The Guardian has been collecting memories of 9/11. See memories from around the world and add your own Guardian Interactive team Alex Graul Martin Shuttleworth Alastair Dant Mariana Santos Jonathan Richards
Continue reading …Per Johansson found moose entangled in neighbour’s apple tree, apparently intoxicated with fermented fruit A stunned Swede discovered a seemingly intoxicated moose entangled in an apple tree. Per Johansson, 45, who lives in south-western Sweden, says he heard a roar from the garden of his neighbour, who was on holiday, late on Tuesday and went to have a look. There he found a female moose kicking about in the tree. The animal was likely to have been drunk from eating fermented apples. With the help of police and rescue services, Johansson later managed to set the moose free by sawing off branches. But the animal appeared confused and wandered into Johansson’s garden, where she was still resting on Thursday. Other neighbours in the Gothenburg suburb of Saro had seen the animal around the area for days. Johansson said the moose appeared to be sick, drunk, or “half-stupid”. Sweden Animals Europe guardian.co.uk
Continue reading …Per Johansson found moose entangled in neighbour’s apple tree, apparently intoxicated with fermented fruit A stunned Swede discovered a seemingly intoxicated moose entangled in an apple tree. Per Johansson, 45, who lives in south-western Sweden, says he heard a roar from the garden of his neighbour, who was on holiday, late on Tuesday and went to have a look. There he found a female moose kicking about in the tree. The animal was likely to have been drunk from eating fermented apples. With the help of police and rescue services, Johansson later managed to set the moose free by sawing off branches. But the animal appeared confused and wandered into Johansson’s garden, where she was still resting on Thursday. Other neighbours in the Gothenburg suburb of Saro had seen the animal around the area for days. Johansson said the moose appeared to be sick, drunk, or “half-stupid”. Sweden Animals Europe guardian.co.uk
Continue reading …Activists present letter for Ban Ki-moon at West Bank mission as officials prepare to lobby general assembly for recognition The Palestinian people have officially launched their campaign to join the United Nations as a full member state, saying they will stage a series of peaceful events in the runup to the annual gathering of the UN general assembly this month. Some 100 Palestinian officials and activists gathered at the UN offices in Ramallah for a short ceremony, where they announced their plans in a letter addressed to the secretary general, Ban Ki-moon. The letter urges Ban to add his “moral voice in support of the Palestinian people”. “Families of the tens of thousands of victims of Israeli occupation, including those martyred, wounded and imprisoned, and countless others who were expelled from their homes or lost their homes and their property, hope that you will exert all possible efforts toward the achievement of the Palestinian people’s just demands,” it says. The letter was handed over by Latifa abu Hmeid, a 70-year-old woman who lost one son in fighting with Israel and has seven other sons in Israeli prisons because of alleged militant activities. Officials said Abu Hmeid was selected to deliver the document because her personal story reflected the plight of the Palestinians. A resident of a West Bank refugee camp, her house has twice been demolished by Israeli authorities as punishment for her sons’ activities, they said. The Palestinians have decided to turn to the UN to recognise their independence after two decades of unsuccessful peace efforts with Israel. The latest round of talks broke down a year ago. The campaign seeks recognition of an independent Palestine in the West Bank, Gaza Strip and East Jerusalem – areas captured by Israel in the 1967 six-day war. Israel rejects a return to its 1967 lines. While any UN vote will be largely symbolic, the Palestinians believe a strong international endorsement will boost their position and put pressure on Israel should negotiations resume. Israel has been lobbying the international community to oppose the vote, saying peace can only be achieved through negotiations. The letter says the campaign will include a series of peaceful events “in various international cities and capitals” leading up to the 21 September opening of the general assembly. Two days later, the Palestinian president, Mahmoud Abbas, will address the gathering in New York and ask for admission to the United Nations. It remains unclear whether the Palestinians will turn to the security council or the general assembly. The council needs nine votes out of 15 and no veto from any of its permanent members to pass a decision. However, the US, which opposes the Palestinian bid, is expected to veto any request in the council. The Palestinians could then seek admission as a “non-member state” of the general assembly, like the Vatican. Approval in the assembly, which is dominated by developing nations sympathetic to the Palestinians, is assured. But the vote would not be legally binding. The Palestinians say they will continue their campaign until they gain full UN membership. Although the Palestinians say their campaign will be peaceful, Israeli military officials fear that mass demonstrations in the West Bank could turn violent. Security forces have been preparing for the possibility of violence, conducting exercises and stockpiling what they say is “non-lethal” riot-control equipment such as teargas, water cannon and stun grenades. Palestinian territories United Nations Middle East Israel guardian.co.uk
Continue reading …Activists present letter for Ban Ki-moon at West Bank mission as officials prepare to lobby general assembly for recognition The Palestinian people have officially launched their campaign to join the United Nations as a full member state, saying they will stage a series of peaceful events in the runup to the annual gathering of the UN general assembly this month. Some 100 Palestinian officials and activists gathered at the UN offices in Ramallah for a short ceremony, where they announced their plans in a letter addressed to the secretary general, Ban Ki-moon. The letter urges Ban to add his “moral voice in support of the Palestinian people”. “Families of the tens of thousands of victims of Israeli occupation, including those martyred, wounded and imprisoned, and countless others who were expelled from their homes or lost their homes and their property, hope that you will exert all possible efforts toward the achievement of the Palestinian people’s just demands,” it says. The letter was handed over by Latifa abu Hmeid, a 70-year-old woman who lost one son in fighting with Israel and has seven other sons in Israeli prisons because of alleged militant activities. Officials said Abu Hmeid was selected to deliver the document because her personal story reflected the plight of the Palestinians. A resident of a West Bank refugee camp, her house has twice been demolished by Israeli authorities as punishment for her sons’ activities, they said. The Palestinians have decided to turn to the UN to recognise their independence after two decades of unsuccessful peace efforts with Israel. The latest round of talks broke down a year ago. The campaign seeks recognition of an independent Palestine in the West Bank, Gaza Strip and East Jerusalem – areas captured by Israel in the 1967 six-day war. Israel rejects a return to its 1967 lines. While any UN vote will be largely symbolic, the Palestinians believe a strong international endorsement will boost their position and put pressure on Israel should negotiations resume. Israel has been lobbying the international community to oppose the vote, saying peace can only be achieved through negotiations. The letter says the campaign will include a series of peaceful events “in various international cities and capitals” leading up to the 21 September opening of the general assembly. Two days later, the Palestinian president, Mahmoud Abbas, will address the gathering in New York and ask for admission to the United Nations. It remains unclear whether the Palestinians will turn to the security council or the general assembly. The council needs nine votes out of 15 and no veto from any of its permanent members to pass a decision. However, the US, which opposes the Palestinian bid, is expected to veto any request in the council. The Palestinians could then seek admission as a “non-member state” of the general assembly, like the Vatican. Approval in the assembly, which is dominated by developing nations sympathetic to the Palestinians, is assured. But the vote would not be legally binding. The Palestinians say they will continue their campaign until they gain full UN membership. Although the Palestinians say their campaign will be peaceful, Israeli military officials fear that mass demonstrations in the West Bank could turn violent. Security forces have been preparing for the possibility of violence, conducting exercises and stockpiling what they say is “non-lethal” riot-control equipment such as teargas, water cannon and stun grenades. Palestinian territories United Nations Middle East Israel guardian.co.uk
Continue reading …At least 12 institutions reconsidering charging maximum after white paper offered incentives to charge less, watchdog says At least 12 universities are considering substantially dropping their tuition fees for next autumn from the maximum of £9,000, it has emerged. More than a third of English universities – 47 out of 123 – intended to charge £9,000 as their standard fee, the government’s higher education access watchdog reported in July. The estimated average fee was £8,393, the Office for Fair Access (Offa) said. However, universities are now reconsidering their sums after the government has given them incentives to charge less than £7,500, the watchdog said. In a white paper published this summer, ministers told universities that they could bid for 20,000 full-time undergraduate places next year if they charged less than £7,500. Vince Cable, the universities secretary, has said the figure of 20,000 will increase in the future. The white paper was published after universities decided on their fees for next year. Offa said at least 12 universities had asked whether they could change their fees in light of the white paper. On Tuesday, the watchdog sent all universities an email with instructions on how to lower their fees. It said they would need to reissue an agreement stating how they would broaden their mix of students to ensure more teenagers from low-income homes went to university. “You may be considering measures to lower your institution’s net average fee, in order to bid for places,” the email states. ” This guidance … sets out how to make any resulting changes.” Teenagers are deciding which universities to apply for and will submit applications from the end of this month. Some may base their decisions on how much a university’s fees are. Eric Thomas, president of Universities UK – the umbrella group for vice-chancellors – said some universities would want to bid for the 20,000 places and so would lower their fees. He said changing fees would be a “complicated calculation” for universities and institutions would have to “get their skates on”. The white paper allows universities to accept as many students with AAB grades at A-level as they want. Universities would have to calculate how many students with these grades would apply to them, Thomas said. Tuition fees Higher education Students University funding Jessica Shepherd guardian.co.uk
Continue reading …Photo albums and videos giving a glimpse into rarely seen aspects of the Gaddafi family’s life have been discovered in Muammar Gaddafi’s compound in Tripoli and other homes around Libya. Several members of Gaddafi’s family are believed to have crossed the border into Algeria
Continue reading …Gage report cites ‘loss of discipline and lack of moral courage’ for death of Baha Mousa after 36 hours of detention in Basra British soldiers inflicted “violent and cowardly” assaults on Iraqi civilians subjecting them to “gratuitous” kickings and beatings, an inquiry into the death of the detainee Baha Mousa has found. In a devastating indictment of military culture, the retired appeal court judge Sir William Gage ruled that there was widespread ignorance of what was permitted in handling prisoners of war. Although he did not suggest there had been a policy of systematic abuse towards Iraqi suspects, he deplored the absence of any “proper MoD doctrine on interrogation”. The report at the end of the two-year inquiry contains savage criticisms of individual soldiers and officers as well as damning descriptions of poor internal communications, “loss of discipline and a lack of moral courage”. Mousa, 26, a Basra hotel worker, died after spending 36 hours in detention in the custody of soldiers from the 1st Battalion Queen’s Lancashire Regiment. He was found to have suffered from 93 external injuries. Gage found that even senior commanders were ignorant of a ban imposed in 1972 on the use of five techniques, including hooding, stress positions and sleep deprivation. The hooding, which was prohibited under the Geneva Convention, was “unjustified and wholly unacceptable”. “For almost the whole of the period up to Baha Mousa’s death … the detainees were kept handcuffed, hooded and in stress positions in extreme heat and conditions of some squalor,” the report said. Four soldiers were singled out for severe criticism, including Colonel Jorge Mendonca, the unit’s commander, who, he said, “bears a heavy responsibility for these events”. Judge Gage said he ought to have known what was going on in the detention centre and should have appreciated the dangers of “conditioning”. He is acquitted, however, of having any knowledge of the beatings. Corporal Donald Payne, was the only soldier convicted of what the report describes as a “dreadful catalogue of unjustified and brutal violence on the defenceless detainees”. Gage calls him a “violent bully”. Lt Craig Rodgers, commander of the unit responsible for guarding the prisoners, is accused of “a very serious breach of duty” for not reporting the treatment meted out. “If he had taken action when he first knew what was occurring, Baha Mousa would almost certainly have survived”. Major Michael Peebles, responsible for monitoring detainees, was accused of “unacceptable” behaviour. There was also stinging criticism of Father Peter Madden, the unit’s Catholic padre, who visited the temporary detention facility (TDF). Judge Gage concluded that he was a “poor witness”. He added: “I find that the did visit the TDF [the day Mousa died]. … He must have seen the shocking condition of the detainees and the deteriorating condition of the TDF. “He ought to have intervened immediately, or reported it up the chain of command but, in fact, it seems he did not have the courage to do either.” Among the humiliations forced upon the detainees, the report said, were toilets being flushed over their heads, beatings with metal bars, verbal abuse, being forced to “dance like Michael Jackson” and having lighter fuel poured over them. One officer who visited the detention centre told the inquiry that the detainees looked as though they had been “in a car crash”. After the death of Baha Mousa, the surviving detainees were subjected to further assaults and “trophy photographs” were said to have been taken of them being beaten. The discovery of weapons at the hotel justified the suspects’ arrest, Gage commented. “However I regard it as highly unlikely that the detainees or any of them were in fact involved in insurgent or terrorist activity.” One of the principal causes was “an unfounded rumour circulating” through the battalion that the detainees had been responsible for the murder of a popular officer or of members of the Royal Military Police. The report paints a picture of “corporate” and “systemic failure” of the MoD to provide clear and consistent guidelines about what was permitted in the treatment of prisoners of war. Techniques were used that had been banned 30 years earlier as “prohibited and unlawful in warfare by reason of the Geneva Convention”. At the time of the invasion of Iraq, “there was no proper MoD doctrine on interrogation of prisoners of war that was generally available”. A ban on hooding ordered made by a senior officer in Basra after the invasion was never effectively communicated to 1QLR. But the incidents, Gage said, “did not amount to an entrenched culture of violence in the [British] battlegroup” – a reference to the rest of British forces in southern Iraq. Even after Mousa’s death an order reminding troops of the ban was not properly disseminated down the chain of command. Prisoner handling was “not given a high priority by the divisional commanders and their chiefs of staff”. The bans on hooding and other techniques were not even included in officers’ training at Sandhurst. It added that there was “no standing orders or general instructions in 1QLR as to the medical care for civilian detainees.” Summing up his findings, Gage declared: “The events of 14 to 16 September 2003 were indeed a very great stain on the reputation of the army and no doubt they did at the time greatly damage some of the good work done by 1QLR and other units in Iraq. “My judgment is that they constituted an appalling episode of serious, gratuitous violence on civilians which resulted in the death of one man and injuries to others. They represent a very serious breach of discipline by a number of members of 1QLR.” Lee Hughes, secretary to the inquiry, said the report is now in the hands of the crown prosecution service which would have to decide whether to take action. “The chairman has no powers to find criminal responsibility, it’s for the prosecution authorities to decide,” he said. Witnesses were protected from self-incrimination but evidence from other sources and witnesses about individuals could lead to criminal charges or civil proceedings. The report of the inquiry, which cost £13m, includes 73 recommendations. They mainly call for clear guidance for all British forces handling prisoners, including an absolute ban on hooding. Baha Mousa Military Iraq Middle East Richard Norton-Taylor Owen Bowcott guardian.co.uk
Continue reading …Rowan Williams hopes to discuss the violent persecution of Anglicans in Zimbabwe when he tours the region next month The Archbishop of Canterbury is hoping to have face to face discussions with Robert Mugabe in Zimbabwe next month amid the violent persecution of Anglicans in the country. Rowan Williams has requested a meeting with the Zimbabwean president when he travels to Harare as part of a tour of the south of the continent, according to his spokeswoman. Williams, who will become the first prominent British representative to visit Zimbabwe’s capital in a decade, is making the journey in an attempt to “show solidarity” with Anglicans in the region, she said. In recent months priests are said to have been beaten and arrested by police, staff evicted from church buildings and property seized, while some Anglicans have allegedly been arrested and murdered. Some have questioned whether Williams would make the trip due to the violent regime, but Lambeth Palace said there had never been any debate over the matter. The Archbishop’s spokeswoman, who confirmed he will also visit Malawi and Zambia during the trip, said the recent persecution is “more of a reason to go because people need more pastoral care”. She said: “The aim of the trip as a whole is a pastoral visit and it’s to show solidarity with Anglicans there, that’s really the aim of the trip.” Dr Chad Gandiya, the Bishop of Harare, told The Times he hoped the visit would bring respite to the Zimbabwean Church. He said police had been acting on the instructions of Nolbert Kunonga, the leader of a breakaway church and a Mugabe supporter. Last month the country’s chief justice ruled that all Anglican property in the Harare diocese was under Kunonga’s custody. Gandiya said despite the attacks, Church attendance numbers were thriving. “I often think, where are all the people coming from. Sometimes I ask them if they know what they are committing themselves to,” he said. Referring to Williams’ visit he added: “He is visiting the province. He is going to Malawi and from there he is coming to Zimbabwe. It is a pastoral visit, it is not a political visit. “He is not coming to tell Kunonga off because that is not his business. He is coming to encourage Zimbabwean Anglicans in their faith.” Lambeth Palace added it has requested a meeting with President Mugabe but has received no reply as of yet. The Archbishop of York, Dr John Sentamu, cut up his clerical dog collar in 2007 in protest at the regime of Mugabe, saying he would not wear it again until the president had left office. Robert Mugabe Zimbabwe Rowan Williams Anglicanism Religion Christianity Africa guardian.co.uk
Continue reading …An early consensus is taking shape from tonight’s GOP debate, and Mitt Romney should be pleased. He won or at least held his own in the eyes of most (but certainly not all). Chris Cillizza of the Washington Post pronounces him the winner for his “slow and steady” performance after…
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