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Government seeks appeal in Sharon Shoesmith case

Department for Education contests ruling that former Haringey children’s boss was unfairly sacked over death of Baby P The Department for Education has confirmed that it is seeking an appeal at the supreme court against the court of appeal ruling that Sharon Shoesmith was unfairly sacked following the death of Baby P. The court of appeal ruled in May that Shoesmith was unfairly sacked . A leading employment lawyer said she could receive as much as £1m if the decision was not overturned. A DfE spokesman said: “The government thinks that it was right in principle for Sharon Shoesmith to be removed from her post as director of children’s services. “Our initial application to appeal has been turned down by the court of appeal. We have now filed an application for permission to appeal to the supreme court.” The DfE’s statement said: “There are questions of constitutional importance involved in this case, beyond the specific question about whether Ed Balls should have had a further meeting with Sharon Shoesmith before removing her. “Our initial application to appeal has been turned down by the court of appeal. We have now filed an application for permission to appeal to the supreme court.” Shoesmith was removed from her post in December 2008 by Ed Balls, who was education secretary. She was then sacked by Haringey, which said it had lost trust in her. The axe fell after regulator Ofsted published a damning report after the death of 17-month-old Peter Connelly exposing failings in her department. Lawyers argued that Shoesmith, 58, had been the victim of “a flagrant breach of natural justice” and that she had been driven from her £133,000-a-year post by a media witch-hunt and political pressure. They asked Lord Neuberger, master of the rolls, sitting in London with Lord Justice Maurice Kay and Lord Justice Stanley Burnton to rule that her sacking without compensation was so legally flawed as to be null and void, and that she still remained entitled to her full salary and pension from Haringey up to the present day. Allowing her challenge, the judges ruled that Balls and Haringey had acted too hastily and in a way that was procedurally unfair because Shoesmith had not been given a proper chance to put her case. Peter Connelly died in August 2007 at the hands of his mother Tracey Connelly, her lover Steven Barker and their lodger, Barker’s brother Jason Owen. The little boy had suffered 50 injuries despite receiving 60 visits from social workers, doctors and police over the final eight months of his life. A series of reviews identified missed opportunities when officials could have saved his life if they had acted properly on the warning signs. Baby P Child protection Ofsted Employment tribunals Local government guardian.co.uk

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Bin Laden wanted to change al-Qaida’s bloodied name

Documents obtained in US assassination reveal frustrations of al-Qaida leader and desire to win over world’s Muslims Osama bin Laden was considering changing al-Qaida’s name to improve its image among Muslims, according to documents obtained by US special forces from the compound where he was killed. A letter apparently written in the months before he died indicates that Bin Laden felt al-Qaida, which means “the base”, was not sufficiently religious and did not reinforce the message that the group considered itself to be engaged in a holy war against the enemies of Islam. A name change would allow al-Qaida to distance itself from growing criticism within the Islamic world that it was responsible for killing large numbers of Muslims, Bin Laden wrote. The letter, described to the Associated Press news agency by US officials, provides further evidence that Bin Laden was considering increasingly desperate measures to retain support for his campaign of violence and to maintain the relevance of his group. One project considered by Bin Laden, reported in the Guardian last month, was the creation of a grand alliance of militant groups in Pakistan and Afghanistan under the umbrella of al-Qaida . Security sources and analysts dismissed such an idea as unfeasible. However, Bin Laden may have been helped in Pakistan by members of a separate local militant group that has close connections to the Pakistani security establishment. The New York Times reported that records of the mobile phone belonging to the courier who helped conceal Bin Laden – and eventually inadvertently led the CIA to him – revealed frequent calls to the Harkat-ul-Mujahideen (HUM) group. Founded in the 1980s, HUM sent members to fight in Afghanistan alongside the Taliban and against Indian security forces in the disputed Himalayan territory of Kashmir in the 1990s. Since 2001 the group has survived successive crackdowns announced by Pakistani authorities. It retains close ties to Pakistani security services. The New York Times reported that individuals called from the seized phone had contacted the ISI, the main Pakistani military intelligence agency. However, an official told the newspaper that there was no “smoking gun” indicating that the ISI had known about Bin Laden’s location . The question of the name of the group led by Bin Laden has often posed problems. Minutes of the meeting at which it was founded in 1988 reveal that “al-Qaida” was chosen in some haste. One suggestion has been that the name referred to a database of contact details for international militants who had fought in Afghanistan against Soviet occupiers. Another is that it refers to the “al-Qaida al-Sulbah” or vanguard of the strong, which militant ideologues were calling for at the time to continue the extremist campaign beyond south-west Asia. One former militant on trial in the US referred to al-Qaida (which in Arabic can also mean a maxim or method), as “a formula system”, denying that it was the name of a group. When Ayman al-Zawahiri, Bin Laden’s then deputy and now successor, formally fused his own group Egyptian Islamic Jihad with al-Qaida the full name of the group was “al-Qaida al-Jihad” or “the base for the jihad”. In the leaked letter Bin Laden is reported to have complained that the last part was often omitted. This, he wrote, allowed the west to “claim deceptively that they are not at war with Islam”. Instead, the letter reveals, Bin Laden pondered alternatives including Taifat al-Tawheed Wal-Jihad (Monotheism and Jihad Group), or Jama’at I’Adat al-Khilafat al-Rashida (Restoration of the Caliphate Group). In his last speech, released posthumously, Bin Laden gave no hint of any such thoughts. However, his statements on the Arab Spring did not include the calls to violence that had previously marked his rhetoric , indicating at least a shift in tone. On Wednesday Barack Obama, in his speech to the nation on withdrawing troops from Afghanistan, said that information recovered from Bin Laden’s compound showed that al-Qaida was “under enormous strain”. “Bin Laden expressed concern that al-Qaida had been unable to effectively replace senior terrorists that had been killed and that al-Qaida has failed in its effort to portray America as a nation at war with Islam, thereby draining more widespread support,” Obama said. The recipient of the letter has not been identified. US investigators believe that Bin Laden only communicated with his most senior commanders, including Zawahiri and Mustafa Abu al-Yazid, a senior militant who ran external operations for the group as well as fundraising and liason with the Afghan Taliban. Al-Yazid was killed in a US air strike last year. Because of the courier system used by Bin Laden it is unclear to US intelligence whether the letter was actually sent. In one letter sent to Zawahiri within the past year or so, Bin Laden said al-Qaida’s image was suffering because of attacks that had killed Muslims, particularly in Iraq, officials said. Bin Laden also wrote that he found the suggestion of one militant in Yemen that blades be attached to a tractor or other farm machine to create a “killing machine” in the US “unacceptable”. Al-Qaida was not about “indiscriminate killing”, he said . Bin Laden and his senior associates have long struggled to make sure the disparate elements of the group and its various affiliated networks only attack targets they consider as legitimate. A series of letters and envoys were sent to Iraq in a bid to moderate – or at least better focus – the brutality of international extremists there. In a question and answer internet session four years ago, Zawahiri was bombarded by aggressive demands that he justify the number of deaths of Muslims resulting from al-Qaida attacks. Successive polls in the Muslim world have shown decreasing support for radical Islam and Bin Laden since around 2005. Yesterday in Jeddah, Saudi Arabia, where Bin Laden was born, few expressed any support for the dead extremist. “He was a freedom fighter against the Russians but then took the wrong path. Violence like that is never justified whatever the provocation,” said Abdulillah, a 42-year-old shopkeeper. In other journal entries and letters, US officials said, Bin Laden wrote that he was frustrated many of his trusted longtime comrades, whom he had fought alongside in Afghanistan, had been killed or captured. Using his courier system Bin Laden could still exercise an element of operational control over al-Qaida, but increasingly the men he was directing were younger and inexperienced, the fugitive leader complained. With the senior militants who had vouched for new recruits dead or in prison, Bin Laden, confined to his walled compound and cut off from the phone or internet for security reasons, was without any means of verifying new recruits’ competence or loyalty, he wrote. The US has now essentially completed the review of documents taken from Bin Laden’s compound, though intelligence analysts will continue to mine the data for a long time, officials have said. Osama bin Laden al-Qaida Global terrorism Ayman al-Zawahiri Inter-Services Intelligence (ISI) Pakistan Islam Religion Afghanistan Jason Burke guardian.co.uk

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Engadget Podcast 245 – 06.24.2011

This week was like some sort of beautiful patchwork quilt of tech news from all sorts of random corners of the industry: we’ve got hoardes of tablets, one very tiny camera, a slew of software and mobile news, and…light bulbs? PhD programs? DataGates? We’d try to explain it all in this text, but we think you’d be better-served to just hit the play button down there. Or the download link. We won’t judge you either way, just get it done, ok? It’s the Engadget Podcast — thanks for listening, as usual! Host: Tim Stevens Guests: Darren Murph, Brian Heater Producer: Trent Wolbe Music: Brown Eyed Girl 00:02:40 – Nokia N9 first hands-on! (update: video) 00:11:27 – Nokia’s first Windows Phone: images and video, codenamed ‘Sea Ray’ 00:14:10 – Editorial: Dear Nokia, you cannot be serious! 00:18:40 – Nokia’s N950 developer MeeGo handset gets official: 4-inch display, QWERTY keyboard, same childlike dreams (updated) 00:23:30 – Prototype dual-screened 2-in-1 Android smartpad from Imerj preview 00:29:22 – Apple unveils updated Time Capsule, bumps storage to 3TB 00:31:25 – Apple Final Cut Pro X now available on Mac App Store 00:35:42 – Samsung denied preview of iPad 3, iPhone 5 in ongoing Apple infringement suit 00:42:05 – Vizio Tablet gets detailed, we go hands-on (video) 00:49:05 – Vizio, your favorite low-cost TV leader introduces… a light bulb (video) 00:50:07 – Huawei MediaPad revealed: world’s first 7-inch Android 3.2 tablet, dual-core 1.2GHz Qualcomm CPU 00:55:55 – Pentax intros Q, world’s smallest interchangeable lens digital camera (hands-on video) 01:01:38 – Verizon’s ‘DataGate’ plans leaked in excruciating detail 01:04:30 – Best Buy puts your music in the cloud, goes where others have gone before (updated) 01:07:38 – Listener questions Hear the podcast Subscribe to the podcast [ iTunes ] Subscribe to the Podcast directly in iTunes (enhanced AAC). [ RSS MP3 ] Add the Engadget Podcast feed (in MP3) to your RSS aggregator and have the show delivered automatically. [ RSS AAC ] Add the Engadget Podcast feed (in enhanced AAC) to your RSS aggregator. [ Zune ] Subscribe to the Podcast directly in the Zune Marketplace Download the podcast LISTEN (MP3) LISTEN (AAC) LISTEN (OGG) Contact the podcast Send your questions to @tim_stevens . Leave us a voicemail: (423) 438-3005 (GADGET-3005) E-mail us: podcast at engadget dot com Twitter: @tim_stevens @bheater @darrenmurph Filed under: Podcasts Engadget Podcast 245 – 06.24.2011 originally appeared on Engadget on Fri, 24 Jun 2011 10:15:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds . Permalink

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NC woman sterilized because state deemed her ‘promiscuous’

Click here to view this media The day that Elaine Riddick had her first and only child at the age of 14, the state of North Carolina had her sterilized on the orders of a court. Riddick had been raped but the state said she was promiscuous. “They said that I was feeble-minded, they said that I was promiscuous,” Riddick, now 57, told CBS News . “I’ve always been able to take care of myself – I’ve never been promiscuous.” “So how can people use these things to describe a child that had been abandoned? Or that had been raped by the neighbor and then again, raped by the state of North Carolina?” North Carolina is the first state to consider a $20,000 payment to victims of sterilizations, but it is doubtful that the Republican-controlled legislature will set aside the necessary funds. CBS News noted that more than 60,000 women in 32 states were sterilized from the 1920′s to the 1970s to keep down welfare costs. The practice is no longer in use.

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Harriet Harman proposes rule to stop men-only Labour leadership

Deputy leader says she submitted proposal because women ‘are still a long way from being equal’ in the Labour party The deputy Labour leader, Harriet Harman, has proposed a rule change to ensure that the party’s “default position” of men filling the leader and deputy leader role comes to an end. Harman said she had submitted the proposal because women “are still a long way from [being] equal” in the party. She outlined the case in the Times as the Labour leader, Ed Miliband, decided to abolish elections to his shadow cabinet, leaving him free to appoint his own team. Miliband – who said during the leadership campaign that he wanted half the shadow cabinet to be women – also wants to see an end to gender quotas for posts. At present, a ballot paper is only valid if at least six votes for women are cast. Miliband’s aides said he would appoint a large number of women as a matter of course, and he is reportedly supportive of his deputy’s call that the rules be changed to ensure the party “doesn’t slip back” to a men-only leadership. Harman believes the proposed change would send a strong message to women voters. “An all-male leadership is not acceptable to the party of equality. A team is best when it is made up of men and women,” she said. Miliband is also seeking greater control over his team with plans to abolish elections to the shadow cabinet, ending a decades-long Labour tradition of Labour MPs deciding the makeup of the party’s frontbench. He will address Labour MPs about his proposals on Monday, and expects a secret ballot to be conducted among them. The proposal also has to formally be endorsed by the party conference in September. Aides said Miliband had taken the step to make his top team focus on the task of holding the government to account. They believe repeated internal elections make some shadow cabinet members as concerned about their popularity among their colleagues as about their impact on

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Glastonbury 2011, in three words – video

Totally worth it? Just fallen over? Don’t tell mum? Revellers at Glastonbury 2011 sum up the festival in just three words John Domokos Christian Bennett

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Habitat faces job cuts in new home

Owner of Argos and Homebase buys Habitant brand and flagship London stores – but rest of UK chain goes into administration The owner of Argos has bought the Habitat brand in the UK and its three top London stores for £24.5m but the rest of the UK chain has been placed in administration as part of a major restructuring that could result in more than 700 job losses. Home Retail Group chief executive Terry Duddy said it had bought the rights to the furniture and accessories brand and the Habitat website but just three of its 33 stores. He said only 150 of its 900 staff, including 50 from its 194-strong head office including the design team, would move over to work for the group, which also owns Homebase. Restructuring firm Zolfo Cooper has been appointed to find buyers for the 30 unwanted stores which will continue to trade as usual. The company said all existing orders and all customer deposits were fully protected. Duddy promised to preserve the integrity of the retailer which was started in the 1960s by design guru Sir Terence Conran as an antidote to the austere furniture aesthetic of postwar Britain. “There is no value in us doing anything to undermine this brand; it is about preserving its integrity,” he said. The Habitat brand with its “style-led credentials” and “strong heritage” was, he said, a significant addition to the group’s portfolio of brands, which include Schreiber, Hygena, Alba and Bush. Duddy said he did not know whether the deal had the blessing of Conran but said the design team was in contact with the founder recently and those conversations had been positive. Habitat has struggled financially for many years: the shops were a breath of fresh air when they arrived on the high street, but its clever designs were mimicked by cheaper rivals and, by the late 1980s, it was in financial difficulties. It was owned by Sweden’s wealthy Kamprad family, whose patriarch Ingvar founded Ikea, for nearly 20 years, but even their expertise could not revive its fortunes and they paid restructuring firm Hilco a multimillion pound dowry to take the loss-making business off their hands in December 2009. In the most recent set of accounts filed at Companies House, Habitat made a loss of £18.7m on sales of £74.3m in the year to March 2009. Hilco said trading conditions remained challenging for retailers of big-ticket items such as furniture. “Significant progress has been made reducing losses and refining the product mix following the installation of a new management team,” it said. “However, a return to profitability for the business in the UK appears unlikely in the near term as many of the stores are expensive and poorly located for a furniture retailer.” Home Retail is buying three London stores which are on the capital’s prime furniture shopping streets: Kings Road, Tottenham Court Road and Finchley Road. It plans to open about 25 Habitat departments in Homebase stores and has not ruled out selling the brand through the Argos catalogue. The company said it expected Habitat to deliver a small loss in its first year but then move into profit. Hilco said it was in advanced talks with a major European listed business to sell Habitat’s profitable European arm, which has 27 stores across France, Spain and Germany. Home Retail Retail industry London Zoe Wood guardian.co.uk

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Habitat finds home with Argos owner

Home Retail Group completes purchase of Habitat brand in the UK and three London stores The company behind Argos and Homebase has bought the Habitat brand in the UK and its three flagship stores in London for £24.5m. The rest of the loss-making UK chain, owned by retail restructuring specialist Hilco, has been put into administration. Home Retail Group acquired the rights on Friday to the exclusive use of the Habitat brand, its brand designs and intellectual property in the UK and Ireland. It is also buying Habitat’s UK website, which was launched last year, plus certain brand support functions and the stores in London’s Tottenham Court Road, King’s Road and Finchley Road. Habitat, which runs 33 shops across the UK employing 900 people, has appointed Fraser Gray from Zolfo Cooper as administrator to the business in the UK to enable a “fundamental restructuring”. Habitat’s remaining 30 UK stores will trade as usual while the administrator talks to potential buyers. Hilco, which acquired Habitat in 2009 from the Kamprad family, the owners of Ikea, said it was in advanced talks to sell Habitat’s profitable European arm to a major European listed group. A deal would need clearance from the French works council and the competition authorities in France, but the sale is expected to complete in August. Phil Wrigley, Habitat’s executive chairman, said: “The sale of the brand and three flagship stores to Home Retail Group secures the future of Habitat and will enable the business to move forward in the UK with the benefit of the group’s multichannel strength.” Home Retail Retail industry Julia Kollewe guardian.co.uk

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Iran giving out condoms for criminals to rape us, say jailed activists

Smuggled letters allege authorities are using mass rape as a weapon inside Iran’s most notorious prisons Prison guards in Iran are giving condoms to criminals and encouraging them to systematically rape young opposition activists locked up with them, according to accounts from inside the country’s jail system. A series of dramatic letters written by prisoners and families of imprisoned activists allege that authorities are intentionally facilitating mass rape and using it as a form of punishment. Mehdi Mahmoudian, an outspoken member of Iran’s Participation Front, a reformist political party, is among those prisoners who have succeeded in smuggling out letters revealing the extent of rape inside some of the most notorious prisons. Mahmoudian was arrested in the aftermath of Iran’s 2009 disputed presidential election for speaking to the press about the regime’s suppression of the movement and is currently in Rajaeeshahr prison in Karaj, a city 12 miles (20km) to the west of the capital, Tehran. “In various cells inside the prison, rape has become a common act and acceptable,” he wrote in a letter published on Kaleme.com, the official website of opposition leader Mir Hossein Mousavi. According to Mahmoudian and letters published on various opposition websites, political prisoners are locked up with some of the most dangerous criminals – murderers and ex-members of armed gangs. Meanwhile, 26 prominent political activists who have been in jail since the 2009 election have written to an official prison monitoring body accusing the government’s intelligence ministry and the revolutionary guards of harassing inmates with unlawful tactics that included sexual assaults. Mohsen Aminzadeh, a senior deputy foreign minister, Mohsen Mirdamadi, a leader of a reformist party and Behzad Nabavi, a veteran activist are among those who put their signatures on the letter. Speaking to Jaras, a website run by opposition activists, families of political prisoners have alleged that prison guards are failing to protect them from rape or sexual assault. “During exercise periods, the strong ask for sex without any consideration. Criminals are repeatedly seen with condoms in hand, hunting for their victims,” an unnamed family member told Jaras. “If the inmate is not powerful enough or guards would not take care of him, he will be certainly raped. Prison guards ignore those who are seen with condoms simply because they were given out to them by the guards at first place,” the family member said. The family members say prison guards are turning a blind eye to the systematic rape and have ignored complaints made by rape victims. Amnesty International, which has documented rape inside Iran’s prisons and interviewed victims for a 2010 report, called on Iran to launch an investigation into the recent allegations. Kristyan Benedict, Amnesty International UK’s Middle East campaign manager, told the Guardian: “Rape is a terrible crime and these allegations [mentioned in the letters] should be thoroughly investigated. Amnesty International has also documented the rape of male and female detainees by security officials. Many of those detained for taking part in post-election protests were tortured and did not receive fair trials. The Iranian authorities still continue to punish and persecute those who peacefully speak up against them.” According to Mahmoudian, who has been transferred to a solitary confinement after his letter attracted attention, one young prisoner was raped seven times in a single night. “In [Rajaeeshahr] prison, those who have pretty faces and are unable to defend themselves or cannot afford to bribe others are forcibly taken to different cells each night [to be raped],” he writes. “The situation is such that those exposed to rape even have an owner and that owner makes money by renting him out to others and after a while selling him to someone else.” Rape victims in Iran usually stay quiet in order to protect the honour of their family but at the time when journalists based in the country are facing strict restrictions, these letters have become one of the only sources of information about the situation of hundreds of imprisoned activists. Iranian officials have ignored the allegations and have previously denied any claims of rape inside jail. Iran Middle East Saeed Kamali Dehghan guardian.co.uk

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Conrad Black faces possible return to prison in fraud case

Disgraced peer and former press baron appears before Chicago judge after almost a year free on bail Former press baron Conrad Black is bracing himself for a possible return to prison on Friday as a Chicago judge weighs up whether he must serve out the rest of his six and a half year sentence. The Canadian-born peer and former press magnate was sent to jail four years ago on fraud and obstruction of justice charges. He served 29 months and has been free on bail for nearly a year after challenging his sentence following a law change relating to one of his convictions. The former owner of the Telegraph newspapers will appear before justice Amy St Eve for re-sentencing. St Eve handed out his original sentence. Legal experts argue that Black, 66, may struggle to stay out of jail. “I think she will reimpose the original sentence and he will have to serve the rest of his time,” said attorney Andrew Stoltmann of Chicago-based Stoltmann Law. Black’s appeal focused on changes to the criminal code’s definition of “honest services”. Among Black’s convictions were charges that he deprived shareholders of his “honest services” when he embezzled $6.1m (£3.8m) for himself and other associates at Hollinger, his media company. The US supreme court tightened the definition of “honest services” last year, ruling that its use had become too broad and Black’s conviction on those charges was overturned. But legal opinion suggests the fraud conviction that the court upheld – involving Black and others taking $600,000 from the company – had nothing to do with honest service but was straightforward theft. St Eve will also consider Black’s conviction on obstruction of justice. The peer and his chauffeur were videotaped taking boxes of documents from his Toronto office after a court had prohibited their removal. Black was given 60 months for the fraud charges and 78 months for obstruction of justice, with both sentences to be served concurrently. St Eve could choose to uphold the original sentence, send him back to jail for a lesser time on the remaining convictions or allow him to stay free based on time served. When re-sentencing, judges are obliged to consider a defendants’ behaviour in jail and prosecutors have alleged that Black lorded it over his fellow prisoners. The peer treated fellow prisoners at Coleman Federal Correctional prison in Florida “like servants,” according to sworn affidavits filed in court earlier this month. Coleman staff claimed Black demanded special treatment, got prisoners to clean for him and do his ironing and was a poor tutor to his fellow inmates. In an email, Black said the accusations were “lies extorted by the prosecutors from susceptible Bureau of Prisons officials”. Stoltmann said St Eve could take the affidavits into consideration and had wide power of discretion in her sentencing. “Those are not the sort of opinions that you want hanging over you when you are asking a judge to shave time off your sentence,” he said. Conrad Black Telegraph Media Group Newspapers & magazines National newspapers Newspapers Canada United States Daily Telegraph Sunday Telegraph Dominic Rushe guardian.co.uk

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