The first woman editor of the New York Times tells why she got the job, how she’ll handle the crucial transition to digital – and why her tattoo is so important to her The executive editor of the New York Times is about as close as it gets in America to royalty, discounting the president and Lady Gaga. Even in this fragmented era of Twitter , Google News and the blogosphere , the newspaper’s chief still has the power to direct the national conversation, to move markets, unseat politicians, sanction wars and create Hollywood movie stars. Yet from the moment I’m ushered into Jill Abramson’s office, it is clear that the characterisation of the typical New York Times editor as a supremely powerful and rather overbearing regal type cannot easily be applied to her. It’s partly that her room has the jumbled air of an antiques shop, cluttered as it is with several bouquets of flowers sent from admirers and friends to congratulate her on her appointment. The walls are cluttered too with several black and white photos, including one of her mother, Dovie, aged 12 standing beside the towering figure of Babe Ruth at the Yankee stadium. More quizzically, there are a couple of cushions on a sofa bearing images of fluffy “Westies” – West Highland terriers like her first dog Buddy. And on a table there’s a copy of her soon-to-be-published book, The Puppy Diaries: Raising a Dog Named Scout, about her current pet, a golden retriever. “I’m a huge dog nut, giant, giant,” she says. It’s not the comment itself that is surprising – though to hear the next editor of the New York Times wax lyrical about her passion for dogs is not exactly what I had expected – so much as the way she says it. Abramson has one of the thickest New York accents you’ll ever hear, a nasal drawl in which the vowels are stretched to breaking point like an elastic band. So “out” becomes “iouuut”, and “now” “niouuuw”, a bit – with all due respect to her beloved dogs – like the mewing of a cat. Abramson , now 57, was born on the Upper West Side to parents who were themselves lifelong Manhattanites. In her childhood home, the New York Times substituted for religion, she says. “What the New York Times said was the absolute truth.” She wears her New Yorker-ness brazenly, proudly, on her sleeve. Or rather, under it – on her right shoulder where eight years ago she placed a tattoo to mark her return to New York city after a long stretch in Washington. It’s a rendition of a New York subway token, an image she chose for its double resonance. “Having grown up here I love the subway, take it everywhere,” she says. “But the reason I picked it for my tattoo was also that on the outside rim of the token it says ‘Good for one fare only’ and that’s my philosophy for life. So it’s a perfect combination of a great philosophy and the city that I love and was born in.” The quality that has been most noted about Abramson’s elevation to the top job in American journalism has not been her identity as a New Yorker but her gender. For the first time in the Times’s 160-year history, the institution is about to be led by a woman. Abramson herself is ambivalent about the significance of that bald fact. In 2006, when Katie Couric was made the first solo anchor of a network news show, she wrote an article in the Times review section headlined “When will we stop saying ‘First woman to . . .’?” She chuckled about that at a dinner last week with Arthur Sulzberger – the Times’s publisher, who gave her the editor’s job. “The thesis of the piece was, when are we going to stop commenting on that. I was saying to Arthur, this is ironic and makes me into a big hypocrite.” But she swiftly adds that in her opinion the “first woman” syndrome does have real meaning. What meaning, I ask. “Number one,” she replies, “I know I didn’t get this job because I’m a woman; I got it because I’m the best qualified person. But nonetheless what it means to me is that the executive editor of the New York Times is such an important position in our society, the Times itself is indispensable to society, and a woman gets to run the newsroom, which is meaningful.” Will it define the paper’s direction under her in any sense? “Possibly,” she replies. “But I think everybody here knows what kind of stories excite me most: hard-edged, deeply reported investigative stories, rich on-the-ground international stories, so I don’t think anyone is fearful that I’m going to bring soft news on to the front page.” Few would disagree with Abramson’s contention that she was best qualified for the post. Harvard-educated, she joined the paper from the Wall Street Journal in 1997 and went on to become Washington bureau chief of the Times. In that role, she survived a tense relationship with the then editor-in- chief, Howell Raines , who was pushed from the job after only two years in a move that Abramson is said to have encouraged and that was widely seen at the time as vindication for her criticism of him. Then there were the many bruising encounters with the Bush administration. “I’m a battle-scarred veteran in that regard. There were several national security stories that they asked us not to publish that we ended up publishing.” Her track record includes stints at investigative reporting, a skill that proved useful during the recent run of WikiLeaks disclosures, in which she played no small part. Of all the investigative work she’s done, though, she is proudest of the inquiry she led into the independent counsel Ken Starr at the time of the impeachment of Bill Clinton . “We had a sceptical take on the motivations of [Starr], and I’m really proud that we did that because every one else was feeding off of tips from the independent counsel.” Her commitment to investigative reporting could prove crucial in the next few years as other papers across the US increasingly abandon serious and probing reporting. Abramson is well versed in the bloodbath that has befallen the American newspaper industry. Last year she wrote an essay for the Daedalus journal, in which she chronicled the catastrophe that has unfolded as foreign bureaux have closed, newsrooms been slashed and entire newspapers shut down. The Times, with its still hefty news- room of 1,200 journalists, has managed largely to buck the trend, but it has not been immune from the existential crisis of steadily falling advertising and circulation revenues as readers migrate to the web. As managing editor of the paper over the past eight years, working alongside the current executive editor, Bill Keller, she has had to wield the knife and cut 100 newsroom jobs, but says: “It’s not been the same kind of deep muscle cuts that other news- rooms have made.” Abramson has spent the past six months immersing herself in the digital side of the Times operation. That’s important preparation, because the paper’s digital future may well determine the success or failure of her term in the editor’s seat. How well, how radically, will she handle the ongoing transition to a digital world? The Times’s record in that regard is patchy. On the one hand, on 6 September Abramson will inherit a paper that is second to none in terms of its global internet reach. Its readership, measured as monthly unique users, now stands at 46 million worldwide, which is testament to its winning combination of superb traditional reporting and an impressive modern array of multi- media offerings and blogs. But the Times has also been criticised for being sluggish when it comes to developing its internet community of readers by embracing the openness and interactivity of the web. “I would say that’s fair,” Abramson concurs. “We are now on that case heavily in terms of using social media for reporting and to make the Times a platform for people to gather. In some ways, on breaking news our greatest competitor can be Twitter.” I’m glad she raises the Twitter issue, because if she didn’t, I would have had to. It goes to the heart of the Times’s challenge: the perception that at its core the paper remains slightly resistant to the digital revolution. That impression hasn’t been helped by the recent series of columns written by Keller himself, in which he rather proudly declared that he had tweeted “#TwitterMakes-YouStupid. Discuss” while in another he ridiculed the Huffington Post for serving up a diet of “celebrity gossip, adorable kitten videos, posts from unpaid bloggers and news reports from other publications”. His comments have a grain of truth in them, certainly, but they played to the Times’s weak spot – the impression that it can radiate a patrician aloofness, of haughty disregard of the lessons it could learn from competitors. Abramson is in an awkward place when it comes to all this. She can hardly criticise Keller’s take on Twitter, as she hasn’t even got a Twitter account to call her own. She rather sheepishly admits that she has just set one up, but when I ask her when she did so she says: “Today, or yesterday.” Isn’t it a bit weird, I suggest, that the next editor of America’s most important paper, the person vested with the crucial task of steering it through a period of unparalleled digital change, hasn’t even yet sent her first tweet? “It may be weird,” she says. “But I haven’t felt the need until now. I’m an interior kind of person.” She seeks to dig herself out of this hole by promising to step up the pace of digital innovation. She’s got herself an iPad, she says, and says she loves the Huffington Post’s iPad app. “It’s really jazzy.” She also name-checks Arianna Huffington , the website’s charismatic founder. “I’ve known her since the early 90s in Washington and she has invented a site that is interesting a lot of the time. I went and spent a day at the HuffPo and had a lovely lunch with Arianna.” She also promises to tackle the perception of the Times as an institution that hands down the absolute truth, just as she saw it when she was growing up, rather than engaging in a conversation with its readers. Her goal, she says, is not to be an unapproachable voice of supreme authority. “Nobody wants a unitary voice of authority any more. Readers are sceptical about our authority, I’m very aware of that. It’s a question of engaging more than we might have years ago. Our readers are an unbelievable resource to us and yes we have to be more energetic and creative about leveraging the beauty of our online audience.” But she makes clear she has no intention of losing sight of what has made the New York Times great. “I think the authority that we enjoy comes from the depth of our reporting and that is immutable. That will never change.” Jill Abramson New York Times US press and publishing Digital media United States Ed Pilkington guardian.co.uk
Continue reading …FBI called in after Liberty County sheriff’s office received anonymous tip that 25 to 30 dismembered bodies were found, many of them children Police in Texas may have found a mass grave containing up to 30 dismembered bodies, possibly all children, according to local media reports. But the Liberty County sheriff’s office said there was no evidence yet that any bodies had been discovered. Sheriff’s department spokesman Rex Evans said the office had received an anonymous report on Tuesday that there were bodies in the house in rural Liberty County, around 70 miles east of Houston. KPRC television, a local station, said 25 to 30 bodies were found by officers acting on a tip-off. FBI spokeswoman Kim Barkhausen in Houston confirmed to the Reuters news agency that the FBI had been asked to help with an investigation, but would not elaborate. Preliminary reports indicated the bodies are those of children, the TV station reported. One local paper, the Cleveland Advocate, said the tipster told authorities dozens of dismembered bodies were buried at the scene. Texas United States Barry Neild guardian.co.uk
Continue reading …Scroll down for pictures. Proenza Schouler’s Jack McCollough and Lazaro Hernandez reprised their roles as designing-community’s darlings at Monday night’s Council of Fashion Designers of America (CFDA) Awards, receiving the prize for Womenswear Designer of the Year. The duo adds this season’s statue to their 2003 CFDA Swarovski Award for new talent, their 2007 CFDA Womenswear Designer of the Year award and their 2009 CFDA Accessory Designer of the Year Award. Still, McCollough told The Huffington Post that their newest accolade came as “a surprise. It was so nerve-wracking, the whole build-up to it. It just gets more and more terrifying as each year passes. You think you’d kind of get a little more comfortable with it, but it’s quite the opposite.” McCollough added: “It’s just nice to be recognized by your peers and your industry. It’s such a small little world and to get the admiration from the people you work with every day and see and the people you admire, there’s nothing better than that, really.” Muses Chloe Sevigny and Liv Tyler were on hand to sing the pair’s praises. When asked what set the two designers apart from the other nominees, Sevigny pinpointed “their attitude towards the whole thing, their youth and vitality, their love of women and their sophisticated style and taste.” Tyler, who hitched a ride with McCollough and Hernandez to the evening’s festivities, remarked, “When we see each other, we always bond and have a lot of fun together. And I think they’re very talented and very nice people.” Take a look at pictures from the 2011 CFDA Awards and scroll down to keep reading. McCollough and Hernandez’s simultaneous enthusiasm and loss for words was perhaps overshadowed by a turquoise wig- and spike thong-clad Lady Gaga, who swung by to demonstrate her own fashion-icon status. She told the crowd that when Vogue editor-in-chief Anna Wintour texted her with the good news that she’d won the CFDA Fashion Icon Award, Gaga mistook her for another Anna in her phone book, “so my reply was, ‘Yes, b*tch, we did it!’” “I got a reply that said, ‘How lovely,’” Gaga quipped. The songstress’ speech also strayed toward the sentimental. “I just wanted to tell you how much this award means to young American people,” she said. “My fans, some of them don’t know who they are and they have so much trouble. They come to the Monster Ball to find who they are and they wake up in the morning and it’s that leather jacket that makes them feel like they can be anyone. Or it’s that YSL blazer that they saw in the window that makes them feel like they could be president one day. Fashion means so much to them. It’s really hard to talk about … I always felt like I had made it before I had made it because of all of you, because it was all of you that made me feel like I was a star.” Also swapping beats for talk of handbags was one Kanye West, who presented Celine Creative Director Phoebe Philo with the International Award. West confessed, “I happen to be the biggest fan of everyone in this room. Those times I go to Style.com and I click, and those times I don’t get into the shows, there’s no show that I would like to click more than the Celine show.” Philo, for her part, kept things short, simply thanking the crowd, cooing, “It’s a real honor to be receiving this here tonight. It means a huge amount to me.” And Marc Jacobs accepted the Geoffrey Beene Lifetime Achievement Award, re-dubbed the “Half-Lifetime Achievement Award,” from Sofia Coppola. The designer thanked his entire team, saying, “While it is wonderful to be recognized and receive this acknowledgment of our past triumphs, I believe we all know and feel that the greatest reward is the process itself, the doing, the giving, the growing and the sharing it all with others. This statue may serve as a great reminder of where we’ve been, but it is here in my heart that I look forward to where we have still to go and what we will get to achieve together.” Michael Kors told HuffPost Style, “I’m thrilled for Marc. We’ve known each other our whole lives and no one has more talent, has worked harder, seen it all and, you know, last year it was me, this year it’s him. I feel like we’re all coming of age. I think it’s amazing. It’s only the beginning.” Alexander Wang, who bagged Accessory Designer of the Year, said, “It’s such an honor … to even just have my name alongside names such as Marc’s is enough of an acknowledgment for me. He was my first internship, one of the main reasons I even wanted to work in fashion, so I pinched myself when [I realized I'd] even come here and be a part of this.” Rounding out the major honors was the Media Award in honor of journalist Eugenia Sheppard, received by the fashion director of the Telegraph, Hilary Alexander, who is set to retire this year. “Firstly, I’m hugely honored,” she gushed. “Secondly, I feel that I’m getting it not just for myself but for the entire British fashion industry and British fashion journalism. And I hope that it reflects the huge passion that I have for fashion and I know that is something that we all share.” Paper magazine Editorial Director Mickey Boardman told HuffPost, “Hilary has such personality, she has such personal style and when someone has been involved in fashion as long as she has and they have such a point of view, it’s hard to lose somebody like that. It takes a lifetime to build up that kind of knowledge and that kind of point of view. Plus, she’s just fun, although I wish she would quit smoking because it’s just bad for her … You know, she’s a real writer, she’s not someone who’s like, ‘Oh, I love fashion, oh, I want to get into the Alexander Wang sample sale.’ She goes to all of the shows. She writes about designers who aren’t necessarily ‘the hot designer,’ but she writes about what she thinks should be written about. So she’s a real journalist. She’s not just a fashion journalist, she’s a journalist.” Other award recipients included: Michael Bastian, Menswear Designer of the Year; Prabal Gurung, Swarovski Award for Womenswear; Robert Geller, Swarovski Award for Menswear; Eddie Borgo, Swarovski Award for Accessory Design; Hal Rubenstein, The Founders Award; Arthur Elgort, Board of Directors’ Special Tribute. Nadja Swarovski also received a statue to fete the tenth anniversary of Swarovski’s support of the event. WATCH:
Continue reading …Four regions to be given official drought status and have controls applied to water supply Four major regions of the UK will be officially declared drought-stricken this week, in a move that is likely to see special powers introduced over water supplies on farms and businesses across large swaths of the country. Wales, the south-west, the Midlands and East Anglia will be raised to official drought status, enabling the government and water companies to invoke extra controls over water supplies as a lack of rain afflicts a huge band across the middle of the country. However, regions that have suffered drought in the past, such as Kent and the south-east, will be spared many of the restrictions as rainfall has been at normal or almost normal levels there in the past six months. Scotland and the north of England are also drought-free. Paul Leinster , chief executive of the Environment Agency, said this year would not see a repeat of the scenes of 1976, as some commentators have predicted , as last winter there was enough rain and snowfall to fill reservoirs. But he added: “It depends on what we see this winter – next year could be the crunch year.” The drought of 1976 followed a dry autumn and winter, during which stocks in reservoirs were severely depleted. “We are in a much better position this year,” he said. “Then one of the big issues was that the previous year had been so dry, so you did not get a ground water recharge.” Leinster added that the UK’s water supply system had been made more resilient in the intervening decades. “We have learned lessons since then,” he said. Although at present there are no domestic hosepipe bans in force in reaction to the drought, consumers may face restrictions if the dry weather continues. Recent rainfall has not been enough to make up for the last six months, after the warmest spring since 1659 and the second driest since 1910 . East Anglia was the worst afflicted region, receiving only a fifth of its average rainfall. Businesses and farms in the worst hit areas are already suffering , as the Environment Agency has brought in changes to 70 licences to abstract water. The agency is also looking closely at a further 200 licences to remove water from rivers and underground sources as the drought takes hold. Businesses affected are likely to include power generators, food processors, breweries and manufacturers, though the agency was unable to pinpoint specific companies. One of the changes brought in that could become permanent is that farmers, especially in East Anglia, have been asked to irrigate their crops at night instead of during the day. The Environment Agency said this made sense as irrigating fields in daytime leads to much of the water evaporating off, whereas at night the crops get the full benefit. Farmers have resisted this change to their working practices as it is less convenient and they may have to rearrange staff working patterns. Most modern irrigation systems can be easily switched to different timings, however. So far, farmers have made the move voluntarily, but Leinster did not rule out compulsion in future. The Environment Agency is also helping to set up co-operatives to share water among farmers and other businesses that have licences to remove river water. As oxygen levels in some rivers have fallen along with water levels, the agency has brought in special measures to save wildlife, including moving fish trapped in pools in the river Teme and river Lathkill, and putting in place pumping equipment to replenish oxygen levels, to protect fish and other aquatic life which could otherwise be in danger. The agency said it was closely monitoring fish stocks such as migrating salmon and sea trout, both of which can be affected by low river flows. Measures including water rationing in extreme conditions, could be brought in by ministers through drought order and drought permits if water companies demonstrate they need to conserve stocks and have followed all reasonable measures to avoid the restrictions. Leinster said the key to protecting against future droughts was to use water more efficiently. This will mean preventing losses, for instance from leaking pipes, but could also mean greater use of metering in future. But one of the problems with managing water use, he said, was the variation in rainfall across the UK. In regions where there has been a lot of rain, consumers are unsympathetic to concerns over shortages elsewhere, and unwilling to countenance water-saving measures. “If you go to the north of England, to talk about the sustainable use of water, you would have a different conversation than if you went to Cambridgeshire,” he said. Leinster said the spread of drought this year showed the extent of annual variation in the UK. “Kent and Sussex have both held up well in terms of rainfall, unusually,” he said. “The pattern we are seeing this year is different to patterns seen in past years.” The variation showed how difficult it was to make plans for water provision in the decades ahead, when climate change is also expected to wreak further damage on water supplies – water flows in rivers in the south of England are predicted to be reduced by half or even 80% by 2050. Flooding patterns remain equally unpredictable, with severe floods afflicting nearly all of the country’s regions in the last decade, in both winter and summer. Water Drought Rivers Farming Weather Utilities Fiona Harvey guardian.co.uk
Continue reading …Liam Fox says government departments under sustained attack – and claims more needs to be done to protect infrastructure Criminals and foreign spy agencies launched more than 1,000 cyber attacks on the Ministry of Defence last year in an effort to steal secrets and disrupt services, Liam Fox has revealed. In a speech on Tuesday night, the defence secretary laid out the growing threat to the country from cyberspace, saying that government departments were now under sustained attack. He underlined the problem by saying that “across the core defence networks there were an average of over a million security alerts every day”. These comprise mainly of spam emails that are blocked before entering government computer systems. But many turn out to be deliberate attempts to infiltrate and steal from the MoD’s computer systems. Last week the Guardian revealed that the UK is now developing a cyber weapons programme to give ministers an attacking capability in cyberspace. It also emerged that the FBI is investigating allegations that the Google mail accounts of senior US government officials have been attacked by Chinese hackers. In his speech, Fox set out why the government had committed an extra £650m for cyber security in last year’s Strategic Defence and Security Review. He also warned more would need to be done to protect the UK’s core infrastructure from cyber attack. “Between 2009 and 2010, security incidents more than doubled,” he said: “Was this in Afghanistan? No. This was in cyberspace and the target was the MoD. I and my senior colleagues are routinely alerted to incidents that could have had severe consequences if they’d not been stopped. “Our systems are targeted by criminals, foreign intelligence services and other malicious actors seeking to exploit our people, corrupt our systems and steal information. “To give you an idea of the challenge, last year we in the MoD blocked and investigated over 1,000 potentially serious attacks. ” Fox described it as the “war of the invisible enemy” and said the boundaries between government, business and every individual internet user were becoming blurred.”This threat is growing in scale and sophistication. My department is a prime target. Across the core defence networks there were an average of over a million security alerts every day.” He said the opening of a new Global Operations and Security and Control Centre would help to coordinate the Whitehall response to cyber attacks, but conceded that government could not do this alone. “We now see weekly reports of cyber attacks against businesses, institutions and networks used by people going about their daily lives,” he said. “The cost to the UK economy of cyber crime is estimated to be in the region of £27bn a year and rising. These are attacks against the whole fabric of our society. “There is no Maginot Line in cyber space … our national intellectual property in defence and security industries is at risk from a systematic marauding. Not only could it severely affect the future success of British industry, our economic advantage, and the country’s financial recovery, but also directly impacts upon our national security today.” Last week, the US government said it was intending to rewrite its military rule book to make cyber-attacks a possible act of war. In May, the chancellor George Osborne said foreign intelligence agencies were carrying out cyber-attacks on the Treasury, targeting it with programs designed to steal information. Some experts have warned against government’s over-exaggerating the problems in cyberspace, noting that 80 per cent of all such attacks can be thwarted with better computer ‘hygiene’ – such as people using less obvious passwords. Terrorism policy Global terrorism Internet Computing UK security and terrorism Nick Hopkins guardian.co.uk
Continue reading …Agriculture commissioner forced to promise better deal to European farmers who lost income during public health panic The European commission on Tuesday promised to pay more than €150m (£134m) to farmers hit by the E coli crisis, following robust lobbying by Spain and France. The agriculture commissioner, Dacian Ciolos, proposed sharing out to farmers affected by falling sales amid the public health panic the sum of €150m, equating to payments worth about 30% of the average market price for the unsold crops. But at the meeting of agriculture ministers in Luxembourg, representatives from several member states demanded more help. Spain immediately warned the €150m would not be enough. Spain has suffered disproportionately from the economic impact of the outbreak, in part because it grows a significant share of Europe’s salad produce but also because blame for the bacteria outbreak at first was attributed to its cucumber crop . “No, Spain does not see €150m as sufficient,” the country’s agriculture minister, Rosa Aguilar, said. She was backed by her French counterpart, Bruno Le Maire. Ciolos then said he would “come back tomorrow with an improved proposal”, but warned that Spanish demands for compensation of 90% or even 100% of market price were unrealistic. “We have to bear in mind that this is public money, and we have to account for its use,” he said. The outbreak, of a newly identified and especially virulent strain of the E Coli bacterium has killed 23 people, all either in, or recently returned, from northern Germany, according to figures compiled by the European Centre for Disease Control. More than 4,200 people have become ill, almost 700 of whom have developed haemolytic uraemic syndrome, a serious complication that affects the blood, kidneys and nervous system. The rate of cases is now slowing. Cornelia Pruefer-Storcks, the health minister for Hamburg, the city thought to be at the centre of the outbreak, said medical staff believed the situation was gradually improving. “We are seeing the first patients discharged, others are getting much better, so the first glimmers of hope are on the horizon.” However, scientists appear to be no closer to establishing the source of the outbreak. After Spanish cucumbers were ruled out, German officials confidently named a bean-sprout farm in Lower Saxony as the likely culprit, only for bacteriological tests to come back negative. German ministers had said there were “strong and clear indications” that bean sprouts from the Gärtenhof organic farm, 40 miles from Hamburg, had spread the E coli bacteria. However, more tests have failed to link the farm to the outbreak. The confusion has seen many Europeans stop buying a range of products, while Russia has banned all EU vegetable imports. EU farming representatives said the sector’s losses had exceeded €400m. Spain has been at the forefront of calls for Germany to pay the bulk of the compensation, a move ruled out by Ciolos, who said it would come from central budgets. At a press conference he refused to speculate on the total bill, saying only that it would be increased, the revised offer to be approved within the next few days. The EU’s health commissioner, John Dalli, has criticised Germany for its “premature conclusions” on the source of the outbreak. “I would like to stress it is crucial that national authorities do not rush to give information on the source of infection which is not proven by bacteriological analysis, as this spreads unjustified fears in the population all over Europe and creates problems for our food producers selling products,” he said before the farm ministers’ meeting. He added: “While such intensive investigations are ongoing, we must be careful not to make premature conclusions.” He said the outbreak had been contained to a relatively small area. He told the European parliament: “I stress that the outbreak is limited geographically to the area surrounding the city of Hamburg, so there is no reason to take action on a European level. [EU-wide] measures against any product are disproportionate.” Scientists say the longer the wait for a definite source, the more likely it is that none will ever be identified. “If we don’t know the likely culprit in a week’s time, we may never know the cause,” said Dr Guénaël Rodier, an infectious diseases expert at the UN’s World Health Organisation. European commission Europe European Union E coli Spain France Farming Peter Walker guardian.co.uk
Continue reading …CPS opens inquiry after claims prosecutors withheld undercover police officer’s surveillance tapes from defence lawyers Prosecutors have been accused of suppressing surveillance tapes covertly recorded by the undercover police officer Mark Kennedy, the Guardian can reveal. Leaked documents indicate the Crown Prosecution Service may also have misled the public and even the courts when the trial of six environmental campaigners accused of planning to break into Ratcliffe-on-Soar power station in Nottinghamshire collapsed earlier this year. Two days before it was due to commence, the trial was abandoned by the CPS, which told the court that “previously unavailable information” had come to light that undermined its case against the activists. However, the supposedly new evidence – the Kennedy tapes – had in fact been in the possession of the CPS for more than a year. Prosecutors had taken part in a number of high-level meetings with police about Kennedy’s potentially explosive surveillance tapes, but withheld them from defence lawyers. Confidential correspondence between senior police and prosecutors suggests officers told the CPS about Kennedy’s deployment from the outset. The police say they handed over a transcript of his secret recording to Ian Cunningham, a senior CPS prosecutor, within weeks of the raid. The CPS confirmed on Tuesday it had opened a “full and formal” inquiry, led by deputy chief crown prosecutor, Chris Enzor, into allegations made by senior police officers who have concerns about how prosecutors managed the case. “All the public statements made by the Crown Prosecution Service about this case have been made based on the information that was available at the time. “It would be wrong to anticipate the outcome of Mr Enzor’s formal inquiry. The original police investigation took at least two years and generated thousands of pages of evidence. Mr Enzor has no previous knowledge of this case and his thorough review of the evidence is, therefore, likely to take some time.” Enzor’s inquiry was described by Cunningham as a potential “disciplinary” investigation. It is the fifth formal investigations launched in response to the Guardian’s ongoing investigation into the multimillion-pound operation to plant police spies in the protest movement. Senior police officers have privately accused the CPS of failing to cooperate with at least one other inquiry into the Kennedy affair, which is being conducted by the Independent Police Complaints Commission (IPCC). The six activists were among more than a hundred spied on by Kennedy, a Metropolitan police officer who had been living deep undercover in the protest movement. Kennedy was gathering evidence to be used to prosecute the activists, who police suspected of planning to break into Ratcliffe-on-Soar power station two years ago. However, the deployment backfired when conversations covertly recorded by Kennedy provided evidence likely to exonerate rather than incriminate the six activists. Kennedy speculated earlier this year that the tapes may have been withheld by his handlers at the National Public Order Intelligence Unit (NPOIU). The new evidence suggests it was down to the CPS. Most of the activists were released without charge, but the CPS brought proceedings against 26 campaigners on charges of conspiracy to commit aggravated trespass. Twenty defendants, known as the “justifiers” because they conceded they planned to break into the plant but said their actions were defensible to avert climate change, were convicted in December last year. But the six so-called “deniers” who said they did not agree to join the protest, faced a trial in January 2010. That trial collapsed after defence lawyers discovered independently the protesters had been infiltrated by Kennedy. The “justifiers” are now seeking to overturn their guilty verdicts at the court of appeal, after the director of public prosecutions, Keir Starmer, said evidence relating to Kennedy’s deployment that was not disclosed at their trial may mean their convictions were unsafe. Mike Schwarz, of Bindmans, the lawyer for all 26 activists, said he hoped the court of appeal case would examine any failure to disclose the Kennedy tapes.
Continue reading …Army document is only written statement detailing Hitler’s wish for systematic removal of Jews from Germany A document understood to be the only existing written statement by Adolf Hitler in which he set out his belief in a systematic removal of Jews from society has been acquired by the Simon Wiesenthal Centre in Los Angeles. The four-page letter, typewritten on faded brown paper and bearing Hitler’s signature, was shown in public for the first time in New York, in what is likely to be seen as a key artefact in the historical record of the Holocaust. It will go on display at the centre’s Tolerance Museum in Los Angeles. The centre’s founder, Rabbi Marvin Hier, said it was one of the most important documents of the period, showing the development of Hitler’s antisemitic thought, and proved he had in mind a governmental solution to the so-called “Jewish Question”. “This is the most important item we have in an archive of more than 50,000 objects,” Hier said, adding that it would be used to educate future generations and to counter Holocaust denial. Though Hitler alluded to his plans to exterminate Jewish people in speeches and indirectly through his closest henchmen, his thoughts on the subject can be found nowhere else committed to paper. Such is the prevalence of fraud in Hitler memorabilia that some experts remain to be convinced of the document’s authenticity. But the Wiesenthal Centre said it had authenticated the letter. Long known by historians of the Third Reich as “the Gemlich letter”, the original signed copy has never before been seen in public. An unsigned copy exists in the state archives in Munich. Hitler wrote the letter in Munich on 16 September 1919. Then aged 30, he was as yet unknown but was starting to show interest in politics. Shortly before writing the letter he attended a meeting of the German Workers’ party, which later he took over and converted into the National Socialist German Workers’ party. At the time he was in a propaganda unit of the German army that tried to counter Bolshevik influences among soldiers returning from the Russian front at the end of the first world war. His commanding officer, Captain Karl Mayr, told Hitler to respond to an inquiry from one Adolf Gemlich, who wanted to know the army’s position on the “Jewish Question”. In his reply, Hitler spouted an antisemitic diatribe, in which he said Jews were “pure materialists in thought and aspirations” and that their effect was “racial tuberculosis on the nation”. Crucially, he went on to set out his vision for a calculated antisemitism that would operate through strong governments rather than the emotion of the people. Emotional antisemitism, he wrote, merely ended in pogroms. “The antisemitism of reason must lead to a struggle for the legal battle to abrogate laws giving [Jews] favoured positions, differentiating the Jew from other foreigners. The final goal must be the uncompromising removal of Jews altogether. To accomplish these goals, only a government of national power is capable, and never a government of national weakness.” The signed letter was bought by the centre for $150,000 from a trader in historical artefacts. It was said to have been obtained by an American soldier in 1945 from a Nazi archive near Nuremberg and was held privately until now. The centre had a chance to buy it in 1988 but was doubtful about its provenance, particularly the fact that it was composed on a typewriter – a rare and expensive object Hitler could personally not have afforded in 1919. Hier said their doubts had been assuaged when they realised that Hitler was working for the army and would have had access to its typewriters. Adolf Hitler Holocaust Judaism Second world war Germany United States Ed Pilkington guardian.co.uk
Continue reading …Legislative body reaches near-unanimous vote of no confidence in policies of universities minister, David Willetts Oxford university has formally declared it has “no confidence” in the policies of the universities minister, David Willetts, the first sign of a concerted academic backlash against the government’s higher education reforms. Lecturers passed a motion opposing the coalition’s policies by 283 votes to five at a meeting of the Congregation, Oxford’s legislative body. The university is the first to take a public stand against the raising of tuition fees and slashing of the teaching grant, but the rebellion is spreading. Cambridge is expected to announce a date for a “no confidence” vote on Monday, while a petition against the government is gathering force at Warwick University. It is the first time a vote of no confidence in a minister has been passed by an English university, and follows a no- confidence vote by the Royal College of Nursing in the health secretary Andrew Lansley’s handling of NHS reforms. The message of “no confidence” will be transmitted to the government by Oxford University’s council, its governing body. Robert Gildea, the Oxford historian who proposed the motion, described the coalition’s reforms as “reckless, incoherent and incompetent”. He warned that proposals to introduce “off quota” student places, funded privately rather than through state-backed loans, and AC Grayling’s plan for a new private university heralded the arrival of a “two-track” admissions system. In a two and a half hour debate, he told fellow academics: “It’s a red carpet for the rich and even more competition for everyone else. We will be back to Brideshead.” The debate had added resonance on the day an influential committee of MPs published a report warning that student numbers might have to be cut to meet the soaring cost of student loans, after ministers underestimated how many universities would charge the maximum fee. Figures compiled by the Guardian show that 105 universities have declared their fee for next year, with an average of £8,765. Karma Nabulsi, a lecturer in international relations who seconded the motion, urged the academics not to consider the motion as a negative statement, “but as an affirmation of who we are and the traditions we wish to observe”. She said: “Oxford is committed above all to the pursuit of academic excellence in all its forms, a defence of academic disciplines without regard for market values, and the idea of education as a comprehensive, publicly funded activity accessible to the widest number of young people.” One of the few academics to lend support to the government was Susan Cooper, a physicist and fellow of St Catherine’s college, who argued that the market in tuition fees needed a few years to develop. She said: “The difference between [an average tuition fee of] £7,500 and £9,000 is not a financial disaster on the scale of the banking crisis. Having embarked on the experiment, I’d like to see it through.” After the vote, which was greeted with cheers from academics gathered in the university’s Sheldonian Theatre, Gildea said he hoped it would have a “rousing effect” on other universities and put pressure on the government to think again. He said: “This government comes across as ideologically driven, but actually it is weak and divided. They are weaker than they think they are and we are more powerful than we think we are. After all, they have to win the next election. If they restored the direct funding [for teaching arts and the humanities] that existed before the cuts, which would keep students fees where they were, about £3,000 a year, that would just solve a whole raft of problems.” David Barclay, president of the students’ union, who addressed the lecturers on behalf of students, said after the vote: “Whatever the pressure from the outside world, we are an institution living by our values. We are the first university to take public leadership in opposition to the government.” The government defended the new fees regime and the decision to cut direct state funding for teaching, saying the reforms “put students in the driving seat”. Acknowledging the public snub, a spokesman for the department for Business, Innovation and Skills said: “Universities have always been bastions of free speech and debate. However, our student and university finance reforms are fairer than the present system and affordable for the nation.”Gareth Thomas, Labour’s universities spokesman, said: “This is a devastating and unprecedented vote, with Oxford academics confirming what a series of independent experts and the Public Accounts Committee have already made clear; that 80% cuts, trebling tuition fees and cuts to research facilities are unfair, unnecessary and unsustainable. “David Cameron and George Osborne should not be surprised by this vote. It is their economic policy and the demand for cuts in higher education, far higher than in any other area of the public sector, which has caused this debacle.” University of Oxford Higher education Tuition fees David Willetts Education policy Conservatives Liberal-Conservative coalition Liberal Democrats Jeevan Vasagar guardian.co.uk
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