Tuesday, 20 May 2014

Gabby Logan admits tax avoidance but vows to pay it back

Gabby Logan admits tax avoidance but vows to pay it back

Gabby LoganA former gymnast, Logan now presents sports coverage for the BBC and ITV reality show Splash!

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Gabby Logan is the latest household name to admit being part of the tax avoidance scheme used by Gary Barlow and Colin Jackson.
The sports presenter invested thousands into Icebreaker, a company which purported to support young musicians.
However, a recent court ruling said the firm was "understood by all concerned to be a tax avoidance scheme".
Logan says she invested in the scheme in "good faith" and vowed "to pay any tax" she owes.
She added that she pulled out of the scheme in 2012.

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"I have been completely open and honest with HMRC and I have never hidden anything”
Gabby Logan
Logan issued the following statement on her website, following press speculation about her involvement in the scheme.
"I was advised about a business opportunity six years ago (2008) and I invested in good faith.
"It was explained to me as a way of funding new acts in the music industry. Because of information which came to light in 2012, I decided the investment was not right for me.
"With new professional help and advisors, I have for some time been working to resolve the issue and I fully intend to pay any tax which should have been paid, had I not entered the business.
The presenter said she had been "completely open and honest" with HM Revenue & Customs (HMRC), adding: "I have never hidden anything."
Gabby Logan and James Jordan on Strictly Come DancingLogan took part in the fifth series of Strictly Come Dancing in 2007
Take That singer Gary Barlow - along with band-mates Howard Donald and Mark Owen, and manager Jonathan Wild - were among about 1,000 people who put money into the Icebreaker scheme.
Since March 2010, the four men have been directors of Larkdale LLP - one of 50 partnerships that Icebreaker arranged to harness tax reliefs that the government had intended would support those in creative industries.
The tribunal found that shortly after money was put in to Larkdale LLP, it reported huge losses of more than £25m.
Those losses could then be offset against tax, reducing the men's tax bills.
Howard Donald, Gary Barlow and Mark OwenSome press reports have speculated Take That's tax bill could be as high as £20m
In total, around 50 partnerships with hundreds of members invested in Icebreaker, which claimed total losses of £336m.
Last week, former Olympic hurdler and BBC broadcaster Colin Jackson admitted to being in one such partnership, Sparkdale LLP, along with a number of dentists and lawyers.
He defended his decision to invest in the loss-making scheme, telling the BBC he was proud to have supported struggling musicians.
"If it means you have to take a hit then I'll happily take a hit," he said.
"People have invested in me in the past to help me get to the top of my game. I'll still invest in people to help them get to the top of their game."
HMRC pursued Icebreaker through the courts after the Times newspaper first exposed the scheme in 2012.
Its members have until 2 July to decide whether they want to appeal. HMRC said it would be seeking payment of the tax in the meantime.

UK house prices up 8% in a year, says ONS

UK house prices up 8% in a year, says ONS

HousesActivity in the housing market varies in different parts of the country
UK house prices rose by 8% in the year to the end of March, official figures show, as the prime minister says he will consider changes to Help to Buy.
The annual increase slowed compared with a 9.2% year-on-year price rise to the end of February.
However, the latest official data from the Office for National Statistics (ONS) showed that the annual property price increase in London stood at 17%.
Excluding London and the South East of England, prices were up by 4.7%.
The wide range of activity was shown with prices in Northern Ireland increasing by 0.3% on a year-on-year basis, and by 0.8% in Scotland.

Help to Buy (mortgage guarantee)

houses
  • Covers all UK
  • Covers "second-hand" homes up to £600,000
  • Began October 2013.
  • Ends December 2016.
In the East of England, property prices were up by 6.6% annually, and by 6.1% in the South East of England.
Help to Buy
The ONS said that prices fell by 0.5% in March compared with February, matching other surveys, making the average home worth £252,000. This was the first month-on-month drop for over a year.
However, house price data from the Halifax and Nationwide, based on their lending, have also shown fairly sharp rises in prices on average over the last year, despite the regional differences.
This has prompted some commentators to call for the second phase of the government-backed Help to Buy scheme in the UK - which supports new homebuyers who might have struggled to get a mortgage - to be scaled back.
Prime Minister David Cameron told the BBC: "Of course, we will consider any changes that are proposed by [Bank of England governor] Mark Carney.

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An unaddressed bubble in London will pump up bubbles in adjacent regions, as buyers feel compelled to look for value and affordability elsewhere”
"But, as he said, this is a well-targeted scheme and it has helped tens of thousands of people get on the housing ladder and to have mortgages."
The shadow chancellor, Ed Balls, said the Help to Buy scheme was simply too high: "We've said it should come down much closer to average house prices. A number below £400,000 would make much more sense than £600,000 which is far too big a house price for the taxpayer to be guaranteeing mortgages. "
The Treasury minister - Andrea Leadsom - said there were a number of issues for the government to consider: "The thing is it's a fine balance. In London prices are rising quite fast. In the rest of the country - and in the country as a whole - they remain 15% in real terms below their pre-crisis peak. "
Rate fear
Mr Carney said he was watching the housing market closely. Although there was a shortage of homes, which the Bank could do nothing about, it did have influence on lenders and would tell the chancellor if changes needed to be made to the government's housing market schemes.
Mortgage rules have been altered recently, that is thought to be lengthening the time it takes to get a home loan. This has reduced the number of mortgage approvals in recent weeks.
The Bank of England also has the power to control interest rates, and a separate report suggests a rise in the Bank rate could hit hundreds of thousands of mortgage holders hard.

BBC housing calculator

Renting example
  • Lets you see where you can afford to live - and if it would it be cheaper to rent or buy
  • Enter how many bedrooms, which end of the market and how much you want to pay each month
  • As you move the payment slider, parts of the UK light up to show you where you can afford
  • Based on pricing and rental data from residential property analysts Hometrack
The Resolution Foundation estimates that 770,000 vulnerable households could be "imprisoned" by a limited ability to switch to another mortgage deal were interest rates to rise. That represents about one in 10 mortgage holders in the UK.
The Bank rate is at a record low of 0.5%, but analysts are predicting a rise in the rate at some point in 2015.
"Many borrowers have enjoyed spectacular savings over recent years, with mortgage rates falling to historic lows, and most will be able to ride the tide of gradually rising interest rates," said Matthew Whittaker, chief economist at the Resolution Foundation and author of the report.
"But for around one in four, even modest rate rises could create financial difficulties. Those at greatest risk are members of this group who also find themselves unable to access the best deals in the market today.
"Almost one in 10 households are doubly exposed: facing the prospect of their mortgage becoming increasingly unaffordable in the future and with the market offering them limited, if any, choice today."
The report suggested that homeowners in London and eastern England were most exposed to an interest rate rise.
The cost of living, as measured by the Consumer Prices Index, rose to 1.8% in April from 1.6% in March. This was the first rise in inflation for 10 months and pushed the annual change in prices slightly higher than the annual change in average earnings.
Are you struggling to get on the housing ladder? Please let us know your experiences. Email haveyoursay@bbc.co.uk with 'House prices' in the subject.

Nigeria bombings: 'Death toll passes 100

Nigeria bombings: 'Death toll passes 100'

The BBC's Will Ross: "For the last two years Jos has been fairly free of attacks"
The bodies of at least 118 people have now been recovered from the sites of twin bombings in the central Nigerian city of Jos, the nation's emergency management agency says.
The first blast was in a busy market, the second outside a nearby hospital.
No group has said it was behind the attack but Boko Haram militants have carried out a spate of recent bombings.
Jos has also seen deadly clashes between Christian and Muslim groups in recent years.
A spokesperson for the regional governor told AFP news agency that most of the victims were women. The market and bus terminal are part of the commercial centre of Jos.
The second blast was some 30 minutes after the first and killed some rescue workers.
Journalist Hassan Ibrahim told the BBC that tension was rising in the area, with youths blocking some roads. Religious leaders are appealing for calm.
National Emergency Management Agency coordinator Mohammed Abdulsalam said: "We've now recovered 118 bodies from the rubble. This could rise by morning, as there is still some rubble we haven't shifted." He said 56 people were injured.
Rule
Analysis by Will Ross, BBC News, Abuja

Prostate cancer 'may be a sexually transmitted disease'

Prostate cancer 'may be a sexually transmitted disease'


trichomonas vaginalis

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Prostate cancer may be a sexually transmitted disease caused by a common yet often silent infection passed on during intercourse, scientists say - but experts say proof is still lacking.
Although several cancers are caused by infections, Cancer Research UK says it is too early to add prostate cancer to this list.
The University of California scientists tested human prostate cells in the lab.
They found a sex infection called trichomoniasis aided cancer growth.

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There are still no known lifestyle factors that seem to affect the risk of developing the disease - and no convincing evidence for a link with infection”
Nicola SmithCancer Research UK
More research is now needed to confirm the link, they say in the journalProceedings of the National Academy of Sciences (PNAS).
Sex infection
Trichomoniasis is believed to infect some 275 million people worldwide and is the most common non-viral sexually transmitted infection.
Often, a person will have no symptoms and be unaware that they have it.
Men may feel itching or irritation inside the penis, burning after urination or ejaculation, or a white discharge from the penis.
Women may notice itching or soreness of the genitals, discomfort with urination, or a discharge with an unpleasant fishy smell.
This latest research is not the first to suggest a link between trichomoniasis and prostate cancer. A study in 2009 found a quarter of men with prostate cancer showed signs of trichomoniasis, and these men were more likely to have advanced tumours.
The PNAS study suggests how the sexually transmitted infection might make men more vulnerable to prostate cancer, although it is not definitive proof of such a link.
Prof Patricia Johnson and colleagues found the parasite that causes trichomoniasis - Trichomonas vaginalis - secretes a protein that causes inflammation and increased growth and invasion of benign and cancerous prostate cells.
They say more studies should now follow to further explore this finding - particularly since we still do not know what causes prostate cancer.
Nicola Smith, health information officer at Cancer Research UK, said: "This study suggests a possible way the parasite Trichomonas vaginaliscould encourage prostate cancer cells to grow and develop more quickly.
"But the research was only done in the lab, and previous evidence in patients failed to show a clear link between prostate cancer and this common sexually transmitted infection.
"There's been a lot of research into prostate cancer risk and we're working hard to piece together the puzzle.
"But there are still no known lifestyle factors that seem to affect the risk of developing the disease - and no convincing evidence for a link with infection.
"The risk of prostate cancer is known to increase with age."
Prostate cancer is now the most common cancer in men in the UK - about one in nine men will get it at some point in their lives.
It is more common in men over 70, and there appears to be some genetic risk since the disease can run in families.

Michael Jackson hologram stars at Billboard Music Awards

Michael Jackson hologram stars at awards show

The pop legend made a digital appearance as a hologram performing at the Billboard Music Awards in Las Vegas.
The late Michael Jackson has made a stunning but not-so-surprising "appearance" at the Billboard Music Awards in Las Vegas on Monday as a hologram, while two Australian acts also performed at the event, which is one of music's big showcases.
The cat was out of the bag last week that Jackson's holographic image would feature after two companies which own patents to the technology – used to digitally resurrect the image of late rapper Tupac Shakur in 2012 at the Coachella music festival – attempted to take out an injunction in the United States to stop the awards. They failed after lawyers for Jackson's estate and the producers of the awards argued doing so would cause them irreparable harm.
Jackson's hologram was used as the centrepiece to a spectacular but rather creepy performance of the single Slave to the Rhythm which included the late singer's trademark 'moonwalking' dance moves. The song was released by Sony Music recently as part of the posthumous Jackson album Xscape, which was based on music made by Jackson but not released during his lifetime.
Michael Jackson's hologram takes the stage.
Michael Jackson's hologram takes the stage.
The digital image of Jackson was dressed in a signature gold-embossed jacket, white T-shirt, gold belt and red trousers and looked inspired by Jackson in his early 30s.
Jackson died in June 2009 aged 50 from acute propofol and benzodiazepine intoxication after a heart attack. The singer's death was ruled a homicide and his physician Conrad Murray was convicted of involuntary manslaughter and sentenced to four years in jail.
Reaction on social media was mixed with many fans shocked at how life-like the hologram looked, while others were split between commenting the performance kept his legacy alive and feeling Jackson’s memory was disrespected by it.
The holgram danced to the new Jackson single ''Slave to the Rhythm''.
The hologram danced to the new Jackson single ''Slave to the Rhythm''.
Others took it as a chance for gallows humour. American writer Gloria Fallon wondered if Michael Jackson’s brothers were ‘‘desperately trying to figure out how to trick a hologram into going on ‘‘just 1 more tour’’ with them [sic]’’. Several younger users reasoned if Jackson could perform at the Billboard awards that way then surely they could attend school as holograms too.
Xscape was released last week to mixed reviews. It went to number one in the United Kingdom and number three in Australia and is expected to vie for the number one spot on America's official Billboard charts. But many critics panned the album's release as distasteful, arguing that if Jackson had wanted to release the music he would have done so.
Fairfax Media reviewer Bernard Zuel wrote "There is no getting around the simple fact that this is an album which shouldn't have come out."
Justin Timberlake was the big winner at the awards, collecting seven awards including top artist, top album and top male artist. The recovering Kiwi teen superstar Lorde won two awards, top new artist and top rock song for Royals, which might surprise people who think of rock music as a little rougher than Lorde's terrific slice of savvy pop. 
Five Seconds of Summer, from Sydney, played their worldwide smash hit She Looks So Perfect at the ceremony which was held at the MGM Grand after their fans deluged Twitter in the lead-up to the event. The hashtag #5SOSBBMAs trended around the world, with a huge 430,000-plus uses in 24 hours. Australian rapper Iggy Azalea also performed, dueting with Ariana Grande on the song Problems


Read more: http://www.smh.com.au/entertainment/music/michael-jackson-hologram-stars-at-billboard-music-awards-20140519-38j6v.html#ixzz32HG6PIv4

BILLBOARD MUSIC AWARDS - MAJOR WINNERS

                                                                                       Top artist
Justin Timberlake

Top Hot 100 Song
Blurred Lines, Robin Thicke feat. T.I. & Pharrell

Top Billboard 200 album
The 20/20 Experience, Justin Timberlake

Top duo/group
Imagine Dragons

Top new artist
Lorde

Top touring artist
Bon Jovi
Top male artist
Justin Timberlake
Top female artist
Katy Perry
Top hot 100 artist
Imagine Dragons
Top Billboard 200 artist
Justin Timberlake
Top digital songs artist
Katy Perry
Top radio songs artist
Justin Timberlake
Top social artist
Justin Bieber
Top streaming artist
Miley Cyrus
Top R&B artist
Justin Timberlake
Top rap artist
Eminem
Top country artist
Luke Bryan
Top rock artist
Imagine Dragons
Top Latin artist
Marc Anthony
Top dance/electronic artist
Daft Punk
Top R&B album
Justin Timberlake, The 20/20 Experience
Top rap album
Eminem, The Marshall Mathers LP 2
Top rock album
Imagine Dragons, Night Visions
Top dance/electronic album
Daft Punk, Random Access Memories
Top digital song
Blurred Lines, Robin Thicke feat. T.I. & Pharrell
Top radio song
Blurred Lines, Robin Thicke feat. T.I. & Pharrell
Top streaming song
Radioactive, Imagine Dragons
Top streaming song (video)
Wrecking Ball, Miley Cyrus
Top R&B song
Blurred Lines, Robin Thicke feat. T.I. & Pharrell
Top rap song
Can't Hold Us, Macklemore & Ryan Lewis feat. Ray Dalton
Top rock song
Royals, Lorde
Top dance / electronic song
Wake Me Up, Avicii


Read more: http://www.smh.com.au/entertainment/music/michael-jackson-hologram-stars-at-billboard-music-awards-20140519-38j6v.html#ixzz32HFTKErM

Monday, 19 May 2014

Abu Hamza: Home Secretary Theresa May hails guilty verdict



The UK home secretary has hailed the verdict of a New York court which found radical Muslim cleric Abu Hamza al-Masri guilty of supporting terrorism.
Theresa May said the conviction came after the government's successful bid to have him extradited from the UK, where he rose to prominence for his fiery sermons at a north London mosque.
Abu Hamza, who is due to be sentenced on 9 September, could face a life term.
The court heard he aided the kidnappers of 16 tourists in Yemen in 1998.
The 56-year-old was also accused of attempting to build a terror training camp in Oregon in the north-western US.
He showed little emotion in court as the verdict was read out, only answering "yes" when his lawyer asked if he was OK.
Nick Bryant looks back at the case against Abu Hamza
He was extradited from the UK, where he preached at the Finsbury Park mosque, after having been jailed for seven years for inciting murder and racial hatred.

Analysis

The conviction of Abu Hamza in New York marks the end of a 16-year long global saga. I first heard his name in Yemen in 1998 while covering the violent kidnapping of 16 western tourists by a gang of jihadists. Three Britons and an Australian died when Yemeni forces rescued the hostages.
Working with the late Times journalist Danny McGrory, we discovered that the kidnappers had been in contact with an extremist imam in a London mosque: Abu Hamza in Finsbury Park. Later it transpired that his son, stepson and several other British radicals had been arrested days earlier in Yemen and Abu Hamza was hoping to trade the western hostages for their release.
Incredibly, Abu Hamza then remained free to preach hatred and intolerance for years afterwards, before being ousted from the mosque and continuing his sermons in the street in front of a small but fanatical group of followers.
He styled himself 'Sheikh' but this former nightclub worker lacked the religious knowledge and authority of the Jordanian cleric Abu Qatada. For years before his arrest in 2004 the security services failed to take him seriously, a mistake they later came to regret.
In New York the jury of eight men and four women reached a unanimous guilty verdict on all 11 terror charges.
Manhattan US Attorney Preet Bharara said: "The defendant stands convicted, not for what he said, but for what he did.
"Abu Hamza was not just a preacher of faith, but a trainer of terrorists.
Manhattan US Attorney Preet Bhara: "Abu Hamza... attempted to portray himself as a preacher of faith but he was, instead, a trainer of terrorists"
"Once again our civilian system of justice has proven itself up to the task of trying an accused terrorist and arriving at a fair and just and swift result."
Reacting to the verdict, Mrs May said: "I am pleased that Abu Hamza has finally faced justice. He used every opportunity, over many years, to frustrate and delay the extradition process."
'Religious war'
Abu Hamza was arrested in May 2004 on a US arrest warrant.
The 11 charges against him included allegations that he arranged satellite communications for a group of kidnappers in Yemen who carried out a deadly attack in which four hostages were killed.
He was eventually also found guilty of conspiring in 1999-2000 to establish an al-Qaeda training camp in Bly, Oregon, among other acts.
He was convicted of various crimes including hostage taking, conspiring to provide material support to terrorists, and abetting religious war in Afghanistan.
His defence team said he would appeal, claiming that too much weight had been given to comments he had made on unrelated matters.
"Bin Laden, al-Qaeda, 9/11, World Trade Centre, USS Cole - all those things which our client was not charged with specifically, they played much more of a role than we believe it should have," his lawyer Jeremy Schneider said outside court.
Theresa May Theresa May says she is pleased Abu Hamza has "finally faced justice"
'Helped MI5'
Born Mustafa Kamel Mustafa, Abu Hamza al-Masri came to Britain from Egypt in 1979. Before gaining notoriety as an Islamist, he had worked at a strip club in London's Soho.
He told the court he lost an eye and both his hands - not, as he had previously claimed, from fighting the Soviets in Afghanistan - but during an accident in Pakistan when liquid explosives intended for use in a road construction project went off by mistake.
Abu Hamza's lawyer, Jeremy Schneider, suggested the terrorism charges had an emotional affect on the jury
It was after this that he began wearing a hook in place of his hands which, along with his missing eye, made him a distinctive figure among British Islamists.
The BBC's security correspondent Frank Gardner said he was ousted from Finsbury Park mosque where he had been an "extremist imam" but was allowed to continue preaching.
His defence claimed in the trial that he had assisted MI5 "to keep the streets of London safe".
But the prosecution portrayed him as a terrorism boss, recruiting and despatching young men on missions around the world.
They said the calm figure who had appeared during the trial was a fraud.