The wedding of King Jigme Khesar Namgyal Wangchuck, Bhutan’s fifth Dragon King, was an extravagant affair outside a sacred 17th century monastery fortress, featuring dancers performing traditional routines, singers chanting celebratory songs, and a procession of monks and flag bearers leading the soon-to-be-queen inside. Even so, there were no celebrities,…
Continue reading …An Amtrak train crashed into another train unloading passengers at a station in California, leaving 16 people with mainly minor injuries, authorities said. The crash occurred late yesterday as the passenger train, traveling at a speed of up to about 20mph, struck the stationary Amtrak train at the station in…
Continue reading …Talk about the break-up from hell: After leather artist Peter Main, 62, parted ways with Toni Jo Silvey, 49, in 2009, she allegedly broke two of his windows with a tire iron and a third with a sword , rammed his parked car with hers and sent it through the garage…
Continue reading …Uncertainty over who will be deported tempers West Bank mood after deal with Israel to free Gilad Shalit When the news came through that the captured Israeli soldier Gilad Shalit was to be released, a wave of relief spread across the West Bank. There are currently around 7,000 Palestinians held in Israeli jails, of whom 180 are children. And this Saturday, 1,026 families will hear whether their husband, wife, child or sister will be among the prisoners Israel will free in return for its captive sergeant. The wait is fraught with hope and anxiety. Among those due to be released are people convicted of mass murders, but there are also those who were simply members of organisations banned by Israel, or who threw rocks at Israeli soldiers. Mohamed Tamimi, 36, has not seen his sister Ahlan since four years ago, when he was last granted a permit to see her in prison. Ahlan is serving 16 life sentences for driving a suicide bomber to a Sbarro pizza restaurant in Jerusalem in 2001. The blast killed 15 people and injured 130, in one of the bloodiest terrorist attacks in Israel’s history. She is reported to be among those marked for release, but her family knows nothing for certain. As news reports say she will be sent to Jordan, Mohamed is preparing to travel there this weekend. “It’s been a very tense week,” he said. “I still don’t know anything. News reports say she is going to be deported to Jordan, but I still don’t know if she’ll be going there or some other country. I have no idea what visas I’m going to need.” Ahlan was arrested when she was 22 years old, during the height of the intifada. Mohamed said her involvement in the bombing came as a huge shock to her family. He assumed Hamas recruited her at Bir Zeit University, where she was studying journalism. She was a perfect target, he said – she did not wear a headscarf and spoke fluent English, so would have aroused little suspicion from Israeli soldiers: “I don’t want to justify her actions. She has a deep connection with this land, she wanted to be part of the resistance. There was so much pressure on us at that time, so much death, frustration – but really, I don’t think she fully thought through what she was doing.”On Thursday a small group of protesters staged a demonstration in Ramallah’s Manara Square, linked in prisoner’s chains in solidarity with the hundreds of Palestinian prisoners on hunger strike in Israel’s jails. Among the demonstrators was Hassan Karaja, whose sister Sumoud is among the hunger strikers. Hassan said Sumoud, who taught health and nutrition, was imprisoned for attempting to cross from Ramallah into Jerusalem without the permit required by West Bank inhabitants. Israel accused her of stabbing an Israeli soldier at Qalandiya checkpoint and earlier this year she was sentenced to 20 years in prison. “She wasn’t trying to do anything that wasn’t her right,” said Karaja, 26. “I am very happy – I am sure she will soon be free. It’s important for her to complete her education. But I’m very sad for the families of prisoners who will stay in jail and for those who will be deported to Gaza, Egypt, Jordan and who knows where.” Israeli authorities have confirmed that 203 of the first 450 prisoners to be released will be sent abroad. A total of 110 of those are from the West Bank. Ahlan Tamimi is now 31, and Mohamed hopes she will be able to start a new life, with political activism behind her. She had wanted to become a journalist and was an honours student at Bir Zeit. Ahlan’s fiance, Nizar Tamimi, is also in prison, accused of killing a settler in the West Bank. It is still not clear whether he will be freed next week “My father and I want to see Ahlan in a white veil getting married. I want to see her children call me uncle,” said Mohamed. “But as happy as we are about this deal, it is not a complete happiness. Deportation will be so painful for Ahlan. I don’t know how she will cope with being banished from the land she is so devoted to.” Palestinian territories Gilad Shalit Israel Middle East Phoebe Greenwood guardian.co.uk
Continue reading …Sirte stronghold edges close to falling with pro-Gaddafi troops stranded as rebels prepare to declare total victory The two men are singing in the back of a pick-up truck, sitting on the rails, their legs resting on a blanket that seems oddly lumpy. Sticking out from beneath it are two pairs of feet, one bare, one wearing socks. They are the feet of two pro-Gaddafi fighters killed in the fighting in the coastal city of Sirte. Thursday was a day of deaths on both sides. Government forces trying to enter the last pocket of Sirte held by pro-Gaddafi fighters were bogged down in a narrow street flooded with sewage and water. Sirte is an unremarkable town, its importance inflated by the fact that the deposed Libyan leader was born nearby and counts its main tribe among his staunchest supporters. But its fate is now being keenly watched around the world. The rebel government in Tripoli has declared – as foreign secretary William Hague told MPs in London – that its fall will mean the liberation of the entire country and trigger the start of a political process to build a new democracy. A street corner where, on Wednesday, it had been possible to walk and stare into a narrow canyon of shattered buildings, was at the centre of the battle. Instead of walking, one had to crawl as the pockets of defenders fired RPGs into buildings and at cars. In response government fighters pulled back a little and brought in tanks, placing them on a low, grassy rise crowned with a shattered white pavilion from where they could blast directly into the rooftop positions, setting fires, nibbling away at the concrete, filling the air with noise and dust. For the pro-Gaddafi fighters it is a hopeless situation. There is nowhere to go except deeper into an area of the city 750 metres wide by 500 metres deep that runs along the coast from the television station – with its pair of wrecked and punctured dishes – to the edge of District Two, overlooked by the pavilion and its sagging roof. The choices faced by Gaddafi’s loyalists are stark: to fight on and end up dead under a blanket like the men in the pick-up truck, or to come out, as one fighter in uniform did on Thursday morning. “You see that captive?” asked Ismail Taweel, a middle-aged fighter from the Harbus Katiba, a unit famous in Libya from the siege of Misrata, most of whose colleagues are in the desert near Bani Walid. He indicated a burly, bearded man with a face bruised from beating, crying with fear. “I want to ask him how many of them are left. I’ve just come from speaking to another captive. A Sudanese. He said there were few left and most were wearing green uniforms. We’re fighting the real soldiers now, not the mercenaries. He said some were trying to escape.” “They have one and a half square kilometres at most,” explained Dr Salah al-Obeidi, a commander from Benghazi who was a dentist before the war. “There are a hundred fighters, maybe a little more, holding us up. That is all.” Others put the number at 200. “They are finished. All they can do is surrender. There has been no attempt to negotiate with them,” Obeidi said. “We don’t negotiate with terrorists. We hear them talking on their radios. Talking about ‘rats’ and killing infidels.” Obeidi had a sheep in the back of his truck, ready to be slaughtered for the victory feast. When victory finally comes. On the roof of an unfinished building with a yellow water tank on top and the green flag of the Gaddafi troops, muzzle flashes were visible. Later the tanks tried to land their shells on top of it. Matthew VanDyke, the film-maker turned fighter who spent months in a Gaddafi jail, was at the front again on Thursday. “I was at the opening of the street yesterday fighting in my vehicle. Then we forced them back to the last buildings in the street, but now they have moved forward to the middle of the street again. The water comes up to the running boards. It is thigh deep when you go in and you can see the bullets hitting it. “A lot of the Gaddafi fighters have slipped out with the families escaping – guys you see of military age.” The Gaddafi forces left in Sirte cannot break out: there is no one to join. They cannot retake a town vast areas of which are now under government control. Why they fight on seems baffling to many of those facing them in these last days and hours of the battle for Sirte and indeed the war for Libya. As evening approached the dynamic of the stalled fighting seemed to change. An advance by government forces through an area of houses on the coast pushed from east to west beyond a tall aerial. Out of sight beyond a flooded series of streets it was possible to measure the progress only by smoke and by the sounds of the truck-mounted anti-aircraft guns and the explosions of tank fire and the recoilless rifles moving – it appeared – inexorably into the pocket. This is a battle that the government fighters now cannot lose. The only question is how many more must die before their victory is complete. Libya Middle East Africa Muammar Gaddafi Arab and Middle East unrest William Hague Peter Beaumont guardian.co.uk
Continue reading …Sirte stronghold edges close to falling with pro-Gaddafi troops stranded as rebels prepare to declare total victory The two men are singing in the back of a pick-up truck, sitting on the rails, their legs resting on a blanket that seems oddly lumpy. Sticking out from beneath it are two pairs of feet, one bare, one wearing socks. They are the feet of two pro-Gaddafi fighters killed in the fighting in the coastal city of Sirte. Thursday was a day of deaths on both sides. Government forces trying to enter the last pocket of Sirte held by pro-Gaddafi fighters were bogged down in a narrow street flooded with sewage and water. Sirte is an unremarkable town, its importance inflated by the fact that the deposed Libyan leader was born nearby and counts its main tribe among his staunchest supporters. But its fate is now being keenly watched around the world. The rebel government in Tripoli has declared – as foreign secretary William Hague told MPs in London – that its fall will mean the liberation of the entire country and trigger the start of a political process to build a new democracy. A street corner where, on Wednesday, it had been possible to walk and stare into a narrow canyon of shattered buildings, was at the centre of the battle. Instead of walking, one had to crawl as the pockets of defenders fired RPGs into buildings and at cars. In response government fighters pulled back a little and brought in tanks, placing them on a low, grassy rise crowned with a shattered white pavilion from where they could blast directly into the rooftop positions, setting fires, nibbling away at the concrete, filling the air with noise and dust. For the pro-Gaddafi fighters it is a hopeless situation. There is nowhere to go except deeper into an area of the city 750 metres wide by 500 metres deep that runs along the coast from the television station – with its pair of wrecked and punctured dishes – to the edge of District Two, overlooked by the pavilion and its sagging roof. The choices faced by Gaddafi’s loyalists are stark: to fight on and end up dead under a blanket like the men in the pick-up truck, or to come out, as one fighter in uniform did on Thursday morning. “You see that captive?” asked Ismail Taweel, a middle-aged fighter from the Harbus Katiba, a unit famous in Libya from the siege of Misrata, most of whose colleagues are in the desert near Bani Walid. He indicated a burly, bearded man with a face bruised from beating, crying with fear. “I want to ask him how many of them are left. I’ve just come from speaking to another captive. A Sudanese. He said there were few left and most were wearing green uniforms. We’re fighting the real soldiers now, not the mercenaries. He said some were trying to escape.” “They have one and a half square kilometres at most,” explained Dr Salah al-Obeidi, a commander from Benghazi who was a dentist before the war. “There are a hundred fighters, maybe a little more, holding us up. That is all.” Others put the number at 200. “They are finished. All they can do is surrender. There has been no attempt to negotiate with them,” Obeidi said. “We don’t negotiate with terrorists. We hear them talking on their radios. Talking about ‘rats’ and killing infidels.” Obeidi had a sheep in the back of his truck, ready to be slaughtered for the victory feast. When victory finally comes. On the roof of an unfinished building with a yellow water tank on top and the green flag of the Gaddafi troops, muzzle flashes were visible. Later the tanks tried to land their shells on top of it. Matthew VanDyke, the film-maker turned fighter who spent months in a Gaddafi jail, was at the front again on Thursday. “I was at the opening of the street yesterday fighting in my vehicle. Then we forced them back to the last buildings in the street, but now they have moved forward to the middle of the street again. The water comes up to the running boards. It is thigh deep when you go in and you can see the bullets hitting it. “A lot of the Gaddafi fighters have slipped out with the families escaping – guys you see of military age.” The Gaddafi forces left in Sirte cannot break out: there is no one to join. They cannot retake a town vast areas of which are now under government control. Why they fight on seems baffling to many of those facing them in these last days and hours of the battle for Sirte and indeed the war for Libya. As evening approached the dynamic of the stalled fighting seemed to change. An advance by government forces through an area of houses on the coast pushed from east to west beyond a tall aerial. Out of sight beyond a flooded series of streets it was possible to measure the progress only by smoke and by the sounds of the truck-mounted anti-aircraft guns and the explosions of tank fire and the recoilless rifles moving – it appeared – inexorably into the pocket. This is a battle that the government fighters now cannot lose. The only question is how many more must die before their victory is complete. Libya Middle East Africa Muammar Gaddafi Arab and Middle East unrest William Hague Peter Beaumont guardian.co.uk
Continue reading …If Iran did indeed plot to assassinate Saudi Arabia’s ambassador to the US, it would be a violation of a treaty it signed in 1978 forbidding “Crimes Against Internationally Protected Persons,” which could escalate the incident to a UN matter, Reuters reports. “This is one of those areas where there’s…
Continue reading …Transitional council also asked to investigate torture, illegal detentions and other human rights abuses reported by Amnesty Britain is urging Libya’s rebel administration to move swiftly to form an interim government once it declares the country liberated — with the defeat of Gaddafi loyalists in Sirte now looking imminent. It has also pressed the National Transitional Council to investigate evidence of torture and illegal detentions in a new Amnesty International report into abuses that risk tarnishing the “new” Libya with practices associated with the old regime. Foreign secretary William Haguetold MPs on Thursday that leaders of the NTC “have confirmed their clear understanding of the need for quick formation of a new, inclusive government.” The NTC has said political change will begin when most fighting is over. If Sirte falls then resistance is likely to be confined to Bani Walid, a sizeable but isolated town south of Tripoli, where Muammar Gaddafi’s son Saif al-Islam is rallying loyalists. Hague also said that Nato air operations to protect Libyan civilians — in the language of UN resolution 1973 —would continue “for as long as is necessary at the request of the NTC.” Russia, China and other countries complain that Nato has exceeded the mandate granted by the UN security council in March and has in effect intervened in a civil war between the regime and rebels. Foreign Office officials said that Britain’s mission in Tripoli had urged the NTC to investigate an Amnesty report that revealed a pattern of beatings and ill-treatment of captured Gaddafi soldiers, suspected loyalists and alleged mercenaries. It said that since August, when the Tripoli uprising took place, armed militia have arrested and detained up to 2,500 people in the capital and al-Zawiya. None of the detainees seen by Amnesty had been shown any arrest warrant and many were effectively abducted from their homes. Detainees were almost always held without legal orders by local councils or armed brigades — far from the oversight of the ministry of justice. “The Amnesty report raises serious questions which the NTC needs to investigate and we have pressed them to take action”, an FCO official said. “Anyone who has committed such abuses must be held to account, so that the new Libya shows a clear break with the past. The NTC leadership has declared their commitment to human rights. But despite what is a challenging situation on the ground, orders from the top need to be translated into action”. The NTC official responsible for justice, Mohammed al-Alagi, said that abuses would be investigated. “People will be held to account,” said spokesman Guma el-Gamaty. “We have been living with human rights violations for 42 years. No-one is trying to hide anything.” Hague warned too that no country should give shelter to fugitives. Muammar Gaddafi, Saif al-Islam and intelligence chief Abdullah Senussi are all wanted on charges of crimes against humanity by the International Criminal Court and are still at large. Other members of the family and regime have taken refuge in Niger, Algeria and Tunisia. The NTC meanwhile approved an investigation into another Gaddafi son, Saadi, over the murder of Bashir al-Ryani, a footballer who played for Libya in the 1980s. He was tortured and killed in December 2005. Saadi is in Niger, where the government says he is under surveillance but it is unlikely to extradite him to a country where he would not be given a fair trial and risked the death penalty. Libya Middle East Africa Amnesty International Muammar Gaddafi Foreign policy Nato Human rights Ian Black guardian.co.uk
Continue reading …Here at The Lookout, we’ve found ourselves citing our current bleak economic statistics so frequently that we know many of them by heart: 14 million officially unemployed, with the unofficial tally nearly twice that; 45 percent of the jobless out of work for more than six months; meanwhile, corporate profits at an all-time high. But
Continue reading …It hasn’t been a good couple of weeks for Scott Brown: Last week, there was that unfortunate Elizabeth Warren comment ; now, he’s being accused of plagiarism. A liberal super PAC discovered that Brown’s website lifted a significant portion of an Elizabeth Dole speech from 2002, the Boston Globe reports. The…
Continue reading …