Kanye West premieres his debut clothing line this Saturday at Paris fashion week. His latest foray into fashion is the culmination of a long love affair with style. And, like all love affairs, there are good bits and there are ‘what were you thinking?’ bits. Simon Chilvers wades through a history of gigantic shades, women’s blouses and fur jackets
Continue reading …Kanye West premieres his debut clothing line this Saturday at Paris fashion week. His latest foray into fashion is the culmination of a long love affair with style. And, like all love affairs, there are good bits and there are ‘what were you thinking?’ bits. Simon Chilvers wades through a history of gigantic shades, women’s blouses and fur jackets
Continue reading …Opposition supporters believe young couple were pressured to testify against missing human rights activist Kouhyar Goudarzi Two Iranian bloggers have killed themselves after being detained by security officials thought to be from Iran’s ministry of intelligence. Opposition activists believe Nahal Sahabi and her partner Behnam Ganji had been under intense pressure to testify against their friend Kouhyar Goudarzi, the prominent human rights activist. Goudarzi was arrested on the same day, 31 July, and remains missing. At the time, the authorities refused to acknowledge holding them. A week after the arrests Sahabi and Ganji were released from jail but Goudarzi, a member of the Committe for Human Rights Reporters (CHRR) in Iran is still missing, his lawyer said by phone from Tehran. Ganji killed himself on 1 September, followed by Sahabi on 28 September, according to an article on CHRR’s website. The reasons behind the double suicide is unknown but speculation is rife that the pair had been pressured while in jail to testify against Goudarzi. “She suffered from depression after Behnam had mysteriously committed suicide a couple days after he was released from prison,” said the CHRR article. “Kouhyar Goudarzi is still detained incommunicado. “There is no information on what happened to Behnam Ganji and Kouhyar Goudarzi in prison. Behnam Ganji’s suicide has raised serious concerns regarding Kouhyar Goudarzi’s unknown situation.” On her last blogpost, addressed to parents and friends, Sahabi wrote about Ganji and shared a YouTube video of a song by the Greek composer Eleni Karaindrou, called Wedding Waltz. Goudarzi, 25, was previously arrested in the aftermath of Iran’s disputed presidential elections in 2009. He was initially accused of moharebeh (waging war against God), which carries a death sentence, but was convicted of “spreading propaganda against the regime” and sentenced to a year in prison. While there, Goudarzi won the National Press Club award for his human rights work. He was released from prison in December last year. A day after his arrest in July, Goudarzi’s mother, Parvin Mokhtareh, was detained in the southern city of Kerman. She has been accused of insulting the supreme leader, propaganda against the regime and acting against national security. Amnesty said the charges stemmed from an interview she gave when her son was jailed in 2010 “in relation to his peaceful human rights activities”. Iran Human rights Middle East Blogging Saeed Kamali Dehghan guardian.co.uk
Continue reading …Lyon’s deputy police chief suspected of compensating informants with batches of confiscated drugs and working with criminals The French police force has been shaken by what could become its biggest corruption scandal in decades after Lyon’s deputy police chief, nicknamed “Supercop” for his fight against drugs, was arrested on suspicion of colluding with international drugs barons. Michel Neyret, 55, the bouffant-haired and charismatic Lyon detective, was arrested at home along with his wife and is being held in custody. He is suspected of having compensated informants with batches of confiscated drugs; police claim that Nyret then worked with the criminals to resell the products. He is being questioned about corruption, international drugs trafficking and money-laundering. Neyret, however, is regarded as a hero for his success in cutting drug crime and stopping jewellery heists in the Lyon area. He had appeared regularly in the media to talk about Lyon’s success in busting crime; he was also a script adviser on a recent feature film about Lyon gang crime. Three other senior officers were also arrested yesterday in swoops from Lyon to Grenoble and the investigation spread to Cannes on the French riviera. Several other people linked to organised crime were being questioned in Lyon and Cannes including a man in his 30s believed to have provided Neyret with luxury cars, including a Ferrari and a Rolls Royce. Judges working on the case said they were investigating links between the police and French organised crime as well as potentially the Italian mafia. The trafficking is said to have involved hard drugs transported from South America, linked to a Paris-region cocaine ring dismantled by police last November. Judges are investigating Swiss bank accounts allegedly used to channel profits. Neyret’s lawyers said he contests all the allegations. French police were stupefied at the arrests. If a web of corruption is uncovered at the top of the French force, it would be a major scandal. The interior minister Claude Gueant said that if the allegations are true, it would be “immensely painful” for the French police. The investigation comes just as Nicolas Sarkozy’s inner-circle has been hit by a series of political party-funding corruption investigations and the country is in a state of soul-searching about sleaze. France Drugs trade Europe Angelique Chrisafis guardian.co.uk
Continue reading …American-born al-Qaeda cleric Anwar al-Alwaki has been killed by an airstrike in eastern Yemen, according to the country’s defense ministry. The radical preacher, believed to be a high-ranking member of al-Qaeda in the Arabian Peninsula, has been a most-wanted terror suspect for years. Tribal elders in the area say an…
Continue reading …Joint letter to Guardian highlights ‘government’s offensive cuts’ and says ‘the profit motive has no place in education’ A group of unions and Labour MPs has lent its support to next month’s student demonstrations against education cuts, saying that “the profit motive has no place in education”. In a letter to the Guardian , the general secretaries of the Unite , PCS , FBU , NUJ , RMT and BFAWU unions vow to oppose what they term “the government’s cuts offensive” as part of a joint fight by workers and students. The letter, also signed by Tony Benn, and the MPs Mike Wood, Katy Clark and John McDonnell, reads: “We believe that education is a public service, which should be owned publicly, controlled democratically, and funded by taxing the rich. The profit motive has no place in education. We recognise that the fight against the coalition government’s cuts offensive is a joint fight, by workers and students, in defence of a common interest.” It concludes: “We support students campaigning against the government’s higher education white paper ; we stand alongside those school and college students who are planning to walk out; and we oppose any attempt by the authorities to curb their right to protest.” The student demonstrations, which have been called by the National Campaign Against Fees and Cuts , will happen in London on 9 November. Three weeks later, a massive public sector strike co-ordinated by the unions is set to take place amid growing signs that students and unions are working closely together to maximise opposition to the government’s cuts programme. Michael Chessum , a member of the National Union of Students national executive and an organiser for the National Campaign Against Fees and Cuts, accused the government of “waging war” on students and young people. “It has scrapped support for the poorest school and FE students and made millions unemployed, while making the worst cuts in the history of education,” he said. “The government’s higher education white paper is an attempt to end education as a public service. We are determined to derail it.” Chessum predicted that tens of thousands of people would turn out to protest on 9 November, adding: “It’s clear that the movement that we built last year has grown into something much bigger, and it’s vital that we keep fighting on education as well as linking to the broader movement.” Liam Burns, president of the NUS, which is also supporting the demonstration on 9 November, said: “The proposals in the white paper are even more damaging than the prospect of £9,000 fees. The coalition is about to create the exact opposite of the ‘pupil premium’, where students from the most debt-averse backgrounds are forced to ask for less money to be spent on their education. We’ll carry on trying to work with politicians of all parties to stop these damaging reforms, but when fees are trebled, the education maintenance allowance scrapped and even less money is spent on supporting students financially, don’t be surprised that demonstrations are here to stay.” Education policy Tuition fees Higher education Students Trade unions Unite National Union of Journalists Public sector cuts Public finance Sam Jones Matthew Taylor guardian.co.uk
Continue reading …Sheikh Raed Salah was held unlawfully after entering the UK despite being banned, the high court rules A Palestinian activist detained on the orders of the home secretary, Theresa May, was held unlawfully and is entitled to compensation, the high court has ruled. The decision is the latest embarrassment for the government over the case of Sheikh Raed Salah, 52, the leader of the Islamic Movement in Israel, who entered the country despite being banned. Since his arrival on 25 June, it has emerged that no one informed him he was prohibited from coming to Britain and that a Heathrow immigration officer who scanned his passport ignored a live alert to exclude him. Three days after entering the UK he was detained at his west London hotel, handcuffed and taken to Paddington Green police station. He had been due to address a series of public meetings, including one at the Houses of Parliament. The home secretary subsequently served a deportation notice on him, on the grounds that his presence in the UK was “not conducive to the public good”. Salah challenged his removal and obtained bail in July. He is appealing against the decision to deport him in separate proceedings before an immigration tribunal which continues next week. In the judgment released on Friday, Mr Justice Nicol found for Salah on one of three grounds that his detention was unlawful. He rejected his claim on two other grounds. Any compensation is likely to be small since it only covers a period of two days until the time when the Palestinian preacher was finally informed correctly why he was being detained. The judgment says immigration officers who detained him failed to ensure information was translated and failed to include the necessary details. Earlier this week, it emerged that senior officials at the UK Border Agency had opposed the home secretary’s decision to deport the Palestinian, warning that the evidence against him was disputed, open to legal challenge and the case “very finely balanced”. Salah had sought damages for illegal detention, arguing in an earlier hearing that he had been “confined without lawful authority” and subjected to what was essentially “false imprisonment”. Neil Sheldon, appearing for the home secretary, had argued that she had acted reasonably and was legally entitled to order Salah’s detention pending deportation. A review of his case by the chief inspector of constabulary also revealed that overseas consular staff were not monitoring Home Office immigration alerts seven days a week. The inquiry report by Sir Denis O’Connor found “insufficiently robust processes” led to UK Border Agency staff at home and abroad, missing six separate chances to intervene overseas, at departure to, and on arrival in, Britain. The chief inspector even recommends that a criminal offence be created of an excluded person “knowingly travelling to the UK in contravention of an exclusion order”. The incident was highly embarrassing for the home secretary as the Palestinian activist was the first high-profile case under her policy of broadening the definition of “non-violent extremists” who encourage terrorism that she pledged to take pre-emptive action against. Salah is the leader of the northern branch of the Islamic Movement in Israel, and has been imprisoned for funding Hamas and leading a violent demonstration. When the order banning him from entering the UK was issued, MPs were told the decision followed allegations of antisemitism and fundamentalist activities. Palestinian territories Theresa May Immigration and asylum Middle East Owen Bowcott guardian.co.uk
Continue reading …An Atlantic City casino is offering frequent gamblers a chance to win a new face. Loyalty card holders who amass enough points at the Trump Taj Mahal Casino Resort in Atlantic City will be entered into a drawing for $25,000 in plastic surgery procedures of their choice, AP reports….
Continue reading …A California fugitive who has been living on his wits in the Redwood forests of Northern California is close to being caught—and has fired on deputies. Aaron Bassler, 35, is suspected of shooting to death a city councilman last month and another person earlier. Bassier has been hiding out…
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