Thursday, 3 November 2011
Mystery as shark found parked on double-yellow lines
Animal experts are baffled by how a shark managed to reach a road on a seafront in Wales.
The dead shark was discovered lying near double yellow lines on the road in Aberystwyth.
Animal charity, the Shark Trust think that it's unlikely the 1.2m (4ft) blue shark was washed up.
John Richardson, who's from the Trust, said larger sharks are usually found 15 to 20 miles further out to sea.
"They are one of the more common larger sharks in British waters," he said.
"They usually grow to about 4m in length, so the one found on the road probably wasn't a mature shark."
The shark was discovered on 24 October by a man on his way home, but it had disappeared after a few hours.
Mysteriously, the local police say they didn't move the animal.
BBC News - Greek PM papandreou 'ready to drop' bailout referendum
Greek PM George Papandreou has said he is ready to drop a proposed referendum on the country's eurozone bailout deal.
Mr Papandreou offered to hold talks with the opposition to seek consensus on the deal, adding that the referendum was never an end in itself.
Four ministers, including influential Finance Minister Evangelos Venizelos, opposed the referendum and there were calls for the prime minister to resign.
EU leaders say Greece cannot get bailout cash until it agrees the deal.
Earlier the BBC reported that the PM was preparing to resign but state TV said he had ruled this out.
The opposition New Democracy party has said it would accept taking part in a coalition government if Mr Papandreou agreed to stand down.
The BBC's Mark Lowen, in Athens, says that whatever the outcome, Greece has been thrown into a period of intense political instability.
The EU bailout, agreed last month, would give the heavily indebted Greek government 130bn euros (£111bn; $178bn) and a 50% write-off of its debts, in return for deeply unpopular austerity measures.
'Ready to talk'Officials quoted Mr Papandreou as saying Greece had been faced with a choice between "true assent" - apparently meaning agreement between the major parties - and a referendum on the package.
"The referendum was never an end in itself," he said.
"I'm glad that all this discussion has at least brought a lot of people back to their senses.
"I will talk to [New Democracy leader Antonis] Samaras so that we examine the next steps on the basis of a wider consensus."
He met MPs from his Pasok party and is speaking to parliament ahead of a confidence vote on Friday.
Pasok holds a slim majority in parliament, 152 out of 300 seats.
But Mr Papandreou was faced with a parliamentary revolt after several of his MPs withheld their backing. Some called for early elections or a government of national unity instead.
Mr Samaras called for a caretaker government to safeguard the EU deal.
"I ask for the formation of a temporary transition government with the exclusive responsibility to immediately hold elections, and ratify the loan deal under the present parliament," he said, quoted by AFP news agency.
A government spokesman said it was ready to talk to the opposition about the issue.
"We welcome New Democracy's decision to support the 26 October deal," said spokesman Ilias Mossialos, referring to the EU bailout deal.
"As far as the other proposals are concerned, we are ready to seriously discuss them, in the interest of the country."
An unnamed minister told Reuters news agency Mr Papandreou would not take a decision on resignation until he knew the outcome of talks with New Democracy.
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