Users whose tweets breach gagging orders could face fines or even jail for contempt of court Twitter users who breach privacy injunctions could face legal action for contempt of court, the attorney general has warned. In the starkest warning yet to users of the micro-blogging site who breach so-called “gagging orders”, Dominic Grieve said individuals could be prosecuted and added that he would take action if necessary if he thought the law was not being upheld. Twitter played a key role in the exposure of footballer Ryan Giggs’s alleged affair with former Big Brother contestant Imogen Thomas, after MP John Hemming used parliamentary privilege to argue that it was not possible to prosecute the thousands of users who had named Giggs. One of the main difficulties in bringing a prosecution against Twitter is that it is a US-based company and is therefore outside the jurisdiction of the UK courts. However, Grieve said that users of the micro-blogging site in England and Wales may find themselves subject to contempt proceedings. He warned that they are not exempt from the requirement to observe privacy orders. In a pre-recorded interview for Radio 4′s Law in Action , which will be broadcast on Tuesday, Grieve said that while it is usually up to those who have taken out injunctions to enforce them he will take action himself, although it is not something he particularly wants to do. Grieve said: “I will take action if I think that my intervention is necessary in the public interest, to maintain the rule of law, proportionate and will achieve an end of upholding the rule of law. It is not something, however, I particularly want to do.” He also said proceedings could be brought against newspapers that dropped heavy hints about the identity of a person protected by an injunction. People found to have deliberately breached court orders can be fined or even imprisoned for contempt of court. Twitter has been used to name a number of celebrities who have taken out gagging orders. A senior Twitter executive has said it will notify its users before handing their personal information to UK authorities seeking to prosecute them over alleged breaches of privacy injunctions. “Platforms should have responsibility not to defend the user, but to protect that user’s right to defend him or herself,” Tony Wang, Twitter’s general manager of European operations, told a conference shortly after Giggs was named by the service’s users. In May, as the battle between national newspapers and high court judges over privacy injunctions intensified, Grieve announced that he was setting up a joint parliamentary committee to examine the complex related issues of privacy, injunctions, the regulation of the internet and the role of the Press Complaints Commission, saying the current position was not sustainable. The committee is due to report in the autumn. It was during the Commons debate following Grieve’s announcement that Hemming named Giggs. Later in May lawyers acting for the woman alleged to have had an affair with the former bank boss Sir Fred Goodwin failed in an attempt to launch contempt of court proceedings against the Daily Mail . The high court declined to refer the Associated Newspapers title to the attorney general over an article it published. •
Continue reading …Users whose tweets breach gagging orders could face fines or even jail for contempt of court Twitter users who breach privacy injunctions could face legal action for contempt of court, the attorney general has warned. In the starkest warning yet to users of the micro-blogging site who breach so-called “gagging orders”, Dominic Grieve said individuals could be prosecuted and added that he would take action if necessary if he thought the law was not being upheld. Twitter played a key role in the exposure of footballer Ryan Giggs’s alleged affair with former Big Brother contestant Imogen Thomas, after MP John Hemming used parliamentary privilege to argue that it was not possible to prosecute the thousands of users who had named Giggs. One of the main difficulties in bringing a prosecution against Twitter is that it is a US-based company and is therefore outside the jurisdiction of the UK courts. However, Grieve said that users of the micro-blogging site in England and Wales may find themselves subject to contempt proceedings. He warned that they are not exempt from the requirement to observe privacy orders. In a pre-recorded interview for Radio 4′s Law in Action , which will be broadcast on Tuesday, Grieve said that while it is usually up to those who have taken out injunctions to enforce them he will take action himself, although it is not something he particularly wants to do. Grieve said: “I will take action if I think that my intervention is necessary in the public interest, to maintain the rule of law, proportionate and will achieve an end of upholding the rule of law. It is not something, however, I particularly want to do.” He also said proceedings could be brought against newspapers that dropped heavy hints about the identity of a person protected by an injunction. People found to have deliberately breached court orders can be fined or even imprisoned for contempt of court. Twitter has been used to name a number of celebrities who have taken out gagging orders. A senior Twitter executive has said it will notify its users before handing their personal information to UK authorities seeking to prosecute them over alleged breaches of privacy injunctions. “Platforms should have responsibility not to defend the user, but to protect that user’s right to defend him or herself,” Tony Wang, Twitter’s general manager of European operations, told a conference shortly after Giggs was named by the service’s users. In May, as the battle between national newspapers and high court judges over privacy injunctions intensified, Grieve announced that he was setting up a joint parliamentary committee to examine the complex related issues of privacy, injunctions, the regulation of the internet and the role of the Press Complaints Commission, saying the current position was not sustainable. The committee is due to report in the autumn. It was during the Commons debate following Grieve’s announcement that Hemming named Giggs. Later in May lawyers acting for the woman alleged to have had an affair with the former bank boss Sir Fred Goodwin failed in an attempt to launch contempt of court proceedings against the Daily Mail . The high court declined to refer the Associated Newspapers title to the attorney general over an article it published. •
Continue reading …Don’t fund those ‘advocating quite different values’, says Dame Pauline Neville-Jones ahead of report on counter-terror strategy There are “plenty of Muslim groups” in Britain who hold anti-democratic values and whose funding should be withdrawn, according to Dame Pauline Neville-Jones, the government’s former security minister. Neville-Jones, who quit the Home Office last month, told the BBC it was not right for the government to “actively assist and advocate those who are advocating quite different values”. Her comments came before the publication of a revised Prevent counter-terrorism strategy, which is expected to confirm that 20 of the 1,200 groups currently financed will have their government funding withdrawn. The affected groups are not expected to be publicly named. The 150-page document will back coalition criticisms that the £63m-a-year Prevent strategy, which combined community cohesion work with tackling terrorism, has seen millions wasted on Foreign Office anti-extremism projects without producing any security benefits. It also reportedly says that no more cash will be spent on “organisations that hold extremist views or support terrorist-related activity”. According to a report in the Times today, the document claims that scrutiny of spending has been so poor it is “possible that Prevent funding has reached extremist groups of which we are not yet aware”. The bulk of the £63m budget is to be split off into a separate community cohesion fund run by the Department for Communities and Local Government. A much reduced Home Office and Ministry of Justice programme will be aimed at “significantly scaling up” efforts to tackle radicalisation in prison and the supervision of newly released convicted terrorists, and on work in the university and health sectors. There will be a new focus on denying potential terrorists use of the internet, with the possible development of a national “blocking list” of violent and unlawful websites. This will be used to prevent computers in schools, colleges and libraries from being used to access unlawful material. “We want to explore the potential for violent and unlawful URL lists to be voluntarily incorporated into independent national blocking lists,” the document is believed to state. “Internet filtering across the public estate is essential.” Doctors and other medical professionals are to be brought within the programme for the first time and asked to help identify those at “vulnerable to the risk of radicalisation”. “The key challenge is to ensure that healthcare workers can identify the signs that someone is vulnerable to radicalisation, interpret those signs correctly and access the relevant support,” the document is expected to say. It adds that the Department of Health will need to ensure that the “crucial relationship of trust and confidence between patient and clinician” is balanced with the health worker’s responsibility to protect wider public safety. Isabella Sankey, director of policy for the civil rights group Liberty, said: “The old Prevent strategy left Muslims feeling targeted and all taxpayers wondering where millions of pounds had gone. But its gravest error was blurring the lines between dissent and criminality and between civil society and security agencies. This is the danger that must be avoided in future. “Block terrorist websites and stop prisons breeding hate by all means, but don’t turn teachers and doctors into spies.” Terrorism policy Alan Travis guardian.co.uk
Continue reading …• Leisure travel drops 3.5% over winter • Profit margins expected to dive to 0.7% • Lufthansa to launch first commercial biofuel route That back-of-the-cabin pilgrimage to Ibiza or Miami this summer will be a little less cramped than usual, according to the airline industry’s leading trade body, as economy class passengers balk at higher fares due to rising fuel costs and aviation taxes. The International Air Transport Association said leisure travel fell 3.5% worldwide between last November and March this year, with Europe suffering the most as recession-hit passengers declined to accept ticket prices driven higher by the increasing cost of oil . IATA’s chief economist, Brian Pearce, said carriers have had no choice but to hike fares because the cost of jet fuel has risen by more than 50% over the past 12 months. With no sign of a significant decline in an oil price that is staying stubbornly above $100 (£61) per barrel, airlines are fighting to stay profitable and have pushed up ticket prices in order to recoup costs, with an inevitable consequence for discretionary spenders, said Pearce. “If they have got a nice fat margin they can lower fares to stimulate demand but when fuel prices are up by 50% that’s not possible,” he said. This week IATA said the industry’s profit margins will slump from 3.2% in 2010, its best since the September 11 attacks, to just 0.7%. Even Ryanair, the best financial performer in recent years , is expected to hike fares by 12% this year. Fuel accounts for 30% of industry costs and a severe fluctuation in oil costs can be the difference between a slender profit and a steep loss at some carriers. UK carriers will have to claw back cost increases of about 8% this year, according to IATA, with the fuel increase equating to a rise of 5% in unit costs and rising air passenger duty forcing up expenditure by a further 3%. Business passengers, meanwhile, are swallowing the resulting rise in fares because buoyant corporate confidence is keeping expense accounts afloat. Business class traffic is running at an annual growth rate of up to 6%. Describing economy class sales as “a worrying trend”, Pearce said: “The high cost of travel is discouraging passengers.” However, the airline industry is set to takes its first serious step towards weaning itself off conventional fuel this year when Germany’s Lufthansa launches its first commercial biofuel route with paying passengers. The Hamburg-to-Frankfurt service will launch later this year if the carrier gets safety clearance, with 25% of its fuel set to be biofuel. The fuel is deemed green because it recoups the emissions generated when it is burned in flight by consuming carbon dioxide when the base plant material from which it is made is being grown. However, IATA’s head of environment, Paul Steele, said the industry was a long way from running all of its services on biofuel, because there is not enough biofuel being made to cover the 70bn gallons of kerosene consumed by the industry every year. “The real challenge is getting the quantities.” Airline industry Ryanair Travel & leisure Oil Global economy Economics Biofuels Energy Dan Milmo guardian.co.uk
Continue reading …Will we Brits will ever really understand what barbecues are all about? The June rain falls, and the thoughts are drawn to the British barbecue as the sparks fly upward. Ponder, if you will, its soggily estival joys. The paper plates, tepid rosé, brown lettuce, bovine protein and blackened wursts: there’s something calm and comforting in their plucky drudgery. And often when an British barbie seems to go right, it’s wrong. The other day the world witnessed the spectacle of Obameron clapping tongs while their wives served salad. It was an episode, one assumes, designed to endow the premiers with a safe, approachable blokiness, but it just looked weird and embarrassing. Never accept a flipped patty from a man wearing a tie, particularly when he’s served it to you from a wok. Most Britons, I think, simply don’t get barbecues. They use them as ordinary cookers transplanted into the garden. Food always tastes better outdoors, of course, so even a crap barbecue can be fun, butch and boozy. But the point about barbecuing is that it’s a different kind of cooking altogether. Here’s a barbecue truism. The more skill and practice needed to operate the contraption, the more flavour you’ll get from it. To barbecue is to strike a compromise between the taste of the food and the practicality of the machine. An electric grill heats up quickly and its temperature can be reliably controlled, but the food that comes off it tastes no better than something from an ordinary frying pan. Nor is gas anything special. A pork chop off a £2,000 gas grill tastes no better than one from a £50 griddle, and you don’t need to ring Calor to fire up one of those. Any cooker heats food. What matters in barbecuing is that smoke flavours the food, that the complex and often dangerous chemicals released from burning wood and charcoal should imbue your dinner with their fuggy aromatics. A barbecue can be as simple as a bit of chicken wire suspended over some bricks with the fuel glowing beneath it – that’s how at least one well-regarded chef I know chooses to do things. There’s more technique to it, as you have to add the fuel at the right time, clean it properly, perhaps adjust the height of the food, and so on. But around the world, that’s how most meat gets grilled, from the shashliks of Mongolia to the yakitori of Japan. Though it scarcely needs mentioning that the USA is the home of the modern barbecue, many British people are ignorant of the truly American “Q”. The word barbecue comes from the colonial Spanish ” barbacoa “, itself most likely derived from the Arawak word for the structure on which meat could be dried or roasted. A Mexican barbacoa was traditionally a hole dug in the ground in which a hunk of meat (often a cow’s head or a whole goat) would be slow-roasted, covered with the beautiful leaves of the maguey plant . Much of southern Texas was for many years part of Mexico, and this dish survives among certain communities there. As you know, everything is bigger in America, and US barbecues differ from ours in size more than anything. Their meat swells and mutates from teensy European slices and girly little trimmings into entire prostrate muscly carcasses. Cooking times stretch from 15 minutes for Euro chicken breasts to 18 hours for a whole fat pig. And the smokers, in Simon Majumdar’s words, are the size of small European cars . America divides itself with proud southern tribalism into barbecue factions. The intricacies of the four major styles (those of Memphis, the Carolinas, Kansas City, and Texas), the esoteric subtleties of the different condiments and sauces, the relative merits of the smoke from mesquite or pecan wood, are not our concern at the moment. It need only be said that those poor souls who think a barbecue involves a dismal burger, a cold bap and a splat of ketchup are missing out. In recent years, a few foodie Brits have begun to realise the glories of slow-barbecuing. This dish from the first-class blogger Helen Graves looks superb, but it’ll be a while before such cooking becomes mainstream. I bought a Weber kettle this year, and it did a good job for 15 people on Saturday: burgers, jerk chicken, grilled veg with aioli, and we also had some Iberico ham and a salad of my most esteemed and beloved potatoes, Jersey royals. There’s a superb recipe in James Ramsden’s new book Small Adventures in Cooking for pork shoulder steaks marinated with fennel seeds, chilli and lemon juice which would be a delicious alternative to a banger from Iceland. A final note on the supposed blokiness of the barbecue. I had always been suspicious of the armchair anthropology that said men are drawn to the barbecue because of some ancient connection to gazelle hunting, or whatever. Like other people (pdf) I had vaguely assumed the phenomenon had more to do with the ways in which the role of fatherhood has changed since the second world war, or that perhaps it was a consequence of or reaction to feminism. (I admit the theory needed work.) And because historically in many societies the women invariably do the cooking, the idea that men should have monopolised the grilling of animal flesh seemed illogical. But Alan Davidson points out that in east Africa (which he takes to include Malawi, Zambia and Zimbabwe as well as the EAC countries), “Women [traditionally] cooked only indoors within their own homes, while the men were responsible for open-air cooking such as grilling and barbecuing.” Perhaps, in the Downing Street garden, Potus and our own dear leader were on to something. Food & drink Oliver Thring guardian.co.uk
Continue reading …Users of Twitter could face legal action for contempt of court if they use the site to breach privacy injunctions Users of Twitter could face legal action for contempt of court if they use the micro-blogging website to breach privacy injunctions, the attorney general has warned. Twitter played a key role in the exposure of footballer Ryan Giggs’s alleged affair with reality TV contestant Imogen Thomas, after an MP argued in the House of Commons that it was not possible to prosecute 75,000 of the site’s users who had named him. Alleged details of a number of injunctions have been anonymously posted on Twitter, and Giggs’s lawyers were taking legal action to discover the identity of those who named him. The attorney general, Dominic Grieve, said on Tuesday that Twitter users in England and Wales were not exempt from the requirement to observe privacy orders. It would normally be for those who had taken out injunctions to initiate action to enforce them, said Grieve. But he told BBC Radio 4′s Law In Action that he would take action himself if he thought it necessary to uphold the rule of law. Grieve said: “I will take action if I think that my intervention is necessary in the public interest, to maintain the rule of law, proportionate and will achieve an end of upholding the rule of law. “It is not something, however, I particularly want to do.” People found to have deliberately breached court orders can be fined or even imprisoned for contempt of court. In the Commons last month, Grieve warned people who thought they could use modern methods of communication to “act with impunity” that they might well find themselves in for “a rude shock”. Superinjunctions Twitter Internet Blogging Injunctions Newspapers & magazines Privacy Privacy & the media Media law Newspapers guardian.co.uk
Continue reading …HMV’s lenders to take 5% stake in return for refinancing deal that will secure its short-term future Beleaguered HMV has been thrown a £220m lifeline by its state-owned lenders that will see them take a 5% stake in the company. The retailer, which has issued four profit warnings this year, agreed a refinancing deal with its banks, Royal Bank of Scotland and Lloyds Banking Group, after months of talks . The agreement secures HMV’s short-term future, and effectively gives UK taxpapers a stake in the struggling high street chain. City analysts warned, though, that the agreement comes at a high price – as the interest rate on part of the loan could hit 14%. Poor sales and ballooning debts of £170m forced HMV to sell its book chain Waterstone’s to Alexander Mamut , a Russian billionaire, for £53m last month. By pledging to use the money to pay down debt, chief executive Simon Fox persuaded the banks to agree the refinancing. Under the plan, warrants will be issued to the banks which will represent 5% of HMV’s share capital when converted into shares after 30 June 2012. The restructuring gives HMV two years to revamp the business and get sales back on track. Fox is focusing on building technology sales, including headphones, iPods and tablet computers such as the iPad. He is also turning the company into a multimedia group that hosts concerts and opens cinemas with Curzon. The new £220m credit facility will replace HMV’s previous bank facility of £240m. It comprises loans worth £70m and £90m and a £60m revolving credit facility, all of which mature on 30 September 2013. Interest is payable at 4% above Libor , the interest rate at which banks lend to each other. The company is blocked from paying dividends while the £90m loan is outstanding, and must also pay an exit fee on repayment. The interest rate on this exit fee will rise to 14% if it has not been repaid by 1 January 2013. “The banks clearly have the company over a barrel,” said Kate Calvert, retail analyst at Seymour Pierce. “We are maintaining our Sell recommendation as we continue to believe that the business is a value trap and the Waterstone’s deal is expected to be dilutive to earnings.” The structure of the loan deal should encourage HMV to repay its debts quickly. John Stevenson of Peel Hunt said the deal would allow its management to focus on running the company again, but warned: “We fear this in an interim pause before the next step down.” Joshua Raymond, market strategist at City Index, said that “the life support machine is still on for the struggling retailer”. Shares in HMV rose 2% in early trading, to 12.7p. HMV Retail industry Royal Bank of Scotland Lloyds Banking Group Julia Kollewe guardian.co.uk
Continue reading …HMV’s lenders to take 5% stake in return for refinancing deal that will secure its short-term future Beleaguered HMV has been thrown a £220m lifeline by its state-owned lenders that will see them take a 5% stake in the company. The retailer, which has issued four profit warnings this year, agreed a refinancing deal with its banks, Royal Bank of Scotland and Lloyds Banking Group, after months of talks . The agreement secures HMV’s short-term future, and effectively gives UK taxpapers a stake in the struggling high street chain. City analysts warned, though, that the agreement comes at a high price – as the interest rate on part of the loan could hit 14%. Poor sales and ballooning debts of £170m forced HMV to sell its book chain Waterstone’s to Alexander Mamut , a Russian billionaire, for £53m last month. By pledging to use the money to pay down debt, chief executive Simon Fox persuaded the banks to agree the refinancing. Under the plan, warrants will be issued to the banks which will represent 5% of HMV’s share capital when converted into shares after 30 June 2012. The restructuring gives HMV two years to revamp the business and get sales back on track. Fox is focusing on building technology sales, including headphones, iPods and tablet computers such as the iPad. He is also turning the company into a multimedia group that hosts concerts and opens cinemas with Curzon. The new £220m credit facility will replace HMV’s previous bank facility of £240m. It comprises loans worth £70m and £90m and a £60m revolving credit facility, all of which mature on 30 September 2013. Interest is payable at 4% above Libor , the interest rate at which banks lend to each other. The company is blocked from paying dividends while the £90m loan is outstanding, and must also pay an exit fee on repayment. The interest rate on this exit fee will rise to 14% if it has not been repaid by 1 January 2013. “The banks clearly have the company over a barrel,” said Kate Calvert, retail analyst at Seymour Pierce. “We are maintaining our Sell recommendation as we continue to believe that the business is a value trap and the Waterstone’s deal is expected to be dilutive to earnings.” The structure of the loan deal should encourage HMV to repay its debts quickly. John Stevenson of Peel Hunt said the deal would allow its management to focus on running the company again, but warned: “We fear this in an interim pause before the next step down.” Joshua Raymond, market strategist at City Index, said that “the life support machine is still on for the struggling retailer”. Shares in HMV rose 2% in early trading, to 12.7p. HMV Retail industry Royal Bank of Scotland Lloyds Banking Group Julia Kollewe guardian.co.uk
Continue reading …HMV’s lenders to take 5% stake in return for refinancing deal that will secure its short-term future Beleaguered HMV has been thrown a £220m lifeline by its state-owned lenders that will see them take a 5% stake in the company. The retailer, which has issued four profit warnings this year, agreed a refinancing deal with its banks, Royal Bank of Scotland and Lloyds Banking Group, after months of talks . The agreement secures HMV’s short-term future, and effectively gives UK taxpapers a stake in the struggling high street chain. City analysts warned, though, that the agreement comes at a high price – as the interest rate on part of the loan could hit 14%. Poor sales and ballooning debts of £170m forced HMV to sell its book chain Waterstone’s to Alexander Mamut , a Russian billionaire, for £53m last month. By pledging to use the money to pay down debt, chief executive Simon Fox persuaded the banks to agree the refinancing. Under the plan, warrants will be issued to the banks which will represent 5% of HMV’s share capital when converted into shares after 30 June 2012. The restructuring gives HMV two years to revamp the business and get sales back on track. Fox is focusing on building technology sales, including headphones, iPods and tablet computers such as the iPad. He is also turning the company into a multimedia group that hosts concerts and opens cinemas with Curzon. The new £220m credit facility will replace HMV’s previous bank facility of £240m. It comprises loans worth £70m and £90m and a £60m revolving credit facility, all of which mature on 30 September 2013. Interest is payable at 4% above Libor , the interest rate at which banks lend to each other. The company is blocked from paying dividends while the £90m loan is outstanding, and must also pay an exit fee on repayment. The interest rate on this exit fee will rise to 14% if it has not been repaid by 1 January 2013. “The banks clearly have the company over a barrel,” said Kate Calvert, retail analyst at Seymour Pierce. “We are maintaining our Sell recommendation as we continue to believe that the business is a value trap and the Waterstone’s deal is expected to be dilutive to earnings.” The structure of the loan deal should encourage HMV to repay its debts quickly. John Stevenson of Peel Hunt said the deal would allow its management to focus on running the company again, but warned: “We fear this in an interim pause before the next step down.” Joshua Raymond, market strategist at City Index, said that “the life support machine is still on for the struggling retailer”. Shares in HMV rose 2% in early trading, to 12.7p. HMV Retail industry Royal Bank of Scotland Lloyds Banking Group Julia Kollewe guardian.co.uk
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