Home » Archives by category » News » World News (Page 367)
Jordan supercasino secret deal was personally approved by prime minister

Exclusive: Documents reveal Ma’arouf al-Bakhit gave green light to contract for Dead Sea Casino, despite public denials See Jordanian PM’s letter about the Dead Sea Casino deal Jordan’s prime minister personally authorised a secret contract to build an extra-legal supercasino complex, despite publicly denying responsibility for it, documents seen by the Guardian reveal. The multimillion-dollar Dead Sea casino deal is now frozen and has been the focus of anti-corruption street protests and parliamentary crises. It has been controversial both because gambling is illegal in Jordan and because the government faces a $1.4bn (£890m) penalty if the 50-year contract is cancelled. Ma’arouf al-Bakhit, the prime minister implicated in what has become known as “Casinogate”, was reappointed by Jordan’s King Abdullah in February to introduce constitutional reforms, after an eruption of popular protest inspired by the uprisings in Tunisia and Egypt. Bakhit, who was also prime minister when the casino contract was signed in 2007, narrowly survived parliamentary impeachment over the scandal in June, while the tourism minister at the time, Osama Dabbas, was successfully impeached for his role in overseeing the deal and now faces trial. Bakhit told MPs in June that he had not been told of the terms of the casino agreement or the penalties the government faced if the contract was broken. But confidential Jordanian state papers from 2007 — which were not shown to MPs at the time of the parliamentary hearings — reveal that the cabinet voted to accept the highly profitable agreement. In a letter sent to the tourism minister on 10 September 2007 and signed by Bakhit , the prime minister said that the cabinet had “decided to accept the agreement” to develop a casino complex by the Dead Sea as a legitimate “touristic activity” and told Dabbas to sign it with the London-based developer Oasis. Other correspondence between the two ministers in August and September 2007 shows Bakhit both saw the tenders in advance and the subsequent contract — a copy of which has also been passed to the Guardian and included a confidentiality clause to prevent public discussion of its contents. Soon afterwards, the development was suspended for fear of boosting support for the Islamic opposition. A recently released 2008 Wikileaks cable includes a report from the then US ambassador to Jordan, David Hale, on the earlier stages of the Dead Sea Casino scandal and cites the figure of $1.4bn as the contract cancellation penalty, as well as attempts by the Jordanian government to offer Oasis — which is seeking damages — alternative development land as compensation. Parliament’s refusal this summer to impeach Bakhit, who himself referred the scandal to Jordan’s anti-corruption commission when he was reappointed prime minister this year, provoked protests in Amman and elsewhere. Demonstrators called for the dissolution of the “parliament of shame” — regarded as having scapegoated the former tourism minister to protect Bakhit and other senior politicians — and for “the casino government” to go. The Jordanian regime is a linchpin of western and conservative Arab influence in the Middle East. Western governments and Saudi Arabia have sharply increased aid to Jordan since the toppling of the Egyptian and Tunisian dictators in the spring. Secret Jordanian state correspondence seen by the Guardian also shows that licences for two earlier casino developments were issued in December 2003 by a previous government led by prime minister Faisal al-Fayez (and negotiated under his predecessor, Aki Abu al-Ragheb in April of that year): one to be built in Aqaba on the Red Sea and the other near the Sheikh Hussein bridge over the Jordan river, linking Jordan to northern Israel. Like the Dead Sea project, the 2003 contract runs for 50 years. The licence for the casinos — which have also yet to be built — was issued to Ayla Corporation, a company owned by Khaled al-Masri, a well-connected businessman also involved in the 2007 Dead Sea bid. Fayez is now the speaker of the Jordanian parliament and in June played a central role in the investigation of the casino scandal and impeachment hearings, allowing Bakhit to speak in his own defence but barring the former tourism minister Dabbas from doing so. Several MPs walked out and submitted their resignations in protest. Jordan Middle East Seumas Milne guardian.co.uk

Continue reading …
Warren Buffett offers job to winner of charity auction

Ted Weschler, who paid $5.2m in two auctions for the chance to dine with Buffett, taken on at Berkshire Hathaway group It may be the most expensive job application ever – but it seems to have paid off. Ted Weschler, a hedge fund manager, paid $5.2m to win two charity auctions to have dinner with investment guru Warren Buffett. Now Buffett has offered him a job. Weschler, 50, the managing partner of Virginia-based Peninsula Capital Advisors, will join another recent Buffett appointee, hedge fund manager Todd Combs, 40, to help manage Buffett’s $66bn Berkshire Hathaway investment fund as its 81-year-old founder contemplates retirement, the company announced on Sunday. “After Mr Buffett no longer serves as CEO, Todd and Ted – possibly aided by one additional manager – will have responsibility for the entire equity and debt portfolio of Berkshire, subject to overall direction by the then-CEO and board of directors,” Berkshire said in a statement. “With Todd and Ted on board, Berkshire is well-positioned for successor investment management at the time Mr Buffett is no longer CEO,” it added. In 2010, Weschler paid $2.6m for the chance to dine with Buffett. He came back for more this year, securing a second dinner with another $2.6m bid. On both occasions the pair dined at Piccolo’s, a casual dining joint in Buffett’s home town of Omaha, Nebraska, according to Fortune magazine’s Carol Loomis, a long-time friend of Buffett. The money from the charity auction went to Glide, a San Francisco homeless charity. The appointments come after scandal threw Buffett’s succession plans awry. Until early this year David Sokol, one of Buffett’s top aides, was seen as the leading candidate to take over at Berkshire. But in January it emerged that Sokol held shares in Lubrizol Corp, a chemicals firm that Sokol recommended Berkshire should buy. Buffett said the holding was “inexplicable and inexcusable” and broke Berkshire’s code of ethics. Berkshire said in February there were four potential candidates to replace Buffett, without naming them. The company owns more than 70 subsidiaries, including insurance firms and clothing manufacturer Fruit of the Loom, while its investment portfolios owns chunks of businesses including American Express, Coca-Cola and Tesco. Warren Buffett Hedge funds United States Dominic Rushe guardian.co.uk

Continue reading …

Kids who attend middle-class schools find themselves in more crowded classrooms, led by teachers drawing smaller salaries, compared to the school systems based in poor or wealthy districts. Per-pupil spending in middle-class schools is also significantly lower than in other schools, a new report by the nonprofit group Third Way finds. The report argues that

Continue reading …
Has postmodernist design eaten itself?

Gaudy and irreverent, postmodernism was once an iconic chapter in design history. Now it sells gimmicky corkscrews. Can the V&A’s forthcoming retrospective tell us why? When Daryl Hannah decorates Charlie Sheen’s apartment in Oliver Stone’s 1987 movie Wall Street , she whips up a quintessential postmodernist pastiche. The faux-ruined walls and clashing colours personify the aspirations of the nouveaux riches, a shallow world of image and artifice. In a rare moment of design slapstick, Michael Douglas (as Gordon Gecko) puts his drink on the coffee table and it falls through – he thinks there’s glass there. You can hear the modernists tutting. With its deceptive surfaces and furniture that doesn’t do what it’s supposed to, postmodernism is not just the backdrop to but a metaphor for unbridled capitalism, where a plump balance sheet conceals all manner of sins and where marble-effect formica hides chipboard. But was postmodernism really so bad? Already we’re in cliche territory. If there were a critic’s rulebook, it would stipulate the need to begin any piece on postmodernism with a pop culture reference and a tone of moral ambivalence. That mandatory disapproval is based not so much on the carnival of bad taste that romped through the 1970s and 80s, but on the fact that this bad taste was only skin deep. For, according to the standard reading, postmodernism was fickle and ironic, obsessed with style for its own sake. Where modernism was about high-minded notions such as essence and truth to materials, perhaps even a social agenda, postmodernism was about surfaces and signs. As Fredric Jameson put it in his brilliant Postmodernism: Or, the Cultural Logic of Late Capitalism , “it is like the transition from precious metals to the credit card”. With a major retrospective of postmodernism opening at the V&A Museum later this month , the question is whether we have anything new to say about this phenomenon. Will the show reinforce old cliches, or will it manage to capture some of postmodernism’s complexity? One of the awkward things about the postmodernists was that few of their leading lights actually wanted to be one. Ettore Sottsass, arguably the godfather of postmodernist design, felt that it was an American architectural movement. And in some ways he was right. In architecture, the agenda was set across the Atlantic, by Robert Venturi and Denise Scott Brown’s embracing of Las Vegas neon , by the historicist references of Michael Graves , the vertiginous corporate lobbies of John Portman and the assemblage style of Frank Gehry’s house . But in design, the main impetus came from Europe. There were exceptions, such as the American Peter Shire, whose Bel Air chair does a fair impression of a cornice abusing a beach ball. But when Sottsass founded the Memphis group in Milan in 1981, along with Michele De Lucchi and Marco Zanini and others, he unleashed postmodernist design’s boldest force. Memphis was garish and irreverent, trawling history for allusions and splattering them with previously unthinkable patterns. It was a self-conscious riposte to modernism’s steel-tube sobriety. Martine Bedine’s Super lamp was like a child’s toy, part ferris wheel, part puppy on a leash. Sottsass’s Casablanca sideboard has something Aztec about it, and that kind of arbitrary reference was pure postmodernism – it might be neo-Mesopotamian, like Sottsass’s 1972 Lapislazzuli teapot , or neo-art deco primitivism like the 1982 Murmansk fruit bowl . But what Memphis is chiefly remembered for is the plastic laminate that gave these pieces their dizzying visual effect. Thanks to this emphasis on shock-and-awe surfaces, it has become common to suggest that Memphis products were designed merely to look good in photographs – that it was mediatised furniture for an image economy. Jameson made the same point about postmodern architecture. This may be true, although in Memphis’ case I’m not sure it was as conscious as that. Certainly, news of Memphis travelled fast – influencing some of the worst design of recent times – but Memphis itself was never a commercial success. The only people who seemed to do well out of it were Abet Laminati, the Italian laminates company that produced the riotous veneers Sottsass and co made all the rage. The problem with the conventional reading of Memphis as ironic, mediatised furniture was that Sottsass, at least, was not that cynical. A romantic, he believed that domestic objects could take on an almost sacred quality. A truer postmodernist was his compatriot Alessandro Mendini, who had established the Studio Alchimia group even before Memphis. Sharing none of Sottsass’s optimism, Mendini was much more the ironist and iconoclast, seizing the opportunity to break all of design’s rules – such as originality. His Proust armchair, a baroque confection daubed in pointillist brushstrokes , crosses furniture with an impressionist painting. He once described it to me as “hermaphrodite design” – nothing is his except the act of creating a hybrid. It was literate, sophisticated and meant as a joke. Just as architectural postmodernism descended into the pejorative “PoMo”, with pastiches such as Philip Johnson’s AT&T building (which crossed a skyscraper with a Chippendale cabinet), so postmodernist design fell into gimmicky merchandising. Mendini was a key culprit, with his toy-like Anna G corkscrew for Alessi , shaped like a woman in a dress. Even more literal was Michael Graves’s kettle , also for Alessi, with its whistling plastic bird perched on the spout. Abandoning the old form-and-function dogma, design embraced its new nature as kitsch – kitsch that still sells rather well today, we might add. From here, the link to pop and street culture is an easy one, and the V&A retrospective promises to regale us with instances of where postmodernist design culture simply became popular culture. Hip-hop sampling, Peter Saville’s New Order record covers , Grace Jones’s eclectic styling and the Levi’s ad in which Nick Kamen strips off in a launderette are all claimed as a groundswell of the postmodern ethos. There’s a good theoretical basis for a lot of that, but it threatens to confuse postmodernism with 1980s popular culture generally – and resuscitating Neneh Cherry as a postmodern icon feels like the 80s revival run amok. In fact, revivalism seems to be one of the permanent legacies of postmodernism. Retro has become a perpetual condition. You can see it in ultra-conservative magazine design and referential fashion statements. If chameleon style-shifters such as Madonna and Grace Jones are postmodernists, then so is Lady Gaga. What is Apple if not neo-modernism, a revival of the minimalism preached by Dieter Rams and the Ulm design school in the 1960s? And the image economy (if that really is a Memphis legacy) is now so advanced that designers publish computer-generated images of work that is not only skin-deep, but doesn’t even exist. In architecture, meanwhile, PoMo didn’t die so much as find itself exported to the new bastions of turbo-capitalism: mirrored glass (and the lack of financial transparency that goes with it) abounds in Moscow, while the towers with the funny crowns migrated to Dubai and Shanghai. The V&A ends the story in 1990 (well, shows have to end somewhere) but postmodernism is proving a difficult habit to kick. Design V&A Museums Exhibitions Architecture Modernism Justin McGuirk guardian.co.uk

Continue reading …

A 3-year-old Canadian boy who was kidnapped five days ago has been returned home apparently unharmed, appearing on his family’s sofa before dawn as mysteriously as he disappeared, reports the Toronto Sun . Police, who had 60 officers on the case, suspect a convicted sex offender took Kienan Hebert from his…

Continue reading …

A chain-smoking orangutan in a Malaysian zoo, who achieved notoriety when she became a symbol of the country’s horrid zoo conditions, has been forced to quit her tobacco habit, reports AP . The 20-year-old orangutan, Shirley, would smoke lit cigarettes thrown to her by zoo visitors. But now Malaysian wildlife officials…

Continue reading …
Bernard Hogan-Howe picked as new Met police commissioner

Former Merseyside chief constable sees off three rivals to become the most senior officer in British policing Bernard Hogan-Howe has been chosen as the new commissioner of the Metropolitan police. The selection was made by the home secretary, Theresa May. Hogan-Howe was believed to have been the candidate favoured by the Conservatives . After the resignation in July of Sir Paul Stephenson as commissioner, May drafted in Hogan-Howe as acting temporary deputy of the Met. He had been serving in Her Majesty’s Inspectorate of Constabulary, and before that had made his name as the chief constable of Merseyside police. Final interviews for the £260,000-a-year job were conducted on Monday morning by May and Boris Johnson, the London mayor. A formal announcement will be made later. Hogan-Howe beat three other police chiefs to become the most senior officer in British policing: Sir Hugh Orde, president of the Association of Chief Police Officers; Tim Godwin, the acting Met commissioner; and Stephen House, chief constable of Strathclyde police. Two official panels that formed part of the selection process had both assessed Orde as the best candidate . But his public criticism of the government’s proposed radical reforms of policing is thought to have cost him the job. In Hogan-Howe’s five years in charge of the Merseyside force, crime fell by 29% and antisocial behaviour by 25%. He branded his style of law enforcement “total policing”, inspired by the “total football” played by Dutch teams in the 1970s. The post of Met commissioner is technically made by royal appointment. The Queen, who is in Balmoral, was consulted as part of the appointment process and will sign a warrant formally appointing Hogan-Howe. He becomes the third Met commissioner in three years. Under Johnson’s administration, first Sir Ian Blair and then Stephenson have resigned. Hogan-Howe had applied for the job in 2009, when the final two candidates were Orde and Stephenson. The change of government helped his cause this time round. The new commissioner faces the challenge of next year’s Olympics in London, placating politicians and his own rank-and-file officers, and dealing with large budget cuts. Metropolitan police London Police Vikram Dodd guardian.co.uk

Continue reading …

Wired Goes German

No Comment

Germany is the latest country to join the march of the geeks, with the launch of a German-language edition of Wired , reports Der Spiegel . Although Spiegel says the magazine is overly reliant on older articles from the US edition, it hails the German version’s “playful, even chaotic” graphics and interesting…

Continue reading …

What did Serena Williams say to the umpire after she lost a key point for yelling during a shot against US Open winner Sam Stosur yesterday? She completely lost her cool, going off on an extended rant in the changeover between games. “If you ever see me walking down the…

Continue reading …

Start the countdown, girls. In a mere seven years, the Biebs plans to be married … with children. “I want to be a young dad,” Justin Bieber told Women’s Wear Daily . “I want to be able to have done what I wanted to do—to be successful, to do a movie…

Continue reading …