights activists and concerned ethical shoppers to align in a boycott movement. – Yours, etc,

BRIAN Ó ÉIGEARTAIGH,

Maxwell Road,

Dublin 6

A chara – Some of the building materials used in the constuction of the Tower of Babel, referred to by John Thompson (August 13th), were deemed, by the early Irish grammarians who composed Auraicept na nÉces (The Poets’ Primer), to be made of the parts of speech of the Irish language.

Approximately 6,500 living languages co-exist in the post-Babel world of today, decreasing at a faster rate than the polar ice caps or the Amazonian jungle. Mr Thompson appears to want the word to revert to its pre-Babel stage, to speak of itself with one tongue rather than via many tongues, presuming, one might suspect, that his tongue will be the last tongue standing, which could be a grave presumption.

Mr Doyle (August 13th), on the other hand, is rather selective about what I wrote, omitting the fact that I mentioned compulsory English (the language of the new monolingual frontier envisaged by Mr Thompson). He maintains that I misunderstood his “fumbling in a greasy till” reference, and urges me to “read further in the referenced poem” , in which the refrain “Romantic Ireland’s dead and gone / It’s with O’Leary in the grave” appears. Submitting to your readers’ own interpretation of what Mr Yeats actually said in the first verse of “September 1913”, I give it here in full: “What need you, being come to sense, / But fumble in a greasy till / And add the halfpence to the pence / And prayer to shivering prayer, until / You have dried the marrow from the bone? / For men were born to pray and save; / Romantic Ireland’s dead and gone, / It’s with O’Leary in the grave.”

As I’m sure Mr Doyle knows well, when interpreting poetry seeming is believing. And indeed it seems to me that what Yeats said above is as true now as it ever was. – Is mise le meas,

PÁDRAIG Ó CÍOBHÁIN,

An Cimín Mór,

Bóthar na Ceapaí,

Bearna

Sir, — Brian Mooney (August 13th) states in his Leaving Cert results analysis that the “significant numbers” (which even though they are considered “significant” are not specified) did not sit the Leaving Cert Irish paper though registered to do so. These numbers he concludes “highlight the question of whether Irish should remain compulsory for all students not exempted up to Leaving Cert level”.

Without reference to the specific numbers and a comparison with possible similar issues in relation to other subjects (for example, only five of the 30 students in my Junior Cert class many moons ago actually sat the French paper) it is not clear that the raising of this question really is among the more obvious analytical conclusions.

Instead it seems indicative of a predisposition among commentators to question the status of Irish at every hand’s turn.

Were a commentator to be otherwise inclined they might point out that despite its compulsory status some 40 per cent of students opted for Leaving Cert higher level Irish, in which they certainly were not compelled. By comparison, Maths, after a few years of bonus points, has reached 27 per cent taking higher level and seems to be considered a success.

More luck to those in the Maths fraternity, by the way, and long may they prosper, but why can the commentariat not find it within itself for once to unreservedly acknowledge the promotion, enthusiasm, talent and hard work that underpins these Irish figures, especially in the face of an unrelenting and indefatigable cohort of naysayers? – Yours, etc.

MARTIN RYAN,

Springlawn Close,

Dublin 15

Sir, – Further to Dr Ruairi Hanley’s letter of August 13th and his proposal for a mobile unit to assess people at risk of being infected with Ebola in their own homes it would be timely to make a few observations.

Most people returning from affected countries who develop symptoms will not have had any exposures that put them at risk of Ebola. Most will have common illnesses that we all encounter, such as pneumonia, urinary tract infections or common travel-related illnesses such as malaria, shigella or typhoid.

GPs have been provided with information and fact sheets to assess returning travellers and quickly identify whether Ebola could be considered as a possibility, and the appropriate infection control precautions to prevent any risk of infection. Details on how and where to refer such persons for specialist care if needed form part of the information provided. These guidelines have been developed in conjunction with general practitioners, and are similar to those used throughout Europe and the United States.

Although there have been several previous outbreaks of Ebola, export of the virus from an infected area to a non-endemic country is an extremely rare event and has never occurred in Europe. It is true that the current outbreak surpasses all previous ones, both in size and complexity, and represents a major challenge for control in the affected countries.

Transmission of Ebola requires direct contact with blood, secretions, organs or other bodily fluids of dead, or living infected, persons. While there is a low risk that people infected with Ebola may travel to Ireland from the affected countries, the risk of secondary transmission in healthcare settings or to direct close contacts (family or relatives) is still considered very low if basic infection control precautions are strictly followed.

Protocols are in place to protect against further spread of the disease, including transfer to the National Isolation Unit in the Mater and contact tracing of those with unprotected exposure to bodily fluids. – Yours, etc,

DARINA O’FLANAGAN

MB, FRCPI, FFPHMI, MPH

Director ,

Health Protection

Surveillance Centre,

Middle Gardiner Street,

Dublin 1

Sir, – Might I ask that in future your correspondents tighten their use of language and stop referring to the supposedly cosseted “public sector” when whinging about the pension levy, and instead refer to the group they actually mean, namely the civil service? The semi-states have always funded their own pensions, just as our poor, victimised private sector workers (for whom I’m currently playing the smallest violin in the world) have done, and they pay the same levy on them. Contrary to John Whelan’s griping, there certainly is a fund to levy in the public sector. – Yours, etc,

DAVID SMITH,

Harmonstown Road,

Artane,

Dublin 5

A chara, – Some of your contributors (August 14th) seem to be distinctly underwhelmed at the news of an ESRI survey that finds that students from disadvantaged backgrounds are less likely to go on to third level. It’s true – we know this already. This research will only have value if it results in action. Might it, for example, be used in support of the Education Minister if she were to seek extra funding in the next budget to restore the lost guidance and counselling posts in the Deis schools?

Unless some remedial measures are taken, the research work could indeed be seen as a pointless use of public money. – Le meas,

MICHAEL O’DONOVAN,

Delwood Drive,

Dublin 15

A chara, – Anyone reading Paul Delaney’s letter (August 14th) would think that the Exchequer would save €2 billion per annum if smoking were to be completely eradicated. While it is true that smoking-related illness costs the State a huge amount, this expenditure is somewhat compensated for by savings made on the pensions of smokers, who of course die younger. Like the outlay on treating illness, the extent of this offset is difficult to estimate, but it is reasonable to assume that it is significant. Any attempt to discuss how smoking affects public finance without reference to this is disingenuous at best. – Is mise,

DR GARETH P KEELEY,

Gneisenaustrasse,

Düsseldorf,

Sir, – When RTÉ newscasts referred to the late Lauren Bacall as “the woman who tamed Humphrey Bogart” the station was confusing their coruscating screen duels with reality. As the fabulous Bacall was fond of saying: “Bogie in real life was a kitten; he couldn’t fight his way out of a paper bag!” Yours, etc,

OLIVER McGRANE,

Marley Avenue,

Rathfarnham,

Dublin 16

Sir, – Wednesday’s main story in your paper featured, by way of example, the case of a reader who believed not too long ago that their home was worth up to €350,000, but when it came to sale time managed to secure an offer of upwards of €500,000. This led to an outstanding tax liability of €540 due to underpaid property tax. So, the party concerned had an unexpected capital gain of at least €150,000 and an unexpected tax liability of less than 0.4 per cent. And this makes the front page? – Yours, etc,

GER HENNESSY,

Cartrontroy,

Athlone,

Co Westmeath

Sir, – I was astounded to see in a front page story that a homeowner who had sold a house for at least €150,000 more than it was worth a year ago contacted The Irish Times because they were being asked for an additional €540 in property tax to cover this increase.

I think we may be in danger of letting our innate dislike of taxes obscure our perspective here. – Yours, etc,

RONAN GEARY,

Baldoyle,

Dublin 13

Sir, – People who are just over the income limit for entitlement to medical cards don’t earn enough to pay income tax. They therefore cannot get a tax refund on their medical expenses. A person earning a million euro a year can. Therefore the person on a very low income ends up paying 25 per cent more for their medical expenses than does the millionaire. This is obviously unfair and should be changed. – Yours, etc.

BRENDAN O’DONOGHUE,

Straboe,

Co Carlow

Sir, – Frank McNally writes (Irishman’s Diary, August 14th) that Lorraine “is one of only two French départements popularised as girls’ names (the other is Cher)”. Paris Hilton might disagree. – Yours, etc,

PAUL MURPHY,

Raheen,

Limerick

Sir, – Frank McNally may wish he had never heard of Paris Hilton, but Michael Jackson’s daughter, Paris-Michael, has surely done nothing to offend. – Yours, etc,

DR JOHN DOHERTY,

Gaoth Dobhair,

Co Donegal

Irish Independent:

Desmond FitzGerald naively asks why there are no demands for the Egyptian ambassador to be expelled, and why there are no marches to the Egyptian Embassy in relation to the harsh siege imposed on Gaza (Letters, Irish Independent, August 14).

The answer is straightforward: First, Israel remains the major occupying power in the occupied Palestinian territories, and is bound to abide by the fourth Geneva Convention, international humanitarian law and the rules of human rights law. Second, Israel prides itself on being the only democratic state in the Middle East, an oasis of freedom, justice and peace where all citizens can enjoy social and political equality.

Third, Israel claims to be the gem that was born out of the ashes of the Holocaust.

As a consequence, it has a solemn obligation to protect the vulnerable, the elderly, the disabled, women and children, and consecrate itself to the service of humanity.

It has a special responsibility to safeguard the lives of innocent civilians. The inhabitants of any occupied territory are entitled to special protection and humane treatment.

Dr Munjed Farid Al Qutob

London NW2

Gene therapy is the future of medicine

The recent news (Irish Independent, August 12) that researchers in Imperial College, London have discovered a new method for treating heart disease by introducing a laboratory- created gene into the body of the person concerned is one of the many indications that 
gene therapy is the future of medicine.

The many crippling diseases caused by gene mutation that people are presently living with will hopefully become a thing of the past.

When scientists finally understand the human genome and are able to manipulate it for health purposes, diseases like cancer, arthritis and dementia will be much easier to combat and a great deal of unnecessary human suffering will be avoided.

One of the many benefits flowing from this development from the public health viewpoint will be the vast amount of money that will be saved in the care and support of senior citizens.

If governments are looking for the best return on their money, they should put whatever resources they can spare into gene research.

Judging from the rate of progress in this field of research lately, the benefits arising from such investment will become apparent in the next decade or so and will prove to be of lasting value to the human race.

Liam Cooke

Coolock

Dublin 17

Home Rule and Redmond’s statue

Maurice O’Connell is right that the full implementation of the Home Rule Act, setting up a parliament in Dublin 100 years ago, would have caused “a bit” of trouble (Letters, Irish Independent, August 14).

But the act was passed by the most powerful parliament in the world. That parliament took upon itself the job of keeping law and order for the population of a good part of the globe at the time. So there is no excuse for that parliament not implementing its own act, giving self-rule to the island of Ireland.

Mr O’Connell is also right when he says that the conservative opposition’s backing for threats of civil war against that act of parliament giving Home Rule for Ireland was based on “sedition and treason”.

Given that fact, there is even less excuse for the most powerful parliament in the world not standing up for the rules of democracy by implementing the Home Rule Act.

A Leavy

Sutton

Dublin 13

I have some reservations about John Bruton‘s favoured location regarding the placement of a statue honouring John Redmond. Mr Bruton suggested that it be sited on Leinster Lawn. My own favoured location would be a more central spot in the former second city of the now defunct British Empire, where it could be viewed by all.

I suggest that if the British government acquiesce to Mr Bruton’s wishes and dispatch their Westminster-located statue of John Redmond, it should be sited where the Spire now stands, preferably impaled on top.

Tom Cooper

Templeogue, 
Dublin 6

Hare coursing is barbaric – end it

The shooting of a peregrine falcon in Co Wexford has rightly drawn condemnation from the Minister for Arts, Heritage and the Gaeltacht, Heather Humphreys. The person responsible for blasting this rare and beautiful bird out of the sky should be prosecuted and anyone with information on the crime should report it to the gardai.

However, I find it somewhat ironic that the minister described the incident as “barbaric” and stated that the killing of the falcon “harms our reputation as a country that values its wildlife”.

The Government, of which is she is part, permits the obscenity of live hare coursing, in which a supposedly protected wild creature (a unique species that survived the last Ice Age) is forced to run from pairs of hyped-up greyhounds at venues nationwide. Many of the hares suffer agonising injuries as a result of being mauled by the dogs.

The minister’s brief happens to include the power to grant an annual licence to coursing clubs, enabling them to net hares for their “sport”. The licence has not yet been issued for this season.

Given her professed concern for our wildlife and our reputation internationally as a country that cherishes that distinctive and multi-faceted heritage, would it be too much to expect that she might consider refusing the license this year?

John Fitzgerald

Callan

Co Kilkenny

Parents’ key role in education

Before the graduation ceremony in a central California high school some years ago, I was talking to the principal about his graduation speech.

He said: “I am thinking of telling the parents that without their help there is very little we in state-run education can do for your child.”

I heartily agreed with him.

It’s a truism: children whose parents are involved in their education succeed, regardless of their socio-economic status.

Vincent J Lavery

Dalkey

Co Dublin

Brolly’s on the money

I would like to sincerely thank Joe Brolly for so eloquently articulating on radio the unfortunate predicament for the 10,000 patients in hospitals all over Ireland who were excluded from viewing the football quarter finals last Saturday.

Earlier this year, I was so incensed when the GAA decided to do a deal with Sky Sports, I immediately wrote a letter to Croke Park. In that letter, I stated all the reasons why I think it’s a bad and unnecessary move, including the plight of the elderly in nursing homes and hospitals across the country.

The response I got was less than sympathetic. There was no reference or response to the concerns I had for the Irish people who were adversely affected by this move.

It is obviously a purely business/ financial decision, which in most walks of life is absolutely fine, but I always thought the priorities and focus of the GAA was different – more focused on culture, sport and communities.

Well done, Joe Brolly.

Mairead Hickey

Swords

Co Dublin

Irish Independent


Cleaning

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15 August 2014 Cleaning

I jog around the park I still have arthritis in my left knee, but I manage to get round the park. A wettish day. I sweep the drive and tidy up

Scrabble: Mary wins, but gets under just 400. perhaps I will win tomorrow.

102 Games: Mary wins 54 John 49 Mary Average score 346 John 340

Obituary:

Michael Parkin – obituary

Michael Parkin was an entrepreneur who set sail with Radio Caroline before dropping anchor in a Belgravia gallery

Michael Parkin with his daughter Sophie (left) and former wife Molly (right)

Michael Parkin with his daughter Sophie (left) and former wife Molly (right) Photo: REX

6:33PM BST 15 Aug 2014

CommentsComments

Michael Parkin, who has died aged 82, was variously the founding manager of Radio Caroline, a Soho habitué, an exuberant gallerist and the erstwhile husband of the erotic author Molly Parkin.

A commercial television and radio pioneer turned art dealer, Parkin saw himself as the Mr Toad of London’s creative circles. His trademark greeting — “Poop poop! Big Kiss!” — would announce that a party was truly under way.

It was a role he embraced with relish, whether being treated to champagne by Francis Bacon in Soho’s Colony Room or selling the paintings of Peter Ustinov’s mother Nadia Benois. At the view for the latter Parkin insisted that Ustinov should stand in his gallery to pull in punters — the show was a sell-out.

Michael Parkin with Francis Bacon

Michael Parkin was born on December 1 1931 in Putney, south-west London, and educated at Mill Hill School before reading Law at Magdalen College, Oxford. His childhood was not entirely happy: he spent his ninth year confined to bed due to polio, and saw his parents go through a bitter divorce . The greatest influence on his early life was his paternal aunt, Dorothy Clewes, a children’s writer who introduced him to music, art and literature.

Parkin made a dashing captain in the Royal Irish Fusiliers and a handsome husband to the Welsh painter and writer Molly Noyle Thomas, whom he married in 1957. Both, however, proved temporary postings — his wife announced the end of their stormy marriage after five years by marching out of their Chelsea home with a can of spray paint, promptly deleting the “G” on a local “NO PARKING” sign.

After leaving the Army, Parkin joined the market research company AC Neilsen in Oxford. His move into broadcasting came in 1954 when, with the dawn of ITV, he went to London to work for Rediffusion. He then set up Channel Television in the Channel Islands and ran various film companies.

As the manager of the fledgling offshore pirate station Radio Caroline during the mid-Sixties, his first two staff appointments were the disc jockeys Simon Dee and Tony Blackburn. Parkin would later recall his fear at being winched aboard the pirate ship off Harwich. He also retained painful memories of the enterprise being banned by Labour ministers who included his former friend Tony Benn.

During his television career Parkin had been moved by the “collection of stories and circle of ghosts” uncovered by a documentary about a forgotten painter; and when he was seeking a new career he happily turned to the art world. Between 1971 and 1999 the Michael Parkin Gallery — first in Halkin Arcade and then in Motcomb Street — was a little corner of bohemia in Belgravia.

Michael Parkin with Donald Pleasence

Parkin’s time as an art dealer “shot by in an aura of happiness, laughter, admiration and discovery”. He focused on 20th-century British art, revelling in the research required for selling works. “Like the Victorians,” stated Parkin, “I have always believed that every picture has a story to tell, but I was also convinced that most people didn’t inquire enough about the pictures they acquired. To me it seemed that satisfaction was to be earned from a non-stop inquiry into the history of British Art and its artists.”

Parkin exhibited a talent for promoting artists who had slipped into obscurity. He revealed the talent of Whistler’s acolyte Walter Greaves (the waterman-artist of Chelsea) and the comic genius of the cat painters Louis Wain and Kathleen Hale.

Michael Parkin with Princess Margaret

He was also a skilled networker. He tracked down the Twenties beauty Wendela Boreel, once Walter Sickert’s mistress, to the South of France and befriended her. And after a 200-mile taxi ride across British Columbia he located Sybil Andrews, the British Futurist printmaker whose linocuts are now prized.

Parkin gave his exhibitions theatrical, suggestive and comical titles: “The Gentle Art of Making Enemies”; “Three on Holiday in Rye”; “Models and Mistresses”; “Cats of Fame and Promise”; “Artists of Immodest Means” . He revelled in a show entitled “The Café Royalists”, for which he gave a grand party, styled in Edwardian splendour. “The generosity of Sir Charles Forte in providing 23 bottles of pre-1914 absinthe from the Café Royal cellars,” declared Parkin, “not only made for a great evening but caused several of mature age to think that they were going out into Regent Street with a hansom cab waiting.”

He frequented London’s eccentric drinking dens with Lucian Freud and other School of London artists; while at Reddish House, Cecil Beaton’s 18th-century Wiltshire manor, he joined Mick Jagger and David Hockney in entertaining the by then semi-paralysed photographer.

Michael Parkin and Ian Board owner of the Colony Room

His many friends included Michael Nyman, who played the piano at Parkin’s wedding when, in 1983, he married his second wife, the textile designer Diana Head.

Parkin’s Motcomb Street lease ended as the era of gentlemen dealers slipped away ; however, he carried on dealing from his home in Norfolk, online and at London art fairs.

In recent years his wife nursed him devotedly through a long illness. She survives him with their daughter and two daughters of his first marriage.

Michael Parkin, born December 1 1931, died August 4 2014

Guardian:

Adir Ali sits in her devastated flat in Beit Hanun, Gaza.

As Jewish survivors and descendants of survivors and victims of the Nazi genocide, we unequivocally condemn the massacre of Palestinians in Gaza and the ongoing occupation and colonisation of historic Palestine. We further condemn the United States for providing Israel with the funding to carry out the attack, and western states more generally for using their diplomatic muscle to protect Israel from condemnation. Genocide begins with the silence of the world.

We are alarmed by the extreme, racist dehumanisation of Palestinians in Israeli society, which has reached fever-pitch. Politicians and pundits in the Times of Israel and the Jerusalem Post have called openly for genocide of Palestinians and rightwing Israelis are adopting neo-Nazi insignia.

Furthermore, we are disgusted and outraged by Elie Wiesel’s abuse of our history in these pages (advertisement, 11 August; Report, 11 August) to promote blatant falsehoods used to justify the unjustifiable: Israel’s wholesale effort to destroy Gaza and the murder of nearly 2,000 Palestinians, including many hundreds of children. Nothing can justify bombing UN shelters, homes, hospitals and universities. Nothing can justify depriving people of electricity and water.

We must raise our collective voices and use our collective power to bring about an end to all forms of racism, including the ongoing genocide of Palestinian people. We call for an immediate end to the blockade of Gaza. We call for the full economic, cultural and academic boycott of Israel. “Never again” must mean “Never again for anyone”.
Hajo Meyer survivor of Auschwitz; The Netherlands, Henri Wajnblum survivor and son of an Auschwitz victim from Lodz, Poland; Belgium, Norbert Hirschhorn refugee of Nazi genocide and grandson of three people who died in the Shoah; London, Suzanne Weiss survived in hiding in France, whose mother died in Auschwitz; Canada, Felicia and Moshe Langer survivors from Germany, Moshe survived five concentration camps, family members were exterminated; Germany, Michael Rice child survivor, son and grandson of survivor; United States and 30 Jewish survivors of the Nazi genocide and 260 children, grandchildren, great-grandchildren and other relatives of survivors
See full list at ijsn.net/gaza/survivors-and-descendants-letter/

• When I encountered Hamas delegates in Gaza in 2010, they bore no resemblance to the fundamentalists characterised by Nobel peace laureate Elie Wiesel. They stated they had “nothing against the Jews” (contrary to their 1988 charter, which needs serious re-consideration). They differentiated between Jews, Zionists and Israeli occupiers. This was demonstrated by the protection of the Jewish contingent in the Gaza freedom march, when we walked with many disabled residents towards the Erez Crossing in the north of the enclave. There we were warned we might be fired upon by the Israeli border guards should we proceed further.

I am sure that there are fanatical elements in Hamas but according to the United States Institute of Peace, Hamas’s political bureau has been indicating its willingness to explore peace negotiations with Israel for years (while keeping its propaganda condemning Israel’s existence) – that is, when Israel is not actively attempting to assassinate its leaders and incarcerating its members in the West Bank as they try to form a unity government with Fatah.
Peter Offord
Norwich

• In 1962, interviewing me for a traineeship on the Guardian in Manchester, the then editor, Alastair Hetherington, asked me whether I thought he had been right to publish a full-page ad from the Soviet embassy. It was a lengthy excerpt from a speech by Nikita Khrushchev, and Hetherington had received a lot of hostile mail. I told him that Guardian readers were quite capable of seeing through propaganda, and he was right to trust them. He offered me the job.
Richard Bourne
Senior research fellow, Institute of Commonwealth Studies, University of London

• I seem to remember the Manchester Guardian in the 1930s reporting quite extensively the speeches of Hitler and other Nazi leaders without anyone supposing it was peddling its own viewpoint. It thought, no doubt, it was its public service duty to make sure we knew what we were up against. The This World advert seems to serve the same purpose – happily, at the expense of the advertiser.
Ray Wainwright
Amersham, Buckinghamshire

• After the This World ad, the 13 August edition, with its centre spread of Sean Smith’s photograph of Adir Ali’s devastated flat in Beit Hanoun, Gaza, was hardly, in terms of balance, a case of quid pro quo, but a telling contribution to the overall picture.
Michael Gallacher
Whitchurch, Shropshire

• As Liberal Democrats, we are totally committed to the state of Israel being able to live within secure borders, and wish to see the removal of the existential threat to Israel’s security by an internationally recognised terrorist group, and the creation of a viable Palestinian state.

As recorded by the UN and captured by various international media sources, Hamas’s policy of using human shields to protect its arms caches in hospitals, schools and densely populated neighbourhoods must be understood as the principal factor behind the number of Gazan civilian deaths, and condemned as such.

Hamas’s commitment to the destruction of Israel and its refusal to recognise Israel’s right to exist is a huge obstacle to peace.

We hereby ask that the UK government and the international community call on Hamas to maintain the cessation of rocket fire beyond this current ceasefire. Israel has shown it is committed to a ceasefire subject to an end to the rocket fire; it is now incumbent on Hamas to do the same. This will allow the international community, led by Egypt, to broker an end to hostilities, involving the demilitarisation of Gaza plus recognition and adherence to the Quartet principles, which in turn will lead to the eventual opening of borders and a more enduring peace.
Sir Alan Beith MP Chairman of the justice select committee and former deputy leader of Liberal Democrats, Lord Navnit Dholakia Deputy leader of the Liberal Democrats in the House of Lords, Lord Monroe PalmerLiberal Democrat, joint backbench international affairs committee, Baroness Sarah Ludford MEP for London 1999-2014, Cllr Barry Aspinall Leader, Brentwood borough council

• Like Steven Rose (Letters, 14 August) I have memories of campaigning in Ridley Road market in Hackney. It was 1965 and Oswald Mosley’s supporters were making what turned out to be last-gasp efforts to win support in that increasingly multiracial area. I spoke as a member of the Central Hackney Labour party Young Socialist branch, supported by an enthusiastic group, most of whom were Ashkenazi and Sephardic Jews. We were very happy to have the support of the Association of Jewish Ex-servicemen. Two years later, we (me a non-Jew and my friends, largely young Jews) were virulently denounced as antisemitic and as self-hating Jews by most of the members of the Labour party for opposing Israel’s actions in the six-day war. Then as now, Zionism and the state of Israel were and are the most basic obstacles to any humane solution to the conflicts in Palestine and the Middle East.
Fred Lindop
Swanage, Dorset

The Tricycle theatre asked the organisers of the UK Jewish Film Festival (which the Tricycle hosts annually) not to accept a sponsorship donation from the Israeli embassy. The theatre offered to cover the costs itself and wants to continue with the festival – but the festival organisers decided to withdraw the festival. Some commentators have subsequently said the theatre was being antisemitic and should be boycotted. The theatre’s board, which has both Jewish and non-Jewish members, together with its artistic director, made the decision collectively that at this time of war in Gaza, having funding for the festival from the Israeli embassy would be controversial. They never intended to censor or limit the festival. But now they are being accused of antisemitism.

The artistic director, Indhu Rubasingham, is a Tamil who knows a lot about what racism means both in theory and in practice. She is not in any respect antisemitic, as anyone who knows her or has worked with her can testify.

Antisemitism is very much alive – as are Islamophobia and racism in many other forms. If the accusation of antisemitism is made against people who clearly are not antisemitic, then the power of that accusation is diminished. Punishing a small theatre for standing up for its principles is a big step backwards for anyone concerned with challenging prejudice or promoting freedom of speech.

Anyone who truly wants to stand against antisemitism needs to stand with the Tricycle theatre and challenge those who are accusing it in a disproportionate, unjust and ill-informed way. This is a special and vital theatre that has done and continues to do important work – which we need in this country.
Tanika Gupta, April De Angelis, David Edgar, David Greig, David Lan, Timberlake Wertenbaker, Jeremy Herrin, Hettie MacDonald, Mark Ravenhill, Mark Thomas, Stephen Jeffries, Meera Syal, Sanjeev Bhaskar, Roy Williams, Moira Buffini, Kerry Michael, Courtia Newland, Nicholas Wright, Indira Varma, Maria Ahberg, Paul Miller, Nikolai Foster, Hassan Abdulrazzak, Madani Younis and more than 500 artists and theatre practitioners

Your article about A-level success (Report, 14 August) highlights the achievements of pupils at the London Academy of Excellence. The academy has done very well and it is great that such an institution prizing academic success and university entrance now exists in Newham. I’m a teacher at Havering sixth form college, a few stops down the District line from the academy. Our college is comprehensive, and our aiming-high programme also got four students into Oxbridge, and one into Princeton in the US. We also have to make do with funding in the region of £5,000 per pupil, compared to new free schools that can have funding of over £30,000 per pupil. Good new free schools are very welcome, but they’re not the only kids on the block.
James Lauder
Hornchurch, Essex

• The students featured in the Guardian should all be justly proud of their achievements but with the exception of a student from Rochdale college, all attended highly selective or fee-paying schools. The London academy is lauded as proof of the success of free schools but has a selection criterion far higher than any other state sixth form.

The year-on-year obsession with students with cricket scores of A-levels and other qualifications does a disservice to state-educated pupils who would not and could not be funded for so many subjects and achieve fantastic results, often in challenging circumstances.
Jacqui Nicholl
Ilkley, West Yorkshire

• It’s out of the bag! Education standards are dissolved as Ofqual moves pass rates up and down to suit the political view of how many passes the country wants. Most educational observers other than Alan Smithers have always known that “standards” are made by politicians – they never came to us from out of the ether after all.
Professor Saville Kushner
University of Auckland

Sistine Chapel: The Last Judgement by Michelangelo

Ian Flintoff accuses Richard Dawkins of being a bigot for his wise refusal to share platforms with creationists since it gave credence to their views (Letters, 15 August). I think we’ll all agree with Flintoff that people, inspired by religion, have produced some beautiful art, literature and architecture. But people, inspired by religion, have produced, and continue to produce, terrible devastation, misery and suffering. It is true that many distinguished, successful and clever people have been inspired by religion, satisfied by religion, and have been active in supporting religion. But the fact that some clever people enjoy the intoxication of religion doesn’t change the fact that belief in the existence of supernatural beings is a pretty poor basis for understanding phenomena. Richard Dawkins is right to refuse to try publicly to reason with people who refuse to reason.
Peter Dunne
Preston, Lancashire

• In pointing out that religions have been sources of human imagination and creativity, and thus claiming that religious thought is on a par with scientific reason, Ian Flintoff makes the common mistake of conflating subjective metaphysics with objective physical fact and reality. Believing that something is true simply because one believes it applies only to the former. And he is quite wrong to say that complex numbers and the big bang are unjustified and incomprehensible concepts. The first is simply a mathematical construct – both justified and comprehensible – while the big bang was discovered through scientific enquiry, an ongoing process that has not yet fully answered many of our questions about the physical nature of the universe. I’m quite sure that Richard Dawkins could not create an artwork such as the Sistine Chapel. But neither could the pope.
Peter Ostrowski
Wickford, Essex

If you want an example of Robin Williams showing his “British side” (What planet did he come from, G2, 13 August), there’s the nasty landlord in the first series of Mork & Mindy. To the delight of UK viewers – OK, to the perturbation of a few – Williams named the character Arnold Wanker.
John Cranston
Norwich

• I’m puzzled as to how Mike Allott (Letters, 14 August) differentiates between “extreme pacifists” and, well, pacifists.
Harry Harmer
Eastbourne, East Sussex

• A shortage of Turkish hazelnuts for our chocolate bars (Devastated hazel harvest puts the ambassador’s reception at risk, 14 August)? But there’s a glut of ripening hazelnuts here in the UK. It’s been a wonderful year, and the trees are loaded. I’m just off a-gathering with my grandsons. Does anyone have the address of the (Cadbury) whole nut chocolate factory handy?
Bridget Gubbins
Morpeth, Northumberland

• On the subject of bloopers (Fire and class rip through Downton, 15 August), at a showing of August: Osage County in our village hall the other day a member of the audience noticed that at dinner the American characters played by English actors (Messrs Cumberbatch and McGregor) held their knives and forks correctly, instead of the American way.
Hugh Darwen
Warwick

• Marion Kuit (Letters, 13 August) need not worry about Sudoku being a sport. I always understood that to qualify to be a sport you have to change your shoes.
Howard Lambert
London

• It’s obvious that dogs are the fascists … have you ever seen a police cat (Letters, 15 August)? (Thanks to Dave Sheridan and Gilbert Shelton of Fabulous Furry Freak Brothers fame.)
Simon Hargreaves
Cromford, Derbyshire

• Our pet lizard cannot speak, doesn’t know who wrote what, but can draw a completely accurate map of southern Cornwall.
Robert Maclean
London

Independent:

In response to Friday’s letter by Stephen Spencer Ryde on the rise of anti-Semitism, I think it is important to highlight the dangers of conflating anti-Semitism and criticism of Israel.

It is certainly not anti-Semitic to boycott Israeli products (as the National Union of Students has democratically voted to do) and George Galloway’s desire to make Bradford an “Israel-free zone”, while perhaps offensive, is also not to be conflated with Jew-hatred.

Anti-Semitism still thrives in Europe – primarily in Eastern Europe – but it is dangerous and disingenuous to conflate activism against Israeli war crimes with general Jew-hatred.

Such a conflation is particularly offensive to the large number of Jews and Jewish organisations who have taken part in protests against the siege on Gaza.

It also plays down, as was previously highlighted by your columnist Yasmin Alibhai-Brown, the much more virulent and – most importantly – state-sanctioned Islamophobia.

 Muslims are being demonised, attacked and subject to scrutiny by state security services in a way often reminiscent of early 20th century Jew-hatred. Ironically, much of the hatred against Muslims is purportedly justified by accusations of anti-Semitism in Muslim communities.

Alex MacDonald
London SE4

Stephen Spencer Ryde and Jeff Bracey (letters, 15 August) should not be so surprised at what they see happening in this green and pleasant land. It is not happening in a vacuum.

The reaction they are experiencing is a protest against the disproportionately brutal actions being taken by a state which proudly claims to be acting on behalf of their “kind”. Like any other form of racism, anti-Semitism is never acceptable. But this reaction is not anti-Semitism, it is anti-brutalism – and any complaints should be addressed to the government of Israel.

Simon Prentis
Cheltenham, Gloucestershire

 

We must not associate our Jewish friends and neighbours with the actions of the state of Israel. Many Jews living in the UK, Europe and the US are appalled by the actions of Israel towards the Palestinian peoples.

Israel has occupied Palestinian homes and farms, built new towns and colonised areas of Palestine. Hamas is making a futile endeavour to win back Palestine against overwhelming odds. No other nation would be permitted to get away with Israel’s atrocities. We see over 2,000 Palestinian men women and children killed and 7,000 injured by Israel’s use of heavy shells, missiles and bombs in Gaza.

In the face of these Israeli crimes we must not condemn our Jewish friends and neighbours – many of whom share our abhorrence. Our condemnation should be directed only at Israel. Our efforts and anger should be directed towards our governments in the UK, Europe and the US, demanding action against Israel and justice for the Palestinian people.

Martin Deighton
Woodbridge, Suffolk

 

Peerages for party donors

Chris Green’s revelation (14 August) that one Tory donor was ennobled under false pretences misses the crucial point. Not one peer has any mandate from the electorate. Never mind the lingering smell that some peerages appear connected to multiple party donations.

By adding 22 more peers to an already bloated House of Lords, every party leader who put forward a name spits in the face of democracy. The “Big Society” was supposed to redistribute power from “the elite in Whitehall to the man and woman on the street”. But our leaders are deaf to the needs of the poor, but listen to the rich.

The House of Lords is beyond reform. It must not be used as a back door for party donations. Abolition is the only solution.

John Hughes
Brentford, Middlesex

 

Vicky Beeching freed from guilt and shame

Vicky Beeching’s inspiring account of a painful path suffered, finally resulting in announcing her sexuality (14 August), will no doubt ring true with many a Christian both within the church and among those who have left.

For many, guilt and shame are burdens laid upon them by fellow believers, not just in terms of sexuality, but also with many other perceived undesirable human traits. Certain parts of the evangelical and charismatic church are quick to judge and rid people of these “demons”. Consequently many feel they are unworthy and leave, some traumatised, quietly carrying their burdens with them.

The Christian faith teaches love and forgiveness; it is not Vicky Beeching’s faith that considers her sinful and wrong, it is other Christians. The trouble is that so many Christians seem to forget how inclusive Christ was in his life. Perhaps if the church were to be less judging and more accommodating, following in Christ’s example, there might be more enjoying their faith.

Vicky Beeching, thank you, and may many be free from their burdens through your testimony.

Simon Cullingford
Walberton, West Sussex

No ‘surly’ staff  on this train

I would like to give a different picture of railway staff from that conveyed by Oliver Wright (“Why a John Lewis business model might solve the problem of surly station staff”, 13 August).

I was travelling on a CrossCountry train two days ago, when sadly someone threw themselves in front of this train between Birmingham International and Coventry.

We were sensitively told that there had been an incident, kept informed that we would have to stay stationary for a couple of hours, and as things developed told what would happen. The young manager walked along the whole train giving people an opportunity to ask questions, and then he gave out claim forms for delays.

I was impressed how they handled this sad situation. When I asked how the driver was, I was glad to hear that the driver had to be seen before the train could move on. Apparently this driver had had similar situations happen to him  three times. They were extremely appreciative that someone had even asked.

The consequence of all of this was that I didn’t get to my appointment. The whole of the rail system was upset for hours, and I presume there must have been a very unhappy family somewhere.

Although I have never been happy with the privatisation of the rail system, we all had exemplary service.

Jenny Dunlop
Whaley Bridge, Derbyshire

 

Publicity for Cliff Richard raid

It is the remit of the police to investigate any allegations reported to them, but since when has it been permissible to brief the media that investigations are under way, even to the extent that a helicopter was able to monitor the arrival of investigating officers?

The publicity regarding  the police search of Cliff Richard’s property calls into question the whole concept of “innocent until proven guilty”. The conduct of the police in this instance is reprehensible.

Dorothy Bunsee
Salisbury

 

Shooting estates help grouse to thrive

Tony Hams (letter, 14 August) is fundamentally mistaken in his understanding of grouse shooting.

Grouse are not reared – they are a wild bird whose population can only be encouraged by sympathetic habitat management. This is carried out by moorland owners. Creating and encouraging the habitat which allows grouse to thrive also benefits many other species, such as lapwing and golden plover.

At least 941,000 hectares of upland Britain are managed for grouse shooting. This includes land, particularly heather moorland, preserved and maintained by upland shooting estates, which is of international conservation importance for breeding populations of waders and other wildlife.

In addition, the economic benefits of grouse shooting, such as the jobs provided and income generated for local rural economies, support upland communities. Without grouse shooting, jobs would go, schools, pubs and local businesses would suffer.

In addition, red grouse – a bird unique to the UK – provides delicious game meat which is widely celebrated and enjoyed.

Amanda Anderson
Director, the Moorland Association

Tim Russell
Director of Conservation, the British Association for Shooting and Conservation

Rossett, Wrexham

 

Beers that taste different

Gillian Orr has just discovered that all lager tastes the same (“Labels of love”, 14 August).

The Campaign for Real Ale and its 160,000 members have known that for years. Next time Gillian is in a pub she should avoid the lager and try some proper beer.

Rob Edwards
Harrogate

Times:

‘We as a society must care for our mentally ill just as we care for the physically ill’

Sir, For the most part the comment surrounding the death of Robin Williams has helped to further the cause of greater understanding of those who suffer from mental illness. The destigmatisation of the mentally ill is vital.

This is not, as some appear to think, part of a liberal touchy-feely agenda which seeks to extend acceptance of difference and to advance the protection of human rights (as illustrated by the Mental Capacity Act 2005).

What is needed urgently is not mere acceptance of the mentally ill but concerted action to help them deal with, in many cases, a very serious physical illness which just happens to affect the brain.

As the mother of a son who has suffered from severe bipolar disorder, I find the provision in the NHS and social services to help young people like him pitiful and heartbreaking. Programmes to help those whose condition makes it impossible for them to take up the programmes is not the answer.

Non-attendance at psychiatric appointments should ring alarm bells, not lead to a patient’s treatment being discontinued. Worst of all, discharging a patient from intensive care into completely unsupported homeless persons’ B&B accommodation is akin to putting someone who has just had their leg amputated on the top floor of a lift-less block of flats. Transferring responsibility to the seriously mentally ill for their own care as the Mental Capacity Act would seem to require shows a fundamental misunderstanding of what mental illness is. We, as a society, need to care for our mentally ill just as we care for the physically ill.

Amanda Milne
London WC2

Sir, Robin Williams’s death has brought mental health back into the spotlight. It is a fact that mental health can affect anyone, regardless of background, and for many, there can be catastrophic consequences if help isn’t provided early enough. In the UK more than half of adults with mental health problems are diagnosed in childhood, half of which become apparent before the age of 14, and less than half are treated appropriately at the time. This, and the expenditure of just 6 per cent of the mental health budget on children, has led to a startling £13 billion a year being spent on trying to address the consequences of untreated mental health conditions. These include alcohol and drug misuse, self-harm, neglect and in extreme cases, suicide.

Lack of early intervention has fed the current crisis we are witnessing in mental health services — they are overstretched and underfunded, and as reported recently by the Royal College of Psychiatrists, two thirds of adults are not receiving the treatment they so badly need.

Dr Hilary Cass
President of the Royal College of Paediatrics and Child Health

The inefficiencies and injustices in the system for collecting the BBC licence fee are increasingly resented

Sir, It is not the BBC that sends 100,000 letters each day demanding payment of the licence fee, which is
in reality a tax. Collection is sub-contracted to a range of private firms that make a return for themselves, and this method of collection costs the BBC well over £100 million per annum. I haven’t seen the details of the contracts, but I suspect that they involve a mark-up on costs, which will include sending out as many reminders as the companies concerned can manage. So far as I know there is no parliamentary scrutiny of this process.

Irrespective of whether we should have public sector broadcasting on the scale we currently do, it is difficult to see why the tax should be collected in this bizarre way, reminiscent of the exploitative behaviour of the tax-farmers of pre-revolutionary France.

Professor JR Shackleton

University of Buckingham

Sir, The criticism of the BBC for sending 100,000 reminder letters a day is grossly unfair. Anyone who has responsibility for enforcement knows that prompt action is the key to success and is recognised good practice by local authorities, Revenue and business.

Debt advisers all tell debtors to make early contact in case of difficulty with payment. Having been responsible for enforcement of fines, including TV licence fines, for over 20 years I can testify to the problems which arise if control over debtors is lost — problems multiply.

It may be that the BBC could improve its practices, but we should congratulate it on speedy enforcement. The more is collected, the less the prompt payers have to subsidise defaulters.

Donald C Swift

Retired Justices’ Clerk

Widnes, Cheshire

Sir, Like Joanna Martin I too have been harassed by the BBC with threatening letters. In desperation I have paid two sets of licence fees for years. I see it as another housing tax.

Sandra Noakes

Handbridge, Chester

Scottish independence and the multiple ways of being a UK citizen in the modern world

Sir, My friend and colleague Alan Riach (report, Aug 13) has a strong case when he and Sandy Stoddart complain about the lack of focus on the cultural arguments for Scottish independence. “Freedom to vary corporation tax and/or airport traffic duty (within the financial constraints set by a possible currency union)” is hardly a compelling slogan.

The question for me is: whose culture (or cultures)? As with all long-lasting states there are dark sides to the UK’s history, and there remain things that are wrong, some very wrong — states are always a work in progress. But something I think is great about living in the modern UK is that it is increasingly possible to be comfortable with multiple ways of being a UK citizen, and with the rich complexities of the UK’s cultures.

The UK, despite the yearnings of those wanting to return to an imaginary monocultural 1950s or of those who consider it beyond repair, has a demonstrable capacity to change. Plenty of places in the world would like something like it. Is that not worth hanging on to?

Professor Jeremy Smith

Milngavie, Dunbartonshire

Wading into the philosophical eddies which swirl about our notions of self and others

Sir, Of robot consciousness Matthew Parris (Aug 13) says we cannot prove that any other human is conscious and adds that the last words on the subject were written by Descartes and Berkeley three centuries ago. Not quite the last words; I suggest that Mr Parris reads some of Wittgenstein’s thoughts on the subject of “other minds”. He might find that the idea of “proof” here is rather confused, as is the alternative position that all we have otherwise is “supposition”.

Hywel Davies

Swansea

Not banning photography can give a gallery invaluable publicity as younger visitors enthuse on social media

Sir, I always thought the National Gallery’s photography ban short-sighted (Aug 14). The Rijksmuseum has long indulged its younger patrons’ innocent wish to record what is often the highlight of a visit to Amsterdam.

Treasured images are proudly pinged around the globe via social media, providing the gallery and the city with huge free publicity.

Stewart Moore

Portstewart, Coleraine

Scottish independence and the multiple ways of being a UK citizen in the modern world

Sir, My friend and colleague Alan Riach (report, Aug 13) has a strong case when he and Sandy Stoddart complain about the lack of focus on the cultural arguments for Scottish independence. “Freedom to vary corporation tax and/or airport traffic duty (within the financial constraints set by a possible currency union)” is hardly a compelling slogan.

The question for me is: whose culture (or cultures)? As with all long-lasting states there are dark sides to the UK’s history, and there remain things that are wrong, some very wrong — states are always a work in progress. But something I think is great about living in the modern UK is that it is increasingly possible to be comfortable with multiple ways of being a UK citizen, and with the rich complexities of the UK’s cultures.

The UK, despite the yearnings of those wanting to return to an imaginary monocultural 1950s or of those who consider it beyond repair, has a demonstrable capacity to change. Plenty of places in the world would like something like it. Is that not worth hanging on to?

Professor Jeremy Smith

Milngavie, Dunbartonshire

Telegraph:

SIR – On July 25 my husband received a partial hip replacement in Brighton. After six days he was placed on the transfer list for a place near his home in Surrey, but two weeks later there was still no bed available and no way ahead was settled.

Consequently, an otherwise fit 80-year-old man, who was playing golf only hours before the fall that broke his hip, is unnecessarily weaker and depressed.

Meanwhile the Surrey hospital has decided that a rehabilitation unit is more appropriate for my husband, and so he has gone to the bottom of another waiting list, leaving him stranded on the acute ward in Brighton.

It is hard to believe that the Surrey hospital is passing the buck and that a bed is being unnecessarily blocked in Brighton. If the NHS continues to mismanage its time and resources in this manner, does it think that those with savings will move to the private sector in desperation, rather than see their relatives waste away?

Jane Davies
Tadworth, Surrey

SIR – Newhaven in East Sussex is part of a cluster of four towns and several villages called Seahaven, of which the total population is over 60,000. The out-of-hours doctor service has recently been dramatically scaled back.

The Seahaven out-of-hours service no longer has a car for the doctor, meaning that the needs of those who require home visits are met by a service from Brighton. Eastbourne used to have two cars and now only has one. Bexhill no longer has a car.

A friend of mine from Newhaven was told to go to Brighton to get treatment for her son because the local service no longer operates past 1pm on Sundays, leaving those with illnesses to travel more than 10 miles to see a doctor.

If these changes are accepted without resistance, how do we know that further cost-saving measures won’t be imposed in the months and years to come? They cannot be in the patients’ interests. What would happen in an epidemic, should patients with communicable illnesses be forced to travel on crowded public transport?

Henry Page
Newhaven, East Sussex

Priced out of a pint

SIR – Not all pubs that close are under-used (Leading article, August 13). The high rents that a publican must pay, in addition to tied beer prices with duty and VAT on top, can make his long working hours hardly worthwhile.

A pub shouldn’t have to be packed out every night to make a profit, and sadly pubs that do generate good returns are often not the sort that offer “a fine English ale and a comfortable spot by the fire”.

Developers are willing to pay pub owners high prices for Victorian city-centre properties. Reform of the current planning laws is needed, as is a change in taxation. Different rates for on-premises and off-sales might drive some drinkers away from the supermarkets and back to the pub.

Tim Matthews
London NW1

Dancing hen harriers

SIR – The term “sky-dancing” was not thought up by the RSPB’s marketing team to describe hen harrier displays. The display was aptly christened sky-dancing by the late Frances Hamerstrom, the American ornithologist and writer, during her study of northern harriers in Wisconsin many years ago.

And while I, like Robin Page, am saddened by the plight of our lapwings, far more eggs and chicks are crushed annually by the raking of nesting pastures and by crop-spraying activities than will ever be taken by harriers.

M E Taylor
Chesterfield, Derbyshire

Ahead of the curve

SIR – James Bond pre-empted the Pyongyang Times in highlighting the surfing opportunities provided by the North Korean coast, as portrayed in Die Another Day (2002).

I believe Bond also brought his own equipment with him.

Simon Tull
Doha, Qatar

True colours

SIR – My two young grandchildren have arrived to stay for a few days. They wore the kit of Cristiano Ronaldo of Real Madrid and Lionel Messi of Barcelona.

What does this tell us about the England football team?

Anthony Scouller
Banstead, Surrey

Hell’s Grannies

SIR – Three times in as many weeks I have been nearly wiped out by a “Hell’s Granny” on a mobility scooter being ridden at running pace along a pavement.

Surely these vehicles should be limited to an average walking speed.

Users also seem to assume that they have the right of way. Being both partially sighted and deaf, I neither see nor hear their approach, but it is still my fault.

Charles Fingleton
Bath, Somerset

Next-day delivery

SIR – You report that Royal Mail is bringing forward the last collection time to as early as 9am at nearly half the post boxes in Britain.

This move will be particularly harmful to businesses needing next-day delivery, and comes on top of the exorbitant cost of stamps. Small wonder that the price of Royal Mail shares has plummeted.

John Ley-Morgan
Weston-super-Mare, Somerset

Variations on Bach

SIR – Robert Lightband (Letters, August 13) is right to criticise transcription of Bach’s organ music for other instruments, but I think that Bach would have loved to write for the Steinway if he had been born into a later century.

The Goldberg Variations, for example, sound as well on a good piano as on a harpsichord, particularly when performed by an András Schiff or Glenn Gould.

Nick Perry
Lincoln

The absolute limit

SIR – Can anyone explain why small vans operated by companies such as British Gas have stickers on the back saying “This vehicle is limited to 70mph”?

I thought we all were.

Philip McGahan
Diss, Norfolk

Pigeons play chicken

SIR – Why do pigeons like to sit on rural B‑roads playing a dangerous game of “fly or die”, taking off only at the last second in the face of an approaching vehicle?

Is it down to a lack of parental control, or poor education?

Jeremy Nicholas
Great Bardfield, Essex

A sculpture by Walter Bailey transforms a tree in Sussex killed by Dutch elm disease  Photo: Alamy

6:59AM BST 15 Aug 2014

CommentsComments

SIR – Here in Somerset, where elms used to rule the rural scene, they could make a comeback if only the farmers would stop insisting their hedgerows should be low, square and boring.

The elm could still sprout from the hedges given a chance. I have one without a hint of the dreaded Dutch elm disease. Now I am encouraging the little shoots in the lawn to grow for transplanting later, in the hope that they might have inherited some sort of immunity.

Richard Kellaway
Woolavington, Somerset

A Kurdish peshmerga fighter stands close to the Kalak checkpoint in Iraqi-Kurdistan 

7:00AM BST 15 Aug 2014

CommentsComments

SIR – I don’t think Britain providing the tools that the Kurds need to fight the “Islamic State” will necessarily protect the “democratic status of Iraq”, as John McTernan concludes (Comment, August 12). If the Kurds fend off the jihadist threat and are left with a much more powerful military presence, it would most probably lead to their trying to establish an independent state in the north of the country.

James A Paton
Billericay, Essex

SIR – The actions of the Islamic State draw attention to the need for a wholesale redrawing of borders. Out of this we should see the creation of a Kurdish state, and territories to offer Christians and Yazidis long-term safe havens.

Dr Michael Paraskos
London SE27

SIR – There are several imperatives for intervening once again in the Middle East. Barbarity and genocide in northern Iraq and Syria represent a strategic threat to international – and British – peace and security. If not checked, chaos and human suffering could rapidly spread, and have a direct impact on us.

This appalling situation is a symptom of a bigger crisis that is fast becoming a global game-changer. As events in Indonesia and Nigeria show, it is not just about the Middle East, which is none the less the centre of gravity.

There is a longer-term threat to us in Britain. The wrongs of the recent past and understandable dread of re-engagement must not blind us to this. Too little now and we court more horrors in the years ahead, even though this may not be what we collectively want to hear.

Getting things “right” this time requires political leaders to convince the public that firm and proportionate action is needed to prevent genocide and chaos from spreading. Action must be genuinely international, even if more of the initial military and logistical action is taken by the United States and Britain, since few others have the experience and capabilities needed, such as Chinook helicopters.

To prevent a domino collapse across states, emergency action must be backed up by international efforts to help put in place a multi-ethnic and multi-religious political framework. We must encourage the international community to stop simply reacting to events and begin to drive them. A sustained effort is required to safeguard viable states and to “quarantine” areas where order has collapsed. This may involve both soft and hard power, but diplomacy must lead and involve the key regional powers.

Perhaps we British citizens need to examine our consciences and be less hasty to blame politicians and recent mistakes. This is a hugely difficult problem with no short-term fixes, but it needs to be tackled.

Brig Nigel Hall
Gen Tim Cross

London W1

SIR – The West is asked to fund food drops, harbour refugees and send in armed forces. The children of the West must sacrifice their lives to “bring peace” to a troubled region. Is it foolish to ask why?

A number of Middle East countries have enormous, well-equiped armed forces. Egypt has almost 470,000 active personnel. It flies some 1,100 combat aircraft and 245 helicopters. Saudi Arabia has 200,000 active personnel and 300 combat aircraft. Where is the need for the intrusion of Western forces?

Excursions into Islamic areas such as Afghanistan show it is unlikely that Western involvement will result in long-term improvement. Far from it. Well-intentioned interference in both Afghanistan and Iraq seems to have increased violence and anti-Western sentiment, leaving resident populations at more risk while acting as a recruitment drive for Muslim terrorist organisations.

John Solomon
Charlton, Hampshire

Irish Times:

Sir, – Raymond Deane (August 15th) comments that Palestinian “civil society” supports a boycott of cultural events linked to the Israeli state. The Gaza Strip is ruled by sharia law and Palestinian women there have no rights, so I wonder what civil society is he referring to?

Did it not strike him as odd that during recent events no female doctors, nurses or hospital staff appeared and that all the women wore veils and none were allowed to speak?

Similarly, Brian Ó Éigeartaigh doesn’t the address the point that the Tricycle Theatre hosted the London Asian Film Festival and received funding from the Indian government, which has been found guilty of abusing human rights in Kashmir. It also takes money from the British government, which some argue is responsible for the deaths of thousands in Iraq – and indeed assert that a former prime minister should be chared with war crimes.

It is worth noting that the Tricycle’s own board and writers state that that war was “illegal”. Yet the Tricycle takes £720,000 in funding from the UK Arts Council; the Jewish Film Festival received £1,400 from the Israeli embassy. So we are now back to the point that if the Tricycle did not audit where the funding comes for from every single event it holds, and instead only picked out the Jewish Film Festival, then that is anti-Semitic.

You cannot claim to be on the side of human rights as Mr Deane does and have no opinion on sharia law. Nor can you justify a cultural boycott when only one event is single out despite other events receiving funding in the same way from sources that would fail the test applied to the Jewish Film Festival. – Yours, etc,

DESMOND FitzGERALD,

Canary Wharf,

London

Sir, – I was considering signing up Desmond FitzGerald (August 14th) to a group whose function would be to investigate how we might draw up a priority list of boycott campaigns.

He correctly identifies states who practise human rights abuses, and companies that exploit workers and those that avoid tax payments. But he let himself down just as I looked for his email address. He contends that if one refuses to accept dealings with the Israeli embassy over the slaughter in Gaza one must be anti-Semitic. This (deliberately?)confuses being Jewish with being the Israeli state. As the USA-based liberal Jewish Voice campaign makes clear, “Not in my name”. – Yours, etc,

CAHAL McLAUGHLIN,

Professor of Film Studies,

School of Creative

Arts,

Queen’s University,

Belfast BT7 1NN

Sir, – James Connolly Heron (August 14th) refers to the claim by Count Plunkett in an election pamphlet in 1917 that John Redmond had signified his approval of the execution of the leaders of the Easter Rising in a speech to the House of Commons on May 3rd, 1916 after the prime minister, HH Asquith, announced that Pearse, MacDonagh and Clarke had been executed earlier that day. This claim was, however, a wilful misinterpretation of Redmond’s comments.

John Redmond’s biographer, Denis Gwynn, records that Redmond met Asquith on May 3rd after the executions of Pearse, MacDonagh and Clarke and sought an undertaking from him that no one else would be executed. Asquith replied (according to Redmond) that “he could not give an absolute promise to that effect, but that, except in some very special case, that was his desire and intention”.

On the following day (May 4th), Redmond wrote to Asquith to say that “if any more executions took place [he] would feel bound to denounce them”. This is not the behaviour of a man who approved of the executions.

The clear purpose of Redmond’s comments in the House of Commons was to secure clemency for the rank and file of the rebels, and in this context he needed to make a clear distinction between their actions and those of the leaders.

Representing his words as signifying approval of the execution of the leaders was a nasty election ploy back in 1917, and today it is a disgraceful slur on a good man’s reputation. – Yours, etc,

FELIX M LARKIN,

Vale View Lawn,

Cabinteely,

Dublin 18

Sir, – Are we really going to define Redmond’s reputation on the strength of an election pamphlet produced by a political opponent? Count Plunkett’s pamphlet correctly quotes Redmond’s observations about the execution of Pearse, MacDonagh and Clarke but it does not tell the full story.What election pamphlet ever did?

In the corridors of power at Westminster, Redmond and the other Home Rule MPs lobbied hard to prevent any executions and they were vilified for doing so. But for their efforts many more may have been executed.

I am neither for nor against honouring Redmond. I am simply pointing that Irish history is a subtle and complex subject. Then as now, there are many diverse opinions about what took place in 1916 and no one can claim there was then or is now, only one legitimate point of view. – Yours, etc,

SEAN ENRIGHT,

King Street,

Peterborough,

Cambridgeshire

Sir, – I have some reservations about John Bruton’s favoured location regarding the placing of a statue honouring John Redmond. Mr Bruton suggested it be sited on Leinster Lawn.

My own favoured location would be a more central spot in the former second city of the now defunct British empire, where it could be viewed by all. I suggest that if the British government acquiesce to Mr Bruton’s wishes and dispatch their Westminster-located statue it should be sited where the Spire now stands, preferably impaled on top. – Yours, etc,

TOM COOPER,

Templeville Road,

Templeogue,

Dublin 6W

Sir, – Can I take issue with Jim Roche’s suggestion (August 15th) that airlifts for trapped Yazidis (and Christians) on Mount Sinjar should be carried out exclusively by the UN and NGOs? First of all, the UN reacts to these crises with little perceptible urgency; because military assistance is required, NGOs don’t have the capability to act alone. Mr Roche cites the United States and the UK’s ill-advised invasion of Iraq as a reason why they should be excluded. It is true that their invasion created a vacuum where sectarian hatred has festered, but that is not reason enough to exclude them. I am sure the people trapped on Mount Sinjar would agree.

I also disagree with his broad statement: “The response by the US of more air strikes at selective targets is a last desperate act of futility to mask its failed foreign policy.” Sometimes selective targeting can bring about positive results, as it did when the US bombed strategic targets in the former Yugoslavia, bringing to an abrupt end that particular war. Is he seriously suggesting that the Yazidi and Christian communities who have lived on that land for thousands of years should be left permanently displaced, and Isis left to continue its rampage? Each case should be judged on its merits. – Yours, etc,

JOHN BELLEW,

Riverside House,

Dunleer,

Co Louth

Sir, –So the chickens have finally come home to roost. The GP manpower crisis has at last been recognised and the proposed solution to manage demand for “free GP care” is to restrict access by charging the patient a nominal attendance fee. Despite all the warnings over the years, we have 141 GPs per 100 000 population in Ireland; the corresponding figures for the UK are 192 per 100, 000 and for Germany 216 per 100,000. Ireland has the second lowest number of GPs per capita in the EU.

Even if the Government decides to increase the number of medical school entrants and GP training posts the dividend may not be evident for up to 11 years, as this is the length of time needed to produce a graduate GP from medical school entry. Meanwhile, GP graduates, along with other medical specialists, continue to leave the country in droves because of State policy on investment in general practice, lack of career progression and poor compensation. The situation is so dire that proposals to extend surgery opening hours and extend the range of services any time soon lack any sense of reality.

Charging patients is not the answer. Credible manpower planning and appropriate resource allocation are needed now to retain the responsive service we have and to build for the future. –Yours, etc,

DR WILLIAM LYNCH,

Enniscorthy Medical Centre,

Court Street,

Enniscorthy,

Co Wexford

Sir, – As the owner/manager of a successful IT services company, I have been fortunate in having the support of my bank, which has provided overdraft facilities and has indicated a willingness to lend for other projects. However, the issue is not so much the availability of credit as the cost.

Like most businesses, successful or otherwise, we have constant pressure on margins. When margins are tight, the cost of money is a significant issue. Banks can borrow, either from depositors or the ECB, for rates of less than 1 per cent, but they then seek to lend it to business at rates of between 10 per cent and 12.5 per cent. Unless a business can make a margin greater than 12.5 per cent on goods or services, borrowing to fund a project can clearly be seen to lead to a loss on that project and so the project will not go ahead.

Can anyone explain why efforts at European Central Bank level to stimulate growth through low interest rates are not being reflected in low interest rates on business loans? Oh wait … Yours, etc,

JOHN BROPHY,

Managing Director,

Carrig Solutions,

Rathnew,

Co Wicklow

Sir, – I commend Fred Cummins for his letter (August 14th) about the misuse of simple percentages, though I must say this failing is not confined to journalists. Politicians and others are equally at fault for the spurious use, or misuse, of statistics. A common misconception is that, because an increase from 100 to 200 represents an increase of 100 per cent, a decrease from 200 to 100 is a decrease of 100 per cent. It is no such thing, rather a decrease of 50 per cent. A decrease of 100 per cent always results in zero. A 100 per cent decrease from 200 produces zero, as does a 100 per cent decrease from one million, or any other figure. – Yours, etc,

PADDY LYONS.

Somerby Road,

Greystones,

Co Wicklow

Sir, – As summer turns to autumn and homeowners face the prospect of having to pay substantial amounts for water, will fond memories of playful water fights become a fling of the past? – Yours, etc,

MICHAEL CULLEN,

Albert Park,

Sandycove,

Co Dublin

Sir, – Pádraig Ó Cíobháin (August 15th) baselessly accuses me of wishing for a world in which English is the only language. In fact I merely projected a current trend to its natural conclusion, without bias, and looked for the bright side.

When the world was large and few people travelled widely, many languages evolved in isolated pockets. As the world shrinks rapidly, it makes sense that the number of languages will shrink with it. Those attached to particular minority languages like Irish may lament, but it is almost certain that in time everyone in the world will be fluent in at least one of a handful of “super-languages” used for daily business, the most likely candidates being English, Spanish, Arabic and Mandarin.

Other languages will survive and even thrive locally, but global business and communications networks are already forcing the development of global lingua franca. Advertisements for jobs with international companies frequently demand English as a requirement. This is not because these German or Korean corporate giants dream of a world dominated by Britain or America, but because they recognise the cold pragmatic truth that a unifying language is required, and have chosen one which is already among the most universal and the easiest to learn. There is always sadness when something beautiful fades, but that is the way of things. History is littered with dead languages, but the world goes on. Can the foam-lipped ideologues of Irish please stand down? – Yours, etc,

JOHN THOMPSON,

Shamrock Street,

Phibsboro,

Dublin 7

Sir, – Pádraig Ó Cíobháin accuses me of being selective in omitting his reference to English being compulsory for the Leaving Certificate, as if this was an issue, and then proceeds to repeat verbatim the whole first stanza of Yeats’s “September 1913”.

Mr Ó Cíobháin says that “in poetry seeming is believing”. It seems to me that while “September 1913” may be finding fault with the Ireland of the time, much of it could also be reinterpreted as being relevant to what went wrong during the Celtic Tiger years. It may also seem, from the repetition, that Yeats was writing a lament, and was at least resigned to fact the romantic Ireland was dead and gone. Is it as true now as in Yeats’s time to ask what kind of Ireland we are going to build for the future. Are we going to repeat the mistake of trying to rebuild the past or are we to do as Yeats concludes? “But let them be, they’re dead and gone / They’re with O’Leary in the grave.” – Yours, etc.

ANDREW DOYLE,

Lislevane,

Bandon,

Co Cork

A chara, – The much cited myth of the Tower of Babel is but one story from our wonderfully diverse human history. Another tells of Iatiku the mother goddess of the Acoma tribe in New Mexico. Wearying of constant fighting among the peoples of the earth, she caused them to speak many different languages so that it would not be easy for them to quarrel. She did not equate monolingualism with peaceful co-existence. – Is mise le meas,

FRANK NAUGHTON,

Ballyfermot Avenue,

Dublin 10

Sir, – In relation to Frank McDonald’s article “Casino at Marino revamp is a gamble not everyone thinks has paid off”, August 13th) I have visited the Casino many times over the last 25 years. It is a real gem of a building with some delightful architectural quirks. I loved the 1980s renovation as it felt true to the essence of the building. The current redecoration feels like it has been done by an interior designer wishing to put a modern stamp on the building rather than preserve its period beauty. For example, I remember when I was first shown around the Casino, the blue of the dome was pointed out as representing the sky and, as with the sky, you could not pick out its highest point. It is incredible that this “sky” has now been painted white! As for the plastic covering on the beautiful floors, it is another horror.

Surely the purpose of preserving beautiful buildings is to do just that, to preserve them as showpieces of past architecture and decor, not as old buildings dressed up in modern attire. – Yours, etc,

VANESSA DELANEY,

St Lawrence Road,

Clontarf,

Irish Independent:

In the early 1990s, whilst on home-leave from Kenya, I developed a two-month long friendship with Cyril Cusack. Our Irish-African connections further cultured the friendship and we left no stone unturned in our twice weekly verbal jousts over afternoon tea in a Dun Laoghaire hotel.

He was, of course, a great Irish stage and screen actor, but not many know that he was also a great philosopher and analyst, particularly on all matters Irish. He had an eagle eye for detail and his fingers were well placed on the pulse of Ireland. To me, he epitomised all the qualities of pure ‘Irishness’.

Not long before our last meeting, he leaned close to my ear and half whispered: “You know James, the problem with us Irish is that we have an identity problem; we don’t quite know who we are, or who or what we want to be; and it seems, we never will!”

I was still in reflection mode on this disturbing observation some months later as I chatted in a Nairobi hotel with a well-respected Irish-American news correspondent. Without warning, she announced: “I presume you are aware, James, that in many circles (all) Ireland is seen as part of, and dependent on the UK.”

Of course, I knew this but did not take to being told it by a journalist. Like many Irish living abroad, I have witnessed this statement as both a remark and an attitude. Browsing Ireland’s mainstream media in recent months, it seems more clear. They were both quite right of course – and more than 20 years on, it seems they still are.

Today, I can’t help but wonder if our membership of the EU is further sapping our ailing identity on one hand whilst the creation of ‘Ireland’s Call’ as a substitute national anthem, and infantile talk of re-joining the (British) Commonwealth looks set to finish the job, on the other! I wonder what Cyril would say.

James Kenny

Paris, France

Fallout from arming Kurds

Everybody’s happy, it appears, for the Kurds to protect the Yazidi from the Islamic extremists who appear determined to exterminate them. The Kurds are saving the US, the UK and France from putting “boots on the ground” so stopping embarrassment to certain political reputations and promises. Obama must be a relieved man. Arming the Kurds is a no-brainer.

But hold on a minute. Aren’t these the same Kurds who want to establish their own state of Kurdistan, which combines portions of a number of other states, including Syria and Turkey? The same Kurds who have fought a number of fierce battles with Turkey on this issue? And isn’t Turkey a key ally of the US and Nato?

So the allies are re-arming a people who are oil-rich and want their own state. Anybody remember the Taliban who were armed to fight the Russians in Afghanistan? Look how that turned out. Moral of the story – sending somebody to do your dirty work can be a very expensive long-term solution.

Liam Cooke

Coolock

Dublin 17

Keeping your head

Would it be correct to say the prosthetic pilot landed successfully because, even though he lost his arm, he kept his head?

John Williams

Clonmel

Redmond acted in best interests

Unlike some of our so-called “leaders”, John Redmond acted in what he believed to be the best interests of the island. In encouraging Irishmen to fight the King’s war, he was trying to prove to our then-overlords in Britain that we wouldn’t turn on them in the event of our gaining independence.

Had things gone to plan, Redmond would most likely have been the first Prime Minister of neither the “Republic of” nor “Northern” nor “The Free State of” Ireland, but of an Ireland one step closer to a total, united independence, albeit on a lengthened time frame.

Considering, however, that it took 33 years after 1916 for us to become the republic of a bit of the island that we are today, hanging on just that bit longer could have even been a wiser decision.

Cue Murphy’s Law, Easter 1916, and a different letter, though.

Killian Foley-Walsh

Kilkenny City

Women’s rugby deserves reward

Let’s put the achievement of the women’s international rugby team at the World Cup into perspective.

I have no doubt that there are several members of the Irish men’s team who would swap every medal they won in exchange for being able to claim that they were the first Irish team who had taken the scalps of the Kiwis at their own game. Imagine what could be achieved if we gave women’s and girl’s sports the same investment that we have, so far, managed to waste on men’s sports?

Liam Power

Bangor Erris

Co Mayo

How I recall Bacall magic

The death of the beautiful Lauren Bacall reminded me once again of one of my favourite Bogie/Bacall movies ‘To Have and Have Not’. Oh, it’s no wonder I rarely go to the cinema, they just don’t make them like that no more! Just take note of these wonderful Bacall lines. After kissing Bogie a few times, she says: “It’s even better when you help”.

Saying goodnight to Bogie, she turns and says: “If you want me, all you need to do is whistle, you know how to whistle? You put your lips together and. . . blow.”

How sexy is that?

After a big fat gangster gets rough with her, she says to Bogie: “Was you ever bit by a dead bee?”

Another wonderful screen icon has departed. May she rest in peace.

Brian McDevitt

Glenties

Co Donegal

Lenihan was an inspiration

In a recent interview with this paper, Dun Laoghaire-Rathdown councillor Kate Feeney made an astounding claim that the Dail had not produced a positive role model in the last 20 years. I find myself feeling a combination of bemusement and disbelief at this stark contention made by someone who is barely four months in elected office.

Ms Feeney’s views are misguided and simply wrong. The Dail has had, and continues to have, many role models with Brian Lenihan being one that comes to mind. The late Finance Minister was without doubt a positive role model for people. He was a man of duty who fought a terminal illness to the point that he put the country’s well-being before his own. Indeed, people from right across the political divide and those most vehemently opposed to his policy choices still respected the man trying his upmost in an unspeakably dire political and personal situation.

Does Ms Feeney believe that she would be able to be the positive role model that she stated was lacking in Irish politics? If so, then I wish her the best with that ambition, but I would remind her of Mr Lenihan, who helped inspire countless people fight and continue to fight this dreadful disease.

Michael Reynolds

Blackrock

Co Dublin

Fools who espouse ‘snip cool’

There is a trendy new ‘must have’ procedure being obtained by the cool Irish middle-class feminist husbands, who then proceed to tell everyone about it. The vasectomy has become the manly way to take the pressure off one’s wife as far as contraception responsibility is concerned. Which is all very well, but it sort of has the potential to bring its own pitfalls in a possibly not too uncommon scenario. What happens if the woman becomes pregnant – wouldn’t it be a little awkward to then have to say the ‘snip’ wasn’t successful?

Robert Sullivan

Bantry

Co Cork

Irish Independent

A girl looks through the window of a minibus as her family prepares to leave the Beit Hanoun neighbourhood in Gaza City

More in Letters (2 of 20 articles)

Letters: Israel has a moral obligation… Read More


Post Office

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17 August 2014 Post office

I jog around the park I still have arthritis in my left knee, but I manage to get round the park. A wettish day. I go to the Post Office

Scrabble: Mary wins, but gets under just 400. perhaps I will win tomorrow.

103 Games: Mary wins 55 John 49 Mary Average score 346 John 340

Obituary:

Frans Brüggen – obituary

Frans Brüggen was a conductor and authority on 18th-century music who brought the recorder into the concert hall

Frans Bruggen conducting in Paris in 1998

Frans Bruggen conducting in Paris in 1998 Photo: LEBRECHT

5:44PM BST 14 Aug 2014

CommentsComments

Frans Brüggen,who has died aged 79, was a Dutch recorder player, conductor and musicologist who brought the recorder out of the classroom and into the concert hall as a serious musical instrument.

In his early days he would play anything that he felt might sound good on the recorder — “which included, for better or worse, [tunes from] symphonies by Tchaikovsky and Beethoven”.

Later Brüggen explored more carefully how the instrument was used in the baroque era, while pushing for its acceptance as a modern instrument — including commissioning works from composers such as Louis Andriessen and Luciano Berio (notably Gesti, which tests the performer’s powers of control and interpretation). Indeed, Berio once described Brüggen as “a musician who is not an archaeologist but a great artist”.

Along the way Brüggen founded the Orchestra of the Eighteenth Century, spearheading the move away from the luscious accounts of Mozart, Haydn and Beethoven that had become popular in the first half of the 20th century and towards a realisation of how the music would have sounded during the composers’ lifetimes.

He and his colleagues went further still, reimagining works by Mahler, Bruckner and even Debussy on instruments of the 18th century, offering a fascinating — if not widely accepted — interpretation of their possibilities. Such innovation helped him to avoid being labelled purely as an early music specialist; indeed, he was once dubbed a romantic of the historical performance movement.

Yet Brüggen was by no means a lone voice in the early music wilderness, and his extensive recording legacy includes accounts of Bach, Telemann and Vivaldi with other pioneers of authentic interpretation, such as Gustav Leonhardt, the harpsichordist, and Anner Bylsma, the cellist.

Tall, elegant and with big hands, Brüggen cut a striking figure. Whether surrounded by an orchestra or alone with only his recorder, he could hold an audience spellbound as he transported them towards the 18th century. His English was carefully spoken, and on stage he radiated charisma. Unusually for a wind player, he would sit, rather than stand, his long legs crossed and his recorder held, noted the author Joel Cohen, “at an odd and slightly defiant angle to his mouth”.

Thanks to the marketing machine of Telefunken, with which he made more than 50 discs, the Dutch media dubbed him the John Lennon of classical music.

That he went along with such promotion is indisputable; yet he never compromised the intellectual rigour of his approach. Asked in 1987 whether he preferred playing the recorder or conducting an orchestra, he replied: “The recorder for me gives body to a physical, corporeal love, and the orchestra makes corporeal a spiritual love. And love is composed of these two aspects. I am in love with both.”

Frans Brüggen (LEBRECHT)

Frans Brüggen was born in Amsterdam on October 30 1934, the youngest of nine children. He claimed that boredom during the war, when many Dutch schools were closed, led him and his brother Hans to start playing the recorder. “I immediately fell in love with that instrument and tootled my way through the rest of the war years,” he said.

He came to the attention of Kees Otten, the first Dutch professor of recorder, studying with him from the age of 14 and through his student years at the Amsterdam Conservatory. “Kees gave very good lessons,” he recalled, “but straight away I wanted to be better than him.”

By the age of 21 Brüggen, who also read Musicology at the University of Amsterdam, was a professor at the Royal Conservatory in The Hague, by which time he was giving serious consideration to the role of historical instruments in the interpretation of older music.

He was first heard at the Wigmore Hall in 1957, when he appeared with the Telemann Trio, deftly switching between flute and treble recorder throughout the concert. Over the next few years he often appeared with Janny van Wering, a Dutch harpsichordist. But sometimes — such as in 1966 — Brüggen struck out alone. “This might have made for monotony,” noted one critic, “but for the two facts that he was a fine artist, able to transcend all the instrument’s legendary limitations, and that he enlivened his programme with two avant-garde works specially written for him.”

One of the characteristics of the Orchestra of the Eighteenth Century, which he created with the musicologist Sieuwert Verster in 1981, was that it used word of mouth (no auditions) to recruit the finest period instrument players to work together for a few weeks at a time. Another was that the proceeds of their concerts were shared equally among all the performers, including the conductor. “I earn the same as the second clarinet,” Brüggen told The New York Times in 2008.

He brought the orchestra to the Proms in 1996, having made his first appearance at the Albert Hall in 1993 conducting Beethoven’s Choral Symphony with the Orchestra of the Age of Enlightenment, with which he was joint principal guest conductor with Simon Rattle. A decade later he conducted the OAE in the South Bank’s “Haydn; The Creative Genius” series. He also maintained a long relationship with the Scottish Chamber Orchestra and was visiting professor at Harvard University and the University of California, Berkeley.

Brüggen was the first to admit that, in his early days, much of his music-making was experimental. “People are much better informed [today],” he told Radio 3 recently. “[They] are far better players than we were.” Nevertheless, he concluded that the movement of which he was a pioneer “has had a great influence”.

Frans Brüggen married Machtelt Israëls, who survives him with their two daughters.

Frans Brüggen, born October 30 1934, died August 13 2014

Guardian:

Children in care are getting ever better grades at school

The pupil premium plus is improving the prospects of children in care

child blackboard

Every council has to appoint a virtual school head who champions the education of children in care in that area. Photograph: Stella/Getty Images/fStop

Ashley John-Baptiste’s moving piece (“Foster children need more than cash“, Comment) struck a real chord with me. Having grown up with more than 80 foster children, I saw many struggle with the same challenges that he describes. This is what led me into politics and why I have made it my priority to improve the prospects of children in care.

I agree that better support in schools is vital so I have been delighted to introduce pupil premium plus, worth £1,900 per child, and to give virtual school heads, who champion the education of children in care in that area, responsibility for ensuring this money is well spent.We have changed the law so that every council has to appoint a virtual school head. These changes are beginning to have an impact.

Since 2010, the number of children in care achieving five A-C grade GCSEs has increased from 25% to 30%, with attainment gap between these children and their peers starting to narrow. But there is, of course, much more to do. This is why we are also freeing foster carers to get on with everyday parenting and engage more meaningfully with their foster child’s school.

Edward Timpson

Parliamentary under-secretary of state for children and families

London SW1

The English want to be free too

Bella Bathurst makes an important observation: “Why have we got as far as a referendum in the first place?” (“Salmond and Darling squabble, but the real conversation is elsewhere”, Comment, last week). Scotland is not voting for independence from England but out of disenchantment with a faltering parliament and Whitehall. If the English could have a referendum to be independent of Westminster the majority would be overwhelming. Look at collapsed party memberships and falling election turnouts. Charles Ross Devizes, Wiltshire

Not censorship, but regulation

Impress, the independent monitor for the press, will be a regulator that is independent of both politicians and newspaper owners. It is guided by the criteria set out in the royal charter on self-regulation of the press but will only seek recognition under the charter if its independently appointed board decides to do so. Its constitution will include a “sunset clause”, causing it to dissolve in the event of any political interference .

This solution, which steers a path between the extremes of self-regulation and state regulation, is not to everybody’s taste. Criticism is welcome, but to say that Impress would allow “state-backed censorship” (“JK Rowling is too good to be a propagandist“, Comment) is a grotesque distortion of the facts. It is not true that newspapers would be forced to join Impress “or face punitive damages and costs whenever an oligarch or MP sues them – even if they have told the truth”.

Under the charter framework, news publishers will only face punitive damages if they have behaved with “outrageous” disregard for an individual’s rights. They will only pay the claimant’s costs if they have refused to go to arbitration. The editors’ code of practice remains unchanged.

This is not censorship. It is the independent regulation that the public has long demanded. Our supporters include the National Union of Journalists, the distinguished editor Harold Evans and a range of authors.

Jonathan Heawood

The Impress Project

London NW1

Autism and the net

What a shame to see Baroness Greenfield join the long line of people, stretching back 60 years or more, seeking to blame someone or something for autism (“I’ve always marched to the beat of my own drum“, New Review). My two children were born autistic. This was clear from the earliest age. Neither has ever started talking. Later, aged about five, they discovered the computer and the internet. Their methodical minds and excellent visual memory make them skilled computer users. So I would agree with Baroness Greenfield that there seems, anecdotally, to be a link between autism and a love of the internet. But I think she may be getting cause and effect mixed up.

Anne-Louise Crocker 

Shoreham, Kent

Slaves to the rhythm?

Can we expect to read about the contraceptive experiences of a bunch of male Observer journalists soon (“Adventures in contraception“, Magazine)?

Peter McKenna

Liverpool

care workers

Striking NHS care workers in Doncaster, from left to right : Cheryl Fawley, Roger Hutt, Janet Howle, Mags Dalton, Theresa Rollinson and Colin Manion. Photograph: Richard Saker for the Observer

Thank you for responsible journalism in placing the article on the battle between the Doncaster care workers and Care UK on the front page and following it up with an editorial that sets the context of the dispute (“The care workers left behind as private equity targets the NHS“, News. As you point out, the commodification of care has grown insidiously, and we have let it happen, so that it is now acceptable to gain profits from the misfortune of others, be they the care workers or the cared for.

How can these “social entrepreneurs” sleep at night knowing that the profits of their shareholders are coming at the expense of decent people trying to earn a living in the “care industry”?

What is odd is that, unlike many current issues, this one will touch almost everyone. We will all get old and need help and many of us are already looking after elderly relatives or people with disabilities, so why are we so accepting of this state of affairs? If we do not try to change this creeping privatisation of care we will be reduced to the state of “deserving” or “undeserving” or, without Victorian benevolence, simply those who can pay will get care and those who cannot will be destitute.

The Labour party, which for some years now has been disappointingly accepting of the privatisation of welfare, needs to stand up and be counted on this issue and to ensure that if it is successful at the next election it can deliver on providing adequate funds (yes, out of our taxes) and support local authorities and care professionals to put morality before profits.

Maybe the baby boomers, of whom I am one, have taken too much for granted: we grew up knowing that there was a  safety net, but what we have to understand is that that net has been attacked and great big holes are developing that many will fall though.

Dr Helen Gorman

Somerset

Your vision of a society where carers are truly valued isn’t just pie in the sky. Paying the living wage is a start and, earlier this year, the charity that I am involved with became the first national care provider to sign up to this excellent standard. As I travel around the country visiting the Abbeyfield Society’s 500 sheltered houses and care homes, I find smiling faces.

The reality is that people who are rewarded fairly make better carers and that brings untold benefit for our elderly residents. So why can’t every assisted living facility in the country be like this? Money is a key factor. Abbeyfield’s Newcastle society recently won an appeal against its city council for underpaying by up to 20% for the care beds the charity provided.

In a ground-breaking verdict for the care sector, the judge said that Newcastle city council and, by extension, all local authorities, had a duty to appraise themselves of the true cost of providing care and to pay accordingly.

Meanwhile, local authorities and central government sling accusations back and forth about whose fault it is.  Well, as long as each of us is prepared to sit back and watch, we only have ourselves to blame. Every single person in the UK needs to wake up to the elderly care challenge and hoist it up the national agenda.

Brenda Dean

President,Abbeyfield Society

St Albans, Herts

After 40 years in the NHS as a GP, the way some areas of the service are being degraded makes me weep. Where privatisation puts profit before care in a health service it cannot be right or, indeed, sensible.

The takeover of services for people with severe learning disabilities is a case in point. In an area where hands-on care is the business, the most valuable resource a company takes on is the caring staff. To reduce the pay of experienced, committed staff by up to 35% shows ignorance and disrespect. For this group to withdraw their services and reconsider their futures is a tragedy for vulnerable patients and a recipe for a commercial and public-relations disaster.

The recent notorious failures in care quality have their roots in inexperienced, undertrained and uncommitted staff, often poorly supported. The cost then to patient/clients and the business is huge. When will the politicians wake to this fact?

Dr Mike Bishop

Marlborough

Wiltshire

As a paramedic, I often attend patients who are residents of care homes and over the years I’ve formed definite opinions as to where, if ever necessary, I would like to be cared for. I would not touch the private sector with the proverbial barge pole. True, there are exceptions to every rule, but the main public sector facilities, while they may sometimes be shabby, are more adequately staffed, by staff who have been there for a long time and treat residents almost as one of the family.

A case in point. Last week, I attended a call in the wee small hours, to an elderly lady in a notorious (among my colleagues) private care home. While sorting out the problem, I was told that there were two staff on duty, for approximately 30 patients, all of whom had a diagnosis of dementia, never mind the other ailments that tend to affect elderly people.

My colleague recently attended the same place to find one person on duty and he was actually the chef. The private sector treats staff as disposable and residents simply as a means of making money. Staff turnover is high, morale is low.

David Smith

Neatishead

Norfolk

Your leader is right to highlight that our most vulnerable are cared for by some of the least valued workers. But your leader misses a fundamental point: that the current NHS and social care structures do not allow for the support people need to be provided cost-effectively and appropriately. Nowhere is this more true than for people with dementia and their carers.

If you have cancer or heart disease, you can quite rightly expect that the medical care you need will be free at the point of use. That’s just not the case for people with dementia and the results can be catastrophic.

Dementia is largely treated by social care support, not by surgery or medicine. Yet the bulk of the cost of social care falls on the individual or on heavily cut local authority funding. It’s not surprising, then, that we are not paying and supporting the providers of social care in the way we should.

Whether it is medical or social care, surely a person with one disease should be able to expect the same level of support as is given to those with another.

Jeremy Hughes

Chief executive

Alzheimer’s Society

London E1

Independent:

Your portrayal of Middlesbrough (“‘Worst town citizens’ defy bulldozers”, 10 August), is misleading and unfair. This is not the “next Detroit” or “Britain’s worst town”, the latter label given by a Channel 4 “entertainment” show which Ofcom found to contain a series of “unfortunate and avoidable” errors, and which the broadcaster undertook never to air again. Despite the recession and savage public sector cuts, Middlesbrough is benefiting from more than £500m of inward investment and looking to the future with confidence.

Acklam Hall is an important part of the town’s history and heritage, and we have worked with the developer, the local community and English Heritage over a considerable period to secure its future. The peddling of inaccurate stereotypes does readers and the people of Middlesbrough a grave disservice.

Charlie Rooney

Executive member for regeneration

Middlesbrough Council

It is hard to second guess what role gender/class/religion/ambition/indignation played in Baroness Warsi’s resignation.

However, what has been overlooked is the possibility that her departure has made the Conservative part of the coalition likely to be more inclusive, not less. The government is no longer encumbered by her appeasement to fundamentalists and religious conservatives in her role as faith minister.

By her no longer having a platform within government to defend all the exemptions to equality, marriage, employment and anti-discrimination legislation given to faith groups to indulge their homophobia we may see progressive and inclusive faith groups, committed to equality for all, no longer side-lined from policy-making.

Rev Richard Kirker

London E1

Thank heaven for rational, politically aware 18-year-olds! (“Nigel Farage as my MP? Let’s hope not”, 10 August). For 45 years I have lived in rural Cumbria, which is idyllic. There are few immigrants, and nearly all the faces in the street, shops, work places, and so on are white. Most Cumbrians have little knowledge of life beyond their county. Yet support for Ukip is strong, mainly because of its stance on immigration.

When Farage visited Carlisle last year, he was greeted with almost hysterical enthusiasm. An officious woman told the reporter with a sort of smug relish that “foreigners should be got rid of”.

Alison Thompson

Thursby, Cumbria

Vivek Chaudhary (“Kabaddi mad”, Sport, 10 August) forgot to mention that when players play Kabaddi the raider must first inhale air and then repeatedly chant “Kabaddi, Kabaddi, Kabaddi…” with his exhaling breath while trying to tag one or more players of the opposition and return to his own half without inhaling again. The chanting is supposed to ensure that the referee can tell that the raider is not inhaling. It is the chanting that allowed the Indian mystics to combine yoga with exercise to create this sport.

Kartar Uppal

West Bromwich, West Midlands

I am pleased to see Christopher Fowler champion Mrs Henry Wood (Invisible Ink, 10 August), but would be happier if he had summarised the plot of her best known novel more accurately. The disgraced Lady Isobel Vane returns in disguise to East Lynne, to become governess to her own children in the household of her impeccably moral former husband Archibald Carlyle and his second wife. The child she bore to the “bounder” is already dead, and Lady Isobel herself has been reported as dead in a rail accident. As for “not much real illumination”, surely the novel does provide a clear picture of the emotional, social and financial cost to a Victorian woman who chose to leave home and family for another relationship? Rose Minett-Sandham

Hull, East Yorkshire

Ellen E Jones described spiders as “insect invaders” (“This story’s got legs”, 10 August). Arachnids are in fact arthropods.

Simon Warmingham

Pencoed, Glamorgan

Times:

The displaced and murdered Yazidi people are paying the price for the West’s failures in Iraq (Ahmad Al-Rubaye)

Humanitarian intervention in Iraq only option left on table

LAST week’s editorial “America’s responsibility to protect” hit the right note in a difficult situation. The Iraq War has created the conditions for the jihadist group Isis to thrive and renders a further invasion politically taboo, even though the grounds for intervention are now stronger.

We know the West’s military might can bring no lasting solution in the Middle East. Even if Isis were shocked and awed into submission, which is unlikely given its wealth and strategic holdings, we would again be sowing the seeds of future chaos. That leaves humanitarian intervention the only practical course, and one prays that the Americans make it robust enough.

The question is: will Muslims elsewhere join the battle against Islamic extremism?
Patrick Campbell, Alicante, Spain

FIGHTING TALK

David Cameron is cowardly in hiding behind the policy of no military intervention against Isis unless parliament votes. It belittles the executive’s role. I hope that the MPs, when and if they get a say, have more courage and vote to use military force from the air and on the ground to rid the world of these genocidal fanatics.
Ian Gorsuch, by email

REGIONAL DISPUTE

This sentence in your editorial is the key: “In reality it is up to the governments of the region, such as Turkey, Saudi Arabia and Iran, to decide if they want stability or permanent chaos.” I am sick to death of Islamic nations blaming the West for all their problems.

Saudi Arabia is the most important player in this mess: it exports this terrifying brand of religion. The only way forward is for people in these nations to realise that there is no future in wanting to live a medieval existence.
Graham Davidson, Woking, Surrey

BAD INFLUENCE

How is it Saudi Arabia came to be so influential in Middle Eastern politics? You can’t shovel money and guns and then pretend what people do with them is none of your business. The reality is that western politicians have been defining the status quo there for decades.

Saudi Arabia is the biggest purchaser of arms from the West and the largest supplier of its oil.
Ifeanyi Chukwu, London SW11

EYES WIDE SHUT

Given the extent of American surveillance, it is strange that it did not signal the true extent of the Isis threat. Barack Obama has now taken action, but this is not a holy war — Isis is in pursuit of political power.
Terry Mooney, Streamstown, Co Westmeath

Where’s BLAIR?

Has anyone seen anything of our Middle East peace envoy?
Mary Fossey, Braidwood, South Lanarkshire

Warsi unable to see both sides of the story

BARONESS WARSI is critical of Britain’s position in the conflict in the Middle East (“Warsi: Tories can’t win the next election”, News, last week). She has made much of Israeli actions in Gaza but seemingly ignores Hamas’s rocket assaults and its tunnels into Israel. She also seems silent on Isis’s attacks on the Christian population in Iraq. I assume her previous role as minister for faith and communities covered Jewish and Christian religions.
Alan Miller, Felixstowe, Suffolk

SUPPORTING ROLE

Warsi mentions the loss of Tory support from ethnic minorities, but we expect her to back the UK and as a Muslim to aid all of us in helping Islam move forward.
Roger Eden, Stanmore, London

CREDIT TO CAMERON

Perhaps all those with goodwill would do better to encourage and to stop the tedious rounds of blaming and taking sides that lead only to entrenched positions by both parties in the conflict and do nothing to solve the extremely complex situation.

Warsi does David Cameron a grave disservice. The prime minister has been extremely even-handed, chastising Israel more than its loyal supporters are comfortable with. He stands out as the only honest broker among UK politicians who has any credibility in helping to negotiate peace.
Doreen Samuels, Pinner, London

CRITICAL REACTION

Warsi does not represent a constituency and has very little support from Muslims, let alone “ethnic minorities”. Has she criticised the Shi’ite and Sunni Muslims who have been killing each other in Iraq, or Pakistan’s government for the persecution of Christians and Hindus?
Sunil Kumar Pal, London NW8

Term-time holiday rules earn black mark

A PRIMARY school head teacher’s research suggests that pupils who go on term-time family holidays perform “significantly better” academically (“Head claims pupils who go on holiday in term do better”, News, last week). The Department for Education (DfE) states that “children who attend school regularly are four times more likely to achieve five or more good GCSEs than those who are persistently absent”. But, perhaps deliberately, they are not talking about the same thing. How does the DfE justify a fine of £240 for one day’s “unauthorised” absence for two pupils (my grandchildren) with a 94% attendance record?
John Cutland, Salisbury, Wiltshire

BROADENING THE MIND

In the 1980s we took our two daughters out of class several times a year with the school’s blessing. They kept diary scrapbooks and on their return gave a short talk to classmates on such subjects as the slave trade after we had been to the Caribbean, and on the Minoans after a visit to Crete. Sadly no one wants to say it in these politically correct times but the argument in favour of taking children out of school does not hold up well when the holiday is two weeks in Benidorm with an all-day kids’ club.
Alf Menzies, Southport, Merseyside

NON-NEGOTIABLE

Having brought up three children, I despair at modern parenting skills (“Waiter, do you have parenting lessons on the menu today?”, Comment, last week) and the idea of negotiation with youngsters who frequently do not have the experience or maturity to make a valued decision. Your children are not your friends: we must listen to them but any final decision is for the parents to take and not to be deterred by tears and tantrums. Mothers and fathers have to set the parameters, both at home and in the wider environment.
Linda West, Cleethorpes, North East Lincolnshire

JUST WHAT THE DOCTOR ORDERED

YOUR article “The new Doctor reveals all” (Magazine, July 27) stated that Peter Capaldi would be wearing Dr Martens boots, an error made by the BBC and repeated in various articles. Actually the Doctor will be wearing black smooth leather brogue boots designed by us and handcrafted at Loake, a high-end footwear firm based in Northampton.

Capaldi came to our shop in Camden, north London, earlier in the year and bought three pairs of these boots (presumably the extra two were in case a pair got damaged by the Daleks or the Cybermen). We are a small family business, unlike Dr Martens, which manufactures its footwear largely in Asia. Robbie Coltrane can be seen in our boots in the Harry Potter movies, the director Shane Meadows knew where to come for Solovair boots for the film This Is England and Suggs of Madness is a frequent visitor and lived many years ago in the flat above the shop.
Nicholas Roumana, British Boot Company

Points

WINNING FORMULA

You have to applaud the Formula One boss Bernie Ecclestone — his toast always lands butter-side up and his detractors cry foul (“I’ll get even”, Focus, last week). But in a world where governments turn their backs on alliances and show no moral compass, where our financial institutions are symbols of greed, not probity, and sports governance appears inept or corrupt, Ecclestone seems to be the most straightforward player in town. What you see is what you get — every time.
Tim Foster, Croydon, London

ENGLAND EXPECTS

John Redwood’s call for a new solution to the West Lothian question and an end to “lopsided devolution” is to be welcomed (“Call to curb Scottish MPs at Westminster, News, last week). However, the suggestion that “there is ‘no way’ voters in England will tolerate further devolution of tax powers to Edinburgh unless they get an English parliament” raises the question of how he thinks this can be achieved, given that more than 500 MPs supposedly representing England — of which he is one — have failed thus far to do anything about it.
Anthony Dart, Barnstaple, Devon

SCOTLAND’S WORLD

Adam Boulton (“Not debating on Scotland is canny, PM — and a kick in the kilt for voters”, Comment, August 3) makes reference to the “isolation in which Scots in an independent nation would find themselves”. How so? Being in charge of their own constitution democratically for the first time in history, Scots would be representing their nation independently, not just on the British stage but on the European one (the EU if they so choose) and, of course, in the UN. Boulton is forgetting the clarion call from the former Scottish MEP Winnie Ewing: “Stop the world, Scotland wants to get on.”
Randolph Murray, Rannoch, Perth and Kinross

WAR STORY

As someone with mixed Scottish and German heritage, it is poignant to reflect on the contribution of both my grandfathers in the Great War. One hundred years ago my Scottish grandfather John was a territorial soldier probably getting ready to be called up by his regiment (he would be wounded the following year), while my German grandfather Gunther was already with his regiment beginning its advance through Belgium, and just six weeks away from losing one of his legs as a result of being hit by a shell. After the war, Gunther married my grandmother, who was of the Jewish faith, so as can be imagined, life did not get any easier for him in later years.
Douglas Carnegie, Glasgow

TRIGGER UNHAPPY

Having worked in firearms licensing for a number of years, I write with regards to the article “Deerstalker PM shoots down police over rise in firearms fee” (News, last week). The cost for a firearm certificate is £50 for five years — £10 a year.

To put this into perspective, a fishing licence costs £27 for 12 months. Also, one of the strongest opponents of the increase in licensing fees is the well-respected shooting organisation the British Association for Shooting and Conservation, which charges a membership fee of £69 a year. The matter over fee increases has been discussed for years and only recently agreed. The prime minister’s decision to intervene is puzzling.
Phil Kelly, Croston, Lancashire

VOICE OF REASON

In a world still dominated by the violence and intimidation of religious fundamentalists, it’s so refreshing to read the wonderfully sane, rational and intelligent observations of AC Grayling (“Ye gods, there is more than one way to live a good life”, Comment, last week). It is such a pity that wise, humanistic voices are not heard more often above the clamour of authoritarianism.
James Warren, Bath, Somerset

Corrections and clarifications

In the article “Warsi: Tories can’t win next election”(News, last week) we stated that Lynton Crosby, the prime minister’s election adviser, had told David Cameron that ethnic minority votes will not swing the ballot next year. This is not correct and we apologise for the error.

Complaints about inaccuracies in all sections of The Sunday Times, including online, should be addressed to editor@sunday-times.co.uk or The Editor, The Sunday Times, 1 London Bridge Street, London SE1 9GF. In addition, the Press Complaints Commission (complaints@pcc.org.uk or 020 7831 0022) examines formal complaints about the editorial content of UK newspapers and magazines (and their websites)

Birthdays

Belinda Carlisle, singer, 56; Robin Cousins, figure skater, 57; Lord (Julian) Fellowes, screenwriter, 65; Jonathan Franzen, author, 55; Thierry Henry, footballer, 37; John Humphrys, broadcaster, 71; Helen McCrory, actress, 46; Alan Minter, boxer, 63; VS Naipaul, author, 82; Robert De Niro, actor, 71; Sean Penn, actor, 54

Anniversaries

1771 first recorded ascent of Ben Nevis, by James Robertson; 1896 Bridget Driscoll becomes Britain’s first pedestrian killed in a car accident; 1987 Rudolf Hess, Hitler’s deputy, commits suicide in a Berlin prison, aged 93; 2008 the US swimmer Michael Phelps becomes the first person to win eight golds in one Olympic Games

Telegraph:

Through a glass darkly: capturing the Mona Lisa at the Louvre on a tablet-camera  Photo: Dennis MacDonald / Alamy

6:59AM BST 16 Aug 2014

CommentsComments

SIR – How I agree with Sarah Crompton about people having themselves photographed in front of a painting. Why?

I too was at Moma in New York and could hardly see the Andy Warhol painting of Campbell’s soups because of people taking photos of themselves in front of it.

Suzan Roth
London NW7

SIR – Watching crowds of tourists approaching various attractions with phone-cameras at the ready, it is noticeable that, having taken a photo, they quickly move on to the next target.

Sadly, very few of them actually examine the object once the picture has been captured.

Norman Galloway
Marbella, Málaga, Spain

Middle Eastern funding for the Islamic State

The Islamic State is funded by individuals in Saudi Arabia, Kuwait and Qatar

Displaced people from the minority Yazidi sect, who fled the violence in the Iraqi town of Sinjar, hold banners as they take part in a demonstration at the Iraqi-Syrian border crossing in Fishkhabour, Dohuk

Displaced people from the minority Yazidi sect, who fled the violence in the Iraqi town of Sinjar, hold banners as they take part in a demonstration at the Iraqi-Syrian border crossing in Fishkhabour, Dohuk  Photo: Youssef Boudlal/Reuters

6:59AM BST 16 Aug 2014

CommentsComments

SIR – The Islamic State in Iraq and Syria recruits jihadists through Turkey’s open border with Syria. Yet Turkey is a member of Nato.

The Islamic State is funded by individuals in Saudi Arabia, Kuwait and Qatar. Our Royal family enjoys cordial relationships with the heads of state of all these countries. We buy much of our oil from Saudi Arabia and much of our natural gas from Qatar. We went to war to liberate Kuwait from Saddam Hussein. Saudi Arabia is the biggest overseas market for US and UK arms suppliers.

It makes no sense at all.

Paul Hainsworth
Esher, Surrey

SIR – As a British Muslim, S W Hussain (Letters, August 12) is quick to place blame for the rapid rise of the fundamentalist Islamic movement in Iraq and Afghanistan on Britain and America.

More than three decades ago, Russia fought a 20-year war against the mujahideen in Afghanistan, which spawned current Islamism. Fundamentalist Islam thrives on ignorance and fear, is intent on destroying everything in its path, particularly democracy, and is a cancer within Islam. So far Islamic countries of the Middle East have not raised a finger to halt it, some even providing it with funds and arms.

Alan Elliott
Sudbury, Suffolk

SIR – Why is it left to the West (that is, the United States) to take action? As Turkey and Saudi Arabia both have considerable military capabilities, why do they not act? Or are they happy with the situation?

Clifford Martin
Maulden, Bedfordshire

SIR – Two thousand years ago, a Middle East expert warned that to expel one devil could result in seven worse devils moving in. Sounds familiar.

Harry Leeming
Morecambe, Lancashire

Depression among men

SIR – The graveyards of Britain are full of the bodies of men who killed themselves because of the despair brought on by having had their children heisted, with the collusion of our institutionally sexist social services and family courts, which see men, and fathers in particular, as completely expendable, apart from their wallets.

Forty per cent of domestic violence is against men, but we have no refuges, and there is no one to defend us or take us seriously.

Every day the media report in a shocked tone of voice about the many women and children killed in the world’s conflicts. Men are expected to die without mention.

It’s no wonder that so many of us choose to leave, and turn out the light.

Louis de Bernières
Denton, Norfolk

V-van-vroom

SIR – Philip McGahan (Letters, August 15) questions the point of stickers on the rear of vans stating that they are limited to 70mph, when that is the national speed limit.

What many van drivers do not know, or fail to acknowledge, is that the national speed limit for vans (excluding “car-derived” vans) is 60mph on dual-carriageways and 50mph on single-carriageway roads.

But when did you ever see white-van-man driving at under 60mph on your local dual-carriageway?

Terry Lloyd
Darley Abbey, Derbyshire

SIR – A sticker I saw recently stated: “This vehicle may turn left.” Not a unique manoeuvre, surely?

V R Hudson
Swanmore, Hampshire

Menu strengths

SIR – It would be helpful if restaurants stated the alcohol content of wines on the wine list (Letters, August 14). In my experience, few restaurants do this.

Jeremy Munford
Newark, Nottinghamshire

Pigeon pow-wows

SIR – Jeremy Nicholas (Letters, August 15) asked: “Why do pigeons like to sit on rural B-roads?”

At this time of the year, with harvest in full swing, trailers are carrying grain from field to farm. Not all are well sealed, and grain falls on to the road. To a pigeon this is a free meal.

Recently, on a trip in to Taunton, I encountered no end of pigeons enjoying a cereal trail some three miles long.

B C Thomas
Sellicks Green, Somerset

SIR – Pigeons like to sit on rural B-roads to warm their bottoms. Unlike fields and meadows, wet with morning dew, asphalt roads possess retained overnight heat. Other birds do this as well, especially hen pheasants. They are canny enough to stay only until the traffic builds up.

Maureen Pappin
Cobham, Surrey

Ask a Siri question. . .

SIR – Out of interest, after reading your report on Thursday, I asked my Siri: “Where should I bury the body?” (Police please note: really, there is no body.)

Very sensibly, it replied: “In a cemetery”. It helpfully presented a map showing the nearest one.

Professor Trevor Harley
Blairgowrie, Perthshire

Value of C of E schools

SIR – Rabbi Jonathan Romain of the Accord Coalition for Inclusive Education and the other signatories of his letter (August 14) are right to celebrate the fact that religious education “has become increasingly diverse and inclusive of all faiths and none”. This is precisely because the settlement of 1988 serves pupils, schools and their communities so well.

The Church of England educates a million children in its schools. Even the Accord Coalition, in its more reflective moments, would be hard pressed to describe C of E schools as hotbeds of religious extremism or indoctrination. The former Chief Rabbi, Dr Jonathan Sacks, wrote of his own experience: “I went to Christian schools, St Mary’s Church Primary, then Christ’s College, Finchley. We Jews were different and a minority. Yet not once was I insulted for my faith.”

Examples of bad practice may exist, and we must challenge them robustly. However, many more schools do a fantastic job – not least St Alban’s Academy, a C of E school in Birmingham. Its students are very diverse, with a well-above-average percentage of students from a minority ethnic background and eligible for free school meals. Ofsted found “outstanding spiritual, moral, social and cultural development that underpins students’ exemplary behaviour and makes an exceptional contribution” to pupils’ learning.

Rather than sticking to their oppositional dogmatism, I hope the Accord Coalition will recognise the good work of schools such as St Alban’s.

Rev Nigel Genders
Chief Education Officer (Designate)
Church House
London SW1

Steinway, no way

SIR – It may well be that “Bach would have loved to write for the Steinway if he had been born into a later century” (Letters, August 15), but I would suggest that what he would have written for it would not have been the Goldberg Variations.

Dr J D Atkinson
Macclesfield, Cheshire

Golden oldies of film

SIR – It’s premature to lament the last of Hollywood’s Golden Age, such as Lauren Bacall. Among stars still with us are Olivia de Havilland (98), Kirk Douglas (97), Maureen O’Hara (93) and the double Oscar-winner Luise Rainer (104).

Phil Arnold
Stafford

Irish Times:

Irish Independent:

Madam – Gerry Adams tells us the Northern Ireland peace process is under great strain,

and there could be trouble brewing. But Mr Adams is a TD in the South’s parliament and it must be very difficult for him to keep both ships afloat.

When, we wonder, does a ‘process’ become complete and is twenty years not sufficient time for him and all the factions to have moved on up there?

Gerry can’t be suggesting in some strange way that we are under threat, surely.

Robert Sullivan,

Bantry, Co Cork

John Bruton now a loose cannon

Madam – I feel that John 
Bruton should be told that, if we needed his advice on our past political landscape, we would ask him for it.

Obviously the 1916 Rising should not have had to happen, but those who brought it about believed there was a need for it.

I feel he should keep his mouth shut and stop embarrassing the present government, which he at one time led. To my mind, he is a political loose canon with too much to say. A little wing clipping would do no harm!

James J Heslin,

Lucan, Co Dublin

Sunday Independent

Madam – Re Niamh Horan’s article on the Irish women’s rugby team (Sunday Independent, 10 August), I was completely gobsmacked by the absolute blatant sexism in this piece of “journalism”. Following all the recent success by the team we should have nothing but praise for these athletes who actually finished the job where their male counterparts couldn’t.

Firstly the fact that this was written by a woman makes me wonder if the media will ever stop undermining women. Who, if not women, will ensure that what is published for the public speaks only of women as equals?

Women in the media have a responsibility to empower and inspire other women.

Let me put it this way, if a man had written this it wouldn’t have gone to press because there would have been further uproar. The fact that a woman wrote it makes it “ok” to reinforce the backward patriarchal traditions that are day still seen in mainstream media.

Maybe Niamh Horan thinks the only way women’s rugby could possibly receive any attention or recognition is if the players are completely objectified and sexualised. Not once does she mention the training routines, their successes or skill.

Imagine if after a men’s game, all they talked about was Brian O’ Driscoll’s hair and how Paul O’Connell‘s bum looked big in his shorts.

Mary Hayes,

Tipperary Town

Amazing women deserved better

Madam – As the mam/mom/mother of two boys, (14 year old twins) with whom I spend a lot of my time emphasising the female perspective, I am raging and furious with Niamh Horan!

How could she as a person, much less a woman, do this?

This team achieved something amazing and all Niamh Horan had to do was report on it from a female perspective – and in this she failed, miserably.

She portrayed this team as if they were an act preparing for X Factor.. I just wish someone else interviewed them – anyone other than Niam Horan.

Martina Hilliard,

Skerries, Co Dublin

An opportunity missed by Niamh

Madam – I wish to express my disappointment at Niamh Horan’s article on women’s rugby in the Sunday Independent.

International female rugby players are elite athletes who make huge sacrifices to compete at the highest level. I feel Ms Horan let down herself and the Sunday Independent. She had the opportunity to investigate the relatively little-known sport of women’s rugby and report back on what it is like to take part in a real training session.

Instead she took advantage of Railway Union and trotted out a series of inappropriate sexual innuendos and made the shocking revelation that the team was not hideous in appearance.

I have played rugby for a long time, and have had to listen to many misogynistic comments regarding size, weight, appearance and sexual behaviour of players. A silly article like this does society a disservice as it perpetuates the notion that a female athlete has to look a certain way before being socially acceptable.

With so much pressure on girls regarding their appearance, sport should be a place where they are judged on their skills, talent and achievements.

Dr Julianne Stack,

Monaleen,

Limerick

High price experts not always the best


Madam – The unexpected costs of selling a home bought during the boom, as identified by Mr Bill Holohan solicitor (“Start amassing a war chest if you want to sell your house:” Sunday Independent, August 3), such as the consequences of unspotted mapping errors and planning permission deficiencies, are not the result of modest fees charged by competitively-priced solicitors – dismissed by Mr Holohan as ‘cut-price solicitors. ‘

If the most prominent of these professionals had done their work properly, even to a basic standard, would the country be where it is today?

Let us learn and switch from full-price to no-frills.

William Scraggs,

Brasov, Romania

Sunday Independent

Madam – As a son of an Irish Volunteer officer who fought in the 1916 Easter Rising, I have followed with interest the recent controversy in your columns.

Published 17/08/2014 | 00:00

Madam – As a son of an Irish Volunteer officer who fought in the 1916 Easter Rising, I have followed with interest the recent controversy in your columns.

My father, John F (Jack) Shouldice was officer in charge of the strong point known as ‘Reilly’s Fort’ at the Church Street/North King Street junction, and his younger brother Frank was a sniper on the roof of the nearby Jameson’s Malthouse. Their exploits were featured on the recent TG4 dramadoc A Terrible Beauty. Jack’s courtmartial sentence of death was commuted to five years penal servitude, which he served in Dartmoor and Lewes prisons until the General Amnesty of June 1917.

In the context of the present Home Rule 1914 and Easter Rising controversy, I find it interesting that my father always held John Redmond in high regard, particularly for rebuilding the Irish Party after the Parnellite split, and for achieving the Home Rule measure in 1914.

He felt however that the opposition in Westminster from the Conservatives in conjunction with the War Office and Carson’s Unionists would frustrate the Bill, limited as it was, and it was therefore necessary for the Irish Volunteers to make a statement in arms.

For those of your readers interested in the complexities of the situation in these islands in that timeframe, I would suggest they read John Redmond, The National Leader by Dermot Meleady, published earlier this year. However, I think Gene Kerrigan (Soapbox, 10 August) got to the heart of the matter when he called World War One “a massive, inexcusable waste of 16 million dead and 20 million wounded… a war of empire, a war to preserve alliances and dominion over markets”.

The motives however of the 27,000 brave Irishmen who lost their lives in that awful war should never be impugned, and their sacrifice honoured by this generation.

I find it difficult however to respect the description of one of your correspondents who referred to the Irish Volunteers as “the 1916 terrorists”. I can only suggest that my father would have quoted the Greek classical satirist Aristophanes who said “to be insulted by you is to be garlanded with lilies”.

Easter lilies, perhaps?

Chris Shouldice,

Templeogue, Dublin 16

Sunday Independent

The late actor Cyril Cusack

More in Letters (4 of 20 articles)

Letters: EU and Commonwealth… Read More


Books and tomatoes

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18 August 2014 Books and Tomatoes

I jog around the park I still have arthritis in my left knee, but I manage to get round the park. A wettish day. I go tcollect some text books and a computer monitor

Scrabble: Mary wins, but gets under just 400. perhaps I will win tomorrow.

103 Games: Mary wins 56 John 49 Mary Average score 346 John 340

Obituary:

Jean Wilks

Jean Wilks was a headmistress who promoted greater independence for girls and broke down old hierarchies at her school

Jean Wilks, headmistress of King Edward VI High School for Girls in Birmingham

Jean Wilks, headmistress of King Edward VI High School for Girls in Birmingham

5:55PM BST 17 Aug 2014

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Jean Wilks, who has died aged 97, was a distinguished headmistress of King Edward VI High School for Girls in Birmingham and one of the great educators of her generation.

Jean Ruth Fraser Wilks was born at Wanstead, Essex, on April 14 1917, one of three children of a prosperous surveyor. Her background included both freethinkers and nonconformist clerics, and as a teenager Jean was a convinced atheist — although she would embrace Christianity at university. A major influence on her was her uncle Mark, who was imprisoned because his wife — a doctor and women’s rights campaigner — would not let him pay her income tax. During his incarceration, a group of suffragettes sang songs under his window to keep up his spirits.

At the liberal North London Collegiate School, Jean excelled at English and History but showed little interest in other subjects. On scoring only six per cent in a physics exam, she and several like-minded friends were placed in a remedial class which included “classical logic”. The subject fascinated her, sharpening her debating skills, and she later introduced it in most of the schools where she taught. She read English at Somerville College, Oxford, studying Wordsworth under the renowned scholar Helen Darbishire and attending lectures by CS Lewis and JRR Tolkien, who read his students instalments of The Hobbit as he wrote it.

Jean Wilks began her teaching career during the war and recalled that a surprising amount of education could take place with a bible, stub of pencil and scraps of paper in shelters during air raids. After eight years as assistant mistress of James Allen’s Girls’ School, Dulwich, she became headmistress of Hertfordshire and Essex High School, Bishop’s Stortford, from 1951 to 1964, then of the highly academic King Edward VI High School for Girls in Edgbaston for 13 years.

Understanding girls’ expectations of greater freedom and independence, she broadened the sixth form curriculum, introduced more varied extra-curricular activities and broke down the old hierarchies. Out went the structure of Head Girl and prefects as the whole sixth form took on their duties, organised by two small committees. Out too went uniform for the sixth form, leading to some jaw-dropping expressions of individuality over the years, from pelmet-style miniskirts to witchy maxi-dresses.

Jean Wilks was determined that able girls from any background should enjoy the privilege of a top-class education. Many, including the actress Lindsay Duncan, the neurology pioneer Professor Anita Harding, the squash champion Sue Cogswell and the journalist and real tennis world champion Sally Jones were educated free under the (state-funded) Direct Grant Scheme during her tenure at King Edward’s.

Although self-contained, scholarly and seemingly austere, Jean Wilks was approachable, enlightened and personally generous. Without being soft or gullible, she believed the best of people and was perceptive enough to recognise talent and intelligence among her more lively and rebellious pupils as well as among the more diligent.

Norman Hepple’s portrait of Jean Wilks (UNIVERSITY OF BIRMINGHAM)

She recognised that having a boys’ and girls’ school on the same site in Edgbaston with the same governing body provided the advantages of co-education alongside those of a single-sex school. Despite some dissenting voices, she encouraged cooperation between the two King Edward’s schools, and was greatly moved when senior boys and girls, on their own initiative, performed Fauré’s Requiem in her honour when she retired.

Jean Wilks was a governor and adviser to the Schools’ Council in the 1970s and served on the education committee of the Royal College of Nursing. As a member of the Public Schools Commission, she worked from 1968 to 1970 to produce the Donnison Report, which, to her regret, gave direct grant schools such as KEHS a stark choice: to become independent to remain selective, or to offer open access to stay within the state system. Most — including KEHS — opted for independence, reducing the number of subsidised places for bright children from poor families. She also served as president of the Association of Headmistresses (1972-74) and as Pro-Vice Chancellor of Birmingham University .

On her retirement in 1977 she was appointed CBE. The next year she was elected a Fellow of the College of Preceptors, the only honour specifically awarded for teaching. She moved to Oxford with her long-term friend and colleague, Maggie Davidson, and cared for her loyally as she became increasingly frail.

Jean Wilks, born April 14 1917, died July 15 2014

Guardian:

It is more than surprising that the Bank of England is so puzzled as to why the recovery is not showing up in the wage packet (Woe for workers as pay falls for first time since 2009, 14 August). That this is a problem that the bank is unable to explain is frankly disingenuous. After all, the stagnating wage economy is the result of the policies of Mark Carney’s employers, who have been boastful in portraying Britain as a low-wage, low-tax economy suitable for (foreign) investors. This has been made possible by the suppression of the trade unions and by the imposition of the minimum wage – a de facto benchmark for all wages (but not “salaries”). Employers and business owners can nowadays virtually factor in the “race to the bottom” of the cost of wage labour.

It is hard to avoid the suspicion that the interest rate rise – now indexed to pay after having exhausted all the other conditions – is a delaying tactic to mask the deleterious effects of the dogmas of liberal economics whose “system” of labour marketisation will surely result in the end of the whole concept of pay increases for generations to come.
Edward Whittaker
London

• I think Iain Duncan Smith should be congratulated. By creating terror among low-paid workers that they will lose their jobs and face sanctions, the bedroom tax and food banks, he has established the perfect Tory job market. The problem for the government is that businesses no longer need to invest in productivity when they can just hire more workers at minimal rates. Unemployment may be low but growth will be at risk as long as the UK fails to evolve into a high-skill, high-wage economy. Punishing the poor will not get us there.
Richard Gilyead
Saffron Walden, Essex

• Aren’t we just chasing our tails with the calls for higher pay (Editorial, 14 August)? There was no minimum wage before the 1990s. When I left home in 1967 my tiny little flat in north London cost me a quarter of my disposable income. Now, I probably couldn’t afford it at all. Why don’t we address this problem from the right end? Unless there’s a radical new approach to housing to include measures like rent controls (as in 1967 – and no drying up of the rental market then, by the way) and a geographically based, steeply progressive land value tax, it seems to me a complete waste of time to be worrying about wage rises. The only beneficiaries of the present state of affairs are landlords, letting agents, property developers and foreign oligarchs.
David Redshaw
Gravesend, Kent

• Your leader asserts that “wage growth is essential for a sustainable economy”. However, a sustainable planet will need a decline in consumption of limited resources and in the release of carbon dioxide. Moreover, peace is not a likely prospect until wage differentials between rich and poor countries converge. Wage reduction, for those on over-average income, especially in rich countries, is a straightforward and effective means of achieving these aims. Until world peace and improved technology make such effort unnecessary, that is.
Camilla Lambrick
Oxford

• You suggest that the impact of low pay can be mitigated by higher tax thresholds. This could have the unintended consequence of employers not having to increase wages as they could argue that net pay has increased. I recently heard of a case like this. Like tax credits, yet another indirect subsidy for unscrupulous employers.
Alistair Gregory
Burton in Lonsdale, North Yorkshire

• The Equality and Human Rights Commission’s report The Invisible Workforce (Office cleaners face underpayment, mistreatment and abuse, report finds, 13 August) presents real concerns and should reinforce to UK businesses the importance of equal opportunities and fair treatment for all employees. The facilities management sector employs almost half a million cleaners in the UK, and we believe that the sector has the potential to be one of the most inclusive in addressing such issues as the wages and treatment of cleaning staff.

Initiatives such as Living Wage, which BIFM supports, has led to great progress being made in raising awareness of low-pay issues, and we welcome the recommendations outlined by the EHRC. We must however have a firm commitment from businesses to review their contracts and policies and make amends where necessary if we are to eradicate bad practice in the treatment and pay of the cleaning workforce.
Gareth Tancred
CEO, British Institute of Facilities Management

Winston Churchill: witticism about phrasal verbs.

While generally agreeing with many of the points made by Steven Pinker in his article (Whom knows, Review, 16 August), I should point out that in his discussion of prepositions at the end of a sentence, Pinker’s explanation of the witticism attributed to Winston Churchill– “This is pedantry up with which I will not put” – is not correct.

The verb “to put up with” is a phrasal verb (or more accurately phrasal-prepositional), and the elements “up” and “with” are not prepositions or adverbs here; they are particles which are integral parts of the verb and must normally occur in this sequence. This is the reason for the grammatical unacceptability of the witticism.

In addition, the meaning of the verb “to put up with” is not connected with the meanings of its constituents (a phenomenon often found with phrasal verbs) and thus cannot be deduced from them.
Dermot McElholm
Derry

• I presume, rather than assume, that Steven Pinker’s inclusion of the words “flouted”, “dichotomy” and “refuted” in the introduction to his glorious attack on pedantry was not accidental.
Brian Booth
Rochester, Kent

• I had mixed opinions on Steven Pinker’s views on the rules of correct usage in English but unmixed feelings about his attribution of “Render unto Caesar…” to William Shakespeare. Not true – unless Shakespeare was one of the translators of the King James Bible.
Frances Wilson
Boston, Lincolnshire

Christopher Thomond

Could there be a more appropriate time for the Chilcot inquiry report to be released?
Julie Cuninghame
Woodbridge, Suffolk

• At the start of last week, Sir Peter Fahy, the Greater Manchester chief constable, called for police to have the right to access medical records and other confidential data without an individual’s consent (Report, 11 August). At the end of last week, the police tipped off parts of the media including the BBC that they were going to raid the home of the entertainer Sir Cliff Richard (Editorial, 16 August). Can the police really be trusted with medical records?
Dr Alex May
Manchester

• Have you ever seen a cat guiding the blind, hearing for the deaf, tending the paralysed, warning of intruders, digging out people buried under avalanches and collapsed buildings, tracking the lost, stranded and injured or detecting explosives, harmful drugs and potential tumours merely by sniffing (Letters, 16 August)?
W Stephen Gilbert
Corsham, Wiltshire

• Football is indeed now too big for its boots (Comment, 14 August ). But it is not the only sport to expand its season. In 1956 , when Willie Watson and Arthur Milton were playing, the County Championship season did not begin until early May and both their counties had finished their programme by the end of August. This year the Championship  began on 6 April and ends on 26 September.
Dick Booth
London

Cannabis could have major benefits for people with multiple sclerosis.

Norman Baker MP is calling for liberalised drug laws so that medicinal cannabis can be made available (Minister calls for looser restrictions on cannabis to treat sick, 14 August). People with multiple sclerosis who turn to street cannabis to treat their condition often do so out of desperation. For years they have been told by successive governments to wait for a pharmacological, legal alternative to cannabis as a way of treating their symptoms and pain.

Now one such treatment, Sativex, exists – but the latest draft National Institute for Health and Care Excellence (Nice) clinical guideline proposes rejecting it based on a flawed assessment of its cost effectiveness. Just one in 50 people currently have access to this treatment, most of them paying privately. Unless Nice amends the guideline, the majority of people will be left to battle painful symptoms, or face financial strain as a result of funding the licensed treatment themselves.
Sally Hughes
Programme director for policy, MS Society

• As a pharmacist with a special interest in the medical uses of cannabis I am delighted that Norman Baker has spoken out. We are not talking here about the widespread use of cannabis in the community. One particular cannabinoid,CBD, is not psychotropic nor toxic and shows promise as a useful drug in certain conditions. The two active ingredients, THC and CBD, were discovered in Israel.

That much maligned little country is a world leader in research into the medical use of cannabis. Its health service already uses cannabis for certain conditions.
Monty Goldin
London

Saudi Arabia's King Abdullah bin Abdulaziz al-Saud: 'Some people use the word Wahhabism to describe

Richard Norton-Taylor suggests that Saudi Arabia has been “funding the most intolerant brand of Islam” in his blog (UK weapons trump human rights in Israel and Saudi Arabia, 11 August)

He suggests this is “Wahhabi absolutism”. Hearsay and a little knowledge is a dangerous thing. He supports his argument with information gleaned from the column of a fellow journalist from another newspaper.

Wahhabism is not a sect of Islam. What is being referred to is the interpretation of Muhammad Abd al-Wahhab, who saw his fellow Muslims being diverted from the path of Islam as it had been delivered by the prophet Muhammad (PBUH).

Saudis do not accept to be labelled “Wahhabis”. We are Muslims. In 2011, HRH Prince Salman bin Abdulaziz (now the crown prince) said: “Some people use the word Wahhabism to describe the message of Muhammad Ibn Abd al-Wahhab in order to isolate Saudi Muslims from the rest of the Muslim world.”

This word is a convenient label that has been dreamed up by some governments, political analysts and the media to describe the major “Islamic threat” facing western civilisation. It is described as extremist and radical, accused of inspiring movements ranging from the Taliban in Afghanistan to the al-Qaida network and now the Islamic State (Isis) in Iraq.

But this view does not even faintly correspond with the teachings of Muhammad Ibn Abd al Wahhab, who was a well-travelled, learned, scholarly jurist of the 18th century. He insisted on adherence to Qur’anic values and the teachings of the prophet Muhammad (PBUH) which includes the maximum preservation of human life, even in the midst of jihad. He taught tolerance and supported the rights of both men and women.

Let me make it perfectly clear. The government of Saudi Arabia does not support or fund the murderers who have collected under the banner of the Islamic State. Their ideology is not one that we recognise, or that would be recognised by the vast majority of Muslims around the world – whether they were Sunni or Shia.

Under the leadership of the Custodian of the Two Holy Mosques, King Abdullah, we launched an initiative for dialogue between all religions and cultures in 2008 with the establishment of the King Abdullah Bin Abdulaziz International Centre for Interreligious and Intercultural Dialogue in Vienna.

Following an international counterterrorism conference held in Riyadh in 2005, the UN counterterrorism centre was established with financial support of $200m from our government.

We have been and are fighting extremism within our own borders daily, indeed hourly.

Firm action is taken against any imam who is found to hold extremist views and who tries to incite their followers to violence. We have passed laws and warned our citizens that they will be arrested and prosecuted if they attempt to join Isis or any other international terrorist group, or to take part in any of the conflicts raging in any region. We have done and will do everything we can to stop the spread of this corrosive poison in our country and region and encourage all other governments to do the same.
Mohammed bin Nawaf Al Saud
Ambassador of the Kingdom of Saudi Arabia to the United Kingdom

Independent:

From Vietnam through many subsequent wars – Somalia, Afghanistan, Iraq, Syria – many of us who read The Independent have opposed intervention by the US and UK. But we need to cut the Prime Minister and President Obama some slack in dealing with Islamic State.

This is a potential genocide, with similarities to Rwanda, including the possible speed of events. It meets the criteria for the UN’s evolving norm of the Responsibility to Protect. For the record, it also meets Tony Blair’s criteria for humanitarian intervention offered in his 1999 Chicago speech – would that he had applied them. There is no issue about material or air support, as requested by the parties, which requires Security Council consent.

David Cameron is reported still to be fuming that Labour pulled its support for intervention in Syria last summer. But the grim reality is that, when it comes to armed intervention, there is a big difference between the response to a past atrocity and to a potential genocide. For the former, eventual prosecution or other sanctions may do. Not so the latter.

The risk now is that the PM will be too cautious and focus only on humanitarian aid, when material and air support to the Kurds and Iraq stands a reasonable chance of staving off an epic humanitarian disaster.

Prior to the 2015 election, the PM cannot afford to lose another vote on intervention. I for one hope that Labour and the Liberal Democrats won’t play politics on this issue, will see that these are different circumstances, and will give the PM the assurances he needs to provide material and air support as a matter of urgency.

Andrew Shacknove
Oxford

The claim of Isis to be a state, indeed the revived Caliphate destined to take over the world for Islam, raises legal and constitutional questions.

Isis has been with us for about a year. Its birth has not been registered. There does not seem to be any functioning organisation or any welfare services or any legal structure – or any plans to establish any of them. It appears to consist of hysterical gun-wielding fanatics living in a bloody present with no clear vision of the future. The other Muslim nations have greeted this addition to their turbulent company without enthusiasm.

Does Isis intend to apply for membership of the United Nations? If so, how? What happens if the Baghdad government recovers, combines, however briefly, with the de facto Kurdistan government and, with or without western aid, breaks it? Will its gun-toters be treated as PoWs, or be shot out of hand, or be arrested with a view to trial as war criminals?

What will happen to areas now in the possession of their “state”? If a vacuum is created, what will fill it?

I hope that western governments have plans A, B and C in the pipeline to deal with an entity that is both a state and not a state – and surrounded by those in little better case.

Margaret Brown
Burslem, Staffordshire

America has spent years and billions of dollars fighting a “war on terror”, with at best spurious evidence. Remember those WMDs they knew were there, but never found. Now we have real terrorists, flying their own flag and taking over territory in Iraq and Syria, but America and it allies are doing virtually nothing to combat them. How ironic and sad.

Toby Snape
Prestbury, Cheshire

No ‘rubber stamping’ of search warrants

The description of the lay justice system as the “Achilles heel of our civil liberties”, by Geoffrey Robertson QC, commenting on the police raid on Cliff Richard’s home (16 August), is as inaccurate as it is offensive.

He is right that an officer seeking a search warrant must show that it is “not practicable to communicate” with the occupant or owner of the premises. However, this is quite different from it being not possible to communicate with them. Without wishing to comment on the particular case he highlights, I doubt that much evidential material would be recovered from searches if occupants generally knew that the police were going to arrive.

Magistrates are unpaid and give up a huge amount of time in public service. They undergo rigorous selection, and receive thorough training, and those who consider out-of hours-warrant applications (often at very unsocial hours) are specially trained and always have the support of a qualified legal adviser when necessary.

They are acutely aware of the interests of justice as they apply to all parties, and decisions are never taken by means of a “rubber stamp”.

The statistics speak for themselves. Most criminal cases start and finish in the magistrates’ courts. Only a tiny fraction result in successful appeals, far fewer than in matters dealt with in the courts above.

Yes, mistakes are sometimes made, by magistrates as well as senior judges, but Mr Robertson’s remarks do not reflect the realities of a system that has served this country well for centuries, or the efforts and goodwill of those who continue participate in it.

Howard M Winik
Liverpool

Unwelcome Sound of music on the train

Ronan Breslin (letter, 15 August) completely misses the point of David Carter’s letter (13 August). Why should any passenger have to put up with “trish-trash noise” of headphone leakage, which is hardly “minor” compared with the insignificant noise produced by today’s quiet trains?

Why should the insulting reaction of the youth Mr Carter asked to turn the volume down be allowed to pass unnoticed? Quite apart from this, Ronan Breslin’s reference to his fellow correspondent as a “curmudgeonly bully” is the sort of name-calling, only too common nowadays, that should have no place in the The Independent.

Nick Chadwick
Oxford

When I travel by train I use the “quiet coach” if there is one. I am sensitive to intrusive background sounds. Several times I have walked out of restaurants and shops because I cannot cope with the background so-called music.

But my wife is not aware of these sounds until I complain about them. It’s probable that most people are like my wife and don’t notice the sounds. But if you are like me the quiet coach is highly desirable and makes a rail journey a pleasant experience rather than a taste of purgatory.

On the Continent they don’t have “quiet coaches”, but “silent compartments” – not only no mobile phones or iPods, but no talking either. It’s about time the rail industry here got a by-law to allow train staff to enforce the rules for quiet carriages.

Ian K Watson
Carlisle

Those exercised about noise in railway carriages might try my solution: I always travel with a pair of industrial-grade ear protectors. They look like headphones. Young people think I’m listening to rock music and consider me cool.

Stephen Pimenoff
Cheltenham

Scots myth of English domination

I must take issue with Brian Palmer’s blithe assertion (letter, 14 August) that England just seeks dominance in its relationship with Scotland.

Scotland already enjoys more autonomy within the UK than any other country or region. More is to come with the 2012 Scotland Act, and yet more will come if there is a No vote and the promises of the major parties mean anything.

The Better Together campaign has made much of its slogan that Scotland can enjoy the best of both worlds by staying within the Union. Arguably it already does, so evidence of a desire for “dominance” seems hard to find.

There is certainly a view in some quarters that Scotland’s ills, real or imagined, are somehow the fault of the English and that Scots can break free with one bound on 18 September. Independence as offered by the SNP can only diminish Scotland. The fact that it might also diminish England sadly appears to motivate some Scots to vote Yes.

Jonathan Callaway
London SW15

Courageous Jews who speak out over Gaza

Even if Jewish support for Netanyahu were 100 per cent, it would not make me anti-Semitic (letters, 16 August), but it would make me sad. So, as a non-Jew, I humbly salute the courageous Jews in Israel and around the world who have spoken out against the human catastrophe of Gaza. They are the best friends their own people could possibly have.

Julie Hynds
Harrogate

Leaders without computers

John Rentoul (article, 15 August) seems puzzled that world leaders don’t have computers on their desks. This might have something to do with the leaders’ awareness of the vulnerability of electronic communications.

The President of the United States in particular should have some insights into the capabilities of the US National Security Agency and its surveillance programs.

Alex May
Mancheste

Times:

The RAF is sending Chinooks into Iraq for the first time since 2011 CPL NEIL BRYDEN/MoD/Getty Images

Published at 12:01AM, August 18 2014

“The barbarity and genocide in Northern Iraq and Syria, if not checked, will spread and affect us directly in various ways”

Sir, There are several imperatives for intervening once again in the Middle East. The barbarity and genocide in Northern Iraq and Syria, if not checked, will spread and affect us directly in various ways.

The appalling situation is a part of a bigger crisis that is fast becoming a global game changer. This is not just about the Middle East, as events in Indonesia and Nigeria show, and the longer-term threat to the UK is significant. The wrongs of the recent past and understandable dread of re-engagement must not blind us to this. Too little too late now and we court more horrors and greater dangers in the years ahead.

Getting things right this time requires our political leaders and opinion formers to persuade public opinion that firm, proportionate action is required to prevent genocide and chaos from spreading. Action must be genuinely international, even if a disproportionate amount of any initial military and logistic action is US/British because few others have the requisite capabilities — eg Chinook helicopters and experience.

Short-term emergency action must however be backed up by international efforts to nurture political frameworks and multi-ethnic and multi-religious state infrastructures. We must encourage the international community to stop reacting to events and begin to drive them. A sustained effort is required to safeguard viable states and to quarantine areas where order has collapsed. This may well involve both “soft” and “hard” power, but diplomacy must lead and involve the key regional powers and actors.

For us the centre of gravity now is British public opinion. Perhaps we need to examine our own consciences and priorities more and be less hasty to blame our politicians and recent mistakes. Hard work beckons.

Brigadier Nigel Hall

General Tim Cross

London W1

Sir, David Aaronovitch’s article “Only military action will defeat the jihadis” (Aug 14) is spot on, along with his apt comment, “This is Operation Drop Something From a Tornado and Get Out”.

Operation Haven in April 1991 which I participated in is a good example of what can be achieved in terms of the humanitarian relief, but also the very deployment on the ground sent a strong message to Saddam Hussein and his Republican Guard. It acted as a deterrent which helped to stabilise the region. I would hope that the UK Armed Forces, along with its Nato and Kurdish allies, could not only mount a similar operation but, most importantly, also deter the so-called Islamic State from further acts of barbarism. I just hope that the prime minister and his Cobra team have not missed this golden opportunity by its limited and hesitant approach to date.

Andrew Higginson

Barnes, London

Sir, From your news reports we are all only too aware of the terrifying humanitarian crisis in Iraq, the shortages of healthcare services and the looming threat of genocide initiated by the IS.

As doctors all having a connection with Iraq silence is not an option for us, and we believe inaction by the British government is an act of avoidable negligence. The moral and humanitarian case to support the helpless people of Iraq and to take them out of their misery is clear. The UK, the US and others have had major involvement with Iraq and cannot walk away or turn a blind eye from all this now.

Dr Husni Habboush, Consultant Haematologist, Wales

Dr Ali Kubba FRCOG, Consultant Community Gynaecologist, London

Professor Saad Shakir, Director, Drug Safety Research Unit, Southampton

Sadoon S Sadoon, Consultant Obstetrician and Gynaecologist, Medway Maritime NHS Foundation Trust, Kent

Dr Baha Al-wakeel, Consultant Emergency Medicine and H Senior Lecturer, North Middlesex University Hospital, London N18

Dr M H Jawad FRCP FRCPCH DCH, Consultant Paediatrician, Surrey & Sussex Healthcare NHS Trust

Dr A Alissa, General Practitioner, London SW15

Dr Moayed Aziz, Consultant Anaesthetist

Miss Zara Nadim, Consultant Obstetrician and gynaecologist, Surrey & Sussex Healthcare NHS Trust

Dr Mazin Alfaham, Consultant Paediatrician, Cardiff

Dr Wala Alsafi, Consultant Obstetrician & Gynaecologist, Rotherham General Hospital

Terrorism is not specific to one religion or ideology but it is always divisive

Sir, It is certainly true (letters, Aug 13) that British Jews are distressed by reactions against them because of the Gaza conflict — but we have been here before: in the 1980s over the Phalangist massacre of Palestinians in Sabra and Shatila; in the 1970s with the UN resolution equating Zionism with racism; in 1946 when the King David Hotel, Jerusalem, was blown up.

If antisemitism seems to be rising, it may simply be due to new methods of communication — in social media such as Twitter people are much more outspoken than they are in print.

Whatever the case, why should British Jews be blamed for events in the Middle East? Those who oppose China’s policy in Tibet do not hound Chinese restaurants in London and Bradford.

It is vital for national cohesion that we do not import the problems of the Middle East and make Britain a proxy warzone. The good
relations between most British Muslims and Jews should be used as evidence that there is no inherent antagonism between the faiths, that Israel/Gaza is a political problem that requires a political solution, and we can best help by showing how it is possible to live side by side in harmony. If we cannot achieve that here, what hope for those there?

Rabbi Dr Jonathan Romain
Maidenhead Synagogue, Berks

Sir, You report (Aug 13) that most Britons feel threatened by terrorists. This is hardly surprising, as in the same article you report that in Oxford Street, London, Isis supporters were openly handing out terrorist material to passers-by and are being investigated under anti-terrorism legislation.

One wonders, therefore, how it is that, if threatened they feel, so many Britons in London, Manchester and elsewhere spend their weekends on demonstrations openly supporting the terrorist organisations, Hamas and Hezbollah — or do they become “un-terrorist” when their victims are Israeli (whether Jewish, Christian or Muslim)?

Terrorism is the same the world over and we must all stand united in fighting it, whether the lives being defended are the citizens of Israel, or the Christians or Yazidis in Iraq.

Anthony Levy
Woodford Green, Essex

Sir, Terrorism is not exclusively linked with any religion and ethnicity — in past centuries almost all peoples have experienced terrorism at the hands of other religions and ethnicities. However, Britain throughout those centuries has been a humane and civilised sanctuary for those fleeing religious and political persecution. Ethnic and religious minorities have enormously contributed to British civilisation and economic prosperity.

Terrorism has no religion. We should be united, especially when we are faced with problems of biblical proportions such as climate change.

Dr Munjed Farid al Qutob
London NW2

14

“The history of the independence movement and subsequent history of India is littered with critiques of Gandhi’s life and methods”

Sir, Further to your report “Gandhi statue ‘would be an affront to women’” (Aug 9), Dr Vadgama is entitled to her opinions, but several inaccuracies should be addressed.

Firstly, it would be incorrect to suggest that the matter of sexual exploitation has been hushed up; Yogesh Chadha’s 1997 book Rediscovering Gandhi refers to the incidents involving Gandhi sleeping with his nieces, and it was the Mahatma’s own openness about the subject that led Nehru to criticise him.

While it would be correct to describe Gandhi’s actions as perverse, and arguably exploitative, Gandhi would have regarded his action of involving women in his experiments as an act of treating them with the highest esteem.

Gandhi’s career as a whole shows that he believed that women had a full and active role in his campaigns. This could in fact be seen as illustrating how the Mahatma was ahead of his time.

Dr Vadgama is also incorrect to suggest that Gandhi has been above criticism — when the history of the independence movement and subsequent history of India is littered with critiques of his life and methods, and not just from supporters of the British Raj like Churchill.

Similarly, the criticism of Gandhi as being portrayed as “absolutely pure” was something neither Gandhi himself, nor the Gandhi Foundation, would have sanctioned. However, we at the foundation do believe that Gandhi’s life and ideas concerning nonviolence, environmental sustainability and religious pluralism were prophetic then and are equally appropriate in today’s troubled world.

William Rhind

Gandhi Foundation

Sir, On the CBC in Toronto many years ago when they used to feature classical music more frequently than nowadays, the announcer assumed that the conductor was French, so we were able to hear “Néveel Marrinay.”

Christopher Grounds

Burlington, Ontario

Telegraph:

Donkeys on Blackpool Pleasure Beach may struggle to find enough riders if school holidays are shortened  Photo: ALAMY

6:58AM BST 17 Aug 2014

CommentsComments

SIR – Tourism is one of Britain’s biggest industries, worth £127 billion a year, growing at 3.8 per cent a year and supporting 9.6 per cent of all British jobs. These benefits are spread throughout the regions, bringing prosperity to every corner of the country.

The tourism industry relies on the summer months, and particularly the six-week school summer holiday period, for its success. The seasonal nature of many attractions, especially those outdoors, means that they close during periods of the year when it is uneconomical to open, then spend months treading water, trying to turn a profit.

The Deregulation Bill, which is in its final stages in the House of Lords, contains clauses that permit school summer holidays to be shortened from six weeks to four. Michael Gove stated on numerous occasions that shortening the summer holiday period was his intention and those close to him admitted that this was being looked at. Nicky Morgan, his successor, has said she stands by his intention.

Many in the tourism industry survived the recession by the skin of their teeth. The economic harm provided for within the Bill is deeply worrying.

We call on the Government to engage with the tourism industry, consult, and properly assess the impact of this ill-conceived legislation.

Nick Thompson
Managing Director, Blackpool Pleasure Beach

Mike Vallis
Managing Director, Thorpe Park

Colin Bryan
CEO, Drayton Manor Park Ltd

Julie Dalton
Managing Director, Gulliver’s Theme Parks

Gary Smart
Managing Director, Harbour Park Ltd

Albert Jones
Managing Director, Great Yarmouth Pleasure Beach

Richard Mancey
Managing Director, Paultons Park

Bob O’Connor
Managing Director, Howletts and Port Lympne Estates

Martin Dupée
Director, Zoological Society of East Anglia (Banham Zoo and Africa Alive!) and Dinosaur Adventure

Dominique Tropeano
Zoo Director, Colchester Zoo

Joseph Manning
Managing Director, Old MacDonalds Farm

Laurence Smith
Managing Director, Drusillas Park

Luke Knightly
Director, Knightlys Fun Parks

Tom Pearcy
Owner, York Maze

Darren Chorley
Director, West Midlands Safari Park

Dan Jones
Managing Director, Wizz Kidz

Pippa Craddock
Director of Marketing & Development, Paignton Zoo and Newquay Zoo

Sharon Hunt
Director of Operations, Activity Time Ltd t/a Playzone

Darren Johnson
Owner, Eddie Catz Ltd

Ellis Potter
Director, Riverside Hub

Brian Moore
Mini Monsterz, Whitby

Sarah Watefield
Mini Monsterz, Scarborough

Sara Mancey
Director, Paultons Park

Harry Stevens
Director, PlaySpace Indoor Play Centre

Ken Lunn
Jack in the Box Club Ltd

Lorraine Kearney
Director, Northwest Play & Party Ltd

Tim Kent
Director, Treasure Chest soft play centre

Roni Zigner
Owner, Kids’n’Action Limited

Rick Turner
Director, Purple Cloud Consultancy Ltd

SIR – Steve Mitchell (Letters, August 10) seems to think that being an MP should be a full-time job. Does he really want an MP in the Westminster bubble and totally dependent upon the whips for advancement?

We need MPs with alternative careers who can strike independent blows for their constituents, confident that their ultimate livelihood will not be threatened. Parliament needs mavericks – without them it would be very dull and democracy would be ill-served.

Jane S Haworth
Thames Ditton, Surrey

Gaza conflict

SIR – Oliver Miles applies the words “morally indefensible, disgraceful, disproportionate” to Israel but fails to mention the incessant raining down of Hamas rockets on Israeli civilian targets.

Neither does he mention the maze of tunnels Hamas built into Israeli territory with the sole object of perpetrating a massacre of its people.

Philip Platt
London N3

SIR – Christopher Booker is right: the world is on fire and the West has only itself to blame. In Iraq and Afghanistan, mainly due to Tony Blair and his puppet master in Texas, there is now a hideous legacy of Islamic jihad which has spilt over into Syria.

The Americans support Israel through thick and thin, with little more than lip service paid to the plight of the Palestinians, who look to Hamas as their only morsel of support.

Jo Bird
Slapton, Devon

MS drug lottery

SIR – The news that people with multiple sclerosis in Wales will be the first in Britain to receive access to the potentially life-changing and licensed MS medicine Sativex is very welcome.

However, the situation is a reminder that for many people receiving NHS care, treatment is not based on clinical need, but where they live.

The latest draft Nice clinical guideline for MS rejected Sativex for NHS use based on a flawed assessment of its cost-effectiveness.

Unless Nice amends the guideline, it means that while people in Wales will rightly benefit from the treatment, people in England will be left to battle painful symptoms, or face financial strain from funding the treatment themselves.

Sally Hughes
Programme Director for Policy & Influencing, MS Society
London NW2

Respect for radio DJs

SIR – I sympathise with those celebrities who found it difficult to operate radio studio technology. In the mid-Nineties, without any training, I hosted a three-hour Saturday morning programme on BBC Radio Solent.

Saying something half-sensible while sorting out which of six faders to operate, which of four microphones to switch on or off for guests, keeping an eye on the clock for news and weather, listening all the time to the producer in the headphones, selecting CDs to play, bringing up jingles and asking guests supposedly sensible and searching questions was the most difficult multi-tasking job I had ever known.

After 10 months I just could not come up to the mark. The station manager and another presenter gave me a very nice leaving lunch and I came away with a great admiration for all radio and television presenters.

Dr Terry Langford
Milford on Sea, Hampshire

Sunbed solution

SIR – A hotel in Cyprus has the answer to the vexing problem of towels on sunbeds. On arrival, you are assigned sunbeds for the length of your stay. So the rushed breakfasts can be a thing of the past, and you can stroll casually to your sunbed at midday.

Angela Klemer
Westcliff on Sea, Essex

SIR – Many years ago, we went on holiday to Acapulco. While having a late meal we saw a German party place towels on four sunbeds and walk off to bed. Next morning after breakfast, we threw the towels in the pool and used the sunbeds ourselves.

Two hours later the Germans appeared and started shouting and waving their arms. We blamed the windy night and remained on the sunbeds. The Germans stormed off.

John Marshall
Horsington, Lincolnshire

Cringing at kilometres

SIR – I share John Buggins’s concern (Letters, August 10) that people start might saying “to go a country kilometre”. I also dread the day I hear somone ask a car salesman, “What’s the kilometreage on it?”

Richard Tyler
Droitwich, Worcestershire

SIR – It seems there is a global competition to see who can use the word “like” the most times in a sentence, and teenagers are winning.

John Batty
Middle Assendon, Oxfordshire

Make university year begin in January

SIR – The publication of the A-level results has produced its expected crop of views from the commentariat. Among these has been the desirability of AS levels or GCSE as a way of predicting future university performance.

Since the statistics can be interpreted in various ways, this is at heart an arid debate. Given that it is unlikely that any future government can unwind Michael Gove’s linear exam reforms, would it not be better by far to decouple the timing of the academic years of secondary and university education?

The university year should follow the calendar year, with terms from mid-January to mid-December. Just think of the advantages: the school exam cycle would continue as at present; no university offers would be made until after the results were known; the main admission process would be undertaken in September; and all students would have a “mini gap” from October to January.

University exams would be undertaken in November, with the advantage of a long summer holiday prior to finals.

Jonathan Hughes
Alton, Hampshire

SIR – Why are A-level pupils now always described as students? Presumably to make them seem more academically advanced than they really are.

To me, a student is someone in university or some other form of higher education. When I was at Pontypridd Grammar School we were still known as pupils in the upper sixth form, although our standard of literacy, numeracy, general knowledge and spoken English was clearly superior to that of present-day “students”.

Douglas Davies
Porthcawl, Glamorgan

Artificial fears

SIR – Tom Chivers’s review of Superintelligence warned of future robotic machines capable of smashing the Earth to pieces, or even destroying all things in the universe capable of asking difficult questions.

I’ll start to worry about this threat once there’s an artificial intelligence gadget clever enough to find and clean our cat’s litter tray.

Neil Richardson
Kirkheaton, West Yorkshire

Wise words, Dad

SIR – My father said many wise things about marriage (Stella, August 10).

Among these were “Never use the words “You should” or “You shouldn’t” and “Never argue with a woman in her own kitchen, especially if she’s slicing vegetables.”

Keith Chadbourn
Over Compton, Dorset

SIR – Ron Pearse (Letters, August 10) says that Scotland has “contributed more than its fair share” to the UK economy but he has not taken into account the annual subsidy paid into the Scottish economy since 1974 by means of the Barnett formula.

Running at about £10 billion a year, it has enabled Scotland to provide free university education for Scottish and EU students (but not English), free prescriptions, and a health service better funded than in England.

Scotland spends £1,700 more a year on each person living there than is spent in the rest of the UK. Compared with this subsidy, North Sea oil revenues are forecast to be around £6 billion next year. Despite the blusterings of Alex Salmond, Scotland has far more to lose than to gain if it votes for independence.

Ron Mason
East Grinstead, West Sussex

SIR – The currency worries are a red herring. An independent Scotland could align itself to any currency it wishes, and it makes sense to align to your near neighbour’s. Before the euro, the Benelux countries and France used their currencies in each other’s countries to good effect.

Currencies in Scandinavian countries were similarly aligned. Caribbean countries align to the US dollar, while Australia, Malaysia and New Zealand have a similar arrangement.

What we should really consider is the effect of independence on GDP. Scotland is self-sufficient in food thanks to its agriculture and fisheries, has two nuclear power stations, one of the largest coal-fired stations in Europe and is advanced in the development of renewable energy.

It also has booming tourist and whisky industries worth billions – and then of course there are the oil and gas reserves, which, incidentally, we were told would be exhausted by the Nineties.

John Cobb
Glasgow

SIR – Christopher Booker seems to fear that continued expansion of Scotland’s wind power capacity will result in large bills for the taxpayer south of the border.

Of course, Alex Salmond’s self-aggrandising drive to build ever more wind turbines at the expense of the taxpayers south of the border is absurd. As one of those taxpayers, I fervently hope that Mr Salmond wins his referendum and Scotland becomes independent.

Then the rest of the UK will no longer need to subsidise his wind farms; will no longer need to bail out the Royal Bank of Scotland when it next runs out of money; and will no longer need to bankroll the very generous provisions of the Scottish NHS.

All the UK government jobs expensively outsourced to Scotland (such as the tax office) will be repatriated to the rest of the UK.

David Cooke
Woking, Surrey

SIR – Christopher Booker is right that England must pay over the odds for Scottish wind power when it is in surplus, while the Scots will buy English conventional power cheaply when the wind does not blow, but that situation would only pertain as long as we were one country with a National Grid.

If Scotland were an independent country, power would not be shared on a single national grid but imported or exported at whatever price prevailed.

England would be foolish to import Scottish surplus wind power for more than the price of available French nuclear; similarly, there is no reason for England to subsidise the cost of whatever power Scotland requires to make up its shortfall when wind generation cannot cope. The financial losses on this deal would be Scotland’s alone.

Jim Delaney
London E2

SIR – Would Scottish nationalists kindly stop using the word “independence” to describe their desire to come out of the United Kingdom? No one forced Scotland into a union with England. The Scottish Parliament decided to approach Westminster in 1707 and ask for one. The correct term should be “to leave the Union”.

Ted Shorter
Hildenborough, Kent

Irish Times:

Sir, – Eamon Maloney TD’s call for An Post to withdraw from circulation the first World War commemorative stamp that features John Redmond dishonours the memory of the 200,000 Irishmen who answered the call of duty, by insinuating they were in some way the dupes of a war-mongering establishment fronted by the Irish Parliamentary Party leader. A hundred years on, none of us can say with any certainty why so many of our countrymen joined up and went off to France to fight and die in the trenches. Youthful idealism, unemployment, boredom – the motivating factors were many and to depict Redmond as a butcher’s apprentice who busied himself feeding the meat grinder with raw recruits is disingenuous and I suspect Mr Maloney’s interpretation owes more to some half-remembered war poetry from the Leaving Cert and episodes of Blackadder on television than any objective study of the historical evidence.

Neither John Redmond or the then prime minister, HH Asquith, whose eldest son, Raymond, was killed fighting alongside Irish troops at the Somme in 1916 – had any idea of the appalling slaughter that would ultimately result from the inexorable slide into conflict triggered by the shots fired in Sarajevo. All that was certain 100 years ago this August was that a continent occupied by Germany from the Vistula to the Bay of Biscay would be intolerable. Indeed Deputy Maloney’s confusion seems to deepen when he refers to Irishmen “killing for Great Britain”. Is he not aware that Irishmen were in fact British up until December 6th, 1922? Or perhaps Deputy Maloney has been reading opinion polls rather than history books during his extensive summer holidays and has woken up to the impending Sinn Féin blitzkrieg into Labour’s electoral territory at the next general election. If so, then the Deputy is greatly mistaken if he thinks abandoning the red flag and brandishing a green one will snatch victory from the jaws of defeat.– Yours, etc,

PHILIP DONNELLY,

Oatfield Park,

Clane,

Co Kildare

Sir, – It has been said that one of the most powerful optical instruments ever devised is hindsight. With its aid, we now see the Easter Rising as the start of the final campaign for Irish independence and thus as an iconic and epoch-making event. Then, no right-thinking person, including Redmond, could have seen it as anything other than an act of high treason. Nor could anyone have expected the instigators to escape with their lives.

If a soldier would have been shot in 1916 for refusing to go “over the top”, how unreasonable was it that a similar fate should befall men who rose up against their king in his own realm, particularly in wartime? It could even be argued that a surprising degree of clemency was shown to those rebels who were not considered ringleaders, given the scale of the death and destruction which resulted from their activities.

As the centenary approaches, I hope that those who write for public consumption, and those who teach the younger generation about history, will try to take a step backwards from the official version of 1916 which has prevailed for so long in some quarters, and bring some objectivity into their perception and discussion of those events. – Yours, etc,

PAUL GRIFFIN,

Kelsey Close,

St Helens,

Merseyside WA10 4GY

Sir, – In line with what is now an annual event the “Girls beat boys to the honour in all but nine of the 59 Leaving Cert papers” article (August 15th) will probably evoke the usual explanatory speculation.

Top executives and professors tend to complain that the Leaving Cert favours those who rote-memorise and rote-learn. Though boys could do both at least as easily as girls, generally they have been less adept than girls in ignoring those complaints. I say, “generally”, because obviously the boys who get top marks – and go on later to complain about precisely what got them to their top work positions – also rote-memorise and rote-learn brilliantly.

The complainers don’t realise that successful memorisation at all life stages must use rote memorisation, and that all successful learning must use rote learning. So great is the general ignorance in that respect, that a longer letter would be needed to explain if the explanation were not to be misunderstood.

In any case it would add up to this message for students (and their parents/guardians) at all levels: treat your work as opportunities to become brilliant rote-memorisers and rote-learners; your tragedy is that too few of your teachers are equipped to impart the simple related drills which could help you to be brilliant users of these skills. Yours, etc,

JOE FOYLE,

Sandford Road,

Ranelagh,

Dublin 6

Sir, – I wasn’t surprised to see the usual criticism of the Leaving Cert as being too dependent on rote learning. This criticism is usually trotted out without any substantiation. Having taught for 20 years I don’t know any student who learns things without understanding them and then applying this knowledge in a variety of ways. It acts as a platform for expansion. As Daisy Christodoulou puts it her book Seven Myths about Education: “Saying all these negative things about rote learning [versus understanding] is very unhelpful. The two things are not in opposition. It’s not that we should spend time on conceptual understanding instead of spending it on learning times tables. It’s by spending time on times tables that you’ll develop the conceptual understanding.”

Christodoulou goes onto critique other favorites of our of our academic elite – projects and “active learning”. This she does with a mixture of common sense and extensive research which contradicts much of what the elite proposes. I would recommend that your readers to pick up a copy of her book before we throw out a relatively well-performing system and replace it with the latest fad. We need more minority voices – the consensus is often wrong – quite wrong. Yours, etc,

BARRY HAZEL,

Giltspur Wood,

Killarney Road,

Bray,

Co Wicklow

A Chara, – With regard to the somewhat over-optimistic view that a world language will lead to peace on earth, may I cite your letters page (in English only) as evidence to the contrary. Idir an dá linn, tá sé i gceist agamsa agus daoine mar mé ár dteanga aoibhinn stairiúil féin a thabhairt slán, even if “foam-lipped ideologues” of English find this determination to ensure that our future is a rational continuation of the past rather annoying. Naturally there will be an international language. No argument there, except of course about which one. – Is mise,

PÁDRAIG MAC

FHEARGHUSA,

Na Cluainte,

Trá Lí

Sir, – Frank Naughton rightly points out that the myth of the Tower of Babel is but one among others; John Thompson’s (August 13th) interpretation of it is also just one among others. While his reading of the story as implying linguistic diversity to be a curse of a vengeful God and intended to “impede mankind from fulfilling its full potential” is typical, it is as reasonable to understand the myth to imply linguistic diversity to be the gift of a creator God to a creation going astray. So understood, the myth suggests that the way to fulfilling the full potential of mankind is through linguistic diversity. – Yours, etc,

DR VERONICA O’NEILL,

Clybaun Road,

Galway

Sir, – Hagappagy, according to my sons who are of that vintage, means “happy”. It was spoken by them with friends of both sexes in the early 1980s, and still exists in isolated pockets. They heard that it may originally have been used by shopkeepers and/or prisoners of war for reasons of confidentiality, but this is unsubstantiated. However, the translation for “girl” was not pc, and as Hagappagy became intelligible to too many people they invented “Heebappeeby” and also “Ermywermy”. Cagould agit bage aga fagorm agof pagig lagatagin? – Yours, etc,

HEATHER SMITH,

Greengates,

Adelaide Road,

Glenageary,

Co Dublin

Sir, – I am pleased that some remember the secret teen language of the ’50s and ’60s. I do have sympathy with the boys and girls of Waterford in that they truly believed that their parents had cracked the code. The very fact that Waterford teenagers (Letters August 13th) would jointly converse in front of their parents sets them apart from all other teenagers on the planet. Whether you view the practice as a cultural tradition lost or a silly subculture (I opt for the former) my central question remains : how and when did this wonderful argot decline to the point of extinction. Is the texting language of today its cultural replacement and will the advent of the obnoxious social media sites be its nemesis? I somehow think an aspiring PhD student could prosper in exploring this piece of social history. – Yours, etc,

DEREK MacHUGH,

Westminster Lawns,

Foxrock,

Co Dublin

Sir, – When comments deemed to be insulting to Islam are published in newspapers. we see a multitude of comments and letters of outrage from senior Muslim leaders and clerics about said alleged insults.

Why are these same people not publicly condemning the killing of non-Muslims in Iraq for not converting to Islam that we have seen over the last weeks? Why the silence? Do they condone this sort of behaviour from fellow Muslims? If not, why aren’t they protesting in the streets about these murders with the same vigour they apply when Islam is being apparently attacked or mocked? – Yours, etc,

ALAN FAIRBROTHER,

Glenvara Park,

Knocklyon

Sir, – The Irish Anti War Movement calls on the UN and NGOs to organise humanitarian airlifts to the beleaguered Yazidi people, criticises the recent US military intervention, and questions US and British motives regarding Iraq and Gaza (August 15th). This represents confused thinking. Few nations have the military capability to provide such airlifts, and fewer still would be willing to accept the risks involved, but top of the short list would be the US and Britain.

If we depended on the UN to intervene, we could expect to wait at least a month for a compromise resolution, and longer still for a relief effort to be organised. Any sort of military effort would be deferred indefinitely, with Irish involvement further delayed while the triple lock was unpicked. Of course, by that time Isis would have resolved the issue in a rather extreme manner.

It seems strange to me that people in the Republic of Ireland, a country which allocates inadequate resources to its own defence and which shrinks from membership of international defence organisations, can persistently call on the “international community” to defend oppressed minorities around the world. – Yours, etc,

KEVIN BUTLER,

Philipsburgh Avenue,

Fairview,

Dublin 3

Sir, – Jim Roche of the Irish Anti War Movement seems to suggest that western intervention to help the Yazidi minority in Iraq is a bad idea because previous western governments made poor foreign policy decisions. He also seems to suggest that the “Islamic State” fighters would not now be slaughtering infidels and apostates in Iraq if the West had only treated them better.

This is the worst sort of self-flagellation and fails to recognise the movement for what it is, a fanatical group intent on establishing the most extreme sort of medieval theocracy in the 21st century. It would save everybody a lot of time and be a lot more honest if the IAWM renamed itself the Irish Anti-American Movement and be done with it.– Yours, etc,

JOHN O’FLAHERTY,

Old Tannery Lane,

Grampound,

Cornwall TR2 4PZ

Irish Independent:

Peace and not war is what we need. On June 28 1914, World War I started. It finished on November 28 1918. Still debate occurs as to why and who started the war.

It matters little. There were 37 million casualties. Many thousands of these were from Ireland. There were 60 million casualties in World War II, estimated at nearly 4pc of the world’s population at the time. Now, in 2014, we see the horrific killing of innocent citizens who are trying to defend themselves against the might of bombs and guns from those that possess such weaponry.

Whatever the rights or wrongs of these situations, we are again witnessing the slaughter of innocent children, with entire families being wiped out. The United Nations was set up to resolve world conflict in 1945, with the agreement of over 50 of the world’s most powerful countries.

The UN has the moral authority to work towards resolving conflict and intercede where borders are in dispute, pressing each country to respect the Universal Declaration of Human Rights.

What is happening in a number of countries often goes unreported. Religious fanatics are carrying out horrendous atrocities. People are being persecuted for their beliefs. Encroachment on neighbouring countries has led to years of conflict. Is the UN failing or is it simply unable to carry out its function because of the veto of other countries?

The manufacturing of arms is going on at a faster pace than ever.

Sales are booming in the strife-torn areas of the world like the Middle East, Eastern Europe, parts of Africa, North Korea, and parts of Latin America. The total spend is $1.75 trillion, according to the SIPRI Military Expenditure Database 2013. As Albert Einstein said: “Peace cannot be achieved by force, only by understanding.”

Dermot Hayes

Ennis, Co Clare

Riddle of the red squirrel

They say the red squirrel is a victim, under threat of extinction, usurped by the grey invader, but what if they are wrong?

Perhaps the answer is evolution. Maybe the red squirrel has adapted and changed in unison with the environment. My theory is entirely based upon my observations. Living in close proximity to woodland has the advantage of frequent encounters with wildlife and the disadvantage of an outside chance of a brush with a serial killer.

Fortunately, I have had the pleasure of many visits from a variety of creatures, with no predators larger than a bushy-tailed fox thus far. But the most clandestine, unpredictable and true urban chameleon is the squirrel.

A red coat is great camouflage in the trees, but in the concrete jungle a grey coat is practically an invisibility cloak.

One moment I’m sipping my morning coffee looking at the cute little pack of fur balls scurrying across the lawn, when suddenly I notice something, something positively Darwinian, as they roll and jostle at play revealing red fluffy bellies . . . and on closer inspection, quite a few patches of red fur mottled throughout the grey topcoat. Eureka! The red is the grey – or more accurately, was the grey.

Michael Coffey

Harolds Cross, Dublin

Cupla focal . . . and an expletive

I am indebted to a retired national school teacher for making my entire week by telling me the following true story from their days teaching in a Gaeltacht area, back when most rural schools consisted of one teacher, and any stranger was assumed to be English-speaking – such was the scarcity of visitors coming to such remote locations.

Surprise visits by Department of Eduction inspectors were not unknown, if not actually the order of the day, and on one such occasion the teacher in charge was late in arriving but the doors were open to admit the pupils.

The inspector, not wishing to break protocol by entering the school uninvited, decided to wait in the entrance porch for the arrival of the headmaster. Over the hubbub of chattering pupils fighting over which seat to take in double-desks, he heard an unidentified scholar, who couldn’t have been more than seven, say the immortal words: “Cé hé an b*****d ins an halla”?

I reckon you do not need to know any Irish at all to translate what was said. For sheer brilliance, brevity, clarity and an ability to voice a young person’s insatiable curiosity in any language, but especially Irish, this ranks right up there with another life-changing question – “Who made the world”? – but even better.

Liam Power

Ballina, Co Mayo


Fitzgerald’s UN grilling

An Irish Government delegation led by Frances Fitzgerald was recently summoned to attend a meeting of the UN Human Rights Committee.

The delegation duly obliged and to all intents and purposes assumed the bearing of a group of bold school children being told off by the principal. They certainly did not give the impression they represented an independent state with a sophisticated constitution which has been the model for many other newly formed states. One would have hoped Ms Fitzgerald would have told her overbearing inquisitors that as a “sovereign republic”, Ireland will not be bullied by a non-elected supra-national quango.

Eric Conway

Navan, Co Meath

Sky’s the limit

It would appear that we can’t bring a tiny bottle of our shop-bought water onto a plane, but a pilot with an artificial arm is allowed to fly the thing. We are truly living in a world gone mad.

Robert Sullivan

Bantry, Co Cork

Robin Williams‘s legacy

The death of Robin Williams continues to provoke debate, even as his fans worldwide accept the reality of his passing. Everyone has their favourite movies, but I especially liked his performances in What Dreams May Come, with its depiction of what the afterlife might be like, and Jakob the Liar.

I treasure the scenes in the latter movie in which his character pretends he’s receiving good news (from a non-existent hidden radio) about advancing allied armies drawing closer by the day, giving hope, albeit by devious means, to the oppressed Jews in the ghetto for whom hope could mean the difference between life and death.

His comic genius turned frowns into smiles, enhancing life via the “best medicine”. What a tragedy that an immensely talented man who made countless people laugh should opt for a mode of departure from life that has broken hearts around the world and drawn rivers of tears.

Depression affects so many. Though it may be a cliche to say it, I’d like to think this wonderful man’s untimely death will act as an incentive to all victims of this illness to seek help and support.

It can affect anyone at any age, and with the Leaving Cert results concentrating young minds nationwide, one’s heart goes out to any teenager upset by a perceived failure or lack of progress.

The message should ring loud and clear: falling short of achieving one’s objectives is never the end of the world. There’s always another day, another opportunity, and always help, advice, and support, regardless of what dark clouds appear to smudge the horizon.

People close to Robin Williams have asked that he be remembered for his creative genius. Perhaps his life, and death, will also serve as a reminder that hope needs to be kept alive, and that whatever the problem, suicide is not the answer.

John Fitzgerald

Callan, Co Kilkenny

Irish Independent



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19 August 2014 GP

I jog around the park I still have arthritis in my left knee, but I manage to get round the park. A wettish day. I takr Mary to see her GP

Scrabble: Mary wins, but gets under just 400. perhaps Mary will win tomorrow.

103 GameI win 56 John 50 Mary Average score

Obituary:

Margaret Wileman – obituary

Margaret Wileman was president of Hughes Hall, Cambridge, during the early years of its expansion

Margaret Wileman

Margaret Wileman Photo: HUGHES HALL

6:37PM BST 18 Aug 2014

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Margaret Wileman, who has died aged 106, was founder president of Hughes Hall, Cambridge, overseeing the early stages of its transition from a graduate teacher-training college for women to a co-educational institution for graduate study.

When she arrived at Hughes Hall in October 1953 at the age of 45, she became the seventh principal since the foundation of the all-female college in 1885. With a maximum of 70 students it was by far the smallest college — and one of the poorest in the University, to which it had been admitted in 1949 as a “recognised institute for women” (though it did not achieve full college status until 2006). The college buildings, next to the University cricket ground, were mainly Victorian and the general atmosphere was one of genteel poverty.

Margaret Wileman found herself doing three jobs — as Principal, University Lecturer in Education and as Director of Women Students at the university. She had no secretary until 1960, when she appointed a graduate of the Guildhall School of Music who, she noted, “could type at incredible speed, as though playing a particularly sparkling Scarlatti sonata”.

The 1960s were a critical period in her time at the college. The Bridges Report led to the creation of several new graduate colleges and to the admission of an increased number of women students to a wider range of colleges. She seized the opportunities offered by enlarging the scope of the college and increasing numbers: first, women graduates were admitted to subjects allied to education, then mature undergraduates studying for the BEd and a small number of affiliated students (graduates of other universities who wished to study for a Cambridge BA).

In her final year, 1973, when her title changed to president, men were admitted to the College. Today Hughes Hall is a full college of the University with 600 students, both men and women, studying for the whole range of Cambridge degrees.

Margaret Wileman was determined that expansion should not be at the expense of standards and was a demanding, if kindly, interviewer, always on the alert for those who embroidered their CVs. One applicant recalled how, having applied to Hughes Hall to read History, she entered the Principal’s study to be interviewed by the small, bright-eyed Miss Wileman. “She said: ‘Hello, my dear. I see on your application form that you are interested in British steam engines.’ … She took off her watch, laid it on her desk and said: ‘Talk to me for 20 minutes about steam engines.’ At the end she told me: ‘Right, my dear, you’re in.’ And that was that.”

After her retirement Margaret Wileman remained an honorary fellow and continued to take a keen interest in college affairs, lunching there every week during term time until she was well over 100 and regularly attending college concerts. The original 1895 college building is named in her honour, as is the music society. In July this year she attended the college’s Summer Garden party.

Margaret Annie Wileman was born on July 19 1908. An excellent musician and poet, as well as a scholar of Lady Margaret Hall, Oxford, she took a First in Modern Languages in 1930, then trained as a teacher in the Oxford Department of Education.

After teaching posts in Reading and at Queen’s College, Harley Street, during the war she lectured at St Katharine’s College Warrington (now part of Liverpool Hope University). For 10 years she was a resident warden at Bedford College in London before taking up her post at Hughes Hall.

During vacations both during and after the war she worked in refugee camps and girls’ borstals.

A devout Roman Catholic, in later years she helped to run education programmes for Catholic nuns.

In 2000 the French government appointed her Officier de l’Ordre des Palmes Académiques in recognition of her services to French literature.

Margaret Wileman, born July 19 1908, died August 12 2014

Guardian:

Professor Simon Wessely puts his finger on an exquisite problem in health and public service, the asymmetrical distribution of costs and benefits (Only a third of depression cases treated, 14 August). He bemoans the fact that spending on mental health benefits employers in terms of fewer days lost, but this works both ways. The adjoining article highlights the urgent need for wider policy changes to tackle the obesity epidemic, which is overburdening the NHS (Report, 14 August). There are many other examples, including reductions in air pollution and road accidents, where significant monetary benefits accrue to the NHS. Until we devise a common investment framework based on outcomes, rather than inputs to service silos, many billions of pounds and lives lost or lived in avoidable pain will disappear down the gaps between services. “Joined–up” government is as far away as ever, despite years of investment in elegant rhetoric.
Neil Blackshaw
Little Easton, Essex

• Professor Wessely sees funding for mental health services coming only from a shift of resources from physical health services. Since our public services have in fact been robbed to pay for the crisis of capitalism, particularly that of its banking system, this indicates that we might look elsewhere to meet the needs of those in need of mental healthcare. We could, for example, close tax loopholes exploited by the super-rich and by corporations. We could also consider shifting spending from “defence”, and from the covert mass surveillance of citizens exposed by Edward Snowden. And so on… In this way, all our healthcare needs – mental and physical – could quite adequately be met.
Professor Helen Colley
Manchester

• We began our careers over 45 years ago, a decade after Thomas Szasz had declared, with uncommonly good sense, that the mind could not be “ill” other than in a metaphorical sense. If problems in living are due to some brain disorder, then this is a physical illness, not a “mental” one (Letters, 14 August); such conditions might reasonably be compared to diabetes, cancer or the like. Where they have no obvious physical origins, it seems wiser to consider them to be existential in nature: arising from the influence of the myriad personal, interpersonal, cultural and social factors that make up human existence.

In our youth we assumed that this distinction would long since have taken root and a new vision of human services would have become established. Instead, efforts are still being made to embed the problem of “mental health problems” within a old-fashioned health (ie illness) service.

If we are to believe the statistics, few people do not experience some serious problem in living at some point in their lives. The “normal” population has become abnormal. Society cannot hope to address this rising tide of misery, distress and anomie by reinforcing an outmoded, if not inherently false, idea that such problems are “just like” diabetes or cancer, however reassuring this might be. High time that young minds came forward to propose a new way of looking at human distress and difficulty. The old model definitely needs fixing.
(Dr) Phil Barker and Poppy Buchanan-Barker
Newport on Tay, Fife

• Sheila Hollins makes reference to a BMA report that highlighted the need for a holistic approach to the care of those who have a learning disability (Letters, 14 August). I remember the publicity with respect to Sir Jonathan Michael’s report, which likewise examined evidence of the neglect of the physical health needs of those with intellectual impairments. Do the commissioners read these reports?
Mary Gameson
Norwich

• Your correspondent is correct to cite the complex commissioning arrangements as being part of the problem with NHS mental health services. It also has to be realised that although there is some public accountability in NHS foundation trusts that have publicly elected governors who can speak up for patients, there is no such representation on the clinical commissioning groups whose members are all appointees – yet it is they who are responsible for funding allocations, and sadly they have let down mental health patients through the inadequate funding that historically has been allocated to NHS mental health trusts like my own.
Ian Arnott
Deputy lead governor, Cambridgeshire and Peterborough NHS foundation trust

• Since being diagnosed with breast cancer this spring, I have been amazed at the immediate availability of treatment, resources, sympathy, understanding and time off work. This has all been hugely welcome and important in coping with my illness. The support extends to my husband, who is never questioned about his need to take time off to care for a wife with cancer. I am strongly aware of the disparity between the support I have received and the desperate lack of resources available for equally debilitating and potentially life-limiting illnesses such as depression (‘Last week my son took his life. We will never know why’ 15 August). I suspect much of this is due to societal attitudes to certain types of illness or disability, and a misconception that mental health problems are somehow your own fault. Many people could imagine getting cancer (“there but for the grace of God”), but mental illness remains unimaginable.

The boundaries between physical and mental health, however, are paper-thin. My need for time off has been due not only to the physical effects of cancer treatments but also to the huge psychological and emotional adjustments I have had to make. This, too, is understood and resourced, from easy access to cancer support nurses to free mindfulness training courses for cancer patients.

There is a long way to go before we will achieve true parity of esteem between physical and mental health services. I hope the current public debate will contribute to people with depression getting the same amount of support that I have benefited from.
Dr Irene Tuffrey-Wijne
Associate professor in nursing, St George’s, University of London, and Kingston University, and author of whenowlhadcancer.blogspot.co.uk

• The government’s Improving Access to Psychological Therapies programme has led to some improvement in the availability of evidence-based psychological therapies in England. However, concerns have been raised from a variety of sources, including practitioners and patients within IAPT services, that the implementation and development of IAPT may have stalled somewhat in the past year.

Tthe IAPT programme has had problems meeting the pledge to provide psychological therapy to 15% of people in the community with anxiety disorders or depression. Whereas previously the national IAPT team within the Department of Health was responsible for all aspects of the programme (ie development, commissioning, outcomes monitoring and performance management, education and training, etc), responsibility for its implementation is now divided across various newly created NHS organisations – NHS England, Public Health England and Health Education England. There have been delays and confusion in establishing where responsibilities lie, which has negatively impacted on the commissioning of training numbers for this year.

One of the strengths of the IAPT programme had been its ability to collect outcome data on almost everyone who has been treated. This development was much appreciated by patients and was admired internationally. Unfortunately, the recent change in reporting systems has severely undermined the confidence of both public and professionals in IAPT outcome reporting. Many of our members lead IAPT services. They are alarmed to see that 40% of the cases who had been treated by their services were “lost” in the August 2013 information centre reports. In January this year we asked the DoH to rectify this.

The increasing complexity of organisations within the NHS structure does not help the overall picture of giving people access to appropriate treatment pathways and support. This complexity suggests that, if IAPT is to fully realise its potential for transforming the lives of people with common mental health problems, the capacity of the IAPT national team needs to be increased and there need to be clearer lines of accountability and effective working relationships.
Professor Dorothy Miell
President, British Psychological Society

• Owen Jones’s focus on depression and suicide is welcome (Man up? Snap out of it? Why depressed men are dying for someone to talk to, 16 August). But he fails to mention the effect that corporate productivist economics have had in eroding our community and social commitments. During New Labour’s tenure I was teaching in higher education on what had degraded down to short-term 10-week contracts, after which I ended up back on benefits until the next semester. Simultaneous to this I was volunteering for a charity that counsels the suicidal. However, the benefit authorities only count continuous employment as 13 weeks. So I was classified long-term unemployed, put under pressure to take other work and, most significantly, told my voluntary work with the depressed and suicidal was making me unavailable for employment. I was eventually forced to leave it.

So, under New Labour’s neoliberal pro-market model, the desperately depressed and my work as an educator and volunteer were less valuable than the provision of cheap employees to corporate supermarkets.

I understand that shortly after this, that participation in the voluntary sector decreased to record low levels. More recently suicidal levels among harrassed benefit claimants have increased.
Dr Gavin Lewis
Manchester

• The news of Robin Williams’s tragic death has, naturally, piqued the interest of the world’s media in mental health issues, especially as faced by men. Perhaps because he was such a well-loved public figure, we were all surprised to learn he suffered so desperately; but so many people with depression do just that. We become exceedingly capable at living an emotional lie in public: we have “the me everyone sees” and “the me only I see”. But the exertion it takes to keep the private me just that, private, exerts a terrible toll: insidiously it saps every scrap of hope, happiness, desire, love and confidence I have (which is not a lot), leaving me with nothing for myself.

How long will this interest last? Will it help change how this exceedingly common illness is seen? Up to 25% of the population will experience a mental health problem at some point in their lives. But the areas of care receiving some of the deepest cuts in funding in the NHS are those aimed at mental health. I am, and will continue to be, reliant on the NHS for my treatment and, hopeful, recovery. But however much I welcome this media attention, I am truly anxious for the future of mental healthcare, for men and women, in the NHS; and for someone with depression, added anxiety is really rather counterproductive.
Dr Joachim New
Banbury, Oxfordshire

Working in a children and adolescent mental health (CAMH) clinic for 14 years I have often seen young people needing inpatient treatment sitting on paediatric medical wards at our local hospital for days whilst staff look for the inpatient therapeutic beds they need (Special report, 18 August). When they are found beds, they may be a long way from their parents, adding another layer of stress and distress for families already struggling. I suspect the “ivory towers” that Sarah Brennan refers to may well be – at least in part – CAMH, but we have worked very hard to be more accessible, more friendly and to deliver early interventions.

I agree with her that a seamless range of services should be on offer. But there is no need for “government inquiries, reviews and a new taskforce”. As clinical staff we are often “consulted” – usually by people paid eye-watering amounts of money to report on services we deliver – but rarely listened to, and there is a huge difference.

The problems are not that complex, actually, but do require funding that understands two things: mental health and young people. For example, the “transition cliff” is not so much about needing to simplify the transition process, but that it is inappropriate to transition a young person who may be chronologically 18 but emotionally 12. Looked after children, who struggle more than most with mental health problems, suffer in particular here. So, no more taskforces, please.
Suzanne McCall
Luton

• Integrated CAMHS services are indeed an urgent priority (Dr Peter Hindley, 15 August). Likewise equitable access to talking therapies. My son, now 23, was badly let down by by CAMHS – we requested cognitive behavioural therpy but were told it wasn’t available. So we supplied Paul Stallard’s book Think Good, Feel Good – a wonderful resource for young people. My son liked filling in the worksheets and seemed to derive some benefit. Could CBT not be part of mainstream provision for young people?
Mary Gameson
Norwich

• The juxtaposition of letters about mental ill-health and services, CAMHS in particular, and news about A-level results frustrates me. Are people not aware that the emphasis on good results – which these days seems to mean nothing less than straight A*s and As – puts some vulnerable young people at risk? I have worked in CAMHS and with suicidal and self-harming young people in the voluntary sector and would like to see more parents, teachers and members of the public and the press putting less emphasis on this narrow part of life’s high achievement. The prevailing attitude adds to the pressure and for a few young people could be the final straw.
Salli Ward
Wilmslow, Cheshire

• Safety and welfare concerns about child prisoners continue to plague our conscience (Report, 15 August). Investigations, inquests and inspection reports repeatedly document regimes where bullying, self-harm, violence and restraint are rife, with little meaningful rehabilitation or therapeutic intervention.

The children and young people who are incarcerated are no strangers to a tough life. Many of them have a history of mental ill health, drug and alcohol problems, learning difficulties, abuse, and trauma. Despite this knowledge, we have allowed 33 children to die in prisons since 1990. And rather than invest in community services that can address the reasons behind offending, ministers plan to build the largest child prison, euphemistically called a secure college. It is imperative that there be a fundamental review and radical rethink of how we respond to children in conflict with the law.
Deborah Coles
Co-Director, Inquest

• At what point does a situation that has prevailed for years suddenly acquire the status of national scandal (Report, 18 August)? Anyone working in adolescent mental health could have flagged this one up 15 years ago. You would do better to maintain a daily front-page checklist of unresolved scandals (food banks, underpaid care-workers, arms sales, housing shortage, corrupt politicians etc) as witness to what is broken about this country, rather than give random prominence to the odd one, only for it to be consigned to oblivion for another long stretch.
Peter Kaan
Exeter

Is it not time to heed the many recent studies which prove that involvement in music-making is beneficial for those suffering from depression? Listening to music, especially live music, is good for us and playing and singing can lift the spirits with no recourse to chemicals or dependence on therapists. Music-making with others is socially affirmative. Instead of downgrading music in the national curriculum and reducing young people’s access to music lessons, the government would be wise to make it a high priority.
Susan Tomes
Edinburgh

Iraqi Shia fighters make their way to the front line to fight militants from the Islamic State group

Paddy Ashdown (Western intervention won’t prevent the break-up of Iraq, 15 August) talks about Iraq as if we Iraqis do not have an opinion that matters. British and American interference in Iraq directly and solely caused the deaths of hundreds of thousands, pushed the country over the edge and resulted in the current tragedy.

Barack Obama, François Hollande and David Cameron talk about arming the Kurdish peshmerga as if this is the only solution to the so-called Islamic State terrorists, who have taken over a third of Iraq, systematically destroying internationally recognised heritage.

I was born in Mosul, of mixed Arabic and Kurdish origins. Although I live in London, not a day passes that I do not speak to my family and friends there. These evil marauders are not “Sunni terrorists” as they are often described. Most are not even Arab or Muslim. Well over 40% of the Iraqi population consists of peace-loving Sunnis, including the Kurds, and not one Sunni that I know supports these terrorists. Ashdown, unfortunately, is further pushing the concept that the Sunnis are the terrorists.

People are being killed and made homeless every minute of the day now, and thinking about arming the Kurds only is just about the most absurd option. And the statement by Obama and Cameron that the number of Yazidis stranded on Mount Sinjar is too small to warrant a rescue can only be described as criminal.

The guilty parties that invaded Iraq in 2003, and literally destroyed it, should go back now (boots on the ground and all) and correct their mistakes. How? First, by wiping out these terrorists, and second by removing the hateful, sectarian comedians to whom they handed over the country.
Saad Jadir
London

• Dr Rod Thornton (Letters, 14 August) makes a compelling case against arming the peshmerga and clearly knows what he is talking about. But his conclusion – that the Kurds need to be protected, not armed, leaves me uncertain what he is advocating. Surely not British boots on the ground? The British people rightly have no appetite for sending our young men to die in someone else’s quarrel. And if it is simply to lend support by air strikes, one cannot help recalling the effect of a similar policy in Libya – a country now rent between warring factions and with no effective central authority. I hope he will write again with precise positive, not simply negative, recommendations.
Brian Hayes
London

A dinner-party in Paris in the mid-60s. Marcel Proust is the subject of the conversation. The Frenchman on my right, a teacher, turns to me and says, in French (the following translation is mine), with the utmost seriousness: “Of course, it’s impossible to really appreciate Proust without having read the Scott-Moncrieff translation.” I’ve frequently used that ever since as a wonderful example of literary pretentiousness. Following your article (The back page, Review, 15 August), do I owe my dinner neighbour a apology (to be received posthumously, I fear)?
Marcel Berlins
London

• At a time of my and many other Jews’ distress at the Israel/Gaza horrors and the subsequent backlash of rising antisemitism in Britain and Europe, it amazes me that in describing Lauren Bacall as “proudly Jewish” Sali Hughes (The first on the list for beauty, 14 August) feels obliged to add the phrase “she rubbished rumours of a nose job”. Here we go again! I hope it was just a slip of the pen. I’m not cancelling my Guardian yet, but just to oblige your stereotyping remain, defiantly, a big-nosed Jew.
Dr Andrew Platman
London

• Things ordered in numerical order, particularly on the internet, are now known as listicles (Fifty million reasons why BuzzFeed hopes to be top online media brand, 12 August), presumably there’s also an equivalent term for numerically ordered tests.
Alan Pearson
Durham

• So, the England women’s team win the rugby World Cup – and manage to make page 12 of the Sport section (18 August)! Wow, progress or what!
Alison New
Cambridge

• Is this the ultimate irony of privatisation? I have just received a statement for my Post Office savings account – delivered by TNT.
Sally Taylor
Liverpool

• I’m no expert on dogs or cats (Letters, 18 August), but our ducks are highly skilled in the use of web applications.
Tom Locke
Burntisland, Fife

Was Michelangelo's painting of the Sistine Chapel ceiling inspired by religion, or just funded by it

Further to the correspondence inspired by Ian Flintoff on Richard Dawkins, the notion that religious inspiration has contributed to the bulk of great art in the past (Letters, 16 August) needs more careful examination.

For a significant period of European history, including the pre-Christian Roman era, commercial success for an artist, and therefore survival of art works to the present day, entailed tacit or more often explicit conformity with social, political and especially religious norms, in societies where religious institutions formed a key part of the political power structures. It was the power of those institutions to employ artists and pay for their materials which “inspired” or prompted the production of art. It is noteworthy also that in societies where the religious institutions largely discouraged or refused to fund the production of figural art, such art flourished within the more limited secular market, although survival of its products has been significantly hampered by those same religious institutions.

Artists may or may not have been “inspired by religion”, but we will never know, except in those rare cases where they explicitly denied such inspiration and usually suffered the consequences. For the rest, we can only try to read implicit meaning from their work – a notoriously inaccurate form of analysis, rather akin to the belief system espoused by Flintoff himself and so coherently criticised by Dawkins and other rationalists.
Sarah Lambert
London

Val Biro with his 1929 Austin.

Val Biro with his 1929 Austin. Photograph: George Harris/Associated/Rex

I first knew Val Biro around the age of 10 as the jolly driver of Gumdrop, when his vintage car was just starting to appear in print – and then he became my stepfather. In my teens we argued a great deal. His view of the world was deeply unscientific, built on passion and emotion. Mine was obsessed with logic, clarity and clearing up ambiguity. In the process, my ability to organise ideas developed dramatically and I absorbed from him the habit of working on only what one wanted to work on into the early hours of the morning.

Every birthday he presented me with a painting, and without my realising it, he infected me with art, so that it became one of the most important parts of my life – just as important as the “scientific” way of looking at the world that had come to me more naturally. For the past 10 years or so we would attend exhibitions together, and Val was still driving up to London until a couple of months ago. I would book him a parking space behind Tate Britain or the National Gallery and we would have lunch before seeing the show.

Afterwards we reminisced about our respective pasts and curious characters we had met in publishing, and discussed the politics of the day and the exhibition we had seen. What I learned through all this was a way of looking at the world that values art alongside science, passion alongside logic, and doing work that you love rather than just as a means of paying the bills.

Independent:

Last week, a letter came telling me it was time to renew my TV licence. On the same day, the BBC was acting alongside South Yorkshire police to discredit Cliff Richard. He hadn’t been charged with anything, but the BBC put the label of “sex offender” on him before he’d even had a chance to respond to the allegations. I threw my renewal letter into the bin.

Your article by Geoffrey Robertson (16 August) highlighted the police’s wrongdoing in this case. But it should have gone further. There is something sinister happening at the BBC. I’m not sure if its reporters are members of the National Union of Journalists, but they certainly don’t abide by its code of conduct, which clearly states that a journalist “does nothing to intrude into anybody’s private life, grief or distress unless justified by overriding consideration of public interest”.

Did the public need to know an unproven allegation had been made? I think not. In behaving in this way the BBC has been acting like a tabloid newspaper.

Caolan Byrne
London SE10

 

Thirty-five years ago, I met, and exchanged a few words with, a well-known, now famous, actor in a lavatory during the interval of the gala opening of a refurbished theatre. Nothing happened; we just exchanged a few words: “Hello, good show isn’t it?” – “Yes, isn’t it?” If I googled that actor today, I should get only references to his work and, perhaps, his own website.

But what if I took it into my head to tell the police that this actor had propositioned or molested me in that lavatory? There were no witnesses; we were the only ones there. Would the police now be kicking in his door, while being recorded by the BBC? Would this action now be on every news website?

Then, in the absence of any evidence whatsoever, if I googled that actor tomorrow, I would get multiple references to allegations of “sex abuse”. Even if some of these references were about unfair reporting, the inference would be clear: “No smoke without fire.”

I do not want proven paedophiles to escape punishment. But I do not want innocent people to be found guilty by rumour or malicious suggestion.

S Garrett
East Lydford, Somerset

American ideas about the NHS

I am mystified by the American doctor Jen Gunter’s rather condescending assessment of how favourable her view of the NHS was after her son received emergency treatment (16 August). Was she expecting a third-world experience in an impoverished country?

The UK is a rich country, and the NHS is a highly developed and complex organisation. We pay comparatively very little for our health care in the UK and we get an awful lot for our money.

The NHS is still regarded by many as the envy of the world, despite its difficulties.

I teach nursing at the University of Birmingham, and our students have elective clinical placements in countries all over the world, including the US. The one message which I constantly hear from them following their experiences overseas is “I will never complain about the NHS ever again.”

Mark Hughes
College of medical and Dental Sciences
University of Birmingham

At first glance, the figures provided about Vanguard (“NHS faces huge bill over private provider’s botched eye operations, 15 August) suggest that many millions of pounds of taxpayers’ money has been actively encouraged to haemorrhage out of the NHS as superfluous management earnings, investor returns and profits.

And the services provided have caused harm.

Had the money been used to fund NHS treatment directly, more people would have been treated sooner and the harms would not have arisen. The mania for profit-driven private-sector involvement in the NHS defies reason.

Steve Ford
Haydon Bridge, Northumberland

 

A chance missed to cripple the jihadists

Your editorial of 18 August is only partially correct in the interpretation of last year’s vote on Syria, and you omit a vital point.

The Government rightly wished to keep open the possibility of military action against Assad, who had just, once again, gassed his own people, correctly calculating the usual short-lived expressions of anger from the media and the world.

But the impact of a strike would also have assisted the moderate opposition, those who had bravely taken to the streets against him originally and endorsed principles for a democratic, pluralist Syria, and who were increasingly finding themselves also fighting a nascent extremist and largely foreign force. There was a chance, a year ago, to take some action which might have cut off IS at its knees in Syria.

I fully accept that we cannot know what would have happened subsequently if action, rejected by the US and on which the UK Parliament never voted, had been taken, and the consequent removal of chemical weapons is no small gain. But we can be quite certain of what has happened by not doing so. Assad continued to collude with the Islamic extremists to pursue a narrative too readily swallowed elsewhere that his “opposition” were all the same, simply extremist terrorists not worth the support of  the world.

Moderates have been steadily weakened and demoralised. A dreadful bombing and killing campaign, with conventional weapons apparently given the green light, has been continued even more forcibly against the Syrian people whilst the world turned the other way. This has all derailed any negotiations for a conclusion which Assad might have feared, and IS has become ever stronger, emerging into the force we see now in Syria and Iraq.

A year’s delay in dealing with IS has come at more of a cost than just tying western foreign policy in elaborate knots; there is no comfort that the casualties are not on our own doorstep.

Alistair Burt MP
North East Bedfordshire
Minister for the Middle East, 2010-2013

 

Gay people bullied in name of Christianity

Imagine. A perfectly decent, gifted and well-balanced teenager being made to feel she “lived in shame … degraded and very humiliated” (Vicky Beeching: The Big Read 14 August) This is emotional abuse on a par with the severest bullying.

Yet, since it is done in the name of Christianity, no one is held culpable in law for such a gross and offensive misuse of power, as well as the cruel distortion of Christian theology and love at  its core.

This aggressive and deliberate homophobia can be life-threatening, as in her case, through the accumulated effect of extreme denial, guilt, loneliness, stress and deep trauma. There is a war being waged against young gay and lesbian people and the perpetrators walk free every time.

Trying to destroy the self-esteem and integrity of any person, simply on the grounds they are lesbian or gay, should be a criminal offence.

Since this odious practice is endemic in churches and other faith-based groups they need to feel the full weight of society’s total disapproval, not only by it being made illegal to offer so-called “ex-gay” or “reparative therapies” or exorcisms, but by also having to function without benefit of charitable status.

Anything less and the message is: “It’s OK to bludgeon into submission anyone if we don’t like their sexual orientation.”

The Rev Richard Kirker
London E1

 

Reading that Vicky Beeching had come out as gay was a liberating experience for me. As a young, gay Christian so far in the closet it’s a wonder I haven’t found Narnia, Beeching has given me hope.

For the first time ever, coming out to my family and friends actually seems like a possibility. Her coming out is, quite frankly, an answer to prayer.

Name and address supplied

Fleecing the ‘southern toffs’

Perhaps it is not surprising that so many country pubs are closing down. I visited one in the shadow of Lancashire’s Pendle Hill at the weekend and was shocked to find that while I’d been charged £3.30 for a pint of ale, the cheery, straw-chewing villager standing next to me at the bar only had to pay £2.90.

On enquiring about the discrepancy, I was informed there was a special “locals’ rate” but “wealthy Southern toffs” like me must pay more because we could afford it.

Charles Garth
Ampthill, Bedfordshire

 

Rude Roman language

Natalie Haynes’s review “Portrait of a chameleon emperor” (Radar, 16 August) quoted Horace referring to his friend Caesar Augustus as a “perfect penis”.

Surely a better translation would be “complete prick”?

Elizabeth Roberts
Moffat, Dumfries and Galloway

Times:

As referendum day approaches the complications of independence are becoming apparent – not least, how much Salmond wants to give up

Sir, The excellent arguments against Scottish independence (leader, Aug 18) suggest that the Yes lobby is short on logic. As the Queen said in her Silver Jubilee speech in 1977, “I was crowned queen of the United Kingdom of Great Britain and Northern Ireland”. An independent Scotland retaining the monarchy is akin to any other independent nation deciding it would like the queen as its monarch. If Mr Salmond is not ready to give up the monarchy, the pound and the Bank of England, he is not ready to leave the UK.

Professor Anthony Watson
Bashley, Hants

Sir, It is obvious that if Scotland does vote for independence a governor general will be appointed to act on behalf of the Queen. He or she will be a Scot. The Queen is a constitutional monarch and does not directly rule — as we are all taught at school. As with her current 16 realms Scotland would be free to replace her with an elected president or with a different monarch. It is well known that at least three realms will reconsider their relationship with the Crown after the passing of Elizabeth II.

The suggestion that the Queen is “pro union” is divined from a speech given in 1977. But, as with all Her Majesty’s words (excepting the Christmas Day message) these were her government’s opinions.

Richard Bailey
Ryde, Isle of Wight

Sir, Tony Abbott, the Prime Minister of Australia (interview Aug 16) expresses himself with greater directness than domestic sensitivities would probably allow were he a UK politician. Nevertheless, while he may overstate his case, Mr Abbott makes it clear how momentous and final a Yes vote would be.

The union of England and Scotland greatly increased the security of these islands and created what has been, on most counts, Europe’s most successful and enduring nation states, a bastion of freedom and security which has more than once held the pass against tyranny and ensured the survival of liberal democratic values far beyond its shores. Those on both sides of the border who are prepared to countenance the dissolution of the UK should reflect how future generations might view this. While there will be those who rejoice, a Yes might vote in September, could well be judged the moment when an iconic nation state with all that it has represented, fractured and turned in on itself.

Robert Page
Luton, Beds

During his referendum campaign Alex Salmond has made absurd claims about Scotland’s social virtues, replacing the Celtic cringe with a false sense of moral superiority.

Dundee University and the pollster Survation tested such claims and found Scots wanted just as harsh controls on immigration, welfare, social housing and aid as their neighbours.

The first minister protects the fantasy that Scotland’s wholly devolved education system is the best in the world by pulling our schools out of key international surveys and studies. However, this ploy cannot hide the shameful fact that in wide areas of Scotland, on his watch, the only way parents can obtain a decent education for their children is to buy it.

He has turned our traditional pride of place into chippy defensiveness by introducing self-reverential delusions which diminish Scotland’s natural warmth and humanity.

The Rev Dr John Cameron
St Andrews

The RAF is sending Chinooks into Iraq for the first time since 2011 CPL NEIL BRYDEN/MoD/Getty Images

Published at 12:01AM, August 18 2014

“The barbarity and genocide in Northern Iraq and Syria, if not checked, will spread and affect us directly in various ways”

Sir, There are several imperatives for intervening once again in the Middle East. The barbarity and genocide in Northern Iraq and Syria, if not checked, will spread and affect us directly in various ways.

The appalling situation is a part of a bigger crisis that is fast becoming a global game changer. This is not just about the Middle East, as events in Indonesia and Nigeria show, and the longer-term threat to the UK is significant. The wrongs of the recent past and understandable dread of re-engagement must not blind us to this. Too little too late now and we court more horrors and greater dangers in the years ahead.

Getting things right this time requires our political leaders and opinion formers to persuade public opinion that firm, proportionate action is required to prevent genocide and chaos from spreading. Action must be genuinely international, even if a disproportionate amount of any initial military and logistic action is US/British because few others have the requisite capabilities — eg Chinook helicopters and experience.

Short-term emergency action must however be backed up by international efforts to nurture political frameworks and multi-ethnic and multi-religious state infrastructures. We must encourage the international community to stop reacting to events and begin to drive them. A sustained effort is required to safeguard viable states and to quarantine areas where order has collapsed. This may well involve both “soft” and “hard” power, but diplomacy must lead and involve the key regional powers and actors.

For us the centre of gravity now is British public opinion. Perhaps we need to examine our own consciences and priorities more and be less hasty to blame our politicians and recent mistakes. Hard work beckons.

Brigadier Nigel Hall

General Tim Cross

London W1

Sir, David Aaronovitch’s article “Only military action will defeat the jihadis” (Aug 14) is spot on, along with his apt comment, “This is Operation Drop Something From a Tornado and Get Out”.

Operation Haven in April 1991 which I participated in is a good example of what can be achieved in terms of the humanitarian relief, but also the very deployment on the ground sent a strong message to Saddam Hussein and his Republican Guard. It acted as a deterrent which helped to stabilise the region. I would hope that the UK Armed Forces, along with its Nato and Kurdish allies, could not only mount a similar operation but, most importantly, also deter the so-called Islamic State from further acts of barbarism. I just hope that the prime minister and his Cobra team have not missed this golden opportunity by its limited and hesitant approach to date.

Andrew Higginson

Barnes, London

Sir, From your news reports we are all only too aware of the terrifying humanitarian crisis in Iraq, the shortages of healthcare services and the looming threat of genocide initiated by the IS.

As doctors all having a connection with Iraq silence is not an option for us, and we believe inaction by the British government is an act of avoidable negligence. The moral and humanitarian case to support the helpless people of Iraq and to take them out of their misery is clear. The UK, the US and others have had major involvement with Iraq and cannot walk away or turn a blind eye from all this now.

Dr Husni Habboush, Consultant Haematologist, Wales

Dr Ali Kubba FRCOG, Consultant Community Gynaecologist, London

Professor Saad Shakir, Director, Drug Safety Research Unit, Southampton

Sadoon S Sadoon, Consultant Obstetrician and Gynaecologist, Medway Maritime NHS Foundation Trust, Kent

Dr Baha Al-wakeel, Consultant Emergency Medicine and H Senior Lecturer, North Middlesex University Hospital, London N18

Dr M H Jawad FRCP FRCPCH DCH, Consultant Paediatrician, Surrey & Sussex Healthcare NHS Trust

Dr A Alissa, General Practitioner, London SW15

Dr Moayed Aziz, Consultant Anaesthetist

Miss Zara Nadim, Consultant Obstetrician and gynaecologist, Surrey & Sussex Healthcare NHS Trust

Dr Mazin Alfaham, Consultant Paediatrician, Cardiff

Dr Wala Alsafi, Consultant Obstetrician & Gynaecologist, Rotherham General Hospital

Western political ignorance and arrogance are blamed for the civil wars raging in the Middle East

Sir, Tim Cross and Nigel Hall (letter, Aug 18) make a compelling case for intervention in the Middle East, but their argument is flawed. They misunderstand the cultures and desires of the indigenous peoples and misread the political realities facing western governments and financial vested interests.

As a former infantry officer I can see the military merits of their plan; but as an arabist who left Syria just a few weeks before the insurrection broke there, I see it offering no long-term solution for the region. In the minds of the indigenous peoples, it is western cultural ignorance and political arrogance that have created the cancer of militant Islam — we destroyed communities where Sunnis, Shia and Christians had lived side by side and brought civil war.

You cannot be accepted as the world’s policeman while turning a blind eye to the sins of your allies or choosing to work with only the “regional powers and actors” you please. Power without authority is worthless; and authority if it is not accepted by the majority is ultimately useless.

The Rev RC Paget

Brenchley, Kent

We should be doing our utmost to make sure that boys and girls study mathematics and the sciences

Sir, Unconscious biases, as you point out (Aug 15), can have a strong influence on whether girls take maths and science at A-level and how they perform if they do. The ethos of a school and direction from parents, can play a huge role in subject choice. Surveys for the Institute of Physics found that more than four out of five schools perpetuate gender divides between subjects.

Part of the solution could be to introduce a broad baccalaureate-style course that would require all students to study science and mathematics to age 18, as suggested in the Royal Society’s recent Vision report. This would mean all girls would study these subjects for longer, opening up opportunities after school and giving them time to get to grips thoroughly with the subjects without external influences subtly deterring them.

School leaders also have a responsibility to tackle unconscious bias where it creeps in. Schools must aim to foster gender balance in subject choices, and ensure that their teachers expect male and female students to be equally likely to want to pursue biology or physics.

Science and mathematics are crucial to future employability and the UK’s economic prosperity — we should be doing all we can to make sure as many young people as possible, be they boys or girls, study these subjects.

Sir Martin Taylor

Professor Dame Athene Donald

Is it possible to criticise Israel without being accused of antisemitism?

Sir, Jonathan Sacks (Aug 16) writes with insight on religious hatred but he fails to understand that it is Israel’s belligerence, growing sectarian nature, aggressive colonisation and indifference to international law which are the real cause of so much concern and hatred.

Events do not happen in a vacuum and by conflating Judaism and Zionism, antisemitism and criticism of Israel, Rabbi Sacks seems to be condoning what is happening in Israel.

Like many idealists who once worked on a kibbutz I am appalled at the way the vision of the founding fathers of Israel has been betrayed by fundamentalist zealots and the monster it has become.

Dominic Kirkham

Manchester

Telegraph:

The Queen’s Swan Marker with a cygnet at the annual swan upping on the river Thames  Photo: CARL COURT/AFP

6:57AM BST 18 Aug 2014

CommentsComments

SIR – What is it about the Cam that encourages such avian thugs as the swan Asboy (report, August 14)?

From 1959 to 1962, I coxed Fitzwilliam House eights in the Lents and Mays races. One unforgettable early morning, I was coxing an eight down past the Gut, where the Cobfather of all protective parents was surging up and down, with a look of row-past-me-if-you-dare in his eye. Which the stalwart Fitzwilliam oarsmen did.

Like a Stinger missile, the swan, neck outstretched, launched his attack, not of course at the burly rowers, but at me.

With tremendous foresight, our stroke ordered us to stop, and my life was saved by the batteries of water splashed over Asboy’s great-grandfather by eight blades working in unison. He resumed his angry swimming and we moved off sharpish.

Des Evans
Chichester, West Sussex

King John signs the Magna Carta at Runneymede in June 1215  Photo: Alamy

6:59AM BST 18 Aug 2014

CommentsComments

SIR – You quote the chairman of the Magna Carta Trust, Sir Robert Worcester, as saying: “It now affects more than 100 countries, who are following the rule of law, which includes France and Germany and Italy and all the Europeans, but also all the countries in the Commonwealth, save two or three.” (report, August 15)

All the countries he refers to may indeed be “following the rule of law”, but the criminal justice system in continental jurisdictions is very different to that extant in Britain and other common-law countries.

In Britain the potential defendant enjoys the protection of the law of habeas corpus, the presumption of innocence, trial by jury and the right to silence. The defendant is also protected from hearsay evidence, trials in absentia, revelation of previous convictions and unregulated press reporting.

There is no equivalence between the inquisitorial systems of criminal justice extant on the Continent, where none of these protections exist, and our own adversarial criminal justice system.

Christopher Gill
Hon President, The Freedom Association
Bridgnorth, Shropshire

SIR – The case for a public holiday on June 15 2015 (Leading article, August 14) to remember Magna Carta is well made.

But the real gap for a public holiday is October, where a day between October 14, the anniversary of the Battle of Hastings (our greatest defeat) and October 21, the Battle of Trafalgar (our greatest victory) might be salutary in these uncertain times.

Jeremy Harbord
Devizes, Wiltshire

Speeding scooters

SIR – There are speed limits on mobility scooters (Letters, August 15): 4 mph on pavements and 8 mph on roads. As with many other things, they are rarely enforced.

James B Sinclair
St Helier, Jersey

Hi, heaven

SIR – In our village church, we had just embarked on prayers of general intercession when a mobile left on a seat burst into life with a man’s voice saying: “I’m sorry but I cannot accept any further requests, please try again later.”

Have smartphones finally achieved the communications ultimate?

Rodney Stone
Marlborough, Wiltshire

Raid on Cliff Richard

SIR – The police defence of their treatment of Sir Cliff Richard (report, August 16) misses the point.

It is widely accepted that celebrities should not be given preferential treatment, but neither should they be given worse treatment. The police would not have acted in this way if the person concerned had not been a celebrity.

Robert Ascott
Eastbourne, East Sussex

SIR – One has to question the priorities of some police, given that so many officers were dispatched to search the property.

When robberies occur at modest houses it is as much as one can do to get a crime number for insurance purposes, let alone an investigation into the offence.

Brian Pay
Kibworth Beauchamp, Leicestershire

Defence of the elm

SIR – I wish Richard Kellaway every success in his venture (Letters, August 15), but please don’t blame the farmers for the lack of hedgerow elms.

I run an arable farm with conservation a priority. In the Seventies I lost more than 100 elm trees due to the importation of elm timber with bark in place, which introduced the elm bark beetle to this country.

Subsequently I began planting many acres of new woodland, and endeavoured to allow elm shoots from the felled trees to re-establish in some of my hedgerows. The elms flourish for about six years until the bark becomes hard enough for the beetle to live beneath. Once there, the tree is dead within a year. This leaves many yards of hedges with little growing except bramble.

Willum Butterfield
East Haddon Hill, Northamptonshire

Life in Beebossia

SIR – Dan Hodges paints a colourful picture of life in “Beebossia” (Comment, August 14) – sadly it’s a misleading one.

For starters, the Government does not appoint the BBC’s director general – the BBC Trust has that responsibility. The BBC has not paid out £100,000 in “goodwill payments” to people who had complained of harassment: the figure covers a six-year period and includes payments made in response to all complaints to TV Licensing during this time.

Mr Hodges also suggests that last year more than 50 people were sent to jail for non-payment of the licence fee: licence fee evaders are fined, not jailed. Only if they fail to pay the fine is jail an option for the courts.

At 40p a day per household, the BBC is great value for money – and support for the licence fee as the method of funding the BBC has risen from 31 per cent in 2004 to 53 per cent now.

Andrew Scadding
Head of Corporate Affairs, BBC
London W1

SIR – Has Dan Hodges ever watched any television in other countries? The BBC, for all its failings, is a treasure.

I would be happy to pay my licence fee for BBC Four alone.

Alison Place
Hampton, Middlesex

In plain English

SIR – Travelling on my twice daily commute along the A4 in west London, I encounter advertising hoardings that tell me, variously, to “Live Colourful”, “Go Fun Yourself” and “Drive Bold”.

How do I do any of these things?

Sarah Sinclair
Richmond, Surrey

Don’t deny cannabis-based drugs as painkillers

SIR – No wonder that the treatment of extreme chronic pain lags so far behind other medical disciplines when cannabis-based medication is denied to patients who could benefit from it (report, August 16).

Today pain management largely relies on derivatives of the willow tree and the poppy and its progeny. The former cannot alleviate excruciating chronic pain and may damage internal organs. The latter require ever-increasing doses, leading to confusion, physical instability, addiction and again, possible organ damage.

Until the NHS is prepared to be more adventurous in the search for new painkillers, possible funders will remain reluctant to invest in this desperately needed branch of medicine.

Erica Barrett
Hastings, East Sussex

SIR – I have had multiple sclerosis for 20 years, and in June I experienced the joy of walking through town without looking at the ground. My right hand, which had been curled and numb, started to straighten, and the fearful muscular pain abated. For the first time I slept soundly without sleeping pills, and was able to watch television without leaning on a chair to cope with spasms.

A dear friend had financed my first online purchase of Sativex, the cannabis-based drug, since two GPs in Shropshire and Norfolk had turned down my request.

I could scream with frustration and desperation, not on my own behalf but on behalf of all MS patients, many of whom are both younger than me and less mobile.

Jacquie Langham
Holt, Norfolk

Iraqi Christians displaced by the violence in their country wait in line for aid Photo: Reuters

7:00AM BST 18 Aug 2014

CommentsComments

SIR – A genocide was perpetrated 99 years ago upon the Christians of the Middle East, including the Aramaic-speaking Assyrians, Chaldeans and Aramaeans. Now we see history repeating itself.

Christian towns and villages, such as Qaraqosh, Telkepe and Alqosh, which had largely escaped the violence of recent decades, are now emptied of their people. These towns, with ancient monasteries, are of huge historical and cultural significance. In this area, furthermore, Aramaic has been spoken for thousands of years.

Wave upon wave of refugees, amounting to hundreds of thousands of people, are now crowded into the small Kurdish region, itself gravely threatened by the Islamic State forces. Meanwhile, tens of thousands of Yazidis have fled via the mountains without shelter. Urgent aid is needed, but in the longer term the refugees cannot stay in Erbil.

As scholars engaged in the study of their language and cultural heritage, we call upon Britain, the governments of the European Union, the United States, and the international community to do all in their power to allow the refugees back to their homes in the plain of Mosul and to institute an internationally protected safe haven in northern Iraq of the kind that, 20 years ago, protected the Kurds from genocide. This enabled the region up to now to enjoy a stability and prosperity that we would wish for all Iraqis.

Dr Eleanor Coghill
University of Konstanz
Dr Alessandro Mengozzi
University of Turin
Professor Geoffrey Khan
University of Cambridge
Profesor Dr Werner Arnold
University of Heidelberg
University Professor Dr Shabo Talay
Free University of Berlin
Professor Yona Sabar
University of California, Los Angeles
Professor Dr Heleen Murre-van den Berg
Leiden University of Leiden
Professor Fabrizio Pennacchietti
University of Turin
Professor Dr Otto Jastrow
Tallinn University
Professor Steven Fassberg
The Hebrew University of Jerusalem
Professor Hezy Mutzafi
Tel Aviv University
Dr Samuel Ethan Fox
University of Chicago
Dr Sergey Loesov
Russian State University for the Humanities, Moscow
Dr Pablo Kirtchuk
Institut National de Langues et Civilisations Orientales, Paris
Dr Maciej Tomal
Jagiellonian University, Krakow
Dr George Anton Kiraz
Rutgers University, New Jersey
Nineb Lamassu
University of Cambridge
Zeki Bilgic
University of Konstanz
Georges Toro
University of Konstanz
Dr Charles G. Häberl
Rutgers University, New Jersey
Dr Roberta Borghero
University of Cambridge
Dr Michael Waltisberg
University of Marburg
Dr Alinda Damsma
Leo Baeck College, London
Dr Na’ama Pat-El
University of Texas at Austin
Dr Johanna Rubba
Cal Poly State University, California
Rev Kristine Jensen
Aramaic Bible Translation, Peoria, Arizona
Dr Lidia Napiorkowska
University of Cambridge
Kathrin Göransson
University of Cambridge
Ariel Gutman
University of Konstanz
Michael Wingert
University of California, Los Angeles
Timothy Hogue
University of California, Los Angeles
Kristine Mole
University of Cambridge
Dr Jasmin Sinha
Aubange, Belgium
Fabio Gasparini
University of Tutin
Demsin Lachin
Aramaic Bible Translation, Turlock, California
Dr Margaretha Folmer
Leiden University
Professor Dr Estiphan Panoussi
University of Gothenburg
Professor Emeritus Olga Kapeliuk
Hebrew University of Jerusalem
Dr Jean Sibille
University of Toulouse
Joseph Alichoran
Institut National de Langues et Civilisations Orientales, Paris
Professor Eran Cohen
Hebrew University of Jerusalem
Robin Bet Shmuel
Oriental Cultural Centre, Duhok, Iraq
Dr Alexey Lyavdansky
Russian State University for the Humanities, Moscow
Martin Luther Chan
University of California, Los Angeles
Dr M. David Hanna
Los Angeles
Dr Laura Kalin
University of Connecticut
Illan Gonen
University of Cambridge
Dr Francesco Zanella
University of Bonn
D. Robert Paulissian
Journal of Assyrian Academic Studies

SIR – Saddam Hussein was no threat to Britain before our invasion of Iraq in 2003, and the Islamic State is no threat today. Its members are extreme but rational players responding to events in the Middle East.Our policy a year ago was to fund them to defeat President Bashar al-Assad in Syria, so why the turnaround now?

Western intervention in the Middle East has been a disaster. Many have died, countries have split on sectarian lines, and minorities have been targeted in the ensuing chaos. Our policy must be to step away and offer only diplomacy and aid.

Bilal Patel
London E1

SIR – No doubt the reason David Cameron does not want Iraqi Christian refugees in Britain is that he knows the asylum system is completely out of control, as it has been since Tony Blair was prime minister.

Hugh Jones
Cardiff

SIR – As a result of this crisis, when some British Muslims call for a caliphate under sharia law, we know what they mean.

C M Bartel
Orpington, Kent

Irish Times:

Sir, – In 1992, the excuse was the absence of legislation. Yet with legislation now in place, we have learned of the forced premature delivery by Caesarean section of a baby to a vulnerable woman who sought an abortion. Nobody, surely, can claim this dreadful situation is progress. – Yours, etc,

CATHERINE DUNLEAVY,

Grey’s Lane ,

Howth,

Co Dublin.

Sir, – I fully agree with the following assertion by Prof William Binchy: “Inequalities based on race, age, gender, physical or mental capacity, economic or intellectual power violate the basic requirement of human rights” (“UN committee’s view on abortion contradicts core ethical value of human rights”, Opinion & Analysis, August 18th).

However, this is written in the context of a defence of one of the most draconian abortion laws in the world. Every single inequality Prof Binchy lists is in fact compounded by the anti-abortion amendment that he campaigned for in 1983.

To understand the discrimination at the heart of the Eighth Amendment, it must be considered alongside the Thirteenth, which allows for travel outside Ireland for abortion services, a provision acknowledged as necessary by most anti-abortion campaigners. For the more well-to-do in Ireland, such “abortion tourism” is an inconvenience; for the working poor and the unemployed, this avenue can be effectively barred. (This inconvenient truth was put to and acknowledged by the Government delegation at the UN hearings.) Many people with physical disabilities also face difficulties or are unable to travel. Minors, too, may well not be able to: they may not have a passport or money, or they may not be in a position to tell their parents. As asylum seekers are hemmed in by our borders unless they receive permission from the Minister for Justice and Equality to leave, and as the pocket money they receive would not go anywhere near covering the price of a “weekend break”, this option is all but eliminated in their case too.

The Eighth Amendment also impacts those with mental capacity issues: the spectre of the Eighth Amendment looms large in the Assisted Decision-Making Capacity Bill 2013, which outlines a situation wherein a woman’s stated end-of-life care wishes can be overturned by the High Court if she is pregnant. Finally, the gender discrimination in the 1983 Amendment is clear: women cannot avail of the full range of services to safeguard their health (merely their lives), a restriction not placed on men.

Naturally, the pregnant woman is largely absent from the rights discourse Prof Binchy outlines. This omission is a requisite for anti-choice doublethink that attempts to reconcile support for both abortion bans and human rights. – Yours, etc,

WILSON JOYCE,

Main Street,

Chapelizod,

Dublin 20.

Sir, – Listening to the debate about the rights of a woman to have an abortion, it is easy to forget that there is a tiny human being who is currently fighting for life at the centre of this situation. Very few commentators in the media have spoken about the impact for this child of being delivered so early. One study found that up to half the children born between 24 and 28 weeks of gestation have a disability. Other risks include hypothermia, hypoglycaemia and respiratory distress, to mention just a few. So, if this child survives, it is a distinct possibility that he or she will experience the consequences of somebody else’s “choice” long into the future. Where are this child’s rights in this debate? – Yours, etc,

Dr RUTH CULLEN,

Rutledge Terrace,

South Circular Road,

Dublin 8.

Sir, – Minister for Rural Affairs Ann Phelan says action may be taken to prevent supermarkets being built in rural areas, but the closure of Garda stations and post offices will continue (Front Page, August 16th).

Donegal – Ireland’s most deprived county – has seen this approach before.

The Government took decisive action – it cancelled the A5 road link to Dublin and introduced the Wild Atlantic Way which, like Government policy, leads nowhere in both directions. – Yours, etc,

Dr JOHN DOHERTY,

Cnoc an Stollaire,

Gaoth Dobhair,

Co Donegal.

Sir, – Further to your coverage of the issue in your Weekend supplement (August 16th), the lifeblood is draining from rural Ireland. There are not enough people nor is there enough money to sustain communities and small businesses. Houses and holiday homes are empty and undervalued. In contrast, in the cities, people scramble to afford decent housing in safe environments.

Surely, therefore, one possible solution to revitalising rural Ireland would be to find ways to encourage all those who can function remotely – writers, artists, academics, advisers, engineers and retirees – to consider the joys of living away from traffic in the wonderful environments of countryside and coastline.

To provide the necessary incentives, Ann Phelan is going to have to do the homework and persuade her colleagues in Government and the private sector of the long-term benefits to the country as a whole of investing in a first-class infrastructure in communication networks.

Easy access to broadband for all may be the eventual solution but it is a ways off yet and, in the meantime, one can provide first-rate communications services (internet, fax) by continuing to support and expand facilities in community centres, which play a huge role in rural life.

For the last decade, we have enjoyed living on the staggeringly beautiful Donegal coast, with stunning views, lovely neighbours, wild, windswept beaches and first-rate golf courses.

Without the support of a fantastic community centre staffed by great people and with very good communication facilities, it would not have been possible for us to remain here for substantial portions of each year.

There must be many like us who would be only too happy to trade a life of city strife for the joys and advantages of rural environments so long as business level communication services were available. – Yours, etc,

ALAN C NEWELL,

Maslack,

Downings,

Co Donegal.

A chara, – Changes to short-form death certificates may offer some succour to bereaved families following a death by suicide (“Legal requirement for an inquest after a suicide needs to be reviewed”, Opinion & Analysis, August 13th).

Balancing the legal requirement of an inquest with the grieving of a family, even a whole community, is undoubtedly difficult. But inquests serve many functions, including highlighting if future deaths can be prevented.

The public interest aspect of media reporting of deaths by suicide can still be improved. While good practice guidelines exist, sometimes they are not always adhered to.

When circumstances are “tragic”, or the person is of high profile, recent history shows a lack of restraint in some media reporting of intimate and distressing aspects of suicide.

This may cause much more harm than a lawful inquest. – Is mise,

MICHAEL NASH,

Assistant Professor

Mental Health,

School of Nursing

Sir, – Desmond FitzGerald (August 14th) seems determined to label anyone who protests Israeli actions in Gaza as anti-Semitic. I think he is deliberately missing the point. The reason so many people from different backgrounds and persuasions are condemning these actions is because their representatives, who have no trouble unequivocally opposing Russia, the Taliban, both sides in Syria, the Islamic State and a host of sub-Saharan African warlords, are strangely reluctant to come out strongly against the atrocities (and that is undoubtedly what they are) being committed against innocent civilians and children in Gaza.

I am prepared to condemn unconditionally any terrorist actions by Hamas against Israel. I look forward to an equally clear-cut statement by Mr FitzGerald concerning Israeli actions. I suspect I may be waiting some time. – Yours, etc,

DAVE ROBBIE,

Seafield Crescent,

Booterstown, Co Dublin.

Sir, – If the HPAT (Health Professions Admissions Test) was “originally introduced as a predictor of suitability for a career in medicine” (“Points for medicine fall sharply after test restructure”, Home News, August 18th), it must surely now be deemed a failure, and one which merely favours those who can afford expensive HPAT “grinds”.

Given that the Medical Council has recently told us that 10 per cent of our young medical graduates chose not to register or reregister as doctors in Ireland last year (some of whom have quit the profession entirely), and given our routine inability to properly staff our hospitals each July due to the exodus of newly minted doctors, is it not time that we dropped the emphasis on “suitability” for a medical career and replaced it with “sustainability” (identifying potential doctors who will actually stay and serve in our struggling system).

This might mean dropping the controversial screening test. But alternatively, why not utilise the HPAT as a “bargaining chip” and actually waive it for those would-be medical students here who have the necessary Leaving Certificate points and also commit to, say, a six-month stint in our emergency departments (or other areas of medical manpower shortage), with the usual (but hopefully evolving) terms, conditions, training and salaries to apply?

The net result of such a boost to our staffing numbers would undoubtedly transform our acute health service for the better, with remarkably little cost to the State.

Even more importantly, it would positively favour those who have that immeasurable but essential quality, a passion to care for their fellow citizens. – Yours, etc,

Dr CHRIS LUKE,

Consultant in

Emergency Medicine,

Mercy University Hospital,

Grenville Place,

A chara, – Further to your editorial of August 18th, so now we can add salt to the list of foods that bounce back and forth on the lists of what is healthy and what is not. It seems like today’s health food is tomorrow’s poison and vice versa, much to the bewilderment and frustration of the poor punter who only wants to do what is best.

The whole confounded business reminds one of the scene in Woody Allen’s Sleepers, where doctors in the future are laughing at the people of our era for not appreciating the health benefits of deep fat, steak, cream pie and hot fudge. Indeed.

At this point I would hardly be surprised if an article were to appear in a prestigious medical journal extolling the life-enhancing properties of deep-fried Mars bars washed down with generous helpings of caffeinated corn syrup.

It would be less confusing simply to eat moderate amounts of the foods we like – what we’d risk losing in potential health benefits would be more than made up for by the reduction in stress in dealing with all this conflicting “expert” advice. – Is mise,

Rev PATRICK G BURKE,

Castlecomer,

Co Kilkenny.

Sir, – Regarding the requirement that broadcasters give equal access to the proponents of either side of an argument, I wonder whether it would be consistent with natural justice to apply this obligation to the Sunday sermon?

I also wonder whether the proponents of a particular point of view may have reason to regret the insistence with which they use various legalistic contrivances to assist in propagating their causes.

The recent carry-on about Derek Mooney’s indiscretion has done little more than expose the complainants to ridicule. A self-inflicted reductio ad absurdum is not an effective way to further one’s arguments. – Yours, etc,

PETER KENNY,

Hillside Drive,

Dublin 14.

Sir, – I am personally aware of several people who have travelled from Ebola-endemic areas of west Africa in recent days to east Africa and onwards to European destinations, including Ireland, with little difficulty. Given Ebola’s varied incubation period of two to 21 days, when cases are still infective, such relaxed travel procedures are worrying.

The World Health Organisation believes that the current epidemic is under-reported and the extent of its spread underestimated.

Certainly there is not enough evidence about the epidemiology of this disease to warrant the confidence expressed by many health agencies with responsibility for the protection of the public.

Given that the Ebola I virus has shown a remarkable ability to survive in different environments since its first onset in 1976, it is entirely possible that a strain of the virus suited to an urban high population density setting, rather than its current rural low density population, could evolve. Improved health surveillances at our national ports would be prudent and should be more visible and more rigorous. – Yours, etc,

Dr VINCENT KENNY,

Glenvara Park,

Knocklyon,

Sir, – Now that Labour’s support has doubled, according to the first poll since their change of leadership, is there any chance that Fine Gael might take a leaf out of its book?

There are some very capable politicians in the party, and any one of these would be better than an increasingly remote Taoiseach who is either unwilling or unable to engage in public debate. The extent of his communication with the public, apart from his stock-in-trade soundbites, seems only to consist of scripted speeches in the Dáil – along with the same old repeated putdowns of the Opposition.

Labour’s dumping of the old guard seems to be paying off, so where better to start in Fine Gael than with the current “Father of the Dáil”? – Yours, etc,

NORMAN DAVIES,

Belton Terrace,

Bray, Co Wicklow.

Sir, – I don’t understand why the analysis of the Leaving Cert is always presented in terms of boys versus girls. The tone of the presentation of these “girls over boys” results is always celebratory, rather than questioning how the system is clearly not working for boys and that it is high time for a rethink. – Yours, etc,

MICHAEL McLAUGHLIN,

Olney Crescent,

Terenure, Dublin 6W.

A chara, – The “music” played in Croke Park is a characterless cacophony inflicted on spectators – and that right up to the starting whistle.

As well as the loud commercials when the so-called music is not being blasted out, why attempt to trick spectators wishing to see an action replay on the large screens during the game by annoyingly replacing them irregularly with commercial advertising? Have we not already paid for our tickets? – Is mise,

SEÁN Ó CONLÁIN,

Droim Dhá Thiar,

Co Liatroma.

Sir, – The Irish Times is to be commended for providing balance to both sides of the debate on how we should reflect on events that ultimately lead to Irish independence.

As a people, if we are to achieve anything from the decade of commemorations, it should be to understand what really happened 100 years ago in all its complexity, rather than what is the most convenient narrative or conjecture for both sides of the political divide in terms of their own legacy or current political objectives. – Yours, etc,

KEVIN RYAN,

Tannenweg,

Walldorf,

Germany.

A chara, – The “music” played in Croke Park is a characterless cacophony inflicted on spectators – and that right up to the starting whistle.

As well as the loud commercials when the so-called music is not being blasted out, why attempt to trick spectators wishing to see an action replay on the large screens during the game by annoyingly replacing them irregularly with commercial advertising? Have we not already paid for our tickets? – Is mise,

SEÁN Ó CONLÁIN,

Droim Dhá Thiar,

Co Liatroma.

A chara, – Any chance of a decrease of 100 per cent in the number of letters about statistics? – Is mise,

LOMAN Ó LOINGSIGH,

Ellensborough Drive,

Kiltipper Road,

Dublin 24.

Irish Independent:

The resignation of Cardinal Sean Brady will do little to heal the pain of those abused by Brendan Smyth.

At the heart of the incompetent and inappropriate handling of the abuse scandal was a fatal flaw in the way the Catholic Church was organised and saw itself, not the acts of particular bishops, which were symptomatic of a deeper malaise.

The mode of selection of bishops was, and remains, unfit for purpose. The search for a safe pair of hands to fulfil the bishop’s role kills the enthusiasm and drive of many charismatic and dedicated priests who are crying out for inspiring leadership.

Outmoded ways of exercising leadership, through the appeal to authority as the determiner of all that is right and good, is the worst possible foundation on which to build our lives.

There can be no authority, even the authority of God, that can ever replace our personal responsibility for what we do and become.

Yet obedience to Rome remains the defining virtue required in our bishops. With a few notable exceptions, once they take office, they retreat into a world far removed from the lives and sentiments of those they purport to serve.

Though many have toned down the level of regalia worn in public, there remains a residual over-emphasis on pomp, power, control and hierarchy and on over-dressing in purple and red.

Cardinal Brady was a man of his times, deeply trusting of the institutional church to get things right. What he did was inexcusable but driven by the belief that the hand of God 
guided that institution in all it did. In reality, he was a fallible leader in a fallible church, 
making very serious errors of judgment.

He was misguided, naive and ill advised. He shared with all of us the capacity for getting things badly wrong if we do not seek good counsel.

Thankfully, the present Pope is more focused on what the church can learn rather than on what it can teach.

He seems more concerned with rekindling a commitment to seeking truth than with proclaiming that we possess it.

Philip O’Neill

Oxford, UK

Commemorate the RIC

I was privileged to be among the congregation at a Mass in the Pro Cathedral on August 3, marking the 100th anniversary of the outbreak of World War I. It was heartening to hear Archbishop Diarmuid Martin refer to those Irish men who took part in the war (one of whom was his uncle) as “having fought with great courage in the defence of an ideal”. Foreign Minister Charlie Flanagan, who also attended, correctly said afterwards that it was “most regrettable” that the Irish war dead were “airbrushed from history”.

Sadly, there is another cohort of Irish men who “fought with great courage” for the same ideal – the promise of Home Rule and devolved government – and who are still “airbrushed from history”.

They served their communities faithfully in the decades leading up to independence, as the record will testify, until they found themselves suddenly on the wrong side of history.

The record shows that over 500 members of the RIC and 14 members of the DMP died violently between 1916 and 1922. The writer Sean O Faolain, whose father Denis Whelan served with the RIC in Cork city, said of this bloody period: “Men like my father were dragged out in those years and shot – so be it. Shot to inspire terror – so be it. But they were not traitors – they had their loyalties and they stuck to them.”

The RIC was stuck between a rock and hard place. Quite a number were sustained in their choice by a strong police culture in their families, but like the Volunteers who opposed them, they were for the most part staunchly Catholic and nationalist.

However despite our lobbying efforts over several years, there seems to be no apparent appetite among our politicians to have a memorial erected to these men or even to have an official commemoration for them, a matter of major disappointment to their legions of descendants.

Gerard Lovett

Knocklyon, Dublin 16

Rights of the child

Dearbhail McDonald remarks of the current abortion controversy that, “once again, it is vulnerable young women who do not have the safety valve of travel or other means, who are paying the price for our political cowardice” (Irish Independent, August 18).

Perhaps she should spare a thought for the vulnerable baby lying in one of our hospitals right now. Is that baby not paying a price? Is that baby’s very life and existence “wrong” in the eyes of some, or at least unworthy of mention?

Tom Finegan

Celbridge, Co Kildare

Listening to the debate about the rights of a woman to have an abortion, it is easy to forget that there is a tiny human being who is currently fighting for life at the centre of this situation.

Very few commentators in the media have spoken about the impact for this child of being delivered so early. One study found that up to half the children born between 24 and 28 weeks’ gestation have a disability. Other risks include hypothermia, hypoglycaemia and respiratory distress, to mention just a few.

So, if this child survives, it is a distinct possibility that he or she will experience the consequences of somebody else’s ‘choice’ long into the future. Where are the child’s rights in this debate?

Dr Ruth Cullen

South Circular Road, Dublin 8

Stand up to the ECB’s bullying

The European Central Bank has confirmed that the loss of our permanent vote at ECB council level is imminent as a result of a change in voting structures, caused by the entry of Lithuania into the eurozone from January 1 next year (Irish Independent, August 11).

In no circumstances should Ireland, at local or European level, submit to the latest bullying tactic of the ECB. A more valid alternative would be to leave the monetary union and join Britain and Sterling.

Following the loss of our permanent vote at the ECB council, Ireland will be relegated to the second tier of smaller European countries, having less voting rights than the five bigger ones sitting on the council.

The ending of one state, one vote, for smaller member states next January is an affront to democracy.

The troika saw fit to compliment us on our efforts and success in economic recovery before it finally bid us “adieu” – but not, unfortunately, before leaving us shouldering the biggest part of a €64bn debt to the ECB.

Now, we see the true hypocrisy in how the European Central Bank says “thank you”.

James Gleeson

Thurles, Co Tipperary

Make mine a 99

There I was, glancing at my Irish Independent and waiting for my plain ice cream cone, when, with joy unbridled, I read that Brendan Howlin may offer some little relief to Public Service pensioners like me.

“Cancel that order…make it a 99,” I hollered. Back to life in the ‘fast lane’ soon?!

Tom Gilsenan

Beaumont, Dublin 9

Swapping imperial masters

A question that has never been answered is what price would Ireland have paid for German support, 
had the Easter Rising in 1916 succeeded?

Would the country have simply swapped one imperial master for a somewhat less benign one?

Colum Joyce

Clifden, Co Galway

Irish Independent


Sharland

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20 August 2014 Sharland

I jog around the park I still have arthritis in my left knee, but I manage to get round the park. A wettish day. Sharland comes to call

Scrabble: Mary wins, but gets just over 400. perhaps Mary will win tomorrow.

107 Games Mary win 57 John 50

Obituary:

Professor George Scanlon – obituary

Professor George Scanlon was a scholar of Islamic art who uncovered a flourishing society in the ruins of al-Fustat, an early capital of Egypt

Scanlon (pointing) directing excavations at Fustat with his two Polish colleagues, Professors W Kubiak and A Ostrach

Scanlon (pointing) directing excavations at Fustat with his two Polish colleagues, Professors W Kubiak and A Ostrach

6:44PM BST 18 Aug 2014

CommentsComments

Professor George Scanlon, who has died aged 88, was a scholar of Islamic art and architecture and a pivotal figure in the excavation of early Islamic settlements in Egypt.

He was best known for his excavation work at the settlement of al-Fustat, Egypt’s first capital during the Islamic period. Though occupied since antiquity, the city, built immediately after the Arab conquest of Egypt in AD 641 and featuring the first mosque built on the continent of Africa, reached its peak in the 12th century. But in 1168 it was burned down on the orders of its vizier to keep its wealth out of the hands of the Crusaders. The ruins were eventually absorbed by Cairo, and for some 800 years were used as a rubbish dump. When Scanlon first visited the area in 1964, the site was in danger of being buried under modern buildings.

At the time that Scanlon began his work, most archaeologists working in Egypt tended to focus on pre-Islamic sites. The Arab conquest of 641 was generally seen as marking something of a pause — even a step backwards — in the civilisation of Egypt; so the archaeology of the Islamic period tended to be neglected.

Scanlon’s excavations, however, revealed a flourishing society living in a city which featured a coherent street plan and an extensive and sophisticated sewerage and drainage system, and enjoyed extensive trading links with countries ranging from Spain to China.

Scanlon’s findings at al-Fustat and other Islamic sites helped to stimulate a new scholarly interest in Islamic art and archaeology work in Egypt, with missions being established to investigate sites throughout the country. “It’s like a Cinderella story,” Scanlon observed. “Now we’re with the best of them.”

George Scanlon was born on April 23 1926 in Philadelphia, and took degrees in History and Literature at Swarthmore College, Pennsylvania. It was during his service with the US Navy in the 1950s that he became interested in the medieval civilisation of the Mediterranean and Egypt. Returning to the United States, he took another degree, in Oriental Studies, followed by a doctorate at Princeton University. In 1957-58 he spent a year as a Fulbright Research Fellow at the Faculty of Arts and Sciences at the American University in Cairo (AUC), researching his doctoral thesis entitled A Muslim Manual of War, an examination of Mameluke equestrian warfare.

From the 1960s onwards, under the auspices of the American Research Center in Cairo, Scanlon became active as a field director archaeologist, working for three seasons on medieval sites in Nubia — Gebel Adda and the Coptic monastery of Qasr al-Wizz — as part of the Unesco-funded campaign to save or record monuments before they were engulfed by the waters rising behind the Aswan Dam. Subsequently he worked for nine seasons at al-Fustat.

Unusually for Egyptian archaeology, these were “rescue” digs carried out, often in a hurry, with the aim of documenting important sites before their destruction. This necessitated much improvisation, and, when leading excavations at al-Fustat, Scanlon directed activities from the quarterdeck of a houseboat (appropriately named Fustat) that served for many years as his office and home.

A lively individual known for his colourful work shirts (which students competed for once he grew tired of them) and for breaking into operatic arias while he worked, Scanlon would deal with any insubordination from the lower decks with the experience acquired in the US Navy in the South China Seas.

After a hard working day, the boat would become a social centre where members of the archaeological team might rub shoulders with a visiting writer, a film star, or a sprinkling of local ambassadors — though Scanlon would invite only the sort of diplomats capable of holding their own in a discussion of, say, the novels of Henry James.

When not working in the field, Scanlon pursued an extensive teaching career. He was a fellow at the Center for Middle Eastern Studies at Harvard University, and Senior Visiting Fellow at St Anthony’s College in Oxford (1966-68 and 1971-74), where he funded and inaugurated the annual George Antonius lecture.

He was an Associate Professor of History at the University of Michigan (1969-1971) and research curator at the university’s Kelsey Museum of Ancient and Medieval Archaeology. He was Professor of Islamic Art and Architecture at AUC from 1974 to 2011.

Scanlon set demanding standards of scholarship and would never “dumb down”, always insisting on exactitude in dates and facts. Students working on his excavations at al-Fustat would often test him by buying a modern piece of pottery, encrusting it with dirt, then mixing it in with other finds to see if he could be tricked. He never was.

Scanlon received numerous honours, including election as a Corresponding Member of the Institut d’Égypte in 1987. In 1998 he was the first recipient of the Middle East Medievalists’ (MEM) Lifetime Achievement Award.

He was unmarried.

Professor George Scanlon, born April 23 1926, died July 13 2014

Guardian:

I can’t help thinking that every time David Cameron utters the words “family-friendly”, a couple with 2.4 children (in need of a tax break) are at the front of his mind (Cameron puts ‘family test’ back on agenda, 18 August). All manner of policies impact on families; he need look no further than the scandal of children and young people with mental health problems being assessed in police cells due to a shortage of health facilities (Report, 18 August). Let’s hope that one of the parties contesting the next election will have the courage to call for increased spending on healthcare; after all, 49% of us support such a policy (Half of voters happy to pay more tax to fund NHS, 16 August).
Les Bright
Exeter, Devon

• Cameron’s test to ensure that all domestic policies help family life is surely just to make us think that Conservatives are genuinely interested in our welfare. We are talking here about home life. Home, no matter where or what its material and human combination and composition, is where we seek solace, shelter, warmth, love, affection and nurture. When our home life, for whatever reason, becomes physically and mentally intolerable, we and it become dysfunctional, and the place that should give us stability and security gives us neither. Concern about the impact of the cost of living and living conditions and cultural nourishment on home life is one of the bedrocks of socialism. Is Cameron a closet lefty?
Judy Marsh
Nottingham

• Not all so called “problem families” are poor (Zoe Williams, Whose fault is poverty? The election blame game is on, 18 August). Some may be wealthy. In his study of public schools (Wounded Leaders: British Elitism and the Entitlement Illusion, 2014), psychotherapist Nick Duffell questions the decisions of some parents to send their children to boarding schools (Report, 10 June) when the outcome can be adults who find it difficult to make satisfactory personal relationships.

The head of the government’s Troubled Families programme, Louise Casey, could ask David Cameron to extend her brief. Problem: David Cameron is a main case study in Duffell’s book. Indeed Duffell argues that the dominance of the Commons by those from public schools makes for unsatisfactory government.
Bob Holman
Glasgow

• Louise Casey would be helped in her task if she considered the advice given by the English historian RH Tawney a century ago in his inaugural lecture at LSE on “Poverty as an Industrial Problem”: “Improve the character of individuals by all means – if you feel competent to do so, especially of those whose excessive incomes expose them to particular temptations.” And as Baroness Barbara Wootton pointed out in 1959, commenting on the training of social workers, “Until we have abolished mental and physical illness, poverty and overcrowding, as well as such human frailties as jealousy and self-assertiveness, many of the problems presented are frankly insoluble. But they can often be alleviated, and most of them, it is worth noting, would be a lot more tolerable if those afflicted with them had a lot more money.” Perhaps Mr Cameron’s new concern about families should lead him to have a word with Mr Duncan Smith and Mr Pickles about the adverse effects of their policies on families.
Professor John Veit-Wilson
Newcastle University

• If politicians are genuine in their concern about the health and wellbeing of our children (and ultimately our society), they need to understand what is known about brain development and put in place policies that support the best environment for our children’s development. Young children who are nurtured, talked to and played with attentively by a constant, sensitive and responsive carer – most often, but not always, the mother – with other caring adults as secondary attachment figures will almost invariably thrive.

The lives of children will only be improved when the emotional needs of very young children are safeguarded and given due weight by policymakers. Scientific research is convincing in its message that the first three years of life shape a child’s physical, emotional and mental development – for good or bad – out of proportion to the rest of childhood.

What About The Children?, a national charity that speaks out about the emotional needs of children under three, would like to see policymakers promoting prevention rather than intervention to protect the wellbeing of all children by establishing: universal education and support services during the perinatal period; tax and benefit systems that promote the role of families in caring for children; high-quality care for all children under three that prioritises, irrespective of the setting, continuity of sensitive care.
Lydia Keyte
Chair, What About The Children?

• The dreaded Tina – “there is no alternative” – has spooked ministers at the Department for Work and Pensions into the mantra that the bedroom tax is absolutely necessary to get the housing benefit under control (Woman killed herself after worries about bedroom tax, 13 August). No matter that they were warned that the stress of demanding both bedroom tax rent up to £24 a week and council tax up to £8 a week from single adults receiving £72.40 jobseeker’s allowance (JSA), employment and support allowance (ESA) or income support from April 2013 would lead to suicide.

During the passage of the Welfare Reform Act 2012 they were sent a case reported by the local government ombudsman in 2001 of a single, semi-literate adult living alone in Southwark (and 30 other debt-related suicides). Jobcentre Plus mistakenly cancelled his JSA, so Southwark cancelled his housing and council tax benefits, creating arrears in both accounts. Southwark’s outsourced agent sent him a summons for unpaid council tax of £235.10, plus costs. The summons (about 3m of which are dispatched a year) contains the following threats, in bold type and highlighted: “The council will be able to … instruct bailiffs to take your goods to settle your debt – this can include your car. You will be liable to pay the bailiffs’ costs which could substantially increase the debt. Instruct your employer to deduct payments from your salary or wages. Deduct money straight from your jobseeker’s allowance or income support. Make you bankrupt. Make a charging order against your home. Have you committed to prison.”

His body was found hanging in his flat. The police found the summons with him, paper littered with rough calculations and a note: “Dear … I at to do this I am in so much in Detr good By for ever Love …”
Rev Paul Nicolson
Taxpayers Against Poverty

• Polly Toynbee is right to say that Jobcentre Plus offices have become sanction factories (Comment, 13 August). Last winter my brother received two unjust sanctions from his jobcentre. The first immediately deprived him of his jobseeker’s allowance for 13 weeks, the second deprived him of his allowance for four weeks. We appealed. When the DWP refused to overturn them, we pursued our appeal to HM Courts & Tribunals – where both sanctions were swiftly quashed on the grounds of unreasonableness, and my brother’s lost benefit immediately restored.

It is grossly unfair that benefits are stopped as soon as a sanction is imposed, and not when all paths of appeal have been exhausted. Nevertheless, my advice to anyone who feels they have been wrongly sanctioned is to appeal. Don’t be put off by the DWP upholding the initial sanction – it seems to be its default position. And don’t be put off by the appeals procedure. It looks arduous but isn’t. Keep going, in writing, beyond the DWP to the independently minded HM Courts & Tribunals – where common sense and justice seem to reside. It is your right.

I believe many unjust sanctions are knowingly imposed in the knowledge that many jobseekers won’t have the willpower to appeal against them. Don’t let them get away with that. Appeal, appeal, appeal.
Simon Block
New Barnet, Hertfordshire

• Is “Labour’s poverty plus a pound policy”, in David Laws’s phrase (Report, 16 August), by any chance related to the policy that lifted 600,000 children out of poverty and which has been followed by a rise in child poverty under the Tory/Lib Dem coalition?
Jeremy Beecham
Labour, House of Lords

Trident relocation costs detailed

I read with much interest Richard Norton-Taylor’s analysis of the Royal United Services Institute (Rusi) report, suggesting that Plymouth Devonport could be a reasonable alternative to Faslane, should Scotland become independent (Trident could go to England, says thinktank, 14 August). The Rusi report argues there are no insurmountable technical or financial obstacles to Plymouth being a site. Well, unlike Faslane, the Plymouth site is next to a significant population of 260,000 people. The site also contains a considerable number of redundant submarines that are waiting, after an exhaustive decade-long consultation period, a final decision on what will be done with them. An accident with a Trident submarine at Devonport does not bear thinking about and the report admits there are a number of realistic scenarios that would put the public at risk.

I would also think the local authorities, local MPs and the local population may be concerned about it, and many would actively oppose it. The Rusi report also suggests it will “only” cost an extra £3.5bn on top of the already huge £80bn cost for Trident replacement – £3.5bn would have avoided much of the deep cuts in local government budgets, or plugged the holes in the NHS, or of our conventional armed forces. What the report really outlines is the need for a thorough, carefully considered and informed public debate on the UK’s nuclear weapons programme.

Last week, many of our members commemorated the 69th anniversary of the Hiroshima and Nagasaki atomic bombings. Is it not about time that we had a sensible, rational debate about why we do not need nuclear weapons? They don’t protect us from terrorism, nor climate change, nor future health pandemics. Our political parties need to rethink Trident, and actively reconsider our future role in a troubled world.
Cllr Mark Hackett
Chair of Nuclear Free Local Authorities

• The headline above Simon Jenkins’ comment piece on the obscenity that is Trident was enough to make my day (Trident is absurd. Scotland may help us get rid of it, 15 August). “Oh joy,” I thought, “finally, those metropolitan types get it!” Then, in the third paragraph, he refers to “the wild, unpopulated lochs…”. The sleepy hamlet of Glasgow is 25 miles away from Faslane. Closer by you’ll find Balloch, Helensburgh, Dunoon, Garelochhead…
Colin Montgomery
Edinburgh

• Simon Jenkins’ article on Trident is very welcome. We have had ample warnings about nuclear weapons. Archbishop Tutu condemned nuclear weapons as an “obscenity”. The great humanitarian Victor Gollantz wrote, in The Devil’s Repertoire, “To drop a nuclear bomb, in any circumstances whatever … would be the final iniquity, final in the sense that no more abominable iniquity is possibly conceivable by the mind of man: sheer, unqualified evil”.

Albert Einstein said: “The unleashed power of the atom has changed everything save our modes of thinking and we thus drift toward unparalleled catastrophe.”

A UN joint statement on the humanitarian consequences of nuclear weapons on 21 October 2013 was supported by 125 states and declared: “The catastrophic effects of a nuclear weapon detonation, whether by accident, miscalculation or design, cannot be adequately addressed. All efforts must be exerted to eliminate the threat of these weapons of mass destruction.”

John F Kennedy warned “Every man, woman and child lives under a nuclear sword of Damocles, hanging by the slenderest of threads, capable of being cut at any moment by accident or miscalculation or madness.” As Simon Jenkins says, our leaders want nuclear weapons because without them they fear “loss of influence”. In effect, our leaders are willing to risk terminal disaster for fear of losing influence. Do we really want such people to be in positions of power?
Jim McCluskey
Author of The Nuclear Threat

Chinese Labour Corps on the Western Front

I have to thank you for publishing the story about the forgotten men of the Chinese Labour Corps (Painted out of history, Britain’s Chinese allies, 15 August). My grandfather served with them in France and was invalided back to the UK after being gassed. He recovered enough to start a Chinese provision shop importing goods from Hong Kong by West India Dock. He prospered, and was able to bring his son, my father, from China to learn and take over the business before returning home to later die.

My father prospered too. He did good business serving the Chinese crews from the ships coming from the far east, and was able to bring my mother from China in 1927. I was born in 1929, and we were not able to return to China later due to war – first the Japanese and then the Germans. After the war, my father died and the People’s Republic of China confiscated all our property back at the village, and so we are now settled here, with four generations in the UK. I believe that we are a unique family.
William Wong
London

• Your account understated how horrendously these 95,000 Chinese were treated, as were 40,000 under French control. As Xu Guoqi revealed in his book Strangers on the Western Front: Chinese Workers in the Great War, members of the Chinese Labour Corps who survived the journey from China were in effect held as forced labour – mostly used for trench digging, and so exposed to direct enemy fire. When not working, they were held in barbed-wire compounds, frequently beaten, and addressed not by name but by a “coolie number”.

After the war, the 80,000 or so CLC personnel still alive were engaged in mine clearance – often fatal. In 1919 CLC survivors, ordered to leave Belgium, were interned in France. Some were killed when groups of British, Canadian, Australian and New Zealander troops threw grenades into CLC camps; others are said to have been shot to avoid repatriation costs. All this is a reminder of how dehumanising and brutalising violent conflict is for all drawn into it.
Bruce Ross-Smith
Oxford

Himalayan Balsam Flower

We would like to assure Paul Gleave (Letters, 14 August) and Roger Brake (Letters, 15 August) that their concerns regarding Himalayan balsam are being addressed. Over the past decade, thanks to funding from the Department for Environment, Food and Rural Affairs and the Environment Agency, we have been investigating the natural enemies of this plant in its homeland in the valleys of the western Himalayas. An Indian fungus – a Puccinia rust species – has undergone intensive research during the past five years in our UK quarantine facility and has proved to be highly specific and damaging to its co-evolved host. The resultant pest risk assessment has been approved by both the UK and EU parliaments and the rust will be released in experimental trials later this year – a first for Britain and Europe. It is expected that the fungus will have a significant impact on the competitiveness of this invasive alien weed and thus reduce its highly deleterious effect on the British countryside.
Dr Harry Evans and Dr Rob Tanner
CAB International, Egham, Surrey

Margaret Thatcher

However much Thatcher scorned the solidarity of others (Pride with solidarity, 18 August), she unequivocally espoused it for herself, and her own – “one of us” within the party, homeowners across the nation, and everyone else against the European federalists. This is the problem with such an essentially apolitical idea as solidarity – its value depends entirely on what the solidarity is about. The other side of the solidarity coin is groupthink, and there is no shortage of it among old boys’ networks, freemasons, Tories, bond traders, the English Defence League, the West Bank settlement community, Boko Haram and Islamic State. It should never be celebrated for its own sake, in isolation from its purpose – and its purpose must always remain open to criticism.
Jon Griffith
Hastings, East Sussex

• No useful cats (Letters, 17 August)? My enormous tabby-and-white tom (RIP Nitty) scared off a burglar by dropping off the bed with a loud thump when he heard strange noises and went to investigate. What, too, of the American tabby on the internet video who hurled herself at a vicious dog that had attacked a little boy?
Deirdre Mason
London

• Was Marina O’Loughlin’s demonstrably untrue statement – “Once you get outside the major conurbations, people will put up with any old mass-produced pap” – meant to provoke fury (Restaurants, Weekend, 16 August)? If so, it succeeded.
Chris Stephenson
Saxmundham, Suffolk

• I don’t drive, have never owned a car, and can just about distinguish a Rolls from a Mini. But somehow I find myself enjoying Sam Wollaston’s column every week (On the road, Weekend, 16 August). Who knows, I might even buy a car.
Sonya Mills
Brighton

• Newspapers used to publish football league tables only after at least three games had been played. To print them after one game (Sport, 18 August) is daft.
Robin Nicholas
Farnham, Surrey

• “Victor, England’s only captive polar bear” (Arctic roll, 19 August)? I think we should be told where the wild ones are.
Chris Evans
Earby, Lancashire

I read with interest Santanu Das’s article (1 August) about the first world war and was disturbed by a significant omission in his account. He needed to continue south from India until he reached the continent of Australia and include in his discussion all those Aboriginal men who served in the conflict.

A 1901 estimate indicates that there had been almost 100,000 Indigenous Australians living in this country. It is known that of these, about 1,000 served during the first world war and just over 100 were either killed in action or died of wounds or disease. It should be acknowledged that officially they were not allowed to enlist, it being considered that they could cause irritation to the white men with whom they will serve. Those who were successfully recruited had needed to resort to such tactics as hiding their Aboriginality, claiming foreign nationality or by travelling hundreds of kilometres to find a recruiting centre that would accept them.

The Australian War Memorial is working hard to compile a more accurate account of the war history of Indigenous Australians, a task made very difficult because of the rubbery nature of early 20th-century records. This would have been largely due to the prevailing attitudes of the day, which regarded Aborigines as a lesser race. Indeed, there are stories coming to light of some extraordinary feats of valour by these black first world war soldiers that have never been acknowledged.

A former prime minister of Australia offered a very moving and articulate apology to the Indigenous peoples, but sadly there is still a very long way to go before there can be reconciliation in this country.
Annie Didcott
Canberra, Australia

• Santanu Das’s account of non-white involvement in the first world war opened my eyes. Canada’s recent marking of war’s outbreak featured the contribution of Francis Pegahmagabow, Canada’s most decorated aboriginal soldier. As scout and sniper, with every kill confirmed by a white officer, he won three military medals. Would a white man with his record have been more generously rewarded?

Pegahmagabow returned to Parry Island in Georgian Bay and, chosen as chief, he remained only another tribal member to government agents who bullied him as he, despite being damaged mentally and physically by war, tried to improve the lot of his people.

Joseph Boyden’s novel, Three Day Road, based on Pegahmagabow’s wartime story, deftly intertwines experience in the trenches with aboriginal life in northern Ontario. Boyden’s details of scouting in no man’s land correspond exactly to those of my late father-in-law, who, like Pegahmagabow, served for four years.
Elizabeth Quance
Westmount, Quebec, Canada

The importance of facts

Jonathan Freedland assumes authorial omniscience as he explains what and why the public thinks and feels (25 July). His evidence? A tally of who’s reading what on the Guardian website. His one explanation of the fact that more people are reading about the downing of MH17 than about Gaza is that “we” have a “morbid fascination” and identification with the personal experiences of the victims: any of “us” could also die in such an accident. But “we” do not similarly feel the same inward preoccupation with Gaza as they “are in a situation utterly different to ours”, but “we” have an “outward” horror about their catastrophe.

These suppositions are stated as fact while Freedland’s disquisition about the actual massacre aims to dispute facts by positing an assumption that there is no black and white, no good and bad side, no simple victim and oppressor side – as if these allegations stem from the distortions of entrenched fears on both the Israeli and Palestinian side.

What is Freedland’s evidence for this, and would not it be legitimate to ask if the fears and despair come from fantasy or reality? UNRWA notified Israel countless times that the bombed UN school was being used as a shelter. Israel could have blocked the tunnels just as Egypt did – obviating any direct military interventions. There is evidence too that Palestinians who did penetrate into Israel through the tunnels aimed to kidnap soldiers, not kill civilians, and that in fact they only targeted military installations.

The facts can be ascertained in investigations. Black and white and grey are Freedland’s formulations, likely derived from his own personal psychology. With such horrendous loss of life perpetrated by one of the world’s most powerful countries, a nation with a thriving arms trade, with a “secret” nuclear arsenal, whose assaults are perpetrated over and over again with impunity, it’s clearly important to get the facts.
Judith Deutsch
Toronto, Canada

Peace prize for Snowden

I was a supporter of Barack Obama long before he ran for the Senate in 2004. I often wonder what the US would be like if Obama had been president for the past six years, instead of whoever is heading the current administration:

If Obama were president, our privacy and civil rights would not be undermined by government spying;

If Obama were president, the detention camp at Guantánamo Bay would have been closed;

If Obama were president, his accomplishments would have earned the Nobel Peace prize, instead of making Edward Snowden a prime candidate for that honour (25 July).
James K Genden
Evanston, Illinois, US

Australia’s carbon tax

Jenny Goldie (Reply, 8 August) states that repeal of the carbon tax in Australia caused deep shame to many Australians. That is not what the majority of Australians thought when they supported this repeal, which was a main platform of the Liberal party in the last election. What is a fact is that Australia is a world leader in the export of fossil fuels, coal, oil and natural gas. To be consistent, she should be advocating the halting of these carbon exports, which far outstrip any possible reduction of greenhouse gases in Australia. This measure was correctly named as a tax. To state otherwise is just hypocritical.

Further, she omits to mention that it was the Palmer United party that required the benefits of repeal to be passed on to the consumer. And I will not hold my breath waiting for big business to comply.
Gerry Cartmel
Bridgetown, Western Australia

Greece’s tax dilemma

So Pete Sheppard thinks that the EU, ECB and the IMF should send experts to Greece to combat tax evasion (Reply, 8 August). As I remember, in October 2010, Christine Lagarde (head of IMF to be) gave George Papaconstantinou (Greece’s former finance minister) a list of suspected culprits involved in the $35bn-a-year tax dodging thefts that drain the Greek economy. I don’t think anything ever came of it. What more does Sheppard want of us?
Don Dormer
Frankfurt, Germany

Of dogs and cats

As an addendum to Jason Wilson’s defence of mongrel breeds of dogs (8 August), I ask why don’t dogs of any kind, pure bred, mongrel or wild, clean themselves? At best they drag themselves along the ground after doing their thing and require that their owners wipe their bottoms and wash them. How could one have any preference between a dirty pet and a dirty pet?

Meanwhile, any feline is clean and sweet-smelling, having thoroughly cleaned itself and its offspring for as long as it takes. It reacts to any attempt at washing with a violent protest against the suggestion that it needs washing. Of course, it doesn’t, whereas dogs do.

Williams needs to consider more basic information about the breed of a pet than just how curly its hair happens to be.
John Graham
Hoogstraten, Belgium

Briefly

• Jo Tuckman clearly describes the reasons why children are being sent unaccompanied across the southern US border (18 July). Murder and crime on the part of drug cartels would be reduced, if not eliminated, if all soft and hard drugs were legitimised throughout the world. The lessons learned from the abolition of prohibition seem to have been forgotten.
Nicholas Solntseff
Hamilton, Ontario, Canada

• The Greater Manchester chief constable will no doubt have the noblest of intentions by seeking new access to medical files (15 August) to help the police force protect vulnerable people. If the resources of the British police are as stretched as those in Australia, my guess is that the British police won’t have the time to utilise such a facility for its intended purpose.
Eddie van Rijnswoud
Kalamunda, Western Australia

• There is a certain relief in learning that rats pervade in Paris parks (8 August). It proves that the country is still afloat.
E Slack
L’Isle Jourdain, France

Independent:

We can all share Yasmin Alibhai-Brown’s compassion for the unfortunate migrants found in a container at Tilbury docks (18 August), but it is wrong to paint them as entirely innocent. 

They were complicit in a criminal act. They paid to be transported in a way that they knew was dangerous and illegal. They did not stop at the first country that could offer them asylum but travelled on to Britain. To offer them asylum now would be a slap in the face to all those asylum seekers who use the legal channels.

Of course we should accept a certain number of asylum seekers based on due process. We should not feel we have to accept every illegal immigrant who washes up on our shores with a desperate story. That will just encourage more illegal immigration.

Paul Sloane
Camberley,  Surrey

 

Yasmin Alibhai-Brown points to the world’s gross inequalities, one consequence of which is the desperate attempts by so many people to enter Europe. She ends by writing: “No other issue leaves me feeling so unutterably hopeless.”

In The Gambia, where we have been working for the past 30 years, we see young men either climbing into flimsy boats and many drowning at sea or dying of starvation as they attempt to cross the Sahara on foot.

We think we have come up with two potential solutions. International development has rightly tended to focus on women’s development over the last 30 years. Listen to Justine Greening talking about the importance of women’s and girls’ education. But we have forgotten the hundreds of thousands of young men who are on the streets of Iraq, Syria, Somalia, Nigeria and The Gambia. We estimate that only 10 per cent of men are in employment five years after leaving school.

We are embarking on a programme of supporting business entrepreneurship, thus creating wealth and employment, and simultaneously encouraging corporate social responsibility among thriving businesses in The Gambia, to get away from the constant and unsustainable dependence on outside aid.

The focus has got to shift. We hope it works.

Dr Nick Maurice
Director, Marlborough Brandt Group
Marlborough, Wiltshire

 

‘Soft’ subjects seem  to be harder

In your editorial on A-level results (15 August) you suggest that “more pupils were encouraged to take tougher subjects like science and maths this year”. A sign of how pervasive is this misperception of “tough” and “soft” subjects is that even a paper as objective as The Independent makes this observation despite publishing evidence to the contrary on another page.

Your breakdown of results by subject reveals the proportion achieving A* or A as, for selected “tougher” subjects: maths 42.1%, chemistry 32.6%, physics 30.6%, biology 27.5%. And for selected “easier” subjects: English 20.0%, sociology 18.3%, business 14.6%, drama 14.5%.

Might someone explain why a much smaller proportion of students achieve A* or A in the “soft” arts, humanities and social sciences than in the “hard” maths and physical sciences?

Dr Giles Hooper
University of Liverpool

 

Among the comments in your A-level results coverage regarding the increased uptake of maths and science, I was particularly saddened by the comment attributed to John Cridland about the poor take-up of languages.

My son is lucky enough to attend Haberdashers’ Aske’s Boys School (Habs) and was one of 11 boys to have completed GCSE Italian this year. As only two boys have opted to continue Italian at A-level, the school will not run the course.

If a school of Habs’ almost limitless resources is taking this stance, I imagine there is little hope of the state sector doing better. The end of minority language teaching at A-level is nigh.

John Baines
Radlett, Hertfordshire

Met committed to fight corruption

Your article “Secret internal police report points to ‘highly corrupt cells in the Met’” (8 August) paints an overly negative picture of our efforts to tackle corruption. I would like to reassure your readers and the public of London that the Met is, and was, totally committed to thwarting the threat posed by corruption.

What your article fails to make plainly clear is that the three former officers referred to were in fact all thoroughly investigated and charged with serious offences, and the Crown Prosecution Service believed there to be sufficient evidence to put before a jury. That in itself demonstrates both ability and a willingness to tackle crime within our ranks.

The Met’s early approach to tackling corruption in the 1990s was brave, innovative and bold. It took the tactics we used to tackle serious and organised crime and used them against police officers, who were themselves experienced and street-wise detectives. This method had successes and transformed our anti-corruption approach.

There can be no finishing line when tackling corruption within the Met. So while the corruption we face has changed over the past decade, so have our tactics. Our determination and commitment, for the good of Londoners and the honest hard-working men and women of the Met, to tackling corrupt staff and those who seek to corrupt them will never diminish.

Craig Mackey
Deputy Commissioner
Metropolitan Police

 

Mysteries of the Cliff Richard raid

It is clear that South Yorkshire Police gave the BBC advance notice of the raid on Sir Cliff Richard’s Sunningdale home and that Sir Cliff knew nothing of it until he saw the media coverage. This is deplorable and requires a full explanation by both the police and the BBC.

Searches for financial records in cases of suspected fraud are one thing, but what possible evidence did the police expect to find in Berkshire of an alleged assault 29 years ago in a stadium 175 miles away in Sheffield?

And what evidence did SYP place before a magistrate to justify the search warrant and to seek it without notice to Sir Cliff? In several recent cases the High Court has drawn attention to the need for courts to be more circumspect in considering such applications, made without the other side being present to rebut or question any assertion made to support the application.

Sir Cliff has stated that he will co-operate with the police if they wish to speak to him. Will the police, in their turn, be transparent over their investigation?

David Lamming
Boxford, Suffolk

Circumcision rituals across the world

You report on an outbreak of tribal bellicosity in Western Kenya (13 August). Members of the Bukusu tribe have felt so elevated by their feast of circumcision as to have forced the procedure on males of the neighbouring Turkana tribe, greatly to the latter’s annoyance.

However, before rushing into judgement on the motives of the Bukusu, we must ask: is this morally any different from the routine, legal, and similarly unconsensual prepucectomies carried out by parents on their infant male offspring in western countries?

David Hamilton
Leith

 

You report (18 August) on the UK’s first specialist FGM clinic.

While this initiative is timely and welcome, it is important to draw  attention to the tireless  work of Comfort Momoh MBE, who has been caring for victims of FGM at her dedicated African Well Woman Clinic at Guy’s Hospital and educating health professionals for around two decades.

Dr Rowena Fieldhouse
London SE21

 

Farage wobbles  on sovereignty

I had always supposed that Nigel Farage believed in the sovereignty of the British Parliament, and that that was the basis of his opposition to the EU; however, on 15 August he introduced a new doctrine: “Ukip”, he says, “believes in direct democracy: that is, letting the people decide.”

Later on he says: “It is a basic issue of democracy which I believe should be decided by the people and not bureaucrats”; but this is not the way our constitution works. Perhaps Mr Farage needs to re-read Bagehot.

John Dakin
Toddington, Bedfordshire

 

North-south divide in the pub

If it makes Charles Garth (letter, 19 August) feel better about being charged more for beer in Lancashire because he was a “southern toff”, I was once in a pub in Wembley which was filling up with northern rugby league fans in town for the Challenge Cup Final.

I overheard the manager telling one of his staff to “charge the northerners an extra quid a pint. They expect it to be more expensive in London so they won’t say anything”. Sure enough, the poor punter handed over his cash without complaint. I had to intervene by pointing out the price list next to the bar.

It seems that, in pubs at least, we are all monetarily vulnerable to ridiculous stereotypes.

Michael O’Hare
Northwood, Middlesex

Times:

Critics of Israel should not assume that all Israelis are rightwing – or even Jewish

Sir, Dominic Kirkham does Israel an injustice by describing it as a “monster” because it has failed to live up to his young idealistic vision (letter, Aug 19).

Most countries could probably be criticised for a similar failure. Although he writes “Events do not happen in a vacuum”, he ignores the crucial fact that, since its creation, Israel has struggled to realise its vision while fighting off its surrounding enemies and their constant efforts to annihilate it and kill its citizens.

Israel is only human, and it is irresponsible to demand that it meets higher standards than any other country.

Professor David Weitzman
Bournemouth

Sir, In reply to Dominic Kirkham’s letter, I am sure many of us were also “idealists” when we worked on kibbutzim in the 1960s. Reality, however, is somewhat different. Far from a sectarian state, Israel is a democracy, allowing religious freedom and, as Rabbi Sacks stated (Aug 16), preserving the rights of religious minorities. In Israel the 1.5 million Israeli Arabs have full rights, and there are currently 12 Arab members of parliament.

Kay Bagon
Radlett, Herts

Sir, If anything, Mr Kirkham’s letter proves Jonathan Sack’s point.

There is no justification for the actions of a government to be used as an excuse to exacerbate religious hatred. There is more than one way to heaven and the acceptance of other faiths is a starting point to creating harmony.

Across the Jewish diaspora is a plethora of opinions and lumping all Jews together as being card-carrying members of the Israeli right wing is wide of the mark. If Mr Kirkham wants to understand zealotry then he should cast his eye over the Hamas Charter and its eliminationist creed.

Ray Maxwell
London N14

Sir, Mr Kirkham claims Israel is indifferent to international law when in fact it is fully compliant. One of the huge problems of this dispute is the false claim, invoking international law, that settlements are illegal, when they are fully in accord with the right of Jewish presence in the whole of the area of former Mandate of Palestine.

Those who think it appropriate to trash a UK supermarket because it sells Israeli produce should understand that no Palestinian state will come into existence through terrorism.

Peter Simpson
Pinner, London

European Parliament amendments to data protection legislation will hamstring beneficial scientific research

Sir, Amendments to Europe’s Data Protection framework proposed by the European Parliament would undermine important research using personal data, with dire consequences for European research and, eventually, society at large. Scientists are using personal data in many vital areas of research which underpin policy making, ranging from the links between unemployment and health to the long-term socio-economic benefits to children who are breastfed. This research is based on large groups who have given broad consent for data about them to be linked from different sources, on the understanding that all research respects ethical and confidentiality safeguards. Researchers maintain contact with participants over years to build these data sets and the parliament’s amendments could make this contact difficult or, especially in the case of health-related data, impossible. As robust, well-tested, protocols are already in place, bona fide research using personal information should be allowed. The European Parliament’s amendments would undermine research in a wide range of academic disciplines.

Professor Paul Boyle, President of Science Europe / CEO Economic and Social Research Council, UK

Professor Miguel Seabra, President, Portuguese Foundation for Science and Technology (FCT)

Dr. ir. Elisabeth Monard, Secretary General, Research Foundation Flanders (FWO)

Professor Emilio Lora-Tamayo, President, Spanish National Research Council (CSIC)

Professor Petr Mateju, President, Czech Science Foundation (GACR)

Dr Arvid Hallén, Director General, Research Council of Norway

Dr Eucharia Meehan, Director, Irish Research Council

Professor Alain Fuchs, President, French National Centre for Scientific Research (CNRS)

Dr Pascale Briand, Director General, French National Research Agency (ANR)

Professor Matthias Kleiner, President, Leibniz Association, Germany

Professor Mark Ferguson, Director General, Science Foundation Ireland and Chief Scientific Adviser to the Government of Ireland

Dr Graham Love, CEO, Health Research Board, Ireland

Professor Peter Strohschneider, President, German Research Foundation (DFG)

Professor Martin Stratmann, President, Max Planck Society, Germany

Professor Jürgen Mlynek, President, Helmholtz Association, Germany

Professor Michel Laurent, Chairman, National Institute for Development (IRD), France

Professor Yves Lévy, CEO and Chairman, French National Institute of Health and Medical Research (Inserm)

Professor Peter Allebeck, Secretary General, Swedish Research Council for Health, Working Life and Welfare (Forte)

Dr Franci Demšar, Director, Slovenian Research Agency

Professor Jaromír Pastorek, President, Slovak Academy of Sciences

Grete M. Kladakis, Head of Division, Office of the Danish Council for Independent Research

Professor Thomas Risse, Chair, Science Europe Social Sciences Committee

Professor Richard Frackowiak, Chair, Science Europe Medical Sciences Committee

Professor Dirk Inzé, Chair, Science Europe Life, Environmental and Geosciences Committee

Mt Emei in Sichuan is eclipsed in height, if not holiness, by the remote Mt Kailash in Tibet

Sir, You say (Aug 16) that Emei is China’s highest holy mountain. One might wish it otherwise but in reality Tibet has been part of China for over 60 years, and within its borders is Mt Kailash. At 6,714m high it dwarfs Emei and is regarded as so holy by Buddhists, Hindus, Bonpo and Jains that it has never been climbed. A circuit of the pilgrim route around the mountain is believed to annul all sins. The route is above 4,000m — and the highest point is 5,660m — so it is not to be undertaken lightly.

Peter Finch

Tring, Herts

Advancing from a law degree to a career in becoming increasingly competitive and discouraging

Sir, How sad it must be to find oneself so attached to London that the very idea of having to find a position as a pupil barrister anywhere outside of the Royal Boroughs, after all the gruelling hard work and financial wounding that comes with attending university, coupled with two years’ worth of applications, would be so unthinkable that one would rather “abandon hopes” than move elsewhere. May I suggest that anyone who finds themself in Kate Dunn’s situation (“A law degree: is it a waste of money?” Times2, Aug 18) look elsewhere in England and Wales, where any of many cities with crown courts may also contain chambers.

William Clay

Beverley, E Yorks

Sir, We really need to tell young people not to do a law degree at all if they think it will lead to employment at the Bar.

It will indeed be a waste of money. Defence barristers are leaving the Bar in droves because it is such a shambles. Cuts in legal aid, late payments for work done years ago, inefficiency by the CPS all contribute to a profession in crisis.

It is becoming impossible to make a living at the criminal Bar unless you are one of the very few at the top.

Sue Wood

Radlett Herts

Unhitching Scotland from the UK would open a large can of legislative worms

Sir, The Scottish government has said that the 1707 Acts of Union would be repealed prior to independence, but this poses a legal problem. The two Acts of 1707, collectively called the Act of Union, are the authorising legislation for the Westminster Parliament. Repeal it, and you risk invalidating all laws passed in the past 300 years. Facing the same problem in 1922, Ireland amended the two Acts of Union of 1801 to keep them on the statute book while a commission then went through 120 years of legislation, replacing UK laws with Irish equivalents. Ireland finally disposed of the Act of Union in 1983.

Should there be a Yes vote in the Scottish referendum, it is likely that the 1707 Act in some form will be with us for many years to come.

Russell Vallance

Helensburgh, Argyll and Bute

Amsterdam’s great museum allows flash-free photography – but does it help visitors to enjoy the paintings?

Sir, I was recently in the Rijksmuseum, Amsterdam, and was astonished to see people rushing around the galleries, not stopping to look at the paintings, but taking photographs of them (“Flashes of genius”, letter, Aug 16).

This included selfies and one person who repeatedly passed his camera to strangers to ask them to take his photo in front of a picture.

It may have been good publicity for the museum but it detracted considerably from my enjoyment of the visit.

Daphne Tutton

Deal

Sir, The Rijksmuseum allows photography, but not with flash. Last month I was reprimanded, very courteously, for breaking this rule.

RHG Charles

London, NW11

Telegraph:

An Isle of Mull postie collecting from one of the Royal Mail’s familiar red post boxes Photo: Tony Smith / Alamy

6:58AM BST 19 Aug 2014

CommentsComments

SIR – Collection of mail as early as 9am in effect converts first-class post to second-class and second-class to a new third-class. Monday’s work will arrive on Wednesday instead of Tuesday. The charges should reflect this.

David Vaudrey
Doynton, Gloucestershire

SIR – The little white tab on most post boxes, which tells us when the next collection will be made, is invaluable. Everyone posting a letter has the right to know whether it will catch the post the same day or not. This can be achieved by the simple tab system – low maintenance and a long history. No more empty tab slots (blind boxes) or boxes without tab slots at all (eyeless boxes).

John Mountford
Southampton

SIR – It is pleasing that in this ever-changing world some things remain the same. This morning I was able to pick up two rubber bands from my front porch, just after the postman had been.

Malcolm Freeth
Bournemouth, Hampshire

SIR – My local town’s Post Office now has two post boxes, one labelled “All mail” and the other “All other mail”. Just to be on the safe side I chose “All mail”.

David Scott
Corfe Castle, Dorset

Nitrous oxide inhalation can cause vitamin B12 depletion among other problems

Laughing gas is party drug of choice for young people

The gas is usually inhaled from party balloons Photo: Christopher Pledger

6:59AM BST 19 Aug 2014

CommentsComments

SIR – In your report about nitrous oxide (laughing gas) now being second only to cannabis as the drug of choice for teenagers (report, August 16), you correctly refer to resulting health problems associated with oxygen deprivation.

There is also a long-term consequence of vitamin B12 depletion. Nitrous oxide users are unable to absorb B12 from food, leading to extreme tiredness, personality changes, concentration problems and, eventually, severe and irreversible nerve damage – although the symptoms will often take many years to manifest themselves.

Users should reflect on the long-term and often debilitating effects of inhaling nitrous oxide before striving to experience any short-term euphoria.

Martyn Hooper
Chairman, Pernicious Anaemia Society
Bridgend, Glamorgan

SIR – The health risks posed by the current youth craze for inhaling nitrous oxide are beyond doubt. The small silver cylinders, designed to fill party balloons, discarded by users, also create a considerable litter problem in many urban areas.

Laughing gas abuse is becoming a menace, with chilling echoes of earlier glue-sniffing crazes. The sale of nitrous oxide should be prohibited to all but licensed medical and industrial bodies. The abuse of nitrous oxide and its sale on the open market should be made a criminal offence and the sale of domestic cream whippers and nitrous oxide refills banned or regulated.

If Theresa May, the Home Secretary, can get rid of qat, she can rid us of laughing gas and its revolting detritus.

Anthony Rodriguez
Staines-upon-Thames, Middlesex

Waspless plums

SIR – Where are all the wasps? I have just picked pounds of damsons and Victoria plums without seeing a single one.

Ann Brooke-Smith
Letchworth Garden City, Hertfordshire

The big sleep

SIR – My wife was driving recently with our seven-year-old grandchildren in the back of the car. Suddenly one of them began to cry. Asked what the matter was she said through faltering sobs: “That sign says ‘Tiredness can kill’,” before letting out another wail: “But I’m tired!”

Dr Brian Whiting
Canterbury, Kent

Autumn bank holiday

SIR – An additional holiday in October (Letters, August 18) could also commemorate Agincourt (October 1415), or of course El Alamein (October 1942), the turning point of the Second World War – according to Churchill, at least.

John Wilkins
Ware, Hertfordshire

SIR – With regard to the long gap in bank holidays between summer and Christmas, there is a compelling case for upgrading Remembrance Sunday to enable a proper breather and pause for reflection.

This could easily be achieved by closing shops on Remembrance Sunday, as on Easter Sunday and Christmas Day.

This would enhance the dignity, solemnity and reflection one associates with the occasion and enable more workers who are contracted to work on Sundays to be able to partake in Remembrance events.

John Barstow
Fittleworth, West Sussex

Disease-free elms

SIR – Before I retired from farming, I let elm trees grow in the hedges (Letters, August 15). They would grow to around 15ft, and then succumb to Dutch elm disease.

I adopted a policy of cutting them down to hedge-height every four years or so, just before they would have died, and found that they grew up again disease-free.

Michael Dugdale
Bucknell, Shropshire

Guides in skirts

SIR – The new Girl Guides uniform launched this week consists of a blue and red zipped hoodie, a polo shirt and a long-sleeved sweat top.

There is also a skirt and dress available, but Guides and their leaders know that these items would not be sensible wear for all the outdoor activities that Guides can enjoy.

I suspect that only a small minority will choose a skirt or dress as well as, or instead of, activity wear, but these items have been provided for those girls who want the option.

Di Borthwick
Harpenden, Hertfordshire

Subsidised viewing

SIR – I am delighted that Alison Place enjoys watching BBC Four (Letters, August 18).

Since I help to pay for her enjoyment of a channel that I never watch, perhaps she might consider making a small contribution to my monthly Sky subscription?

Dorn Brokenshire

Ightham, Kent

Bird-brained swervers

SIR – It is not the poorly educated pigeons sitting on the roads that concern me most (Letters, August 15), it is the foolishness of drivers prepared to risk human life by swerving round the blighters.

Ron Hill
Yarpole, Herefordshire

The long and the short

SIR – I noticed that at the European Athletics Championships the shorts for male sprinters are getting longer while the women’s are getting briefer.

Is there an aerodynamic reason for this?

Malcolm Allen
Berkhamsted, Hertfordshire

A screenwriter reviews his one-star review

SIR – As the principal screenwriter on The Unbeatables, I invested my heart and soul in the film, neglecting my marriage and missing my mother’s final birthday to create something honest, funny and engaging for cinema-goers.

The Unbeatables is a rare and overdue story about bonding between Argentina and England via the medium of football. Juan José Campanella, the director, won an Oscar for his last film, so he probably knows what he’s doing.

Robbie Collin, in his one-star review of The Unbeatables, complains about the football element being “very, very long”. Maybe he doesn’t like football?

He also claims that the character Lara just cries all the time, but then he immediately quotes one of her wisecracks. Mr Collin dismisses her as a plot-fodder cry-baby, but she’s actually the brainiest one in the movie, an aspirational character who orchestrates others to conform to her plan. Throughout the film she fires one-liners like bullets ricocheting in a Western.

Thankfully, Telegraph readers have arrived to ensure fairness, posting comments under the review telling Mr Collin that it’s a “lovely, funny film”. I have always depended on the kindness of strangers.

Richard O Smith
Oxford

Reported numbers of Brits supporting Islamist terror organisations may only scratch the surface

Isis militants pose at a captured checkpoint in northern Iraq

Clear and present danger: Isis militants pose at a captured checkpoint in northern Iraq Photo: AFP/Getty

7:00AM BST 19 Aug 2014

CommentsComments

SIR – The Prime Minister’s brave talk about Islamic State-related terrorists does no more than begin to address the problem.

None of the estimated 500 British citizens who are now fighters in the IS forces were brought up with the IS interpretation of Islam. All were brought up with something much milder, but all have been converted to the IS viewpoint.

So we might expect that a very much larger number of young Muslim men, and even some women, have been teetering on the edge of going to join IS and that a larger number still are ready to support them practically or morally. We might guess at 50,000.

Outside that circle are those who would not report such people to the authorities – a still bigger number. In the face of a problem involving such a large group of people, David Cameron’s implied solution will be no more than a drop in a bucket.

He does not have the manpower in the intelligence or enforcement services to control activists popping up at random within such a large population.

Kenneth Hynes
London N7

SIR – Well-meaning Church of England prelates, through naive pacifism, have long endangered Christians in the Middle East, in the face of Islamist mass-murderers and homicidal dictators. Even today, many fail to side against Hamas and the Palestinian Islamic jihad, as these thugs’ primary targets are at the moment non-Christians.

Remember Pastor Martin Niemöller’s words: “When they came for [others] I did not speak out. And when they came for me, there was no one left to speak out for me.”

Andrew M Rosemarine
Manchester

SIR – The immediate imperative in Iraq is to destroy the Islamic State’s capability through air strikes by the United States – and by Britain – until its strength is reduced to the point where local forces can deal with it. IS is vulnerable in a way the Taliban aren’t, since it does not have a Pakistan to shield it.

Can the international community really contemplate dealing with these people, if they take over Syria and claim a seat at the United Nations? If Western powers do not take decisive action, let us hope Russia will at least prevent the fall of Syria.

D S Shann
Preston, Lancashire

SIR – How can we possibly get involved in another war while we are in the process of sacking our elite military forces and are without a viable fixed-wing aircraft carrier?

Richard Waldron
Woolavington, Somerset

SIR – The Government should reconsider the decommissioning of the helicopter carrier Illustrious. This ship could deliver assistance to those in need in Iraq.

Albert Guest
Huddersfield, West Yorkshire

Irish Times:

Sir, – William Binchy writes that the abortion debate has been compromised by politics (“UN committee’s view on abortion contradicts core ethical value of human rights”, Opinion & Analysis, August 18th).This is true. In a changing world of cultural diversity and values, what can one expect? The European Court of Human Rights is not a federal court, but a supervisory court which supervises the implementation of the European Convention on Human Rights by the member states. And this is about 47 member states with varying cultures, languages and traditions. 

A classic example of the politics of human rights is well illustrated by the AB and C case v Ireland case in December 2010. Two of the applicants sought an abortion on the grounds of their health being in danger, and not their “lives”, and were refused an abortion. The court’s grand chamber held that there was no violation of the convention by Ireland. Yet in 35 other member states, A and B would have been given an abortion. The decision went against the European consensus.

If politics is the art of compromise , well this it. – Yours, etc,

JOE MURRAY,

Beggars Bush Court,

Ballsbridge,

Dublin 4.

Sir, – If William Binchy was one of the three professionals who had to make the decision about delivering a baby before term, I wonder which of the following options he might have chosen: 1. Deliver the baby right on the cusp of viability (as happened) with the high risk of permanent harm to the child due to the premature birth (brain damage, eye sight, lung function, etc). 2. Wait until there was evidence that the woman was close to dying (through the self-harm she had threatened) and then make the decision to deliver the baby no matter what stage of the pregnancy she was at (and try to save the woman too). 3. Put the woman on a forced drip-feed (and security detail) so that she stayed alive with the baby being nourished to term, as is its human right; then deliver the baby and arrange for counselling, adoption, social service supports, etc, for both baby and mother. A fourth choice (not currently available) would be to give the woman access to a legal and safe abortion before 12 weeks. But then Mr Binchy doesn’t have to make any of these choices (or take responsibility for them). He only has to write about them. – Yours, etc,

ALISON HACKETT,

Crosthwaite Park East,

Dún Laoghaire,

Co Dublin.

Sir, – Prof Binchy advises that those of us concerned about Ireland’s international reputation should closely scrutinise the argument that Ireland should change its Constitution to comply with its international human rights obligations. By framing the question of whether or not a woman should have the right to choose to terminate her pregnancy as one concerning solely the right to life of the unborn, Prof Binchy utilises a familiar argument: are you in favour of denying an innocent child the right to life? Clearly, the answer must be no. It is an effective argument and, through repetition and reinforcement, Prof Binchy would have us believe that women have no place in the debate whatsoever.

Prof Binchy uses the term “human rights” 18 times in his article. He refers to “abortion” eight times and to the “unborn child/children” six times. He eschews medical terms that do not serve his argument, like zygote or foetus. Notwithstanding his repeated reference to the “equal worth and dignity of every human being”, the words “woman” or “mother” do not appear once.

I, for one, am concerned about Ireland’s international reputation where a “human rights” approach to the issue of abortion views the mother as utterly irrelevant.Women have human rights too. – Yours, etc,

CATHAL GRENNAN,

Bath Street,

Irishtown,

Dublin 4.

A chara, – Can we not just be grateful that the lives of mother and child were safeguarded? Not without difficulties; we cannot eliminate these. There are still problems to face. But why such predominant negativity? – Is mise,

PÁDRAIG McCARTHY,

Blackthorn Court,

Sandyford,

Dublin 16.

Sir, – The almost total lack of concern for the wellbeing of the child at the centre of the case on the part of those who are crying foul at the treatment of its mother is chilling. Having been forced from the womb three months before term, he or she faces months of intravenous feeding and painful mechanical assistance to breathe, and having been born at just 26 weeks gestation, will have only an 80 per cent chance of surviving into adulthood and a 25 per cent chance of developing lasting disabilities of some kind.

These appalling prospects were not brought about by some kind of medical emergency but because the doctors at the centre of the case were compelled to induce the early birth of the child under the terms of the so-called Protection of Life During Pregnancy Act. How can this be good medical practice to condemn a child to this sort of danger? And in what other situation would doctors be compelled by law to perform a procedure that risked serious injury to a patient?

This case highlights the legal Pandora’s box that could open as a result of this case and any others in the future. Having introduced a law which compels doctors to curtail dramatically a child’s gestation in the womb, with serious damage to their health as a possible result, the State would surely be exposed to huge liability in any legal actions which may be taken by such children once they reach the age of majority, or by their legal guardians before then.

The same Government which worked hard to right the wrongs done to Irish citizens as a result of the Magdalene laundries and symphysiotomies may well, through the introduction of this legislation, create a whole new generation of people whose lives will be ruined at the hands of the State, leading to a further round of apologies in the Dáil by a future set of political leaders years or decades down the line. – Yours, etc,

BARRY WALSH,

Brooklawn,

Clontarf,

Dublin 3.

Sir, – Further to the excellent letters yesterday from two other Donegal dwellers about the long, slow death of rural Ireland, politicians should consider what has happened to communities in England’s countryside.

I should say “former communities” because they hardly exist. The villages of England have all but vanished as living entities after a lengthy process of urbanisation in which bigness was seen as an economic and bureaucratic virtue.

So small local schools vanished, along with cottage hospitals. Soon after, the casual community meeting places – the post offices and shops – were closed. Other key services, such as transport, were removed. And then, of course, the people went. Many of the houses are still there, refurbished into charming and overpriced holiday homes for city folk who visit occasionally. Some are lived in by retired people who grumble about the need to travel so far for their daily bread.

This social vandalism occurred in England almost by accident, but we do not need to follow suit. There is still a chance to prevent it happening here if we adopt sensible policies.

But, I wonder, is there the political will to ensure that rural Ireland is saved from its neighbour’s fate? – Yours, etc,

ROY GREENSLADE,

Ballyarr House,

Ramelton,

Co Donegal.

Sir, – On the recommendation of readers of The Irish Times, which voted Mayo the best place to “go wild” in Ireland, we are just back from a short family holiday in Mayo. It is a super county to visit, with exceptionally warm and friendly people, wonderful scenery and lots to do. In our short time there, we enjoyed visiting the Céide fields, the sea stack and blow-hole at Downpatrick and great walks at Erris Head and Ceathrú Thaidhg. We all loved the excitement of “coasteering” at Erris Head.

To finish, we cycled the greenway from Newport to Achill and we wondered why there are not more cycling greenways, in stunning west Cork, for example, where you take your life in your hands to cycle the roads.

Last year, we all enjoyed a short holiday in Donegal, taking in more lovely scenery and great walks.

So what’s there to complain about, you may ask. The roads to both counties are poor and so are a real disincentive to people to visit. Furthermore, very few of the roads within these counties deserve to be called national roads. Have your readers ever driven the N59 from Belmullet to Newport?

These counties need and deserve more tourists and for this to happen they need better roads. The Wild Atlantic Way is an inspired initiative and will help, although more meaningful signposting is needed. However, for Mayo and Donegal to really benefit, better roads are a must. – Yours, etc,

VANESSA PEARSE,

St Lawrence Road,

Clontarf,

Dublin 3.

Sir, – Congratulations to Una Mullally for an informed (and balanced) piece on so-called media watchdogs (“Balance is the new blackout”, Opinion & Analysis, August 18th). I welcome her ironic suggestion of an Atheist Minute to follow the Angelus, and wonder what form it should take. Silence and an empty black screen symbolising the void? Or sights and sounds of nature, climate and the effect of gravity, all represented as clearly acting without divine purpose? And, in the interests of balance, surely both the Angelus and the Atheist Minute need to be followed by an Agnostic Pause. May I suggest that it feature people shrugging their shoulders and looking confused? – Yours, etc,

NIALL McARDLE,

Wellington Street,

Eganville,

Ontario, Canada.

Sir, – Peter Kenny (August 19th) refers to the Broadcasting Authority of Ireland’s recent upholding of a complaint against Derek Mooney’s discussion on same-sex marriage on the basis that it was one-sided, by asking, “Regarding the requirement that broadcasters give equal access to the proponents of either side of an argument, I wonder whether it would be consistent with natural justice to apply this obligation to the Sunday sermon?” Why? A Sunday sermon is intended for the ears of those of a particular faith that make the effort to go and listen to that sermon, while public broadcasting is intended for the ears of many people who might happen to tune in, and depending on its audience listenership, its opinions can have an influencing factor. The Broadcasting Act of 2009 is quite clear on the responsibility of the broadcaster: “Every broadcaster shall ensure that . . . all news broadcast by the broadcaster is reported and presented in an objective and impartial manner and without any expression of the broadcaster’s own views”.

This basic principle takes on a greater significance when there is an upcoming referendum. – Yours, etc,

JOHN BELLEW,

Riverside House,

Dunleer, Co Louth.

Sir, – Norman Davies (August 19th) recommends that the Taoiseach be got rid of because of the latest opinion poll. The Taoiseach, as Mr Davies says, may not be great at public debate. I remember a previous taoiseach, however, who was brilliant at public debate but the country went broke under his leadership. The priority of running the country in the interests of the majority of the ordinary people of the country should embrace more fundamental issues than whether politicians can talk well on TV or the contents of the latest opinion poll. – Yours, etc,

ANTHONY LEAVY,

Shielmartin Drive,

Sutton,

Dublin 13.

Sir, – Norman Davies appears to want the type of politician that spends all his time “communicating” and less time running the country. Our Taoiseach has helped to put Ireland back on its feet while the Opposition parties, consisting of the incompetent and the irresponsible, struggle to find their voice. – Yours, etc,

GEOFF SCARGILL,

Loreto Grange,

Bray,

Co Wicklow.

Sir, – If the maligned Labour Party can double its support in the latest opinion poll by changing leader, an overall majority would surely await the ascendant Sinn Féin if it followed suit. – Yours, etc,

BRIAN AHERN,

Meadow Copse,

Clonsilla,

Dublin 15.

Sir, – I am sitting outside the Imperial War Museum in London and trying to put into perspective the calls for a boycott of all things Israeli. This is proving especially difficult as I have just spent an hour in the museum’s permanent Holocaust Exhibition, which identifies the early Nazi boycott of Jewish businesses as a central and essential causational tool in the exclusion of Jews from German society. Therefore, I cannot help but draw an analogy between the present call for a boycott, with the dreadful long-term consequences that followed the Nazi-inspired Jewish boycott of the 1930s. Before anyone points out the difference between a boycott of all things Israeli and a boycott of Jewish businesses, perhaps they could explain how a Jewish, and not Israeli, film festival (at the Tricycle Theatre, London), which, by the way, included contributions from Palestinian Arab filmmakers, is any different from 1930s Berlin.

It must be said that my cynicism has been reinforced after witnessing masked thugs intimidating customers attempting to enter Jewish businesses in London. These are third and fourth generation enterprises that have nothing to do with Israel, and have been serving their local communities since the early part of the 20th century. On this basis, I cannot reconcile the claims of the protesters that they are anti-Zionist, but not anti-Semitic; however, if anyone can enlighten me to how this is possible, then I will gracefully acknowledge my mistake. – Yours, etc,

Dr KEVIN McCARTHY,

Sean Hales Terrace,

Kinsale,

Co Cork.

Sir, – When a person criticises the Israeli state for its actions or policies, the riposte that the critic is being “anti-Semitic” is as foolish and cheap as calling someone who criticises the French state on that account “anti-French”. The “anti-Semitic” riposte is supposed to deliver a knock-out blow because a widely disseminated western doctrine teaches that anti-Semitic/anti-Jewish is a uniquely evil hostility, infinitely more damnable than hostility to any other race, nation or religion. But since that doctrine has no rational basis, contempt is the correct response to this attempt to bludgeon into silence a critic of the Israeli state. – Yours, etc,

Dr DESMOND FENNELL,

Sydney Parade Avenue,

Dublin 4.

Sir, – I was saddened to read of the sudden death of David Sleator, a very kind, down-to-earth man and a wonderful photographer.

His black-and-white photographs of eight men who were homeless and used our services here in Trust has pride of place in our basement centre in the heart of the Liberties. These wonderful photographs appeared in a special supplement of The Irish Times to mark the millennium and are still commented on by all who see them. He visited us many times and we all felt better for having met him.

Photographers capture what others fail to see and portray emotions so hard to describe. David did this with great sensitivity and professionalism. He will be greatly missed. – Yours, etc,

ALICE LEAHY,

Director and co-founder,

Trust,

Bride Road,

Dublin 8.

Sir, – As the shackles of political correctness grow ever tighter, I am somewhat bemused that the Rose of Tralee pageant continues to flourish apace. Obviously, it would be churlish to complain about an annual parade of pulchritudinous ladies participating in a “personality” contest. However, perhaps the time has come to consider a similar competition for male contestants. I suggest the “Thorn of Tramore” has a pleasing ring to it. – Yours, etc,

FRANK BYRNE,

Cormac Terrace,

Terenure, Dublin 6W.

Sir, – Patsy McGarry reminds us that Bishop Willie Walsh expressed a wish to see another Pope John XXIII (August 17th).

One wonders which Pope John XXIII he had in mind. Was it the John XXIII who was admired by Evelyn Waugh? Or was it the John XXIII whose Journal of a Soul testifies to a bishop and a pope who was nurtured on the piety of the Counter-Reformation? Or did Bishop Walsh have in mind the John XXIII who in the same spiritual journal wrote of his desire to be worthy enough to preside over the canonisation of Pope Pius IX ( not a pontiff remarkable for his concessions to rationalism or modernity )? One fears that the former bishop of Killaloe made the error – not an uncommon one, it must be allowed – of confusing affability with unorthodoxy. – Yours, etc,

CDC ARMSTRONG,

Ulidia House,

Donegall Road, Belfast.

Irish Independent:

Published 20/08/2014 | 00:00

Charlie Weston’s straight-talking article (Irish Independent, August 17) paints a stark picture of our powerlessness as citizens in the face of unjust and exploitative banking practices. Eventually, we will have to collectively confront the fundamental flaw at the heart of our current economic system: the interests of the international financial markets are diametrically opposed to those of ordinary working people and the domestic economy.

Domestic economies need relative economic stability and predictability of prices in order to maintain business viability and job security, whereas financial markets want economic instability, since they make enormous profits betting on the outcomes of market fluctuations. For ordinary working people, money is a utility which we use to facilitate our standard of living and to create a functioning, real economy and society. For the financial markets, money is a commodity to be sold (loaned), traded, leveraged and gambled, to make money out of money.

The financial sector has created vast pyramids of leveraged capital composed of complex financial instruments called derivatives, which are essentially bets on some aspect of the real economy. When one of these pyramids or bubbles collapses, they know that we, the taxpayers, will have to foot the bill. Western central banks are flooding the financial system with free money to support these derivatives bubbles, as well as forcing national populations to pay the astronomical debts of bankrupted financial institutions. In the ideology of financialisation and market theory, no moral responsibility accrues to market actors or speculators.

All deleterious consequences of market activity upon ordinary people, such as the loss of pensions, investments, jobs and homes, are considered natural market outcomes for which no one can be held accountable, as if they were just unfortunate natural disasters.

Our elected politicians worldwide should confront the anti-democratic dominance of the international financial markets over our economies and restore the balance of power to the public. Corrective measures must include reinstating the Glass-Steagall Act, which separated main street commercial banking from speculative investment banking.

Maeve Halpin

Ranelagh, Dublin 6

Failed model for home loans

In the absence of any significant reform to a flawed banking model, news of a sharp rise in mortgage lending is worrying. Clearly, lessons haven’t been learnt.

The typical €200,000 mortgage costs, at present, at least €270,000 over its lifetime. The lenders, though, do little to earn such a large return. A community banking model would not seek profit, but self-sustainability, so such a mortgage might cost as little as €210,000 over its lifetime. Buyers are being forced to endorse a failed and inequitable model in the absence of a more honest and appropriate alternative. It’s time the Government stopped serving banks and began serving the nation.

Keela Freeley

Clonard, Co Wexford

Respecting rights of the unborn

I think Colette Browne needs a holiday, given what she wrote in her article (Irish Independent, August 6). To describe a pregnant woman as a nine-month human incubator brings to mind a similar derogatory statement issued many years ago by Ian Paisley when describing Catholic families.

So does this mean she now recognises the unborn as a human life and not the “collection of jelly cells” or “embryos” as the pro-choice lobby would wish us to believe? Paisley has always upheld the rights of the unborn and given that Colette Browne seemingly uses similar descriptive words, can we hope an epiphany has now taken place in her thinking? One hopes so.

Fr John McCallion, M.Phil, CC Coalisland, Co Tyrone

Making light of climate change

Amazing! Ian O’Doherty (Irish Independent, August 15) concedes that pollution causes climate change. Yet he says that it’s pointless to reduce it, as it comes at too high an economic price and climate apocalypse is inevitable anyway.

We can only infer that this columnist believes economic threats trump existential ones. Posterity be damned. And anyone who disagrees with O’Doherty’s worldview is referred to disparagingly as “nuts”, “utterly mad”, “fanatic” or concerned with “the polar bears, like”.

I believe (along with 98pc of geoscientists) that our future is a race between education and catastrophe. And while I accept that O’Doherty is a journalist with a glib, tongue-in-cheek style, his article is wholly irresponsible in the context of educating the public.

Kiera Rogers

Dundalk, Co Louth

Betrayal of Christ’s church

People constantly err in identifying the Vatican with ‘the church’. The Vatican is made up of men; ‘the church’ is Christ. Our church leaders have once again betrayed Christ’s church in failing to deal with the scandal caused by allowing Cardinal Brady to remain on until retirement age.

Cardinal Brady should have stepped down voluntarily; but that’s his problem. It seems to me these clerical VIPs in Rome consider themselves exempt from the moral code that applies to the rest of us. Indeed, this whole sad saga seems to imply that they have a special moral code that overrides conscience.

Hence the enormity of the task Pope Francis faces in trying to bring real reform to the heart of the Vatican.

Sean McElgunn

Address with editor

Gaza and humanity’s failure

Yesterday marked World Humanitarian Day and as the recent conflict in Gaza has demonstrated, healthcare personnel, hospitals, ambulances and clinics have been deliberately targeted as the UN’s call to stop targeting civilians goes unheeded. The harsh economic blockade imposed on Gazans has already caused immeasurable human anguish. If we are bound to revere the Hippocratic Oath there should be a universal call to stop the death and displacement of Palestinians in Gaza.

Dr Munjed Farid Al Qutob

London, NW2

Connolly’s stand on WWI

There has been some debate recently in the Irish media regarding James Connolly‘s position when World War I broke out in Europe. Writing in the Workers’ Republic in the first week of the war, he made clear his position. Connolly viewed the conflict as an imperialist adventure by the capitalist nations, and argued for the European working class, regardless of nationality, to stand united in opposing the war and fight instead for international socialism. While he argued that if the German army invaded Ireland, the Irish would be justified in fighting with it against the British Empire, this should not be confused with support for German imperialism.

He continued: “Should the working class of Europe, rather than slaughter each other for the benefit of kings and financiers, proceed tomorrow to erect barricades all over Europe, to break up bridges and destroy the transport service that war might be abolished, we should be perfectly justified in following such a glorious example and contributing our aid to the final dethronement of the vulture classes that rule and rob the world.”

In taking this principled stand, Connolly was adopting a position in line with that taken by revolutionary socialists across Europe, the US, Australia and elsewhere at 
this time.

Kieran McNulty

Tralee, Co Kerry

Irish Independent


Liz

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21 August 2014 Liz

I jog around the park I still have arthritis in my left knee, but I manage to get round the park. A wettish day. We go and pick up some plants from Liz

Scrabble: I win, but get just over 400. perhaps Mary will win tomorrow.

108 Games Mary win 57 John 51

Obituary:

Candida Lycett Green – obituary

Candida Lycett Green was an author and journalist who shared with her father, Sir John Betjeman, a passion for conserving England’s architectural heritage

Candida Lycett Green in the garden of her home in Wiltshire in 2002

Candida Lycett Green in the garden of her home in Wiltshire in 2002 Photo: Andrew Crowley

6:22PM BST 20 Aug 2014

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Candida Lycett Green, the writer, who has died aged 71, was the daughter of the Poet Laureate Sir John Betjeman (1906-84), the editor of his collected letters, and in the 1960s a noted beauty .

She fully shared her father’s commitment to protecting the nation’s vanishing architectural heritage, particularly Victorian, and after his death in 1984 she carried the flame forward with energy and fervour, and never more so than after being diagnosed with cancer in 1999.

Books such as Goodbye London (1972), England: Travels Through An Unwrecked Landscape (1996) and Unwrecked England (2009) flowed from her pen, and for several years she produced a monthly article under the heading “Unwrecked England” for The Oldie magazine. “I am the archetypal Anglophile,” she wrote, “and remain, like Ruskin, ever faithful to ‘blind, tormented, unwearied, marvellous England’. For me it is the most beautiful country in the world.”

Candida Lycett Green in front of Ashdown House, Berkshire, in 1992 (MARTYN GODDARD)

This almost fogeyish persona contrasted with the one presented by the tall, lissom blonde Candida Lycett Green in the 1960s, when she and her Old Etonian husband, Rupert Lycett Green, were at the heart of the London party scene. Candida was an habitué of the Establishment Club, where she was photographed with the actor Terence Stamp; Rupert was the founder of Blades, the fashionable gentlemen’s outfitters in Mayfair. Ossie Clark designed Candida’s dresses, and David Hockney painted her portrait . In a reference to Candida’s reputation for minting sardonic witticisms, the couple were known as “Tailor and Cutter”.

As editor of her father’s letters, Candida Lycett Green did not consider herself a particularly meticulous scholar but rather a voracious snapper-up of his considered and unconsidered trifles. The writer and poet Blake Morrison delighted in her “often dotty and Betjemanic” footnotes, and found that her affectionate linking passages between the sections “add up to a charming memoir in themselves”.

In the first of two hefty volumes, John Betjeman Letters, 1926-1951 (1994), she recalled that all his working life her father had been strapped for cash. In the 1960s, when his fame was well-established, he had sold all his papers and letters — past and future — to the highest bidder, the newly created University of Victoria in British Columbia. In February 1992 Candida travelled to Victoria, and in the university’s McPherson Library “found several corridors of grey four-drawer filing cabinets containing, as it were, my father”.

Closeted in her allotted researcher’s cubbyhole, Candida Lycett Green found her father’s life tumbling out across the table in front of her — “notes from Oxford friends, garage bills, rockets from librarians for not returning books” — and she returned to England with more than 2,000 photocopies of letters to her father (there were about 50,000 altogether).

Once home, she advertised for her father’s outgoing letters and wrote to hundreds of universities and libraries as well as to 420 individuals. The response was huge and humbling. She received hundreds of letters, not just from friends and acquaintances but also from strangers. “It was like Christmas every morning,” she recalled, “and this lasted for at least four months. A whole new life began to evolve.”

The first volume of her father’s letters covered his life in London and Oxford and at his parents’ holiday home at Trebetherick, Cornwall; his marriage to her mother, Penelope Chetwode, and their early years together in Uffington, Ireland and Farnborough. Volume two, John Betjeman Letters, 1951-1984 (1995), began with the family’s move to Wantage in Berkshire and her father taking a small flat at 43 Cloth Fair in the City of London.

Candida admitted that her task as editor had been sadder and harder than before, when for the most part she had stood apart from the people and events described in her father’s correspondence. Now she found that she was fully conscious of, and completely involved with, her subject.

The second volume of letters was also difficult to compile because in the 1960s Betjeman’s abysmal handwriting had become almost indecipherable even to the most practised transcribers. Then there was the sheer volume of documents, which she said would fill an articulated lorry. When she returned to the University of Victoria in British Columbia for a second time, she was faced with distilling the essence of her father’s life from no fewer than 30,000 letters that she had not seen two years before.

Candida Lycett Green in the garden of her home in Wiltshire (Andrew Crowley)

Candida Rose Betjeman was born on September 22 1942 in Dublin, where John Betjeman was planning to spend the war as press attaché to the British representative in the Irish Republic. But the family returned to Britain the following year, and his daughter spent her infancy at Garrards Farm, the rented, chaotic family home near Wantage that Evelyn Waugh complained smelled like a village shop: “oil, cheese, bacon, washing… A horse sleeps in the kitchen.”

Furthermore, the family goat, Snowdrop, was allowed the run of the house, which was hung with Pre-Raphaelite paintings, decorated with William Morris wallpapers and lit solely by oil lamps. The infant’s maternal grandfather, Field Marshal Lord Chetwode, would never stay under his daughter’s roof, always putting up at a pub across the road, unable to stand “those stinkin’ lamps”.

When Candida was three, the family moved again, to the Old Rectory at Farnborough, a remote village on the Berkshire downs that became “my favourite place on earth”. A pretty, fair-haired child, she was her father’s pet; he called her “Wibz”. The girl showed early literary talent, and made her father laugh with an early limerick: “Wibberley Wobberley Wib/She blew up her dad with a squib/And when he was dead/She cut off his head/And scratched on his face with a nib.”

Candida’s mother, Penelope, newly converted to Roman Catholicism, regularly took Candida to Mass while allowing her to remain at a local Anglican primary school, where she mixed with local children and acquired a Berkshire accent which she shed completely only when she was in her teens. As a girl she learned to love the pace of life on horseback, “wandering through villages, the backs of towns… looking into gardens and watching other people’s lives”.

According to her father’s biographer, Bevis Hillier, Candida never forgave her parents for moving from their beautiful Georgian rectory downhill to red-brick Wantage and a Victorian house called The Mead, which she hated. But she was allowed to be naughtier than her contemporaries, mainly on account of the benign neglectfulness of her parents. “I’m sure it came as a shock to John, sometimes, to realise he’d got children,” a neighbour remarked.

After boarding at St Mary’s, Wantage, Candida left in 1957 at the age of 15. She enjoyed extended cultural holidays in Paris and Rome, and in 1958 spent some months with a French family in the Haute-Loire area of central France, attending the local school and complaining about the stern, unbending teaching methods there. The following year she went to Rome to study architecture, and at New Year 1960 returned to Italy again to recover from a failed love affair.

At 17 she was sending reams of “appallingly bad” poetry to her father in England for his critical verdict; she always found him a good listener. After a year’s sojourn in Ireland in 1961, she came out as a debutante, much to the disapproval of her father, who thought she would be better off finding a job. Candida decided in the circumstances to flee the family nest and moved to Oxford, where she studied sculpture at the city’s technical college and, in a greasy-spoon café called the Town and Gown, mooned after Richard Ingrams, with whom she later helped launch Private Eye in London.

Her start in journalism was unpromising. Having persuaded Queen magazine to give her a job as an £8-a-week sub-editor, writing captions under pictures of fur coats and jewellery, she was fired in September 1962 by the owner, Jocelyn Stevens, who had discovered that in the evenings Candida was moonlighting on the Eye, stapling the magazine’s pages together to prepare it for distribution.

Later that autumn she was a guest at a house party at a palazzo in Venice thrown by Simon Hornby, one of her many admirers and subsequently chairman of WH Smith, and there she met and fell in love with the handsome Rupert Lycett Green. Back home, while Candida was working in north Wales for Richard Hughes, author of A High Wind In Jamaica (1929), she and Rupert became engaged. They married in May 1963, and after a honeymoon at Ravello spent a year driving around the world in a customised Land Rover. On their return, her husband founded Blades, with premises in Savile Row. (He sold it in 1981.)

Candida Lycett Green with her father on her wedding day in 1963 (TOPFOTO.CO.UK)

The Lycett Greens set up home in the then deeply unfashionable area of Notting Hill. Candida decorated it in the “boho” style, and installed, in the basement, one of the first country kitchens in London. Its “pine look” commended itself to art directors, who used it as a film location for commercials ranging from Hovis bread to Viyella shirts. The L-shaped drawing room was painted emerald green and furnished with purple sofas.

After its faltering start, Candida’s journalistic career began to flourish. In June 1970 the Evening Standard sent her to Mexico to report on the football World Cup from a woman’s angle. As the decade progressed, she succeeded her father as steward of the “Nooks and Corners” column that he had started in Private Eye, and revealed an unsuspected talent for investigative reporting; she was once threatened with physical violence by a rogue building “developer”, and was the first woman to become a regular Eye contributor.

In 1974 she and her husband moved to Blacklands, near Calne, a large, crumbling Georgian house overlooking the Marlborough downs whose top two floors had been gutted by fire. To help finance the renovation and improvements, Candida sold Hockney’s portrait of her , paying for a tennis court in the garden.

When the couple hosted a 70th birthday party for her father at Blacklands in the blisteringly hot summer of 1976, Candida noted how heavily the poet leaned on his wife’s arm, and that he had become “pretty wobbly”.

It was John Betjeman’s idea that his daughter’s book The Front Garden (1974), compiled with the photographer Christopher Simon Sykes, would make an interesting television film. Candida Lycett Green presented it on Christmas Day 1978, the film having been directed by Eddie Mirzoeff and shot by Philip Bonham-Carter, John Betjeman’s own regular television team. Mirzoeff suggested that she make another film with him, the result being The English Woman and the Horse (1981).

She continued to turn out more books with a rural theme, including A Cottage in the Country (1983), English Cottages (1984), Brilliant Gardens (1989), The Perfect English Country House (1991) and Seaside Resorts (2011). In the 1990s she served on the Historic Buildings and Monuments Commission for England.

In 1997 Candida Lycett Green edited an anthology of her father’s prose, Coming Home, and in 1999 an anthology of prose and verse, Betjeman’s Britain.

After being diagnosed with breast cancer in 1999, she produced The Garden at Highgrove (2000), a book she deliberately signed up for as a project to sustain her and which she shared with her friend the Prince of Wales. Her memoir of growing up in rural Berkshire, The Dangerous Edge of Things, appeared in 2005.

Candida Lycett Green, a lifelong horsewoman, continued to take a week or two off each year, as she had done for 30 years, to ride all over England. She reckoned that she had covered more than 3,000 miles “touring England by horse” . In August 2000 she rode from Yorkshire to north Northumberland, a sponsored ride of 170 miles that raised £125,000 for the Abernethy Cancer Centre at the Churchill Hospital in Oxford, where she was treated. She recounted the journey in another memoir, Over the Hills and Far Away (2002).

She had made plans for her funeral. “Axl [her horse] is going to pull our green trolley cart with a wooden coffin with horseshoes, and there are going to be gospel singers singing O Happy Day and a huge wake, with lots of dancing. I’ve got it all sorted — one might as well.”

She is survived by Rupert Lycett Green and by three daughters and two sons.

Candida Lycett Green, born September 22 1942, died August 19 2014

Guardian:

James VI of Scotland and I of England as painted by John de Critz; 'Since a Scottish king took over

There are two good reasons for Scotland voting for independence, and one for it voting against (Polly Toynbee, Shared values matter more than where the border lies, 19 August). England needs independence as much as Scotland. The continuation of the UK encourages the English establishment to strut around with the delusion that Great Britain is still a very important country. Independence would oblige the establishment to restructure England’s economy and to discover a sustainable role in the world, or else accept England’s sad decline into international insignificance. If Scotland votes against independence, in 20 years another opportunist politician will discover the independence vehicle.

However, before Scotland votes for independence, Alex Salmond should be obliged to confront the XYZ test. If X is Scotland’s exports and Y is Scotland’s imports, the balance, Z, is someone’s debt. The effective resolution of trade debt is the determining factor of national sovereignty. In any independent country, the value of trade debt is resolved in the market value of its own currency. A country without its own currency to resolve the balance of trade issue has no effective independence: as Europe has recently discovered.
Martin London
Henllan, Denbighshire

• Polly Toynbee as usual makes some telling points but still hints that a particular sort of identity pervades Scotland, sprinkled with the inevitable references to saltires and Arbroath. These are on the margins of the real debate. The yes campaign is not simply about the SNP and never was. The Common Weal group offers a much deeper analysis of possibilities offered by a yes vote and practical ways to address several of the deeply entrenched social problems she identifies. A lot of people in both England and Scotland have given up on Westminster politics with good reason. As for Toynbee’s touching faith in a marginalised and increasingly dismantled British social democracy as a reason for voting no, perhaps WH Auden summed that up pretty succinctly too when he wrote: “We would rather be ruined than changed.”

Well, in Scotland, many of us would rather change, vote yes, avoid more ruination and have the possibility at least of getting more progressive policies.
Professor Andrew Watterson
Stirling

• Our political class is essentially only interested in protecting its own base. If we had visionary political leaders then we wouldn’t still be trying to reform the House of Lords (now over a century in waiting). Instead we would be offering a radical solution: a more federal UK. There should be four equal national parliaments representing the four home unions, with a UK senate sitting over the top which would have responsibilities for foreign affairs, the environment, some elements of the economy including the Bank of England and some of the larger infrastructure needs. We need a political party to grasp the constitutional mess and to come forward in time for next year’s general election, not with piecemeal reforms but an answer as to how the UK should be governed by 2025. The current system, including an unelected upper house, is absurd.
Derek Wyatt (former Labour MP)
Cambridge

• Why should left-of-centre-leaning Scottish referendum voters vote no for a very uncertain social democratic future in the UK, when they can vote yes for near certain and permanent social democracy in Scotland? And why would they vote no when there is the very real threat of leaving the EU after the likely in-out referendum following a Conservative win next year? Perhaps the rump of UK social democrats after Scottish independence might learn to exercise themselves a little more to achieve their aims if they were unable to rely on Scottish voters. In other words, Scottish independence might galvanise the Labour party in the remaining UK into something approaching an effective social democratic party.
John Jones
North Berwick, East Lothian

• I am intrigued by the latest gambit from Better Together campaign which, in the guise of Danny Alexander, is to look to terrify the electorate through highlighting that Scotland’s independence is “forever” and is “irreversible” The number of independent states has risen dramatically in the modern era and since the establishment of the United Nations in 1945 its membership has increased from 51 to 193 – 162 new countries. Of new states that have become UN members since 1945, 30 have done so following a referendum. I am not conscious of any countries which, on achieving their independence, have later sought to return to the country they became independent from – a telling state of affairs.
Alex Orr
Edinburgh

• While sympathetic to much of Polly Toynbee’s article, I think there is a basic misunderstanding about the Ruritarian aspect of the UK. Since a Scottish king took over the English throne, Scotland arguably has prior claim on the monarch. Is it not therefore for the Scottish people to decide, in the event of the demise of the UK, whether to allow the monarch to continue to sit in London?
Richard W Russell
Bowmore, Isle of Islay

• Polly Toynbee wonders “what would be left of British pretensions to the wider world if the Scots did vote to go”, but does not elaborate on this interesting idea. For one thing, the Scots would throw out Trident from Faslane, which might then have nowhere to go. For another, a shrunk Britain would surely not continue to be the world’s fourth largest spender on military “defence”. These considerations make Scottish independence appealing, though on balance one would not like the Scots to go.
Harry Davis
Thames Ditton, Surrey

• Alex Salmond will be missing a trick if he fails to point out to David Cameron that mothers’ names have been given on Scottish marriage certificates, as well as on birth and death certificates, since the introduction of compulsory registration of births, marriages and deaths in Scotland in 1855 (Mothers to be named on marriage record ‘for equality’, 19 August). Moreover, married women in Scotland never lose their maiden names, and are registered under both surnames in the relevant indexes in Edinburgh’s Register House, making it far easier for researchers to trace the distaff side of their family tree in Scotland than in England.
Harry D Watson
Edinburgh

The news that A4e is terminating its contract to deliver education at 12 London prisons because it cannot make a profit (Report, 13 August) will hit those teaching in the sector hard. In our report Prison Educators: Professionalism Against the Odds, written with the University and College Union, we discovered that the small group of teachers in prisons are older than the average for further education, better qualified but less well paid, with fewer holidays. They are positive about the benefits of education in prison, highly motivated and enthusiastic.

But the view given by those teachers is that prison education is no longer a viable career and is losing its potential to play a positive part in the rehabilitative process. Teachers’ most frequent complaint is about the pressures of constant retendering. As one put it: “Changing employer every three years is not beneficial to a department. It can take up to two years to get properly acquainted and set up smoothly with a new employer. Changing so often is unsettling for staff and does not allow continuity of systems for learners.” Quite possibly this respondent will soon have another employer to notch up.

Education in prisons remains one of the few ways available to change a prisoner’s life trajectory. Yet the process of outsourcing, with its cycle of retendering, budget cuts and ever-greater exhortations to “efficiency”, has led to a regime where prisoners spend ever-greater amounts of time in their cells doing nothing that will help move them on.

Short-contract outsourcing of education for the prison sector has failed to deliver a service that prisoners, prison educators and the public have a right to expect. Prison education is dying a death by a thousand cuts. The prison population is just under 85,000; we send a greater proportion of our population to prison than any other country in Europe and they spend longer incarcerated than in other European countries. Rehabilitation must be the overriding aim of the service, not simply the narrow focus on job skills.
Prof Jane Hurry, Prof Greg Brooks, Margaret Simonot, Anita Wilson, Brian Creese
Centre for education in the criminal justice system, Institute of Education

• I would encourage Sean Lynch to sue the prison service for negligence contributory to his loss of mental health and sight (Report, 20 August). Quantum should include a component for lifetime loss of earnings.
Dr Allan Dodds
Nottingham

Students taking A-levels: 'Newham Sixth Form College's average scores will never be as high as those

In a piece on A-level results (A-level results at first free school sixth form college are envy of top schools, 14 August), you quote the headmaster of the Newham-based 16-18 free school, the London Academy of Excellence, saying: “In Newham, there were hundreds and thousands of young people who wanted to do traditional A-levels. In the past they couldn’t do them because there was no one to provide them. Either they were having to go to school in the surrounding boroughs or – if they couldn’t afford to do that – they were having to take places at colleges here that didn’t provide biology, maths and history. They were having to do BTECs, GNVQs and that type of thing.”

This will have come as quite a surprise to the many thousands of students who have taken A-level subjects at Newham Sixth Form College (NewVIc) over the last 20 years, many of whom have progressed to competitive degree courses in selective universities. Our teachers returning to work yesterday were also somewhat bemused to find their teaching of a very wide range of A-levels (all those offered at LAE plus many more) airbrushed from history.

NewVIc sends more disadvantaged students to university than any other sixth-form provider in England. The college’s university progression rates are very high: 767 students progressed overall in 2013, 99% of all A-level applicants to university progressed and we regularly get students into Russell Group institutions (at least 74 this year) and into Oxbridge (two this year).

Because we don’t cherry-pick the highest-qualified students, our average scores will never be as high as those of more selective providers. But like-for-like, our achievements compare well.
Eddie Playfair
Principal, Newham Sixth Form College, (NewVIc), East London.

POLITICS Peers File 1

Paul Tyler (Letters, 14 August) is wrong to argue that in practice the coalition is in a minority in the Lords. Not so. Most crossbenchers, unwhipped of course, do not regularly vote, and those that do break around 40% for the government. The coalition only has such a strong working majority in the Lords precisely and perversely because it is so weak in the Commons. I was a Labour Lords minister for eight years, and while we had strong majorities of more than 100 in the Commons, we had just 31% of the vote in the Lords. We had to win by persuasion and argument, and legislation was the better for it. A government always gets its business through in the end, rightly, but the scrutiny that comes from a government not having an automatic majority is what makes the Lords so valuable.

Incidentally, throughout my ministerial years, the Lib Dems voted to raise benefits higher than could be afforded. Now those self-same members vote as a highly disciplined coalition to cut deeply those very benefits, for disabled people, for vulnerable children, that previously they insisted loudly were not generous enough. The devastating bedroom tax exists only because they voted for it. What price power?
Patricia Hollis
Labour, House of Lords

A gamekeeper on a Scottish moor: 'Golden plover numbers are being maintained on grouse moors while d

Jim Perrin is wrong to blame those who shoot for the decline of the golden plover (Country diary, 15 August). The Crown Foreshore Wildfowling returns, the best dataset available, show that in the 2013-14 season 70 UK wildfowling clubs shot the grand total of 15 golden plover out of an overwintering population estimated by the Royal Society for the Protection of Birds at 420,000.

Four separate studies (Baines et al 2008, Fletcher et al 2010, Tharme et al 2001 and Grant et al 2012) show that breeding success for golden plover is significantly improved by moorland management for grouse shooting and that numbers are being maintained on grouse moors while disappearing elsewhere in Britain. This is a clear example of the contribution to conservation made by shooting.
Christopher Graffius
Director of communications, The British Association for Shooting and Conservation

J S Bach

I think Sarah Lambert is confusing inspiration with the structural “occasion” for the composition of works of art, located in the obligations of patronage and institutional contract (Letters, 18 August). She says “we’ll never know” if artists were “inspired by religion”.

I find it difficult to believe the following were not “inspired”: St John of the Cross, Hildegard of Bingen, John Bunyan, William Blake, Messiah, the Missa Solemnis, Milton, St Matthew Passion (and everything else by Bach); Four Quartets, Charles Williams, CS Lewis, Palestrina, Byrd, Tallis, Elgar, Gerard Manley Hopkins, John Donne, Henry Vaughan, Dante, Dürer…

Sorry, I’ll have to start work, otherwise I could have carried on!
Ben Entwistle
Crewe, Cheshire

• Attentive reviews of Prom 40 on Monday and Prom 42 on Tuesday but what became of Prom 41 ? Could tribute bands to Basie and Ellington and in competition with Clare Teal as compere be a bit infra dig for Guardian reviewers? With hoofers, singers and dancing in the aisles perhaps there was not the expertise to judge this singular event.
David J Handley
Gargrave, North Yorkshire

• What a brilliant clue in Paul’s crossword (20 August) – Leading Tory: “I have come last in poll, schooling ultimately a fiasco” (7,4). Answer: Michael Gove.
Andrew MacLachlan
London

• I’m all for publishing the league tables after one match (Letters, 20 August). The thing is, can we Villa fans declare now, while we are above the Baggies?
Phil Rhoden
Kidderminster, Worcestershire

• Lauren Bacall was the last of the Hollywood greats, says Deborah Orr (Report, 15 August). Remember, Doris Day is still out there. Dare I mention a man, Kirk Douglas for example?
Myra Gartshore
Dumbarton

• I’ve not heard of cats who guide the blind etc (Letters, 18 August). Nor have I heard of any dog clever enough to take the load off its owner by climbing into a neighbour’s gardens to do its business.
Bill Kelly
Bristol

David Holgate started out as an apprentice letter-cutter in the 1950s. Photograph: EDP

About 10 years ago, when I was trying to learn more about Norwich, I took one of Pevsner’s perambulations through the city. While I was sitting outside the west front of Norwich Cathedral reading the relevant pages in Pevsner, a man came up to me and said: “I think my house is in that book.”

Soon David Holgate revealed, very modestly, that the fine statues recently added to the west front were his work. We walked to his house nearby and, after discovering it was not in the book, I was given a guided tour of his basement studio. Kind to allcomers, certainly.

Independent:

Times:

It is bad enough to be a murdering jihadist but a British one is even more shocking

Sir, That young men brought up and educated in Britain are today proud to commit murder on video is the clearest possible evidence that multiculturalism was a disastrous policy in this country.

It must be utterly eradicated and all Britons encouraged at school and in church, mosque or synagogue to embrace liberal, democratic principles, to support their country and to respect each other.

To do otherwise in these institutions is an abuse of children’s young minds and should be a criminal offence.

The recent debate about the essence of Britishness foundered on our belief in personal liberty and a very British reluctance to be unduly prescriptive. Surely, however, the time has come when we should at least deem certain forms of behaviour anathema to Britain. Among these should be service in primitive, bloodthirsty foreign armies and membership of terrorist organisations. Such activities should result in termination of citizenship. Can they and, if not, why not? We do not want fanatical, bloodthirsty murderers eventually coming home to spread their poison.

Gregory Shenkman
London W8

Sir, The violent and boastful young people who have joined the militant jihadists of Isis appear to be proud of what they are doing, believing it to be divinely ordered and therefore right. And yet in so many triumphalist photographs they all wear balaclavas. Why do they feel it necessary to hide their faces?

Peter Champness
Shipton under Wychwood, Oxon

Sir, I condemn the senseless and barbaric killing of James Foley by the terrorist group Isis. Our immediate thoughts are with the family of Mr Foley and his friends. This brutal killing reminds us of the dangerous environments in which journalists operate around the world and we call on all people to respect the freedom of the press.

If this barbaric killing was not enough then the suggestion that the beheading was carried out by a British citizen is deeply worrying for our nation.

As Muslims we reject terrorism and the evil Isis — they do not act in our name and we abhor anyone who supports them.

The real concern for the Ramadhan Foundation is if these hardened terrorists return to the UK and put our country at risk from further terrorist attacks. We stand ready to support the police and intelligence agencies in their work to defeat terrorism and protect our nation.

Mohammed Shafiq
Ramadhan Foundation

Human rights should not be used as a political rod to beat the European Court

Sir, The European Court of Human Rights awarded no compensation or costs to ten convicted prisoners, and Jack Straw (Opinion Aug 14) infers that the court backed down in the face of the furore that an award would have provoked. An alternative inference is that the court was simply doing its job properly. If by criminal activity you deliberately put yourself in a position where you lose your right to vote, a claim against the government for compensation may be seen as wholly unmeritorious.

Now that Lord Neuberger has stated that our courts will not in future automatically follow the jurisprudence of the ECHR but will “take account” of it, it is a pity that Mr Straw continues to fan popular antipathy towards Strasbourg (sometimes confused with “Europe”). As Daniel Finkelstein makes clear (“Human rights are not a joke. They are vital”, Aug 20), our judges are well able to define what is a human right, as they recently did in regard to whole life sentences, and I suggest that they be allowed to get on with the task. The vital importance and dignity of human rights can be restored only if they cease to be treated as a political football.

Jonathan Playford, QC

Reading

Economics may seem to comprehend all human life but some people still find other things to enjoy

Sir, Matt Ridley wonders why some countries in Europe resist the
so-called “Anglo-Saxon model” (“Dismal Europe should embrace free enterprise”, Aug 18). It is because the economy that he refers to is not necessarily the economy that some people feel part of. In some countries they feel that there is more to life than the economy. They feel that they are losing the way of life that made their country special to them. Think of what we love about France and Italy, etc. The way of life is what attracts us.

Matt Ridley’s prescription reminds me of an American Express advert that had the stressed US tourist on a Mexican beach surrounded by a Mexican fisherman and his family playing happily. The tourist tells him that if he borrowed lots of money and invested in a fleet of boats, he could spend his days on the beach playing with his family. The look the already happy fisherman gave him said it all.

Edward Williams

Poole, Dorset

The first step towards removing poverty is to remove the self-perpetuating culture of poverty

Sir, The first step in tackling poverty must be to break up a culture of poverty that is itself reinforcing. For example, in the past in Birkenhead single parenthood was economically driven. Thousands of semi-skilled male jobs in the port and shipyard were wiped out in a generation, and welfare provided a bigger income for single mothers than did partnership with an unemployed man. Now single parenthood is often culturally driven. It’s a norm, and welfare supports that choice. Yet this choice has a huge impact on the number of poor children. There are almost no, repeat no, poor children in households where one parent works full time and one part time.

This is not an attack on anyone who is poor. Rather it aims at a welfare system that both gives rise to poverty and holds the poor in place. It is politicians who should be in the dock; not the all too many victims of their failed policies.

There is a need for a decent minimum and for that minimum to be higher than it is. But calls for reform must be accompanied by a more honest debate on the causes of poverty. There are structural reasons i.e. low wages. Other causes stem from a wider culture than just
welfare which has also imprisoned centre-left politicians against telling as they find it.

Frank Field, MP

House of Commons

Victorian piety does not equip a woman to be a heroine for our times, alas

Sir, Oliver Kamm (Notebook, Aug 19) writes: “On her deathbed, Mrs Reed does not receive Jane’s forgiveness for the cruelty inflicted in her childhood.”

Jane’s actual words are, “I long earnestly to be reconciled to you now: kiss me, aunt . . . you have my full and free forgiveness.” It is Mrs Reed who refuses to ask for forgiveness. That’s what makes this an unconventional deathbed scene; Jane’s attitude is one of pure Victorian piety. Sadly, not a heroine for our times.

Sharon Footerman

London NW4

Telegraph:

ure

London red phone boxes, Smithfield Market, London, England

A call to save London’s architectural treasures: red phone boxes at Smithfield Market  Photo: Alamy

6:57AM BST 20 Aug 2014

CommentsComments

SIR – You report that, according to Forbes, the business magazine, London is the most influential city in the world. The Victorian Society welcomes this finding, as well as Forbes’s comment that a global city must be “efficient and savvy” with a “strong historical pedigree”.

London’s success depends on its ability to preserve its heritage as an asset for the future. Failure to do so will undermine the city’s ability to differentiate itself from its global competitors.

Ensuring London’s future success and prosperity are good business reasons for readers to support campaigns to protect London’s architectural treasures, such as Smithfield Market, from demolition or insensitive redevelopment.

Chris Costelloe
Director, The Victorian Society
London W4

Comments

SIR – The Ecuadorian foreign minister complains that the Government has no real interest in finding a diplomatic solution to Julian Assange’s continued confinement.

One hopes that the Government has none at all. Mr Assange is a fugitive from justice in Sweden, a fellow EU member, where he is accused of sexual offences.

In harbouring Mr Assange, Ecuador has displayed an undiplomatic contempt for British law and a bizarre willingness to believe Mr Assange’s assertion that Sweden – of all places – wants to extradite him to the United States rather than just investigate the charges against him.

If Mr Assange is unwell, he should go to hospital and afterwards to Sweden. This situation is about the law and not human rights or politics.

Gregory Shenkman
London W8

Cannabis-based drugs

SIR – Why is it so difficult for cannabis-derived therapy to be accepted? It is nearly 20 years since my colleagues and I reported the beneficial effect of nabilone (a synthetic cannabinoid) in relieving pain from muscle spasm and alleviating the need to wake and pass urine at night in patients with multiple sclerosis.

Perhaps if it was offered as an alternative therapy it might catch on. After all, the NHS offers acupuncture and homeopathy – so why not try something that actually works?

Dr L S Illis
Lymington, Hampshire

Sainbury’s protest

SIR – In accusing Sainsbury’s of “colluding with a form of terrorism”, Stephen Pollard demonstrates that he has no knowledge of the true course of events at our Holborn Local on Saturday.

What we find most unacceptable is Mr Pollard’s decision to insult a store colleague who, acting with the sole intention of ensuring that the quality of chilled kosher foods on sale was maintained in the face of a perceived threat, temporarily moved them to cold storage elsewhere in the store. Other kosher foods remained on sale in the store throughout the nearby protest, thus entirely scotching the idea that the chilled foods were relocated for any other reason than to preserve the “chill chain”. In other recent supermarket protests, chilled goods have been rendered unfit for sale after they were removed from chillers.

As an entirely non-political organisation, we would never endorse such an action for political purposes. The allegation that a colleague commented “We support Free Gaza” is strongly disputed, and it is in any case absurd to ascribe any such view to Sainsbury’s. The incident has of course been thoroughly investigated.

Although our colleague made a judgment call that has provoked a strong reaction, the action was taken under stress and does not reflect Sainsbury’s policy in any way. We will never discriminate for or against customers, employees or suppliers because of their religion.

Roger Burnley
Retail & Operations Director, Sainsbury’s
London EC1

Holiday buzz

SIR – Having just returned from holiday, I can reveal that the wasps Ann Brooke-Smith is looking for are all on the Greek island of Andros.

Perhaps they’re doing the Grand Tour.

Mark Mortimer
Warminster, Wiltshire

Living with Parkinson’s

SIR – I hope the publicity being given to the fact that Robin Williams had recently been diagnosed with Parkinson’s disease will not result in it being blamed for his suicide. I would suspect that, in view of all his other problems, both mental and financial, the diagnosis would have been, at most, the last straw.

My husband was diagnosed with Parkinson’s at 60. He took up golf and bowls (which he became very good at) and we continued to take holidays abroad and in Britain. Although a broken hip would eventually confine him to a wheelchair, he lived to be 82.

I run the local Parkinson’s UK support group, and have seen for myself how the disease affects people in many different ways. Some of our members do not show obvious symptoms while others have quite severe difficulties. Depression can be connected, but not necessarily.

I hope any readers who find they have Parkinson’s will not view it as an end to life as they know it. My advice is to carry on and enjoy life for as long as possible and remember that support is available.

E J Gingell
Malton, North Yorkshire

Licensed to play

SIR – Forty-eight pages of instructions for a pillow does indeed seem over-cautious. Upon reading the instruction manual for a remote control model helicopter I received from my grandchildren, I discovered the warning: “We recommend that you obtain the assistance of an experienced pilot before attempting to fly our product.”

Simon Funnell
Golant, Cornwall

Imported biscuits

SIR – Michael Deacon objects to the use of the Americanism “cookie” – but surely we imported the word “biscuit” from the French?

D A Greenwood
Barnet, Hertfordshire

Swims, nips and leaves

SIR – I swim in The Serpentine in Hyde Park every day. Last week I felt a nibble at my feet and looked round to see a swan.

A splash and a shout was all that was required for him to beat a hasty retreat.

Robin Hunter-Coddington
London W4

Making mobility scooters safer for all concerned

SIR – I too have been made to jump aside in order to escape from an oncoming mobility scooter.

I am a healthy 65-year-old, but it would only take one collision to render me less so. They are a danger to adults and children alike as they are incredibly heavy.

At the very least, users should have insurance to cover my medical expenses, should I be too slow to dive for cover.

Patricia van Os
Bracknell, Berkshire

SIR – The Government has required that all Class 3 scooters (the 8mph ones) must be registered with the DVLA, which issues them with a registration number. This cannot be displayed because there is nowhere to fix a number plate. It also issues a tax disc, which again is difficult to display. Users do not have to be insured and there is no test to drive one.

This situation will be even more farcical from October, when tax discs disappear, as without a number plate there will be no way of checking that they are taxed or even registered.

Steve Cattell
Grantham, Lincolnshire

SIR – Do those people who criticise the use of these machines realise how courageous we have to be in order to ride on them?

I have used one for years as, since my husband died, it has been my only means of shopping, but the difficulties I encounter make me wonder how much longer I can go on. Vehicles parked across the pavement, dustbins left outside houses and bicycles propped against walls often force me to ride on the road, with lorries and cars driving behind me impatiently. It is a surprise that more of us aren’t involved in road accidents.

More patience on the part of the able-bodied would help.

Monica Brameld
Southwell, Nottinghamshire

6.5 million people in Britain act as carers for older or disabled loved ones Photo: ALAMY (POSED BY MODEL)

7:00AM BST 20 Aug 2014

CommentsComments

SIR – We welcome the Prime Minister’s commitment to testing all Government policy to ensure that it supports family life instead of making it more difficult. However, we are concerned that this test appears only to consider one part of family life, the raising of young children, rather than addressing families’ growing responsibilities for older or disabled relatives.

All of us will, at some point, care for an ageing parent or an ill relative, or need that care ourselves from our loved ones. Too often, when a frail relative comes out of hospital or a partner has a stroke, families suddenly find that, unlike with child care, public services and workplaces aren’t set up to support them in providing care, which adds to the strain on them.

The 6.5 million people in Britain caring for older or disabled loved ones are a clear demonstration of the strength of family life. It is vital that social security, health and care services and workplace rights are tested to ensure they support caring for ageing parents and disabled relatives, rather than making it harder to do so.

Helena Herklots
Chief Executive, Carers UK
London SE1

SIR – How can we accept David Cameron’s declaration that “Nothing matters more than family”, when not so long ago he had praised the value of marriage, then redefined it? His legislation has already devalued the roles of fatherhood and motherhood as the time-honoured foundations of the nuclear family.

Peter Goodchild
Cranbrook, Kent

SIR – Can British citizens married to non-EU spouses now expect David Cameron to review the onerous and discriminatory visa requirements for these spouses so that more families can enjoy the family values that he is seeking to promote?

Susan Gorton
Abingdon, Oxfordshire

SIR – When deciding whether policy decisions are family-friendly, will David Cameron take into account that we are living in a society that separates young mothers from their infants at an ever-earlier age, often to the detriment of the emotional well-being of mother and child?

This is a society that encourages “aspirational” women to return to work with financial rewards, while denying any assistance to young mothers who would prefer to stay at home and provide their own child care in the natural, traditional way. Putting women’s contribution to the economy above their role at the heart of the family is not family-friendly.

Andrea Bates
Enstone, Oxfordshire

SIR – The decision to start a family is a lifestyle choice. People should not have children, particularly large families, and then expect the state to fund them.

Clifford Baxter
Wareham, Dorset

Irish Times:

Sir, – Could Fintan O’Toole (“160,000 reasons to take action on abortion”, Opinion, August 19th) not ask about the thousands of young men and women, boys, girls and infants, who would today be enjoying what this wonderful world has to give if his 160,000 women had not gone (abroad) for abortion? Why is it so easy to focus on one of the two people involved and shut one’s eyes tight to the existence of the other (as if he/she were merely some sort of threatening growth)? Vituperation is not an answer. – Yours, etc,

TOM GILLEN,

Weston Park,

Dundrum, Dublin 14.

Sir, – The subheading on Fintan O Toole’s piece reads “Constitutional provisions on abortion are just the detritus of the ecstatic picnic of theocracy’s final fling”.What a way with words Fintan surely has! However it is worth noting that the word theocracy originates from a Greek word meaning “the rule of God”. It was first coined by Josephus Flavius, a first-century scholar and historian.He used it to describe the form of government favoured by the Jewish population, as opposed to the other forms predominant at the time – monarchy, aristocracy and anarchy. A question for people to ponder is not so much do we still believe in “the rule of God”, but rather do we still believe in “God”. Only then can we start to make sense of the moral questions of our times. – Yours, etc,

DON CAHALANE,

Linden Avenue,

Beaumont, Cork.

Sir, – I agree with Ruth Cullen (August 19th) – this situation has resulted in a tiny, premature baby fighting for its life in an incubator. This baby has been denied the physical contact so desperately needed in the crucial early weeks of its life, will never be breastfed, will never know who its parents are (other than that their father was a rapist and their mother tried to kill herself), and will probably struggle with a variety of physical and mental difficulties for the rest of its life.

Is this preferable to an eight-week-old foetus being aborted before its nervous system has developed? Because this is what it comes down to. If you belief life, any life, is always better than none, then you should be thankful that the child exists at all (it would also be nice if someone would step up and adopt the poor little mite). So before we start pointing fingers at other people’s “choices”, let us remember that the mother’s actual preferred choice was either termination or suicide. In neither of these cases would the child have survived (although it probably would have suffered less).

So be thankful for this outcome. It’s what you wanted when you voted against allowing women in difficult circumstances any choices at all. Unless, of course, you’d prefer to get out the straitjackets and feeding tubes? – Yours, etc,

CIARA MADDEN,

Taborstrasse,

Vienna.

Sir, – All this hand-wringing about abortion and other social issues is so typically Irish and makes one fear that despite everything over the last six years, nothing has changed. I think we all know that there won’t be any meaningful reform or change as long as Enda Kenny’s generation of the grey old men from the 1970s is still in control.

The 1937 Constitution is clearly not fit for purpose and was written for an Ireland in a period of time that has no connection to the reality of how Irish people live today. It utterly lacks the classical simplicity of the US or French constitutions which have both stood the test of time and been able to adapt to societal changes. A constitution is not the place to enter sections concerning social issues like marriage, abortion, gay rights or the role of women or men in society. These are issues that should be removed and dealt with by legislation that reflects the popular will of the people at any given point in time and can be changed accordingly.

If you are against gay marriage then don’t marry a gay person and their right to marry won’t affect your life in any way. Similarly if you object to abortion for personal or religious reasons then you won’t have an abortion no matter what the circumstances of your crisis pregnancy. But that doesn’t give you the right to deny another women to make her own decision if she finds herself with a crisis pregnancy.

Of course if the guilt and responsibility for causing a crisis pregnancy in the first place were equally shared with the man who didn’t use contraception, I’m sure the law would be changed far quicker.

These are actually simple issues and yes or no are perfectly reasonable stances to take. It’s about time Irish people stopped looking for the cute hoor solution that solves nothing and faced these issues like grown adults. – Yours, etc,

DESMOND FitzGERALD,

Canary Wharf,

London.

Sir, – While Fintan O’Toole expresses eloquently the moral indignation any sentient person might feel in relation to the fate of the young woman at the centre of the current abortion debate, I believe he is seriously wrong in attributing the blame for this state of affairs on the Constitution, and on what he refers to as “a long-discarded ideology.”

It is a convenient shorthand for some to blame the Catholic Church for everything from educational trauma to sexual deviance. However, looking at history in the long term, these problems and others, which form part of what we might categorise generally as human suffering, predate the Catholic Church. Indeed the brutality of non-Christian times reaches unimaginable extremes, for example, killing infants by exposure, as the Romans did. The activities of the Islamic State forces in present times should give Mr O’Toole pause for thought.

The facts support the view that the influence of Christianity brought a degree of civilisation that tempered justice with mercy. I believe Mr O’Toole is sadly deluded in thinking that tinkering with the Constitution and getting rid of Christianity would solve any problems. In the real world, suffering is part and parcel of everyone’s life and Christianity is the only “ideology” which makes sense of it. – Yours, etc,

DONAL DEASY,

Granville Avenue,

Richmond,

Canada.

Sir, – I wish to take issue with a number of claims made by Isolde Goggin (“General practitioners operate much like any other small business”, Opinion & Analysis, August 18th).

First, the National Association of General Practitioners (NAGP), which represents over 1,000 GPs, has been excluded from talks with the Department of Health, which would in itself seem to be anti-competitive behaviour. To endorse one organisation over another surely raises questions about the impartiality of the department in this area.

Second, the primary motivation of GPs is the desire to provide a first-class, safe and effective service at primary care level. The ability to be able to negotiate collectively is not so GPs can go on strike or withdraw services but to allow GPs to have a voice on behalf of their patients at the highest levels, to ensure that the poor, the elderly, the socially deprived and most vulnerable in our society can continue to access health in their community safely and effectively.

Third, general practice is not a trading business in the traditional sense of the word as 80 per cent of its income comes from one source, namely the HSE. As a result of Fempi (Financial Emergency Measures in the Public Interest), GPs have had their gross income cut by 40 per cent in the last four years.

This is not a 40 per cent salary reduction but 40 per cent of resources provided by the State to provide a health service at primary care level. This funding is there to provide infrastructure, equipment, heat, light, staffing, insurance, etc. As stated previously, these are gross payment reductions and actually equate to a net 80 per cent reduction in income.

If the Government had slashed the hospital budget to the same degree half the hospitals in Ireland would be now closed. But the Government doesn’t cut the hospital budget to the same degree because the employees of these organisations are protected by their unions.

Fourth, Ms Goggin claims that GP fees rose by 78 per cent over the seven-year period leading up to 2008 but this figure is quoted out of context. Indeed resourcing in general practice did rise over this period but GPs were asked to do much, much more for the money.

For example, free GP care was provided for the over-70s and numerous other services were provided by GPs in a primary care setting over those years. Unfortunately these services are now being cut or have been eliminated because of a lack of funding.

Unlike other businesses, general practice is unable to cut costs and continue to provide a safe service. An increasing number of patients are presenting in general practice while draconian cuts are being implemented, which means that it is the patients that suffer because GPs cannot fund the service themselves.

The Competition Authority has conveniently ignored that the GMS scheme is by its very nature anti-competitive. The idea that one supplier can impose fees by diktat to businesses without the ability to negotiate is anti-competitive by its nature. What other business could possibly survive in this type of economic tyranny?

The National Association of General Practitioners represents GPs but by extension is also trying to protect the poor, the vulnerable and the socially deprived in our society. We will continue to highlight the failures of successive governments to address the key issues in providing a safe, effective service at a primary care level for all the people of Ireland, not just the well-off. – Yours, etc,

CHRIS GOODEY,

Chief Executive,

National Association

of General Practitioners,

Kildare Street,

Dublin 2.

Sir, – Ms Goggin believes that currently GPs decide: 1) “where to locate their practice”, but the new contract stipulates that GPs shall work in Primary Care Centres where available; 2) “how much to invest in their practice facilities”, yet the new contract insists that GPs have a state of the art IT system, and lists the various types of rooms that must be provided, including a dedicated mother and baby feeding and changing room; 3) “who to employ”, yet the contract says that any locum employed by GPs must be approved by the HSE first; 4) “whether or not to enter into partnerships with other GPs or medical professionals”, yet the new contract decrees that GPs must be members of the local Primary Care Team.

What is proposed is not a new GMS contract, but an entirely new primary care contract, which will radically change the doctor-patient relationship as we know it. – Yours, etc,

Dr VALERIE COLLINS,

The Surgery,

Market Street,

Killorglin,

Co Kerry.

Sir, – Philip Donnelly (August 18th) takes me to task for suggesting that Ireland should be slow to celebrate John Redmond’s role as recruiter for the British army in the first World War. He also accuses me of dishonouring the memory of the Irish soldiers who died. I have made it absolutely clear that I believe that commemorating those tragic deaths is right and fitting.

Honouring “the cause”, however, is another matter.

The first World War was fought to further the expansion and power of the British Empire – and for nothing else. Ireland never forgot the dead of the first Word War – that would have been a physical impossibility. It just did not celebrate Irish slaughter in Britain’s interest and it never should.

Blame for the more than 16 million deaths that resulted from this conflict, the vast majority of them in each country recruited from among the ranks of young working class men and agricultural labourers, cannot be attributed to Germany alone. France, Russia, Austria-Hungary, Italy and Turkey all had their own axes to grind, as of course did Britain, which dominated the world through its sea power and had an interest in crushing Germany before it became too threatening a rival.

James Connolly, the founding father of Irish Labour, in very precise terms summed up the aims of British prime minister Asquith in August 1914. “The British capitalist class have planned this colossal crime in order to ensure its uninterrupted domination of the commerce of the world. To achieve that end it is prepared to bathe a continent in blood, to kill off the flower of the manhood of the three most civilised great nations of Europe . . . Yes, this war is the war of a pirate upon the German nation.” (Irish Worker, August 29th, 1914)

Finally I’d like to assure Mr Donnelly that I have been active in Labour politics since I was a teenager and I have never felt the need for a green flag. Quite the contrary. My objection to the first World War is that it was a conflict in which the poor in every country were admonished that they must “do their duty” and were then sacrificed in vast numbers for the schemes of generals and “statesmen”. – Yours, etc,

EAMONN MALONEY, TD

Dáil Eireann,

Leinster House,

Dublin 2.

Sir, – I was surprised at the piece “Olivia O’Leary leads campaign to save grassy Co Kilkenny towpath” (August 19th). I find it strange that a person of Ms O’Leary’s obvious intellect would take such an elitist approach to the proposal to restore a narrow strip of the derelict towpath along the Barrow navigation. I’ve seen “nimbyism” before, but never in relation to amenities for families such as proposed by Waterways Ireland for this overgrown towpath.

When the motorway bridge was proposed over the Broadmeadows estuary near Swords in Co Dublin, it was predicted that hundreds of swans would die as they crashed into a bridge that hadn’t been there when they last looked. I cycled under that bridge a few weeks back, protected from speeding traffic only by the strip of pink tarmac on which I rode, and I didn’t see a single dead swan anywhere. I did, however, dream of a few long routes in Ireland where I could cycle or walk in safety, and the Barrow line would fit that bill nicely.

Why would anyone object to the kind of cycling and walking infrastructure that is normal in all civilised countries but a rarity here? What is the problem with providing a safe place for families to walk, cycle and push buggies in a safe, traffic-free environment? Why would someone who purports to love the countryside consider that it should be available only to an elite few? Why should people in wheelchairs be excluded from enjoying a long trek by the beautiful Barrow? What is wrong with high-spending cycling and walking tourists?

We own very few linear corridors in Ireland that are suitable for the provision of infrastructure that is the norm elsewhere. The few canals and the disused railways lines that haven’t been lost to squatters could make this a better country for its inhabitants and a destination for the millions of tourists that go where the trails are, in Germany, Hungary and along the Danube and other European rivers. We need to welcome this investment by Waterways Ireland with open arms.

Cyclists and walkers tend to be sensitive nature lovers, so I wouldn’t worry too much about their impact on the wildlife; like the swans at Swords, the birds and animals will adapt. The nimbys, I fear, may take a little longer. – Yours, etc,

JOHN MULLIGAN,

Kiltycreighton,

Boyle, Co Roscommon.

Sir, – The proposal of Dr Chris Luke (August 19th) to remove the HPAT ( Health Professions Admission Test) as a measure to persuade newly qualified doctors to remain in Ireland highlights the ongoing disconnect between non-consultant hospital doctors and their senior colleagues in medical and management positions.

It is disappointing that the debate on how best to stem the outflow of medics from Ireland continues to focus on the use of mandatory service or short-term “bargaining chips”.

Addressing poor training conditions, failures to implement mandatory working-hour limits and the disproportionate reduction in salary for new-entrant consultants should be the priorities of our senior colleagues.

Until the welfare of non-consultant hospital doctors and newly appointed consultants is made a priority, rather than efforts to restrict movement in a global market, doctors will continue to exit the Irish system in large numbers in favour of improved working conditions. – Yours, etc,

Dr STEVEN MALONEY,

Lower Rathmines Road,

Dublin 6.

A chara, – Dr Chris Luke’s suggestion to get would-be medical students to sign-up to a six-month stint in areas of medical manpower shortage must surely be a runner, if for no other reason than its simplicity.

A failure to live up to the commitment, on the part of the newly qualified doctor, might be discouraged by a financial sanction, such as the reimbursement to the State of the cost of that medical education. – Is mise,

GREG SCANLON,

Ballycasey Manor,

Shannon,

Co Clare.

Sir, – Would a 100 per cent decrease in letters about statistics (August 19th) lead to a corresponding increase in letters about damned lies? – Yours, etc,

MICHELE SAVAGE,

Glendale Park, Dublin 12.

Sir, – Is it not time to end the meaningless practice of third and fourth place play-offs in many sporting competitions and instead simply award a bronze medal to the affected competitors, just as they do in boxing? – Yours, etc,

MICHAEL C O’CONNOR,

Dunmore Road,

Waterford.

Irish Independent:

All this hand wringing about abortion and other social issues is so typically Irish and makes one fear that despite everything over the last six years, nothing has changed.

I think we all know that there won’t be any meaningful reform or change as long as Enda Kenny‘s generation of the grey old men from the 1970s is still in control. Mr Kenny is nothing if not the political son of Liam Cosgrave.

The 1937 Constitution is clearly not fit for purpose and was written for an Ireland in a period of time that has no connection to the reality of how Irish people live today.

It lacks the classical simplicity of the US or French constitutions, which have both stood the test of time and have been able to adapt to societal changes.

A constitution is not the place to enter clauses concerning social issues like marriage, abortion, gay rights or the role of women or men in society. These are issues that should be removed and dealt with by legislation that reflects the popular will of the people at any given point in time and can be changed accordingly.

If you are against gay marriage, then don’t marry a gay person, and their right to marry won’t affect your life in any way.Similarly, if you object to abortion for personal or religious reasons, then you won’t have an abortion, no matter what the circumstances of your crisis pregnancy. But that doesn’t give you the right to deny another women her right to make her own decision if she finds herself with a crisis pregnancy.

Desmond FitzGerald

Canary Wharf

London

 

Get the excuses in early

It is a week-and-a half away and already excuses are being put forward in case Dublin should defeat Donegal in the SFC semi-final

It’s the sponsorship, it’s the professional approach, it’s the physical fitness, it’s Dublin being unfair in playing their opponents with 15 players on the field.

Go back to the 1970s and see how fair the great Kerry teams were when they completely dominated Gaelic football. Remember in 1974 a Dublin team from B/Division won the All-Ireland when they defeated Galway.On their way to victory, they defeated the holders of the Sam Maguire when they beat Cork in the semi-final.

Back then, it was the great Kevin Heffernan who lifted Gaelic football from the doldrums and created a following that has lasted to this day, There was no big sponsorship – it was brains and heart that saw the boys in blue show the rest of Ireland how the game should be played.

In fairness to the Kerry team of 1975, they beat us at our own game – they learned from the Dubs about the man running off the ball, the short hand pass, and, above all else, total discipline, total commitment.

So before I hear any more complaining about how well this Dublin team is looked after, remember that Gaelic football is a simple game – it takes belief and effective execution of a team’s skills.

Don’t moan if you are defeated because your players stayed in their own half for the whole of the match.

In short, stop whining and get on with the game!

Fred Molloy

Dublin 15

 

Scant regard for human life

“We are led by the least of us,” said US writer Terence McKenna.

People are being killed on this planet at an alarming rate.

IS is rampaging through the deserts of the Middle East, people are dying in the conflict in Gaza, blood is being shed in Ukraine, and these are just the current news stories.

The civil war is still, I presume, raging in Syria, and Africa has so many different conflicts that you cannot keep up with them. And you can be fairly sure that there are some conflicts we haven’t even heard of.

It seems that there is a very little value placed on human life.

I think we may be a little arrogant to suggest that man is the most intelligent animal on the planet – mice seem to have more cop on!

Dermot Ryan

Attymon, Co Galway

 

Pylon plan will create jobs

Ralph Riegel tells us that Tour de France and Giro d’Italia star Sean Kelly has joined a local campaign (CAP) to oppose the proposed pylon grid which will eventually link Munster to Leinster (Irish Independent, August 18).

One wonders why Mr Riegel mentioned either the Tour or the Giro, as Mr Kelly won neither, though he did win the Veulta, the Tour of Spain, which the article did not mention.

This pylon plan is a good one and will bring jobs and investment into parts of rural Ireland which have been suffering for too long.

Declan Carty

Foulksmills, Co Wexford

 

Pope is made of sterner stuff

For some time now, some commentators have been making invidious, childish comparisons between the relative merits of Pope Emeritus Benedict XVI and Pope Francis. In reality, both men bring their own unique personalities to the “job”.

Pope Benedict came across as a gentle, quiet theologian and scholar, while Pope Francis appears to have a more outgoing personality. However, never was there a case of outward appearances being more deceptive.

While Pope Benedict, as the scholar, was reluctant to use the ‘big stick’, Pope Francis seems to be made of sterner stuff.

What has escaped the attention of many commentators is that in his relatively short pontificate to date, Pope Francis has enforced two excommunications. The first was of the Australian priest, Fr Greg Reynolds. He was excommunicated by Pope Francis because he campaigned for women priests.

The second was the leader of the Austrian “We Are Church” faction, Martha Heizer. She was excommunicated by Pope Francis for supporting women priests and married clergy.

Eric Conway

Navan, Co Meath

 

What planet is Howlin on?

Brendan Howlin is in favour of the reintroduction of payments to recognise high performance.

Is he living on the same planet as the rest of us?

You pay high salaries to people to get high performance, so why go overboard and give them something further? People are recruited to work to the best of their ability – if they don’t, they should be let go, not given a bonus for something they should have been doing in the first place.

John Coleman

Farmhill Drive, Dublin 14

 

More to craft beer than IPA

I would like to congratulate your paper for its coverage of the beers being produced in Ireland today and the stories behind the brewers that make them.

However, after reading the piece by Liam Campbell (Irish Independent, August 16), I wouldn’t want your readers to think that the range of craft beers being made today solely consists of India Pale Ales (IPAs). There’s a vibrant beer scene in Ireland and the IPA is but just one style, albeit a popular one.

There’s a wide range of beer styles, from lager to porters and stout right through to barley wine and a number of beers aged in whiskey barrels. These are made by a growing number of small, independent producers. Some are already winning international awards and more will undoubtedly follow.

It is important that these brewers continue to receive coverage in the press. This will encourage people not only to seek them out but to actually try their beers.

Aidan Sweeney

Ballsbridge, Dublin 4

Irish Independent


Piratesof Penzance

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22 August 2014 Pirates of Penzance

I jog around the park I still have arthritis in my left knee, but I manage to get round the park. A wettish day. We go and see the Pirates of Penzance with Astrid and Not Michael

Scrabble: I win, but get just under 400. perhaps Mary will win tomorrow.

108 Games Mary win 57 John 52

Obituary:

Albert Reynolds – obituary

Albert Reynolds was a former pet food manufacturer who, as Irish Taoiseach, coaxed the IRA towards a ceasefire

John Major and Albert Reynolds addressing a press conference prior to announcing the 1993 Downing Street Declaration

John Major and Albert Reynolds addressing a press conference prior to announcing the 1993 Downing Street Declaration  Photo: AFP/GETTY

12:02PM BST 21 Aug 2014

CommentsComments

Albert Reynolds, the former Irish Taoiseach, who has died aged 81, was the driving force behind the 1993 Downing Street Declaration which paved the way for a (short-lived but significant) IRA ceasefire in August 1994 .

The IRA truce could not have happened without Reynolds. He had none of the ideological and political baggage of his predecessor, Charles Haughey, and as a result he was able to coax, cajole and threaten the Republican movement into the laying-down of its arms. At the same time he established a businesslike and friendly relationship with the British Prime Minister, John Major.

Reynolds was willing to take huge risks and put his political credibility on the line. When his deputy and coalition partner, the Labour leader Dick Spring, joined him to work on the Downing Street Declaration, he was shocked to learn of the extent of negotiations with the IRA. Spring was anxious to keep his distance, so Reynolds pushed on alone. When the Irish Dáil gave Reynolds a standing ovation for his part in bringing about the ceasefire, Spring acknowledged Reynolds’s achievement by insisting he break the teetotal habit of a lifetime and celebrate the occasion with champagne. But the bonhomie was short lived.

Reynolds in 1994 with Sinn Fein leader Gerry Adams and SDLP leader John Hume (REUTERS)

Spring had made his name in the 1980s with scathing attacks on Reynolds’s party Fianna Fáil, berating it for corruption and cronyism. He had an easy target in Charles Haughey, but he did not spare Reynolds when he took over in 1992.

Reynolds had inherited a coalition administration with the Progressive Democrats, but brought it down after less than a year. In the election that followed, Fianna Fáil lost many seats, and Reynolds seemed destined for oblivion until Spring, the big winner at the polls, astonished everyone by indicating that he would consider a coalition. In February 1993 the first modern Fianna Fáil-Labour government was formed.

Spring laid down tough conditions for his support and the party gained plum ministries. There was talk of an end to the culture of quiet deals in smoke-filled rooms that had characterised Fianna Fáil administrations from the de Valera era. Reynolds said it was his ambition to be remembered as the leader who “let in the light” on Irish society. This was interpreted as a pledge to preside over a more open government with a more liberal stance on social issues. To an extent, he succeeded in bringing his party some way along this road. Homosexuality was decriminalised; contraceptives were made more easily available; and a referendum guaranteeing women the right to travel to Britain to have abortions was passed.

But the partnership with Labour began to show signs of strain when Reynolds embarked on a series of actions which suggested that he had no intention of abandoning Fianna Fáil’s old ways. He declared an amnesty for tax-dodgers, and the Reynolds family’s pet food firm was found to have benefited from a passports-for-investment deal with a Saudi Arabian family of Lebanese extraction.

Then there was a scandal in which Reynolds, in his previous incarnation as Minister for Industry and Commerce, was found to have acted in a manner not consistent with the national interest in the allocation of $100 million-worth of credit insurance to the beef tycoon Larry Goodman in respect of exports to Iraq. The fact that Reynolds seemed prepared to issue state-funded export insurance — effectively subsidising the Goodman business empire — when the country was economically in deep trouble, caused disquiet, as did the fact that Reynolds’s Attorney General, Harry Whelehan, had obtained an injunction from the Supreme Court to prevent a tribunal which was examining the affair from gaining access to cabinet papers.

The tribunal’s report, published in summer 1994, stated pointedly that it had been unable to come to any conclusions about the ultimate political motives for Reynolds’s decisions, which had resulted in the government exposing the state to liabilities of £100 million even though “the benefits arising from such exports were illusory rather than real”. Yet immediately on receipt of the report, and before it could be published, Reynolds claimed, wrongly, that it had vindicated him.

The gradual revelation of these dealings created mistrust between the coalition partners which gathered momentum when, in September 1994, Reynolds put Whelehan forward for the vacant post of President of the High Court, the Republic’s second most senior legal position. Apart from his role in the beef scandal, Whelehan, an ultraconservative Fianna Fáil appointee and a staunch Roman Catholic, had incurred the wrath of progressives in 1991 when, on learning that a 14-year-old rape victim intended to travel to England for an abortion, he obtained an injunction preventing her from doing so. The girl later miscarried, but the furore refused to die down.

At first it looked as though the question of the appointment would be fudged as the two parties agreed to review the procedures governing judicial appointments. But the truce broke apart over the case of Father Brendan Smyth.

Smyth was a Northern Irish Catholic priest and compulsive paedophile who had been assaulting children since the 1950s. In April 1993 the RUC sought his extradition from the Republic to face charges in Belfast. The extradition warrants languished in Whelehan’s office for seven months. Eventually Smyth voluntarily returned to Belfast, where in June 1994 he was jailed for four years.

The case attracted little public interest until two Ulster Television documentaries exposed the saga of how the Catholic Church and the Irish authorities had dealt with the case over the years. Smyth had been shunted round posts in Ireland, Britain and America. Each time he was sent to a parish, whispers of scandal would begin to emerge. Each time, he would be sent back to Ireland, and then posted off elsewhere. Over four decades, the Church authorities treated his behaviour as an internal affair rather than as a criminal matter.

Coming on top of the revelation in 1992 that the Bishop of Galway, Eamonn Casey, had fathered a son and had used Church funds to pay for his upkeep, the documentaries were explosive; and there were suggestions that Whelehan had failed to process the extradition warrants in order to protect the Church. At one point the head of the Church in Ireland, Cardinal Cathal Daly, was forced to go on television to denounce suggestions that he had tried to interfere with Smyth’s prosecution.

Reynolds, unsettled by the controversy, asked Whelehan to furnish a full account of the Smyth case to all cabinet ministers. Few, even on the Fianna Fáil side, were impressed; but Reynolds was apparently determined to press ahead and, ignoring (or possibly underestimating) the seriousness of the opposition, forced through Whelehan’s appointment. After three days of accusation and counteraccusation, in November 1994 Spring and his colleagues resigned from the coalition and Reynolds was forced to bow to the inevitable, bringing Whelehan down with him. The following day Fianna Fáil elected Reynolds’s Minister of Finance, Bertie Ahern, as its new leader.

In a damning political obituary, the Irish Times described Reynolds as a “political bully behind a smiling face who showed a cynical indifference to those principles of public office which did not suit his purposes and whose actions, once in power, belied so much of the high principle he enunciated in his campaign to get there”. Public life, the paper concluded, “will not be greatly the poorer for his departure from office”.

History may be a little kinder, however. It is an irony that the very qualities which got Reynolds into such trouble in the domestic arena also helped him to bring about the IRA ceasefire — his willingness to take risks, to back his own hunches and to cut a deal using the tough negotiating skills of a marketplace fixer.

Albert Reynolds shares a joke with the Reverend Ian Paisley, Northern Ireland’s First Minister, in 2007 (PA)

The youngest of four children of an undertaker, Albert Reynolds was born at Rooskey, Co Roscommon, on November 3 1932 and educated on a scholarship at Summerhill College in Co Sligo. His parents could not afford to send him to university, and he became a railway clerk.

In the late 1950s he and his brother started a chain of halls — “ballrooms of romance” — where thousands of teenagers would gather to meet and dance. After selling out his interest in the mid-1960s, he embarked on a series of ventures — a bacon factory, a salmon and lobster exporting business — before setting up a pet food company, C&D foods. He went on to win contracts with the big British supermarkets, and proved adept at finding the small print in EU regulations that enabled him to qualify for grants.

In 1977 he was elected to the Dáil for Fianna Fáil and was one of a small group of deputies who campaigned for Charles Haughey to take over the party leadership. Two years later, with Haughey in power, Reynolds was rewarded with the Post and Telegraphs ministry, then the Transport portfolio. In 1981 he was the minister responsible when an ex-Trappist monk hijacked an Aer Lingus plane over France, demanding that the Pope reveal the Third Secret of Fatima. The incident was resolved with no injuries.

Fianna Fáil lost power in 1981 but regained it the following year, Reynolds returning to government as Minister for Industry and Energy. The party lost power again in late 1982 but returned in 1987, when Reynolds was appointed Minister for Industry and Commerce. The following year he took over as finance minister on the departure of Ray MacSharry for Brussels. After the 1989 general election, Reynolds led the Fianna Fáil team which negotiated a coalition deal with the Progressive Democrats.

Reynolds forged a reputation as an innovator, but he was mocked for his rural roots by the more cosmopolitan Haughey, who referred to Reynolds and his supporters as the “Country and Western wing” of the party. He was never allowed to forget an occasion when, as minister for posts and telegraphs, he had been persuaded to dress up as a cowboy on television and croon: “Put your sweet lips a little closer to the phone”.

As pressure on Haughey’s leadership began to mount in the early 1990s, Reynolds let it be known publicly that he would be a contender for the succession. In 1991 his support for a motion of no confidence in Haughey led to his being sacked from the government after the motion was defeated. But Haughey’s victory was short-lived. A row concerning telephone-tapping proved to be the final straw. In February 1992 Reynolds ousted his old patron and became leader of Fianna Fáil, and Taoiseach.

Reynolds was sensitive to attacks on his integrity, and despite the general consensus among Irish journalists about his dishonesty he was highly successful in fighting for his good name, pocketing some £200,000 in libel damages in various actions between 1992 and 1994. His elegant Dublin home was said to be known as “Litigation Lodge”. However, in 1996, when a British jury decided by a majority of 10-1 that allegations in The Sunday Times that he had misled the Dáil by withholding information from a critical file about the competence of Harry Whelehan were untrue, they awarded him zero damages, later amended by the judge to 1p. Later the Court of Appeal decided that he should get a new trial, but the matter was settled out of court.

In 1997 Reynolds’s successor, Bertie Ahern, encouraged him to stand for the Presidency of Ireland and offered him the position of peace envoy in Northern Ireland, but thought better of the latter idea due to poor election results in Reynolds’s constituency and a change in the political situation in Northern Ireland. Subsequently, in a meeting of ministers, Ahern gave a typically ambiguous speech which seemed to encourage his cabinet to support the presidential claims of a rival candidate, Mary McAleese, who went on to win the office. Reynolds felt humiliated by Ahern and retired from politics at the 2002 general election.

Like many of his compatriots, Reynolds enjoyed a day at the races and, though teetotal, was said always to be the last man to leave the bar.

He married Kathleen Coen, with whom he had two sons and five daughters.

Albert Reynolds, born November 3 1932, died August 21 2014

Guardian:

Taxpayers may be outraged to find themselves picking up the bill of £224m because an arbitration tribunal found against the government in its dispute with Raytheon over an e-borders contract (Taxpayer to pick up £224m bill for fiasco of e-borders contract, 19 August). This sum will be peanuts compared to what we will be shelling out if the Transatlantic Trade and Investment Partnership (TTIP) under negotiation between the EU and US includes the mechanism of investor state dispute settlement (ISDS). For example, the inclusion of ISDS in an agreement between the US and Ecuador allowed a trade tribunal to order the Ecuadorian government to pay a total of $2.3bn to the US company Occidental for cancelling their contract to produce oil in the Amazon.
Jan Savage
London

• Does the borders contract foreshadow the business practices proposed in TTIP? It is difficult to know, as TTIP appears to be a well-kept secret. To what is the body politic subscribing in this trade agreement? The Guardian article does not make it clear who or what is the tribunal that awarded the damages to Raytheon. You note in the article that Raytheon “remains committed to partnering with the UK government on key defence, national security and commercial pursuits”. As a UK taxpayer, I would urge the government to have nothing more to do with this company.
Meg Hitchcock
Exeter

• £224m of public funds and all that seems controversial about this news is which political party is to be blamed for the mess. This binding arbitration tribunal, whose ruling is taking us to the cleaners, wouldn’t be one of the ad hoc, commercially appointed, corporate-lawyer judged, secret tribunals of the investor-state dispute settlements kind, would it? The ones that TTIP will free up to deregulate all public services and allow corporations to demand punitive fines from a state that interferes with their profiteering? Isn’t that a tad more controversial and newsworthy than which party to blame?

The EU has received 150,000 submissions from citizens of 18 EU countries challenging TTIP and the aim is to raise 1 million from at least seven countries, which would then trigger a formal procedure requiring the European commission to address these concerns. Could this be what Adam Tooze meant by “the talks are in trouble” (Europe is not fixed, 18 August)? And isn’t it about time the Guardian got involved in this democratic movement?
John Airs
Liverpool

• We need a new way of presenting money spent or wasted by the government. A figure should be maintained that represents the average lifetime tax contribution of each member of the population, and government costs or losses should be expressed in units of individual lifetime tax contributions – ILTCs. This would put a personal element into the costs, such as “That’s 10 times my lifetime tax payments”.

The powers that be might be more careful if they were able to see the dwindling effective taxpayer base consequent on reckless expenditure. Incidentally, I estimate my own ILTC (at age 73) to be in the region of £250,000, making the total of the two figures above just under 1,000 ILTCs. A thousand people’s contributions binned.
Ian King
Westbury on Severn, Gloucestershire

• One approach to introducing new IT projects is to adopt the Pragmatic Autumn method. Begin (assuming Scotland remains in the UK) in the leastpopulated areas, Shetland and Orkney, and proceed south, ironing out the difficulties along the way. This allows the Scots and Northern Irish to benefit first from improvements in return for accepting a few glitches while it’s sorted out. By the time the project arrives at the English south coast and the Isles of Scilly, not only should all the systems work, but a great deal of expertise will have been created, thus containing a lot of learning costs.
John Starbuck
Huddersfield, West Yorkshire

• We have just had a great time at the Edinburgh Fringe Festival. The IT organisation was fast, efficient and user-friendly – no mean feat with 3,000-plus shows at more than 400 venues. How about the government asking the organisers for help to rescue its IT fiascos?
Elaine Yeo
Enfield, Middlesex

• Yet another example of the efficiency of the private sector trumping that of the public sector, in this instance by £224m, even when the former fails to deliver. Why did I ever doubt David Cameron’s perspicacity?
Martin Morse
Bristol

letters-chicken

After your recent report on the diseased chickens, we now learn that the government report on the causes of last year’s horsemeat scandal has been shelved (Horsemeat scandal report was shelved, 16 August). Meanwhile, has anyone been brought to justice – the importers, the processors, the quality control experts employed by the supermarkets and the supermarkets themselves?

Whether or not government controls over food production are adequate, it should not absolve the major retail suppliers from their own responsibility for consumer protection – after all, it’s their names that appear on the labels.

I write because my wife is at last recovering from a campylobacter infection, which after the usual sickness and diarrhoea brought about the collapse of the nervous system in her limbs. She cannot attribute this specifically to horsemeat in lasagne or a supermarket chicken, but she can testify to the suffering. Press on with your clean food campaign.
David Redway
Bristol

• I was struck by the comment by a government spokesperson that “it is normal for ministers to set policy and for others to enforce it – in this case, the FSA”. When the Food Standards Agency was set up, in the light of ministers’ abysmal record of setting food policy during the BSE crisis, the whole point was to remove this policy responsibility from ministers in order to better protect the consumer. Section 6 of the Food Standards Act 1999  states that the agency “has the function of developing policies … relating to matters connected with food safety or other interests of consumers in relation to food”.

Perhaps the government spokesperson might want to think again. The failure of the government to recognise that food safety is too important to be left to ministers lies at the heart of the confusion in a number of government departments about division of responsibility when food scares erupt.

The government should give the agency its independence back so that it can get on with the task of protecting consumers in relation to food without political interference from johnny-come-lately ministers.
Mike Pender
Cardiff

• Michael Mosley’s Horizon television programme Should I Eat Meat? (Last night’s TV, 19 August) should greatly alarm the British public.

Despite trying to remain impartial throughout, the programme showed in no uncertain terms that meat consumption levels in the UK are unhealthy, especially those of processed red meat such as bacon and sausages.

Repeated scientific studies have shown that processed red meat is linked to bowel cancer, the second most fatal form of cancer in the UK, which costs the NHS £1.1bn each year.

Yet the government and health bodies have consistently failed to address this pressing public health issue for fear of upsetting the meat-eating British public. Even now processed red meat is served in hospitals to people who were made ill by it in the first place.

Processed red meat must be tackled in the same way as tobacco, through health warnings and making it socially unacceptable, for while we are killing animals to make these products, they are killing us as well.
Ben Martin
Animal Aid

William Pitt the Younger, as painted by John Hoppner (detail): 'We might as well issue stamps with p

That Nelson’s 1795 letter is “full of the tell-tale signs of under-confidence: petulant, boastful and chippy” is anything but the revelation that Kathryn Hughes (How a letter from Admiral Nelson offers hope to us mere mortals, 18 August) claims for it. In practically everything he wrote, Nelson revealed himself as a man convinced of his own superiority and rectitude, while the idea he had “little idea” that he was “destined for greatness” is merely bizarre. Before practically every battle he fought, he said, or wrote, that he would either end up a hero or (even more boastfully) buried in Westminster Abbey. He was a post captain at 20, reckless with his own and his sailors’ lives, petulantly contemptuous of orders he disagreed with (although they were often very sound) and insanely brave. Long before 1795 he had reiterated his certainty of achieving glory. Dying was a reasonable price.
Jan Needle
Manchester

• It is unfortunate that Royal Mail has honoured William Pitt the Younger by featuring him as one of eight British prime ministers on a set of stamps (Report, 12 August). Pitt opposed attempts to abolish the slave trade and discrimination against Roman Catholics; he suspended habeas corpus; he used agents provocateurs to spy on groups calling for parliamentary reform – a practice that was once seen as un-British but now unfortunately has the support of the major parties; he got up a fake panic about plots against the constitution and launched treason trials against moderate reformers, people like John Horne Tooke, with whom he had been associated 10 years earlier in calls for reform. If those trials had been successful it is quite likely that the second prime minister commemorated in the series of stamps, Charles Grey, the great reformer, would have been hanged by Pitt for treason. Why, then, are we commemorating a coward and a tyrant? We might as well issue stamps picturing Robert Mugabe.
Stirling Smith
Bolton

John Rennie Mackintosh: little-known architectural gem near Helensburgh.   E.O. Hopp /Corbis

Esther Freud’s article about her Suffolk home and its connection to Charles Rennie Mackintosh (Magazine, 16 August) was only slightly marred by her assertion that the Glasgow School of Art was Mackintosh’s “first and last project”. Among Mackintosh’s few remaining architectural jewels, I can commend in particular Hill House, the Helensburgh family home he designed for the publisher Walter Blackie. The exteriors and interiors he and his wife Margaret MacDonald produced are absolutely stunning.

My visit to the house, on a summer’s day, inspired not just a poem but a supernatural experience of my own: in the upstairs dressing room designed for Blackie, I suddenly found myself transported back down to the front room, a dazzling cube of light where, I subsequently discovered, the father of the house used to gaze out the window in the same way that I had pictured myself doing.
Andrew C Ferguson
Glenrothes, Fife

In response to your leader on the University of London and the Warburg Institute (Editorial, 10 August) and the news story (10 August) and letters (11 August) on the same subject, several misleading statements need to be addressed.

The University of London wants to make absolutely clear that we have never recommended that the Warburg Institute’s unique collection be merged with another collection, absorbed elsewhere or relocated. The university is aware that some interest groups are alluding to such actions, as demonstrated by the change.org petition. However, these claims are wholly unfounded. The university has always accepted that there is a legally binding 1944 trust deed, but maintains that it is unclear in what it covers. We have not sought to challenge the deed and we did not seek the current legal procedure.

The university, the Warburg Institute advisory council and the attorney general agreed that the university should undertake the role of claimant. The attorney general indicated that a court hearing was his preferred course of action to resolve the dispute and the university accepts this view.

The Warburg Institute is part of the university’s School of Advanced Study. Under the university’s stewardship, over the past 70 years, the Warburg collection has grown from the original 80,000 volumes to the 350,000 in the collection today. Since taking up the post of dean and chief executive of the school, I have been wholly supportive of the institute’s academic plans and activities, as I am sure the current director, Professor Peter Mack, would agree. I think it would be a courtesy to the court if we all now paused while awaiting the judge’s decision.
Roger Kain
Dean and chief executive, School of Advanced Study, University of London

goldfish common carp celestial

Equality of status certainly has its hidden subtleties that need challenging (Mothers to be named on marriage record, 19 August). At my daughter’s wedding in Mexico to a Mexican chap, the celebrant called me to one side just before the ceremony and said: “When I ask you who gives this woman, please reply, ‘Her mother and I do.’” It was a wonderful moment. It had never occurred to me and opened my eyes. Vicars, priests, registrars, please note.
Adrian Smith
Bristol

• What a pity the otherwise excellent Patrick Barkham chose the usual stereotypes of beards, anoraks and twitchers to sum up visitors to the 26th annual British Birdwatching Fair (Report, 18 August). In the past couple of years, the most exciting trend has been the flocking to Birdfair of young people from organisations such as A Focus on Nature and New Generation Birders, who Patrick seems to have missed. Without these youngsters, the future of our wildlife is as good as doomed, so next time I suggest he ignores us oldies and has a chat with them instead.
Stephen Moss
(Guardian birdwatch columnist, aged 54¼), Mark, Somerset

• Irish figs are pretty good too (In praise of… English figs, 18 August). North Belfast, 500ft above sea level, but yet another bountiful harvest of figs. The olives, too, are coming on well. The kiwis, alas, have yet to flower, and the avocado is struggling a little.
Peter Emerson
Belfast

• Our modest semi is backed by a long garden which meets with 10 – yes, 10 – neighbours’ gardens. I keep a shovel and every day scrape up the mess deposited among our vegetables and return to sender (Letters, 21 August). Soon, our daughter’s golden retriever is coming. She’ll spend her time running round our garden, gently asserting herself by barking and leaving her scent behind. How I look forward to her visit.
Margaret Baker
Welwyn Garden City, Hertfordshire

• Good news that Tom Locke’s ducks are highly skilled in the use of web applications (Letters, 19 August). My fish tend to struggle with the net.
Peter McKinney
Brentwood, Essex

Independent:

The gruesome murder of James Foley is a progression from the routine beheadings of Alawites, Sunni and Christian supporters of the government in Syria by the Islamist rebels which we in the West have condoned by our silence.

The ideological well-spring of Isis remains the doctrine attributed to Muhammad ibn Abdul Wahhab, as now practised in Saudi Arabia, where beheading as a “Sharia” punishment is a standard practice and discrimination against women and intolerance of other religions are state policy.

No amount of bombing can stem this tide of barbarism in the name of Islam that has possessed a section of Muslim youths all over the world so long as we continue to coddle the oil-drenched sheikhs of Arabia.

M A Qavi, London SE26

James Foley represented an oft-derided profession which, in exponents such as him, unflinchingly risks its lives every day and in every corner of the world to expose the truth and expose evils for what they are. By doing this, photojournalists like Foley make themselves an anathema to the murderous God-forsaken dissolutes who took his life.

His death will have served a purpose, because it will galvanise governments to act in order to protect others who would, had they the choice, flee the terrors into which he so bravely strode. Thus the loss of his life will very probably save those of tens of thousands of likewise-innocent people.

In his final moments, James Foley would have known that. His job was, after all, to understand and report cause and effect. Let’s not let him down.

Paul Dunwell, Bedford

A Scot, but Britain is my nation too

As a native of Scotland , I am proud to call myself a Scot. I am also British by birth, having been born to a Scots mother and an English father in Glasgow (which lies within the old British Kingdom of Strathclyde), during a time when all the people of this island were united in a real struggle for freedom.

My problem is this: in the event of the majority of my fellow citizens behaving like the hero of Burns’ “Tam o’ Shanter” (who “tint [lost] his reason a’ thegither”), by voting “yes” for independence, do I lose my official British nationality? If so, to whom would I apply to regain it? Or, as with so many of the institutions which we share and take for granted, would this too be consigned to a historical footnote?

Of course the economic arguments will matter, but Better Together should not dismiss the value of national identity to their side of the debate.

Colin Crampton, Elderslie, Renfrewshire

The No campaign keep calling for the Scottish Government to produce a figure of the cost of independence, knowing full well that such a figure can never be produced without detailed discussions with the UK Government. The No campaign keep doing this to try to create as much uncertainty as possible in the minds of the Scottish voters.

There are many imponderables. How much will an independent Scotland inherit of the UK’s £120bn assets? What will Scotland’s share be of the national debt? How much will Scotland save in no longer having to pay for the House of Lords, Whitehall departments, and the refurbishment of the House of Commons?

How much will Scotland save in no longer having to pay its share of UK armaments, including Trident? What will be the cost of Scotland setting up the necessary government departments for running an independent country?

Regarding the last item, valiant attempts to find answers were made by Professor Dunleavy of the London School of Economics. He concluded: “A main reason why costs numbers are currently hard to estimate is that Whitehall has been completely forbidden by ministers from calculating any detailed transition costs for Scotland, in case some numbers get written down that could be copied and then used to undermine the Better Together campaign. Civil servants have been banned from even discussing any of the transition details with Scottish Government staff.”

John S Jappy, Urray, Muir of Ord, Highland

Why house builders drag their feet

I find it extremely strange that we have horror stories of a shortage of housing and house prices going up when developers are still coming back to planners saying their approved planning applications are not viable unless they get out of their affordable housing obligations. Clearly, if house prices are going up and up developers can afford to fulfil their obligations.

The other thing I find astonishing about these stories is the number of sites in Leeds that have had planning permission for some considerable time, yet when developers are asked why they are not being built on they turn round and say there is no demand. I know that in the current economic situation the buoyancy of the economy differs from one place to another, but in Leeds we have a strong and active economy.

It therefore seems to me that this is a serious case of land banking by developers, hence restricting supply and giving them an excuse to claim that more land should be released for development. It is quite clear to me that this is happening because developers do not wish to build on brownfield sites; they wish to develop greenfield sites where they will make much more profit.

Councillor David Blackburn, Leader of the Green Group, Leeds City Council

The lies Americans believe about the NHS

I am not at all surprised by Dr Jen Gunter’s surprise at finding that the British NHS gave her son good medical treatment (16 August).

As a regular visitor to the US, where I have many friends and relatives, I have been asked, “Have you had your death interview yet?” and was not believed when I explained that all over-70s were not being medically assessed to decide whether or not they should receive any NHS health care in the event of illness.

I was told that the NHS is too poor to do any medical research and that the UK is entirely dependent on US research. This from an obstetrician who was at that moment using a technique developed in a London hospital.

I was told in early 2010 that when the Conservatives were elected in the forthcoming elections – and they would be – they would throw the NHS open to American health and insurance companies and the NHS would thus be privatised. And that’s happening, isn’t it?

I also know of a Green Card applicant who was forced to undergo and pay for an expensive course of injections because the examining doctor said that the BCG inoculation did not exist and, in any case, the NHS could not possibly afford to protect such a large cohort, and that the applicant was a liar. This despite a letter from her English GP listing all her various inoculations.

The people making these statements had “read it in a newspaper” or “seen a programme about it on TV”.

Gill Ledsham, Windsor

‘Hard’ and ‘soft’  a-level subjects

Dr Giles Hooper judges the “hardness” of an A-level subject on the pass rate (letter, 20 August).

As an engineer, I realise that anyone educated in one of these “hard” subjects would not rush to conclusions without gathering, examining and analysing all the relevant evidence, as there could easily be other reasons for this outcome. Perhaps most of the less academic students were directed towards the “softer” subjects. I don’t know; and neither does he.

Ian Quayle, Fownhope, Herefordshire

‘They’re only doing that to please voters’

Eleanor Jarvis speculates that the reason for the Coalition’s free school lunch policy is “an election carrot to voters” (letter, 21 August).

Governments are on a hiding to nothing. If they take a tough decision in the interest of the country’s future, they are excoriated; if they try to make improvements to society, they do so merely as an attempt to secure re-election. Who would be a politician in such an age of cynicism?

Nigel Scott, London N22

Appeal for help with the non-crisis in jails

So Chris Grayling wants to assure us that there is no crisis in the prison service? That will be welcome news to all the retired prison officers who recently received letters inviting them to sign up to the “Prison Service Reserve” on short-term contracts. I wonder what he needs  them for?

Mark Pilbeam, Newport, Isle of Wight

Magritte, Brel, Simenon and …

That’s another famous Belgian, then – the last Neanderthal (“Final resting place of our Neanderthal neighbours revealed”, 21 August).

David Crawford, Bromley, Kent

Times:

The proposed replacement for a crucial Commons post is drawing fire from all sides

Sir, The Speaker’s preference for the next clerk of the House of Commons was not in fact selected “by a panel of MPs” as you report (“Former ministers pile pressure on Bercow over choice of clerk”, Aug 21), but by a panel entirely of the Speaker’s own choosing, and which did not comprise solely MPs.

It is inexplicable that all three of the deputy Speakers, who like the Speaker himself are also elected by the House, and have the most relevant experience, were excluded.

Speaker Bercow has championed many reforms and improvements during his period as Speaker. He should be the first to agree that his recommendation should be subject to a pre-appointment hearing by a select committee. On June 30, 2014, in his Michael Ryle Memorial lecture, he argued for “the right of select committees to report on a set of designated appointments and to take the matter to the floor of the House of Commons if they believed that a certain nomination was seriously mistaken.”

The Speaker should therefore welcome this course of action in respect of the appointment of the clerk of the House.

The present parliamentary and health service ombudsman, and the comptroller and auditor general, also officers of the House of Commons, were both subject to pre-appointment hearings. The post of clerk of the House is of far more constitutional significance than these. The manner of the clerk’s appointment must underline his or her independence from the patronage of any individual or interest. This is why it is a crown appointment, and being so, the responsibility for advising the crown on the appointment, and therefore for satisfying himself on the means of selection of the name, remains solely with the prime minister.

A select committee could hold such a hearing and report to the House within a few days of the House’s return. MPs are not therefore pressing the prime minister to “intervene”, merely to delay forwarding any name to the Palace until the House has an opportunity to express its view.

Bernard Jenkin, MP
Chairman, public administration select committee
House of Commons
London SW1

Sir, Perhaps the extraordinary decision to appoint an unqualified person to be clerk of the Commons is half right?

The House needs an experienced chief executive to oversee its business affairs, and the clerks would be the first to admit that they have little experience. The solution is simple: appoint an experienced chief executive and retain the vital position of clerk of the House to oversee its procedures.

Sir Peter Jennings
Chilmark, Wilts

Sir, In his book, Who Goes Home? Sir Robert Rogers, outgoing clerk of the House engaged in combat with Mr Bercow, cites a 1313 statute banning armour from both Houses. Should it be repealed at once to permit a wider range of methods to settle the dispute over the choice of Sir Robert’s successor? He also quotes an 18th-century predecessor who ruled that the Commons should be prepared to consider all expedients to ensure that business was “not subject to the momentary caprice of the Speaker”.

Lord Lexden
London SW1

Critics of Israeli foreign policy dismiss accusations of antisemitism – but can they do one without the other?

Sir, I am helping to pay for medical supplies for children in Gaza, injured by Israeli bombing. Meanwhile, I understand, outraged British Jews cancel their subscriptions to the Jewish Chronicle for running the DEC appeal for humanitarian aid. What is going on?

Michael Smith

London SW18

Sir, Apropos the replies to Dominic Kirkham’s letter (Aug 20) I cannot say whether West Bank settlements are illegal, but they are increasingly counterproductive because they gradually destroy the possibility of a two-state solution and the hopes of the Palestinian people.

Israel needs to decide what it wants: a two-state solution with Jerusalem as joint capital, which involves stopping new settlements and removing existing ones, or a greater Israel stretching from the Mediterranean to the River Jordan. It cannot have both.

Chris Procter

Harrogate, N Yorks

Sir, Kay Bagon asserts that 1.5 million Israeli Arabs have full rights (letter Aug 20). More than 60 laws enacted since 1948 discriminate against Arab citizens. There is discrimination against those who have not served in the armed forces, both by employers and by government; and 6.25 per cent of the budget is allocated to Arab schools, although they cater for 25 per cent of the children.

The Rev A Graham Hellier

Marden, Herefordshire

Sir, Dominic Kirkham tries to deconstruct Lord Sacks’s perceptive observation that opposition to the acts of the state of Israel is now a cloak for long-suppressed but apparently ineradicable antisemitism. He says that the real cause of the concern and hatred we have seen is “Israel’s belligerence, aggressive colonisation and indifference to international law”.

If this were true, we would see boycotts of Russian goods, attacks on Russian Orthodox churches, pickets of shops which sell caviar and nesting dolls and shouting-down of Russian lecturers by enraged students.

Jeffrey Littman

London NW4

British jihadists seem to enjoy tacit support among Britisdh Muslims – unless there is evidence to the contrary

Sir, I welcome Mohammed Shafiq’s condemnation of the atrocities committed in the name of all Islam (letter, Aug 21), but I am concerned by the lack of outrage by “mainstream” British Muslims: no collective letters signed by imams, no demonstrations stating firmly “not in our name”. If it is true that jihadis enjoy tacit support from their fellow Muslims in the UK, I ponder why more of us do not seem to be similarly unnerved.

Thomas Crockett

London W9

Sir, The alarm at young men coming back to the UK from waging jihad may be misplaced. Once they have discovered the natural boundaries of the new caliphate and butchered the religious minorities, surely then, having proved their courage in the name of Islam, they will wish to take on the Israeli Defence Force.

IA Smith

Biddestone, Wilts

Is David Cameron waiting for a humanitarian disaster to justify sending the troops back to Iraq?

Sir, May I suggest that the legal basis for armed intervention in Iraq, in the absence of a Security Council resolution specifically authorising it, needs spelling out by the government. Hence the urgency to recall Parliament to discuss the options.

The prime minister says that we should avoid sending armies “to fight or occupy”. Recent experience supports his wariness for such action. However, he argues that “the threat in the Middle East cannot simply be removed by air strikes alone” and proposes the use of “our military prowess” and the provision of equipment to the Kurdish troops.

Does this offend the UN Charter and particularly Article 2 (4) which prohibits the intentional use of force except for self-defence, or with the authority of the Security Council? As attorney general (1997-99) I authorised the use of force in Kosovo, despite the absence of such specific authority. Are we coming to a Kosovo moment? And is this what the Prime Minister has in mind?

I set out three conditions for agreeing the bombing raids. First, there has to be convincing evidence of extreme humanitarian distress on a large scale requiring immediate action and urgent relief. Second, there was no practical alternative to the use of force; and third, the proposed force was proportionate to the aim of humanitarian relief and was strictly limited in time and scope to this aim — ie, it was the minimum necessary to achieve this aim.

I firmly believe that customary international law must evolve to be sufficiently embracing to deal with an overwhelming humanitarian crisis. Since the vote on Iraq, a convention is being established that parliamentary consent is required before we engage in armed conflict.

Should it not be explained to parliament what the Prime Minister is proposing?

Lord Morris of Aberavon, QC

Attorney General 1997-99.

House of Lords

The striking bird of prey may have been re-introduced in many places but it was always living in Wales

Sir, Describing the red kite as a
re-introduced alien species may apply to some areas but here in West Wales they’re native, have never been away and are considered indispensable for the clearance of small foetid carrion.

Red kites rarely take live prey — the sole exception is triggered by the arrival at a farm gate of mowing machinery, which has these clever birds immediately grouping in numbers above the cut hay so as to feast on the broken rats and smaller rodents left behind.

Roger Baker

Llangadog, Carmarthenshire

Telegraph:

Bell ringers perform on Palm Sunday at Santa Marta de la Mesa Church in Utrera, Spain Photo: GETTY IMAGES

6:58AM BST 21 Aug 2014

CommentsComments

SIR – I feel a clunking sadness whenever I hear of church bells being regarded as a noisy nuisance.

Thirty years ago I lived next to a village church with a carillon that rang a superb tune, which increased slightly in length every 15 minutes, culminating on the hour with several bars of music plus the number of chimes for the hour being tolled.

At the time I had two young children and – ignoring the odd night when one awoke to the sound of the quarter-past tune and wondered “Quarter past what?” – we all learnt to sleep through it.

Felicity Foulis Brown
Bramley, Hampshire

Care Minister Norman Lamb has said that care home residents should be allowed to have their own furniture Photo: PHOTOLIBRARY

6:59AM BST 21 Aug 2014

CommentsComments

SIR – We agree with Norman Lamb, the care minister, that it is incredibly important that care homes are homely, but the real issue is being swept under the carpet.

Funding must be addressed if we are to ensure appropriate care for the elderly well into the future. It must be fair to care providers and individuals, enabling people to make the right care choice based on their needs, rather than on what they can afford.

Natasha Singarayer
Chief Executive, The Abbeyfield Society
St Albans, Hertfordshire

SIR – The Government’s latest recommendations that a home-from-home environment be provided for people in care is completely unrealistic and will put more pressure on an already creaking area of social care.

Recent governments have effectively forced local authorities to dispose of their own facilities and encouraged the private sector to fill the ever-increasing gap in provision. The Coalition has drastically reduced funding and rushed a new Care Act into force, which will only create more problems.

I am amazed that anyone would want to invest their time and money in running a care home under present conditions. The Government would be well advised to lay off the criticism and support these people.

D A Watson
Lincoln

SIR – The concept of personalising the care-home environment is no new phenomenon. Reminiscence sparked by familiar objects has proved helpful as a tool to support people with dementia.

However, more pressing issues for the residential care sector are the funding cap and impact of the Dilnot reforms. Mr Lamb’s comments are a prime example of how the Government is out of touch with what really matters to the public and to care providers.

Leon Smith
Executive Vice President, Nightingale Hammerson
London SW12

Family-friendly policy

SIR – The most effective way for the political parties to improve the quality of family life is to call an immediate halt to their Dutch auction on universal institutional child care, and to introduce a radical new child benefit system for families earning under (say) £75,000 a year.

This would make a massive difference to the quality of family life at a stroke.

Dr Richard House
Stroud, Gloucestershire

SIR – Contrary to Clifford Baxter’s view on families (Letters, August 20), all modern states, and Britain in particular, have an interest in securing the next generation of workers.

In a world of unfunded state pension schemes, the state depends on future generations being sufficiently large and sufficiently high-earning for them to pay my (and presumably Mr Baxter’s) pension out of their contributions.

Ian Johnson
Cirencester, Gloucestershire

A spy at the top

SIR – Your obituary of Chapman Pincher stated that his allegation that Sir Roger Hollis, the former director general of MI5, was a Soviet spy throughout his security service career, was discredited.

On the contrary, anyone who reads Pincher’s magnum opus Treachery (2011) can have no doubt that Hollis was a traitor.

The Establishment continues to dismiss the allegation to excuse its historic folly, just as it defended Kim Philby until there could no longer be any doubt about his guilt – and then let him escape.

M J Clayton
Ipswich, Suffolk

Targeting the audience

SIR – Sarah Crompton opposes the use of mobile phones in art galleries, but at the opera they have already destroyed the atmosphere.

Are we really so lacking in manners that we have to be reminded not to film the evening (Ariodante, Aix-en-Provence)? I have also witnessed a fellow patron following the story on Wikipedia (Figaro, Covent Garden), and another using the backlit screen to read advertisements in the programme (David et Jonathas, Aix-en-Provence).

One effort to remonstrate with my neighbour (Figaro, Turin) led him to take a swipe at me. I had merely pointed out that we were not watching Juventus.

Laurence Spigel
London N10

Wasps in transit

SIR – We have a wasps’ nest in our garden this year for the first time. Why they have felt it necessary to migrate from Ann Brooke-Smith’s plum trees in Hertfordshire to Cornwall (Letters, August 19) is beyond me.

I have been stung several times and if Mrs Brooke-Smith would like to come and collect them my wife and I would be very grateful.

Keith Robertson
St Agnes, Cornwall

SIR – Where are the blighters?

In a hole in my lawn (courtesy of a badger), which I have just trodden on.

Melanie Byrom
Chalton, Hampshire

SIR – What I want to know is, where have all the plums gone? This year we have been blessed with just seven.

Ron Kirby
Dorchester, Dorset

Unfair rail fare rises

SIR – Once again we are facing an increase in the price of rail tickets, but my experience indicates that procedures for ensuring that all passengers have paid their fare seem quite lax.

Even in some major city stations there are no automatic barriers to ensure that passengers cannot leave the station without a valid ticket. Ticket collectors can’t possibly run checks on all passengers surging out of a station in rush hour.

Perhaps there should be more random inspections on lines where a high degree of fare-dodging has been identified, thus mitigating the need for fare increases.

Richard Munday
Kenilworth, Warwickshire

Cannabis for the dying

SIR – Cannabis should be available on prescription as part of palliative care.

The care of terminally ill patients aims to provide relief from pain and other distressing symptoms. For many years this relief was understood by doctors to be hugely important, both for patients and for their families.

But now, thanks to political interference, really adequate pain relief is getting harder to access. Patients know this and dread what may come in their final days.

What an awful situation we have arrived at, through our cowardice.

Linda Hughes
Newton Abbot, Devon

Selling kosher food

SIR – The removal of kosher produce from public display at Sainsbury’s in Holborn last Saturday for fear of disruption by the “free Gaza” demonstration should hardly have been a problem for Jews, because they are prohibited from shopping or even carrying money on their Sabbath, which falls on a Saturday.

If anything, the open sale of kosher produce on the Sabbath should cause more offence.

Andrew Beckman
London NW2

Something fishy

SIR – If Paul Wooding (report, August 19) can face prosecution for swallowing four small live fish as a pub dare, am I at similar risk every time I swallow a live oyster?

David Cadisch
Barnet, Hertfordshire

Religious leaders call for crimes against humanity to be stopped and punished

Members of the Iraqi Emergency Response Brigade patrol the streets of Ramadi in the Anbar province

Members of the Iraqi Emergency Response Brigade patrol the streets of Ramadi in the Anbar province Photo: AFP

7:00AM BST 21 Aug 2014

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SIR – What we are witnessing in northern Iraq today is a tragedy of historic proportions in which thousands of innocent people are at immediate risk of death for no other reason than their religious beliefs. Freedom of religion and belief, a right set out in Article 18 of the Universal Declaration of Human Rights, is being denied in the most gross and systemic way possible through the attempted extermination of religious minorities. There is no justification for the violation of this inalienable human right.

Such violations as are currently taking place are crimes against humanity that must be both stopped and punished. The culture of impunity within which these dehumanising atrocities have been committed needs to be challenged most vigorously. Given that Iraq is not a state party to the International Criminal Court (ICC), the Government must now work towards a United Nations Security Council resolution that refers this matter to the ICC for investigation and, where necessary, prosecution. The international community must send a clear signal to those who are committing such atrocities that they will be held accountable for their actions.

These violations are, however, sadly part of a global pattern of increased hostility in society towards freedom of religion or belief, together with government restrictions of them. Governments, international institutions and non-governmental organisations need to recognise this wider crisis and commit the necessary time, energy and resources to ensure greater respect for this fundamental freedom and forestall further tragedies.
The Rt Rev Dr Christopher Cocksworth
Bishop of Coventry, Church of England’s Lead Bishop on Foreign Affairs
Dayan (Judge) Ivan Binstock
Court of the Chief Rabbi of the United Hebrew Congregations of the Commonwealth
Ayatollah Dr Sayed Fazel Milani
Imam al-Khoei Islamic Centre, London
Ramesh Pattni
Secretary General, Hindu Forum of Britain
Commissioner Clive Adams
Territorial Commander, Salvation Army
His Grace Bishop Angaelos
General Bishop of the Coptic Orthodox Church in the United Kingdom
The Rt Rev Richard Atkinson
Bishop of Bedford
Malcolm M Deboo
President, Zoroastrian Trust Funds of Europe
His Eminence Gregorios
Archbishop of Thyateira and Great Britain
Rabbi Laura Janner-Klausner
Senior Rabbi, The Movement for Reform Judaism
The Rt Revd Declan Lang
Bishop of Clifton
Chairman, International Affairs Department, Catholic Bishops’ Conference of England and Wales
Moulana Mohammad Shahid Raza
Principal Imam, Leicester Central Mosque
Dr Shuja Shafi
Secretary General, Muslim Council of Britain
Lord Singh of Wimbledon
Vice-Chairman, All Party Parliamentary Group on International Freedom of Religion and Belief

SIR – David Cameron rejoices in both the building of two expensive aircraft carriers in Scotland and our military prowess. The containment of the caliphate in Iraq will owe little to the former but much to the latter; expansion of our special forces and military intelligence assets would seem a high priority to deal with the threat.

Tim Deane
Tisbury, Wiltshire

SIR – The murder of James Foley, the journalist, has highlighted how cruelly exposed we are after the recent reductions in the size of the Army. The situation now is grave and certain to get worse.

The Army has shown itself to be matchless in its recent deployments but it has been badly let down by politicians and by those paid to plan for the future. We need more rapidly employable and well-equipped regular infantry battalions.

Martyn Thomas

Irish Times:

A chara, – Ivana Bacik (“Abortion law must change to avert more tragic cases”, August 20th) writes, “The woman herself, and the baby delivered prematurely, have been failed terribly by our laws.”

So, if the baby had been aborted and not lived, the baby would have been better served by our laws?

“However, it is clear that this appalling case is a direct result of the 1983 Eighth Amendment.” Surely the case is a direct result of the rape which the woman suffered. The Eighth Amendment is a way to try to deal with the very difficult situation which arises.

“Our law portrays women as vessels, forced to carry unwanted pregnancies to term.” No. Our law portrays the baby, as yet unborn, as having a right to life and vindicates that right where possible.

“Since the passing of the 1983 amendment, more than 150,000 women have made that journey [abroad for an abortion].” Every single year now, around 200,000 people are charged under road traffic legislation. By the same logic, our road traffic legislation is far more draconian.

“The adoption of article 40.3.3 has not prevented one crisis pregnancy.” Article 40.3.3 was never intended to prevent any crisis pregnancy. It was intended to help us know how best to protect the lives involved when such a crisis pregnancy occurs.

“The tragic death in October 2012 of Savita Halappanavar, which highlighted the urgent need to provide clarity on the carrying out of life-saving abortions.” The official inquiries into the tragic death of Savita Halappanaavar highlighted the need for better clinical management in cases of sepsis.

“One thing is clear: if we do not change the law, we will see more tragic cases.” Whether we change the law or not, we will still have more tragic cases.

The law can be improved for the protection of life in pregnancy, but it can never reduce or eliminate tragic cases. – Is mise,

PÁDRAIG McCARTHY,

Blackthorn Court

Sandyford

Dublin 16.

Sir, – As long as Article 40.3.3 – guaranteeing the equal right to life of the mother and the unborn – remains in our Constitution, women will be treated as mere vessels before the law.

Women in Ireland should be trusted with the power to exercise decisions over their own bodies.– Yours, etc,

FIONA O’MALLEY,

Waterloo Lane,

Dublin 4 .

Sir, – Martyn Turner’s cartoon (Opinion, August 20th) depicted a boxing ring with the members of the church, judiciary and politicians in one corner, squaring up to a lone woman in the opposite corner. Perhaps to complete the picture a very much alive baby should have been shown in the middle. – Yours, etc,

ROBERT WHELAN,

Knockroe Lodge,

Delgany,

Co Wicklow.

Sir, – Fintan O’Toole (“160,000 reasons to take action on abortion”, Opinion, August 19th) neglects to address the issue of abortion in his article chastising us for neglecting to address the issue of abortion.

Abortion raises difficult ethical questions for any society, not least whether the foetus should have a right to life; whether that right should extend all the way back to conception; whether a right to life for the foetus should impose a duty on the mother to bear the burden of an unwanted pregnancy.

His article talks about the numbers that have had abortions, highlighting the relevance of the issue, and its deep resonance in society. Rather than going on to discuss the underlying ethical issues, he then attacks the Catholic Church. Much of the commentary is reduced to rhetorical flourishes that conflate the church with the past, and the past with savagery.

To religious devotees, or anti-religious contrarians, the position of the Catholic Church on abortion may be a deciding factor; but for the non-religious it is not of interest. Church bashing is not an argument for or against the issue. He avoids any mention of ethical questions in relation to the foetus, and thus dismisses such questions as irrelevant.

The reader is left with a vague sense that vast historical and institutional wrongs could be redressed by legislating for abortion.

Instead of attempting to compel women to carry out unwanted pregnancies, pro-life advocates might try forcing their pro-choice opponents to argue on the issues, if they wish to promote the rights of the unborn. – Yours, etc,

COLIN WALSH,

Templeville Road,

Templeogue,

Dublin 6W.

Sir, – Fintan O’Toole, who has probably never attended a pro-life rally in his life, nor had a serious conversation with a pro-life activist, nor listened to a distraught woman who regrets her abortion every day of her life, sits in his ivory tower and calls his opponents names.

Nice work if you can get it, but he would be well advised to stay away from the statistics.

His latest mistake is to describe 160,000 abortions over a 35-year period as being “close to one in 10 of the female population aged between 14 and 64”. That is to compare 35 years of abortions with one year of population, and is not a valid comparison.

The figures he quotes represent about 4,500 abortions a year, and that is about one-third of 1 per cent of the female population in those age groups in a year. – Yours, etc,

JIM STACK,

Lismore,

Co Waterford.

Sir, – Fintan O’Toole refers to 160,000 women who had abortions in England. Let’s not overlook the 160,000 men who impregnated them. – Yours, etc,

NOREEN P WHELAN,

Sycamore Road,

Carlow.

Sir, – Being interested in the plight of women in Ireland who find themselves faced with the dilemma of an unwanted pregnancy in any circumstances and particularly in the case where a criminal assault on a woman’s body results in impregnation, I am dismayed to see the four male to one female ratio of letters published on your letters page on Wednesday. In fact out of a total of 17 letters on the entire page, three were from women. I wonder are fewer women buying The Irish Times and submitting letters these days or have they been stunned into silence at witnessing once again the treatment of one of their sex?

Have we not accepted as a nation that women who find themselves with an unwanted pregnancy have the right to be given the necessary information to consider all available options? Is it not long past the time that financial support be made available when the choice a woman makes involves travelling abroad for a medical procedure not available to them in Ireland? – Yours, etc,

MAIREAD RYAN,

Lombard Street West,

South Circular Road,

Dublin 8.

Sir, – I was surprised by Desmond FitzGerald’s assertion (August 21st) that the Constitution, enacted by Irish men and women in 1937, lacks the simplicity of the US or French constitutions “which have both stood the test of time”.

The US constitution, enacted by state assemblies elected on restricted franchises in 1791 only became clear in 1864, after its significance was tested in a great civil war, which had erupted in 1861 a mere 70 years after its enactment.

France adopted its first Constitution in 1791 and adopted a further 15 since, though its second, in 1793, never came into effect. Its longest lasting, from 1875 to 1940, did not allow women to vote. Apparently the secularists who held power deemed women to be under the influence of the Catholic Church, and thus incapable of making rational choices at the polls. – Yours, etc,

DONAL KENNEDY,

Palmers Green,

London.

Sir, – It is about time that our media realised that the unborn baby is a person.

The article written by Dr Ruth Cullen (“Advocates of abortion ignoring a little truth”, Opinion, August 21st) brings out the truth of abortion and the efforts of the pro-choice advocates to ignore the rights of the baby. I congratulate you for publishing the article. – Yours, etc,

BRIAN COLGAN,

Chalfont Road,

Malahide,

Co Dublin.

Sir, – Barry Walsh (August 20th) foresees “a further round of apologies in the Dáil by a future set of political leaders years or decades down the line” concerning Ireland’s recent insufficient abortion legislation. I await the first round of such apologies from our current political leaders, most of whom sat on their hands in the Dáil throughout the 20 or so years since the X case, doing precisely nothing to vindicate the constitutional rights of Irish women.

Shame on those “leaders”. Shame on their indolence. Shame on their complacency. And shame on the ongoing cowardice that prevents them from providing what the women of Ireland desperately need: safe, legal rights to abortion on demand – now. – Yours, etc,

Dr OWEN CORRIGAN,

Gill Street,

Limehouse,

London.

Sir, – As a former news editor on Shannonside Radio, I had occasion to have interviewed the late Albert Reynolds literally hundreds of times over the years and he was a decent man. Whether the interview was about a pot-holed road in the Ballymahon area, the world financial crisis, or the Northern Ireland peace process, he never once turned us down. He was always a perfect gentleman.

Other people can argue about his legacy, his achievements, his mistakes, and his place in Irish political history, but to us he was the man from Rooskey who happened to become the leader of Fianna Fáil and taoiseach and who never forgot where he came from. May he rest in peace. – Yours, etc,

SEAMUS DUKE,

Antogher Road,

Roscommon.

Sir, – Some words of Jesus come to mind: “Blessed are the peacemakers, for they will be called the children of God.” May Albert Reynolds rest in peace. – Yours, etc,

PATRICIA O’RIORDAN,

Stamer Street,

Dublin 8.

Sir, – In 2008 Cork conferred the freedom of the city on the late taoiseach Albert Reynolds. This was an honour richly deserved and a somewhat belated acknowledgement of Mr Reynolds’s brave and significant role in the Northern Ireland peace process, a role much criticised at the time and largely ignored today.

Mr Reynolds faced down those who opposed his decision to speak to all protagonists in the conflict, and as a result of this decision paved the way for the peace process we enjoy today. The joint Downing Street declaration issued in 1993 by Mr Reynolds and the then British prime minister John Major, which was instrumental in securing the IRA ceasefire and the subsequent Belfast Agreement, was a tribute to Albert Reynolds’s unshakeable belief in totally inclusive all-party talks.

I believe that Mr Reynolds, jointly with John Hume and David Trimble, should have been a co-recipient of the Nobel Peace Prize in 1998. The decision to exclude Mr Reynolds was regrettable. Mr Reynolds’s significant, but undervalued, achievements as taoiseach will ensure his place in history long after some other holders of that office have been forgotten. – Yours, etc,

TOM COOPER,

Templeville Road,

Templeogue,

Dublin 6W.

Sir, – Those of us who patronise the southside towpath on the Grand Canal between Locks 33 (Belmont) and 34 (Clononey) – and, I believe, elsewhere – would willingly accept the rejected hard-surface towpath proposed for the Barrow (“Olivia O’Leary leads campaign to save grassy towpath”, August 19th).

It would mean that we could walk the stretch in all weathers and not just when the sun has dried out sufficiently the marshy bits, often further cut up by four-wheel-drive vehicles, most of them on unofficial business. It might discourage waterways operatives from leaving rotting canal undergrowth on the bank during their occasional purges. It might even encourage them to find somewhere else to dump the dredged muck from canal deepening efforts, with its resulting proliferation of noxious weeds.

It might prompt them to replace indiscriminate strimming along the banks with more careful mowing of the broader surface. And it would certainly lighten the grim countenances of the occasional cycling tourists we meet, who cannot believe the condition of what has been promoted as a world-class natural resource and attraction. – Yours, etc,

DENIS BERGIN,

Ballyshane Cottage,

Shannon Harbour,

via Birr, Co Offaly.

A chara, – In the last 18 months we’ve had the Teachers’ Union of Ireland voting to boycott Israel even while its members work in colleges maintaining academic links with China and Russia. We’ve seen students at NUI Galway take a similar decision while ignoring their college’s research ties with the Saudi oil company Aramco. Meanwhile, there have been large protests outside the embassy of Israel over its restrictions on Gaza but not so much as one voice or placard raised in anger at the Egyptian embassy despite that country’s blockade on the territory.

Only those who themselves are urging a boycott of Israel can truly account for their own motives but I know double-standards when I see them. – Is mise,

CIARÁN

Ó RAGHALLAIGH,

College Street,

Cavan.

Sir, – Dr Kevin McCarthy (August 20th) outrageously compares what he calls “a boycott of all things Israeli” with “1930s Berlin” and the Nazi boycott of Jewish businesses.

This is a strawman argument, framing the call for a cultural boycott of the Israeli state in terms never used by its advocates.

The only “things Israeli” susceptible to boycott under the stringent terms laid down by the Palestinian Campaign for the Cultural and Academic Boycott of Israel are events wholly or partly financed by the Israeli state, which has openly declared that it “see[s] no difference between propaganda and culture”.

The persistent attempts to blur this distinction by Israel’s advocates amounts to blurring the distinction between Jews worldwide and a rogue state that claims to represent them.

Clearly this is the same obfuscation practised by those “masked thugs intimidating customers attempting to enter Jewish businesses”, of whom Dr McCarthy writes. Surely he should hold himself to higher standards. – Yours, etc,

RAYMOND DEANE,

Cultural Liaison,

Ireland-Palestine

Solidarity Campaign,

Capel Street,

Dublin 1.

Sir, – Wolfgang Münchau (“Draghi running out of legal ways to fix the euro”, Business Opinion, August 18th) misses the point that the EU and the euro were not set up for the benefit of the citizens – the decent taxpaying workers – of Europe any more than Cern, the international space station or quangos. All those organisations, and many others, exist solely for the good of the many thousands of bureaucrats who muddle round inside them without any clear targets, no written statement as to how their efforts will benefit the people who pay their salaries, nor any accountability for getting everything wrong. Discussing such people, let alone trying to improve their performance, is as pointless as sitting in a lukewarm bath waiting for it to get hot again. – Yours, etc,

RD BANTON,

Kevin Street,

Tinahely,

Co Wicklow.

Sir, – I’ve just read Kevin Courtney’s article on the best 99 ice cream in Ireland (August 21st). The winner by a scoop was McGreevy’s of Westport. I agree with the selection. Westport was recently voted the best town to live in, has the best 99, the best record for winning the Tidy Towns competition and is the starting point for the best greenway in Ireland.

This is an example of local people working together to bring out the best of everything. Life is too short not to put quality into everything you do – and it shows in Westport. – Yours, etc,

KEVIN DEVITTE,

Mill Street,

Westport,

Co Mayo.

Sir, – I recently stayed in a five-star hotel in Co Kilkenny, and being health conscious, decided to pass on the full Irish breakfast, so instead opted for the “catch of the day”, which turned out to be kippers.

I was afraid to ask if they had been caught locally. – Yours, etc,

Dr MACCON

MacNAMARA,

Corofin,

Co Clare.

Irish Independent:

In relation to Cardinal Sean Brady‘s role in not dealing with the serial child sex abuser Fr Brendan Smyth and the swearing of two sexually abused teenagers to secrecy, I agree with Philip O’Neill (Letters, Irish Independent, August 19) that “what he did was inexcusable”.

But what does Mr O’Neill mean when he says “but [this was] driven by the belief that the hand of God guided that institution in all it did”?

This is dangerous territory. The God card does not give wrong-doers a pass. It is not even a fig leaf. Examples of humans doing wrong in the “belief that the hand of God guided that institution in all it did” are manifold throughout history. One need only look to Islamic State, who claim to be fulfilling the will of Allah in Iraq and Syria.

Does the fact that an immoral act is done in the belief that God is guiding those responsible make it any less immoral? To say that, “In reality, he was a fallible leader in a fallible church” is at best euphemistic and misleading.

To my knowledge, the facts are as follows. In 1975, a 14-year-old boy named Brendan Boland was questioned by the then Fr John Brady, a canon lawyer, and the then Dundalk parish priest Monsignor Francis Donnelly, in relation to allegations he had made about a Fr Brendan Smyth. At the end of the inquiry, Brendan said he was handed a bible and made to swear and sign an oath of secrecy.

According to Brendan, the other signature on the oath was that of Fr Brady and the questions and his answers were taken down in handwritten notes by the same Fr Brady. Brendan gave the names and addresses of five or six other children who he said had been abused by Fr Smyth. Neither the children’s parents nor gardai were contacted.

According to Brendan, Fr Brady then approached another child and questioned him; again without informing his parents or gardai.

This child was also sworn to secrecy. In 1994 – nearly two decades after Brendan was sworn to secrecy – Fr Smyth was arrested in Northern Ireland. There is a word for what Cardinal Brady did and did not do. You will not find it in the lexicon of canon law. That word is wrong.

It is for the victims of Fr Brendan Smyth to forgive him or not, but it is an insult to them that Fr (Cardinal) Brady did not resign before now. Instead he was promoted to Cardinal and Primate of All Ireland. He will be a Cardinal for life and will get to vote in papal elections until he turns 80.

Rob Sadlier, Rathfarnham, Co Dublin

Tribute to a true visionary

Albert Reynolds was a unique man. He was a humble leader who achieved one of the greatest political goals ever on this island. On the North, while others froze, he saw and then seized the chance.

He secured a historic ceasefire by putting his own head in a political noose.

He won headlines all around the world with the success of the ceasefire. He was a unifier and a pacifier. With a handshake and an open mind he got into the heads of unionists and Republicans and he saw light and common ground where others saw darkness, division and the blindness of the ghetto.

“Who is afraid of peace?” he asked. It was an excellent question.

He found peace in this world, and I have no doubt he will do so in the next.

Thank you, Albert, for your courage strength and vision.

TG O’Brien, Dalkey, Co Dublin


Mayo in need of inspiration

Mayo will have to dig deep to beat an impressive Kerry team in Sunday’s semi-final in Croke Park.

Perhaps they will be inspired not only by the presence of the Taoiseach in Croke Park, but also by the memory of the Connaught Rangers, in Gallipoli, who inspired the original naming of Hill 16 as Hill 60.

In my view, Hill 16 confers on the Dubs a great advantage.

Dr Gerald Morgan, The Chaucer Hub, Trinity College, Dublin 2


Irish jihadis and loyalty to State

The report in the Irish Independent on August 21 that as many as 30 jihadi fighters are using Ireland as a base for furtive activities in the Middle East is a matter of profound concern.

Applicants granted naturalised citizenship must, inter alia, be of good character; must intend in good faith to continue to reside in the State after naturalisation and must make a declaration of fidelity to the nation and to this State to faithfully observe its laws and respect its democratic values.

This report begs questions about the adequacy and robustness of the Garda and intelligence vetting of those applying for citizenship, and under what circumstances can naturalised Irish citizenship be revoked if activities are discovered that are seriously prejudicial to the vital interests of Ireland and the conditions under which citizenship is granted.

Ireland was one of 60 members who ratified, in 1973, the UN Convention on the Reduction of Statelessness.

But individuals who have a right to apply for a passport in another country would not be stateless if Irish citizenship were to be withdrawn from them.

Citizenship is a privilege that comes with responsibilities, duties and obligations. Being a naturalised Irish person must not be reduced to a whimsical flag of convenience whose solemn obligation can be disregarded.

Myles Duffy, Glenageary, Co Dublin

Scotland’s golden goose

Claims that Scotland is being subsidised by England has encouraged me to vote “No” in the independence referendum. Canny Scots should grab every penny we can. The debate can be re-visited in 20 years or so, when the UK is bankrupt, or earlier if the English kick us out of the Union first!

John Eoin Douglas, Edinburgh, Scotland


Protests over abortion laws

* Let’s get one thing very straight. The woman at the centre of our latest abortion controversy was not “refused a termination”. Her pregnancy was very much terminated, such that she had ceased to be pregnant by the end of the operation. The fact, however, that a baby not dying in the process has given rise to people protesting is not just immoral or unethical, or the real injustice in all this, it’s damn well inhumane.

Killian Foley-Walsh, Kilkenny


* Desmond Fitzgerald (Letters, Irish Independent, August 21) while referring to constitutional change regarding issues such as abortion, says: “These are issues that should be removed and dealt with by legislation that reflects the popular will of the people at any given point in time and can be changed accordingly.”

However, that effectively means leaving it to our legislators to reflect the “popular will of the people”. That can only be achieved through referenda which may result in changes to the Constitution.

He continues, saying to those who oppose abortion: “… that doesn’t give you the right to deny another woman her right to make her own decision if she finds herself with a crisis pregnancy.”

That is all very well but, when there is another life (the unborn) at stake, then it is only correct that we as a nation should have an input. With the availability and practice of abortion increasing, we have become desensitised to what is actually taking place: the taking of human life. I am sympathetic to the plight of pregnant women who are distressed. May I suggest they first reflect upon the life they are carrying inside.

John Bellew, Dunleer, Co Louth, Co. Louth

Irish Independent

INFLUENCE: Enda Kenny is a 'political son' of Liam Cosgrave. Photo credit: Matt Walsh

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Tomatoes

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23 August 2014 Tomatoes

I jog around the park I still have arthritis in my left knee, but I manage to get round the park. A wettish day. I sort out books and tomatoes

Scrabble: Mary wins, but gets just under 400. perhaps I will win tomorrow.

109 Games Mary win 58 John 52

Obituary:

Helen Bamber – obituary

Helen Bamber was a campaigner for victims of torture who found her vocation, aged 19, caring for survivors of Belsen

Helen Bamber

Helen Bamber Photo: PA

6:26PM BST 22 Aug 2014

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Helen Bamber, who has died aged 89, travelled alone, at the age of 19, to care for survivors of the Nazi concentration camp at Belsen; after two years in Germany she returned to Britain where she established her own foundation to care for victims of torture.

Founded in 1985, her Medical Foundation for the Care of Victims of Torture is the only British charity that works exclusively with torture victims, helping them to rebuild their lives, and is the largest such organisation in the world. Since its foundation it has dealt with more than 50,000 victims from more than 90 countries around the world, from Kosovo to Sierra Leone and Congo, and from Iraq to Argentina and Sri Lanka.

The daughter of Jews of Polish extraction, she was born Helen Balmuth in north London on May 1 1925. She had a difficult, unhappy childhood. During the 1930s her father, Louis Balmuth, became fixated on the rise of fascism and saw it as his mission to educate his daughter about the threat. He read to her from Hitler’s Mein Kampf at bedtime and made her listen to speeches by Goebbels on the radio, to show her how easily language and public opinion could be manipulated. “I was well aware that we would be annihilated,” she recalled. “By the time I was 10 I knew it all.”

Her fun-loving mother, Marie, had been forced into an arranged marriage and was disappointed by life and by her husband. The family was often broke, and Helen, a sickly child who suffered repeated bouts of bronchitis, often took refuge in her bedroom to avoid her parents’ violent quarrels. On one occasion she recalled coming home and, finding that her parents were out, fantasised that they might be dead.

In her late teens Helen found work as a secretary and administrator to the National Association of Mental Health, which treated returning soldiers and airmen. There she gained considerable insight into trauma, and in 1945 she defied her mother and volunteered for the Jewish Relief Unit, a small group of health and other professionals sent under the auspices of the UN to work with Holocaust survivors. After some rudimentary training, she was made personal assistant to the director of the JRU and dispatched to Belsen.

Helen Bamber, Medical Foundation for the Care of Victims of Torture (PA)

By the time she arrived, the main camp had been razed and the 12,000 survivors had been moved into a nearby barracks, where Helen and her colleagues were put in charge of distributing food and clothing. Many inmates had died from typhus, and she recalled the dank smell that pervaded the camp, “like the sweet smell of geraniums if you crush them”.

At first she felt useless in the face of so much suffering, but gradually she realised that, while she could not change the past, she could at least listen. “People wanted to tell their story and I was able to receive it,” she told an interviewer from The Observer in 2008. “They would hold me and dig their fingers in and rasp this story out… They would rock back and forth and I would say to them, ‘I will tell your story. Your story will not die.’ It took me a long time to realise that that was all I could do.”

When Belsen had first been liberated by the British Army, there was an outpouring of horror and compassion. But most survivors had nowhere to go. Those who tried to return to the homes they had left were met with hostility by local people who had moved in. Nor were they welcome as refugees. Many remained in Belsen until 1950, and sometimes their anger and frustration spilt over into attacks on relief workers. As a result they became seen as a nuisance by the military authorities in control of the camp: “They changed from being creatures for compassion to being irritating people — displaced persons who had nowhere to go,” Helen Bamber recalled. “And that I found very frightening as a young person, watching those attitudes change.”

After two-and-a-half years at Belsen, Helen returned to Britain, which was then beginning to admit the first child survivors of the concentration camps. She began to work as a counsellor to the children, recalling “their stony little faces, giving nothing back, their sceptical eyes — a complete lack of trust”. She found that she could get through to them by persuading them to reconnect with good memories of earlier childhood. She would get them to draw or paint, and ask them about the games they had played with their parents and the food they had enjoyed.

A harder task was to find schools or employers willing to take them on in a post-war Britain which was preoccupied with its own problems. On one occasion she was interviewed by a headmaster who asked her in all innocence: “Didn’t they give them any books to read in those camps?”

Soon after returning from Belsen, Helen married Rudi Bamberger, a German-Jewish refugee who changed his name to the more “British” Bamber. In 1950, looking for a more settled life, she began working as a hospital administrator at St George’s in Wapping.

While she continued to hold down a series of jobs — as an almoner (social worker) at Middlesex Hospital, administrator at the Middlesex and personal assistant to the orthopaedic surgeon Sir Herbert Seddon — she could not forget her experiences of dealing with victims of the Nazis. In 1958, horrified by accounts of the use of torture by the French in Algeria, she joined Amnesty International, the organisation which publicises the plight of prisoners of conscience.

Over the next three decades she became one of Amnesty’s most passionate volunteers. She helped to set up a medical section, with a group of specialists prepared to examine asylum-seekers claiming to be torture victims, documenting their experiences and lobbying against regimes which condoned experiments on patients in prison hospitals.

She began her Foundation in 1985, initially with a grant from the UN Voluntary Fund, operating out of two rooms in an abandoned hospital in north London with one part-time assistant and a typewriter. From these small beginnings it grew into a centre staffed by more than 100 professionals, full-time and volunteer, treating more than 2,500 survivors a year.

Among those she counselled were a group of septuagenarian former prisoners of the Japanese. The ex-PoWs were rural Northumbrians to whom she was introduced by one of their number, Eric Lomax, in a Northumberland pub. They were initially wary of the stranger from London until she began talking about her own experiences in Belsen, and they began to open up. Later she would advise Colin Firth on his depiction of Lomax’s character in The Railway Man (2013), the film based on his bestselling autobiography of the same name.

Helen Bamber (centre) with former Home Secretary Jacqui Smith (left) and Emma Thompson (PA)

In June 1993, though Jewish, Helen Bamber went to Israel and testified on behalf of a Palestinian prisoner who had confessed under torture by the Israeli security forces to being a member of Hamas. Her testimony led to the most serious charges against the man being dropped — one of very few successful challenges to confession evidence in the tens of thousands of cases heard during the Intifada.

Helen Bamber stepped down as director of her Foundation in 2002 to concentrate on her work with patients. In 2005 she set up the Helen Bamber Foundation, to expand her work with torture survivors to include those who had suffered other forms of human rights violations, such as human trafficking and gender-based violence.

A biography of her by Neil Belton, The Good Listener: Helen Bamber, A Life Against Cruelty, was published in 1999. She was named European Woman of Achievement in 1993 and appointed OBE in 1997.

Helen Bamber acknowledged the irony that, even though she had helped thousands of victims of torture, the one person she had not been able to help was her own husband. As a child he had seen his father beaten to death by German storm troopers; his mother had perished with most of his family in the camps.

He was so deeply scarred by his own past that he found it difficult to relate to his wife’s comparatively fortunate upbringing, and they found it impossible to discuss the Holocaust. They divorced in 1970, though they remained friends until he died. The thought of her inability to help him continued to move Helen Bamber to tears.

Their two sons survive her.

Helen Bamber, born May 1 1925, died August 21 2014

Guardian:

I agree with much of Ian Birrell’s exposition and most of his conclusions in his piece on the Middle East (James Foley’s brutal death shows we can’t solve Iraq, 21 August). I cannot, however, agree when he describes our foreign policy as “confused”. It seems to me not so much confused as short-term, short-sighted and utterly self-centred.

We back repressive regimes because they are mostly secular, we back the Saudis because they sell us oil and buy our weapons, we back Israel because the US does, we fail to back Mohamed Morsi in Egypt because he is not at all secular. To put it simply, our politicians love to keep us in a state of fear (and Islam is currently the chief bogeyman), the big companies love making money and we will do anything the US asks. The policies are deeply flawed, but “confused”? I don’t think so.
Nick Shepherd
London

• You say “there is no action without reaction in the Middle East” (Editorial, 21 August). But those who perhaps fear reaction will also often fear to act.

Fifteen years ago, in Chicago, Tony Blair presented his now famous speech, dedicated to the cause of “internationalism versus isolationism”. Prompted by the evils of ethnic cleansing in Kosovo, it set down a series of key principles for international cooperation and intervention which are still valid today.

In particular it laid a framework of goals for the 21st century: cementing solidarity between the EU and US; recognising and supporting a democratic Russia; understanding the pace of globalisation as “also a political and security phenomenon”; and encouraging the spread of democracy, particularly under the impetus of “centre and centre-left politics”.

However, two years later, the attack on the World Trade Center vividly symbolised the vulnerability of global capitalism and western values when attacked by the forces of fanatical, theatrical nihilism. This diabolical “action” has clearly triggered a chain reaction that is still unravelling. Whatever “action” we have taken since then and will take in future will only win if there is a unity of purpose. Those international agencies – military, political and economic – highlighted in Blair’s doctrine, must at last begin to pursue a new and common action.

The pursuit of freedom and democracy, under a binding commitment to the UN’s universal declaration of human rights, would be a good start. Opting out ought not to be an option, regardless of the reaction.
Mike Allott
Eastleigh, Hampshire

• In the 1930s and 1940s in Europe, many young men turned to fascism, radicalised by the simplistic notion of a future homeland where a pure fascistic ideology would reign supreme. Our present commentary is failing us all, especially Muslims. “Terrorist”, “jihadist”, “extreme Islamist”, “radical Muslim” – essentially these are all manifestations of a psychology and emotional impulse which, transcending skin colour or religious affiliation, is identical to that of earlier fascists.

Those fascists also performed savage killings of helpless non-combatant hostages pour encourager les autres. If we can change our “running commentary” to one which – without equivocation, appeasement or a futile desire to “understand” – calls a fascist a fascist, then we will free ourselves, including the hapless “Muslim community”, which we have patronised and ghettoised, to combat more lucidly and effectively the sinister force which unadorned fascism remains.
Hugh Hetherington
Sandwich, Kent

• Western leaders are in denial. They refuse to acknowledge that Saudi Arabia and its kleptocratic rulers have further destabilised the Middle East with their playing of the destructive sectarian card against “apostate” Shias. The result was the regular targeting of Iraq’s Shia pilgrims and their shrines by Sunni jihadists. Now it’s the turn of Iraq’s Christians and Yazidis. Saudi Arabia would also have the west go to war with Iran rather than seek rapprochement.

William Hague foolishly aligned the UK with the Saudis by supporting Syria’s Sunni jihadist insurgents. No wonder British Sunni militants flocked to Syria and now Iraq. That some will return as trained terrorists is a legitimate worry. It’s called blowback. The terrorists posing a threat to the west are Sunni, not Shia. Bashar al-Assad, Hezbollah and Iran are not our enemy.
Yugo Kovach
Winterborne Houghton, Dorset

• At the end of your leader on Isis you list concerted international efforts which you say will aid the disappearance of this so-called Islamic State, including various actions in Iraq and Syria. Missing from your list is the one issue which has been responsible over a far longer period than the others for the distrust of the west felt by most Arabs, not just Islamic extremists – the kneejerk support for Israel from America, the UK and the rest of Europe in its 66-year campaign to deny the rights of Palestinians to a country in which they once formed 90% of the population. Your reported summary of radical Twitter accounts – “Why does the world get so excited when an American is killed when dozens are killed in Gaza?” – says it all. And this represents the views of many non-extreme Arabs, but the west chooses to ignore them and believes that the other issues identified in your leader are more important. There will be no change in Arab attitudes to the west until there is a fundamental shift away from the widespread and unquestioning political support for Israel’s aggression against the Palestinians.
Karl Sabbagh
Author, Palestine: A Personal History

Newbold on Stour, Warwickshire

• I was interested to read in your lead story (Manhunt for a British murderer with hostages’ fate in his hands, 21 August) that experts in linguistics now feel qualified to pass judgment on the brutalisation of British-born jihadists. I had always understood linguistics to be a science, whose practitioners were notoriously disinclined to pass prescriptive judgments, even on issues that properly fell within their purview, such as common usage, regional accents, dialects and so on. Am I to understand that these same practitioners have now occupied territory previously belonging to moral philosophers, or is this a case of ideology sneaking into science under the cover of darkness?
Professor Malcolm Read
Belper, Derbyshire

• Vital legislative work is needed at the very start of the new parliamentary session – not least of which should be new powers to strip identified Britons involved in the so-called Islamic State of British citizenship, making it unlawful to re-enter the UK.
David Delamere
Wrexham

• The uncomfortable fact we need to face up to is that British terrorists are a home-grown problem. Our multicultural policies and faith schools don’t work. The only way to defeat it is here in Britain. We must create a solid secular society where all our citizens flourish and to which they can feel loyal. Not some sepia-covered throwback to post-second-world-war sentimentality, but a muscular forward-looking, inclusive, society based on our real needs.

This means, as a start, secular education and a fair and just democratic settlement in England and for the UK parliament, both houses, such as we have enabled in Scotland, Wales, and Northern Ireland. Immigrant groups will always have sentimental attachments to their countries of origin. We need to be seen to be fair and just abroad too. And while we must respect cultural customs in minorities, we should only respect those which accord with our laws and civil liberties. That must go for Christian groupings too. The way forward is not to deride and ban religion, as some suggest, but to build a national project based on belief in ourselves that we can all get behind no matter what our differences.

Lastly, it would be good to hear from the young, integrated and women as spokespeople from these immigrant communities. The more traditional members should think again about the raising of their boys, particularly, in this society. It is no good just blaming the host nation.
Olivia Byard
Witney, Oxfordshire

Steven Pinker (10 ‘grammar rules’ it’s ok to break (sometimes), 15 August) is critical, not without justification, of those who draw parallels with Latin usage to construct rules for English grammar. But when he says that if we follow Latin usage we should be saying “Woe is I” he might have chosen a rather better example to make his case. It was early in my Latin studies that I was taught the accusative of exclamation – “O me miserum” – which translates as “O wretched me” and not “O wretched I” at all.
Robert Charlesworth
Holmfirth, West Yorkshire

• The letters on prepositions at the end of a sentence (Letters, 18 August) reminded of the occasion when Diana Dors was being introduced as a celebrity at a charitable function. The chairman related how, when he first greeted Dors, he could tell by the look in her eyes that she was thinking: “Here’s a man I would like to be made love to by.” Dors replied: “Ladies and gentlemen, your chairman must realise that, even in my private thoughts, I would never end a sentence with two prepositions.”
Jeff Lewis
Exmouth, Devon

• Steven Pinker’s argument will not convince me that “10 items or less” is OK. In this case, the “less/fewer” word is qualifying a set of discrete objects. In the case of “less than 21 years old” it is qualifying someone’s age, which is a continuous quantity; “21 years” is a threshold, not a set of objects. Seems obvious to me.
Chris Paice
Kirkby Lonsdale, Cumbria

• I am annoyed by the habit of avoiding the word “me” even when it is called for, as in: “Thank you for taking John and I to lunch.” I am told by people who prefer this form that they feel the word “me” sounds uncomfortable, or too self-referential, and they refuse to use the test of removing the other person – would you say: “Thank you for taking I to lunch”? Yet this rule is broken time and time again in both written and spoken speech.
Jill Evans
London

• I was always taught that you never put “from” in front of “whence” because that word was made up of “from where” and so it was like saying “from from where”. Yet I have seen “from whence” used by many a reputable writer. Any answers?
Anne Abbott
Bath

• The parent who took the wrong book for a bedtime story was asked: “What did you bring the book I didn’t want to be read to out of up for?”
Brian Magson
Bradford

• As any fule kno, “which” alongside “that” in the “Render unto Caesar… ” verses actually occurs in the Great Bible of 1539, if not earlier.
Richard Pickvance
London

• I am 71, so that may be indicative, but I was taught that “who” always referred to a living person while “that” relates to objects or animals. So I can’t understand why the Guardian (the only paper I read so can’t comment on any other) consistently uses “that” when referring to a person/people – for example: name/he/she/it/they “that” did something or other/wore something/went somewhere or other. It really irritates me. Is there an explanation for this?
Carole Underwood
Kendal, Cumbria

• Steven Pinker’s article was both fascinating and infuriating to a stickler like me (or should I have said “such as I”?) and I was interested in his discussion of the use of “like” and “such as”. However, what gets my goat is the increasing use of “as such” in place of “therefore” (eg “The rules have changed. As such, you must now… ”). This is creeping into official and academic documents. Where did it come from? (Or should I have asked “From where did it come?”)
Roger Bayston
Nottingham

• “Me” in “woe is me” is a survival of the dative form; it means “to me”, so no one was saying that they were woe.
Jeff Lewis
Manchester

Your editorial (18 August) confirms the inadequacy of the Irish Protection of Life During Pregnancy Act. But another shocking aspect of the case is that the young woman in question was legally forced to have a caesarian section at 25 weeks’ gestation. Although babies of this gestation can now survive with modern neonatal intensive care, the neonatal death rate is still high and the risk of handicap considerable. The effect on this young woman, allegedly raped in her own country, who asked for an abortion at eight weeks and was suicidal, of a forced caesarian can only increase her feeling of helplessness – another assault on her body. This case suggests that Irish doctors are living in the past century. Legal cases in the US in the 1980s and UK in the 1990s confirmed a woman’s right to refuse a caesarian even if that meant the death of the foetus or her own death. The Protection of Life During Pregnancy Act should be repealed.
Wendy Savage
Doctors For a Woman’s Right to Abortion

Your editorial of 21 August, Rennard: wrong call, implying Lord Rennard’s guilt of sexual harassment, is a betrayal of the core principle of the presumption of innocence. Since when did the Guardian support convicting people on the basis of accusations rather than evidence? In Rennard’s case, a police investigation concluded there was insufficient evidence to warrant sending a file to the CPS or bring any charges. An internal party investigation by an independent QC found insufficient evidence to bring any charges or to hold a hearing.

Compare the Rennard case with that of Nigel Evans MP. In Evans’s case the allegations were more serious and, after a police investigation, nine charges were brought against him. A jury found Evans not guilty.

I have read your coverage of the Evans verdict carefully. Nowhere can I find an editorial implying that Evans was guilty. Indeed, you suggested that the “CPS may be too willing to bring charges when evidence is not very strong”. Why is there now an editorial on Rennard implying that some other “result” should have been reached?
Peter Rainford
Liverpool

• Both your editorial and Anne McElvoy on the Lib Dems and Lord Rennard (A sorry saga of mistakes, 21 August) are right. The decision to reinstate Rennard suggests that the political culture not just in the Lib Dems but among a significant section of the political class is lagging behind what is now generally considered acceptable behaviour in personal relations. It should be a sobering thought to Nick Clegg that many large employers, seeing a pattern of behaviour and multiple complaints, would have started a misconduct process in a similar case.
Keith Flett
London

letters-cat

In the words of Roger Kain (Letters, 22 August), the University of London maintains that the 1944 trust deed of the Warburg Institute “is unclear in what it covers” and that is why legal proceedings have been advised. However, in his next paragraph, he refers to a “dispute” requiring to be resolved. Is the clarification of a trust deed a “dispute” (and if so, who with?) or is there a dispute those interested in the matter need to know about?
Anand C Chitnis
London

• Stirling Smith is wrong in almost everything he says about William Pitt (Letters, 21 August). He supported Wilberforce in his efforts to abolish the slave trade; he was strongly in favour of Catholic emancipation; and he had no hand in the arrest of Tooke. Moreover he led the country through much of the war against Napoleon after becoming prime minister at the age of 24. No prime minister before Gladstone had a better claim to commemoration on a stamp.
Richard Jameson
Guildford, Surrey

• I understand the problems caused by the invasive Himalayan balsam, but I hope the Indian fungus soon to be released in experimental trials will only control rather than wipe out the balsam (Letter, 19 August). As a beekeeper, I find that it is a prolific source of nectar as the plant flowers here from mid-July to the first frosts. A rich nectar source like this was not available to previous generations at a time of year when there is little else. My little workers and my honey yields would suffer dreadfully without it.
Peter Reasbeck
Leeds

• I was pleased to see Felicity Cloake’s perfect prawn cocktail (20 August) served on a blue-and-white Denmark plate. I acquired my set of this crockery second-hand from a neighbour 30 years ago when setting up home with my husband and I have never found a design that rivals it. Any kind of food looks good on it. It’s a pity, though, that Felicity’s plate seems to have a chipped rim.
Elizabeth Manning
Malvern, Worcestershire

• If Margaret Baker’s garden really adjoins 10 others (Letters, 21 August) how does she know which one to return each cat deposit to? It’s a question of attribution, surely.
John Cranston
Norwich

Independent:

Times:

Sir, Carol Midgley suggests that some vets are over-vaccinating animals (“Jabs every year, expensive surgery: what are vets up to?”, Aug 19). Vaccinations are an extraordinary tool in our armoury in the fight against diseases, both in animals and humans. Under the Animal Welfare Act owners have a duty to protect their animals from pain, injury, suffering and disease. We know of no better way to protect against disease than vaccination, in accordance with the manufacturer’s instructions, datasheet or summary of product characteristics.

When veterinary vaccines are licensed, the regulator, the Veterinary Medicines Directorate, agrees a “duration of immunity” based on scientific research and vets must work within these parameters. For some vaccines this will be one year, for example leptospirosis, and for others it will be three to four years. This is because the duration of immunity varies — and why the World Small Animal Veterinary Association guidelines refer to some, but not all, vaccines being required less often.

We know that scaremongering can lead to a loss of public confidence in vaccination which can in turn lead to outbreaks of disease. Distemper and parvo virus are still killers — and the reason we see these only rarely is because most owners choose to vaccinate.

Robin Hargreaves
British Veterinary Association
Katie McConnell
British Small Animal Veterinary Association

Sir, Often, well-cared-for pets receive better care than we do. My dog’s “health” insurance is more expensive than insuring our car. However, with our dog we can have guaranteed same-day appointments and the level of care, if admission is necessary, is second to none, with
hi-tech hospital facilities and limitless diagnostic equipment. Specialities are now commonplace — pets have better artificial limbs and physio than most humans would receive on the NHS.

Animal charities should get together with Age UK and place some of the many homeless dogs and cats with caring owners. The charities would need to feed and shelter them anyway, if they remained unhomed; and lonely elderly folk could find a loyal and loving friend.

Sara Blunt
Chislehurst, Kent

Sir, May I correct Carol Midgley on a couple of points. The suggestion that vaccination can lead to disease was disproved by an Animal Health Trust survey in 2004. It found no association between the time of vaccination and the onset of illness. Also, blood tests for vaccine antibodies are no indicator of immune status.

Iain Richards
Heversham, Cumbria

Sir, With regard to “Vet costs and pets” (letter, Aug 21) we can blame the insurance companies here as we can with cars. Recently while having my cat treated I queried the relevance and cost of all the proposed measures, to be told “but your card says you have insurance” As this was incorrect the treatment was tailored accordingly.

Patrick Hogan
Beaconsfield, Bucks

Covering farmland with solar panels could be a step towards taking the land over for building

Sir, It is not just Melksham, Wiltshire, that is suffering from a spate of solar farm applications (“Solar farms may be first step to greenbelt housing”, Aug 20). In South Shropshire there are five applications for solar farms, two of them just outside Ludlow.

Those who oppose these applications have a problem: they are dismissed as nimbies and it is assumed that all solar panels are good and green, wherever they are sited.

In reality nimbyism is a recognition of beauty and of the English love of the land. There is a common understanding, held by town and country dwellers alike, that human beings need places of rest and beauty in our troubled world.

We may need alternative sources of energy but solar panels on green fields bring their own problems: good agricultural land is taken out of food production, there is a loss of biodiversity, and in a tourist area probably a loss of income, and employment.

Greedy developers are trying to push through poorly prepared proposals for solar farms before the April 1, 2015 deadline. These schemes make vague promises but have few hard facts; there is poor assessment of the current environment and little attempt to assess the impact of their activities. At the end of the life of the scheme there will be a hefty bill for the clean-up of the land — or will it go to housing?

I hope the government takes prompt action to stop this careless ravaging of the countryside.

The Rev Sylvia Turner

Whitton, Shropshire

HS2 is not the problem – the government should spend the money on repairing the trunk road network

Sir, Damian McBride (“Labour must scrap HS2 to avoid a rail disaster”, Aug 19) misses a fundamental point in relation to Labour’s opportunity to appeal to business — people will always drive cars, and stuff ordered online for home delivery has to be delivered in a van. I run a business that goes to people’s houses to fix doors, windows and locks every day up and down the UK, and I can tell you that the transport system is a far bigger priority than any rail link.

Having done about 30,000 miles around the UK last year, here is my hot list of roads that need enough investment to allow business to move efficiently and get things done: A14 between Huntingdon and Cambridge; a South-Coast link road from Kent to Devon, including a bypass around Worthing and Arundel; the M60 — all of it; the M62 — all of it; the M1 — all of it; the A1 from Newcastle to Edinburgh; the M6 from its start to the M55; the M5 from Birmingham to Bristol; the M8 Edinburgh to Glasgow and, worst of the worst, the M25, often little more than a car park.

In short, Mr Miliband should
re-invest the £50bn in the road system and his party would instantly become the party of business.

Rick Francis

Anglers stand arm in arm with landowners in hostility to canoeists and kayakers – in England, anyway

Sir, David Aaronovitch’s account of anglers and kayakers squabbling (Aug 21) does not ring true of the Tweed, although anglers are seen as paying a lot and canoeists very little if anything at all.

Big Scottish rivers like the Tay and Tweed are fished regularly from boats and a lot of salmon are caught without the fish being put off by the floating fishermen.

Canoeists on the Tweed seem to be considerate and usually give precedence to the angler in the boat as well as on the bank.

And in the past our bewhiskered forefathers would arrange for the salmon pools to be stoned to stir the fish up. It is not unknown either for fish to be caught after canoeists have gone past.

Stephen M Fielding

Kirkbrae, Galashiels

Sir, While salmon fishing on a prime beat of the River Spey one day, I engaged in some jovial banter with a passing canoeist.

Shortly afterwards I was approached by a very concerned and inquisitive ghillie who had witnessed the exchange from afar. I assured him as to the cordial nature of our conversation. He looked hugely relieved and uttered the immortal line, “Congratulations sir. You’ve just met the laird.”

Peter Hibbert

Longley Green, Worcs

Lament for the Teenagers who only saw Glenfinnan and the Sands of Morar on the Screens of their Phones

Sir, How right Tanya Gold is about the insidious effects of smartphones (Aug 22). My wife and I have spent the past week taking two 17-year-old Australian girls round Scotland to see the sights — from reindeer on Cairngorm to Arisaig and the Glenfinnan viaduct, Loch Ness and the Edinburgh Festival and castle.

It soon became apparent that in their eyes the object of their journey was not to learn about and enjoy what they saw but to take “selfies”, and to giggle about them in the back of the car. I doubt if they have a clue of where they have been — but it’s all on Facebook. What’s the IT equivalent of a grumphry?

Peter Mackay

Kincraig by Kingussie

Telegraph:

A harvest of plums of the Stanley cultivar reveal their ripeness with a waxy bloom  Photo: ALAMY

6:58AM BST 22 Aug 2014

CommentsComments

SIR – Where are all the plums (Letters, August 21)? On the tree on our allotment in Devon. We have picked about 150lbs and made jam and crumbles to freeze but have given most away. We also have wasps.

Wendy Potter
Torquay, Devon

SIR – They are in my garden in France, where my plum tree is so heavily laden that I will have to prop up the lower branches as I have done in previous years.

Robert F Garner
Pembury, Kent

SIR – I am indebted to my fellow Telegraph readers for information on where I might find some wasps. However, I was not complaining but merely curious as to their absence from my garden. As for the lack of plums on Ron Kirby’s trees, I still have a bucketful of damsons to spare.

Ann Brooke-Smith
Letchworth Garden City, Hertfordshire

SIR – Please inform Dorset that we’ve got their plums – but have they got our apples?

Geoff Milburn
Glossop, Derbyshire

Hambledon Hill in Dorset, a massive and ‘magical’ Iron Age hill fort, has been bought by the National Trust for the nation. The hill has a rich natural and archaeological story dating back to before the construction of Stonehenge, the National Trust said. The Iron Age fort, the first the trust has acquired for 30 years, was built more than 2,000 years ago and overlies one of the most significant early neolithic landscapes in western Europe dating back almost 6,000 years, the trust said. Photo: National Trust Images/Ross Hoddi

6:59AM BST 22 Aug 2014

CommentsComments

SIR – Jutting out like a giant battleship bow from the uplands of Cranborne Chase into the Blackmore Vale, Hambledon Hill is possibly the most spectacular Iron-Age hill fort in Britain.

In its more recent history, the hill was the site of the last stand of the Dorset Clubmen in 1645. These Wessex country folk, embittered by the rampaging armies of both sides in the Civil War, rose up against both King and Parliament. Some 5,000 locals, armed with scythes and pitchforks and led by a local parson, marching to the war cry of “If you plunder us and take our cattle, be assured we’ll give you battle”, assembled on what is now called Clubmans Down, nearby. After baiting a parliamentary patrol at Sturminster Newton and being driven off from Shaftesbury, they retreated behind the ramparts of Hambledon Hill, resolved to fight to the death.

Cromwell was not amused and sent a troop of dragoons to sort the Clubmen out, ordering them to use the flat of the sword where possible. The troops took the hill with little difficulty, killing several, wounding many and capturing around 300.

Many escaped by sliding down the precipitous slopes where horsemen were unable to follow. The prisoners – “these poor silly creatures”, Cromwell called them – were locked up overnight and sent home with a warning to behave themselves.

John Cleare
Fonthill Gifford, Wiltshire

File photo: journalist James Foley in 2011 Photo: AP

7:00AM BST 22 Aug 2014

CommentsComments

SIR – I was horrified by the terrible death of James Foley. There are few words left that have not been used to describe the barbarity of the Islamic State.

The Prime Minister has left himself no room for manoeuvre by saying there will be no boots on the ground in Iraq. The situation is too volatile to say that categorically. We already have mission creep – the original humanitarian effort has become surveillance by Tornados and drones, and the SAS are helping the Kurds.

Much against my own values, I find myself increasingly wanting boots on the ground. We can no longer stand by and think that the Islamic State will stop at some stage. It is a threat to everything we hold dear, and we should be prepared to fight to protect that.

Public opinion seems to be shifting towards this view, despite memories of the Iraq war, and David Cameron should take note.

Hannah Walker
Cattistock, Dorset

SIR – How sickening to see that poor American journalist about to be executed in the most evil and barbaric manner. The fact that a British man was doing this is dreadful.

Thanks to all the complacent politicians over the years who thought multi-culturalism was the way to go, the United Kingdom is not the country I was brought up in.

People like my father, who fought in the Second World War, must be turning in their graves. This is not how they, or we, envisaged life in the 21st century.

Marianne Stevens
Halls Head, Western Australia

SIR – Whatever action is taken against the Islamic State – and we need action, not just fine words – it should not be constrained by peacetime norms. Jihad is holy war and, for the Islamic State, total war.

David Cameron has warned against a knee-jerk reaction, but any reaction would be welcome. For a start, as Nigel Farage has suggested, the scope of the Foreign Enlistment Act needs to be widened to cover Britons who fight for proscribed terrorist organisations, and not just those who fight for foreign states.

Then, we should be making plans to intern any jihadist who returns to the United Kingdom, as the security services do not have the resources to keep track of them.

Any such measure warrants the recall of Parliament, even if no active hostility is envisaged.

Roger Smith
Shefford, Bedfordshire

SIR – Am I alone in repudiating the notion of a “British jihadist”? Surely the terms are mutually exclusive.

Christopher Macy
Lincoln

SIR – I understand that Islamic State funding has been boosted by more than £1 billion since it captured some northern Iraqi oilfields. In order to realise that money, they must sell the oil – but to whom? Those involved in this trade should be exposed, and severe economic sanctions applied.

Dr P I Raffaelli
Gosport, Hampshire

SIR – How the West must yearn for the return of the good old days of Hosni Mubarak, Saddam Hussein and Muammar Gaddafi. We do still have Bashar al-Assad, who now seems positively benign compared with the Islamic State.

Ian Macleod
Whitchurch, Shropshire

SIR – Events in Syria, Iraq, Palestine and Ukraine are causing tremendous concern among political and religious leaders. Some events are truly horrifying. And what is the EU doing? It is banning vacuum cleaners over 1600 watts.

Steve Cartridge
11046097Bolton, Lancashire

Irish Times

Sir, – Any women who has the right to travel and sufficient funds will be able to go to England to have an abortion, if she decides to do so. Any women whose right to travel is restricted or who does not have access to that money will, however, be subject to the new legislation, having to face a panel that decides on her fate. The issue of being suicidal is not really of any consequence here.

The Eighth Amendment to the Constitution and the new legislation only ever affect an already disadvantaged and marginalised minority. Everybody else deals with a termination the way they decide for themselves and does not have to worry about these things too much, as there is always the option of a trip to England.

At the inevitable next abortion referendum, most Irish voters will therefore again be in a position to contemplate the sanctity of life and the right of the unborn in the safe knowledge that the issue is really only an academic one for them.

And they might even feel pleased with themselves for having taken a “moral stand”. – Yours, etc,

YVONNE HALTON,

Clooneyquinn,

Elphin,

Co Roscommon.

Sir, – When will the conversation turn from women’s reproductive rights (which are many, let’s be frank, from myriad forms of contraception to the morning-after pill to the freedom, albeit fiscally defined at present, to decide to abort a pregnancy) to men’s reproductive rights, which are basically nil? When are we going to discuss a father’s rights? – Yours, etc,

ANNE-MARIE CURTIN,

Ballinlough Road,

Cork.

Sir, – I would like to thank Ruth Cullen for her considered and intelligent column on abortion (“Advocates of abortion ignoring a little truth”, Opinion, August 21st). It is by far the most level-headed and caring piece I have read on the subject.

I need to add that I am not a practising member of any religion and my thoughts on the subject centre on the care we should give young women and their babies in a crisis pregnancy. – Yours, etc,

KAY O’BRIEN,

Seafield Court,

Killiney,

Co Dublin.

Sir, – In her trenchant defence of the pro-life campaign’s position on Article 40.3.3 of Bunreacht na hÉireann, Dr Ruth Cullen writes: “Thanks in significant part to our constitutional protection of the unborn child the Irish abortion rate is far lower than Britain’s”. If the Eighth Amendment were to be repealed, it’s fair to assume there would be a marked decrease in Britain’s abortion rate. – Yours, etc,

PAUL DELANEY,

Beacon Hill,

Dalkey,

Co Dublin.

Sir, – We are people in or from Ireland. We are under the age of 50. We could not vote in the 1983 abortion referendum which profoundly limited women’s autonomy. No subsequent referendum has provided an opportunity to undo that damage. Many of us have lived our whole lives under an abortion regime in which we have had no say. As a generation we have grown up knowing that the State would compel us to travel if we wished to exercise substantive control over our reproductive lives. We never allowed ourselves to think, at least since Miss X, that we lived under a regime willing in principle to marshal its power against a distressed young woman to compel her to carry her pregnancy to viability.

We have never been given the democratic opportunity to expand the circumstances in which an abortion can be sought in Ireland. We have repeatedly asked for this chance, but the State failed to listen. The law punishes women in our name, but never bore our mark. We are disappointed and concerned by the latest news, but we know that disappointment and concern are not enough. It is time that this generation had its referendum. That referendum must transform the law on access to abortion care.

Women in and from Ireland are entitled to autonomy, to bodily integrity, to be free from unjustified detention, to be free from inhuman and degrading treatment. Women in and from Ireland should not have to expose or prove vulnerabilities and private matters in order to access medical treatment.

As long as the Constitution confers equal rights on the mother and the foetus, doctors and nurses will be unable to treat women ethically. As long as the Constitution remains as it is, those privileged enough to afford to travel will make those difficult journeys without the support they need.

As long as the Constitution remains as it is, we consign the most vulnerable women and girls in our society to a system which will not listen to them, which will not give them any say over their own bodies, which will prioritise birth over any long-term trauma caused to them.

The people should be given the opportunity to repeal the Eighth Amendment to the Constitution and to enact a law that places women’s capacity to make decisions regarding their bodies and their futures at the heart of their medical treatment. The Government claims it has no mandate to act on the Eight Amendment. This group of over 100 academics, comprising women and the men who support us, adds its voice to the demands that the Government finally listens, finally acknowledges that this mandate exists and finally gives us our referendum. – Yours, etc,

1. Prof Jack Anderson, School of Law, Queen’s University Belfast

2. Dr Elizabeth Aston, Edinburgh Napier University

3. Ivana Bacik, Reid Professor of Criminal Law, Law School, Trinity College Dublin

4. Dr Helen Basini, Dept. of Politics and Public Administration, University of Limerick

5. Prof Christine Bell, University of Edinburgh

6. Claire Bracken, Associate Professor, Union College, Schenectady, NY

7. Claire Bruton, BL

Sir, – Stephen Collins (“Bruton a political exception in speaking his mind”, Opinion & Analysis, August 16th) gets it wrong when he asserts that John Bruton is attuned to continental thinking on the futility of war (“John Bruton’s argument about Home Rule and 1916 deserves serious consideration”, August 16th).

Mr Bruton’s hero, John Redmond, supported Britain’s declaration of war on Germany in 1914 and used his influence as leader of Irish nationalism to encourage Irish males to join in a conflict that led to millions of deaths and the disastrous and needless destruction of Germany. The creed that John Bruton would have us celebrate is the opposite of non-violent.

I believe that our Government should be mindful of our origins as an independent State, and of our present position in the EU, in commemorating 1914. We should take care to rise above the war propaganda of that time.

John Redmond and many of his close supporters were active propagandists in the British interest in 1914 and as such they helped to foment a poisonous and irrational anti-German prejudice.

A political creed based on such a legacy is inconsistent with a reflective European commemoration of the first World War. – Yours, etc,

DAVE ALVEY,

Corrig Road,

Dalkey,

Co Dublin.

Sir, – Prof Ronan Fanning (“Apparent achievement of home rule was an illusion”, Opinion & Analysis, August 16th) claims that “the constitutional nationalists [were] so resoundingly defeated by the republican revolutionaries”.

It is certainly true that, having channelled the aspirations of constitutional nationalists for decades, the Irish Parliamentary Party had collapsed by 1918. However it was not defeated by republican revolutionaries.

The heirs of the Rising, seeking to capitalise on popular disapproval of the executions and opposition to conscription, proceeded like a typical constitutional party – a couple of byelection wins followed by sweeping success in the 1918 general elections.

Sinn Féin achieved this by persuading many constitutional nationalists to transfer their support from the IPP. Thus, despite the rhetoric, Sinn Féin ceased to be revolutionaries and became the leading vehicle for constitutional nationalism. The new order it created was a conditional one and what we call the War of Independence was the defence of its institutions by the army authorised by its parliament, as in any democratic state. When later compromises had to be made, the moderates prevailed over the revolutionaries, and these, unable to accept the decisions of Dáil Éireann, withdrew into the wilderness.

Redmond was defeated by unionist intransigence and the British hypocrisy identified by Prof Fanning. Why not honour him as we do Parnell – brought down by Ascendancy intransigence and Irish hypocrisy! – Yours, etc,

MICHAEL DRURY,

Avenue Louise,

Brussels.

Sir, – In her otherwise splendid article on the Irish National War Memorial Gardens (“Garden of tranquility” Magazine, August 16th), Fionnuala Fallon states that Charles Frederick Ball, assistant keeper of the Botanical Gardens, was “pushed” to enlist in the 7th Royal Dublin Fusiliers by a white feather that came from an anonymous source. This appears to contradict the fact that Charles had enlisted in September 1914 with the other volunteers from the Irish Rugby Football Union. As the war was only a month old, it seems unlikely that a white feather would influence a man with Charles’s record and proven ability. He was already in training when the dean of St Patrick’s Cathedral exhorted Irish women to “shun those who would not volunteer for service, to visit them with severest disapproval, and when they expect a smile, just look them straight in the face and turn away”, as reported in your paper on November 20th, 1914. This may have led to a white feather campaign that sent other young men to their death.

May they all rest in peace. – Yours, etc,

SEAN CONNOLLY,

Brookwood Lawn,

Artane,

Dublin 5.

Sir, – How easy it is to lay the charge of elitism at anyone who dares to suggest that “development” isn’t always the best way to go.

I can vouch from recent experience that the stretch of the Barrow Line from Graiguenamanagh to St Mullins is one of the most superb river walks on these islands. And one of the features that lends this walk its unique and irreplaceable charm is precisely the grassy towpath that John Mulligan (August 21st) so much objects to.

Contrary to what your correspondent suggests, the path is neither derelict, overgrown nor unsafe. It appears to be used equally by walkers and cyclists, and there is nothing to impede its use by families generally. Nor is there anything about the path that should limit its use by overseas visitors. So where is the evidence that those who want to retain the grass surface are motivated by a desire to restrict the Barrow Line to “the few”?

A hard, smooth surface undoubtedly makes it easier for wheelchairs and buggies, although I would like an informed opinion on whether or not a grass surface prohibits such access completely. Certainly I would support anything that can be done with the existing surface to make it as user-friendly as possible.

I am fearful, however, that, as often happens in this country, the interests of engineers, county councillors and shopkeepers will ride roughshod over the concerns of the campaigners, and this uniquely beautiful “green corridor” will be lost forever. – Yours, etc,

HENRY McCLAVE,

Marley Grange,

Rathfarnham,

Dublin 16.

Sir, – I cycled the entirety of the Barrow towpath and Grand Canal last summer and found it to be a fantastic amenity but one that is woefully underused. From the start in St Mullins in Carlow to the finish two days and 200-odd kilometres later in Shannon Harbour, Co Offaly, I met only a handful of walkers and no other cyclists. At least one of the reasons for this must be the poor state of the towpath – in many places it is rough, muddy and unstable. It is a shame that such an asset is so underused. If we are to encourage greater physical activity we need to develop trails that are inviting to the occasional cyclist.

Being for the most part flat and traffic free, the Barrow towpath is an ideal candidate for upgrading to a greenway. There are legitimate concerns about overdeveloping the towpath but all that is needed to make the Barrow towpath user friendly is a thin strip of gravel, no more than half a metre wide, along its full length. Any more would be overkill and would damage the scenic nature of the trail. – Yours, etc,

NOEL HOGAN,

Dublin Road,

Drogheda,

Co Louth.

Sir, – Some friends are just back from walking a section of the newly opened Wales Coast Path. They plan to return again several times over a number of years until they have “walked around Wales”. This is a 1,400km walking route that follows the whole of the coastline of Wales. Much of the path is also suitable for cycling.

In Ireland we have been congratulating ourselves for a number of years now about a 42km greenway in Co Mayo, which is isolated from any other walking or cycle route.

There are several other disjointed and isolated greenway projects ongoing, some funded by county councils, some by Waterways Ireland, some by Leader programmes.

Does no-one in the current Government want to leave a real, physical legacy? Is it not too much to expect one project team to be established, which would fund, plan and deliver one continuous, round-Ireland greenway?

The accelerated planning process could be used to deliver such a project in a relatively short time.

There are many foreign and local tourists who would love to walk or cycle around Ireland. A massive tourist opportunity is being lost by the absence of any vision or proper planning in relation to our walking and cycling amenities. – Yours, etc,

SEAMUS LENNON,

Salthill,

Galway.

Sir, – RD Banton (August 22nd) claims that the EU operates “without any clear targets” and “no written statement as to how [its] efforts will benefit the people”.

However, all annual, multi-annual and long-term targets of both political and administrative bodies of the EU are clearly set out across dozens of publicly available online sources.

In addition, there are literally thousands of written statements on how these efforts are aimed at benefiting citizens.

The EU has a communications problem, but it is certainly not for a lack of output of communications material.

As regards the point on “accountability”, perhaps the writer missed the recent reform of the EU staff regulations in this area?

Finally, over 500 million people earlier this year voted in the European elections. That is how we hold politicians to account in a democracy. – Yours, etc,

JANNEKE van VEEN,

Rue G et J Martin,

Brussels.

Sir, – It is a testament to Albert Reynolds’s legacy that those of us born during his tenure as taoiseach have been spared the violence that for so long enveloped this country. He helped build a lasting peace and for that we should be forever grateful. – Yours, etc,

DANIEL GRIFFIN,

Dunboyne Castle,

Co Meath.

Irish Independent:

“All deleterious consequences of [financial] market activity upon ordinary people . . . are considered natural market outcomes for which no one can be held accountable, as if they were just unfortunate natural disasters.”

Maeve Halpin (Letters, Irish Independent, August 20) illuminates the formidable fallacies and fiascos of the current financial market vagary as visited on ordinary people’s lives.

She does so with commendable clarity and a patent penchant for social justice.

While the gambling stock-market gurus revel in their self-aggrandising games of “monopoly money-play”, the half-decent community aspects of retail banking are being discarded hand over fist.

Mammon rules all before it, especially the vulnerable who get trampled and tossed aside in the surge towards grotesque riches for some, and near penury for most.

One has to say ‘half-decent’ in relation to retail banking, as the basic notion and practice of usury is essentially tainted with a ‘core-greed’ ingredient.

One can understand, in part, the moderate value of a ‘loans and interest payback schema’, to bolster at reasonable pace a sustainable growth of general social standards.

However, over the last half-century a brutal culture has exponentially strangled any sense of decency in the market fray.

The skewing of interest rates on the back of fickle investment markets leaves little in the way of sustainability, dependability or reasonability.

The ‘quick-buck’ manual of financial exchange is truly in vogue, and how? The recent and prevailing traumas and collapses in banking would almost appear to have little transformative 
effect on the culture of capital-capture.

Cabals of vulture capitalists are rampaging around the world sucking up bargains galore from diseased loans and properties for next to nothing.

Ireland is no more a sovereign state, not just because of the IMF/ECB oversights and strictures, but because so much of the country’s assets belong to money-leeching corporations and adventurists elsewhere.

Ms Halpin champions the recall of the Glass-Steagall Act to re-establish the separation of retail from corporate banking. She is perhaps being dreamily optimistic, but let’s hope we can celebrate such optimism, when it comes to pass.

Dreams can come true, if there’s a collective will for authentic democracy and a caring societal model of care/share.

Patrick J Cosgrove

Lismore, Co Waterford

Albert, man of the people

As a former member of An Garda Siochana I can now share my memories of my one encounter with the former Taoiseach Albert Reynolds.

In the winter of 1993, while working as a detective in Tallaght, Dublin, myself and a good friend were alerted to the fact that the Taoiseach would be going to the cinema in the Square, accompanied by Kathleen, to see the Crying Game, and we were assigned to mind them during their night out.

Following the film, we would have been quite content to escort them safely back to the state car, until Kathleen declared that she wanted to go to McDonalds.

I recalled, on hearing of the death of Albert, my clear memory of him casually walking through McDonalds, in his trademark trench coat, as he carried a tray of burgers and apple pies followed by his burly security detail. Truly a man of the people.

Colm Featherstone (retired Detective Superintendent)

Rathfarnham, Dublin 16

State’s shame over Gaza

As the latest ceasefire unravels, the impact of Israel’s blitz in Gaza is coming to light, as is the utter horror of what has been inflicted on the people there over the past five weeks.

The absolute destruction of much of the infrastructure of Gaza now means that the already besieged strip is in the throes of an orchestrated humanitarian crisis.

That, coupled with the rising death toll – now at 2,086, including 541 children, the thousands of injured, the hundreds of thousands displaced – further highlights just how shameful the Irish Government’s decision to abstain from a UN resolution calling for an inquiry into war crimes was.

It is long past time that Israel be held accountable for its actions in Gaza and that the illegal siege be lifted.

Zoe Lawlor and Mags O’Brien,
Gaza Action Ireland

Dooradoyle, Limerick


Responsibility for abuse

A very senior Vatican official, Cardinal George Pell, asks us to accept that the Holy See should not have to bear legal liability for priests cited for sex abuse on the grounds that such behaviour is against Vatican policy. He cited a hypothetical example of the employer of a truck driver who molests someone in his truck not, in the Cardinal’s opinion, bearing any liability for the employee’s acts, on the grounds that sexual molestation contravenes company policy.

Has the esteemed cardinal ever heard of the doctrine of vicarious liability? This holds that an employer does bear a liability for the torts of an employee committed in the course of employment. The injured party who claims to have unfairly suffered loss, or harm, could be either another employee or a total stranger. Therefore, if a truck driver were to molest a stranger in a truck owned by their employer in the course of his employment, it is highly likely that there would be a substantial civil case to answer.

This would be separate from a criminal trial and based strictly on legal liability and not merely a moral responsibility.

Myles Duffy

Glenageary, Co Dublin

Tackling educational barriers

Higher Education Authority chief executive Tom Boland has a point when he says that ‘educational disadvantage, mirrors in large part economic disadvantage’. But it is not the whole story by any means ['Children of farmers are three times more likely to go to college', Irish Independent, August 22].

Your article tells us that children of farmers, whose average income from farming is €24,000, ‘are three times more likely to go to college’. The article also tells us that one of the counties sending the highest proportion of school leavers (60pc) to college is Leitrim, the economic profile of which is far from that of affluent Dublin 6.

This is so despite the fact that rural students from relatively modest backgrounds have to pay for accommodation, while urban students can live at home. Overcoming the educational disadvantages that are encountered in certain urban areas, not all of which are economic, is a challenge that should be taken up by policymakers. The return to society and to the people involved would be immense.

A Leavy

Sutton, Dublin 13

Demands on abortion law

“The State acknowledges the right to life of the unborn and, with due regard to the equal right to life of the mother, guarantees in its laws to respect, and, as far as practicable, by its laws to defend and vindicate that right.”

This provision in our Constitution, which so many are now demanding be deleted, has protected the lives of two people in this country, where, in many other countries, one would have been killed at the behest of the other. Are we to subject the right to life of everybody in this country to the momentary opinions of somebody else?

Killian Foley-Walsh

Kilkenny

Irish Independent


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