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Phone-hacking scandal: Stuart Kuttner is latest NoW exec to be arrested

Former managing editor and one-time public face of the News of the World taken into custody Stuart Kuttner, the public face of the News of the World and its most vocal public defender for 22 years, has been arrested by police investigating allegations of phone hacking and of bribing police officers to leak sensitive information. As managing editor until his resignation in July 2009, Kuttner was in charge of finances at the now-defunct tabloid. Kuttner, 71, was described at the time of his resignation by the last editor of the newspaper, Colin Myler, as a man whose “DNA is absolutely integrated into the newspaper which he has represented across the media with vigour”. Kuttner reportedly did not know he was going to be taken into custody when he arrived by appointment at a police station in London on Tuesday at 11am for questioning over the phone-hacking scandal. Police from both Operation Weeting (the investigation into phone hacking) and Elveden (the investigation into allegations of inappropriate payments to police), are understood to have arrested Kuttner who is suffering serious health problems and recently returned from the US for treatment. Kuttner is believed to have been arrested on suspicion of conspiring to intercept communications, contrary to Section1(1) Criminal Law Act 1977, and on suspicion of corruption allegations contrary to Section 1 of the Prevention of Corruption Act 1906. They are the same allegations that Rebekah Brooks, the former News of the World editor and ex-News International chief executive, faces since her arrest last month. When Brooks faced a Commons culture, media and sport select committee hearing last month she told MPs that payments to private investigators were the responsibility of the paper’s managing editor’s office. Brooks admitted using private investigators during her time as editor of the now defunct tabloid between 2000 and 2003 for, she claimed, “purely legitimate” purposes. When asked whether she had ever discussed individual payments to private investigators with Kuttner, she admitted that “payments to private investigators would have gone through the managing editor’s office”. But, she added: “I can’t remember if we ever discussed individual payments.” Kuttner’s role as the public face of the News of the World proved to be key to the tabloid under the editors, Rebekah Brooks – then Rebekah Wade – and her replacement, Andy Coulson, both of whom were reluctant to talk to the media. When Brooks’s “Sarah’s Law” campaign caused public hysteria in some towns and cities across the UK, prompting some Portsmouth residents to burn the homes of suspected paedophiles, it was Kuttner who faced the cameras. He also played a role in the paper’s dealing with Sara Payne in the years after her eight-year-old daughter, Sarah, was abducted and murdered in July 2000. The Guardian revealed last week that Payne’s mobile phone had been targeted by Mulcaire at a time when key members of the newspaper’s executive staff were working hard to forge what Payne believed to be a close and genuine friendship. Kuttner was one of those who attended the funerals of her parents. No reason was given for Kuttner’s departure from the newspaper two years ago, shortly before the Guardian exclusive that blew the phone-hacking story wide open. At the time, News International said he would continue to work on “specialised projects”, including its Sarah’s Law campaign. In February 2008, he appeared on Radio 4′s Today programme and claimed the News of the World was a “watchdog” which guarded against corruption among those in positions of power: “If [the use of private investigators] happens, it shouldn’t happen. It happened once at the News of the World. The reporter was fired; he went to prison. The editor resigned.” He went on to argue that British journalism is “a very honourable profession” and that newspapers such as the News of the World had to act as watchdogs because “we live in an age of corrosion of politics and of public life – degradation”. His role as the public face of the News of the World continued when he visited Soham in 2002, following the disappearance of Holly Wells and Jessica Chapman, to defend the tabloid’s decision to offer a reward of £150,000 in conjunction with the Sun newspaper for information that could lead to their safe return. He also appeared on the BBC’s Breakfast with Frost, responding to criticism of the reward and saying the man leading the investigation into the girls’ disappearance, Detective Superintendent David Hankins, had welcomed it. The managing editor was also an influential presence behind the scenes. When Gordon Brown and Tony Blair gave their first joint newspaper interview for more than 10 years to the tabloid in April 2005, Kuttner’s byline was on the story, along with that of Ian Kirby, the paper’s long-serving political editor. The arrest of Kuttner, who was news editor at the London Evening Standard before moving to the NoW in 1987, is the 11th by Operation Weeting police, who are conducting the current investigation into phone hacking. After being questioned by police – a process that lasted 12 hours in the case of Brooks – he is expected to be released on bail until October. Others arrested and bailed have included Brooks, ex-NoW editor Andy Coulson, ex-NoW assistant editor Ian Edmondson, ex-NoW chief reporter Neville Thurlbeck, senior ex-NoW journalist James Weatherup, freelance journalist Terenia Taras, an unnamed 63-year-old man, and ex-NoW royal editor Clive Goodman. Operation Elveden was also involved in Kuttner’s arrest. Officers from Elveden are being supervised by the Independent Police Complaints Commission. Phone hacking News International News of the World Newspapers & magazines National newspapers Newspapers News Corporation Media business Rebekah Brooks Glenn Mulcaire Andy Coulson Police Amelia Hill guardian.co.uk

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Driving test fraudsters jailed for ‘ridiculously unsophisticated’ scam

Five-time test failure’s friend agreed to step in – and ended up making 16 mistakes, court told Two bungling drivers have been jailed for hatching a “ridiculously unsophisticated” plot to get one of them a licence. Hadi Mohammed, 28, a former Iraqi police officer, had failed his test five times and his friend, Derbas Hamed, a qualified driver, agreed to step in and take the examination for him. Eyebrows were raised when Hamed, 25, was spotted driving up to the test centre in Gloucester alone. Hamed pretended to be Mohammed and took the test but failed in “spectacular fashion”, making 16 mistakes, Gloucester crown court heard. Staff were suspicious and called the police. Rosie Walsh, for the prosecution, said: “Mr Mohammed had booked to take his driving test in Gloucester. He had failed the test five times beforehand.” She said Hamed showed staff his friend’s provisional licence and because they looked similar he was allowed to take the test. Walsh added: “When the police interviewed Mr Hamed at first he gave his name as Mr Mohammed but when he was arrested he confessed. When Mr Mohammed was also arrested he said he had been too tired to take the test.” Giles Nelson, in mitigation for Mohammed, said: “My client did not actively commit the deception and played a secondary part. “It was an extremely unsophisticated fraud, ridiculously unsophisticated and amateurish. He got nowhere near succeeding and is thoroughly ashamed. “Since coming to this country from Iraq he is desperate to find work and needs a driving licence.” Lloyd Jenkins, for father-of-two Hamed, said: “My client was candid in interview and has apologised. He drove his friend to Gloucester as a favour and on the way the plan was hatched. There was no money involved. “My client says that he realised what he was doing was wrong so he deliberately failed the test in a spectacular fashion. He had 16 driving faults.” The men, who are from Bristol, admitted fraud by false representation. Mohammed was jailed for two months and Hamed, who has a previous conviction for fraud after he impersonated someone else for a driving theory test, was sent to prison for three months. Recorder Michael De Navarro QC told the men: “This is a very serious offence and had you both been successful a completely unqualified driver and not a very good one at that would have been let loose on the roads. “This would have meant a danger to other road-users and only a custodial sentence is justified. I do not accept Mr Hamed’s contention that he failed the test deliberately.” Crime Steven Morris guardian.co.uk

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Phone-hacking scandal: Key figure at News International arrested

Unnamed man, believed to be former NoW managing editor Stuart Kuttner, taken into custody for questioning A key new arrest has been made in the ongoing phone-hacking scandal. The unnamed man, believed to be former News of the World managing editor Stuart Kuttner, apparently did not know he was going to be taken into custody when he arrived by appointment at a police station in London at 11am on Tuesday to answer questions about the phone-hacking scandal. Police from both Operation Weeting, the Metropolitan police investigation into alleged phone hacking, and Elveden, the investigation into allegations of inappropriate payments to police, are understood to have been involved. The development is the latest in a scandal that has already caused the closure of a 168-year-old newspaper, the News of the World, and the resignation of two top police officers, as well as 10 arrests. The man at the centre of the new arrest is s understood to have been arrested on suspicion of conspiring to intercept communications, contrary to Section1 (1) Criminal Law Act 1977, and on suspicion of corruption allegations contrary to Section 1 of the Prevention of Corruption Act 1906. They are the same allegations that Rebekah Brooks, the former News of the World editor and ex-News International chief executive, faces since her arrest last month. After being questioned by police – a process that, judging by previous arrests, could last for many hours – the man is expected to be released on bail until October. Others arrested and bailed have included Brooks, ex-NoW editor Andy Coulson, ex-NoW assistant editor Ian Edmondson, ex-NoW chief reporter Neville Thurlbeck, senior ex-NoW journalist James Weatherup, freelance journalist Terenia Taras, an unnamed 63-year-old man, and ex-NoW royal editor Clive Goodman. Phone hacking Newspapers & magazines National newspapers Newspapers Amelia Hill guardian.co.uk

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Chinese police shoot two dead over suspected terror attacks

Pair were being hunted over violence in Xinjiang that left 11 dead and was blamed on extremists trained in Pakistan Chinese police have shot dead two suspects they were hunting in connection with a deadly attack in the troubled north-western region of Xinjiang, say officials. Police have imposed a nighttime curfew in the centre of Kashgar and armed paramilitary police are guarding major junctions following the weekend’s violence. Officials have blamed extremists trained in camps in Pakistan for Sunday’s attack, which left 11 dead. Pakistan, one of China’s closest allies, has condemned the violence and pledged support in tackling terrorism. A police officer said the incident appeared to be linked to violence the previous night – when two blasts and a knife attack left seven dead, including one assailant – but authorities have yet to say who was responsible for that assault. A notice posted on the Xinjiang regional government website said police shot Memtieli Tiliwaldi, 29, and Turson Hasan, 34, who had been hiding in fields on the outskirts of Kashgar. Police had issued a reward of 100,000 yuan (£9,400) for information leading to their arrest, believing they were among a group who stormed a restaurant on Sunday, killing the owner and waiter and setting fire to the building. The assailants then hacked to death four people on the street and wounded 12 more. Police shot dead five suspects at the scene and arrested four others. Authorities later said the group’s leaders received firearms and explosives training at terrorist camps in Pakistan run by the separatist East Turkestan Islamic Movement (ETIM). The region’s Communist Party boss, Zhang Chunxian, has ordered a crackdown on “illegal religious activities” in the wake of the attacks, the state news agency Xinhua added. It is less than a fortnight since officials said 18 people were killed in an attack on a police station in Hotan, another city in the region. Uighur exiles disputed that account. Exiled Uighur leader Rebiyah Kadeer, president of the World Uyghur Congress, said she opposed violence but blamed the Chinese government for Sunday’s attacks. Kadeer said in a statement: “I am saddened that Han Chinese and Uyghurs have lost their lives. At the same time, I cannot blame the Uighurs who carry out such attacks for they have been pushed to despair by Chinese policies. I condemn the Chinese government for the incident. “The Chinese government has created an environment of hopelessness that means it must take responsibility for civilian deaths and injuries caused by their discriminatory policies.” She added that the congress was sceptical of claims the attackers had connections to international terrorist groups. The Uyghur American Association said in a statement that it feared Uighurs could face arbitrary detention and torture. “Chinese officials have sown the seeds of instability in East Turkestan through the repressive measures they have enforced since the unrest of July 5, 2009″, added president Alim Seytoff. Xinjiang has been under tight security since the ethnic riots in the capital Urumqi, which killed almost 200 mostly Han Chinese people. Professor Rohan Gunaratna of Singapore’s International Centre for Violence and Terrorism Research said he believed the weekend’s attacks were carried out by ETIM or people inspired by the group. He added that ETIM – which he believes is the same organisation as the Turkestan Islamic Party – had been in decline since its leader was killed in 2003. Its size and influence was further reduced by the death of a new leader in a US missile strike in Waziristan last year. Gunaratna said ETIM now numbered a few dozen members and relied on overseas terrorist groups for training because it did not have its own infrastructure. While there is evidence of links between al-Qaida and ETIM, some experts question whether the contacts were substantial and how long they lasted. There are also disputes about whether ETIM is a group as such, or little more than an umbrella term. Nicholas Bequelin, senior Asia researcher at Human Rights Watch, said: “The reason the Chinese government always points at foreign involvement in violent incidents in Xinjiang is to take the focus off local discontent.” Many in the large Uighur Muslim population are angered by religious and cultural controls, economic discrimination and large-scale Han migration. China Global terrorism Pakistan Tania Branigan guardian.co.uk

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Man becomes first person in UK to get artificial heart

Matthew Green, 40, who suffered failure of both chambers of his heart, is preparing to go home after groundbreaking surgery A 40-year-old man has become the first person in the UK to receive a totally artificial heart. Matthew Green had been critically ill, suffering from end-stage failure of both chambers of his heart. But now he is preparing to return home after undergoing the groundbreaking surgery at Papworth hospital, near Cambridge. The operation – which has also been completed successfully in the US and parts of Europe – could help cut transplant waiting times in the future. Green said: “Two years ago, I was cycling nine miles to work and nine miles back every day but by the time I was admitted to hospital I was struggling to walk even a few yards. “I am really excited about going home and just being able to do the everyday things that I haven’t been able to do for such a long time, such as playing in the garden with my son and cooking a meal for my family. “I want to thank all the wonderful staff at Papworth hospital who have been looking after me and who have made it possible for me to return home to my family.” During a six-hour operation last month, surgeons replaced Green’s damaged heart with the device, which will serve the role of both ventricles and heart valves. It provides a blood flow of up to 9.5 litres, eliminating the symptoms and effects of severe heart failure. The artificial heart will be powered by a “freedom portable driver”, worn like a backpack or shoulder bag. The transplant team at Papworth, led by Steven Tsui, consultant cardiothoracic surgeon and director of the transplant service, underwent training in Paris and was assisted by Latif Arusoglu, an expert artificial heart surgeon from Bad Oeynhausen, Germany. Green suffered from arrhythmogenic right ventricular cardiomyopathia, a heart muscle disease which results in arrhythmia, heart failure and sudden death. Tsui said: “At any point in time, there may be as many as 30 people waiting for a heart transplant on our waiting list at Papworth, with one third waiting over a year. “Matthew’s condition was deteriorating rapidly and we discussed with him the possibility of receiving this device, because without it he may not have survived the wait until a suitable donor heart could be found for him. “The operation went extremely well and Matthew has made an excellent recovery. I expect him to go home very soon, being able to do a lot more than before the operation with a vastly improved quality of life, until we can find a suitable donor heart for him to have a heart transplant.” Health Health & wellbeing guardian.co.uk

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Man becomes first person in UK to get artificial heart

Matthew Green, 40, who suffered failure of both chambers of his heart, is preparing to go home after groundbreaking surgery A 40-year-old man has become the first person in the UK to receive a totally artificial heart. Matthew Green had been critically ill, suffering from end-stage failure of both chambers of his heart. But now he is preparing to return home after undergoing the groundbreaking surgery at Papworth hospital, near Cambridge. The operation – which has also been completed successfully in the US and parts of Europe – could help cut transplant waiting times in the future. Green said: “Two years ago, I was cycling nine miles to work and nine miles back every day but by the time I was admitted to hospital I was struggling to walk even a few yards. “I am really excited about going home and just being able to do the everyday things that I haven’t been able to do for such a long time, such as playing in the garden with my son and cooking a meal for my family. “I want to thank all the wonderful staff at Papworth hospital who have been looking after me and who have made it possible for me to return home to my family.” During a six-hour operation last month, surgeons replaced Green’s damaged heart with the device, which will serve the role of both ventricles and heart valves. It provides a blood flow of up to 9.5 litres, eliminating the symptoms and effects of severe heart failure. The artificial heart will be powered by a “freedom portable driver”, worn like a backpack or shoulder bag. The transplant team at Papworth, led by Steven Tsui, consultant cardiothoracic surgeon and director of the transplant service, underwent training in Paris and was assisted by Latif Arusoglu, an expert artificial heart surgeon from Bad Oeynhausen, Germany. Green suffered from arrhythmogenic right ventricular cardiomyopathia, a heart muscle disease which results in arrhythmia, heart failure and sudden death. Tsui said: “At any point in time, there may be as many as 30 people waiting for a heart transplant on our waiting list at Papworth, with one third waiting over a year. “Matthew’s condition was deteriorating rapidly and we discussed with him the possibility of receiving this device, because without it he may not have survived the wait until a suitable donor heart could be found for him. “The operation went extremely well and Matthew has made an excellent recovery. I expect him to go home very soon, being able to do a lot more than before the operation with a vastly improved quality of life, until we can find a suitable donor heart for him to have a heart transplant.” Health Health & wellbeing guardian.co.uk

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Norway gunman making ‘unrealistic demands’, says lawyer

Anders Behring Breivik wants government to resign and the Japanese to investigate his mental state, his lawyer reveals The lawyer defending the man who has confessed to Norway’s bomb and shooting attacks says his client has presented a long list of “unrealistic” demands, including the resignation of the government and that his mental condition be investigated by Japanese specialists. Geir Lippestad said Anders Behring Breivik is linking these demands to his willingness to share information about two other alleged terrorist cells he has mentioned during questioning. Lippestad said the 32-year-old Norwegian wants to be investigated by Japanese specialists because “the Japanese understand the idea and values of honour”. The 22 July Oslo bombing and shooting massacre at a youth camp killed 77. Anders Behring Breivik Norway Europe The far right guardian.co.uk

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Norway gunman making ‘unrealistic demands’, says lawyer

Anders Behring Breivik wants government to resign and the Japanese to investigate his mental state, his lawyer reveals The lawyer defending the man who has confessed to Norway’s bomb and shooting attacks says his client has presented a long list of “unrealistic” demands, including the resignation of the government and that his mental condition be investigated by Japanese specialists. Geir Lippestad said Anders Behring Breivik is linking these demands to his willingness to share information about two other alleged terrorist cells he has mentioned during questioning. Lippestad said the 32-year-old Norwegian wants to be investigated by Japanese specialists because “the Japanese understand the idea and values of honour”. The 22 July Oslo bombing and shooting massacre at a youth camp killed 77. Anders Behring Breivik Norway Europe The far right guardian.co.uk

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Hama – the city that’s defying Assad

The Syrian city of Hama, the scene of a bloody crackdown by President Assad’s army, has a long history of standing up to the brutal Ba’athist regime It’s early July in Hama. Among the

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Syria deaths continue as UN considers condemnation

As the security council inches towards a resolution censuring violence, Assad forces press on with crackdown on protesters Twenty-four people have been killed across Syria as the UN Security Council showed signs of inching towards condemning the violence being unleashed by forces loyal to President Bashar al-Assad. According to the London-based Syrian Observatory for Human Rights, 10 people died in the central city of Hama on the first day of Ramadan, the Muslim holy month. A further six were reported to have been killed in the eastern Damascus suburb of Arbeen early on Tuesday, three in the central province of Homs, two in the eastern border town of al-Boukamal, two in the coastal city of Latakia and one in Maadamiyah near Damascus. Describing the attacks in the capital, one resident told Reuters: “People marched after the nightly Ramadan prayers. Security cars and pick-up trucks with machine-guns mounted on their beds entered Erbin around midnight and assembled at the main roundabout before branching out in the streets and firing at neighbourhoods.” News of the continuing bloodshed in a military crackdown which has now cost an estimated 1,700 civilian lives came as western diplomats intensified efforts to force a UN security council resolution condemning the violence . An hour-long meeting in New York late on Monday night, which had been called by Germany after up to 100 people were killed on Sunday in a brutal assault on Hama, failed to yield any unified stance. But diplomats insisted progress was being made. “I detected a certain convergence of thinking, concern about the escalating violence,” said Indian ambassador Hardeep Singh Puri. “The members of the council all felt that the council should address itself to the situation and pronounce itself if the need be.” The 15-member security council has been divided for months over how to address the Syrian crackdown, with nations including Britain pushing for a resolution but others, including veto-wielding China and Russia, opposing such a move, saying they fear it could be used as a pretext for military intervention in Syria. Russia’s UN ambassador Vitaly Churkin said: “We are still under the shadow of events in Libya where we found a resolution adopted by the security council dealt with very frivolously, and we cannot but keep that in mind as we contemplate what the security council can and cannot do on Syria.” On Monday, William Hague, the foreign secretary, said that that was “not a remote possibility”. Later, in New York, the US ambassador to the UN said the claims of countries opposing a resolution were a “canard”. “In my opinion, it’s an excuse by those who don’t want to confront what’s happening in Syria,” she said, according to Reuters. A more palatable solution with the potential to unite all security council members, even Syria’s neighbour Lebanon, would be the issuing of a formal statement by the council president that called for an end to violence and urged a peaceful political solution. Churkin, who insisted a resolution would be “somewhat excessive”, said he thought such a move would be “satisfactory”. Speaking before Monday night’s meeting, Hillary Clinton, the US Secretary of State, urged the security council to come up with some form of unified position. In a veiled appeal to China and Russia, she said in a statement: “We call on those members of the United Nations security council who have opposed any security council action that would call on Assad to stop the killing to reconsider their positions.” Clinton is due to meet with a group of US-based Syrian activists and representatives of the Syrian-American community on Tuesday. The Arab League has failed to specifically condemn the Syrian government, preferring to urge its members to “abide by human rights”. Turkey, however has expressed increased concern since Sunday. “…Beginning the holy month of Ramadan within a bloody environment is unacceptable,” President Abdullah Gül told the Anatolia news agency on Monday, adding: “The use of heavy weapons against people in Hama when Ramadan began shocked me. It is not possible for us to remain indifferent to this violence.” Syria Arab and Middle East unrest United Nations Bashar Al-Assad Middle East Lizzy Davies guardian.co.uk

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