Man shot dead in West Bank village hours before Mahmoud Abbas’s request to the UN for recognition of a Palestinian state A Palestinian man has been shot dead in a clash with Israeli soldiers and settlers in the West Bank. Hours before President Mahmoud Abbas’s address to the United Nations general assembly and his formal request for recognition of a Palestinian state, the man, identified as Issam Badran, 35, was shot in the neck, according to witnesses including an Associated Press reporter. The incident began with a warning broadcast made over mosque speakers in Qusra of an approach by settlers from a nearby outpost. Scores of village men and youths headed towards a hill where around 20 settlers had gathered, waving Israeli flags. Israeli troops arrived and fired tear gas, then live rounds. Settlers also fired their weapons. Qusra has been the scene of repeated incursions by settlers in recent weeks, including an attack on a mosque in which tyres were set alight inside the building and the walls defaced with Hebrew graffiti. Elsewhere, sporadic clashes between Palestinian protesters and the Israeli military broke out in East Jerusalem and across the West Bank on Friday. Several hundred young Palestinians, swathed in Palestinian flags, their faces covered with scarves, gathered at Qalandiya checkpoint to throw stones, in defiance of Abbas’s call for non-violent demonstration. “We’re not listening to Abu Mazen [Abbas], we never do,” said one 20-year-old student, clutching several rocks in his hand. “Really we’re just playing. It’s a game we play every week. We want to send a message that after 60 years of occupation, we’re still here.” One group of youths marched towards a line of Israeli troops holding aloft an American flag with the word “veto” printed on before torching it. Others threw rocks and miniature molotov cocktails at the advancing soldiers. On the other side of the separation wall, Israeli police reported five arrests in East Jerusalem for rock throwing in an afternoon described by spokesperson Micky Rosenfeld as “relatively quiet”. The arrest of Hamze Jaber, 17, in the neighbourhood of Ras al-Amud sparked outrage. “He did nothing. He just saw the soldiers, got scared and ran. They chased him and jumped on him. Now he’ll be in prison for maybe two months,” said Jamil Abu Madi, 27, a local who struggled to hold back furious young boys from throwing stones at retreating Israeli soldiers. “They closed Al-Aqsa mosque today so we just prayed on the street. Why? Because of a Palestinian state? We just want to live.” In the village of Nabi Saleh, protesters burned Israeli flags and posters of US president Barack Obama in an expression of rage over his UN speech this week, widely seen as overtly sympathetic to Israel. Police fired teargas at the protesters. There were further clashes in the villages of Bil’in and Ni’lin. Confrontations between Palestinians and Israeli troops in West Bank villages are a routine Friday occurrence. Palestinian territories Israel Mahmoud Abbas Middle East United Nations Harriet Sherwood guardian.co.uk
Continue reading …Click here to view this media Here’s the Fox transcript of Gary Johnson’s comedy moment, which clearly garnered the most laughs of the night: BAIER: Governor Johnson? JOHNSON: My next-door neighbor’s two dogs have created more shovel-ready jobs than this current administration. And here’s a clip of the transcript from Rush Limbaugh’s radio show this afternoon: BREAK TRANSCRIPT RUSH: My dogs have created more shovel-ready work than Obama has (chuckling) just this week alone. The new puppy. Honest to God. More shovel-ready work for me this week than Obama has created all two and a half years. Limbaugh doesn’t seem to have much objection to Johnson’s use, and Johnson claims it was one of several one-liners sent to him by radio host Jim Villanucci , who used to write for the Tonight Show. Laughs aside, the thing about those projects? They may not have been instantly “shovel-ready”, but they are being done, and they did have an impact. Here’s a chart of the impact on GDP: enlarge That’s a CBO estimate. I guarantee you Gary Johnson and Rush Limbaugh wouldn’t be paying anyone to shovel their dogs’ crap when they can just toss it all over the stage.
Continue reading …Two further judicial reviews lodged with courts as high court judge delays decision The residents of Dale Farm won a further temporary legal victory on Friday when a high court judge ruled that he would not make a decision on the fate of the site until after the weekend. A final decision on whether bailiffs can move in and mount one of the largest evictions in British history could be delayed by weeks after it emerged that two further judicial reviews over the contested site in Essex had been lodged with the courts. Dale Farm residents gained an emergency injunction on Monday to prevent bailiffs entering the site, which is home to 86 families. The injunction was granted because of fears that Basildon council’s eviction “may go further” than allowed. If the two judicial reviews go ahead, they could add thousands to the already substantial legal bills generated by the Dale Farm battle, with the eviction itself estimated to cost up to £18m before the most recent delay. At the high court, Marc Willers, on behalf of Dale Farm, argued that the injunction should be extended because moves to clear the site were legally flawed. Mr Justice Edwards-Stuart told the court the “ultimate eviction” was “in many cases going to happen”. There could be no dispute about the eviction notices themselves, he added, warning: “Anybody who thinks this is a long stay of execution while minor squabbles are carried out – they must think again.” However, he said that did “not mean that they [Dale farm residents] are not entitled to be treated with dignity and that any eviction must be carried out in a sensitive way”. He added: “The ultimate eviction which is, in many cases, going to happen must be carried out, in so far as possible, with people knowing exactly what is going on, what is going to happen and in a way which causes minimum alarm to children and others. It can’t be used as yet another springboard for delay.” Dale Farm Roma, Gypsies and Travellers Alexandra Topping guardian.co.uk
Continue reading …Zainab al-Hosni’s mutilated remains were found by her family in a morgue, according to Amnesty International An 18-year-old Syrian woman, whose mutilated body was discovered in a morgue, is believed to be the first female to die in custody during the country’s six-month-old uprising, Amnesty International has said. The family of Zainab al-Hosni found her corpse by chance as they searched for her activist brother’s body in the city of Homs, the human rights group said. The family said she had been decapitated, her arms cut off, and skin removed. “If it is confirmed that Zainab was in custody when she died, this would be one of the most disturbing cases of a death in detention we have seen so far,” said Philip Luther, Amnesty’s deputy director for the Middle East and North Africa. Amnesty said Ms Hosni was abducted by plainclothes individuals believed to be members of the security forces on 27 July, apparently to pressure her activist brother Mohammad Deeb al-Hosni to turn himself in. The deaths of Ms Hosni and her brother bring to 103 the number of people who have been reported killed in Syrian custody since the uprising began in March, Amnesty said. Overall, the UN estimates 2,600 people have been killed since the revolt began in March, and there is no sign of either side giving up. The protest movement has proved remarkably resilient, although the opposition has no clear leadership that could offer an alternative to President Bashar al-Assad, whose family has ruled Syria for more than 40 years. On Friday, Syrian security forces opened fire on thousands of protesters calling for the opposition to unite against Assad’s regime. Friday protests have become a weekly ritual in Syria, despite the near-certainty that security forces will respond with bullets and tear gas. The protests came as the European Union agreed on an investment ban in the Syrian oil sector to put more pressure on Assad to end his deadly crackdown. An activist group, known as the Local Coordinating Committees, said security forces killed one person outside the al-Maari mosque in Damascus. The London-based Syrian Observatory for Human Rights said security forces killed another man near Homs. An activist in Homs, Majd Amer, said there was unprecedented security presence in the city. “They have been deploying here since last night,” said Amer as cracks of gunfire could be heard in the background. The Syrian government has banned foreign journalists and placed heavy restrictions on local coverage, making it difficult to independently verify reports. Syria Middle East Bashar Al-Assad Arab and Middle East unrest guardian.co.uk
Continue reading …Click here to view this media Almost 20,000 questions were submitted for Thursday night’s Republican presidential debate, but Fox News picked the Federation for American Immigration Reform (FAIR), a designated hate group, to ask the first question on immigration. “Struggling U.S. workers continue to compete with millions of illegal aliens,” FAIR’s Kristen Williamson claimed in her video question. “Do you support legislation to require all employers to use e-verify in order to ensure that the people that they hire are actually legally authorized to work in the U.S.?” Republican presidential candidate Newt Gingrich replied by saying that the country would be better off if the e-verify program was outsourced to private credit card companies. Although FAIR has testified to Congress more than 30 times, the Southern Poverty Law Center (SPLC) considers them to be a hate group . “The identification of FAIR as a bona fide hate group is important,” SPLC’s Mark Potok wrote in 2007. “FAIR is the hub of the American nativist movement, the group that more than any other has contributed to the rancid turn the national immigration discussion has taken. With FAIR fanning the flames of xenophobic intolerance, hate groups, hate crimes and hate speech directed at foreigners and Latinos continue to rise in America.”
Continue reading …Xan Brooks reviews a biopic about pro-surfer Bethany Hamilton, who made headlines when she returned to the sport after losing her arm in a shark attack aged 13 Xan Brooks Henry Barnes
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