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NHS nurses in England ‘fear job losses or downgrades as cuts bite’, poll finds

One in twenty nurses expect to lose their post in next year while similar proportions expect fewer hours or responsibilities Almost 75,000 nurses expect to lose their jobs, have their hours cut or see their roles downgraded in the next year, according to a survey that highlights the growing impact of the NHS’s financial squeeze. Five per cent of the NHS in England’s 410,000 nurses – some 20,500 in all – believe their posts will disappear in the next 12 months. Another 24,600 anticipate a cut in hours, while another 28,700 expect to have their jobs reassessed as involving fewer responsibilities. The findings, extrapolated from a Royal College of Nursing (RCN) poll of 8,000 of its members, have prompted renewed claims that the coalition is not honouring repeated promises to protect the NHS frontline from cuts. The nurses’ fears come as more acute and mental health trusts across England decide to reduce their nursing workforce as part of efforts to help in the NHS’s £20bn cost-saving drive. For example, Plymouth hospitals NHS trust plans to cut 281 posts, including 145 nursing jobs, to save £31m this year. The RCN is concerned that 130 existing nursing vacancies at the trust have led to staff shortages in some areas of medical care, and that patient safety could be at risk. As part of plans to restructure community services in London, Camden and Islington NHS foundation trust, which deals with mental health services, will lose 69 posts, including those of nurses, psychologists and social workers. Portsmouth hospitals NHS trust aims to shed 99 posts by next April, including at least six nurses, three of which are specialist nursing posts, giving care to people with long-term medical conditions. In the RCN’s biannual employment survey: • 54% of respondents reported that staffing levels of nurses had decreased in their workplace in the past year. • 57% said they worked over and above their contracted hours either every shift or several times a week, with 16% saying that they did so every shift. Forty per cent said their employer had initiated a recruitment freeze. • 19% had seen posts disappear in the past year. • 13% had seen beds or wards closed. Dr Peter Carter, the RCN’s chief executive and general secretary, said: “Nurses are at the heart of all that is good about the NHS and this is yet more evidence that the frontline is not being protected. “We know the government wants to protect services, but nurses are wilting under the strain of longer working hours, taking on the burden on unfilled vacancies and reduced staffing levels. “All these short-term measures are likely to leave patients with longer waiting times, poor care and a worse NHS. It is absolutely critical that trusts make sure they have the right numbers and balance of staff to deal with this.” Nurses say the cuts are affecting patient care. Some 52% said they were too busy to give patients the level of care they would like to provide, while 32% said that the quality of care was

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Al-Qaida’s top bombmaker escaped drone strike, says Yemeni official

US drone attack killed cleric and propagandist but not al-Qaida bomb expert, says source Al-Qaida’s top bombmaker in Yemen did not die in a drone strike on a convoy, a senior Yemeni official said, a report that dashed the hopes of US officials. The US drone strike on 30 September killed US-born cleric Anwar al-Awlaki and American propagandist Samir Khan, who published an English-language web magazine that spouted al-Qaida’s anti-western ideology. US intelligence officials had said it appeared that bombmaker Ibrahim al-Asiri was among the dead. But the Yemeni official listed those whose bodies had been identified and said Asiri was not one of them. The official spoke on condition of anonymity. Saudi-born Asiri, 29, who is of Pakistani descent, was tied to the so-called underwear bomb used in an attempt to bring down a Detroit-bound jetliner on Christmas Day 2009. hit an abandoned school. Global terrorism al-Qaida Yemen Middle East guardian.co.uk

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Herman Cain Reiterates That Blacks Are Brainwashed, Warns About Sharia Law

Click here to view this media Herman Cain shares his CEO-informed wisdom on This Week with Christiane Amanpour, exhorting blacks to consider Republican economic arguments and warning about the dangers of sharia law. Yawn. AMANPOUR: Let me move on to some things that you’ve said. Right after the debate in Florida, you told Wolf Blitzer of CNN that, basically, African-Americans, blacks in this country had been brainwashed over the years into supporting Democrats. CAIN: Yes. AMANPOUR: I mean, isn’t that really an inflammatory thing to say? I mean, do you really believe that African-Americans, blacks, are so easily manipulated? CAIN: I also said in that same interview… AMANPOUR: No, but let me you ask about that. That word is very inflammatory. CAIN: It is. I’m going to answer your question. I also said the good news is a large percentage of black people are thinking for themselves. Now, I think that — if the word is inflammatory, that’s too bad. It is true. And here’s why: because some black people won’t even listen to someone who appears to be a conservative or a Republican. I call that brainwashing. AMANPOUR: Some would say that — some would say that actually it’s because those policies and what you’re proposing, for instance, don’t meet their demands or what they’re looking for. CAIN: And I say that the reason they don’t see them as meeting their demands of what they’re looking for is because they have not looked at them. My economic growth and jobs plan, as an example, is not partisan. It is a solution that benefits everybody, especially the African-American community. AMANPOUR: Well, let me as you about that, because 999… CAIN: Yes. Yes. AMANPOUR: … you talk about 9 percent corporate, 9 percent income tax, and a 9 percent national sales tax. CAIN: Yes. AMANPOUR: And economists are saying that that could actually disproportionately affect poorer people, African-Americans, and all sorts of poorer people. CAIN: Ask them to do the math. AMANPOUR: Apparently they have done the math. CAIN: No, they have not, because I have done the math. Let me give you an actual example. If you take the median income of $50,000 a year… AMANPOUR: But what about $20,000 a year, people who are paying less? CAIN: If it’s $20,000 or $25,000, just divide by two, OK? It started with the median income, OK? If you start with $50,000 a year, the same numbers work. You get the same conclusion if they make $25,000 a year. Here are the actual numbers, $55,000 a year under the current system, they’re going to pay approximately $10,000 in taxes. It includes the payroll tax. Now, on the 999, they’re going to pay $4,500, 9 percent of $50,000. Now, if they — that means that they an excess of about $5,500 because they’re now paying $10,000. If they paid a 9 percent sales tax on everything that they buy, which means they bought all news goods and services, they would still come out $2,000 ahead. So what I’m saying is, those economists need to do the math. They’re making that assertion based upon wanting to attack it and turning it into a class warfare argument. AMANPOUR: I want to ask you about something else that you’ve said. You’ve said — and we’re going to show a graphic — that there’s been a creeping attempt to gradually ease Sharia law and the Muslim faith into our government. And now listen to what Governor Chris Christie has said about the fear of Sharia law here in the United States. (BEGIN VIDEO CLIP) CHRISTIE: This Sharia law business is crap. It’s just crazy. And I’m tired of dealing with the crazies. (END VIDEO CLIP) AMANPOUR: So he’s saying that those kinds of fears that you espouse and others are crazy. What do you say to that? CAIN: Call me crazy, but there are too many examples of where there has been pushback. AMANPOUR: You don’t really mean this, though, do you, Mr. Cain? CAIN: Oh, yes, I do. AMANPOUR: Sharia law in the United States? CAIN: Some people would infuse Sharia law in our court system if we allow it. I honestly believe that. So even if he calls me crazy, I am going to make sure that they don’t infuse it little by little by little. It’s not going to be some grand scheme, little by little. So I don’t mind if he calls me crazy . I’m simply saying… AMANPOUR: You’re sticking to it? CAIN: I’m sticking to it. American laws in American courts, period. AMANPOUR: American laws are in American courts… CAIN: Yes. AMANPOUR: … so the people of this country should be safe for the moment. CAIN: Exactly.

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Shell accused of fuelling violence in Nigeria by paying rival militant gangs

Oil company rejects watchdog’s claims that its local contracts made it complicit in the killing of civilians Shell has fuelled armed conflict in Nigeria by paying hundreds of thousands of dollars to feuding militant groups, according to an investigation by the oil industry watchdog Platform , and a coalition of non-government organisations. The oil giant is implicated in a decade of human rights abuses in the Niger delta, the study says, claiming that its routine payments exacerbated local violence, in one case leading to the deaths of 60 people and the destruction of an entire town. Platform’s investigation, which includes testimony from Shell’s own managers, also alleges that government forces hired by Shell perpetrated atrocities against local civilians, including unlawful killings and systematic torture. Shell disputes the report, defending its human rights record and questioning the accuracy of the evidence, but has pledged to study the recommendations. In Counting the Cost: Corporations and Human Rights in the Niger Delta, Platform says that it has seen testimony and contracts that implicate Shell in the regular awarding of lucrative contracts to militants. In one case last year, Shell is said to have transferred more than $159,000 (£102,000) to a group credibly linked to militia violence. One gang member, Chukwu Azikwe, told Platform: “We were given money and that is the money we were using to buy ammunition, to buy this bullet, and every other thing to eat and to sustain the war.” He said his gang and its leader, SK Agala, had vandalised Shell pipelines. “They will pay ransom. Some of them in the management will bring out money, dole out money into this place, in cash.” The gang became locked in competition witha rival group over access to oil money, with payments to one faction provoking a violent reaction from the other. “The [rival gang] will come and fight, some will die, just to enable them to also get [a] share. So the place now becomes a contest ground for warring factions. Who takes over the community has the attention of the company.” Platform alleges that it was highly likely that Shell knew that thousands of dollars paid per month to militants in the town of Rumuekpe was used to sustain a bitter conflict. “Armed gangs waged pitched battles over access to oil money, which Shell distributed to whichever gang controlled access to its infrastructure.” Rumuekpe is “the main artery of Shell’s eastern operations in Rivers state”, with aroundabout 100,000 barrels of oil flowing per day, approximately10% of Shell’s daily production in the country. Shell distributed “community development” funds and contracts via Friday Edu, a youth leader and Shell community liaison officer, the report said, an exclusive arrangement that magnified the risk of communal tension and conflict. By 2005, Edu’s monopoly over the resources of the Shell Petroleum Development Company of Nigeria (SPDC) had sparked a leadership tussle with Agala’s group. The latter was reportedly forced out of the community and a number of people killed. Dozens of gang members and residents reportedly died in counter raids by Agala. The inter-communal violence killed an estimated 60 people, including women and children, from 2005-08. Thousands more were displaced by fighting that left homes, schools and churches in ruins. Many still suffer severe malnutrition, poverty and homelessness. Platform says the local conflict soon created regional instability. Displaced villagers were hunted down in the regional capital, Port Harcourt, and killed in their homes, schools and workplaces. Gangs active in Rumuekpe collaborated with prominent criminal networks in Rivers state and doubled as Movement for the Emancipation of the Niger Delta (Mend) militants. Mend’s activity in Rumuekpe seriously disrupted Shell’s operations and sent shockwaves through world markets, the report notes, yet Shell paid little heed. One of the corporation’s managers was alarmingly candid: “One good thing about their crisis was that they never for one day stopped us from production.” Platform interviewed Ex-gang members claimed Shell exacerbated the conflict by providing regular funding to both factions throughout. In 2006, Shell is alleged to have awarded maintenance contracts relating to its oil wells, the Trans-Niger pipeline, its booster station and flowstation to Edu’s gang. But after Agala’s counter-raid left Rumuekpe “littered” with corpses, Shell apparently switched sides and started paying Agala. It paid whoever controlled access, even if they were known criminal gangs, Platform claims. The allegations of ex-gang members were largely substantiated by the testimony of a Shell official, Platform claims. A manager confirmed that in 2006, one of the most violent years, Shell awarded six types of contract in Rumuekpe. Thousands of dollars flowed from Shell to the armed gangs each month. The company eventually terminated some, though not all, of the contracts. But by then the violence had reached the Shell flowstation. A Shell manager, whose name has been withheld, is quoted as saying: “Somebody came in [to the flowstation] and cut off somebody’s hand. We had to vacate the place. We stopped the contract entirely.” Other contracts to “maintain the pipeline right of way” continued throughout the entire conflict, as did one-off contracts created in response to specific threats, the report found. Matthew Chizi, a local youth leader, said: “[Shell] were going to their job, doing their operation, servicing their manifold. They never cared that people were dying. They never did anything to call the crisis to order. Rather they were using military to intimidate the community.” Platform’s report offers a damning assessment: “Shell was highly likely to be aware that it was helping to fuel the conflict in Rumuekpe, since company workers visited the community on a regular basis. Even if Shell was somehow unaware of the violence, media reports were publicly available. “Members of the community reportedly wrote to Shell to request that the company stop awarding contracts to gang leaders such as Friday Edu. Through Shell’s routine practices and responses to threats, the company became complicit in the cycle of violence.”It adds: “The Rumuekpe crisis was entirely avoidable… Shell operated for decades without an MoU, polluted the community and distributed ‘community development’ funds through an individual who had lost the confidence of the community. Once conflict erupted, Shell paid the perpetrators of gross human rights abuses as long as they controlled access to oil infrastructure. The cumulative impact of Shell’s mistakes was devastating.” Rumuekpe is just one of several case studies examined by the report which alleges, that in 2009 and 2010, security personnel guarding Shell facilities were responsible for extra-judicial killings and torture in Ogoniland. Platform calls on the corporation to break ties with government forces and other armed groups responsible for abuses, and to clean up environmental damage. Rumuekpe is just one of several case studies examined by the report which alleges, that in 2009 and 2010, security personnel guarding Shell facilities were responsible for extra-judicial killings and torture in Ogoniland. Shell insisted that it respected human rights and was committed to working with Nigeria to ensure that the country benefited from its natural resources. “We have long acknowledged that the legitimate payments we make to contractors, as well as the social investments we make in the Niger delta region may cause friction in and between communities,” a spokesman said. “We nevertheless work hard to ensure a fair and equitable distribution of the benefits of our presence. “In view of the high rate of criminal violence in the Niger delta, the federal government, as majority owner of oil facilities, deploys government security forces to protect people and assets. Suggestions in the report that SPDC directs or controls military activities are therefore completely untrue.” He added: “It is unfortunate that Platform has repeated several old cases, some of which are unsubstantiated and some proven inaccurate, because doing so obscures the good work which has been going on for many years. However, we will carefully examine its recommendations and look forward to continuing a constructive dialogue with the Nigerian government and other stakeholders to find solutions to these issues.” Nigeria Royal Dutch Shell Africa Oil Oil and gas companies Human rights David Smith guardian.co.uk

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Shell accused of fuelling violence in Nigeria by paying rival militant gangs

Oil company rejects watchdog’s claims that its local contracts made it complicit in the killing of civilians Shell has fuelled armed conflict in Nigeria by paying hundreds of thousands of dollars to feuding militant groups, according to an investigation by the oil industry watchdog Platform , and a coalition of non-government organisations. The oil giant is implicated in a decade of human rights abuses in the Niger delta, the study says, claiming that its routine payments exacerbated local violence, in one case leading to the deaths of 60 people and the destruction of an entire town. Platform’s investigation, which includes testimony from Shell’s own managers, also alleges that government forces hired by Shell perpetrated atrocities against local civilians, including unlawful killings and systematic torture. Shell disputes the report, defending its human rights record and questioning the accuracy of the evidence, but has pledged to study the recommendations. In Counting the Cost: Corporations and Human Rights in the Niger Delta, Platform says that it has seen testimony and contracts that implicate Shell in the regular awarding of lucrative contracts to militants. In one case last year, Shell is said to have transferred more than $159,000 (£102,000) to a group credibly linked to militia violence. One gang member, Chukwu Azikwe, told Platform: “We were given money and that is the money we were using to buy ammunition, to buy this bullet, and every other thing to eat and to sustain the war.” He said his gang and its leader, SK Agala, had vandalised Shell pipelines. “They will pay ransom. Some of them in the management will bring out money, dole out money into this place, in cash.” The gang became locked in competition witha rival group over access to oil money, with payments to one faction provoking a violent reaction from the other. “The [rival gang] will come and fight, some will die, just to enable them to also get [a] share. So the place now becomes a contest ground for warring factions. Who takes over the community has the attention of the company.” Platform alleges that it was highly likely that Shell knew that thousands of dollars paid per month to militants in the town of Rumuekpe was used to sustain a bitter conflict. “Armed gangs waged pitched battles over access to oil money, which Shell distributed to whichever gang controlled access to its infrastructure.” Rumuekpe is “the main artery of Shell’s eastern operations in Rivers state”, with aroundabout 100,000 barrels of oil flowing per day, approximately10% of Shell’s daily production in the country. Shell distributed “community development” funds and contracts via Friday Edu, a youth leader and Shell community liaison officer, the report said, an exclusive arrangement that magnified the risk of communal tension and conflict. By 2005, Edu’s monopoly over the resources of the Shell Petroleum Development Company of Nigeria (SPDC) had sparked a leadership tussle with Agala’s group. The latter was reportedly forced out of the community and a number of people killed. Dozens of gang members and residents reportedly died in counter raids by Agala. The inter-communal violence killed an estimated 60 people, including women and children, from 2005-08. Thousands more were displaced by fighting that left homes, schools and churches in ruins. Many still suffer severe malnutrition, poverty and homelessness. Platform says the local conflict soon created regional instability. Displaced villagers were hunted down in the regional capital, Port Harcourt, and killed in their homes, schools and workplaces. Gangs active in Rumuekpe collaborated with prominent criminal networks in Rivers state and doubled as Movement for the Emancipation of the Niger Delta (Mend) militants. Mend’s activity in Rumuekpe seriously disrupted Shell’s operations and sent shockwaves through world markets, the report notes, yet Shell paid little heed. One of the corporation’s managers was alarmingly candid: “One good thing about their crisis was that they never for one day stopped us from production.” Platform interviewed Ex-gang members claimed Shell exacerbated the conflict by providing regular funding to both factions throughout. In 2006, Shell is alleged to have awarded maintenance contracts relating to its oil wells, the Trans-Niger pipeline, its booster station and flowstation to Edu’s gang. But after Agala’s counter-raid left Rumuekpe “littered” with corpses, Shell apparently switched sides and started paying Agala. It paid whoever controlled access, even if they were known criminal gangs, Platform claims. The allegations of ex-gang members were largely substantiated by the testimony of a Shell official, Platform claims. A manager confirmed that in 2006, one of the most violent years, Shell awarded six types of contract in Rumuekpe. Thousands of dollars flowed from Shell to the armed gangs each month. The company eventually terminated some, though not all, of the contracts. But by then the violence had reached the Shell flowstation. A Shell manager, whose name has been withheld, is quoted as saying: “Somebody came in [to the flowstation] and cut off somebody’s hand. We had to vacate the place. We stopped the contract entirely.” Other contracts to “maintain the pipeline right of way” continued throughout the entire conflict, as did one-off contracts created in response to specific threats, the report found. Matthew Chizi, a local youth leader, said: “[Shell] were going to their job, doing their operation, servicing their manifold. They never cared that people were dying. They never did anything to call the crisis to order. Rather they were using military to intimidate the community.” Platform’s report offers a damning assessment: “Shell was highly likely to be aware that it was helping to fuel the conflict in Rumuekpe, since company workers visited the community on a regular basis. Even if Shell was somehow unaware of the violence, media reports were publicly available. “Members of the community reportedly wrote to Shell to request that the company stop awarding contracts to gang leaders such as Friday Edu. Through Shell’s routine practices and responses to threats, the company became complicit in the cycle of violence.”It adds: “The Rumuekpe crisis was entirely avoidable… Shell operated for decades without an MoU, polluted the community and distributed ‘community development’ funds through an individual who had lost the confidence of the community. Once conflict erupted, Shell paid the perpetrators of gross human rights abuses as long as they controlled access to oil infrastructure. The cumulative impact of Shell’s mistakes was devastating.” Rumuekpe is just one of several case studies examined by the report which alleges, that in 2009 and 2010, security personnel guarding Shell facilities were responsible for extra-judicial killings and torture in Ogoniland. Platform calls on the corporation to break ties with government forces and other armed groups responsible for abuses, and to clean up environmental damage. Rumuekpe is just one of several case studies examined by the report which alleges, that in 2009 and 2010, security personnel guarding Shell facilities were responsible for extra-judicial killings and torture in Ogoniland. Shell insisted that it respected human rights and was committed to working with Nigeria to ensure that the country benefited from its natural resources. “We have long acknowledged that the legitimate payments we make to contractors, as well as the social investments we make in the Niger delta region may cause friction in and between communities,” a spokesman said. “We nevertheless work hard to ensure a fair and equitable distribution of the benefits of our presence. “In view of the high rate of criminal violence in the Niger delta, the federal government, as majority owner of oil facilities, deploys government security forces to protect people and assets. Suggestions in the report that SPDC directs or controls military activities are therefore completely untrue.” He added: “It is unfortunate that Platform has repeated several old cases, some of which are unsubstantiated and some proven inaccurate, because doing so obscures the good work which has been going on for many years. However, we will carefully examine its recommendations and look forward to continuing a constructive dialogue with the Nigerian government and other stakeholders to find solutions to these issues.” Nigeria Royal Dutch Shell Africa Oil Oil and gas companies Human rights David Smith guardian.co.uk

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George Osborne extends council tax freeze for another year

Chancellor will say he wants to help families and pensioners with the cost of living – a move that will cost the government £800m The chancellor, George Osborne, will announce plans to extend the council tax freeze in England for a further year as a sign of his determination to ease the cost of living, seen by the government as the biggest issue facing struggling families. The freeze in 2013 will cost £800m and extends a Conservative manifesto commitment to freeze the highly visible tax for two years. On Monday Osborne will say the money has been found due to underspending across Whitehall. It will be the third announcement in recent weeks from ministers of extra spending due to an underspend elsewhere. The government has also put up a £500m capital investment fund, and the communities secretary, Eric Pickles, announced an extra £250m to help councils reintroduce weekly bin

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Markets under threat as shoppers go online for fruit and veg

Rising rents are intensifying fight for survival, while a traders’ group says markets are struggling to attract new stallholders For generations the bustling local market has offered cost-conscious shoppers fresh fruit, meat and vegetables served by traders, and many have had the same family stall for years. But now, market stallholders say they face a battle for survival as shoppers turn to supermarkets or online shopping. According to the National Market Traders Federation (NMTF) – founded in 1899 by South Yorkshire market traders – people have simply forgotten how to use a market. Traders continue to suffer two years on from a parliamentary select committee report that concluded that the majority of the country’s estimated 3,000 general markets were in decline. In Mexborough, near Doncaster, traders have started legal action to stop rents being quadrupled. The minimum rent at Mexborough market will rise from £15.72 to £36.68 a week and eventually to £78.60 a week by 2014. Landlords Doncaster council says the rents have not increased in more than 15 years and the extra money would fund investment that would attract more shoppers – but some traders have hired solicitors and surveyors to look into the matter. One trader, who wished to remain anonymous, said: “If the rents go up like that we might as well just pack up and go home – we just couldn’t afford to stay here, we don’t make enough money. We’re valued by our customers but we’re just not profitable enough.” Rents are also contentious at Europe’s largest indoor market, Kirkgate, in Leeds. Cliff Hocken runs a stall selling seafood, sandwiches and refreshments with his wife, Michelle. The family have run the business for 130 years. Michelle subscribes to the theory that better management of the facilities would bring more people in. She said: “Market traders often bend over backwards for their customers – if people ask us how to cook stuff we can help them and offer that personal touch. People are becoming more discerning and want fresh produce and to know where it’s come from — it’s that kind of thing we provide, but I wonder how many people are aware of that.” The campaign group Friends of Leeds Kirkgate Market fear the council is looking to gentrify the facilities and change its character – a charge denied by Leeds markets champion councillor Gerry Harper, who says things cannot stay the same forever. He said: “Some people seem to think we’re trying to close the market, we’re not. We genuinely want to make this the best market in the country,” Harper said. But the NMTF has said one of the biggest issues facing modern markets is attracting new stallholders. Communications manager Roy Holland said that stalls that had been in the same families for generations were now closing because the younger generation does not want to take them over. The NMTF is hoping an apprenticeship scheme will encourage youngsters to think of the markets as a viable way of earning a living. But Holland remained upbeat that, ultimately, shoppers will start to find markets again. “There is a very strong future for markets,” he said. “I don’t accept there’s a terminal decline here. But the people who run the facilities need to understand what it is they’re running, and they need to be promoted better, which is down to the traders as well. “Some shoppers have forgotten how to use a market, it’s a mindset that you just now go to the supermarket and get everything there. We need to promote ourselves as a place where you can get fresh good quality products where stallholders offer a personal touch.” Internet John Baron guardian.co.uk

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Students fear plans to reform law on squatting may outlaw sit-ins

NUS warns of campaign against government if justice ministry’s proposals lead to criminalisation of protest tactics Government proposals to criminalise squatting may also outlaw occupation-style protests and sit-ins, student leaders, trades unionists and lawyers have said. Plans to make trespass a criminal offence appear in a recently published justice ministry consultation paper that seeks to make it easier to evict squatters from unoccupied commercial and residential property. Currently, trespass is a civil offence and property owners must take squatters through the civil courts. Lawyers fear that outlawing trespass, the ministry’s strongest proposal, will also have the effect of banning peaceful sit-ins, a protest tactic that is favoured by students and workers. National Union of Students national executive member Michael Chessum said the NUS would mount a campaign to make it “politically impossible” for the government to introduce such a law. “It will be a fundamental affront to the right of students to protest if occupation was criminalised,” Chessum said. “I have no doubt that if the government tries to criminalise occupations … we would mount a campaign to make it politically impossible to stop student occupiers occupying.” Last autumn thousands of students occupied dozens of campuses in an attempt to stop a tripling of tuition fees to £9,000. Chessum added that criminalising trespass could change the environment on campus and lead to “war” between management and students involving police and courts. “The idea that peacefully occupying your own campus might be taken away from you is something that we simply won’t take,” he said. He added that many students also squat and the proposals would also be resisted on this basis. “Students and young people in particular are thrown out into a world in which there are vanishingly few jobs and housing is an absolutely massive crisis [for them] … and will defend the right to squat” he said. Teresa Mackay, a regional organiser for the Unite union, said anti-squatting legislation had become a big issue for unions and they were planning to submit their concerns to the government’s consultation process, which closes on 5 October. “I have spoken to other trade unionists about this and they do feel that almost that the attack on squatters is a bit of a smokescreen when you think that of the battles that are going to possibly take place over the next few years,” she said. In a statement, the Ministry of Justice (MoJ) denied that its intention was to criminalise occupations and said the consultation was aimed specifically at squatting. On page nine of the consultation it suggests that any new law might want to exempt occupation protests from criminalisation. But Giles Peaker, a housing solicitor, said it would be difficult for the legal system to distinguish between squatting and politically-based occupations. “The consultation suggests that certain kinds of occupation might possibly be excluded, including things like students occupying university property, it doesn’t say that they will be, and the suggestion appears to be you would have Ministry of Justice licensed protests – permitted and not permitted. “Is it necessarily for the MoJ to be the ones proscribing what constitutes a valid form of protest and what doesn’t? … The potential for legal grey areas is huge.” The concerns come after the Telegraph revealed that the Conservative party had been give £3.3m by property developers in recent years. Squatting activists believe any new law could be used as a way of placing the costs of evictions on to the public purse at a time when vacancy rates for commercial property have grown during the recession. Cat Brogan who was evicted by St John Hackney Joint Charities trust from a squat in Well Street, Hackney last month, said that if squatting was criminalised it would be “unaffordable and unenforceable” and would put the burden on tax payers. “[Criminalising squatting] means that you are using taxpayers money to pay for costly evictions for rich landlords and rich property owners who have vast swathes of property that they leave empty for land banking,” she said. Responding to fears an MoJ spokesperson said: “These proposals are not targeting legitimate forms of protesting but those people who enter and occupy homes or business properties without permission. “No decisions on our squatting proposals have been made and we await with interest the responses to the consultation which is due to be published this autumn. “Our consultation will tell us more about the types of people who squat and the extent of squatting. We particularly welcome the views of any organisations that are likely to be affected by our proposals.” Students Shiv Malik guardian.co.uk

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Playing the ‘Can’t They All Just Get Along Game’ in the Wake of GOP Obstruction

Click here to view this media In yet another example of CNN allowing one of their guest to play the “both sides are obstructionists” and a lack of bipartisanship is what’s wrong with our politics game, frequent contributor Prof. Peter Morici does his best to lie to their audience about who is actually making sure that nothing gets done in Washington D.C. — as long as Republicans’ primary goal is to make sure that President Obama is not reelected instead of allowing the economy to improve. Here’s Morici on Saturday’s Your Money : VELSHI: So the work needs to be done to fix this economy outside of Washington in the private sector. But the idea there is a road map, there is some destination and there are some agreement as to how to get there is the thing that is going to help businesses make those decisions to employ people. So ultimately the gridlock you’re saying, Diane, is a large part of the problem. Peter Morici, what’s the logical fix to that? Do we have to wait for 14 months for an election to finally have the people somehow send the message that you guys have to get something done in Washington? Are we still going to see this reactionary politics that plays its way all the way down to the voter who now is going to vote on choices that affect them personally? MORICI: The fact of the matter is we’re going to see marginal action on the president’s plan. Even the Democrats in the Senate are putting it off. My feeling is there will be a package. It won’t be nearly as comprehensive as the president likes. But a basic problem we have is that when the Republicans win, they think they should get everything their way and the Democrats think they should obstruct. When the Democrats win, they think they should get everything their way and Republicans think they should obstruct. The reality is folks do want government — Americans are moderate. They want solutions in the middle. Until politicians are willing to do that, we’re going to have this seesawing in elections. I mean, that’s all there is to it and we’re going to be a country divided. But I think there are real solutions to getting the private sector going. We haven’t had a clear vision from the White House how to do that beyond stimulus. And frankly on the Republican side, cutting taxes and deregulating doesn’t warm me up. Naturally what Morici fails to mention here is that Democrats have not been the ones unwilling to negotiate, to a fault I would say. It’s been the Republicans and to the point that they’re even refusing to vote for their own ideas if heaven forbid those ideas might somehow even marginally improve the economy. We’ve already written about the level of GOP obstruction we’ve been watching over the last couple of years at Video Cafe. Steve Benen wrote a post on this earlier this year here — Evil vs. Disgusting — which did a really good job laying out just how craven the Republican’s strategy has been that bears repeating here in the wake of Morici’s remarks. Regular readers know that we’ve been keeping an eye on the “ sabotage ” question, wondering whether congressional Republicans would consider hurting the economy on purpose, for purely partisan reasons. Just this month, some high-profile, mainstream pundits have begun exploring the issue , and just last week, two of Congress’ most powerful Democrats broached the same subject . Michael Tomasky went even further the other day, arguing that Democrats should start “saying openly what has been clear for months or even years now — that as long as economic recovery would work to the political benefit of Barack Obama, the Republicans have been, are, and will be in favor of sabotaging the economy.” Tomasky added this is “obvious,” though many consider the question to “impolite” to repeat. Rachel noted, among other things, that the congressional GOP has decided it’s against their own ideas about helping the economy, which necessarily raises some awkward questions about their motivations. Keep in mind, for much of the country, the problem with policymakers and the economy is that Washington lacks “leadership” and the “political will” to make things better. These assumptions are wrong — the problem is a major party that controls the House and can block at will in the Senate appears unwilling to consider any measures that could improve the economy, and demands measures that would make matters worse. During the segment after the clip at the top of the post, host Ali Velshi, Morici and Mesirow financial economist Diane Swonk went on to discuss what they thought some of the solutions out there might be for job creation in the United States. And what were those? The first one suggested was naturally lowering the tax rates on corporate America and supposedly closing some of those loopholes we know is never going to happen at the behest of that great bastion of bipartisanship, Sen. Pat Toomey (R-Club for Growth). Following that, they did actually talk about a few things I agree with, like doing something for underwater homeowners instead of the banks, and the fact that businesses are hurting right now because we just don’t have enough demand and that government can play a role in helping in that regard although I disagree with their premise that ultimately it’s all up to the private sector to see that happen in the long term. If government doesn’t step in and protect American workers, the private sector is going to continue to do nothing but have a race to the bottom on wages and benefits all in the name of taking care their stockholders and bonuses for their CEO’s. What irked me when watching this is that not once did they point to the GOP and let their viewers know what Steve Benen wrote about in his post, and that is the Republicans are obstructing everything possible for the sole purpose of hoping that if our economy is in the tank, President Obama does not get reelected. They also, of course, failed to address the real divide we’ve got in America right now and it’s not a problem with the divide between Republicans and Democrats. It’s a problem with the divide between the powerless in America and the ultra-rich who are controlling so much of the wealth in the country as the middle class disappears. Nor did they discuss the problem with our politicians having to raise endless amounts of money to get reelected and being beholden to those they’re taking the money from once they get in office — and companies like CNN benefiting from the political advertising money that follows — so they have no interest in trying to do anything about it because it’s earning them a handsome profit. And if you go read the entire transcript from the show which is linked above, it wasn’t just this segment that was playing the “can’t all of the politicians just get along” game. It was repeated over and over again during the entire hour, even from one of their so-called liberals they had on there, Roland Martin, who said this later in the program: MARTIN: I recall President George W. Bush coming in, in 2000 saying I want to end partisanship in Washington, D.C. What happened? I heard President Obama, then Senator Obama, say in 2008, I want to come into Washington, D.C. No politician, Democrat or Republican, they have to be able to confront the problem that you have few moderate Republicans, and you have a decreasing number of conservative Democrats. As long as you have people who are on the extremes, you cannot bring folks together. We still are a split nation. That’s the fundamental problem that we have. Just replace “moderate” with the word “corporate” and maybe what Martin said could be considered a halfway honest statement other than the fact that he’s calling those on the left who are tired of a race to the bottom and actually want to fix our economy instead of rigging it for Wall Street and the rich “extremists.” That and the fact that he is actually pretending that there is a single person left in the Republican Party that you could rightfully call a “moderate.” Sorry Martin, but they’re long gone. Just not obstructing every single things Democrats do just because they’re Democrats doesn’t suddenly earn someone the title of “moderate.” Here’s the follow up with Velshi, Swonk and Morici discussing what they thought needed to be done to help the unemployment in the U.S. that I already wrote about above. Click here to view this media

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The New York Times reported Sunday that Nancy Reagan is “pushing” New Jersey governor Chris Christie to run for president. George Will spoke to the former First Lady Saturday evening and told Christiane Amanpour on ABC's “This Week” that Mrs. Reagan “laughed merrily at that absurdity” (video follows with transcript and commentary):

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