Campaigners say US president became weak-kneed over closure of Guantánamo bay and that spying restrictions are gone The Obama administration has disappointed civil rights campaigners who had expected him to reverse most of the post-9/11 restrictions introduced by the Bush administration. On becoming president in January 2009, Obama promised to close Guantánamo Bay within a year. He did order an end to waterboarding but Guantánamo remains open and almost all the rest of the Bush era anti-terrorism apparatus, from the Patriot Act through to increased surveillance is still in place. Measures once considered only for emergency use are being consolidated. “I did not like it when the violations of rights were temporary but now, because of Obama going along with the changes, they are becoming a permanent fixture of our legal landscape,” said Michael Ratner, president emeritus of the Centre for Constitutional Rights (CCR), which has been battling since the civil rights campaigns of the 1960s. Ratner, who was among the first, small group of lawyers to fight on behalf of the Guantánamo detainees, said Obama had the chance to close Guantánamo but became weak-kneed about it. “Indefinite detention, restrictions on habeas corpus, rendition, all these continue under Obama. We still have military commissions under Obama.” He added: “All the restrictions on government surveillance and spying that we fought for and won in the 1970s, are gone. We are back to square one. There are no restrictions on the FBI. None. They are targeting Muslims in particular. One’s religion has become a key criteria for surveillance.” Michelle Richardson, a lawyer specialising in national security at the American Civil Liberties Union, echoed some of Ratner’s points. “We definitely think there has been quite a significant shift and there is much more government snooping. It started with the Patriot Act, which made it easier to spy on people who aren’t suspected of doing anything wrong.” There were fewer than 1,000 people being wiretapped before 9/11 for intelligence purposes and “now we don’t know how many”, she added. Richardson said the public is split between those who think the government is over-reacting and those who think the measures are justified. “The government has done a good job of keeping people in a state of emergency,” she said, adding that it was too soon to say whether the balance will change. The scales might tip if people begin to be denied benefits or jobs because they are on terrorist lists, she said. But Benjamin Wittes, a senior fellow in public law at the Brookings Institution, is less convinced that America is any less free today than it was before 9/11. Wittes said: “I am not convinced we are less free. If you talk to someone walking on the street – other than in Washington, where we feel more of the brunt because we are more of a target – I would be surprised if they felt less free.” He suggested three categories of freedom. The first affects large numbers of people; the only post-9/11 example of such is airport security; this, Wittes said, is not a constraint on freedom as it allows people to fly. The second category is people who are non-Americans and has zero affect on Americans walking round the streets. Guantánamo is in this category. The third category is surveillance. “There is no doubt there has been an increase in wiretapping. It is a substantial increase, not dramatic. It is not awesome. Most of it is public. The wild card in this is the National Security Agency warrantless wiretapping and we do not know the volume of this.” What about waterboarding? “I agree that countries that engage in torture are less free than those who do it. If you accept it was torture, the question is still more complicated,” Wittes said. It is still a country that in a moment of crisis involved a small number of dangerous people and then stopped. Is that country less free? I think that is extravagant. I am more sympathetic to the CIA than most people.” The bottom line, for Wittes, is that waterboarding has stopped. Obama administration United States US politics Guantánamo Bay FBI September 11 2001 Human rights Ewen MacAskill guardian.co.uk
Continue reading …The prime minister is expected to use a speech on crime to announce plans to televise the sentencing of offenders Judges’ sentencing of offenders is to be televised under plans to be unveiled by the prime minister shortly, the Guardian has learned. David Cameron is expected to make his announcement in a long-awaited crime speech, expediting the agenda even though a Ministry of Justice consultation with the judiciary into the matter has not yet begun. It is not yet known how many courts will be televised. As part of his push for transparency in public services, Cameron will give the go-ahead to the televising of judicial verdicts but it is thought this will critically not include the process of the trial leading up to the verdict, protecting witnesses from exposure to publicity. The shift towards the televising of court proceedings has always been hampered by the spectre of OJ Simpson’s trial in the US which degenerated into prime-time entertainment. Television companies have been pressing for greater access to the highlights of court cases and a consultation on the shift was undertaken by the previous Labour government but was eventually discarded. Now the present government has revived the plans, believing a judicial pronouncement should become more of a moment of public reckoning. Officials believe transparency would aid public understanding of the court process and the idea has gained momentum in the aftermath of the riots. Number 10 has decided to strengthen its law and order agenda in the wake of the riots, but televising verdicts is something Cameron has been minded to do for some time. The decision to go ahead comes at the end of a consultation with judges on the issue. In May, the Ministry of Justice revealed that officials would be canvassing the opinion of judges on the matter. A Ministry of Justice spokesman said: “We are considering proposals put forward by broadcasters to allow limited recording and transmission from courts in specific circumstances. “However, before any firm proposals are developed, the lord chancellor will wish to consult on the principle of broadcasting from court with the senior judiciary.” There is a fair wind for the proposal with the director of public prosecutions, Keir Starmer, suggesting in May when the consultation was announced that he would lend the move his support. He called for greater openness and transparency in the justice system. Then Starmer told a Society of Editors meeting: “In principle I would support a proposal that judgments, judges’ closing remarks and judicial sentencing in criminal cases could be televised. “There may be a case for going further, although I would obviously not want to promote anything that adversely affected the ability of victims or witnesses to give their best evidence to the court. “Therefore there would need to be appropriate safeguards, particularly in cases involving vulnerable individuals, and any requests to televise any part of the court process should be subject to the judge’s individual discretion.” When the country’s most senior court – the supreme court in Westminster – was opened in September 2009 it was fitted with cameras. As things stand it is the only court where footage is routinely available for broadcasters on request and has been televised live. It allows visitors to watch appeals and judgments on televisions around the building without sitting in the courtrooms, but it is seen to be a different case since supreme court hearings do not involve witnesses being cross-examined or juries. Cameras have been allowed in some Scottish courts under tight restrictions since 1992. The appeal of Abdelbaset al-Megrahi against his conviction for the Lockerbie bombing was televised in 2002. Writing in the Guardian in December, the head of Sky News, John Ryley, suggested the trials of six MPs who were accused of misusing their parliamentary expenses were prime examples of public interest trials that would have benefited from being televised. Labour launched a limited trial in the court of appeal in 2004. UK criminal justice David Cameron Television Allegra Stratton guardian.co.uk
Continue reading …The prime minister is expected to use a speech on crime to announce plans to televise the sentencing of offenders Judges’ sentencing of offenders is to be televised under plans to be unveiled by the prime minister shortly, the Guardian has learned. David Cameron is expected to make his announcement in a long-awaited crime speech, expediting the agenda even though a Ministry of Justice consultation with the judiciary into the matter has not yet begun. It is not yet known how many courts will be televised. As part of his push for transparency in public services, Cameron will give the go-ahead to the televising of judicial verdicts but it is thought this will critically not include the process of the trial leading up to the verdict, protecting witnesses from exposure to publicity. The shift towards the televising of court proceedings has always been hampered by the spectre of OJ Simpson’s trial in the US which degenerated into prime-time entertainment. Television companies have been pressing for greater access to the highlights of court cases and a consultation on the shift was undertaken by the previous Labour government but was eventually discarded. Now the present government has revived the plans, believing a judicial pronouncement should become more of a moment of public reckoning. Officials believe transparency would aid public understanding of the court process and the idea has gained momentum in the aftermath of the riots. Number 10 has decided to strengthen its law and order agenda in the wake of the riots, but televising verdicts is something Cameron has been minded to do for some time. The decision to go ahead comes at the end of a consultation with judges on the issue. In May, the Ministry of Justice revealed that officials would be canvassing the opinion of judges on the matter. A Ministry of Justice spokesman said: “We are considering proposals put forward by broadcasters to allow limited recording and transmission from courts in specific circumstances. “However, before any firm proposals are developed, the lord chancellor will wish to consult on the principle of broadcasting from court with the senior judiciary.” There is a fair wind for the proposal with the director of public prosecutions, Keir Starmer, suggesting in May when the consultation was announced that he would lend the move his support. He called for greater openness and transparency in the justice system. Then Starmer told a Society of Editors meeting: “In principle I would support a proposal that judgments, judges’ closing remarks and judicial sentencing in criminal cases could be televised. “There may be a case for going further, although I would obviously not want to promote anything that adversely affected the ability of victims or witnesses to give their best evidence to the court. “Therefore there would need to be appropriate safeguards, particularly in cases involving vulnerable individuals, and any requests to televise any part of the court process should be subject to the judge’s individual discretion.” When the country’s most senior court – the supreme court in Westminster – was opened in September 2009 it was fitted with cameras. As things stand it is the only court where footage is routinely available for broadcasters on request and has been televised live. It allows visitors to watch appeals and judgments on televisions around the building without sitting in the courtrooms, but it is seen to be a different case since supreme court hearings do not involve witnesses being cross-examined or juries. Cameras have been allowed in some Scottish courts under tight restrictions since 1992. The appeal of Abdelbaset al-Megrahi against his conviction for the Lockerbie bombing was televised in 2002. Writing in the Guardian in December, the head of Sky News, John Ryley, suggested the trials of six MPs who were accused of misusing their parliamentary expenses were prime examples of public interest trials that would have benefited from being televised. Labour launched a limited trial in the court of appeal in 2004. UK criminal justice David Cameron Television Allegra Stratton guardian.co.uk
Continue reading …The prime minister is expected to use a speech on crime to announce plans to televise the sentencing of offenders Judges’ sentencing of offenders is to be televised under plans to be unveiled by the prime minister shortly, the Guardian has learned. David Cameron is expected to make his announcement in a long-awaited crime speech, expediting the agenda even though a Ministry of Justice consultation with the judiciary into the matter has not yet begun. It is not yet known how many courts will be televised. As part of his push for transparency in public services, Cameron will give the go-ahead to the televising of judicial verdicts but it is thought this will critically not include the process of the trial leading up to the verdict, protecting witnesses from exposure to publicity. The shift towards the televising of court proceedings has always been hampered by the spectre of OJ Simpson’s trial in the US which degenerated into prime-time entertainment. Television companies have been pressing for greater access to the highlights of court cases and a consultation on the shift was undertaken by the previous Labour government but was eventually discarded. Now the present government has revived the plans, believing a judicial pronouncement should become more of a moment of public reckoning. Officials believe transparency would aid public understanding of the court process and the idea has gained momentum in the aftermath of the riots. Number 10 has decided to strengthen its law and order agenda in the wake of the riots, but televising verdicts is something Cameron has been minded to do for some time. The decision to go ahead comes at the end of a consultation with judges on the issue. In May, the Ministry of Justice revealed that officials would be canvassing the opinion of judges on the matter. A Ministry of Justice spokesman said: “We are considering proposals put forward by broadcasters to allow limited recording and transmission from courts in specific circumstances. “However, before any firm proposals are developed, the lord chancellor will wish to consult on the principle of broadcasting from court with the senior judiciary.” There is a fair wind for the proposal with the director of public prosecutions, Keir Starmer, suggesting in May when the consultation was announced that he would lend the move his support. He called for greater openness and transparency in the justice system. Then Starmer told a Society of Editors meeting: “In principle I would support a proposal that judgments, judges’ closing remarks and judicial sentencing in criminal cases could be televised. “There may be a case for going further, although I would obviously not want to promote anything that adversely affected the ability of victims or witnesses to give their best evidence to the court. “Therefore there would need to be appropriate safeguards, particularly in cases involving vulnerable individuals, and any requests to televise any part of the court process should be subject to the judge’s individual discretion.” When the country’s most senior court – the supreme court in Westminster – was opened in September 2009 it was fitted with cameras. As things stand it is the only court where footage is routinely available for broadcasters on request and has been televised live. It allows visitors to watch appeals and judgments on televisions around the building without sitting in the courtrooms, but it is seen to be a different case since supreme court hearings do not involve witnesses being cross-examined or juries. Cameras have been allowed in some Scottish courts under tight restrictions since 1992. The appeal of Abdelbaset al-Megrahi against his conviction for the Lockerbie bombing was televised in 2002. Writing in the Guardian in December, the head of Sky News, John Ryley, suggested the trials of six MPs who were accused of misusing their parliamentary expenses were prime examples of public interest trials that would have benefited from being televised. Labour launched a limited trial in the court of appeal in 2004. UK criminal justice David Cameron Television Allegra Stratton guardian.co.uk
Continue reading …Mark Allen, deputy governor of HMP Brixton, accused of assault, excessive restraint and attempting to influence witnesses A prison governor has been suspended over allegations he assaulted an inmate and tried to persuade staff to lie about the incident. Mark Allen, deputy governor of Brixton prison in south London, has been removed from his post following an incident in which a prisoner is understood to have been injured while being restrained. The Guardian has learned that the allegations against Allen include assault, excessive use of restraint and trying to influence witnesses. The Ministry of Justice has appointed Carol Draper, former governor of Parkhurst prison, to carry out an investigation into the incident, which is believed to have taken place last week. Earlier this year Brixton, which has a capacity of 500, was the subject of a critical report by Nick Hardwick, the chief inspector of prisons. The inspectorate said the jail was 250 prisoners over normal capacity, with many sharing small cells described as “dirty and in a poor state of repair … [and many] spending 21 hours a day locked up.” The prison is currently believed to be holding almost 800 prisoners as a result of arrests arising from the London riots. Last month the total number of people in prison in England and Wales passed 86,000 for the first time. Prison Service chiefs have expressed alarm internally over potential unrest and violence in overcrowded jails in England and Wales owing to extra pressures resulting from the riots. There have been concerns that prisoners detained in connection with the disturbances last month may be targeted by others and staff have been asked to be vigilant. Allen is understood to have been promoted from a smaller jail to take the post of deputy governor at Brixton, a position seen as a stepping stone to governorship. Previous governors at Brixton, one of the oldest jails in the system, include Amy Rees, who received a Civil Service leadership award for her work at the jail and Paul McDowell, currently chief executive at the crime reduction charity Nacro. A Prison Service spokesman confirmed a senior manager at Brixton prison had been suspended following allegations concerning the treatment of a prisoner. “An investigation has been commissioned and is being carried out by a governor from headquarters,” he said. In his report on Brixton, Hardwick singled out the jail’s inpatient mental health care unit for particular criticism, describing it as a “disturbing sight”, with many young men who had been sectioned waiting up to six months for a place at a secure mental hospital. Many of the cells were dirty, with ripped linoleum floors and dirty toilets without seats, the report said. The inspection team spoke of a prisoner who was was unable to care for himself in even the most basic way. Hardwick said: “It was a disgraceful way to hold someone who was little more than a boy and extremely sick.” Carol Draper, who will investigate the allegations against Allen, has governed a number of jails. She was widely regarded as having turned Parkhurst around after a scathing inspection report of the Isle of Wight jail in 2002. Prisons and probation UK criminal justice Eric Allison guardian.co.uk
Continue reading …Click here to view this media (h/t David at VideoCafe ) Michele Bachmann had to have the most interesting campaign promise of any of the Republican candidates to date: The same woman who has never passed a single bill in her tenure in congress is telling audiences that President Bachmann will make sure Americans are paying less than $2 per gallon for gasoline . “Under President Bachmann you will see gasoline come down below $2 a gallon again,” Bachmann told a crowd Tuesday in South Carolina. “That will happen.” “The day that the president became president gasoline was $1.79 a gallon,” Bachmann said. “Look what it is today.”[..] Let’s first take a look at the basic claim. I have seen many people repeat her claim that gasoline was $1.79 per gallon when Obama took office, but I haven’t seen anyone fact check it. So I went to the EIA statistics , and found that the week before Obama took office (his inauguration was on Tuesday, January 20, 2009), overall retail gasoline averaged $1.90 per gallon. The week of his inauguration retail gasoline averaged $1.89 per gallon. So, there was some slight context possibly needed to qualify the $1.79 per gallon remark (probably somewhere gasoline averaged that price) but the general claim is basically correct: Prices were much lower when Obama took office, and now the current price of gasoline is $3.66 per gallon. Just for fun — and before we examine the claim in more detail — I decided to check and see what gas prices were when Bush took office. When he first took office on January 20, 2001, gasoline prices averaged $1.51 a gallon. At the beginning of his second term in 2005, gasoline prices averaged $1.90. When Bush left office, gasoline prices averaged $1.90. However, as we know gasoline prices were hardly stable in between. During Bush’s second term — in the summer of 2008 — gasoline ran up to over $4 per gallon. The price remained at that level for almost two months before a recession brought the economy crashing down — and gasoline prices along with it. But most families don’t fill up for the entire year on a specific day, so a snapshot of prices on inauguration day isn’t really that meaningful. Let’s consider average annual gas prices over the past few years. Beginning in 2002, each subsequent year of Bush’s administration saw higher average annual gas prices than the previous year. For six years in a row — from 2003 through 2008 — gas prices rose. Prices crossed the $2 per gallon mark in 2004 and ultimately rose to an annual average of $3.30 per gallon in 2008, Bush’s last full year in office. And the only reason gasoline prices weren’t higher than $3.30 per gallon was due to the recession-induced price collapse in the price of oil in the second half of 2008. Beyond the fundamental idiocy of the construct, how exactly does President Bachmann think she’ll achieve this particular sparkle pony? By taking an “All Of The Above” approach to energy policy, naturally. SCHIEFFER: Now congresswoman, I think that’s a great idea. And I think everybody hopes that. But who would you propose to do that? BACHMANN: Well, by embarking on an all of the above energy strategy. What the president has been doing is strangling the United States energy sector. The good news is, Bob, that many Americans still don’t know is that the United States is the number one energy resource rich nation in the world. We have 25 percent of all the coal in the world. One of the largest natural gas finds, trillions of cubic feet of natural gas was recently discovered in Pennsylvania. And of course from ANWR, to the east Gulf region to the Atlantic, to the Pacific, to the Bakken oil fields, we also have billions of barrels of oil. Um, huh? She does know that coal and natural gas doesn’t really do much to the 18 million barrels of oil that the US consumes daily, doesn’t she? And that Bakken oil field ? Certainly 3.65 billions barrels of recoverable oil is nothing to sneeze at, but a little perspective is in order. The U.S. currently imports an average of about 10 million barrels of oil per day (for a total of about 3.65 billion barrels of oil per year), so even if all the estimated undiscovered oil in the Bakken formation were extracted today, it would only be enough to wean the U.S. off of crude oil imports for one year. But what’s the biggest missing point that Professor Bachmann misses in her free market-deregulation-all of the above zeal? She could allow for the mining of every square inch of this country for every possible energy resource, leading to massive environmental destruction, birth defects and god knows what other horrors and NOT ONE SINGLE KILOWATT of energy would necessarily be for US consumption. All that oil that spilled into the Gulf of Mexico wasn’t necessarily going to the US, but the open market where BP could get the highest price for it. And let’s not cry any tears over the regulations BP had to suffer while oil permits were * temporarily * halted. Their stockholders certainly aren’t . And what were those gas prices like then, Michele? But hey, it’s interesting that Bachmann’s “All of the Above” approach doesn’t include a single clean energy solution, like solar or wind power .
Continue reading …When it comes to debasing conservative women, is there nothing considered off-limits by the liberal media? Consider Sunday's Doonesbury which joked about the bra sizes of former Alaska governor Sarah Palin and Congresswoman Michele Bachmann: In the strip, long-time character B.D. is watching a televised interview with Palin in Iowa. She's asked, “What do you think of Michele Bachmann's early success here?” In the second to last frame, the faux Palin said, “And did you see me in Newsweek? That article shows that as president, I'd be totally ready if called on to fill a tight sweater.” In the next frame, B.D. thinks to himself, “Good one. Advantage Palin” as her interviewer asked, “Are you saying Bachmann wouldn't?” The faux Palin responded, “We don't know. The lamestreamers won't get the facts out.” Now imagine for a moment Barack Obama was a Republican, and both Palin and Bachmann were Democrats. Would Doonesbury creator Gary Trudeau be using cheap boob jokes to mock two prominent liberal women? Yes, that was rhetorical.
Continue reading …Basildon council says it plans to evict Travellers on 19 September and urges them to make homelessness applications The Travellers living at at Dale Farm in Essex have been given a fortnight to leave before Basildon council starts forcible evictions in the week beginning 19 September – when electricity supplies will also be cut. Around 400 people living on the illegal part of the site, on land they own but have no planning permission for on a former scrapyard at Crays Hill in Essex, were notified by the council that the date has been set, and advised to make homelessness applications urgently. The date has been set after the Travellers lost their last legal challenge in the decade-long row , despite a United Nations committee calling on the government to suspend the eviction. The Travellers’ cause has been taken up by celebrities including the actor Vanessa Redgrave, and young activists have moved on to the site determined to help them resist eviction. Kathleen McCarthy, one of those facing losing her home, said there would be “a brutal eviction”, despite the statement from Basildon council that they would not cut off the water when the electricity was cut. “We can go the shop and buy gallons of water, but we can’t go and buy electricity, and we need the electricity because there’s people on breathing machines that need this. They can’t live without the electricity,” she told the BBC. The council urged anyone who needed electricity for “specific health and welfare reasons” to make contact, and also to contact Essex county council over schools. Tony Ball, leader of the Conservative council, said in a statement that the evictions were a last resort. “It is with reluctance that we have been forced to take direct action to clear the site. We have sought a negotiated settlement and exhausted the legal system for almost 10 years. In that time the Travellers have refused to budge, leaving us with no alternative to the action we are now about to take.” He denied the council was discriminating against them, insisting the Travellers were being treated exactly like any other local resident who built on or developed greenbelt land without permission. Dale Farm Roma, Gypsies and Travellers Homelessness Communities Housing Maev Kennedy guardian.co.uk
Continue reading …Basildon council says it plans to evict Travellers on 19 September and urges them to make homelessness applications The Travellers living at at Dale Farm in Essex have been given a fortnight to leave before Basildon council starts forcible evictions in the week beginning 19 September – when electricity supplies will also be cut. Around 400 people living on the illegal part of the site, on land they own but have no planning permission for on a former scrapyard at Crays Hill in Essex, were notified by the council that the date has been set, and advised to make homelessness applications urgently. The date has been set after the Travellers lost their last legal challenge in the decade-long row , despite a United Nations committee calling on the government to suspend the eviction. The Travellers’ cause has been taken up by celebrities including the actor Vanessa Redgrave, and young activists have moved on to the site determined to help them resist eviction. Kathleen McCarthy, one of those facing losing her home, said there would be “a brutal eviction”, despite the statement from Basildon council that they would not cut off the water when the electricity was cut. “We can go the shop and buy gallons of water, but we can’t go and buy electricity, and we need the electricity because there’s people on breathing machines that need this. They can’t live without the electricity,” she told the BBC. The council urged anyone who needed electricity for “specific health and welfare reasons” to make contact, and also to contact Essex county council over schools. Tony Ball, leader of the Conservative council, said in a statement that the evictions were a last resort. “It is with reluctance that we have been forced to take direct action to clear the site. We have sought a negotiated settlement and exhausted the legal system for almost 10 years. In that time the Travellers have refused to budge, leaving us with no alternative to the action we are now about to take.” He denied the council was discriminating against them, insisting the Travellers were being treated exactly like any other local resident who built on or developed greenbelt land without permission. Dale Farm Roma, Gypsies and Travellers Homelessness Communities Housing Maev Kennedy guardian.co.uk
Continue reading …Basildon council says it plans to evict Travellers on 19 September and urges them to make homelessness applications The Travellers living at at Dale Farm in Essex have been given a fortnight to leave before Basildon council starts forcible evictions in the week beginning 19 September – when electricity supplies will also be cut. Around 400 people living on the illegal part of the site, on land they own but have no planning permission for on a former scrapyard at Crays Hill in Essex, were notified by the council that the date has been set, and advised to make homelessness applications urgently. The date has been set after the Travellers lost their last legal challenge in the decade-long row , despite a United Nations committee calling on the government to suspend the eviction. The Travellers’ cause has been taken up by celebrities including the actor Vanessa Redgrave, and young activists have moved on to the site determined to help them resist eviction. Kathleen McCarthy, one of those facing losing her home, said there would be “a brutal eviction”, despite the statement from Basildon council that they would not cut off the water when the electricity was cut. “We can go the shop and buy gallons of water, but we can’t go and buy electricity, and we need the electricity because there’s people on breathing machines that need this. They can’t live without the electricity,” she told the BBC. The council urged anyone who needed electricity for “specific health and welfare reasons” to make contact, and also to contact Essex county council over schools. Tony Ball, leader of the Conservative council, said in a statement that the evictions were a last resort. “It is with reluctance that we have been forced to take direct action to clear the site. We have sought a negotiated settlement and exhausted the legal system for almost 10 years. In that time the Travellers have refused to budge, leaving us with no alternative to the action we are now about to take.” He denied the council was discriminating against them, insisting the Travellers were being treated exactly like any other local resident who built on or developed greenbelt land without permission. Dale Farm Roma, Gypsies and Travellers Homelessness Communities Housing Maev Kennedy guardian.co.uk
Continue reading …