TASK 1
You are going to read short texts. Choose the best answer
A former spy is suing the Metropolitan police for failing to "protect" him from falling for one of the environmental activists whose movement he infiltrated. Mark Kennedy, who was known as Mark Stone until the activists discovered his identity in late 2010, filed a writ last month claiming damages of between £50,000 and £100,000. "I worked undercover for eight years, my superiors knew that I was sleeping with her but chose to turn a blind eye because I was getting such valuable information. They did nothing to prevent me falling in love."
1. The former undercover policeman is claiming his superiors ...
A broad online survey has shown signs that the new operating system from Microsoft is making slower inroads than the previous version launched exactly three years ago. Toluna suggested that the response to Windows 8 may partly be due to the success of Windows 7 in satisfying existing customers – who are very likely to have upgraded from XP or Vista in the past three years and may not see any reason to change.
2. The launch of Windows 8 in Britain has ...
The Iron Dome, a new Israeli antimissile shield has recently been fully operational and proved successful. The shield protects Israel from missiles that can attack the middle of its territory from Gaza and the south of Lebanon. At first works on the Iron Dome had been fast, however, later activation of the system was considerably delayed. Due to financial cuts the Israeli MoD spent much less money on the shield, and the producer Rafael Advanced DefenseSystems suspended works. However, a training course for soldiers who would operate it, which had started earlier, was continued.
3. The Israeli MoD’s financial policy did not have any effect on …
Knowing you’re succeeding is one thing. Understanding why is even sweeter. Knowledge is key. But knowledge without insight isn’t much of an advantage in business. We help our clients use analytics to turn data into insight, insight into action and action into tangible results. That’s high performance, delivered to wherever you are nationwide. UK Accenture – consulting, technology, outsourcing.
4. UK Accenture is ...
Greenpeace scientists have identified a dense patch of deep-sea corals in a lease area of the Arctic's Chukchi Sea off Alaska's north-west coast, where Royal Dutch Shell is slated to start drilling. Researchers for the advocacy group, which have been lobbying to block drilling in the Arctic this summer, went down about 50 metres in a submarine last week to take samples. During the dives, they found significant concentrations of the soft coral Gersemia rubiformis, which is commonly known as sea raspberry. Shell is awaiting final permits to begin drilling in the Chukchi and Beaufort seas and has predicted it could start as early as this week.
5. The advocacy group have been lobbying against ...
The Indian authorities cracked down on social-networking sites they say are being used for scaremongering. They claim that threatening messages and pictures have been sent to migrant workers following clashes in the north-eastern state of Assam. Fearing more violence, especially against Muslims, thousands of north-easterners have left the cities of Bangalore and Pune.
6. According to the Indian authorities, social sites were used to …
After granting diplomatic asylum to Julian Assange, the founder of WikiLeaks wanted in Sweden to face sexual-assault allegations, Ecuador's president, Rafael Correa, tried to rally Latin American support against what he claimed was a threat by Britain to storm his country's London embassy. Mr Assange has lived there since June, when British courts approved his extradition to Sweden.
7. Rafael Correa fears Julian Assange …
Bradley Manning, the US soldier who has spent ten months in solitary confinement at a military prison in Virginia on suspicion of handing reams of sensitive information to WikiLeaks, is being forced to sleep naked, and remain naked during the morning roll call, according to his lawyer. David Coombs, who is representing the ex-military intelligence officer in his court martial procedure, alleges that Manning, 23, is being humiliated because he made a single sarcastic remark. Last week the army brought 22 new charges against him, including "aiding the enemy", which can carry the death sentence. However, the army says it does not intend to seek it.
8. According to Mr Coombs, Bradley Manning ...
A coalition of activists has purchased a small plot of land earmarked for a third runway at London’s Heathrow Airport and plans to sell it in several thousand chunks in a bid to snarl up the proposed development. The group, which includes Oscar-winning actress Emma Thompson, says the expansion would force the demolition of homes and increase pollution.
9. The purchase ...
One of Spain’s most notorious killers – an Eta terrorist dubbed La Tigresa for her sexual appetite – has been kicked out by the Basque separatists, renouncing violence and apologizing for her crimes. Idoia Lopez Riaño was sentenced to 1,500 years in prison for the murders of 23 people. She is notorious for seducing policemen, then gunning down their colleagues. Lopez was formerly one of the most revered of Eta’s 700 prisoners; her expulsion reflects a widening split between the old guard and the new within Eta, which has officially abandoned its armed struggle.
10. Eta’s move ...
Britain is to spend £483m on a cutting-edge air defence system designed to protect Royal Navy ships. The Ministry of Defence announced today it had awarded the contract to develop the Sea Ceptor to the British arm of European missile firm MBDA. Reaching speeds of up to Mach 3 this system will protect vessels over land and sea by targeting and intercepting incoming projectiles. It will replace the ageing Sea Wolf system due to be taken out of service by the Royal Navy in 2016 and comes as emerging powers, like China, begin to exert their naval power by building large naval fleets.
11. What do we know about the Sea Ceptor?
Nigeria is “at war” with the Islamist sect Boko Haram and should not negotiate with its leaders, who as “mass murderers” deserve no concessions, Nigerian Nobel laureate Wole Soyinka said last week. President Goodluck Jonathan has confirmed that his government was open to dialogue with the sect, whose insurgency has killed an estimated 2,800 people since 2009.
12. The text implies that Wole Soyinka …
A policy change that would expand access to emergency contraception has hit a snag. In a surprise move, the US Department of Health and Human Services (HHS) overrode the Food and Drug Administration’s recommendation to remove age restrictions on the morning-after pill Plan B One-Step, which would have made the drug available without a prescription to all women. (Those under 17 currently need a prescription.) In rejecting the advice, HHS cited concerns about putting weighty reproductive decisions in the hands of girls as young as 11.
13. HHS decided to …
TASK 2
You are going to read a newspaper article. Choose the best answer
The Roma’s Struggle to Find a Home
Another day, and another ramshackle encampment where Roma once lived is gone. The scrap-wood shelters without running water, electricity or sanitation have been pushed to the ground. The tents, collapsed. The inhabitants, scattered. In Rome, the eviction of the Roma – a European minority sometimes referred to as Gypsies – is taking place with the full force of the law: military police, bulldozers, German shepherds. But, in contrast to the international firestorm over such evictions in France, Italy's have attracted little attention.

Even as French President Nicolas Sarkozy struggled with the European Union over the repatriation of dozens of Roma to Romania (despite the name, Roma don't historically come from the country, although many live there), the mayor of Rome announced the demolition of his city's 200 illegal squatter camps, at a rate of three or four a week. This means another wave of expulsions for the Roma, who have faced similar efforts all over the country. Meanwhile, Italy's Interior Minister, Roberto Maroni, took to the airwaves and declared the country's Roma problem – and many here see it as a problem – "practically resolved." He added, "The controversy around Sarkozy's decision made me smile a little. For us, it's a movie we've already seen."

The Roma and their camps have been present in Italy since the Middle Ages. But a steep rise in their numbers after Romania's entry into the E.U. raised tensions in a country where bigotry runs deep: in Italian, to call somebody a Gypsy is to call him a thief and a liar. At its height, Italy's Roma population more than doubled to somewhere around 160,000, many of them living in unregistered squats in appalling conditions. And they are not welcome. In 2008, after a teenage Roma girl was caught in a Naples apartment allegedly trying to steal a baby, a mob burned down the nearest camp. The government declared a state of emergency and announced it would fingerprint the country's Roma and expel those who were there illegally. Objections from the E.U. halted the fingerprinting, but the reprimand stopped there.

If Italy managed to avoid the severe criticism being heaped on France, it's not because it treats its Roma any better. The criticism leveled at France accuses Sarkozy's government of singling out a specific ethnicity. Italy's campaign came in a context of broad xenophobia: discrimination against the Roma is not much stronger than that against, say, Romanians in general (indeed, many Italians don't make a distinction between the two).

Italy's politicians insist they aren't performing mass expulsions, but simply enforcing the law, closing camps and arresting criminals. But to many Roma, it all amounts to much the same thing. Frequent evictions, widespread discrimination and the risk of vigilante violence create constant pressure to go. Rebecca Covaciu, a 14-year-old immigrant from Romania, spent two years on the move, enduring police raids, beatings by thugs and a close brush with a mob in Naples before finally settling with her family in an apartment in Milan. "My family has had a terrible time finding work," she says. "When they see that we're Roma, they tell us, 'We don't need anyone.' And then you walk out, and there's 'Help Wanted' on the door."

In theory, evicted Roma are to be resettled, but so great is the mistrust that when Rome started destroying camps in September, the inhabitants – alerted by the arrival of journalists – dispersed before the police and social services could arrive. Evictions continue, even though a dozen new settlements the city has planned won't be completed for several months. Other municipalities are following suit. As a result, say activists, most of Italy's immigrant Roma have already left – to Spain, Switzerland, France and beyond.

Indeed, as more countries follow Italy's and France's leads, the pattern of forcing people to move out risks being replicated on a European scale. Italy's politicians have seized on the current uproar to propose laws that would allow the country to expel and bar entry to E.U. citizens who breach the conditions of their stay – being afraid the Roma pushed out of France will head their way.
14. The recent actions against Roma in Rome …
15. Italy’s interior minister announced …
16. The 2008 tensions in Italy started after …
17. Unlike France, Italy …
18. Italian politicians claim …
19. The evicted Roma …
20. Italian politicians propose new laws because they …