Thursday, March 24, 2011

Wildlife photographer Paul Goldstein runs four marathons with a tiger on his back


Wildlife photographer Paul Goldstein runs four marathons with a tiger on his back

Award-winning wildlife photographer Paul Goldstein is running four marathons in one week with a 9ft-high, 30lb aluminium-framed tiger strapped to his back, to try to raise more than £30,000 to protect the Bengal tiger, one of the world’s most endangered animals.
For Paul, the London Marathon on 17 April will be the fourth marathon he runs next month; after Brighton (10 April), Manchester (12 April) and Cardiff (15 April) – all wearing his tiger costume.
Picture: Paul Goldstein/Exodus Travels
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Raccoon: Bushy-tailed bandits ready to go native

 

Bushy-tailed bandits ready to go native

Raccoons may look like cute, furry foragers, but their presence in Britain is a cause for concern, says Eifion Rees

Light-fingered: raccoons' dexterity makes them ideal scavengers and they have been spotted in Britain raiding bird tables
Light-fingered: raccoons' dexterity makes them ideal scavengers and they have been spotted in Britain raiding bird tables  Photo: PHOTOLIBRARY.COM

Are you quite sure that a fox is responsible for knocking over your bins at night and scattering rubbish across your garden? I ask only because another wily scavenger is becoming increasingly at home in British gardens: the raccoon.

Sightings of these masked, bushy-tailed bandits are on the rise; one was photographed raiding a bird table in Ringwood, Hampshire, earlier this month. Two confirmed sightings were made in County Durham last year and in 2009 raccoons were spotted in Surrey, west Berkshire and Portsmouth. These individuals may just be isolated escapees, but the accumulation of incidents is starting to look like something more sinister.

The increase is probably due to the fact that many more raccoons are being kept as pets in Britain following a change to the law in 2007 which removed the need for a licence. As kittens, raccoons are playful and cuddly, but their temperaments can change when they reach sexual maturity (two years old for males, one for females). At this stage, they can become aggressive and difficult to manage, prompting inexperienced or poorly prepared owners to panic and dump them in the wild.

Just one mating pair could precipitate an invasive species explosion to rival that of grey squirrels and wild boar, according to Simon Baker, the author of a 1990 report about non-native mammals in Britain.

He predicted then that if wildlife legislation were not strengthened, we

would see new exotic species establish themselves in Britain, and raccoons and wild boar would “almost certainly be the first”. Baker was right about wild boar: Britain now has a feral population of almost 1,000. Will he soon to be proved right about raccoons, as well?

Perhaps because the wilds of Britain are not so different from the temperate environment of their native North America, raccoons adapt well to life on the run. “From an ecological point of view, I don’t think a breeding population of raccoons would have any trouble surviving in the wild in Britain,” confirms Charlie Wilson, wildlife management specialist for Natural England.

“They certainly have the potential to be damaging to our environment and wildlife by taking birds’ eggs and predating on native species. The few sightings we’ve had so far suggest that the few raccoons being found are escaped pets, however, and the fact that they tend to be kept as individuals has certainly helped. The danger would be if several escaped at one time.”

Natural England undertook a “horizon-scanning” exercise in 2009 to determine which non-native species posed the greatest threat to British wildlife. The raccoon was placed on the Alert List –“high-risk species either currently absent from the wild or present but contained in enclosed environments” – because of its success in proliferating on mainland Europe.

The blame for that – among other things – can be laid at the feet of Hermann Goering. In 1934, at the request of the Reich Forestry Service, he authorised a pair to be released into the German countryside both to “enrich local fauna” and for sport.

In the event, the hunted outlasted both the hunters and Hitler: with no natural predators, there are now 500,000 to a million raccoons in Germany, resulting in a decline in songbird numbers due to their fondness for eggs, and millions of pounds worth of damage to property. The animals have since spread to France, Eastern Europe and Russia.

Spring is when females litter, so keep an eye out for their black-and-white faces lurking around your bins – and don’t just blame foxes.

 

Interesting raccoon facts

Raccoons kept as pets in Austria and Germany must legally be housed in pairs to protect against loneliness.

The world’s heaviest raccoon suffered from an overactive thyroid. “Bandit” died in Pennsylvania in1994 weighing 75lb (34kg).

The name is derived from the Algonquian Indian word arakun, meaning “he scratches with his hand”.

Raccoons often dip their food in water before eating.

Raccoon bites can trigger a neurological disease in dogs.

 

Heart symbol enters Oxford English Dictionary

 

Heart symbol enters Oxford English Dictionary

The heart sign has entered the Oxford English Dictionary as the first graphical symbol to signify a word in the reference work's 127-year history.

Heart symbol enters Oxford English Dictionary
The symbol is among 45,437 new words and meanings added to the latest revision of the dictionary Photo: ALAMY

Readers looking up the word “heart” will find the symbol listed as an entirely new usage, as a verb meaning “to love”.

Perhaps the most famous example, which is included in the latest edition of the dictionary, is the New York tourism advertising slogan: I [heart] NY.

Its earliest recorded use is on a car bumper sticker printed in the US in 1984, which read: “I [heart] my dog’s head.”

Researchers believe the use of the heart symbol in this way is the first time a typographical innovation developed through such bumper stickers and tee-shirts has entered mainstream language use.

The symbol is among 45,437 new words and meanings added to the latest revision of the dictionary, which is held to be the most authoritative and comprehensive record of the English language in the world.

Among the additions are phrases which reflect the spread of technology, such as OMG, a abbreviation of “Oh my God” used in mobile phone texting, and dotbomb for an internet company which has spectacularly failed.

Changing obsessions in society are also reflected in the first entries for: Wags – the wives and girlfriends of footballers; muffin top – “a protuberance of flesh above the waistband of a tight pair of trousers”; and ego-surfing – “searching on the internet for mentions of one’s own name”.

The newest addition to the rich variety of English words for being drunk is now lashed (also included as the phrase on the lash), while the happy camper and the domestic goddess should avoid bogus callers, or they might suffer a crack-up and end up in singledom.

Several entries reflect the nation’s increasingly eclectic diet, with the first mentions of: banh mi – a Vietnamese sandwich with pickles and meat; taquito - a small Mexican taco, or fried roll of filled maize bread; and kleftiko – a Greek dish of slow-cooked lamb.

The OED was first published in 10 volumes in 1884, but it took 100 years for the full second edition to be published, by which time its size had doubled to over 59million words in 20 volumes.

A comprehensive updating was begun in 1989, and it is now available online, where the latest meanings will be added today.

The largest single entry is the verb “to run”, which has 645 different senses, phrases and idiomatic uses. Its entry is half as large again as the next-longest one, which is “to put”.

Graeme Diamond, the principal editor of the OED's new words group, said: "While symbols do become spelt-out words relatively frequently, it’s usually only with a mundane meaning as the name of the symbol - “star” for *, “hash” for #, and so on.

"It’s very unusual for it to happen in such an evocative and tangential way, and this is due to the special place the heart (as an organ of the human body) occupies in the language.

"In English, since the late 12th century the heart had been thought of as the seat of love and affection."

 

 

New words or meanings:

Bang one’s head against a brick wall – (phrase) to engage in a futile or fruitless effort

Hedge one’s bets – (phrase) to confront uncertain circumstances by pursuing multiple courses of action; to avoid committing oneself.

Five-second rule (also three- and ten-) – (noun) a notional rule which permits the retrieval and consumption of dropped food within the specified period of time

Scrunchy – (adj) of a wrinkled or ruffled appearance

State-run – (adj) operated or managed by the government of a country

Tragic – (noun) a boring or socially inept person, especially a person who pursues a solitary interest with obsessive dedication

Tinfoil hat – (noun) used with allusion to the belief that such a hat made of metal foil will protect the wearer from mind control or surveillance

Storming – (adj) great, excellent, marvellous

Tasty – violent, good at fighting

Yuck factor – (noun) a feeling of horror, revulsion, or disgust generated by an idea, action or situation

 

Sign up for the Silver Lining Event - 6th April 2011

 

Take a step into the clouds at an exclusive networking event at one of the City’s most prestigious landmarks - The Gherkin.

The Silver Living Event will be held in The Gherkin on  April 6, 2011.
The Silver Living Event will be held in The Gherkin on April 6, 2011.

On April 6, 2011, Microsoft and The Telegraph will be hosting the Silver Lining event to inspire and inform companies on the very latest in cloud computing.

The venue, with its magnificent views from the 40th floor across the London skyline, is the perfect location for a drinks reception and dinner with high-profile speakers from The Telegraph, Microsoft and the government.

Only 50 places are available, so if you’re an IT decision-maker for a medium or larger company please give us some information about yourself and your company by April 1, 2011.

 

Traffic lights could be switched off at night

 

 

raffic lights could be switched off at night

Traffic lights could be turned off or switched to flashing amber on quiet roads at night.

Traffic lights could be switched off at night
Traffic lights could be switched off at night Photo: ALAMY

The Department for Transport is carrying out research to see whether the existing use of traffic lights around the clock is justified.

One council, Portsmouth, has applied to the DfT, volunteering to carry out the trials on behalf of the Government.

"It can be extremely frustrating if you are on the road at 2 or 3 o'clock in the morning and forced to stop at a red light when no other cars are around,” said Barry Rawlings, senior traffic systems engineer at Portsmouth City Council.

“Turning the lights to flashing amber in these quiet periods would allow motorists to stop and go as they wish and keep delays to a minimum.”

But it is understood that Portsmouth will have to wait until the DfT has completed its own research and even then legislation would be needed before the council would be allowed to turn off the lights.

"The Department is currently investigating new options for the use of traffic signals when traffic volumes are low,” said Norman Baker, the local transport minister.

“However, in the interests of safety, it is important to ensure that any signalling technique provides a consistent and unambiguous message to all road users."

Flashing amber lights are commonplace in other countries including France and Spain. In opposition the Tories had voiced concern at what Theresa Villiers, then the party’s transport spokesman, called the proliferation of traffic lights.

But Andrew Howard, Head of Road Safety at the AA, voiced concern at the proposals. "It sounds like a great idea but I have concerns about how a trial can be implemented safely,” he said.

"By switching lights to flashing amber you may improve traffic flow, cut journey times and reduce pollution but it is not without its faults.

"First, there is the issue of who has priority if two cars reach the junction at the same time.

"The idea that drunks and young drivers are going to get to the flashing lights after midnight and say 'after you' is nonsense.”

 

Silvio Berlusconi's 'bunga bunga' pictures revealed

Silvio Berlusconi's 'bunga bunga' pictures revealed

What an arresting sight – this "policewoman" is among the
first photographs to emerge from Silvio Berlusconi's infamous "bunga
bunga" parties.

 

What an arresting sight ? this policewoman is among the first photographs to emerge from Silvio Berlusconi's infamous bunga bunga parties.

 

 
Image 1 of 4
Barbara Guerra pictured during one of the infamous bunga bunga parties, left, and her normal look, right 

The pictures were discovered on laptops and cameras seized by prosecutors from
dozens of female guests as part of their investigation into the Italian
prime minister.

The 74-year-old is alleged to have paid for sex with a 17-year-old belly
dancer called Karima El Mahroug – as well as 32 other women – giving them
cash and jewellery. Miss El Mahroug, it is alleged, was under the legal age
for prostitution.

The television showgirl Barbara Guerra, 32, is wearing a frighteningly
tight-fitting police uniform, provocatively dangling a pair of handcuffs
from her finger which is resting on her pouting red lip.

Miss Guerra has appeared on Italy's
version of The Farm and she is also the former girlfriend of Manchester City
star Mario Balotelli.

Other pictures show unidentified women about to kiss as well as women in
provocative poses. They were all taken in the early hours of the morning at
Mr Berlusconi's home in Arcore near Milan, one of the venues for the parties.

The photographs form part of the 20,000 page prosecution dossier which details
the allegations of abuse of office and under-age prostitution.

Mr Berlusconi is said to have used his power as prime minister to secure the
release of Miss El Mahroug when she was arrested for theft last May by
wrongly telling Milan police she was related to the then Egyptian President
Hosni Mubarak.

Mr Berlusconi has denied any wrongdoing. The trial is due to start on April 6
in Milan and he has said he will appear in court to defend himself,
insisting that he is the victim of a "Left-wing orchestrated plot"
to oust him.

coalition steps up attacks but Gaddafi tanks still in Misurata - Telegraph

Coalition forces have intensified their attacks in Libya but have been unable
to prevent Col Muammar Gaddafi's tanks entering the key town of Misurata, it
was reported on Thursday evening.

Coalition forces have intensified their attacks in Libya but have been unable to prevent Col Muammar Gaddafi's tanks entering the key town of Misurata, it was reported on Thursday evening.

 

One of France's Rafale fighter jets shot down a Libyan combat plane Photo: EPA

It is now becoming clear that the port city 150 miles east of Tripoli is the
crucial battlefield. Its proximity to the capital means the rebels could use
it as a launch pad for an offensive.

Col Gaddafi's forces have stepped up their offensive on Libya's
third largest city with a population of 300,000 as they recognise its
strategic importance.

In response Western air strikes hit armour on the outskirts of the rebel-held
area but tanks inside the city remain there and have not been hit.

A Libyan combat plane was also destroyed after French surveillance aircraft
spotted it flying near Misurata in violation of the UN Security Council
resolution. A French Rafale fighter jet fired a guided air-to-ground missile
on the jet after it landed at a nearby airbase.

On the sixth day of the campaign coalition aircraft and warships stepped up
strikes against Col Gaddafi's forces including artillery, tanks, an
ammunition bunker and a small number of helicopters parked on an airfield
along the coast.

An intensive air raid was also made on Col Gaddafi's southern stronghold of
Sebha, a local resident reported.

RAF Tornados and Typhoons continued enforcing the United Nations no-fly zone,
completing 59 missions to date.

The coalition fired 14 Tomahawk missiles including some fired by Triumph, the
Royal Navy hunter killer submarine.

More than 175 £800,000 Tomahawk missiles have now been fired to suppress Col
Gaddafi's air defences and limit his ability to respond to jets patrolling
the skies.

The noose was also tightening near Libya's coast as a fleet of coalition
warships stepped up efforts to prevent arms smuggling. Vice Admiral Rinald
Veri, said he expected to have enough vessels in place in a few days for an
effective maritime blockade, so "closing the main front door".

The fleet includes the Royal Navy frigates Westminster and Cumberland, which
it was announced yesterday would have a stay of execution over being
scrapped on April 1 and continue in service at least for another fortnight.

French fighter jets also attacked a Libyan airbase 150 miles inland from the
Mediterranean coast overnight.

For the first time Norway took part in operations sending two F-16 fighters
over Libya, as part of a six plane squadron.

Libya: Gaddafi regime claims 100 civilians have been killed by coalition air strikes

Libya: Gaddafi regime claims 100 civilians have been killed by coalition air strikes

The Libyan government on Thursday night claimed close to 100 civilians had died in air strikes since last Saturday, the first estimate of the number of casualties since the first day of bombing.

The Libyan government on Thursday night claimed close to 100 civilians had died in air strikes since last Saturday, the first estimate of the number of casualties since the first day of bombing.

 

Libyan mourners at the martyrs' cemetery in Tripoli attend the funerals of victims of air strikes by coalition forces Photo: REUTERS

State media in the country have repeatedly stressed the civilian casualties of
the air strikes, which they say include many children.

But officials have been unable to give definitive figures, and have provided
no firm evidence of the breakdown of civilian and military casualties.

In a reversal of practices in similar situations where governments have been
keen to show off civilian losses, police and militia on Thursday detained
seven journalists for an hour at a checkpoint near Tajoura Hospital in the
east of the city, where casualties were to be undergoing treatment.

They were eventually escorted back to their hotel after being refused access.

A mass funeral was held at the nearby Martyrs' Cemetery for 18 people said to
have been killed in raids on Wednesday night. A government official claimed
they were civilian, though Mussa Ibrahim, the official spokesman, admitted
that students at military academies were counted as civilians.

A military academy in Tajoura, as well as a nearby military base containing
anti-aircraft and radar equipment, was among the sites hit on Wednesday
night.

In the early hours of Thursday morning, a Reuters photographer was taken to
Tajoura Hospital and shown 18 burned corpses. All were of young men. It was
not confirmed whether they were same men buried yesterday.

"Civilian deaths are getting close to 100 for sure," Dr Ibrahim
said, though he added the Ministry of Health had yet to release exact
figures.

The army has released no figures at all for military casualties. The
government gave a figure on Sunday of 64 deaths in total across the country
for the first night of raids, but has not updated that number since.

Dr Ibrahim also said the civilian death toll included workers at airports,
which had also been attacked.

A large crowd gathered for the mass funeral, which was broadcast live on state
television under the banner headline: "Funeral of our martyrs, victims
of the crusader colonial aggression".

They listened to an angry address which told them that western forces were
responsible for "hundreds of innocent Libyans
being killed".

Altogether 33 coffins were brought, though some were taken away again
afterwards to be buried elsewhere. The shrouded bodies were removed and
placed in breeze block-lined graves left empty when soldiers due to be
buried in them on Sunday never arrived.

Reporters were unable to find any relatives of the dead to confirm identities.

General Carter Ham, head of US Africa Command, did not go as far as previous
allied comments that there was no evidence of any civilian casualties at all.

"I cannot be sure there have been no civilian casualties," he said
at a briefing at the Sigonella airbase in Sicily. "We are being very,
very precise and discriminating in our targeting.

"There have been more instances than I can think of in the conduct of
this campaign where our pilots have made the correct decision to not attack
a legitimate military target for concern of the civilian casualties."

Yemen and Syria pose a greater threat to us than Libya

 

Yemen and Syria pose a greater threat to us than Libya

Unlike Libya, both countries pose an active and current threat to our everyday
well-being, writes Con Coughlin.

 

Yemen and Syria pose a greater threat to us than Libya; Anti-Syrian government protesters pass next to burning tyres; AP

 

Anti-Syrian government protesters pass next to burning tyres Photo: AP

With the anti-government protests in Syria and Yemen becoming more ugly by the day, I am increasingly of the view that, by launching military action against Libya, we may actually have managed to target the wrong country.

I fully concede that Muammar Gaddafi and his dysfunctional family should be removed from power at the earliest opportunity. But these days they can hardly be said to pose a serious threat to our security, having surrendered their investment in nuclear proliferation and international terrorism many years ago.

But the same cannot be said for Syria and Yemen, two countries that, in their different ways, pose an active and current threat to our everyday well-being.

Take Syria. The Assads have ruled Damascus with an iron fist since the Ba'athist dictatorship established its uncompromising rule in 1963 – longer than Gaddafi has controlled Libya. Since then, Syria has been a defiant enemy of the West, supporting a wide array of terror networks and establishing itself as Iran's most important regional ally.

During the bitter conflict in neighbouring Iraq, American forces came close on several occasions to attacking Syria after the regime was identified as actively supporting al-Qaeda's terror network, as the recent disclosure of WikiLeaks documents revealed.

Syrian intelligence officials have been implicated in the 2005 murder of Rafik Hariri, the Lebanese prime minister, while the strength of the country's relationship with Tehran was emphasised last month when the first Iranian warships to pass through the Suez Canal since the 1979 Islamic revolution made a triumphant entry at the Syrian port of Latakia.

So long as the Assad regime remains in power, it is highly unlikely that the West can ever achieve its ambition of bringing peace and stability to the region. For this reason we should give our wholesale support to the brave protesters who have recently marched through the Syrian city of Deraa demanding freedom from the Assad tyranny.

This is the most serious unrest the government has faced since the infamous revolt in 1982 when Islamist militants challenged the rule of then president Hafez al-Assad in the town of Hama. Assad senior responded by massacring the occupants – up to 40,000 people were killed – thereby silencing all opposition for best part of the next three decades.

Bashar al-Assad, 40, the London-educated opthalmologist who succeeded his father in 2000, has been portrayed as a more moderate figure who has made various attempts to court the West.

William Hague is one of the many Western dignitaries to have visited Damascus in recent months in the hope that the government could be persuaded to mend its ways.

But when, inspired by the success of other protests around the region, demonstrators took to the streets in Deraa this week, the government responded with characteristic brutality. At least 15 people were killed and scores more injured as security forces opened fire on unarmed civilians, protesting against the arrest of a group of schoolchildren who had written anti-government graffiti on the town walls.

Similar scenes of carnage are taking place in the Yemeni capital Sana'a, where protesters have recently intensified their campaign to end the dictatorship of President Ali Abdullah Saleh, who has been in power for 32 years. Saleh's offer to stand down has failed to stem the tide of dissent, and dozens of unarmed civilians have been killed by militias loyal to Saleh.

Yemen under Saleh also enjoys the unhappy distinction of posing a serious threat to Western security. Anwar al-Awlaki, the mastermind behind the recent ink cartridge bomb plot at East Midlands airport, is based in the country, as are many other al-Qaeda terror cells.

In short, Yemen poses a greater threat to our security than Libya ever will, a fact our politicians would do well to note.

Libyan air strikes: Armed Forces minister admits there is no exit strategy

 

Libyan air strikes: Armed Forces minister admits there is no exit strategy

The Government does not know how long the Armed Forces will be engaged in Libya, a defence minister admitted as debate intensified over the likely outcome, cost and leadership of the mission.

Armed Forces minister admits there is no Libya exit strategy
 
Image 1 of 2
Libyans inspect the burnt wreckage of the American warplane that came hurtling out of the sky to crash in a meadow. Six Libyans who were trying to help the pilot were wounded by an American rescue helicopter Photo: SEBASTIAN MEYER

Nick Harvey, the Armed Forces minister, was asked how long Britain would be involved in the military operation in north Africa. He replied: “How long is a piece of string? We don’t know how long this is going to go on for.”

His admission, three days into the intervention, came as ministers faced mounting pressure to set out the limits of Britain’s involvement and explain their eventual exit strategy.

MPs were becoming increasingly concerned that Britain would be “sucked in” to a prolonged conflict.

Adding to the sense of uncertainty, France and Britain remained at odds over a plan for Nato to take over command of military operations when the US winds down its involvement, a transition expected in days.

In other developments:

• A defiant Colonel Gaddafi appeared on state television, addressing supporters from a compound in Tripoli that had been bombed by coalition forces. "We will not surrender ... we will defeat them," he told the crowds. "We are ready for the fight, whether it will be a short or a long one."

• US troops entered Libya briefly to rescue the pilot of a US fighter that crashed near the rebel stronghold of Benghazi. In a potential propaganda disaster, the rescuers opened fire on Libyans who were trying to help the pilot, injuring six of them.

• The Ministry of Defence said three nights of air strikes were having a “very real effect” on Muammar Gaddafi’s regime and a no-fly zone was being maintained. But the head of US forces said loyalist forces were continuing to attack rebels and civilians, especially in and around the city of Misurata. Anti-aircraft fire was heard again over Tripoli last night.

• Qatar made the first military contribution by an Arab nation to the UN campaign. Two Qatari fighter jets and a transport plane arrived in Crete to help police the no-fly zone.

• David Cameron spoke to President Barack Obama for the first time since air strikes began, with both agreeing that “a lot of work remained to be done” in Libya. They also agreed that Nato would have “a key role” in future operations but stopped short of proposing that it took command.

The House of Commons overwhelmingly backed Britain’s role in Libya this week, but uncertainty about the eventual exit strategy has alarmed many MPs.

The Daily Telegraph has calculated that patrolling the no-fly zone is costing Britain about £3.2 million a day, before a weapon is fired. In a BBC interview, Mr Harvey admitted that the Western intervention could result in a “stalemate” between Gaddafi and the rebels, with each holding on to part of the country. “If it is, so be it,” he said. “That wouldn’t be desirable, but a stable outcome where they weren’t killing each other would in a sense be one way of achieving the humanitarian objective.”

He also refused to rule out a small-scale deployment of British ground troops to Libya.

Rory Stewart, a Conservative MP and former diplomat, said that ministers should ensure that Britain’s involvement was strictly limited to enforcing a no-fly zone, and avoid being dragged into the country’s internal conflict.

“We have not declared war on Gaddafi and we should not declare war on Gaddafi,” he said. “Do not get sucked into Libya.”

Mark Lancaster, a Tory MP, TA soldier and parliamentary aide to Andrew Mitchell, the International Development Secretary, said ministers should push for a new United Nations agreement on Libya’s future. “I fear that we have no clear exit at the moment in Libya,” he said. “That is no reason not to go in, but I fear that we will need further UN resolutions before we see the end to the situation.”

John Baron, another Tory backbencher, told the BBC that ministers had not explained how the mission would unfold. “What is the exit strategy?” he said. “If this is not known, we risk being drawn into an ill-defined mission whilst civilian causalities rise. If there is a stalemate on the ground, are we simply going to walk away? These are questions that are not being answered at the moment, and I think they should be.”

Government sources said it was impossible to put a precise timetable on Britain’s involvement, but insisted that Mr Cameron was clear that British Forces would not become entangled in years of operations as they were in Iraq and Afghanistan.

Norway, which is sending fighters to police the no-fly zone, said it had put a three-month time limit on its involvement in Libya.

Britain has deployed a Royal Navy submarine, RAF Tornado and Typhoon fighters and a range of reconnaissance aircraft to the international intervention.

British forces did not fire on Libyan targets on Monday night, suggesting that the air strike phase may end soon, marking a new phase in which the coalition focuses on policing the no-fly zone.

 

Libya Live: coalition enforces no-fly zone on Muammar Gaddafi

 

 

Turkish foreign minister Ahmet Davutoglu has told TRT television that Turkey's demands had been met and Nato will take command of the Libya military operation.

Coalition forces have intensified their attacks in Libya but have been unable to prevent Col Muammar Gaddafi's tanks entering the key town of Misurata, it was reported on Thursday evening.

18.26 Turkish foreign minister quoted as saying Nato will take command of Libya operation, AP reports. A Nato statement is expected.

18.21 Watch a Telegraph video of Gaddafi forces clashing with rebels in Misurata.

18:01 Libyan rebels have killed 30 government snipers in the town of Misrata and government warships and boats that were in the town's port have now gone, Abdulbasset Abu Mzereiq, a rebel spokesman, tells Reuters:

Quote There were clashes today and our fighters managed to find a way to reach the snipers on rooftops and killed thirty of them. They have also managed to make the movement of those left very difficult because they went to the buildings they are positioned on and blew up the stairs of the building so now they are stuck.

The warships and the boats are gone now and the coalition forces have informed the (rebel) council that they will secure a safe passage for ships that are coming from Malta carrying aid.

17:58 A doctor in Misurata has told AFP that at least 109 people in the city have been killed and more than 1,300 wounded in the attacks by Gaddafi-loyalist forces over the last week.

17:52 Dmitry Medvedev, the Russian president, has warned his US counterpart Barack Obama of the need to avoid civilian casualties in the bombing campaign. A Kremlin statement said:

Quote The Russian president especially noted the need to avoid casualties among the civilian population and the priority of achieving goals set by UN Security Council Resolution 1973.

17:39 More from Richard Spencer:

Richard Spencer The government's official spokesman, has just read a short statement saying they had received intelligence that the allies were intending to attack broadcasting and telecommunications facilities. He appealed to the United Nations say it was "immoral" to attack civilian facilities in this way. If it were true, it would mark a significant escalation in hostilities - akin to the bombing of Belgrade in 1999 as well as of Baghdad in 2003.

A reconnaisance aircraft taking off from aircraft carrier Charles De Gaulle. (EPA)

17:31 The African Union has invited representatives of Muammar Gaddafi's government, Libyan opposition representatives and others to talks in Addis Ababa this Friday, Reuters reports the union's chairman Jean Ping as saying.

Ping told reporters that Gaddafi may send his prime minister and that officials from the European Union, United Nations Security Council, and neighbouring Arab countries had also been invited to Ethiopia to discuss the Libyan crisis.

17:05 Richard Spencer has emailed from Libya, further to CNN's Tweet earlier (14:54) about funerals, apparently of people killed in coalition bombing raids:

Richard Spencer The mass funeral continued at the Martyrs' Cemetery in Souq al-Jouma'a in Tripoli. Officials said 40 people were being buried, but in the end 33 coffins turned up, and about 13-15 of the bodies were buried, taken in shrouds out of the coffins. They were placed in the empty graves I wrote about the other day.

Crowds chanted "The people want revenge for the martyrs", a variant on the theme heard throughout the Middle East this year, which started off with "The people want the downfall of the regime" and transformed here first into "The people want Colonel Gaddafi" which rhymes in Arabic.

One official said the people being buried were all civilians, but as before names were not given and reporters found no relatives at the funerals. They had flags draped over the coffins in military style.

Meanwhile, after minders failed to arrange a trip to Tajoura hospital to visit the civilian casualties said to be there, reporters tried to go on their own. But police at the junction between the hospital and the military base opposite stopped them held them for an hour and turned them back.

16:56 Tayyip Erdogan, the Turkish Prime Minister, has criticised the Western nations' operation in Libya as a "crusade", and suggested that they are seeking to control the country's mineral wealth, even as his country's parliament has voted to take part in enforcing the arms embargo:

Quote I wish that those who only see oil, gold mines and underground treasures when they look in that direction, would see the region through glasses of conscience from now on.

16:43 UN human rights experts say hundreds of people have disappeared in Libya in recent months, with some vanishing after going to anti-government demonstrations, AP reports. The global body's five-member working group on enforced disappearances says if government forces are found to be carrying out systematic abductions this could amount to a crime against humanity.

16:36 More from the Telegraph's Rob Crilly on the rebels in Ajdabiya apparently offering loyalist forces a chance to surrender:

Twitter @robcrilly rebels say they approached Gaddafi forces in Ajdabiya to offer surrender, but were fired upon and withdrew

 

16:22 A bit more on that Libyan aircraft shot down by a French fighter - apparently it was destroyed on the runway with an air-to-ground missile, according to an armed forces spokesman:

Quote The French patrol carried out an air-to-ground strike with an AASM weapon just after the plane had landed at the Misrata air base.

French Navy Rafale jet fighters on the deck of Charles de Gaulle aircraft carrier in the Mediterranean sea. (AP)

16:13 The New York Times has called on President Sarkozy and the French government to take a back seat over the Libya conflict:

Quote Many people were taken aback when France emerged as one of the most pugnacious advocates of military action in Libya, especially Americans who were accustomed to French criticism over Iraq and French foot-dragging over Afghanistan. Without President Nicolas Sarkozy’s early and constant pressure for a United Nations-endorsed no-flight zone, military intervention might have come too late to save Benghazi’s people from the murderous threats of Col. Muammar el-Qaddafi.

Now, Mr. Sarkozy needs to step back and let NATO take the lead.

16:05 The Turkish parliament has approved its government's decision to participate in the naval arms blockade off Libya, according to Reuters.

15.42 The Telegraph's Rob Crilly has tweeted:

Twitter @robcrilly rebels outside Ajdabiya reckon they are offering Gaddafi forces inside a chance to surrender

15.29 Israeli Defence Minister Ehud Barak has said in Tel Aviv that the Arab uprisings will prove positive in the "long-run".

15.27

A Libyan rebel stands guard at the last check point on the road between Ajdabiya and Benghazi, Eastern Libya

15.26 An unnamed US official tells AP news agency a French fighter jet which reportedly shot down a Libyan plane may have been a military trainer aircraft. He says the Libyan plane may have been landing at the time of the attack.

15.15 Damien McElroy is on a government run "peace tour of Libya" to show journalists that the regime really isn't that bad and that the majority of Libyans are backing Gaddafi. However, he has been in touch to see that there hasn't been much fanfare to speak of so far. He said:

We are travelling in a convoy of 12 buses, most of which are empty. We are going past many civilians but none of them are smiling or waving flags [in support of Gaddafi]. We have also passed Tripoli International Airport and I can say that it hasn't been hit. There were 12 planes sitting on the tarmac.

14.54 CNN's Nic Robertson has tweeted:

Twitter Govt officials taking journalists to funerals for 16 people they claim were killed in coalition bombing raids, driving towards east Tripoli

14.52 Syria will make "important decisions" to meet the wishes of the population, Buthaina Shaaban, media advisor to President Bashar al-Assad, has claimed. She said:

Quote Syria will witness important decisions to fulfil the aspirations of its people. The people will participate in decisions and in decision-making.

14.46 A US official has confirmed that a French jet has attacked and destroyed a Libyan aeroplane. Reports say that the plane, described as a "Galeb," was shot down over the city of Misrata, about 150 miles east of Tripoli. The SOKO G-2 Galeb (Seagull) is an older plane produced by the former country of Yugoslavia from the 1960s to the 1980s, it was reported.

14.42 Israeli Defence Minister Ehud Barak has warned that Israel will not tolerate "terrorist" attacks, a day after a bombing in Jerusalem left one dead and more than 30 wounded.

14.29 Syria promises "important decisions to fulfil aspirations of people", AFP has reported.

14.16 At least two Grad rockets fired by Palestinian militants in Gaza slammed into the port city of Ashdod and just north of it, police and the Israeli army said. Medics said no one was injured in the strikes, which came a day after Gaza's Hamas rulers vowed to rein in recalcitrant militant groups who had vowed to hit ever-deeper into Israel.

13.54 Pro-Gaddafi snipers are in Misurata, a resident has said.

13.47 The International Criminal Court prosecutor says he is "100 percent" certain that his investigation will lead to charges of crimes against humanity against the Libyan regime. Luis Moreno-Ocampo said that his team was looking into six incidents of violence against civilians and trying to identify those who participated in and ordered the attacks. He hopes to present his findings to the UN in May.

13.46 A Tripoli resident has told BBC's Newshour:

Quote I'm not exaggerating if I say tens of thousands of young people are arrested. Look, we cannot even now stay close to each other, three four people, for a couple of minutes talking or chatting, I mean it's very danger[ous].

13.42 Jordan - Hundreds of Jordanian students started a protest camp on Thursday in central Amman, demanding "regime" reforms and "trial of the corrupt." Around 500 young people from different movements, including the powerful Islamist opposition, braved rain and cold weather to camp out adjacent to the Interior Circle, or Gamal Abdel Nasser Square, in the capital.

13.02 ABC News has reported that a French fighter has shot down a Libyan air force jet which was violating the no-fly zone. More to come soon.

12.57

Libyan rebels keep watch atop a vehicle for any signs of pro-Gaddafi fighters, on the road between Ajdabiya and Benghazi, Eastern Libya

12.53 Mr Hague also said he wanted to see Nato take control of operations. He told parliament:

Quote "The case for this action remains utterly compelling, appalling violence against Libyan citizens continues to take place exposing the regime's claims to have ordered a ceasefire to be an utter sham.

"These coalition operations are currently under United States command, but we want them to transition to NATO command and control as quickly as possible."

12.44 Mr Hague adds that there has been "universal condemnation of what the Libyan regime is doing", from the UN, Arab League, African Union and EU. He says:

Quote The regime's action is strengthening our resolve to continue our current operations and our support for the work of the International Criminal Court. Our action is saving lives and is protecting hundreds of thousands of civilians in Benghazi and Misrata from the fate that otherwise awaited them.

12.41 "Appalling violence against Libyan civilians continues to take place, exposing the regime's claim to have ordered a ceasefire to be an utter sham," William Hague, the Foreign Secretary, has told the Commons.

12.38 The leader of Yemen's largest tribe has sided with opponents of the embattled president, calling for Ali Abdullah Saleh to step down immediately and refrain from further violence against protesters. The decision by the widely respected Sheik Sinan Abu Lohoum, 80, was announced in a statement issued from the United States, AP said.

 

12.27

Libyan rebels perform a prayer on the road between Ajdabiya and Benghazi, Eastern Libya

12.24 Silvio Berlusconi, the Italian prime minister, has said that the time is not right for mediation in Libya. He said:

Quote The cessation of hostilities by the colonel is the necessary condition for any mediation, after which we can open the diplomatic phase. The coalition is intervening to defend the civilian population. Italy is not at war and does not want to be.

12.23 The International Labour Organisation has estimated that 800,000 foreign workers still in Libya.

12.12 Western air strikes have again hit a target in the Tajoura district of the Libyan capital that was struck overnight, a Libyan military source told Reuters.

12.10 Libya is short of fuel and needs imports, a Libyan energy official has told Reuters. He added that a ship was en route to Libya with fuel supplies but that claimed that it may be stopped or even bombed by the Western coalition.

11.59 A video posted on social media websites purports to show Syrian forces opening fire on hundreds of anti-government protesters in Deraa, near the Jordanian border.

11.57

A Yemeni army officer is lifted by anti-government protestors gestures as he joins them in a demonstration demanding the resignation of Yemeni President Ali Abdullah Saleh, in Sana'a,Yemen

11.56 The international coaltion carried out an intensive air raid overnight on Gaddafi's southern stronghold of Sebha, a local resident has told AFP .

11.47 Syria - 20,000 people have gathered in the city of Deraa for the burial of victims shot dead on Wednesday, a rights activist told AFP. The crowd were support for the anti-regime movement, the source said. It came as reports emerged that more than 100 people were killed by police on Wednesday.

11.46 French fighter jets attacked a Libyan air base 150 miles inland from the Mediterranean coast overnight, French military officials have said.

11.42 Videos have been posted online by a Libyan freedom group, showing violence in Misurata.

11.31 More just in from Richard Spencer, who is in Tripoli. He says:

Richard Spencer In the early hours of this morning - about 4am - a Reuters photographer was taken to the hospital in Tajoura, the town on Tripoli's eastern borders whose military base has seen the heaviest allied bombardment. There she was shown and allowed to photograph eighteen charred corpses just brought, she was told. She was told they belonged to both military and civilian casualties, though she was given no other details (name, age etc) that would help verify this.

A colleague points out that the government stresses repeatedly that all Libyans are armed and notionally part of the People's Armed Forces - "volunteers" as I wrote in a piece the other day are being given AK47s and joining checkpoints and engaging in other quasi-military activities, along with the militia, another quasi-military force. So the civilian-military distinction is deliberately unclear.

11.17 freedom4libya has tweeted:

Twitter Reports of coalition planes flying over Gaddafi troops outside city of Zintan. Gaddafi military installations hit hard last night in Sebha. No civilians were hurt.

11.16 David Cameron has said it is important not to exceed the remit of the UN resolution in Libya. He made the comment in response to a question asking if Gaddafi was a legitimate target.

11.12 The first female RAF Typhoon pilot was poised for another mission today after her successful sortie to Libya. Flight Lieutenant Helen Seymour flew into action yesterday, taking part in a seven-hour round-trip to patrol the no-fly zone over the north African country. She returned last night to the southern Italian airbase of Gioia del Colle, where the RAF pilots involved in the operation are staying. After being debriefed and taking some rest, the pilots can be expected to fly two days in a row. But it was not confirmed whether Flt Lt Seymour - the only woman flying the fighter jet for the air force - would be jetting off today. A military told PA she was focused on the job and did not want any special attention just because she is female.

10.55 Yemen - Britain is withdrawing embassy officials from the country with "immediate effect", the Foreign Office said. The department said only a "small core" of staff will remain in the country, and it urged other British nationals to leave. A spokesman said:

Quote "In light of the rapid deterioration in the security situation in Yemen and the high risk of increased tension in Sana'a and likely protests on Friday 25 March which might result in violent clashes, part of the British Embassy team in Sana'a is being temporarily withdrawn, leaving a small core staff in place. This will take immediate effect.

10.24 Western air strikes have hit government tanks on the outskirts of Libya's rebel-held Misurata but tanks inside the city remain there and have not been hit, a resident has told Reuters.

10.20 The Telegraph's Rob Crilly, has reported on the violent way the rebels are running Benghazi as they try to fight off government loyalists. He writes:

Rob Crilly It wasn't supposed to be like this in free Benghazi. After throwing off the shackles of Gaddafi's brutal rule, Libya's young opposition movement is rounding up suspected opponents and delivering its own brutal form of justice in a city living in fear that they have been penetrated by a fifth column of government loyalists.

10.17

Tires burn during anti-government protests on the streets of Daraa, Syria where dozens have been killed by security forces

10.10 Pro-Gaddafi forces have seized control of Misurata port, Reuters has reported. Thousands of foreign workers are stranded there and are seeking evacuation, the agency said.

10.07

Western warplanes have hit Libya for a fifth night in succession, causing major destruction to a military base.

10.04 William Hague, the Foreign Secretary, is to make a statement on Libya at around 12.30, it has just been revealed.

09.59 Syria's Deraa national hospital has received at least 25 bodies of protesters who died in confrontations with security forces, a hospital official has told Retuers. More on this as soon as we get it.

09.50

Ground crew work on an RAF Typhoon jet fighter at the Italian Airforce base of Gioia del Colle near Bari in southern Italy

09.35 Syria - human rights groups have said that more than 90 people, including a 15-year-old blogger, have been arrested in Syria this month for online activities. The claim came after Syrian forces were accused of killing up to 16 people outside a mosque in Deraa on Tuesday night.

09.27 An article in Time magazine wonders if Bahrain is targeting Shiite doctors and medical workers. The piece quotes family members of hospital staff saying that they have been targeted by government thugs for helping injured protesters.

09.23 Embassy officials have confirmed that the British woman killed in a bombing in central Jerusalem on Wednesday was a tourist. The woman was critically injured in the blast and died on the way to hospital. Her next of kin have been informed but her name has not been released.

09.21 France has urged Syria to open up to dialogue and democratic change, after Syrian forces killed six people in an attack on protesters and opened fire on hundreds of youths marching in solidarity. In all, 14 civilians have been killed by Syrian forces in six days of demonstrations for political freedom and an end to corruption, in a protest movement spreading across the Arab world since a popular uprising in Tunisia late last year. Alain Juppe, the foreign minister, said:

Quote We urge Syria to listen to the voice of dialogue and of democracy. A great change is under way. For a long time, France's Arab policy aimed for stability. Today, Arab policy is to listen to the aspirations of the people and that applies to Syria, which must take on board this widespread movement.

09.11 NATO has drawn up a plan for a command structure to run military operations in Libya from an Italian base, a diplomat told AFP. The day-to-day operational command would be located at NATO's base in Naples, with sub-commands for naval operations in the same location and for the no-fly zone at Poggio Renatico in northern Italy, the diplomat added.

NATO's strategic headquarters, Supreme Headquarters Allied Power Europe (SHAPE) in Mons, Belgium, would oversee the overall operations. The aerial mission would be overseen at Izmir, Turkey, but the day-to-day tactical operations would be run out of Poggio Renatico

09.09

Libyan rebels unload a government tank near the key city of Ajdabiya, Libya

09.05 Gaza Strip - Israeli aircraft struck targets in the Palestinian territory again on Thursday as fears were raised of a new round of tit-for-tat violence. Israeli bombs killed four Palestinian civilians earlier this week while a bombing in Jerusalem killed a British woman yesterday.

09.03 Reports are coming in that Gaddafi forces have resumed bombarding the rebel-held city of Misurata. Residents told the BBC that they've run out of medical supplies, hospitals are overflowing with casualties, there is no food, and people drinking rainwater.

09.00 Nancy Soderberg, a former US ambassador to the United Nations, has told the BBC World Service that the international coalition "is not falling apart, but it needs to be strengthened". She said:

Quote It was quite impressive that the European powers and the United States secured UN Security Council resolution for really the first purely humanitarian military operation in our history. The disagreements that existed before and after that vote are now showing themselves. It doesn't mean it will fall apart, but it is very much a fluid situation and dependant very much on how difficult it gets on the ground in Libya.

8.51

A man buries a rebel killed by forces loyal to Libyan leader Muammar Gaddafi in Ajdabiyah, Libya

08.48 Israel - a British woman was the only victim killed in a bomb blast near a Jerusalem bus station on Wednesday, the Foreign Office has confirmed.

08.45 The Telegraph's Rob Crilly has tweeted:

Twitter Grey morning here. Lots of people headed up road to Ajdabiya to see whether rebel positions have moved forward

08.42 America doesn't even want to be in Libya, and the Germans are just getting in the way, so can Britain and France really run this conflict? Con Coughlin has written:

Con Coughlin We've only been at war for four days, but already serious divisions have appeared within the coalition leadership over how to prosecute the campaign. It is easy to understand Barack Obama's reluctance to play a lead role in a conflict he didn't want in the first place. This was one war that America didn't want.

Telegraph 08.40 Nato still remains split over the command of the Libyan mission, with little evidence of an agreement soon, The Telegraph has reported.

08.38 Sixty percent of Americans support the US and allied military action in Libya to impose a no-fly zone to protect civilians from forces loyal to Muammar Gaddafi, a Reuters/Ipsos poll has found. 79 percent said they thought Gaddafi should be removed.

08.34 Libya's neighbour Tunisia has frozen assets belonging to the family of Gaddafi, a Tunisian government source has told Reuters.

08.32 President Obama may be under attack from all quarters over Libya, but he knows what he’s doing, Alex Spillius, Washington Correspondent, has argued. He said:

Alex Spillius His plan is consistent with his approach to date of restoring US standing after the Bush era, promoting US economic interests given the nation’s shrinking share of the global pie, and avoiding conflict without looking weak – hence his decision to redouble efforts in Afghanistan. This may be too nuanced, or too vague, to be called an Obama doctrine. But as long as he sits in the White House, US allies will have to get used to the fact that while they can turn to America in a crisis, they may not receive the response they expect, especially when they themselves are in hawkish mood on any given issue.

08.30 Richard Spencer, The Telegraph's Middle East Correspondent, has been in touch to provide interesting detail about the woman in the picture below and to describe what it was like to go on the government's guided tour. He said:

Richard Spencer The woman in the picture is Nuriah Muftah, who identified herself as the aunt of the "martyr" whose family we were taken to see in the town of Beni Walid 100 miles south of Tripoli yesterday. We had been promised - as we have been for several days - victims of the allied bombing campaign, which we are told has killed many civilians. In fact, Fatih Issa Ibrahim was an infantryman killed when the French air force struck a line of tanks outside Benghazi on Saturday evening. His uncle talked reasonably and coherently and apparently with genuine sadness about the family's loss.

But once again, if the visit was intended to win sympathy, it backfired, largely because of the screaming loyalist gangs who are brought in at every opportunity to shout at us. Nuriah Muftah also began to speak about her nephew - her sister's son - but the government minders had allowed the gangs into the family's compound, and whether feeling under pressure, giving vent to her genuine feelings, or just struck by hysterical contagion - or a mixture all three - she lapsed into the same chants as the women surrounding her, seizing the weapon given to Fatih's younger brother last week as part of Gaddafi's arm-the-people campaign. The episode ended in some disarray when the menfolk of the family started to try to wrestle the gun out of her grip. Eventually a compromise was reached and she was allowed to fire two shots in the air for the cameras before handing it over.

At another point, the weapon was seized by a woman in niqab - full face-veil - who also brandished it, ululating. I cannot imagine there could be a worse image for the western media of what the regime stands for than a woman in niqab brandishing an AK47.

Telegraph 08.28 The Libyan rebel movement could legally be supplied with weapons from abroad in a move that would rapidly bring the conflict to an end, defence experts have told Thomas Harding, The Telegraph's Defence Correspondent.

08.26

Libyans loyal to leader Muammar Gaddafi shout slogans as they gather during a government guided tour for journalists in Bani Walid, Libya

08.23 US warplanes conducted strafing runs during an operation to rescue a downed fighter pilot, a military source has told Nick Squires. The cannon fire could explain the fact that several civilians were injured by bullets fired during the mission near the opposition stronghold of Benghazi, The Telegraph's correspondent on board the USS Kearsarge reports.

Telegraph 08.19 Col Muammar Gaddafi's Tripoli compound was targeted by coalition air strikes on Wednesday night as a senior British commander said the Libyan air force had been destroyed. Five loud blasts were reported at Gaddafi’s Bab al-Aziziya compound, where he had made an address on Tuesday night and which had been first attacked on Sunday night.There were eight further large explosions heard in the east of the capital and at a military base in Tajura, 20 miles to the east of the city. State television reported “a large number of civilians” had been killed.

08.16 There have been reports that civlians were targeted over night by Alain Juppe, France's foreign minister, has denied this. He told RTL radio that the strikes were "only targeting military sites and nothing else, and added that they were a "success" and would "continue as long as necessary."

08.15 British forces launched Tomahawk Land Attack Missiles during a fifth night of coalition strikes, the Ministry of Defence has said. Chief of Defence Staff's Strategic Communication Officer Major General John Lorimer said:

Quote British Armed Forces have again participated in a co-ordinated strike against Libyan Air Defence systems in support of the United Nations Security Council Resolution 1973. The UK launched guided Tomahawk Land Attack Missiles (TLAM) from a Trafalgar Class submarine at Air Defence targets as part of the coalition plan to enforce the resolution.

08.10 GMT Welcome back to The Telegraph's live blog, following developments minute-by-minute in Libya and across the rest of the region.