As BBC director general Mark Thompson discusses cuts, this week we ask whether British TV is in rude health or in need of a prune – starting with entertainment programmes Entertainment programming makes up some of the most watched, most profitable, and at times most controversial television on British screens. Like them or not, our noisy, trashy, shiny-floored shows bring huge ratings and have helped transform Saturday night television. That’s why America bought Pop Idol and turned it into American Idol. It’s why America bought Strictly Come Dancing and turned it into Dancing with the Stars. And it’s why, later this year when millions of Americans turn to each other during US X Factor and shriek “What IS this crap?”, we can all feel proud. That’s our crap, America. Ours. Once we were content to spend our weekends watching Ted Rogers hand over boxes of steak knives to badly permed women from Runcorn – but no more. Now entertainment shows are all about size and spectacle. I’m A Celebrity … Get Me Out of Here! is broadcast live from the other side of the world. The X Factor is like being punched in the face by an exploding petrol tanker for three months at a time. Question the content if you like – and many, many people do – but these shows are the Clifton suspension bridge of their days. If Brunel could see the engineering that goes into making them, he’d weep. Creatively they’re berserk, too. A woman who inspects poo for a living being trapped in a rat-filled coffin until she faints. Members of the public compete against a 4x4x4 metre Perspex cube. Soon we’ll be watching a show called Sing If You Can where, judging by the international versions , pop stars will belt out tunes while being mauled by a dog. It’s as if production companies have started to plunder avant garde foreign-language horror films for ideas. Of course, the internet has helped. Previously, Saturday evening telly was something you watched alone when everyone else was out having fun. But thanks to Twitter, the world has been transformed into one big living room, where people trade quips and make buzzer noises whenever a Take Me Out contestant drops below their desired level of acceptability. Twitter – not to mention Guardian liveblogs – has made entertainment TV a communal pursuit again. But there is a sense that we might be riding the crest of a particularly perilous wave. Every year The X Factor gets bigger, and every year its ratings swell to ever more ridiculous heights (at one point during last year’s final, 19.4 million people were watching ). But one day, maybe soon, The X Factor will inevitably go in to decline. Perhaps it will finally become too off-puttingly ridiculous for public consumption. Perhaps when the first episode of the next series is broadcast, ITV will realise that it still hasn’t hired any judges. But it will happen. And when it does, the flaws in our entertainment television will be exposed for all to see. For instance, we still don’t have a definitive chatshow. Product-plugging celebrities currently only have the choice of Piers Morgan (unappealing because he’ll make you cry), Top Gear (unappealing because Jeremy Clarkson will berate you for owning a Nissan Sunny once), Graham Norton (unappealing because you’ll just sit quietly for the whole show while he giggles at cat videos on the internet), Alan Carr (unappealing because it takes place in a room that looks like it was used to host wife-swapping parties in the 1970s) and The One Show (unappealing). The UK sorely needs a Letterman-style nightly talkshow that mixes comedy, guests and music. Also, there are a fair few horrors among the hits. Channel 4, for instance, might be the home of The Million Pound Drop – but then it also broadcast the risible Famous and Fearless, a show that assumed that people wanted to see Rufus Hound cycle around a convention centre. While Sky1 has Got To Dance, the nightmare that was Don’t Forget the Lyrics! should never be repeated. And just because we can sell international rights to everything we make, it doesn’t mean we should. America will soon be confronted with 101 Ways to Leave a Gameshow, a remake of a tedious BBC1 misfire from last summer. If any Americans happen to shriek “What IS this crap?” during that, it might be best to keep schtum. The X Factor Television Entertainment Stuart Heritage guardian.co.uk
Continue reading …As BBC director general Mark Thompson discusses cuts, this week we ask whether British TV is in rude health or in need of a prune – starting with entertainment programmes Entertainment programming makes up some of the most watched, most profitable, and at times most controversial television on British screens. Like them or not, our noisy, trashy, shiny-floored shows bring huge ratings and have helped transform Saturday night television. That’s why America bought Pop Idol and turned it into American Idol. It’s why America bought Strictly Come Dancing and turned it into Dancing with the Stars. And it’s why, later this year when millions of Americans turn to each other during US X Factor and shriek “What IS this crap?”, we can all feel proud. That’s our crap, America. Ours. Once we were content to spend our weekends watching Ted Rogers hand over boxes of steak knives to badly permed women from Runcorn – but no more. Now entertainment shows are all about size and spectacle. I’m A Celebrity … Get Me Out of Here! is broadcast live from the other side of the world. The X Factor is like being punched in the face by an exploding petrol tanker for three months at a time. Question the content if you like – and many, many people do – but these shows are the Clifton suspension bridge of their days. If Brunel could see the engineering that goes into making them, he’d weep. Creatively they’re berserk, too. A woman who inspects poo for a living being trapped in a rat-filled coffin until she faints. Members of the public compete against a 4x4x4 metre Perspex cube. Soon we’ll be watching a show called Sing If You Can where, judging by the international versions , pop stars will belt out tunes while being mauled by a dog. It’s as if production companies have started to plunder avant garde foreign-language horror films for ideas. Of course, the internet has helped. Previously, Saturday evening telly was something you watched alone when everyone else was out having fun. But thanks to Twitter, the world has been transformed into one big living room, where people trade quips and make buzzer noises whenever a Take Me Out contestant drops below their desired level of acceptability. Twitter – not to mention Guardian liveblogs – has made entertainment TV a communal pursuit again. But there is a sense that we might be riding the crest of a particularly perilous wave. Every year The X Factor gets bigger, and every year its ratings swell to ever more ridiculous heights (at one point during last year’s final, 19.4 million people were watching ). But one day, maybe soon, The X Factor will inevitably go in to decline. Perhaps it will finally become too off-puttingly ridiculous for public consumption. Perhaps when the first episode of the next series is broadcast, ITV will realise that it still hasn’t hired any judges. But it will happen. And when it does, the flaws in our entertainment television will be exposed for all to see. For instance, we still don’t have a definitive chatshow. Product-plugging celebrities currently only have the choice of Piers Morgan (unappealing because he’ll make you cry), Top Gear (unappealing because Jeremy Clarkson will berate you for owning a Nissan Sunny once), Graham Norton (unappealing because you’ll just sit quietly for the whole show while he giggles at cat videos on the internet), Alan Carr (unappealing because it takes place in a room that looks like it was used to host wife-swapping parties in the 1970s) and The One Show (unappealing). The UK sorely needs a Letterman-style nightly talkshow that mixes comedy, guests and music. Also, there are a fair few horrors among the hits. Channel 4, for instance, might be the home of The Million Pound Drop – but then it also broadcast the risible Famous and Fearless, a show that assumed that people wanted to see Rufus Hound cycle around a convention centre. While Sky1 has Got To Dance, the nightmare that was Don’t Forget the Lyrics! should never be repeated. And just because we can sell international rights to everything we make, it doesn’t mean we should. America will soon be confronted with 101 Ways to Leave a Gameshow, a remake of a tedious BBC1 misfire from last summer. If any Americans happen to shriek “What IS this crap?” during that, it might be best to keep schtum. The X Factor Television Entertainment Stuart Heritage guardian.co.uk
Continue reading …As BBC director general Mark Thompson discusses cuts, this week we ask whether British TV is in rude health or in need of a prune – starting with entertainment programmes Entertainment programming makes up some of the most watched, most profitable, and at times most controversial television on British screens. Like them or not, our noisy, trashy, shiny-floored shows bring huge ratings and have helped transform Saturday night television. That’s why America bought Pop Idol and turned it into American Idol. It’s why America bought Strictly Come Dancing and turned it into Dancing with the Stars. And it’s why, later this year when millions of Americans turn to each other during US X Factor and shriek “What IS this crap?”, we can all feel proud. That’s our crap, America. Ours. Once we were content to spend our weekends watching Ted Rogers hand over boxes of steak knives to badly permed women from Runcorn – but no more. Now entertainment shows are all about size and spectacle. I’m A Celebrity … Get Me Out of Here! is broadcast live from the other side of the world. The X Factor is like being punched in the face by an exploding petrol tanker for three months at a time. Question the content if you like – and many, many people do – but these shows are the Clifton suspension bridge of their days. If Brunel could see the engineering that goes into making them, he’d weep. Creatively they’re berserk, too. A woman who inspects poo for a living being trapped in a rat-filled coffin until she faints. Members of the public compete against a 4x4x4 metre Perspex cube. Soon we’ll be watching a show called Sing If You Can where, judging by the international versions , pop stars will belt out tunes while being mauled by a dog. It’s as if production companies have started to plunder avant garde foreign-language horror films for ideas. Of course, the internet has helped. Previously, Saturday evening telly was something you watched alone when everyone else was out having fun. But thanks to Twitter, the world has been transformed into one big living room, where people trade quips and make buzzer noises whenever a Take Me Out contestant drops below their desired level of acceptability. Twitter – not to mention Guardian liveblogs – has made entertainment TV a communal pursuit again. But there is a sense that we might be riding the crest of a particularly perilous wave. Every year The X Factor gets bigger, and every year its ratings swell to ever more ridiculous heights (at one point during last year’s final, 19.4 million people were watching ). But one day, maybe soon, The X Factor will inevitably go in to decline. Perhaps it will finally become too off-puttingly ridiculous for public consumption. Perhaps when the first episode of the next series is broadcast, ITV will realise that it still hasn’t hired any judges. But it will happen. And when it does, the flaws in our entertainment television will be exposed for all to see. For instance, we still don’t have a definitive chatshow. Product-plugging celebrities currently only have the choice of Piers Morgan (unappealing because he’ll make you cry), Top Gear (unappealing because Jeremy Clarkson will berate you for owning a Nissan Sunny once), Graham Norton (unappealing because you’ll just sit quietly for the whole show while he giggles at cat videos on the internet), Alan Carr (unappealing because it takes place in a room that looks like it was used to host wife-swapping parties in the 1970s) and The One Show (unappealing). The UK sorely needs a Letterman-style nightly talkshow that mixes comedy, guests and music. Also, there are a fair few horrors among the hits. Channel 4, for instance, might be the home of The Million Pound Drop – but then it also broadcast the risible Famous and Fearless, a show that assumed that people wanted to see Rufus Hound cycle around a convention centre. While Sky1 has Got To Dance, the nightmare that was Don’t Forget the Lyrics! should never be repeated. And just because we can sell international rights to everything we make, it doesn’t mean we should. America will soon be confronted with 101 Ways to Leave a Gameshow, a remake of a tedious BBC1 misfire from last summer. If any Americans happen to shriek “What IS this crap?” during that, it might be best to keep schtum. The X Factor Television Entertainment Stuart Heritage guardian.co.uk
Continue reading …Government says levels are not harmful to human health as anxiety grows over leaks at stricken nuclear power plant Traces of plutonium have been found in the soil at the Fukushima Daiichi nuclear power plant, Japanese officials said on Monday, but not at levels considered harmful to human health. The discovery of plutonium – a byproduct of nuclear reactions – added to anxiety over the stricken plant, 150 miles north of Tokyo. Earlier, the government confirmed that levels of radioactivity in water leaking from a reactor at the facility resulted from a partial meltdown of fuel rods, amid growing fears that radiation may also have seeped into seawater and soil. The plant’s operator, Tokyo Electric Power [Tepco], said readings of plutoinium-238, 239 and 240 were similar to those recorded in other parts of Japan after nuclear tests conducted overseas. “I apologise for making people worried,” Tepco’s vice president, Sakae Muto, told reporters. “It’s not at a level that’s harmful to human health.” But an official from Japan’s nuclear safety agency was more cautious. “While it’s not at a level harmful to human health, I am not optimistic,” Hidehiko Nishiyama said. “This means the containment mechanism is being breached, so I think the situation is worrisome.” Tepco has yet to determine the source of the plutonium, although it appeared that in two places, the radioactive element had come from reactors rather than from the atmosphere. One of the plant’s three reactors contains plutonium in its fuel mix. Meanwhile, contamination in a pool of water in the turbine building of the No 2 reactor was found to be 100,000 times normal levels, Tepco said. On Sunday the firm said the figure was 10m times higher, a mistake the government’s chief spokesman, Yukio Edano, said was “absolutely unforgivable”. Tepco was forced into another embarrassing apology after it admitted it had twice named the wrong isotope in its corrections about the levels of radiation. “On one hand, I do think the workers at the site are getting quite tired,” Edano told reporters. “But these radiation tests are being used for making various decisions on safety … they are absolutely unforgivable.” In addition, radiation above 1,000 millisieverts per hour was found in surface water in concrete tunnels outside the No 2 reactor, Tepco said. It added that the tunnels did not lead to the sea, but conceded it could not rule out that radioactive water had seeped into the ground. Greenpeace, meanwhile, said that it had recorded radiation levels of up to 10 microsieverts per hour in Iitate, a village 25 miles from the plant, and urged authorities to expand the evacuation zone from its current 12-mile radius. “It is clearly not safe for people to remain in Iitate, especially children and pregnant women, when it could mean receiving the maximum-allowed dose of radiation in only a few days,” said Jan van de Putte, the group’s radiation safety expert. “When further contamination from possible ingestion or inhalation of radioactive particles is factored in, the risks are even higher.” Tepco has reportedly asked the French nuclear sector for assistance, seeking help from Electricite de France, Areva and the Nuclear Energy Agency, a research body, according to Eric Besson, France’s industry and energy minister. Japan’s nuclear and industrial safety agency (Nisa) said radioactive iodine-131 of 1,150 times the maximum allowable level had been detected in seawater near drainage outlets serving four of Fukushima’s reactors. Nisa’s spokesman Hidehiko Nishiyama said he suspected radioactive water from the plant was leaking into the sea. On Sunday he had denied any connection. Edano said partial meltdown had probably occurred when the plant was hit by the tsunami on 11 March, adding that there was no evidence of subsequent meltdown. Four of the facility’s six reactors have yet to be made safe, while efforts are continuing to pump in fresh water to prevent a far more dangerous full meltdown. “The radiation seems to have come from fuel rods that were partially melted down and came into contact with the water used to cool the reactor,” Edano said. “Steam may have condensed … carrying water from within the containment vessel.” Airborne radiation has been confined to the reactor buildings, and work to remove contaminated water from the structures continued on Monday. Setbacks to attempts to cool the reactors, and the realisation the crisis is far from over, have added to the plight of tens of thousands of people living nearby. Sakae Muto, vice-president of Tepco, said: “Regrettably, we don’t have a concrete schedule at the moment to enable us to say how many months, or years it will take [to make the plant safe].” About 70,000 people within a 12-mile radius of the Fukushima plant were evacuated soon after the disaster, while a further 130,000 people living in a 12-20-mile radius have been told to stay indoors. The government said that it had no plans to widen the evacuation zone. It is not known exactly how many people remain in the outer zone. Many have left voluntarily after days without essential supplies and services. Truck drivers are refusing to enter the zone, fearing radiation exposure. The government created confusion last week when it advised people within a 20-mile radius to consider leaving. It insisted the advice was given due to concern for their quality of life, not exposure to harmful levels of radiation. According to the public broadcaster NHK, self-defence force personnel in the evacuation zone said 30 people had yet to leave the 12-mile evacuation zone, and 10 had indicated they wanted to remain in their homes. Evacuees have been urged not to return to the area to collect belongings while the Fukushima plant remains unstable. Residents who return, even temporarily, would expose themselves to “great risk of radiation contamination”, Edano said. “It is very likely that the [12m] area is contaminated and there is a significant risk to health,” he added. Local authorities reported, however, that some people had already returned. Others forced out of their homes are coming to terms with the possibility that they may never be able to return. Even if they do, the many residents who depended on Tepco for employment accept that with the plant ruined, their chances of finding work in the area are close to nil. A large number of evacuees have already moved twice since the nuclear crisis began, and could be forced to move again if the situation worsens and the evacuation zone is expanded. “We’re assuming that in a worse-case scenario we might also be subject to evacuation,” Norio Hattori, a disaster official in Nihonmatsu, said, adding that he had sent his own daughter to Tokyo. Some of the refugees are beginning to accept that a vast area surrounding the Fukushima plant could be condemned as a nuclear wasteland. “If it had been an earthquake or a tsunami, we could have gone home again, but because it’s radiation, we can’t,” said Tokuko Sujimoto. Her home, in the village of Namie, was so close to the plant she heard the first reactor explosion on 12 March. Her husband had watched from the roof of their house as a cloud of smoke rose from the reactor, before they fled. Yoshimoto Nogi, who had a job at the Fukushima plant until he retired last summer, said he had no hopes of going home this year. “It’s going to take a year or two. It is not a question of months,” said Nogi. “Even if the nuclear plant is stabilised tomorrow, I don’t think the government is going to tell us it is safe to go back any time soon.” Japan disaster Japan Nuclear power Energy Justin McCurry Suzanne Goldenberg guardian.co.uk
Continue reading …US president gives speech to nation claiming US action has saved ‘countless lives’ – but rules out targeting Gaddafi Barack Obama has addressed the American people on TV and said that military intervention by America had prevented a massacre in Libya. The US president also called on those people still loyal to Muammar Gaddafi to desert him, and said that the end of the Libyan leader’s rule was inevitable. “We will deny the regime arms, cut off its supply of cash, assist the opposition, and work with other nations to hasten the day when Gaddafi leaves power,” Obama said. “It may not happen overnight, as a badly weakened Gaddafi tries desperately to hang on to power. But it should be clear to those around Gadaffi, and to every Libyan, that history is not on his side.” Obama had previously said that he wanted Gaddafi to leave power, even though such a goal appears to exceed the mandate of the UN resolution authoring a no-fly zone and the protection of civilians. But Obama did say that the coalition would not target Gaddafi, and that regime change by armed force – especially by American ground troops – was not an aim. “To be blunt, we went down that road in Iraq. Thanks to the extraordinary sacrifices of our troops and the determination of our diplomats, we are hopeful about Iraq’s future. “But regime change there took eight years, thousands of American and Iraqi lives, and nearly a trillion dollars. That is not something we can afford to repeat in Libya,” he said. Instead Obama sought to justify the military attacks on Gaddafi’s army by saying there was no doubt that a massacre of opposition forces and civilians had been prevented. Obama pulled no punches in detailing what he believed would have happened had the rebel stronghold of Benghazi fallen into loyalist hands. “Gaddafi declared that he would show “no mercy” to his own people. He compared them to rats, and threatened to go door to door to inflict punishment. In the past, we had seen him hang civilians in the streets, and kill over a thousand people in a single day. We knew that if we waited one more day Benghazi … could suffer a massacre that would have reverberated across the region and stained the conscience of the world,” Obama declared. The powerful language of Obama’s speech was used in part to explain to the American public why the US is now involved in a third conflict in a Muslim country. The setting of the address – the National Defence University in Washington – was also a clear part of Obama’s communication strategy. Normally when American presidents speak to the nation they use the Oval Office. Obama has come in for a barrage of criticism from Republicans and some Democrats for a perceived slowness to speak clearly and publicly about why American forces are involved in Libya. Critics have accused him of not setting out concrete objectives and failing to justify another military intervention in the Muslim world. Obama’s own administration has appeared somewhat divided on the issue. While Hillary Clinton, the secretary of state, has pushed for military action, others – like Pentagon chief Robert Gates – have seemed more reluctant. On Sunday, Gates gave a television interview in which he said he did not think Libya was a “vital interest” to America. But during Obama’s speech Gates was seated in the front row, perhaps as an attempt to show a unity of purpose. Obama’s speech sought to address the complexity of the changes sweeping through the Arab world. Some critics have wondered why military force has been used in Libya but not in other states, such as Syria, Yemen and Bahrain, where government crackdowns have cost scores of lives. Obama said the US could not use its military in every situation, and would always seek to build and lead coalitions rather than act unilaterally. But, verbally at least, he signalled that his administration will embrace change across the region and those who espouse democratic ideals. “The United States will not be able to dictate the pace and scope of this change. Only the people of the region can do that. But we can make a difference. I believe that this movement of change cannot be turned back, and that we must stand alongside those who believe in the same core principles that have guided us through many storms,” he said. Barack Obama US foreign policy US military Libya United States Nato Protest Middle East Paul Harris guardian.co.uk
Continue reading …US president gives speech to nation claiming US action has saved ‘countless lives’ – but rules out targeting Gaddafi Barack Obama said the US would ‘work with other nations to hasten the day when Gaddafi leaves power’. Photograph: Getty Images Barack Obama has addressed the American people on TV and said that military intervention by America had prevented a massacre in Libya. The US president also called on those people still loyal to Muammar Gaddafi to desert him, and said that the end of the Libyan leader’s rule was inevitable….
Continue reading …• Nato prepares to take on full control of miltiary operation • Britain and France call on Gadaffi to go ‘before it is too late’ • Gadaffi’s forces retain control of Sirte • Read our latest Libya news story here • Read a summary of events so far 1.08am: Some reaction Twitter to Obama’s speech. @ChangeInLibya , a Libyan anti-Gaddafi activist, tweets: Obama also said that “[they] are working with the opposition”. That’s all I needed to hear. #libya #feb17 12.53am: The president cited the warm welcome afforded to US pilots whose jet fighter crashed in the east of Libya. It was a reflection, he said, of the desire for change and a sign of hope, even after the “demonisation” of the US for so long by Gaddafi. Wherever people long to be free, they will find a friend in the United States, he added, without mentioning the casualties caused to local villagers during the US extraction operation for one of the downed air crew. 12.52am: Turning to the road ahead, he said: “As the bulk of our military effort ratchets down, what we can do – and will do – is support the aspirations of the Libyan people.” “We have intervened to stop a massacre, and we will work with our allies and partners as they’re in the lead to maintain the safety of civilians. We will deny the regime arms, cut off its supply of cash, assist the opposition, and work with other nations to hasten the day when Gaddafi leaves power.” “It may not happen overnight, as a badly weakened Gaddafi tries desperately to hang on to power. But it should be clear to those around Gadaffi, and to every Libyan, that history is not on his side. With the time and space that we have provided for the Libyan people, they will be able to determine their own destiny, and that is how it should be.” 12.51am: Obama added: “The task that I assigned our forces – to protect the Libyan people from immediate danger, and to establish a No Fly Zone – carries with it a UN mandate and international support. It is also what the Libyan opposition asked us to do.” “If we tried to overthrow Gaddafi by force, our coalition would splinter. We would likely have to put U.S. troops on the ground, or risk killing many civilians from the air. The dangers faced by our men and women in uniform would be far greater. So would the costs, and our share of the responsibility for what comes next.” “To be blunt, we went down that road in Iraq. Thanks to the extraordinary sacrifices of our troops and the determination of our diplomats, we are hopeful about Iraq’s future. But regime change there took eight years, thousands of American and Iraqi lives, and nearly a trillion dollars. That is not something we can afford to repeat in Libya. ” 12.50am: “Moreover, America has an important strategic interest in preventing Gaddafi from overrunning those who oppose him,” he adds. “A massacre would have driven thousands of additional refugees across Libya’s borders, putting enormous strains on the peaceful – yet fragile – transitions in Egypt and Tunisia. The democratic impulses that are dawning across the region would be eclipsed by the darkest form of dictatorship, as repressive leaders concluded that violence is the best strategy to cling to power. “The writ of the UN Security Council would have been shown to be little more than empty words, crippling its future credibility to uphold global peace and security. So while I will never minimize the costs involved in military action, I am convinced that a failure to act in Libya would have carried a far greater price for America. 12.48am: The President is now tackling the argument of critics on the Libyan intervention. “To brush aside America’s responsibility as a leader and – more profoundly – our responsibilities to our fellow human beings under such circumstances would have been a betrayal of who we are,” he said. “Some nations may be able to turn a blind eye to atrocities in other countries. The United States of America is different. And as President, I refused to wait for the images of slaughter and mass graves before taking action.” 12.42am: The president is now moving in a section of the speech that appears designed to underline how the US is pulling back from the operation, after succeeding in its initial goals. “The United States of American has done what we said we would do,” he said. “That is not to say our work is complete,” says the president, who outlines how the US military will continue to be involved in the Nato operation, while humanitarian aid will continue to be provided to the Libyan people. 12.39am: In just one month, the US has worked with our international partners, secured a coalition, stopped an advancing army and secured a no-fly zone, the president said. To put it in context, he added “when people were being brutalised” in Bosnia in the 1990s it took the international community as long as a year. “It took us 31 days,” he said. 12.38am: The rebel-held city of Benghazi would have suffered a massacre that would have reverberated across the region and “stained the conscience of the world” if action had not been taken, said Obama. 12.35am: In the face of the world’s condemnation, Gaddafi chose to escalate his attacks rather than stepping down, Obama said. “At my direction, American led and effort without allies at the UN to pass an historic resolution,” he said, name-checking “European allies” and the Arab League. 12.33am: “Mindful of the cost of military action, we are reluctant to use force,” he said, but there has been a responsibility to act in the case of Libya. 12.32am: Obama has started by paying tribute to US troops on the ground in Afghanistan and on duty elsewhere. 12.26am: We’re expecting Barack Obama to make a speech on Libya in the next few minutes. We’ll bring you coverage of that as it happens. 11.58pm: While the spotlight has fallen on the looming showdown between rebels and pro-Gaddafi forces outside the town of Sirte, each side is still claiming control over parts of Misrata, Libya’s third largest city, east of Tripoli. With the constant crackle of automatic fire ringing out around the city, Misrata bore the marks of intense fighting, and plumes of smoke rose high above its dusty skyline, according to a Reuters report filed after journalists were taken to view one of its suburbs. Houses were riddled with bullet holes. Windows were smashed and rubble littered its deserted streets. “Down with Gaddafi,” said graffiti scrawled on one wall. No civilians were in sight and residential houses appeared abandoned. A herd of camels quietly crossed a street strewn with smouldering rubble and fallen electricity poles. Burned hulks of military and civilian vehicles and blown-up fuel tanks and shipping containers were scattered about. Areas north of Tripoli Street in southern Misrata which appeared to be under state control were off limits to visiting journalists, and there was gunfire from that direction. A small crowd of Gaddafi supporters, including children, waved flags in front of a Libyan state television camera broadcasting live images to Libya’s seven million people from what it described as “liberated Misrata”. “Misrata is ours. There are still some bad guys in other parts, but Gaddafi is winning, the city is ours,” said Abdul Karim, a local resident, a green bandana around his head. A Libyan army officer said rebel forces had been pushed out to the northern part of the city. “Yes there are still some bad guys. We squeezed them out, there are less than 100 of them. We control the city,” he said. Nearby, soldiers manned checkpoints and rag-tag bands of government militiamen stood in front of battered buildings. Several pro-Gaddafi gunmen were visible on rooftops. Anti-aircraft guns pointed into the sky and tanks were hidden under large leafy trees. The atmosphere was nervous, and soldiers were on edge. As distant gunfire intensified, panicked government minders herded journalists into their vehicles and rushed out of the city before dark. Outside Misrata, a coastal road leading to Tripoli was firmly under government control. Checkpoints were reinforced with anti-aircraft guns. Slabs of concrete blocked the highway. Rebel Saadoun al-Misrati said pro-Gaddafi forces had been trying to advance on the eastern front and rebels were heavily engaged with them. “We are determined not to allow them to enter the main street to the east as they did with Tripoli Street.” Rebels and a resident said eight people were killed when forces loyal to Gaddafi resumed attacks on Sunday. 11.13pm: The Libyan foreign minister, Moussa Koussa, has arrived in Tunisia for a “private visit”, according to Tunisia’s official news agency, the BBC reports. Tunisia’s foreign ministry was reported to have said that Koussa was on a “private visit”. 11.07pm: Libya’s army is pouring reinforcements into Sirte, reports the Guardian’s Ian Black from Muammar Gaddafi’s strategic hometown . He reports that units of regular soldiers in jeeps were driving towards the town on Monday as the frontline moved ominously closer to a key regime stronghold for what could turn out to be the decisive battle of the war. Crowds gathered in central Martyrs Square to chant pro-regime slogans and fire bursts of machine-gun fire into the air – that bizarre Libyan ritual of celebrating reverses and expressing determination to resist. But there were signs of anxiety when an aircraft was heard far overhead. Many shops were shut. Libyan forces are deployed outside Sirte and nervousness is evident at the makeshift roadblocks manned by police or militiamen at intervals of just a few hundred yards in some places. To the west the soldiers at a mobile radar battery – part of the country’s now battered air defence system – looked especially apprehensive. In early afternoon a convoy of 15 Toyota Land Cruisers carrying groups of fresh-looking regular soldiers moved east from Misrata where some rebels are still holding out. But there were no signs of heavy armour or artillery – perhaps because these have been easily hit in coalition air strikes in the battles for Ajdabiya, Ras Lanuf and Brega over the past few days. Lightly armed infantrymen, backed up by militiamen and civilians driving mud-smeared cars armed en masse by the government will be a far more elusive target for allied pilots if they are involved in a battle for a sizeable town or skirmishes along the coastal road. 10.56pm: Chris McGreal reports for the Guardian from the Libyan rebels’ frontline staging post at Wadi al-Ahmar , where he was told of ‘dirty tricks’ on the part of pro-Gaddafi troops dug in to defend the key town of Sirte. Suliman Abdul Mula was not surprised when he saw the white flag waved by a group of Muammar Gaddafi’s soldiers caught between western air strikes and the rapid advance of Libya’s rebels. “We saw they raised the white flag. We thought they no longer wanted to fight for Gaddafi. They are losing and no one in Libya wants to die for Gaddafi any more,” said the 31-year-old. “But when we approached, they opened fire. It was a trick.” Several of the rebels were wounded, including one whose left arm was hanging by a string of flesh. Another soldier with Mula estimated that there were 100 or more government soldiers in the group flying the white flag as the rebels pushed forward to within 50 miles of the strategically and politically important town of Sirte where Gaddafi was born. The soldier said that as soon as the rebels got close enough, Gaddafi’s forces shot at them with machine guns. Mula was outraged. “Everyone knows the white flag if for surrender. These are Gaddafi’s dirty tricks,” he said. 10.46pm: Air strikes have hit the town of Surman, 70 km west of Tripoli, according to Libyan state television, Reuters reports. 10.14pm: British voters – by a margin of 47 percent to 43 percent – did not back the decision to commit British armed forces to the Libya action, according to a ComRes survey for The Independent. It also suggested that 71 percent were concerned that the UK could be “dragged into a prolonged conflict like the Iraq war”. Almost a quarter (24 percent said they did not share that fear. A majority of those who expressed an opinion (46 percent to 40 percent said they believed Gaddafi was a legitimate target. And more than two-thirds (68percent) agreed that the Libya mission showed the government should not be cutting defence spending. 10.10pm: Downing Street has said that David Cameron set out his priorities for tomorrow’s London summit on Libya in a video conference with US president Barack Obama, French president Nicolas Sarkozy and Germany’s chancellor, Angela Merkel. The Prime Minister’s spokesman added: “He hoped it would strengthen and broaden the coalition of countries committed to implementing the UN resolutions and protecting the people of Libya; it would discuss plans for the provision of urgent humanitarian assistance; and it would call for a political process which would allow the people of Libya to shape their own future.” “There was also a discussion of the reform process in Egypt and agreement on the importance of revitalising the Middle East peace process.” 10.03pm: Efforts appear to be under way to offer Muammar Gaddafi a way of escape from Libya , with Italy saying it is trying to organise an African haven for him, and the US signalling it will not try to stop the dictator from fleeing. Julian Borger and Richard Norton-Taylor report for the Guardian on a move that comes as diplomatic and military pressure on Gaddafi mounts. On the eve of tomorrow’s London conference, focused on coordinating assistance in the face of a possible humanitarian disaster, Italy offered to broker the ceasefire deal in Libya, involving asylum for Gaddafi in an African country. “Gaddafi must understand that it would be an act of courage to say: ‘I understand that I have to go’,” said the Italian foreign minister, Franco Frattini. “We hope that the African Union can find a valid proposal.” 9.55pm: Some more from that Pentagon briefing. The coalition carried out strikes against the command headquarters of one of Muammar Gaddafi’s most loyal units, which has been one of the most active attacking civilians, Admiral Bill Gortney said. Gortney also said coalition had fired six Tomahawk cruise missiles in the past 24 hours and had carried out 178 air sorties, most of them strike-related. 9.08pm: The coalition has flown 178 sorties in the skies over Libya in the last 24 hours, the Pentagon briefing has been told by Vice Admiral Gortney. He made a point of saying that Qatari jets have now also taken part in the operations and that air force units from the United Arab Emirates are ready to take part over the course of the next day or two. 9.04pm: A briefing is underway at the Pentagon, where a spokesman says that coalition forces have yet to receive “a single, confirmed” report of civilians deaths as a result of air strikes. 8.49pm: The Gaddafi regime has carried out a spate of enforced disappearances, according to Amnesty International , which has published a new report. ‘Libya: detainees, disappeared and missing’ details more 30 cases of individuals who were ‘disappeared’ since before the beginning of protests against the regime. Children were also among those seized as rebel forces seized control of the eastern city of Benghazi and pro-Gaddafi forces retreated, according to Amnesty. A relative of 14-year-old schoolboy Hassan Mohammad al-Qata’ni told the organisation: “I haven’t slept since he’s gone missing, nobody in my family has slept; we are so worried; he is just a kid; we don’t know what to do, where to look for him, who to turn to for help.” 8.45pm: Now to Syria, where security forces fired shots and used teargas to disperse up to 4,000 protesters in the volatile Syrian city of Deraa earlier today. As frustration continues to mount at the slow pace of promised reforms, the Guardian has a report from inside Syria , where protesters appear to be consolidating their positions in Deraa in the deep south and in the northern port city of Latakia despite the widespread presence of security forces. 8.38pm: The Guardian’s Richard Adams has been blogging from Washington DC on Barack Obama’s speech later tonight on Libya: While opinion polls show American voters broadly in favour of the military action, the demand for more detail comes in two forms. One is that the administration has not set out its objectives clearly. The other is to explain why Libya’s pro-democracy forces deserve US aid delivered via Tomahawk cruise missiles, and those in Yemen or Syria – for example – do not. Setting out the precise extent of the US mission will be the more difficult of the two. The administration has already said clearly that overthrowing or killing Gaddafi himself is not the mission’s objective. That has given Obama’s Republican and neocon critics an opening to criticise the president’s handling of the action while still supporting it overall. At an event in DC today, Obama gave a quick preview of his remarks, saying: “Our involvement [in Libya] is going to be limited, both in time and in scope.” So Obama should outline exactly what that means this evening – especially the “time limited” part. On the second point, earlier today Obama’s deputy national security adviser Denis McDonough said the argument that the president would make for US involvement in Libya cannot be applied to the protests going on elsewhere in the region. 8.33pm: For those in need of a basic up-to-date primer on Nato’s assumption of control over operations in Libyan skies and seas, here’s a quick Q&A from Julian Borger, the Guardian’s diplomatic editor: Who is running the military operation? Officially Nato has taken over all military operations. But at the moment it is only running the naval blockade, which is enforcing the arms embargo, and the no-fly zone. The Nato commander, Lieutenant General Charles Bouchard, will assume control of the most controversial operations, the air strikes against Gaddafi’s ground forces, in a few days’ time. Why is there a delay in Nato taking over air strikes? Bouchard said that the handover would take some days because it was “complex”. The delay gives more time to the existing coalition, co-ordinated by the US but led by the French and British, to continue to choose their own targets for bombing. Will the handover to Nato control make any difference? Nato’s 28-member countries agreed rules of engagement for air strikes on Sunday. As sceptics like Turkey and Germany were involved in the draft, the rules are likely to be more restrictive that those being used by the French and the British, who have been bombing Libyan government forces across the country. 8.24pm: The Ministry of Defence has said that two RAF Tornados conducting reconnaissance flights over the area “around” the Libyan town of Misrata fired Brimstone missiles which destroyed two main battle tanks and two armoured vehicles. 8.18pm: The UN Security Council has been meeting to discuss Libya and is currently being briefed on the progress of sanctions imposed on the Gaddafi regime. The briefing is being given by the Portuguese UN Ambassador, Jose Filipe Moraes Cabral, who chairs the committee overseeing the sanctions. Laura Trevelyan, the BBC’s UN correspondent, reports that the security council will go into a closed session later where she said that it will talk about adding the names of additional Libyan officials who could be the subject of sanctions. However, that meeting is also an opportunity for certain countries to speak out against the sanctions. 8.12pm: Western air strikes have hit civilian and military areas in the towns of Garyan and Misdah, Libyan state television is reporting, according to Reuters. 8.04pm: From Cairo, Jack Shenker has more on that statement by Egypt’s ruling generals that the ousted president, Hosni Mubarak has been placed under house arrest. The revelation by Egypt’s Supreme Council of the Armed Forces – who have been in power since Mubarak’s three-decade dictatorship succumbed to revolution last month – was an attempt to quash speculation that the ailing 82 year old had fled to Saudi Arabia to receive medical treatment. The Saudi monarch, King Abdullah, has been a stalwart supporter of Mubarak throughout Egypt’s recent turmoil, and has repeatedly offered the former president sanctuary in the kingdom. In an announcement on its official facebook page, the Egyptian military said: “Out of the supreme military council’s belief in the importance of maintaining communication with the Egyptian people and the youth of the revolution, we stress [that] news of the departure of former president Mohamed Hosni Mubarak to Tabuk in Saudi Arabia is not true, as he is under house arrest along with his family.” For now, Mubarak remains in internal exile in the Red Sea resort of Sharm El Sheikh. He and his family are facing a raft of corruption charges and have already been hit by a travel ban and asset freeze. The latest moves against Mubarak come amid renewed criticism of Egypt’s armed forces as they begin to prepare for national elections later this year and a planned transition towards democratic, civilian government. 7.57pm: The US is preparing to pull a number of vessels from the Mediterranean as Nato takes over operations, US military officials have told Reuters. 7.44pm: Is this the soundtrack to the Libyan uprising? Some young Libyans have put together a rap song as their sound track to the rising against the Gaddafi. It’s been posted on YouTube, while it can be viewed with English language subtitles on this site . To watch the full video, turn off the auto-refresh button at the top of this page. _ 7.28pm: The “Arab Spring” might have “stopped in its tracks” without the military response unleashed against the actions of Muammar Gaddafi, tweets the former US State department spokesman, PJ Crowley : Crowley, who fell on his sword after criticising the treatment of Bradley Manning , the alleged source of the WikiLeaks files, has given an interview to the BBC’s HardTalk programme . He was at pains to differentiate what is happening in Libya with the US-led campaigns in Iraq and Afghanistan, according to advance interview snippets released by the BBC. “They’re of a totally different magnitude and totally different purpose. There’s no question that in protecting civilians you are also protecting political opposition, you are creating a level playing field so that the opposition has a fair opportunity to make its case to the Libyan people and to force Gaddafi to step down,” said Crowley. 7.27pm: We’ve also published an interesting piece debating the proposal by Turkey for a ceasefire and a negotiated solution . The Paris-based writer Nabia Ramdani supports the calls by the Turkish prime minister. Prime minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan’s suggestion that what started out as a wholly humanitarian effort is deteriorating into a “second Iraq” or “another Afghanistan” is entirely correct. Cruise and Tomahawk missiles do not bring peace to a country any more than AK-47-wielding paramilitaries expressing vague affiliations to overseas governments. Atrocities have certainly been committed by Gaddafi’s army as it fights to put down the rebellion, but the killing on both sides is unremitting. Whereas our Middle East expert Brian Whitaker says we should wait for the imminent collapse of the Gadaffi regime. Amid repeated claims that Libya could turn into another Iraq or Afghanistan, there are growing calls for a negotiated solution. Such talk at the moment serves no purpose, apart from throwing a lifeline to the Gaddafi family and helping them maintain their grip on the country, or at least some of it. Calls for negotiation are predicated on the idea that the situation in Libya will reach a political/military impasse. It might do, but it hasn’t yet – so there is no need to start behaving as if it had. A more likely scenario, though, is that the Gaddafi regime will implode suddenly and fairly soon – in a matter of weeks rather than months or years. We should at least wait to see if that is what happens. 7.18pm: The Guardian’s award-winning photographer, Sean Smith, has spent the past month in Libya documenting the uprising, from its triumphant beginnings in Benghazi to its near-defeat, and its apparent rescue by the coalition air strikes. Here’s a collection of his best images in this gallery . _ 7.02pm: After half hour on the ground in the town of Misrata, CNN’s Nic Robertson tweets that Libyan government minders have been loading journalists on to a bus again to bring them back to Tripoli: _ 6.56pm: The British prime minister David Cameron and the French president Nicolas Sarkozy have released a joint statement setting out the objectives of an international conference on Libya being hosted by the UK in London tomorrow. Britain and France of course have been at the forefront of the military action – and at the brunt of criticism that it is tipping over into the area of regime change. The statement is pretty bullish: it says military operations would end “only when the civilian population are safe and secure from the threat of attack”. The current regime has “completely lost its legitimacy” and Gaddafi must “go immediately” the statement says, calling on the dictator’s supporters to “leave him before it is too late”. 6.30pm: Good evening and welcome to our continuing coverage of the Libya crisis. Here is a summary of events so far today. • Ahead of a UK-hosted summit on Libya tomorrow, the British and French leaders have issued a joint statement calling on Gadaffi to step down “before it is too late”. Both countries have rejected criticism that the coalition-led operation has gone beyond the terms of the UN resolution that authorised it. • Rebels and pro-Gadaffi forces are gearing up for a battle for Sirte, the psycologically important birthplace of the Libyan leader. Revolutionary forces had advanced more than 150 miles in two days, helped by coalition air strikes, breaking the stalemate at Ajdabiya streaming along Libya’s coastal road. But they appear to have halted about 50km east of Sirte, with reports of pro-Gadaffi forces advancing the other way. • Barack Obama is due to make a speech on the Libya crisis tonight. Libya Nato Ben Quinn guardian.co.uk
Continue reading …Student Portal – Screencast Save UMSU’s Women’s Officer! With Subtitles. Student Portal Login News Clicker » HBUHSD ParentStudent Portal Home Page Welcome to Student Portal a personalized web page for the students and parents of gcs to have one secure location to obtain information. Student portal database information for itt tech, asford university, dadeschool, everest institute, … PhD Scholarship 2011 in Economy and Mathematics at Exeter … Free College Scholarships Student Portal 2011. Scholarships Data Center. Monday, March 28th, 2011. Home · About · Privacy Policy · Scholarships Application · RSS · College Scholarships · Africa Scholarships · America Scholarships … Kurdish Studies PhD Studentship 2011 at University of Exeter … Free College Scholarships Student Portal 2011. Scholarships Data Center. Monday, March 28th, 2011. Home · About · Privacy Policy · Scholarships Application · RSS · College Scholarships · Africa Scholarships · America Scholarships … PhD Scholarships 2011 of Architecture and Design at Oslo School … Free College Scholarships Student Portal 2011. Scholarships Data Center. Monday, March 28th, 2011. Home · About · Privacy Policy · Scholarships Application · RSS · College Scholarships · Africa Scholarships · America Scholarships … Philosophy of Law PhD Scholarships at Radboud University … Free College Scholarships Student Portal 2011. Scholarships Data Center. Monday, March 28th, 2011. Home · About · Privacy Policy · Scholarships Application · RSS · College Scholarships · Africa Scholarships · America Scholarships … ShakeeraMdSham says: RT @merissadelina Can't believe I have to start signing in the student portal again. Stupid blackboard7
Continue reading …This is only the warm-up of things to come. From mcjoan of Dkos: The House will vote on the Federal Aviation Administration reauthorization and the provision in it which would essentially codify vote fraud in organizing elections. A recap: last year the the National Mediation Board that oversees those elections ruled that the railroad and airline industries would have to end their practice of counting non-votes in these elections as no votes. Previously, any eligible worker who chose not to vote was automatically counted as a no. Which would be fraud in any other election in the United State. The industries, and most House Republicans, want the rule back. Fast forward. The anti-union push is building, in part fueled by one particular airline’s zeal to kill fairness in the workplace . I’m at the point that I will never fly Delta again. I think you should consider it too. Air travel is no day in the park and many people want to book a flight and be done with it, but there comes a time when even if it causes us more inconvenience, we have to do the right thing. TPM: In the next several days, the state-level fight between Democrats and Republicans over unions will go federal. House Republicans want to re-establish old rules which say that when aviation or rail workers don’t vote in unionization elections, they’re treated as having voted against unionization. And now on of the nation’s largest airlines is getting involved in the fight. The push is reflected in language in the House’s FAA re-authorization bill. In an earlier stage of the legislative fight, Democrats, joined by a few Republicans, nearly succeeded in getting the provision stripped. Now, sources say, a similar fight is likely to play out on the House floor, and anti-union employees at Delta Airlines are preparing to fly to Washington to join the fight. In a message to its members obtained by TPM, the group “No Way AFA” — a coalition of Delta employees who want to deliberalize union rights — frames the fight this way. (AFA is the Association of Flight Attendants, the flight attendants union.) “Title IX of the House FAA Reauthorization bill repeals the National Mediation Board’s 2010 elections rule change, which permits a minority of employees at airlines and railroads to determine whether or not the majority will be represented by unions,” the message reads. “[I]t is anticipated that an amendment will be offered on the House floor to strike these provisions from the bill and allow the NMB’s modified rule to stay in place.” According to the note, “Delta strongly supports the bill” as currently written. Members are encouraged to participate in a fly-in to Washington, D.C., to lobby their congressmen, for which “positive space travel” — free travel for airline employees — is permitted. A Delta spokesperson said No Way AFA operates separately from the company itself, but that the company “allow[s] employees to travel positive space to D.C. when supporting legislative efforts that the company supports.” By contrast, Delta policy requires employees to fly standby for leisure and personal travel, suggesting that the “positive space” standard for the fly-in could squeeze out seating space for regular travelers. How many times have you been booked on a flight only to hear these dreaded words while waiting to board the plane? “This flight is over-booked.” In this case your seats are probably going to anti-union Delta workers . If we apply the standard that these union busters want to use, namely that if you, as a worker fail to vote, it now counts as a “no” then Rep’s like Rep. Mica would not have been elected. Brian Beutler explains: Under the current system, a simple majority of those voting wins, just like in, say, the House of Representatives. If Republicans get their way, those rules will change, and workers who don’t vote will be tallied as having voted “no.” To illustrate the unfairness of that structure, the Communication Workers of America will circulate a new report on the Hill Monday, making the point that none of the recently-elected members of Congress would have won if their constituents who didn’t vote at all had been counted as votes against them. “[L]et’s take a look at what would happen to Rep. John Mica (R-FL), the Chair of the House Transportation and Infrastructure Committee and the lead driver behind the insertion of the NMB elections provision into the larger FAA Reauthorization bill,” their report reads. Rep. Mica received support from 69% of the voters in his district who cast a ballot in his successful 2010 re-election campaign, amounting to slightly over 185,000 actual votes tallied for him. However, if you add the over 83,000 voters who voted against Rep. Mica to 312,000 eligible voters who did not participate, then Rep. Mica would only muster 32% of the overall total – falling far short of the majority needed for election. Rep. Mica would lose handily to the 68% of “voters” who chose his opponent or were non-participating voters whose absence was counted as a vote for the alternative. This is a cute way to look at the debate, but it’s also the way several Republicans see things . We are in a long battle that’s not going to end until Tea Party and extreme right-wing legislators are voted out of office. Wisconsin was only the beginning. I know propaganda plays a huge part in the uninformed stances taken by many American voters who are too busy to pay attention like we do, but with every vote they only secure the destruction of their own future.
Continue reading …During Monday's “Morning Joe,” Time's Mark Halperin and co-host Mika Brzezinski helpfully provided some spin for the White House to borrow as President Obama finishes his prepared remarks for Monday evening's address to the nation on the events in Libya. President Obama has received sharp criticism for his foreign policy concerning Egypt and Libya, but Halperin threw cold water on that, calling Obama's strategy “extremely deft in a very tough situation.” Brzezinski agreed with his premise, adding that his “deft” handling is also in accord with promises he previously made. “He's pro-democracy, right? He's anti-violence. He's anti-unilateral U.S. intervention,” Halperin noted of Obama, trying to connect his current policy with the peacemaker he claimed to be as a presidential candidate. (Video below the jump. Comments begin at the 12:30 mark.)
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