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Former US marine smuggled up to 80 guns for UK criminals, court told

Steven Greenoe bought weapons from US gun shops and smuggled them into the UK, Liverpool crown court hears Guns smuggled into the UK on commercial flights by a former US marine captain were used to carry out crimes on the streets of Britain, including a fatal shooting, a court was told. Steven Greenoe, 37, bought weapons from American gun shops, broke them down to their component parts, and smuggled them into the UK in his luggage, Liverpool crown court heard on Wednesday. Two British men were also said to have been involved in the alleged conspiracy: Steven Cardwell, 31, and Neil Copplestone, 32, both from the north-west, who, the prosecution claims, sold the guns on to criminals. The court heard that Greenoe, who is awaiting sentence in the US, bought 81 firearms from gun shops in North Carolina, and that some of them were smuggled and used in serious criminal offences in the UK. The prosecution said most, if not all, the firearms purchased by him were intended for or are now in the hands of criminals in the UK. Security staff at Raleigh-Durham airport in North Carolina found a cache of 16 weapons in his luggage when he was stopped while in transit on 25 July 2010. Neil Flewitt QC, for the prosecution, said experts had proved that guns purchased by Greenoe were used in a fatal shooting, the details of which cannot be reported for legal reasons, as well as an attempted murder in Manchester and an attempted robbery in Liverpool. The trial also heard that undercover police officers in Liverpool bought three pistols linked to Greenoe for £3,600 each. Greenoe had paid £300 per gun in the US. The court heard that between December 2009 and his arrest last year more than £67,000 had been paid into Greenoe’s bank account, mostly in cash. Greenoe has indefinite leave to remain in the UK because his wife, Elizabeth, is a British citizen. When in the country they lived in Shrewsbury, Shropshire. US authorities were carrying out undercover surveillance of Greenoe and identified 15 separate dates on which 81 firearms were purchased by him or on his behalf. Officers witnessed him dumping the boxes that held the guns and test-fired rounds which come with each weapon. These rounds were forensically matched to firearms used by UK criminals. Flewitt said Greenoe was arrested as he was about to board a flight to New York, flying on to Manchester. “At the airport he checked in four bags,” the prosecutor said. “However, when his luggage was searched the US authorities found a total of 16 firearms broken down into their component parts and wrapped separately in plastic bags, together with 32 pistol magazines.” When officers searched Greenoe’s home in Shropshire after his arrest in the US, they found a Glock pistol and two magazines stored in a canvas bag in a safe. Cartridges found at a shooting in Manchester matched guns bought by Greenoe in America, the jury was told. A gun used in the attempted robbery of a Liverpool taxi driver in March 2011 was matched to two guns bought by Greenoe in America. Cardwell, of Aintree, Merseyside, and Copplestone, of Ormskirk, Lancashire, both deny conspiracy to import, sell and possess prohibited firearms with intent to endanger life. The trial continues and is expected to last for up to six weeks. Gun crime Crime United States Helen Carter guardian.co.uk

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Iran ‘harassing’ relatives of journalists working for BBC Persian Television

Head of global news at BBC says Iranian officials are targeting around 10 of channel’s staff with campaign of intimidation Iran has arrested, questioned and intimidated relatives of journalists working for the London-based BBC Persian Television in its latest crackdown on press freedom. It comes just two weeks after the arrests in Tehran of documentary film-makers accused of secretly working inside the country for the Farsi-language service. Peter Horrocks, the head of global news at the BBC, said on Wednesday that relatives and friends of around 10 of the channel’s Iranian staff who work in the UK have been approached by the authorities. He called on the Iranian government to “repudiate the actions of its officials” and urged the British government to “deter the Iranian government” from attempts to undermine free media. “Passports have been confiscated, homes searched and threats made. The relatives have been told to tell the BBC staff to stop appearing on air, to return to Iran, or to secretly provide information on the BBC to the Iranian authorities,” he wrote on the BBC blog The Editors. “Many of our Iranian employees who live in London are fearful to return to their country because of the regime’s attacks on the BBC. But although those journalists are beyond the direct reach of their government they are now subject to a new underhand tactic,” he added. Horrocks also highlighted the plight of the imprisoned film-makers who Iran said have “painted a black picture of Iran and Iranians” by supplying the BBC with reports misrepresenting the country. They have been identified as four documentary film-makers – Hadi Afarideh, Naser Saffarian, Mohsen Shahrnazdar and Mojtaba Mirtahmasb – and a producer and distributor, Katayoun Shahabi. The BBC says they are independent and have no links with the television channel. It has previously shown films belonging to some of them after buying rights but it insists they have never been commissioned by the channel. Since the arrests, several Iranian officials have stepped forward to condemn the film-makers as “a group of terrorists, Baha’is, communists” and, in the words of Iran’s minister of intelligence, Heydar Moslehi, “devil-worshippers”. BBC Persian, which has also been accused by the Iranian regime of collecting information on behalf of MI6, is blocked in the country but millions of Iranians watch satellite channels illegally. Observers have seen the recent developments as Iran’s response to the broadcast of a documentary made by BBC Persian on the Iranian supreme leader, Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, called The Ways of the Ayatollah. The programme – produced by Iranian journalist Bozorgmehr Sharafedin and shown in mid-September – was the first of its kind to touch the taboo issue of Khamenei’s leadership. Iranian documentary film-maker Maziar Bahari, who was arrested in June 2009 and kept in jail for 118 days, said dozens of other people in Iran have also been summoned to Iran’s security departments in recent weeks after the broadcast of the documentary. “They basically want to cut any contact of the Iranians with the outside world,” he said. “They are afraid of the BBC in particular because its journalists worked in Iran until recently and have a better understanding of the Iranian society.” Bahari, who has written a book about his experience in jail named Then They Came For Me, said: “I know the imprisoned film-makers and I believe Iran has absolutely no evidence against them but is now resorting to fabricating charges in order to implicate them or make them to confess.” Bahari – whose forced confession was broadcast by Iran’s state-run Press TV while in jail – said the broadcast of the Khamenei documentary by the BBC triggered the arrests. Kamnoosh Shahabi, the sister of the imprisoned distributor, said Katayoun Shahabi had been denied access to her lawyer since her arrest: “The authorities asked us not to speak to media but we are extremely worried and we have no other choice.” She said the irony is that her sister has been praised by the Islamic republic in the past for her contribution to Iran’s film industry. Iran’s embassy in London could not be reached for comment. BBC Iran Middle East Television industry Saeed Kamali Dehghan guardian.co.uk

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Phone hacking: Shaun Russell among those suing News International

The father of Josie Russell, who survived a hammer attack in which her mother and sister were killed, is one of the claimants The father of Josie Russell, who as a young girl survived a horrific attack in which her mother and sister were killed, is among a raft of new claimants suing News International for alleged phone hacking. Shaun Russell is one of dozens of alleged victims who are suing the News of the World’s parent company, part of Rupert Murdoch’s media empire. Russell’s daughter Josie survived the 1996 attack by Michael Stone in which her mother, Lin, and younger sister, Megan, were murdered. The murders and the subsequent hunt for the killer were the subject of intense media interest. Thirteen new legal writs, from claimants including the Sarah’s law campaigner Sara Payne and 7/7 hero Paul Dadge, were issued against News Group Newspapers company on Monday , taking the number of civil actions now under way to more than 60. Dadge is the man whose image was published across the world after he was photographed helping victims of the 2005 tube bombings. Another 24 writs were filed last week. The scale of the litigation now facing the News of the World’s owner could force the company to make payments that far exceed the £20m it has set aside for compensating phone-hacking victims who can demonstrate that they have a strong case. It emerged in July that a mobile phone given to Sara Payne had been targeted by Glenn Mulcaire, the private investigator who was employed by the paper. Payne campaigned with the NoW to change the law so that parents could obtain access to information about paedophiles following the murder of her eight-year-old daughter, Sarah. Payne’s representatives indicated at the time that she was unlikely to sue the title. She wrote an article praising the paper in its final issue, which was published the week before it emerged she had also been targeted by Mulcaire. Others who have also now begun legal action include Dannii Minogue and her brother Brendan, Princess Diana’s former butler Paul Burrell, James Blunt, Pete Doherty, the actor Sadie Frost, and Lance Gerrard-Wright, the ex-husband of Ulrika Jonsson, who is also suing the paper. The rash of lawsuits has been triggered by a deadline set by Mr Justice Vos, the judge who is hearing a number of phone-hacking cases that are well advanced. They include actions being brought by Steve Coogan and the football agent Sky Andrew, which are due to come to trial in the new year. The media lawyer Niri Shan, of Taylor Wessing, said victims who filed claims before a trial scheduled for January could benefit because there was “a level of uncertainty about what the court would award in January. He added: “News Corp may overpay to get rid of claimants.” If the claimants win in January and they are awarded damages by Vos those payouts will be used to assess the level of future payments to hacking victims. Also among the high-profile names in the 63 writs now listed are the former Downing Street communications chief Alastair Campbell and politicians including Lord Prescott, Simon Hughes, Denis MacShane, Chris Bryant, Mark Oaten, Tessa Jowell and George Galloway. There are also writs in the names of George Best’s son, Calum, Ashley Cole, the rugby player Gavin Henson and the jockey Kieren Fallon. Some of the writs involve more than one person. Charlotte Church is joined in her lawsuit by her mother, Maria, and stepfather James. This reflects the fact that Mulcaire typically made a note of phone numbers and other personal information belonging to the relatives and friends of the celebrities he allegedly targeted. The overwhelming majority of the writs have been issued jointly against News Group Newspapers, the News International subsidiary that published the now defunct News of the World, and Mulcaire. But one, filed by the singer Cornelia Crisa, also names the former NoW chief reporter Neville Thurlbeck, who chose to break his silence on the phone-hacking affair last week in sensational fashion. It is the first phone-hacking lawsuit to target Thurlbeck, who was arrested and bailed in April for alleged hacking but has not been charged. Thurlbeck said: “As I said last week, the truth will out. But this will be in the law courts and at a public tribunal.” He has started legal proceedings against News Group claiming that he was unfairly dismissed. The number and range of the claims has taken some legal observers by surprise. One of the lawyers acting for some of the hacking victims, Mark Lewis, pointed out: “So far, fewer than 5% of the victims of Glenn Mulcaire have been notified.” Scotland Yard detectives working on Operation Weeting, which is investigating allegations of widespread phone hacking at the News of the World, are in the process of contacting nearly 4,000 people whose names are listed in notebooks seized from Mulcaire’s home in a 2006 raid. Mulcaire and Clive Goodman, the News of the World’s former royal editor, were jailed for hacking in January 2007. Lewis said: “When the final tally takes place, we will see thousands of claims and more than one paper.” He added that, as the number of claimants grows, estimates that Murdoch’s company would need at least £100m to settle such claims looks like “a serious underestimate”. Several litigants, including the former Sky Sports commentator Andy Gray and the actor Sienna Miller, have already received payments of tens of thousands of pounds from News Group. The typical payment is likely to be around £50,000, but some will far exceed that. For example, the company has already offered to pay one of Lewis’s clients – the murdered schoolgirl Milly Dowler’s family – £3m. Phone hacking Newspapers & magazines National newspapers Newspapers News International Roy Greenslade James Robinson guardian.co.uk

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Syrian insurrection set to gather momentum

UN failure to pass sanctions resolution against Assad’s regime has convinced some that diplomacy cannot protect them An armed insurrection inside Syria looks set to gather momentum after the failure to pass a UN resolution against president Bashar al-Assad’s regime, according to dissidents in two key Syrian cities. Activists from Homs and Hama, where mostly peaceful protests over the past six months have lately become more aggressive and armed, say the failure of the US effort to threaten sanctions against Syria has convinced some that diplomacy cannot protect them. “There’s no way out of this except to fight,” said an activist from Homs. “For the people of Homs the international community are not with us and we know that for sure. Russia and China will continue to protect Assad and as long as that happens, he will hunt us down.” Britain, France and the US are expected to seek a fresh resolution on Syria before the UN Security Council after Russia and China on Tuesday night vetoed a draft that threatened sanctions, a security council source said. The veto by Russia, supported by China, provoked the biggest verbal explosion from the US at the UN for years, with its ambassador Susan Rice expressing “outrage” over the Moscow and Beijing move. Rice also walked out of the security council, the first such demonstration in recent years. While walk-outs are common at the UN general assembly, they are rare in the security council. “It will not go away,” the source said. “It will not be next week. We don’t have a date. But there are a number of ways the security council can get back to this.” The vote was 9-2 in favour, with four abstentions: South Africa, India, Brazil and Lebanon. Rice, who before joining the Obama administration established a reputation as an outspoken critic of the failure of the west to intervene in humanitarian crises round the world, said after the vote: “The United States is outraged that this council has utterly failed to address an urgent moral challenge and a growing threat to regional peace and security.” Without naming Russia and China but making it clear they were the target of her words, she said: “Let there be no doubt: this is not about military intervention. This is not about Libya. That is a cheap ruse by those who would rather sell arms to the Syrian regime than stand with the Syrian people.” She added: “This is about whether this council, during a time of sweeping change in the Middle East, will stand with peaceful protestors crying out for freedom – or with a regime of thugs with guns that tramples human dignity and human rights. “We deeply regret that some members of the council have prevented us from taking a principled stand against the Syrian regime’s brutal oppression of its people.” The resolution had been weakened considerably since the original text was circulated to the 15 security council members in early August seeking to impose sanctions. The draft resolution on Tuesday only said the security council would “consider its options” in 30 days’ time if Assad failed to stop the violence and seek a peaceful settlement of the crisis. It said the options would include sanctions. To further water down the resolution in an attempt to make it more acceptable to Russia and China, there was no hint of military intervention. In Homs, where government forces are routinely clashing with armed members of the opposition – many of them former soldiers who defected with their weapons – outgunned protesters are now openly seeking weapons from outside the country. “We know that we will not see Nato jets above the skies of Damascus,” said one Homs resident. “It is us against them. No one else will help us.” In Beirut, where aid supplies to Homs and Hama are co-ordinated, aid workers said they had been receiving more requests for weapons than for food or medicine. “Of course we can’t help with this. But it shows how much their priorities have changed.” Syria Bashar Al-Assad Middle East United Nations Martin Chulov Ewen MacAskill guardian.co.uk

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UK chaplains in Afghanistan: ordinary priests with an extraordinary flock

With their camouflage Bibles and combat crosses, the forces’ 278 chaplains are outsiders in the church and the military The Rev James Francis was travelling in an armoured vehicle north of the Bowri desert in Afghanistan, accompanying the Brigade Reconnaissance Force during the stopping and searching of vehicles for insurgents, when a Royal Marine interrupted his chat with a gunner to ask if it was right to kill. “That was a direct question,” says the padre for 30 Commando, “but it’s quite normal for these things to occur to people out here and it’s vital that when difficult decisions are being made we have direct answers, that as Christians we don’t retreat into some kind of holy huddle.” Francis is the archetypal Church of England priest – cheerful, polite, with James Herriot DVDs and a lavish tea collection – but his congregation is extraordinary: British forces who on Friday will have been engaged in operations in Afghanistan for 10 years in the wake of the 9/11 attacks. Chaplains – there are 278 serving in the British military – have also been in the country for a decade to minister and give comfort when the war exacts terrible costs. There have been 382 UK military fatalities in Afghanistan since 2002 – 35 of them this year. Camp Bastion and other British military bases in Afghanistan hold vigils, overseen by padres such as Francis, to commemorate those who have died. These have come to represent the most formal face of collective worship here, but much of the work of the chaplains is in smaller gatherings, perhaps over a cup of tea. The men and women are forced to deal with mortality at a far younger age than most of their civilian peers. “For when you need someone to pray with” is the motto for a dedicated military telephone prayer line. Combat crosses Wherever UK forces are, padres will be found. They have military and medical training but no weapons. The tools of their trade are camouflage-cover Bibles and they wear combat crosses – small, metallic discs with a punched-out cross – alongside the standard military-issue dogtags bearing their surname, blood type, service number and religion. While Francis’s digs are in Lashkar Gah, a military base so well-appointed it is nicknamed Lash Vegas, he and other chaplains regularly find themselves on the frontline in the war against the Taliban and al-Qaida on patrols and operations, and Francis’s foray into the Bowri desert was not untypical. So, back to the marine’s question. Is it right to kill? Sometimes, says Francis, force is necessary in situations to counter what would otherwise be worse. “Not to provide them with an element of spiritual direction and support would be seriously negligent. We have a role to serve those who are there to pull the trigger. We help them negotiate the moral maze,” he says. The padres are something of a tribe of outsiders – outsiders in the church (many of their peers just don’t understand how they can do the job they do), and outsiders among the military men and women they support. Against a backdrop of an increasingly secularised Britain, it might jar that troops still have chaplains, or that the Ministry of Defence employs them – at a cost of £22m a year – when it is slashing jobs elsewhere as part of its strategic defence spending review (the funding status of chaplains is “currently being assessed”, the MoD says). But clergy have served men and women in the forces for almost a century, with padres rising to prominence during the first world war, offering support not readily available at the frontline or from the chain of command. It was a first world war chaplain nicknamed Woodbine Willie – real name Geoffrey Anketell Studdert Kennedy – who had this tip for newcomers: “Take a box of fags in your haversack, and a great deal of love in your heart, and go up to them, laugh with them, joke with them; you can pray with them sometimes, but pray for them always.” The advice still holds true. Then, as now, many troops show little interest in religion. Petty Officer Hamish Burke, 28, says the only time religion enters his life is when he is in theatre – the area of military operations. He does not go to church. He is not baptised. None of his family goes to church and he only went to midnight mass at Buckfast Abbey because he wanted to go to the abbey. He married in a register office and says he doesn’t “even have the bare minimum religious affiliation”. While he feels “ill-placed” going to a church service, he feels differently about vigils. “Right at the start they talk about what that person left behind. While you think about that, you think what you have to lose yourself. My little boy is 14 months old. It’s a time to reflect on where you are and what people back home are going through.” Remembrance Hours before the Guardian arrived at Camp Bastion, thousands of troops had gathered to remember the life of 24-year-old Lieutenant Daniel John Clack, from 1st Battalion the Rifles, who was killed by an improvised explosive device on 12 August. The vigil for Clack was the 32nd to have taken place in 2011. The 33rd was being organised as the Guardian prepared to leave. Sergeant Barry Weston, from 42 Commando Royal Marines, died on 30 August. Commanders fully recognise and appreciate the work of the padres, even if their contribution is not always understood elsewhere. Major Nigel Jordan-Barber was a rifle company commander with 3 Scots (the Black Watch) in summer 2009, a particularly bloody period for British troops in Afghanistan. Several 3 Scots soldiers died during the battalion’s six-month tour of Musa Qala, Helmand province. Jordan-Barber says: “We were unable to participate in the remembrance services or repatriation because my company was so far away from the rest of 3 Scots. I asked the 3 Scots padre [Duncan Anderson], to prepare some words for me to say in remembrance, of Gus Millar in particular.” Millar, 40, from Inverness, was killed by a rocket-propelled grenade alongside Private Kevin Elliott, 24, while on foot patrol in the Babaji district. Jordan-Barber says: “Millar was very popular and his death came as a shock to most of my company. Being able to call on a padre who knew the deceased, and knew my soldiers, to advise me how to manage their grief, was of immense importance. “This is not mawkish sentimentality, but essential in my role as commander to make sure that they had the time and the resources to get their thoughts in order before they went back to their operational tasks.” There was another death at the end of the 2009 tour that Jordan-Barber remembers well. Acting Sergeant Michael Lockett of the Mercians was killed by a roadside bomb days before he was due to leave Afghanistan. Once again, the padre helped the men through the ordeal. “It was one of the most contradictory and moving events I have experienced,” says Jordan-Barber. “His coffin was paraded past the battlegroup on to the tailgate of the aircraft which was to fly him home. Padre Duncan said some quiet prayers before the aircraft taxied away. I discussed it with some of my soldiers afterwards and they were very clear that although it wasn’t a funeral we all felt we had taken part in a very spiritual event.” Jordan-Barber has had soldiers of varying denominations under him and says padres offer a “ministry of all souls” that is is respected by all. “I have been assisted in my role as a commander by a great number of padres conducting their ministry in arduous and extreme environments. Their presence alongside us as valuable as their role.” Geoff Withers, a Church of England priest ministering to the men and women of the Joint Aviation Group, reckons on spending 90% of his time with people who have no formal practice of religion. “We work hard to be able to walk into a hangar without emptying it. They are reasonably used to your presence.” The softly spoken 48-year-old priest, from Belfast, looks like any other member of the air force save for the discreet crosses on his uniform, and weaves his way in and out of smoking areas decorated with murals of busty women. Withers describes himself as “a nosy beggar” who is interested in human issues “first and foremost”. He adds: “If something difficult happens I’m not a complete stranger. I might be regarded as a weirdo but I’m not a stranger.” The “something difficult” is too often the death of a serviceman. Padres – who earn as much as bishops in the Church of England, starting on more than £37,000 – have their own moral mazes to navigate. Last month the government inquiry into the death of the Basra hotel receptionist Baha Mousa – who was beaten to death while in British custody in Iraq in 2003 – criticised Father Peter Madden, who was attached to 1st Battalion the Queen’s Lancashire Regiment, for not reporting the abuse. The inquiry accused Madden of giving inconsistent evidence and “lacking the courage” to report the “shocking and shameful” treatment of 10 Iraqi men, including Mousa. His conduct shocked serving chaplains. One, who does not wish to be named, says: “The inquiry was very damning. That padre got it wrong. I hope it was a one-off but it will be a marker for us.” Scott Shackleton, a chaplain to 45 Commando, is on his third tour of Afghanistan. His parish consists of Royal Marines who treat his chaplaincy – in an old British fort, now called Camp Shawqat – like a common room, helping themselves to tea, coffee and television and popping outside for cigarettes. Occasionally they will flick through the books on the table, including the camouflage-print Bibles or the Commando Prayer Book. The cover shows a cross above a black dagger – the badge every marine wears on his arm. Men and women, who are in good health, deal with mortality at a far earlier age than their friends back home. A sense of vulnerability among the men and women here sharpens the mind, raising questions that may not otherwise be asked. The consensus among padres is that troops are changed by their experiences, sometimes for the better. Alice Smith, a chaplain for the Joint Fires Group, says: “I’m not suggesting everyone will become an evangelical Christian but people start to ask questions and that’s a start. There’s no support for them back home on this because society does not encourage people to explore their faith in a meaningful way. Obviously any minister will tell you that they would love to have more people come to church. But it would be foolish to expect our guys to come to church.” The padres are aware of the practical and theological challenges they face when working with young, mostly “unchurched” men. “Jesus didn’t have a church,” says Shackleton, a Church of Scotland minister. “He hung around and walked among people. In some ways he spent his time with people who didn’t go to synagogue. But he didn’t say that not going didn’t matter either.” The marines address him as padre or Scott as he wears the same rank as the person he is speaking to. Like the men around him he has a green beret, having completed the commando course. Shackleton’s chaplaincy can be a chat over cup of tea, a formal service or a quiet word under camouflage netting. The topic of conversation is more likely to focus on relationship or family issues than moral guidance or spiritual reassurance. He can be seen in the same places as the commandos – the dining area, Camp Shawqat’s messes, the gym or the makeshift running track, which is basically a dusty path, used by marines of all ranks and ages at all hours. Shackleton can be seen doing laps of an afternoon, although he has yet to adopt the latest exercise devised by marines to stay fit – flipping a massive tyre along a 100-metre stretch or dragging it behind him on a harness. The doors to his accommodation – a windowless shipping container – are always open. The arrangement hasn’t always been this cosy. Shackleton flew into Afghanistan in January 2002, with 3 Commando Brigade as part of Operation Jacana. “It was war fighting. It was about dealing with men getting on to a helicopter, going out to fight. I was also dealing with them when I came back. There’s something straightforward about war fighting because you’re plunged into a survival position. Two sides are fighting, one is going to win and the other isn’t. But the fallout depends on how many casualties you have. We didn’t take any in Jacana.” But they lost 11 people in Iraq. “That’s when it changes. Ever since then that’s been the experience for people in Herricks [the name for the UK's military operations in Afghanistan]. You’re dealing with families who have lost someone and they have to go forward. “The walk up to the family’s front door is the shittiest thing in the world because you know you’re about to change someone’s life for the worst. If the guys have lived when their friend didn’t, they may feel responsible. You realise how fragile your life is. Maybe there’s redemption in that.” Chaplains The majority of the 278 military chaplains across the three services belong to the Church of England and there are civilian chaplains for each major faith group. A Ministry of Defence spokesman has said the spending of £22m a year on military chaplaincy is “currently being assessed”. Groups such as the British Humanist Association argue that religious groups should fund their own chaplains – whether they work in hospitals, prisons or universities – and that the job of providing pastoral support should not be confined to people of faith but open to all “qualified people”. According to figures released last year, the Royal Army Chaplains’ Department is experiencing one of its busiest decades since the second world war. It has deployed 15 padres to Afghanistan and the experience of chaplaincy has left a life-changing impression on some troops. Around 70 men and women from the armed forces are considering military chaplaincy as a result of their experiences with padres on the frontline. The starting salary for a military chaplain is £37,172 on appointment, rising to £55,857 after 15 years’ service. Senior chaplains are on a separate pay scale. The average salary for a Church of England bishop is £39,020. Military Anglicanism Afghanistan Christianity Religion Riazat Butt guardian.co.uk

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Joanna Yeates murder jurors warned off social network sites

Judge instructs would-be jury members not to discuss case online or do background research ahead of Vincent Tabak trial Potential jurors in the trial of Vincent Tabak, the man accused of murdering Joanna Yeates, have been told to avoid discussions about the case on social network sites. The 12 jurors who will hear the case against Tabak are due to be sworn in on Thursday. Before sending them home for the night on Wednesday, the trial judge, Mr Justice Field, told the possible jurors he had “stern instructions” for them. He told them: “It is most important you don’t read or take any notice of any publications concerning this case.” The judge said that meant they should not look at reports of the current proceedings at Bristol crown court or reports from when Yeates went missing. “Do not look at anything on social network sites or other social websites,” he added. Earlier the judge said Tabak, who denies murder, had to be tried only on the evidence that was put before the court. “If other information starts to leak in that pollutes the system of justice,” he said. On Tuesday he also impressed on the jurors that they should not do any background research of their own about the murder. Twelve jurors (out of a possible 17) are due to be sworn in on Thursday morning. The judge told them they would be “next required” after that on Monday. Tabak, a 33-year-old Dutch engineer, is accused of murdering landscape architect Yeates, 25, just before Christmas last year. Wearing spectacles, a dark suit, blue tie, shirt and sneakers, Tabak watched proceedings from the dock. Before being selected, the potential jurors had answered a series of questions to ensure they were not connected with people or businesses involved in the case. They were told that they would have to be available for the next four weeks. Yeates went missing after pre-Christmas drinks with friends near Bristol city centre. After a high-profile search, her frozen body was found on a country lane on Christmas morning three miles from her home in Clifton, Bristol. Tabak is being represented by William Clegg QC. Nigel Lickley QC prosecutes. The trial continues. Joanna Yeates Bristol Crime Steven Morris guardian.co.uk

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Libya mass grave discovered near Misrata

Bodies of five bound and executed men found wrapped in military blankets and buried in shallow sandy scrapes Whoever buried the five men, discovered in graves a little way outside the Libyan coastal city of Misrata, had a sense of order. The bodies were buried neatly in a row of shallow sandy scrapes, each wrapped in a green military blanket, the last one of them interred on the stretcher on which he was, in all likelihood, killed. Someone – no one knows who — had marked the place, leaving a sign next to the grave site saying: “Five dead.” All of them were men, wearing civilian clothes. Dr Faros Ahmed Dibrik gently uncovered one of the faces. From the state of decomposition, the man, like the others, had been dead for several months, probably killed during the bitter siege of Misrata by pro-Gaddafi forces. A blindfold had been tied around the man’s eyes. Dibrik carefully pushed it back and brushed away the sandy earth. The man’s forehead bore a bullet hole, just above his nose, penetrating the rag tied round his eyes. The damage at the back of the skull suggested he had been shot at close range. His hands and feet had been tied with thick green twine. Dibrik and a colleague measured the body. They examined the teeth and talked into a microphone, recording the injuries. Dibrik then moved to another body. Its hands too had been tied. The man on the stretcher, identifiable only by a serial number scrawled on a piece of paper and placed on his body, had also had his eyes covered before being shot. He had been a small man. When Dibrik rolled over the body his hands had also been tied behind his back. Forty or so onlookers, some in the uniform of Libya’s revolutionary forces, stood watching by the graves in silence. Dibrik searched in the pocket of the tracksuit bottoms worn by one of the men, looking for ID. There was none. “Nike,” he said. “Civilian clothes.” A man standing nearby explained that many of the fighters from Misrata’s siege wore combat trousers, as many fighters do today, mixed with T-shirts or other civilian clothing. Another made a calculation. “If these men were killed in April then this area of the front was under the control of Gaddafi forces. The only people who came here were shepherds.” It is impossible to tell. What is clear is that they were executed and their bodies dumped. Whatever the circumstances of their death, these graves are evidence of a war crime, committed, it seems likely from the military stretcher and from the army blankets, by soldiers. It seems likely too that these men’s names would appear on the list of the 1,000 or so still recorded by the town’s revolutionary forces as missing from the time of siege. Where the bodies of those still missing have been hidden is only now slowly being revealed, in sandy remote plots like this, far from any houses. It is evidence of what happened in Libya, beyond the eyes of reporters and human rights investigators, during the long months of war when atrocities were committed on both sides, and often with impunity. It is not the first grave and nor will it be the last to be found near this city. Even as the five bodies were exhumed, officials from the new government were searching for another grave which they had been told by a captured pro-Gaddafi fighter contained the bodies of 25 civilians captured during the town’s siege. For those still looking for their family members, the battle for Misrata will only be over when the last grave is found. Libya Middle East Africa Arab and Middle East unrest Peter Beaumont guardian.co.uk

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Bahrain medics jailed for treating protesters to get retrial

Twenty medical personnel were given sentences ranging from five to 15 years for treating injured protesters Bahrain’s attorney general has ordered a civilian court retrial for 20 medical personnel sentenced to prison as alleged backers of anti-government protests. A statement on Wednesday by Bahrain’s government apparently nullifies the verdicts earlier this week from a special security court against the doctors and nurses, who received sentences ranging from five to 15 years for treating injured protesters. The case brought an outcry from rights groups and raised questions from the UN secretary general. Bahrain has been gripped by nearly eight months of unrest by Shia-led protests seeking greater rights from the ruling Sunni monarchy. Bahrain Middle East Arab and Middle East unrest guardian.co.uk

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Bernard Madoff victims get first compensation cheques

• Payments go to 1,230 victims of Bernard Madoff’s Ponzi fraud • Initial distribution delayed by legal ruling on New York Mets Victims of Bernard Madoff’s fraud scheme are set to receive $312m (£202) this week as the trustee charged with recovering their cash sends out their first set of compensation cheques. The money will be split between the holders of 1,230 Madoff accounts and represents a recovery of roughly 4.6 cents for every dollar they invested. Irving Picard, court-appointed trustee for the Madoff victims, said he had recovered, or entered into agreements to recover, approximately $8.7bn, about half the $17.3bn he estimates was lost in Madoff’s Ponzi scheme. “This initial distribution is the first return of stolen funds to Madoff’s defrauded customers,” said Picard. “Significant, additional funds – currently unavailable for distribution due primarily to appeals – will ultimately be returned to their rightful owners, as well as future monies yet to be recovered. The need among many Madoff customers is urgent, and we are working to expedite these distributions.” Picard said distribution of the rest of the money he has recovered was being held up by appeals or the timing of payments. Picard’s $5bn settlement with the estate of late investor Jeffry Picower – his largest settlement to date – is currently being appealed. The payments were to go out last week but were delayed as Picard considered the effects of a court ruling over Madoff profits given to the owners of the New York Mets baseball team. On 27 September Judge Jed Rakoff of the US district court in Manhattan ruled that the trustee was allowed to seek only the return of fictional profits the Mets owners withdrew in the last two years of the fraud, which lasted more than a decade. The judge also rejected Picard’s bid to recover preference claims, the cash paid to team owners in the last 90 days of the fraud. Picard calculated that if the ruling applied to the hundreds of other claims he is pursuing, it would reduce potential recoveries by $6.2bn. “The order had raised potential issues regarding the distribution, which have since been resolved, allowing the distribution to commence,” said Picard. The trustee has sued for nearly $100bn in damages and fictional profits that he claims banks, including HSBC and JP Morgan, hedge funds and investment managers made dealing with Madoff during his decades-long scheme. Madoff is serving a 150-year jail sentence after being found guilty of running one of the largest fraud schemes of all time. Bernard Madoff United States Dominic Rushe guardian.co.uk

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Tory MP on intelligence committee is paid by Azerbaijan lobby group

Mark Field denies conflict of interest over his links to a country whose human rights record is criticised by the Foreign Office A Conservative MP who sits on the committee that scrutinises the security services is being paid £6,000 a year by a pro-Azerbaijan lobby group. Mark Field, MP for the Cities of London and Westminster, has joined the advisory board of the European Azerbaijan Society. Azerbaijan’s government has been criticised this year by the Foreign Office and Amnesty International for torturing protesters campaigning for political reforms. Labour MPs have questioned whether Field’s new job is appropriate given the sensitive nature of the work of the intelligence committee. Field, 46, is the youngest ever MP to serve on the committee, which reports directly to 10 Downing Street and oversees the UK’s intelligence and security services. The committee is unique because it consists of nine parliamentarians appointed by, and reporting directly to, the prime minister. It has greater powers than a select committee of parliament, being able to demand papers from former governments and official advice to ministers, both of which are not open to select committees. His new advisory role began in June. He is also the chairman of the all-party group for Azerbaijan. Field flew to Azerbaijan to meet senior Azeri politicians in May on a five-day trip that cost around £3,500 and in July 2010 he spoke in the country’s capital, Baku, at a Nato conference. In March Prince Andrew met Field at Buckingham Palace and asked for support in parliament and Whitehall for British investment in Azerbaijan. The European Azerbaijan Society was launched in November 2008 to promote Azerbaijan to international audiences, according to its website. The country is the size of the island of Ireland and sits on the edges of eastern Europe and west Asia. It is attracting increasing interest from foreign powers because of an abundance of gas and oil reserves. Tale Heydarov, a 26-year-old businessman whose father is one of Azerbaijan’s ministers, is the society’s main funder and director. A former student at the London School of Economics, he has been described as the “Abramovich of Azerbaijan” after pouring millions of pounds into his local football team – including £1m a year in wages to recruit the former England captain Tony Adams as manager. Azerbaijan is ruled by the authoritarian president Ilham Aliyev and, according to the Foreign Office, the country’s human rights record is poor. Journalists in the country have been harassed and jailed, opposition candidates disqualified and voters intimidated. In March Amnesty International called upon Azerbaijan’s authorities to end their crackdown on activists preparing for a protest inspired by recent events in the Middle East and north Africa. Detainees said they had been waterboarded and threatened with rape while in police custody. A spokesman for the Foreign Office said human rights remained a crucial issue in the country. “We and the EU have raised our concern over the slow progress in improving human rights in Azerbaijan on many occasions. These concerns still exist.” The society has increased its profile in Westminster over the past year. It provides secretarial services for the all-party parliamentary group on Azerbaijan, which has 20 members. It has organised high-profile meetings and receptions at all three of the main party conferences. The society also founded “Conservative Friends of Azerbaijan” this year, which has 25 Tory parliamentarians as members. Robert Halfon MP is vice-chair and Chris Pincher MP is treasurer. Other members include the deputy speaker Nigel Evans and the 1922 Committee chairman, Graham Brady. Approached this week, Field said it was “absurd” to claim that he should not have taken up his new position. He said he had met Tale Heydarov on a couple of occasions. “The reason that I have been out there [to Azerbaijan] on two occasions is because the country is trying to develop its financial services sector. There is no question of a conflict of interest,” he said. “I have signed the Official Secrets Act and I will not be divulging any secrets to the Azerbaijan government or anyone else connected to any of the other organisations or all-party committees I am involved with. It would be absurd and would be quite improper to think that anyone on the security and intelligence committee could not have any other outside interests,” he said. A spokesman for the society said the Heydarovs were not its only funders and it was an independent organisation, entirely separate from the Azerbaijan government. John Mann, the Labour MP for Bassetlaw, said: “This shows how wrong it can go when an MP takes a second job. It is an obvious conflict of interest.” Lisa Nandy, the Labour MP for Wigan who chairs the all-party group on corporate responsibility, said: “As one of a small number of parliamentarians who have the power to influence the British intelligence services and access to highly sensitive information, it is inappropriate that he is paid by a company promoting a government that is willing to torture those who question the status quo.” Azerbaijan Rajeev Syal guardian.co.uk

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