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Libyan rebels are none too pleased with NATO, complaining that Moammar Gadhafi is advancing because of the alliance’s inaction. And the harsh words didn’t stop there. Rebel leader Abdel Fattah Younes griped that it takes hours for NATO to respond to what’s happening on the battlefield, and said that they…

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Raids on ex-Taliban ‘harm
Afghan peace process’

Security forces target homes of former regime members who have played a vital role in pushing peace talks with insurgents International and Afghan security forces are setting back the embryonic peace process by raiding the homes of former Taliban officials instrumental in promoting talks with insurgents, according to diplomats and leaders of the former hardline regime. At a time when the US has called for a “diplomatic surge” to solve the conflict, the most recent target of the greatly expanded night raids programme, which employs electronic eavesdropping and special forces units on a major scale, was Mullah Zaeef, former Taliban ambassador to Islamabad and a proponent of peace talks. He is regarded as sufficiently important by the international community that last year an international travel ban on him was lifted, so he could visit London for talks with British officials. Just over three weeks ago, a mixed force of foreign troops and agents from Afghanistan’s National Directorate of Security attempted to enter his house late at night. Zaeef was not present, but there was an armed standoff between the raiding party and his guards, who also work for the directorate. The raid was called off after what Hamid Karzai’s spokesman described as “interventions by the government leadership”. Abdul Hakim Mujahed, a former Taliban envoy to the UN, said security forces had been tracking a target who had gone into Zaeef’s house; he complained the government of Hamid Karzai was “too weak” to stop such operations. The incident is one of several where former high-ranking Taliban involved in reaching out to current insurgents in order to “reintegrate” them into peaceful life have had their houses raided, or attempts have been made to raid them. “We get phoned up by HPC [High Peace Council] members all the time, complaining that their house has just been raided,” said Mujahed. The HPC, set up by Karzai to foster peace talks, includes many former Taliban officials. Mujahed said western military officers and diplomats were failing to co-ordinate their efforts: “It’s really unhelpful, but we have these different sets of players that are really bad at talking to each other.” An official for Nato’s International Security Assistance Force (Isaf) in Kabul said a “reintegration event” had been taking place at Zaeef’s house at the time, and that the security forces would not have interfered had they known about it. He also said Isaf soldiers had been present only to support a directorate-led operation. The Taliban’s former commerce minister, Abdul Razak, also a member of the HPC, said such raids were hugely damaging to efforts to bring peace because they sowed distrust among insurgents considering an end to violence. “They say to us: look, you are with the government now but you can’t even stop your houses being raided. Why should we come for peace, too?” he said. Razak said he was himself had been the subject of a raid, last May, when he was entertaining some of his fellow former Guantánamo Bay detainees for lunch. A team of US soldiers tied up the men and held the women and children at gunpoint as they searched “every last thing” in the house, he said. In November Isaf troops and directorate agents made an aborted night raid on Arsala Rahmani, a former Taliban education minister who sits in Afghanistan’s upper parliament. Rahmani emphasised the importance of being able to meet people freely. “Everyone is coming to us – people who don’t like the government, people with peace plans,” Rahmani said. Rahmani and others have long argued that the Taliban should be allowed to set up an office outside the country, with Turkey often suggested as a location, where they could meet representatives from all sides of the conflict without fear of being arrested. Karzai’s spokesman suggested the Isaf was not solely to blame for the mistaken raids, saying the government had told “both our international partners and our security forces” that the private homes of former Taliban living in peace must “be immune from intrusion”. An Isaf spokesman said the international force “fully supports the Afghan government’s reintegration and reconciliation efforts”, but those efforts were complicated by the huge increase in the number of Isaf operations to kill and capture insurgent leaders. “All of these targeted operations are co-ordinated with the Afghan security forces, and all of them have Afghan security force involvement,” he said. “We share our intelligence and will adjust our operations focus based on input and feedback from our Afghan partners.” Michael Semple, a former diplomat closely involved in reconciliation issues, said there were a number of possible explanations for the aborted raid on Zaeef’s house, including that his enemies may have fed false intelligence to security, and the enthusiasm of US counter-terrorism (CT) forces. “As long as there is a terrorist threat, Afghan false reports and CT forces in the field, this kind of thing will happen,” he said. Taliban Afghanistan Hamid Karzai Nato Jon Boone guardian.co.uk

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When enough people see things like this with their own eyes, I suppose that’s when we’ll have a democratic revolution in this country: Last week, a SWAT team forcefully evicted Rochester resident Catherine Lennon from her New York home, arresting at least six protestors and neighbors in the process , according to MSNBC.com. The federal debate over the foreclosure process has heated up in recent weeks, with the Obama administration backtracking on an earlier, more dramatic proposition that would have required mortgage lenders to reduce monthly payments for millions of homeowners like Lennon. Lennon, a grandmother living with her children and grandchildren, says she was willing to make mortgage payments to government-sponsored mortgage insurance firm Fannie Mae, but that the bank refused to accept her checks because the property was not in her name. Her husband — the official homeowner — died in 2008 without writing a will, leading to a legal battle between Lennon and her bank. Take Back The Land-Rochester, a group dedicated to defending community housing and now supporting Lennon, staged an eviction in the weeks leading up to the altercation. The day of the confrontation, police arrested protestors for attempting to block entrance to the house. “This is not America,” a neighbor told a local television crew. “This is not what America should be.” Bank of America released a statement in response to the controversy saying Lennon had fallen behind on her payments, becoming delinquent. In turn, TBLT’s Ryan Acuff said that while Lennon was delinquent on payments to Countrywide and Bank of America, she had “not only met with the Housing Council, the local HUD approved mortgage counselors, but attempted to engage with Bank of America.” “[T]he fact remains,” Acuff continued, “that Bank of America refused her attempts to pay and efforts to negotiate modifications to her mortgage for the reasons stated above.” Rep. Louise Slaughter (NY-28) has reached out to Fannie Mae to re-review Lennon’s case. After speaking with high-level representatives, Lennon says she is “very positive” about the prospect of her house being returned to her. The difference is, during the Great Depression, hundreds of people would have shown up to stop this, not fewer than a dozen.

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When enough people see things like this with their own eyes, I suppose that’s when we’ll have a democratic revolution in this country: Last week, a SWAT team forcefully evicted Rochester resident Catherine Lennon from her New York home, arresting at least six protestors and neighbors in the process , according to MSNBC.com. The federal debate over the foreclosure process has heated up in recent weeks, with the Obama administration backtracking on an earlier, more dramatic proposition that would have required mortgage lenders to reduce monthly payments for millions of homeowners like Lennon. Lennon, a grandmother living with her children and grandchildren, says she was willing to make mortgage payments to government-sponsored mortgage insurance firm Fannie Mae, but that the bank refused to accept her checks because the property was not in her name. Her husband — the official homeowner — died in 2008 without writing a will, leading to a legal battle between Lennon and her bank. Take Back The Land-Rochester, a group dedicated to defending community housing and now supporting Lennon, staged an eviction in the weeks leading up to the altercation. The day of the confrontation, police arrested protestors for attempting to block entrance to the house. “This is not America,” a neighbor told a local television crew. “This is not what America should be.” Bank of America released a statement in response to the controversy saying Lennon had fallen behind on her payments, becoming delinquent. In turn, TBLT’s Ryan Acuff said that while Lennon was delinquent on payments to Countrywide and Bank of America, she had “not only met with the Housing Council, the local HUD approved mortgage counselors, but attempted to engage with Bank of America.” “[T]he fact remains,” Acuff continued, “that Bank of America refused her attempts to pay and efforts to negotiate modifications to her mortgage for the reasons stated above.” Rep. Louise Slaughter (NY-28) has reached out to Fannie Mae to re-review Lennon’s case. After speaking with high-level representatives, Lennon says she is “very positive” about the prospect of her house being returned to her. The difference is, during the Great Depression, hundreds of people would have shown up to stop this, not fewer than a dozen.

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When enough people see things like this with their own eyes, I suppose that’s when we’ll have a democratic revolution in this country: Last week, a SWAT team forcefully evicted Rochester resident Catherine Lennon from her New York home, arresting at least six protestors and neighbors in the process , according to MSNBC.com. The federal debate over the foreclosure process has heated up in recent weeks, with the Obama administration backtracking on an earlier, more dramatic proposition that would have required mortgage lenders to reduce monthly payments for millions of homeowners like Lennon. Lennon, a grandmother living with her children and grandchildren, says she was willing to make mortgage payments to government-sponsored mortgage insurance firm Fannie Mae, but that the bank refused to accept her checks because the property was not in her name. Her husband — the official homeowner — died in 2008 without writing a will, leading to a legal battle between Lennon and her bank. Take Back The Land-Rochester, a group dedicated to defending community housing and now supporting Lennon, staged an eviction in the weeks leading up to the altercation. The day of the confrontation, police arrested protestors for attempting to block entrance to the house. “This is not America,” a neighbor told a local television crew. “This is not what America should be.” Bank of America released a statement in response to the controversy saying Lennon had fallen behind on her payments, becoming delinquent. In turn, TBLT’s Ryan Acuff said that while Lennon was delinquent on payments to Countrywide and Bank of America, she had “not only met with the Housing Council, the local HUD approved mortgage counselors, but attempted to engage with Bank of America.” “[T]he fact remains,” Acuff continued, “that Bank of America refused her attempts to pay and efforts to negotiate modifications to her mortgage for the reasons stated above.” Rep. Louise Slaughter (NY-28) has reached out to Fannie Mae to re-review Lennon’s case. After speaking with high-level representatives, Lennon says she is “very positive” about the prospect of her house being returned to her. The difference is, during the Great Depression, hundreds of people would have shown up to stop this, not fewer than a dozen.

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When enough people see things like this with their own eyes, I suppose that’s when we’ll have a democratic revolution in this country: Last week, a SWAT team forcefully evicted Rochester resident Catherine Lennon from her New York home, arresting at least six protestors and neighbors in the process , according to MSNBC.com. The federal debate over the foreclosure process has heated up in recent weeks, with the Obama administration backtracking on an earlier, more dramatic proposition that would have required mortgage lenders to reduce monthly payments for millions of homeowners like Lennon. Lennon, a grandmother living with her children and grandchildren, says she was willing to make mortgage payments to government-sponsored mortgage insurance firm Fannie Mae, but that the bank refused to accept her checks because the property was not in her name. Her husband — the official homeowner — died in 2008 without writing a will, leading to a legal battle between Lennon and her bank. Take Back The Land-Rochester, a group dedicated to defending community housing and now supporting Lennon, staged an eviction in the weeks leading up to the altercation. The day of the confrontation, police arrested protestors for attempting to block entrance to the house. “This is not America,” a neighbor told a local television crew. “This is not what America should be.” Bank of America released a statement in response to the controversy saying Lennon had fallen behind on her payments, becoming delinquent. In turn, TBLT’s Ryan Acuff said that while Lennon was delinquent on payments to Countrywide and Bank of America, she had “not only met with the Housing Council, the local HUD approved mortgage counselors, but attempted to engage with Bank of America.” “[T]he fact remains,” Acuff continued, “that Bank of America refused her attempts to pay and efforts to negotiate modifications to her mortgage for the reasons stated above.” Rep. Louise Slaughter (NY-28) has reached out to Fannie Mae to re-review Lennon’s case. After speaking with high-level representatives, Lennon says she is “very positive” about the prospect of her house being returned to her. The difference is, during the Great Depression, hundreds of people would have shown up to stop this, not fewer than a dozen.

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Western donors falling short on aid

Germany and Italy named by OECD among countries which have missed G8 targets – with Africa suffering most from shortfall Rich western countries have failed to meet aid pledges to the world’s poorest countries made at the G8 summit in Gleneagles in Scotland six years ago, the Organisation for Economic Cooperation and Development said on Wednesday. In its annual review of development assistance , the Paris-based OECD said donors had increased aid by $30bn (£18.5bn) since 2005 but had fallen $19bn short of the promises made in 2005. Under pressure from Tony Blair when he was British prime minister, the G8 also agreed at Gleneagles to increase aid to Africa by $25bn by 2010, but the OECD said only $11bn had been delivered. The OECD, a club of rich developed countries, said the financial constraints imposed by the global recession were only marginally to blame for the broken pledges. “Only a little over $1bn of the shortfall can be attributed to lower than expected gross national income levels due to the economic crisis. The remaining gap of $18bn was due to donors that did not meet their Overseas Development Assistance (ODA) commitments,” the review says. Britain’s aid rose to 0.56% of gross national income (GNI) after increasing by almost 20% between 2009 and 2010, according to the report, but many other European countries – including Germany and Italy – fell well short of the Gleneagles commitment to raise aid spending to 0.51% of GNI by 2010. The OECD warned that a comprehensive survey of donors’ future spending plans pointed to slower aid growth ahead. Development assistance is planned to grow by an inflation-adjusted 2% per year between 2011 and 2013 compared with 8% on average over the last three years. In 2010, total aid reached a record $128.7bn, an increase of 6.5% when adjusted for inflation. Bilateral aid to Africa rose by 3.6% overall, but fell by 0.1% when debt relief grants were excluded from the calculations. The OECD said the failure to meet the $25bn target for African aid had been caused by the “poor performance” of several donors who provide a large chunk of their financial help to the world’s poorest continent. “When countries make aid pledges, they must do the political, budgetary and planning work needed to sustain them,” said Brian Atwood, who chairs of the OECD’s development assistance committee. “Too often, donors commit without the backing that will enable these promises to be kept. We are promoting a new code of good pledging practice to ensure that promises are backed by plans. “The volume of aid is a crucial factor, but there are other forms of assistance that are not classified as ODA, such as some loans and guarantees, that provide critical support to low income countries. And the contribution of new donors is important as well. We are building broader and deeper global partnerships – sharing collective know-how to alleviate poverty and meet the Millennium Development Goals.” Aid G8 Economics Poverty Economic policy Larry Elliott guardian.co.uk

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Prescott: Delay Sky deal over hacking

Former deputy prime minister speaks out in House of Lords after arrest of two senior News of the World journalists Lord Prescott, the former deputy prime minister, has called for News Corporation’s takeover of BSkyB to be delayed until the police inquiry into phone-hacking allegations at the News of the World is complete. Prescott was speaking in the Lords on Wednesday, the day after two senior News of the World journalists, chief reporter Neville Thurlbeck and former assistant editor (news) Ian Edmondson, were released on police bail after being arrested on suspicion of conspiring to intercept mobile phone messages . The former Labour MP and cabinet minister, who has been named as a potential victim of phone hacking by the News of the World, accused the paper’s owner, News Corp, of being “actively involved at all levels in criminal acts”. Prescott also said Rebekah Brooks, chief executive of News Corp’s UK newspaper publisher News International, had admitted a “criminal act” – that police were paid for information. “Is the government aware, in giving this decision on BSkyB, that it would be totally unacceptable for a company like this that is actively involved at all levels in criminal acts to be given control of BSkyB?” he asked. “Will they now delay the decision until all these investigations are completed?” Prescott also asked Lord Wallace, a government spokesman in the Lords: “Are you aware of the decision yesterday following the imprisonments of two employees of Murdoch press [Clive Goodman and Glenn Mulcaire] that the new inquiry has now arrested two senior employees of the Murdoch press? “And we’ve learned yesterday that in the parliamentary committee of the [Commons] there was conflicting evidence given by the director of public prosecutions [Keir Starmer QC] and Mr Yates [acting Metropolitan police deputy commissioner John Yates], who was in charge of the original inquiry.” Wallace said he was aware of the “very strong feelings” on the issue. He told Prescott: “You raised the issue of payments to the police, which clearly would have been illegal, and I know some of these have now been admitted. “It’s necessary, of course, for the police to have a close relationship to the media because the media can help in solving crime but payments for information received are clearly illegal.” Prescott’s comments came in Lords question time after former Conservative cabinet minister Lord Fowler asked the government what assessment it had made of the evidence of phone hacking by newspapers. Wallace said this was a matter for the police and the Crown Prosecution Service and it would be “inappropriate to comment or speculate on any particular aspects of that active investigation pending its outcome”. Fowler added: “Leaving aside the two arrests yesterday, isn’t it already clear that there has been a total abuse of power involving some parts of the press in this area? “Have we not also seen a five-year delay in the investigation, a public dispute now taking place between the DPP and the Metropolitan police, and the utter failure of any system to prevent such wrongdoing? “Will you give an assurance that once criminal proceedings are complete, there will be an independent inquiry into what has happened and how scandals of this kind can be prevented?” Wallace said he had raised broad issues about the relationship between the press and politics. “I think it’s fair to say that we will need to return to those questions once current investigations are complete,” he added. “The relationship between the press and the government rests upon the idea that a free press in a democracy is free but should be responsible – just as bankers in a free market ask for light regulation with the expectation that they will also behave responsibly. Newspapers, like bankers, have not always been as responsible in relationship to their obligation as they might have been in recent years.” In March the culture secretary, Jeremy Hunt, recommended regulatory approval for News Corps acquisition of the 61% of Sky it does not already own, after the company gave an undertaking to spin off Sky News into a separate listed company. Following a period of consulation, Hunt is due to deliver a final verdict on the proposed takeover towards the end of April , after parliament returns from its Easter break. •

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** House GOP to distribute shutdown plan [ Citizens for Legitimate … Recent Searches. federal government shutdown; federal government shutdown 2011 . 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 · OctoFinder. ►Citizens for Legitimate Government · This page in English. Relevant Tags …

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Life Imitates Art on ‘Workaholics’

The stars of Comedy Central’s new show ‘Workaholics’ play post-college slackers who would rather have fun than be responsible. In real life, they started out doing comedy online, got tapped to do a series and film in the house they really live in. (April

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