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Policeman blinded by gunman Raoul Moat arrested

David Rathband, who was shot last year by Raoul Moat as he sat in his police car, has been arrested on suspicion of assault The police officer blinded by gunman Raoul Moat has been arrested on suspicion of assault. Father-of-two PC David Rathband was held by officers on Tuesday over an incident at his home in Northumberland, sources said. The 43-year-old was shot twice on 4 July last year as he sat unarmed in his patrol car. Officers were called to reports of an assault at his address in Cramlington just before midnight. A Northumbria police spokeswoman said: “Officers attended and a 43-year-old man was arrested on suspicion of assault. Inquiries are ongoing.” Rathband has been praised for his charity work in the wake of his injuries sustained last year. He set up the Blue Lamp Foundation, an organisation offering help to injured members of the emergency services, last year. Raoul Moat guardian.co.uk

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Riots policy warning from Lib Dem Home Office minister

Lynne Featherstone writes in her local newspaper that government must not ‘jump to conclusions’ in riots postmortem A Home Office minister has warned the government against “jumping to conclusions” as it goes about crafting its response to the riots. Liberal Democrat Lynne Featherstone has written in her local newspaper that the “government’s job is to ensure that its citizens are safe … but we do have to be careful about jumping to conclusions”. Her call for more caution in devising measures for dealing with the riots is in line with the Lib Dem position that they will put a brake on some of the responses. Immediately after the riots, David Cameron and ministers floated a plethora of policy responses, including the eviction of the families of rioters from council houses and a consultation on halting benefit payments to offenders. The PM also gave emphatic support for tough sentences handed out by the courts, intended to be “exemplary” and to deter people from taking part in riots in the future. Asked about this, Cameron said it was “very good” that courts had been able to send out a tough message. In her article in the Ham & High, the Hornsey and Wood Green MP wrote: “The government was criticised for not having its senior members on the spot (that left me to go out on the airwaves as duty minister at the Home Office on the Sunday and Monday). It is now being criticised for knee-jerk reactions and for raising questions about police tactics. It is the government’s job to ensure that its citizens are safe – and if there are questions that need answering on operational decisions, that is appropriate. But we do have to be careful about jumping to conclusions.” She singled out a fresh area of concern. She said: “One question I particularly want to keep an eye on is the large number of people who were on parole who have been arrested, and those who have ‘previous’ – which raises questions about how our parole and prison systems work (or don’t).” She added: “We all know that the stories which catch the headlines can be far from typical – we need a full analysis of the whos, the whats and the whys so that future decisions are based on reality rather than everyone just cherry-picking the evidence to support what they always wanted anyway.” The Lib Dem leader Nick Clegg sought to slow the run of suggestions immediately after the riots. The deputy prime minister instead stressed plans to rehabilitate offenders through the government’s work programme, softening the hardline language used 24 hours earlier by the prime minister. He also announced a cross-party inquiry into the causes of the riots after brokering a deal between Cameron and the Labour leader, Ed Miliband. He also appeared to put the brakes on the benefit withdrawal plans, saying they would not be entered into without extensive consideration. He told a press conference in Whitehall: “We are going to take our time to look at this. Of course you need to be proportionate, of course you need to be careful, of course you don’t want to create unintended consequences where the taxpayer ends up footing more of the bill or we create more social problems or problems of law and order.” Last week, two senior legal experts warned against tough sentencing for riot-related offences. Lord Macdonald, who led the prosecution service in England and Wales for five years, warned that the courts risked being swept up in a “collective loss of proportion”, passing jail terms that lack “humanity or justice”. Fellow Lib Dem peer Lord Carlile, the barrister who was until this year the government’s independent adviser on terrorism strategy, warned against ministerial interference in the judicial process, arguing that “just filling up prisons” would not prevent future problems. Other senior Lib Dems also expressed deep concern over the government’s so-called security crackdown. The former Lib Dem leader Sir Menzies Campbell described himself as being part of a growing “movement” calling for a more considered response to last week’s riots. “With all due deference to the prime minister, politicians should be neither cheering nor booing in the matter of sentencing. It is an important part of our constitutional principles that political influence is not directed at the judicial system,” he said. UK riots Crime Police Liberal Democrats Lynne Featherstone Youth justice UK criminal justice Allegra Stratton guardian.co.uk

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Libya: hunt for Gaddafi – live updates

• Pro-Gaddafi forces still fighting in east, south and Tripoli • Gaddafi ‘was nearly caught yesterday’ • Doctors running short of supplies in capital • At least part of NTC moves to Tripoli • Italy unfreezes £300m for rebels •  Read a summary of today’s key developments 2.36pm: The rebels are saying they believe they have Muammar Gaddafi trapped in an apartment complex near to his compound, Sky News is reporting. 2.32pm: Rebels believe they have got Muammar Gaddafi and an unspecified number of his sons surrounded in Tripoli, Reuters is reporting. 1.56pm: Gaddafi’s sons are thought to be holed-up to the east of Tripoli airport, Martin Chulov reports after witnessing heavy fighting in the area. Speaking via Skype Martin said: The airport seems to be under a concerted attack from fields to the east which appears to be a Gaddafi stronghold … That’s where figures like Saif al-Islam Gaddafi are expected to have fled to and are regrouping and continue to fight. He also reported seeing Nato jets bomb Tripoli to the south of the Bab al-Aziziya compound at around 12.30pm. “It is a city which is by and large calm, but every now and again we see these spasms of violence. And that’s situation that’s going to continue for the next few days,” he said. On the hunt for Gaddafi, Martin said: People are guessing – there doesn’t seem to be any informed lead as to where he may be. His son, or his sons in general, are thought to be in Tripoli. This area near the airport is being heavily contested by members of the standing Gaddafi army, it is not mercenaries. They are continuing to do fight, now why are they doing so? There has to be a reason – they are protecting not only their own interests but they are protecting the regime itself. It is reasonable to deduce that. It seems hard for them to have slipped the drag net around Tripoli. I would think the sons are in town. The father – who knows – it’s anyone’s guess. But central Tripoli is slowly returning to normal, Martin said. “Shops are very slowly starting to open. We could actually go out and buy some water and food today. We could get hold of some petrol and we haven’t been able to do that for three or four days, and there are water tankers turning up in the suburbs, so there are slight signs of normality … [But] it is a city where the situation is still fluid … and the old guard is still around. It does occasionally poke its head up and say ‘hey we are here’. 1.10pm: Here is a lunchtime summary . Libya • Libyan rebels are fighting pro-Gaddafi forces in the east of the country and are continuing to face resistance in Tripoli. In Sirte, Muammar Gaddafi’s home town, loyalists were still putting up a fierce fight ( see 10.55am ). Opposition leaders say they are trying to negotiate a peaceful surrender of the city. Near the town of Bin Jawad, 350 miles (560km) south-east of Tripoli, pro-Gaddafi forces ambushed rebels and killed 20 of them, according to the Associated Press news agency. Rebels have also seized several parts of Sebha, another Gaddafi stronghold – this one much further south – where fighting is still taking place. You can see on this map where Bin Jawad, Sebha and Sirte are in relation to Tripoli . • Muammar Gaddafi’s whereabouts remain unknown. Paris Match magazine said Libyan commandos nearly caught him yesterday and Libyan and Arab intelligence services believe he is still in Tripoli ( see 12.15pm ). Liam Fox, the British defence secretary, said Nato was involved in the hunt for the Libyan leader ( see 11.58pm ). The rebels have offered $2m and an amnesty to the person who captures or kills him. Yesterday Gaddafi told a television channel in a phone call he was prepared to fight “until victory or martyrdom”. His son Saadi – previously reported captured – sent emails to CNN offering to broker a truce ( see 11.14am ). • Doctors are running desperately short of medical supplies in Tripoli. One told the Guardian: “We don’t have operation theatre nurses and emergency nurses, paramedics, ambulances” ( see 12.23pm ). • At least part of the rebel National Transitional Council has now moved to Tripoli, rebel prime minister Mahmoud Jibril said at a press conference with Silvio Berlusconi in Milan ( see 12.32pm ). He gave no further details. • Italy has begun unfreezing €350m (£308m) of Libyan funds for the use of the rebels ( see 12.25pm ). Italian oil and gas group Eni (ENI.MI) is expected to sign a deal on Monday in Benghazi to supply a “large” amount of gas and petrol for free to the Libyans, Berlusconi said at the press conference with Jibril, who is touring Europe trying to get allies to unlock frozen Libyan funds. The NTC says it needs at least $5bn (£3bn) of what may be as much as $110bn frozen worldwide to pay salaries, maintain services and repair oil facilities. The UN security council is set to vote tonight on freeing up $1.5bn for them. South Africa has been blocking this but a vote of the full council does not need to be unanimous. Jibril said the “biggest destabilising element” threatening Libya right now was if the NTC could not deliver services and pay salaries ( see 12.27pm ). The Arab League recognised the NTC as the government of Libya ( see 10.55am ). Senior diplomats from more than 30 countries are meeting in Istanbul today to discuss ways of assisting the new Libyan government. • Fox said there were no plans to put British “boots on the ground” as part of any post-conflict peacekeeping force in Libya ( see 11.58am ). Any such force should be made up of African and Arab troops, he said. • Four Italian journalists held by Gaddafi loyalists have been freed ( see 11.17am ), as has American journalist Matthew VanDyke, who was missing for six months ( see 10.59am ). Syria Syrian security forces attacked a renowned anti-regime cartoonist early today in Damascus and left him bleeding along the side of a road ( see 11.23am ) 12.41pm: Footage purporting to show Ayesha Gaddafi’s opulent bathroom compete with jacuzzi, sauna and flatscreen TV, has been uploaded to YouTube (see above). 12.32pm: Jibril says he should be in Libya right now but it’s so important to get this money that he has had to visit different countries to sort it out. Al-Jazeera points out that a third of all Italy’s petrol needs come from Libya, which Italy used to rule as colonial power. Jibril also said at least part of the NTC had moved to Tripoli. It is unclear what this means in practical terms: who has moved there and what exactly they are doing. 12.28pm: Mahmoud Jibril says they are now trying to rebuild infrastructure in Libya, and lists other steps the NTC has to carry out – but they need money to do so. 12.27pm: Mahmoud Jibril is speaking now. He expresses his thanks to Berlusconi and Italy, and says he is urgently trying to get all this money unfrozen to pay salaries, which people have not received for months. 12.25pm: Italian prime minister Silvio Berlusconi and the Libyan rebel NTC’s Mahmoud Jibril are holding a joint press conference in Milan right now. Berlusconi has said an agreement will be signed in Benghazi on Monday regarding gas and oil. He said he wanted to unfreeze $350m (£214m) for the rebels. 12.23pm: Muad Pensasi, a volunteer doctor in Tripoli, said medics are running desperately short of supplies as they work round the clock to treat the wounded. In a telephone interview from a field hospital near the Bab al-Aziziya compound, Pensasi said: We have a lot volunteers and they did their best but they don’t have medical experience. It is too hard to work for 24 hours a day without rest but we try to do our best. Pensasi said the hospital had run out of oxygen cylinders and urgently needed medication, surgical instruments, vaccines and trained staff. “We don’t have operation theatre nurses and emergency nurses, paramedics, ambulances,” he said. He recounted the “horrible” experience of seeing the bodies of 26 rebel fighters bought to the hospital. He said the men had been executed in an underground prison. “They had gunshot injuries all over their bodies,” he said. The stench of the bodies suggested the incident had occurred a few days ago, he said. Two of those shot at had escaped the execution by hiding under blankets, he said. It was quieter today, he said. 12.15pm: Muammar Gaddafi was almost captured yesterday , the French magazine Paris Match is reporting. Libyan commandos came close to finding him when they raided a private home where he appeared to have been hiding, the magazine reported today. Gaddafi was gone when the commandos got to the safe house in central Tripoli when the agents arrived at about 10am local time (9am BST – as the helpful Twitter stream ” Time in Libya ” can tell you) following a tip-off from a credible source. The magazine said the rebels found evidence Gaddafi had spent at least one night there – although it was not clear how recently. Libyan and Arab intelligence sources still believe Gaddafi is in Tripoli, Paris Match said. 11.58am: In this morning’s BBC interview, Liam Fox , the British defence secretary, confirmed that Nato “intelligence and reconnaissance assets” were helping in the search for Muammar Gaddafi and had been heavily active in carrying out airstrikes against the Libyan leader’s forces. He also seemed to go further than William Hague, the foreign secretary, did in insisting that British troops would not be involved in enforcing law and order in the new Libya. Any international security force should be drawn from African and Arab countries. We have absolutely no plans to have any British boots on the ground. 11.44am: Extraordinary footage has emerged purporting to show the liberation of Tripoli’s notorious Abu Salim prison. The doors to individual cells were smashed open using sledgehammers and bars, to screams of delight from inmates. There is no sign in the footage of Matthew VanDyke, the American journalist, who was one of those released from the jail according to his mother ( see 10.59am ). The Dutch broadcaster NOS has footage of hangers full of dozens of Gaddafi’s tanks. The tanks, at a military airbase, were largely undamaged, it reports. 11.23am: Activist group Avaaz links to Facebook pictures of injured Syrian cartoonist Ali Ferzat in hospital. My colleague Nour Ali (a pseudonym) has the full story here . Avaaz says Ferzat was driving back from his office at 4am this morning when masked gunmen driving a van set upon him in Omayyad Square in central Damascus. Avaaz’s Henrietta McMicking said: He tried to resist arrest but was badly beaten, and his hands in particular were targeted. He was forced into the van and taken away. Ali Ferzat was held for a few hours before his body was dumped on the Airport Road where he was found by some passers-by. The cartoonist was resuscitated and then taken to al Razi Hospital where he is now. Following a medical examination it now appears that his left hand is broken, he has cuts to the head and face as well severe bruises to the chest. 11.17am: Four Italian journalists held by Gaddafi loyalists have been freed, according to the Italian newspaper Corriere della Sera . The four are: La Stampa’s Domenico Quirico; Elisabetta Rosaspina and Giuseppe Sarcina of Corriere della Sera; and Claudio Monici of Avvenire, the newspaper of the Italian bishops’ conference. 11.14am: CNN is reporting that emails from Muammar Gaddafi’s son Saadi (left) show him proposing some sort of truce to save Tripoli from “a sea of blood”. Saadi told CNN in the emails that he had the authority to negotiate and discuss a ceasefire with US and Nato officials. He wrote: I will try to save my city Tripoli and 2 millions of people living there … otherwise Tripoli will be lost forever like Somalia … [Without a ceasefire] soon it will be a sea of blood. The rebels had reported that Saadi had been captured, although the CNN story suggests he no longer is. Two of Gaddafi’s other sons, Saif and Mohammed, also slipped out of rebel hands somehow – or were never in them in the first place. 11.06am: Al-Jazeera has new footage inside the network of Muammar Gaddafi’s tunnels underneath his compound (above). Rebels are combing the network for clues to the whereabouts of the Libyan leader, according to the report by Andrew Simmons. 10.59am: Matthew VanDyke, an American journalist missing in Libya for the last six months, has been freed from Tripoli’s notorious Abu Salim prison, according to his mother, the Washington Post reports . “He sounds good,” said Sherry VanDyke, a retired Baltimore school principal, who had spent months lobbying lawmakers and human rights organisations to find information about her only child. “He sounds just like himself,” she said. On Wednesday, several Libyans arrived at his cell and released him, his mother said. “At first he thought they were coming to kill him,” she added. The prison had been liberated by rebel fighters, and he was led to a compound that he told his mother was safe. 10.55am: The Arab League has now recognised the rebel National Transitional Council as the legitimate government of Libya . The BBC is reporting that pro-Gaddafi troops have not retreated back to Sirte, Muammar Gaddafi’s hometown, as expected, but are still attacking. One rebel with an American accent said, “I don’t know what they’re fighting for. They must believe in this guy [Gaddafi], I don’t know. But we’ve got them in a corner now.” Senior diplomats from more than 30 countries are meeting in Istanbul today to discuss ways of assisting Libya’s opposition. Turkish officials say Mahmoud Jibril, prime minister in the Libyan rebel National Transitional Council, will attend, although he is also apparently due in Italy today to talk to Silvio Berlusconi about securing the release of billions of dollars of frozen Libyan assets. The Libyan opposition say they urgently need at least $5bn (£3bn) in frozen assets to pay state salaries, maintain vital services and repair critical oil facilities. Analysts estimate that as much as $110bn is frozen in banks worldwide. South Africa has been preventing the release of $1.5bn of the funds in the UN security council committee that monitors the sanctions against Libya. All 15 nations on the committee must agree, so the US is tonight putting the matter to the full security council, which does not need a unanimous vote. This morning, Liam Fox, the British defence secretary, told the BBC: I think there will be huge moral pressure on South Africa. They wanted the world at one point to stand with them against apartheid. I think they now need to stand with the Libyan people, help unfreeze their assets and allow their authorities to get access to the capital they need to rebuild the country and it’s disappointing the stance they have taken so far, I hope that even now they will change their minds. Meanwhile the director of Unesco, the UN’s cultural agency, is warning Libyans to guard against the looting of the country’s cultural heritage during the current turmoil. 10.50am: Syrian security forces attacked a renowned anti-regime cartoonist early today in Damascus and left him bleeding along the side of a road, human rights activists said. Ali Farzat, who is in his 60s, was hospitalised after passers-by found him “heavily beaten and physically abused,” said Omar Idilbi, a spokesman for the Local Co-ordination Committees, an activist group that monitors protests in the country. 10.40am: My colleague Paddy Allen has updated his interactive graphic of the fighting in Libya . 9.27am: Tripoli resident Saeed Ashour, who lives 300m from the Rixos hotel, filmed this video footage of the green flag of the Gaddafi regime being torn down outside the hotel after trapped journalists were freed on Wednesday. YouTube footage outside Tripoli’s Rixos hotel after international journalists and politicians fled the building Ashour also filmed a burnt out supermarket in the area. 9.10am: Welcome to Middle East Live. Here’s a summary of the main developments overnight: • The fighting in Tripoli is reported to have eased on Thursday morning, but residents fear pro-Gaddafi snipers. Muammar Gaddafi’s supporters continue to fight in some areas, including the airport, but it is unclear whether this represents a desperate last stand or the start of a guerilla campaign . A Tripoli resident tells al-Jazeera of her fears of sniper attacks in the city • South Africa is stalling attempts by the US to release $1.5bn (£910m) of frozen Libyan assets for use by the National Transitional Council. South Africa’s UN ambassador Baso Sangqu said the NTC had not yet been recognised by the African Union. • Rebel columns are closing in on the coastal city of Sirte, Gaddafi’s birthplace, where loyalist troops fired Scud missiles at the rebel-held town of Misrata. ” Sirte is now our main challenge,” rebel spokesman Mohammad Zawawi said. “If we can [take Sirte] it’ll mean the whole coast, the north side of Libya, will be clear and we can look to the south,” he said. • Libyan officials continue to switch sides as the rebels gain the upper hand . The latest defections include the deputy director of foreign security in the Libyan intelligence service, General Khalifah Mohammed Ali, and health minister Mohammed Hijazi. The Guardian’s Luke Harding toured Tripoli’s abandoned government offices and rifled through the papers of the former prime minister. • Nato is using intelligence resources and electronic tracking devices to try to track down Gaddafi, as the National Transitional Council offers a £1m reward and amnesty for the capture or killing of the Libyan leader. The SAS is leading the hunt for Gaddafi , according to the Daily Telegraph. Writing in the Independent, Gordon Corera points out that Britain’s secret service is now hunting the man it once did deals with . The NTC is using mini-helicopter drones to track down Gaddafi’s forces , according to the New York Times. • The Times tours Ayesha Gaddafi’s opulent mansion after it was ransacked by rebels . Inside were marbled floors and chandeliers, and sitting in a cavernous round hall beneath a sweeping circular staircase was a huge gold sofa shaped like a mermaid with Ayesha’s head. • Journalists freed from the Rixos hotel after being held at gunpoint by Gaddafi loyalists have been recounting their “nightmare” ordeal. They were freed in cars provided by International Committee of the Red Cross and the Chinese embassy. • Four Italian journalists who were kidnapped in Libya after their driver was killed in an ambush are being held unharmed by Gaddafi loyalists , an Italian foreign ministry force said. The journalists were stopped forcibly while driving near Zawiya, 30 miles west of Tripoli, “by unknown forces” who then handed them over to the loyalists. They were later taken to the capital, Tripoli. La Stampa profiles of all four journalists : its own Domenico Quirico; Elisabetta Rosaspina and Giuseppe Sarcina of Corriere della Sera; and Claudio Monici of Avvenire, the newspaper of the Italian bishops’ conference. Libya Muammar Gaddafi Arab and Middle East unrest Middle East US foreign policy Nato Syria Bashar Al-Assad Matthew Weaver Paul Owen guardian.co.uk

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Yes, you heard it here first. Programs that have lifted the poverty rate, empowered people to live independently – saving lives have made us “weaker” according to VP wannabe, Marco Rubio. Speaking at the Reagan Library Tuesday night, Rubio said this : These programs actually weakened us as a people. You see, almost forever, it was institutions in society that assumed the role of taking care of one another. If someone was sick in your family, you took care of them. If a neighbor met misfortune, you took care of them. You saved for your retirement and your future because you had to. We took these things upon ourselves in our communities, our families, and our homes, and our churches and our synagogues. But all that changed when the government began to assume those responsibilities. All of a sudden, for an increasing number of people in our nation, it was no longer necessary to worry about saving for security because that was the government’s job. Such a big lie Rubio tells. Before Social Security, one in four senior citizens lived in poverty. Now that number is 14 percent . The Social Security Act also precipitated adoption of far more employer-sponsored pension plans, and the union movement pushed those plans to be competitive and provide retirement security for employees. These are things that didn’t happen before Social Security and Medicare. The same is true of health insurance. Health insurance did not have wide traction as an employee benefit until Medicare was in effect and unions negotiated health benefits for their members. Neither of these things weakened this nation. They strengthened it by keeping senior citizens out of poverty and giving families some breathing room. And of course, those dollars, such as they are, increase the number of consumer dollars available to stimulate the economy. But perhaps the biggest lie of all is Rubio’s lie about how the churches and synagogues cared for the poor. Here’s an excerpt from testimony before Congress back in 1959 from one senior citizen ( PDF ): I am one of your old retired teachers that has been forgotten. I am 80 years old and for 10 years I have been living on a bare nothing, two meals a day, one egg, a soup, because I want to be independent. I am of Scotch ancestry, my father fought in the Civil War to the end of the war, therefore,I have it in my blood to be independent and my dignity would not let me go down and be on welfare. And I worked so hard that I have pernicious anemia, $9.95 for a little bottle of liquid for shots, wholesale, I couldn’t pay for it. Where were her churches – her synagogues? And note her own pride, not wanting to accept charity but willing to *work* for the right to access the medicine she needed for the anemia she contracted out of her hard work and poverty. What our social safety net did more than anything else was create something people had ownership in, that they’d paid for. I’ve heard all the stories about how they take more out than they put in, but that isn’t their fault. That’s the fault of a flawed attitude on the part of lawmakers, who demonize and butcher the intent of these programs in order to claim they harm “free markets” and “weaken us as a nation.” It’s such a hollow argument. It suggests, as Rubio has done in the past, that we are all predestined for one of two baskets: those who have, and those who do not have. It suggests that there is no way out of the “have-not” basket if one is not chosen to step out by a golden benefactor, and it further suggests that deep and harsh income equality are simply the realities of life, that government does not exist for the greater good of its people, but only to serve those who have been tapped as deserving. I would like for these Randian idiots like Rubio to actually live what they preach. Marco Rubio got to college on a football scholarship , though it’s unclear whether scholarships took him all the way through school. And even Rubio walks the fine line, still caught up in the bigger lie. Toward the end of his speech, this: Now, I personally believe that you cannot make changes to these programs for the people that are currently in them right now. My mother just – well she gets mad when I say this. She is in her eighth decade of life and she is on both of these programs. I can’t ask my mom to go out and get another job. She paid into the system. But the truth is that Social Security and Medicare, as important as they are, cannot look for me how they look for her. [ full transcript ] My generation must fully accept, the sooner the better, that if we want there to be a Social Security and a Medicare when we retire, and if we want America as we know it to continue when we retire, then we must accept and begin to make changes to those programs now, for us. In Rubio’s world there is his mother’s generation, and his. Nothing in between. None of us who have also paid for his mother to have those benefits because the promise was that we, too, would enjoy similar benefits. No acknowledgement that much of what he has been able to accomplish rested on the knowledge that his mother was cared for, at least at a minimum level. No acknowledgement. Just the selfish declaration that rather than pay for a future where we value the lives of everyone, we must accept a weaker, more unequal America.

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Petrol bombs thrown at police as riot-hit Edmonton sees fresh attack

Met says no injuries resulted from bombardment of van with incendiaries in north London suburb The Metropolitan police have said that petrol bombs were thrown at a marked police van patrolling a suburb hit by this month’s riots. Officers escaped injury after coming under attack on Wednesday night in Edmonton, north London. A Scotland Yard spokesman said police became aware of “what appeared to be petrol bombs landing near their vehicle” while on routine patrol in Fore Street, a main thoroughfare. “No damage was caused and no injuries were sustained,” a statement said. “[There have been] no arrests at this early stage and inquiries continue.” UK riots London Crime guardian.co.uk

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High street retailers suffer in August

Some retailers have already been driven into launching Christmas displays to drum up sales UK high street sales have suffered their sharpest fall in a year as Britain’s retail sector continued to be buffered by weak consumer confidence. The CBI reported that August has been a disappointing month for many retailers. The news came as flooring firm Floors 2 Go fell into administation, Topps Tiles posted a profits warning and the Co-operative Group reported that trading conditions were the toughest in four decades. The latest CBI Distributive Trades Survey found that 46% of retailers suffered a fall in sales in the first half of August, while just 31% saw turnover rise. The resulting balance of -14 is the worst monthly performance since May 2010. The CBI also reported that many retailers are now cutting back on investment spending, with the threat of a double-dip recession looming. “August was a tough month on the high street,” said Judith McKenna, chair of the CBI distributive trades panel. “Consumers have continued to see their real incomes squeezed by a combination of inflation and weak wage growth.” Analysts predicted that the riots that hit several UK cities this month would also have hurt retailers. “As the pressures of inflation and rising utility bills continue to bear heavily on consumer spending, conditions remain difficult for retailers and this month’s riots are only likely to have exacerbated the situation,” predicted Richard Lowe, head of retail and wholesale at Barclays Corporate. Lowe added that some retailers have already been driven into launching Christmas displays to drum up sales. The CBI also found that a balance of -11% of retailers said they felt more negative about the business situation over the next three months than they did three months ago – the most negative results for 18 months. The data chimes with research published this morning by the Nationwide Building Society, which showed that shoppers are holding back from making “big ticket” payments . Tax increases, weak wage growth and higher energy bills have combined to dent consumer confidence. The Co-operative Group added to the gloom on Thursday by reporting a 10% drop in underlying operating profits, with its food arm suffering a 21% slump in profitability. Peter Marks, its group chief executive, said the challenging business climate was “the worst I have seen in over 40 years of retailing.” Thousands of jobs have been lost across the retail sector in recent weeks, with several firms going bust. On Thursday, Floors 2 Go announced the closure of 53 stores with the loss of almost 200 job. The company is now in the hands of administrators, who blamed the firms’s demise on the general downturn over the last 12 months, and a lack of disposable income from consumers. Topps Tiles also blamed falling consumer confidence, as it reported a 10.4% drop in revenues over the last seven weeks. Shares in the company crashed by 25% after the company admitted that it will not hit City forecasts for the current financial year. Consumer spending Economics Retail industry Confederation of British Industry (CBI) Graeme Wearden guardian.co.uk

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High street retailers suffer in August

Some retailers have already been driven into launching Christmas displays to drum up sales UK high street sales have suffered their sharpest fall in a year as Britain’s retail sector continued to be buffered by weak consumer confidence. The CBI reported that August has been a disappointing month for many retailers. The news came as flooring firm Floors 2 Go fell into administation, Topps Tiles posted a profits warning and the Co-operative Group reported that trading conditions were the toughest in four decades. The latest CBI Distributive Trades Survey found that 46% of retailers suffered a fall in sales in the first half of August, while just 31% saw turnover rise. The resulting balance of -14 is the worst monthly performance since May 2010. The CBI also reported that many retailers are now cutting back on investment spending, with the threat of a double-dip recession looming. “August was a tough month on the high street,” said Judith McKenna, chair of the CBI distributive trades panel. “Consumers have continued to see their real incomes squeezed by a combination of inflation and weak wage growth.” Analysts predicted that the riots that hit several UK cities this month would also have hurt retailers. “As the pressures of inflation and rising utility bills continue to bear heavily on consumer spending, conditions remain difficult for retailers and this month’s riots are only likely to have exacerbated the situation,” predicted Richard Lowe, head of retail and wholesale at Barclays Corporate. Lowe added that some retailers have already been driven into launching Christmas displays to drum up sales. The CBI also found that a balance of -11% of retailers said they felt more negative about the business situation over the next three months than they did three months ago – the most negative results for 18 months. The data chimes with research published this morning by the Nationwide Building Society, which showed that shoppers are holding back from making “big ticket” payments . Tax increases, weak wage growth and higher energy bills have combined to dent consumer confidence. The Co-operative Group added to the gloom on Thursday by reporting a 10% drop in underlying operating profits, with its food arm suffering a 21% slump in profitability. Peter Marks, its group chief executive, said the challenging business climate was “the worst I have seen in over 40 years of retailing.” Thousands of jobs have been lost across the retail sector in recent weeks, with several firms going bust. On Thursday, Floors 2 Go announced the closure of 53 stores with the loss of almost 200 job. The company is now in the hands of administrators, who blamed the firms’s demise on the general downturn over the last 12 months, and a lack of disposable income from consumers. Topps Tiles also blamed falling consumer confidence, as it reported a 10.4% drop in revenues over the last seven weeks. Shares in the company crashed by 25% after the company admitted that it will not hit City forecasts for the current financial year. Consumer spending Economics Retail industry Confederation of British Industry (CBI) Graeme Wearden guardian.co.uk

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MSNBC Blames Conservative Israelis for No Peace, Frets Over ‘Dangerous’ Christian Right

On Wednesday's Last Word on MSNBC, substitute host Chris Hayes of the left-wing Nation magazine used conservative talk radio host Glenn Beck's rally in Israel as an occasion to blame conservative Israelis like Prime Minister Netanyahu for the absence of a peace agreement with the Palestinians and asserted that it was “dangerous” for such Israelis to ally with America's Christian Zionist movement. Hayes – who will soon be host of his own MSNBC show – brought aboard Jeremy Ben-Ami,

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Syrian forces beat up political cartoonist Ali Ferzat

Ferzat, who had become increasingly critical of Bashar al-Assad’s regime, found bleeding at side of Damascus road Syrian security forces have beaten up a prominent Syrian political cartoonist and left him bleeding on the side of a road, in the latest episode of a campaign to quash dissent against the regime of President Bashar al-Assad. Ali Ferzat, 60, is one of Syria’s most famous cultural figures, and his drawings and cartoons have pushed at the boundaries of freedom of expression in Syria. Working from a gallery in central Damascus, Ferzat has long criticised the bureaucracy and corruption of the regime and since March has turned to depicting the uprising. In the early hours of Thursday, masked men seized Ferzat on a Damascus street and beat him up before dumping him, bleeding, on the capital’s Airport Road where he was found by passersby, activists said. Ferzat had become increasingly critical of the regime and its brutal crackdown. He recently appeared on al-Arabiya television and his drawings were avidly followed by Syrians looking for some light relief. In a recent cartoon he critiqued the regime’s offers of reforms, with a picture of an official with rosebuds in his speech bubble – and a coiled turd in his head. Another cartoon showed Assad hurriedly painting railway tracks to escape from a fast-approaching train. Assad has shrugged off international condemnation and continues to use security forces and thugs to kill and arrest opponents to his rule. At least 2,200 people have been killed since mid-March, according to the UN. Fame has in the past offered a measure of protection from the full force of the regime, allowing outspoken cultural figures to get away with more criticism than others. But in recent weeks, a string of artists, writers and actors have been arrested. On 13 July the actor May Skaf was among a group of public figures arrested after a demonstration in the Damascus area of Midan. They were later released. “Ferzat’s arrest is part of an intimidation campaign by security forces who have increasing leeway,” Ammar Abdulhamid, a US-based dissident and son of the actor Mona Wasif said. “At this stage fame may be more of a danger than a protection because the regime does not want any prominent figure to come to the fore and provide a public face for the revolution.” Ferzat was born in the western city of Hama, the scarred city where a tank assault on the eve of Ramadan to bring the city back under government control caused widespread outrage. A graduate of Damascus University’s faculty of fine arts, his initial work in the 1970s appeared in state-run newspapers but by 1980 his cartoons were being published in the French newspaper Le Monde, bringing him international recognition, exhibitions and prizes. In a 2001 interview with the Guardian , Ferzat recalled that before becoming president Assad visited one of his exhibitions and told him that some of the cartoons that had been banned in Syria should have been published. He was later granted permission to publish al-Domar (Lamplighter), a satirical paper which ran from the end of 2000 until 2003, when he closed it under pressure. Nour Ali is the pseudonym for a journalist based in Damascus Syria Newspapers Journalist safety Arab and Middle East unrest Middle East Bashar Al-Assad Nour Ali guardian.co.uk

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UK net migration rises 21%

A drop in the number of people going to live abroad undermines Theresa May’s plan to bring net migration below 100,000 Net migration to Britain jumped by 21% to 239,000 last year fuelled by a sharp fall in the number of people going to live abroad, according to official figures. The Office for National Statistics (ONS) said long-term immigration to Britain in 2010 was 575,000 – similar to the levels seen each year since 2004. At the same time the annual migration statistics show that the number of people leaving Britain to live abroad for more than 12 months was 336,000 in 2010 – 91,000 lower than the 2008 figure for emigration. The rise in net migration appears to be a further blow to the hopes of the home secretary, Theresa May, of bringing the annual figure for net migration down below 100,000 by the time of the next general election. She may, however, take small comfort in the fact that the net migration figure of 239,000 for the year to December 2010 is slightly below the peak of 243,000 recorded for the 12 months to September 2010. The ONS says overseas students make up the main group migrating to Britain, with 228,000 coming to study in 2010 – three-quarters of whom are from outside the European Union. The number of people coming from outside Europe to work with a definite job offer is at its lowest since 2004 at 110,000. But within Europe the figures show a new increase in people coming to work from the former eastern European states, such as Poland, with a net migration figure of 39,000 in 2010 compared with 5,000 in 2009. Immigration and asylum Theresa May Alan Travis guardian.co.uk

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