Home » Archives by category » News » Politics (Page 269)
MPs attack constituency changes to shrink Commons to 600 seats

Cameron warned of long fight against ‘arbitrary, unworkable, brutal’ proposals David Cameron is being warned by his whips he faces two years of trench warfare as Tory MPs harden their opposition to proposals to shrink the House of Commons from 650 to 600 seats. As Vince Cable became the first cabinet member to voice concerns about the changes, which will radically alter his Twickenham constituency, Tories warned the party leadership they may not be able to support the changes which will have to be approved by parliament in 2013. “These changes are much more radical than anyone had expected,” one loyalist MP said of the proposals published on Tuesday by the Boundary Commission for England. England is to lose 31 seats. Another Tory said: “Unease about the recommendations is spreading.” Cable echoed those concerns. The business secretary, who could face a battle with the Tory MP Zac Goldsmith in the new seat of Richmond and Twickenham, told the London Evening Standard: “In order to get the right size of constituency, no account has been taken not just of borough boundaries, but any sense of identity.” The deep unease among Lib Dems prompted senior Tories to tell their coalition partners they are bound by the coalition agreement to support the changes. Francis Maude, the Cabinet Office minister, said: “What do I say to those within the coalition parties who don’t like it? Well, this is what we agreed to do. “It would be unprecedented for the orders changing the boundaries to be voted down. The legislation was voted through by parliament and it would be eccentric indeed to reject the results.” But Tory whips are warning ministers of similar anger among their own MPs. One Tory MP said: “You get the feeling that the Boundary Commission thought the government’s idea to equalise the size of constituencies was poo and so it has drawn up ideas that are completely unworkable. The central flaw is that many of the new constituencies have no central focus.” The unease is shared by Labour MPs. One member of the shadow cabinet said: “This is like the partition of India. Somebody has sat down in a room in London and drawn arbitrary lines through communities they know nothing about.” The changes to the Leigh constituency of the shadow health secretary, Andy Burnham, are being held up as an example of the main flaw. The name of the constituency survives but it does not include Leigh civic centre, the town’s library or its parish church. The old constituency has been hived off into three new constituencies – a redrawn Leigh, Makerfield and Westhoughton. Burnham, who is launching a Keep Leigh in Leigh campaign, said: “It is utterly random. Leigh has been paired with places that have nothing to do with it. This shows the sheer brutal process. We talk a great deal about restoring trust in parliament. But how can we do that if we have constituencies that have no linking heart?” Chris Bryant, the shadow constitutional reform minister, said: “Many of the initial proposals for new constituencies reflect the flawed legislation which brought them into being. There has been pointless disruption in some regions, leading to the unnecessary division of traditional communities and making MPs more remote from the communities they serve, not closer. The task now is to inject some common sense back into many of these recommendations.” Andy Sawford, chief executive of the Local Government Information Unit said: “The proposed changes will mean that parliamentary constituencies cross more council boundaries and this will make democratic representation more complicated and confusing in some areas, not just for elected representatives, but also for the voters. “There is often a strong sense of identity, arising from history and logical geographic boundaries in many constituencies, and voters might well be confused by some of the proposed new arrangements, which stretch local links. Factor in other new developments such as elected police commissioners and it makes it even harder for citizens to know who represents them, where and for what purpose.” Under the changes, which the government said would save £12m, a constituency must have an electorate no smaller than 72,810 and no larger than 80,473. There will be a few exemptions, including splitting the Isle of Wight into two constituencies of around 50,000 voters. Boundary changes Electoral reform Liberal-Conservative coalition Nicholas Watt Allegra Stratton guardian.co.uk

Continue reading …
Leighton Buzzard ‘slavery’ case: four men remanded in custody

Four members of same family appear in court charged with enslaving ‘vulnerable’ men following police raid at Travellers’ site Four members of the same family appeared in court yesterday charged with enslaving men discovered at a Travellers’ site in Bedfordshire after a 200-strong police raid on Sunday. James “Jimmy” Connors, 23, Tommy Connors, 27, and Patrick Connors, 19, appeared before Luton magistrates, along with their brother-in-law James “Big Jim” Connors, 33. The four men were charged with conspiracy to commit offences of holding others in servitude and requiring them to perform forced labour. James Connors is charged with six offences relating to three of the four alleged victims, and Jimmy, Tommy and Patrick Connors are each charged with four offences, relating to two of the victims. Ben Gumpert, prosecuting, told the district judge Leigh Smith that the four victims should not be named in any press reports since they were vulnerable. As Smith denied the four men bail – on charges brought under section 71 of the Coroners and Justice Act 2009, which came into force last year – four women in the court burst into tears. One cried out: “What am I going to do with my children?” The charges followed an investigation by Bedfordshire and Hertfordshire major crime unit and relate to alleged offences against the men who were living at the Greenacres Travellers’ site at Great Billington, near Leighton Buzzard. The four-month undercover operation culminated in a raid by more than 200 police officers in the early hours of Sunday, aided by a helicopter and dog patrols. The defendants also live with their families at the caravan site. The four men confirmed their names, ages and addresses, and told the court they understood the charges. The men are due to appear at Luton crown court on 5 December. Slavery Alexandra Topping guardian.co.uk

Continue reading …
Phone hacking: 7/7 disaster victim’s mother to sue NoW publisher

News emerged as fresh revelations placed the conduct of Murdoch’s global media group News Corp under intense scrutiny The mother of a victim of the 2005 London terrorist attacks is suing Rupert Murdoch’s media empire after she was told by police that her son’s mobile phone is likely to have been targeted by a private investigator working for the News of the World. Sheila Henry filed a high court writ this week against the paper’s owner, News Group Newspapers, alleging that journalists at the tabloid, which was shut down in July, hacked into a mobile belonging to Christian Small, 28, on the day he was killed by a bomb blast on the London Underground. Henry left messages on her son’s phone on the day of the attacks in which 52 people died. In common with many victims of the 7/7 disaster, Small was missing for some time after the initial bomb blasts, and his family were trying to discover where he was. News that Henry is suing the paper’s publisher emerged on a day of fresh revelations in the phone-hacking affair that once again placed the conduct of Murdoch’s global media group News Corp under intense scrutiny. The company’s UK subsidiary told the high court on Tuesday that it had found “tens of thousands” of additional emails that could potentially shed light on the extent of phone hacking at the paper “which the current management were unaware of”. Those emails are understood to include correspondence between reporters and senior managers at the News of the World and the Sun. Mr Justice Vos, the judge who is overseeing the phone hacking cases, said : “There’s some important material in what has already been disclosed. I took the step of looking at some of the material. There’s some significant material. I’m sure there’s lots more to come.” The high court was also told Scotland Yard has handed a 68-page document to phone-hacking litigants who are pursuing civil cases . It lists the names of News of the World journalists who commissioned Glenn Mulcaire, the private investigator the paper employed, to hack into mobile phones. The fact that the document runs to so many pages suggests Mulcaire acted on the orders of a number of News of the World reporters. Separately, James Murdoch, Rupert’s 38-year-old son and News Corp’s third most senior executive, was recalled to parliament to face a second grilling by MPs over whether he was told three years ago that hacking extended beyond a single “rogue reporter” at the paper. Murdoch’s denial was contradicted by the News of the World’s last editor, Colin Myler, and former legal head Tom Crone, at the Commons culture, media and sport committee last week. Meanwhile, a group of News Corp shareholders in America who are suing the company for corporate negligence widened their action against the company. The investors now allege that “illicit phone hacking and subsequent cover-ups at News of the World were part of a much broader, historic pattern of corruption”. The action targets Murdoch, chief operating officer Chase Carey, and Carey’s deputy, James Murdoch. The case brought by Sheila Henry is the first to be launched by a 7/7 victim or a family member of someone who was caught up in the atrocity. The Metropolitan police have warned relatives of a handful of the 52 people who were killed in the capital that day that mobile phone numbers belonging to their deceased relatives were found in Mulcaire’s notebooks. It is understood that Mulcaire made a note of Henry’s own mobile as well as her son’s. The apparent confirmation of the News of the World’s willingness to target victims of a terrorist attack brought immediate condemnation. Labour MP Tom Watson, who has vigorously pursued the hacking allegations, said: “If this is accurate it shows that in the week we commemorated the victims of 9/11 the victims of our own terrorist attack have had their memories insulted in a callous and inhuman way.” A spokeswoman for News International, News Group’s parent company, said: “We take very seriously the matters raised in court this morning and we are committed to working with civil claimants to resolve their cases.” Henry’s claim will be one of half a dozen lead cases heard at trial early next year. If successful it will set a benchmark for the amount of compensation awarded to victims of hacking. They could include the parents of Milly Dowler, the schoolgirl who was murdered in 2002. The revelation in July that their daughter’s phone had been targeted by Mulcaire led to the closure of the News of the World and the resignation of former NI chief executive Rebekah Brooks. Phone hacking News Corporation Rupert Murdoch National newspapers Newspapers Newspapers & magazines 7 July London attacks United States James Robinson Ed Pilkington guardian.co.uk

Continue reading …
Bachmann Calls Out Perry for Taking Money From HPV Vaccine Drug Company

Click here to view this media During the CNN Tea Party Express debate Monday, Republican presidential candidate Michele Bachmann went after fellow candidate Rick Perry for taking campaign contributions from Merck, a company that sells the HPV vaccines that he had, as the governor of Texas, tried to mandate for all young girls in the state. “In the midst of this executive order, there was a big drug company that made millions of dollars because of this mandate,” Bachmann charged. “What I’m saying is that it’s wrong for a drug company, because the governor’s former chief of staff was the chief lobbyist for this drug company, the drug company gave thousands of dollars in political donations to the governor, and this is just flat-out wrong. The question is is it about life or was it about millions of dollars and potentially billions for a drug company?” “The company was Merck, and it was a $5,000 contribution that I had received from them,” Perry countered. “If you’re saying that I can be bought for $5,000, I’m offended.” “Well, I’m offended for all the little girls and the parents that didn’t have a choice. That’s what I’m offended for,” Bachmann shot back. EDITOR’S NOTE: Wait, so is Bachmann is also anti-vaccine? Is there any half-baked conspiracy theory she doesn’t tout? Also in this clip, this is the least amount of children Bachmann has ever claimed to have: three. Usually it’s in the 20s.

Continue reading …

During 2009 and 2010, liberal commentators and even politicians made a point of bashing conservative commentators such as Glenn Beck and Laura Inghram for allowing gold companies to advertise on their shows, arguing that conservatives and gold companies cynically colluded to deceive viewers into buying bad investments. The recent spike in gold prices seems to prove that the conservative commentators were right after all. Gold prices topped $1,900 an ounce on August 22. The price of gold rose over 400 dollars since the beginning of this year, up from $1,421.40 per ounce since January 1st, 2011, and has rapidly risen over the past two months. The price of gold was $854.60 per ounce at the start of the Obama administration. In other words, gold prices have more than doubled since the beginning of the Obama administration. Gold prices tend to increase in weak or unstable economies. Economic instability and fears of future inflation serve to drive up the price of gold, which serves as a “safe haven” in times of economic distress. Considering the current economic difficulties, it is hardly surprising that economists such as CNBC's Jim Cramer advocate investing a small portion of one's portfolio in gold in today's uncertain economy. Cramer predicted that the price of gold would increase to over $2000 in 18 months – in March 2011, when gold was still at $1,440 . It is also not surprising that conservative commentators, most notably Glenn Beck, encouraged listeners to invest in gold as a means to provide a safe haven from the wreckage of Obama's polices. And it would certainly make sense for a gold company to advertise during programs where commentators encourage their listeners to buy gold. But liberal news outlets sought to discredit the connection between gold companies and conservative commentators, portraying it as a concerted effort by both parties to deceive credulous American viewers and listeners of conservative programs into buying overpriced gold coins. (The criticism went nicely with attempts to pressure advertisers to drop sponsorship of Glenn Beck's Fox News Channel program.) ABC News reporter Brian Ross investigated claims against two gold companies. One of these companies was Goldline, which was conveniently linked to Beck and other conservative luminaries. The complaint argued that the company was directing its callers to buy gold coins, rather than bullion bars, which command less of a premium above their actual gold value. In a related print piece, Ross declared that gold companies and conservatives had a “symbiotic relationship.” Politico's Kenneth Vogel reported on the relationship between right-wing media figures and gold companies. He closed his piece with a shot at conservative commentators, quoting a woman who had lost money after investing in coins that the article stated could have cost less elsewhere: “How could I be mislead [sic] by Glenn Beck, Fred Thompson and Marvin [sic] Levin?” MSNBC's Keith Olbermann opined on “Countdown” that the relationship between gold companies and conservative commentators “has been profitable for everybody, except the viewers and listeners.” Olbermann invited then-Congressman Anthony Weiner, D-NY, onto his program to launch a full-blown, histrionic attack on Beck and Goldline. Weiner railed against a legal, private business arrangement, calling the relationship between Goldline and Beck an “unholy alliance.” Weiner had previously issued a report attacking Goldline. His office went further, charging that “Goldline is little more than a gold peddler posing as an investment advisor, an unfortunate byproduct of the Tea Party movement.” A “red-faced” Weiner went so far as to summon a representative of Goldline before Congress and blasted him for his company's advertising practices. Weiner's charges went nowhere . In perhaps the most serious and well-thought out of the charges, comedian Stephen Colbert mocked conservative talk show hosts who stumped for gold companies in 2009. Conservatives media figures who advocated that their audience invest in gold were proven correct. The economic “recovery” has stalled. Gold prices have fluctuated in the last couple of weeks, but at this writing ($1832 per ounce) it still is worth more than twice its value when President Obama was inaugurated. Where are the liberal pundits now?

Continue reading …
Bishop of Derry calls for end to celibacy in Catholic church

Father Edward Daly, famous for protecting the wounded during Blood Sunday, says Vatican must ease shortage of priests On Bloody Sunday in 1972 Father Edward Daly faced down the Parachute Regiment responsible for shooting dead 13 unarmed Derry civilians, waving just a white handkerchief as he protected the wounded from the army’s bullets in the Bogside. Now 39 years later the retired Bishop of Derry is confronting an even more powerful force than the Paras: the Vatican. Dr Daly, who was the Bishop of Derry for 20 years during the Troubles, has become the first senior Irish Catholic cleric to call for an end to celibacy in the church. His intervention in the debate over whether priests should be allowed to marry is highly significant because he is still one of the most respected figures in the Irish Catholic church at a time when faith in the institution has been shattered by the paedophile scandals involving clergy. Challenging centuries of Catholic theocracy, Daly has said that allowing the clergy to marry would solve some of the church’s problems. The number of Catholic priests in Ireland is in sharp decline as older clergy die and very few young men take up a celibate life. In some parishes the church has transferred priests from Poland and the developing world to fill the gap. “There will always be a place in the church for a celibate priesthood, but there should also be a place for a married priesthood in the church,” Daly writes in his new book A Troubled See, Memoirs of a Derry Bishop, which will be launched at Magee College in the city on Wednesday. “I think priests should have the freedom to marry if they wish. It may create a whole new set of problems but I think it’s something that should be considered,” he says. “I’m worried about the decreasing number of priests and the number of older priests. I think it’s an issue that needs to be addressed and addressed urgently.” While Daly accepts he might be out of step with current Vatican thinking he points out that he is “not engaged in a popularity contest”. He says that during his time as a bishop he found it “heartbreaking” that so many priests or prospective priests were forced to resign or were unable to get ordained because of the celibacy issue. Many young men who once considered joining the priesthood turned away because of the rule, the 74-year-old cleric argues. Daly became a recognised figure around the world in 1972 when he was seen waving a bloodied white handkerchief in front of British paratroopers in Derry during Bloody Sunday. The sight of the priest during the army massacre in the city became one of the most iconic images of the Northern Ireland Troubles. Daly was also a fierce critic of the IRA’s armed campaign and a strong supporter of the peace process kickstarted by the likes of his friend and confidant, the Nobel peace prize winner John Hume. In the book the former bishop praises Hume who he says is “one of my great heroes”. He had first-hand experience of the Battle of the Bogside in 1969 and took part in the civil rights demonstrations in the city prior to the Troubles erupting. Daly also played a part in the campaign to free the Birmingham Six. His tenure as Bishop in Derry spanned the years 1974 to 1993 and included some of the worst atrocities of the Troubles. He accepts that admission of married men to the priesthood could well create new problems and issues for the church. “However, under the guidance of the Holy Spirit, major decisions must be made,” he adds. In his book he also denounces the paedophile priests whose crimes and the cover-up by the Catholic hierarchy has dramatically reduced the church’s respect and influence in Ireland. He is “heartbroken and appalled” that fellow clergymen were engaged in “such horrible criminal acts against the most vulnerable”. Catholic priests have been unable to marry since the Gregorian reforms in the 11th century made celibacy compulsory. Historians have contended that the move was partly for spiritual reasons, but was mainly to ensure estates held by clerics would pass back to the church upon their deaths rather than to offspring. However, in recent years Pope Benedict XVI has made allowances for married Anglican ministers to transfer to the Catholic church after a number made the move in protest at controversial Anglican issues including the ordination of women priests, and acceptance of ministers in same-sex relationships. The County Fermanagh-born cleric now works as a chaplain in Derry’s Foyle hospice. Vatican’s view Bishop Daly’s proposal will meet with dogged silence in the Vatican, but widespread understanding in the Roman Catholic church. The view from the top is clear. Last year, when the scandal over clerical sex abuse was at its height, the archbishop of Vienna, Christoph Schönborn, suggested part of the problem might be priestly celibacy. His comment was all the more interesting, coming as it did from a conservative theologian andformer star pupil of Pope Benedict. But in case anyone thought his musings had Vatican backing, the pope went out of his way a few days later to praise celibacy as an “expression of the gift of oneself to God and others”. Three months later, he reinforced his defence of the status quo, describing celibacy as a “great sign of faith”. The debate over whether to admit married men to the priesthood, however, is one not even the pope can stifle. Two developments have refocused attention on the issue in the last couple of years – and one is partly attributable to Benedict himself. The first is the continuing sex abuse scandal, which on Tuesday acquired new life when the US-based Survivors Network of Those Abused by Priests asked the international criminal court to investigate the Vatican for crimes against humanity. The first senior figure to argue the case for a link between an unmarried priesthood and sex abuse was the bishop of Hamburg, Hans-Jochen Jaschke, who in March 2010 told a newspaper interviewer a “celibate lifestyle can attract people who have an abnormal sexuality”. The other development has been the welcoming into the Catholic church of traditionalist Anglicans, unable to reconcile their faith with the ordination of women or the consecration of openly gay bishops. Their incorporation has been made easier since October 2009 when Benedict issued a controversial ordinance allowing them to retain much of their identity, liturgy and pastoral arrangements. The reordination into the Catholic church of married Anglican priests has pointed up the fact that priestly celibacy is not a doctrine, but a discipline. In 1970, the decline in priesthood vocations persuaded nine leading theologians to sign a memorandum declaring that the Catholic leadership “quite simply has a responsibility to take up certain modifications” to the celibacy rule. Extracts from the document were reprinted in January. Not least because one of the signatories was the then Joseph Ratzinger, now pope Benedict. Northern Ireland Ireland Catholicism Religion Christianity Europe Henry McDonald guardian.co.uk

Continue reading …
Bishop of Derry calls for end to celibacy in Catholic church

Father Edward Daly, famous for protecting the wounded during Blood Sunday, says Vatican must ease shortage of priests On Bloody Sunday in 1972 Father Edward Daly faced down the Parachute Regiment responsible for shooting dead 13 unarmed Derry civilians, waving just a white handkerchief as he protected the wounded from the army’s bullets in the Bogside. Now 39 years later the retired Bishop of Derry is confronting an even more powerful force than the Paras: the Vatican. Dr Daly, who was the Bishop of Derry for 20 years during the Troubles, has become the first senior Irish Catholic cleric to call for an end to celibacy in the church. His intervention in the debate over whether priests should be allowed to marry is highly significant because he is still one of the most respected figures in the Irish Catholic church at a time when faith in the institution has been shattered by the paedophile scandals involving clergy. Challenging centuries of Catholic theocracy, Daly has said that allowing the clergy to marry would solve some of the church’s problems. The number of Catholic priests in Ireland is in sharp decline as older clergy die and very few young men take up a celibate life. In some parishes the church has transferred priests from Poland and the developing world to fill the gap. “There will always be a place in the church for a celibate priesthood, but there should also be a place for a married priesthood in the church,” Daly writes in his new book A Troubled See, Memoirs of a Derry Bishop, which will be launched at Magee College in the city on Wednesday. “I think priests should have the freedom to marry if they wish. It may create a whole new set of problems but I think it’s something that should be considered,” he says. “I’m worried about the decreasing number of priests and the number of older priests. I think it’s an issue that needs to be addressed and addressed urgently.” While Daly accepts he might be out of step with current Vatican thinking he points out that he is “not engaged in a popularity contest”. He says that during his time as a bishop he found it “heartbreaking” that so many priests or prospective priests were forced to resign or were unable to get ordained because of the celibacy issue. Many young men who once considered joining the priesthood turned away because of the rule, the 74-year-old cleric argues. Daly became a recognised figure around the world in 1972 when he was seen waving a bloodied white handkerchief in front of British paratroopers in Derry during Bloody Sunday. The sight of the priest during the army massacre in the city became one of the most iconic images of the Northern Ireland Troubles. Daly was also a fierce critic of the IRA’s armed campaign and a strong supporter of the peace process kickstarted by the likes of his friend and confidant, the Nobel peace prize winner John Hume. In the book the former bishop praises Hume who he says is “one of my great heroes”. He had first-hand experience of the Battle of the Bogside in 1969 and took part in the civil rights demonstrations in the city prior to the Troubles erupting. Daly also played a part in the campaign to free the Birmingham Six. His tenure as Bishop in Derry spanned the years 1974 to 1993 and included some of the worst atrocities of the Troubles. He accepts that admission of married men to the priesthood could well create new problems and issues for the church. “However, under the guidance of the Holy Spirit, major decisions must be made,” he adds. In his book he also denounces the paedophile priests whose crimes and the cover-up by the Catholic hierarchy has dramatically reduced the church’s respect and influence in Ireland. He is “heartbroken and appalled” that fellow clergymen were engaged in “such horrible criminal acts against the most vulnerable”. Catholic priests have been unable to marry since the Gregorian reforms in the 11th century made celibacy compulsory. Historians have contended that the move was partly for spiritual reasons, but was mainly to ensure estates held by clerics would pass back to the church upon their deaths rather than to offspring. However, in recent years Pope Benedict XVI has made allowances for married Anglican ministers to transfer to the Catholic church after a number made the move in protest at controversial Anglican issues including the ordination of women priests, and acceptance of ministers in same-sex relationships. The County Fermanagh-born cleric now works as a chaplain in Derry’s Foyle hospice. Vatican’s view Bishop Daly’s proposal will meet with dogged silence in the Vatican, but widespread understanding in the Roman Catholic church. The view from the top is clear. Last year, when the scandal over clerical sex abuse was at its height, the archbishop of Vienna, Christoph Schönborn, suggested part of the problem might be priestly celibacy. His comment was all the more interesting, coming as it did from a conservative theologian andformer star pupil of Pope Benedict. But in case anyone thought his musings had Vatican backing, the pope went out of his way a few days later to praise celibacy as an “expression of the gift of oneself to God and others”. Three months later, he reinforced his defence of the status quo, describing celibacy as a “great sign of faith”. The debate over whether to admit married men to the priesthood, however, is one not even the pope can stifle. Two developments have refocused attention on the issue in the last couple of years – and one is partly attributable to Benedict himself. The first is the continuing sex abuse scandal, which on Tuesday acquired new life when the US-based Survivors Network of Those Abused by Priests asked the international criminal court to investigate the Vatican for crimes against humanity. The first senior figure to argue the case for a link between an unmarried priesthood and sex abuse was the bishop of Hamburg, Hans-Jochen Jaschke, who in March 2010 told a newspaper interviewer a “celibate lifestyle can attract people who have an abnormal sexuality”. The other development has been the welcoming into the Catholic church of traditionalist Anglicans, unable to reconcile their faith with the ordination of women or the consecration of openly gay bishops. Their incorporation has been made easier since October 2009 when Benedict issued a controversial ordinance allowing them to retain much of their identity, liturgy and pastoral arrangements. The reordination into the Catholic church of married Anglican priests has pointed up the fact that priestly celibacy is not a doctrine, but a discipline. In 1970, the decline in priesthood vocations persuaded nine leading theologians to sign a memorandum declaring that the Catholic leadership “quite simply has a responsibility to take up certain modifications” to the celibacy rule. Extracts from the document were reprinted in January. Not least because one of the signatories was the then Joseph Ratzinger, now pope Benedict. Northern Ireland Ireland Catholicism Religion Christianity Europe Henry McDonald guardian.co.uk

Continue reading …

This will be online . Any chance we can get it broadcast into the congressional offices? Probably not. Starting on Wednesday, Gore will expound on climate change for 24 hours straight, with a one-hour presentation to be broadcast each hour in a different time zone. Gore’s organization will also commandeer the social media accounts of willing participants throughout the event, called “24 Hours of Reality. “The presentations will feature “200 new slides arguing the connection between more extreme weather and climate change,” an official from one of Gore’s partner organizations told Reuters . “There will be a full-on assault on climate skeptics, exploring where they get their funding from. “You might think that if slide shows and lectures from Al Gore could sway climate change deniers, they would have done so already. But there is evidence that some might need a refresher. Concern over climate change in the U.S. has dropped from 62 percent in 2007 to 48 percent today, according to opinion polls. More information about Gore’s campaign is online at the website of the Climate Reality Project .

Continue reading …
Borussia Dortmund v Arsenal – live!

• Bash F5 or use our auto-refresher for the latest • Send your thoughts to barney.ronay@guardian.co.uk • Catch up on Chelsea v Bayer Leverkusen here • And get all tonight’s latest scores right here 13 mins Cleared off the line by Sagna. that was lovely play by Gotze, who found Lewandowski in lots of space near goal by the simple tactic of passing it to where Koscielny should have been standing, if Koscileny was a better defender. Lewandovski rounded Szczesny but his shot was hacked away by Sagna. Dortmund are all over Arsenal here, as you might expect in the early minutes. 11 mins Blimey. A simple long pass over the top finds Kagawa in a vast pocket of space that seems to stretch from horizon to horizon. Unfortunately he fails to control it properly and then shoots wildly over the bar. Koscielny: I’m also looking at you. I’m scratching my head and frowning while I’m looking at you. Now I’m shaking my head. Terrible marking there from the disappointing Frenchman. 8 mins Dortmund look quite fluid between midfield and attack, lots of scampering movement. It is very open, albeit this is partly because Arsenal don’t really know how to defend properly. Arteta has been neither anchoring nor passing so far. He has instead been doing nothing at all. 5 mins Gotze has a nice little attacking jink but it comes to nothing. He looks very clam and aware of what’s around him. And, oh my, Gervinho has a great chance to score, put through in front of the keeper with the ball bouncing a little high, but he makes a right pig’s ear of it and allows Weidenfeller to paw away his weak side foot shank. Although there was a fine challenge from Hummels in there. Gervinho: sorry. You’re probably a nice guy. But somehow you and I both know this just isn’t going to work out, don’t we? 3 mins Walcott is playing quite high up the pitch, presumably to use his acceleration on the break. Gary Naylor writes: “I wish Mikel Arteta well after years of fine service at Goodison. He might need those good wishes too, if he’s holding in midfield – has Arsene seen him play?” Not sure it’s really an “anchor” role. More a deep playmaker and a ball carrier. Song will do the fouling. 1 min Arsenal kick off and they’re on the attack straight away. Walcott finds a bit of space on the right and wins a corner which Big Per rumbles up for, but it’s cleared in frustratingly easy fashion. Already looks like there’s a lot of space out there. I scent goals. 7.44pm: Philippa Booth notes: “also in Group F OM are in an Arsenal-esque bit of trouble in Ligue 1 at the minute, if not worse (3 pts from 5, lying in 17th) and selection issues for DiDi mean that Djimi Traore (yes, him) is at left back while Jeremy Morel (a left back) is promoted to the wing. Could be interesting…” indeed it could. Sort of. About to kick off here. 7.43pm: The players are out. They’re standing there listening to the anthem like it’s a proper anthem. 7.37pm: Paul Merson on the Sky coverage seems strangely jumpy. How excited is it possible to get about these early group stages, even when you’re a drooling fan or Paul Merson? This at least should be a decent game. I’m genuinely curious about Arteta playing for Arsenal. I’m also Dortmund-curious and expecting big things from Gotze. I have it on good authority Germany is currently churning out an alarming excess of really good young players. Compulsory academies: it’s the key. And not the kind of academies where you still get shouted at and told to hoof it but in slightly more expensive surroundings and with isotonic drinks. 7.36pm: Paul Broadwater… Now this is the right kind of email. “Though this will sound like the most unattractive bout of arse kissing ever, Barney, thank you very much despite producing just the preamble so far tonight – some common sense and perspective from a journalist…” and so it goes on for a bit. More of that kind of thing. Note: it’s never unattractive. 7.33pm: Liam Mosley fancies crisis-club Arsenal tonight. “I know Arsenal have hardly set the world alight but the price for them to win 16/5 does seem a bit generous. Dortmund have not met the high standards of last season and are relative novices at this level. Worth the price of a pint surely? Or if you are me two pints.” It’s a loud, angry, swinging kind of ground. Never an easy place to go, the BVB Stadion. And Arsenal have a very open-looking team tonight. They’re not here for a draw. Hello and welcome to live coverage of Arsenal ‘s trip to Borussia Dortmund . It’s a tricky group F opener for crisis club Arsenal (who are not in crisis), their under-pressure manager Arsene Wenger (who is not under pressure) and his end-of-window panic signings (NB all experienced international players) as their season lurches (note: season not lurching) into another calamitous and potentially fatal non-fatal, fairly low-key… well, you get the point. This feels a bit like a game on two levels. On a sensible level it is a very interesting match-up with the youthful German champions, who are coming on a bit like an Arsenal 2.0, all thrusting, prancing ball-playing home made product and a charismatic and innovative coach. On an insensible level this has suddenly become a vital match, for reasons of perception above all. Wenger has become a story. A kind of ersatz pressure is being summoned up out of not that much. And Arsenal desperately need to get to the knockout stages, not for reasons of finance, or to break new ground, or because they’ve got any hope of winning the thing, but to arrest a perception of genuine decline. Of course, there is a bit of decline. A front line of Gervinho, Benayoun, Walcott and Van Persie is so-so, but it’s not what it once was. I like the Arteta signing though: he is a wonderful player, plus it’s a fascinating notion, that he can make the step up to a higher level at 29. Don’t see why not. There are even some things he does better than Fabregas. Also, Mertesacker is a good signing: I believe he will be a triumph. He’s slow apparently, but then so are John Terry, Jamie Carragher, Gary Cahill, Chris Samba and Carlos Puyol. So was Bobby Moore. The idea with a centre half is not to do that much running around in the first place. Anyway, enough ranting. Here are the teams: Borussia Dortmund Weidenfeller, Piszczek, Subotic, Hummels, Schmelzer, Bender, Kehl, Gotze, Kagawa, Grosskreutz, Lewandowski. Subs Langerak, Da Silva, Zidan, Blaszczykowski, Gundogan, Felipe Santana, Perisic. Arsenal Szczesny, Sagna, Mertesacker, Koscielny, Gibbs, Song, Arteta, Walcott, Benayoun, Gervinho, van Persie. Subs Fabianski, Park, Andre Santos, Djourou, Arshavin, Frimpong, Chamakh. Champions League Champions League 2011-12 Arsenal Borussia Dortmund Barney Ronay guardian.co.uk

Continue reading …
Met police join investigation into Kenya killing of Briton

Speculation that David and Judith Tebbutt from Hertfordshire were attacked by gang from al-Qaida-linked group A team of Metropolitan police officers has been dispatched to Kenya to aid the investigation into the murder of a British holidaymaker and the kidnap of his wife at the remote Kiwayu Safari Village resort, close to the Somalian border. The team arrived amid speculation that David and Judith Tebbutt from Bishop’s Stortford, Hertfordshire, were attacked by a gang from Somalia and from the al-Qaida linked insurgent group, al-Shabab. Scotland Yard said the Kenyan authorities “remain the lead investigators”. The gang raided the Tebbutts’ beach house in the early hours of Sunday morning. The couple were the hotel’s only guests, having just arrived following a week in the Masai Mara game reserve. Attackers are said to have shot the 58-year-old, a finance director at the publisher Faber & Faber, and sped from the isolated resort near Lamu island by boat having abducted his wife, 56. As the hunt for her continued, police in Kenya were reported to have arrested a man suspected of being involved. A search and rescue operation is under way but the Ministry of Defence refused to confirm reports British special forces had been drafted in. Kiwayu Safari Village said everyone at the resort was “devastated” and sent their “deepest condolences” to the Tebbutts’ son, Oliver, 25, family and friends. “Our thoughts are with them as we pray for Judith’s safe return.” The Foreign Office said a team had been deployed from the high commission in Nairobi, and called for those involved in the kidnapping to “show compassion”. The FCO warns against “all but essential travel to within 30km of Kenya’s border with Somalia”. Ben Lopez, a kidnap-for-ransom consultant and author of the book The Negotiator, said it was now a “waiting game” to see what the gang want. Lopez, who works for Compass Risk Management which specialises in the prevention and mitigation of incidents of kidnap, maritime piracy and extortion, said: “We don’t know if it’s al-Shabab or a regular kidnap-for-ransom”. He said it was likely the abduction was planned, rather than opportunistic, and it could be some days before the kidnappers got in touch. Tributes have been paid to David Tebbutt, who was a member of the Book Trade Charity, which offers support and grants to those in the book trade. “He was a lovely chap, he was on the grants committee. He was a very caring person and very concerned about the people that we were supporting financially,” said the charity’s chief executive, David Hicks. The couple had visited Africa many times, said Iain Stevenson, professor of publishing at University College London, who described his friend’s death as an “an enormous loss to the publishing world”. “He loved travel, he was always going on holidays, he got teased about his exotic holidays,” he said. “He was just basically a very kind, modest, unassuming man, very funny, with a wicked sense of humour, but he was very dedicated to his family. “The whole reason he moved to Bishop’s Stortford was so his son could go to Bishop’s Stortford College. It must be awful for them [the family], particularly their son.” Kenya Africa Somalia Caroline Davies guardian.co.uk

Continue reading …