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Hunt for hackers of US government sites leads to Essex teenager’s bedroom

Police believe Ryan Cleary, 19,

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Rwanda heroes: 17 years on

In 1994, against huge odds, two men saved hundreds of Tutsis during the genocide in Rwanda. Finally reunited, they recall the extraordinary story of their first meeting In a park in London, two men greet each other as old friends. One is grey-haired and American, the other a tall Rwandan in a smart suit. They embrace. The American wipes tears from his eyes. The last time the two men met was in Kigali, the Rwandan capital, in 1994: the year of the genocide in which 800,000 people were killed in 100 days. The two men, Jean-Francois Gisimba and Carl Wilkens, met a handful of times in that year but in the most extreme of circumstances. Together with Jean-Francois’ brother, Damas, they saved more than 400 children and hundreds of adults from the Interahamwe, the Hutu militia intent on eradicating Tutsi ” inyenzi ” or “cockroaches”. Seventeen years later, the Aegis Trust, which campaigns against genocide, has brought Jean-Francois and Carl back together in the UK. At last, Jean-Francois has the chance to say: “You saved my life but I don’t understand why.” Back in 1994, Jean-Francois, then 24, and Damas were running the orphanage their late parents had founded in Kigali in the 1980s. Of mixed Hutu and Tutsi parentage, they were caring for around 60 children of different ethnicities. “We were brought up not to see a difference,” Jean-Francois says. Damas ran the orphanage full-time, while Jean-Francois also worked for Radio Rwanda. On 6 April, a private jet carrying Rwandan President Juvenal Habyarimana was shot down near Kigali airport, triggering the genocide. Government-controlled news organisations began reporting that the Hutu president had been assassinated by Tutsi rebels. Within hours, Kigali was surrounded by roadblocks and the systematic murder of Tutsi families by militia groups began. Jean-Francois rushed home from the radio station to find hundreds of people gathered at the orphanage, seeking shelter. “They came not because they thought we could save them, but because they didn’t want to die alone,” he says. People were hiding in the attic, in the basement and in locked rooms, sick with dysentery and starvation. The brothers kept them alive for months with the help of Red Cross parcels. Because of their father, they had Hutu identity cards, and Damas began to negotiate for the orphanage’s survival. “My brother would go for a beer with the killers,” Jean-Francois remembers. “He would say: don’t come, don’t panic the kids, but he was also protecting the adults inside. He was pretending to be with them.” As the killings continued, the militia members became restless. Armed men began turning up drunk at the orphanage. On one visit they tortured and killed eight people they found hiding on the roof. Then the brothers heard from friends that they planned to kill everyone at the orphanage. “The day you came was the day the massacre was going to happen,” Jean-Francois tells Carl. “There was a knock at the door and I thought: this is it. A boy said, there is a muzungu – a white man – at the door looking for you.” Jean-Francois looks at the man sitting next to him. “It was you in your white Toyota Corolla.” Carl was then the 36-year-old head of Adrai, an Adventist relief organisation working in Rwanda. On 10 April, the UN had evacuated all foreigners from the country, including Carl’s wife, parents and three young children. Carl was the only American who stayed through the genocide. By negotiating with key militia figures including Colonel Tharsisse Renzaho, the prefect of Kigali, he managed to get supplies of water and food through to people in dire need. Renzaho had told him there was an orphanage that needed help. “I came out and you started telling me: ‘I’m bringing water,’” Jean-Francois says. “I wanted you to stop talking. I had the feeling that you did not know what was going on. You just wanted to deliver water and go to the next place. I dragged you to Damas’s office. “I said to you: they are coming in five or 10 minutes to kill all of us. I just wanted you to stay there and witness – so that later you could tell people what had happened.” Carl wanted to leave immediately to fetch help. “I remember standing in the parking lot by my Corolla. You kept on telling me: don’t go.” Jean-Francois shakes his head. “We went together slowly up to the car. You were trying to start it. You looked in the mirror and I remember you putting your hands through your hair. You got out again and got on your radio.” As the men stood by the car, dozens of Interahamwe militia began surrounding the orphanage. “The leader said: ‘I am coming to take all the Tutsis who are here.’” “Carl was still on his radio. Then I heard them say: ‘We were going to carry out our mission, but the American is there.’ The boss said in Kinyarwanda: ‘Leave the place, don’t do it in front of that man.’” With Jean-Francois still begging him to stay, Carl left to raise the alarm. When he reached Renzaho’s office he found that the prime minister, Jean Kambanda – who would later plead guilty to genocide – was visiting. “He was one of three people orchestrating the genocide,” Carl says. “But what choice did I have? I said: ‘There’s a massacre about to happen at Gisimba.’ “He talked to his men and said: ‘We’re aware of this.’ He promised me that the orphans would be OK. He shook hands with me.” At the orphanage, Jean-Francois waited. “For three days nothing happened,” he says. “Then an army major arrived. Many Interahamwe came behind him. One of the biggest killers – who had killed thousands – was there. ‘ Inyenzi ‘ he called us – cockroaches.” The major took Jean-Francois aside. “He said to me, ‘I am not a killer, I am with you, but you need to tell me the truth.’ I decided to trust him. I said, well, the truth is we are hiding many people – more than 400 children, and a big number of adults, widows. I don’t even know the number myself. “He said: ‘Be ready to be evacuated.’” By the next day, more militia had surrounded the orphanage. The Rwandan Patriotic Front (RPF), the Tutsi rebel army fighting their way back into Rwanda, were now close to the capital. “Bombs were landing like rain from the hills,” Jean-Francois says. “I thought: now we are going to die. “The major returned with 12 bodyguards. He said to his men, ‘Whoever tries to shoot, you shoot all of them.’ If only more soldiers had been like him. “I thought these were my last moments. There was shooting. They took us to the road. He packed all of us into buses. He had a revolver in his hand and a Kalashnikov on his shoulder. They took us all up to St Michel Cathedral. Two to three days later the RPF took the area and we were safe.” More than 17 years later, Carl and Jean-Francois have met again because the Gisimba orphanage (still run by Jean-Francois and Damas) needs money. Next week is the 25th anniversary of the orphanage’s foundation. “We want it to have a future,” Jean-Francois says. In London, the American turns to the Rwandan and says: “I never knew if it was the right decision to leave you at the orphanage.” “It was the right decision,” Jean-Francois replies. “But what about my question – why did you help us?” Carl talks about not abandoning his Rwandan staff and friends, but Jean-Francois is shaking his head. “You were on the other side of the city so why cross through all those roadblocks, bombs and bullets to get to the orphanage?” Carl looks at him as if he should know. Jean-Francois, after all, is a man who let hundreds shelter in the orphanage knowing it meant almost certain death. “Why did you help those people?” he asks. Jean-Francois looks at him with incredulity. “How would we turn people away? We were taught by our parents that we should respect other people’s lives. If you tell people to get away you are an animal not a human being.” And so somehow he himself answers the question he has been waiting 17 years to ask. For further information on the Gisimba Orphanage, and details about how to support it, go to www.aegistrust.org Rwanda Human rights Ros Wynne-Jones guardian.co.uk

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Tory MEPs defy David Cameron over greenhouse gas targets

Conservatives threaten to scupper EU vote on carbon reduction by opposing the 30% cut in emissions committed by the PM David Cameron is facing a revolt from Conservative members of the European parliament against the coalition’s environmental policies, as they try to scupper a proposed toughening of Europe’s climate targets. The revolt of the MEPs is an embarrassment for the prime minister, who has committed Britain to some of the most ambitious greenhouse gas targets in the world and staked his reputation on leading “the greenest government ever”. Tomorrow the European parliament will vote on whether to toughen the EU’s emissions-cutting target from 20% reductions by 2020, compared with 1990 levels, to a 30% cut. The commitment to a 30% cut is in the coalition agreement, and has won support from other member states. But British Conservative MEPs said they would vote to oppose the 30% cut. The leader of the UK Conservative delegation, Martin Callanan, said: “Conservative MEPs have always been sceptical of the EU unilaterally increasing its target to 30% without a worldwide agreement … European companies will be unable to compete if the reduction targets are set too high. “Many high energy consuming companies are already being forced to relocate to countries outside the EU, which have little or no environmental legislation, putting many Europeans out of work, and an increased target will exacerbate this trend. “We are also concerned that the higher carbon costs from an increased target will feed through into energy price increases for domestic consumers, who are already facing steep rises.” His remarks were echoed by several other Tory MEPs who replied to a Guardian question to all Tory MEPs asking how they would vote. Only one out of the 23 – Marina Yannakoudakis – replied to say she would vote in favour of 30%, and Julie Girling said she planned to vote for 20% but might compromise on 25% if that was on the table. The MEPs’ reluctance to agree with the coalition’s climate aims is at odds with Cameron’s statements. Only last month, after committing the UK to the toughest carbon targets in the EU , Cameron reiterated his green claims: “When the coalition came together last year, we said we wanted this to be the greenest government ever. This is the right approach for Britain if we are to combat climate change, secure our energy supplies for the long-term and seize the economic opportunities that green industries hold … the UK can prove that there need not be a tension between green and growth.” Climate scepticism among Tory MPs and MEPs is increasing, according to party insiders. Labour said the vote was tight enough that it could be lost. “Cameron’s own MEPs prove that the Conservative party is not serious about tackling climate change. The ‘greenest government ever’ is increasingly exposed as all talk, and little action,” said Meg Hiller, the shadow energy secretary. “Cameron should step in,” said Martyn Williams, a campaigner at Friends of the Earth. “He should tell his MEPs ‘we look stupid if you vote against this’.” Downing Street did not respond to a request for comment. The row among the Conservatives reflects a wider disagreement within the EU over toughening the carbon targets. Although more than 70 large businesses , including Google, Unilever and Scottish and Southern Energy, recently came out in favour of the stiffer cuts, many business lobby groups oppose them . The move comes as EU environmental policy was undermined by one of the most important figures in the European commission, causing alarm in Brussels. Janusz Lewandowski, the commissioner in charge of fraught negotiations on the future of the EU’s €130bn budget, cast doubt on the science of climate change and the future of emissions policy. In an interview with a Polish newspaper he said: “We already have overambitious agreements on CO 2 emission reduction. There is a notion that the thesis that coal energy is the main cause of global warming is highly questionable. Moreover, more and more often there is a question mark put over the whole [issue of] global warming as such.” Lewandowski said the CO 2 targets “are too ambitious for the Polish economy … Polish politicians have to persuade that there cannot be a quick jump away from coal. For Poland it would be a disaster.” His remarks were all the more pointed as the Poles at the European council blocked progress on the carbon roadmap to 2050, which the commission hoped would be the basis of a strengthening of climate policy. Poland will hold the revolving presidency of the EU from 1 July. Ruth Davis, chief policy adviser at Greenpeace UK, said: “It’s terrifying that the man in charge of Europe’s budget is someone you might expect to see in Sarah Palin’s Republican party. “He has a huge influence over all of our economic futures and yet not only does he deny the overwhelming evidence of climate change, but he’s also opposing measures that leading businesses say would drive green growth and create millions of new jobs in Europe’s clean industries.” The ructions came as peace unexpectedly broke out in another key area of European environmental policy, when the EU’s energy chief and climate chief reached an amicable compromise over a new directive on energy efficiency. The row was over plans for a new energy efficiency directive from Günther Oettinger , energy commissioner, that will force businesses to cut dramatically the amount of energy they waste. But green experts feared the new rules would create problems for the EU’s emissions trading scheme, because if companies reached their efficiency targets they would be left with large amounts of unused carbon permits. The influx of these permits would drive down the cost of carbon overall, and render the emissions trading system useless as a means of driving investment in clean technology, as well as improving efficiency. Connie Hedegaard, the climate commissioner, favoured setting aside a quantity of permits in order to prop up the carbon price, but many businesses opposed this as they feared it would impose higher costs. The compromise arrived at on Tuesday means that if the emissions trading system is seen to be failing because of the energy efficiency directive, adjustments can be made – including setting aside permits. Green politics Carbon emissions Climate change Conservatives European Union David Cameron Fiona Harvey guardian.co.uk

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Sling sends some users offline with PRO-HD update, issues fix

“Having difficulty with your PRO-HD this week?” That announcement headlining the Slingbox Answers Forum sums it up: a software update pushed last week “caused some Slingbox PRO-HD models to appear unavailable for TV streaming” — a fairly significant issue, considering TV streaming is what these things do. Sling Media has since released a fix, but your device will need to connect to the internet to receive it. A spokesperson said that a “very small percentage” of users were affected, and that power cycling the device and waiting 10 minutes should solve the problem, as each box is programmed to connect and check for updates during the boot sequence. One Pro-HD owner wrote in claiming that the new software “bricked” his unit, meaning it’s unable to power-up to receive the new update. If you’re experiencing a similar issue, Sling suggests calling customer service at (877) 467-5464 — mentioning the failed firmware update should help you avoid that nasty $30 service call charge. [Thanks, Tom] Sling sends some users offline with PRO-HD update, issues fix originally appeared on Engadget on Tue, 21 Jun 2011 14:52:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds . Permalink

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George Papandreou awaits MPs’ verdict as IMF delivers financial ultimatums

The Greek prime minister faces a vote of confidence as ratings agencies issue damning judgments on the country’s finances The multi-layered effort to stave off a Greek sovereign default that could plunge Europe into one of its worst ever crises moved towards a climax last night with the Greek prime minister pleading in Athens for a vote of confidence and Europe’s leaders staring into the abyss before a Brussels summit on Thursday. Leaders in Brussels spoke of the worst crisis in Europe since the second world war as the International Monetary Fund (IMF) set ultimatums before the 17 countries of the euro single currency and international ratings agencies classified the bailout terms for Greece as a likely default. George Papandreou, the embattled Greek prime minister, needed to win a midnight vote of confidence in his reshuffled socialist government before attempting an even bigger challenge – getting the parliament in Athens to back a radical programme of spending cuts, tax increases, and a mass assets sell-off by the end of the month. As Athens’s 300-seat parliament prepared for the vote, tens of thousands of protesters converged on Syntagma Square in a mass show of “no confidence” for politicians widely perceived to have triggered the financial mess in which the nation now finds itself. “As long as there are squares to protest in we will be there,” said Giorgos Papastathopoulos, an unemployed civil engineer gesticulating angrily towards the parliament building. “These people are thieves, they are crooks; if they were really honourable they would lead by example and take a wage cut just like everyone else before talking about austerity.” If Greece fails to agree the austerity measures, the IMF will pull the plug on the latest €12bn tranche of its €110bn bailout and Greece would be insolvent, with immense implications for European banks and the fate of the single currency. However, the strong expectation that Papandreou would win the vote lifted stock markets all over the world. The FTSE 100 in London closed 81.92 points higher at 5775.31 and the FTSEurofirst 300 index of leading shares rose 1.5%, its biggest increase for two months. The Dow Jones industrial average was up more than 100 points at lunchtime in New York. At a summit in Brussels on Thursday evening, EU governments will be under intense pressure to seal a new three-year Greek bailout worth as much as the current rescue fund. The expectation was that leaders would agree to guarantee the new bailout, leaving the details to be hammered out by 3 July. “We’re at a critical point in the most serious crisis since the second world war,” warned Olli Rehn, the European commissioner for monetary affairs. A group of 15 leading public figures, including six former EU prime ministers, warned that the EU faced a future on the international sidelines. “Europe isn’t in a good place these days,” said the group, all allied with the Brussels Friends of Europe thinktank. “The drive towards closer integration is losing momentum and appears in great danger of slipping backwards … European leaders risk the EU becoming a marginal player in a globalised world whose rapid change is clearly not to Europe’s advantage.” Chancellor Angela Merkel of Germany, a central figure in the crisis, voiced confidence that Europe would rise to the challenge, while reiterating German demands that Greece’s private creditors should volunteer to roll over the debt as part of the rescue. “We believe some burdens can be put not only on taxpayers but that banks must also participate,” Merkel said while visiting Warsaw. “We will achieve positive results because it is in the interests of banks and of countries for the euro currency to be stable … These three components – Greece’s tasks, EU solidarity and the voluntary participation of banks – are the solution.” But Fitch, one of the three big international ratings agencies, cast doubt on Merkel’s optimism, warning that it would view a voluntary rollover of Greek debt as a default. “Fitch would regard such a debt exchange or voluntary debt rollover as a default event and would lead to the assignment of a default rating to Greece,” said Andrew Colquhoun, head of Asia-Pacific sovereign ratings with Fitch. The jury still seems to be out on this, however, with detailed arguments raging across the EU over how, when, and whether Greece would be deemed to be in default. The process of persuading the banks, insurance companies and pension funds holding Greek debt to remain exposed after redeeming their loans is also an exacting task which could take weeks without any certainty of success. The markets and the European business elite believe that in the end Greece will need to restructure its unmanageable debt with major writedowns for its creditors. A poll of German executives showed very few of them believed Greece could avoid a debt restructuring. Almost nine out of 10 of the 519 business people questioned in the poll for the business magazine, Capital, predicted a restructuring, while two-thirds were worried about the stability of the euro. EU leaders appeared to be playing for time to try to avoid colossal collateral damage across the eurozone, while the IMF was urging the EU to get its act together and guarantee a copper-bottomed bailout for Greece before the fund would commit to contributing. The IMF has taken a harder line on the European debt crisis in recent weeks since the resignation of its French chief, Dominique Strauss-Kahn. Some European officials are also complaining that the temporary leadership of the IMF is inhibiting its capacity to act. Greece Europe IMF Economics Global economy European commission European Union Euro Euro Ian Traynor Helena Smith guardian.co.uk

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George Papandreou awaits MPs’ verdict as IMF delivers financial ultimatums

The Greek prime minister faces a vote of confidence as ratings agencies issue damning judgments on the country’s finances The multi-layered effort to stave off a Greek sovereign default that could plunge Europe into one of its worst ever crises moved towards a climax last night with the Greek prime minister pleading in Athens for a vote of confidence and Europe’s leaders staring into the abyss before a Brussels summit on Thursday. Leaders in Brussels spoke of the worst crisis in Europe since the second world war as the International Monetary Fund (IMF) set ultimatums before the 17 countries of the euro single currency and international ratings agencies classified the bailout terms for Greece as a likely default. George Papandreou, the embattled Greek prime minister, needed to win a midnight vote of confidence in his reshuffled socialist government before attempting an even bigger challenge – getting the parliament in Athens to back a radical programme of spending cuts, tax increases, and a mass assets sell-off by the end of the month. As Athens’s 300-seat parliament prepared for the vote, tens of thousands of protesters converged on Syntagma Square in a mass show of “no confidence” for politicians widely perceived to have triggered the financial mess in which the nation now finds itself. “As long as there are squares to protest in we will be there,” said Giorgos Papastathopoulos, an unemployed civil engineer gesticulating angrily towards the parliament building. “These people are thieves, they are crooks; if they were really honourable they would lead by example and take a wage cut just like everyone else before talking about austerity.” If Greece fails to agree the austerity measures, the IMF will pull the plug on the latest €12bn tranche of its €110bn bailout and Greece would be insolvent, with immense implications for European banks and the fate of the single currency. However, the strong expectation that Papandreou would win the vote lifted stock markets all over the world. The FTSE 100 in London closed 81.92 points higher at 5775.31 and the FTSEurofirst 300 index of leading shares rose 1.5%, its biggest increase for two months. The Dow Jones industrial average was up more than 100 points at lunchtime in New York. At a summit in Brussels on Thursday evening, EU governments will be under intense pressure to seal a new three-year Greek bailout worth as much as the current rescue fund. The expectation was that leaders would agree to guarantee the new bailout, leaving the details to be hammered out by 3 July. “We’re at a critical point in the most serious crisis since the second world war,” warned Olli Rehn, the European commissioner for monetary affairs. A group of 15 leading public figures, including six former EU prime ministers, warned that the EU faced a future on the international sidelines. “Europe isn’t in a good place these days,” said the group, all allied with the Brussels Friends of Europe thinktank. “The drive towards closer integration is losing momentum and appears in great danger of slipping backwards … European leaders risk the EU becoming a marginal player in a globalised world whose rapid change is clearly not to Europe’s advantage.” Chancellor Angela Merkel of Germany, a central figure in the crisis, voiced confidence that Europe would rise to the challenge, while reiterating German demands that Greece’s private creditors should volunteer to roll over the debt as part of the rescue. “We believe some burdens can be put not only on taxpayers but that banks must also participate,” Merkel said while visiting Warsaw. “We will achieve positive results because it is in the interests of banks and of countries for the euro currency to be stable … These three components – Greece’s tasks, EU solidarity and the voluntary participation of banks – are the solution.” But Fitch, one of the three big international ratings agencies, cast doubt on Merkel’s optimism, warning that it would view a voluntary rollover of Greek debt as a default. “Fitch would regard such a debt exchange or voluntary debt rollover as a default event and would lead to the assignment of a default rating to Greece,” said Andrew Colquhoun, head of Asia-Pacific sovereign ratings with Fitch. The jury still seems to be out on this, however, with detailed arguments raging across the EU over how, when, and whether Greece would be deemed to be in default. The process of persuading the banks, insurance companies and pension funds holding Greek debt to remain exposed after redeeming their loans is also an exacting task which could take weeks without any certainty of success. The markets and the European business elite believe that in the end Greece will need to restructure its unmanageable debt with major writedowns for its creditors. A poll of German executives showed very few of them believed Greece could avoid a debt restructuring. Almost nine out of 10 of the 519 business people questioned in the poll for the business magazine, Capital, predicted a restructuring, while two-thirds were worried about the stability of the euro. EU leaders appeared to be playing for time to try to avoid colossal collateral damage across the eurozone, while the IMF was urging the EU to get its act together and guarantee a copper-bottomed bailout for Greece before the fund would commit to contributing. The IMF has taken a harder line on the European debt crisis in recent weeks since the resignation of its French chief, Dominique Strauss-Kahn. Some European officials are also complaining that the temporary leadership of the IMF is inhibiting its capacity to act. Greece Europe IMF Economics Global economy European commission European Union Euro Euro Ian Traynor Helena Smith guardian.co.uk

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Why Is There An American Media Blackout of the UK’s News Corp. Eavesdropping Scandal?

enlarge Credit: yourdemocracy.net.au I bet most readers of blogs don’t even know much about this major UK media scandal perpetrated by Rupert Murdoch’s English tabloids and we’re online and digesting news almost 24/7. Why? Because there’s been an almost complete blackout by the US media over this eavesdropping scandal. Here’s a primer if you’ve never read anything on it before: The News Corp. Phone Hacking Scandal Never Ends: A look at the latest developments This actually could spell big trouble for News Corp. and Rupert Murdoch, but you’d never know it from the American press. Hey, what’s a little eavesdropping on the royal family and almost everybody else? Digby writes: Michael Wolfe, the man who literally wrote the book on Rupert Murdoch on the eavesdropping scandal .From what he says it’s a much tighter case than I realized: In sum: It is now well-documented that employees of Murdoch’s News of the World British tabloid eavesdropped on the voice mail messages of practically anybody who was anybody in Britain for the better part of the last 10 years—the most recent revelations put Kate Middleton and Tony Blair on this list—including, undoubtedly, some of the people who went to the News Corp. party. Although this might not have seemed like much of a crime while it was being committed by myriad News Corp. reporters, and sanctioned by their bosses—just hacks being hacks—it has since transmuted into a profound breach of the civil trust. And to date, each next domino in the inquest has fallen. The informed speculation in U.K. media and political circles is about which present and former members of the top circle of News Corp. management in London will next be frog marched in front of a tribunal. In addition to company chief Rebekah Wade Brooks (who herself appears to have been hacked by reporters) and her predecessor Les Hinton, who now runs The Wall Street Journal

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Police arrest man suspected of killing six-year-old in hit and run

Huddersfield man, 21, to be questioned over death of Owen Wightman of Wakefield left by roadside after collision Police have arrested a man on suspicion of causing the death by dangerous driving of a six-year-old schoolboy who was left at the roadside after being knocked down. Detectives in West Yorkshire said that a 21-year-old man from Huddersfield would be questioned about the events, which happened in Wakefield, West Yorkshire, on Saturday. The driver is said to have stopped out of sight of the accident and inspected the front of his car for damage. The child, Owen Wightman, was playing in the street close to his home. The boy was crossing a busy road with a seven-year-old friend when he was struck by a light blue or grey hatchback driven by a single man who appeared to be in his 20s. Detectives have had a good response to appeals for witnesses after it emerged that the car pulled in for the damage check, in a side road about 100 yards further on. CCTV footage from a passing bus with details of the car has also been analysed. Wightman’s parents, Joanne, 33, and Neil, 31, appealed before the arrest for someone to come forward. They said: “Owen was a perfect little man who was taken from us – just perfect in every way. He walked into a room and lit it up. He was our bundle of joy and our little ray of sunshine.” Passers-by continued to add to a pile of flowers and teddy bears at the scene, in memory of Owen, who had two brothers, Jack, 12, and one-year-old Thomas. Jack’s tribute alongside a green cuddly monkey, read: “You were the best bro’ ever. Even when we used to fight and argue I still loved you anyway.” Another message said: “To mummy and daddy’s little soldier, forever in our hearts, love u always.” Rewards for information resulting in a conviction total £15,000 – two-thirds from the Sun newspaper and the balance from the charity Crimestoppers. Crime Martin Wainwright guardian.co.uk

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US man stages $1 bank robbery to get state healthcare

Unemployed and without health insurance, man in North Carolina has himself arrested in order to receive treatment It was not perhaps the most obvious way of getting a bad back, arthritis and a dodgy foot seen to. But if you’re unemployed in North Carolina with no health insurance, there is no obvious way. So on 9 June James Verone left his Gastonia home, took a ride to a bank and carried out a robbery. Well, sort of. What he did was hand the clerk a note that said: “This is a bank robbery, please only give me one dollar.” Then, as he later told the local NBC news station , he calmly sat in the corner of the bank having told the clerk: “I’ll be sitting right over there in the chair waiting for the police.” Before his peculiarly modest robbery, Verone, 59, sent a letter to the Gaston Gazette . “When you receive this a bank robbery will have been committed by me for one dollar. I am of sound mind but not so much sound body.” He invited the paper to send a reporter to interview him in Gaston county jail, where he is now in custody facing charges of stealing from a person (for just $1 the prosecutors didn’t think they could hold up a bank robbery charge). He told the paper he had lost his job after 17 years as a Coca-Cola delivery man, and with it his health insurance. He was in increasing pain from slipped discs, arthritic joints, a gammy foot and a growth on his chest. Since being in the jail he has attained his goal: he has been seen by nurses and an appointment with a doctor is booked. US healthcare North Carolina United States Ed Pilkington guardian.co.uk

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Kidnapped security guards in Iraq endured mock executions, inquest told

Inquest hears of traumatic treatment meted out to killed Britons employed to protect computer programmer in Baghdad Three security guards kidnapped in Iraq were subject to mock executions, regularly beaten and kept chained and blindfolded for lengthy periods before being shot dead by their captors, an inquest heard on Tuesday. Jason Creswell, 39, Jason Swindlehurst, 38, and Alec MacLachlan, 30, were protecting computer programmer Peter Moore when they were seized in May 2007. The men, who were employed as security guards by the global firm GardaWorld , were kidnapped when a gang of armed men posing as police officers stormed the Iraqi finance ministry in Baghdad. All three were eventually executed while Moore was released in December 2009 after two years and seven months in captivity, the inquest at Trowbridge, Wiltshire, was told. A fourth security guard who was snatched with them, Alan McMenemy, 34, has never been found and is presumed dead. Chief inspector Mark Moles, of the SO15 counter-terrorism unit at Scotland Yard, went through a statement given by Moore detailing the mistreatment they suffered. He said: “They were all subjected to mock executions. This saw them placed on their knees, blindfolded, a gun pointed to their heads and a different gun firing off elsewhere in the room. This caused immense trauma. “They were always chained by their feet to a rail or bar and blindfolded for long periods.” The five Britons were seized by “between 50 and 100 men”, the inquest was told. Moore, 36, of Lincoln, was working in the building for American firm BearingPoint, teaching Iraqi officials how to use a new IT system when the armed men entered the building. Moles said the security guards would not have been aware of the ambush as officials in police uniform entered constantly. He said: “All were patrolling different parts of the building. They would have had no cause to have suspicion as police and military entered the building all the time. It wouldn’t have been until the very last moments they would have pulled their weapons in defence. “The attack gave them no chance to act, no chance to challenge, no chance to take any action to prevent their kidnap.” The five men were bundled into two vehicles. Once driven away, they were stripped to their underwear and all personal effects were thrown out of the vehicles. The kidnappers returned to the ministry in search of a second man the bodyguards had been protecting, Peter Donkin, but staff had hidden him in a compartment under the floor. It is thought the men were moved to Basra or a major city south of Baghdad because tests revealed their bodies contained high levels of lead, in line with the dust and air they would have inhaled. When Moore was debriefed following his release , he said the hostages had been moved to different locations every few months. He said the prisoners were beaten regularly, especially before they were to be moved to a new location in order to make them “compliant”. Moore said they were made to sleep on the floor or with a thin blanket. They were given food and water and allowed to shower regularly. He said they were occasionally allowed to watch television, enabling them to keep a track of the date. The bodies of Swindlehurst, from Skelmersdale, Lancashire, and Creswell, from Glasgow, were handed over to authorities at a Baghdad police station in June 2009. Swindlehurst had suffered two gunshot wounds to the head and one to the chest. It is thought Creswell, from Glasgow, died from three shots to his chest and abdomen while he knelt with his hands on his head. The body of MacLachlan, 30, of Llanelli, south Wales, was recovered in September 2009. He had been shot twice in the head. The Iraqi Shia group Asaib Ahl al-Haq has been blamed for holding the men hostage but has denied claims of torture and abuse. The Wiltshire and Swindon coroner, David Ridley, ruled the men had been unlawfully killed. British hostages in Iraq Iraq Middle East Steven Morris guardian.co.uk

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