You have to admire the pluck of Christine O’Donnell If nothing else, the girl has spunk. Most people would just wilt under the withering criticism that gets directed at her but she just picks herself up and keeps right on going. Sort of the Energizer Bunny of politics, or infotainment personality or whatever hell category she fits into. Take this week: Though she’s been on all the major cable news networks (CNN, O’Reilly, etc), morning shows, national radio and the like promoting her fictional account of last year’s Senate race in Delaware she’s managed to sell only 2000 copies so far of her opus, Troublemaker . A recent book signing in conservative bastion Naples, Florida had only five people bother to attend. O’Donnell took the turnout of five people — members of the media outnumbered customers — at Barnes & Noble in stride. “God bless you, Tom,” she told Tom Bruzzesi of Fort Myers, who said he’s launching his own presidential campaign. “I like her,” Bruzzesi said. “She’s kind of a rogue like me.” “Thank you for coming out today,” O’Donnell said to Louise Campo of Naples. “She interests me. She’s very conservative,” Campo said. O’Donnell, a Christian, then politely turned down a request from a young man who asked her to sign his book on demonology instead of a copy of her book . And now we hear today that Christine’s appearance with Sarah Palin at a tea party rally in Indianola, Iowa has been cancelled . Apparently teabaggers objected to witches attending. From the Wall Street Journal blog : “I made a mistake,” said Ken Crow, president of Tea Party of America. “I assumed there was an open slot and there wasn’t.” Monday night, Mr. Crow told Washington Wire that Ms. O’Donnell would appear. Tea Party of America’s co-founder, Charlie Gruschow, said the group withdrew Ms. O’Donnell’s after receiving numerous “emails from a lot of tea party folks that were very disappointed that she would be speaking.” “We decided not to have her speak,” Mr. Gruschow said. “We felt it was in the best interest of the movement.” Ms. O’Donnell’s spokesman did not immediately return a request for comment. But O’Donnell did take to Twitter to express her disappointment : @ChristineOD I was honored to be asked to speak at the Iowa rally this weekend and accepted. Changed my flight to make it work… Then quickly deleted the tweet/whine. UPDATE: O’Donnell will be speaking at the tea party powwow in Iowa this weekend after all, reports CNN late Tuesday. Cue witchcraft jokes. UPDATE 2: Now they’ve invited her again , after the bad publicity. After news spread across the Internet that O’Donnell had been dumped by the same tea party movement that catapulted her to victory last September over Rep. Mike Castle in the GOP Delaware Senate primary, tea party leaders had a change of heart and re-invited O’Donnell. “We’re making room for her,” Crow told The News Journal late Tuesday. “We welcome her and look forward to hearing her speech.” In a statement, O’Donnell said she has “humbly re-accepted their re-invitation.” … “We’re grass-roots people,” said Crow, a retired west Texas rodeo cowboy. “We’re not professional political operatives.”
Continue reading …Ramzan Kadyrov berates ‘zombified bandits’ for three Grozny explosions which killed nine ‘on the holiest day for all Muslims’ Ramzan Kadyrov, the Chechnyan leader, has promised a harsh response after three suicide bombers blew themselves up in the southern Russian republic on Tuesday night, killing nine people and wounding 22. One of the bombers detonated his explosives in Grozny , the capital, when two police officers asked to check his documents as he walked about 150 metres from the Chechen parliament. The other two men set off their devices about 20 minutes later at the same spot as police and passersby gathered. Islamist rebel websites called the bombers martyrs. Seven of the dead were police officers and one was an official from the emergencies ministry. Sixteen of the injured were also police. The attacks took place as Muslims celebrated Eid al-Fitr, the holiday marking the end of Ramadan, which is known as Uraza Bayram in Russia. Kadyrov said the attackers were “zombified bandits” and “not people, but the devil incarnate”. He praised officers who had attempted to stop a terrorist attack “on the holiest day for all Muslims, [when] people forgive all wrongs, and help the poor, orphaned and sick”. The explosions proved that “evil must be annihilated” and that a fierce and uncompromising battle was the only way to stamp out the rebels, Kadyrov added. Russia has been fighting an increasingly radicalised Islamist insurgency in its North Caucasus republics since full-scale military operations against Chechen separatists ended a decade ago. Several hundred people die in clashes and terror attacks every year, while the Islamists revived suicide attacks on civilian targets in 2009 after a lull. In one of the most devastating assaults, a bomber struck Moscow’s Domodedovo airport in January this year, killing 37 people. Doku Umarov, the Chechen leader of the insurgency, issued a statement a few hours before the Grozny attacks, saying he was ready to become a suicide bomber. “Today, none of us knows how and when his life will end,” he said. “Allah be praised, I am ready for death at any moment, I am calm and do not worry about that. I am ready for death anywhere, even at the wheel of a Kamaz [truck] with an explosive device.” However, the principal martyrs to the Islamist cause are likely to be young men, who commentators say are vulnerable to recruiting because of abuses by security forces, unemployment and poverty in the region. Investigators named two of the bombers as Magomed Dashayev, 22, from the Chechen town of Urus-Martan and Adlan Khamidov, 21, a student at an oil institute in Starye Atagi, a village near Grozny. Chechnya Europe Global terrorism Eid al-Fitr Islam Russia Tom Parfitt guardian.co.uk
Continue reading …Move crushes hopes BP could deflect attention away from its failure to tie up a deal with Rosneft of Russia Hopes that BP could take the focus away from its failure to tie-up a ground-breaking deal with Rosneft in Russia were crushed on Wednesday when black-clad special forces raided its main offices in Moscow. The law enforcement officers were acting with the consent of a court in Tyumen, where minority shareholders are pursuing a $3bn (£1.8bn) compensation claim against BP over the collapse of the share swap with Rosneft. The move comes less than 24 hours after the Russian state-owned oil company triumphantly unveiled an alternative strategic alliance to explore the Russian Arctic with BP’s rival ExxonMobil. Lawyers acting for Andrei Prokhorov, a disgruntled shareholder from BP’s Russian joint venture TNK-BP, said the raid was a reaction to BP’s failure to provide documents on the proposed tie-up between the UK firm and state-owned Rosneft. “We therefore applied once again to the court of arbitration of Tyumen region to have the measures to secure evidence replaced, and on 30 August the court permitted the bailiff to examine documents held by BP Exploration Operating Company Limited,” said Dmitri Chepurenko, a partner in the Liniya Prava legal practice which represents Prokhorov but also – allegedly – the Alfa Access Renova (AAR) consortium led by oligarchs such as Mikhail Fridman. BP dismissed the raid as unnecessary and said there were no grounds for anyone to seek compensation over the collapse of the Rosneft deal. “We do not believe there is any legitimate basis whatsoever for the claim launched against BP in the Tyumen court and we intend to defend our interests vigorously,” said a spokesman at BP’s London headquarters, adding: “We do not believe there are legitimate grounds for today’s raid.” Bob Dudley, the BP chief executive, unveiled the Rosneft share swap and exploration deal in January in a fanfare of publicity, presenting it as a key new initiative following the disastrous Gulf of Mexico blowout which damaged a strategy centred on US deep-water drilling. But the Rosneft arrangement was opposed by the AAR consortium, which argued that the tie-up should be between Rosneft and TNK-BP, not between Rosneft and BP alone. Neither Rosneft nor BP favoured the latter arrangement and the deal fell through in May. BP Oil Oil and gas companies Energy industry Russia Europe Terry Macalister guardian.co.uk
Continue reading …Move crushes hopes BP could deflect attention away from its failure to tie up a deal with Rosneft of Russia Hopes that BP could take the focus away from its failure to tie-up a ground-breaking deal with Rosneft in Russia were crushed on Wednesday when black-clad special forces raided its main offices in Moscow. The law enforcement officers were acting with the consent of a court in Tyumen, where minority shareholders are pursuing a $3bn (£1.8bn) compensation claim against BP over the collapse of the share swap with Rosneft. The move comes less than 24 hours after the Russian state-owned oil company triumphantly unveiled an alternative strategic alliance to explore the Russian Arctic with BP’s rival ExxonMobil. Lawyers acting for Andrei Prokhorov, a disgruntled shareholder from BP’s Russian joint venture TNK-BP, said the raid was a reaction to BP’s failure to provide documents on the proposed tie-up between the UK firm and state-owned Rosneft. “We therefore applied once again to the court of arbitration of Tyumen region to have the measures to secure evidence replaced, and on 30 August the court permitted the bailiff to examine documents held by BP Exploration Operating Company Limited,” said Dmitri Chepurenko, a partner in the Liniya Prava legal practice which represents Prokhorov but also – allegedly – the Alfa Access Renova (AAR) consortium led by oligarchs such as Mikhail Fridman. BP dismissed the raid as unnecessary and said there were no grounds for anyone to seek compensation over the collapse of the Rosneft deal. “We do not believe there is any legitimate basis whatsoever for the claim launched against BP in the Tyumen court and we intend to defend our interests vigorously,” said a spokesman at BP’s London headquarters, adding: “We do not believe there are legitimate grounds for today’s raid.” Bob Dudley, the BP chief executive, unveiled the Rosneft share swap and exploration deal in January in a fanfare of publicity, presenting it as a key new initiative following the disastrous Gulf of Mexico blowout which damaged a strategy centred on US deep-water drilling. But the Rosneft arrangement was opposed by the AAR consortium, which argued that the tie-up should be between Rosneft and TNK-BP, not between Rosneft and BP alone. Neither Rosneft nor BP favoured the latter arrangement and the deal fell through in May. BP Oil Oil and gas companies Energy industry Russia Europe Terry Macalister guardian.co.uk
Continue reading …With the death toll at 40 and rising, historic flooding in Vermont and parts of upstate New York, millions without power and an estimated $7-10 billion worth of damage, we can hardly say that anything about Hurricane Irene is cause for celebration — but it would have been much, much worse were it not for the amazing collective action both by the federal and local governments, and by neighbors and communities. The storm’s proximity to the 10th anniversary of 9/11 gives these efforts added resonance. At a time when the nation seems paralyzed and polarized, the pending milestone has already been cause for reflection about a time — in the days and weeks after the attacks — when the country showed all the incredible ways that we could come together. That spirit still exists at the community level, but has been lost at the national level. Over the last weekend, we watched the country once again come together as we tapped into that All-American barn-raising — or, in this case, barn-maintaining — spirit. After the storm passed in New York City, there was certainly relief, but also a kind of exhilaration at having gone through an intense, shared experience with a lot of other people. We came through it a little bit closer to one another than we went into it. What Irene and the response to it showed is that when the media devote wall-to-wall attention to something, and government officials bring a sense of urgency and ask the public to respond in kind, remarkable things can happen. What this weekend demonstrated is that even though we can’t do anything to stop the hurricane, with resolve and collective action we can greatly mitigate its destructive impact. Clearly, that capacity is always there. The question is: why do we only tap into it for natural disasters and external attacks? The fact is, we have another crisis that’s been hovering over the entire United States for almost three years now and shows no signs of blowing over. The numbers should be just as scary as the ones that have dominated our national conversation about Irene: Right now, there are over 25 million Americans unemployed or underemployed. The number who have been unemployed for 27 weeks or more is over 6 million. The average duration of unemployment now stands at over 40 weeks, the highest since the financial crisis began. With the toll that the job crisis is taking on the lives of millions of people in this country — from college graduates who can’t get jobs to middle class families being thrown out of their homes — this is a Category 5 disaster. In extreme cases, financial desperation has even been a reported cause in suicides. “We have noticed many more people mentioning the economy,” said Eve Meyer, executive director of the nonprofit San Francisco Suicide Prevention, which has seen an increase in suicides on the Golden Gate Bridge. “We constantly hear, ‘I’m going to be homeless; I would rather be dead than be homeless.’” Studies show that around 18 months into an economic crisis, suicides begin to rise. “Benefits run out and the crises begin to multiply,” said Meyer. Plus, we know that there are myriad other downstream life-and-death consequences of prolonged, economic decline. Faced with the threat of economic devastation, and even the loss of life: in one instance, we move heaven and earth to prevent them; in the other, we simply accept them. Why is that? As Hurricane Irene first bore down on North Carolina, various government agencies sprang into action. Scientists and experts were called in to help. Models and forecasts were produced — then quickly acted upon. We knew what the economic and human consequences would be if we didn’t act, so we did. And then the media sprang into action. Reporters didn’t just give us the facts, they told us stories and created a sense of shared experience. Yes, coverage of extreme weather often goes overboard — sometimes literally (as Jeff Jarvis Tweeted: CNN guy standing in water when he could be standing on pier right next to him. Needless, showoff idiocy. #stormporn) — but the excessive coverage showed how effective the media can be when they declare something urgent and vital. There were often so many reporters swarming the scene that, as the New York Times’ Nick Confessore Tweeted, “Stopped to interview someone. It was another reporter. #irene #reporterproblems.” If only there were as many reporters eager to report from the multiple scenes of our jobs crisis. Despite the fact that, in poll after poll, Americans say that jobs is the issue most important to them, a study by the National Journal concluded that reporting about unemployment fell during the last two years while stories about the deficit skyrocketed. Of course, the media are not alone in this pivot away from the real emergency. This past weekend, we saw the parade of governors and mayors — Christie, Bloomberg, Cuomo, O’Malley, Corbett, Perdue — in the now familiar Emergency Press Conference Protocol: sporting windbreakers, standing in front of a temporary podium, flanked by emergency personnel and the heads of relevant agencies, all with looks of grim determination and resolve. It’s the look of action. It’s the look that says, “This is not going to be easy but we are up to the task and will do everything in our power.” And they did to great effect. Contrast that with the dominant message about the jobs crisis: paralysis, acquiescence, resignation. Not a lot of windbreaker moments. My guess is that the approval ratings for all those mentioned above are going to rise because of their strong, effective performances during the hurricane. Compare that with the attitudes found in a recent Pew poll. President Obama got a job approval rating of 43 percent. The number viewing the GOP favorably was 34 percent. Congress got 25 percent. And 86 percent reported that they felt “angry” or “frustrated” with the federal government. Respond to a crisis, and the public responds back. Don’t respond, and the public grows angry and frustrated. Just as we knew what the consequences of not acting would have been during Irene, we know what the consequence of not acting have been — and will continue to be — with the jobs crisis. As Paul Krugman points out, the Congressional Budget Office estimates that by 2015 there will be a total output gap — the difference between what we’re capable of producing and what we are producing — of $5.1 trillion. What an enormous waste of human potential. And what makes it so tragic is that it’s so avoidable. “If you had told people back in, say, 2007 that this would happen, they would have asserted with confidence that generating a faster recovery would be at the top of the political agenda,” writes Krugman. “The fact that it isn’t — that deficits are still dominating the conversation, even as interest rates plumb record lows — is truly remarkable.” In his speech on Sunday about Irene, the president rightly praised the emergency response and painted a picture of government and citizenry in common action. Just imagine if the following described the response to the jobs crisis and not just the hurricane: “You need to know that America will be with you in your hour of need.” “… federal agencies are doing everything in their power to help folks on the ground.” “We’re going to make sure that we respond as quickly and effectively as possible.” “This has been an exemplary effort of how good government at every level should be responsive to people’s needs, work to keep them safe, and protect and promote the nation’s prosperity.” “I want to thank scientists who provide the information necessary for governors and mayors to make sound decisions, disaster response experts who made sure we were as prepared as possible.” “… the past few days have been a shining example of how Americans open our homes and our hearts to those in need and pull together in tough times to help our fellow citizens prepare for and respond to, as well as recover from, extraordinary challenges, whether natural disasters or economic difficulties. That’s what makes the United States of America a strong and resilient nation, a strong and resilient people.” He’s right. All of that was true during the hurricane and it was moving to see it in action. Now that we’ve been reminded of what is possible, let’s rally again — this time in response to the devastating economic winds blowing across America.
Continue reading …New humiliation for BP a day after ExxonMobil ended its hopes of developing Arctic offshore oil fields with Russia Bailiffs raided BP’s Moscow offices on Wednesday, a new humiliation for the British oil company a day after ExxonMobil signed an agreement that ended BP’s hopes of developing Arctic offshore oil fields with Russia. The bailiffs gave no reason for the morning raid, in which witnesses said about 15 black-clad special forces officers entered the central Moscow headquarters of BP Trading and sealed it off. But a lawyer for minority shareholders in TNK-BP, BP’s joint venture in Russia, said the raid was connected with a lawsuit they have filed over BP’s failed bid to team up with Russia in the Arctic. “We were ordered to leave the office and work from home,” a BP source said, adding that only senior company officials and lawyers remained in the building with the bailiffs. Tuesday’s pact between US oil company ExxonMobil and Russia’s state-controlled oil group Rosneft on developing Arctic offshore prospects gives Exxon access to potentially substantial reserves in Russia, the world’s top oil producer. Rosneft gained the deal by being able to bring in one of the few companies capable of drilling in the harsh, deep waters of the Arctic. It was a big blow for BP, ending its chances of salvaging its own agreement with Rosneft to develop the same prospects. BP’s deal collapsed shortly after it was announced in January following objections from TNK-BP shareholders which also prevented a parallel $16bn (£9.8bn) share swap deal between BP and Rosneft going ahead. Alfa-Access-Renova (AAR), the consortium that represents the shareholders, had objected to the BP-Rosneft pact, saying that BP was obliged to pursue all its Russian ventures through TNK-BP. There is a growing history of bad blood between BP and Russian authorities. Russian security forces searched BP’s headquarters in Moscow in 2008 during a corporate standoff at TNK-BP which resulted in TNK-BP boss Bob Dudley – who is now CEO of BP – being forced out of Russia. BP Oil Oil and gas companies Energy industry Russia guardian.co.uk
Continue reading …Robbie Crofts remains missing after his girfriend was found washed up on a Wirral beach Detectives investigating the unexplained death of a 17-year-old girl whose body was found on a beach fear her missing boyfriend may also be dead. Hayley Holmes’s body was found on the beach at Fort Perch Rock, New Brighton, Wirral, on Monday morning. A postmortem examination established that she had drowned. Her boyfriend Robbie Crofts was last seen at 8pm on Sunday. Merseyside police believe the couple had spent the day together in Liverpool city centre at the Mathew Street Festival. A pair of women’s sandals and men’s Converse trainers were found close to where Hayley’s body was discovered by a dog walker. A mobile phone was also found. One theory is that they could have gone for a late night swim that went wrong, although the weather on Sunday was very cold for August. Police say they are extremely concerned about Robbie Crofts’s welfare and are appealing for anyone who has seen him since Sunday to contact them. Detective Inspector Rachel Wilson, from Birkenhead CID, said: “We now know that Robbie and Hayley were together on Sunday night and had spent the day at the Mathew Street music festival in Liverpool before returning to New Brighton for a short while. “They were not seen by friends or family after 8pm, but some of their belongings have been found on the beach, near to where Hayley’s body was found. We are understandably concerned about Robbie, as are his family, and we would appeal for anyone with any information to get in touch.” He is described as white, 21, stocky, 5ft 8in tall with short black hair and blue eyes. Hayley was a sixth-form student at Upton Hall RC Convent Grammar School. Headmistress Patricia Young said: “Hayley was a bright, beautiful girl with a bubbly personality and so much potential to fulfil. “Hayley was also a former member of the school council, with a real zest for life and a desire to look after others. “She should have been returning to school next week to start her final year at Upton and begin applying to university. She was looking forward to all the special events planned for the year ahead. “Her friends and teachers are deeply shocked and our hearts go out to her family who are so very proud of her.” Thousands of people have joined a Facebook tribute page in memory of Hayley. Helen Carter guardian.co.uk
Continue reading …• Loyalists refuse to surrender despite Sirte invasion threat • NTC rejects UN plan to send military observers • Frozen assets released to restore basic services • Amnesty documents killing of 88 people in Syrian prisons 9.24am: “The mood here is pretty raucous,” Luke Harding reports from Tripoli Martyr’s Square at the start of Eid celebrations. Speaking above the sound of celebratory gunfire Luke says: There’s been a revolution here so you would expect people to fire. But this morning they have been firing again with Kalashnikovs and heavy weaponry and some people have been hurt from falling bullets. It shows that there is no control in this city whatsoever. “I expect we are going to get three days of this,” Luke said. (I’ll transcribe more from Luke later). 8.32am: Welcome to Middle East Live. Here’s a morning run through of the main developments: Libya • Loyal followers of Muammar Gaddafi are refusing to surrender in his home town of Sirte raising the prospect of new fighting in Libya when an ultimatum expires after this week’s Eid holiday , Reuters reports. The head of the National Transitional Council Mustafa Abdel Jalil, said: Muammar Gaddafi is not finished yet. He still poses a threat to Libyans and the revolution. He still has pockets of support in Libya and supporters outside Libya, both individuals and countries. • British held Libyan assets worth £1bn were released last night by the UN to help fund basic services, pay salaries and boost confidence in Libyan banks. The banknotes, together with $1.5bn in US-based assets unfrozen by the UN security council sanctions committee last week, were aimed at supporting efforts by the National Transitional Council to bring stability in the wake of Gaddafi’s fall. • Libya’s new leaders have rejected UN plans to send military observers to help stabilise the country , the BBC reports. UN adviser Ian Martin appeared to confirm a memo leaked earlier this week setting out the deployment of military observers and police to Libya. But Libya’s deputy representative to the UN, Ibrahim Dabbashi, said such a deployment was unnecessary. He said: “They [the UN] put the possibility of deploying peacekeepers on the ground but in fact the Libyan crisis is a special case. It is not a civil war, it is not a conflict between two parties, it is the people who are defending themselves against the dictatorship.” • Zimbabwe has expelled the Libyan ambassador and his staff from Harare after they declared support for the National Transitional Council and tore down portraits of Gaddafi. The state newspaper the Herald quoted foreign affairs minister Simbarashe Mumbengegwi as saying: Once you renounce the authority, which gave you letters of credence, pull down their portrait and burn the flag and pledge allegiance to a different authority, it means that act alone deprives you of the diplomatic standing, which you had been accorded. • Abdulqadir al-Baghdadi, one of the diplomats accused of the 1984 killing of PC Yvonne Fletcher outside the Libyan embassy in London, has been found dead in Tripoli. Those seeking justice for Fletcher have claimed that a junior diplomat, Abdulmagid Salah Ameri, was seen firing a gun from inside the embassy. The NTC has said that it knows the location of a third suspect implicated in Fletcher’s killing, Matouk Mohammed Matouk , according to the Daily Telegraph. • New details have emerged of the route used by Muammar Gaddafi’s family to escape into neighbouring Algeria. The fact that a conspicuous convoy of six armoured limousines could drive unmolested down the length of the country, from Bani Walid to the pro-Gaddafi bastion at Sebha, on the edge of the Sahara desert, and then west to the Algerian border, indicates that there is a wide swath of the central Libyan hinterland outside the NTC’s grasp. • NTC interior minister, Ahmed Darrat said the security situation in Tripoli was now almost normal, with few explosions and no serious signs of a loyalist guerrilla backlash. Asked how the Gaddafi family members were able to flee the capital last week, he said: “They may not have been in Tripoli. They may have been outside it.” It was a good point.Two leading members of the regime – Saif al-Islam and government spokesman Moussa Ibrahim – were spotted for the last time at Tripoli’s Rixos hotel late last Monday. But other Gaddafi relatives were probably never there. Syria • At least 88 people, including 10 children, have died in detention in Syria since the uprising against the regime began in March in what amounts to “systematic persecution on a vast scale”, according to Amnesty International. The majority of victims were tortured or ill-treated, with injuries ranging from beatings, burns and blunt-force traumas to whipping marks, electrocution, slashes and mutilated genitals. Amnesty researcher Neli Simmonds said : The accounts of torture we have received are horrific. We believe the Syrian government to be systematically persecuting its own people on a vast scale. • Europe is to impose an oil embargo on Syria, in effect freezing almost all business between Damascus and the EU, Syria’s main trading partner. The decision will halt more than €3bn (£2.6bn) a year in Syrian crude oil and petroleum products being exported to Europe. “This is trying to hit the oil that’s a critical financial lifeline to the regime,” said an EU official. Bahrain • Bahrain has pardoned a poet who was jailed after mocking the country’s Sunni monarchy during pro-democracy protests this spring. Ayat al-Qurmozi, 20, was sentenced to a year in prison but released in July. The information affairs authority said Qurmozi had been among those declared pardoned by King Hamad bin Isa al-Khalifa during a speech on Sunday. • Bahrain has defended the continued detention of doctors who treated those injured in the protests. In a letter to the Guardian Luma E Bashmi, an official from the information ministry, said the doctors were not charged for carrying out medical duties. The most serious charges – and the ones made against some of the doctors still being detained – include the possession of hidden unlicensed machine guns, ammunition and knives etc for the purpose of implementing terrorist acts. Israel The Israeli military is to train Jewish settlers in the West Bank and plans to equip them with tear gas and stun grenades to confront Palestinian demonstrators when their leaders press for UN recognition next month, the Independent reports. Libya Muammar Gaddafi Arab and Middle East unrest Middle East Syria Bashar Al-Assad Nato US foreign policy United Nations Bahrain Eid al-Fitr Israel Matthew Weaver guardian.co.uk
Continue reading …Women managers already more than £10k behind men doing the same job and may not get parity till 2109, according to CMI Women may have had equal voting rights since 1928, but they may have to wait another 98 years for parity in pay, research has found. While the salaries of female executives are increasing faster than those of their male counterparts, it will take until 2109 to close the gap if pay grows at current rates, the Chartered Management Institute reveals. The research shows that male executives continue to be paid more than women for the same roles, earning an average of £42,441 compared with £31,895. The £10,546 gender pay gap is an increase on the £10,031 from the same study last year, despite women’s salaries having grown by 2.4% and men’s 2.1% in the 12 months to February 2011. Mike Petrook, head of public affairs at the CMI, said: “Our reaction to it taking almost 100 years to get any form of parity is incredible alarm. It is a position we shouldn’t be finding ourselves in. It brings with it issues of discrimination and loss of skills, as women are more prepared to walk [from jobs] than men if they are not getting what they want.” The data shows that 4.2% of women resigned during the period, compared with 3.6% of men. The figures, compiled from a poll of 34,158 UK executives, were unveiled after a year in which the issues of female recruitment and remuneration have become increasingly high-profile. In February, Lord Davies of Abersoch, who led an inquiry into male boardroom dominance, warned big British businesses to double the number of women in boardrooms to 25% within five years or face government sanctions. To hit 25% by the deadline, a third of all vacancies for FTSE 100 directors will have to be filled by women. While Davies faced criticism for not imposing a compulsory quota, recent figures suggest that the mere threat of punishment has pushed companies into action. According to an analysis by the Observer, Britain’s biggest companies have doubled the number of women they are recruiting to their boards in the past six months. Elsewhere, Helena Morrissey, chief executive of Newton Investment Management, and the Labour peer Lady Goudie have founded the 30% Club, a group of company chairs lobbying for increased female representation in the boardroom. Its members include Robert Swannell of Marks & Spencer, Sir Philip Hampton of Royal Bank of Scotland and Sir Roger Carr of the British Gas owner, Centrica. Petra Wilton, the CMI’s director of policy and research, added: “Diversity shouldn’t be seen as something that has to be accommodated, but something that must be celebrated. Imposing mandatory quotas and forcing organisations to reveal salaries is not the solution. “We need the government to scrutinise organisational pay, demand more transparency from companies on pay bandings and publicly expose organisations found guilty of fuelling the gender pay gap.” The CMI study also found that redundancy hit men and women equally hard between February 2010 and February 2011, with 2.2% of both male and female executives losing their jobs. While that appears to be encouraging for female executives compared with last year – when 3% of men were made redundant compared with 4.5% of women – the figures also revealed high levels of inequality at the top end of companies, where almost five times as many female directors as male directors lost their jobs. During the period, companies shedding directors released 0.6% of men and 2.9% of women. However, despite the slow pace of change, the survey did unearth some more positive trends for women. For the first time since the CMI started collating the figures, some female executives are earning as much as their male counterparts, albeit only at a junior level. With an average salary of £21,969, female junior executives in the UK are being paid marginally more than male executives at the same level, whose average salary is £21,367. Phillippa Williamson, chief executive of the Serious Fraud Office, said: “There is a clear business case for equal pay; evidence shows that companies where women are well represented at every organisational level from board level down perform better.” Equality Pay Work & careers Family finances Women Simon Goodley guardian.co.uk
Continue reading …Merseyside police appealing for witnesses after 25-year-old found with a gunshot wound to his head A murder investigation has been launched by police after a man was gunned down in the street. The 25-year-old victim, who has not been formally identified, was found by police in Brayfield Road, Liverpool, at about 10.10pm on Tuesday. Officers were called to the area in Anfield after a member of the public reported hearing gunshots and seeing a group of men acting suspiciously. Merseyside police said the victim died from a single gunshot wound to his head. Forensic examinations are taking place at the scene and a Ford Mondeo recovered nearby is being studied. Police are also carrying out house-to-house inquiries and examining CCTV from shops and businesses. A police spokeswoman said officers were keeping an open mind about the motive for the attack. She added: “The circumstances of his death are now being investigated by the force’s major incident team and detectives are appealing for anyone in the Brayfield Road area who saw or heard anything suspicious last night to contact police. “The victim’s family have been notified and are receiving support from specially trained family liaison officers.” Liverpool Crime Gun crime Helen Carter guardian.co.uk
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