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Dale Farm residents prepare for latest court ruling

High court judge is due to examine the case and rule on whether the eviction of Travellers at the Essex site can now take place The residents of Dale Farm are once again facing the prospect of imminent removal from their home as a judge prepares to rule on Friday morning whether the bailiffs can move in and mount one of the largest evictions in British history. Travellers at the site at Crays Hill, Essex, won an 11th-hour injunction on Monday that prevented authorities from clearing the land amid concerns about “over-enforcement” resulting in total clearance – including structures entitled to be there. But a judge at the Royal Courts of Justice is due to examine the case and rule on whether the eviction can now take place. Basildon council, which was ordered by Mr Justice Edwards-Stuart to serve a schedule on the residents specifying what was proposed for each of the 51 unauthorised plots, says it has now done that. Dale Farm residents, who had been told to remove the barricades to the site, have also complied with the court. Speaking on ITV’s Daybreak, Tony Ball of Basildon council said the council would “have no choice” but to mount its own appeal if the court rules against it at the hearing, expected at 11.30am. However in a separate interview he said that, if the injunction is lifted, authorities could be in a position to move in to the site on Saturday morning. “We need to get the site cleared,” Ball told the BBC. “Everyone agrees now that there has to be a resolution to this – the judges and the public at large and I think even the travellers.” On Monday, there was jubilation among travellers and protesters at the site when news reached them that Monday’s planned eviction had been halted, but they are now preparing for the high court judgment to go against them. Ball said that, since Monday, many Travellers had returned to the site in anticipation of being able to stay. There was a “concern”, he added, that the barricades could be moved back “very quickly” to form an obstacle for bailiffs. Basildon council’s fight to clear Dale Farm – and the 86 families who live there – has attracted considerable criticism in recent weeks . It emerged on Thursday that members of the International Expert Group Meeting on Forced Evictions, meeting at the UN Human Settlements Programme in headquarters in Nairobi, have written to the Traveller community expressing sympathy. The letter, signed by more than 30 representatives from different countries, said: “Repressive policies targeting Gypsies and Travellers disguised as planning regulations are discriminatory, whilst inclusive national strategies that are in line with human rights standards generate real progress in addressing issues of exclusion and marginalisation.” Dale Farm Roma, Gypsies and Travellers Lizzy Davies guardian.co.uk

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Woman arrested after four-year-old daughter found dead

Police say 31-year-old walked into Manchester Royal Infirmary and ‘expressed concerns’ about welfare of her child A woman has been arrested on suspicion of murder after her four-year-old daughter was found dead. The 31-year-old walked into Manchester Royal Infirmary at around 7.15pm on Thursday night and “expressed concerns” about the welfare of her child to doctors and nurses. Staff contacted police, who went to a house on Garthorne Close, in Moss Side, around two miles from the hospital. Officers discovered the child’s body at the address. It is understood there were no obvious signs of injury to the child, and a post-mortem examination will take place to establish cause of death. Sources said the arrested woman had gone into the hospital and told staff her daughter was dead. It is believed police are not looking for anyone else in relation to the death, and a source close to the inquiry described the incident as “sad and tragic”. A spokesman for Greater Manchester police said: “Police have launched a murder inquiry after the death of a four-year-old girl. “At 7.15pm on Thursday, police were contacted by staff at the Manchester Royal Infirmary after a woman came into the hospital and expressed concerns about the welfare of a four-year-old girl. “Officers then attended at a house … and found a four-year-old girl deceased. Inquiries to establish the circumstances surrounding her death are ongoing. “A 31-year-old woman has been arrested on suspicion of murder and remains in police custody for questioning.” Crime guardian.co.uk

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Woman arrested after four-year-old daughter found dead

Police say 31-year-old walked into Manchester Royal Infirmary and ‘expressed concerns’ about welfare of her child A woman has been arrested on suspicion of murder after her four-year-old daughter was found dead. The 31-year-old walked into Manchester Royal Infirmary at around 7.15pm on Thursday night and “expressed concerns” about the welfare of her child to doctors and nurses. Staff contacted police, who went to a house on Garthorne Close, in Moss Side, around two miles from the hospital. Officers discovered the child’s body at the address. It is understood there were no obvious signs of injury to the child, and a post-mortem examination will take place to establish cause of death. Sources said the arrested woman had gone into the hospital and told staff her daughter was dead. It is believed police are not looking for anyone else in relation to the death, and a source close to the inquiry described the incident as “sad and tragic”. A spokesman for Greater Manchester police said: “Police have launched a murder inquiry after the death of a four-year-old girl. “At 7.15pm on Thursday, police were contacted by staff at the Manchester Royal Infirmary after a woman came into the hospital and expressed concerns about the welfare of a four-year-old girl. “Officers then attended at a house … and found a four-year-old girl deceased. Inquiries to establish the circumstances surrounding her death are ongoing. “A 31-year-old woman has been arrested on suspicion of murder and remains in police custody for questioning.” Crime guardian.co.uk

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An epic fail in the beer heist department, according to cops in Los Angeles County. They say two 19-year-olds went into a market and fled with a 30-pack of Tecate. Employees chased them and caught one, reports the Los Angeles Times . The other jumped into a waiting car driven by…

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Republicans are back in debate mode, this time with no fewer than nine candidates thanks to the invite extended to former New Mexico Gov. Gary Johnson. (Yeah, the libertarian pro-pot guy.) The big focus, though, will obviously be on Rick Perry and Mitt Romney—and whether Michele Bachmann and…

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US soldier pleads guilty to Afghan murder

Andrew Holmes, of Boise, Idaho, fired machine-gun at unarmed civilian ‘for sport’ A soldier among five charged in the “thrill” killings of Afghan civilians last year pleaded guilty to a murder charge on Thursday, confessing in court that he fired a heavy machine-gun at a startled, unarmed man from 15ft away after a co-defendant threw a grenade at him. “I knew I should have taken cover, but instead I pulled the trigger,” Private 1st Class Andrew Holmes, of Boise, Idaho, told the judge. The soldiers from Joint Base Lewis-McChord, south of Seattle, were arrested in Afghanistan last year, after prosecutors said they killed three civilians for sport during patrols in January, February and May. Holmes, 21, was accused of directly participating in the first killing, and he was initially charged with conspiracy, premeditated murder and other charges. In a deal with prosecutors, he pleaded guilty to murder by an inherently dangerous act, possessing a finger bone from his victim, and smoking hashish. Holmes told the judge, Lt Col Kwasi Hawks, at the court in Joint Base Lewis-McChord, that one of the ringleaders of the plot, then-Cpl Jeremy Morlock, had frequently talked about killing civilians and suggested ways they could do it. As they left on patrol on 15 January, 2010, Morlock told Holmes to grab an illicitly obtained grenade out of his tent because “something might happen” – and Holmes complied: “I didn’t know what was going to happen, but I had a terrible feeling that Cpl Morlock was up to no good.” Later, as they patrolled a village in Kandahar, Morlock stood by a low wall along a field and called for Holmes. It was a cold day, Holmes said, and he was sweating and out of breath when he took a knee beside Morlock. He said he saw Morlock fiddling with something out of the corner of his eye. “I suspected it was the grenade, but I was hoping it was his radio,” he said. The grenade it was. Morlock tossed it at a young man standing near the other side of the wall – even though the man was obviously unarmed and posed no threat, Holmes said. Then, he ordered Holmes to shoot. “I looked at the young man. He was standing there like a deer in the headlights,” Holmes told the judge in a clear, steady voice. “I fired six to eight rounds at the man, and I’ve regretted it ever since.” Holmes and Morlock then posed for a photographs holding up the head of the victim. Holmes’ lawyer, Dan Conway, has insisted he was ordered to pose. Holmes was expected to be sentenced on Friday. No sentencing recommendations by prosecutors or the defence under the terms of the plea deal were immediately disclosed. Under military law, a person can be convicted of murder even if the act is not premeditated – if, for example, the actions of the defendant were taken in disregard of human life. The charges against the five soldiers from what was formerly known as the 5th Stryker Brigade – since renamed the 2nd Stryker Brigade – are among the most serious war crimes charges to emerge from the Afghan war. Prosecutors say that in addition to killing three men some of the defendants kept body parts severed from the corpses as well as photographs kept as war trophies. Drug use was rampant in the unit, and one soldier who blew the whistle on hash-smoking by his comrades was beaten up and threatened in retaliation. Morlock has admitted taking part in the three killings and agreed to testify against his co-defendants in exchange for a 24-year sentence. Staff Sgt Calvin Gibbs of Billings, Montana, is the highest ranking soldier charged in the killings, and Morlock and others said he was the mastermind. Gibbs denies wrongdoing. Spc Adam Winfield of Cape Coral, Florida, told his parents about the plot in Facebook messages after the first killing, and his father immediately reported it to Lewis-McChord. But the alert was not reported up the chain of command, and the plot did not come to light until months later, when two more victims had been killed. Winfield admitted participating in the last killing, saying he thought Gibbs might kill him if he didn’t, and he pleaded guilty this summer to involuntary manslaughter and was sentenced to three years. Holmes also pleaded guilty to drug use and keeping a finger bone severed from a corpse. He told the judge Gibbs gave him the finger, and he took it only because Gibbs insisted. Conway said it was a “tough pill to swallow” for Holmes to plead guilty to murder, but prosecutors would not agree to the lesser charge of involuntary manslaughter. He blamed Holmes’ troubles on the unluckiness of being assigned to a unit with Morlock. “Andy Holmes joined the army as a healthy, good-natured, 18-year-old kid who liked to play golf and go fishing,” Conway said after court on Thursday. “He may be leaving the army as a felon.” US military United States Washington state Idaho Afghanistan guardian.co.uk

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Jaycee Dugard is suing the federal government for failing to keep track of Phillip Garrido, the parolee who held her captive for 18 years and fathered two children by her, reports CNN . Her complaint states that the Justice Department’s “gross neglect borders on virtual complicity,” notes the Los Angeles Times…

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Michael Sata wins Zambian presidential election

Opposition leader nicknamed King Cobra ousts incumbent Rupiah Banda, whose party has run Zambia since 1991 The opposition leader Michael Sata has been declared the winner of Zambia’s presidential election, ousting the incumbent, Rupiah Banda. With 95% of constituencies counted, Sata had 1,150,045 votes, 43% of the total, compared to Banda’s 961,796. Sata’s supporters spilled into the streets of the capital, Lusaka, to celebrate the announcement. Banda’s Movement for Multi-party Democracy party has run Zambia since one-party rule ended in 1991. On Thursday youths fought running battles with riot police in the towns of Ndola and Kitwe, setting fire to vehicles and markets. Hackers hit the election commission’s website overnight, posting false results showing Sata on course for a landslide, adding to the confusion and tension of what was already a tight race between two old rivals. Sata lost to Banda by just 35,000 votes in 2008. Sata, 74, nicknamed King Cobra because of his venomous tongue, toned down his rhetoric against foreign mining firms in the closing stages of the six-week campaign but his victory could still cloud the investment outlook. Zambia is Africa’s biggest copper producer and Chinese companies have become key players in Zambia’s economy, with total investments by the end of 2010 topping $2bn, according to data from the Chinese embassy. Sata accused Chinese mining firms in the earlier stages of the campaign of creating slave labour conditions with scant regard for safety or the local culture. Zambia Africa guardian.co.uk

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Death row inmates in Texas can no longer request special last meals, and they can blame racist killer Lawrence Russell Brewer. Before he was executed last night , Brewer ordered up a Texas-sized feast, according to the Austin American-Statesman : “Two chicken fried steaks, a triple-meat bacon cheeseburger, a cheese omelet, large…

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The latest TSA story making the rounds involves a Dallas woman who says agents humiliated her by searching her afro, reports NBC-Dallas/Fort Worth . “I just heard these voices saying, ‘Hey you, hey you, ma’am, stop. Stop—the lady with the hair, you,” says hairdresser Isis Brantley. (It’s some hair, too:…

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