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Plane crashes off Chilean coast

Rescuers are searching for wreckage among the Juan Fernandez islands, 500 miles from the country’s Pacific coast A Chilean air force plane with 21 people aboard, including a popular local television host, crashed in the Juan Fernandez islands off the country’s Pacific coast, authorities said. Juan Fernandez’s mayor, Leopoldo Gonzalez, said the plane tried without success to land at the islands’ airport, which is 515 miles from Chile’s coast. “The accident must be accepted as a fact,” Gonzalez said in an interview with Television Nacional de Chile. Rescue boats were searching for the wreckage of the plane but so far they have only found some equipment, the mayor said. Defence minister Andres Allamand said searchers faced “particularly adverse” conditions, adding that the plane’s status was still listed as missing. Felipe Camiroaga, one of Chile’s most popular television presenters, was on the flight, Gonzalez said. Camiroaga, 44, worked for the state TV channel’s Good Morning Everyone programme, and was travelling to the islands for a story on the reconstruction following the 27 February magnitude-8.8 earthquake and tsunami that wiped out its main town. Also on board was businessman Felipe Cubillos, who had been working on post-earthquake reconstruction efforts. The Chilean air force plane took off from the capital, Santiago, at 2pm local time and lost contact with air control almost four hours later, according to a statement from aviation authorities. Chile Plane crashes Air transport guardian.co.uk

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Pima County GOP Get An Earful Over Glock Handgun Raffle

Click here to view this media I’ve snipped together some local news reports from Tucson about the reaction to their proposed handgun raffle. Reports are from KOLD , KGUN , and KVOA . TUCSON, AZ (AP/KOLD ) – The Pima County Republican Party is drawing scathing criticism for its decision to raffle a Glock handgun. It’s the same brand of gun authorities say accused shooter Jared Loughner used in the January 8 shootings in Tucson that killed six and wounded 13, including Congresswoman Gabrielle Giffords. Democrats are calling it “a stunning lack of judgment and sensitivity.” The story has gone viral. The Glock raffle is on the local Republican Party’s website. .. In a news release, Arizona House Minority Leader Chad Campbell said, “Their raffle is not common sense; it is sick, and the Pima County GOP should call off the raffle in respect for the Arizonans who died and were injured in the Tucson shooting.” The raffle is not sitting well with the Pima County GOP’s former chairman. Brian Miller says “It’s a human issue. It’s a sensitivity thing. It’s a result, like I said, a result of echo chamber thinking. It’s myopia.” Chairman of the GOP’s legislative district that includes the southern Tucson area, James Kelley, says he advised his colleagues not to raffle the gun. He acknowledges the party has held previous gun raffles without problems, “but post-Jan. 8, it’s bad messaging, and it’s insensitive.”

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Leona Lewis: the Hackney heroine has given Simon Cowell a lesson in taste

Collide singer talks epic spook-pop, riots and dodging Whitney style ballads with Sylvia Patterson Leona Lewis, despite her 9m album sales, three Grammy nominations and audience of 2 billion at the Olympic closing ceremony in Beijing in 2008 (with Jimmy Page on guitar and David Beckham on balls), still lives in Hackney. We meet four days after the London riots and the hitherto mild-mannered, some-might-say drearily namby-pamby, Leona Lewis has turned into a high-pitched version of walking-stick-wielding Hackney Heroine Pauline Pearce. “It was just hoodrats getting totally out of control,” she froths, with an indignant swish of her newly dark, single-plaited hair. “I don’t think there was any motivation behind it other than to cause trouble cos they’re bored and want free stuff. Total, total hoodrats. Little shits!” We’re perched on a golden velvet sofa in an upstairs lounge of the Jim Henson Studios in Los Angeles, 26-year-old Leona demurely elegant in a black lace vintage frock and considerably more strident than the 21-year-old X Factor winner of 2006 whose most-heard pronouncement was the hand-wringing squeak, “fanks very much … I can’t believe it!” A lifelong Hackney resident with a Welsh social worker mum and Afro-Guyanese youth offending officer dad, she’s a liberal soul at heart, bemoaning youth-work cutbacks – “Kids need somewhere to go, so they’re not bored on the street” – but this was beyond her political pale. “I don’t care how poor you are,” she scoffs, “there’s no excuse for setting fire to people’s property. I was, ‘This is our community and you’re setting fire to your neighbour’s house? You could kill someone!’ They weren’t even thinking about it.” She blames Ver System: “My dad was saying, ‘It’s been a long time coming,’” she notes. “He was, ‘We have so many laws and regulations against us that we can’t discipline the kids. There is no discipline. ‘ It’s a lack of discipline and respect. Yeah, some were opportunists just taking stuff but the ones setting light to stuff? When I was young there were always troublemakers but it’s changed so much.” ‘Simon and I mostly agree but there have been arguments definitely … sometimes I say: nooo thanks!’ If she’s become unexpectedly opinionated, she remains, simultaneously, a supernaturally gentle soul, the barefoot vegetarian who recently rescued “a bunny in peril!” from a homeless drunk in LA. “I felt so sad for both of them,” she laments. She couldn’t help the bum, but she could help the bunny – “She was about this big (circles fingers), she would’ve died” – offering him $20 to take her home. “But he wouldn’t take it,” she balks, “so I gave him a hundred dollars. He saw me coming a mile off, probably does it all the time! But I love her soooo much …” Leona’s as-yet-unfinished third album (out November, featuring a production spectrum from UK grime whizz Naughty Boy to US balladeer Ryan Tedder and Emeli Sandé ) is called Glass Heart “because it’s about being fragile, but also open and honest”. We hear a few songs other than the current corking dancefloor single Collide, its backing track now credited to Swedish DJ Avicii after a copyright rumpus (“I don’t get involved in record label politics,” notes Leona, adding that monetary/legal wrangling generally “actually hurts my soul”). There’s the orchestral soundscape of Sugar, the eastern-tinged 80s electro of Fire Flies. Most intriguingly, there’s the stunning trip-hop of Trouble (“It’s very London,”), as if Kate Bush in 1979 was transported through a pop Tardis to front Massive Attack in 1991. Her spectral vocal imploring “I’m a whole lot of trouble.” “It’s definitely true,” she smiles. “I am a whole lot of trouble.” This is tremendous news, the lyrics centring on the relationship transition between her childhood sweetheart, electrician-turned-talent-scout Lou Al-Chamaa, from whom she split in 2010 (she never discusses her “sacred” private life) and her new beau, the incandescently handsome, Timberlake-esque German dancer Dennis Jauch, 22. “It’s about getting into a new relationship knowing there’s a past and it can be trouble for you, so don’t be a fool,” she demurs. She and Dennis have much in common, he the winner of Germany’s So You Think You Can Dance? and backing dancer on Leona’s debut 2010 Labyrinth tour. The only German he’s taught her so far is for “how are you?” (” Wie geht es dir ,” she splutters none-too-convincingly), even if he is, as she cackles gamely, “a hot teacher … definitely!” Leona Lewis’s singing voice is a world-class sonic phenomenon which causes involuntary tears on contact (and it isn’t just me), a profoundly emotive gift which her almighty label bosses, Syco’s Simon Cowell and Sony Music Entertainment’s chief creative officer Clive Davis do no favours in their persistent comparisons to the tri-headed hydra of yodelsome 90s balladeering: Whitney, Mariah and Celine. If Leona hasn’t, miraculously, released 15 albums of weedy Westlife B-sides already, we only have her to thank. If she hadn’t persistently said no, she “would’ve had a gazillion albums by now!” Instead she’s slowly found her niche, which we might call epic spook-pop. The bigwigs, certainly, balked at Bleeding Love, Leona’s choice for her debut single proper in 2007: “Everyone said, ‘It’s weird, it won’t work on the radio’” (it went to No 1 in 34 countries). No wonder Simon Cowell “really trusts my instincts”, allowing her “any amount of time I want” to complete her albums unlike, say, every other artist in the history of Simon Cowell’s roster. Sometimes, though, he’ll still send weedy songs “and I’ll be, ‘Nooooo thanks!’ Simon and I mostly agree but there have been arguments definitely.” Do the top brass understand the new album? “Um, they’re slightly scared!” [Giggles head off.] ‘I need my privacy and I know where not to go … plus in Hackney there’s no photographers’ The world knows little, still, about the enigmatic Leona Lewis. She has homes in both Hackney and LA (where she keeps a horse, alongside the bunny) and is almost never in the public eye, her almost wizardly between-albums disappearing act leading us to think: what has he done with her? “He’s put her in a tower!” she hoots, which is exactly what we think, as if Simon Cowell has locked her, Rapunzel-like, in a showbiz castle turret until the songs are complete and a voice booms upwards to the prison balcony: “Come, my pretty, it is time .” In truth, she says, she’s absent from showbiz by wilful design: “I need my privacy and I know where not to go”; plus “in Hackney there’s no photographers”. She eschews The Game. “I’ve seen people, with my own eyes, call photographers when they’re here,” she blinks. “Americans and British. That’s not what I’m about at all “. This year, she discovered “friends” had sold stories to the tabloids: “People I’ve trusted who’ve betrayed me, just … evil people”. When she disappears she’s usually campaigning against cruelty to animals; now an ambassador for WSPA (World Society for the Protection of Animals) she visits bear and horse sanctuaries worldwide. She is also a militant vegetarian to the extent of controlling the catering on her photo shoots, video shoots and tours. “Some people are really funny about it,” she notes. “But I’m like, ‘If you’re gonna have that attitude, don’t do the job.’ Seriously, it really annoys me. I’m just not gonna pay for cruelty!” Was she always this robust, underneath all that fluttering confetti? “On the X Factor, a lot of people perceived I was really shy, a little flower,” she decides. “But really I was young. It’s all about finding your voice. I’m very sensitive but I’m also ambitious and very hard. You have to be, to do this.” We adjourn downstairs to the recording studio where assembled “people” (PR, A&R man, vocal engineer) make jokes, much to Leona’s mirth, about tiny LA dogs wearing dinosaur-shaped coats. Suddenly, a voice shimmers throughout the room. Leona, as if beamed through a Star Trek transporter, is now barely visible behind a charcoal vocal booth curtain, singing a song no one has mentioned, a soaring reverie over mournful piano and strings, called Blank Page. “I am a blaaaaaank page,” she serenades, a soul-bending power lilt somewhere between Sinéad O’Connor and Barbra Streisand, “waiting for life to start.” It might just do for Leona what Someone Like You has done for Adele. Confronted by the force of this year’s other Hackney Heroine there’s no talk here, any more, of Hollywood hounds in jerkins. Instead: total silence. Other than the sound of a reporter’s ruined mascara descending towards the floor. Leona Lewis Pop and rock Simon Cowell The X Factor guardian.co.uk

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Leona Lewis: the Hackney heroine has given Simon Cowell a lesson in taste

Collide singer talks epic spook-pop, riots and dodging Whitney style ballads with Sylvia Patterson Leona Lewis, despite her 9m album sales, three Grammy nominations and audience of 2 billion at the Olympic closing ceremony in Beijing in 2008 (with Jimmy Page on guitar and David Beckham on balls), still lives in Hackney. We meet four days after the London riots and the hitherto mild-mannered, some-might-say drearily namby-pamby, Leona Lewis has turned into a high-pitched version of walking-stick-wielding Hackney Heroine Pauline Pearce. “It was just hoodrats getting totally out of control,” she froths, with an indignant swish of her newly dark, single-plaited hair. “I don’t think there was any motivation behind it other than to cause trouble cos they’re bored and want free stuff. Total, total hoodrats. Little shits!” We’re perched on a golden velvet sofa in an upstairs lounge of the Jim Henson Studios in Los Angeles, 26-year-old Leona demurely elegant in a black lace vintage frock and considerably more strident than the 21-year-old X Factor winner of 2006 whose most-heard pronouncement was the hand-wringing squeak, “fanks very much … I can’t believe it!” A lifelong Hackney resident with a Welsh social worker mum and Afro-Guyanese youth offending officer dad, she’s a liberal soul at heart, bemoaning youth-work cutbacks – “Kids need somewhere to go, so they’re not bored on the street” – but this was beyond her political pale. “I don’t care how poor you are,” she scoffs, “there’s no excuse for setting fire to people’s property. I was, ‘This is our community and you’re setting fire to your neighbour’s house? You could kill someone!’ They weren’t even thinking about it.” She blames Ver System: “My dad was saying, ‘It’s been a long time coming,’” she notes. “He was, ‘We have so many laws and regulations against us that we can’t discipline the kids. There is no discipline. ‘ It’s a lack of discipline and respect. Yeah, some were opportunists just taking stuff but the ones setting light to stuff? When I was young there were always troublemakers but it’s changed so much.” ‘Simon and I mostly agree but there have been arguments definitely … sometimes I say: nooo thanks!’ If she’s become unexpectedly opinionated, she remains, simultaneously, a supernaturally gentle soul, the barefoot vegetarian who recently rescued “a bunny in peril!” from a homeless drunk in LA. “I felt so sad for both of them,” she laments. She couldn’t help the bum, but she could help the bunny – “She was about this big (circles fingers), she would’ve died” – offering him $20 to take her home. “But he wouldn’t take it,” she balks, “so I gave him a hundred dollars. He saw me coming a mile off, probably does it all the time! But I love her soooo much …” Leona’s as-yet-unfinished third album (out November, featuring a production spectrum from UK grime whizz Naughty Boy to US balladeer Ryan Tedder and Emeli Sandé ) is called Glass Heart “because it’s about being fragile, but also open and honest”. We hear a few songs other than the current corking dancefloor single Collide, its backing track now credited to Swedish DJ Avicii after a copyright rumpus (“I don’t get involved in record label politics,” notes Leona, adding that monetary/legal wrangling generally “actually hurts my soul”). There’s the orchestral soundscape of Sugar, the eastern-tinged 80s electro of Fire Flies. Most intriguingly, there’s the stunning trip-hop of Trouble (“It’s very London,”), as if Kate Bush in 1979 was transported through a pop Tardis to front Massive Attack in 1991. Her spectral vocal imploring “I’m a whole lot of trouble.” “It’s definitely true,” she smiles. “I am a whole lot of trouble.” This is tremendous news, the lyrics centring on the relationship transition between her childhood sweetheart, electrician-turned-talent-scout Lou Al-Chamaa, from whom she split in 2010 (she never discusses her “sacred” private life) and her new beau, the incandescently handsome, Timberlake-esque German dancer Dennis Jauch, 22. “It’s about getting into a new relationship knowing there’s a past and it can be trouble for you, so don’t be a fool,” she demurs. She and Dennis have much in common, he the winner of Germany’s So You Think You Can Dance? and backing dancer on Leona’s debut 2010 Labyrinth tour. The only German he’s taught her so far is for “how are you?” (” Wie geht es dir ,” she splutters none-too-convincingly), even if he is, as she cackles gamely, “a hot teacher … definitely!” Leona Lewis’s singing voice is a world-class sonic phenomenon which causes involuntary tears on contact (and it isn’t just me), a profoundly emotive gift which her almighty label bosses, Syco’s Simon Cowell and Sony Music Entertainment’s chief creative officer Clive Davis do no favours in their persistent comparisons to the tri-headed hydra of yodelsome 90s balladeering: Whitney, Mariah and Celine. If Leona hasn’t, miraculously, released 15 albums of weedy Westlife B-sides already, we only have her to thank. If she hadn’t persistently said no, she “would’ve had a gazillion albums by now!” Instead she’s slowly found her niche, which we might call epic spook-pop. The bigwigs, certainly, balked at Bleeding Love, Leona’s choice for her debut single proper in 2007: “Everyone said, ‘It’s weird, it won’t work on the radio’” (it went to No 1 in 34 countries). No wonder Simon Cowell “really trusts my instincts”, allowing her “any amount of time I want” to complete her albums unlike, say, every other artist in the history of Simon Cowell’s roster. Sometimes, though, he’ll still send weedy songs “and I’ll be, ‘Nooooo thanks!’ Simon and I mostly agree but there have been arguments definitely.” Do the top brass understand the new album? “Um, they’re slightly scared!” [Giggles head off.] ‘I need my privacy and I know where not to go … plus in Hackney there’s no photographers’ The world knows little, still, about the enigmatic Leona Lewis. She has homes in both Hackney and LA (where she keeps a horse, alongside the bunny) and is almost never in the public eye, her almost wizardly between-albums disappearing act leading us to think: what has he done with her? “He’s put her in a tower!” she hoots, which is exactly what we think, as if Simon Cowell has locked her, Rapunzel-like, in a showbiz castle turret until the songs are complete and a voice booms upwards to the prison balcony: “Come, my pretty, it is time .” In truth, she says, she’s absent from showbiz by wilful design: “I need my privacy and I know where not to go”; plus “in Hackney there’s no photographers”. She eschews The Game. “I’ve seen people, with my own eyes, call photographers when they’re here,” she blinks. “Americans and British. That’s not what I’m about at all “. This year, she discovered “friends” had sold stories to the tabloids: “People I’ve trusted who’ve betrayed me, just … evil people”. When she disappears she’s usually campaigning against cruelty to animals; now an ambassador for WSPA (World Society for the Protection of Animals) she visits bear and horse sanctuaries worldwide. She is also a militant vegetarian to the extent of controlling the catering on her photo shoots, video shoots and tours. “Some people are really funny about it,” she notes. “But I’m like, ‘If you’re gonna have that attitude, don’t do the job.’ Seriously, it really annoys me. I’m just not gonna pay for cruelty!” Was she always this robust, underneath all that fluttering confetti? “On the X Factor, a lot of people perceived I was really shy, a little flower,” she decides. “But really I was young. It’s all about finding your voice. I’m very sensitive but I’m also ambitious and very hard. You have to be, to do this.” We adjourn downstairs to the recording studio where assembled “people” (PR, A&R man, vocal engineer) make jokes, much to Leona’s mirth, about tiny LA dogs wearing dinosaur-shaped coats. Suddenly, a voice shimmers throughout the room. Leona, as if beamed through a Star Trek transporter, is now barely visible behind a charcoal vocal booth curtain, singing a song no one has mentioned, a soaring reverie over mournful piano and strings, called Blank Page. “I am a blaaaaaank page,” she serenades, a soul-bending power lilt somewhere between Sinéad O’Connor and Barbra Streisand, “waiting for life to start.” It might just do for Leona what Someone Like You has done for Adele. Confronted by the force of this year’s other Hackney Heroine there’s no talk here, any more, of Hollywood hounds in jerkins. Instead: total silence. Other than the sound of a reporter’s ruined mascara descending towards the floor. Leona Lewis Pop and rock Simon Cowell The X Factor guardian.co.uk

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Brian Paddick picked by Liberal Democrats for London mayoral race

2012 race will be rematch between Boris Johnson, Ken Livingstone and former Met deputy assistant commissioner London’s mayoral election next year will be a rematch between Boris Johnson, Ken Livingstone and Brian Paddick, after the former Scotland Yard deputy assistant commissioner was selected as the Liberal Democrats’ candidate for the second time. Paddick, who came third in the 2008 mayoral election when Johnson ousted Livingstone after two terms, was declared the winner after a four-horse race in which the former MP Lembit Opik was eliminated in the first round. Opik lost the safe Lib Dem seat of Montgomeryshire in the 2010 general election. On Friday, in an election run on the single transferrable vote, he secured just 252 votes, coming fourth behind London councillor Brian Haley, with 316. Paddick narrowly won on second preference votes (1,567), with Mike Tuffrey, a member of the London assembly, close behind on 1,476. About 6,000 London party members were eligible to vote. Paddick, who had said he was undecided about standing when he put in his nomination papers in June, has pledged to fight for a “fair deal” for Londoners, to protect local community policing and to hold down bus fares. He thanked Liberal Democrat members “who placed their trust and confidence in me to be their candidate for mayor of London – I won’t let you down”. Opik, who had previously claimed that “forces within the party” were trying to prevent him standing, conceded defeat before the final result was announced. He told the Evening Standard: “I stood because I felt the Lib Dems desperately need to reach out beyond their traditional voters. Boris and Ken are celebrity politicians. I fear the party doesn’t grasp the implication of this.” He was not quitting. “I’ll be back,” he said. Some in the party are resigned to next year’s election being a Johnson-Livingstone rematch, and see the mayoral election as a way of boosting the party’s profile for the London assembly elections taking place at the same time. Currently it holds just three seats out of 25. Nick Clegg, the Lib Dem leader and deputy prime minister, said Paddick provided Londoners with a “real, credible alternative” to Johnson and Livingstone. “Brian’s experience is exactly what London needs right now. Whether dealing with the aftermath of the riots or phone hacking and corruption in the Metropolitan police, Brian has shown in recent weeks that he has the authority and leadership London needs.”The phone hacking scandal that rocked News International, the Metropolitan police and the political establishment is likely to surface in the 2012 contest. Paddick, whose phone was hacked by the now defunct News of the World, is among a group of public figures who have sought permission for a judicial review of the Met’s handling of the phone hacking scandal. Johnson, the incumbent mayor who declared his intention to seek a second term a year ago, came under fire over the summer for having dismissed reports that News of the World’s use of phone hacking was more widespread than first thought as “codswallop” – a claim that turned out to be wide of the mark. Livingstone, who was the first to declare his intention to stand again, was mayor when the original police investigation was conducted in 2006. Paddick, who retired from the police in 2007 after 30 years of service, told the Evening Standard on Friday that reformed gang members should go into school to warn children of the dangers of getting involved in violent crime, after the recent riots in the capital raised fears about violent young people. London politics Brian Paddick Boris Johnson Liberal Democrats Ken Livingstone London Hélène Mulholland guardian.co.uk

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Brian Paddick picked by Liberal Democrats for London mayoral race

2012 race will be rematch between Boris Johnson, Ken Livingstone and former Met deputy assistant commissioner London’s mayoral election next year will be a rematch between Boris Johnson, Ken Livingstone and Brian Paddick, after the former Scotland Yard deputy assistant commissioner was selected as the Liberal Democrats’ candidate for the second time. Paddick, who came third in the 2008 mayoral election when Johnson ousted Livingstone after two terms, was declared the winner after a four-horse race in which the former MP Lembit Opik was eliminated in the first round. Opik lost the safe Lib Dem seat of Montgomeryshire in the 2010 general election. On Friday, in an election run on the single transferrable vote, he secured just 252 votes, coming fourth behind London councillor Brian Haley, with 316. Paddick narrowly won on second preference votes (1,567), with Mike Tuffrey, a member of the London assembly, close behind on 1,476. About 6,000 London party members were eligible to vote. Paddick, who had said he was undecided about standing when he put in his nomination papers in June, has pledged to fight for a “fair deal” for Londoners, to protect local community policing and to hold down bus fares. He thanked Liberal Democrat members “who placed their trust and confidence in me to be their candidate for mayor of London – I won’t let you down”. Opik, who had previously claimed that “forces within the party” were trying to prevent him standing, conceded defeat before the final result was announced. He told the Evening Standard: “I stood because I felt the Lib Dems desperately need to reach out beyond their traditional voters. Boris and Ken are celebrity politicians. I fear the party doesn’t grasp the implication of this.” He was not quitting. “I’ll be back,” he said. Some in the party are resigned to next year’s election being a Johnson-Livingstone rematch, and see the mayoral election as a way of boosting the party’s profile for the London assembly elections taking place at the same time. Currently it holds just three seats out of 25. Nick Clegg, the Lib Dem leader and deputy prime minister, said Paddick provided Londoners with a “real, credible alternative” to Johnson and Livingstone. “Brian’s experience is exactly what London needs right now. Whether dealing with the aftermath of the riots or phone hacking and corruption in the Metropolitan police, Brian has shown in recent weeks that he has the authority and leadership London needs.”The phone hacking scandal that rocked News International, the Metropolitan police and the political establishment is likely to surface in the 2012 contest. Paddick, whose phone was hacked by the now defunct News of the World, is among a group of public figures who have sought permission for a judicial review of the Met’s handling of the phone hacking scandal. Johnson, the incumbent mayor who declared his intention to seek a second term a year ago, came under fire over the summer for having dismissed reports that News of the World’s use of phone hacking was more widespread than first thought as “codswallop” – a claim that turned out to be wide of the mark. Livingstone, who was the first to declare his intention to stand again, was mayor when the original police investigation was conducted in 2006. Paddick, who retired from the police in 2007 after 30 years of service, told the Evening Standard on Friday that reformed gang members should go into school to warn children of the dangers of getting involved in violent crime, after the recent riots in the capital raised fears about violent young people. London politics Brian Paddick Boris Johnson Liberal Democrats Ken Livingstone London Hélène Mulholland guardian.co.uk

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Good for these kids for doing the right thing and for exposing yet another abuse by corporate America and their race to the bottom on wages and exploiting foreign students rather than paying workers in the local community a living wage. From Democracy Now — Alleging Captive Labor, Foreign Students Walk Out of Work-Study Program at Hershey Plant : We look at the story of 300 foreign students who came to the United States as part of a work-study program and found themselves engaged in what they refer to as captive labor at a Hershey’s packing plant in Palmyra, Pennsylvania. The students — from Eastern Europe and Asia — went on strike two weeks ago, after they were reportedly required to lift heavy boxes, work eight-hour shifts beginning at 11 p.m., and stand for long periods of time while packing candy on a fast-moving production line. Federal agencies have launched four investigations into the alleged exploitation. The walkout apparently marks the first time that foreign students have engaged in a strike to protest their employment. The guest workers are demanding a return of the $3,000 to $6,000 each student paid for the cultural exchange program to work at Hershey, that Hershey end exploitation of J-1 student cultural exchange workers, and that the 400 jobs the guest workers filled instead be given to local workers paid a living wage. We speak to two of the student guest workers who took part in the strike at the Hershey plant: Decebal Bilan, an economics student from Romania, and Zhao Huijiao, a foreign languages student from China. We are also joined by Saket Soni, director of the National Guestworker Alliance. “Today the J-1 program has essentially become the United States’s largest guest worker program,” says Saket. He notes that while students are recruited ostensibly for cultural exchanges, “they do learn about American culture, just the wrong part of American culture.” Some highlights from the transcript below the fold. JUAN GONZALEZ: We turn now to the story of 300 foreign students who came to the U.S. as part of a work-study program and found themselves engaged in what they refer to as captive labor at a Hershey’s packing plant in Palmyra, Pennsylvania. The students from Eastern Europe and Asia went on strike two weeks ago after they were reportedly required to lift heavy boxes, work eight-hour shifts beginning at 11:00 p.m., and stand for long periods of time while packing candy on a fast-moving production line. Federal agencies have launched four investigations into the alleged exploitation. The student workers recorded an open appeal to Hershey’s CEO John Bilbrey. They’re still waiting for an official response. Here’s a clip from their appeal. AMY GOODMAN: The students came to the United States through a long-established State Department summer J-1 visa program that allows them to work for two months and then travel. However, in recent years, the program has drawn complaints from students about low wages, unexpectedly difficult work conditions. It appears, however, the walkout at the Palmyra plant is the first time foreign students have engaged in a strike to protest their employment. The guest workers are demanding a return of the $3,000 to $6,000 each student paid for the cultural exchange program to work at Hershey, that Hershey end its exploitation of J-1 student cultural exchange workers, and that the 400 jobs the guest workers filled instead be given to local workers paid a living wage. The students have collected more than, oh, 63,000 petition signatures from Americans supporting their demands. JUAN GONZALEZ: A spokesman for Hershey’s, Kirk Saville, said the company—the chocolate company did not directly operate the Palmyra packing plant, which is managed by a company called Exel. He declined our offer to come on the show but did provide this written quote: “Hershey cares deeply about all of its employees and those of its vendors. We were disappointed to learn that some of the students were dissatisfied in the cultural immersion element of the program. Hershey is partnering with the students’ employers to address this in a manner consistent with Hershey’s values. We strongly support Exel’s decision to discontinue the use of the J-1 program in staffing this facility,” end of quote. AMY GOODMAN: Saket Soni, you’re the director of National Guestworker Alliance. Talk about the J-1 program, how these students who came to the United States to do travel and to work ended up doing this kind of full-time work at the plant. SAKET SONI: Well, Amy, you know, this is really the story of how far a corporation is willing to go to cut costs, to deny permanent good jobs to local people, and to maximize profits. The J-1 visa program was started in 1961. It was part of the United States’s effort to win the Cold War. It was part of a goodwill campaign to try to bring in foreign students, like them, and have them meet Americans and learn about the American way. Unfortunately, we’ve come a long way in what the American way is. Today the J-1 program has essentially become the United States’s largest guest worker program. Students like them, from across the world, are recruited ostensibly for cultural exchanges. And they come in, and, like them, they do learn about American culture, just the wrong part of American culture. They learn about corporate greed, and they learn about how American corporations use captive workers. So these workers paid $3,000 to $6,000 apiece. They were expecting work and travel. Instead, they came into a company town, were forced to live in company housing, charged quite a large sum of money, way above market value, for the privilege of living in company housing. And, most importantly, when they started to organize, they faced threats and retaliation. JUAN GONZALEZ: Now, you’ve made the point that companies like Hershey have become less of a direct manufacturer and more of a marketing agent and that they spin off their manufacturing to these suppliers now. SAKET SONI: That’s right. That’s right. I mean, you know, the quote from Hershey that you had up on the screen a little while ago is very instructive. These used to be permanent jobs inside the Hershey chocolate factory. Hershey’s then took those jobs out of the factory, outsourced them, and created four layers of subcontractors between them and these students.

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Storm Lee could unleash torrential rains and floods in Gulf coast states

Mississippi and Louisiana declare state of emergency, and New Orleans put on alert as tropical storm gathers strength Mississippi declared a state of emergency in seven counties on Friday as it prepares for tropical storm Lee. The storm has formed in the waters off Louisiana and is expected to unleash torrential rains along the Gulf coast over the Labor Day weekend. Some areas could receive up to 20 inches of rainfall. Louisiana has also declared a state of emergency, expecting flash flooding. In New Orleans, mayor Mitch Landrieu has taken similar measures for the city. The US national weather service has warned of “torrential tropical rains” for several days. The US army corps of engineers in New Orleans is monitoring developments but does not plan on closing any flood control structures yet, a spokesman said. Tropical storm warnings are in effect from Mississippi to Texas, including New Orleans, and flash flood warnings have been extended along the Alabama coast into the Florida Panhandle. The storm has halved the normal oil production from the Gulf of Mexico. The federal energy agency said it has evacuated 169 of the 617 manned production platforms and 16 of the 62 drilling rigs. The storm is also tantalisingly close to Texas but not close enough to alleviate the state’s worst drought since the 1950s. Lee is the 12th named storm of the Atlantic hurricane season. Storm watchers were also monitoring hurricane Katia, spinning in open waters 705 miles (1,134kms) east of the Leeward Islands and moving west-northwest at 14mph. It regained hurricane strength with maximum sustained winds of 75mph on Friday. The storm is expected to grow in strength but it is too early to say it will hit the US. There was also a slow-moving low pressure system about 450 miles south of Halifax, Nova Scotia, that could turn into a tropical cyclone in the next two days. The new storm warnings come days after the US east coast was hit by hurricane Irene, which caused major damage from North Carolina to New England. Natural disasters and extreme weather United States Louisiana Mississippi Hurricane Irene guardian.co.uk

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Obama backs down on tighter smog regulations

Environmental groups dismayed as president – under pressure from GOP – delays enacting stricter standards until 2013 Barack Obama has bowed to pressure from Republicans in Congress to postpone plans to introduce tighter controls over smog-producing companies. The decision provoked expressions of dismay among environmental groups campaigning for cleaner air. The retreat will add to the growing perception among voters that Obama is a weak president, reluctant to stand up to the Republicans. Obama had insisted he was intent on pushing ahead with tougher rules to force businesses to reduce concentrations of ground-level ozone. But Republicans argued it would increase the burden on businesses at a time when they are struggling and could lead to job losses. The Republican House majority leader, Eric Cantor, had described the proposed regulations as “job-killers”. It is another victory for the Republicans, who only control the House of Representatives but have managed to dictate much of the political agenda in the Democratic-controlled White House and Senate. Republicans, who return to Congress from holiday next week, paralysed Washington in the weeks running up to the summer break by threatening to vote against raising the country’s debt ceiling, forcing Obama to concede substantial spending cuts. The Republican leader in the Senate, Mitch McConnell, hailed Obama’s latest climbdown on Friday. “The president took a step today that highlights the devastating impact on jobs that has been created by this administration’s regulatory overreach. This action alone will prevent more job losses than any speech the president has given,” McConnell said. One of McConnell’s Senate colleagues, John Barrasso, echoed him: “Job creators scored a major victory today in the fight against Washington’s red tape.” Democrats in Congress saw it as a setback. Ed Markey, a Democratic congressman on the House natural resources committee, said: “I am disappointed that the president chose to further delay important clean-air protections that would have helped to prevent respiratory and cardiac disease in thousands of Americans.”Obama had promised to replace weak air-control standards introduced by George W Bush. In a statement, Obama said on Friday the changes would have to be delayed until 2013, after the White House election in November next year. He cited the impact on business as the reason for the delay. Obama insisted he remained committed to the environment. “At the same time, I have continued to underscore the importance of reducing regulatory burdens and regulatory uncertainty, particularly as our economy continues to recover,” he said. His decision overrules the advice of the federal government’s Environmental Protection Agency, a body treated with derision by Republicans, who see it as an embodiment of “big government”. In his statement, Obama told the head of the EPA, Lisa Jackson, to withdraw the proposal to tighten standards. The EPA’s independent panel of advisers earlier this year unanimously agreed that public health would benefit from the introduction of higher standards. Jackson had said the changes would have helped prevent as many as 12,000 premature deaths a year and save $100bn (£61.6bn) in health costs. The new rules would have forced companies to reduce emissions of certain chemicals that help create smog. Dow Chemical said the changes would cost as much as $90bn. Earthjustice, which has launched legal actions aimed at tackling smog-producers, expressed disappointment. Martin Hayden, the group’s vice-president, said: “The Obama administration knows the heavy cost of smog pollution but has made the terrible decision to leave outdated, weak standards in place, leaving thousands of Americans who suffer from lung and breathing problems at the mercy of this dirty air.” Gene Karpinski, president of the League of Conservation Voters, said: “The Obama administration is caving to big polluters at the expense of protecting the air we breathe. This is a huge win for corporate polluters and huge loss for public health.” US domestic policy Barack Obama Pollution Obama administration Activism Republicans Democrats United States US politics Ewen MacAskill guardian.co.uk

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In order for me to feel truly optimistic, I’d have to believe that these lawsuits are intended to break up the banks and bankrupt them, and of course that’s not going to happen. Plus, I can’t help but notice this isn’t the Justice Department and we’re not seeing criminal charges. So is this a real come-to-Jesus moment for the bankers — or kabuki? Are the Feds really going to recover enough of the money they stole? Of course it would be good if they did, but nothing but some high-profile perp walks will really make up for the devastation these bastards have left behind: The federal agency that oversees the mortgage giants Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac is set to file suits against more than a dozen big banks, accusing them of misrepresenting the quality of mortgage securities they assembled and sold at the height of the housing bubble, and seeking billions of dollars in compensation. The Federal Housing Finance Agency suits, which are expected to be filed in the coming days in federal court, are aimed at Bank of America, JPMorgan Chase, Goldman Sachs and Deutsche Bank, among others, according to three individuals briefed on the matter. The suits stem from subpoenas the finance agency issued to banks a year ago. If the case is not filed Friday, they said, it will come Tuesday, shortly before a deadline expires for the housing agency to file claims. The suits will argue the banks, which assembled the mortgages and marketed them as securities to investors, failed to perform the due diligence required under securities law and missed evidence that borrowers’ incomes were inflated or falsified. When many borrowers were unable to pay their mortgages, the securities backed by the mortgages quickly lost value. Fannie and Freddie lost more than $30 billion, in part as a result of the deals, losses that were borne mostly by taxpayers. In July, the agency filed suit against UBS, another major mortgage securitizer, seeking to recover at least $900 million, and the individuals with knowledge of the case said the new litigation would be similar in scope. Private holders of mortgage securities are already trying to force the big banks to buy back tens of billions in soured mortgage-backed bonds, but this federal effort is a new chapter in a huge legal fight that has alarmed investors in bank shares. In this case, rather than demanding that the banks buy back the original loans, the finance agency is seeking reimbursement for losses on the securities held by Fannie and Freddie. And my contention that the only suitable response is jail time is validated by this: But privately, financial service industry executives argue that the losses on the mortgage-backed securities were caused by a broader downturn in the economy and the housing market, not by how the mortgages were originated or packaged into securities. In addition, they contend that investors like A.I.G. as well as Fannie and Freddie were sophisticated and knew the securities were not without risk. If there is no punishment, there is no reason to think they won’t do this, or something just as bad, all over again. Because obviously, they have no reason to think they can’t BS their way out of it. After all, it’s worked so far!

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