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Cameron in Pakistan for talks

Prime minister seeks to ‘deepen the unbreakable partnership’ and plans to announce extra aid for Pakistan David Cameron is to try to mend relations with the Pakistani government with a lightning visit to Islamabad where he will claim the two countries have “an unbreakable partnership”. He headed to Islamabad for a day of talks after visiting UK fighter pilots enforcing the Libyan no-fly zone from a Nato base in Sicily. He will hold talks with president Asif Ali Zardari and the prime minister, Yousuf Raza Gilani, during his first visit to the country – a trip designed to restore relations after he upset the Pakistani government last July by accusing elements in the country of “facing both ways on terrorism”. Cameron’s criticism of Pakistan for promoting the export of terror created such a diplomatic outcry because it was made on a trip to India and because he refused to withdraw his remarks. He attempted to patch up relations during Zardari’s visit to Britain in August, held against the background of Pakistan’s floods. The two countries have agreed to hold a strategic dialogue comprising annual discussions between leaders and bi-annual foreign ministers talks. Zardari has repeatedly warned the west that the battle for hearts and minds over the Taliban’s use of Pakistan as the base for its attacks on Nato forces in Afghanistan is being lost. He says Cameron has not done enough to recognise how much Pakistan is doing to combat terrorism. Acknowledging the misunderstandings of the past, Cameron will argue in a speech to students that he wants “a new chapter in the relationship between our two countries. We want to deepen and enhance the unbreakable partnership between Pakistan and Britain. The unbreakable partnership must not just be between our two governments. It must be between our peoples, too”. He will acknowledge “there are challenges that our friendship must overcome”, including the subjects of relations with India, national security and questions of governance. Cameron will call for a fresh start: “It is time for a new step in relations between Britain and Pakistan, and between Britons and Pakistanis.” He wants a “Pakistan that is safe for its citizens, free from the threat of terror on your doorsteps, in your neighbourhoods”. He will promise a “Britain that respects your choices; a relationship of mutual trust”. He will draw parallels between the Arab democratic spring and the lawyers’ movement in Pakistan, the popular uprising against General Pervez Musharraf when he unconstitutionally sacked the chief justice , Iftikhar Muhammad Chaudhry. The f Foreign Office’s annual human rights report was still highly critical of Pakistan’s record, pointing to state efforts to muzzle independent media. It warned the judicial system was “under-trained, often politicised, corrupt and under-resourced”, adding: “The courts currently face a backlog of more than 1m cases. Successful convictions are rare. “Police investigations are often seriously flawed, based on allegation rather than evidence, and trials cannot be described as either fair or free in many cases, being marked by delay and intimidation.” The Pakistani foreign office dismissed the report as a worthless and skewed document that omitted the “positives” of Pakistani society. Cameron is expected to announce further aid for education and health. Britain has already announced the doubling of its development aid over the next four years, which will make Pakistan the highest recipient of British aid by 2015, receiving £446m annually. Cameron, who will also be meeting opposition leaders in Pakistan, is being accompanied by Sir Peter Ricketts, the national security adviser, Sir John Sawers, head of the secret intelligence service, Lady Warsi, the leading Muslim politician in the cabinet, and Sir David Richards, chief of the defence staff. The composition of the team underlines the degree to which the trip has a strong security element in light of the fact that as many as 50 terrorist plots in the UK are thought to have originated in Pakistan. At least four cabinet ministers have visited Pakistan in the last year – a sign of how important the government believes improved relations can be in preventing the threat of terrorist groups operating inside the country or in Afghanistan. Cameron will be relieved he is arriving at a time of improved Indian-Pakistani relations. Pakistan last week agreed to allow a visit by Indian investigators as part of their inquiry into the 2008 Mumbai militant attacks in a significant confidence building measure between the nuclear-armed neighbours. Pakistan Global terrorism David Cameron Terrorism policy Foreign policy Aid Patrick Wintour guardian.co.uk

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A news article written by a reporter at AFP

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Holder points finger at Congress for forcing 9/11 military tribunals

Click here to view this media U.S. Attorney General Eric Holder announced Monday his decision to try 9/11 suspects military tribunals at Guantanamo. Holder said that he stood behind his initial decision to try Khalid Sheikh Mohammed in criminal court. “Now, unfortunately, since I made that decision, members of Congress have intervened and imposed restrictions blocking the administration from bringing any Guantanamo detainees to try in the United States regardless of the venue,” he explained.

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Holder points finger at Congress for forcing 9/11 military tribunals

Click here to view this media U.S. Attorney General Eric Holder announced Monday his decision to try 9/11 suspects military tribunals at Guantanamo. Holder said that he stood behind his initial decision to try Khalid Sheikh Mohammed in criminal court. “Now, unfortunately, since I made that decision, members of Congress have intervened and imposed restrictions blocking the administration from bringing any Guantanamo detainees to try in the United States regardless of the venue,” he explained.

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Holder points finger at Congress for forcing 9/11 military tribunals

Click here to view this media U.S. Attorney General Eric Holder announced Monday his decision to try 9/11 suspects military tribunals at Guantanamo. Holder said that he stood behind his initial decision to try Khalid Sheikh Mohammed in criminal court. “Now, unfortunately, since I made that decision, members of Congress have intervened and imposed restrictions blocking the administration from bringing any Guantanamo detainees to try in the United States regardless of the venue,” he explained.

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Fox Business’ Judge Napolitano Pimps the Opening of Atlas Shrugged

Click here to view this media I’m still waiting for the good Judge to explain to the rest of us what he said to his mom after he told her that he was buying into Ayn Rand’s Libertarian B.S. “philosophy” of “I’ve got mine and the hell with anyone else” after, as he admitted here, reading Rand’s book several times during his younger years in college and his mom freaking out about what sort of philosophy he was buying into. Apparently like a lot of people who were young and impressionable and read that book, Andrew Napolitano never figured out that it was a myth propagated by people who really just don’t want to pay their fair share for participating in our civilized society, to hold up their end of the social contract. Like most Libertarians and this current “Tea Party” crowd, they basically believe that you’re “on your own” and that we have no shared responsibility to each other in maintaining a civil society. And like the good little cheerleader for Rand’s philosophy that Napolitano is, he brought on the producer of the new movie version of Atlas Shrugged coming out on Tax Day this month, John Aglialoro, to push the latest propaganda effort by the right to fool Americans into thinking that being selfish and greedy and telling everyone else I’ve got mine and screw you is somehow a virtue. And if anyone wonders why Fox’s sorry excuse for a “business channel” that was supposed to compete with the other not-quite-as-sorry example of a business channel, CNBC, and why their ratings are in the tank, I’d just cite this as one of the many examples. CNBC pushes corporate America’s agenda with their reporting; but Fox’s alternative has stuff like this Libertarian crap as a regular feature. So if you’re looking for news on how the market’s doing, you can choose between the mouthpieces for the upper 1 % at CNBC, or you can watch the wingnuts over at Fox tell you that you should take Ayn Rand’s horribly written novel seriously.

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Lansley tries to save NHS reforms

Health secretary makes the rare step of making a Commons statement on his bill as it passes through parliament The health secretary, Andrew Lansley, is to launch a last-ditch attempt to rescue his controversial NHS reforms by accepting that the membership of new GP-led consortiums needs to be widened. Lansley will on Tuesday agree with the broad principles of proposals made by the health select committee, chaired by John Major’s last health secretary, Stephen Dorrell, although he will resist many of the detailed recommendations. Lansley was forced to announce to MPson Monday that he would amend his plans, during a “natural break” in the passage of the heath and social care bill. His reforms would hand 60% of the NHS’s £103bn budget to new GP-led consortiums. Government sources said he was studying carefully proposals by the committee, which warns that GPs should not be the sole commissioners of care in the NHS. In a report it calls for GPs to share commissioning powers and responsibility with nurses, consultants, public health experts and patients. Lansley, who met David Cameron in Downing Street on Monday, took the rare step of making a statement to MPs about the progress of a bill which has still not completed all its stages in the Commons. In a sign of nervousness in Downing Street, which fears that the public backlash is jeopardising Cameron’s work in persuading the public that the NHS is safe in Tory hands, Lansley will accept some of the broad principles in the health select committee report. “Some of the ideas suggested by the committee are in sync with the government’s thinking on how, for example, others might be involved in the GP consortia,” one Whitehall source said. But Lansley will not accept all of Dorrell’s ideas because he believes they would put too many groups in the new GP-led consortiums. “It is wrong to assume that the health select committee is telling the secretary of state what to do,” the source said. “This is an evolutionary process.” Dorrell admitted that his reworking of the bill “is not minor tweaking”. He said: “We believe it is crucial to get the reform of NHS commissioning right if the service is to confront the massive financial challenge it now faces. Our report contains a set of practical proposals to strengthen the health and social care bill and make it better able to meet the government’s objectives. “Our proposals are designed to ensure that NHS commissioning involves all stakeholders – GPs, certainly, but also nurses, hospital doctors, and representatives of social care and local communities. We believe this broadening of the base for commissioning is vital if we are to achieve the changes that are necessary to allow the NHS to deliver properly co-ordinated healthcare.” The signals that the government was prepared to accept some of the principles behind the Dorrell report came as Lansley acknowledged that people have “genuine” concerns as he announced that the government would table amendments to the bill. Amid fears in Downing Street that Lansley has failed to explain the thinking behind his reforms, the health secretary said he would use a “natural break in the passage of the bill” to offer reassurances that the government’s sole intention is to improve the NHS. The bill completed its committee stage last week. No date has been fixed for its report stage, the penultimate hurdle before it goes to the House of Lords. In a sign of Lansley’s isolation no full voting member of the cabinet, apart from ministers on other business, sat with him on the frontbench. Lord Tebbit, the former Conservative chairman, criticised the plans in the Daily Mirror. Lansley will outline the amendments at a joint appearance later this week with the prime minister and Nick Clegg. The health secretary told MPs the amendments will make clear there will be no backdoor privatisation of the NHS; Lansley told MPs: “Choice, competition and the involvement of the private sector should only be a means to improve services for patient, not ends in themselves. Some services like accident and emergency or major trauma clearly will never be based on competition.” the private sector will not be allowed to cherry-pick the most profitable parts of the NHS; and there will be greater transparency and accountability of the new consortiums. Lansley said: “People want to know that the GP commissioning groups cannot have a conflict of interest, are transparent in their decisions and accountable not only nationally but locally, through the democratic input to health and wellbeing boards.” Under the committee’s proposals, the GP consortiums would become NHS commissioning authorities and would no longer be merely the province of GPs. GPs should take a majority of the seats on the authority, says the report, but there should also be places reserved for a professional social care representative, an elected member of the local authority, a nurse, a hospital doctor and a public health expert. This wider membership is necessary to ensure commissioning bodies, which have responsibility for spending large amounts of taxpayers’ money, “comply with the highest standards of governance and accountability”, says the committee. It would also help break down the barriers between primary, hospital and community care, with the commissioning authorities responsible for commissioning all of it, as well as forging closer links with social care. NHS Health Health policy Andrew Lansley Liberal-Conservative coalition Nicholas Watt Sarah Boseley Polly Curtis guardian.co.uk

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‘I never thought I would be a victim’

A detective investigating sexual assaults was

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Tomlinson officer ‘feared for his life’

PC Simon Harwood tells inquest how G20 protesters turned hostile when he tried to arrest the newspaper seller in 2009 The police officer who pushed Ian Tomlinson to the ground during the G20 protests two years ago told an inquest into the newspaper seller’s death that he had been “in fear for my life”. PC Simon Harwood was advised by the coroner, Peter Thornton, that he was not obliged to answer any question that could incriminate him as he took the witness stand for the first time and came face to face with Tomlinson’s grieving family. His opening remark that he was “here to help the family” was met with snorts of derision in the public gallery and Tomlinson’s son, Paul King, stormed out of the hearing. Tomlinson’s widow, Julia, also left the room, followed by several tearful members of the family. Thornton told Harwood: “I’m sure that you know, and no doubt will have been advised, that you are not obliged to answer any question tending to incriminate you. It may well be that I shall repeat that warning to you later.” Harwood, dressed in a grey suit and patterned yellow tie, said: “I’m very aware of that. I’m here as a witness to help with the inquest and also to give some sort of answers to help the family. So I’m here to answer questions, just to help.” There were scuffles outside the International Dispute Resolution Centre in Fleet Street when Harwood arrived at the inquest. Security staff escorted him past waiting photographers. Harwood’s evidence to the inquest is likely to last at least two days and will play a crucial role in deciding the circumstances of Tomlinson’s death almost exactly two years ago. Tomlinson staggered a hundred yards from where the police officer pushed him and died within minutes of the incident. The officer was questioned by Alison Hewitt, counsel for the inquest on the events leading up to the encounter with Tomlinson in Royal Exchange Passage in the City of London on 1 April 2009. Harwood, a police carrier driver on the day, described how he saw a demonstrator crouching at the rear of one of the police vehicles and drawing or writing something on the bodywork. He told the inquest: “I then made my way towards the person concerned”. His intention, he said, was to arrest the man. Asked if he believed an arrest was the right course of action, he said it was his “duty” because the “blatant disregard” the protester showed him gave him no other choice. “I felt it was done right in front of me, so close to my position, I believed it was my duty to go and take some course of action towards this male.” But the arrest caused other protesters to react as the arrest began going awry and his target struggled to break free. He said he had become the centre of attention, with the protesters jeering and shouting. There was a “large gasp” from the crowd as the suspect he was holding collided with the door of a police van. Footage showed him leading the man further away from the vans with the crowd surging behind him. He said: “At the time, because he was becoming more aggressive, more hostile, I was starting to believe that this was getting out of control. I was aware there was a very hostile crowd and I was actually in fear for my life then from what was coming towards me.” Members of Tomlinson’s family shook their heads when they heard the officer say he was in fear for his life. Harwood said that before going out on duty that day he had made sure his police numbers were displayed on his uniform. The jury also heard Harwood offer some explanation about his uniform. Jurors have already been shown pictures of Harwood’s distinctive dress, which marked him apart from other officers. He was wearing a yellow jacket tucked into his trousers and a balaclava covering the lower half of his face. Photographs also appear to suggest his badge numbers had not been showing. Harwood said he had secured his epaulettes to the shoulders of his jacket with pins. “I always have my numbers [visible] as it is a policy, a Metropolitan police policy, to always have your numbers displayed, especially on public order.” The officer added that his jacket was tucked into his trousers “for health and safety reasons”, enabling him to access the weapons and tools on his belt. The balaclava, he said, was lifted as a precaution to protect him from injury. He said of the policing of the demonstration: “There was a general feeling that it would be robust policing, not just going and picking on people, but robust as in keeping the demonstration where it should be.” The inquest continues. Ian Tomlinson Police London G20 Protest David Sharrock Paul Lewis guardian.co.uk

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Katie Couric Leaving the CBS Evening News; Look Back at Her Worst Bias

AP’s Dave Bauder reported this morning that CBS Evening News anchor Katie Couric would be leaving that post. An exact departure date was not announced, but Couric’s contract with CBS News is set to expire on June 4, 2011, although Bauder suggested that if Couric strikes a deal with CBS for a syndicated daytime talk show, she might stay on temporarily if there was “an extended search for her successor.” The Media Research Center has just updated our “ Profile in Bias ” recounting the liberal slant that Couric promoted as CBS Evening News anchor. ( An earlier report covered the bias she conveyed as a longtime co-host of NBC’s Today). Here are some of the choicer examples from her disastrous tenure at CBS: Tea Party = “Moderate Republicans” an “Endangered Species” “The party crashers. Big primary victories by fringe candidates open a rift in the GOP….After big victories this week by candidates of the Tea Party, the Grand Old Party is in turmoil….Does this mean moderate Republicans are becoming an endangered species?” — Katie Couric on the September 16, 2010 CBS Evening News. “We went to Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, and talked with independent voters who helped President Obama win that battleground state two years ago….There was unanimous agreement in this group, the Tea Party isn’t their cup of tea.” — Couric on the October 14, 2010 CBS Evening News. Fearing Cuts that Are “Too Deep” “Republicans say high on their priority list is deficit reduction, starting with major cuts in domestic spending this year. Fiscally conservative freshmen say everything’s fair game. But is there danger in your view, Congressman [Allen] West, that the ax will be too sharp, that the cuts will be too deep?” — Couric during panel discussion with freshmen members of Congress, CBS Evening News, January 5, 2011. We Need “Muslim Version of The Cosby Show” “Maybe we need a Muslim version of The Cosby Show. I know that sounds crazy, I know that sounds crazy. But The Cosby Show did so much to change attitudes about African-Americans in this country, and I think sometimes people are afraid of what they don’t understand – like you, Mo.” — Couric talking to comedian Mo Rocca on her @katiecouric web show, December 22, 2010. “There is a debate to be had about the sensitivity of building this center so close to Ground Zero. But we can not let fear and rage tear down the towers of our core American values.” — Katie Couric on Ground Zero mosque for “Katie Couric's Notebook” on Couric & Co. blog, August 23, 2010. Shaking Her Pom-Poms for Obama

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