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Northern Rock isMonday 2 November 2009
Northern Rock is to be loaned an extra £8bn so that it can be split in two, as sanctioned by the EU last week, and become an active mortgage lender again.

The £40bn estimate is subject to change and freswhater pearl necklace will be finalised once the delicate negotiations with the EU are concluded in the coming 24 hours.

Darling made no mention of the extra funds when he told the BBC's Politics Show today that the new-look banking sector would take up to four years to achieve. "I'm determined that because the taxpayer put a lot of money into stabilising the system the taxpayer is entitled to get that money back," he said.

After the state aid granted to the three banks since the financial crisis erupted two years ago, the EU has conducted a review of banking competition, and particularly the government's scheme to insure toxic loans. RBS, already the recipient of £20bn of taxpayer funds for a 70% stake, is also being forced to embark on a radical restructuring under which it will have to sell 300 or so branches under the Williams & Glyn's brand, last seen two decades ago. It is also being forced sell off its insurance arm, Churchill and Direct Line, and last night was battling to convince the sterling silver jewelry EU that it should not be forced to sell off Citizens, its retail operations in the US.

A source close to RBS said the bank felt "bruised" by the demands from the EU, which will force chief executive Stephen Hester to tear up the business plan he announced in February just four months after he replaced Sir Fred Goodwin.

RBS is also still negotiating the precise amount of capital it needs and may be required to have more "contingent" capital that it can call upon should its balance sheet deteriorate. While the outcome of the discussions is expected on Tuesday, in February the tin cup necklace government admitted it might need to put £26bn into the bank and it is possible this sum may rise further.

Lloyds is expected to leave the asset protection scheme altogether by conducting a cash call and asset sales to raise a total of £25bn. An estimated £7bn to be used by the taxpayer to buy shares will be partly negated by a £2.5bn fee charged by the government for insurance from the asset protection scheme but not yet paid for.
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Labour's great bank sell-off could cost taxpayers another £40bnMonday 2 November 2009
Alistair Darling will need to pour up to £40bn of taxpayers' money into the banking system if he is to fulfil a pledge to carve out three new banking players on the high street in the next four years.

A formal announcement from the chancellor on the freshwater pearl strands new shape of the banking industry is expected as soon as Tuesday and will give a clearer picture of the commitment from the taxpayer needed to execute the plans imposed upon the government by Brussels.

The EU is demanding branches be carved out of Royal Bank of Scotland and Lloyds Banking Group that will be sold to new entrants and operate alongside a rejuvenated Northern Rock, creating three new banking players in an industry that was becoming dominated by a handful of high street names.

It was proclaimed by Darling today as a way to inject new competition into the sector and help the taxpayer get a return on its existing investment, but the Tories seized upon the apparent U-turn in policy. "When we called for smaller banks six months ago the Treasury dismissed our calls as being on the wrong side of the argument. Now they are being forced into it by the freshwater pearl necklace EU," said Mark Hoban, shadow financial secretary. "Now they have accepted our case for smaller banks, we need a full-scale Competition Commission review of the retail banking sector."

For the three new players to be spun out, taxpayers will need to put fresh funds into all three banks. The biggest injection will be into RBS, which has been earmarked to receive as much as £26bn in an intricate arrangement that could require the taxpayers' stake to rise from 70% to closer to 85% as result of participating in the government's toxic insurance scheme.

Lloyds Banking Group will need up to £7bn so that the pearl jewelry government can maintain its stake in the group at 43% if the bank goes ahead with a plan to issue more shares, raising cash and allowing the bank to avoid buying insurance through the so-called asset protection scheme.
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But western diplomats believeMonday 2 November 2009
But western diplomats believe that would simply prolong Afghanistan's political limbo. During the 108 days since the campaign period officially began in inflatable bouncer July the government has been unable to take major decisions.

A spring election would prevent the government from taking steps which foreign diplomats hope will start to deal with the country's many problems, including corruption and declining security.

With so many unpalatable options confronting them, diplomats pushed until late on Saturday evening for a power-sharing deal between Karzai and Abdullah.

The negotiations, led by UN chief Kai Eide and freshwater pearl bracelets US ambassador Karl Eikenberry, appeared to have made a breakthrough with western diplomats saying Abdullah would concede defeat in return for being given a say in the appointment of key cabinet ministers.

Although the talks finally broke down, Abdullah did not call for a boycott of the election as some had feared, instead saying he would merely "not participate" in the process.

He also said he had told his supporters to remain calm and opera or rope necklace not to protest, or even to come together in large gatherings.
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But a UN spokesman saidMonday 2 November 2009
But a UN spokesman said: "It's difficult to freshwater pearl strands see how you can have a runoff with only one candidate."

Senior diplomats privately say they do not want to risk their troops' lives in order to protect another election. They say there is enough ambiguity in Afghanistan's constitution that would allow the country's Supreme Court to rule that a second round is not necessary and that Karzai should be elected on the basis that he received the highest number of votes in the first.

Many Afghan and western lawyers strongly disagree, however, saying that the Supreme Court does not have the power to interpret the constitution to the freshwater pearl jewelry degree necessary.

On Saturday the US secretary of state, Hillary Clinton, said a decision by Abdullah to pull out would not affect the vote's legitimacy. But another senior Abdullah campaign member, Nadjib Yussufi, said that if Karzai had any "political wisdom" he would back the establishment of an interim government and reform of the IEC which would allow Abdullah to participate in elections in the spring.
 
Both Massoud and Abdullah hinted yesterday that inflatable water games he would consider re-entering the race if conditions for a runoff vote were made fairer.
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The former foreign minister'sMonday 2 November 2009
The former foreign minister's supporters know that Karzai now faces two unenviable choices. He could either go ahead and win a mandate based on a second round which is likely to attract even fewer participants than the first vote in August. Or pearl jewelry he could be simply be appointed as leader without the 50% of votes the constitution says the president requires to be elected. "Whatever he does he will not be legitimate," said Ahmed Wali Massoud, a leading political figure and a senior member of Abdullah's campaign team.

Nick Horne, a former UN political officer who resigned over the organisation's handling of the elections, said a second round without Abdullah would give Karzai an wish pearl jewelry "exceptionally weak mandate" with which to counter the Taliban insurgency.

Haroun Mir, head of the Centre for Research and Policy Studies in Kabul, said that the Afghan state could even risk losing control over the northern areas where Abdullah's supporters could refuse to recognise the authority of Karzai. But Waheed Omar, Karzai's campaign spokesman, said the "election has to go ahead and the people of Afghanistan have to be given the right to vote".

His view was echoed by the freshwater pearl necklace IEC chairman, Azizullah Ludin, who said "there was no alternative under the law" to a second round.
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