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Pakistan: fatal explosions in Peshawar

At least 34 people have been killed and another 100 injured after two explosions ripped through a busy market area Two explosions ripped through a busy market in Pakistan’s volatile northwestern city of Peshawar, killing at least 34 people and injuring nearly

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Al-Qaida bomber Fazul Abdullah Mohammed killed

Terrorist was behind the 1998 attacks on two embassies in Kenya and Tanzania that killed hundreds of people The terrorist behind the 1998 bombings of two American embassies in East Africa – the attack that brought al-Qaida to global attention – has been killed in Somalia. Fazul Abdullah Mohammed, who had a $5m price tag put on his head by American authorities, was one of the most wanted Islamist militants in the world. The embassy attacks – in Nairobi, Kenya, and Dar es Salaam in Tanzania – killed more than 200 people and injured several thousand. The majority of the casualties were local African staff or passersby caught in the multiple explosions that destroyed the buildings. Mohammed also organised the 2002 attacks on two Israeli targets, including the bombing of an Israeli-owned hotel in Kenya, which killed 13 people, and an attempt to shoot down a passenger plane on a flight to Israel. The US secretary of state, Hillary Clinton, who was on a visit to Tanzania as news of the death broke, described the killing as a “significant blow to al-Qaida, its extremist allies, and its operations in east Africa”. “It is a just end for a terrorist who brought so much death and pain to so many innocents in Nairobi and Dar es Salaam and elsewhere – Tanzanians, Kenyans, Somalis and our own embassy personnel,” she said. A senior American official in Washington said that his killing removed one of the group’s “most experienced operational planners in east Africa and has almost certainly set back operations”. News of Mohammed’s death comes just six weeks after the death of the al-Qaida leader, Osama bin Laden, in a US special forces raid in Pakistan. Last week Ilyas Kashmiri, another senior terrorist with ties to al-Qaida, was also reported to have been killed. Kenyan police, who cited Somali officials, said Mohammed had been shot dead when he and an associate refused to stop at a checkpoint north-west of Mogadishu, the Somali capital, earlier this week. The dead man, thought to be aged 38, had a false passport and $40,000 in cash it was reported. “We have confirmed he was killed by

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Chris Huhne attacks energy companies over price increases

Energy secretary urges consumers to hurt suppliers over increases with more companies likely to announce cost hikes The government has intervened dramatically in the row over spiralling energy prices by urging consumers to desert companies, such as Scottish Power, that impose substantial increases in the cost of gas and electricity. As concern grows that the other five major energy companies are preparing to follow Scottish Power and announce big rises within weeks, the energy secretary, Chris Huhne, told the Observer that consumers should not accept the increases “lying down” but “hurt” their supplier by finding cheaper alternatives. “Consumers don’t have to take price increases lying down,” he said. “If an energy company hits you with a price increase, you can hit them back where it hurts – by shopping around and voting with your feet.” Last week Scottish Power raised gas prices by 19% and electricity tariffs by 10%, adding 48p a day, or £175 a year, to the average daily combined gas and electricity bill of its 2.4 million customers. Now millions more consumers are expected to be hit by imminent rises as the other big suppliers follow suit. At least one of the other so-called “big six” energy companies is understood to be preparing to announce a significant price increase in the coming days, and the rest are likely to follow over the next few weeks.”There has been a lot of waiting for somebody to go first. I wouldn’t be at all surprised if we didn’t see the other five big energy companies putting up their prices pretty quickly. And I couldn’t rule out us doing it soon,” said a source at one of the big six. Huhne’s intervention is the latest sign of concern in the coalition about the impact of rising prices on consumers as they face what Bank of England governor Sir Mervyn King has called the most prolonged decline in living standards since the 1920s. Ministers are also understood to be seeking powers to force companies to reveal to every customer on their bills whether they are on the cheapest tariff, amid concerns about lack of transparency. In a further attempt to ease pressure on prices by increasing competition, the energy secretary will this week announce new measures to make it easier for smaller companies to compete in the market by easing the costs and red tape that prevent them from doing so. Around 99% of people currently get their energy from one of the big six. “Right now, only one in five people switch suppliers. I want to see more switching, more competition and more companies in the market,” Huhne said. “The big six only have a few minnows snapping at them, who are kept artificially small. By scrapping red tape for small players they can become serious challengers and help keep bills down.” The move comes as chancellor George Osborne prepares to defend his handling of the economy in his annual Mansion House speech on Wednesday. Official figures to be published on Tuesday are expected to show that inflation remains above 4%, more than double the government’s target, and adding to pressure for a rise in interest rates. Rocketing utilities bills will pile on the pain for households already struggling under the weight of public spending cuts and tax increases, including January’s VAT rise. Analysts are now warning that if the other energy suppliers follow Scottish Power, it could cause a fresh spike in inflation later this year. “Since prices usually jump in August anyway, following the end of the summer sales in July, we could be facing a sharp jump in the inflation rate in late summer which will take it well above 5%,” said Peter Dixon, chief UK economist at Commerzbank. A string of retailers have reported that sales on the high street are flagging as consumers tighten their belts. Research by insurance group Axa suggested last week that up to 20 million people have cut back on spending this year. A spokesman for Consumer Focus added: “The big six tend to hunt in a pack. When one goes, they all go. Consumers need to brace for across-the-board increases. On past experience the energy providers tend to introduce very similar price increases. We are concerned about competition in this market.” Scottish Power blamed last week’s price rises on soaring wholesale gas and oil prices, which have risen by nearly a third this year on the back of Middle East unrest, the weak dollar and continuing demand from emerging countries. Further measures to address a lack of competition in the market are expected to be announced by energy regulator Ofgem. The changes, which could be announced as soon as this week, are expected to force the big six – which have their own power stations – to auction up to a fifth of their generated output on the open market to make it easier for new players to enter the market. The new measures are also expected to ensure that the huge array of tariffs – which has grown by 70% since 2008 to nearly 350 – are dramatically reduced so that customers can more easily compare prices between suppliers. Ofgem first announced these proposals in March, following a four-month investigation. The regulator gave the big six – Scottish Power, nPower, EDF, Scottish and Southern, E.ON and British Gas – until 1 June to “engage constructively” with its proposals or face a referral to the Competition Commission. Energy industry Energy bills Consumer affairs Household bills Chris Huhne Energy Gas Toby Helm Tom Bawden Heather Stewart guardian.co.uk

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New Rule: If You’re Going to be the Pathetic Laughing Stock Center of a Tawdry, Lie Riddled Sex Scandal, at Least Get Laid

Click here to view this media Bill Maher slammed Rep. Anthony Weiner for not actually having sex with anyone if he was going to find himself embroiled in a sex scandal, and for taking anyone’s word about who he was actually sexting with during his New Rules segment tonight on Real Time.

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Sarah Palin pleaded with Tony Hayward for a BP pipeline across Alaska

Governor pressed oil boss for investment – a year after his company was responsible for the largest spill in Alaska’s history Former Alaska governor Sarah Palin held private discussions with Tony Hayward, the discredited BP chief executive, to win his support for a 1,700-mile gas pipeline across North America a year after his company’s failure to maintain another pipeline saw it blamed for the biggest oil spill in the state’s history. The revelation is contained in emails released from Palin’s time as governor that were made public following freedom of information requests. Palin’s Alaska Gasline Inducement Act was supposed to encourage energy producers to build a multibillion-dollar pipeline to deliver natural gas from Alaska’s North Slope fields to the US. But the energy companies refused to back the plan, believing it was a bad deal. In June 2007, two months after BP executives first poured cold water on Palin’s bill before an influential Senate hearing, and a year after BP Alaska spilled more than 5,000 barrels of crude oil due to corroded pipes, the confidential emails show Palin was so desperate to talk to Hayward that she readjusted her schedules to take his call. They reveal that Palin instructed her office to ensure that Hayward had all her private and official phone numbers so the call could proceed after his office asked for it to be rearranged. Palin’s office was desperate to get the likes of BP and rival Conoco to back the pipeline, the construction of which would have given Alaska’s first female governor a national profile. But revelations that Palin sought to curry favour with Hayward could now damage any possible presidential ambitions. Hayward became one of the most reviled men in the US following BP’s offshore oil rig disaster in the Gulf of Mexico last April, which killed 11 workers. Forced to resign over the scandal, Hayward came under heavy criticism, not least from President Obama, for his handling of the spill, inflaming critics with a series of gaffes that included telling journalists he “just wanted his life back” and suggesting that the Gulf was a “big ocean” in relation to the amount of oil released. Another PR blunder was being photographed on a sailing holiday off the Isle of Wight as experts were proclaiming the spill the “worst in US history”. Internal emails show Hayward followed up the phone conversation with Palin with a further email to the governor explaining that the Alaska gas project was “very important to BP”. In the email, dated 25 June 2007, he says that he has put a BP executive, Andy Inglis, in charge of the project, explaining he has lived and worked in Alaska in the past. Hayward says “Andy” is looking forward to meeting Palin, as is Doug Stuttles, president of BP Exploration Alaska – “our senior representative in Alaska”. Clearly buoyed by the telephone call, Palin fires off an email to a colleague soon after saying “very nice conversation with BP’s Hayward (yest)”. At times, Palin’s desire to cultivate a close relationship with BP appears to threaten a conflict of interest. When she is asked by her office to respond to an email from Rhonda Boyles (a local Republican politician) about who should sit on BP’s Benevolent Giving Board, she fires back: “My sister. If not her, then a missionary friend of mine – I’ll get her name.” The position of Palin’s husband, Todd, who worked for BP until 2009, was also a concern for the governor. In a jokey email sent to a colleague in September 2007 Palin asks: “If we, er, when we get a divorce, does that quell ‘conflict of interest accusations about BP?’ ” The emails suggest Palin’s office was obsessed with BP’s oil and gas production, from which the state of Alaska earns hundreds of millions of dollars in tax revenues. On 9 May 2008, BP’s Prudhoe Bay field was shut down. Emails show Palin’s office was informed this “will have a 1 to 3 day impact” on output. But BP’s US tax manager, Bernard Hajnay, was quick to inform Palin’s office that the shutdown did not affect other BP operations and they would be “ramping up production over the 1-3 days”. “I think we’re all in agreement that the state not launch a press release until after the company does,” an email circulated among Palin’s office staff states, adding: “Our production forecast anticipated some shut-downs and was ahead before this event. As long as the event does not exceed three days, our FY2008 production forecast is still good.” Palin is also warned in March 2008 that an expert “has emailed me … regarding his claim that BP is restricting the production of oil, causing the State to lose funds. He claims that BP is shorting production 100,000 to 150,000 b/d [barrels per day].” Last month BP was fined $25m and ordered to spend some $60m on improving pipeline safety in Alaska after a 2006 oil spill on the state’s North Slope coastal region. Investigators blamed the leak on a failure to properly inspect and maintain the pipeline to prevent corrosion. Safety concerns concerning BP’s activities were never far away when Palin was governor, even if her office was one of the last places to hear of them. In September 2007, Palin was informed that more than 100 staff contracted to BP and “tasked with corrosion prevention work” were being laid off, prompting consternation in her office. Palin asked her source how he heard the news. “It was third-hand,” Palin is told. “A former staffer with a buddy on the [North] Slope told me. His contact is somebody at BP that’s up there … and the BP person learned of it this afternoon.” An email from a Palin aide to the governor refers to a letter from Chuck Hamel, an oil industry expert, who complains to the governor that an official investigation into a fire involving BP on 6 August 2007 “only supported BP’s position and did not adequately review the severity of BP’s failed preventative maintenance”. The aide proposes to Palin that her office confirm “it is looking into the issue.” As media outlets pored over the 24,000 emails released, conservatives bombarded newspapers and rightwing websites with complaints that Palin had been singled out for special treatment. Greta van Susteren, a Fox News journalist and one of the few members of the media trusted by Palin, labelled her treatment “a media colonoscopy” and suggested some news organisations were on “a mission to destroy”. Sarah Palin emails Sarah Palin BP Alaska Oil and gas companies Oil Pollution BP oil spill United States Oil spills Jamie Doward Ewen MacAskill Richard Rogers guardian.co.uk

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Bill Maher Takes Racist Swipe At Herman Cain: Gingrich is Republican ‘Polling Behind a Black Guy’

HBO's Bill Maher on Friday took a racist swipe at Republican presidential candidate Herman Cain. During the New Rules segment of “Real Time,” the host said pretending that he was speaking to Newt Gingrich, “Let me put your unpopularity in context for you – you're a Republican and you're polling behind a black guy” (video follows with transcript and commentary): BILL MAHER: New rule: Newt Gingrich – just stop. Seriously, your campaign isn't just off to a rough start. It's like you hired me to run it and I purposely ran it into the ground. Let me put your unpopularity in context for you: you're a Republican and you're polling behind a black guy. I magine for a moment the media firestorm that would have happened if back in 2008, a conservative talker made such a remark about Hillary Clinton, John Edwards, or any of that year's Democrat candidates that were at times polling behind Barack Obama. There likely would have been calls from the Left for such a person to be fired. But a liberal making such a comment about a black conservative? Heck, HBO will probably give him a raise.

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Gingrich tries to change the subject to the ‘Obama depression’

Click here to view this media A day after his campaign staff resigned en masse , Republican presidential candidate Newt Gingrich attempted to change the subject. “I am a candidate for president of the United States because I think we are in the early stages of the Obama depression,” he told reporters Friday. “I’m prepared to go out and to campaign very intensely but I want a campaign on ideas and on solutions and I want to do it in a way that brings Americans together into a large movement,” ABC News quoted the former House Speaker as saying.

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Gingrich tries to change the subject to the ‘Obama depression’

Click here to view this media A day after his campaign staff resigned en masse , Republican presidential candidate Newt Gingrich attempted to change the subject. “I am a candidate for president of the United States because I think we are in the early stages of the Obama depression,” he told reporters Friday. “I’m prepared to go out and to campaign very intensely but I want a campaign on ideas and on solutions and I want to do it in a way that brings Americans together into a large movement,” ABC News quoted the former House Speaker as saying.

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Jo-Wilfried Tsonga v James Ward – live! | Alan Gardner

• Hit F5 or use the autorefresh tool for the latest updates • Email your thoughts to alan.gardner.casual@guardian.co.uk 1st set: Tsonga 5-2 Ward* Having pulled himself up on his own serve, Ward tries to put pressure on Tsonga’s – but that’s easier said than done against such scud attacks. Tsonga holds to love. 1st set: *Tsonga 4-2 Ward Ward needs to hold to avoid going completely under and he starts well, racing to 40-0 thanks to a combination of good serves and a bit of luck – a rally that drew Tsonga into the net goes the Briton’s way when his cross-court shot clips the cord and foxes Tsonga. An unforced error gives Tsonga a glimpse but that’s all it is, Ward sending a backhand winner down the line. 1st set: Tsonga 4-1 Ward* Pshaw! That serve went straight through the space where Ward intended his racquet to be – it was so fast he couldn’t react in time. Ward fights back, though, forcing a couple of unforced errors from Tsonga – who then double faults to give the home favourite his first break point. An ace brings up deuce and then Tsonga concedes the advantage with an attempted drop shot that lands on the tramlines. The crowd are getting involved now, a few calls of “Go James” … but Tsonga quickly slams the door. Still, this is definitely more like the battling underdog stuff we were hoping for. 1st set: *Tsonga 3-1 Ward Now that will do nicely. Ward finds his service game, thumping down two aces and twice forcing Tsonga to send his returns long. He looks a little unsteady trading groundstrokes with the hulking Frenchman, but that was a decent hold. 1st set: Tsonga 3-0 Ward* Well, at least we can’t say we didn’t see this coming. Having played a game and a half yesterday, Ward is perhaps understandably a little creaky but Tsonga will not allow him time to ease into the occasion. You can sense Ward trying a little too hard … Tsonga is smoothly into the groove that took him past Nadal. He drops just one point on the way to a 3-0 lead. 1st set: *Tsonga 2-0 Ward In a pleasing symmetry, Ward’s first service game also begins with an ace. But nerves then appear to take a wee hold of the Briton, first catching the frame of his racquet to send the ball miles up and out, then missing a relatively simple volley at the net. He’s quickly 15-40 down and despite valiantly saving the first, he them dumps a backhand into the net. No favours from Tsonga here. 1st set: Tsonga 1-0 Ward* Tsonga serves an ace first up. I’ll give you fair warning, this could get grisly. But Ward manages to stay in the next two points, unobtrusively moving the Frenchman around the court to go 15-30 ahead. Tsonga up his tempo a wee bit, though, using his power to force mistakes from Ward and take the opening game. * Denotes serving next set 2.40pm: Tsonga is known as “Ali” on the circuit (though I still think “Heavyweight Kluivert” has a certain ring to it). If this was a boxing match, well, these two wouldn’t be allowed in the ring together. The element of surprise could be Ward’s best weapon, according to the experts. Good luck with that. Tsonga will serve first … 2.35pm: The players are wandering out under blue skies and fluffy white clouds. Tsonga served 25 aces against Nadal yesterday. “It’s one of my best weapons, I will try to use it a lot,” he says. Oh, Jo-Wilfried, you’ve given away your gameplan! While Tsonga cracks a joke with John Inverdale, pretending to mishear his question about letting Ward win, the Londoner looks a little more tense. “Obviously it’s been a great week, great to be here on semi-finals day,” he says, adding that he will go for it. Ward’s dad is a cabbie, which I imagine means he’s never been called papa, as John Lloyd has just referred to him in the commentary box. 2.25pm: Andy Murray has just tanned Andy Roddick’s Yankee backside in the first semi-final. History ahoy! As Kevin Mitchell neatly put it in his report for Saturday’s Guardian : “If the improbable final happens, Ward and Murray will be emulating John Olliff and Edward Avory who contested what was then called the London Championships in 1931. Mr Olliff won 3-6, 6-4, 6-2 and, no doubt, he and the loser were greeted later with understated glee in the members’ bar of this fine establishment until carriages arrived to take them on to a gentleman’s club to mull over the splendid feat that June of the Gloucestershire left-arm tweaker Charlie Parker, who had already raced to 100 wickets for the season – at the age of 48.” Ward and Tsonga have been having a hit (remember, never “hitting up”) over on the practice courts. They’ll be on next. Any thoughts on Ward’s run, the state of tennis, or indeed Charlie Parker’s outstanding 1931 season, would be most welcome. Preamble: Jamie Delgado; Martin Lee; Alex Bogdanovic; James Ward? In recent times, we’ve become accustomed to the occasional ripple in the pond of British male tennis underachievement. Ward, ranked 216th in the world but on the brink of his first ATP final (and with the possibility of making it the first all-British men’s final at Queen’s since 1931), is at the head of the queue to be the next plucky-Brit-you-think-you-may-have-heard-of-once. Though having nixed Stanislas Wawrinka, who took Andy Murray to five sets at the French Open, and Sam Querrey (as well as Adrian Mannarino, Juan Martin Del Potro’s conquerer), Ward is actually deserving of more than the usual cheap disdain polite condescension. He’s even won a few Davis Cup games, against no lesser opposition than the mighty Tunisia and Turkey. He’s only 24, and could yet be the next Tiger Tim. Or possibly Jeremy Bates. And that’s probably as much as we should ask for, frankly. His opponent is man-mountain Patrick Kluivert-lookalike (if you squint) Jo-Wilfried Tsonga, ranked 17 in the world and fresh from ousting numero uno, Rafael Nadal. Did anyone bring the sticking plasters? Tennis Alan Gardner guardian.co.uk

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Syria and Middle East unrest – live blog

All the latest developments as the Assad regime in Syria continues its crackdown on dissenters 11.56am: Al-Jazeera has a report from the refugee camps on the southern border of Turkey and Syria where thousands have fled the bloodshed. In this video a man says how he was shot three times on the way back from a funeral in the besieged town of Jisr al-Shughour by Syrian military intelligence offers: They were waiting for us – like an ambush. When we arrived at a certain spot they just appeared. The people didn’t kill outright, they beat them till they died. We had no guns, no arms, nothing in our hands. 11.54am: The UK foreign secretary, William Hague, has issued a statement on the anniversary of the protests about the disputed 2009 Iranian presidential elections, which draws parallels between that uprising and the Arab spring. Two years ago we saw the Iranian people take to the streets to dispute the results of the 2009 Presidential election and demand representation reflecting the will of the people. They were ultimately denied this, but we all remember the scenes of Iranians pouring onto the streets in peaceful protest to demand their civil and political rights. Two years later we have seen similar demonstrations in Tunisia, Egypt and elsewhere in the Arab World; protests that the Iranian regime now claims to support. This feigned support is all the more disturbing when we consider what has happened in Iran since 2009. There has been a brutal crackdown on all those who freely and peacefully sought to express their views and a concerted attempt to silence any opposition. And now there is plenty of evidence that Iran is exporting these same repressive techniques to its long time ally Syria, as Syria’s rulers brutalise their people to cling to power. It is not in our conscience as a nation to stand by as people are stoned, locked up for defending their rights under their constitution, or beaten on the streets by hired thugs. Two years after people took to the streets to demand reform, I want it to be known that our attention has not been diverted and we will continue to call on Iran to implement its international human rights obligations. 11.17am: The opposition Ugarit News channel and Shaam News Network both continue to post videos of the crackdown on protesters on YouTube. This clip Ugarit News appears to show Syrian security forces opening fire on protesters in Damascus yesterday who were chanting “Peaceful! Peaceful!” 11.01am: The release of a report showing that American firms sold around $200m of arms to Bahrain last year is likely to fuel further criticism of US Middle East policy. The US government approved the military sales just months before the autocratic regime launched its brutal crackdown against pro-democracy protesters, AP reports. The state department annual report on global sales of US arms showed that licensed defence sales to Bahrain rose by $112m between 2009 and 2010. The bulks of the military hardware sold was for aircraft and military electronics. But the US also licensed $760,000 in exports of rifles, shotguns and assault weapons, which raises the possibility that some might have been used against protesters. 10.34am: Reuters has more details about the deployment of Syrian helicopter gunships in the northern town of Maarat al-Numaan. The helicopters opened fire after security forces on the ground killed five protesters, the Syrian Observatory for Human Rights told the news agency: “At least five helicopters flew over Maarat al-Numaan and began firing their machine guns to disperse the tens of thousands who marched in the protest,” one witness said by telephone. “People hid in fields, under bridges and in their houses, but the firing continued on the mostly empty streets for hours,” said the witness, who gave his name as Nawaf. This brief clip posted on YouTube appears to show a government helicopter flying over the town. Syria’s state television, in contrast, blamed violence in the area on anti-government groups. It made no mention of attack helicopters but said an ambulance helicopter had come under fire over Maarat from “terrorist armed groups,” injuring crew. 10.28am: An elite army division commanded by Assad’s younger brother, Maher, is believed to be responsible for most of yesterday’s violence, AP reports: The decision to mobilise his unit against the most serious threats to the Assad regime could be a sign of concern about the loyalty of regular conscripts. 10.09am: The besieged town of Jisr al-Shughour is almost deserted this morning, surrounded by tanks and heavy armour, AP reports: Syrian state television on Saturday said army units arrested several leaders of the alleged armed groups in the area. About 80% of the population has fled, with more than 4,000 Syrians taking sanctuary across the Turkish frontier. The town – normally inhabited by 41,000 people – has become a focal point of the Syrian revolution ever since Assad’s regime vowed to wreak vengeance on its mostly forsaken inhabitants, who the regime accuses of killing 120 government troops last weekend. Refugees who crossed the border into Turkey said the chaos had erupted as government forces and police mutinied and joined the local population against the forces loyal to Assad. But AP reports that, despite the build up of Assad’s forces, protests have spread to every major town in the region. In the town of Maaret al-Numan, 25 miles (40km) to the south-east of Jisr al-Shughour, thousands of protesters overwhelmed security forces and torched the courthouse and police station. The BBC’s Owen Bennett Jones spoke to refugees just over the border in Turkey who told him Assad’s forces were operating a scorched earth policy in the region, with people being shot in their beds. 9.47am: Good morning and welcome to our continued coverage of the unrest in the Middle East. Syria continues to be the focus of international concern with thousands of people fleeing into Turkey to escape the deadly crackdown on pro-democracy protesters. Here’s a round-up of the latest developments: • Syrian tanks have sealed off the northern town of Jisr al-Shughour , with pro-democracy activists warning that they expect an all-out assault by government troops. More than 20 people were killed across the northern province of Idlib yesterday. • Syrian helicopter gunships have fired machine guns to disperse thousands of protesters in the north-western town of Maarat al-Numaan in the first reported use of air power to quell unrest in the three-month-old uprising. • The US has condemned Syria’s “outrageous use of violence” against anti-government protesters. The White House said President Bashar al-Assad’s regime was leading Syria down a “dangerous path” and called for “an immediate end to the brutality and violence”. • Syria has warned the United Nations against intervening in its internal affairs. Syrian foreign minister Walid al-Moualem said a European draft resolution condemning the country for its crackdown on anti-government protesters would only embolden “extremists and terrorists”. • Turkish prime minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan has accused Assad of failing to take the violence perpetrated by his troops seriously , warning that the crackdown by Syria’s intelligence service was “heading towards a massacre” . Syria Arab and Middle East unrest Middle East Refugees Protest Bashar Al-Assad Libya David Batty guardian.co.uk

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