Mumbai’s 5,000 lunch couriers down tiffins to support hunger striker’s call for anti-corruption agency The famous “dabbawallas” who pick up and deliver home-cooked lunch to hundreds of thousands of office workers in India’s commercial capital Mumbai announced the first strike in their long history on Thursday, in solidarity with the high-profile anti-corruption campaigner arrested earlier this week. The couriers are the latest to join protests across India that have seen tens of thousands of people taking to the streets to support Anna Hazare. The 74-year-old social activist leading the effort to force the government to set up a powerful new anti-corruption agency is maintaining his hunger strike in a high-security prison, even though he is now free to leave. The Mumbai dabbawallas – “dabba” refers to the tin box in which the lunch is held, “walla” means man – say they have been inspired by Hazare’s refusal to eat solid food. “We are breaking our 120-year tradition by not providing tiffins. This is the least we can do to support Annaji, who has been fasting for over 50 hours in inhuman conditions,” Kiran Gavande, the secretary of the Nutan Dabbalwala Trust told a local television station. The 5,000 dabbawallas in Mumbai would march on Friday to show their support, Gavande said. The lean men with their trays of metal canisters, each filled with three or four separate dishes and marked with a code designating the son, husband or grandson for whom they are intended, are one of the best-known sights of the city. Elsewhere there is little sign of the protest dying down. Although authorities have made a series of concessions, Hazare has refused to leave Tihar prison in Delhi, where he was detained earlier this week, until a venue for his public fast has been prepared. Outside the jail, crowds of supporters, including school children and students, gathered on Thursday afternoon. One 12-year-old carried a placard saying “Save My Future”. Sunny Kumar, a 28-year-old IT consultant, said he backed Hazare’s campaign. “We need someone who will listen to our problems and eradicate corruption from our society.” Kiran Bedi, a respected former senior police officer, said the deal with the authorities that would allow Hazare to fast for 15 days at a vast parade ground in the city centre big enough to accommodate tens of thousands of supporters was not a victory. “We are not playing games. We are doing this to move the country forward,” said Bedi, who was also briefly arrested this week, told reporters. About 2,500 Hazare followers were arrested earlier this week, provoking comparisons with draconian measures employed by British imperial rulers before India won independence in 1947. Amnesty International has issued a statement calling on authorities in India “to respect the rights to freedom of expression and of peaceful assembly”. Though few analysts expect the government to fall, in part due to weak political opposition, the crisis has increased lack of confidence in the prime minister, Manmohan Singh, 78, and the Congress party-led government mid-way through its second term. Economic and legal reforms remain blocked in parliament, while progress in the delivery of basic services is patchy at best. Hazare has tapped deep anger in India at the endemic corruption, both petty and large scale, that successive administrations have either fuelled or failed to tackle, and this has been compounded by the government’s mishandling. Anna Hazare India Jason Burke guardian.co.uk
Continue reading …Click here to view this media Rick Perry dances around some of those tricky “gotcha” science-y questions, the kind that could get him trouble with his base if he doesn’t mention creationism as an equally valid concept but also could get him completely discounted as a nutbar if he goes too far with that kind of talk among regular folks who don’t think the earth is flat, or that we rode around on dinosaurs back in the Flintstones era. KID: “How old do you think the earth is?” RICK PERRY: “You know what? I don’t have any idea….I’m not sure anybody knows absolutely and completely for sure.” KID: “Do you believe in Evolution?” RICK PERRY: “It’s a theory that’s out there. It’s got some gaps in it. In Texas we teach both creationism and evolution….You know, ‘cos I figure you’re smart enough to figure out which one’s right.” [WINK] Sounds like he said “gas” but I’m pretty sure it’s “gaps”. That would be consistent with his overall message. UPDATE: Apparently Rick Perry has no idea what he’s talking about though. “No, it is not true,” said Kathy Miller, president of the Texas Freedom Network, an interest group that has lobbied the State Board of Education to keep religion out of public schools. “Texas science standards do not call for teaching creationism in the classroom.” David Bradley, a social conservative member of the State Board of Education, said he hadn’t heard the governor’s comments. But when asked if Texas schools teach creationism alongside evolution, Bradley responded: “Not specifically.”
Continue reading …Pukkelpop music festival in Belgium hit by storm. Three die when stage collapses and more than 70 are injured across site At least three people have been killed and more than 70 injured at a music festival after a stage collapsed during a heavy storm. The Chateau stage at the Pukkelpop festival, near the town of Hasselt in eastern Belgium, was apparently destroyed when trees were blown over in strong winds and crashed into rigging. The Shelter stage was also damaged but is not thought to have caused any injuries. Some giant TV screens also fell down. An estimated 60,000 people were at the three-day festival when the storm broke on Thursday. Video from the site showed stage equipment dangling in gales as rain-battered festivalgoers ran for shelter. Hugo Simons, Hasselt’s head of emergency medical planning, told VRT radio that three people died, 11 were severely injured while 60 sustained light injuries as a result of the storm. Hilde Claes, Hasselt’s mayor, said those injured were taken to nearby hospitals. Dutch NOS television reporter Rick Hoogkamp, who was attending the festival said the sky got dark, winds picked up violently and hailstones pelted those gathered. He said several tents collapsed. Images and video of the disaster also showed fallen trees and fallen lighting scaffolds. The headline acts at the festival, about 50 miles (80km) east of Brussels, were Foo Fighters, Eminem and The Offspring. Its organiser Chokri Mahassine said today “we have for now put the festival on hold until we understand the situation completely”. It is the second deadly incident at an outdoor festival within a week. On Saturday, parts of a stage collapsed at the Indiana State Fair in Indianapolis , killing five people and injuring dozens after winds with a velocity of 60mph (96kmph) to 70mph (112kmph) hit the site. The Smith Westerns, who were due to play on The Chateau stage, wrote on Twitter : “Just found out the extent of damage. All of prays go out To those hurt.” Jared Leto, frontman with 30 Seconds To Mars who were due perform tonight, wrote on his own Twitter feed : “FOUR STAGES DOWN – STILL RAINING + THUNDER IF YOU ARE HERE PLEASE BE SAFE. “SERIOUS INJURIES AT THE FESTIVAL. MORE BAD WEATHER POSS HEADING THIS WAY. PLEASE TAKE CARE AND CAUTION. “PUKKELPOP UPDATE: Two confirmed dead. 40 at the hospital. Sending our thoughts and prayers.” Belgium Natural disasters and extreme weather Europe Festivals David Batty guardian.co.uk
Continue reading …The Orlando Sentinel has discovered that a “watch list” of Orlando residents handed out at a recent town hall meeting by Rep. Tim Griffin (R-AR) likely originated in the office of Rep. Daniel Webster (R-FL). Griffin’s office told the Sentinel that the watch list was given to them by another member of Congress. A source involved with the scandal confirmed that the Floridians targeted by the watch list had only attended Webster’s town halls, making Webster the only member of Congress to have seen them and the only member of Congress who would’ve had reason to target them. Each of the listed activists is a resident of Webster’s district. The watch lists were distributed not only at the Griffin town hall, but reportedly in in Louisiana, Georgia and South Carolina as well. The handouts included photos of six activists from the Orlando area and a list of questions to ask each of the residents. The questions were clearly designed to undermine the credibility of the activists, painting them as professional operatives out to disrupt conservative town hall meetings. In addition to dozens of spelling and grammatical errors, the handouts imply numerous factual inaccuracies about each of the people targeted. For instance, one of the questions for Organize Now Political Director Michael Cantone is “Were you rated one of the ‘Best’ Progressive Bloggers in the State of Florida by the Florida Progressive Coalition.” Speaking as the primary writer for the Florida Progressive Coalition, I wrote the comment the flier is asking about and I (and FPC) have never “rated” Florida bloggers. The question implies that an offhand remark I made about Cantone’s writing (which he never did much of, anyway) somehow is meant to say that he is a prominent Florida progressive blogger, which is not true. Each page of the handout leads with the following: Are Things Always As They Seem? FOR THE MEDIA Accepting comments offered at face value may not always be the best idea, without engaging just the most basic due diligence into who is doing the speaking. Learning more about what organizations a person represents, supports or is involved may serve to provide more clarity as to the motivation behind what is being said. What also provides more clarity is factual accuracy and living up to the basic standard you set for others. The document does not reveal what organizations it “represents, supports or is involved” with or created by. And the author of the document certainly didn’t engage in basic due diligence when it came to correctly reporting people’s names or what jobs they have held in the past. None of the people in the handout, for instance, worked for “Barak Obama” in 2008, as the document implies. Or Barack Obama. And none of them is a paid MoveOn operative, either. The activists in the flier responded: “It seems clear that the presentation of these materials is intended to encourage harassment of these citizen activists and to intimidate other citizens from speaking out across America by attacking those who have already spoken out,” said Tamecka Pierce, President of Organize Now, who is also profiled in the document. “This behavior is unfitting for any member of Congress or their Congressional staff and represents a threat to the First Amendment rights of all citizens. This type of state sponsored intimidation, is a troubling, direct danger to our democratic process.” “Citizens everywhere should be concerned as to whether or not tax payer dollars and resources were used to profile fellow Americans in an attempt to silence their voices and what role Congressional offices or campaigns played in disseminating state-sponsored intimidation of private citizens,” said Mike Cantone, Political Director for Organize Now, who was also profiled. “These fear tactics are reminiscent of the incendiary “Wanted” posters for Planned Parenthood doctors and activists and Sarah Palin’s crosshairs on Representative Gabrielle Giffords’ district — threats and intimidation tactics that led to real violence and even murder,” said another local activist, who was also profiled in the handout, but is fearful of being quoted directly because of further possible retribution while looking for employment. “The Constitution welcomes and protects open, honest and impassioned speech by the citizenry, no matter the party affiliation, race, ethnicity or socioeconomic status. Unfortunately, it seems that Rep. Webster does not tolerate dissent and has placed constituents who often disagree on some kind of ‘watch list,’ which has been distributed to the public by at least one other Congressional office.” “This action sends a clear message to constituents: If you disagree, keep quiet or face retribution,” says Pierce. “I’m scared to know that if I speak at a public meeting, that the Federal Government will use their vast tax-payer funded resources to spread lies and fear across the country. Big government should not be used to intimidate its citizens.” Much of the handout fails even a basic logic test. Justin Rubin, MoveOn’s executive director said: “It is ridiculous that Republicans think that every constituent that stands up and challenges them at a town hall is a MoveOn member. The fact of the matter is their policies are deeply unpopular with the vast majority of Americans – not just MoveOn members. If Republicans don’t want to take questions from their constituents it is probably time for them to find a new line of work.” Intimidation at Griffin’s town hall went even further. As Huffington Post reports: One local activist in Griffin’s district, who did not want to be named for fear he would “end up in the next handout,” said Griffin’s District Chief of Staff, Carl Vogelpohl, along with two other staffers, were manning the sign-in table where the “watch list” was being distributed, and staffers were instructing attendees that it was their “homework.” One attendee contended that the combination of seeing the handouts and then observing staffers videotaping and photographing the audience created an atmosphere of intimidation at Griffin’s town hall.
Continue reading …Rebels in Zawiyah celebrate milestone of control over crucial oil refinery and coastal highway For Yusuf Hamad it was a happy moment. Standing under the shadow of a giant oil
Continue reading …Frenzied selling wipes £62bn off value of FTSE and Dow Jones plummets in another tumultuous day for world economy Financial markets on both sides of the Atlantic were convulsed by a fresh wave of selling amid fears that the world economy is sliding back towards recession. The FTSE 100 closed down 239 points, or 4.5%, at 5092, wiping more than £62bn off its value. By late afternoon on Wall Street, the Dow Jones was down by 480 points, or 4.2%. Growing disarray in the eurozone over the latest bailout for Greece, weak American manufacturing figures and a warning from Wall Street bank Morgan Stanley that the US and Europe are “hovering dangerously close to recession” all contributed to the mood of panic. A closely watched gauge of the US manufacturing sector produced by the Philadelphia Federal Reserve plunged, underlining fears that the recovery has ground to a halt. The yield on benchmark 10-year US Treasury bonds, which measures the cost of borrowing for the American government, slipped below 2%, as investors sought a haven from the storm. Gold, which has soared in value this year, hit another new record of $1,825 (£1,106) an ounce. Sal Catrini, managing director for equities at Cantor Fitzgerald in New York, said: “The market is in meltdown mode; the data continues to stink. I don’t know that there’s much more to be said.” In Europe, investors were spooked by news that at least five eurozone countries had asked the Greek government to put up collateral against their share of the latest emergency bailout for Athens. Austria, the Netherlands, Slovenia and Slovakia joined Finland in insisting that the Greeks put up assets as security, before they sign off on the €109bn (£95bn) emergency loan agreed in July. Their demands underline fears that eurozone countries have little confidence in the latest plans to shore up the single currency. “It does suggest that northern European states have a certain lack of faith in Greece,” said Simon Derrick, of the bank BNY Mellon. Europe’s banks also saw their shares fall sharply, despite the ban on short-selling imposed by several countries including France and Germany last week. It was reported that the European Central Bank has made an emergency short-term loan of $500bn to one struggling financial firm; while a story in the Wall Street Journal suggested that European banks with US operations had been hauled in by the New York Federal Reserve and asked whether they had enough capital to survive the market chaos. In the UK, shares in Royal Bank of Scotland and Barclays were down by 11%, and Lloyds by 9%. The turmoil came as Andy Haldane, the Bank of England’s executive director for financial stability, warned that the fears in financial markets have been exacerbated by the “psychological scarring” from the traumatic events of the past two years. “Memories of financial disaster are now fresh, as after the Great Depression, causing an over-estimation of the probability of a repeat disaster,” he said, in a paper published by the Bank. He called for “a more optimistic popular narrative” to help counter this ingrained pessimism. Despite the US Federal Reserve chairman Ben Bernanke’s pledge to keep interest rates at rock bottom until 2013, investors are increasingly nervous that central banks have run out of ammunition to rescue the ailing world economy. “Every time the economy got the sniffles, we had the Federal Reserve standing by with tissues,” said Jack Ablin, chief investment officer at Harris Private Bank. “This time around, I think the box is empty, and we’re going to have to go through this alone.” Market turmoil Global economy Economics FTSE Stock markets Dow Jones United States Europe Heather Stewart guardian.co.uk
Continue reading …Looks like Jon Stewart was right —the media is grossly ignoring Ron Paul. A new study from the Pew Project for Excellence in Journalism has found that Paul is just the 10th leading newsmaker in the GOP field—behind even non-candidates like Donald Trump and Sarah Palin. Paul has been…
Continue reading …Click here to view this media Independent Connecticut Sen. Joe Lieberman said Wednesday that he was unsure if he would support Barack Obama for president in 2012. So, the hosts of Fox & Friends did their best to convince him that Republican Texas Gov. Rick Perry was the right choice. “Everybody remembers that in 2008, you supported the Republican in the race, John McCain, your dear friend,” Fox News host Gretchen Carlson began. “But now will you support President Obama?” “Well, I’m going to approach this 2012 election as the independent that I am,” Lieberman explained. “Therefore, I don’t know who I’m going to support at this point… I want to see who’s got the plans, who the Republicans nominate… Bottom line, too early to say.” “No one has to tell you what’s going on in Afghanistan and Iraq,” Fox News host Brian Kilmeade told the senator. “In Iraq, we seem to be taking our eye off the ball. There have been a bunch of bombings. So, that can’t make you happy. And in Afghanistan, Petraeus comes up with a plan, who you have a great respect for, and the president comes up with his own plan. Isn’t that a game breaker for you?” “It’s not a game breaker,” Lieberman replied. “The good news in terms of President Obama and Afghanistan is that he surged the troops beginning in 2009 — 30,000 extra — according to Dave Petraeus’ — Gen. Petraeus’ plan.” “Senator, I heard when you saying when you said who you were going to support, some of the things you were looking at were the economy, the debt and a strong military presence,” Fox News host Eric Bolling noted. “Rick Perry strikes me a someone, a tea party advocate, a tea partier from the very get-go, who wants to see the debt come down. The economy, very strong in Texas. And then military, he’s a military guy. If it were Rick Perry, could you get behind that one?” “It really is too early to say,” Lieberman insisted. “I never have really met Rick Perry. I must say that I watched the launch of his campaign the last few days and first impressions are important. He’s made, to me, some very good first impressions.” “Maybe at first blush, what you like about him is that he tells it like it is,” Carlson suggested.
Continue reading …Gemma Redmond remembers her last moments with her husband on their honeymoon, following him being mauled by a shark The widow of a man killed by a shark on their dream honeymoon in the Seychelles has said that her husband had laughed off the dangers of sharks. Gemma Redmond described how she and her husband Ian had gone to the Seychelles partly because they thought the islands were free from dangerous animals. In an interview with the BBC, she said she had asked a receptionist if there were sharks and was told: “No, not in the Seychelles, the Seychelles are very safe waters.” She said: “We didn’t really think that sharks would be in the Seychelles at all. It wasn’t something we were aware of.” Gemma Redmond has also described the moment she heard his “awful scream”. She said she first thought her husband was sneezing as he was snorkelling. But Gemma said she soon realised he was in trouble. She said: “I could see the top of his snorkel because he had a bright orange band around it so I could always follow where he was. “And, all of a sudden, I heard this ‘Help’ and I thought at first he was sneezing. “And then I heard it again – I heard ‘Help’ and the most awful scream. “I can still hear it when I close my eyes.” Redmond said she was sitting with their bag on the beach and her 30-year-old husband had been in the water for 20 minutes when he was attacked. One onlooker described her saying she “still had hope” for her husband while he lay on the sand with terrible injuries after the attack, which happened off Anse Lazio beach on Praslin, the second largest island in the archipelago. Earlier this month, a 36-year-old French tourist was killed by a shark in the same area. Government officials have issued a ban on swimming in certain areas until the killer is captured. Ian Redmond, an IT specialist, was savaged just 10 days after his wedding to primary school teacher Gemma Houghton at St Michael’s Church, in the village of Dalton, Lancashire, just a few hundred yards from the bride’s family home. It is thought that the parents of the couple, from Lancashire, have travelled to the Seychelles following the attack. Police said the incident two weeks ago had been treated as a “freak occurrence”, but the death of Ian Redmond has “changed the whole complexion of things”. Search teams are still trying to find the animal and discover what species it is by examining a tooth they recovered. Until this month the last recorded fatal shark attack in the Seychelles was in 1963. Seychelles Marine life Africa Wildlife Animals guardian.co.uk
Continue reading …Spanish fashion chain’s parent denies claims but will compensate 15 migrants ‘rescued’ from Sao Paulo workplace Retail fashion chain Zara is under investigation by Brazil’s ministry of labour after a contractor in São Paulo was found to be using employees in sweatshop conditions to make garments for the Spanish company. The Brazilian government listed 52 charges against Inditex, Zara’s parent company, after it “rescued” 15 workers from a factory sub-contracted by AHA, the company responsible for 90% of Zara’s Brazilian production. Fourteen of the workers were Bolivians and one was from Peru. One was 14. Inditex said in a statement that it could not be held responsible for “unauthorised outsourcing” but would compensate the workers because AHA had violated Inditex’s code of conduct. Zara has 1,540 stores worldwide, including 64 in the UK. The response has not satisfied the Brazilian authorities. “AHA is a logistical extension of its main client, Zara Brasil,” said the prosecutor, Giuliana Cassiano Orlandi. “The company is responsible for its employees. Its raison d’être is making clothes and it follows that it must know who is producing its garments.” Inditex said its 50 suppliers last year produced 7m garments, with only 0.03% made in unlicensed workshops. It was working closely with the ministry of labour to eradicate sweatshop conditions. Renato Bignami, who led the investigation, said the workers – who lived on the premises – worked 12-hour shifts in dangerous and unhealthy conditions. One Bolivian told the TV channel A Liga that the labour component of a pair of Zara jeans selling at $126 (£76) was $1.14, which was divided between the seven people involved in the process. The workers earned between $156 and $290 a month. The minimum wage in Brazil is $344. The investigation began after unions reported last June that sweatshops in Sao Paulo were producing garments for Zara. “Before then, no accusations had been made against Zara,” said Maria Susiclea Assis of the local garment-makers’ union. Bignami said the economic crisis in Spain was driving impoverished migrant workers from places such as Bolivia, Paraguay and Peru back to Brazil, which is in a boom. The high exchange rate for the Brazilian real means that, even at these wages, workers can send money home. “They work 16 or even 18 hours a day,” he said. “It is extremely exhausting work, from Monday to Saturday, sometimes even Sunday depending on demand. I’ve seen workers who have taken home R$150-250 (£57-94) at the end of the month – after paying off housing debt, food debt, telephone card debt, debt [to people traffickers] for the journey here.” Many have to work for three or four months to pay off the “coyotes” who have smuggled them into the country. “These are classic cases of immigrant sweatshops,” Bignami said, adding that he had no doubt that such labour conditions characterised modern-day slavery. Workers often face “threats, coercion, physical violence. All this to increase productivity,” he added. Ineke Zeldenrust of the Clean Clothes Campaign, in Amsterdam, said such sub-contracting was common in the industry. “It is Zara’s responsibility to know who is making their clothes,” she said. “According to the code of conduct that they have signed up to, they are responsible for everyone involved in the supply chain. It is up to them to do the monitoring.” Zara is a family business founded in 1975 in La Coruña, north-west Spain by Amancio Ortega, who has become Spain’s richest man and the seventh richest in the world. According to Forbes magazine, half of production remains in Spain, with 26% per cent in Europe and the remainder spread around the world. In July, 300 Zara employees staged a demonstration in Madrid, complaining that 80% of the mainly female workforce were on temporary contracts. They earn €830 for a 40-hour week. Slavery Brazil Spain Retail industry Europe Stephen Burgen Tom Phillips guardian.co.uk
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