Bristol Palin would like you to know she is not a homophobe, thank you very much. In another sign of how quickly things can spiral downward anytime there’s a mechanical bull involved, the eldest Palin daughter was filming her reality show at a bar and had just fallen off the…
Continue reading …Six men in total – all from Birmingham – charged over terrorism offences after arrests in city last week Three men from Birmingham who were arrested a week ago as part of a major operation by counter-terrorism police in the Midlands have been charged with plotting a suicide bombing campaign in the UK. Two of them, Irfan Nasser and Irfan Khalid, aged 30 and 26 and from the Sparkhill and Sparkbrook areas, also face charges of making a martyrdom film, travelling to Pakistan for training in terrorism – including bomb making, weapons and poison making – collecting money for terrorism, and constructing a home-made explosive device. Ashik Ali, 26, from Balsall Heath, was charged with collecting money for terrorism, stating an intention to be a suicide bomber, and involvement in recruiting others for terrorist acts. A fourth man, Rahin Ahmed, 25, from Mosely, was charged with assisting others to travel to Pakistan for terrorism training, and investing and managing money for terrorist acts. It is alleged that between Christmas Day 2010 and 19 September this year, they were preparing, or helping others prepare, to commit acts of terrorism. Two other men, Bahader Ali and Mohammed Rizwan, aged 28 and 32 and from Sparkbrook, were also charged with failing to disclose information. It is alleged that between 29 July and 19 September this year, both had information which they knew may help prevent the commission of an act of terrorism. Bahader Ali, who is Ashik Ali’s brother, was also charged with terrorist fund raising. Last week’s arrests were unarmed, pre-planned and intelligence-led, according to West Midlands police, which added that a seventh man from Birmingham, aged 20, continues to be questioned. Officers have until Thursday to charge him, release him, or apply for a further warrant of detention. The six charged men will appear at West London magistrates court in Hammersmith on Monday. The arrests took place from 11.30am on Sunday 18 September, with the last suspect detained at about 1am on the Monday morning. The raids took place in several deprived areas of the city that have sizeable Muslim populations. The operation involved MI5, with officers from Scotland Yard’s counter-terrorism command supporting the Birmingham-based force. West Midlands police said last week the “large-scale operation” had been running for some time and had been subject to regular review, adding that the action was necessary “in order to ensure public safety”. UK security and terrorism Ben Quinn guardian.co.uk
Continue reading …Brussels has until November’s G20 summit to work out how best to turn the €440bn bailout fund into €2tn war chest The International Monetary Fund has warned that the immense firepower of the European Central Bank (ECB) would be needed to “scare” the financial markets and prevent an intensification of the turmoil threatening to send the global economy back into recession. With investors poised to give their verdict tomorrow on the weekend talks in Washington of finance ministers and central bank governors, European policymakers insisted that fresh moves to scale up the fighting fund to support struggling members of the single currency were in the offing. Brussels has a deadline of the Cannes G20 summit in early November to flesh out its proposals but is waiting for a key vote in the German parliament this week on the expansion of the European Financial Stability Facility (EFSF) before deciding how best to turn the €440bn (£380bn) pot of capital into a €2tn war chest. “We need to find a mechanism where we can turn one euro in the EFSF into five, but there is no decision on how we could do that yet,” one senior European official said. Some European countries, including Germany, are sceptical about using the ECB to provide the leverage but the International Monetary Fund (IMF) insisted there was no alternative. Antonio Borges, head of the IMF’s European division, said: “It is very important that we see a combination of the ECB and the EFSF. Anyone who thinks that the EFSF will be a miraculous solution to the problem is making a very big mistake. “The ECB is the only agent which can really scare the markets.” Privately, many officials at the IMF and in its 187 member governments accept the inevitability of a Greek default and now see the priority as preventing the two much bigger economies of Italy and Spain being dragged down. Greece’s finance minister, Evangelos Venizelos, said Greece would not default before talks with the IMF about the next €8bn instalment of its rescue package due next month. Sources in Washington said Greece would get the money in the hope that Europe would buy itself enough time to piece together a convincing anti-contagion strategy. The likeliest time of a Greek default is thought to be in late 2011 or early 2012. Prices of shares and commodities plunged last week as dealers took fright at Europe’s intensifying debt crisis and signs of a marked slowdown in the world economy. The managing director of the IMF, Christine Lagarde, said the world was in a “very dangerous place” while the president of the World Bank, Robert Zoellick, said there was a risk of the contagion spreading to emerging economies, which have been performing more strongly than the rich western nations. “The numbers emerging out of developing countries over the past month are shaking and shaky,” Zoellick said. European policymakers in Washington responded to the pressure put on them by the US, Britain and emerging country members of the G20 group. Brazil’s finance minister, Alexandre Tombini, said his country’s experience showed the need to act with “overwhelming force”, while Tim Geithner, the US treasury secretary, said: “Decisions as to how to conclusively address the region’s problems cannot wait until the crisis gets more severe.” Justine Greening, economic secretary to the Treasury, said Britain had been urging Europe to get to grips with the crisis for several weeks. “I think we’ve had some positive steps taken this weekend towards the eurozone being able to do that in terms of both recapitalising the banks in Europe that are under stress but also [by] putting in place a bailout fund that is big enough to give confidence to the markets,” she said. Olli Rehn, Europe’s commissioner for economic and financial affairs, said the eurozone needed to do more. “We need to build a bridge and I think this bridge will be developed on the basis of the current reform of the EFSF and as one part of that next stage we are contemplating the possibility of leveraging the EFSF resources to have more firepower and thus have a stronger financial firewall to support our member states doing the right thing.” One option to increase the potency of the EFSF currently under discussion would be for the ECB to commit large amounts of funding, with the capital in the EFSF used to cover potential losses. German finance minister, Wolfgang Schäuble, said he was open to the idea of leveraging Europe’s rescue fund but said that did not necessarily mean the ECB should provide the extra firepower. Mohamed el-Erian, co-chief investment officer of the giant bond fund Pimco, said: “It is encouraging that … European officials are signalling a better appreciation of the depth and potential consequences of the crisis. “Now they need to translate this into decisive actions underpinned by a common vision of what they want the eurozone to look like in five years’ time.” European debt crisis European banks Europe European Central Bank IMF Economics Global economy Stock markets Financial crisis Global recession Banking G20 Market turmoil Timothy Geithner Larry Elliott guardian.co.uk
Continue reading …Good news for the ladies of Saudi Arabia: You can vote and even run for office, Saudi King Abdullah said today in an announcement that many are hailing as major progress for women’s rights. Of course, there’s a caveat: Abdullah’s announcement won’t take effect until after this Thursday’s elections, so…
Continue reading …The NYPD was busily busting protesters yesterday, notching at least 80 arrests on the seventh day of protests known as “Occupy Wall Street,” reports the Wall Street Journal . “On our march from Union Square the cops proceeded to use nets to round up people,” said one 24-year-old protester. “They split…
Continue reading …Liberal minister says he will quit if Medvedev becomes PM after announcement that caught many off guard The fallout from Vladimir Putin’s announcement that he plans to return to the Kremlin is being felt throughout Russia, with a key liberal official indicating that he plans to quit the government. The finance minister, Alexei Kudrin, a darling of the west because of his commitment to the free market and fiscal conservatism, said he would refuse to serve under Dmitry Medvedev, who is due to replace Putin as prime minister. His departure would deal a severe blow to liberal elements inside the ruling regime. “I do not see myself in a new government,” Kudrin said during a visit to Washington. “The point is not that nobody has offered me the job; I think that the disagreements I have [with Medvedev] will not allow me to join this government.” The reformist minister said disputes about spending were to blame and it was unclear why he blamed Medvedev when Putin has the final say over the country’s economic path. Although Putin’s return to the presidency was widely expected, the announcement, at a congress of the ruling United Russia party on Saturday, caught many off guard – even Putin’s spokesman Dmitry Peskov, who said in an interview: “We were totally unprepared for what was announced. It was their bilateral decision
Continue reading …Labour leader justifies policy as an attack on ‘fast-buck’ culture but critics say the change would not help poorer students A pledge by Ed Miliband, which would see the maximum university tuition fee cut by a third to £6,000, came under fire from across the political spectrum on the first day of the Labour conference. Amid confusion over whether the party would still advocate a graduate tax at the next general election, the National Union of Students joined forces with the coalition to warn that the change would do nothing to benefit poorer students. Miliband received a rough ride after he moved to reach out to disillusioned Liberal Democrat voters by announcing, at the annual conference, held in Liverpool for the first time, a plan for the cap on student tuition fees to be lowered from £9,000 to £6,000. The £800m cost of the fees change, outlined by the Labour leader in an Observer interview , would be paid in two ways. A cut in corporation tax for the banks would be reversed. (George Osborne announced in the budget in March that the tax would drop from 28% in 2010-11 to 23% in 2014-15.) And graduates later earning more than £65,000 would have to pay higher interest rates on their loans. Miliband told The Andrew Marr Show on BBC1 that the change would help Britain move away from the “fast-buck” economy. “We face big choices and tough choices in this country. Do we cut taxes for financial services, do we carry on with a fast-buck economy, or do we change course? Do we say invest in the future of our young people? I think we’ve got to put an end to the fast-buck era. “I don’t think the priority for Britain is to cut taxes for financial services, and it’s a big choice … a big difference between ourselves and the government.” The Labour leader was accused overnight of a U-turn, since he opposed an increase in tuition fees last year and advocated a graduate tax. Coalition ministers pointed out that the new policy was a step back from a graduate tax and would lead to a doubling of fees from the amount bequeathed by Labour when it left office. David Willetts, the universities minister, said: “Ed Miliband has now accepted that tuition fees should be doubled to £6,000 a year. He has consistently supported a graduate tax and Labour MPs were whipped to vote against higher fees at the end of last year. This monumental U-turn is evidence of weak leadership.” Miliband explained that the new policy was designed to form the centrepiece of a manifesto if an early election were held. He indicated that it remained his ambition to move towards endorsing a graduate tax by the time of the next general election if the present parliament lasted until 2015. “If we can do more by the time of the election [in 2015], we will,” he told the BBC. “But this is an important first step.” Willetts questioned whether the cut in the cap would benefit poorer students. In a letter to John Denham, the shadow business secretary, Willetts said: “Will graduates enjoy lower monthly repayments under your proposals? As you do not appear to be planning any changes to the repayment terms, it seems that monthly repayments will remain the same. “Moreover, there will be no benefit to the lowest-earning graduates because their entire outstanding debt is written off after 30 years, irrespective of its size. So your proposal jeopardises the funding of universities without reducing the monthly repayments paid by graduates.” Liam Burns, president of the National Union of Students, echoed the remarks by the Tory minister when he told Sky News that the changes would do nothing to help poorer students and would end up benefiting more affluent students. Burns said: “This was a long-term policy. You have to think who this benefits. Because of the 30-year cut-off – in which your debt would be written off under the system being proposed – actually taking the cap down to £6,000 would benefit the richest the most.” The NUS judgment was based on figures which showed that the alteration made no difference for students earning under £35,000. Under a £9,000 or £6,000 cap, students earning under £35,000 would be exempted from paying off the full debt. One coalition source said: “The winners from this policy, relative to government policy, are the highest-paid graduates because they are the group that pay off the whole debt. If you cut the total debt they enjoy benefit.” Labour sources insisted there was no confusion about Miliband’s commitment to endorsing a graduate tax, regarded by the Labour leader as being more fair. “This is a step towards a graduate tax,” one source said. “We would like to go further but we can only do what is affordable.” Denham said: “What we wanted to do was to show there is an alternative available to this government now that would cap fees – [it] would mean that universities would get all the money they have been expecting to get under the new system. It would also get away from this very pernicious ‘core and margins’ system where 60,000 places would get auctioned off. “It gives a sense of the direction of travel we want to go in for the next election … we are proposing a more progressive payment system because we are saying there should be lower fees and we are turning our back on some of the market the Tories are trying to put into place. But the direction of travel, we have always said, should be towards a graduate tax … [which] could only take place over a period of time.” Student finance Ed Miliband Higher education Labour conference 2011 Liberal-Conservative coalition Labour Labour conference Students Nicholas Watt guardian.co.uk
Continue reading …Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas has received a hero’s welcome in the West Bank, triumphantly telling his people the “Palestinian Spring” has begun following his historic speech to the UN last week. Abbas asked the world body on Friday to recognize Palestinian independence, defying appeals from Israel and the United States…
Continue reading …A plane carrying tourists to view Mount Everest crashed while attempting to land in Nepal today, killing all 19 people on board, including 13 foreigners. Ten Indians, two Americans, and one Japanese citizen were among the victims, Tourism Secretary Ganeshraj Joshi said. The turboprop plane belonging to Buddha Air was…
Continue reading …Amos Richards fell in same canyon where climber cut off his arm with pocketknife in 2003, as depicted in 127 Hours A 64-year-old man who broke his leg while hiking crawled through the Utah desert for four days near Canyonlands national park before rangers rescued him. Amos Wayne Richards, from Concord, North Carolina, is now recovering at home. He was hiking alone on 8 September in the rugged Maze District when he fell 10ft (3 metres). Chief park ranger Denny Ziemann says a search started the next day after Richards’ camping spot was found unattended. His car was seen near Little Blue John Canyon on 11 September, and rangers found Richards a few hours later. Richards fell in the same canyon where climber Aron Ralston cut off his arm with a pocketknife after being trapped by a boulder in 2003. Ralston’s story was later adapted into the Oscar-nominated film 127 Hours. Utah North Carolina United States guardian.co.uk
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