Sunday 9 March 2014

Many 'self-employed' women get by on less than £10,000 a year

Self-employed women earned 40% less than self-employed men in 2012, according to the figures published by HM Revenue & Customs. ItsPersonal Income Statistics 2011-12 report shows that, while average income for a self-employed man was £17,000, the equivalent for women was just £9,800.
The gap is widest in London, where women earned less than half the £25,700 average income of a self-employed man. Next came the east of England and the east Midlands. In almost every region apart from London, the south-east and Scotland, self-employed women earned less than £10,000 a year, the report reveals.
The revelations follow research by the Office for National Statistics (ONS), which showed that the gender pay gap in the UK widened for the first time in five years in 2012, from 9.5% to 10%. It found that women have made up more than half the 10% growth in self-employment since the recession began.
Some economists have speculated that many people who register as self-employed may have done so after failing to secure employment, because the rise in self-employed individuals, to almost 4.4 million, has coincided with a fall in employee numbers.
Frances O'Grady, general secretary of the TUC, said: "There may be perfectly good reasons for being self-employed, but it would be naive to think that all these workers are really budding entrepreneurs."
She added: "These figures instead suggest that many employee roles are being replaced by self-employed positions. Bogus self-employment is bad news for workers because they miss out on vital rights at work – such as paid holidays and employer pension contributions – without having the advantage of being their own boss."
The Women's Budget Group, a campaign organisation, noted in a recent report that "much of this increase [in women becoming self-employed] was effectively in precarious work or zero-hours contracts, rather than the creation of new businesses."
Scarlet Harris, spokesman for the group, said: "Clerical, cleaning and caring work, which is predominantly carried out by women, has experienced some of the fastest growth in self-employment in recent years. These women, who already suffer poverty rates of pay, are now having to contend with the poor working conditions and complete lack of job security that self-employment brings. These shocking gender pay gap figures should end any delusions people have about the UK's four million self-employed workers."
Evidence has emerged that the government encourages benefit claimants to register as self-employed, so as to remove them from official employment statistics. A BBC investigation last month found that advisers exhort individuals on the welfare-to-work scheme to become self-employed, in order to shift them from unemployment benefits to working tax credits.
Self-employment also tends to negatively affect an individual's personal finances. Debt charity StepChange has warned that the self-employed are, on average, burdened with four times the debt of employed workers.
A conference entitled Women's Assembly Against Austerity convened last month, following a report revealing that low-income women have been worst-hit by austerity measures and the economic downturn.

Scotland Yard in new undercover police row

Scotland Yard stands accused of covering up "institutionalised sexism" within the police in trying to block civil claims launched by women allegedly deceived into sexual relationships with undercover officers.
Police lawyers are applying to strike out, on secrecy grounds, the claims of five women who say they were duped into intimate long-term relationships with four undercover police officers working within the special demonstration squad (SDS), a Metropolitan police unit set up to infiltrate protest groups.
The legal bid, funded by the taxpayer, is being fought despite widespread outrage and promises of future transparency by Scotland Yard, following official confirmation last week that an undercover officer was deployed 21 years ago to spy on the grieving family of murdered teenager Stephen Lawrence.
The Observer understands that police lawyers are asking the high court to reject claims against the Metropolitan police on the grounds that the force cannot deviate from its policy of neither confirming nor denying issues regarding undercover policing.
It is understood that Scotland Yard will say in a hearing, scheduled to be held on 18 March, that it is not in a position to respond to claims and therefore cannot defend it.
Last week an independent inquiry revealed that an officer identified only as N81 was deployed in a group "positioned close to the Lawrence family campaign". The spy gathered "some personal details relating to" the murdered teenager's parents. It was also disclosed that undercover officers had given false evidence in the courts and acted as if they were exempt from the normal rules of evidence disclosure.
A separate report on a police investigation into the SDS found that three former officers who had had sexual relations with women who had not known their true identities could face criminal charges.
Harriet Wistrich, a lawyer at Birnberg Peirce & Partners representing the women, said it was absurd that Scotland Yard claimed to be transparent while blocking her clients' bid for justice in open court. On Friday the former director of prosecutions, Lord Macdonald, accused the police of engendering a "culture of conceit".
Wistrich said: "They should just hold up their hands and say, 'this is terrible, we recognise that and are doing everything we can do to put it right'."
Wistrich said Scotland Yard had made no move to reverse its legal position despite calls by Theresa May, the home secretary, for transparency in the wake of what she last week described as "profoundly disturbing" findings.
"They are basically saying that we have this policy and we have to uphold the policy because we gave lifelong assurances that we would not reveal their identities. This is nonsense when some have confessed themselves to being undercover officers.
"In total, we have got five different officers between the eight claimants and our own evidence suggests there was a deliberate kind of encouragement to do this. We are not just talking about a bad apple … but a rotten-to-the-core, institutionalised sexism."
The officers accused of forging long-term sexual relationships with women while undercover are Jim Boyling, Bob Lambert, John Dines and Mark Jenner.
There are additional calls, including by shadow business secretary Chuka Umunna, for an examination of the role of undercover officers in providing information for a blacklist operation run by major companies within the construction industry which forced more than 3,000 people out of the sector.
Brian Richardson, a barrister who has set up an umbrella group, Campaign Opposing Police Surveillance, said: "It is extremely important that the proposed inquiry considers the infiltration of the Lawrence family campaign and that of [all] the targets of police surveillance. However, we must continue to campaign to ensure that the inquiry is fully transparent and that those responsible … are held to account."

SODA : Qui sont Ludo et Slimane, les deux copains de Kev Adams ?

Pas de Simpson sur W9 ce soir, mais une soirée spéciale Kev Adams ! La chaîne va diffuser plusieurs épisodes de la saison 3 deSoda. L'occasion d'en savoir plus sur les acteurs qui campent les rôles de Ludo et Slimane, les deux potes d'Adam.
Fait presque exceptionnel, W9 ne diffusera pas de soirée Simpson ce samedi soir. Pourquoi ? Parce qu'elle consacre une grande soirée à Kev Adams. Pour cela, la chaîne de la TNT va diffuser, en prime-time, plusieurs épisodes de la saison 3 deSoda avant le spectacle Kev Adams : the young man dès 23 heures.

Si les téléspectateurs commencent à connaitre le jeune humoriste, peu savent qui sont réellement les acteurs qui campent les rôles de Slimane et Ludovic, les deux grands copains d'Adam Fontella (Kev Adams).Slimane Elboughi est joué par William Lebghil, un jeune homme de 23 ans qui a fait une école d'art dramatique avant de camper le rôle qui lui offre aujourd'hui une jolie exposition. Pour preuve, il a interprété le personnage de Karim, l'un des personnages principaux dans Les Mythos, le film de Denys Thibaud sorti en 2011.Gaël Cottat (Ludo dans Soda) est beaucoup plus âgé que le personnage qu'il est censé interpréter. A 27 ans, le jeune homme est également auteur (poèmes, scénarios) et réalisateur. Son premier roman est paru en 2007 Tant que les papillons auront des ailes et son second romanmots pour maux est paru en 2009. Il a également tourné dans de nombreux courts-métrages avant de jouer un rôle secondaire dans La vérité si je mens ! 3 en 2012.

Tuesday 4 March 2014

Anger outbursts linked to swift heart attacks

PARIS: People who have outbursts of anger are at greater risk of having a heart attack or stroke in the two hours immediately after the episode, European researchers said Tuesday.

The study -- a big review of published papers -- is the first to give powerful statistical backing to suspicions that strong emotions can drive cardiac risk, although the underlying biological causes remain unclear.

In the two hours immediately after an angry outburst, an individual’s risk of myocardial infarction or acute coronary syndrome rose nearly five-fold, to 4.7 percent, compared to times when the person was calm, the study found.

The risk of stroke tripled, to 3.6 percent, it also found. There were also higher risks for arrythmia, or an erratic beating of the heart.

The risks rose proportionately if the person had a history of cardiovascular problems or was frequently angry.

"Although the risk of experiencing an acute cardiovascular event with any single outburst of anger is relatively low, the risk can accumulate for people with frequent episodes of anger," said Elizabeth Mostofsky at the Harvard School of Public Health in Massachusetts.

"This is particularly important for people who have higher risk due to other underlying risk factors or those who have already had a heart attack, stroke or diabetes.

"For example, a person without many risk factors for cardiovascular disease, who has only one episode of anger per month, has a very small additional risk, but a person with multiple risk factors or a history of heart attack or stroke, and who is frequently angry, has a much higher absolute excess risk accumulated over time."

- Risk rises with anger episodes -

The researchers calculated that one extra heart attack per 10,000 people per year can be expected among people with low cardiovascular risk who are angry only once a month.

This rises to an extra four per 10,000 people with a high cardiovascular risk. Among people who were frequently angry, five episodes of anger a day would result in some 158 extra heart attacks per 10,000 people with a low cardiovascular risk per year.

The tally would increase to around 657 extra heart attacks per 10,000 among those with a high cardiovascular risk.

The paper, published in the European Heart Journal, looked at nine previously published studies covering wide groups of people whose anger profile was known.

The data trawl found more than 5,000 cases of heart attack and at least 800 of stroke. The methodology used in these published papers varied, but an unmistakeable association emerged from all of them, the authors said.

Previous attempts to clarify the question were based on small sample sizes where few patients reported having outbursts of anger, they said. As a result, the picture was fuzzy or lacked credibility.

The paper was not designed to explore why anger is so clearly linked to heart attack.

The authors point to previous research which found that psychological stress increases heart rate and blood pressure. Changes in blood flow can cause blood clots and may stimulate an inflammatory response from the immune system.

Further research is needed to pinpoint this mechanism and to finetune options for doctors mulling whether the best treatment should be drugs to lower cholesterol or blood pressure or psychological help or physical exercise to curb dangerous anger episodes -- or perhaps a combination.

In an independent commentary, US specialists Suzanne Arnold and John Spertus from the University of Missouri and Brahmajee Nallamothu of the University of Michigan said the findings called for an all-round approach.

"Treating anger in isolation is unlikely to be impactful," they wrote in the journal.

"Instead, a broader and more comprehensive approach to treating acute and chronic mental stress, and its associated psychological stressors, is likely to be needed to heal a hostile heart." (AFP)
 

Pakistan aim final berth, Bangladesh seek pride

MIRPUR: Buoyed by their last-over win over arch-foes India, a rejuvenated Pakistan will look to seal a berth in the title clash as they lock horns with beleaguered hosts Bangladesh in their last round-robin Asia Cup match here on Tuesday.

The top two teams qualify for the summit clash and Pakistan, having collected nine points from three appearances, will go into the match as favourites. The momentum swung their way after 'boom boom' Shahid Afridi's enterprise laid India low at the Shere Bangla Stadium here last night.

For the record, Pakistan had lost to Sri Lanka in the tournament opener, before getting their campaign back on track with successive wins over Afghanistan and the big one against India. A win for Pakistan will only make things more difficult for India, provided Sri Lanka lose both their remaining games against Afghanistan and Bangladesh, which seems highly unlikely.

India lost to Pakistan two days after their defeat to Sri Lanka. The Indians won their opener against Bangladesh, and their run-rate stands at -0.027 to Pakistan's +0.438. Reeling under two big defeats, including one against first-timers Afghanistan, Bangladesh would try and look to regain some lost glory against their famed opponents.

In One-day cricket, Bangladesh have upstaged Pakistan just once, that too way back in the 1999 World Cup in England. And again, Bangladesh, who played the final of the last edition, would be looking to prove that the loss to Afghanistan was a mere aberration and the side has the potential to humble stiffer opponents.

Skipper Mushfiqur Rahim would be happy to see the return of all-rounder Shakib Al Hasan, who was banned for lewd gestures by the country's cricket board. As far as Pakistan are concerned, they will be on a high after the positive result against India.

Mohammad Hafeez was back amongst runs, and that is a good news for Misbah-ul-Haq's team going into the business end of the competition. He has also been making significant contributions with the ball. Twice run-out in this tournament, Misbah would be hoping for a better luck and get some runs under his belt against the hapless host nation.

On the bowling front, pacer Umar Gul and spinner Saeed Ajmal would be leading the Pakistani attack. However, Pakistan would do well to guard against complacency.

Teams (from):
Bangladesh: Mushfiqur Rahim (captain), Al-Amin Hossain, Arafat Sunny, Shafiul Islam, Naeem Islam, Rubel Hossain, Shakib-Al-Hasan, Ziaur Rahman, Abdur Razzak, Anamul Haque, Imrul Kayes, Mominul Haque, Nasir Hossain, Shamsur Rahman, Sohag Gazi, Shakib al Hasan.

Pakistan: Misbah-ul-Haq (c), Sharjeel Khan, Ahmed Shehzad, Mohammad Hafeez, Sohaib Maqsood, Umar Akmal (wk), Shahid Afridi, Anwar Ali, Umar Gul, Saeed Ajmal, Junaid Khan, Mohammad Talha, Abdur Rehman, Fawad Alam.

Pak vs Bangladesh: Abdur Rehman stopped from bowling

DHAKA: Pakistani spinner Abdur Rehman was stopped from bowling during Pakistan’s Asia Cup match against Bangladesh for bowling three consecutive ‘beamers.’

The Pakistani spinner came to bowl in the 11th over of the match and delivered three consecutive no-balls which were higher than the batsmen waist. The umpire stopped Rehman from bowling the rest of his over.

Bangladesh captain Mushfiqur Rahim won the toss and decided to bat in a must-win Asia Cup match. Behind brilliant batting Bangladesh set a 327 run target for Pakistan.

Bangladesh have lost both their matches so far -- against India and Afghanistan -- and made five team changes in their bid to remain in the tournament.

Pakistan, who need to win to meet Sri Lanka in Saturday´s final, were forced to replace injured opener Sharjeel Khan with middle-order batsman Fawad Alam in their line-up which beat India by one wicket on Sunday.

Tigers roar atlast in Asia Cup

DHAKA: Bangladesh piled up a huge total of 326 runs for three wickets against Pakistan in the eighth match of the 12th Asia Cup here at the Shere Bangla National Stadium on Tuesday.

Bangladesh who have been winless so far in the tournament showed aggression with style for the first time.

Bangladesh bat against Pakistan in Asia Cup

DHAKA: Bangladesh captain Mushfiqur Rahim won the toss and decided to bat in a must-win Asia Cup match against Pakistan in Dhaka on Tuesday.

Bangladesh have lost both their matches so far -- against India and Afghanistan -- and made five team changes in their bid to remain in the tournament.

Out went injured spinner Sohag Gazi, along with Shamsur Rahman, Arafat Sunny, Rubel Hossain and Naeem Islam. They were replaced by Shakib Al Hasan, Imrul Kayes, Shafiul Islam, Al-Amin Hossain and Mohammad Mahmudullah.

Pakistan, who need to win to meet Sri Lanka in Saturday´s final, were forced to replace injured opener Sharjeel Khan with middle-order batsman Fawad Alam in their line-up which beat India by one wicket on Sunday.

They also left out paceman Junaid Khan to include left-arm spinner Abdur Rehman in the side.

Teams:

Bangladesh: Mushfiqur Rahim (capt), Anamul Haque, Mominul Haque, Nasir Hossain, Shakib Al Hasan, Imrul Kayes, Shafiul Islam, Al-Amin Hossain, Mohammad Mahmudullah, Ziaur Rahman, Abdur Razzak.

Pakistan: Misbah-ul Haq (capt), Ahmed Shahzad, Mohammad Hafeez, Umar Akmal, Sohaib Maqsood, Fawad Alam, Shahid Afridi, Umar Gul, Abdur Rehman, Saeed Ajmal, Mohammad Talha. (AFP)

Russia warns could ‘reduce to zero’ economic dependency on US

MOSCOW: Russia could reduce to zero its economic dependency on the United States if Washington agreed sanctions against Moscow over Ukraine, a Kremlin aide said on Tuesday, warning that the American financial system faced a "crash" if this happened.

"We would find a way not just to reduce our dependency on the United States to zero but to emerge from those sanctions with great benefits for ourselves," said Kremlin economic aide Sergei Glazyev, saying Russia could stop using dollars for international transactions.

"An attempt to announce sanctions would end in a crash for the financial system of the United States, which would cause the end of the domination of the United States in the global financial system," he added. (AFP

Five missing persons presented in SC

ISLAMABAD: Five missing persons from Malakand Detention Centre were presented in the Supreme Court on Tuesday.

The missing persons were identified by their families members present at the apex court. According to details, the faces of the missing persons were covered when they were brought to the Supreme Court.

The Supreme Court will resume hearing of the case pertaining to the 35 missing persons on Wednesday.
 

Turkmenistan to buy airliners and build airports

ASHGABAT – Turkmenistan has adopted a programme to upgrade its fleet of civil aircraft by 2020, meaning more travel options for its citizens.  
"The programme (part of an improvement plan determined in December) provides for the procurement of aircraft and equipment, construction of airports, training of specialists, and improvement of service quality and flight safety," Merdan Atayev, a Turkmenistan Airlines transportation department specialist focusing on logistics, said, adding that its stage-by-stage implementation is already bearing fruit.
Turkmenistan Airlines now flies to 17 foreign cities, according to its website, including service to Paris that launched just before New Year's Day. By 2015, it will have 10 more international destinations, Atayev said.
The airline's fleet is growing too, according to data from Ashgabat International Airport. In 2013, three Boeing 737-800 aircraft and two AgustaWestland AW101 helicopters began service.
"In the first half of 2014, Turkmenistan Airlines will receive its first long-haul wide-bodied Boeing 777-200 LR, which will make non-stop flights to other continents possible," Atayev said. Presently, the airline flies no farther than Eastern Europe nonstop.
By 2030, under the aviation development programme, the country will have up to 40 Boeings.
Domestic air network to expand
Along with international flights, Turkmenistan Airlines proposes to develop the domestic flight network. It now offers regular service among Ashgabat and the oblast capitals but is planning eventually to fly to the district capitals too.
Last December, the government decided to buy 20 airliners capable of accommodating up to 100 passengers and to build five airports in each oblast's remote areas.
"We were interested in the 50-passenger French-[Italian] ATR 42-600 and the 19-passenger Czech Let L-410," Atayev, who does not rule out the possibility of buying Ukrainian An-38's and An-140's, said.
"The number of passengers flying domestically is bound to increase," he said. "A ... state commission will have the last word on the new purchases."
Turkmenistan Airlines employees in outlying districts welcome the planned boost to domestic air service.
"If everything that is planned comes to pass, it will be of the greatest benefit to those who live in remote districts," Erkebai Dosmedov, a communications specialist at Dashoguz Airport, said. "Тhey now have to travel two or three hours ... to their oblast capital to catch a plane."
Each oblast has its hinterlands, the inhabitants of which would like to fly in comfort, he said.
Pros and cons
Implementation of the civil aviation development programme in the provinces will lay the foundations for improving transport infrastructure and for creating new jobs, but profitability might be in doubt, according to the Economy and Development Ministry.
A large part of the population (about 70%) reports an average monthly wage of less than 572 TMT ($200), and citizens in this category would find it difficult to spend a fifth of their monthly income on a round-trip flight to Ashgabat, economist Rustem Vakhidov said, predicting that the majority of Turkmens will continue to take road or rail.
Flying is faster, Vakhidov said, but the cost might be prohibitive in some cases, especially since a trip by inter-city bus costs about a fifth of what the airfare would be.
"If the fares were more affordable, of course people would prefer to fly," Khaytan Gulgeldiyev, a cotton grower from Aibovur village, Dashoguz Oblast, said. High airfares could threaten the project's profitability, he said, agreeing with Vakhidov.
Another thing that could help the investment and civil aviation upgrade succeed would be for the country to buy airliners that suit the Turkmen climate and flying conditions, Atayev said.
But early indications are that the programme has some promise.
"The ... ATR-42-600 already had test runs on the Ashgabat-Mary route," Atayev said. "Reactions in the press and in official reports have been entirely positive."

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Sunday 2 March 2014

Morsi son arrested in Egypt drugs case

CAIRO: The authorities in Egypt arrested a 19-year-old son of ousted president Mohamed Morsi Saturday, accusing him of possessing hashish cigarettes, a charge denied by his brother.

Security officials said police found two joints on Abdullah Morsi and a friend who were in a car parked by the roadside in Qalyubia province north of Cairo. The two were arrested for questioning, they added.

Morsi´s other son, Osama, dismissed the allegation.

He said Abdullah was stopped at a police checkpoint while on his way home.

"He has been arrested. They are fabricating the case. My brother doesn´t even smoke," Osama, a lawyer, told AFP.

"This is a clear attempt to defame the family of president Mohamed Morsi. This incident is part of a series of violations committed by the state against us."

Morsi and his Muslim Brotherhood have been target of a relentless government crackdown since he was ousted last July after just a year in office.

Amnesty International says more than 1,400 people have been killed, mostly Morsi supporters, in street clashes since his ouster.

Morsi himself and several Brotherhood leaders have been put on trial. (AFP)
 

Ukraine seeks NATO assistance to protect territorial integrity

KIEV: Ukraine has asked NATO to look at all possible ways to help it protect its territorial integrity, Foreign Minister Sergei Deshchiritsya said on Saturday.

The minister said he had held talks with officials from the United States and the European Union and then asked NATO for help after what Ukraine´s prime minister described as Russian aggression.

A request had been made to NATO to "look at using all possibilities for protecting the territorial integrity and sovereignty of Ukraine, the Ukrainian people and nuclear
facilities on Ukrainian territory," he said.

US Navy jet crashes during training

LOS ANGELES: A US Navy F/A-18C Hornet jet aircraft crashed during training Saturday in the western state of Nevada, the navy said in a statement.

There was no immediate news on the fate of the pilot. The fighter plane, assigned to the Naval Strike and Air Warfare Center in Fallon, in western Nevada, crashed at approximately 3:00 pm (2300 GMT) on a training range some 112 kilometers(70 miles) east of Naval Air Station Fallon.

"The Navy has not officially confirmed the status of the aircraft crewmember. The aircraft was conducting a training flight prior to the crash," the statement read. It added: "A safety investigation will be carried out to determine the cause.

"Boeing-built Hornets, used as attack planes and as a fighters, have been in service since the 1980s.

If Taliban ready for talks, we support it: Khurshid Shah

SUKKUR: Pakistan People’s Party (PPP) leader and leader of the opposition in national assembly, Khurshid Shah Sunday said that if Taliban were ready for talks, then we support it, Geo News reported.

Talking to Geo News here, Khurshid Shah said that we consider Taliban the murderers of thousands of innocent persons including Benazir Bhutto, however, if Taliban were ready for talks and peace gets restored in the country, then we support it.

He said that PPP government had also held talks with the Taliban in Swat and added that we support talks. He further said that the government has now to be watchful whether Taliban fearing military actions were not seeking time to regroup themselves.

Asia Cup match-6: Pakistan put India into bat

MIRPUR: Pakistan captain Misbah-ul-Haq won the toss and elected to field first against their arch rivals India in a crucial match of the Asia Cup 2014 here at the Shere Bangla National Stadium on Sunday.

Pakistan have made one change bringing in fast bowler Mohammad Talha in place of Anwar Ali while India have also made one change as leg-spinner Amit Mishra replaced Stuart Binny.

Teams:
Pakistan: Ahmed Shehzad, Sharjeel Khan, Mohammad Hafeez, Sohaib Maqsood, Misbah-ul-Haq (captain), Umar Akmal (wk), Shahid Afridi, Mohammad Talha, Umar Gul, Saeed Ajmal, Junaid Khan.

India: S Dhawan, RG Sharma, Virat Kohli (captain), AT Rayudu, AM Rahane, KD Karthik (wk), RA Jadeja, R Ashwin, A Mishra, B Kumar, Mohammad Shami.

Friday 28 February 2014

Heartbroken mother whose twin babies died at birth discovers she is pregnant again nine weeks later - with TWINS

She was still grieving for the twin babies she had lost just weeks before.
So Barbara Short couldn't believe the news when doctors confirmed she was pregnant again - with twins. 
The 32-year-old, from Hartlepool, had been devastated when her twins Ava and Alfie, born at just 23 weeks, had died.But just over two months later, she received the wonderful news that she was pregnant again - and there were two heartbeats.
She added that while she was 'overjoyed when the babies were born healthy,' she still felt an emptiness for the children she had lost. 
She has now given birth to another set of twins - Frankie and Lilly Wallace.Ms Short said: ‘It’s as if Ava and Alfie have been sent back to me. I can’t believe how I can be so blessed to have another two and be able to take them home with me. 
‘Everyone, even the doctors, were shocked at me having two sets of twins in less than a year. It was definitely meant to be that I was given Frankie and Lilly.’
Ms Short suffered complications almost as soon she found out she was pregnant in April 2012 and just 23 weeks into her pregnancy she was rushed to hospital and gave birth.Tiny Ava Wallace and Alfie Wallace were born at the University Hospital of North Tees in Stockton. 
Ava came into the world at 2.50am weighing just 9oz, while Alfie was born 10 minutes later and weighed 1lb.
The pair - who Ms Short says could have fitted into the palm of her hand - were taken to the James Cook University Hospital, in Middlesbrough, and placed on ventilators.
But Ava lost her fight eight hours after she was born and Alfie battled on for just a few more hours before dying at 4.30pm on the same day.
Former delivery driver Ms Short, who has two older children, Molly-Jo Short, seven, and four-year-old James Wallace, said her world came crashing down after their deaths.She said: ‘I felt like I was looking in on someone else and it wasn’t me. I’d had two babies, but I was going home with none. 
‘None of it seemed real. I was empty, my stomach was empty, but yet I had nothing. I still haven’t got over that and I don’t expect I ever will.’
But just nine weeks later Ms Short went from despair to happiness when she discovered that she was pregnant again - with twins.
And unlike her pregnancy with Ava and Alfie, she had no health problems and went into labour at a safer 36 weeks. 
After a Caesarean birth, Ms Short delivered Frankie and Lilly on July 22 last year at 4.17pm. 
Although Frankie was not breathing when he was born, doctors worked on him and he took his first breath six minutes later.Lilly was taken home two days after her birth and Frankie came home five days later, after being looked after in the special care baby unit.
Ms Short, who has since split from the babies’ father, said seven months on, both babies are healthy and Frankie is ‘really stern and serious’ and Lilly is ‘full of smiles’.
Ms Short said: ‘It’s hard to explain but when they were born I was over the moon, but at the same time I was still grieving for Ava and Alfie. 
‘But even though they have filled the void, I’ll still always feel an emptiness for the two I lost, especially when I go to the cemetery.
‘I know their souls are with us though. They can never be replaced.’

EXCLUSIVE: Sarah Harding: 'I was too skinny when I was in Girls Aloud, it was ageing' Singer talks weight, family plans and her new album

She was one fifth of the biggest and most glamorous girl group in pop's history. But reflecting on her time with Girls Aloud, Sarah Harding has admitted that she was too thin.
Speaking to MailOnline, Sarah said: 'I was too skinny when I was with the girls, it was ageing.' 
The 32-year-old has now adopted a much more healthy approach to her weight and, like many celebrities, has jumped on the juicing bandwagon.
A spaghetti strap slip is perfect to enhance a boyish figureThis chiffon slip dress is a winner for Sarah Harding. Spaghetti straps are perfect at enhancing a boyish figure with a skinny top as they will balance your out. (Please do not attempt this look if your arms are anything less than perfect as a tiny strap will make them look way bigger. Trust us on this.)
The underwear as outerwear style popularised by Marc Jacobs at Louis Vuitton last year is still likely to be around later this season as well so if you buy the bright blue version of this dress at Topshop - there are only a few left but they are reduced to £15 (unfortunately the ice blue one that Sarah is wearing is last season so unavailable) you'll still be on trend if you wear it come summer.
Fashion Finder is particularly keen on the teal dress in the ASOS Petite range - not least because Teal and Electric Blue have been all over the AW14 catwalks so be an early adopter and get in there!
We do admit that it is still rather chilly to wear a little sun dress though so we've put in the mix an ice blue swing shift with long sleeves that is rather more season approp.
A word on the styling. We do get where the stylist was going matching the lippy to the shoes but really? Rather a fun statement wedge or a nude pump. Over and out.


Everton reject Mustafi called up by Germany... after being released on a free transfer by Moyes

A defender released by David Moyes while at Everton has been handed a surprise call up to the Germany squad by Joachim Low.
Shkodran Mustafi, now 21, was let go on a free transfer by Moyes in 2012 after making just one substitute appearance for the Goodison Park side.
But he has flourished at current club Sampdoria and has now been deemed good enough to make the Germany squad for their friendly with Chile on Wednesday.Centre-back Mustafi was a German youth international right through his time at Everton but made his only appearance as a substitute for Tony Hibbert in a Europa League tie with BATE Borisov in December 2009.
He moved on to the Serie A side in January 2012 for nothing and has since made 41 appearances.
Mustafi has a relatively low profile in Germany but was a member of the side that won the European Under-17 Championships in 2009 and has two Under-21 caps. He is one of four newcomers selected by Loew for the friendly in Stuttgart, alongside Matthias Ginter of Freiburg, Pierre-Michel Lasogga of Hamburg and Andre Hahn of Augsburg.
They could feature alongside stars Bastian Schweinsteiger, Mario Gotze, Mesut Ozil and Lukas Podolski in the match as Low decides his squad for the World Cup finals in Brazil. 
'Many players, including key players, are still injured or just back from injuries and not yet in full form,' Low said.
'Now is the chance to act and find solutions and alternatives. That is why we brought some new faces.'
Mustafi was born in Germany but is also eligible for Albania because of his family heritage.


'I'm trying to get my girl back': Emotional Robin Thicke dedicates song Lost Without U to estranged wife Paula Patton at first concert since split

He said earlier in the day that he wanted to get back together with his estranged wife Paula Patton.
And Robin Thicke reiterated this point in an emotional tribute to the actress in his first concert since their split.
'For y'all that don't know me and my wife separated, but I'm trying to get my girl back. She's a good woman,' the 36-year-old told the audience at a scheduled gig in Fairfax, Virginia on Thursday evening. The singer then sang Lost Without U after admitting he had written the song for his wife.
Robin was certainly dressed the part as he took to the well-lit stage to perform and wore his wedding ring throughout the show.
The Blurred Lines singer told TMZ photographers earlier in the day that he is 'just trying to get her back.'
The father-of-one had canceled three concerts following their split, which the couple announced on Monday.Curiously, on the same day, the singer's stunning estranged wife's West Hollywood home was bombarded with copious amounts of expensive looking floral arrangements.
Meanwhile back in Los Angeles, a gaggle of burly men were tasked with the responsibility of delivering multiple enormous and elaborate bouquets of flowers to Paula's place.
Perhaps the flowers were a gift from Robin as a part of his efforts to get back in her good graces.The antics come after the couple told People magazine in a joint statement on Monday: 'We will always love each other and be best friends, however, we have mutually decided to separate at this time.'
Paula, 38, is said to have called time on the marriage last Friday and wasn't moved by her spouse's last ditch attempt to persuade her differently.
He flew to Canada, where she was filming, but the grand gesture didn't change the mother-of-one's mind. Months of embarrassment over Robin's twerking routine with Miley Cyrus and dodgy photographs of him groping random socialite Lana Scolaro's bottom apparently pushed the stunning Paula - an incredible catch - to end the relationship.
The actress reportedly had a huge argument with the singer following the show, saying the raunchy routine - which featured the then-20-year-old twerking up against her spouse - was insulting to her, particularly as it took place in front of a huge TV audience.
According to TMZ, Paula felt 'utterly disrespected' by her husband's willingness to go along with Miley's improvised antics.However, People magazine is reporting that the split may not necessarily result in actual divorce.
'Who knows what will happen? They do love each other. They are very good friends and will continue to be as strong and as good friends as they can be,' a source told the publication.
The source continued: 'I can truly see them being the best of friends no matter what happens. They still admire each other. She'll always be his biggest fan and he'll always write songs about her and put her on a pedestal.'
Paula and Robin have one son together, Julian, who is almost three.


Shocking moment heroin couple kidnapped terrified quadriplegic man and robbed him of just £6 to fund their drug habit

A heroin addict couple who kidnapped a wheelchair-bound quadriplegic so they could rob him of £6 to fund their drug habit have been jailed.
Adam Webster, 38, and Sarah Harcourt, 35, abducted Stephen Dooley, 38, from his book stall at a council activity centre in Norwich and pushed him to a nearby park to take his money.
The pair, who have almost 100 previous convictions between them, robbed the helpless disabled man of what little coins he had and then left him to get home on his own last August.Their victim Mr Dooley was struck down by meningitis as a nine-day-old baby and left disabled by the devastating illness.He was waiting to be picked up from Norwich's Vauxhall Resource Centre when the thieves wheeled him to nearby Chapelfield Gardens and mugged him of all his cash.
The crime has left Mr Dooley too devastated and terrified to go out and confidence is in tatters, the court heard.
In his own victim statement, he said: 'Working on the book stall was the one thing I did by myself.
'I enjoyed doing this and I miss it lots.
'I could go alone in a taxi.
'It was nice to be able to go to the centre without my family, but now I am too scared to go.'
Harcourt, of Norwich, had already admitted robbery and kidnap when she was jailed yesterday.
Webster, also of Norwich, was found guilty of both offences after he was tried at Norwich Crown Court last month.
Giving evidence during the trial from behind a screen with the help of an interpreter and intermediary, Mr Dooley told Richard Potts, prosecuting, how he was 'afraid and scared' when he was kidnapped.
Jonathan Morgans, defending Harcourt, who has 43 previous convictions for 97 offences between 1992 and 2013, said she wanted to 'apologise' for what she had done.
Mr Morgans said the crimes were committed against a background of an 'out of control drug addiction' to heroin.
Lori Tucker, for Webster, who has 37 convictions relating to 117 offences, said he was a 'subordinate' in the offence.
She said he too had been addicted to heroin from just 13 after an 'extremely unhappy childhood' during which he was the victim of abuse.
Judge Anthony Bate jailed Webster for six years and Harcourt for four years, 12 weeks at the crown court yesterday.
He said they both had 'appalling criminal records' and became 'partners in opportunistic crimes'.Judge Bate told the couple: 'This was a despicable joint crime driven by self-centred greed and as usual an utter disregard for your victim's feelings.'
Last night Mr Dooley's shocked father, the Rev Gerald Dooley, said he struggled to comprehend why two people would do this and said the crime was 'way outside humanity'.
The vicar said in a statement after the case: 'Your hear things all the time but you never think something like this will happen to your family.'Stephen's proud sister Vicky Shucksmith said she admired her brother's immense bravery to give evidence in court.
She said: 'The trial lasted for three weeks and Stephen gave evidence over three days.
'It was hard for us and distressing to see but he wanted to do it.
'He didn't want them to get away with it.'
Investigating officer, Det Con Jim Starling, of Norwich CID, said afterwards: 'Harcourt and Webster are the lowest of the low.
'For two people to target a man who clearly has no means of defending himself or even calling for help is beyond belief.
'Stephen would have been visibly distressed during the incident, but this didn't stop them pushing him to the park and robbing him of a few pounds before abandoning him on the street.'
He added: 'Stephen needs constant care and is never alone and, understandably, has been left very distressed by what happened.
After sentencing both defendants, Judge Bate paid tribute to the 'spirit' and 'strength of personality' of Mr Dooley.
He said: 'Whilst this experience has undoubtedly been distressing for him, I hope that, with time and the loving support of his close family, he will gain a measure of closure and begin to engage again with the outside world, which I believe is enriched by his company.'

Couple who spent five years building Britain's greenest home by HAND must tear it down after refusing to get planning permission because it was 'against their principles'

A couple who spent five years building Britain’s greenest home by hand, using old railway sleepers and lorry tyres, have been ordered to tear it down.
Matthew Lepley and Jules Smith decided not to ask for planning permission from Torridge District Council in Devon because it takes consumes too much paper and energy, and defies their eco-friendly 'personal principles'.
Mr Lepley, 34, and Ms Smith, 54, moved from a London tower block to the countryside in 2009, and lived in tents while they constructed their dream house by hand.They lived off the land while they constructed the one bedroom cabin from scrap wood and metal. They also shunned the use of power tools in their quest to live 'at one with nature'. The final product has no electricity or running water and a compost heap for a toilet.
Officials have now served Matthew, 34, and Jules, 54, with an enforcement notice ordering them to 'remove' it from their field in in Beaworthy, Devon.
Mr Lepley said: 'We wanted to build a home that would let us truly live as one with nature. We used recycled materials, an axe to break up the wood and hand tools to piece the structure together.'The process was a lot slower but it was extremely satisfying. We wanted to reduce carbon emissions as much as possible. The plans for the house have changed over the years in accordance to our needs and nature. The heat comes from a woodburner which heats the water for the bathroom. 
'We don’t have electricity but we get by with paraffin lamps and candles. This life is not for everyone but we love it - it enables us to live a therapeutic lifestyle and be self-sufficient.
'We took the decision to build without planning permission because the council’s procedure is not environmentally friendly enough and it goes against our personal principles.'Mr Lepley and Ms Smith left their jobs as carers in London give years ago and fled a 'pent-up' tower block in Wood Green, north London. They bought a 20-acre field and set aside £20,000 for construction costs, then scoured farmland and scrap yards for unwanted junk.The foundations were made from old tractor tyres filled with gravel, while the walls and roof were build from discarded haulage pallets and railway sleepers.
Despite having just one bedroom, a lounge, a kitchen and a bathroom to build, the building has taken years to complete because of the low-tech methods of construction.
The couple feed themselves by growing their own fruit and vegetables. They rear ducks for their eggs and sheep for wool. Instead of a fridge they use a compartment two and a half feet underground to keep it cool.
Their water is drawn out of the ground with a bore hole, and all the waste from their outside compose toilet is recycled.
The couple say their neighbours were initially supportive of their ambition to live a self-sufficient lifestyle on the remote woodland plot.
But when they revealed plans to turn their rustic retreat into a conservation business, hosting workshops in green engineering and 'permaculture', locals turned against them.
Mr Lepley said the pair ignored local planning rules as they breached their eco-friendly principles.They hoped their unique dwelling would not attract any complaints - meaning it would automatically gain retrospective permission after four years.But two years into the build a local opponent gathered ten signatures and submitted the petition to Torridge District Council’s planning department. 
The first enforcement was appealed three years ago, and the couple are now going through a second round.
Mr Lepley said: 'There is a chronic lack of affordable housing in this country and very few options for people on a low income. It’s not illegal, though we knew there was a risk someone might complain.
'We’ve had a lot of drama with the neighbours, some have been really supportive while others have gone against us and started a petition. We were hoping no one would notice as its only visible within the dwelling and can’t be seen from the road. 
'The idea of the conservation project was to provide retreat accommodation and run courses and workshops on sustainable living. The house and surrounding land enables us to be totally self sufficient - we would be devastated if we had to knock down.'
Torridge District Council said the process had gone to appeal to decide if the notice is to be enforced and the house torn down.
A spokesman said: 'I can confirm Torridge District Council has served an enforcement notice that they remove the structure. However, as it has now gone to appeal, we have to wait for the inspector’s decision before we can take any further action.'

Wednesday 19 February 2014

Frosty the kitten found frozen solid in a block of ice is rescued

A kitten found frozen inside a block of ice and stuck to the road has been saved and is expected to recover fully.
A driver who found a the tiny kitten frozen to the road in northeast Ohio says she thought at first it was a chunk of ice.
Shocked when the block of ice tried to move, Dara Taylor quickly realised it was a live animal and rescued the little grey cat.
The Elyria, Ohio resident told The Chronicle-Telegram that she found the cat on Monday and that he was so covered in ice she suspects he had been doused in water and left in the cold.
‘As I got out of the car, I could hear him meowing so loudly and pitifully and his little heart was beating so fast,’ she said.Frosty – as he has since been named – was unable to open his eyes because of the ice when Dara took him to the Friendship Animal Protective League.
The group’s chief financial officer, Shelley MacDonald, says the 5-month-old cat has warmed up and is being treated for a respiratory infection. Officials are hopeful he will fully recover.
The organization says it is already getting adoption requests for the kitten, which has been named Frosty.