Home » Posts tagged with » media (Page 297)
Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows: Part 2 – review

Sensational, satisfying, surreal … an explosive final chapter puts the magic back into the Harry Potter franchise. WARNING: CONTAINS SPOILERS “It all ends,” says the poster slogan. A potentially grim statement of the obvious, of course, yet the Potter saga could hardly have ended on a better note. With one miraculous flourish of its wand, the franchise has restored the essential magic to the Potter legend – which had been starting to sag and drift in recent movies – zapping us all with a cracking final chapter, which looks far superior to CS Lewis’s The Last Battle or JRR Tolkien’s The Return of the King . It’s dramatically satisfying, spectacular and terrifically exciting, easily justifying the decision to split the last book into two. Here is where the Harry Potter series gets its groove back, with a final confrontation between Voldemort (Ralph Fiennes) and our young hero, and with the sensational revelation of Harry’s destiny, which Dumbledore had been keeping secret from him. When stout-hearted young Neville Longbottom (a scene-stealer from Matthew Lewis) steps forward to denounce the dark lord in the final courtyard scene, I was on the edge of my seat. And when, in that final “coda”, the middle-age Harry Potter gently hugs his little boy before sending him off for his first term at Hogwarts – well, what can I say? I think I must have had something in my eye. The colossal achievement of this series really is something to wonder at. The Harry Potter movies showed us their characters growing older in real time: unlike Just William or Bart Simpson, Daniel Radcliffe’s Harry was going to grow up like a normal person and never before has any film – or any book – brought home to me how terribly brief childhood is. The Potter movies weren’t just an adaptation of a series of books, but a living, evolving collaborative phenomenon between page and screen. The first movie, Philosopher’s Stone , came out in 2001, when JK Rowling was working on the fifth book, Order of the Phoenix , and when no one – perhaps not even the author herself – knew precisely how it was going to end. The movies developed just behind the books, and it’s surely impossible to read them without being influenced by the films. This is most true for Robbie Coltrane’s endlessly lovable, definitive performance as Hagrid . In this final episode, Harry (Radcliffe), Hermione ( Emma Watson ) and Ron ( Rupert Grint ) continue their battle to find and destroy the “horcruxes” that the sinister Voldemort needs so he can stay alive for all eternity: these are objects in which the fragments of souls are trapped and whose vital, spiritual force Voldemort, that hateful parasite, can siphon off for his own ends. Harry and his friends track down these horcruxes, but the last one is a puzzle. As the forces of good assemble at Hogwarts for the final showdown with Voldemort and his hordes, Harry knows only that the most vital horcrux is actually in the castle, very close at hand. There are some superb set-piece scenes – and now the plot has so much more zing, these scenes have a power that comparable moments in earlier movies did not have. When Harry, Ron and Hermione insinuate themselves into Gringotts Bank to steal the sword of Gryffindor, the effect is bizarre, surreal and macabre: drawing on the influence of Lewis Carroll and Terry Gilliam. It is a great moment when Severus Snape , played with magnificently adenoidal disdain by Alan Rickman, is attacked by Voldemort’s snake Nagini, and we witness this only from behind a frosted glass screen – a nice touch from director David Yates . London-dwelling Potter fans will, as before, be intrigued to see how the ornate St Pancras railway station is used to represent King’s Cross, from where the Hogwarts train traditionally departs. Millions of tourists are undoubtedly convinced that this building is, in fact, King’s Cross. It may be forced simply to change its name. We get passionate, but somehow touchingly innocent screen kisses between Harry and Ginny (Bonnie Wright) and, of course, between Ron and Hermione. In the midst of the battle, Neville declares that he is going to find Luna (Evanna Lynch) for a snog: “I’m mad about her! About time I told her, since we’re both probably going to be dead by dawn!” But these love stories are always subordinate to the all-important battle between good and evil. The crucial moment of the film is where, I admit, I have a quibble: it is gripping and even moving when Harry realises what his destiny is, and sets out to fulfil it. Yet the exact rationale for his ultimate survival may be a little obscure, and perhaps even Potter-diehards may suspect that in the film there is a touch of having your cake and eating it. Well, no matter. This is such an entertaining, beguiling, charming and exciting picture. It reminded me of the thrill I felt on seeing the very first one, 10 years ago. And Radcliffe’s Harry Potter has emerged as a complex, confident, vulnerable, courageous character – most likable, sadly, at the point where we must leave him for ever. Wait. I’ve got that darn thing in my eye again … Rating: 4/5 Harry Potter Daniel Radcliffe Emma Watson Rupert Grint Ralph Fiennes Science fiction and fantasy Action and adventure Harry Potter JK Rowling Peter Bradshaw guardian.co.uk

Continue reading …
Yellowstone river oil spill throws spotlight on ExxonMobil and regulators

Oil executives criticised for conflicting accounts of breach and regulators accused of failing to ensure safe operation ExxonMobil and the Obama administration faced a growing credibility gap on Thursday over their management of a pipeline break that has fouled the Yellowstone river . Clean-up crews have yet to reach the site of the pipeline break nearly a week after the rupture, which leaked 42,000 US gallons (159,000 litres) of oil into the Yellowstone, one of the last undammed rivers left in America. State officials in Montana criticised oil company executives for offering conflicting accounts of the pipeline breach and its safety record. SkyTruth , which came to prominence last year for satellite maps tracking the BP oil spill in the Gulf of Mexico, has also questioned Exxon’s initial estimates of the size of the leak. SkyTruth’s founder, John Amos, said his calculations suggested a leak of 63,000 US gallons, or nearly half again as much as Exxon’s estimate of about 42,000 US gallons. Environmental organisations, meanwhile, accused federal government regulators of failing to ensure safe operation of the pipeline until it was too late. “We don’t need regulators to tell us that a pipeline gushing oil into our rivers is not operating safely. We need them to create rules and standards that ensure pipelines don’t do that in the first place and we don’t seem to have that,” said Anthony Swift, energy campaigner at the Natural Resources Defence Council . The pipeline safety authority ordered Exxon to make safety improvements to the pipeline on Tuesday – four days after the breach. The oil company and federal government officials believe that severe flooding eroded the riverbed in which the pipeline was buried, exposing the structure to damage. Ken Olson, the mayor of the nearby town of Laurel, Montana, said the Exxon crew were at work two weeks ago trying to protect the pipeline. He said he saw crews building a berm around a valve. “We’ve experienced erosion last year, and again this year we saw even more. The amount of erosion we experienced this year I would consider, as an amateur, to be a 100-year event. I never saw anything like it,” Olson said. The record erosion has turned the focus towards the depth of the pipeline below the riverbed. In filings with the pipeline safety authority last December, Exxon claimed that the pipeline was at least 5 feet (1.5 metres) beneath the riverbed. The pipeline authority had faulted the oil company for a series of other probable violations in July 2010. After a temporary shutdown of the pipeline last May, following safety concerns being raised by local officials, Exxon reported on 1 June the line was at a depth of 12 feet. However, ExxonMobil Pipeline Company president Gary Pruessing said on Wednesday he could not verify that figure. It was the third discrepancy in Exxon’s account of the pipeline. The oil company had initially claimed that it took 30 minutes to shut off the pipeline, when it fact it took 56 minutes. The company was also forced to acknowledge that oil from the ruptured pipeline had caused far wider damage than its initial claims of a 10-mile stretch of the river. The pipeline authority said aerial surveillance had detected oil as far as 240 miles away from the breach. A spokesman for the pipeline authority refused to confirm Exxon’s claims to have buried the pipeline at the greater depth of 12ft. He also gave no indication that the safety authority had directed Exxon to increase the amount of earth shielding the pipeline, despite forecasts of an unusually heavy flood season. “Exxon made two relatively reckless move. One was building a pipeline that shallow in a flood prone river. The second was to restart the pipeline in May despite heavy flooding,” said Alex Swift, the pipeline safety campaigner for the Natural Resources Defence Council. “But again a key issue here is that it was allowed to do that by the regulators.” Oil spills Rivers Exxon Mobil Oil Oil Montana Oil and gas companies Pollution United States Suzanne Goldenberg guardian.co.uk

Continue reading …
Pakistani generals ‘helped sell nuclear secrets’

• North Korea paid senior figures $3.5m, letter claims • AQ Khan ‘wants to set the historical record straight’ The story of the world’s worst case of nuclear smuggling took a new twist on Thursday when documents surfaced appearing to implicate two former Pakistani generals in the sale of uranium enrichment technology to North Korea in return for millions of dollars in cash and jewels handed over in a canvas bag and cardboard boxes of fruit. The source of the documents is AQ Khan, who confessed in 2004 to selling parts and instructions for the use of high-speed centrifuges in enriching uranium to Libya, Iran and North Korea. Extracts were published by the Washington Post, including a letter in English purportedly from a senior North Korean official to Khan in 1998 detailing payment of $3m to Pakistan’s former army chief, General Jehangir Karamat, and another half-million to Lieutenant General Zulfiqar Khan, who was involved in Pakistan’s nuclear bomb tests. Both generals denied the allegations. “What can I say. [These are] bits of old info packaged together. [There is] not an iota of truth in the allegations against me. [There is] no reason on earth for anyone to pay me for something I could not deliver,” Karamat wrote in an email to the Guardian. Lt Gen Khan told the Washington Post that the documents were “a fabrication”. The issue is seen as critically important by western governments. Seven years after Khan, the godfather of the Pakistani nuclear programme, made his public confession on Pakistani television, there is still uncertainty over the extent to which he was a rogue operator or just a salesman acting on behalf of the Pakistani state and its army. Western officials are also unsure whether the covert nuclear sales are continuing. One of the documents published on Thursday was allegedly a copy of a 1998 letter in English to him from Jon Byong Ho, then the secretary of the North Korean Workers’ party, who is believed to have masterminded the state’s covert trade in nuclear and missile technology. The document states that “the $3m have already been paid” to Karamat, and “half a million dollars” and some jewellery had been given to Lt Gen Khan, who went on to run the national water and power company. The Washington Post interviewed senior US officials who said that the document contained “accurate details of sensitive matters known only to a handful of people in Pakistan, North Korea and the United States”, and that the substance was “consistent with our knowledge” of the same events. Khan’s smuggling network was broken in 2003, and he delivered a confession on Pakistani television in February 2004 in which he admitted selling centrifuge technology for enriching uranium to Iran, North Korea and Libya to further those countries’ nuclear weapons programme. He claimed in his confession that the Pakistani government had not been complicit. Khan has since said he had been persuaded to absolve the Islamabad government in return for his freedom. He handed over his version of events to a British journalist, Simon Henderson, now an analyst at the Washington Institute for Near East Policy. Henderson said Khan gave him the North Korean letter “several years ago” as an “insurance policy”, but later agreed to have it published. “I think he wants to set the historical record straight,” Henderson said. “This would appear to confirm that Khan was not a rogue operator; secondly, that the military was deeply involved in what he was doing; and that thirdly, it confirms the growing concerns that the Pakistani military is not working in our interests, at best, and is duplicitous at worst.” Among the documents Khan handed over to Henderson was the written account of his activities given to Pakistani investigators in 2004, in which he claims he handed over two deliveries of cash from the North Koreans to Karamat. He said the first payment was for half a million dollars and the balance was paid once details had been agreed on how Pakistan would help Pyongyang develop technology for enriching uranium. “I personally gave the remaining $2.5m to Gen Karamat in cash at the Army House to make up the whole amount,” Khan wrote. According to the Washington Post, he claims to have delivered the money in a canvas bag and three cardboard boxes. David Albright, an expert on nuclear proliferation and author of a book on AQ Khan’s smuggling network, Peddling Peril, said he had obtained the same account some years ago but that no western government had made a judgment on its reliability. “In these documents, Khan blames everybody else, including [assassinated former prime minister] Benazir Bhutto,” Albright said. He added that he still believes Khan was the driving force behind the network, rather than a mere servant of the Pakistani state. “He had tremendous autonomy which he used to build up his network, and he used the corruption of the state to further his goals.” Pakistan North Korea Nuclear weapons Nuclear power Julian Borger guardian.co.uk

Continue reading …
Oh, Quit Whining, Heritage Foundation

enlarge You’d think there was no news out there if you were a Daily Caller reader. Because the Really Big News on the Daily Caller concerns a Heritage Foundation guy by the name of Rob Bluey. Rob is upset, and claims that Jesse Lee, the White House new media guy, is ‘bullying’ people on Twitter. Note: that link goes to Daily Caller, Tucker Carlson’s whine cellar. One such example happened last week in a dispute over the budget. Eder posted this tweet: “Hmm…it can’t be true that @SenateDems haven’t passed a budget in 790 days and the only plan Obama has is a speech. Right, @jesseclee44?” To which Lee responded: “@keder @SenateDems Plan is keep negotiating w/ Rs & Ds, not default & trash economy, not voucherize Medicare to fund more tax cuts for rich.” Give me a break. If this is bullying, I’m writing this upside down while hanging from a tree in upside-down land, where everything right side up is upside down. Compare and contrast Jesse Lee’s response with this one from Andrew Breitbart: enlarge Well, maybe not bullying. Maybe more like flaming someone. But whatever. I debated even writing about this, except that the point of Mr. Bluey’s whine is so disingenuous. First, he whines about Jesse Lee, and then likens that to White House bullying of the press. Only, the three examples he gives of this alleged bullying have nothing to do with Jesse Lee or Twitter or the White House. Maybe he could actually take aim at the guy responsible for two of them — Jay Carney, and then tell the truth about the White House response to Mark Halperin’s stupidity on the air last week. Bullying online is real and it’s scary when it happens. Trivializing it this way for political whine points is yet another cynical effort to pin the tail on the white house donkey when it’s still stuck to the elephant. While I expect little more from the likes of Tucker Carlson, I thought the esteemed Heritage Foundation was above such idiocy. Oh, wait. Here’s why, via Jason Linkins on the Huffington Post : “The Heritage Foundation was on the receiving end last week from both Lee and White House Communications Director Dan Pfeiffer, both of whom maintain official White House accounts on Twitter that are subject to archival under the Presidential Records Act,” writes the article’s author, Rob Bluey, who is also the director of the Center for Media and Public Policy at The Heritage Foundation. So, basically, this whole article is just a complicated way of asking Lee to please stop criticizing the Heritage Foundation on Twitter. What a world! Aw, Tuckie. Get the bad bully for Rob Bluey, pretty please?

Continue reading …
Iran escalates use of capital punishment

Two people a day executed by Islamic regime in first half of 2011 Iran has executed an average of almost two people a day in the first six months of this year, human rights groups have warned. The sharp escalation in the use of capital punishment comes at a time when the Islamic regime is fighting to prevent pro-democracy movements similar to those that have been sweeping across the Middle East from taking hold in the country. Human rights groups that have been carefully monitoring the rate of executions in Iran said the authorities had launched a fresh campaign of secret and mass hangings of prisoners in the provinces. According to Amnesty International, Iran has acknowledged the execution of 190 people from the beginning of 2011 until the end of June but at least 130 others have also been reported to have been executed. Iran Human Rights (IHR), an independent NGO based in Norway, told the Guardian it had recorded 390 executions since January, including two death sentences carried out on Thursday. The International Campaign for Human Rights in Iran (ICHRI), a US-based non-government organisation, said its records showed 320 executions – a combination of those announced by the regime and those that have taken place in secret. Hadi Ghaemi, executive director of the ICHRI, said: “The sharp rise of executions in Iran is a clear message that the state has no hesitation in using violence and applying it, no matter how arbitrarily, in holding on to power.” According to Ghaemi, Iranian officials are using execution as a means of intimidation to prevent popular discontent as the country heads towards the second anniversary of the unrest in the aftermath of its disputed 2009 presidential election, which gave president Mahmoud Ahmadinejad a second term in office. Iran says executions are related to drug trafficking; it is a neighbour to Afghanistan, a leading producer and supplier of the world’s drugs. But independent observers have questioned the veracity of the claims. At least two political activists have been identified as among those hanged in the first half of the year. Iran has been proud of its fight against drug trafficking and has often been applauded by foreign governments for its achievements, but activists say hanging criminals is a cover-up for a wider purpose. “Recently, Iran’s state television showed a group of armed forces raiding the house of some people who they described as criminals but, by depicting such violence on national TV, Iran is showing its ability to exercise violence in any circumstances,” said Ghaemi. IHR said it had received credible reports from Karaj, a city west of Tehran, that 25 people were hanged in a secret mass execution on Sunday in Ghezel Hesar prison on charges related to drug trafficking. Last week, the ICHRI reported that 26 inmates were executed in Vakilabad prison in the eastern city of Mashhad on 15 June. An earlier report by Amnesty International in April warned against Iran’s use of public executions, in which authorities publicly hang convicts from a large crane. The report said that this year 13 people had been hanged in public – including two juveniles – compared with 14 in the whole of 2010. In June, the UN human rights council appointed former Maldivian foreign affairs minister Ahmed Shaheed as a UN special rapporteur investigating Iran, but several Iranian officials have signalled he will not be allowed to visit the country. Mahmood Amiry-Moghaddam, a spokesman for the IHR, said: “The biggest challenge for Shaheed is to make Iran co-operate and to get access to Iran, especially in order to highlight these executions. “We think that Iran will put pressure on the families of those who are executed not to co-operate with the UN but our request from Shaheed is to investigate these secret and mass executions.” Last year, 252 people were executed according to Iranian officials, but human rights groups say 300 more executions went unacknowledged by the state. Iran Middle East Capital punishment Saeed Kamali Dehghan guardian.co.uk

Continue reading …
Keir Starmer: Rape claims retracted out of fear should not lead to charges

Director of public prosecutions issues guidance to help distinguish genuine victims in danger of attack Women who retract allegations of rape out of fear of violence should not face criminal charges, according to fresh guidance issued by the director of public prosecutions, Keir Starmer QC. His announcement is intended to help prosecutors distinguish between those who pervert the course of justice by inventing false claims and genuine victims in danger of attack from vengeful partners or assailants. A review of the previous Crown Prosecution Service guidance was triggered by public concern over the case of a 28-year-old mother who was given an eight-month prison sentence last autumn for “falsely retracting” a rape allegation against her husband. The court accepted she had suffered prolonged domestic abuse and had withdrawn the rape accusation under pressure from her husband but nonetheless imposed a custodial sentence. The woman was later freed by the court of appeal at which the lord chief justice, Lord Judge, said there should be a “broad measure of compassion for women who had already been victimised”. The new advice has been drawn up as the result of public consultation, involving charities and women’s groups. Announcing the details at the Women’s Aid Annual National Conference, the DPP said: “Rape and domestic violence victims should be confident in reporting abuse without fear of prosecution if they are later pressured into retracting the allegation, following the publication of new CPS guidance. “We recognise that complainants sometimes retract a true allegation due to pressure, violence or intimidation. Prosecutors should always explore whether the original allegation was true and any background of domestic violence to which the complainant has been subjected.” The latest guidance applies to cases where a complainant of rape or domestic violence makes a false allegation, retracts an original complaint, or takes back a retraction of the original complaint. The altered advice to prosecutors says that complainants who do not understand the seriousness of making a false allegation because they have a learning disability or mental health issues should be less likely to be prosecuted. It asks CPS officials to consider the interests of those under 18 when “weighing up the public interest factors along with the fact that the principal aim of the youth justice system is to prevent offending by children and young people”. Additional “examples of reasons why someone might retract a true allegation” have been provided. It is also suggested that specialist victim groups “may be sources of information” to help prosecutors assess whether there is a background of domestic violence”. Medical evidence, tapes of emergency calls and any CCTV footage should be gathered to help assess whether “the original allegation may have been true”. Conversely prosecutors are advised to consider prosecutions for perverting the course of justice where a complaint was “motivated by malice”, “a false complaint was sustained over a period of time” or the complainant has “a history of making demonstrably false complaints”. The DPP has said that all cases where a CPS lawyer is considering prosecuting someone who has made a rape or domestic violence allegation should be referred to CPS headquarters before a prosecution decision is reached. Rape Police Women Owen Bowcott guardian.co.uk

Continue reading …
Argentina president bans sex ads in newspapers

Cristina Fernández de Kirchner crackdown on sex workers comes as a surprise in a nation where prostitution is legal Argentina’s president has banned classifed newspaper adverts by sex workers, in the latest episode of a long-running and acrimonous dispute with the country’s opposition media. Cristina Fernández de Kirchner said the measure represented “a giant step forward in the defence of women”, although many of the ads feature transvestites and male escorts. The justice minister, Julio Alak, also announced plans to block internet sites advertising sexual services. The announcements came as a surprise in a country where prostitution is legal and where transvestites offer themselves openly in the Rosedal, a traditional city park in the select Palermo district of Buenos Aires, infuriating the high-class neighbours with luxury apartments overlooking the park. Political observers see the ban as the latest swipe by the president at Clarín, a mass-circulation paper that publishes some 200 sex ads daily. Announcing the ban, Kirchner, who is seeking re-election in the October elections , said it would put an end to the “hefty profits” some newspapers made from the ads. Kirchner and Clarín fell out three years ago when the newspaper sided with the nation’s farmers during a long-running strike that eventually forced the president to back-pedal on an increase in agricultural taxes. Since then Clarín, which had been an unabashed supporter of the president, has focused on the many cases of corruption in her administration. Kirchner has responded by passing a media law that could force the media conglomerate to divest its cable and open-air television holdings. Free-speech advocates protested against the ban, enacted not by Congress but by a stroke of the presidential pen. “It is unconstitutional because it affects freedom of expression and the exercise of a legal activity,” said Martin Carranza Torres, a technology lawyer. The Argentine Association of Prostitutes also dismissed it as a “magic solution” that was unlikely to solve the real problem of sexual exploitation in Argentina. The ads “in most cases represent legitimate work such as ours”, it said. Cristina Kirchner Argentina Prostitution Uki Goni guardian.co.uk

Continue reading …
Syria, Libya and Middle East unrest – 7 July 2011

• Syrian city of Hama continues to put up resistance • Libyan rebels edge towards Tripoli from east and west • Chinese diplomat visits Libyan opposition 5.04pm: Tomorrow’s protests in Syria have been labelled the “Friday of No Dialogue” , activist Edward Dark tweeted. The opposition is refusing to enter talks with the government until it stops the violent crackdown. The Local Co-ordination Committees of Syria said thousands of people attended the funeral today of Ahmad Qutaish, a soldier who it says was killed in Idlib by the the security forces. (That’s it for today. There will be on the Friday protests in Cairo and Syria tomorrow). 4.49pm: British MPs are wrong to welcome the son of Rifaat al-Assad , a man thought to be responsible for the deaths of thousands of Syrians, argues Chris Doyle, director of the council for Arab-British understanding. Although he will be speaking out against the Bashar al-Assad regime, the young man also happens to be a first cousin of Syria’s president. His name is Ribal al-Assad and the genuine Syrian opposition regard him warily since he represents one side of a decades-old squabble within the ruling family. It is widely believed that Ribal’s father, Rifaat, tried to stage a coup against his brother Hafiz, who was president from 1971 to 2000. Hafiz expelled Rifaat from Syria and he has been obsessed with returning ever since. His sons, including Ribal, are his cheerleaders. But instead of throwing Rifaat out of Syria, Hafiz should have put him on trial. He is possibly the most hated of all Syrians, including those who are still part of the regime. Few in the region have more innocent blood on their hands. Earlier this week we reported that graphic video footage had emerge of the body of activist Ibrahim Kashush with his throat cut. Doyle provides some important context: Only days ago thousands were watching the compelling video of a man singing to a huge crowd in Assi square in Hama, chanting for freedom, singing “Irhal ya Bashar” (“Get out Bashar!”). The crowd goes into rapture as he sings, “Tuzz fiik yaa Bashar” (roughly, “Fuck off, Bashar”) and after appearing on YouTube it is being sung at demonstrations across Europe. But the man who wrote the lyrics, Ibrahim Kashush, will hear it no more. It seems his body was found, washed up in the Orontes, his throat slashed. In Arabic, the Orontes is called Nahr al-Assi (“the rebellious river”) and two of its riverbank cities, Hama and Homs, have perhaps been the most rebellious in Syria. Historically they have been rivals but today they are united in one struggle. Homsis have gone into the streets chanting Ibrahim’s name. 4.32pm: Remember those camels in Tahrir Square ridden by pro-Mubarak supporters during the revolution? Prosecutors in Egypt have charged 25 people with instigating a camel charge in February , Reuters reports. This sounds like another attempt to head off anger ahead of tomorrow’s planned demonstration in Tahrir Square . 4.07pm: Hama will be too preoccupied with defending the city from the army to take part in a demonstration tomorrow , Omar a resident and activist in the city predicted. “People are guarding the city 24 hours a day,” he said. “Today from one side six [army] buses to got in… but they ran away,” he said. He foresaw only small protests taking place tomorrow, and nothing on the scale of last week’s rally – the biggest in the Syrian uprising so far. “People will keep guarding the city. We will not go on a big demonstration and leave the sides of the city open for them,” Omar said. We are safe, we are quiet, [there is] no attack because all the world is watching what they [the regime] are doing. I don’t think they will do something silly. Once anyone comes hundreds and thousands get down to the street[s] with stones and wood. Without any weapons just fighting defending their city with stones and wood. He said it been relatively quiet today after a general strike. People had stopped fleeing the city and tanks had moved away. He insisted that electricity and water in the city were turned back on in the city after activists threatened to blow up an electricity towers that supplies other parts of Syria. “After this threat, within half an hour water and electricity came back,” Omar said. _ You can hear earlier audio from Omar here (apologies for not embedding this earlier). 3.26pm: Nato has denied helping the rebel advance in Libya, as Gaddafi’s regime claimed ( 10.31am ), AP reports. Wing Cmdr Mike Bracken, an alliance spokesman in Naples, Italy, said Nato is “not involved in the ground battles,” although he acknowledged the alliance is tracking the fighting between rebels and forces loyal to Moammar Gadhafi. He said Nato’s mandate remains to protect civilians. 2.12pm: More than 700 people have been arrested in the Syrian Hama in the last 24 hours, according to the citizen journalist network Avaaz. It also names 24 people who have been killed in the crackdown. Avaaz claimed that water and electricity had been cut off in the city. But a resident told the Guardian that electricity had been switched back on after activists threatened to attack a power station that supplies other parts of Syria. The Syrian Observatory for Human Rights said that about 1,000 people had fled the city, according to Al-Jazeera . 2.02pm: CNN has a compelling undercover report on a clandestine group of Damascus doctors treating those injured in the protests in Syria in make shift field hospital. The report, which was spotted by reader oivejoivej, was put together with graphic YouTube footage of injured protesters. _ 1.47pm: Another crack in the Nato alliance over Libya ? The Italian Prime Minister Silvio Berlusconi said he had opposed the decision to go to war but was forced into it by the Italian parliament, Reuters reports. “I was against this measure as everyone knows,” Berlusconi told a book presentation. “I had my hands tied by the vote of the parliament of my country.” Italian support for the campaign has always been weak. Italian jets joined the campaign in late April after Italy initially said it would take no part in air strikes citing Italy’s colonial rule. Last month foreign minister Franco Frattini said civilian deaths from the airstrikes threatened Nato’s credibility . 12.52pm: Activists in the Egyptian capital Cairo took part in the fourth TweetNadwa last night to discuss the Economy and Social Justice. The initiative is kind of highbrow tweetup in speakers are limited to 140-second contributions to discuss Egypt’s future. American blogger Michael Kremer described the “inspiring” atmosphere . It was impossible not to be inspired by several hundred people voluntarily coming together to talk about the future of their country. The level of energy and passion in the room – fed by the feeling that there is a real window of opportunity right now to shape Egypt’s political and economic future – was infectious. But he seemed slightly unnerved when the discussion took a leftist turn. Tonight’s topic was social justice, and the conversation mainly focused on economics. The microphone swiftly changed hands in the beginning of the meeting, with most of the attendees striking idealistic notes about the necessity of improving healthcare and education, raising the minimum wage, etc. Nothing revolutionary, but nevertheless a good way to start the program. After a brief digression in which the attendees argued amongst themselves about how the stock market functioned and whether it was or wasn’t necessary for the country’s future, the discussion heated up when a proud Communist stood up and admonished the crowd for not focusing on the real issues. “You all are forgetting the critical problem here,” he declared, “we need to stop talking about the minimum wage and the stock market and start talking about how to end the capitalist plague that is destroying our country! We must return to the basics and realize that capitalism is inherently unfair!” The crowd’s attention instantly turned to broad, ideological issues. Instead of clapping, the moderator told the audience members to raise their arms and wave their hands when they agreed with a certain point, and judging by the amount of raised hands and smiles after that mini-Communist manifesto, the man had many allies in the room. Citizen journalist Lilian Wagdy published this Flickr gallery of the event. _ 12.03pm: MEPs have called for humanitarian corridors to be set up help those fleeing the violence in Syria , according to a report by the European Parliament. Besides calling on the UN security council to pass a resolution condemning Syria, MEPs urged the other EU institutions to press the UN to help the Turkish and Lebanese authorities to set up a humanitarian corridor at their borders with this country. 11.51am: Graffiti has popped all over Cairo announcing tomorrow’s demonstration in Tahrir Square, Cairo-based photographer Themba Lewis says. She says the bystanders in this photograph are watching a protest march in solidarity with Suez demonstrators, who yesterday attacked police in pitched battles over the release of police officers charged with killing protesters. The photo was taken in Midan Talaat Harb, just a few minutes from Tahrir Square, she says. _ 11.28am: A general strike in the rebellious Syrian city of Hama has turned the city into a “ghost town”, activists and resident Omar told me in telephone interview. Omar said electricity had been been switch back on after activists threatened to switch off a power line that would have cut power to large swaths of Syria, Omar claimed. He confirmed that 28 people have been killed in the city since the army began a crackdown on the city. Activist had published their names on a Facebook page he said. He also claimed that the army tanks had withdrawn from the edge of the city. Activists say 20 people were injured after shooting on the Hama’s Mazreb Bridge. General strike in #Hama after shooting in Mazreb Bridge which caused 20 injured most of them in Horani hospital #Syria Omar said this was only a minor incident and that the city was largely calm. “I’m not afraid the city is protecting us,” he said. Video from Hama dated today appears to back Omar’s claim that the city is deserted as a result of the strike . _ 10.31am: Libya has accused Nato of backing the rebels advance on Tripoli , in breach of the its UN mandate, the Global Post reports. Deputy foreign ninister Khaled Kaim told AP Nato targeted police checkpoints in the Nafusa mountains southwest of Tripoli ahead of a rebel advance on al-Qawalish. He claimed rebels were later pushed back from Qawalish. Kaim said: “The aim of these attacks is to help the rebels to advance. But I assure you, it will be another failure for them.” A list of the latest targets hit by Nato appears to show that airstrike are backing the rebels advance . The Guardian’s interactive on the Nato bombing campaign has been updated to include Nato’s latest “key hits” . Nato lists them as: In the vicinity of Brega: 1 Military Refuelling Equipment, 8 Armed Vehicles, 2 Armoured Fighting Vehicles, 1 Truck. In the vicinity of Gharyan: 1 Anti-Aircraft Gun. In the vicinity of Misratah: 3 Armed Vehicles. In the vicinity of Waddan: 1 Military Storage Facility. In the vicinity of Yafran: 1 Artillery Piece, 1 Armed Vehicle. In the vicinity of Zlitan: 8 Armed Vehicles. In the vicinity of Zintan: 1 Armed Vehicle. The Middle East analyst Juan Cole, argues that Nato’s action falls within the UN resolution . Gaddafi made his an outlaw state and under these circumstances the UN resolution authorizes Nato action to prevent him from committing further atrocities. The only practical way to do so, given his defiance and aggression with heavy weapons, is to hit them where they are committing aggression and to strengthen the Free Libya forces. 10.20am: Libyan rebels claim they are clearing Gaddafi’s forces from the western town of al-Qawalish, al-Jazeera reports from Zintan. _ 10.02am: “Gaddafi is crumbling and I predict he will fall,” US Senator John McCain told the BBC Radio 4′s Today programme. He claimed there was a humanitarian imperative to fight Gaddafi but it was also important for national security of European countries because of Gaddafi’s threat to attack Europe. 9.25am: A new Guardian video explores how Egypt’s political divisions are played out in the rivalry between Cairo’s biggest football teams Al Ahly and Zamalek. _ 8.24am: Welcome to Middle East Live. On the surface the capital cities of Libya and Syria are staying loyal to their respective governments. But the Guardian correspondents in both Tripoli and Damascus have uncovered simmering discontent. First, David Smith in Tripoli : Numerous witnesses tell the same story: that when night falls, out come the police checkpoints aimed at locking down restive districts, but so too do rebel militas opposed to Muammar Gaddafi. Under cover of darkness, it is said, they emerge from hiding to ambush his security forces. In some neighbourhoods the gun battles rage every night, but the bodies of those killed and all other traces are swiftly removed. With security tight and little sign of a major uprising in Tripoli, these audacious guerrilla tactics appear to be the rebels’ best hope of chipping away at the Libyan leader’s defences. Now Nidaa Hassan, a pseudonym of a journalist in Damascus, describes life in Syrian capital : Normality belies a city that may not yet have been rocked by the protest movement, but has been torn apart under the surface. The protests and the regime’s violent response – which it has blamed on armed gangs of foreigners and extremists – triggered an emotional reaction in the capital that has shifted from denial and confusion to anger and, finally, polarisation… Everyone knows the calm in the centre may not last. Stories of detention and torture circulate widely, opening eyes to the brutality of the regime, which under Assad’s rule has positioned itself as reformist, with some success, far from the dark days of his father’s time in power. A cafe customer tells her: This country does not belong to Assad and we need to make that clear. Damascus’s day will come because the whole country, including here, has already witnessed a revolution in horizons and aspirations. In Hama, 130 miles north of Damascus, the city is open revolt in a standoff with security forces who have encircled the city . One resident told the Guardian: We are protecting the central square area. We have checkpoints and roadblocks of burning tyres. If the boys manning the checkpoints see security forces coming, they shout, everyone picks up that shout, and people go inside. So far they haven’t broken through into the city centre being protected. “The Syrian people’s fight for freedom promises to be long, uncertain, and violent,” warns Syria watcher Gary Gambill in Foreign Policy magazine. The crux of the problem is Syria’s unique minority-dominated power structure, which is most closely comparable to Saddam Hussein’s Iraq. Alawites, a heterodox Islamic sect comprising roughly 12 percent of Syria’s population, may not be the privileged minority suggested by some Western media reports, but they provide both the brains and the muscle for a secular authoritarian political order that would otherwise be untenable. Alawite solidarity renders the loyalty of the internal military-security apparatus nearly inviolable, enabling Assad to mete out a level of repression far beyond the capacity of most autocrats. But US officials are describing events in Hama as a possible turning point in the uprising , according to the Washington Post. One said: The support base is eroding, and particularly among the business elite.These guys carry a lot of weight, and until now they have benefited from the regime. Now they’re looking for an alternative, and Assad is not part of the solution. Here are some of the other main developments in the region: Libya • Senior Chinese diplomat, Chen Xiaodong, has called for talks to end the conflict in Libya . He made the plea after a meeting with members of the opposition National Transition Council in Benghazi. • Libyan rebels have launched an apparently co-ordinated two-pronged offensive against pro-Gaddafi forces , striking from bases in the western mountains south-west of Tripoli and from the besieged city of Misrata, 130 miles to the east. • Analysts are concerned about the possibility of   “catastrophic success” in Libya . The Guardian’s Simon Tisdall explains: In this scenario, the negotiated settlement between regime and rebels and the orderly departure from power of Muammar Gaddafi that is the UN and Nato’s stated aim does not happen. Instead, Gaddafi is killed or flees, his government implodes, the rebels’ national transitional council splinters into rival power bases, and unpaid army units and police, renegade mercenaries and tribal militias (armed in some cases by France) commence battle for the nation’s oil wealth. Egypt • The Minister of the Interior Mansour al-Essawy has promised a shake up of the police force ahead of planned rally in Cairo’s Tahrir Square tomorrow. • Hundreds of protesters pelted the security headquarters in the Egyptian city of Suez with rocks on Wednesday, angered by a court’s decision to uphold the release of seven policemen facing trials for allegedly killing protesters during the country’s uprising. Arab and Middle East unrest Middle East Syria Bashar Al-Assad Libya Muammar Gaddafi Yemen Egypt Bahrain Protest Nato Matthew Weaver guardian.co.uk

Continue reading …
Casey Anthony to be freed next week

Anthony is sentenced to four years for lying about daughter Caylee’s death, but will be freed because of time already served A Florida judge has sentenced Casey Anthony, the young mother cleared of murdering her two-year-old child , to the maximum four years in prison for lying to police about the circumstances of her daughter’s death. But Anthony, 25, who appeared relaxed, laughing and winking in court, will be freed from jail next Wednesday because of the time she has already served while awaiting trial. Outside the Orlando courthouse, demonstrators protested against Tuesday’s verdict which found Anthony not guilty of murdering her daughter, Caylee, whose body was found in late 2008 with duct tape covering her nose and mouth in woods six months after she disappeared. Anthony falsely claimed to police that the child had been abducted by a nanny, who turned out not to exist, initially prompting a nationwide hunt for Caylee. She also lied about working at the Universal Studios theme park and her movements during the time of her daughter’s disappearance. The judge, Belvin Perry, sentenced Anthony to the maximum one year in prison on each of four convictions for lying to police, to be served concurrently. But as she has already been in prison for about three years, and with credit for good behaviour, she will be released next week. Anthony was also fined $4,000. At her trial she claimed that Caylee drowned accidentally in the family swimming pool and that she panicked and dumped her corpse in the woods with the help of her father, who denied the allegation. Prosecutors alleged that Anthony murdered the child with chloroform and duct tape, and then drove around with the body in the boot of the car before dumping it, because taking care of Caylee interrupted her social life. Anthony’s acquittal of murder, manslaughter and child abuse charges has been widely attacked on the television talk shows that followed the six-week trial in detail. The CNN host Nancy Grace, who has greatly increased her audience with highly partisan coverage of the trial, said of Anthony’s acquittal: “The devil is dancing tonight.” The Fox News host Bill O’Reilly also denounced the outcome of the trial. “I am so angry about this verdict,” he said. But some of the jurors have defended their decision. Jennifer Ford, a 32-year-old nursing student, told ABC News that jurors were not persuaded of Anthony’s innocence but that the prosecution provided insufficient evidence to convict her. “I did not say she was innocent. I just said there was not enough evidence. If you cannot prove what the crime was, you cannot determine what the punishment should be,” she said. “We were sick to our stomach to get that verdict. We were crying, and not just the women.” Ford said that the failure of prosecutors to offer a firm explanation of how Caylee died undermined their case. “If you’re going to charge someone with murder, don’t you have to know how they killed someone or why they might have killed someone, or have something where, when, why, how? Those are important questions. They were not answered,” she said. An alternate juror, Russell Huekler, said that the hostile public reaction to the verdict was unfortunate. “They didn’t show us how Caylee died. They didn’t show us a motive. I’m sorry people feel that way … These were 17 total jurors. They really listened to this case and kept an open mind,” he told ABC News. Another juror, who was not identified, told the St Petersburg Times that, while he suspected Anthony was guilty, the prosecution did not make the case sufficiently. “I wish we had more evidence to put her away,” the juror said. “I truly do. But it wasn’t there.” Publishers have already expressed an interest in Anthony writing her account of Caylee’s death. Her lawyer said she was keen to give her version of events. United States Chris McGreal guardian.co.uk

Continue reading …
7 Scientology Secrets You Didn’t Know (PHOTOS)

For more than half a century, the Church of Scientology has been America’s most controversial religious movement: known for its appeal to celebrities like Tom Cruise, its requirement that believers pay as much as hundreds of thousands of dollars for salvation and its storied history of harassing journalists and others through litigation and intimidation, even infiltrating the highest levels of the government to further its goals. It has been called a “cult” and even a “mafia” by its critics; to Scientologists it’s “the fastest growing religion in the world.” But what, beyond the media hype, is Scientology actually about?

Continue reading …