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Where will Larry Page lead Google?

As Google co-founder Larry Page takes over from Eric Schmidt as the company’s CEO, technology editor Charles Arthur looks at what Page needs to do to take the search engine through its next phase of growth In the 10 years since the last time Larry Page was Google’s chief executive, the company has changed a bit. It has gone from an ambitious startup to a publicly-listed giant of the internet which generates cash and has 24,000 employees (and will probably have 30,000 by the end of the year); it has a stake in the fast-growing smartphone market, which barely existed; and it has also begun facing up to the changes inherent in being so large, one of which – the risks of bureaucracy – are well-known to most chief executives; the other – the threat of antitrust action in Europe and the US – are not. As Page, who turned 38 last month, takes over the reins of the company again from Eric Schmidt, who announced in January he was stepping down , he knows he has to get those problems fixed. And although publicly Google is telling journalists “don’t look for dramatic or immediate changes”, Page has already begun tweaking the way that the company is organised and run in the three months he has had to prepare to take over fully. That’s not to say that Google’s big visions (projects such as driverless cars or the Google BookScan project ) are going away. Page is in many ways the ideal face to represent the company: he’s rather geeky, isn’t very outgoing, but is extremely smart. And he’s bringing a number of changes to the company and how it runs. • Product and engineering managers have been asked to email him about their projects now under way, with a view to slimming them down: they were asked to describe their projects in 60 words or fewer, effectively getting them to pitch the ideas. He also spent parts of February and March touring the company and its outposts asking those managers about what problems they think they face in getting things done. • The detail of meetings – which can be the making or the death of a large company – has also been tweaked: attendees are told to pick a decision-maker and hold off working on their laptops during the meeting. (That would be something of a departure for Page, who – as the New Yorker writer Ken Auletta documents – once spent most of a meeting with IAC’s powerful Barry Diller with his head buried in his Palm PDA reading emails.) • Page has reinstated a form of the “weekly meeting” that Schmidt got rid of when he took over in 2001. That meeting had brought together the company’s (then rather fewer) top executives and allowed anyone to come up and query them about something. Schmidt felt it distracted from their work. Page clearly thinks it’s time it came back: he has announced that the divisional heads will be available in a central space each day in the iconic Building 43 of the main headquarters, so that if someone does have a pressing query, they’ll know when and where to find them. • Google isn’t going to be the “bottom-up” culture of past years, when someone like Paul Buchheit could knock together the prototype of Gmail in a single day (as happened in 2001) and then build it up by accreting engineers from other teams. (Buchheit also came up with the ” Don’t Be Evil” motto that the company took to its heart.) Instead, a better model is how the Android platform has been driven, with a clear strategy (which despite claims to the contrary, has not diverged from its earliest intentions) driven by its lieutenants. The idea was never that Android would be an open-source project where absolutely anyone could make a phone, stick software in it, and call it “Android-powered”. Instead Andy Rubin, who Google acquired in 2005 with the eponymously-named Android company, has been given his head by Page to make the phone system into a money-spinner for Google; its rise to the lead in the US and world smartphone markets , and the increasingly tight restrictions that Google is making on what tweaks can be made to the software, means that that could easily be achieved. Gene Munster of the analysts Piper Jaffray reckons that by next year there will be more than 130 million Android users worldwide, and that their viewing of ads on phones, plus other income sources (such as the Android Market for apps, where Google takes a 30% cut of any purchase, just like Apple) could generate more than $1bn in straight revenue. • Data will remain the most important decision-maker. Google once tried to figure out what the best shade of blue was to get people to click on hyperlinks. An in-house designer picked one shade; an engineer then showed the results of a small test which suggested another shade would do better. For Google, more clicks means more ad revenue – so it embarked on a huge test with millions of GMail users as guinea pigs in which it tracked clickthroughs as they were served very slightly different colours of blue. The data won – and the rebooted Google, with a computer scientist at its helm, will reiterate the importance of always following the data. It might not seem like an inspired way to do design. But Google is about size. • Doing something in the “social software” space remains an ambition at Google, but Page stands somewhat aloof from it. He isn’t on Facebook or Twitter (unlike Schmidt, who elliptically announced his departure on the latter). Google already has a long track record of failure in social software: Jaiku wanted to be Twitter, and wasn’t; Google Buzz was so dreadfully implemented (released to the wild after some limited testing in-house) that it led to lawsuits and Federal Trade Commission slapdowns that mean Google will have to tolerate oversight on its privacy policies for the next 20 – that’s twenty – years . It’s possible that social software is simply a blind spot for a company whose culture is dominated by engineers and whose brand is built around search. It’s an oddity, because Google leapt to prominence a decade ago with the American public when they discovered that it wouldn’t just lead them to good factual answers, but that you could find out about potential dates and lovemates: “Googling” as a verb first appeared in a US paper at the end of 2000 when the New York Observer noticed that people used it to check out their upcoming dates because it could lead them to names. But Google has never managed to become a place where you connect with people – possibly because Page and Sergey Brin, its two inventors, designed it not as a destination but as a staging point on the web, your midpoint to whatever you were looking for. • The A-word – antitrust – might look like a headache for Page. The European Commission has sent out sets of three detailed questionnaires to advertising companies around Europe, asking about how well the online advertising market works and whether Google is behaving in an overly dominant way by using its heft to prevent others competing fairly (in antitrust lingo, this is known as “foreclosing the market”). The signals emanating from the EC suggest though that Google may escape this time – though its clearly preferential treatment of its own results, as has been highlighted by one of the principal complainants, the British search startup Foundem , may have to end. Industry observers shook their heads at the irony of Microsoft weighing in on this last week, in which it filed an antitrust complaint to the EC , offering a more-in-sorrow-than-anger tone and acknowledging its own rocky antitrust past with the EC (which only stopped biting chunks out of it in 2004). Google may not have to adjust its behaviour too much. One thing that won’t change with Page’s ascent: the deeply felt antipathy inside Google towards Microsoft, which had already been the target of a sting earlier this year over search results, and with which Google is increasingly tussling for business contracts to offer cloud services such as email and document sharing. In fact, it may be the fight with Microsoft that will define Page’s tenure more than the driverless cars or the potential dominance of Android. There’s no chance that Google will chip away at Microsoft’s principal monopoly, Windows, which generates roughly half the Redmond giant’s profits; the Chrome OS laptops Google is encouraging PC makers to build will be suitable only for a small group who live always-connected lives. But if Google can start to undermine the Office monopoly, which generates the other half of Microsoft’s income, then it can begin to destabilise its ageing enemy. And at present, Microsoft remains the only company that can challenge Google on every front – smartphone operating systems, cloud services, search. Google Larry Page Search engines Internet Technology sector Smartphones Mobile phones Android Software Gmail Apps Charles Arthur guardian.co.uk

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Sen. Lindsey Graham proposes giving missiles to Libyan rebels

Click here to view this media Sen. Lindsey Graham (R-SC) thinks it’s time to take the fight in Libya to the next level. The senior senator from South Carolina said Sunday that the U.S. should directly target embattled Libyan leader Muammar Gaddafi with airstrikes. He also suggested that the opposition forces should be given U.S.-built Tube-launched, Optically-tracked, Wire command data link, guided (TOW) missiles. “I think it’s time to go directly after Gaddafi,” he told CBS’ Bob Schieffer. “If you had TOW missiles given to the rebels in Libya, they could fight the tanks in addition to air power, but this strategy that President Obama has come up with, I think, is not going to defeat a determined enemy.” “So this strategy is going to lead to a stalemate. We should be taking the fight to Tripoli. You don’t need ground troops but we should take the air campaign to Tripoli to go Gaddafi’s inner circle. They live like kings. Go after them, to go after their propaganda machine. The way to end this war is to have Gaddafi’s inner circle to crack. The way to get his inner circle to crack is to go after them directly.” “You say what we need to do is air strikes on Gaddafi and his people?” Schieffer asked. “Absolutely. I think he’s an international war criminal,” Graham said. “The strategy should be to help the rebels help themselves. To take the best air force in the world and park it during this fight is outrageous. When we called for a no-fly zone, we didn’t mean our planes… As much as I respect our NATO allies, you take a lot of capacity off the table by grounding our airplanes.” “You’re ready to give missiles to the rebels there?” Shieffer pressed. “I think TOW missiles — I’m ready to look at arming them to help them help themselves. We need America air power back into the fight and we need to take the fight to Tripoli,” Graham insisted. Obama has reportedly signed a presidential directive authorizing the Central Intelligence Agency (CIA) to conduct secret operations to support the Libyan opposition forces. “I’m not ruling it out,” the president said last week when Brian Williams asked him about arming the rebels. “But, I’m also not ruling it in.” Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid said Sunday that the U.S. should hold off providing arms to the opposition forces. “I spoke to the president yesterday about this, President Obama, and I think at this stage we really don’t know who the leaders of this rebel group is,” he told Schieffer . “We have others, as [Defense] Secretary Gates has said, that can do it more easily than we can,” Reid added. “So I think at this stage let’s just wait and see.”

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9/11 architect faces Guantánamo trial

Khalid Sheikh Mohammed to be tried at the US military base in Cuba rather than in a civilian court on American soil Khalid Shaikh Mohammed, the alleged mastermind of the 9/11 attacks on New York and Washington, will be tried by a military commission in Guantánamo. It is the latest retreat by the Obama administration from its much-vaunted plans to overhaul the legal processing of terror suspects. Mohammed and four other terror suspects will be put on trial through a military system that President Obama had vowed to abolish when he began in office in January 2009. The White House had declared its intent in 2009 to push them through the civilian justice system with a landmark trial at the federal court in Manhattan, a stone’s throw away from Ground Zero. But the proposal invoked a groundswell of opposition, most powerfully from New York residents and the mayor of the city, Michael Bloomberg. The US attorney general, Eric Holder, was expected to announce the administration’s U-turn at a press conference in Guantánamo. The about-face is hugely symbolic as Mohammed was al-Qaida’s main architect of 9/11, according to the commission of inquiry into the terrorist outrages convened in New York. How he is treated arguably sets the tone for America’s legal handling of terror suspects. Obama had wanted to bring that legal process back into the norms of civilian justice. But he was thwarted by a wall of opposition from Republicans in Congress, backed by some Democrats. Republicans inserted a provision into the latest defence budget effectively banning the use of Pentagon funds to transfer Guantánamo detainees to the mainland, thus blocking any civilian trials. Obama initially promised to repeal the restriction, but last month he backtracked by allowing the resumption of military commission trials at the US base in Cuba. Bloomberg also did a volte face. Initially, he approved the idea of a civilian trial for Mohammed in downtown Manhattan, but then turned against it, arguing that it would cost the city more than $400m (£248m) in security alone. Other opponents claimed that it would again make New York the target of terrorists’ wrath. Never Forget, a group of family members of victims of the attacks, as well as emergency workers and former military personnel, welcomed the announcement. “We are relieved that President Obama has abandoned his plan to try the 9/11 conspirators in a civilian court on US soil. Prosecuting war criminals, whose only connection to this country is the location of their victims, in military commissions is the right thing to do.” Khalid Sheikh Mohammed United States Global terrorism Guantánamo Bay Cuba US politics Ed Pilkington guardian.co.uk

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UN helicopters fire on Gbagbo forces in Abidjan

Four missiles reported to have been fired at a military base in Abidjan as UN seeks to stop weapons being used to hit civilians United Nations helicopters have launched attacks on president Laurent Gbagbo’s forces in Ivory Coast according to reports. The helicopters fired four missiles at a pro-Gbagbo military camp in the main city of Abidjan, witnesses told Reuters. “We saw two UNOCI (U.N. mission in Ivory Coast) MI-24 helicopters fire missiles on the Akouedo military camp. There was a massive explosion and we can still see the smoke,” one of the witnesses said. The camp is home to three battalions of the Ivorian army. Earlier, sources told the Guardian the UN was looking at the possibility of using helicopters to launch aerial attacks after its base was targeted and 11 of its peacekeepers shot. The UN is focusing on heavy weapons that troops loyal to Gbagbo are using to strike civilians, including BM-21 rocket systems. The international body has no air force of its own, and so there is no question of a full-blown air offensive along the lines of the Libyan conflict. But the UN does have a Ukrainian aviation unit with three Mi-24 attack helicopters, that have already been actively deployed in Ivory Coast. The security council is meeting to discuss the situation.The streets of Abidjan resemble a ghost town as residents, most too terrified to leave their homes, awaited a final battle for power between two rival presidents. There was a lull in fighting as reinforcements fighting for Alassane Ouattara, the internationally recognised election winner, travelled from his northern stronghold. The UN evacuated 170 civilian staff from Abidjan over the weekend. “We are fast approaching a tipping point,” Choi Young-jin, the UN’s top diplomat in Ivory Coast, told the BBC: “We are planning action, we can no longer condone their [Mr Gbagbo's forces] reckless and mindless attack on civilians and the United Nations blue helmets with heavy weapons.” Choi, whose own office has been hit by sniper fire, added: “We are now in a way under siege, so we cannot go out freely, [they're] targeting us with snipers, it’s a deliberate shoot at United Nations. “For the last few days we have had 11 [peacekeepers] wounded by their gunshots. They are targeting the headquarters, they cut off the water … and we are now in the bunker.” A total of 20 peacekeepers have been injured since the crisis triggered by last November’s disputed election. Choi said the UN’s 9,000 troops did not have a mandate to dislodge Gbagbo but can respond to heavy weapons attacks against the UN or civilians. “We will be using our air assets,” Choi said. “We will be taking action soon.” Thousands of the rebels massed at a toll booth some 20 miles from the centre of Abidjan, which has been a fierce battleground in recent days. Several pickup trucks with mounted machine guns could be seen. The mood was described as surprisingly relaxed and even jovial. Speaking on Sunday on the pro-Ouattara TCI television channel, Ouattara’s prime minister, Guillaume Soro, said their side’s strategy had been to encircle the city, harass Gbagbo’s troops’ positions and gather intelligence on their arsenal. “The situation is now ripe for a lightning offensive,” he said. But in a rare boost for Gbagbo, it was claimed that his top army general had returned to the fold days after deserting. General Phillippe Mangou, his wife and five children left the South African ambassador’s residence in Abidjan after fleeing there last week. Lieutenant Jean-Marc Tago claimed: “The general is with us and has always been with us. Our plan is to defend the institutions of the republic against all its enemies, against the rebels, against the mercenaries, against the [United Nations] and all those who are attacking the institutions of the republic commanded by President Laurent Gbagbo.” A Gbagbo spokesman, Ahoua Don Mello, said on state TV: “Phillipe Mangou met with his fellow soldiers on the ground. But we still don’t know if he is willing to return at the helm of affairs. I don’t have enough information about that.” He added: “I saw him at the residence of the president with his colleagues. He is going to deliver a statement in person.” On Ouattara’s rival TV station, Serges Alla, a journalist, confirmed that Mangou had left the embassy and been picked up by a close collaborator of Gbagbo’s. But the journalist added: “Mangou was forced to leave the South African embassy because some of his relatives were made hostage by diehard supporters of Gbagbo, and Gbagbo militiamen were putting pressure on him, saying they would bomb his village if he doesn’t show himself or doesn’t return to the Gbagbo army.” Despite mass defections, Gbagbo has surprised many observers by fighting back, issuing a call to arms to his supporters, who descended on his residence on Sunday to form a human shield around it. Gbagbo’s spokesman, Abdon George Bayeto, told the BBC that there is an international plot against the incumbent. “When it comes to a fight we are going to put up a fight,” he said. “The president is not going to step down.” The UN has raised concerns about the possible involvement of fighters linked to Ouattara’s forces in hundreds of killings in the west of the country – something the Ouattara camp denies. France is sending an extra 150 soldiers from Gabon to Ivory Coast to help protect civilians, a spokesman for the armed forces said. The soldiers’ deployment brings the number of French troops in Ivory Coast to 1,650. In Britain, foreign secretary William Hague said a team is on standby to assist in an evacuation of European Union nationals if the situation in the Ivory Coast deteriorates. Hague said: “We call for an end to the violence, for defeated former president Gbagbo to step down, for all human rights abuses to be investigated and for the International Criminal Court to investigate the crimes which appear to have taken place.” Hague added that Gbagbo’s supporters in the African Union were “down to zero”, but he understood there was no prospect of African military intervention. Ivory Coast Laurent Gbagbo Alassane Ouattara United Nations Ed Pilkington David Smith guardian.co.uk

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Honeybees’ anti-pesticides defence

By sealing up cells full of contaminated pollen, bees appear to be attempting to protect the rest of the hive Honeybees are taking emergency measures to protect their hives from pesticides, in an extraordinary example of the natural world adapting swiftly to our depredations, according to a prominent bee expert. Scientists have found numerous examples of a new phenomenon – bees “entombing” or sealing up hive cells full of pollen to put them out of use, and protect the rest of the hive from their contents. The pollen stored in the sealed-up cells has been found to contain dramatically higher levels of pesticides and other potentially harmful chemicals than the pollen stored in neighbouring cells, which is used to feed growing young bees. “This is a novel finding, and very striking. The implication is that the bees are sensing [pesticides] and actually sealing it off. They are recognising that something is wrong with the pollen and encapsulating it,” said Jeff Pettis, an entomologist with the US Department of Agriculture . “Bees would not normally seal off pollen.” But the bees’ last-ditch efforts to save themselves appear to be unsuccessful – the entombing behaviour is found in many hives that subsequently die off, according to Pettis. “The presence of entombing is the biggest single predictor of colony loss. It’s a defence mechanism that has failed.” These colonies were likely to already be in trouble, and their death could be attributed to a mix of factors in addition to pesticides, he added. Bees are also sealing off pollen that contains substances used by beekeepers to control pests such as the varroa mite , another factor in the widespread decline of bee populations . These substances may also be harmful to bees, Pettis said. “Beekeepers – and I am one – need to look at ourselves in the mirror and ask what we are doing,” he said. “Certainly [the products] have effects on bees. It’s a balancing act – if you do not control the parasite, bees die. If you control the parasite, bees will live but there are side-effects. This has to be managed.” The decline of bee populations has become an increasing concern in recent years. “Colony collapse disorder” , the name given to the unexplained death of bee colonies, is affecting hives around the world. Scientists say there are likely to be numerous reasons for the die-off , ranging from agricultural pesticides to bee pests and diseases, pollution, and intensive farming, which reduces bee habitat and replaces multiple food sources with single, less nutritious, sources. Globalisation may also be a factor, as it spreads bee diseases around the world, and some measures taken to halt the deaths – such as massing bees in huge super-hives – can actually contribute to the problem, according to a recent study by the United Nations . The loss of pollinators could have severe effects on agriculture, scientists have warned. Pesticides were not likely to be the biggest single cause of bee deaths, Pettis said: “Pesticide is an issue but it is not the driving issue.” Some pesticides could be improving life for bees, he noted: for many years, bees were not to be found near cotton plantations because of the many chemicals used, but in the past five years bees have begun to return because the multiple pesticides of old have been replaced with newer so-called systemic pesticides. Studies he conducted found that bees in areas of intensive agriculture were suffering from poor nutrition compared with bees with a diverse diet, and this then compounded other problems, such as infection with the gut parasite nosema . “It is about the interaction of different factors, and we need to study these interactions more closely,” he said. The entombing phenomenon was first noted in an obscure scientific paper from 2009 , but since then scientists have been finding the behaviour more frequently, with the same results. Bees naturally collect from plants a substance known as propolis , a sort of sticky resin with natural anti-bacterial and anti-fungal qualities. It is used by bees to line the walls of their hives, and to seal off unwanted or dangerous substances – for instance, mice that find their way into hives and die are often found covered in propolis. This is the substance bees are using to entomb the cells. The bees that entomb cells of pollen are the hives’ housekeepers, different from the bees that go out to collect pollen from plants. Pettis said that it seemed pollen-collecting bees could not detect high levels of pesticides, but that the pollen underwent subtle changes when stored. These changes – a lack of microbial activity compared with pollen that has fewer pesticide residues – seemed to be involved in triggering the entombing effect, he explained. Pettis was speaking in London, where he was visiting British MPs to talk about the decline of bee populations, and meeting European bee scientists. Bees Wildlife Insects Conservation Fiona Harvey guardian.co.uk

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Police ask BBC for cuts protest video

NUJ criticises Met’s ‘fishing trip’, warning journalists of risks being seen as ‘information gatherers’ BBC journalists have been asked if they would be willing to hand over unbroadcast footage of last month’s march against government cuts in central London, as part of the Metropolitan police’s investigation into violence at the demonstration. The initial approaches to reporters prompted a swift reaction from the NUJ, whose general secretary warned journalists of the risks of handing over any of their material to the police. It is understood that detectives from the Met have contacted a number of people in BBC News about the possibility of obtaining unseen material of the event. A hard core of militant activists caused extensive damage in London’s West End at the end of the protest organised by the TUC on 26 March. Officially, a spokesman for the Metropolitan police said it was currently “considering” requesting media organisations for unbroadcast footage. However, unofficial contact already appears to have been made with some journalists at the BBC, prompting the National Union of Journalists general secretary Jeremy Dear to release a statement. Dear described it as to be a “fishing trip” and warned of the hazards of journalists being seen as “information gatherers” for the police. “The NUJ has a long and proud record in fighting to protect journalists faced with actions over sources or journalistic material,” said Dear in an email to NUJ members. He added: “It is important we do not allow the police to use journalists as information gatherers for their purposes. Such a move places all journalists at greater risk when covering public order issues and stops sources coming forward. The NUJ stance has been confirmed in various cases before the UK and European courts.” Dear said a number of NUJ members at the BBC had received emails regarding police attempts to secure unbroadcast material from the demonstration. He said he had also written to the BBC urging them to make “strong representations” in defence of the confidentiality of journalists’ material and their sources. A Metropolitan police spokeswoman said: “As part of the investigation into the serious disorder and violence committed in the West End on Saturday 26 March, detectives are considering requesting unbroadcast footage from media organisations. “This is regularly a consideration for those responsible for investigating these incidents and is done after careful consideration as to its necessity. “Such footage is obtained via an application to the crown court, made under the Police & Criminal Evidence Act 1984. As part of this process all parties are able to put forward arguments, should they wish to do so.” The police can use the courts to access journalistic material provided they can show it is in the public interest or of substantial value to an investigation, and that they have taken all reasonable measures to obtain the material. Police used court orders to seize TV footage of clashes between protestors and police ahead of the G8 summit in 2005 . No official police requests have so far been put into either ITN or Sky. The BBC was unavailable for comment at the time of publication. Detectives from Operation Brontide – the team investigating the disorder – today released 18 images of people they want to identify following the violence around Trafalgar Square, Piccadilly and Oxford Street areas of central London. •

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UK must speak up on Manning – MP

Welsh MP says UK must challenge US over treatment of marine being detained for alleged leak of state secrets to WikiLeaks Britain risks losing its moral authority if it fails to officially challenge the US government on its “cruel and uneccessary” treatment of the US marine Bradley Manning, parliament is to be told. Ann Clwyd, chair of the all-party parliamentary group on human rights, will on Monday evening say UK’s credibility in “places where human rights are not nearly so well observed” is at risk. She will call on the government to offer practical support to the British-based relatives of Manning, who is currently imprisoned on a US marine base, accused of leaking state secrets to the WikiLeaks website. “I do not want us to get drawn into a discussion of the rights and wrongs of the WikiLeaks revelations. I would like us now to concentrate on the current conditions of detention for Bradley Manning,” Clywd is expected to say at the adjournment debate speech. “Manning’s case is important because of the message it sends out to the rest of the world about what kind of treatment the United States thinks is acceptable for people in detention. And, for us, it is important what we say – or what we don’t say – because of the message that it sends out about what kind of treatment we in the United Kingdom and in the UK government think is acceptable. “That matters in places where human rights are not nearly so well observed. People will pay attention in China and in Russia. And in Libya where we want to be on the side of those fighting for freedom from state repression. “And most of all in Afghanistan: It matters to those UK and US service personnel fighting in Afghanistan what kind of image Britain and the US have in the world.” Clwyd will draw on her experiences during the seven years she spent as special envoy to Iraq on human rights. “It is my view that some of the greatest damage was caused to British and American efforts in Iraq when the stories of prisoner abuse emerged,” she will say. “It undermined our moral authority at a time when we needed to explain that we were fighting for a better future for Iraq “The United States – and the UK, in the way we respond to actions of the US – needs to preserve that moral authority if we are to have a positive impact on the world and lead by example.” Praising The Guardian’s coverage of Manning’s treatment in the US, Clwyd said she would be willing to visit the solider if his family asked her to. “I have read the several accounts of Bradley’s treatment which have appeared in the press – some very good accounts have been in the Guardian and from David Leigh in particular,” she will say. But the account to which she has paid most attention is Bradley’s own, in which he complains of “improper treatment” and “unlawful pre-trial punishment”. Clwyd is the only politician to have directly questioned the foreign secretary, William Hague, over the government’s position on Manning. She has sponsored an early day motion calling for the government to raise the case with the US administration. The motion is supported by 37 MPs, including co-sponsors Peter Bottomley, Jeremy Corbyn, Mark Durkan and Paul Flynn. Hague has previously said the UK government has not intervened because Manning’s lawyer has said the soldier “does not hold a UK passport, nor does he consider himself a UK citizen”. “Our standing on this matter is limited,” Hague said during a parlimentary debate last month. “[Manning] is not asking for our help, nor considering himself British.” But Clwyd is expected to call Hague’s response a red herring. She will point out that Manning’s mother, Susan, is Welsh and lives in Pembrokeshire, where Manning lived between the ages of 13 and 17. and she will point to calls from Manning’s lawyer, David Coombs, for his client’s detention status to be changed. Manning’s treatment in the military prison in Quantico, Virginia, “ignores the repeated recommendations of the marine corps’ own appointed psychiatrists”, Coombs has said. His treatment “serves no purpose other than to humiliate and degrade Bradley Manning. I regard it as cruel and unnecessary.” Human Rights Watch has called on the US government to “explain the precise reasons behind extremely restrictive and possibly punitive and degrading treatment” that Manning alleges he has received. Amnesty International has said “Manning is being subjected to cruel, inhuman and degrading treatment. This is particularly disturbing when one considers that he hasn’t even been brought to trial, let alone convicted of a crime.” The UN special rapporteur on torture is understood to have raised his concerns with the US administration and is waiting for a response. Clwyd quoted a recent column written for the Guardian by PJ Crowley , who resigned as spokesman for the US state department after criticising Manning’s treatment, in which he repeated his conviction that it was “ridiculous, counterproductive, and stupid”. Bradley Manning Foreign policy US military US national security WikiLeaks United States Amelia Hill guardian.co.uk

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UK must speak up on Manning – MP

Welsh MP says UK must challenge US over treatment of marine being detained for alleged leak of state secrets to WikiLeaks Britain risks losing its moral authority if it fails to officially challenge the US government on its “cruel and uneccessary” treatment of the US marine Bradley Manning, parliament is to be told. Ann Clwyd, chair of the all-party parliamentary group on human rights, will on Monday evening say UK’s credibility in “places where human rights are not nearly so well observed” is at risk. She will call on the government to offer practical support to the British-based relatives of Manning, who is currently imprisoned on a US marine base, accused of leaking state secrets to the WikiLeaks website. “I do not want us to get drawn into a discussion of the rights and wrongs of the WikiLeaks revelations. I would like us now to concentrate on the current conditions of detention for Bradley Manning,” Clywd is expected to say at the adjournment debate speech. “Manning’s case is important because of the message it sends out to the rest of the world about what kind of treatment the United States thinks is acceptable for people in detention. And, for us, it is important what we say – or what we don’t say – because of the message that it sends out about what kind of treatment we in the United Kingdom and in the UK government think is acceptable. “That matters in places where human rights are not nearly so well observed. People will pay attention in China and in Russia. And in Libya where we want to be on the side of those fighting for freedom from state repression. “And most of all in Afghanistan: It matters to those UK and US service personnel fighting in Afghanistan what kind of image Britain and the US have in the world.” Clwyd will draw on her experiences during the seven years she spent as special envoy to Iraq on human rights. “It is my view that some of the greatest damage was caused to British and American efforts in Iraq when the stories of prisoner abuse emerged,” she will say. “It undermined our moral authority at a time when we needed to explain that we were fighting for a better future for Iraq “The United States – and the UK, in the way we respond to actions of the US – needs to preserve that moral authority if we are to have a positive impact on the world and lead by example.” Praising The Guardian’s coverage of Manning’s treatment in the US, Clwyd said she would be willing to visit the solider if his family asked her to. “I have read the several accounts of Bradley’s treatment which have appeared in the press – some very good accounts have been in the Guardian and from David Leigh in particular,” she will say. But the account to which she has paid most attention is Bradley’s own, in which he complains of “improper treatment” and “unlawful pre-trial punishment”. Clwyd is the only politician to have directly questioned the foreign secretary, William Hague, over the government’s position on Manning. She has sponsored an early day motion calling for the government to raise the case with the US administration. The motion is supported by 37 MPs, including co-sponsors Peter Bottomley, Jeremy Corbyn, Mark Durkan and Paul Flynn. Hague has previously said the UK government has not intervened because Manning’s lawyer has said the soldier “does not hold a UK passport, nor does he consider himself a UK citizen”. “Our standing on this matter is limited,” Hague said during a parlimentary debate last month. “[Manning] is not asking for our help, nor considering himself British.” But Clwyd is expected to call Hague’s response a red herring. She will point out that Manning’s mother, Susan, is Welsh and lives in Pembrokeshire, where Manning lived between the ages of 13 and 17. and she will point to calls from Manning’s lawyer, David Coombs, for his client’s detention status to be changed. Manning’s treatment in the military prison in Quantico, Virginia, “ignores the repeated recommendations of the marine corps’ own appointed psychiatrists”, Coombs has said. His treatment “serves no purpose other than to humiliate and degrade Bradley Manning. I regard it as cruel and unnecessary.” Human Rights Watch has called on the US government to “explain the precise reasons behind extremely restrictive and possibly punitive and degrading treatment” that Manning alleges he has received. Amnesty International has said “Manning is being subjected to cruel, inhuman and degrading treatment. This is particularly disturbing when one considers that he hasn’t even been brought to trial, let alone convicted of a crime.” The UN special rapporteur on torture is understood to have raised his concerns with the US administration and is waiting for a response. Clwyd quoted a recent column written for the Guardian by PJ Crowley , who resigned as spokesman for the US state department after criticising Manning’s treatment, in which he repeated his conviction that it was “ridiculous, counterproductive, and stupid”. Bradley Manning Foreign policy US military US national security WikiLeaks United States Amelia Hill guardian.co.uk

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2,600 navy and army staff go in cuts

Navy pilots, Gurkhas and troops serving in Afghanistan among those to lose jobs in initial round of military redundancies Some 1,600 navy personnel and 1,000 soldiers will lose their jobs in the initial round of defence cuts, senior military officials have announced. Gurkhas will be among those going in the army’s first round of redundancies, while troops now serving in Afghanistan may not be saved and Navy pilots will be among those losing their jobs. Around half the redundancies in the army are expected to be compulsory. The head of army manning, Brigadier Richard Nugee, said the 3,500-strong Brigade of Gurkhas would lose about 50 soldiers. There was a surplus number of Gurkhas because changes made to their terms of service in 2008 meant they could now serve for 22 years rather than the previous 15-year limit. “Opportunities for promotion within the brigade are being severely limited by the current situation,” Nugee said. “We are committed to a strong and vibrant Brigade of Gurkhas into the future and therefore must take action to ensure that, like the rest of the army, their structures and manning are in the best possible shape by the end of this process.” Fifteen out of the 59 navy fast jets pilots will be made redundant as a result of the decision in last year’s defence review to get rid of Britain’s fleet of Harrier jumpjets. The redundancies are part of 17,000 in the armed forces – 7,000 from the army, 5,000 from the RAF, and 5,000 from the navy – announced in the review. Military Defence policy Gurkhas Richard Norton-Taylor guardian.co.uk

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2,600 navy and army staff go in cuts

Navy pilots, Gurkhas and troops serving in Afghanistan among those to lose jobs in initial round of military redundancies Some 1,600 navy personnel and 1,000 soldiers will lose their jobs in the initial round of defence cuts, senior military officials have announced. Gurkhas will be among those going in the army’s first round of redundancies, while troops now serving in Afghanistan may not be saved and Navy pilots will be among those losing their jobs. Around half the redundancies in the army are expected to be compulsory. The head of army manning, Brigadier Richard Nugee, said the 3,500-strong Brigade of Gurkhas would lose about 50 soldiers. There was a surplus number of Gurkhas because changes made to their terms of service in 2008 meant they could now serve for 22 years rather than the previous 15-year limit. “Opportunities for promotion within the brigade are being severely limited by the current situation,” Nugee said. “We are committed to a strong and vibrant Brigade of Gurkhas into the future and therefore must take action to ensure that, like the rest of the army, their structures and manning are in the best possible shape by the end of this process.” Fifteen out of the 59 navy fast jets pilots will be made redundant as a result of the decision in last year’s defence review to get rid of Britain’s fleet of Harrier jumpjets. The redundancies are part of 17,000 in the armed forces – 7,000 from the army, 5,000 from the RAF, and 5,000 from the navy – announced in the review. Military Defence policy Gurkhas Richard Norton-Taylor guardian.co.uk

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