• Athens parliament passes austerity package amid violent protests • Trade unionist killed as police use tear gas to break up fighting Greece’s attempt to reform itself was marked by death, violence and chaos as mass demonstrations against austerity measures demanded in return for international aid were eclipsed by fierce fighting outside the Athens parliament. As lawmakers debated the package of job and spending cuts, which was approved on Thursday night, a trade unionist died in clashes only metres away. The man, identified as Dimitris Kotsaridis, a 53-year-old construction worker, was pronounced dead shortly after being tear-gassed in running battles between rival groups that were eventually broken up by police. “Enough is enough, society is despairing, the country is collapsing,” said MP Vasso Papandreou, giving voice to widespread fears that Greece is on the verge of imploding. “I will vote in favour [of the measures] but this is the last time. I am struggling with my conscience,” added the deputy, a prominent member of the ruling Pasok party, although no relation to prime minister George Papandreou. The EU and the International Monetary Fund (IMF), which have been keeping Greece afloat with funds drawn down from a €110bn bailout put together in May 2010, have said that without the new package of cuts and tax increases, further aid will be withheld. But with the governing socialists divided over the cutbacks, following a relentless wave of similar measures that have thrown Greece into deep recession, the debate inside the 300-seat house was unusually heated. After voting against a measure abolishing collective wage agreements, Louka Katseli, the former Pasok economy minister, was reportedly expelled from the ruling party. Outside the parliament, in Syntagma Square, 80,000 protesters had gathered in bright sunshine to denounce the policies, before the area was turned into a war zone. In scenes not seen since the collapse of military rule, Greeks turned on Greeks, with some throwing petrol bombs and rocks, others wielding wooden batons and clubs. Television showed black-clad youths, many wearing helmets and gas masks, attacking members of the Communist-affiliated trade union, Pame, which had been attempting to lead a peaceful protest by forming a human chain around the parliament building. Kotsaridis, who was taken to the hospital with scores of other protesters injured in the clashes, is the fourth victim of the crisis so far. Three employees died last year after the bank in which they worked in central Athens was fire-bombed by self-styled anarchists. The unrest, which saw hooded youths setting light to rubbish bins in a wave of destruction around the capital, coincided with the second day of a crippling 48-hour strike called by unions to protest against the new round of austerity cuts. On Wednesday 100,000 protesters gathered in Syntagma. “The message we want to send both abroad and here at home is that we are not going to accept these policies lying down,” said Evangelos Fotio, a private sector employee, sitting on a kerb as he took a respite from chanting himself hoarse. “The government seems to have forgotten to speak to us. All it does it speak to the troika [the EU, the IMF and the European Central Bank] and enforce what they tell it to do.” Ordinary Greeks hit by the cuts have seen their purchasing power halved in the last year. Addressing parliament before the make-or-break ballot, Evangelos Venizelos, the finance minister, said Greeks confronted a choice between “a difficult situation and a catastrophe”. The sacrifices they were being asked to make were “huge” but nothing compared to the crisis they would face if Greece was forced to declare bankruptcy and default on its debt. “There will be absolutely no point in either me attending tomorrow’s euro group meeting or the prime minister attending the EU summit in Brussels on Sunday if this bill is not passed,” he said. But with resistance to the reforms unlikely to abate, unions warned that the passage of the bill would amount to an empty victory. “Our European friends should know that our prime minister will go to the EU summit naked, because the promises he will make will have no backing in his country. The measures will be impossible to implement,” said Ilias Iliopoulos, secretary general of the civil servants’ union, ADEDY. Greece European debt crisis Europe Helena Smith guardian.co.uk
Continue reading …Queen discusses difficulties of forming minority governments with Tony Abbott in Canberra Australia’s turbulent political landscape and minority government were the topics of conversation when the Queen met the country’s opposition leader. The monarch told Tony Abbott, head of the Liberal party, that forming minority governments was always problematic. The sovereign was referring to the experiences of Australia’s prime minister Julia Gillard, who experienced weeks of political wrangling before she was able to form a government after elections last year produced no overall winner. The politician had to rely on a handful of independent members of parliament finally backing her before she could take up office at the head of a minority government. The Labor party leader had called a snap election after taking over from prime minister Kevin Rudd who was deposed in a party coup less than three years after becoming prime minister. The Queen rarely speaks about her personal views in public and her words were recorded by the waiting media who were given access to the first few moments of the audience. But her comments were also formed by recent experiences as there were a number of anxious days before David Cameron was able to form a coalition government with the Liberal Democrats last year. Abbott met the Queen in the morning room of Canberra’s Government House on Friday after the sovereign had held discussions with Gillard. The Queen wasted no time raising the issue of the precarious state of Australian politics saying: “It is an interesting time.” Australia’s minority government is the first in decades and commentators have said it could easily be threatened by a ministerial misdemeanour or by-election. Abbott replied to the Queen’s opening statement saying: “It is never dull, we play our politics tough in this country and give no quarter, Australian society is always dynamic.” He made the Queen laugh when he added: “We like to think we’re the happening place, Your Majesty.” The monarch replied: “A minority government is always a difficult thing to organise,” before talks continued behind closed doors. Gillard has faced criticism for deciding not to curtsey to the Queen when the pair first met, and on Friday she again bowed her head, twice, to the monarch as she walked into the room. Australia Monarchy Julia Gillard guardian.co.uk
Continue reading …The report naming six companies has raised questions about their identities and links to the Pargav slush fund Downing Street faces growing pressure to definitively identify a company named in the report by the cabinet secretary, Gus O’Donnell, into Liam Fox’s links with his best man, Adam Werritty. The former cabinet minister Peter Hain demanded that ministers clarify who is behind the company, IRG Ltd. The report’s publication on Tuesday was intended to draw a line under the furore around Fox’s links with Werritty, which led to Fox resigning as defence secretary. But the report, which named the six companies and individuals that funded Werritty’s Pargav “slush fund”, has raised more unanswered questions. Among the Pargav donors, including the mining tycoon Mick Davis, private investigations firm G3 and billionaire property mogul Poju Zabludowicz, is a company referred to as simply “IRG Ltd”. More than 30 companies and organisations use the same initials, including an Iraq-focused charity, an executive recruitment agency linked to the former Tory minister Virginia Bottomley and a pizza restaurant in Basildon. On Thursday , Hain put down a parliamentary question for the Cabinet Office minister, Francis Maude, demanding he “explain the nature and purpose of IRG Ltd”. Hain said: “The tentacles of this scandal spread even further and the government must come clean on what IRG is. There is no reason for the Cabinet Office to say it knows what IRG is, but not to admit it in public.” Among those being scrutinised is International Resources Group, a US company that claims it “organised and synthesised Afghanistan’s constitutional and religious, secular, and customary laws” after the fall of the Taliban. International Resources Group has refused to return the Guardian’s calls for the last three days. The Guardian visited IRG’s offices at a New York skyscraper and was refused entry by security guards. Its website, IRGltd.com , says it is “an L-3 company”. L-3 has denied that International Resources Group is the same IRG Ltd that funded Pargav. L-3 is a hi-tech telecommunications company in which the Tory donor Michael Hintze’s CQS hedge fund has had a $34m investment. In July, Fox told parliament that the Ministry of Defence would go ahead with plans to award a contract to L-3 to provide the MoD with new rivet joint aircraft to replace Nimrod. A spokesman for CQS, which has been extensively linked to Werritty, said Hintze had “no idea” whether the IRG company named by O’Donnell was the same IRG that is owned by L-3 in which CQS holds an investment. Hintze’s charitable foundation was the biggest single donor to the Atlantic Bridge, the now-defunct charity that appears to have supported Werritty’s jetset lifestyle before the creation of Pargav. Werritty ran the Atlantic Bridge from inside CQS’s plush offices over looking Buckingham Palace. Oliver Hylton, one of Hintze’s closest aides and the manager of his charitable foundation, arranged for Werritty to be given a desk in CQS’s HQ. Hylton, who has been suspended by CQS, was the company secretary of Pargav, which funded Werritty’s first class flights and five star hotels on trips to accompany Fox on official visits abroad. Last week Hylton handed over details of Pargav’s funding to the media. CQS declined to ask Hylton to identify IRG. Another IRG Ltd is a UK company which trades as Odgers Berndston, an executive recruitment agency and it counts former Conservative health secretary, Virginia Bottomley, as a director. It too has denied any connection to Pargav. A third organisation, the Iraq Research Group, said to be led by Stephen Crouch, the former chairman of the Tory Party’s Camarthen West and South Pembrokeshire constituency, has been identified in media reports as a possible candidate. The Guardian has been unable to contact Crouch. Simon Hart, the MP for Camarthen West, said Crouch used to make frequent trips to Iraq and said it was understood locally that he had a background in the military or intelligence. “We always thought he was working for the programme rebuilding Iraq and that he was working for an American company,” Hart said. Hart said Crouch once helped arrange a £5,000 donation to the local party from Tony Buckingham, an oil tycoon with interests in Kurdistan. A search of company records shows that almost 30 companies registered in the UK use the initials IRG. A Cabinet Office spokesman said: No 10 knows which organisation it is, but will not make it public. “We are not going to go into the detail of the people or organisations that are in the report.” A spokesman at Conservative central office said: “The Conservative party has no idea who IRG is.” Liam Fox and Adam Werritty links Liam Fox Adam Werritty Rupert Neate Robert Booth Karen McVeigh Gus O’Donnell guardian.co.uk
Continue reading …The report naming six companies has raised questions about their identities and links to the Pargav slush fund Downing Street faces growing pressure to definitively identify a company named in the report by the cabinet secretary, Gus O’Donnell, into Liam Fox’s links with his best man, Adam Werritty. The former cabinet minister Peter Hain demanded that ministers clarify who is behind the company, IRG Ltd. The report’s publication on Tuesday was intended to draw a line under the furore around Fox’s links with Werritty, which led to Fox resigning as defence secretary. But the report, which named the six companies and individuals that funded Werritty’s Pargav “slush fund”, has raised more unanswered questions. Among the Pargav donors, including the mining tycoon Mick Davis, private investigations firm G3 and billionaire property mogul Poju Zabludowicz, is a company referred to as simply “IRG Ltd”. More than 30 companies and organisations use the same initials, including an Iraq-focused charity, an executive recruitment agency linked to the former Tory minister Virginia Bottomley and a pizza restaurant in Basildon. On Thursday , Hain put down a parliamentary question for the Cabinet Office minister, Francis Maude, demanding he “explain the nature and purpose of IRG Ltd”. Hain said: “The tentacles of this scandal spread even further and the government must come clean on what IRG is. There is no reason for the Cabinet Office to say it knows what IRG is, but not to admit it in public.” Among those being scrutinised is International Resources Group, a US company that claims it “organised and synthesised Afghanistan’s constitutional and religious, secular, and customary laws” after the fall of the Taliban. International Resources Group has refused to return the Guardian’s calls for the last three days. The Guardian visited IRG’s offices at a New York skyscraper and was refused entry by security guards. Its website, IRGltd.com , says it is “an L-3 company”. L-3 has denied that International Resources Group is the same IRG Ltd that funded Pargav. L-3 is a hi-tech telecommunications company in which the Tory donor Michael Hintze’s CQS hedge fund has had a $34m investment. In July, Fox told parliament that the Ministry of Defence would go ahead with plans to award a contract to L-3 to provide the MoD with new rivet joint aircraft to replace Nimrod. A spokesman for CQS, which has been extensively linked to Werritty, said Hintze had “no idea” whether the IRG company named by O’Donnell was the same IRG that is owned by L-3 in which CQS holds an investment. Hintze’s charitable foundation was the biggest single donor to the Atlantic Bridge, the now-defunct charity that appears to have supported Werritty’s jetset lifestyle before the creation of Pargav. Werritty ran the Atlantic Bridge from inside CQS’s plush offices over looking Buckingham Palace. Oliver Hylton, one of Hintze’s closest aides and the manager of his charitable foundation, arranged for Werritty to be given a desk in CQS’s HQ. Hylton, who has been suspended by CQS, was the company secretary of Pargav, which funded Werritty’s first class flights and five star hotels on trips to accompany Fox on official visits abroad. Last week Hylton handed over details of Pargav’s funding to the media. CQS declined to ask Hylton to identify IRG. Another IRG Ltd is a UK company which trades as Odgers Berndston, an executive recruitment agency and it counts former Conservative health secretary, Virginia Bottomley, as a director. It too has denied any connection to Pargav. A third organisation, the Iraq Research Group, said to be led by Stephen Crouch, the former chairman of the Tory Party’s Camarthen West and South Pembrokeshire constituency, has been identified in media reports as a possible candidate. The Guardian has been unable to contact Crouch. Simon Hart, the MP for Camarthen West, said Crouch used to make frequent trips to Iraq and said it was understood locally that he had a background in the military or intelligence. “We always thought he was working for the programme rebuilding Iraq and that he was working for an American company,” Hart said. Hart said Crouch once helped arrange a £5,000 donation to the local party from Tony Buckingham, an oil tycoon with interests in Kurdistan. A search of company records shows that almost 30 companies registered in the UK use the initials IRG. A Cabinet Office spokesman said: No 10 knows which organisation it is, but will not make it public. “We are not going to go into the detail of the people or organisations that are in the report.” A spokesman at Conservative central office said: “The Conservative party has no idea who IRG is.” Liam Fox and Adam Werritty links Liam Fox Adam Werritty Rupert Neate Robert Booth Karen McVeigh Gus O’Donnell guardian.co.uk
Continue reading …Scottish National party leader tells conference: ‘This can be the independence generation’ Support for home rule is growing among Scots of all ages and backgrounds, Alex Salmond has told the Scottish National party conference as he proclaimed: “This can be the independence generation.” Salmond was speaking as the SNP gathered in Inverness at its first annual conference since securing a historic majority in elections to the Scottish parliament this year. The result means that a poll on Scotland’s continued membership of the more than 300-year-old union is now expected in or before 2015. In an attempt to display the differences between the government in Edinburgh and that in Westminster, Salmond pounced on this week’s announcement that a multimillion-pound carbon capture project in Fife had been shelved by the coalition. He said the SNP’s Scottish government was committed to securing the future of the country’s energy resources. “Scotland’s vast energy reserves can power our future as an independent nation. Fuel poverty amid such energy plenty in Scotland makes it essential that our national parliament gains responsibility for the nation’s abundant resources,” he added. Announcing inward investment for a tidal energy project for Orkney, he said: “The SNP government’s efforts to secure such investment from around the world stand in stark contrast to the lack of commitment to Scotland’s energy future from the UK government – as with their shameful decision to pull out of the Longannet carbon capture project.” He sought to portray the SNP as the guardian of Scotland’s energy interests, whether of the fossil fuel or renewable variety. Revenues from oil “bestowed upon us by the creator of the universe” were running at record levels. Salmond cited a recent comment by the prime minister on a trip to Scotland that North Sea oil was “set to be around for many, many years to come”. This was in contrast to what David Cameron’s “geography teacher had told him at Eton”. The first minister added: “We are leading the global revolution in clean, green renewable energy. All of that massive potential means Scotland must gain responsibility for our own resources with independence.” The mood among the SNP faithful was confident and upbeat, despite the possibility that the coming referendum may offer Scots a third option of greater devolution that stops short of independence. Recent polls have indicated that such a “devo-max” alternative may prove popular. After a burst of a cover of Brian Ferry’s “Let’s Stick Together” and video footage of May’s electoral triumph, Salmond, who is to deliver his main speech on Saturday, told them: “The SNP gather in great spirits as the first ever majority government in Scotland, with an unprecedented mandate based on our record, team and vision for Scotland which won us the historic election. We thank the people of Scotland for the faith and trust they have placed in the SNP in government.” Looking ahead to the referendum, which could hail the breakup of the British state, he said: “As well as our renewed mandate, and our record membership, the SNP now has all the momentum in Scottish politics as we build towards the independence referendum. “A change is coming, and the people are eager for progress for Scotland – something that none of the unionist parties acknowledge or allow for.” Alex Salmond Scottish National party (SNP) Scottish politics Scotland Stephen Khan guardian.co.uk
Continue reading …Basque separatist group renounces use of arms after year in which it has observed unilateral ceasefire Read the full text of Eta’s ceasefire statement Half a century of bloodshed in the Basque country has come to a historic close after the separatist group Eta finally renounced the use of arms and sought talks with the Spanish and French governments. Three leaders in masks announced that the group was calling a final halt to the use of bombs and bullets in a video obtained by the Guardian and other news media. “Eta has decided the definitive cessation of its armed activity,” they said. Eta was following a peace script put together with the help of mediators led by the former UN secretary general Kofi Annan, after a year in which it had observed a unilateral ceasefire. The Guardian revealed exclusively on Monday that a definitive end to Eta’s armed campaign, one of Europe’s bloodiest, was due to be announced this week, in response to a petition from Annan’s group and following pressure from Eta’s political allies in the so-called “Basque separatist left”. Annan’s group made its petition late on Monday, urging Eta to make “a public declaration of the definitive cessation of all armed action”. Leaders of the separatist left publicly backed the call the next day . Eta’s swift response indicates that separatist-left politicians such as Rufino Etxeberria and Arnaldo Otegi, both of whom have served Eta-related prison terms, exercise growing power over the group, according to sources close to the negotiations. It also suggests that Eta has lost not just power over political allies, but also the support they once enjoyed among the 10%-20% of Basques who traditionally voted for pro-Eta parties. Spanish prime minister José Luis Rodríguez Zapatero welcomed Eta’s statement as a victory of democracy over terrorism. “For many, too many, years, we have suffered and battled against terror,” he said. “We have done so until democratic reason has won out definitely.” “Ours will be a democracy without terrorism but with memory; the memory of 829 victims and their families, of so many wounded who suffered the unjust and hateful blow of terrorism,” he added. While Zapatero said the task of deciding what happens next should be left to the administration formed after the general election on November 20, it was not immediately clear how the governments of Spain and France would react to Eta’s request for negotiations that it said should address “the resolution of the consequences of the conflict … to overcome the armed confrontation”. That is taken to mean, among other things, talks about the future of the 600 Eta members in Spanish and French jails. The Spanish government will also come under immediate pressure to legalise the Batasuna party and other separatist organisations that were banned for being Eta fronts. Although Zapatero’s government did not meet Annan when it travelled to San Sebastian on Monday, observers speculated that group members – including former Norwegian prime minister Gro Harlem Brundtland – would not have gone to Spain without government consent. The regional prime minister of the Basque country, fellow socialist Patxi López, has already suggested that Eta prisoners be moved to prisons closer to their families. The centre-right People’s party, led by Mariano Rajoy, which has traditionally been tough on Eta, is expected to win a landslide in the general election. If it does it will come under fierce pressure from Eta victims, including the families of PP politicians it has killed, not to concede anything to the group. While other members of Rajoy’s party have insisted that they will accept nothing less than Eta’s surrender and dissolution, he has not commented publicly. “He is a perceptive, intelligent and responsible person,” said Brian Currin, the South African lawyer who has done much of the mediating work. “I am sure he will take the step to lead this process to its natural conclusion.” The announcement came 53 years after Euskadi ta Askatasuna, which means Basque homeland and freedom in the region’s Euskara language, was founded by young separatists while Spain was ruled by the military dictator General Francisco Franco. The group claimed its first victim, a civil guard police officer gunned down in Adona, near the northern Basque city of San Sebastian, in 1968. Most of its victims, however, died in the years after Spain’s transition to democracy and the approval of a statute of partial self-government for the region in 1979. The group has been seriously weakened by police action in recent years, and some observers claim it has simply been
Continue reading …Murdochs face ranks of investor critics at LA event as Labour MP claims type of snooping distinct from hacking Tom Watson, the Labour MP who has been a leading figure in parliament’s investigation into the News of the World phone-hacking scandal, plans to make dramatic allegations about News Corporation’s use of surveillance at the company’s annual shareholder meeting. Watson, who sits on the Commons culture, media and sport committee which has investigated the scandal, said he would be giving News Corp’s shareholders details of previously undisclosed surveillance methods used by the firm that were technologically quite distinct from the phone hacking carried out by NoW staff. He refused to go into details about the allegations he would be making or to offer any evidence to corroborate them. He said: “I want to leave investors in no doubt that News Corporation is not through the worst of this yet and there are more questions for the Murdochs to answer.” Watson has flown to Los Angeles to attend the shareholders meeting, which he will gain access to having been given a proxy vote by the US trade union umbrella group, the AFL-CIO. News Corporation is bracing itself for independent shareholders to vote in considerable numbers at the meeting against the reappointment of Rupert Murdoch and his sons, James and Lachlan, in the wake of the phone-hacking scandal. The scale of the protest outside the Murdoch family is expected to be substantially over 20% of independent shareholders, with several expected to raise questions at the meeting at Fox studios. But their protest will not be enough to topple the family, because Rupert Murdoch controls 40% of the voting shares. Nevertheless, before the meeting there were clear signs of tension at the upper levels of News Corp, with particular emphasis on security at the event and worries about what sort of tone the 80-year-old media mogul will strike in front of those who, alongside him, have a stake in the empire he built. Murdoch’s opening address is expected to show less of the contrition than in London in July, when he told MPs: “This the most humble day of my life.” Instead he is expected to strike a more combative tone, although there are worries that this will alienate some investors and outsiders. The language is understood to reflect the sentiments expressed 10 days ago in a stock exchange filing in which News Corp, in response to the growing army of concerned shareholders, accused its critics of having a “disproportionate focus on the News of the World matter” which
Continue reading …Senior police officers’ judgment questioned as revelations emerge about the behaviour of undercover agents It was shortly after 10am, in a corner at a primary school near Nottingham, that a police agent using the codename UCO 133 began whispering into a microphone hidden in his watch. Mark Kennedy was a long-haired, tattoo-covered undercover police officer who had been living for six years as an environmental activist. But the covert agent with a long-term activist girlfriend was about to set in train a chain of events that would result in one of the most intriguing scandals in policing history. “I’m an authorised police officer engaged in Operation Pegasus,” Kennedy hissed into his £7,000 Casio G-Shock watch, equipped with a hidden microchip. “This weekend, Easter weekend, I am together with a group of activists that are planning to disrupt Ratcliffe-on-Soar power station. Shortly gonna go … and record briefings that subsequently take place throughout the day. So I shall now switch this device off.” He snatched a look at his wrist and read out the time. At that point – 10.06am on 12 April 2009 – one of the British constabulary’s most closely guarded secrets remained intact; Kennedy, perhaps the most successful in a fleet of agents sent to live deep undercover among political activists, had maintained his cover. More importantly, virtually nothing was known about the secretive police units which, for four decades, had been surreptitiously disrupting the activities of political campaign groups. But now a series of revelations concerning a network of undercover agents has become a growing crisis for police. At the centre of the latest controversy is a set of documents, obtained by the Guardian and the BBC’s Newsnight, indicating that another police spy, Jim Boyling, who lived undercover among the environmental group Reclaim the Streets, concealed his identity in a criminal trial, giving false evidence under oath about his real name. The accusation that police deliberately subverted the judicial process, and at worst sanctioned perjury, prompted outrage among lawyers and parts of the judiciary and led to the last-minute postponement of a major report into undercover policing of protests by the newly appointed commissioner of the Metropolitan police, Bernard Hogan-Howe. Now questions are being asked about the judgment of Britain’s most senior police officer, whose report – conducted in his prior role with the policing inspectorate – is being reviewed. Lord Macdonald, the former director of public prosecutions, described the court deception as a monumental misjudgment, saying police had “crossed the line”. There are mounting calls for a full public inquiry. The truth behind the police spies began to unravel late last year when activist former friends of Kennedy revealed his police background on the website Indymedia. Two months later – in January this year – the Guardian published the first revelation in its long-running investigation into the undercover policing of protests, revealing how Kennedy, after leaving the Met, returned to his activist friends, expressed sympathy with their cause and attempted to continue living under his fictional identity, Mark Stone. In the last 10 months, the Guardian has detailed the covert deployments of six undercover police officers. In addition to Kennedy and Boyling, police officers using the fake identities Mark Jacobs, Lynn Watson and Pete Black have been exposed. This week Bob Lambert, a well-known academic, was unmasked as a former spymaster who spent years deep undercover. Writing in the Guardian , Lambert acknowledges police should learn from mistakes, but defends the work of undercover police officers in “countering political violence and intimidation”. Lambert, who later ran special branch’s Muslim contact group, which was tasked with building relations with London’s Muslim organisations, said he was not involved in any surveillance at that stage of his career. Boyling also went on to work for the same unit. “I did not recruit one Muslim Londoner as an informant, nor did I spy on them,” Lambert said. “They were partners of police and many acted bravely in support of public safety and protection of fellow citizens.” A seventh undercover officer, Simon Wellings, was exposed by Newsnight in March. All seven spies shared similar modi operandi: they appeared out of nowhere, often had access to vehicles and showed an unflinching willingness to help run the logistics of protest organisation. Unlike undercover officers who penetrate serious criminal gangs, typically for no more than a few weeks or months, agents deployed in protest organisations are authorised to spend years living double lives as campaigners. Only rarely have they been asked to gather evidence for prosecutions; usually, their mandate is to gather intelligence on activists while quietly disrupting their campaigns. Most of the undercover police officers identified by the Guardian and Newsnight have also had sexual relationships with their targets, in some cases developing long-term relationships. Some activists argue this has been the most disturbing element of the controversy, equating the operation to state-sanctioned sex abuse. They point to the anger, betrayal and psychological trauma suffered by some of the women who have spoken out about their relationships with men who later turned out to be police spies. Senior officers have claimed sexual relations were never condoned or known about by the top ranks – a finding Hogan-Howe was expected to endorse in his report. However, the mounting evidence suggests otherwise. Kennedy said he could not “sneeze” without his handlers knowing about his activities, and gave every indication they knew about the methods he used to gain the trust of activists, including his sexual liaisons. Black has said it was “part of the job” for fellow agents to use “the tool of sex” to maintain their cover and glean intelligence. Together, these seven agents, and dozens more, have infiltrated a series of groups from across the political spectrum, including groups such as Stop the War, Youth Against Racism, Earth First, and Climate Camp. They have been regularly spying on activists at major demonstrations surrounding summits such as the G8 and G20, as well as local protests such as a campaign to protect Titnore Woods in West Sussex. However, it was Kennedy’s operation to prevent 112 activists from breaking into the Nottinghamshire power station in 2009 that placed the long-running operation under the spotlight. Late last year, prosecutors refused to admit that the environmental campaigners had been infiltrated by an undercover police officer. The secret recordings made on Kennedy’s Casio watch – which would have exonerated the activists if disclosed during their trials – were suppressed. An inquiry by Sir Christopher Rose, the former surveillance commissioner, is investigating claims made by police that their colleagues in the Crown Prosecution Service suppressed the recordings. Transcripts of those recordings have now been obtained by the Guardian, along with other police materials relating to Kennedy’s deployment marked “restricted” and “confidential”. They shed light on the extent of surveillance undertaken to keep tabs on a group of environmental campaigners. They reveal the minute details about the activities of campaigners being relayed by Kennedy, from discussions about football teams to types of biscuits eaten at a planning meeting. In one document, marked “secret”, police chiefs lay out what they believed to be the legal justification for Kennedy’s surveillance operation, stating that the environmental campaigners could cause “severe economic loss to the United Kingdom” and an “adverse effect on the public’s feeling of safety and security”. Those police claims, along with the broader suggestion that environmental activists threaten the national infrastructure of the UK, have been repeatedly challenged in court. All 26 activists police wanted to prosecute for conspiring to trespass at the Nottinghamshire power station either had their trials abandoned or their convictions quashed following the Kennedy controversy. Sentencing 20 of the activists in January, a judge at Nottingham crown court said he accepted they had intended a peaceful protest and had the “highest possible motives”, describing the group as “honest, sincere, conscientious, intelligent, committed, dedicated, caring”. When their convictions were quashed in July, three court of appeal judges, who included the lord chief justice, said “elementary principles” of the fair trial process were ignored when prosecutors did not disclose the secret recordings to activists’ lawyers. In a damning ruling, the judges said they shared the “great deal of justifiable public disquiet”, found that Kennedy’s operation had been partly unlawful, and even proffered the suggestion he had arguably been acting as an agent provocateur. What the judges did not mention – but is increasingly becoming clear – was that Kennedy was not a lone operator, but the latest in a long line of undercover police officers who have been spying on activists as part of a classified operation dating back four decades. Previously known as the special demonstration squad, which operated under the command of the Metropolitan police’s special branch, the undercover unit was first conceived as a tool to combat the anti-Vietnam protests at Grosvenor Square in 1968. The infrastructure of long-term police surveillance of leftwing and far-right campaign groups has remained in place ever since – and continues today. What was previously conceived as a secret plan to disrupt the activities of “subversives” was, more than a decade ago, reinvented under the leadership of the Association of Chief Police Officers as part of a new drive to combat “domestic extremists”. The secretive body that controls the spies, the National Public Order Intelligence Unit, was recently returned to the command of the Met. It now falls to Hogan-Howe to grapple with the fallout of the latest controversy over Boyling, who has been placed on restricted duties and subject to a disciplinary inquiry since January, when it emerged he married an activist he met while undercover and fathered two children with her. That inquiry, which is investigating claims by Boyling’s ex-wife that he encouraged her to change her name by deed poll to conceal their relationship from his superiors, has yet to conclude. It is now likely to be overshadowed by the accusation that he lied about his real identity under oath. Details of his false evidence were revealed on Wednesday. Besides prompting outrage among lawyers, the accusation that police subverted the judicial process appears to have shaken senior police officers. Within hours, Her Majesty’s Inspectorate of Constabulary (HMIC) cancelled its planned publication of the report on Hogan-Howe’s review. The Hogan-Howe report had been expected to ignore advice from other senior police officers, who argued that the unfolding scandal in undercover policing revealed the need for a more robust system of independent oversight. HMIC said it would now seek further details about Boyling’s alleged false evidence under oath before reviewing its report. However, what is unclear is how much information – if any – the Met disclosed to the inspectorate about Boyling, his marriage to an activist and his evidence under oath. A draft of the HMIC report circulated over the summer, as Hogan-Howe believed he was nearing his conclusions, is not believed to have contained any reference to Boyling at all. Jenny Jones, a Green party member of the London assembly who sits on the Metropolitan police authority, will be questioning Hogan-Howe at an MPA meeting next week. She said: “I will be pressing him to explain how we can stop such mistakes being made again and how we can bring some accountability to a police service which has been given almost carte blanche to spy on its own citizens.” Metropolitan police Police Bernard Hogan-Howe Protest London Crime Activism Mark Kennedy Paul Lewis Rob Evans guardian.co.uk
Continue reading …It’s no surprise MSNBC hosts were quick to see “vindication” for President Barack Obama in the death of Moammar Qaddafi, but ABC’s George Stephanopoulos and Jake Tapper were just as eager Thursday night to make sure viewers knew the White House was gloating. “The President was careful not to take too much credit in the Rose Garden,” fill-in World News anchor George Stephanopoulos noted before presuming that “behind the scenes White House officials have to be feeling some sense of vindication.” Tapper confirmed “they do. They see this as a vindication for Obama's foreign policy ….which is more international cooperation, smaller footprint, more focused applications of U.S. power.” This played out in Libya, “using the unique capabilities of the U.S. and then stepping back and letting NATO take control. All of this part of the Obama foreign policy and they do feel vindicated.” Neither the CBS Evening News nor NBC Nightly News characterized Qaddafi’s death as “vindication” for Obama’s policies. Thursday afternoon, in the 3 PM EDT hour, MSNBC’s Martin Bashir basked in Obama’s triumph over conservative criticism: “After putting up with months of criticism, the accusation was that he led from behind, he didn’t know what he was doing. Isn’t this the complete vindication of his strategy?” Washington Post editorial writer Jonathan Capehart unhesitatingly agreed: “I would think so.” Opposite Stephanopoulos and Tapper in the 6 PM EDT hour, MSNBC’s left-wing activist/Obama-phile Al Sharpton fretted during his PoliticsNation program: Whether you applaud this brutal end or not, today’s events are clearly a vindication of the President’s policy in Libya. The dictator’s gone and no Americans was killed. But today in a statement after statement, Republicans barely made mention of President Obama… From the Thursday, October 20 World News with Diane Sawyer on ABC: GEORGE STEPHANOPOULOS: With Qaddafi’s death today, three men responsible for thousands of American deaths have been killed in almost as many months: Osama bin Laden in May, Anwar al-Awlaki in September and now Qaddafi, all by or backed by American force. I want to bring in Jake Tapper from the White House now. And Jake, the President was careful not to take too much credit in the Rose Garden, but behind the scenes White House officials have to be feeling some sense of vindication. JAKE TAPPER: They do. They see this as a vindication for Obama’s foreign policy. One senior White House official telling me this evening, bin Laden, Awlaki, Qaddafi, all met their demise in some fashion because of decisions President Obama made. It's part of the larger Obama foreign policy which is more international cooperation, smaller footprint, more focused applications of U.S. power. They said that, al-Qaeda, it’s been very, very targeted, the attacks the U.S. has made on al-Qaeda. And Libya, using the unique capabilities of the U.S. and then stepping back and letting NATO take control. All of this part of the Obama foreign policy and they do feel vindicated, George.
Continue reading …Thailand’s worst floods in half a century are seeping into the outer districts of the capital Thailand’s prime minister has urged Bangkok residents to get ready to move their belongings to higher ground as the country’s worst floods in half a century begin seeping into the capital’s outer districts. The warning came one day after the government opened several floodgates in a risky bid to let built-up water flow through the city’s canals toward the sea. Authorities had said the canals could overflow but it was not known to what extent. Water has entered homes in Bangkok’s northern Lak Si district, which is located along the capital’s main Prapa canal. The water rose to knee height in some places but damage was minor and had not yet affected Bangkok’s main business district. Yingluck Shinawatra, the prime minister, told reporters the Prapa canal was a big concern as the water had risen significantly overnight. “I would like to ask people in all districts of Bangkok to get ready to move their belongings to higher ground as a precaution,” Yingluck said, adding that people should not panic. Sukhumbhand Paribatra, the Bangkok governor, said managing the Prapa canal was a “top priority”. Vast runoff from the north is expected to swell its level. Authorities have said immense networks of sandbagged barriers could deteriorate under pressure from the water, since they were not designed as dams. Yingluck has said there are no other options to slow down the approaching water. Prolonged rain and storms have killed 745 people – a quarter of them children – in Thailand, Cambodia, Vietnam, Laos and the Philippines this year, according to the United Nations. At least 342 of them were Thais, according to their government. The floods have submerged land in about one-third of the country, leaving some towns under water more than two metres high. The threat of floodwaters swamping downtown Bangkok and ruining treasured ancient palaces has loomed for weeks. No major damage has occurred yet and life remains mostly normal, but inhabitants are preparing for the worst. “The water is coming. It’s inevitable,” said Oraphin Jungkasemsuk, a 40-year-old employee of Bangkok Bank’s headquarters, where sandbags have been stacked two metres high. “They are fighting a massive pool of water. They cannot control it any more,” Oraphin said. “There are barriers but it can come into the city from any direction, even up through the drains.” Economic analysts say the floods have already cut Thailand’s 2011 GDP projections by as much as 2%. Damages could run as high as $6bn (£3.8bn) – an amount that could double if Bangkok floods. Thailand Flooding Natural disasters and extreme weather Rivers guardian.co.uk
Continue reading …