Sun, Times and former News of the World publisher decides not to redevelop site that was scene of bitter 1986 union dispute Rupert Murdoch’s News International, publisher of the Sun and the Times, is to sell Wapping, the headquarters of its UK operations for 25 years. The move was announced in an email to all News International staff at lunchtime on Monday. “Today, we announced that we are putting our 15-acre Wapping site up for sale,” the internal announcement said. It added: “Taking into account the current property market and economic climate, we have decided to sell rather than redevelop the site and will remain in the TMS [Thomas More Square] buildings for the foreseeable future.” News International said in a statement: “News International today announces it is putting its Wapping site up for sale. The decision to sell the 15-acre site follows a review of News International’s London property portfolio. “The majority of News International’s Wapping-based editorial and commercial staff have now relocated into Thomas More Square with the remainder to be relocated by the end of 2011. Thomas More Square provides the company with excellent facilities and flexibility. As a result, and in light of current market conditions, News International has decided not to proceed with remodelling the Wapping site.” Most of the office space up for sale has been empty for months, it is understood. Staff from all News International titles moved to Thomas More Square in September last year. The 15-acre site, for which Murdoch paid about £300,000 an acre in 1985, is now expected to be worth hundreds of millions of pounds. Speculation that News International could move its newspapers to Osterley, the west London home of BSkyB, fell quiet after News Corp abandoned its bid to take full control of the satellite broadcaster in July. News International began a shift away from its east London headquarters in 2005, when it announced that its printing would move to regional bases in Broxbourne, in Hertfordshire, Liverpool and Glasgow. The move marks a significant change of direction. In November 2008, News Corporation shelved plans to move its international businesses – including Dow Jones, Harper Collins, 20th Century Fox and MySpace – to Wapping because of the economic downturn. Only three months before that, News International abandoned plans to sell its east London site and instead turn it into a “campus for UK businesses” by 2012. James Murdoch, News Corp’s deputy chief operating officer, described Wapping at the time as “not only important as a physical site, but also it is a symbol of how bold individuals, working together, can advance the world of media and thereby contribute to life in Britain”. The site, known as “Fortress Wapping” after the fierce trade union dispute that blighted News International’s move from Fleet Street in 1986, was home to the editorial staff behind the Sun, the Times and Sunday Times for 25 years. The News of the World was also based at Wapping until its closure in June as a result of the phone-hacking scandal. •
Continue reading …Rebecca Leighton was freed from prison after charges against her over deaths at Stepping Hill hospital were dropped The nurse who was released after six weeks on remand accused of contaminating saline at a Cheshire hospital, leading to the deaths of three patients, has indicated that she wants to return to work. Rebecca Leighton was released from Styal prison on Friday after all the charges against her were dropped by the Crown Prosecution Service . The 27-year-old was arrested in July after unexplained deaths at Stepping Hill hospital, in Stockport, and was charged in connection with contaminating bags of saline with insulin and criminal damage with intent to endanger life. She has always denied any wrongdoing. Leighton said she had been in a “living hell” after she being locked up for something she had not done. The investigation centred on bags of saline solution that were sabotaged with insulin and initially focused on five deaths, but police later said the deaths of two of those patients – Vera Pearson, 84, and George Keep, also 84, both from Cheadle – were no longer part of their inquiry. They are still examining the suspicious deaths of Tracey Arden, 44, 71-year-old Arnold Lancaster and Alfred Weaver, 83, who all died at Stepping Hill. Greater Manchester police were called after an experienced nurse noticed a sudden and inexplicable drop in patients’ blood sugar levels on two interconnected wards. Leighton remains suspended from practising after an interim order by the Nursing and Midwifery Council, and has vowed to clear her name. Her solicitor, Carl Richmond, said his client, from the Heaviley area of Stockport, was prepared to do whatever it took to prove her innocence. He said: “She wants the opportunity to have her suspension lifted and then she will make the decision what to do next. “She has worked as a nurse for a long time, so that’s obviously in her thoughts, but she’s still a bit raw. She wants to clear her name professionally, and that’s her priority at the moment.” Asked whether Leighton would return to work at Stepping Hill, Richmond said: “I don’t know if she would or wouldn’t. It might be too difficult. “The finger of suspicion was firmly pointed at her, and you don’t recover from that quickly. She needs to clear her head and decide what’s best for her in the long term.” Richmond said he believed his client had been made a scapegoat by police, who are investigating the deaths of seven patients – and potentially 40 in total – connected with sabotaged saline drips. He said: “They jumped the gun and tried to build the case against her from there, rather than the usual method of bailing her pending further inquiries.” Greater Manchester police’s assistant chief constable, Terry Sweeney, said the force would leave no stone unturned in the search for the person responsible for the contamination. He said the investigation was complex and officers needed to speak to 700 people – patients, staff and visitors. Crime Nursing Health Helen Carter guardian.co.uk
Continue reading …Younis al-Mauritani detained in western city of Quetta with two other members of terror group Younis al-Mauritani, a senior al-Qaida commander believed by some experts to be the organisation’s “foreign minister”, has been captured by Pakistani security forces working with the CIA, the Pakistani army said on Monday. Mauritani – who was detained in the western city of Quetta with two other al-Qaida members – played a central role in the group’s plots against the west, the army said. He is the most high profile al-Qaida figure to have been arrested in Pakistan for several years, and his detention marks another blow to the group following the deaths of Osama bin Laden in a US raid on 2 May and the second in command, Atiyah Abd al-Rahman, in a CIA missile strike last month. The discovery that Bin Laden had been living in Pakistan for several years caused acute embarrassment to the country’s authorities, which have been under intense pressure to prove they are committed to the fight against al-Qaida. In the years immediately following the 9/11 attacks, a series of leading al-Qaida figures were captured in Pakistan, but there have been fewer high-profile arrests in recent years. “Mauritani was tasked personally by Osama bin Laden to focus on hitting targets of economical importance in United States of America, Europe and Australia,” a statement from the Pakistani military said. “He was planning to target United States economic interests including gas and oil pipelines, power generating dams and strike ships and oil tankers through explosive-laden speed boats in international waters.” According to the statement, Mauritani was arrested with the help of US intelligence agencies, showing that anti-terror co-operation between the countries is continuing despite the deep tensions between Islamabad and Washington following the death of Bin Laden. He had reportedly been planning a major attack in Europe, which triggered a terror alert in Germany late last year. The detention also confirmed that many of al-Qaida’s leaders remain in hiding in Pakistan. al-Qaida Pakistan Global terrorism Saeed Shah guardian.co.uk
Continue reading …Click here to view this media As usual, August has been the cruelest month for President Barack Obama. From the stupid debt-ceiling debate to the even dumber jobs speech snafu, he has taken hit after hit after hit from both sides of the aisle with the press amplifying each negative message. But underneath every one of these so-called gaffes, there is Bill Daley. It’s clear to me that whatever I may have thought about Rahm Emanuel, he was simply better at what a Chief of Staff is supposed to do than Bill Daley can hope to be. Jonathan Chait has a column in Sunday’s New York Times that highlights how ineffective Daley really is , though that’s not the primary focus. This has been the summer that liberal discontent with Obama has finally crystallized. The frustration has been simmering for a while — through centrist appointments, bank bailouts and the defeat of the public option, to name a few examples. But it has taken the debt-ceiling standoff and the threat of a double-dip recession to create a leftist critique of the president that stuck. If messaging is a part of the Chief of Staff’s duties, and I believe it’s one of the central parts, then Daley clearly fails on all counts. Every single issue is framed inside right-wing themes, from the decision to suspend new EPA standards to the debt-ceiling debate. There is no progressive message, not even a small bone offered up to progressives who might be able to swallow a short delay in implementation if there is some small sensible reason. Yet, time after time, Daley offers up those nuggets to the Chamber of Commerce, the Republican Party, and conservatives, presumably in the hope that some will be reasonable. There’s a term for that. In some circles, some might call it insanity. I call it a failure to serve a wider constituency. If a 30-year veteran of Congressional politics sees no hope of reasonableness , why can’t Daley? Even on the level of the mundane, there was no excuse for the ridiculous scheduling “error” to have happened, much less for it to get any traction, and that was, once again, all Bill Daley . If Daley didn’t know that Wednesday, the day Congress returns from its five-week break, was also the night of the NBC/ Poliltico -sponsored GOP debate at the Reagan Presidential Library in Simi Valley, California—moderated by NBC’s Brian Williams, and featuring, for the first time, Texas Gov. Rick Perry—he should have. Yes, it’s one debate of 20 to come, but the contretemps made the president look like he was mischievously, sneakily trying to steal his potential opponents’ thunder. In an editorial entitled “Oh, Grow Up,” critical mostly of Boehner and Company, this paragraph stood out: “It’s possible that the White House failed to seek Mr. Boehner’s back-room agreement before making its formal request. That’s hard to believe, even from an administration that is maladroit politically, to put it kindly.” The Hill ’s Sam Youngman made essentially the same point in his report : “The back-and-forth has left some Democrats in Washington worried that the White House is becoming a rudderless ship.” Daley, the ship’s skipper, has made no public comment so far. Exactly. It was stupid to try and intentionally step on their debate, and uncharacteristic of what President Obama has stood for in the past. He has always welcomed debate, not tried to squelch it. And if it wasn’t intentional (I think it was), then it was stupid. Either way, it was a lose-lose proposition that opened the door wide for the left side of the aisle to be very angry because: a) it gave the appearance that the White House “caved”; and b) It left all of us feeling like Boehner and Co got a nice chance to be jerks at our expense. Again. That slice of stupid was only over scheduling a speech. Why don’t Republicans complain about Daley? Why should they? He’s acted in their best interests over and over again. There’s no doubt in my mind that the debt-ceiling debate would not have turned into such a debacle, nor would it have once again left Democrats — centrist and liberal alike — feeling like they’d once again been forced to give up everything to a bunch of terrorist hostage-takers, had Bill Daley bothered to actually craft a message that wasn’t written by the right-wing establishment. The video at the top of this post is a perfect example. Listen to Tom Donohue at the US Chamber of Commerce brag about how he’s “like this” with Bill Daley : CAVUTO: Finally, very quick, personally, I know you guys broke bread not too long ago. You are across the street from one another. So, are you guys getting along? Is your association getting along, is Commerce getting along now with the president? How would you describe relations? DONOHUE: I think relations are fine. We worked very closely with Bill Daley. We worked with the whole gang while they were trying to do the deficit and debt issue. CAVUTO: Right. DONOHUE: We really encouraged everybody in the Congress that we couldn’t default. I think we would have put three European countries out of business. I think we’re all going to work together to try and get a very serious program from the 12 apostles. (LAUGHTER) That exchange followed Donohue’s announcement that the U.S. Chamber will be introducing their very own jobs plan which includes, among other things, tax repatriation (a terrible idea), and more domestic oil drilling. You know, I just don’t want a White House Chief of Staff to be that buddy-buddy with one of the Riders of the Apocalypse. And how arrogant is it for a trade association to be unveiling *their* jobs plan? They may think they’re in charge of this country, but we still have three branches of government they have to deal with, two of which would be involved in their so-called jobs plan. I’m not exempting the President from this tirade. After all, he hired the guy. But as much as I support him and will continue to, I have no faith in his Chief of Staff, and think it’s time for him to replace Daley with someone who is capable of crafting a stronger message and dealing with the right-wing idiots in Congress with a stronger hand. There was absolutely no reason for us to give up the advantage on Medicare that we had after Paul Ryan managed to lead Republicans right down the rabbit hole of destruction. The right wing was on the verge of self-destruction and instead of capitalizing on it, Daley’s message seemed to affirm it. It would have been a good time for President Obama to have drawn a line. But as Chait notes: And then, this summer, Obama let the G.O.P. hold the debt-ceiling vote hostage to extract spending cuts. I think he should have called the Republicans’ bluff and let them accept the risk of a financial meltdown. But the reason Obama chose to cut a deal is that calling their bluff might have resulted in catastrophe. And Obama made a point of back-loading the G.O.P.’s budget cuts so as not to contract the economy. He may have chosen wrongly, but he chose exactly the priorities liberals now insist he ignored — favoring economic recovery over long-term goals. Maybe. But do we hear this message? No. Where is Daley out there on the Sunday shows, pushing back on the idea that in hostage situations, the reasonable guy in the room will try to save the hostage? He’s nowhere? Instead, week after week is filled with Republican messages and right-wing memes. With friends like Daley, who needs enemies? It’s time for President Obama to admit that his strategy of trying to co-opt the right-wing with a pro-business Republican type like Daley was a mistake, ask for his resignation, and put someone in there who will at least manage to get some liberal messaging out of the White House. We don’t have time to wait. The election may well hang on what Bill Daley’s next failure is.
Continue reading …U.S. Labor Secretary Hilda Solis admits she’s ignorant about job creation in Texas, then proves she’s wrong about everything else. Wow. Just wow. We’ve come to expect our politicians to be liars, but we also expect them to be good liars. Solis has obviously mastered the former, but failed at the latter. Broadcasting platform : YouTube Source : I Hate The Media Discovery Date : 04/09/2011 20:28 Number of articles : 2
Continue reading …Tomas Alfredson’s marvellously chill adaptation of John Le Carré’s cold war thriller features a delicate performance from Gary Oldman along with a first-rate supporting cast A thunderstorm rolled into Venice overnight, flash-bulbing the sky and lancing the boil of heat that has enveloped the city these past six days. One could have sworn that the temperature dropped still further, to practically Baltic levels, during the morning screening of Tinker, Tailor, Soldier, Spy, a marvellously chill and acrid cold war thriller from Swedish director Tomas Alfredson. Right here, right now, it’s the film to beat at this year’s festival. Nimbly navigating the labyrinthine source novel by John Le Carré, Alfredson eases us through a run-down 70s London, all the way to a municipal MI6 bunker, out by the train yards. This, it transpires, is “the Circus”, a warren of narrow corridors and smoke-filled offices, patrolled by jumpy, ulcerous men with loose flesh and thinning hair, peering into the shadows in search of a spy. There’s a mole at the top of the Circus, a “deep-penetration agent” leaking secrets to the Soviets. Control (John Hurt) has narrowed the hunt to five likely suspects. Now all that remains is for diffident George Smiley (Gary Oldman), working off the books and under the radar, to steal in and identify the culprit. Oldman gives a deliciously delicate, shaded performance, flitting in and out of the wings like some darting grey lizard. We have the sense that Smiley has seen too much and done too much, and that a lifetime’s experience has bled him of colour. His eyes are tired, his collar too tight, his necktie a noose. Yet still he keeps coming, quietly infiltrating a first-rate supporting cast that includes Mark Strong, Kathy Burke and Colin Firth. Away in Istanbul, Tom Hardy raises the roof as Ricki Tarr, the tale’s bullish rogue element, while Benedict Cumberbatch is mesmerising as the well-groomed gentleman conspirator coming slowly apart at the seams. If Alfredson’s film has a problem, it is only that a quirk in the casting blows the whistle too soon. You don’t need to be George Smiley to grow suspicious of the big-name actor with too much time on his hands. Does this matter? Possibly not, because Tinker, Tailor, Soldier, Spy is finally more about the journey than the destination; more fascinated with the detail than the denouement. The Circus, after all, is precisely that: an outmoded sideshow of clowns, strong-men and acrobats, founded on dodgy principles and banging the drum for a war that may not be a real war anyway. Who cares who is responsible? All these men are guilty of something; all of them drinking from the same dirty water fountain. Tinker, Tailor … treads a shifting, dangerous world where 70s London looks a lot like 70s Moscow and where Santa Claus wears a Lenin mask. It invites us to look from our spy to their spy and treat those two impostors just the same. Rating: 4/5 Venice film festival Venice film festival 2011 Thriller Drama John Le Carré Film adaptations Thrillers Fiction Festivals Xan Brooks guardian.co.uk
Continue reading …• Clinton Cards is among those under strain as rents fall due • Stocks expected to fall include Home Retail, Dixons and HMV Britain’s high street retailers are braced for another wave of closures following one of the worst summer trading periods in years and growing concern about pressures on consumers in the run-up to Christmas. Sales figures for August, blighted by riots, volatile stockmarkets and poor weather, slipped 2.2% among mid-market retailers, according to accountancy firm BDO – the worst drop since the depths of recession two years ago. Widespread disruption, which caused shops to close their doors during trading hours well beyond the riot flash points, has left many retailers facing an uphill struggle in the face of a looming quarterly rent deadline at the end of this month. Among those already under financial strain is Clinton Cards. It emerged the company had approached landlords requesting more time to meet rent bills – as it did this time last year. Earlier this year, the rent deadlines at the end of March and June were followed by a string of retailers crashing into administration. They included Focus DIY, Habitat, TJ Hughes and fashion chain Jane Norman. The second quarter of 2011 saw 375 retailers call in administrators, said accountancy firm PricewaterhouseCoopers, a 9% rise on the same period in 2010. Meanwhile, many surviving mid-sized retailer groups listed on the stock exchange are among those most targeted by short sellers – those investors who effectively bet on the value of shares falling. Recent figures from research firm Data Explorers suggest stocks heavily shorted included Argos’s parent company Home Retail, Dixons, HMV, Ocado, Mothercare, Next and Carpetright. Accountancy firm RSM Tenon has identified almost 9,000 retailers it believes are now financially vulnerable, an increase of more than 10% in the last six months. The Local Data Company and the British Property Federation will this week issue a report expected to show that many towns have seen a sharp rise in the number of boarded-up shops. Previous figures from the British Retail Consortium (BRC) suggest about one in 10 shops are vacant in town-centre shopping districts. The BRC will publish its sales survey for August on Tuesday, which are expected to confirm the gloomy picture painted by BDO. Its figures for July pointed to comparable sales having risen by 0.6% – a number boosted by inflation. The next two weeks will see trading updates from Next, JD Wetherspoon, Costa Coffee parent Whitbread, Carpetright, Home Retail Group, B&Q parent Kingfisher and Primark parent Associated British Foods. All will be closely watched for hints of stress on the high street. However, struggling retailers may well be able to put a case to creditors to ease the pressure before the Christmas trading period, traditionally the busiest time of year. Retail industry Clinton Cards Economics Simon Bowers guardian.co.uk
Continue reading …New prime minister Yoshihiko Noda promises urgent assistance as winds and rain leave thousands stranded in central areas Rescuers and search parties were scouring central Japan on Monday as the death toll from the worst typhoon to hit the country in seven years climbed to 26. Typhoon Talas, which was later downgraded to a tropical storm, lashed coastal areas with destructive winds and rain at the weekend before moving offshore into the Sea of Japan. Fifty two people were missing and thousands were stranded as the typhoon washed outbridges, railways and roads. The scenes of destruction were an unwelcome reminder of Japan’s vulnerability to natural disasters as the country attempts to recover from the 11 March earthquake and tsunami. Prime Minister Yoshihiko Noda, who was sworn in a day before the storm, said the government would provide assistance as quickly as it could. His predecessor, Naoto Kan, was forced out of office chiefly because of public anger over the government’s response to the tsunami, which left nearly 21,000 people dead or missing and sparked the world’s worst nuclear disaster since Chernobyl in 1986. “We will do everything we can to rescue people and search for the missing,” Noda said. The typhoon was believed to be the worst to hit Japan since 2004, when 98 people were killed or reported missing. It caused most damage on the Kii peninsula in central Japan, south-west of Tokyo and hundreds of miles from the north-eastern coast, which bore the brunt of the effects of the earthquake and tsunami. The extent of damage from the typhoon continued to emerge on Monday. Rescuers and reconnaissance teams spread out over the worst-hit areas to look for survivors or people stranded in flood zones. Television footage showed washed-out train bridges, neighbourhoods inundated by swollen rivers and police using rope to pull frightened survivors out of homes. The government’s emergency headquarters put the death toll at 26 on Monday morning. About 100,000 people were being advised to evacuate their homes. Most of the dead were in Wakayama prefecture, said local official Seiji Yamamoto. He said 17 were killed there and another 28 people were missing. “There are so many roads out that it is hard to count them all,” he said. “Hundreds of homes have been flooded.” Rains and wind were recorded across wide swaths of Japan’s main island, but no significant damage was reported in the north-east. At least 3,600 people were stranded by flooded rivers, landslides and collapsed bridges that were hampering rescue efforts, Japanese news agency Kyodo reported. The centre of the typhoon crossed the southern island of Shikoku and the central part of the main island of Honshu overnight on Saturday. It moved slowly north across the Sea of Japan off the country’s west coast, the Japan meteorological agency said. Japan Natural disasters and extreme weather Yoshihiko Noda guardian.co.uk
Continue reading …Fox News Sunday host Chris Wallace displayed to former Vice President Dick Cheney how NBC’s Today show on Tuesday had ended Matt Lauer’s interview with him by pulling back to highlight an Amnesty International protest sign (“TORTURE IS A CRIME: INVESTIGATE CHENEY”) in the crowd on the street. Wallace wondered: “What do you make of that? I mean, I somehow doubt that if Hillary Clinton or Barack Obama were speaking, they would have taken the shot and then suddenly a person with a sign would have been putting their picture up. I mean, simply, do you think there is a liberal bias in the mainstream media?” Cheney, who seemed to have not seen the video before, chuckled as he repeated the sign’s line, “investigate Cheney.” Out on a media tour to promote his memoirs, Cheney demurred on a chance to condemn NBC News, replying to Wallace’s liberal bias suspicion: “Oh, I think there probably is. But I don’t spend a lot of time worrying about it.” Earlier: “ NBC's Lauer to Cheney: You’re the ‘Most Divisive Political Figure in This Country in a Century ’” From the September 4 Fox News Sunday: CHRIS WALLACE: I don’t know if you’ve seen this. I was watching your interview on the Today show earlier this week and I don’t even know if you’re aware of this. I want to show you – take a look at how it ended. TODAY SHOW CLIP: MATT LAUER, TODAY : Thank you for being with us this morning. I appreciate it. DICK CHENEY, ON TODAY: Well Matt, I’ve enjoyed it. [VIDEO: sign] END TODAY CLIP
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