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With US-Pakistani tensions on the verge of boiling over , the New York Times today has a shocking account of a 2007 incident in which the Pakistanis allegedly opened fire on American and Afghan military officials after a meeting to discuss a disputed border post. As the officers were getting into…

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The government shutdown has been averted , but don’t expect Ezra Klein to break out the confetti. The week’s shutdown threat was the third we’ve faced this year, and the “most absurd yet.” Congress has gone from battling over sizable figures (an deal struck earlier this year slashed $78.5 billion…

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Israel approves new settler homes in East Jerusalem

EU calls for reversal of controversial plan to add 1,100 new homes to Gilou settlement Israeli authorities approved in principle the construction of 1,100 homes in an East Jerusalem settlement on Tuesday, putting at risk international efforts to persuade Israeli and Palestinian negotiators to return to talks. Lady Ashton, the EU’s foreign policy chief, swiftly called for the plan to be reversed, saying settlement expansion “threatens the viability of an agreed two-state solution”. The expansion of Gilo, a settlement built across the Green Line, was authorised by a Jerusalem planning committee and would be subject to public consultation before final approval. The plan was condemned by the Palestinian Authority. In reference to its efforts to get recognition of a Palestinian state, the authority stated that the Israeli prime minister, Binyamin Netanyahu, had said “there should be no unilateral steps – but there could be nothing more unilateral than a huge, new, round of settlement building on Palestinian land”. The Palestinian negotiator Saeb Erekat called the move a “slap in the face to all international efforts to protect the fading prospects of peace in the region”. Following the Palestinian submission of their request to be admitted to the UN as a full member state, the Middle East Quartet – the US, UN, Russia and the EU – called for both parties to return to the negotiating table. In a statement setting out a timetable for talks, the Quartet urged the parties “to refrain from provocative actions”, which was interpreted as a coded call for Israel to hold back from settlement expansion. Neither party has formally responded to the Quartet statement, but the Palestinians have made clear they want a further settlement freeze before more talks. The UN announced that it was very concerned about the decision to build further in Gilo. “Today’s decision … ignores the Quartet’s appeal of last Friday to the parties to refrain from provocative actions,” said a spokesman for Robert Serry, the UN special coordinator for the Middle East peace process. “This sends the wrong signal at this sensitive time. Settlement activity is contrary to the Road Map and to international law, and undermines the prospect of resuming negotiations and reaching a two-state solution to the conflict.” The expansion of Gilo, a huge settlement built on land between Jerusalem and Bethlehem that was captured and later annexed by Israel in 1967, has been on the table for more than two years. The settlement is illegal under international law. The Israeli government asserts it has the right to build Jewish settlements anywhere in the city. The approval came as the chairmen of several rightwing parties in Israel wrote to Netanyahu to urge him to annex all West Bank settlements and accelerate settlement construction in response to the Palestinian bid for statehood. They also called for financial sanctions and curbs on Palestinian construction in areas of the West Bank controlled by Israel. Tensions in the West Bank between settlers and Palestinians have risen sharply this September with the demand for Palestinian statehood at the UN. An Israeli police investigation concluded that a settler and his infant son, who were killed when their car overturned last Friday, had been struck by a rock thrown by Palestinians. At their funeral on Sunday night, a rabbi called for “collective punishment” of Palestinians, saying “there are no innocents in a war”. The Israeli security service, Shin Bet, confirmed that it had urged the education ministry to halt funding to a religious school in the settlement of Yitzhar. According to a report in the news service Haaretz, security services said that senior rabbis were inciting students to attack Palestinian villagers. A Palestinian man was shot dead by Israeli soldiers during a protest last Friday against settlers in the West Bank village of Qusra. Israel Middle East Palestinian territories United Nations European Union Harriet Sherwood guardian.co.uk

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Israel approves new settler homes in East Jerusalem

EU calls for reversal of controversial plan to add 1,100 new homes to Gilou settlement Israeli authorities approved in principle the construction of 1,100 homes in an East Jerusalem settlement on Tuesday, putting at risk international efforts to persuade Israeli and Palestinian negotiators to return to talks. Lady Ashton, the EU’s foreign policy chief, swiftly called for the plan to be reversed, saying settlement expansion “threatens the viability of an agreed two-state solution”. The expansion of Gilo, a settlement built across the Green Line, was authorised by a Jerusalem planning committee and would be subject to public consultation before final approval. The plan was condemned by the Palestinian Authority. In reference to its efforts to get recognition of a Palestinian state, the authority stated that the Israeli prime minister, Binyamin Netanyahu, had said “there should be no unilateral steps – but there could be nothing more unilateral than a huge, new, round of settlement building on Palestinian land”. The Palestinian negotiator Saeb Erekat called the move a “slap in the face to all international efforts to protect the fading prospects of peace in the region”. Following the Palestinian submission of their request to be admitted to the UN as a full member state, the Middle East Quartet – the US, UN, Russia and the EU – called for both parties to return to the negotiating table. In a statement setting out a timetable for talks, the Quartet urged the parties “to refrain from provocative actions”, which was interpreted as a coded call for Israel to hold back from settlement expansion. Neither party has formally responded to the Quartet statement, but the Palestinians have made clear they want a further settlement freeze before more talks. The UN announced that it was very concerned about the decision to build further in Gilo. “Today’s decision … ignores the Quartet’s appeal of last Friday to the parties to refrain from provocative actions,” said a spokesman for Robert Serry, the UN special coordinator for the Middle East peace process. “This sends the wrong signal at this sensitive time. Settlement activity is contrary to the Road Map and to international law, and undermines the prospect of resuming negotiations and reaching a two-state solution to the conflict.” The expansion of Gilo, a huge settlement built on land between Jerusalem and Bethlehem that was captured and later annexed by Israel in 1967, has been on the table for more than two years. The settlement is illegal under international law. The Israeli government asserts it has the right to build Jewish settlements anywhere in the city. The approval came as the chairmen of several rightwing parties in Israel wrote to Netanyahu to urge him to annex all West Bank settlements and accelerate settlement construction in response to the Palestinian bid for statehood. They also called for financial sanctions and curbs on Palestinian construction in areas of the West Bank controlled by Israel. Tensions in the West Bank between settlers and Palestinians have risen sharply this September with the demand for Palestinian statehood at the UN. An Israeli police investigation concluded that a settler and his infant son, who were killed when their car overturned last Friday, had been struck by a rock thrown by Palestinians. At their funeral on Sunday night, a rabbi called for “collective punishment” of Palestinians, saying “there are no innocents in a war”. The Israeli security service, Shin Bet, confirmed that it had urged the education ministry to halt funding to a religious school in the settlement of Yitzhar. According to a report in the news service Haaretz, security services said that senior rabbis were inciting students to attack Palestinian villagers. A Palestinian man was shot dead by Israeli soldiers during a protest last Friday against settlers in the West Bank village of Qusra. Israel Middle East Palestinian territories United Nations European Union Harriet Sherwood guardian.co.uk

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It’s long been rumored , and tomorrow Amazon.com’s Kindle tablet will finally be announced. The iPad competitor will be called the “Kindle Fire,” TechCrunch reports, and it will resemble BlackBerry’s PlayBook with a 7-inch backlit display. The custom version of Android it will use “looks nothing like Android,” writes MG…

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Is the downturn redrawing the economic map of the United States? When the recession began in late 2007, the south and the Sun Belt regions were booming. But today, as the New York Times notes, states in those regions have some of the highest rates of joblessness in the country. Nevada and California, lead the

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Is the downturn redrawing the economic map of the United States? When the recession began in late 2007, the south and the Sun Belt regions were booming. But today, as the New York Times notes, states in those regions have some of the highest rates of joblessness in the country. Nevada and California, lead the

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Another step for women’s equality : Australia’s military has become the fourth in the world to allow women to take on front-line combat roles. Announced today, the move opens some of the country’s most dangerous combat jobs to women, including Special Forces positions in Afghanistan and some army artillery slots. Australian…

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Raoul Moat death was suicide, inquest jury rules

Jury rules that officers who cornered gunman Raoul Moat and fired a Taser at him behaved properly during six-hour stand-off The fugitive gunman Raoul Moat took his own life after police fired an unapproved Taser at him, an inquest jury decided on Tuesday. The jury concluded that the armed officers had behaved properly during the six-hour stand-off with the 37-year-old former bouncer at Rothbury, Northumberland, in July 2010. Moat had been on the run for a week after shooting his ex-girlfriend Samantha Stobbart, 22 and killing her new partner Chris Brown, 29. He went on to shoot and blind an unarmed traffic officer, PC David Rathband, after declaring “war” on police. The three-week inquest at Newcastle crown court had been told that Moat was hit by an experimental Taser round fired by marksmen who believed he was about to kill himself. The Taser had no effect, aand Moat shot himself in the head. The inquest was told that Moat had likened himself to King Kong while on the run . The jurors spent five hours considering their verdict . Summing up, the coroner David Mitford said the jury should consider either a verdict of suicide or an open verdict. He told them they had to answer five questions linked to whether police should have used the untested XRep X12 Taser that had not been approved by the Home Office. It had been the first time it had been used in the UK during a police operation. The coroner said the jury had to be “satisfied so you are sure” before returning a verdict of suicide. An Independent Police Complaints Commission (IPCC) investigation into the operation found no evidence of misconduct by officers. The IPCC looked at the period from the sighting of Moat until his death, including strategy and tactics and the deployment of XRep Tasers. It concluded that there may be “some learning” for Northumbria Police from the investigation but there was no evidence any police officers had committed misconduct. One area the jury had to consider was whether the use of Tasers was appropriate. It found no evidence of improper behaviour by police. Moat’s brother Angus told the inquest that he should have been allowed to negotiate with his brother, but this request was turned down by police. He said Raoul responded to aggression and threat “but he also responded to kindness and friendship”. The inquest had been told that Moat has said he would “take the shoot-out” rather than go back to jail. He left a message on a dictating machine three or four days before he was cornered by police marksmen. In it, he described losing the only two people who mattered to him – his grandmother and his former girlfriend. Moat’s brother Angus told the inquest that Raoul had attempted suicide in 1999 and was treated in hospital for a drug overdose. While on the run, their mother had spoken to the press and said Raoul would be better off dead, but Angus Moat had disagreed. He said she had bipolar disorder and was “severely mentally ill and incapable of being a parent”. He said if he had been able to speak to his brother, he thought he would be able to change the way he was feeling and the way he would act. Raoul Moat Police Crime Helen Carter guardian.co.uk

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Ed Miliband makes high-risk speech to Labour conference

Party leader promises to end ‘fast buck’ capitalism, presenting himself as the man willing to ‘break the consensus’ Ed Miliband has promised to rip up decades of irresponsible “fast buck” capitalism in the most radical analysis of Britain’s plight offered by any Labour leader since 1945. In a high-risk speech to the Labour conference in Liverpool, Miliband presented himself as the man “willing to break the consensus rather than succumb to it”. He promised a tough fight to recast a new capitalism built around British values that reward the hard-working grafters and producers in business, and not the asset-stripping “predators”. Miliband’s aides insisted the speech did not represent a lurch to the left, as immediately claimed by the Conservatives, but instead a decisive break from “a something for nothing” system that grew up under Thatcherism and that New Labour had been unable to correct. “Britain’s problems stemmed from the way we have chosen to run our country, not just for a year or so, but for decades,” Miliband said. New Labour “had brought good times, but this did not mean we had a good economic system. We changed the fabric of our country, but we did not do enough to change the values of our country.” Accusing David Cameron of being the last gasp of an old system, he said the country was crying out for a society in which the hard-working grafters are rewarded and the closed circles at the top of society are broken up. He promised to regulate and tax companies according to whether firms invested for the long term, rather than for the fast buck, recruiting apprentices and not simply stripping assets. Miliband’s pedestrian, drooping delivery did no justice to the ambition of his argument, leaving the packed conference hall sometimes flat. He was not helped when the TV live feed went down for at least 20 minutes. He was also startled when part of the audience cheered when he told them he was not Tony Blair, a reaction that left some former cabinet members despairing. Overall, the halting delivery will do little to convince those who question his prime ministerial qualities. But his aides said the speech had proved he was his own man, and no one could not now underestimate the radicalism of his diagnosis. “We have thrown the dice and now we will find out whether the voters agree,” said one. Some Blairites were privately alarmed by what they regarded as an anti-business tone. This was denied by Miliband’s circle, who are convinced the successive crises have created a once-in-a-generation mood for change in the country. Miliband – not Cameron – would be seen as the man to tear up the old rules that no longer work for the hard-working majority. There was a smattering of newly sketched policies: support for employees on company remunerations boards, government contracts only given to firms that hire apprentices, a break-up of energy companies and a commitment to allocate social housing according to behaviour, not just need. But he offered little on how he would regulate to reward what he described as good companies such as Rolls Royce, as opposed to the predators such as the private care home chain Southern Cross. But most of all he drew together the disparate British crises in banking, media, parliament and in the inner cities to make a broader argument that a quiet crisis was gripping the country. He said: “We have allowed values which say take what you can, I’m in it for myself, to create a Britain that is too unequal. The people at the top taking unjustified rewards is not just bad for the economy. It sends out a message throughout society about what values are OK. And inequality reinforces privilege and opportunity for the few.” He also tried to present himself to a sceptical country as someone with leadership qualities and a valuable, personal backstory. He said he had the heritage of the outsider and the vantage point of the insider, making him the “guy who is determined to break the closed circles of Britain”. Referring to the highlight of his year-old leadership – his decision to attack Rupert Murdoch over phone hacking – he said the episode had taught him to be true to himself and his values. “The lesson I have learnt most closely in the past year is that you have got to be willing to break the consensus, not succumb to it,” he said. “I am my own man,” he asserted to wide applause. Miliband has repeatedly refused to define himself against his own party, but passages of his speech did challenge traditional Labour on the deficit, welfare and aspects of the Thatcher settlement. In a passage at the start of the speech, he admitted the party had lost the electorate’s trust on the economy and said many of the cuts will not be reversed. If the deficit was not eliminated in this parliament, a Labour government would finish the task, he said. He was “determined to prove the next Labour government will only spend what it can afford”. But as part of the new bargain that requires responsibility at the top and at the bottom, he also said welfare cheats would have to be tackled. He went on to draw strong applause when he questioned why the prime minister was so eager to cut the 50p tax rate for people earning over £3,000 a week. Only David Cameron, he said, “could believe you make ordinary families work harder by making them poorer and you make the rich harder by making them richer”. But Miliband said nothing about the coming strikes on pensions or the future of the union party link. Lady Warsi, the Conservative party co-chairman, dismissed the speech: “What we heard was a weak leader telling his party what it wanted to hear. He’s moved Labour away from the centre ground and come up with no solutions to the something-for-nothing culture that he helped Labour create. “All he promised was more of the same spending, borrowing and debt that got us into this mess in the first place.” Ed Miliband Labour conference 2011 Labour conference Labour Economic policy Patrick Wintour guardian.co.uk

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