THE CONSUMERS' Association Britain's defender of consumer rights is branching out into selling the products

THE CONSUMERS' Association, Britain's defender of consumer rights, is branching out into selling the products it recommends, to support its campaigning work. The 770,000 members of the association are to be offered the services of Value Direct, a company which claims to offer consumer goods at "lower than high-street" prices. It promises to refund 110 per cent of the difference if anyone can find its products cheaper elsewhere.Andrew Fisher, a spokesman for the association, said the deal in no way compromised the advice that thousands of consumers have come to rely on as impartial "We don't take money from government or industry. Prices include pounds 169.95 for a Dyson upright vacuum cleaner and pounds 289.95 for a Siemens dishwasher.. We have no shareholders."Members could already ring its consumer centre for details of where recommended goods were available, so the mail-order service was an extension of that, he added.Value Direct boasts more than 4,500 items, delivered free within seven days. It's how we test the washing machines and campaign on transport and health and freedom of information. "If people pay pounds 60 a year, why shouldn't they benefit? Value Direct is a supplier which can offer prices considerably cheaper than the major suppliers."But Mr Fisher said the association was not telling members they should buy only from Value Direct; it still recommended shopping around, and, if a product was cheaper at Dixons or Comet, the customer should buy there.Mr Fisher said the Consumers' Association relied on its commercial activities - such as the sale of its Which? guides to divorce, hotels and food - to fund its other work."But one can't operate without the other All the profit goes into running the organisation. We do not benefit from this arrangement at all," Mr Fisher said.The Consumers' Association is a not-for-profit organisation which funds its testings and campaigns from the sales of Which? magazine and books, published by its commercial arm.Subscribers pay about pounds 60 a year to receive the magazine's advice on goods and services.

"People usually laugh at their passport photos because they look so different from reality, but young children change so quickly it could be the recipe for some travel disasters," he said.The design of the new child's passport is the same as the adult version, but it is valid for only five years rather than 10. It will cost pounds 11 by post or pounds 21 for personal applications.Jackie Gibson, of the Association of British Travel Agents, said its 7,300 members had been warning travellers about the changes. Abta had been concerned about the extra costs posed to family holidays: "We were worried about the extra expense, but the reality is that most European countries now issue children's passports and we don't foresee too many problems.". Those already on a parent's passport will be exempted until it expires or the child reaches 16, when their own passport becomes compulsory.A Passport Agency spokeswoman said parents must take care that the inevitable changes in appearance of a growing child do not make the passport photo redundant soon after it is taken."Obviously a six-month-old baby will look very different a few years on, and it is incumbent on the parents to make sure they get a new passport if necessary," she said.Mark Harris, a travel agent in north-west London, said families could be refused entry to their holiday destinations. Denise Carter, director of Reunite, the National Council for Abducted Children, supports the new passport law."Child abduction is a growing problem, partly because of a greater number of cross-cultural marriages, and the fact that international travel is so much easier these days," she said. "A lot more people have children without getting married, which further complicates matters."The new law will immediately affect more than 500,000 under-16s applying for passports for the first time.

"We went to enormous lengths to avoid using firearms and achieve a peaceful resolution."Paul Condon profile, page 26. MORE THAN half a million children will have to apply for passports from tomorrow, under new rules requiring them, from birth onwards, to travel with their own documents rather than on those of their parents. Some parents never see their children again or become involved in expensive legal actions that can take years to resolve.Last month, Jamel Bain, whose Algerian father abducted him eight years ago, was finally reunited with his mother from Scotland Nearly 16 years old, he had forgotten how to speak English. The Home Office has warned parents they must take responsibility for ensuring the photographs are kept up-to-date. Mike O'Brien, the Immigration Minister, said the move was primarily aimed at reducing the number of child abductions and improving security at ports.The latest Home Office figures reveal 374 children were illegally removed from the custody of a parent or guardian and taken abroad in 1996. After nearly five days, sections of the local media began asking what the police were waiting for."It was a distressing one for a commander.

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