Car boot sale diamond fetches £650k at auction
A diamond ring bought at a car boot sale for £10 has been sold for £656,750 at auction in London.
The jewel was expected to fetch £350,000, but went for almost double that at Sotheby's on Wednesday.
The
owner believed the "exceptionally-sized" stone was a piece of costume
jewellery when she bought it at West Middlesex Hospital in Isleworth,
west London, in the 1980s.
Unaware it was a 26 carat diamond, she wore it daily for decades.
The cushion-shaped white diamond is thought to have been from the 19th Century.
Ahead of the sale, the head of the auction house's London
jewellery department, Jessica Wyndham, said: "The owner would wear it
out shopping, wear it day-to-day. It's a good looking ring.
"No-one had any idea it had any intrinsic value at all. They enjoyed it all this time."
Ms
Wyndham said the owner - who does not want to be identified - assumed
it was not a genuine gemstone because it was in a "filthy" mount and it
did not have the sparkle of a diamond.
It wasn't until after 30
years of wearing the ring that the owners took it to Sotheby's and a
jeweller told them it may be valuable.
Another eye-catching item from the Sotheby's sale was a Cartier diamond brooch worn by Margaret Thatcher.
It was worn the day she offered her resignation as Prime Minister to the Queen.
With its geometric chevron design, the brooch was eventually sold for £81,250, having been estimated to fetch up to £35,000.
Proceeds from that sale will be donated to charity.
Ms Wyndham
said: "It was a thrill to bring the hammer down on two objects which
have been the subject of so much interest and attention over the last
few weeks and to see that attention translate into such strong bidding
competition."
BBC NEWS
Paris pollution victim sues France for bad air
A Parisian woman is taking the French state to court for failing to protect her health from the effects of air pollution.
Clotilde Nonnez, a 56-year-old yoga teacher, says she has lived in the capital for 30 years and seen her health deteriorate.
However, it became worse than ever when pollution in Paris hit record levels last December.
Her lawyer says air pollution is causing 48,000 French deaths per year.
"We
are taking the state to task because we think the medical problems that
pollution victims suffer are as a result of the authorities' lack of
action in tackling air pollution," François Lafforgue told Le Monde
newspaper.
More cases would be brought in the coming weeks, in Lyon, Lille and elsewhere, he added.
Paris
has struggled for years to combat high levels of smog and the
authorities have introduced fines for any vehicle not carrying a
"Crit'Air" emissions category sticker - part of a scheme to promote
lower-emitting vehicles.
Several routes in the capital now have
restrictions on car use and a 3km (1.8-mile) stretch of the Right Bank
of the River Seine has become pedestrianised.
Ms Nonnez says she
has led a healthy life, first as a dancer and more recently as a yoga
teacher, but has increasingly suffered from respiratory problems,
ranging from chronic asthma to pneumonia.
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- Is there a way to tackle air pollution?
- Amazing views and dirty air in French Alps
When pollution hit the worst levels for a decade last December,
her existing bronchial condition prompted an acute pericarditis attack.
"The
doctor treating me says Paris air is so polluted that we're breathing
rotten air. She has other patients like me, including children and
babies too. My cardiologist says the same," she told the France Info
website.
BBC NEWS
Burmese military plane vanishes over Andaman Sea
Hopes are fading for the 120 people on board a Burmese military plane which has gone missing over the Andaman Sea.
The
army said the plane was flying between the southern city of Myeik and
Yangon (Rangoon). Search and rescue efforts are under way.
"Communication
was lost suddenly at about 1:35 pm [07:05 GMT] when it reached about 20
miles west of Dawei town," the army said in a statement.
There were 106 military personnel and family members and 14 crew on board.
The plane, a Y8 transporter made in China, was half an hour into the short routine flight.
Latest reports suggest that debris has been spotted in the sea by some of the military planes or ships dispatched to the area.
There were no reports of bad weather at that time. The plane was
purchased from China in March last year and had logged 809 flying hours,
the army said.
Myanmar has seen a number of aircraft incidents in recent years.
In
February 2016, the five-member crew of an air force plane died when the
aircraft crashed in the capital of Nay Pyi Taw. A few months later,
three officers were killed when a military helicopter crashed in central
Myanmar.
An Air Bagan commercial aeroplane made an emergency landing in 2012 and burst into flames, killing two people.
BBC NEWS
General election 2017: Voters to go to the polls
Millions of people will be casting their vote in the UK general election later.
Polls
open at 07:00 BST at more than 40,000 polling stations across the
country, with counting starting once voting ends at 22:00 BST.
A total of 650 Westminster MPs will be elected, with about 46.9 million people registered to vote.
That is up from the last general election, in 2015, when there were 46.4 million registered voters.
- Guide: How to vote
- Find your constituency and candidates
- What CAN'T you do in a polling station?
- Manifesto guide on where the parties stand
Some votes have already been cast, through postal voting, which
accounted for 16.4% of the total electorate at the 2015 general
election.
Overall turnout in 2015, when the Conservatives won 331 out of 650 seats, was 66.4%, up from 2010.
Most polling stations are in schools, community centres and parish
halls, but pubs, a launderette and a school bus have been used in the
past.
A handful of seats are expected to be declared by midnight, with the final results expected on Friday afternoon.
Unusually,
no local elections are taking place at the same time, so results might
come through earlier than in recent general elections.
In 2015 the first seat to declare was Houghton and Sunderland South, at 22:48 BST.
To
form a majority in the House of Commons one party must win 326 seats -
in 2015 a Conservative majority was not confirmed until 13:34 BST.
Coverage
The
weather forecast is for some rain in south-west England, Northern
Ireland, Scotland and Wales on Thursday, with south-east England
remaining cloudy and dry.
Polls close at 22:00 BST, but officials say anyone in a polling station queue at this time should be able to cast their vote.
The BBC's main election programme, fronted by David Dimbleby, starts at 21:55 BST, with live coverage from scores of counts.
Dimbleby, fronting his 10th election night broadcast, will be joined by Mishal Husain, Emily Maitlis, Jeremy Vine.
Wales,
Scotland and Northern Ireland will have their own overnight programmes
but will join Huw Edwards from 07:00 BST on 9 June.
On the radio, an overnight broadcast by BBC Radio 4 will be hosted by Jim Naughtie and Carolyn Quinn.
On BBC Radio 5 live, the overnight show will be hosted by Stephen Nolan and Emma Barnett.
Full
coverage of the results as they come in will be on the BBC politics
online live page and front page scorecard, with all the big breaking
stories from around the country and analysis by correspondents.
BBC NEWS
Farc weapons handover begins in Colombia, Timochenko announces
Farc rebels in Colombia say they
have handed over 30% of their arms to United Nations (UN ) monitors,
under the terms of last year's peace agreement.
They will hand over another 30% of their arms next Wednesday, with the remainder due to be surrendered in a fortnight's time.
The weapons are to be stored at 26 locations around the country.
After five decades of war and years of negotiations, Farc and the government came to a peace agreement last year.
Farc, the Revolutionary Armed Forces of Colombia, is the country's biggest rebel group.
There are 7,000 fighters handing over their rifles and pistols and the group will become a political party.
Farc leader Rodrigo Londoño Echeverri, who is better known as Timochenko, made the announcement on social media on Wednesday.
The timeline will see them meet a 20 June deadline, which has been extended from the start of the month.
The
decades-long conflict between rebel groups, state forces,
paramilitaries and drug gangs killed hundreds of thousands of people and
displaced more than seven million.
The
peace deal was initially rejected in a referendum, then reworked and
implemented. Since it came in to force the national army has been
granted access to areas that were once occupied by the Farc and former rebels have been rejoining civilian life.
But in a move that threatened the process, a rebel was arrested in contravention of the deal's terms. President Juan Manuel Santos put the arrest down to "confusion" and the man was released.
For his efforts to reach peace with the Farc, Mr Santos was awarded last year's Nobel Peace Prize.
BBC NEWS
North Korea fires anti-ship missiles, says South Korea
North Korea has fired several anti-ship cruise missiles off its east coast, South Korea's military says.
Authorities said they appear to be short-range "surface-to-ship" missiles, launched on Thursday morning from the city of Wonsan.
They flew about 200km (125 miles) before landing in the water.
Repeated
missile tests by the North this year - not all of them successful but
all a breach of UN sanctions - have sparked international alarm.
Anti-ship
missiles are guided missiles and most of them skim the water. North
Korea has previously unsuccessfully tested anti-ship ballistic missiles,
experts believe.
On 29 May the North fired a Scud-type ballistic missile from the same location, which flew about 450km.
- Have North Korea's missile tests paid off?
- How advanced is North Korea's nuclear programme?
- Trump fears 'major major' conflict with North Korea
- North Korea's missile programme
Last Friday the UN Security Council unanimously adopted a new US
resolution to impose targeted sanctions on certain North Korean
officials and state entities.
The US has also ramped up its
military presence in the region in response to these missile tests. Two
US aircraft carriers have recently been carrying out naval exercises in
the Sea of Japan, reported Reuters news agency citing the US military.
However, South Korea said on Wednesday it was suspending the further deployment of a controversial US anti-missile defence system called Thaad, until an environment assessment is complete.
Pyongyang
has been testing its missiles at an unprecedented pace. Experts fear
the tests indicate progress towards Pyongyang's ultimate goal of putting
a nuclear warhead on a missile that could strike continental US.
BBC NEWS
Comey to testify Trump told him: 'I expect loyalty'
Ex-FBI chief James Comey will tell
Congress on Thursday President Donald Trump wanted a "patronage
relationship" and asked for his "loyalty".
According to his
opening statement, Mr Comey will also testify the president asked him to
drop an inquiry into fired National Security Adviser Mike Flynn.
He says Mr Trump called the Russian probe "a cloud" over him.
Mr Comey also says he had told Mr Trump three times he was not under scrutiny, confirming the president's account.
Reacting
to the prepared testimony on Wednesday evening, Mr Trump's private
legal counsel on the Russia inquiry, Marc Kasowitz, said the president
was "pleased" Mr Comey had confirmed he was not in investigators'
crosshairs.
"The president feels completely and totally vindicated," said the attorney.
Two national security officials, NSA Director Mike Rogers and
Director of National Intelligence Dan Coats, earlier testified to
senators that they never felt pressured by the White House to do anything illegal.
But
in Thursday's Senate Intelligence Committee hearing, Mr Comey will
detail how Mr Trump made him uncomfortable during a series of encounters
leading up to the FBI director's firing on 9 May.
It is one of
several congressional panels that, along with the Justice Department, is
investigating US intelligence assessments that Russian hackers meddled
in last November's presidential election in an effort to help Mr Trump
beat Democratic candidate Hillary Clinton.
The inquiries are also
investigating whether any Trump campaign officials colluded with the
alleged Kremlin plot, which Moscow has repeatedly denied.
According
to seven pages of prepared testimony, Mr Comey will say his first
meeting with the president occurred on 6 January in a conference room at
Trump Tower, where Mr Comey briefed him alone on "salacious and
unverified" allegations about him.
A dossier compiled by a former
British intelligence official had claimed the Russian security services
possessed compromising material on Mr Trump, including that he had been
recorded consorting with prostitutes at a Moscow hotel.
Mr Comey's statement says the president "expressed his disgust for the allegations and strongly denied them" during a subsequent meeting.
That
denial came in a one-to-one dinner on 27 January at the White House, Mr
Comey will say, adding that he had a "very awkward conversation" with
the president that evening.
Who do you believe? Anthony Zurcher, BBC News
It's like a sneak preview of a blockbuster movie - this opening statement should be preceded with a "Spoiler Alert!" warning.
Mr
Comey is going to largely confirm all the reports that were circulating
in the media about what took place during his private meetings with the
president - the talk of loyalty, the pressure on the FBI to ease off
its Flynn investigation, the multiple requests for public confirmation
that the FBI was not targeting Mr Trump himself.
While Mr Comey
casts the president in a less-than-flattering light, he does shy away
from directly accusing the president of obstruction of justice. Much
will be made of how the two men may have interpreted the phrase "honest
loyalty" differently. In addition, Mr Comey viewed the president's Flynn
request as only relating to his conversations with the Russian
ambassador and not the investigation as a whole.
That may not matter much, however.
Large
portions of the former director's account is in direct contradiction to
Mr Trump's version of their meetings. It sets up a "he-said, he-said"
situation - but Mr Comey has memos and conversations with other FBI
officials to buttress his case.
What's more, if recent polls are
any indication, the American public trusts him more than the president.
Mr Comey's performance under questioning - particularly if Mr Trump
responds angrily via Twitter - could further sour the public mood.
Mr
Trump asked the FBI director during the discussion in the Green Room
whether he wanted to stay in his job, Mr Comey will testify.
He
will say he found this "strange" because Mr Trump had already told him
twice in earlier conversations that he hoped he would not step down.
The
former FBI director will testify the question "concerned me greatly"
because he felt the dinner was an effort to "create some sort of
patronage relationship".
- James Comey: From 'brave' to fired
- Russia: The scandal Trump can't shake
- How Trump's Russia trouble unfolded
The former FBI director will say: "A few moments later, the president said, 'I need loyalty, I expect loyalty.'
"I
didn't move, speak, or change my facial expression in any way during
the awkward silence that followed. We simply looked at each other in
silence."
In testimony, the former FBI director will detail his
next encounter with Mr Trump, during a meeting attended by intelligence
chiefs at the White House on 14 February.
The president asked Mr Comey to stay at the end of the Oval Office meeting and told him: "I want to talk about Mike Flynn."
Mr
Trump accepted Mr Flynn's resignation as national security adviser just
24 days into the job after he misled the White House about his
conversations with the Russian ambassador.
Mr Comey will say Mr
Trump told him: "I hope you can see your way clear to letting this go,
to letting Flynn go. He is a good guy."
The former FBI director will testify that he offered no such assurance.
Mr
Comey will also say the president phoned him on 30 March and said the
Russia investigation was "a cloud that was impairing his ability to act
on behalf of the country".
The former FBI director will testify
that Mr Trump "said he had nothing to do with Russia, had not been
involved with hookers in Russia".
Mr Comey will say he assured Mr
Trump during their discussions on 6 January, 27 January and 30 March
that the president himself was not under investigation.
He will testify that Mr Trump told him during the 30 March phone call: "We need to get that fact out."
The
former FBI director will say Mr Trump phoned him again on 11 April to
press him on this matter. It was the last time they spoke.
Mr Comey will say he told the president the White House should contact the Department of Justice.
The
former FBI director notes that he spoke with President Barack Obama
only twice during the more than three years that their time in office
overlapped.
But he can recall nine one-on-one conversations with Mr Trump in four months, three in person and six on the phone.
BBC NEWS
Uber 'obtained rape victim's medical records'
An Uber executive obtained the medical records of a rape victim in India, according to a report.
Eric
Alexander, who ran Uber's business in Asia, is said to have shared the
records with the company's chief executive, Travis Kalanick, over a year
ago.
Uber confirmed to the BBC that Mr Alexander no longer worked at the firm - but offered no further comment.
Technology news site Recode said Mr Alexander was fired only after the publication contacted the company about the story.
It said as well as Mr Kalanick, the records were seen by the company's senior vice president, Emil Michael.
The
news is the latest in a series of high-profile scandals greatly
affecting Uber's reputation. On Tuesday, the company announced it had
fired 20 employees as part of an investigation into sexual harassment
and other misconduct at the company.
Delhi ban
In December 2014 a 26-year-old Delhi woman was raped by Uber driver Shiv Kumar Yadav. Yadav was sentenced to life in prison.
At
the time Uber said "sexual assault is a terrible crime and we're
pleased he has now been brought to justice", adding it had improved
security due to "lessons we learned from this awful case".
But the ride-sharing service was consequently banned from operating in Delhi (the ban was lifted in June 2015).
Behind
the scenes, Uber executives reportedly doubted the authenticity of the
woman's claim, and questioned whether Ola, an Uber competitor in India,
was behind the incident as part of a sabotage attempt.
As well as the criminal case, the woman sued Uber. It was settled out of court.
BBC NEWS
Funeral set to take place for knife attack victims
Hundreds of mourners are expected to attend the funerals of a mother and son from the Black Country who were killed in a knife attack at their home.
Tracey Wilkinson and her 13-year-old son Pierce were attacked in Stourbridge in March.
Tracey's husband Peter was also critically injured but has made a full recovery.
BBC NEWS
Philippines bank BPI hit by glitch which debited accounts
The Bank of the Philippines Islands
(BPI) says a major system glitch led to customers being hit by
unauthorised money withdrawals and deposits.
The problematic
transactions reached up to thousands of pesos. Some users claimed on
social media that their accounts had even gone into the red.
BPI chief executive Cezar Consing apologised on Wednesday morning in an interview with a local TV station.
"This is not a hack, this is an internal issue," he said.
"Over the next few hours, we are making sure the double credits, debits are corrected," he told ANC.
Account holders on social media are claiming to have lost anything from 4,000 pesos ($80; £62) to up to 100,000 pesos.
In a statement posted on Twitter, BPI said some clients might have seen their accounts debited twice or credited twice for a past transaction.
It said they had suspended access to electronic banking while errors were corrected.
However, the move caused other BPI customers to complain they now can't check their accounts to see if they were affected.
BPI had nearly 8 million clients and 1.4tn pesos in total deposits at the end of 2016, according to its latest annual report.
Shares of BPI fell nearly 2% in early stock market trading in Manila.
The 165 year-old BPI counts Philippines conglomerate Ayala and Singapore sovereign wealth fund GIC among its major shareholders.
BBC NEWS
An egg a day appears to help young children grow taller
An egg a day might help undernourished young children grow to a healthy height, according to a six-month study in Ecuador.
Whether soft or hard-boiled, fried or whisked into an omelette, eggs appeared to give infants a boost.
It could be a cheap way to prevent stunting, say researchers in the journal Pediatrics.
The first two years of life are critical for growth and development - any stunting is largely irreversible.
Too short for age
Poor nutrition is a major cause of stunting, along with childhood infections and illnesses.
According to the World Health Organization, 155 million children under the age of five are stunted (too short for their age).
Most live in low- and middle-income countries and health experts have been looking at ways to tackle the issue.
Lora
Iannotti and her colleagues set up a field experiment in the rural
highlands of Ecuador and gave very young children (aged six to nine
months) free eggs to eat to see if this might help.
Egg dinners
Only
half of the 160 youngsters who took part in the randomised trial were
fed an egg a day for six months - the others were monitored for
comparison.
The researchers visited the children's families every
week to make sure they were sticking to the study plan and to check for
any problems or side-effects, including egg allergy.
Stunting
was far less common among the egg treatment group by the end of the
study - the prevalence was 47% less than in the non-egg group, even
though relatively more of these egg-fed infants were considered short
for their age at the start of the study.
Some of the children in the control group did eat eggs, but nowhere near as many as the treatment group.
Lead researcher Ms Iannotti said: "We were surprised by just how effective this intervention proved to be.
"And
what's great is it's very affordable and accessible for populations
that are especially vulnerable to hidden hunger or nutritional
deficiency."
She said eggs were great food for young children with small stomachs.
"Eggs contain a combination of nutrients, which we think is important."
Balanced diet
Prof
Mary Fewtrell, nutrition lead at the Royal College of Paediatrics and
Child Health, said: "In a way, it is surprising that more research has
not been conducted using egg in this situation - although I know that in
some cultures, parents do not necessarily find egg to be an acceptable
early food mainly because of concerns about allergy.
"Egg is a
good nutritious complementary food that can be introduced as part of a
varied diet once the mother decides to start complementary feeding -
never before four months."
She said eggs should always be well cooked to avoid any potential infection risk.
The
WHO recommends mothers worldwide to exclusively breastfeed infants for
the child's first six months to achieve optimal growth, development and
health. After the first six months, infants should be given nutritious
complementary foods and continue breastfeeding up to the age of two
years or beyond.
The British Nutrition Foundation advised: "While
eggs are a nutritious food to include, it's very important that young
children have a variety of foods in their diets. Not only is this
necessary to get all the vitamins and minerals they need, but also to
allow them to become familiar with a wide range of tastes and textures.
"A
range of protein-rich foods should be provided when feeding young
children, which can include eggs but can also feature beans, pulses,
fish, especially oily fish, meat and dairy products."
BBC NEWS
Qatar row: Trump urges Arab unity in call to Saudi Arabia's King Salman
US President Donald Trump has called
the king of Saudi Arabia to urge Gulf unity amid an escalating dispute
over Qatar's alleged support for militants.
Earlier, he said the Saudis' move to isolate Qatar could mark the "beginning of the end to the horror of terrorism".
Several Gulf countries cut travel and embassy links with Qatar on Monday.
Qatar
strongly denies supporting radical Islamism. The rift has affected oil
prices, travel and shipping, and has raised fears of food shortages.
The
emir of Kuwait is mediating in the dispute and the president of Turkey
has also offered to help, saying isolation and sanctions will not
resolve the crisis.
"His [Mr Trump's] message was that we need
unity in the region to fight extremist ideology and terrorist
financing," a US official told Reuters news agency.
- Why this row has erupted
- I'm flying through the Gulf: How will this affect me?
- Food, flights and football at risk
- Five things you may not know about Qatar
What is Trump saying?
Mr Trump had earlier claimed credit for the pressure placed on Qatar, saying his recent visit to Saudi Arabia was "already paying off".
In
a series of tweets on Tuesday morning, Mr Trump accused Qatar of
funding terrorism, saying: "During my recent trip to the Middle East I
stated that there can no longer be funding of Radical Ideology. Leaders
pointed to Qatar - look!"
In his phone call to King Salman, he was
quoted by Reuters as saying: "It's important that the Gulf be united
for peace and security in the region,"
Separately, the Pentagon thanked Qatar for hosting the largest US air force base in the Middle East.
What do the Saudis want?
Saudi
Arabia's foreign minister called on Qatar to cut ties with Palestinian
group Hamas in the occupied territories, and the Muslim Brotherhood in
Egypt, if it wanted to end its isolation in the Gulf region.
Adel Al-Jubeir said: "Nobody wants to hurt Qatar. It has to choose whether it must move in one direction or another direction."
Speaking in Paris, he said the economic measures should put pressure on Qatar to act "like a normal country".
He
name-checked "support of extremist groups", "hostile media" and
"interference in affairs of other countries" as things Qatar would have
to change if it wished to restore ties.
But Qatar's Foreign Minister, Sheikh Mohammed Bin Abdulrahman
al-Than, said: "There is no single evidence that the Qatar government is
supporting radical Islamists."
On Monday, several countries
withdrew their ambassadors from Doha, Qatar's capital, while some cut
transport links and gave Qatari nationals two weeks to leave their
territory.
Disruption to airspace in the Gulf began on Tuesday
morning local time. Doha, Qatar's capital, is a major hub for
international flight connections.
Airlines affected include Qatar
Airways, Etihad Airways and Emirates. Saudi Arabia and Bahrain have
revoked the licences of Qatar Airways and ordered its offices to close.
When
avoiding Saudi Arabia, their massive - and only - neighbour, Qatar's
planes are having to take more indirect routes, leading to longer flight
times.
Qatar is heavily dependent on food imports and residents have been queuing at supermarkets to stockpile.
- Qatar travel ban for Philippine workers
- Saudi pulls Qatar Airways licence
- 'A Qatarstrophe' - social media reacts
- All you need to know about Qatar
Does anyone sympathise with Qatar?
Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan said isolating Qatar would "not resolve any problems" and called for "mutual dialogue".
"In this respect, we appreciate Qatar's constructive stance," he said.
"Trying to isolate Qatar, which certainly carries out an efficient fight against terrorism, will not resolve any problems."
France's
President Emmanuel Macron spoke to Mr Erdogan and to the emir of Qatar
in separate telephone calls, saying he was ready to back "all
initiatives to encourage calm".
BBC NEWS
Iran's parliament and Khomeini shrine attacked by gunmen
Armed individuals have opened fire
at the Iranian parliament and the shrine of Ayatollah Khomeini in the
capital, Tehran, causing a number of casualties.
Heavy gunfire
could be heard on an audio recording from inside the parliament chamber,
and there are reports that a security guard has died.
Several people were injured at the shrine, dedicated to the founder of the modern Islamic republic.
There was one suicide bomber and two or three other gunmen.
Ali
Khalili from the mausoleum's public relations office told IRNA news
agency that one of the armed men detonated himself in front of a bank
outside the mausoleum.
However Fars News said that the suicide bomber was a woman.
The Iranian Labour News Agency reported that two attackers had been arrested.
Five people were wounded at the shrine, and one person confirmed dead, it said.
Latest reports suggest the attack at Iran's parliament is ongoing.
An
image posted by Tasmin News showed what appeared to be a gunman holding
an assault weapon shooting out from an upstairs window of the
parliament building.
MP Seyyed Hossein Naqavi-Hosseini told the
Iranian Students' News Agency (ISNA) that three gunmen were still in the
building, in MPs' offices.
The gunmen were carrying Kalashnikovs and one Colt pistol, reports said.
One gunman has been arrested, IRNA said.
The attack at the mausoleum, several kilometres to the south, happened at the same time and appeared to be co-ordinated, reports said.
Uber fires 20 staff after harassment investigation
Uber has fired more than 20 people, and is taking other actions against staff, after a harassment investigation.
The taxi-app firm said the sackings related to sexual harassment, bullying and issues about poor company culture.
Uber
has been under fire over its treatment of women staff since a former
employee wrote a scathing blog post about her experience.
It led to two investigations and the uncovering of 215 complaints about harassment and other allegations.
Uber
has struggled with a series of controversies in recent months,
including a backlash over aggressive corporate tactics and a lawsuit
from Google-owner Alphabet over allegedly stolen technology for
self-driving cars.
Several high-placed executives resigned amid
the turbulence, including a former head of engineering, who had failed
to disclose harassment complaints at his former employer.
Chief executive Travis Kalanick's filmed argument with an Uber driver over falling rates also fuelled criticism, leading him to say that he needed "leadership help".
Susan Fowler, who wrote the critical blog post
about Uber, said the company had ignored her complaints of sexual
harassment. Widely shared, the blog prompted Mr Kalanick to launch the
investigations.
Law
firm Perkins Coie reviewed 215 claims, which included sexual harassment
and discrimination as well as other complaints, an Uber spokeswoman
said.
The firm recommended no action in 100 of them; 57 remain
under review, while others have received warnings or are in training,
she said.
Some of those fired held senior positions, she said.
The 215 claims investigated were broken down as follows:
Discrimination,
54; Sexual harassment, 47; Unprofessional behaviour, 45; Bullying, 33;
Other harassment, 19; Retaliation, 13; Physical security 3; Wrongful
dismissal 1.
Action taken and cases under review:
Staff fired, 20; Staff put in training, 31; Final warnings, 7; Claims still under review, 57.
Uber
has also appointed Eric Holder, who served as attorney general under
former US president Barack Obama, to investigate the company's broader
culture.
The findings of that report have been turned over to the board and recommendations are expected to be made public next week.
Some changes are already in place.
Uber announced the hiring of two women to high profile positions this week.
Frances
Frei, a Harvard Business School professor, will serve as a senior vice
president for leadership and strategy, working with the head of human
resources Liane Hornsey. Ms Hornsey is herself relatively new, starting
at the company in January.
Bozoma Saint John, a former marketing executive at Apple, is also joining Uber as chief brand officer.
Uber employs more than 12,000 people globally.
About
36% of the workforce is female, according to a diversity report the
firm published earlier this year. Women hold about 15% of the technology
positions.
By Dave Lee, BBC North America technology reporter, San Francisco
It goes without saying that this issue doesn't go away with these firings.
Uber
has major questions still to answer - some of them will hopefully be
addressed when more details of the report are made public.
Most
troubling is why Uber's own internal HR measures weren't thorough or
fair enough to see that the actions of 20 employees warranted dismissal.
Instead it took a brave former employee - and then an expensive, lengthy investigation - to get to that point.
So
as well as detailing what it has done to address those existing
complaints, Uber will now have to be very clear about how it will handle
such issues in future.
Crucially, the lessons from this report
should not be heeded by Uber alone. As many people have pointed out to
me since we began reporting this story, this is a problem that affects
the technology industry across the board
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