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  • 10
    Jan
    2013
    12:38pm, EST

    Landslip exposes human bones at Dracula graveyard

    Bones have been exposed by a landslip at a cemetery that featured in the horror novel, Dracula. ITV's Steven Douglas reports.

    By Alastair Jamieson, NBC News

    A landslip has exposed human bones in the English coastal cemetery that inspired a scene in Bram Stoker's horror novel Dracula.

    Erosion has dislodged banks of earth containing human remains from graves at St Mary's in Whitby, North Yorkshire, ITV News reported.

    The cemetery was mentioned in the 1897 novel, whose author lived in the seaside town for several years, and the church is a magnet for fans of the book.

    'I managed to identify one hip bone, two pieces of skull and a large bone that looked like it was part of a leg,” local resident Barry Brown told the Northern Echo newspaper.

    He said he found several bones in the backyard of his kipper smokehouse, which sits under the cliff on which the church is perched, the newspaper reported.

    "It’s quite sad picking that sort of thing up, I expect the people who buried them thought they’d be there forever,” he said.

    Whitby Town Council said tthe church itself was not in danger of collapse, and that the remains in the churchyard were very old.

    The church dates from 1100, according to a BBC report.

    A damaged drainage pipe, which left rainwater pouring out of the ancient graveyard and down the cliff, was thought to be to blame for the landslip, ITV said.

     

    46 comments

    Misleading title for the article. I thought they were talking about a cemetery in Romania.

    Show more
    Explore related topics: history, books, church, world, life, england, uk, weird, itv, featured
  • 14
    Nov
    2012
    6:59am, EST

    Violence breaks out amid austerity protests in Europe

    Anger and sometimes violent protests have been staged across Europe against unemployment and austerity measures.  ITN's Emma Murphy reports. 


    Follow @NBCNewsWorld
    By NBC News staff and wire reports

    Updated at 9:05 a.m. ET: Pockets of violence broke out as public demonstrations and strikes over rising unemployment and austerity measures took place in many parts of Europe Wednesday.

    Spanish and Portuguese workers staged a coordinated general strike across the Iberian Peninsula, shutting transport, grounding flights and closing schools to protest against spending cuts and tax hikes.

    International rail services were disrupted by strikes in Belgium and workers in Greece, Italy and France planned work stoppages or demonstrations as part of a "European Day of Action and Solidarity.”

    Hundreds of flights -- including those between southern Europe and connection hubs such as London Heathrow, Paris Charles de Gaulle and Amsterdam Schiphol -- were also canceled.

    NOVEMBER 7: Greece's government has approved another round of deep cuts to spending, wages and pensions, which sparked fierce clashes between police and protesters. ITV's James Mates reports.

    More than 60 people were arrested in Spain and 34 injured, 18 of them security officials after scuffles at picket lines and damage to storefronts, Reuters reported. Riot police arrested at least two protesters in Madrid and hit others with batons, witnesses said.

    Protesters jammed cash machines with glue and coins and plastered anti-government stickers on shop windows. Power consumption dropped 16 percent with factories idled.

    More photos: Demonstrations across Europe over austerity measures

    In Italy, students pelted police with rocks in a protest in Rome over money-saving plans for the school system. The windows of a bank in Milan were reportedly smashed by protesting students, according to a report on the website of the U.K.’s Guardian newspaper.

    In Greece, state workers, holding banners reading "Enough is Enough," started rallying on several squares in central Athens on Wednesday morning.

    See more coverage of this story at ITV News

    Yves Herman / Reuters

    A passenger waits on an empty platform at the Thalys high-speed train terminal at Brussels Midi/Zuid rail station amid strikes across Europe Wednesday.

    The international coordination shows "we are looking at a historic moment in the European Union movement," said Fernando Toxo, head of Spain's biggest union, Comisiones Obreras.

    Spain, where one in four workers is unemployed, is now teetering on the brink of calling for a bailout from the European Union, with Prime Minister Mariano Rajoy trying to put off a rescue that could require even more EU-mandated budget cuts.

    Passion has been further inflamed since last week when a Spanish woman jumped from her apartment to her death as bailiffs tried to evict her when her bank foreclosed on a loan. Spaniards are furious at banks being rescued with public cash while ordinary people suffer.

    SEPTEMBER: Day two of demonstrations in Madrid as protesters clash with police outside parliament over new austerity measures. NBCNews.com's Dara Brown reports.

    "We're going to protest because they're ignoring people's rights. People are being evicted and they're raising our taxes," said Sandra Gonzalez, 19, a social work student at Madrid's Complutense University who plans to march with friends.

    ITV News reporter James Mates posted a picture on Twitter of a deserted station in central Madrid.

    Madrid's main station completely deserted at height of rush hour this morning. Nothing moving #GeneralStrike twitter.com/jamesmatesitv/������¢���¯���¿���½������¦

    — James Mates (@jamesmatesitv) November 14, 2012

    In Portugal, which accepted an EU bailout last year, the streets have been quieter so far, but public and political opposition to austerity is mounting, threatening to derail new measures sought by Prime Minister Pedro Passos Coelho. His policies were held up this week as a model by Germany's Angela Merkel, a hate figure in crisis-hit southern European countries.

    A strike organized by CGTP in March had little impact, but in September hundreds of thousands of Portuguese rallied against a government plan to raise workers' social security contributions.

    "The first-ever Iberian strike" would be "a great signal of discontent and also a warning to European authorities," said Armenio Carlos, head of Portugal's CGTP union which is organizing the action there.

    Unions have planned rallies and marches in cities throughout both countries, with a major demonstration beginning at 6:30 p.m. (12:30 p.m. ET) in Madrid.

    Some 5 million people, or 22 percent of the workforce, are union members in Spain. In Portugal about one fourth of the 5.5 million-strong workforce is unionized.

    "This austerity is a never-ending story. We see no light at the end of the end of the tunnel, just more pain and difficulties. We have to protest, do something to stop it," said Lisbon pensioner Jose Marques, who planned to march Wednesday.

    AFP - Getty Images

    Demonstrators march in Rome, Italy, as protests and strikes over austerity measures were held by people across Europe Wednesday.

    ITV News is the U.K. partner of NBC News. Reuters contributed to this report.

    More world stories from NBC News:

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    Follow World News from NBCNews.com on Twitter and Facebook

     

     

     

     

     

    108 comments

    "This austerity is a never-ending story. We see no light at the end of the end of the tunnel, just more pain and difficulties. We have to protest, do something to stop it," said Lisbon pensioner Jose Marques, who planned to march Wednesday.

    Show more
    Explore related topics: italy, economy, spain, europe, world, strikes, protests, portugal, greece, itv, featured, austerity
  • 4
    Jul
    2012
    8:04am, EDT

    'Catastrophe': Journalist behind the lines in Syria sees no end to war

    From the front line in what looks ever more like a fight for Syria's capital Damascus, members of the Free Syrian Army appear to be closing in on President Assad's stronghold, at a terrible cost to both sides. NBC's Bill Neely reports.

    By msnbc.com

    As International Editor at NBC News' British partner ITV News, Bill Neely has covered the Libyan and Egyptian revolutions, the 2008 terrorist attack in Mumbai, as well as the wars in Afghanistan and Iraq. He is on his fourth trip in seven months to Syria, a country largely off-limits to Western journalists, where he and his team are covering the war. He spoke to msnbc.com's F. Brinley Bruton from Syria where he was witnesssing what he called "the battle for Damascus."

    Q: Are you surprised by the level of violence you've seen on this trip?

    A: Every day there are surprising things to be seen. On my last trip I was genuinely surprised by the level of destruction in the Baba Amr district of Homs where Marie Colvin (an American correspondent for Britain's Sunday Times) was killed. I think this time it has been really surprising to see three, four miles from the center of Damascus such sustained bombardment. Nobody in Damascus can be unaware of what's happening.


    I was surprised to see (the Free Syrian Army) operate quite openly. I mean, on Monday they drove us around for a long time through suburbs of Damascus. There wasn't a sign in sight of any army presence and they weren't hiding themselves, they were driving around with the guns out the window.

    Ricardo Garcia Vilanova / AFP - Getty Images

    A wounded man is lifted after shelling by Syrian government forces in Qusayr, close to the restive city of Homs, on Tuesday.

    A few days ago (I was surprised by) the level of artillery and mortar fire going into Douma. It still has the capacity to shock you that an army will use that level of force to subdue a rebellion.

    Q: How do you compare this to other conflicts you have covered in the past?


    Follow @msnbc_world

    A: My immediate point of comparison would be [Libyan leader Moammar] Gadhafi [shelling] of the town of Zawiya which was 30 miles from Tripoli. Again there was a staggering level of force used in the bombardment.

    In Kosovo it was very clear that it was ethnic cleansing, that Orthodox Christian Serbs were ethnically cleansing Muslims, as they had done in Bosnia. It is different here. The suburbs I was in yesterday are Sunni and the regime is not Sunni, it's Alawite, a branch of Shiite Islam, so there is a sectarian element to it. I think the Kosovo thing was even more, well, brutal.

    Q: Have we reached a tipping point in the conflict?

    A: My view was was that this was a civil war several months ago, and I think if there were any doubt [Syrian President Bashar] Assad answered that question a few days ago when he said this is a war on all fronts.

    Homs and other Syrian suburbs continue to be relentlessly shelled. Meanwhile, rebel fighters targeted the main court building in the capital. NBC's Bill Neely reports.

    We don't like to call it a war in the West because we don't have a damn clue what to do about it. At the minute it seems to me it is in the interest of the great powers to almost play this down.

    AFP - Getty Images

    A destroyed Syrian forces tank stands in street in Atareb in the province of Aleppo on Monday. Most of Atareb's residents fled the town due to heavy fighting between Syrian forces and rebels.

    One interesting aspect of this is that the U.N. has now stopped giving casualty figures, it has kind of been stuck for quite a long time at around 10,000. Well, it is way way over that.

    More about ITV News' Bill Neely

    Activists appear to have some grounding in fact and are coming up with about 18,600 civilians and rebels killed. The deputy foreign minister told me in May that there were more than 6,000 pro-regime dead. That takes you straight away to 25,000. Hillary Clinton said a few days ago it was 700 in the past week. I just looked at the activists figures and it looks about 100 a day now.

    This is now the longest of the Arab revolutions by a long way, it is bigger than Libya, Egypt and Tunisia put together.

    Syria's pro-government television station has been attacked. Seven people were killed. It is one of the boldest attacks yet on a symbol of that regime as rebel forces step up the fighting around the capital Damascus. ITV's Bill Neely reports.

    And the U.N. keeps warning that if we're not careful this will become a catastrophe. I think if it's 100 a day -- you are talking war, you are talking catastrophe.

    Photos: A glimpse at the escalating conflict in Syria

    And you can talk about talks between the opposition and Assad and a transitional government by mutual consent, and frankly it sounds to the people here on both sides like so much "blah blah blah." In fact, it probably sounds like "blab blah blah" to the citizens of the U.S. and Britain and France as well. But it is it is a [Band-Aid] by embarrassed governments while in reality on the ground there are two sides who are gunning for each other quite literally.

    Q: What can the West do?

    A: I just came from the U.N. in Damascus and there are dozens of white U.N. Land Rovers lined up there. They are all dressed up with nowhere to go.

    It does give a very bad impression of a world that is completely impotent, and secondly of a world that isn't even trying because the U.N. are just sitting in their hotel doing nothing.

    UN suspends Syria monitoring due to rising violence

    Q: What did you think of the recent Human Rights Watch report on widespread torture in Syria, were you surprised?

    A bomb targeting Syria's highest court has exploded in Damascus. NBC's Bill Neely reports.

    A: There was a large element of "duh!" when that report came out. You just thought, "Well, what do you expect, this has been a brutal regime for a very long time."

    Yes, it's terrible but I don’t think it told us anything new. Obviously, Human Rights Watch are trying to get the U.N. to refer Syria to the [International Criminal Court], they're building the evidence up block by block.

    Rights group: Syria's 20 torture methods

    Q: Is the risk that Syria could implode?

    A: The distinction is that Libya imploded, and the problem with Syria is that it could explode. Someone once said the Middle East is like a series of detonators all strung together. When Syria goes off Lebanon will, Iraq might, Iran, Syria's closest, friend might. And Israel may get tempted.

    Shaam News Network / AFP - Getty Images

    A handout image released by the opposition's Shaam News Network shows an anti-regime demonstrator holding a banner during a protest in Kfar Sousa on July 2. The Syrian Revolution General Commission (SRGC) pulled out of an opposition conference in Cairo, citing political "disputes," a statement said on July 3.

    Q: So you don't see much sign of the Assad government losing?

    A: Not much sign of them stopping the bombardment of Homs and Douma because, if that’s what they feel they have to do to crush the revolution than that’s what they’ll do. They’ve made that absolutely clear. You read the official Syrian news agency and the word "crush" appears many many times. 

    More world news from msnbc.com and NBC News:

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    Follow World News on msnbc.com on Twitter and Facebook

    105 comments

    Compared to ME Muslim nations' standards, Assad is far a better leader than most of them. Sunni Syrian rebels are supported by the Sunni Saudi invented most extremist and barbarians al-Qaida, MB and others. They have become so intolerant that they can't tolerate a ruler belonging to a different sect …

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  • 21
    Jun
    2012
    7:31am, EDT

    UK doctors strike despite $105,000-a-year pension offer

    By ITV News

    LONDON -- British doctors staged their first strike in nearly 40 years Thursday over plans to increase the amount they pay into their pension fund and make them work until they are 68, ITV News reported.

    The government says doctors would receive more than $105,000 a year after the age of 68 under its proposals.


    However the British Medical Association, which represents doctors, says the highest earning doctors will have to pay 14.5 percent of their pay into the pension fund by 2014, compared with 8.5 percent in March 2012.

    They also claim the new deal would actually leave retired doctors worse off.

    Read more stories from ITV News

    ITV News reported that early polls suggested as few as 22 percent of the BMA's more than 100,000 members were taking part in the strike.


    Follow @msnbc_world

    "Nobody is happy about taking any kind of action that impacts adversely on patients. There has been a lot of soul searching in the BMA, but we have to represent our members' views and nearly three-quarters of those who voted wanted to take this kind of action because they were so angry about what was happening to their pensions," Hamish Meldrum, chairman of the BMA, told ITV News.

    U.K. Health Secretary Andrew Lansley told the station that up to 1.25 million doctor appointments could have to be delayed.

    He said the BMA was "out on their own" because other trade unions in the U.K.'s public health service had agreed to a new deal "even if they didn't want to increase contributions for their pensions."

    ITV News is NBC's U.K. partner.

    More world news from msnbc.com and NBC News:

    • 1.5 million children in imminent danger of starvation in West Africa
    • Three US troops, at least 18 Afghans, killed in suicide blast
    • New Greece government agreed, says socialist party leader
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    Follow us on Twitter: @msnbc_world

     

    71 comments

    This is happening with government employees around the world. These individuals are going to simply have to learn to accept the new reality - the people that pay their salaries and benefits are tapped out. I encourage non-government workers (and government workers as well) to stand up and say "the p …

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  • 29
    May
    2012
    10:04am, EDT

    Parents arrested after six children killed in UK house fire

    Parents arrested over deaths of six children in UK house fire. ITV News' Damon Green reports.

    Watch on YouTube
    By ITV News

    LONDON - The parents of six children killed in an arson attack on their home in Britain were arrested on suspicion of murder on Tuesday.

    Mick Philpott, 55, and his wife Mairead, 31, were detained in connection with the attack on the house in Derby, in the English Midlands.


    The victims, whose ages ranged from 13 to five, died after the blaze at the house in Victory Road, Allenton, on May 11.

    Two weeks ago the couple broke down in tears at a press conference, just days after the incident:

    The family once appeared on the British version of The Jeremy Kyle Show.

    Click here for more coverage from Britain's ITV News

    Derbyshire Police said a 55-year-old man and a 31-year-old woman from Derby were arrested on Tuesday morning but did not name them.

    'Crucial information'
    Jade Philpott, 10, and brothers John, nine, Jack, seven, Jessie, six, and Jayden, five, all perished in the blaze, while Duwayne Philpott, 13, died of his injuries in Birmingham Children's Hospital two days' later.

    In a statement, Assistant Chief Constable Steve Cotterill said: “I suspect there may still be people with crucial information who have not yet come forward to speak to us.

    “In view of the arrests, I would urge anyone who may have been holding back, not felt comfortable to voice their concerns or not had the confidence, to do so now. They have my personal reassurance that we will deal with their information sensitively.

    “We still need information to help us in this inquiry. The latest arrests are just one step further in the investigation. It is absolutely vital that if you know anything you think could help us, come forward now, do not wait any longer. It is important that we find justice for these six young children.”

    A 28-year-old woman and 38-year-old man, both from Derby, were arrested earlier this month on suspicion of murder but were later released without charge, police said. 

    ITV News is the UK partner of NBC News.

    More world news from msnbc.com and NBC News:

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    Follow us on Twitter: @msnbc_world

     

    21 comments

    Wow that was a whole lot of no information, another poorly written article. RIP Jade, John, Jack, Jessie, Jayden, and Duwayne Philpott.

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