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Clarke: prison is a waste of money

Rise in prison numbers unsustainable, says justice secretary, who blames media for creating image that prison life is easy The rate of jail sentencing is “financially unsustainable”, the justice secretary, Kenneth Clarke, has said, delivering a defiant riposte to critics within his own party and the tabloid press who have suggested that his plans to overhaul the penal system are soft on crime. Clarke last year unveiled a green paper on sentencing as part of government plans to cut the £4bn prison and probation budget by 20% over four years, promising to end a Victorian-style “bang ‘em up” culture and reduce high reoffending rates by tackling the root causes. But after facing sustained criticism, he used an interview with The Times to dismiss characterisation of him as a minister who is “soft on crime.” He is preparing to publish a bill next month which will include proposals to allow for large sentence discounts in return for early guilty pleas and diverting the mentally ill away from jail. The goal is a 3,000 cut in the record 85,000 jail population in England and Wales in four years. “[The rise in prison numbers is] financially unsustainable. That is not my principal motivation but it is pointless and very bad value for taxpayers’ money,” Clarke said. He blamed the media and lobby groups for helping to create a public perception that prison life was easy, adding: “Prisons are not hotels, they are not comfortable, they are overcrowded, they are noisy. Anyone who visits a prison soon realises the prevailing atmosphere is one of stupefying boredom on the part of inmates. “It is just very, very bad value for taxpayers’ money to keep banging them up and warehousing them in overcrowded prisons where most of them get toughened up.” He said that too many prisoners sit idly in their cells when they could be doing something more productive with their time. “I would like to see prisons where there is a working environment, where people get into the habits of the rest of the population.” Private firms would be encouraged to operate in jails and help endow inmates with skills that would make them employable when they entered into free society again. “The firms are cautious about advertising it because the newspapers write them up as ‘employing jailbirds’,” he said. However, Clarke did pledge to make community punishments tougher by insisting offenders do unpaid work for eight hours a day. “I want them to be more punitive, effective and organised. Unpaid work should require offenders to work at a proper pace in a disciplined manner rather than youths just hanging around doing odd bits tidying up derelict sites,” he added. Kenneth Clarke UK criminal justice Prisons and probation Ben Quinn guardian.co.uk

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Dublin auction sells semi for £20k

Crowds spill on to the pavement for the first sale of ‘distressed property’ in Ireland The Irish property bubble burst in such spectacular fashion that it will cost Irish taxpayers for years to come. But an IMF bailout and swingeing austerity measures do not appear to have dented the Irish enthusiasm for a property deal. The crowds spilled on to the pavement at Ireland’s first ever auction of “distressed property” today as an estimated 1,200 would-be buyers flocked to the swish Shelbourne Hotel in Dublin in search of a bargain. But with 84 keenly priced lots, ranging from a three-bed semi priced as low as €22,500 (£20,000) to a four-bed mews house in Dublin’s most salubrious district going for €600,000, it was probably always going to be busy. Quick-thinking auctioneers despatched a man with a microphone to the steps of the hotel to relay bids from the pavement back into the ballroom, where would-be investors, solicitors, estate agents and young couples looking for their first home gathered for an event estate agent Majella Rippington from Corporate Lettings described as “historic”. The police, however, were not impressed and the auction was briefly suspended to allow the Garda to disperse the crowd outside. It was merely a brief hitch. Nothing could have halted the most keenly awaited auction since the recession began. Inside, the atmosphere was bristling with excitement as the hammer came down on the first lot – a 500 sq ft studio apartment in the centre of Temple Bar, Dublin’s equivalent of Soho, a touristy district best known for boozy stag and hen parties. There were at least a dozen bidders, including a man who claimed to live upstairs from the flat and said it would have fetched €350,000 at the peak. Today it had a reserve price of €80,000, but was swiftly sold for €127,000 to businessman Douglas Taylor, who wanted it for his student daughter. “It’s a charming apartment, needs lots of work – but nothing that can’t be put straight,” said Taylor, who has several businesses, including cleaning, security and recruitment. “I nearly missed out – I left my ID in the car and then, because of the crowds, couldn’t get back in again. I was lucky.” Taylor is not a novice in the property business: he owns three properties in Ireland – all in negative equity – and four in London, which are not. “I think this will help establish the floor and get the market going again,” he said. And the auction found the floor for Ballsbridge – Dublin’s most sought-after residential district. The biggest shock of was the four-bed mews house that did not attract a single bid at the guide price of €600,000. There were gasps as the hammer came down at just €550,000. “I’m feeling a bit of elation and nervousness,” said the successful bidder, who gave his name only as Patrick. “I thought it would go for in excess of €700,000.” He is a returning émigré and plans to live in the house himself. The purchase will send shivers down the spines of his new neighbours. In 2006 a similar mews house sold for €2.5m while in 2007 another sold for €1.5m – a sign of how far and fast property prices have tumbled in Dublin in the last four years. While Ballsbridge might now be on its uppers, other parts of Dublin generated brisk trade, particular city centre apartments. Michaela Masojada from London was thrilled when the hammer came down on her €345,000 bid for a three-bed penthouse in Bride Street, just minutes from her lectures at the Royal College of Surgeons on St Stephen’s Green. Her bid valued the property at 50% more than the reserve price of €230,000. “I’m so happy. I screamed at the auction. You’d never get a place like this in London,” she said. Portlaoise, an unprepossessing midlands town about an hour away from Dublin, also generated some surprises. Best known for its high-security prison – home to IRA prisoners in the 1970s and 1980s – it became a commuter belt town in the boom as spiralling prices in Dublin pushed out young families. Two apartments with guide prices of €35,000 sold for €61,000 and €62,000 – putting them among the star performers of the day. “I’m glad it’s done a little bit better than expected. Anything that moves this depressed market is a good thing,” said Rippington, who says the market has been paralysed by the fear that prices would fall further. UK auctioneers Allsop, which spent a year putting the auction together with local partner Space, were thrilled with the result and are planning a second auction in the summer with hundreds more properties. After six hours Allsop auctioneer Gary Murphy realised €15m for the banks. “It was unbelievable,” he said. Just three properties remained unsold. “I don’t think we’re disappointed about [the mews house] in Ballsbridge,” said Allsop partner Michael Linane. “The key was to sell it. This is not about us telling the Irish or anyone else what property is worth, it’s about saying ‘you decide’. “If you market the auction right and generate enough interest you’ve done what you can. And as you can see the interest is phenomenal.” John Howard from UK company Auction House, a rival to Allsop, was also at the hotel. He was surveying the opportunities for his own firm and thinks there is going to be a surge of repossession auctions in Ireland and the UK. “Last time this happened in the 1990s interest rates were really high. Now they are at 1% in the UK and 1.25% in Ireland. There are also an awful lot of buy-to-let customers in both countries that we didn’t have in the last recession. I think this is going to take off. It is a learning curve for everyone.” Ireland Europe European debt crisis European banks Lisa O’Carroll guardian.co.uk

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Will Ferrell drops by The Office

Ferrell’s familiarity with Steve Carell was palpable, writes Hadley Freeman , but so was an itchiness in his new role And all too soon, he was finished. That’s what she said. On Thursday night, Michael Scott – the double entendre-dropping boss played by Steve Carell on the hugely successful US version of The Office – started to take leave of the show. To ease the trauma for the 7.3m US viewers who watch it every week, not to mention its cast members, who have publicly admitted to concern about the show’s future without Carell, the producers hired a new boss to take over as manager. Scott introduced Deangelo Vickers to the staff at Dunder Mifflin, and he soon revealed himself to be boorish, cruel, and in possession of an inexplicable fondness for terrible paintings of deserts. On the plus side, he is played by Will Ferrell. The original UK version of The Office ran for only 14 episodes, whereas The Office: An American Workplace has been on air since 2005, providing more of the characters with more storylines than the original possibly could. Gervais’s Office has been adapted in many countries around the world but, thanks to the presence of Carell, the US version is the most high-profile, and has been one of NBC’s most consistently popular shows. The cast was made up of near-unknowns, with the exception of Carell, who, it is rumoured, now wants to concentrate on more serious film roles, like the one he played to critical acclaim in the 2006 film Little Miss Sunshine. Ferrell and Carell have acted together before in the films Bewitched and – somewhat more successfully – Anchorman. From the moment the latest episode of The Office opened, with the two of them talking to one another in a bar without realising each was whom the other was waiting for, their familiarity with one another was palpable, but so was Ferrell’s itchiness in his new role. Ferrell is a broad comedian, one the big screen sometimes hardly contains, and watching him try to tamp down his natural tendencies so as not to overwhelm was like listening to someone speak muffled: painful and not very clear. In an interview with the New York Times, Ferrell, who will stay for only four episodes, admitted to feelings of anxiety about joining such a beloved show with such an established cast: “I just really wanted to fit in. [It's] that first day of school feeling.” He’s not the only one. The show’s network, NBC, has become such a byword for beleaguered in the US that it is a running joke on the comedy show 30 Rock, even though it, too, is shown on NBC. By the end of the episode, Deangelo was beginning to fit in nicely, and Michael Scott was packing up. Scott’s finale at the end of the month will guest star Ricky Gervais and will be, producers promise, huge. That’s what he said. US television Television US television industry Will Ferrell Steve Carell NBC Television industry United States Hadley Freeman guardian.co.uk

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Pat Buchanan defends Trump statement about ‘the blacks’

Click here to view this media Former Republican presidential candidate Pat Buchanan is defending Donald Trump against charges of racial insensitivity. On a conservative radio show Thursday, Trump said that he was concerned that he wouldn’t get many African American votes given President Barack Obama’s high poll numbers with that demographic. “I have a great relationship with the blacks,” Trump said . “I’ve always had a great relationship with the blacks.” “I don’t find any malice in what he said in that statement about the black folks,” Buchanan told MSNBC host Chris Jansing Friday. “I mean, I’m a Catholic and if he said ‘I have a great relationship with the Catholics,’ I don’t think I would take great offense.” “Well, Pat, you know it’s a completely different dynamic,” journalist Karen Hunter objected. “Give me a break.” “What do you think he meant?” Buchanan asked. “It’s that thing: ‘you people,’” Hunter replied. “We’re not aliens. We’re Americans.” “Maybe you’re hearing something Donald Trump didn’t really say,” Buchanan suggested. “I think you can listen to it and it’s very clear what ‘The Donald’ had to say,” Jansing concluded.

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Pat Buchanan defends Trump statement about ‘the blacks’

Click here to view this media Former Republican presidential candidate Pat Buchanan is defending Donald Trump against charges of racial insensitivity. On a conservative radio show Thursday, Trump said that he was concerned that he wouldn’t get many African American votes given President Barack Obama’s high poll numbers with that demographic. “I have a great relationship with the blacks,” Trump said . “I’ve always had a great relationship with the blacks.” “I don’t find any malice in what he said in that statement about the black folks,” Buchanan told MSNBC host Chris Jansing Friday. “I mean, I’m a Catholic and if he said ‘I have a great relationship with the Catholics,’ I don’t think I would take great offense.” “Well, Pat, you know it’s a completely different dynamic,” journalist Karen Hunter objected. “Give me a break.” “What do you think he meant?” Buchanan asked. “It’s that thing: ‘you people,’” Hunter replied. “We’re not aliens. We’re Americans.” “Maybe you’re hearing something Donald Trump didn’t really say,” Buchanan suggested. “I think you can listen to it and it’s very clear what ‘The Donald’ had to say,” Jansing concluded.

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Gaddafi forces ‘using cluster bombs’

Human Rights Watch say Gaddafi’s army has fired the weapons, which cause massive damage and are banned in most states Forces loyal to Muammar Gaddafi have fired cluster bombs into residential areas of the besieged city of Misrata , according to witnesses. Human Rights Watch reported that four cluster bombs exploded in the city on Thursday and Friday, and two Libyan residents of Misrata told the Guardian that they suspected the munitions were being used. Cluster bombs, banned by most countries in the world, explode in midair, indiscriminately throwing out dozens of high-explosive bomblets which cause widespread damage and injuries over a large area. The submunitions often fail to explode on impact but detonate when stepped on or picked up. The claims came as the leaders of US, Britain and France committed their countries to pursue military action until Colonel Gaddafi has been removed from power. In a joint letter , Barack Obama, David Cameron and Nicolas Sarkozy described the onslaught on Misrata a “medieval siege … to strangle its population into submission”. More than 100 government rockets were also fired on Misrata on Friday during a second day of heavy bombardment. Eight people were killed, according to rebels, who said government forces had reached the city’s centre. HRW condemned the use of cluster munitions, especially in residential areas. “They pose a huge risk to civilians, both during attacks, because of their indiscriminate nature, and afterward because of the still-dangerous unexploded duds scattered about,” said Steve Goose, HRW’s arms division director. It said that, based on its examination of submunition found in Misrata, the bombs originated in Spain. “The cluster munition is a Spanish-produced MAT-120 120mm mortar projectile, which opens in mid-air and releases 21 submunitions over a wide area. Upon exploding on contact with an object, each submunition disintegrates into high-velocity fragments to attack people and releases a slug of molten metal to penetrate armored vehicles,” it said in a statement. The US secretary of state, Hillary Clinton, speaking after a meeting of Nato foreign ministers in Berlin, said she was not aware of the reports, but remarked, “I’m not surprised by anything that Colonel Gaddafi and his forces do.” She added: “That is worrying information. And it is one of the reasons the fight in Misrata is so difficult, because it’s at close quarters, it’s in amongst urban areas and it poses a lot of challenges to both Nato and to the opposition.” Mohamed, a rebel opposition spokesman in Misrata, told the Guardian by Skype that he had heard “one big explosion followed by many smaller ones. It sounds like cluster bombs”. He also reported seeing victims of what he called “candy bombs”, describing them as “something that resembles a pretty bottle. You pick it up, it explodes and kills you.” Aiman Abushahma, a doctor at a Misrata hospital, said medics were seeing people with injuries consistent with cluster bombs. “We never saw these injuries before. We need experts to assess [the weaponry],” he said. HRW said cluster bombs had fallen around 1km from the frontline in Misrata. It could not confirm whether civilians had been killed or injured by the munitions. It quoted two Misrata ambulance drivers, who said they had witnessed cluster strikes on Wednesday and Thursday. Ibrahim Abuwayfa saw an explosion in the air and “little flames” coming down at about 7pm on Wednesday. “One of the objects landed a few metres away on a residential wall and it exploded when it hit and then shrapnel flew out,” he said. Waleed Srayti said he saw a cluster munition strike at around 11am on Thursday. “I was in the streets behind the vegetable market,” he said. “A big battle was going on in Tripoli Street at the vegetable market. I heard a noise and about nine or 10 things started popping out of the sky over the market. I just saw the pops in the air. I saw white smoke coming down.” Government spokesman Moussa Ibrahim denied that Libya was using cluster bombs. “We can never do this, morally, legally. We challenge them [HRW] to prove this. We know the international community is coming en masse to our country. We’re not using them.” Libya has not signed the Convention on Cluster Munitions , which bans the use, production, stockpiling and transfer of cluster munitions, and requires states to destroy stockpiles. Libya War crimes Muammar Gaddafi Arab and Middle East unrest Middle East Harriet Sherwood guardian.co.uk

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Gaddafi forces ‘using cluster bombs’

Human Rights Watch say Gaddafi’s army has fired the weapons, which cause massive damage and are banned in most states Forces loyal to Muammar Gaddafi have fired cluster bombs into residential areas of the besieged city of Misrata , according to witnesses. Human Rights Watch reported that four cluster bombs exploded in the city on Thursday and Friday, and two Libyan residents of Misrata told the Guardian that they suspected the munitions were being used. Cluster bombs, banned by most countries in the world, explode in midair, indiscriminately throwing out dozens of high-explosive bomblets which cause widespread damage and injuries over a large area. The submunitions often fail to explode on impact but detonate when stepped on or picked up. The claims came as the leaders of US, Britain and France committed their countries to pursue military action until Colonel Gaddafi has been removed from power. In a joint letter , Barack Obama, David Cameron and Nicolas Sarkozy described the onslaught on Misrata a “medieval siege … to strangle its population into submission”. More than 100 government rockets were also fired on Misrata on Friday during a second day of heavy bombardment. Eight people were killed, according to rebels, who said government forces had reached the city’s centre. HRW condemned the use of cluster munitions, especially in residential areas. “They pose a huge risk to civilians, both during attacks, because of their indiscriminate nature, and afterward because of the still-dangerous unexploded duds scattered about,” said Steve Goose, HRW’s arms division director. It said that, based on its examination of submunition found in Misrata, the bombs originated in Spain. “The cluster munition is a Spanish-produced MAT-120 120mm mortar projectile, which opens in mid-air and releases 21 submunitions over a wide area. Upon exploding on contact with an object, each submunition disintegrates into high-velocity fragments to attack people and releases a slug of molten metal to penetrate armored vehicles,” it said in a statement. The US secretary of state, Hillary Clinton, speaking after a meeting of Nato foreign ministers in Berlin, said she was not aware of the reports, but remarked, “I’m not surprised by anything that Colonel Gaddafi and his forces do.” She added: “That is worrying information. And it is one of the reasons the fight in Misrata is so difficult, because it’s at close quarters, it’s in amongst urban areas and it poses a lot of challenges to both Nato and to the opposition.” Mohamed, a rebel opposition spokesman in Misrata, told the Guardian by Skype that he had heard “one big explosion followed by many smaller ones. It sounds like cluster bombs”. He also reported seeing victims of what he called “candy bombs”, describing them as “something that resembles a pretty bottle. You pick it up, it explodes and kills you.” Aiman Abushahma, a doctor at a Misrata hospital, said medics were seeing people with injuries consistent with cluster bombs. “We never saw these injuries before. We need experts to assess [the weaponry],” he said. HRW said cluster bombs had fallen around 1km from the frontline in Misrata. It could not confirm whether civilians had been killed or injured by the munitions. It quoted two Misrata ambulance drivers, who said they had witnessed cluster strikes on Wednesday and Thursday. Ibrahim Abuwayfa saw an explosion in the air and “little flames” coming down at about 7pm on Wednesday. “One of the objects landed a few metres away on a residential wall and it exploded when it hit and then shrapnel flew out,” he said. Waleed Srayti said he saw a cluster munition strike at around 11am on Thursday. “I was in the streets behind the vegetable market,” he said. “A big battle was going on in Tripoli Street at the vegetable market. I heard a noise and about nine or 10 things started popping out of the sky over the market. I just saw the pops in the air. I saw white smoke coming down.” Government spokesman Moussa Ibrahim denied that Libya was using cluster bombs. “We can never do this, morally, legally. We challenge them [HRW] to prove this. We know the international community is coming en masse to our country. We’re not using them.” Libya has not signed the Convention on Cluster Munitions , which bans the use, production, stockpiling and transfer of cluster munitions, and requires states to destroy stockpiles. Libya War crimes Muammar Gaddafi Arab and Middle East unrest Middle East Harriet Sherwood guardian.co.uk

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Trump’s poll surge underscores the insanity of the American Right

Click here to view this media Donald Trump’s recent surge to the front of Republican presidential primary polls has been confirmed by Public Policy Polling : Only 38% of Republican primary voters say they’re willing to support a candidate for President next year who firmly rejects the birther theory and those folks want Mitt Romney to be their nominee for President next year. With the other 62% of Republicans- 23% of whom say they are only willing to vote for a birther and 39% of whom are not sure- Donald Trump is cleaning up. And as a result Trump’s ridden the controversy about Barack Obama’s place of birth to the highest level of support we’ve found for anyone in our national GOP polling so far in 2011. Trump’s broken the perpetual gridlock we’ve found at the top of the Republican field, getting 26% to 17% for Mike Huckabee, 15% for Romney, 11% for Newt Gingrich, 8% for Sarah Palin, 5% for Ron Paul, and 4% for Michele Bachmann and Tim Pawlenty. Among that 23% only willing to vote for a birther Trump is cleaning up even more, getting 37% to 13% for Huckabee and Palin, and 10% for Romney and Gingrich. He’s a lot weaker with the 38% who say they’re perfectly happy to vote for someone who’s dismissed the birther theory- with them Romney leads at 23%, with Huckabee at 18%, Trump at 17%, Gingrich at 10%, and Palin at only 7%. Interestingly, Politico’s Ben Smith thinks that even asking such poll questions is absurd : Who seriously thinks Republican primary voters spend much time thinking about whether birth certificate views disqualify a candidate, much less are going to vote on those purported views. It’s really a great example of the deep irrelevance of most early polling. Actually, Smith’s remark is typical of someone who lives deep inside the Beltway bubble and doesn’t get out and mix much those ordinary voters out in the heartland. Because if you talk to Tea Partying Republican voters out in the heartland, these issues are very much a big deal to them. A large percentage of these voters have harbored doubts about Obama’s citizenship for some time even if they haven’t wholly embraced the Birther theories — and as Trump legitimizes them, both the theories and Trump have gained traction with them. Of course, Trump is also gaining traction with the Tea Partiers — a majority of whom take the Birther claims quite seriously — because he embodies so many of their values in many other regards, particularly their Randian/right-wing populist fantasies about the immense innate wisdom of our captains of industry. Really, this is the Donald Galt candidacy. But the synchronicity of Trump’s Birtherism with its resurgence among Republican primary voters is not merely an accident. At first, it appeared that Trump was just trying to make the rest of the GOP field look sane and intelligent by comparison. But what’s become clear instead is that their embrace of Trump reflects their willingness to ardently embrace claims and ideas that are provably untrue as long as they undermine — or better yet, functionally delegitimize — your political opponents. Last night on Sean Hannity’s Fox News show, his “Great American Panel” (loaded up, as usual, with a preponderance of right-wingers with a token liberal/voice of sanity) was claiming that Trump’s ascension was “making liberal heads spin”, even as Hannity was asserting that “the best case” Democrats have for proving Obama’s Hawaiian birth is the independent corroboration provided by the Hawaiian newspaper birth announcements (rather than the fact that Hawaiian officials say they have his long form on record there, and have issued a short-form birth certificate attesting to this fact). It may be true that liberal heads are spinning — and for that matter, as Ben Smith indicates, so are those of the Beltway villagers and corporate conservatives, all of whom cannot conceive of the reality that, yes, the American Right really has gone insane. We’ve been saying it for awhile now, you’ll notice. Indeed, we even wrote a book about it. Too many liberals, particularly those inside the Beltway, continue to believe that they can negotiate with these people. But the reality is, you can’t even have a normal conversation with them. Eventually they’re going to go tearing off into some Obama/socialist/Marxist/Caliphate conspiracy theory or another. And you’ll be left sitting there with a gaping mouth. Trump really is proving what we’ve been saying along: the Right has gone completely over a cliff. The question now is whether they’ll take the rest of us with them.

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Syria’s protest movement growing

Syria’s protest movement is far from uniform, and divisions are becoming apparent as it gathers momentum It was an episode that at any other time in Syria’s history might have gone unnoticed. A month ago, a group of Syrian children, aged between 10 and 13, daubed anti-regime graffiti on a wall in a dusty town near the Jordan border. The security forces made some arrests. Relatives of the children protested. They were insulted and beaten. Syrians have become used to this kind of brutality during the 11-year rule of Bashar al-Assad. But amid the revolt sweeping the Arab world, the incident quickly turned explosive. “It was unintentional,” said Omar, 29, who identified himself as a family friend of the children in the original protest. “They saw on television Egypt and Tunisia and copied it.” In the month since then, protests have swirled around Syria, raising questions about the durability of the Assad regime. A rally in Deraa ended with six people being killed by security forces. The movement spread to other areas – Homs, the Damascus suburb Douma, Aleppo and Latakia in the north, Banias on the coast. Every time the security services tried to quash the protests, it merely provoked more unrest. The number of protests has increased ever since, as has the death toll, which is now estimated at more than 200. Assad has tried waving threadbare olive branches: on Thursday he offered a prisoner release and appointed a new cabinet. But on Friday security forces used teargas to prevent thousands of protesters from marching towards Damascus’s main Abbasside Square, while thousands once again took to the streets in a number of towns and cities from Deraa to Banias. “We have always felt repression and lack of dignity but felt scared to do anything. Deraa changed that,” said Mohammed, a 22-year-old student from the Damascus suburb of Madamiya where early on protests spilled out of mosques in solidarity with the “martyrs” of Deraa. So who are the forces ranged against the Syrian president and can they follow the example of Tunisia and Egypt in ridding the region of another despot? As in Egypt and Tunisia, latent anger has been simmering for years in Syria over a lack of jobs, corruption and nepotism and political repression at the hands of unaccountable security services. Over the past three years prices have shot up, adding to economic woes, while a burgeoning youth population connected to the world through television and the internet has seen life outside. “The killing of people caused something to snap,” said Mohammed. “As soon as I chanted for freedom and Deraa I felt like a human being for the first time in my life.” People like Mohammed form the majority of the protest movement – apolitical, informed, frustrated, mostly between 20 and 40 and largely male. There is much to complain about: a poor education system that fails to equip them for the job market, the nepotism and cronyism that disqualifies them from many opportunities, an inability to marry because they cannot afford a house. Women have been less visible, though this week they turned out in their hundreds to call for the release of men rounded up in Beida. “We no longer trust the president,” said one of the women, who did not want to be named. “We lack freedoms and corruption is everywhere, and the youths have demonstrated to address these issues peacefully. They [the security forces] faced them with fire.” She pointed out that her brother was summoned by the Syrian intelligence 30 years ago and has never returned home. “We do not know if he’s dead or alive,” she said. This cohort has been bolstered by a small but budding group of lawyers, artists and aid workers engaged in social activism; teaching Iraqi refugees or taking food to victims of Syria’s drought. “I have long been trying to organise protests,” said one activist and former NGO worker in Damascus, who is subject to a travel ban, one of the Assad regime’s tools of repression. “But until now people have been too scared – Egypt, Tunisia and Libya gave us inspiration whilst the killings caused anger to outweigh fear.” Activists like him have helped to organise further protests through a series of secret chatrooms online, and others such as Razan Zeitouneh and Wissam Tarif, two outspoken human rights activists who unusually go by their real names, seek to document the violence and garner media attention. In the last fortnight, members of the Damascus Declaration, a grouping of liberal and Islamist activists, have thrown their weight behind the protesters. The movement is far from uniform, and divisions are becoming apparent as it grows. Calls for toppling Assad and defacing billboards of him are on the rise, but some protesters have specific demands. In Douma, some have called for the release of political prisoners and an end to shootings, while Mohammed says he wants “freedom” but is not yet sure what that means – “If good reforms are made, that may be enough.” And it would be wrong to say the movement is rampant or widespread. It may count many tens of thousands of supporters. But Syria is a country of more than 20 million people. And there may be as many Assad loyalists as there are protesters, people who through genuine admiration or fear of the alternative support the president. Despite protesters from the Sunni majority being joined by some Kurds, Christians and reportedly Alawites from Assad’s minority sect, they and many other Sunnis fear the rise of conservative Islam if Syria’s secular state were to fall. Others look to Iraq and Lebanon as a forewarning. “We may not agree with everything, but the president has kept it safe for us,” said one Christian in Damascus’s Old City. A young female Muslim added: “He is young and understands us and is struggling against a regime he unintentionally inherited from his father.” Amid a standoff between protesters and the government, what comes next will depend on the large silent majority, including Sunni businessmen and religious figures. Almost all have the same aspirations to a life with dignity and without repression and for a chance to have more control over their lives and their country. “I changed my mind after the speech he [Assad] gave,” said Abdullah, a 30-year-old office worker who described himself as previously neutral. “I am thinking of joining the protest because I don’t think he will – or even can – make changes.” Kurds turned out to rally last week despite Assad’s move to grant citizenship to tens of thousands of stateless Kurds. But others say protesting is not the way. “Protests have not been about people changing their opinions but breaking the shackles stopping them from expressing them,” said Ahmed, a 20-year-old from the impoverished eastern region. “I feel the same but I want to study and change things peacefully.” Assad can fall back on a regime apparatus that, despite occasional reports of reluctance by army conscripts to open fire on protesters, is loyal. The family has populated the upper echelons of the military and intelligence with Alawites who fear persecution if a Sunni majority takes hold. There are also Sunni loyalists in the regime who through a system of carefully doled out benefits are discouraged from leaving Assad’s side. Each time they take to the streets, Syria’s protesters know they have a hard battle ahead with an unpredictable end. Katherine Marsh is a pseudonym for a journalist living in Damascus Syria Bashar Al-Assad Arab and Middle East unrest Middle East Katherine Marsh guardian.co.uk

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Apathy and anger as AV day looms

Both camps struggle to convince voters of importance of 5 May poll – in town that would have had a different MP under AV Paul Holmes surveys the celebrated crooked spire and historic market square in his former constituency of Chesterfield and shrugs. “It’s almost certain,” the former Liberal Democrat MP agrees. “But you can’t tell with voters.” The British Election Study suggests it is a certainty. Under AV, the alternative voting system subject to a referendum on 5 May, the study says this Derbyshire constituency would have been one of 43 to elect a different MP. The seat’s Labour incumbent, Toby Perkins, would have seen his perilously slim 549 majority wiped out by second and third preferences and Holmes, 54, a former Lib Dem party chairman and history teacher, would not be the ex-MP he is today. He says: “Nearly two out of three votes were against Labour last year. But Labour won. And that’s just ludicrous. The people defending first past the post [FPTP], I just don’t know how they can. It’s absolutely indefensible, excepting that turkeys don’t vote for Christmas.” History acknowledges the part Chesterfield has played in past political upsets. The Cock and Pynot inn, now a museum two miles from the town centre at Old Whittington, was where parliamentarian conspirators plotted the fall of James II in favour of William III in the 1688 Glorious Revolution. Holmes is hoping a similar zeal for change will galvanise local voters to put a cross in the yes box. To persuade them, he and other Lib Dem canvassers are pounding the constituency streets, pushing local election leaflets through 48,000 letterboxes along with literature explaining why AV is so important. But his passion appears not to have translated to the people of a town that for more than a century prospered on the sweat of coalminers and toil of engineering and was largely Labour. Now the pits are grassed over, housing and retail developments colonise old factory sites, and Chesterfield is reinventing itself with greater reliance on smaller businesses and technology. With the Lib Dems defending 38 seats to Labour’s 10 on Chesterfield council at next month’s elections, Holmes feels he can argue: “The social and economic profile is changing. It’s no longer a Labour town.” Except under FPTP. However, in the Pavements shopping centre and in the market square, questions about AV are largely met with head shakes, blank stares and apologetic responses: “No. I’ve not heard of it.” “A referendum? Really?” “We don’t keep up with the news.” Those who are aware, however, reveal that whatever message the campaigns manage to impart, decisions will be based on complex factors. There is shared disgust over MPs perceived to be more crooked than the town’s famous spire, over broken promises on tuition fees, fears for the NHS, and the leniency they feel has been shown to bankers. But how this negativity will manifest itself on 5 May is not clear. “If I don’t vote, it will be in protest,” says Darren, 45, a joiner. His daughter is at university, but his son has decided he can’t afford to go. Banks have destroyed Darren’s small business and his health, he claims. And he can’t forgive MPs over their expenses. “The way they have explained [AV], it’s like solicitors’ talk, it’s too complicated and looks as if they are hiding something. As for Clegg. Well, if he were on fire, I wouldn’t chuck a bucket of water on him. He’s reason enough to vote no.” Perkins, 40, who reclaimed the seat for Labour, opposes the change, and admits under AV he might not have won. Unlike Holmes, he hasn’t been pushing the message on doorsteps. Because Labour has no party line – Ed Miliband is for, many backbenchers are against – it is not a registered party under the Electoral Commission for or against AV, he says, “so we can’t just put the no campaign stuff in with our election leaflets”. He says that there is a “pitiful” awareness of the issue. “I’ve spoken to a hell of a lot of people in the last few weeks, and I think only five have asked me about it, one of whom was in favour, and four against.” He’s concerned some Labour voters may see Miliband in favour as well as Tony Benn, who represented Chesterfield for 17 years, and assume the Labour line is backing a yes vote. But he is hoping the “Clegg effect” may garner votes for the no camp. “There’s a real sense of anger with Clegg. Indeed when I discussed it with my father he said: ‘I really can’t make up my mind about AV. But I know if I vote no, Nick Clegg will be sad on 6 May, and that’s enough for me.’” Benn, who backs the yes campaign, says he thinks AV would not have altered Chesterfield’s result. “The Labour vote recovered and the Lib Dem vote declined, and I don’t think AV would have made any difference,” he says.But he is not convinced the pro-AV campaign has done enough. “With the Conservatives against it and a lot of Labour people against, and the general sense of cynicism about politics, I think it is not all that certain it will go through. And I don’t know to what extent people understand it.” Perkins is also hopeful that older voters, those most likely to turn out, are more likely to vote no – such as John Walker, 80, a former engineering worker, who, after studying the arguments in detail, has concludes: “Australia and Fiji don’t seem too happy with it, and I can’t see a good reason to change.” But some are wavering. “It’s a bit clearer now,” said former bakery worker Lily Wightman, 64, after AV was explained. “Yes,” said her friend Kathleen Starbuck, 62, a former canteen worker at Chesterfield transport, “perhaps it is a bit fairer.” Wightman adds: “I used to like that Nick Clegg – before he went over. But I don’t think I’d let that cloud my judgment.” Benn, who supports the Yes campaign, believes AV would not have altered Chesterfield’s result. “The Labour vote recovered and the Lib Dem vote declined, and I don’t think AV would have made any difference,” he said. He is also not convinced the Yes campaign has done enough to win. “With the Conservatives against it and a lot of Labour people against, and the general sense of cynicism about politics, I think it is not all that certain it will go through,” he said. “And I don’t know to what extent people understand it”. ends AV referendum Alternative vote Electoral reform Caroline Davies guardian.co.uk

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