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Policeman shot and blinded by Raoul Moat found dead in home

Northumbria police say PC David Rathband pronounced dead at scene after they were called to house in Blyth PC David Rathband, the police officer shot and blinded by Raoul Moat, has been found dead in his home. Northumbria police said they attended his house in the Northumberland town of Blyth following “concerns for his welfare”, but he was pronounced dead at the scene. The circumstances of his death remain unclear and a police investigation is under way. A force spokesman said: “Around 7pm tonight, Wednesday February 29, officers received a report of concerns for the welfare of PC David Rathband at his home in Blyth. “Officers attended alongside the ambulance service and PC Rathband was found inside. He was declared dead at the scene. “A police investigation is under way and officers are in the process of informing the family.” The coroner has also been informed of the death, he added. Rathband, a father of two teenagers who joined Northumbria police in 2000, was blinded in both eyes when he was shot at close range during the manhunt for Moat on 4 July 2010. The gunman had shot and injured his ex-partner Samantha Stobbart and killed her new boyfriend, Chris Brown. He was pursued by police for six days before eventually killing himself. Rathband said afterwards he bore Moat no ill will and in July last year was presented with a police bravery award in London. Police Raoul Moat Beatrice Woolf guardian.co.uk

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Spanish reporter escapes from Homs

Javier Espinosa, El Mundo correspondent trapped in besieged Syrian city, is smuggled to safety as fighting rages in Baba Amr Javier Espinosa, the El Mundo correspondent who has been trapped in a besieged suburb of the Syrian city of Homs, has escaped to safety. Espinosa, who has written a series of dramatic dispatches from Homs – some published in the Guardian – was smuggled out afternoon after making the perilous journey out of the city. He was reporting from Baba Amr, the suburb that has been under siege for 25 days, and was one of the tiny group of journalists trapped there when two of them, including the Sunday Times reporter Marie Colvin, were killed last week. It was disclosed on Wednesday that the regime of President Bashar al-Assad had refused permission for the UN’s humanitarian aid chief, Valerie Amos, to enter the country, despite the urgings of Moscow. Reports also emerged of heavy fighting on all four sides of the Baba Amr district. Meanwhile Kofi Annan, the new UN-Arab League envoy for Syria, said he would hold talks in New York with the UN secretary general, Ban Ki-moon, and member states. He will then meet the Arab League chief, Nabil Elaraby, in Cairo. According to witnesses, the Syrian army’s 4th Division has moved towards the outskirts of Baba Amr, where troops were involved in heavy clashes with members of the Free Syrian Army. Espinosa’s escape follows that of Colvin’s colleague, the Sunday Times photographer Paul Conroy, who was smuggled to safety on Sunday evening after the journalists were split up during their escape attempt while under attack by government troops. Thirteen activists were killed trying to get them to safety. The campaign group Avaaz, which helped coordinate the escape of Conroy said on Wednesday night that Espinosa had reached Lebanon. In a statement the group said: “Javier Espinosa left Baba Amr with Paul Conroy and the Syrian activists on Sunday. But after the Syrian Army shelled the fleeing party, he was separated from Conroy and the activists as he stopped to tend to the wounded and severely injured. “For several hours he was unaided before he was reunited with a group that were able finally to escort him to safety in Lebanon. “Sadly two more journalists, Edith Bouvier and William Daniels, remain trapped in Homs tonight as a full-scale ground invasion of the Baba Amr neighbourhood appeared to begin. “Government forces were today engaged in an assault on four fronts after the most severe shelling of the last 26 days where over 20,000 people remain.” Bouvier broke her leg badly during the attack that killed Colvin and the French photographer Remi Ochlik last week. Sources of reliable news from inside Homs were scarce on Wednesday as activists in the city were cut off for long periods from communicating with the outside world. The rebels have sworn to fight to the last man, according to Ahmed, an activist who said he had just left Baba Amr. He said other opposition areas of Homs were also under attack but gave no details of casualties. Activists in the city said in a statement: “Pray for the Free Syrian Army. Do not be miserly in your prayers for them.” Speaking via Skype, Ahmed said: “We call on all Syrians in other cities to move and do something to lift the pressure off Baba Amr and Homs. They should act quickly.” However, some activists said leaders of the Farouq Brigade of the Free Syrian Army had already left Baba Amr. Homs, a symbol of opposition to Assad in a nearly year-long revolt, was without power or telephone links, Ahmed said. YouTube footage posted by activists showed army trucks and tank carriers on a highway purportedly heading for Homs. Reports from the city could not immediately be verified due to tight government restrictions on media work in Syria, where Assad is facing the gravest challenge of his 11-year rule. A spokesman for the International Committee of the Red Cross, Hicham Hassan, said the violence was making the humanitarian situation more difficult. “This makes it even more important for us to repeat our call for a halt in the fighting,” he said. “It is essential that people who are in need of evacuation – wounded people, women and children – that we are able to offer them that with the Syrian Arab Red Crescent.” Libya will donate $100m (£62m) in humanitarian aid to the Syrian opposition and allow them to open an office in Tripoli, a government spokesman said, in a further sign of its strong support for forces fighting Assad. Representatives from the Syrian National Council visited Tripoli this week after Mustafa Abdel, chairman of Libya’s National Transitional Council (NTC), made the initial offer earlier this month to host an office there. The UN said on Tuesday that it estimated Assad’s security forces had killed more than 7,500 civilians since the revolt began last March. This figure was significantly higher than previous estimates. This is disputed by Syria’s government, which said in December that “armed terrorists” had killed more than 2,000 soldiers and police during the unrest. France said this week that the UN security council was working on a new Syria resolution and urged Russia and China not to veto it, as they have previous drafts. An outline drafted by Washington focused on humanitarian problems to try to win Chinese and Russian support and isolate Assad, western envoys said. But they said the draft would also suggest Assad was to blame for the crisis – a stance opposed particularly strongly by his long-time ally Russia. But China’s foreign minister, Yang Jiechi, also called for political dialogue in Syria, something ruled out by Assad’s opponents while the bloodshed goes on. Russia has warned against interference in Syria under a humanitarian guise. Avaaz said in its statement about its help in the rescue of Espinosa that it was disappointed “with the irresponsible behaviour of the Spanish Embassy in Lebanon who have released information before all the journalists are safely out of the country”. It continued: “To our immense sadness, 13 brave Syrian volunteers were killed in the evacuation attempt. Three were killed as they tried to help all four journalists to exit Baba Amr on Sunday night. Seven were killed helping French journalists Edith Bouvier and William Daniels back to the Baba Amr field hospital, after their escape was shelled by the Syrian government. “Espinosa and Conroy managed to escape the city, but were subsequently separated in a further shelling attack, apparently targeted by the Syrian army, later that night. Three volunteers died in this.” Ricken Patel, executive director of Avaaz said: “As the Syrian Army tightens its iron grip around Homs, the staggering bravery of activists has freed another journalist today. “Javier Espinosa risked his own rescue when he was separated as he stopped to attend to wounded activists as they were shelled. We can only hope that the bravery of these individuals is matched by the courage of the international community in stopping the horrific atrocities in Homs today.” Syria Arab and Middle East unrest Bashar al-Assad Middle East and North Africa United Nations Marie Colvin Journalist safety Peter Beaumont guardian.co.uk

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News Corp shareholders step up bid to oust James Murdoch

Shareholders already drafting resolutions ahead of AGM to call for James Murdoch to be removed from News Corp board Shareholders are planning to step up their campaign to oust James Murdoch from News Corp following his decision to quit the UK and return to New York. News Corp announced on Wednesday that Murdoch was giving up his position as executive chairman of News International – the British publishing division hit by the phone-hacking scandal – and returning to New York “to assume a variety of essential corporate leadership mandates”. Shareholders are already drafting resolutions ahead of this year’s annual general meeting to step up pressure for change at the media firm. The deadline to file is May. “It’s business as usual,” said Julie Tanner, director of socially responsible investing at shareholder Christian Brothers Investment Services (CBIS). “This is a very minor step in the right direction. I have not seen any significant changes in governance policies or a code of ethics.” CBIS led last year’s shareholder revolt against the Murdochs at News Corp’s AGM. That vote ended with 35% of shareholders voting against James Murdoch’s re-election to the board. After subtracting the shares controlled by Rupert Murdoch, 67% of the vote went against James Murdoch. “Given these ongoing allegations, I expect the vote against will be even larger this year,” she said. The Rev Seamus Finn, of the Interfaith Center on Corporate Responsibility, who also voted against Rupert and James Murdoch and other senior executives at News Corp’s annual general meeting last year, said: “This raises further concerns about the way this company is governed.” “It is clear to us that there are too many conflicts of interest in the way this company is run.” Change To Win (CtW), an advisory group that works with pension funds with over $200bn in assets, also called for Murdoch to resign. Senior policy analyst Michael Pryce-Jones said Murdoch should resign from News Corp and from Sotheby’s, the auction house where he is also a director. CtW has written to Sotheby’s chairman Michael Sovern calling for Murdoch’s removal. “This has been a very bad week for James, who knows what next week will bring,” said Pryce-Jones. “Clearly he is very distracted, he can’t be managing these businesses and dealing with this.” James Murdoch, once News Corp’s heir apparent, is the highest profile executive at the company to lose his job amid a scandal that has led to more than 20 arrests and triggered the closure of the News of the World, News International’s most profitable paper. “We are all grateful for James’s leadership at News International and across Europe and Asia, where he has made lasting contributions to the group’s strategy in paid digital content and its efforts to improve and enhance governance programs,” Rupert Murdoch said in a statement. He said James would “continue to assume a variety of essential corporate leadership mandates, with particular focus on important pay-TV businesses and broader international operations.” But senior media executives in New York have dismissed the suggestion that James can continue to play a major role at the company while the phone-hacking scandal continues. One senior executive, speaking on condition of anonymity, said Murdoch’s role within the company was becoming increasingly difficult. He said the idea of James Murdoch running any significant part of News Corp’s US business was “ridiculous”. “There’s too much trouble hanging over his head. All this newspaper stuff just seems to get worse by the day. How can anyone expect him to fully commit to anything else? And anyone who works with him is going to be wondering how long he’s going to be around. It would have been easier to let him go. Looks like Rupert is getting sentimental.” News Corporation James Murdoch Rupert Murdoch News International United States Corporate governance Dominic Rushe guardian.co.uk

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Government U-turn on work scheme

Rules on work experience changed after threats from major employers The government abandoned a central plank of its work experience scheme on Wednesday when it was forced to bow to pressure from businesses to drop benefit sanctions against young people on the programme. Amid threats from some of Britain’s largest employers that they would withdraw from the scheme, which has been criticised for exploiting young people, the Department for Work and Pensions announced that participants would now keep their benefits even if they left a placement. The announcement by Chris Grayling, the employment minister, came after business leaders raised concerns that involvement in the voluntary work experience scheme was damaging their reputations. Participants in the scheme, which offers 16- to 24-year-olds eight weeks of work experience, receive their benefits while on the scheme. Until the government’s change of heart, they would have lost two weeks’ jobseeker’s allowance if they withdrew after a week. In a statement issued by the DWP, which announced that Airbus, Center Parcs and HP Enterprise Services were joining the scheme, Grayling claimed the “sanction regime” would remain in place, because participants would lose their benefits if they were guilty of gross misconduct. Grayling had earlier acknowledged the change, but later issued the carefully worded statement amid unease from Iain Duncan Smith, the work and pensions secretary, over dropping the sanctions. News of the change was conveyed by Anne Marie Carrie, chief executive of Barnardo’s, one of those who attended a 90-minute meeting with Grayling to discuss the scheme. She told Channel 4 News: “Two things that have come out of it are really important. One is the removal of sanctions for anyone at any time if they leave this voluntary work experience scheme, to make sure we understand it is completely voluntary. “The second thing that Barnardo’s proposed is that we produce a young person’s guide to work experience, so they understand what is expected of them.” Grayling acknowledged that the sanctions had been withdrawn. He said: “The employers said to us: ‘Look we would like to modify it. At the moment you’ve got a situation where people can leave voluntarily after the first week. We would like them to be able to sit down later with us in the work placement if it is not working out and say we want to opt out.’ We thought that was reasonable. We want to keep the scheme going. It is a positive scheme for young people and so we said fine, we will accept that.” The government’s change of heart, which follows a series of investigations by the Guardian into the work placements, came shortly after David Cameron denounced as “Trotskyites” some of those campaigning against the scheme. “It is time for businesses in Britain, and everyone in Britain who wants to see people have work experience, to stand up against the Trotskyites of the Right to Work campaign, and perhaps recognise the deafening silence there has been from the Labour party,” he told MPs. However, the prime minister was forced to announce a review of Whitehall procedures over the appointment of Emma Harrison, the former chair of A4e, as his troubled families tsar. Some employees of her company, which finds work for the long-term unemployed in the separate Work Programme, were subject to a fraud investigation before her appointment. There is no suggestion that Harrison did anything wrong. “I am concerned that subsequent to Emma Harrison’s appointment, information needed to be passed up the line to ministers more rapidly,” he said, announcing that the cabinet secretary, Sir Jeremy Heywood, would review Whitehall guidelines. His move came hours before the government’s flagship welfare reform bill passed all its stages in parliament after a bumpy ride in the House of Lords. The bill will introduce a blanket £26,000 cap on household welfare benefits and lead to the introduction of Duncan Smith’s universal credit, which wraps most benefits into one payment. The prime minister said: “Past governments have talked about reform, while watching the benefits bill sky rocket and generations languish on the dole and dependency. This government is delivering it. Our new law will mark the end of the culture that said a life on benefits was an acceptable alternative to work.” Grayling amended the rules for the voluntary work scheme, which falls outside the new bill, after business leaders expressed their frustration to him in their 90 minute meeting. One executive, who was present but asked to remain nameless, said: “They were not angry with Grayling himself, but they were very concerned that they had been trying to do ‘the right thing’ for unemployed youngsters and yet it had turned into bad publicity. The protests were threatening to damage the reputations of their businesses and undermine morale among their existing staff through accusations that working for some employers was ‘not a real job’.” Some of the large supermarkets were particularly vociferous, added the executive, who said there was a feeling that the debate had been lost by the DWP to protesters in the media. “Most people at the meeting told Grayling they supported the general scheme and said their local managers got positive feedback from the youngsters, but they made clear the government had to make changes to it or they would be forced to pull out.” Brendan Barber, the TUC general secretary, said: “We welcome the government’s climbdown on the use of sanctions in work experience. Of course proper work experience can be useful and helpful for many young people, but it needs to be designed to help the young person, not provide free labour for employers or displace paid staff. Making absolutely clear that it is voluntary at all times will help safeguard against abuse.” Grayling denied he had caved in to the “Trotskyists”, saying: “The real argument of the Trotskyist is that unpaid work experience is wrong, and is denying people the right to work; they are wrong.” Grayling pointed out that only 220 participants in the scheme had had their benefits withdrawn. This sanction was at the discretion of jobcentre staff. Critics of Grayling and the DWP will say that they should have acted earlier to get rid of any accusation that the scheme amounted to “workfare”, since he has been under pressure from employers for more than a week on the issue. Mark Dunk, from the Right to Work campaign, said: “The dropping of sanctions for the work-experience scam is one battle won, but the wider fight goes on. Forced unpaid work still continues in the form of the mandatory work activity and community activity programme. We demand that the government immediately drops not just one of its forced labour schemes [but] all of them. “There should not be any young person anywhere forced to work for no pay. Everyone on any training scheme should receive minimum wage or above. We demand real jobs now for all.” Katja Hall, the CBI’s chief policy director, said: “It’s good to hear that many more employers are signing up to give young people a chance to get experience of work.” “Gaining hands-on experience of the workplace is vital to giving young jobseekers a foot in the door, and it can make such a difference when they are applying for interviews. The advantage of this scheme is that they gain work experience while remaining on benefits.” Welfare Benefits Chris Grayling Young people Job losses Economic policy Patrick Wintour Nicholas Watt Shiv Malik guardian.co.uk

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North Korea agrees to halt nuclear programme in exchange for US aid

Washington promises food aid for first time since 2009, with Hillary Clinton hoping new leadership will ‘guide nation to peace’ North Korea has agreed to suspend nuclear missile tests and uranium enrichment, and submit to international monitoring, in return for US food aid. Washington described the deal, which breaks with the US’s previous assertion that large-scale deliveries of food are not tied to North Korea curbing its nuclear programme, as “important, if limited”. Under the agreement, which was hammered out in Beijing, North Korea will suspend nuclear weapons tests, uranium enrichment and long-range missile launche. It will also allow the return of International Atomic Energy Agency inspectors who were forced to leave North Korea’s Yongbyon reactor three years ago. For its part, the US will provide 240,000 tonnes of food for the first time since deliveries were suspended in 2009. Washington also affirmed it does not have hostile intentions toward North Korea and is prepared to take steps to improve relations. Diplomats said it was an important move in assuring Pyongyang the US is not intent on bringing down the communist regime. The US secretary of state, Hillary Clinton, was cautious in her description of the agreement to a congressional committee on Wednesday. “The United States still has profound concerns, but on the occasion of Kim Jong-il’s death, I said that it is our hope that the new leadership will choose to guide their nation on to the path of peace by living up to its obligations. “Today’s announcement represents a modest first step in the right direction. We, of course, will be watching closely and judging North Korea’s new leaders by their actions,” she said. “This is just one more reminder that the world is transforming around us, from Arab revolutions to the rise of new economic powers to a more dispersed but still dangerous al-Qaida terrorist network to nuclear diplomacy on the Korean peninsula.” Clinton said the aid would be subject to “intensive monitoring” to ensure food supplies reach those who most need it. Until now Washington has insisted food aid to North Korea was not linked to its nuclear programme. But on Tuesday, Admiral Robert Willard, commander of the US Pacific fleet, told a Senate committee that preconditions for food assistance “now include discussions of cessation of nuclearisation and ballistic missile testing and the allowance of IAEA perhaps back into Yongbyon”. “There are conditions that are going along with the negotiations with regard to the extent of food aid,” he said. There are differing opinions over whether the deal marks a breakthrough in western relations with North Korea following the death in December of Kim Jong-il and the rise to power of his son, Kim Jong-un, or whether it is a short term attempt by Pyongyang to alleviate a food crisis. North Korea has battled to feed its population since a famine in the 1990s killed hundreds of thousands of people. Aid agencies say the food situation has again deteriorated after a harsh winter hit harvests. George Lopez, professor of peace studies at Notre Dame university who served on the UN panel of experts for North Korea until last year, said the agreement “indicates we have turned a new page with the North Koreans”. “First, the moratorium will be monitored by the return of IAEA inspectors, which is a significant move to nuclear transparency and stability. Secondly, the delivery of large amounts of nutritional foodstuffs sets a tone for other nations to respond to North Korean needs – it is an important confidence building measure,” he said. “Finally, the US has reaffirmed the armistice agreement as a platform for peace and has essentially provided a non-aggression pledge, both important to the North. History shows that nations never fully denuclearise without a public non-aggression pledge from their foes.” In 2005, North Korea reached a deal with the US, South Korea, China, Russia and Japan to abandon its nuclear weapons programme in return for economic aid and other incentives. But the deal fell apart with some blaming Washington for being reluctant to follow through. The following year, North Korea tested a nuclear bomb. Professor Hazel Smith of Cranfield University said the latest agreement “shows the logjam has been broken between the US and North Korea”. “We have seen it before but the timing is significant; it is so soon after Kim Jong-il’s death. Whatever the shifting factions are, it shows the ones who want to push for peaceful compromise have the upper hand,” she said. “It looks like this small space has been used on both sides to open up a dialogue and I think that’s very positive. The US is talking about a quarter of a million tonnes of food: that is not a token amount like 10 or 20,000 tonnes. It is a diplomatic sign. It is a pretty big gesture by the US if they go through with it all.” She added that the South Korean elections were also likely to reduce tensions. Relations on the peninsula deteriorated sharply after the President Lee Myung-bak took office and ended his predecessor’s policy of free-flowing aid. Others were less optimistic, stressing the agreement’s similarity to previous deals that failed to improve relations in the long term. “History repeats itself … There were nuclear inspectors on site in 2002 and 2007,” said James Hoare, a former British chargé d’affaires in Pyongyang. “People suddenly think it’s all different. Anything that leads to some sort of movement is positive, but there will be lots of voices in the US saying, ‘Come on, we have been there before and you can’t trust them; they broke the agreement last time’ – though my view is that it was the Americans.” Hoare said he thought Pyongyang was keen to secure a source of food ahead of the celebrations in April to mark the centenary of the birth of Kim Il-sung, the new leader’s grandfather, revered in North Korea as the country’s founder. Pyongyang has heralded 2012 as the year when the country becomes a “strong and prosperous nation”. North Korea Nuclear weapons International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA) Chris McGreal Tania Branigan guardian.co.uk

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Waiter Accidentally Dumps Beer All Over Angela Merkel

A brush with celebrity is a highlight for a waiter serving any high-profile event, but it also means the stakes are higher. Surely one German waiter wishes his hand were steadier now after he spilled a tray of beer glasses onto German Chancellor Angela Merkel at an Ash Wednesday event last week in Demmin. The

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Andrew Lansley promises ‘significant’ changes to NHS bill

Health secretary responds to emergency question from Labour counterpart after apparent discord within coalition Andrew Lansley declared on Tuesday that the latest amendments to his controversial NHS reform bill would be “significant”. The health secretary was responding to an emergency question from his Labour shadow, Andy Burnham, after the coalition government’s apparent confusion over the changes announced on Monday by the Liberal Democrat deputy prime minister Nick Clegg. In an effort to head off a backlash against the health and social care bill from within his party at its spring conference in March, Clegg wrote to his MPs and peers promising important changes to “rule out beyond doubt any threat of a US-style market in the NHS”. However the promise of five new amendments through the House of Lords was undermined by his Conservative coalition partners after Downing Street said that the changes would be “not significant”. On Friday, and at lunchtime on Monday, government ministers had also said there would be no further changes to the bill. Burnham challenged Lansley to tell MPs whether the latest changes were “substantial or cosmetic”, and whether they had been agreed by the prime minister and health secretary in advance. “The government appears in complete disarray, or maybe it was … coalition choreography to save face for the deputy prime minister,” said Burnham. “The NHS matters too much to leave it to be carved up in cosy coalition deals.” Lansley avoided at least three times answering questions about whether he had been consulted about Clegg’s letter. “The point of the letter was to reflect the discussions we have been having,” he said in reply to Labour MP Gisela Stuart, apparently referring to the government and the House of Lords, which has discussed amendments in the committee and now report stages. “The amendments to the report would, by their nature, be significant,” he added later. Labour MP Rushanara Ali challenged Lansley on the decision by Tower Hamlets clinical commissioning group, in her constituency, to ask the health secretary to drop the bill. “When the very structures he’s establishing to advise him are telling him they don’t want to have part to do with this nightmare he’s creating, isn’t it time to look again and drop the bill?” she asked. Lansley replied: “They will use the powers in this bill and they will use them effectively.” Later Burnham also criticised the decision of the backbench business committee of MPs, which decided not to hold a debate on the e-petition signed by 162,000 people asking for the health bill to be dropped. E-petitions hosted by the government website are eligible to be debated when they are signed by more than 100,000 people. Health policy NHS Andrew Lansley Andy Burnham Health Public services policy Liberal-Conservative coalition Juliette Jowit guardian.co.uk

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Syria: the Homs rescue – live updates

• Journalist Paul Conroy now safe in Lebanon • Whereabouts of Edith Bouvier unclear • Thousands of Syrian activists appear on regime ‘hit list’ • Elite fourth division armoured sent to Homs • Read the latest summary 9.37pm: Hillary Clinton, the US Secretary of State, has said that the US is working closely with Libya as it struggles to create a post-Muammar Gaddafi existence, the Associated Press reports. Clinton told the Senate Foreign Relations Committee earlier that Libyan Prime Minister Abdurrahim el-Keib will be visiting the US in a few weeks. She said the people of Libya are optimistic but “it’s like starting from scratch.” Libyan rebels overthrew the Gadhafi regime last year. They received military backing from the United States and other nations. 9.26pm: The Egyptian judge handling the trial of dozens of democracy activists, including 16 Americans, accused of illegally receiving funds from abroad, has said that he will resign, according to the Egyptian state news agency, MENA. “Judge Mahmud Mohamed Shukry held a five minute meeting with lawyers today and after it he announced he would step down from the case because he felt embarrassed,” a judiciary source who attended the judge’s meeting with the lawyers told Reuters. The news agency adds: The exact reason for his resignation was not immediately clear. The case of the 43 foreign and Egyptian non-profit workers, including the 16 Americans has underscored tension between the United States and Egypt. The first session of the court took place on Sunday and was adjourned to April 26, raising hopes among the activists’ supporters that the case could be dropped to spare further damage to Egypt’s ties with its ally Washington. US Secretary of State Hillary Clinton on Tuesday voiced hope that the issue could still be resolved – but declined to discuss details of what she called “very intensive discussions” with the Egyptian government. Judge Abdel Moez Ibrahim, head of Cairo Appeal Court, who received Shukry’s request to resign told Reuters Shukry did not give a reason for his decision. 8.16pm: The Guardian’s Paris correspondent, Angelique Chrisafis, has been exploring the role of the spouses behind some of the Arab world’s most ruthless dictators. Here’s a snippet from the piece , which is really well worth a read: Jane Kinninmont, senior researcher on the Middle East at the Chatham House thinktank in London, says the leaders’ wives in the Arab spring were of clear “symbolic importance”, though Asma al-Assad [pictured below, with her husband, Bashar al-Assad] is different to Tunisia’s Leila Trabelsi, who had been a key source of unrest. “In Syria, the resistance is very focused on the regime,” says Kinninmont. “In the past, Bashar’s wife was something of an asset for him: young, charming, international, helpful to soften his image. Now that has fallen away. Vogue last March was a terrible error of judgment. The timing was particularly bad, but it was part of a wider trend for quite fluffy portraits of dictators’ wives as glamorous woman, saying ‘look how good our charity work is’. Glamorous, well-educated, well-dressed: the western media still falls for this pseudo aristocratic clap-trap. It’s all part of trying to give a pretty face to a regime.” __ 8.08pm: Channel 4′s Krishnan Guru-Murthy ‏has posted a blog following on from some conversations he has been having in the last few days with the Shia-led Iraqi government in preparation for a forthcoming Unreported World documentary in April. In relation to Syria, he writes : … a senior government source told me today that they strongly fear a sectarian war between Assad’s Allawi Shias and Sunnis in Syria could spill over into Iraq – causing more bombings and restart the sectarian killings in Iraq of five years ago. They also strongly oppose international military intervention saying the West cannot repeat the Libyan model in Syria and warn a Syrian revolution could let Al Qaeda move in there. 7.48pm: The non-profit news organisation ProPublica has published a fascinating piece about a recent visit earlier this month to Washington by three young Bahrainis who came to talk about reform and were billed as representing “the leading voice for change and reform”. But according to the ProPublica report , they were actually members of a “youth delegation” put together by a top US public relations firm, Qorvis , which has been working with Bahrain to the Gulf state’s image: The youth delegation’s modestly pro-reform message was mixed with sharp criticism of the opposition in Bahrain and complaints about negative media coverage in the US. Last year, in the early weeks of Bahrain’s violent crackdown on the largely Shia opposition protests, the minister of foreign affairs inked a contract with Qorvis to provide public-relations services for $40,000 per month, plus expenses. One of the largest PR and lobbying firms in Washington, Qorvis employs a number of former top Capitol Hill staffers and also works for Bahrain’s close ally, Saudi Arabia. The firm’s work for Bahrain came under scrutiny last year when it defended the government’s raid last year on a Doctors Without Borders office in Bahrain. Also in 2011, a Qorvis official wrote pro-regime columns in The Huffington Post without revealing his affiliation with Qorvis. Bahrain is an important American ally in the gulf, and its capital Manama is home to the U.S. Navy’s 5th Fleet. 7.30pm: A face-saving exit plan might be the only way to remove Bashar al-Assad from power in Syria, and prevent further polarisation of the world’s superpowers, according to Abdel al-Bari Atwan, editor-in chief of the London-based pan-Arab newspaper Al-Quds Al-Arabi. He writes in Comment is Free piece for the Guardian: The daily atrocities in Homs – like the terrifying attacks Gaddafi threatened in Benghazi – have, perfectly understandably, led to increased calls for military intervention. But Syria is not Libya: there is still support for Assad inside the country, and any military intervention – from a no-fly zone to peacekeeping forces in humanitarian corridors – would be taken as a declaration of war with the potential for rapid regional escalation pitting the Sunni states, led by Saudi Arabia, against the mighty Shia bloc headed by Iran. Russia and China have already aligned themselves with Syria and Iran, while the west champions oil-rich Saudi Arabia and the Gulf states. Such a polarisation might easily lead to proxy wars between superpowers and open the door for the real war – with Iran. 7.19pm: Peter Beaumont and Martin Chulov, who is in Beirut, have filed a detailed piece for the Guardian on Paul Conroy’s evacuation from the ­Syrian city of Homs, a 26-hour ordeal that began on Sunday night. The Sunday Times photographer, who had been injured in the shell blast that killed his colleague Marie Colvin, was carried on a stretcher in relays out of the besieged and shell-smashed suburb of Baba Amr and to safety over the Lebanese border nearly 20 miles away, crossing the border in the early hours. In the piece , Beamont and Chulov add: The nature of Conroy’s evacuation underlines the high risks faced by those who have been trying to run medical, food and other supplies into the besieged suburbs of the city and evacuate the injured, including foreign journalists. Activists believe a drone that has been flying over the city for some time, described by Espinosa, may have been used to direct artillery or mortar fire towards the rescuers. The regime of President Assad, which has recently moved the elite 4th Division commanded by his brother Maher into the battle for Homs, has been using a foreign-supplied drone to target its artillery and mortar fire into the city. Conroy had twice refused to leave Baba Amr without the body of Marie Colvin. The group of reporters had been holed up there ever since as the protracted ­negotiations to evacuate them failed. According to the Avaaz network, which has been co-ordinating with Syrian opposition activists, it had been working with 35 volunteers willing to help free the reporters. “Paul Conroy’s rescue today is a huge relief but this must be tempered with the news that three remain unaccounted for, and with our respects for the incredibly courageous activists who died during the evacuation attempts,” said Ricken Patel, executive director of Avaaz. 6.40pm: Good evening. This is Ben Quinn picking up the blog. First to some related political developments today in the UK, where the Foreign Secretary, William Hague, told MPs that he was “horrified” at the ongoing bloodshed in Syria – but stopped short of threatening force to stop the violence and topple President Bashar al-Assad. The Press Association reports on other statements by Hague in the House of Commons today: Asked about creating a safe zone guarded by foreign troops in north-west Syria, the Foreign Secretary said: “The difficulty is considerable for establishing safe areas without agreement with the country concerned. “Without that agreement it requires military force – and sufficient military force to be wholly effective because one of the worst things you can do is tell people they may be safe and then not be able to provide that safety to them.” Mr Hague also told the Commons British officials had been posted to Syria’s borders so they could gather evidence of crimes against humanity to aid possible prosecutions. He said European leaders yesterday agreed travel bans for more of President al-Assad’s associates to tighten pressure on the regime. Mr Hague added: “We adopted a number of measures yesterday in Brussels, including sanctions on the central bank of Syria and we extended by another seven names the list of now more than 150 individuals and entities on whom we have restrictions of travel bans and asset freezes. 5.43pm: To clear up any lingering doubt, the newspaper for which Bouvier is working in Homs has issued a statement saying she “is not in Lebanon but still in Syria”. AFP reports Le Figaro as saying: It is false to say that she is safe and well in Lebanon. It’s not often you see Le Figaro contradicting Sarkozy. 5.40pm: And there was, according to AFP, an unusual note of humility in Sarkozy’s remarks. He told journalists: Earlier I was imprecise and I apologise to you for that. 5.37pm: Reuters has a bit more on that retraction. Sarkozy, speaking in Montpellier, is quoted as saying: I would not like to say inexact things. We are working on the evacuation but for the moment…I can say nothing. 5.32pm: French magazine Le Nouvel Observateur has the following quote from Sarkozy, going back on his earlier assurance. It is not confirmed that she is now safely in Lebanon. Communications with Homs are very difficult. The president blamed an “imprecise” and “complex” situation, the magazine continues. 5.25pm: Nicolas Sarkozy has withdrawn an earlier statement that claimed wounded journalist Edith Bouvier had been evacuated from Homs and was safely in Lebanon, according to the BBC. 5.00pm: Here’s a summary of events today: • The British photographer Paul Conroy has been smuggled out of Homs in a rescue mission in which a number of Free Syrian Army members were killed. It is unclear whether French journalist Edith Bouvier has been evacuated too; some reports say she has, others that she has not. The French foreign ministry has said it cannot confirm a statement from President Sarkozy that she is safe in Lebanon. • France says the UN security council is starting work today on a new draft resolution to halt the violence in Syria and enable humanitarian access to victims. Meanwhile, the UN human rights council is holding an emergency debate on Syria . • In a newspaper interview to be published tomorrow, Tunisia’s president says he is ready to offer asylum to Bashar al-Assad as part of a negotiated solution to end the Syrian conflict. • The Assad regime has sent units of an elite armoured division into Homs as rebel-held districts came under the heaviest bombardment of a three-week-old offensive, opposition sources told Reuters. 4.45pm: Tunisia’s president has said he is ready to offer asylum to Bashar al-Assad as part of a negotiated solution to end the Syrian conflict. President Moncef Marzouki made the offer in an interview with the French-language daily, La Presse de Tunisie, which is due to be published tomorrow . He also said the offer would extend to Assad’s associates. Tunisia, the birthplace of the Arab spring, was the first country to recall its ambassador from Syria in protest at the violence and it also hosted the international Friends of Syria conference last Friday which called for an immediate ceasefire and the delivery of humanitarian aid to the country. However, the idea of giving refuge to Assad is likely to be controversial among Tunisians. Tunisia’s former president, Zine el Abidine Ben Ali, fled to Saudi Arabia when he was overthrown last year. 4.22pm: More caution on reports about Bouvier’s apparent rescue. Sunday Times journalist Miles Amoore continues to caution against reports that Edith Bouvier has been evacuated, despite the apparent confirmation from President Sarkozy. The BBC’s correspondent in Beirut, Jim Muir, said Lebanese officials could not confirm that she was safe. At the time of writing, Le Figaro – the paper Bouvier works for – says the French foreign ministry cannot confirm that she is safe . 4.05pm: US secretary of state Hilary Clinton said today that an argument could be made that Syrian leader Bashar al-Assad is a war criminal, Reuters reports. “There would be an argument to be made that he would fit into that category,” Clinton told a Senate committee hearing, responding to a senator’s question. But she added that using such labels “limits options to persuade leaders to step down from power”. 3.50pm: The UN’s political chief, Lynn Pascoe, says “well over” 7,500 people have died in the violence in Syria since the start of the uprising almost a year ago, AP reports. Pascoe told the security council that he cannot give exact casualty numbers, but says there are “credible” reports that more than 100 civilians are dying in the country daily. The Violation Document Centre, a website run by activists which aims to record and identify all those killed, claims 8,861 people have been killed . 3.43pm: An activist in Homs said he doubted that remaining journalists trapped in city could be rescued today, because the smuggling route was under attack. Abo Emad said troops had tried to enter the Baba Amr area from the west today. “The two places [Baba Amr and al-Quosour] are under attack so I can’t think they are going to smuggle the reporters,” he said. He was speaking before reports emerged claiming that Nicolas Sarkozy had confirmed French reporter Edith Bouvier had been evacuated. Emad, who said he was based near the Baba Amr area, said he trusted the Red Crescent (Bouvier twice refused to enter Red Crescent vehicles, according to reports). “The Red Crescent is basically composed of our people, it is not composed by the regime. It is composed of volunteers who are are friends and brothers,” he said. He added: “Every day is worse than the day before.” He claimed the Syrian army’s fourth armoured division has been involved in Homs since the start of the assault. He also confirmed that rebels in the city had access to armoured vehicles, but he added: “You can’t fight a tank with an armoured vehicle.” He confirmed that a tank had been used in the al-Quosoor area of the city, but he said: “We don’t even have five tanks.” Emad described the shock in the city at the discovery of 64 bodies near an army check point on Monday. “We are shocked at that in the area. How could they do that? The people were trying to get out of the neighbourhood with their families. We still can’t believe that. They knew they were from Baba Amr, because it is written on your IDs where you are from. The women and children and old are missing until now.” Emad claimed hundreds of families had managed to escape from the city before the incident. 3.26pm: A flash from Reuters, citing the French news channel, BFM TV: President Sakozy says Edith Bouvier has been evacuated from Syria and is now safe in Lebanon. 3.06pm: Reports are circulating that French journalist Edith Bouvier has been rescued from Homs and is now in Lebanon. We believe these reports are incorrect. The ICRC has drawn our attention to a story in Le Monde in which Dr Abdel Rahman Attar, head of Syrian Arab Red Crescent, says his organisation has been unable to speak to Bouvier directly and that she has apparently put certain conditions on her departure. “We don’t know her conditions and we don’t know if she genuinely refused [to leave] because we were not able to have direct contact with her,” he said. 2.30pm: The International Committee of the Red Cross has repeated its call for a daily ceasefire in Homs, Reuters reports. It quotes ICRC spokesman Hicham Hassan in Geneva as saying: “We managed to bring relief material into Homs city and Idlib today (Tuesday) which was handed over to the Syrian Arab Red Crescent branches in both cities to be distributed as soon as possible. It needs suitable security conditions. That is why it is essential to implement our initiative of a humanitarian ceasefire so the assistance can be distributed to all people in need of help.” 2.18pm: The Red Cross has been forced to abandoned a planned trip to Homs today because it says the “security situation deteriorated markedly”. Activists say there has been heavy shelling in number of districts, after it emerged that photographer Paul Conroy had been smuggled out of the city. Samsonhoms, an activist who claims to be based in the city, tweeted : 15:20 here is #Homs :shelling has intensified on the #Inshaat & # BabaAmr regions, bullets are falling like raindrops. Pray for us #Syria The Local Co-ordination Committee in Syria reported a “powerful explosion” in the Karmam Zaitoun area to the east of the centre. A spokesman for the International Committee of the Red Cross said: “We had been on our way from Damascus to Homs, but turned back. The ICRC was supposed to be there today but didn’t because the security situation deteriorated markedly.” He denied an al-Arabiya report that the Red Crescent had quit Homs in the wake of failed attempts to rescue three of the journalists from the city. “The local chapter of the Syrian Arab Red Crescent remains in Homs and has been distributing food parcels today,” he said. 2.11pm: A tweet from Avaaz says 23 out of 50 activists involved in the operation were killed. (We cannot confirm this information.) Ricken Patel, from #Avaaz , is live on #NSCNN CNN now. “There were over 50 activists in the opp, 23 died”. — Avaaz.org (@Avaaz) February 28, 2012 1.16pm: Here’s a summary of events so far today. • The British photographer Paul Conroy has been smuggled out of Homs in a rescue mission in which several Free Syrian Army members were killed. Three other journalists, Edith Bouvier, Javier Espinosa and William Daniel, remain in the city. • France says the UN security council is starting work today on a new draft resolution to halt the violence in Syria and enable humanitarian access to victims. Meanwhile, the UN human rights council is holding an emergency debate on Syria . The Syrian delegation has walked out of what it called “this sterile discussion”. • The Assad regime has sent units of an elite armoured division into Homs as rebel-held districts came under the heaviest bombardment of a three-week-old offensive, opposition sources told Reuters. They said tanks and troops of the Fourth Division, which is commanded by Assad’s brother Maher moved overnight into main streets around the besieged southern area of Baba Amro. Meanwhile, video footage has emerged purporting to show rebels in defending different parts of Homs with tanks. • The names of thousands of Syrian dissidents have appeared on an apparent Syrian government hit list obtained by the US news site Mother Jones. Three experts said the 718-page document containing the names and phone numbers of dissidents, was authentic. • The bodies of dozens of men were found dumped on wasteland on the outskirts of Homs on Monday in what appeared to be one of the worst instances of mass killing since the uprising against President Bashar al-Assad began, the Washington Post reports. The Local Co-ordination Committees, an opposition group, said that the bodies of 64 men were taken to the National Hospital in Homs and that an unknown number of women and children who had been with them are missing. 12.55pm: Reuters is now rowing back on its earlier report that Edith Bouvier has been smuggled out of Homs. It reports: Some Syrian opposition activists said Edith Bouvier, a freelance reporter working for French newspaper Le Figaro, who has a broken leg, had also escaped to Lebanon, but there was no immediate confirmation of this. It has been confirmed that Conroy has escaped to Lebanon. Wissam Tarrif, a human right campaign with Avaaz, tweets: Paul is out – 3 Journalists are still in Baba Amro #Homs #Syria stop circulating rumors that they are out! They are not. — wissamtarif (@wissamtarif) February 28, 2012 The Guardian will have a full report soon on how Conroy was smuggled out of Homs. 12.30pm: The UN security council is to start work today on a new draft resolution to halt the violence in Syria and enable humanitarian access to victims, Reuters reports, citing a French official source: “Work is starting today at the security council on a proposed resolution on stopping the violence in Syria and on humanitarian access to the worst affected sites and people,” foreign ministry spokesman Bernard Valero told a news briefing, adding that the focus was on the besieged city of Homs. “We hope Russia and China will not oppose the proposed resolution,” he said. “Given the emergency, it’s time that all the council members, without exception, put a stop to this barbarity.” 12.21pm: Syria’s new constitution is now officially in force following the referendum and a decree issued by President Assad . The new constitution outlaws torture and says every defendant shall be presumed innocent until convicted in a fair trial. It also says “any person who is arrested must be informed of the reasons for his arrest and his rights, and may not be incarcerated … except by an order of the competent judicial authority. As yet, though, the regime does not seem to be changing its ways. This video is said to show arrested citizens of Deraa, in southern Syria, chained together and being loaded into a vehicle yesterday. 11.58am: Russia may soften its position on Syria after its presidential election next week, a senior Lebanese politician has told Reuters. “The Syrian problem became a domestic issue in Russia. It is part of the election campaign … [Syrian] blood is being used as a way of trading between Russia and the west,” former prime minister Fuad Siniora said, adding that Russia might be “ready to discuss business in a more pragmatic way” after the vote. Syrian opposition figures expressed a similar view to the Guardian during a visit to London last week. Siniora also suggested China had balked at UN condemnation of the Assad regime because of concerns about criticism of its own domestic record. But in the long term he said it was not in China’s interest to side with the Syrian leader: “They have lots of investments and interests in the Arab world. They cannot continue taking such a position.” 11.33am: The Syrian representative has just finished addressing the UN human rights council. He conceded that the humanitarian situation has deteriorated but blames this on “armed groups”. The official, whose name we did not catch, said the UN debate itself is “part of a pre-established plan” to attack the Syrian state and its institutions “under the pretext of humanitarian needs”. He ended by saying that Syria is now withdrawing its delegation “from this sterile discussion”. Meanwhile, the US representative has called on Syria to halt attacks on civilians, withdraw troops to their barracks, release detainees and allow humanitarian access. 11.25am: The activists group the Local Co-ordination Committees in Syria claims the French journalist Edith Bouvier is refusing to leave Homs until the Syrian government guarantees that her photographs and recordings will not be destroyed . It also reports that Conroy was rescued by the Free Syrian Army, not the Red Crescent. This cannot be confirmed. Bouvier is reported to have twice refused to enter Red Crescent ambulances. Last June Syrian security forces were filmed using Red Crescent vehicles to transport arrested activists . 11.19am: The UN’s human rights chief says the situation in Syria has deteriorated rapidly in recent weeks and is demanding an immediate humanitarian ceasefire. Navi Pillay says her office has received reports that Syrian military and security forces “have launched massive campaigns of arrest” and launched an onslaught against government opponents that has deprived many civilians of food, water and medical supplies. Pillay told an urgent meeting Tuesday of the UN human rights council that “hundreds of people have reportedly been killed since the start of this latest assault in the beginning of February 2012.” She called on Syria to end all fighting, allow international monitors to enter the country and give unhindered access to aid agencies. Pillay again called for Assad regime to be referred to the international criminal court for alleged crimes against humanity. 11.10am: There is much debate among military aviation buffs about a drone that was filmed in the skies around Damascus earlier this month. The one thing everyone seems to agree on is that it isn’t American (despite reports that the US is operating drones over Syria). But if it isn’t American, whose is it? Some think it could be an Israeli Heron drone , others that it’s an Iranian Ghods Mohajer – possibly obtained by the Assad regime to spy on its own people. Or could it be Turkish? You can follow the discussion at The Aviationist , Open Source GEOINT and Military Photos . 10.53am: Advisory: the fate of the journalists trapped in Homs remains very unclear. The Times and Reuters reported that Sunday Times photographer has been smuggled out of Homs. Other journalists, including Edith Bouvier, appear to be still stranded in Homs. But according to Times journalist Miles Amoore, even Conroy’s reported rescue cannot be confirmed. As far as our sources know, they are all still in Bab Amr. We are the best informed unit on the ground working on their release — Miles Amoore (@MilesAmoore) February 28, 2012 The campaign group Avaaz claimed Free Syrian Army fighters were killed in the operation to rescue the journalists , but this too has been denied by Amoore . He adds: please be very careful what you report. you are rising lives of others. I can;t stress this enough. we, here, who have been working on… — Miles Amoore (@MilesAmoore) February 28, 2012 10.33am: Video has emerged purporting to show opposition fighters firing at a government helicopter near Syria’s second city of Aleppo. The incident was filmed in in Anadan , north of the city. Meanwhile, the International Centre for Agricultural Research in the Dry Areas , based in Tel Hadya on the outskirts of Aleppo, has sent backups of “almost its entire collection of seeds” for safekeeping in Norway, the Associated Press reports. The seeds, which include varieties of chickpeas and fava beans, will be stored in the Svalbard Global Seed Vault, “sometimes referred to as a doomsday vault [which] is designed to withstand global warming, earthquakes and even nuclear strikes,” AP says. The research centre in Syria has not suffered damage during the uprising but Cary Fowler, of the Global Crop Diversity Trust, which maintains the Norwegian vault, told AP: “I think the events unfolding in Syria obviously underline the importance of having safety duplication outside of a country.” 10.29am: Despite objections from Iran and Russia , the UN Human Rights Council is due to begin a debate about Syria about now. The 47-member body, which has no legal force, looks set to back a resolution condemning Syria’s “continued widespread and systematic violations”. Reuters reports: Drafted by the Arab countries and Turkey, with strong support from the European Union and United States, the resolution condemns “the use of heavy artillery and tanks to attack residential areas … that have led to the death of thousands of innocent civilians”. It also voices alarm at the humanitarian crisis in areas lacking food, medicine and fuel and calls for aid agencies to be allowed to deliver vital supplies to civilians in heavily-hit areas, especially Homs, Deraa and Zabadani. “There will be a wide majority of states in favour. It will pass easily,” an Arab diplomat told Reuters … “We should expect Russia, Cuba and Ecuador to vote against it. On China, [it] is not clear,” he added. 10.27am: Paul Conroy’s father Les, has confirmed that his son is safe in Lebanon, according to AFP. It is still only Reuters’ opposition sources that claiming that Edith Bouvier is safely out too . 10.13am: The whereabouts of Le Figaro reporter Edith Bouvier remain unclear. Reuters quoted activists as saying that she like Paul Conroy had been smuggled out of Homs to Lebanon. But this has not been confirmed. Guardian sources said she is still in Homs. The Times also reports that Bouvier is still stranded in the city . 10.02am: As reports emerge about the journalist smuggled out of Homs, Human Rights Watch continues to campaign for two British reporters detained by the Libyan authorities , along with three Libyans who were travelling with them. The Saraya Swehli militia detained Nicholas Davies-Jones, 32, and Gareth Montgomery-Johnson, 37, on 21 February. The two journalists are freelances working mostly with the Iranian state-owned Press TV. It is unclear why they were detained. According to the militia, they were driving late at night in Tripoli and taking photographs – which was deemed suspicious, Human Rights Watch says. There are also claims that they did not have proper immigration papers. Sarah Leah Whitson, Middle East and North Africa director at HRW said: The longer armed groups make arrests and hold prisoners, now including foreign journalists, the harder it becomes to bring these groups under control. The militias need to get out of the detention business, and the government should re-double its efforts to take control of all militia detention facilities and treat all unauthorised detention as a crime. 10.00am: Diplomats are questioning the Syrian government’s claim of a 57% turnout in last Sunday’s constitutional referendum. They suggest the actual turnout was around 5%, according to a report by GlobalPost. The report – compiled with input from a journalist in Damascus who is not named for security reasons – also says multiple voting was easy, since voters only had to produce an ID card or student card, and their fingers were not inked after casting their ballots. The report continues: At one polling station in a state-run clinic in Damascus’ Midan district, a neighbourhood of traditional Sunni Damascene families and a centre for protests in the capital, the transparent ballot box was still almost empty by late afternoon. At others, the box was at least opaque and, for the first time in Syria, private voting booths were available, though many of those who did vote did so openly at the desk. Of the roughly 40 ballots cast in Midan’s polling centre, said one of the government employees running it, most had come from employees of the health facility itself. “All public workers must vote, otherwise they could be penalised by the secret service,” said Muhammad Faour of the Carnegie Middle East Centre in Beirut, describing the result of the referendum as a “foregone conclusion”. 9.52am: The International Committee of the Red Cross could not confirm that the journalists Paul Conroy and Edith Bouvier had escaped from Homs, as Reuters is reporting. A spokesman said that if the journalist had been smuggled out, this was a separate operation from a failed ICRC rescue attempt last night. The BBC reported that Bouvier refused to enter a Red Crescent vehicle last night. The ICRC spokesman said it would continue to try to rescue wounded people from Homs. 9.42am: French journalist Edith Bouvier is also safe in Lebanon, according to Syrian opposition sources, Reuters reports. Bouvier reportedly refused to leave Homs last night in a Red Crescent ambulance. 9.33am: Paul Conroy’s wife Kate has not heard official confirmation that her husband is safe, according to the BBC. Conroy was last seen in a video appeal last Thursday. At the time he said: My name’s Paul Conroy. I’m a photographer with the Sunday Times. Today’s date is 23 February 2012 I was wounded in a rocket attack yesterday. Three large wounds to my leg. My colleague Marie Colvin was also killed in this same attack. I am currently being looked after by the Free Syrian Army medical staff who are treating me with the best medical treatment available and it’s important to add that I am here as a guest and not captured. Obviously any assistance that can be given by government agencies would be welcome and we’ll work on the same premise on the ground. 9.19am: Injured Sunday Times photographer Paul Conroy is reported to be “safe and sound” in Lebanon, according to Reuters. A diplomatic source told the agency that he was smuggled out of Homs. 9.08am: Another video from Homs appears to show a tank under the control of Free Syria Army fighters. The clip was purportedly filmed on Monday and cannot be verified. Meanwhile the YouTube channel Syria Pioneer continues to document the army’s bombardment of the Baba Amr area , now in its 25th day. 8.35am: (all times GMT) Welcome to Middle East Live where Syria remains the main focus. Here’s a roundup of the latest developments: Syria • Syrian president Bashar al-Assad sent units of an elite armoured division into Homs on Tuesday as rebel-held districts came under the heaviest bombardment of a three-week-old offensive, opposition sources told Reuters. They said tanks and troops of the Fourth Division, which is commanded by Assad’s brother Maher moved overnight into main streets around the besieged southern area of Baba Amro. The tanks had “Fourth Division Monsters” painted on them, they said. • Activists video from Homs shows rebels in control of a tank, which appeared to be used to defend a church in the city. The footage was purportedly filmed on Sunday in the Christian area of Hamdiyeh, north-east of the centre. • The bodies of dozens of men were found dumped on wasteland on the outskirts of Homs on Monday in what appeared to be one of the worst instances of mass killing since the uprising against President Bashar al-Assad began, the Washington Post reports. The Local Co-ordination Committees, an opposition group, said that the bodies of 64 men were taken to the National Hospital in Homs and that an unknown number of women and children who had been with them are missing. • The names of thousands of Syrian dissidents have appeared on an apparent Syrian government hit list obtained by the US news site Mother Jones. A 718-page digital document obtained by Mother Jones contains names, phone numbers, neighbourhoods, and alleged activities of thousands of dissidents apparently targeted by the Syrian government. Three experts asked separately by Mother Jones to examine the document—essentially a massive spreadsheet, whose contents are in Arabic—say they believe that it is authentic. • The UN’s human rights council is poised to discuss Syria at a special session today in Geneva. Russia said it would not object to holding meeting, but said any written resolution would not be useful to resolving the situation in Syria. • A referendum on a new constitution was approved by close to 90% of voters, the Syrian government claimed as international reaction to its ongoing crackdown intensified, with the European Union announcing fresh sanctions against key regime figures. Activist groups said 124 people had been killed the day after the ballot, which had been hailed as a showpiece of reform in the rigidly controlled state. • Fresh attempts to evacuate wounded Western journalists to safety from the Syrian city of Homs have failed again after one of the reporters refused for a second time to get into a Red Crescent vehicle, the BBC reports. Edith Bouvier, a reporter with the French daily Le Figaro, apparently would not board the vehicles and other evacuees stayed behind in solidarity. • Qatar’s prime minister, Sheikh Hamad bin Jassim al-Thani, has urged the international community to provide arms to Syrians rebelling against the Assad regime . “I think we should do whatever is necessary to help them, including giving them weapons to defend themselves,” the prime minister said during a visit to Norway. • New York Times columnist Roger Cohen backs calls for the international community to help arm the Free Syrian Army. I hear the outcry already: Arming Assad’s opponents will only exacerbate the fears of Syria’s minorities and unite them, ensure greater bloodshed, and undermine diplomatic efforts now being led by Kofi Annan, a gifted and astute peacemaker. It risks turning a proxy war into a proxy conflagration. There is no policy for Syria at this stage that does not involve significant risk. But the only cease-fire I can see that will not amount to an ephemeral piece of paper is one based on a rough balance of forces. For that, the Free Syrian Army must be armed. In the end, this course will support, not undermine, Annan’s diplomacy and perhaps open the way for the sort of transition outlined by the Arab League. In return, the divided Syrian opposition must provide a firm commitment to respect the rights of minorities. The treatment of minorities — like that of women — is one of the many pivotal tests of the Arab Spring. • Mohammed Zidan, a police defector from Idlib, has been speaking to the Independent’s Kim Sengupta. “I feel very worried, guilty. But I have made my choice, I have joined the people.” Iran • Iran’s crackdown on free speech and civil society has dramatically escalated in the run up to this week’s parliamentary elections, according to a new report by Amnesty International. The report documented a wave of recent arrests targeting a range of groups, including lawyers, students, journalists, political activists and their relatives, religious and ethnic minorities, filmmakers, and people with international connections, particularly to media. Syria Bashar al-Assad United Nations Qatar Iran Turkey US foreign policy Middle East and North Africa Arab and Middle East unrest Matthew Weaver Brian Whitaker Lizzy Davies Ben Quinn guardian.co.uk

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Leveson inquiry: Simon Hughes claims Sun had access to phone records

Lib Dem MP says he was forced to admit homosexuality after tabloid claimed it had evidence he called a gay chatline Simon Hughes told the Leveson inquiry that he outed himself in a 2006 interview with Trevor Kavanagh of the Sun after a journalist from the tabloid had rung him to say the newspaper had his personal telephone call records to show he had called a gay chatline. Hughes added that he believed the forced admission, came at the time he was running for the party leadership and pushed him out of contention. However, he did not name any Sun journalists he spoke to because the inquiry’s solicitor said they may have been “party to an offence under the Data Protection Act” by obtaining his call records. Hughes said that a reporter calling him “told me that the Sun had telephone calls records showing that I had called a gay chatline. Although I thought then, and still believe, that my sexuality is a private matter, I immediately admitted to this.” Obtaining another person’s telephone records is an offence under section 55 of the Data Protection Act 1988. However, there is a public interest defence for journalists under the act. An article appeared in the Sun headlined “Hughes: I’ve had gay sex” in January 2006 and was written by the paper’s then-political editor Kavanagh. At the time Charles Kennedy had just quit as Lib Dem leader and Hughes said he was the bookie’s odds-on favourite to win. Following the Sun story he said he became the 4-1 outsider in a race won by Menzies Campbell. Kavanagh told the Guardian that he was content to be named as the journalist who spoke to the Lib Dem MP. “I am perfectly happy for it to be known that it was me who spoke to Simon Hughes. After all, my byline is on the story. The only reason I got involved at all was because Simon asked for me to interview him after he had been approached by someone else at the paper.” The Sun’s report at the time justified its story by saying that Hughes had “twice denied he was homosexual” – having issued denials to the Independent a week before the Sun’s story and the Pink Paper in 2004. Simon Hughes told the inquiry the meeting with the journalist to discuss the phone call to the chatline “was relatively short, because although it was a hugely important and personally difficult matter, I was in the middle of an election campaign, I had a campaign team who were working for me, and I wanted to mitigate the harmful effects of whatever was happening”. Speaking to the Guardian after he gave evidence, Hughes said he did not know how the Sun had obtained the telephone records but that he believed the paper had no public interest in his sexuality. “It was a character assassination, not backed up by anything,” he added. Kavangah cautiously justified his actions. The Sun’s associate editor said: “If he hadn’t wanted to speak about it, he need not have done. Remember, he asked to see me and spoke about it.” He added: “It could be argued that he had twice denied about being gay. Maybe times have changed. It seemed like a story to me.” Hughes said he did not see the underlying information that the Sun had unearthed: “He never showed me whether it was a BT printout or whatever. I don’t know if someone from BT [or another phone company] woke up one morning and said this is of interest or whether the Sun was pro-active.” Kavanagh indicated that he did not know the source of the Sun’s information about Hughes’s use of a gay chatline. He said: “I don’t know where the original tip for the story came from. I am sure it was not obtained through phone hacking.” • To contact the MediaGuardian news desk email editor@mediaguardian.co.uk or phone 020 3353 3857. For all other inquiries please call the main Guardian switchboard on 020 3353 2000. If you are writing a comment for publication, please mark clearly “for publication”. • To get the latest media news to your desktop or mobile, follow MediaGuardian on Twitter and Facebook . Leveson inquiry Phone hacking Newspapers & magazines National newspapers Newspapers Press intrusion The Sun Liberal Democrats Simon Hughes Lisa O’Carroll Roy Greenslade guardian.co.uk

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Union leader threatens public sector strikes to disrupt London Olympics

Government attacks on public sector justify targeting 2012 Games, says Unite general secretary Len McCluskey Employees should consider using strike action to disrupt the Olympics as part of their campaign against the government’s spending cuts, the leader of Britain’s biggest union has declared. In an interview with the Guardian , Len McCluskey, the leader of Unite, said attacks on public sector workers were “so deep and ideological” that targeting the Games would be justified. The call came as the RMT union increased the pressure on the capital’s mayor, Boris Johnson, over delivering a strike-free event by declaring a formal dispute after rejecting an Olympics pay deal for London Underground staff. “If the Olympics provide us with an opportunity, then that’s exactly one that we should be looking at,” said McCluskey. He also said that any attempt by ministers to tighten anti-strike legislation would lead to unions deliberately breaking the law. Government plans to cut the value of public sector pensions prompted the biggest strike for three decades in November last year. Although some unions have scaled back their opposition to the proposals, McCluskey said industrial action would “drag on and on” and that it would involve “all forms of different protest and action”. That included possibly hitting the Olympics, he said: “The attacks that are being launched on public sector workers at the moment are so deep and ideological that the idea the world should arrive in London and have these wonderful Olympic Games as though everything is nice and rosy in the garden is unthinkable. “Our very way of life is being attacked. By then this crazy health and social care bill may have been passed, so we are looking at the privatisation of our National Health Service. I believe the unions, and the general community, have got every right to be out protesting.” McCluskey was speaking in general terms and he admitted Unite did not at this stage have specific plans for action during the Olympics. But he said his union represented London’s 28,000 bus drivers and staff, who are involved in their own row about extra payments during the Olympics. The bus workers want £500 in supplementary pay for the Games, in line with deals at Network Rail, Virgin Trains and London Overground. “They will be examining what leverage points we have, and the Olympics will clearly come into play,” he said. McCluskey said that, because of the seriousness of the issues at stake, he was encouraging the public to engage in “all forms of civil disobedience within the law” in the campaign against cuts. “Our parents and our grandparents, having defeated fascism in Europe, came back determined to build a land fit for heroes. They gave us the welfare state, the National Health Service, universal education. All of that is being attacked,” he said. “I, for one, am not prepared to stand by and have my children or grandchildren say to me, what did you do when this was being taken away from us?” The Olympics were a focal point, he said. “If there is a protest, then the purpose of protest is to bring your grievances to the attention of as many people as possible.” Britain’s largest rail union escalated its dispute with Transport for London (TfL) on Tuesday. It declared a formal dispute over Olympics pay for tube staff and announced a ballot of administrative staff at TfL over the right to take leave during the Games. It is the underground dispute that threatens to cause Johnson the biggest problem. The RMT represents about 10,000 of the tube’s 18,000 staff, from drivers to platform staff, and any industrial action during the Games would be highly disruptive. A spokesman for the RMT stressed the union wanted a settlement despite turning down an offer last month of £500, including £100 for meeting customer satisfaction targets and an extra £20 a shift. “The formal move to declare a trade dispute gives us scope to declare a ballot [for industrial action] if we choose. We want to get this settled,” said the RMT spokesman. On Thursday underground bosses and the RMT are due to hold talks at the conciliation service Acas, raising hopes of a deal. The next strike over public sector pensions is expected on 28 March, with Unite’s health workers, civil servants in the Public and Commercial Services union and the National Union of Teachers contemplating combined action. More than one million public sector workers took part in the national walkout on 30 November but numbers could be lower next month because the largest public sector union, Unison, is focusing on settlement talks. The PCS has mooted rolling programmes of action by specific groups of workers, such as call centre staff, or work-to-rule campaigns in which employees carry out no more work than the bare minimum stipulated in their contracts. Last week a meeting of the British Medical Association, the union representing 130,000 doctors and medical students, decided to ballot for industrial action short of a strike over NHS pension reforms after eight out of 10 members rejected the changes. Some Conservatives have already been arguing that the government should tighten the strike laws in response to what they perceive as militant unionism represented by leaders such as McCluskey and his ally, the PCS general secretary, Mark Serwotka. One idea, backed by Johnson and not wholly ruled out by ministers, is for unions to be prohibited from striking unless 50% of their members back strike action – not just 50% of those voting. In his interview McCluskey signalled that unions would refuse to comply with such a law, even if that meant calling strikes illegally. “If [ministers] make these attacks against us, trying to limit the type of strike action … if they push us outside the law, they are going to have to live with the consequences of that,” he said. “Because if we need to break the law in order to defend what are our basic human rights – right of association – then we will do that.” McCluskey also used the interview to say that Ed Miliband and Ed Balls should “worry less” about fiscal credibility. Instead of trying to impress “the chattering classes” by embracing the case for austerity, McCluskey said the Labour leader and his shadow chancellor should concentrate on winning credibility with voters by proposing alternatives to “the fear and the misery and the gloom and the despair” represented by the coalition. Len McCluskey Unite Trade unions Olympic Games 2012 London Organising Committee of the Olympic and Paralympic Games (Locog) Tax and spending Public sector cuts Public services policy Public sector pay Public sector pensions Andrew Sparrow Dan Milmo guardian.co.uk

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