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Massive leak reveals Guantánamo’s secrets

• Innocent people interrogated for years on slimmest pretexts • Children, elderly and mentally ill among those wrongfully held • 172 prisoners remain, some with no prospect of trial or release More than 700 leaked secret files on the Guantánamo detainees lay bare the inner workings of America’s controversial prison camp in Cuba. The US military dossiers, obtained by the New York Times and the Guardian, reveal how, alongside the so-called “worst of the worst”, many prisoners were flown to the Guantánamo cages and held captive for years on the flimsiest grounds, or on the basis of lurid confessions extracted by maltreatment. The 759 Guantánamo files, classified “secret”, cover almost every inmate since the camp was opened in 2002. More than two years after President Obama ordered the closure of the prison, 172 are still held there. The files depict a system often focused less on containing dangerous terrorists or enemy fighters, than on extracting intelligence. Among inmates who proved harmless were an 89-year-old Afghan villager, suffering from senile dementia, and a 14-year-old boy who had been an innocent kidnap victim . The old man was transported to Cuba to interrogate him about “suspicious phone numbers” found in his compound. The 14-year-old was shipped out merely because of “his possible knowledge of Taliban…local leaders” The documents also reveal: • US authorities listed the main Pakistani intelligence service, the Inter-Services Intelligence Directorate (ISI), as a terrorist organisation alongside groups such as al-Qaida, Hamas, Hezbollah and Iranian intelligence. Interrogators were told to regard links to any of these as an indication of terrorist or insurgent activity. • Almost 100 of the inmates who passed through Guantánamo are listed by their captors as having had depressive or psychotic illnesses . Many went on hunger strike or attempted suicide. • A number of British nationals and residents were held for years even though US authorities knew they were not Taliban or al-Qaida members. One Briton, Jamal al-Harith , was rendered to Guantánamo simply because he had been held in a Taliban prison and was thought to have knowledge of their interrogation techniques. The US military tried to hang on to another Briton, Binyam Mohamed , even after charges had been dropped and evidence emerged he had been tortured. • US authorities relied heavily on information obtained from a small number of detainees under torture. They continued to maintain this testimony was reliable even after admitting that the prisoners who provided it had been mistreated. The leaked files include guidance for US interrogators on how to decide whether to hold or release detainees, and how to spot al-Qaida cover stories. One warns interrogators: “Travel to Afghanistan for any reason after the terrorist attacks of 11 September 2001 is likely a total fabrication with the true intentions being to support Usama Bin Laden through direct hostilities against the US forces.” Another 17-page file, titled “GTMO matrix of threat indicators for enemy combatants”, advises interrogators to look out for signs of terrorist activity ranging from links to a number of mosques around the world, including two in London, to ownership of a particular model of Casio watch. “The Casio was known to be given to the students at al-Qaida bombmaking training courses in Afghanistan,” it states. The inclusion of association with the ISI as a “threat indicator” in this document is likely to pour fuel on the flames of Washington’s already strained relationship with its key regional ally.A number of the detainee files also contain references, apparently based on intelligence reporting, to the ISI supporting, co-ordinating and protecting insurgents fighting coalition forces in Afghanistan, or even assisting al-Qaida. Obama’s inability to shut Guantánamo has been one of the White House’s most internationally embarrassing policy failures. The files offer an insight into why the administration has been unable to transfer many of the 172 existing prisoners from the island prison where they remain outside the protection of the US courts or the prisoner-of-war provisions of the Geneva conventions. The range of those still held captive includes detainees who have been admittedly tortured so badly they can never be successfully tried, informers who must be protected from reprisals, and a group of Chinese Muslims from the Uighur minority who have nowhere to go. One of those officially admitted to have been so maltreated that it amounted to torture is prisoner No 63, Maad al-Qahtani . He was captured more than nine years ago, fleeing from the site of Osama bin Laden’s last stand in the mountain caves of Tora Bora in 2001. The report says Qahtani, allegedly one of the “Dirty 30″ who were Bin Laden’s bodyguards, must not be released: “HIGH risk, as he is likely to pose a threat to the US, its interests and allies.” The report’s military authors admit his admissions were obtained by what they call “harsh interrogation techniques in the early stages of detention”. At the other end of the spectrum the files detail many innocents or marginal figures swept up by the Guantánamo dragnet because US forces considered they might be of some intelligence value. One man was transferred to the facility “because he was a mullah, who led prayers at Manu mosque in Kandahar province, Afghanistan … which placed him in a position to have special knowledge of the Taliban”. US authorities eventually released him after more than a year’s captivity, deciding he had no intelligence value. Another prisoner was shipped to the base “because of his general knowledge of activities in the areas of Khowst and Kabul based as a result of his frequent travels through the region as a taxi driver”. The files also reveal that an al-Jazeera journalist was held at Guantánamo for six years, partly in order to be interrogated about the Arabic news network. His dossier states that one of the reasons was “to provide information on … the al-Jazeera news network’s training programme, telecommunications equipment, and newsgathering operations in Chechnya, Kosovo and Afghanistan, including the network’s acquisition of a video of UBL [Osama bin Laden] and a subsequent interview with UBL”. The Guantánamo files are among hundreds of thousands of documents US soldier Bradley Manning is accused of having turned over to the WikiLeaks website more than a year ago. The documents were obtained by the New York Times and shared with the Guardian and National Public Radio, which is publishing extracts, having redacted information which might identify informants. A Pentagon spokesperson said: “Naturally we would prefer that no legitimately classified information be released into the public domain, as by definition it can be expected to cause damage to US national security. The situation with the Guantánamo detention facility is exceptionally complex and releasing any records will further complicate ongoing actions.” The Guantánamo files Guantánamo Bay David Leigh James Ball Ian Cobain Jason Burke guardian.co.uk

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Amazing: To AP Reporter, Gas Prices Are a Big Problem Because They Hurt Obama’s Reelection Chances

The establishment press's lack of interest in associating President Obama with the sharp run-up in energy costs has been thoroughly documented by several folks at the Media Research Center, including but not limited to Julia Seymour when gasoline hit the $3 mark, and more recently Brent Bozell . Saturday, the Associated Press's Mark S. Smith took the gas-price propaganda to the next level. As anyone would predict, he failed to assign any blame for the energy cost run-up to specific Obama administration policies such as the Gulf drilling moratorium and other barriers to production, and paid relative lip service to the pain it is causing average Americans. To Smith, those are apparently mere trifles. Smitty's real problem is that those darned gas prices might be hurting Barack Obama's reelection chances (bolds and numbered tags are mine): Costly gasoline clouds Obama re-election prospects

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Research fellow charged with possession of drugs after teenager is taken ill at house party in west London A university academic has been arrested on suspicion of possession of drugs following the death of a teenage girl who became ill at a party. Brian Dodgeon, a research fellow at the University of London’s Institute of Education, is believed to have been held over the death of Isobel Clara Reilly, 15, of Acton, west London. Officers were alerted by London Ambulance Service at 4.10am on Saturday after she took ill at a house in Barlby Road in north Kensington. Isobel was taken to hospital, but died later that morning. A 60-year-old man was arrested on suspicion of possession of drugs and child abandonment, the Metropolitan police said. He was bailed to return at a date in June. Isobel’s death is currently being treated as unexplained, but officers are examining whether drugs played a role in her death. “We await the results of the postmortem examination,” a police spokesman said. A 14-year-old girl, believed to be Dodgeon’s daughter and two boys, both aged 14, were also taken to hospital as a precaution. Last night they remained there under observation. Detective Sergeant Neil Philpott appealed for more information from guests who attended the party. “We believe the victim was taken ill during a party at the address in Barlby Road,” he said. “We are yet to make contact with all those who attended and would ask anyone who was present at any point during the evening to make contact with officers.” Isobel’s family said last night they and their daughter’s friends were “devastated and heartbroken” about her death. “We hope that if anything positive comes from this dreadful event, it is that others will make the right decisions to be safe and well in the future,” they said in a statement. They appealed for privacy, and also for anyone who had any information concerning Isobel to contact the police. Tony Ryan, headteacher of Chiswick Community School, where the teenager attended, described her as an “extremely popular girl”. “Her tragically early death is devastating news to everyone associated with the school and all our thoughts are with her family at this time,” he said. Crime Drugs Amy Fallon guardian.co.uk

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From theatre to Thor

With Thor, Tom Hiddleston has shot from indie star to Hollywood. Next stop, Spielberg Tom Hiddleston turns up for breakfast at a central London hotel dead on time and breathlessly thrilled. Though the 30-year-old has already had an impressive career, renowned as one of the most penetratingly intelligent actors of his generation and working with directors as illustrious as Michael Grandage and Terence Davies , travelling here on the tube he had a Hollywood moment. He saw a poster of Thor for the first time. He sits forward eagerly. “It’s a wildly exciting time. I’ve never been in a film that has posters on the tube. And it’s not even my face on the poster.” The Thor poster shows a close-up of Chris Hemsworth as the god of thunder; Hiddleston plays his Machiavellian brother Loki, the god of mischief. On screen, the two actors are brawn and brain, large and little. Hemsworth’s Thor is a brash yet increasingly likable god; Hiddleston’s Loki is ultimately just a kid who wants to please his dad, Odin, played by Anthony Hopkins . It’s surprising, then, to learn that director Kenneth Branagh initially asked Hiddleston to audition for the title role. Hiddleston digs into his eggs benedict and laughs. “Ken found out he’d got the job in late 2008, when we were appearing at the Donmar together, knocking eight bells of ideological crap out of each other every night in Chekhov’s Ivanov . Dressed as the self-righteous 19th-century doctor Lvov, with wire-rimmed spectacles, a pocket watch, grey trousers, a linen jacket and a goatee, I ran up to Ken’s dressing room holding a massive empty water cooler that I pretended was Thor’s hammer. He looked at me and said, ‘Don’t joke, love, you never

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Trump denies poor voting record

US tycoon reacts with fury to revelation by news station in his home town that he has not voted in primaries for 21 years Donald Trump, property tycoon turned reality TV star turned potential presidential candidate, is a busy man. Too busy, it seems, to make it to the polling booth. Records unearthed by NY1 , Trump’s hometown news station, show he has not voted in primary elections for 21 years. City election board spokeswoman Valerie Vazquez confirmed NY1′s story at the weekend. The news prompted a furious denial from Trump. “I voted in every general election … You’re going to pay a big price because you’re wrong … I have records that I voted and so does the board of elections … I signed in at every election,” he told NY1. Trump has yet to confirm he will run for president but will be hoping for a more committed turnout from his own supporters if he is to move forward with his campaign. In order to secure the nomination he would need to get fellow Republicans to vote for him in a primary election – something that the state election board records appear to show he has failed to do consistently since 1989. Back in 1989 Trump voted in the primary for mayor when Rudolph Giuliani beat business magnate Ronald Lauder, but according to the documents, Trump failed to show up at the primaries after that for over 20 years. It wasn’t just local elections Trump missed. The tycoon also failed to cast his vote in several presidential primaries, including in 1988 and 1996. The star of The Apprentice became a Democrat in 2001 but missed the 2001 and 2005 primaries for mayor. In 2002 records show he also appears to have skipped the general election. In 2008 Trump voiced his support for Barack Obama during the fiercely fought primary with Hillary Clinton. “I think [Obama] has a chance to go down as a great president,” Trump told NY1 in 2008. “Now if he’s not, if he’s not a great president then this country is in trouble.” Perhaps it was this ambivalence that led to him missing that vote too. Trump’s lawyer Michael Cohen told Associated Press on Saturday that “for one of the greatest international businessmen who travels all over the country and the world, his voting record is very, very good.” Trump’s campaign has been fuelled by his questioning whether Obama was born in the United States, and by his plans to seize the oil of countries including Iraq and Libya. The latest Gallup poll finds Trump tied in first place among Republican voters with Mike Huckabee, the former Arkansas governor, on 16%. Mitt Romney is third with 13%, with former Alaska governor Sarah Palin in fourth on 10%. Donald Trump United States US politics Dominic Rushe guardian.co.uk

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‘Behind the Bias’: Hannity Examines ‘Double Standards’ in American Media Coverage

Newsbusters : On Friday night, the Fox News Channel debuted a Hannity special, ‘Behind the Bias: The History of Liberal Media.’ The promo declared: “Double standards? Groundless attacks? Blatant bias? Sean calls out the mainstream media! Don’t miss Behind the Bias: The History of Liberal Media.” The Media Research Center made available to Fox News Channel producers video clips from our archive going… Broadcasting platform : YouTube Source : The Blaze Discovery Date : 23/04/2011 14:18 Number of articles : 2

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Many of us on the ATLAS experiment at CERN have been a little more busy than we anticipated this Easter. I tried to explain why on Channel 4 news. You may have seen reports of rumours of …. dramatic findings at the Large Hadron Collider over the past few days. I haven’t commented on them here so far since the rumours are based on an leaked internal document. Nevertheless when Channel 4 asked me about it I though I should go on: So, it is not a hoax. But the rumours are based on an analysis which has to pass many levels of scientific scrutiny before I get very excited by it. It could fail at any stage. If it passes, it will be released by ATLAS , and will then be submitted to a journal. For comparison, journal submission is the stage the CDF bump has got to, and that is far from established yet as a real new physics effect. The thing is, CERN is an exciting place right now. New data are coming in as I write. There are lots of levels of collaboration and competition. Retaining a detached scientific approach is sometimes difficult. And if we can’t always keep clear heads ourselves, it’s not surprising people outside get excited too. This is why we have internal scrutiny, separate teams working on the same analysis, external peer review, repeat experiments, and so on… So don’t go tearing up your particle physics text books just yet. But please stay tuned for when we really do have something to say! These are indeed interesting times. Jon Butterworth guardian.co.uk

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Activists Avaaz turn fire on Murdoch

New York-based Avaaz has launched huge campaigns on issues including the BSkyB takeover and Bradley Manning If you had been on the Strand in London on the day that the high court was considering how to proceed with scores of civil actions against the News of the World for its phone-hacking escapades, you would have seen a peculiar sight. About 30 people were gathered on the steps of the court, the palms of their hands painted red, bearing banners that read: “Murdoch’s men caught red-handed.” On the same day, outside a Sainsbury’s store in Godalming, Surrey, where the culture secretary, Jeremy Hunt, was holding his weekly constituency surgery, another group of 25 people had gathered. They were leafleting shoppers about the News of the World scandal and calling on the government to delay approval of Rupert Murdoch’s bid to takeover BSkyB until a full public inquiry could be held. Both events were the work of one of the most successful of a new breed of internet campaigner, in this case a global activism network called Avaaz , which means voice in Urdu and several other languages. It put out an alert to its half a million UK members calling for activists to attend the two stunts, with impressive results. To get a sense of what Avaaz is and how it operates you have to switch the lens 3,000 miles to a pleasantly light-filled office with great views overlooking Union Square in Manhattan. This is where Avaaz has its headquarters – if an organic network of internet activists can be said to have a headquarters. Avaaz, formed in 2007, has more than eight million members in 193 countries and can claim to be the largest online activist community in the world. This year alone it has attracted an extra one million members and it is now wholly self-funding with about $20m (£12m) raised so far in online donations. “We have no ideology per se,” says director Ricken Patel. “Our mission is to close the gap between the world we have and the world most people everywhere want. Idealists of the world unite!” A Canadian who holds dual British citizenship, Patel was involved in student activism while at Oxford University studying PPE and later at Harvard. After three years working for aid groups around the world and a stint at the UN, he witnessed the power of the internet as a volunteer for the US liberal campaign MoveOn.org . What MoveOn tries to do with domestic American politics, Avaaz applies globally. Its weekly meeting of staff, held via a Skype conference call, gives a taste of its ambitions. With the Guardian listening in, several of the 35 Avaaz staffers join the call from their bases in San Francisco, Toronto, Mexico City, Rio, London, Paris, New Delhi and Sydney. The team cheered when the US staff began by talking about this week’s news that Bradley Manning, the alleged WikiLeaks source, had been moved to a new, more lenient, prison. Avaaz had organised an online petition signed by 530,000 members calling on President Barack Obama to “end the torture” of the US soldier. Next, the Canadian staff talked about an Avaaz campaign to force the Ottowa government to release a report into alleged misuse of G8 funds, while the Delhi staff gave an update on the health of Anna Hazare, an activist they are backing who has been on hunger strike in protest at Indian political corruption. While most of Avaaz’s projects are initiated by the staff themselves, every few days they survey a random collection of 10,000 members to ask them which campaigns they want to prioritise. They also monitor constantly online statistics that reveal which campaigns are attracting most interest among members, enabling the membership itself to chose the network’s focus. “Democratic accountability is hard-wired into the way we work. Each campaign is only as successful as the number of people who choose to join it,” Patel says. The idea of a campaign against the News of the World was received with great enthusiasm by Avaaz’s members, particularly in the UK. Patel says: “We have long seen Rupert Murdoch as a powerful threat to the health of our democracies through his domination of the media environment. When we polled our members, they were strongly in favour of trying to stop his takeover of BSkyB until a full public inquiry into News Corp could be held.” Avaaz teamed up with its fellow online lobbying group 38 Degrees to send 60,000 submissions opposing the Murdoch bid to Ofcom. Late last year, Avaaz members sent 50,000 messages to David Cameron and Hunt calling for a review by the Competition Commission, supported by a petition signed by 400,000 global members. To press home the point, it targeted 10 key constituencies of politicians involved in the bid decision and invested in TV and newspaper adverts arguing against the takeover. The overall aim, according to Avaaz’s Bristol-based campaign director Alex Wilks, was to get “tens of thousands of citizens signing up, even just for five minutes, so they can express themselves and make a difference”. But he says it is not enough just to sit back and rely on the internet to do the heavy lifting: “We have also to get into politicians’ faces and make sure they know how many people feel passionately about what they are, or are not, doing.” Phone hacking BSkyB News Corporation Rupert Murdoch BSkyB News International Jeremy Hunt News of the World Bradley Manning Television industry Media business Newspapers Newspapers & magazines National newspapers Protest Barack Obama Internet United States Ed Pilkington guardian.co.uk

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US scientists get glimpse of antihelium

Heaviest particles of antimatter seen in a lab survive for about 10 billionths of a second before crashing into collider’s detector They were gone as soon as they appeared, but for a fleeting moment they were the heaviest particles of antimatter a laboratory has seen. Scientists in the US produced a clutch of antihelium particles, the antimatter equivalents of the helium nucleus, after smashing gold ions together nearly 1bn times at close to the speed of light. The discovery of antihelium at the Relativistic Heavy Ion Collider at Brookhaven national laboratory in New York will aid the search for exotic phenomena in the distant universe, including antimatter versions of stars and even galaxies. Antimatter looks and behaves like normal matter but has one crucial difference: particles of antimatter have an equal and opposite charge to those that make up the world around us. When antimatter meets matter, the two annihilate one another, leaving nothing but a burst of energy. Researchers at the US laboratory recorded 18 antihelium particles that survived for about 10 billionths of a second before they crashed into the collider’s detector and vanished in the tiniest of fireballs. “Antihelium is stable, so if it doesn’t encounter anything it will survive forever,” said Aihong Tang, a physicist at the laboratory. “Unless there is a major breakthrough in accelerator technology, this will be the heaviest antimatter made for decades to come.” Antihelium is the heaviest breed of antimatter created by scientists, with each particle is roughly 10 million billion times lighter than a grain of sand. The next heaviest that is stable is antilithium, but this is so rare the Brookhaven collider would have to run for thousands of years to detect just one particle. Antimatter is central to one of the greatest mysteries of our existence. Equal amounts of matter and antimatter were created in the Big Bang and should have destroyed each other in one enormous cosmic explosion. But for reasons unknown, only normal matter seems to have survived to make up all we know in the visible universe. Particles of antimatter were first discovered in 1932 when a US researcher found antielectrons, or positrons, among the debris of cosmic ray collisions. Cosmic rays are highly charged streams of particles that can span vast stretches of space. Paul Dirac, the British physicist who predicted antimatter, speculated that some regions of the universe might be home to entire galaxies made of antimatter. The latest research, published in the journal Nature , is a benchmark for space-based experiments that will hunt for antimatter elsewhere in the universe. Next week, the penultimate mission of the space shuttle will deliver a $2bn instrument called the alpha magnetic spectrometer (AMS) to the International Space Station. From there, it will scour space for signs of heavenly bodies made from antimatter. “Collisions among cosmic rays near Earth can produce antimatter, but the odds of these collisions producing an intact antihelium nucleus are so vanishingly small that finding even one would strongly suggest that it had drifted to Earth from a distant region of the universe dominated by antimatter,” said Hans Georg Ritter at the University of California, Berkeley. “Antimatter doesn’t look any different from ordinary matter, but AMS finding just one antihelium nucleus would suggest that some of the galaxies we see are antimatter galaxies.” Particle physics Physics Ian Sample guardian.co.uk

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jailbreak(脱獄)アプリTVOut2で車載NAVIへAV出力 LHC Poerani ori tahiti 3 LHC automated rail station Large Hadron Collider rumoured to have found God Particle … The memo revealed that one of the particle detectors at the LHC had caught a particle that could be a Higgs boson decaying into other two high-energy particles known as photons. The memo, written by four scientists working on the LHC’s … Breaking Scientific Breakthrough! Higgs Boson Particle Discovery … The controversial rumor is apparently based on a leaked internal note from physicists at the Large Hadron Collider ( LHC ), a 17-mile-long particle accelerator near Geneva, Switzerland,… The World News Media: NewsFlash: Rumor Sweeping World's Science … The controversial rumor is based on what appears to be a leaked internal note from physicists at CERN’s Large Hadron Collider ( LHC ), a 17-mile-long particle accelerator near Geneva, Switzerland. It’s not certain at this point if the … LHC's record intensity speeds Higgs search | One Stop Blog LHS experiments are assembled underground. Here, a silicon tracking detector–a cousin to an ordinary digital camera sensor–is inserted into one of the. Rumor Sweeping Science Community that CERN's LHC Detected -The … A rumor has gone viral in the physics community that the world’s largest atom smasher may have detected a long-sought subatomic particle called the Higgs boson, also known as the… MaryAnneLeRoy says: RT @dailygalaxy : NewsFlash: Rumor Sweeping World's Science Community that CERN's LHC has Detected the Higgs Boson -The “God Particle” http://su.pr/2mEVDa

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