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Leading Articles

Leading article: British and US interests are still fatally entwined

Published: 06 February 2007

The death of the 100th British soldier to be killed in Iraq as a result of hostile action is the latest sad milestone to have been reached since the start of this ill-conceived war

Leading article: A surgical solution

Published: 06 February 2007

A report yesterday by Dr David Colin-Thome, the National Clinical Director for Primary Care, set out the next evolutionary step for the NHS

Leading article: Suffolk is only one battle in a long global war

Published: 05 February 2007

The outbreak of bird flu in Suffolk is deeply disturbing. In terms of scale, Britain is now the centre of the worst outbreak in Europe. The relatively low-key public reaction to the eruption, however, would suggest that at last we have apparently learned not to panic.

Leading article: Why doesn't Europe make green cars?

Published: 05 February 2007

European officials have a knack for handing rods to Europhobes to beat them with. Just as the world wakes up to the peril of global warming, a European commissioner who shows he is alert to this concern by announcing he will replace his gas-guzzling car with a more environmentally-friendly variety is criticised by colleagues for not choosing a vehicle made in Europe.

Leading article: Kylie, Kate and culture

Published: 05 February 2007

It is no surprise that the V&A's decision to devote an exhibition to the singer Kylie Minogue, complete with items of clothing from her iconic soap Neighbours, has drawn hostile complaints from certain quarters to the effect that the perky balladeer hardly merits a show of her own in such a hallowed setting. The exhibition of Kate Moss's career in the National Portrait Gallery could well draw a similar reaction.

Leading article: Don't panic. Yet

Published: 04 February 2007

At the risk of sounding like Corporal Jones in Dad's Army, the response to the news that the bird flu that killed thousands of turkeys in Suffolk was the serious H5N1 strain should be: Don't panic

Leading article: What a way to go

Published: 04 February 2007

It was never meant to end like this. Tony Blair's dream, expressed in a staffer's cringe-making memo last year, of leaving office with applause ringing in his ears and "the crowds wanting more", vanished four years ago in the sands of Iraq

Leading article: A star is reborn

Published: 04 February 2007

We are not quite sure what the situation is regarding water, sparrows and PS3s. But one thing of which there is a shortage in this country is sporting heroes.

Leading article: The world's leaders must deliver more than hot air

Published: 03 February 2007

The public appetite for serious action is growing. The scientific case for action is beyond doubt

Leading article: A sign of rising confidence

Published: 03 February 2007

Political progress in Northern Ireland has tended to be fitful and slow. The decision by Sinn Fein last weekend to recognise the police was a significant step. But it does not mean that agreement on power-sharing is just around the corner. There will be more opportunities for brinkmanship on either side.

Leadinga article: In a league of his own

Published: 03 February 2007

What a privilege is in store for the 82,000 spectators who will crowd into Twickenham Stadium today for England's match against Scotland, both teams' first in the 2007 Six Nations competition.

Leading article: A chance for peace that must not be spurned

Published: 02 February 2007

While the tensions between the US and Iran are building, the signals for Syria have become more ambivalent

Leading article: Politics of fear

Published: 02 February 2007

When Parliament voted to increase the detention period without charge for terrorist suspects, from 14 days to 28, they imposed a dangerous curb on our civil liberties

Leading article: Today's lesson

Published: 02 February 2007

For the first time, the science of global warming and sustainable development is to make its way on to the national curriculum in secondary schools. The Qualifications and Curriculum Authority, which advises the Government on what should be on the curriculum, proposes that climate change should be taught as part of geography lessons, which are compulsory up to age 14. And the Education Secretary, Alan Johnson, today throws his weight behind the idea, ensuring that it will actually happen.

Leading article: Nods, winks and a lesson for the media worldwide

Published: 01 February 2007

As legal theatre, the drama being played out in Courtroom 16 of the federal district courthouse in Washington DC this week takes some beating

Leading article: A question of leadership

Published: 01 February 2007

The most alarming outcome of the latest Ofsted report is the 25 per cent rise in the number of primary schools being put on "special measures"

Leading article: Every little helps

Published: 01 February 2007

This newspaper's campaign against excess packaging has prompted a response from one of the largest retailers in the world. According to Sir Terry Leahy, the chief executive of Tesco, it is impossible to "force the pace of change, even if it is for sound environmental reasons. Customers have to want to change, and that can take time." He goes on to cite an instance where Tesco dispensed with the cardboard sleeve wrapping on a ready meal in its Value range. Customers apparently liked the product but hated the packaging, and opted instead for products that retained a cardboard sleeve.

Leading article: Prejudice, myth, and a system that fails the victim

Published: 31 January 2007

There has been some discussion in the House of Lords of late over what should be done about women who falsely accuse men of rape

Leading article: Location, location, location

Published: 31 January 2007

Like two unlucky punters watching as their "dead cert" nags are overtaken in the last furlong by an unfancied 16-to-1 shot, Greenwich and Blackpool had to concede victory to Manchester in the race for Britain's first "supercasino"

Leading article: New morality? If only...

Published: 31 January 2007

The political tussle over gay adoption and the incoming Equality Act has shone a rather revealing light on modern Britain. Its political consequences have been stark, demonstrating Tony Blair's waning power. Half of the Cabinet felt able to shoot down the Prime Minister's plan to grant an exemption to Catholic adoption agencies from the Act. The compromise, allowing the agencies time to adapt to the new rules, represents a palpable defeat for Mr Blair.

Leading article: The African Union needs outside help to succeed

Published: 30 January 2007

Good news out of Africa is not as rare as is often supposed, but yesterday's headline was especially heartening. The continent's 53 leaders refused to bow to the insistence of Sudan's ruthless President, Omar al-Bashir, that it was his turn to be chairman of the African Union.

Leading article: The 'hobbit' and the search for truth

Published: 30 January 2007

The latest salvo in the continuing row over the remains of the "hobbit" found on the island of Flores, Indonesia, raises intriguing questions about the nature of scientific discovery.

Leading article: Stubbed out

Published: 30 January 2007

Like Humphrey Bogart in Casablanca, many smokers probably imagined that they'd always have Paris. No longer. France is to ban smoking in public spaces in offices, schools and shopping malls from next month. Restaurants, bars and cafes follow next January.

Leading article: Sinn Fein takes a key step towards shared power

Published: 29 January 2007

The most direct and succinct explanation of the current state of Irish republicanism was this week delivered in a draughty Falls Road monastery by IRA icon Gerry Kelly. Conflicts, he said, ended either with a clear victory or in negotiations, often protracted ones. "It has been accepted by republicans," he declared flatly, "that they cannot push the British out into the sea."

Leading article: Wars and rhetoric about wars

Published: 29 January 2007

We share the fury and frustration of those who marched against the Iraq war in Washington this weekend. US voters brought about one of the greatest electoral upsets of recent years when they gave the Democrats a majority in both Houses of Congress last November. The deciding issue was, by common acknowledgement, disillusionment with the failing war in Iraq.

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