Tuesday, May 31, 2011

Stranded 44ft whale dies on beach

Stranded whaleThe mammal died despite hopes it would survive until the tide went out
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A 35ft (10.6m) long whale has died three hours after becoming stranded on a beach on Teesside.

Police alerted the RNLI after spotting the stricken mammal on Redcar Beach just after 0620 BST on Tuesday.

Officers from the RSPCA joined the rescue bid and tried to keep the whale wet in the hope it would be taken out by the high tide at about 1500 BST.

But despite the efforts, the whale, whose species has not been identified, died three hours later.

Officers from the Coastguard and Cleveland Fire Brigade also tried to help while RSPCA vets assessed the mammal's condition.

An RNLI spokesman said: "We have just received notification that unfortunately it has just died in the last few minutes.

"We don't know the reasons but usually when they get to this situation the conclusion is that they don't survive."

This article is from the BBC News website. � British Broadcasting Corporation, The BBC is not responsible for the content of external internet sites.

Source: http://www.bbc.co.uk/go/rss/int/news/-/news/uk-england-tees-13601654

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Do prayers help players?

 
Javier Hernandez, Lionel Messi, Emmanuel Adebayor, Cristiano Ronaldo, Ronaldo, Edu

At the Champions League final there is likely to be evidence of faith, with players making the sign of the cross and other religious gestures. But does belief really boost sporting performance?

All eyes will be on Lionel Messi, the world's greatest footballer, when he walks out with Barcelona in the Champions League final. If you watch carefully, you may see him crossing himself as he strides onto the pitch.

On the opposing side, Manchester United striker Javier Hernandez has been known to pray on the pitch.

Messi and Hernandez are not the only footballers to reveal their beliefs during the pursuit of their sport. Real Madrid star Kaka has often talked about his faith, praying on the pitch and thanking God for his rapid recovery from a broken back.

Other sportsmen, from Muhammad Ali to Jonathan Edwards, the triple jumper, have also spoken about the power of faith. They believe in different theologies, but all would assert they have benefited from their convictions. As Ali put it in the build-up to his clash with George Foreman in 1974: "How can I lose with Allah on my side?"

Brazil squadThe Brazil football squad combine prayer with on the field success

Atheists will regard the idea that religion can make a difference to outcomes in sport as fanciful. But it is possible to put aside the issue of whether or not God exists and just examine the impact of faith on performance.

This is what Jeong-Keun Park of Seoul University did in 2000 by studying the performances of Korean athletes. He found that prayer was not only a key factor in coping with anxiety but also in attaining peak performance.

A quote from a participant in Park's study encapsulates the findings: "I always prepared my game with prayer. I committed all things to God, without worry. These prayers make me calmer and more secure and I forget the fear of losing. It resulted in good play."

This echoes extraordinary research about the power of faith from the world of medicine. In the 1960s, a series of studies found that heart disease is far less common among the religious than in the general population, even after controlling for different lifestyles. Later studies extended this finding, including a paper in 1996 which found that mortality rates in secular kibbutzim are nearly twice that of their religious counterparts.

It seemed that religious beliefs conferred real health benefits.

Jonathan Edwards

“Any belief can have powerful effects, so long as it is held with sufficient conviction”

Jonathan Edwards

How is this possible? You can look for answers in one of the most perplexing of all psychological mysteries - the placebo effect, a phenomenon that has transfixed doctors since Theodor Kocker, a Swiss surgeon, performed 1,600 operations without anaesthesia in Berne in the 1890s.

Kocker's patients were told that anaesthesia had been administered and were able to endure surgery without even clenching their teeth, despite the fact that they had nothing beyond saltwater running through their veins.

In recent years, the placebo effect has been found to extend way beyond pain relief. It can cure ulcers, combat nausea and much else besides. It can also boost concentration, so long as the pill is dispensed in the right colour. Pink placebos, it turns out, have better concentration-boosting qualities than blue ones.

All of which hints at how the placebo effect works. Its power has nothing to do with the pharmacology of the drug (which is, by definition, non-existent); rather, its effect derives from the power of belief in the drug.

But this belief is not created out of nowhere, it is manufactured within a context. Anything that imbues the treatment with greater authenticity will strengthen belief. Colour, for example, is strongly connected in certain cultures with certain types of effect: red is buzzy, white is soothing. Drug companies play on these meanings. Stimulant medication tends to come in red or orange, antidepressants in white, and so on.

Diego MaradonaMaradona thanked the "hand of God", but there are examples of belief appearing to affect outcome

The placebo effect provides one possible explanation as to why those with religious beliefs have better health outcomes. Instead of a belief in the efficacy of sugar pills, patients have a belief in the healing power of God. And it is not just Christians who have better outcomes, but also those who hold different beliefs, such as Muslims. It would seem that it is not the content, but the strength of belief that matters.

As Anne Harrington, Professor of Medical History at Harvard University, puts it: "There is an innate capacity for our bodies to bring into being, to the best of their ability, the optimistic scenarios in which we fervently believe".

The results from the study of South Korean athletes have been replicated again and again, and across religious boundaries. The belief that a higher power is guiding one's performance seems to boost performance and remove doubt, something which can help sports people just as much as it helps patients.

Even away from faith, there are examples where belief can appear to change outcomes in sport. England midfielder Paul Ince used to leave it until the last moment to put his shirt on. Goalkeeper Mark Schwarzer has worn the same shin pads since he was 16. Nani, the Manchester United winger, plays with his socks the wrong way round.

Of course, these superstitions have little relevance to performance - unless you really believe they do. As Edwards, who lost his faith after retirement, put it: "Any belief can have powerful effects, so long as it is held with sufficient conviction".

All of which suggests that religious conviction really can boost performance, but only if you truly believe.

Matthew Syed is the author of Bounce: The Myth of Talent and the Power of Practice

This article is from the BBC News website. � British Broadcasting Corporation, The BBC is not responsible for the content of external internet sites.

Source: http://www.bbc.co.uk/go/rss/int/news/-/news/magazine-13575702

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Sprint moves to block mobile deal

AT&T and T-Mobile logosThe combined mobile phone company would have about 43% of the US market
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US mobile network provider Sprint Nextel has asked US regulators to block AT&T's takeover of T-Mobile USA, saying the deal would harm competition.

Sprint has been the most vocal opponent of the $39bn (£24bn) deal that would create the largest US wireless network.

It argued the deal had "no public interest benefit", in a filing at the Federal Communications Commission.

Forcing AT&T to divest assets would not be enough to prevent "serious anti-competitive harms", it added.

"This proposed takeover puts our mobile broadband future at a crossroads," said Sprint's Vonya McCann in a statement.

"We can choose the open, competitive road best travelled, and protect American consumers, innovation and our economy, or we can choose the dead end that merely protects only AT&T and leads the rest of us back down the dirt road to Ma Bell."

Sprint, the third biggest mobile operator in the US, also said the deal would lead to higher prices for consumers.

AT&T agreed to buy T-Mobile from Deutsche Telekom in March, but the deal still needs approval from regulators.

If approved, it would give AT&T about 43% of the US mobile market, taking it ahead of industry leader Verizon Wireless.

This article is from the BBC News website. � British Broadcasting Corporation, The BBC is not responsible for the content of external internet sites.

Source: http://www.bbc.co.uk/go/rss/int/news/-/news/business-13610481

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UK rural broadband plans move on

road through a woodThe government is keen to see fast net services in all rural areas
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Homes in Devon, Somerset, Norfolk and Wiltshire will get super-fast broadband, the government has said.

Making sure rural areas have fast net services is part of a wider drive to make the UK the best place for broadband by 2015.

Each county will receive a portion of the £530m fund the government has set aside to fund rural broadband.

The Department for Culture said that all the UK's local authorities will receive funding in the next few years.

"This is part of our plan for virtually every community in the UK to have access to super-fast broadband," said culture secretary Jeremy Hunt.

The government acknowledges that its £530m pot - which is money left over from an earlier digital switchover fund - will not be enough to give the entire country fast broadband.

Private investment will also be needed.

The successful counties were among 18 which originally bid for the money.

Devon and Somerset will receive around £30m, Norfolk £15m and Wiltshire £4m and they will then choose a contractor and technology best suited for their needs.

The government anticipates that the technologies will be a mix of mobile, satellite and fibre connections.

Wiltshire County Council has already pledged to spend £16m on broadband services across the county.

It may be disappointed by the grant allocated to it as it originally bid for £40m and anticipates it will cost £100m in total.

The government announced the first tranche of its rural broadband plan in October 2010, setting up three pilots in North Yorkshire, the Highlands and Islands of Scotland and Cumbria and Herefordshire.

It has been accused of being far too slow to get the trials up and running. So far none are live and only two have begun the process of finding a firm able to offer services.

Fujitsu has pledged to build a super-fast network across the whole of rural Britain. It has said it will offer fibre-to-the-home technology to around five million homes. That could provide homes with speeds of up to 100Mbps (megabits per second).

In order to do so it will rely on using BT's infrastructure - the ducts and poles that provide telephone and broadband services around the UK.

Ofcom has forced the telco to open up its network but some have argued that the prices it is planning to charge for access are too high.

Revised pricing is expected in June.

According to BT, Fujitsu has yet to join its ducts and poles trial.

This article is from the BBC News website. � British Broadcasting Corporation, The BBC is not responsible for the content of external internet sites.

Source: http://www.bbc.co.uk/go/rss/int/news/-/news/technology-13563787

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UN condemns Sri Lanka war footage

A man walks past a mural depicting fighting during the war in Colombo April 27, 2011The Sri Lankan army defeated Tamil Tiger rebels in 2009

An international seminar in which Sri Lanka aims to share its experience of defeating "terrorism" has begun despite calls for a boycott by rights groups.

Entitled "Defeating Terrorism - Sri Lankan Experience", the event is being attended by 42 countries.

It comes amid allegations of war crimes by the Sri Lankan government in the closing stages of the war in 2009.

Sri Lanka defeated Tamil Tiger rebels fighting for a separate homeland after 26 years of bloody civil war.

Human Rights Watch has said that the three-day event is an attempt at a whitewash. A report commissioned by the UN said there was credible evidence that both sides may have committed war crimes: the Tigers, for instance, by shooting escaping civilians, and the government, for example, by shelling hospitals.

The government has repeatedly denied accusations that thousands of civilians were killed in the latter stages of the war - arguing that it has been unfairly criticised for ending a conflict that claimed an estimated 100,000 lives amid regular suicide bombings of government targets.

The seminar is co-sponsored by China and officials say it is being attended by more than 40 nations, including Russia, India and Pakistan.

The US, Britain, Japan, Australia and France are among nations who have decided to stay away from the event.

Defence Secretary Gotabhaya Rajapakse, brother of President Mahinda Rajapakse, told the seminar's opening session on Tuesday that mass army recruitment was key to ending the decades-long civil war.

"We had a large but essential expansion of the army. It grew from 120,000 to 220,000 (between 2005 to 2009)," he said.

He added that he and the president had displayed a strong will to crush the Tigers. Sri Lanka says that the three-day conference could benefit other countries struggling with insurgencies.

The BBC's Charles Haviland in Colombo says that the government and military portray their defeat of Tamil Tiger rebels as a source of pride and a model for others to follow.

They say Sri Lanka is the "only country to defeat terrorism" and that the army rescued hundreds of thousands of civilians, inflicting minimum civilian casualties.

On Monday senior UN officialsaid he believes controversial video footage, circulated on the internet and broadcast by the UK-based Channel 4 News, is authentic.

The video appears to show Sri Lankan soldiers killing captured and unarmed Tamil Tiger rebels at close range.

Sri Lanka denies the accusation, insisting the video is fake and that the UN probe into the video is "biased."

This article is from the BBC News website. � British Broadcasting Corporation, The BBC is not responsible for the content of external internet sites.

Source: http://www.bbc.co.uk/go/rss/int/news/-/news/world-south-asia-13601907

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Apple to unveil own cloud service

Apple's CEO Steve JobsApple CEO Steve Jobs has been away from the public eye after taking medical leave earlier this year
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Apple CEO Steve Jobs will announce a range of new products, including a widely anticipated cloud service, at its developer conference next week.

iCloud is likely to offer services rivaling that of Google and Amazon.

Attendees will also see Lion, the latest version of Apple's Macintosh operating system, and an upgraded version of mobile system iOS.

Mr Jobs, who is on medical leave, has not appeared in public since March.

Details of the products on show came via an Apple press release ahead of its Worldwide Developers Conference (WWDC) - an unusual step for a company which is usually very secretive ahead of its flagship event.

Rumours of the iCloud have been circulating since it was reported that Apple bought the "iCloud.com" domain name in April.

Analysis

Two things stand out from Apple's announcement about next week's event.

First, the news that Steve Jobs will take to the stage. Apple's charismatic boss has been on sick leave for months, so this appears to be welcome evidence that he is in reasonable shape.

Then, as well as confirming that the conference will see the unveiling of the next generation of Mac OSX, there's the revelation that iCloud - "Apple's upcoming cloud services offering" - will also be on show.

While the music industry has been buzzing for months, even years, with speculation that Apple would launch a streaming music service, it is unusual for a company that guards its secrets so jealously to give us even this much detail in advance.

The eyes of Google, Amazon and Europe's Spotify will be on Steve Jobs' keynote on Monday.

They will all be wondering whether the company that has dominated the digital download market now has plans to take control of the cloud too.

However, it is unclear whether the iCloud will be a purely music streaming tool or if it will be a wider cloud service for storage such as the one offered by, among others, Dropbox.

Amazon and Google have already launched streaming music services, but so far have not managed to get big record labels on board - meaning they can only offer streaming of tracks already owned by the user.

Unconfirmed reports have hinted that Apple have managed to seal deals with several labels.

If true, this would make it a fierce competitor to Spotify, an already well-established music service with over 10m members.

Spotify is not yet available in the United States.

Last year, Mr Jobs said Lion - the eighth version of its Mac OSX operating system - would bring "many of the best ideas from the iPad back to the Mac, plus some fresh new ones".

Also on show will be the fifth version of iOS, the software which powers the iPad, iPhone and iPod touch.

However, official details about the next iPhone have yet to be publicised.

This article is from the BBC News website. � British Broadcasting Corporation, The BBC is not responsible for the content of external internet sites.

Source: http://www.bbc.co.uk/go/rss/int/news/-/news/technology-13605219

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New review of Digital Act sought

Man listening to music, GettyThe Digital Economy Act enrolled ISPs in the fight against illegal downloads
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Telecoms firms BT and Talk Talk are to appeal against a High Court ruling on the controversial Digital Economy Act.

In 2010, the firms asked for a High Court review, arguing the Act broke European laws that the UK must uphold.

In April, the High Court rejected the call for a judicial review, but said the government had to look again at who pays for some of the Act's measures.

The companies said in their appeal that the court should reconsider the anti-piracy actions required by the Act.

The original legal action was brought because BT and Talk Talk said the Digital Economy Act received "insufficient scrutiny" when it was passed into law just before the 2010 general election.

The clauses that BT and Talk Talk wanted the court to consider obliged internet service providers to co-operate with record labels and film studios that want to identify those who deal in pirated music and films online.

The legal challenge claimed this amounted to a violation of European laws on privacy and commerce. The court did not agree and the legal challenge failed to get the law overturned.

In a statement, BT and Talk Talk said they were now seeking leave to take their case to the Court of Appeal.

If granted leave to appeal, the two aim to challenge the DEA on the grounds that it stands at odds with European directives dealing with e-commerce, technical standards, authorisation and privacy.

This article is from the BBC News website. � British Broadcasting Corporation, The BBC is not responsible for the content of external internet sites.

Source: http://www.bbc.co.uk/go/rss/int/news/-/news/technology-13574960

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Tablets to take stage in Taipei

The Asus PadfoneAsus' innovative Padfone turns a smartphone into a tablet
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Over 50 of the latest tablet computers will be on show as the annual Computex computing show kicks off in Taipei, Taiwan.

All will be hoping to put a dent in the Apple iPad's dominance of the market amid falling PC sales.

The event is the second-largest in the computing diary, and runs from Tuesday to Saturday.

Highlights will include the Padfone, an Asus-made phone that becomes a tablet when slotted into special casing.

Asus, which is based in Taipei, will also be showing off the UX21, a slimline laptop set to take on Apple's Macbook Air series, and the Asus Eee Pad MeMO 3D - a glasses-free 3D tablet.

Elsewhere at the event, ViewSonic will display what it says is the first tablet equipped with both Windows 7 and Google Android operating systems.

The ViewPad 10 Pro, which runs on Intel's new Atom chip, is designed to help people make a transition from netbook to tablet, explained Kai Wang, a ViewSonic product manager.

"While iPad users are aimed for entertainment, our new machine has functions more than that," Mr Wang told reporters.

The device will weigh just over 830 grams (1.8lb) and is expected to go to market in the summer, priced at around $799 (£485).

Also giving an early peek at their show products were Shuttle.

A model displays the Shuttle V08Shuttle have stepped up their tablet race with a low-cost device aimed at students

Their tablet, the Shuttle V08, is expected to cost just $200. Company manager David Chen hopes it can soak up users priced out of more advanced tablets - most likely to be students.

"It's true iPad is popular," Mr Chen said. "But it is impossible for Apple to take the world's entire tablet market.

"There is still room for some tailor-made tablet developers."

Rising consumer interest in tablets has seen researchers predict slower growth in PC sales across the world.

Gartner Research cut its sales growth forecast for global PC sales in 2011 from 15.9% to 10.5%.

Acer, the third biggest computing manufacturer worldwide, saw its PC sales drop by 20% year-on-year in the first quarter of 2011.

According to IHS iSuppli, 8.1 million PCs were sold in the same period for all manufacturers.

Worldwide sales of tablet computers are forecast to hit 50 million units this year and double to 100 million in 2012 the Taipei Computer Association has predicted.

Apple is expected to retain the lion's share of the market with 70-80%.

This article is from the BBC News website. � British Broadcasting Corporation, The BBC is not responsible for the content of external internet sites.

Source: http://www.bbc.co.uk/go/rss/int/news/-/news/technology-13593148

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VIDEO: Click reviews the latest game releases

Marc Cieslak looks at three of the latest video game releases.

This article is from the BBC News website. � British Broadcasting Corporation, The BBC is not responsible for the content of external internet sites.

Source: http://news.bbc.co.uk/go/rss/int/news/-/1/hi/programmes/click_online/9499197.stm

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China warns over Mongolian unrest

Handout photo taken on May 26, 2011 and released on May 31, 2011 by Southern Mongolian Human Rights shows Mongolian herders and students protesting in Huveet Shar BannerHundreds of ethnic Mongolians took part in protests
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China's Foreign Ministry has claimed that foreigners are stirring up trouble in the province of Inner Mongolia.

Ministry spokeswoman Jiang Yu said attempts cause trouble would not succeed, but she did not specify which foreigners she was talking about.

Last week, hundreds protested after two ethnic Mongolians were killed - allegedly by Han Chinese assailants.

Protest groups say the deaths have highlighted wider concerns about the economic development of the region.

Many ethnic Mongolians say their traditional nomadic way of life is being overridden, particularly by mining projects.

The Chinese authorities have tightened security across the region, and there have been no reports of demonstrations this week.

The government has largely removed references to the protests from the internet.

Ms Jiang told a regular news conference that the authorities would try to tackle the grievances of the people in Inner Mongolia.

"As for the reasonable claims by the people, the local authorities will respond positively to them," she said.

But she added that people overseas were trying to use the incident to cause trouble.

"As for those overseas trying to play up this incident for ulterior motives, we feel that it would be impossible for them to succeed," she said.

The unrest erupted last week after two ethnic Mongolians were killed in separate incidents.

A farmer was run over and killed on 10 May while trying to protect his land.

Five days later, another ethnic Mongolian was killed during a protest at a mine.

Less than 20% of Inner Mongolia's estimated 25 million residents are ethnic Mongolians. About 80% are Han Chinese.

This article is from the BBC News website. � British Broadcasting Corporation, The BBC is not responsible for the content of external internet sites.

Source: http://www.bbc.co.uk/go/rss/int/news/-/news/world-asia-pacific-13602589

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Man's body found in Blantyre burn

A man's body has been found in a burn in Blantyre, South Lanarkshire, police have confirmed.

The body was discovered by a member of the public at about 1300 BST in a burn close to Stoneymeadow Road, to the northeast of East Kilbride.

Strathclyde Police said it was too early to establish the cause of death.

The man's body has now been removed and taken to Glasgow's city mortuary. A post mortem examination will be held in due course.

This article is from the BBC News website. � British Broadcasting Corporation, The BBC is not responsible for the content of external internet sites.

Source: http://www.bbc.co.uk/go/rss/int/news/-/news/uk-scotland-glasgow-west-13603589

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Spanish anger at cucumber blame

Andalucian Minister of Agriculture and Fisheries, Clara Aguilera

The Andalucian agriculture minister ate a cucumber to show her confidence in the vegetables

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Spain has expressed anger at links being made between Spanish cucumbers and a deadly E. coli outbreak.

The country's agriculture minister said Germany pointed to Spanish cucumbers "without having reliable data".

Meanwhile, German officials have voiced doubts about whether the Spanish cucumbers they are investigating carried the deadly E. coli strain.

The outbreak has led to 16 deaths - 15 in Germany and a woman who died in Sweden after travelling to Germany.

The Robert Koch Institute (RKI), Germany's national disease institute, says more than 1,150 people within Germany have been affected by enterohaemorrhagic E. coli, also known as EHEC.

In many instances, the gastrointestinal infection has led to Haemolytic-uraemic Syndrome (HUS), which causes kidney problems and is potentially fatal.

The RKI has confirmed 373 cases of HUS in Germany.

“We want Germany to provide, without any delay and distractions, the necessary information of its investigation”

Rosa Aguilar Spanish agriculture ministerQ&A: Contaminated vegetables

German authorities initially pointed to organic cucumbers from Spain.

But Spanish officials have refused to accept the blame, saying it is still unclear exactly when and where the vegetables were contaminated.

Spanish Agriculture Minister Rosa Aguilar said: "We are disappointed by the way Germany handles the situation."

"We want Germany to provide, without any delay and distractions, the necessary information of its investigation so that the European Union can know what is causing the E. coli outbreak."

Speaking at an EU meeting in Hungary, she also said the issue should be treated as a "common problem" and that there should be compensation for Spanish and other European producers affected.

The Netherlands has also said it will ask for compensation.

The president of Spain's fruit and vegetable export federation has urged the government to deal with the outbreak, saying it was costing Spanish exporters $200m (£120m) a week.

Asked which countries had stopped buying Spanish produce, Jorge Brotons was quoted as telling a news conference: "Almost all Europe. There is a domino effect on all vegetables and fruits."

Authorities in Hamburg said four suspect cucumbers found there last week - including three imported from Spain - were carrying EHEC, but not the same kind found in patients.

Commission spokesperson Pia Ahrenkilde Hansen

EC spokesperson Pia Ahrenkilde Hansen: "We are still getting the full picture"

"As before the source remains unidentified," Hamburg state health minister Cornelia Pruefer-Storcks said.

"Our hope of discovering the source of the cases of severe complications with HUS unfortunately has not been fulfilled by these first results."

She also defended the decision to link the outbreak to Spanish cucumbers last week.

"It would have been irresponsible with this number of ill people to keep quiet about a well-grounded suspicion," she said. "Protecting people's lives is more important than economic interests."

Earlier, a senior German scientist warned that the outbreak could worsen.

"We hope the number of cases will go down but we fear it will worsen," said Oliver Grieve, of the University Medical Centre Schleswig-Holstein, where many victims are being treated.

German authorities have warned people to avoid eating raw cucumbers, tomatoes and lettuce.

In Sweden, authorities said there were 39 suspected E. coli infections, including 15 with HUS.

On Tuesday, Swedish authorities said a woman in her 50s had died in hospital, after being admitted on Sunday following a trip to Germany.

Cases have also been reported in Switzerland, Denmark, the Netherlands and the UK.

Several countries have taken steps to curtail the outbreak, such as banning cucumber imports and removing the vegetables from sale.

This article is from the BBC News website. � British Broadcasting Corporation, The BBC is not responsible for the content of external internet sites.

Source: http://www.bbc.co.uk/go/rss/int/news/-/news/world-europe-13605910

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