Countries and conservation groups will share intelligence and work on public awareness campaigns Britain has secured international agreement to clamp down on the illegal trade of rhino horn , which has become so sought after it is worth more than diamonds, gold, heroin and cocaine. The UK will lead a global steering group to dispel the myths that rhino horn can cure cancer or help stroke patients , which are fuelling demand for it in Asia and driving up its price to £50,000 a kilo. Countries and conservation groups will share intelligence and policing tactics and work on public awareness campaigns against the illegal trade. The agreement was reached at the Convention for International Trade in Endangered Species in Geneva. The environment secretary, Caroline Spelman, said: “Criminals trading in rhino horn have lined their pockets while bringing this magnificent animal to the brink of extinction, but their days are now numbered. “We will be leading global action to clamp down on this cruel and archaic trade, and to dispel the myths peddled to vulnerable people that drive demand for rhino products.” There has been a significant increase in the number of rhino killed in countries such as South Africa since 2010, in what conservationists warn is a “poaching crisis”. The UK will support a workshop in South Africa in September to develop better co-operation between countries where rhinos are poached and those where their horns are sold. Last September, after the UK’s animal health agency detected a rise in the number of rhino horn products being sold through auction houses, it issued a warning that it would refuse almost all applications to export such items from the UK. It was feared that the legal export of “worked items”, such as ornaments, created and acquired before June 1947, was being used to send rhino horn to Asia, where it is powdered and used for medicinal purposes. The trade could stimulate the market for products from the endangered animal, fuelling poaching, officials said. Under rules brought in for the UK and then backed by the EU, export licences are granted only if the item’s artistic value exceeds its potential value on the black market, if it is part of a genuine exchange of goods between institutions such as museums, if it is being taken as an heirloom by a family moving country, or if it is part of a bona fide research project. Endangered species Conservation Animals guardian.co.uk
Continue reading …Click here to view this media Failed Republican Senate candidate Christine O’Donnell Friday defended walking out of an interview with Piers Morgan by attacking the CNN host. “It was not about the questions of gay marriages, as the producer very dishonestly tried to portray it,” O’Donnell told NBC’s Savannah Guthrie. “It was, like I said, the very inappropriate, creepy line of questioning leading up to that.” “Wait a minute,” Guthrie interrupted. “Let me ask you about that a just little bit though because you walked out of an interview actually at the moment he asked you about gay marriage.” “When they’re sitting there pressing you on personal intimate questions and you’re saying, ‘I don’t want to go there.’ He could have said, ‘What’s your mother’s name?’ And I would have been like, ‘Come on, let’s stop.’ I wanted to stop that borderline sexual harassment that was going on,” O’Donnell explained.
Continue reading …Northern Irish man says waiter who confessed to murder of two women was a ‘gold-digger’ A 15-year-old girl whose mother was stabbed to death while on holiday in Turkey was being comforted on Saturday night by her father. The girl’s Turkish boyfriend has confessed to killing Marion Graham and her friend, Kathy Dinsmore. Before flying out from Northern Ireland, the girl’s father, Raymond McGuinness, recalled his unease over his daughter Shannon’s relationship with Recep Cetin, a 17-year-old waiter, which began last summer. McGuinness described Cetin as “controlling” and a “gold-digger” and claimed that he had been keen on acquiring the property the McGuinness family owned on the Turkish Aegean. Graham, McGuinness’s former wife, and her friend, had been killed after being lured to a forest near the city of Izmir. Their bodies were discovered by police 20 yards apart from each other in
Continue reading …Scientists are subjected to a campaign of abuse and violence The full extent of the campaign of intimidation, attacks and death threats made against scientists by activists who claim researchers are suppressing the real cause of chronic fatigue syndrome is revealed today by the Observer . According to the police, the militants are now considered to be as dangerous and uncompromising as animal rights extremists. One researcher told the Observer that a woman protester who had turned up at one of his lectures was found to be carrying a knife. Another scientist had to abandon a collaboration with American doctors after being told she risked being shot, while another was punched in the street. All said they had received death threats and vitriolic abuse. In addition, activists – who attack scientists who suggest the syndrome has any kind of psychological association – have bombarded researchers with freedom of information requests, made rounds of complaints to university ethical committees about scientists’ behaviour, and sent letters falsely alleging that individual scientists are in the pay of drug and insurance companies. “I published a study which these extremists did not like and was subjected to a staggering volley of horrible abuse,” said Professor Myra McClure, head of infectious diseases at Imperial College London. “One man wrote he was having pleasure imagining that he was watching me drown. He sent that every day for months.” Chronic fatigue syndrome – also known as myalgic encephalomyelitis (ME) – is common and debilitating. A recent BMJ (formerly the British Medical Journal ) feature suggested that as many as one in 250 people in the UK suffers from it. Patients are sometimes unable to move and become bedridden, occasionally having to be fed through a tube. For more than 20 years, scientists have struggled to find the cause, with some pointing to physiological reasons, in particular viral infections, while others have argued that psychological problems are involved. It is the latter group that has become the subject of extremists’ attacks. The antagonists hate any suggestion of a psychological component and insist it is due to external causes, in particular viruses. In the case of McClure, her “crime” was to publish a paper indicating that early studies linking the syndrome to the virus XMRV were wrong and the result of laboratory contamination. So furious was the reaction that she had to withdraw from a US collaboration because she was warned she might be shot. A similar hate campaign was triggered by a study published in the Lancet earlier this year. It suggested that a psychological technique known as cognitive behavioural therapy could help some sufferers. This produced furious attacks on the scientists involved, including Michael Sharpe, professor of psychological medicine at Oxford University. He had already been stalked by one woman who was subsequently found to be carrying a knife at one of his lectures. “The tragedy is that this tiny group of activists are driving young scientists from working in the field,” said Sharpe. “In the end, these campaigns are only going to harm patients.” This point was backed by Fiona Fox, director of the Science Media Centre. “Using threats and intimidation to prevent scientists pursuing specific avenues of research or speaking out is damaging not just science. It harms society,” she said. None of the scientists contacted by the Observer believed chronic fatigue syndrome was purely psychological. All thought external causes were involved. “There is an element that is heritable,” said Dr Esther Crawley, a consultant paediatrician at Bristol University. “We also know that in children it is often triggered by a virus infection, while in adults it is associated with social deprivation. Stress and adversity is involved. To call this yuppie flu – as people have done – is a complete misnomer.” Crawley has spent years trying to unravel the causes, but her refusal to accept that the condition is a result only of organic external factors has resulted in her being deluged with hate mail from extremists. “You evil bastards … time is running out for you so you have [sic] better start denouncing your flawed inhumane therapy and pray to God for forgiveness,” said one. “To those who are responsible for preventing us sick ME sufferers from getting the help we need … you will all pay,” stated another. “It is depressing to receive emails like that, but I make sure that it does not get me down,” said Crawley. “I do check packages that are sent to my office, however.” Many of the extremists’ claims are bizarre, said Professor Simon Wessely, of the Institute of Psychiatry at King’s College London. “They say I am in league with pharmaceutical companies in order to suppress data that shows a link between viruses and the syndrome. But why on earth would drug companies do that? If they could link the condition to a virus they would be well on the way to developing lucrative treatments and vaccines. It is crazy.” Wessely has installed speed dial phones and panic buttons at the police’s request and has his mail X-rayed. He gave up his research on chronic fatigue syndrome several years ago, though he still treats patients. “I have moved my research interests to studies of Gulf war syndrome and other conditions linked to war zones,” he said. “That has taken me to Iraq and Afghanistan where quite frankly I feel a lot safer – and I don’t mean that as a joke.” Chronic fatigue syndrome Medical research Health Robin McKie guardian.co.uk
Continue reading …Scientists are subjected to a campaign of abuse and violence The full extent of the campaign of intimidation, attacks and death threats made against scientists by activists who claim researchers are suppressing the real cause of chronic fatigue syndrome is revealed today by the Observer . According to the police, the militants are now considered to be as dangerous and uncompromising as animal rights extremists. One researcher told the Observer that a woman protester who had turned up at one of his lectures was found to be carrying a knife. Another scientist had to abandon a collaboration with American doctors after being told she risked being shot, while another was punched in the street. All said they had received death threats and vitriolic abuse. In addition, activists – who attack scientists who suggest the syndrome has any kind of psychological association – have bombarded researchers with freedom of information requests, made rounds of complaints to university ethical committees about scientists’ behaviour, and sent letters falsely alleging that individual scientists are in the pay of drug and insurance companies. “I published a study which these extremists did not like and was subjected to a staggering volley of horrible abuse,” said Professor Myra McClure, head of infectious diseases at Imperial College London. “One man wrote he was having pleasure imagining that he was watching me drown. He sent that every day for months.” Chronic fatigue syndrome – also known as myalgic encephalomyelitis (ME) – is common and debilitating. A recent BMJ (formerly the British Medical Journal ) feature suggested that as many as one in 250 people in the UK suffers from it. Patients are sometimes unable to move and become bedridden, occasionally having to be fed through a tube. For more than 20 years, scientists have struggled to find the cause, with some pointing to physiological reasons, in particular viral infections, while others have argued that psychological problems are involved. It is the latter group that has become the subject of extremists’ attacks. The antagonists hate any suggestion of a psychological component and insist it is due to external causes, in particular viruses. In the case of McClure, her “crime” was to publish a paper indicating that early studies linking the syndrome to the virus XMRV were wrong and the result of laboratory contamination. So furious was the reaction that she had to withdraw from a US collaboration because she was warned she might be shot. A similar hate campaign was triggered by a study published in the Lancet earlier this year. It suggested that a psychological technique known as cognitive behavioural therapy could help some sufferers. This produced furious attacks on the scientists involved, including Michael Sharpe, professor of psychological medicine at Oxford University. He had already been stalked by one woman who was subsequently found to be carrying a knife at one of his lectures. “The tragedy is that this tiny group of activists are driving young scientists from working in the field,” said Sharpe. “In the end, these campaigns are only going to harm patients.” This point was backed by Fiona Fox, director of the Science Media Centre. “Using threats and intimidation to prevent scientists pursuing specific avenues of research or speaking out is damaging not just science. It harms society,” she said. None of the scientists contacted by the Observer believed chronic fatigue syndrome was purely psychological. All thought external causes were involved. “There is an element that is heritable,” said Dr Esther Crawley, a consultant paediatrician at Bristol University. “We also know that in children it is often triggered by a virus infection, while in adults it is associated with social deprivation. Stress and adversity is involved. To call this yuppie flu – as people have done – is a complete misnomer.” Crawley has spent years trying to unravel the causes, but her refusal to accept that the condition is a result only of organic external factors has resulted in her being deluged with hate mail from extremists. “You evil bastards … time is running out for you so you have [sic] better start denouncing your flawed inhumane therapy and pray to God for forgiveness,” said one. “To those who are responsible for preventing us sick ME sufferers from getting the help we need … you will all pay,” stated another. “It is depressing to receive emails like that, but I make sure that it does not get me down,” said Crawley. “I do check packages that are sent to my office, however.” Many of the extremists’ claims are bizarre, said Professor Simon Wessely, of the Institute of Psychiatry at King’s College London. “They say I am in league with pharmaceutical companies in order to suppress data that shows a link between viruses and the syndrome. But why on earth would drug companies do that? If they could link the condition to a virus they would be well on the way to developing lucrative treatments and vaccines. It is crazy.” Wessely has installed speed dial phones and panic buttons at the police’s request and has his mail X-rayed. He gave up his research on chronic fatigue syndrome several years ago, though he still treats patients. “I have moved my research interests to studies of Gulf war syndrome and other conditions linked to war zones,” he said. “That has taken me to Iraq and Afghanistan where quite frankly I feel a lot safer – and I don’t mean that as a joke.” Chronic fatigue syndrome Medical research Health Robin McKie guardian.co.uk
Continue reading …Americans captured two years ago after crossing unmarked border are imprisoned at closed hearing An Iranian court has sentenced two Americans accused of espionage and illegally crossing the border to eight years in jail, Iran’s state-run television reported on Saturday. Sources from Iran’s judiciary told the news channel Irinn that Shane Bauer and Josh Fattal, both 29, described as “US hikers”, have each been imprisoned for three years for illegally entering Iran, and a further five years each for spying on behalf of the US intelligence services. The channel said the men, who had already been held for two years, have 20 days to appeal against the verdict, which was issued by the a branch of the revolutionary court. Their lawyer, Masoud Shafii, said he had not yet been informed of the court’s verdict, an Iranian news website, Khabaronline, reported. In July 2009, Bauer and Fattal along with their friend, Sarah Shourd, 33, were arrested by Iranian security forces after walking across an unmarked border between Iran and Iraqi Kurdistan. Shourd was released last September on health grounds, on bail of $500,000 (£324,000). While in prison, Shourd became engaged to Bauer. The Americans have denied that the two men were involved in espionage and say they unwittingly crossed the unmarked border while hiking, after stepping off a dirt track near a waterfall. But Iran accused them of spying. The trial of the two Americans ended last month. Speculation was rife that Iran might release them on the eve of the Islamic month of Ramadan. At the time Iran’s foreign minister said the trial could clear the way for their freedom. The court, which was held behind closed doors, had also summoned Shourd but she did not travel to Iran to appear for the trial. The families of the Americans have been campaigning for their release and were allowed to see them in a highly publicised visit to Tehran last year. Bauer’s mother, Cindy Hickey, said in July that she had seen “positive comment” coming out of Tehran, and hoped they would be freed shortly. In June, Shafii told the New York Times that he had not been able to meet with the two men since taking up their case in late 2009. He accused Iran of holding them hostage. “There is no espionage or illegal entry evidence against my clients. This case is political and unfortunately my clients have been held hostage, and they have become playthings for the government. “From a political view, however, my clients should not even be held even one more day, as this detainment is hurting the reputation of the Islamic Republic of Iran,” Shafii told the newspaper in an email interview. The case has further aggravated tensions between Iran and the US, which have become strained over Iran’s nuclear programme. The US accuses Iran of pursuing nuclear weapons. Iran says it is enriching uranium for energy purposes only. Iran United States US foreign policy Saeed Kamali Dehghan guardian.co.uk
Continue reading …Americans captured two years ago after crossing unmarked border are imprisoned at closed hearing An Iranian court has sentenced two Americans accused of espionage and illegally crossing the border to eight years in jail, Iran’s state-run television reported on Saturday. Sources from Iran’s judiciary told the news channel Irinn that Shane Bauer and Josh Fattal, both 29, described as “US hikers”, have each been imprisoned for three years for illegally entering Iran, and a further five years each for spying on behalf of the US intelligence services. The channel said the men, who had already been held for two years, have 20 days to appeal against the verdict, which was issued by the a branch of the revolutionary court. Their lawyer, Masoud Shafii, said he had not yet been informed of the court’s verdict, an Iranian news website, Khabaronline, reported. In July 2009, Bauer and Fattal along with their friend, Sarah Shourd, 33, were arrested by Iranian security forces after walking across an unmarked border between Iran and Iraqi Kurdistan. Shourd was released last September on health grounds, on bail of $500,000 (£324,000). While in prison, Shourd became engaged to Bauer. The Americans have denied that the two men were involved in espionage and say they unwittingly crossed the unmarked border while hiking, after stepping off a dirt track near a waterfall. But Iran accused them of spying. The trial of the two Americans ended last month. Speculation was rife that Iran might release them on the eve of the Islamic month of Ramadan. At the time Iran’s foreign minister said the trial could clear the way for their freedom. The court, which was held behind closed doors, had also summoned Shourd but she did not travel to Iran to appear for the trial. The families of the Americans have been campaigning for their release and were allowed to see them in a highly publicised visit to Tehran last year. Bauer’s mother, Cindy Hickey, said in July that she had seen “positive comment” coming out of Tehran, and hoped they would be freed shortly. In June, Shafii told the New York Times that he had not been able to meet with the two men since taking up their case in late 2009. He accused Iran of holding them hostage. “There is no espionage or illegal entry evidence against my clients. This case is political and unfortunately my clients have been held hostage, and they have become playthings for the government. “From a political view, however, my clients should not even be held even one more day, as this detainment is hurting the reputation of the Islamic Republic of Iran,” Shafii told the newspaper in an email interview. The case has further aggravated tensions between Iran and the US, which have become strained over Iran’s nuclear programme. The US accuses Iran of pursuing nuclear weapons. Iran says it is enriching uranium for energy purposes only. Iran United States US foreign policy Saeed Kamali Dehghan guardian.co.uk
Continue reading …Explosions and gunfire shake Libyan capital as residents say anti-Gaddafi protesters have taken to the streets Tripoli was shaken by explosions and rocked by gunfire on Saturday night amid rumours that a major rebel offensive had left the regime of Muammar Gaddafi close to collapse. Tripoli residents told Reuters there were anti-Gaddafi protesters in the streets. “We can hear shooting in different places,” said one. “Most of the regions of the city have gone out, mostly young people … it’s the uprising … They went out after breaking the [Ramadan] fast.” “They are shouting religious slogans: God is greatest!” Celebrations broke out across Libya after Libyan TV reported that Muammar Gaddafi and his two sons had left the country. In the town of Zintan, the opposition stronghold in Libya’s western mountains, locals fired wildly into the sky with Kalashnikovs and anti-aircraft guns as news of Gaddafi’s apparent departure spread. Libya’s opposition Al-Aharar channel said that, according to sources in Tripoli, Gaddafi and his sons Mu’tasm and Hannibal had all fled. There was no information on how they had allegedly managed to escape from Tripoli, now under siege from rebel forces in the west, east and south. A caller from Tripoli also told Libya’s Al-Aharar TV channel that anti-Gaddafi locals had closed off the city’s main Alsika Street, close to the French embassy and leading from Tripoli university to the former King’s palace. Government troops in pick-up trucks with anti-aircraft guns were trying to enter, he added. Libyan state TV failed to report Saturday night’s dramatic events. It broadcast instead a report of a Ramadan prayer from a Tripoli mosque and old video of Gaddafi supporters waving flags in the city’s Green Square. Dr Khalid Abdul Rahman, a UK-based Libyan working as a visiting consultant in Zintan hospital, said: “We’re excited. We should be in Tripoli now. We just want to make sure of this news. If he [Gaddafi] has gone it means I’m travelling tomorrow to Tripoli to see my family. This is what we’ve been fighting about for the last six months now.” According to Dr Khalid, people from Tripoli were pouring on to the streets on Saturday night. “I just spoke to my cousin in Tripoli. He’s left his house. All the men have gone out to celebrate. I’m overjoyed. I feel drunk.” He added: “We want a Libya were everyone has their rights, and has what they’ve been deprived of for 42 years.” Al-Jazeera, citing rebel sources, reported on Saturday night that an uprising was already under way on the streets of Tripoli. The station said that after sunset celebratory fire started across the Libyan capital. People had barricaded their streets and districts with burning tyres and were joining up with other anti-regime opponents. One witness told al-Jazeera that people had been injured in several districts of the city from exchanges of fire between pro- and anti-government forces. One opposition Libyan TV station reported that Gaddafi’s departing order was for his troops to use “maximum force” against the rebels. Other sources said the firing died down late in the evening. Abdul Hamid, a 35-year-old engineer based with the rebels in Zintan, said: “If it’s correct I feel very happy. If Gaddafi has escaped everything will be under control soon. We thought Tripoli would be the biggest fight and a lot of people from both sides would die in the fight. If Gaddafi and his sons have run away there will be no fight. Everyone will surrender.” Asked whether the report was true, he said: “I believe it 70 per cent. I can’t say it 100 per cent. Sometimes these reports are just street news.” Libya Muammar Gaddafi Arab and Middle East unrest Middle East Luke Harding guardian.co.uk
Continue reading …Former prime minister gives verdict on unrest and says that politicians are ‘missing the point’ talking about a broken society Tony Blair has launched a fierce attack on widespread claims that this summer’s riots showed that British society is in “moral decline”. The former prime minister warns that rash talk of a broken society threatens to harm the country’s reputation abroad. While admitting that he was guilty of a similar reaction to the murder of two- year-old Jamie Bulger in 1993, he calls for the government not to play politics with the crisis and mounts an impassioned defence of Labour’s legacy after 13 years in power. Writing in the Observer , in his first public verdict on the riots, Blair says: “In 1993, following the Bulger case, I made a case in very similar terms to the one being heard today about moral breakdown in Britain. I now believe that speech was good politics but bad policy. Focus on the specific problem and we can begin on a proper solution. “Elevate this into a highfalutin wail about a Britain that has lost its way morally and we will depress ourselves unnecessarily, trash our own reputation abroad, and worst of all, miss the chance to deal with the problem in the only way that will
Continue reading …Flight Lieutenant Jon Egging killed after aircraft plunges to the ground near Bournemouth Airport in Dorset A Red Arrows pilot died on Saturday afternoon when his plane crashed after a display at an air show. Flight Lieutenant Jon Egging was killed when his Hawk T1 aircraft plunged to the ground near Bournemouth Airport in Dorset. Onlookers reported seeing the plane flying low before smashing into a field and coming to a standstill with its nose in the River Stour near the village of Throop. The aircraft was one of nine members of the famous RAF display team that had taken part in a display over the seafront in Bournemouth for the town’s fourth air festival, which was watched by tens of thousands of people. This evening a Ministry of Defence spokesman said: “We can confirm that we are aware of an incident involving one of the Red Arrows and we are investigating.” The fire service confirmed it had been called to an air crash which happened near Bournemouth International Airport shortly before 2pm. One man told the BBC: “I heard a rushing sound and I saw a plane about 15m above the ground racing across the fields. It impacted and bounced across the field.” Members of the public reportedly jumped into the water to search for the pilot. Wayne Kent, 30, the assistant manager of the nearby Broadway Pub, said some of his customers had seen the incident and that they believed the pilot had guided the plane away from houses in the village and from people walking near the riverbank. “I heard that the plane went down in the fields near Throop and it bounced three or four times,” he said. “The pilot then steered it towards the river.” Radio enthusiast Malcolm MacIntyre told the Bournemouth Echo that he had listened in on radio communications between the team and the control tower, just before the crash. He said that just after the Red Arrows were called to land by the tower, one of the pilots said: “Are you aware of the mayday?” The tower replied: “Yes, we are, somebody is dealing with that.” It was reported that the Red Arrows had been performing a final low-level manoeuvre as a “thank-you” to the local air traffic control when the accident happened. Witnesses said one of the aircraft performed a turn and then failed to recover. Amateur footage shows one of the Red Arrows display team planes flying at a lower height. “Whatever has happened it is a tragic incident and very devastating for local people especially, and for the team and the family of whichever pilot is involved,” said Terry Trevett, chairman of the Bournemouth Red Arrows Association. A police helicopter and a coastguard helicopter were dispatched to the scene, while emergency services established a wide exclusion zone around the crash site. TV crews were asked to stop filming while emergency services combed the wreckage. The display team is intended to be the public face of the RAF, both at home and abroad. Since 1965, the Red Arrows have flown more than 4,000 displays in 52 countries. Two Red Arrows planes collided over Crete last year, forcing one pilot to eject before his aircraft crashed on to the Greek island. The Red Arrows website says: “Today the Red Arrows are renowned throughout the world, acting as ambassadors for Great Britain when displaying overseas. They also support UK industry by demonstrating the capabilities of British equipment and expertise.” Since 1979, the Red Arrows have used the dual-control BAE Systems Hawk T1 aircraft. The planes’ Rolls Royce engines produce 5,200lbs of thrust and give a top speed of mach 1.2. The cockpit seats are fitted with Martin-Baker Mark 10B rocket boosted ejection seats. A spokesman for Dorset police said: “The incident will be investigated by the military air accident investigation team.” Plane crashes Military Air transport Jamie Doward guardian.co.uk
Continue reading …