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Bodies found in O’Callaghan search

Man, 47, arrested as police find two dead, one believed to be missing Swindon woman Police searching for Sian O’Callaghan , who disappeared after leaving a nightclub in Swindon last week, have said they have found two bodies, including one which is thought to be O’Callaghan. A 47-year-old man has been arrested on suspicion of kidnap and two murders, officers told a news conference. Detective superintendent Steve Fulcher said: “The location of two bodies have been identified to me, one of whom has yet to be identified formally, but I am quite clear is Sian. “I have informed Sian’s family, who are obviously deeply distressed, and I would ask to give them time and space to come to terms with what’s happened. Police reportedly arrested the suspect outside an Asda in Swindon. A green Toyota was also taken away on the back of a trailer. Meanwhile, police began searching a house in Ashbury Avenue, Swindon. Neighbours said the man who lived there was a cab driver who drove a green taxi. A white police tent was erected in the front garden of the semi-detached house, which was cordoned off and had three police vans parked outside Sian, aged 22, disappeared after leaving a nightclub in Swindon on Saturday in the early hours. Police have been combing the Savernake forest 12 miles away. Analysis of O’Callaghan’s mobile phone records suggests that about 30 minutes after she left the club, her phone was somewhere in the 1,800-hectare (4,500-acre) forest, near Marlborough. O’Callaghan, an office administrator, was caught on CCTV leaving the nightclub in Swindon’s Old Town area, after an evening out with friends. She lived in a flat just half a mile away with her boyfriend Kevin Reape, 25. O’Callaghan’s family thanked the public for their help in the search for “our beautiful girl”. In a statement released by police they said: “We have been so touched by the support shown by the community that we wanted to express our thanks. “The sheer numbers of people who have given up their time to help search for Sian and distribute appeal posters are overwhelming and we couldn’t ask for better support from the public, police and media.” Crime Police Steven Morris guardian.co.uk

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Bodies found in O’Callaghan search

Man, 47, arrested as police find two dead, one believed to be missing Swindon woman Police searching for Sian O’Callaghan , who disappeared after leaving a nightclub in Swindon last week, have said they have found two bodies, including one which is thought to be O’Callaghan. A 47-year-old man has been arrested on suspicion of kidnap and two murders, officers told a news conference. Detective superintendent Steve Fulcher said: “The location of two bodies have been identified to me, one of whom has yet to be identified formally, but I am quite clear is Sian. “I have informed Sian’s family, who are obviously deeply distressed, and I would ask to give them time and space to come to terms with what’s happened. Police reportedly arrested the suspect outside an Asda in Swindon. A green Toyota was also taken away on the back of a trailer. Meanwhile, police began searching a house in Ashbury Avenue, Swindon. Neighbours said the man who lived there was a cab driver who drove a green taxi. A white police tent was erected in the front garden of the semi-detached house, which was cordoned off and had three police vans parked outside Sian, aged 22, disappeared after leaving a nightclub in Swindon on Saturday in the early hours. Police have been combing the Savernake forest 12 miles away. Analysis of O’Callaghan’s mobile phone records suggests that about 30 minutes after she left the club, her phone was somewhere in the 1,800-hectare (4,500-acre) forest, near Marlborough. O’Callaghan, an office administrator, was caught on CCTV leaving the nightclub in Swindon’s Old Town area, after an evening out with friends. She lived in a flat just half a mile away with her boyfriend Kevin Reape, 25. O’Callaghan’s family thanked the public for their help in the search for “our beautiful girl”. In a statement released by police they said: “We have been so touched by the support shown by the community that we wanted to express our thanks. “The sheer numbers of people who have given up their time to help search for Sian and distribute appeal posters are overwhelming and we couldn’t ask for better support from the public, police and media.” Crime Police Steven Morris guardian.co.uk

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Jose Socrates

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Jose Socrates

nº 544 Pm portugues Jose socrates Primer Ministro de Portugal renunció a su cargo Portugal’s PM Resigns PM of Portugal Jose Socrates Gives Resignation | SHM News The prime minister of Portugal Jose Socrates has resigned because parliament has cancelled austerity budget. This is a defeat and can flare up a bail out that. Portuguese PM Jose Socrates announces resignation « New Media Blog Agence France’Presse, by Staff Posted By: Photoonist- Thu, 24 Mar 2011 01:07:13 GMT Lisbon ‘ Portuguese Prime Minister Jose Socrates has announced his resignation on the eve of a key EU summit on the eurozone debt crisis after … Portugal PM Jose Socrates resigns after budget rejected | Frequency portugal portugal Portuguese Prime Minister Jose Socrates resigns after parliament rejects an austerity budget. José Socrates affrime that the political crisis will have … José Socrates affrime that the political crisis will have consequences “very serious” for Portugal. By. admin. – March 24, 2011 Posted in: News. “I feel I have done my duty in presenting my difficult measures that the country can … Jose Socrates , Portuguese Prime Minister, Resigns After Austerity … “Portugal will report a 2010 deficit equivalent to or less than 7 percent of GDP, narrower than the 7.3 percent gap the government had forecast, Prime Minister Jose Socrates said on Jan. 28. That follows a shortfall of 9.3 percent in … PollyLor3040 says: RT @sofasurfer : RT @alexmartins : José Sócrates in Lisbon, PT, unlocked the 'Resignation' badge. #bieber

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3DS: ‘Another big success for Nintendo’

Keith Stuart gets his hands on Nintendo’s new handheld console, the first to feature 3D gaming without the need for glasses Keith Stuart Richard Sprenger

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Turkey and France clash over Libya air campaign

Tension mounts over military action as Ankara accuses Sarkozy of pursuing French interests over liberation of Libyan people Turkey has launched a bitter attack on French president Nicolas Sarkozy’s and France’s leadership of the military campaign against Libyan leader Muammar Gaddafi, accusing the French of lacking a conscience in their conduct in the Libyan operations. The vitriolic criticism, from both the prime minister, Recep Tayyip Erdogan, and the president, Abdullah Gül followed attacks from the Turkish government earlier this week and signalled an orchestrated attempt by Ankara to wreck Sarkozy’s plans to lead the air campaign against Gaddafi. With France insisting that Nato should not be put in political charge of the UN-mandated air campaign, Turkey has come out emphatically behind sole Nato control of the operations. The row came as France confirmed that one of its fighter jets had destroyed a Libyan air force plane just after it landed at the Misrata base. This was the first time the no-fly zone had been breached by pro-Gaddafi forces. The clash between Turkey and France over Libya is underpinned by acute frictions between Erdogan and Sarkozy, both impetuous and mercurial leaders who revel in the limelight, by fundamental disputes over Ankara’s EU ambitions, and by economic interests in north Africa. The confrontation is shaping up to be decisive in determining the outcome of the bitter infighting over who should inherit command of the Libyan air campaign from the Americans and could come to a head at a major conference in London next week of the parties involved. Using incendiary language directed at France in a speech in Istanbul, Erdogan said: “I wish that those who only see oil, gold mines and underground treasures when they look in [Libya's] direction, would see the region through glasses of conscience from now on.” President Gül reinforced the Turkish view that France and others were being driven primarily by economic interests. “The aim [of the air campaign] is not the liberation of the Libyan people,” he said. “There are hidden agendas and different interests.” Earlier this week, Claude Guéant, the French interior minister who was previously Sarkozy’s chief adviser, outraged the Muslim world by stating that the French president was “leading a crusade” to stop Gaddafi massacring Libyans. Erdogan denounced the use of the word crusade yesterday, blaming those, France chief among them, who are opposed to Turkey joining the EU. Senior Nato officials are meeting in Brussels for the fourth day in a row to try to hammer out an agreement on who should assume command of the no-fly zone over Libya from the Americans who are determined to relinquish command within days. Sarkozy has agreed to give Nato military planners operational command of the campaign, but refused to grant the alliance political and strategic control, insisting this should be vested in the broader “coalition of the willing” taking part. Turkey has responded by blocking Nato planning operations for Libya while stressing that Nato should be given “sole command”, senior Nato diplomats said. Turkey, Nato’s second biggest army after the US and its only Muslim member, appears bent on winning the argument. It is already taking part in Nato patrols in the Mediterranean to police an arms embargo on Libya. It wants to limit and shorten the air campaign and proscribe ground attacks on Libya by Nato aircraft. If Nato is given political command of the air effort, Turkey would be able to exercise a veto in a system run on consensus. The US’s top military officer in Europe, Admiral James Stavridis, Nato’s supreme commander Europe, has gone to Ankara to try to mediate a deal. The Turks are incensed at repeated snubs by Sarkozy. The French failed to invite Turkey to last Saturday’s summit in Paris which presaged the air strikes. French fighters taking off from Corsica struck the first blows. The Turkish government accused Sarkozy of launching not only the no-fly zone, but his presidential re-election campaign. While the dispute over Libya is substantive and political, it also appears highly personal, revealing the bad blood simmering between the French president and the Turkish prime minister. Sarkozy went to Turkey last month for the first time in four years as president. But the visit was repeatedly delayed and then downgraded from a state presidential event. He stayed in Turkey for five hours. “Relations between Turkey and France deserve more than this,” complained Erdogan. “I will speak with frankness. We wish to host him as president of France. But he is coming as president of the G20, not as that of France.” While the German chancellor, Angela Merkel, is also opposed to Turkey joining the EU, she has voiced her objections moderately. Sarkozy has declared loudly that culturally Turkey does not belong in Europe, but in the Middle East. France has blocked tranches of Ankara’s EU negotiations on the grounds that it should not be seen as ever-fit for membership. Arab and Middle East unrest Turkey Nicolas Sarkozy Nato Libya Muammar Gaddafi European Union Middle East France Europe Ian Traynor guardian.co.uk

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G. Edward Griffin and the Fed: Is Glenn Beck about to do another swan dive into the deep end of conspiracism?

Click here to view this media Glenn Beck has done lots of mainstreaming extremist beliefs and ideas in his two-plus years at Fox News — especially far-right ideas that have circulated for years among Patriot-movement militiamen and John Birch Society members, from various “New World Order” theories and claims to “Tenther” theories to his abortive flirtation with FEMA concentration-camp theories . Judging from the hints he’s been dropping on his Fox News show all this week, on Friday he’s going to once again dive into the deep, dark and murky waters of classic far-right conspiracism of the Bircher kind. He dropped hints the other day while discussing the “Liberty Dollar” scamsters — claiming, on the one hand, that he knew ahead of time that what these characters were doing was breaking the law, but simultaneously, they were telling the truth when it came to the evil Federal Reserve. BECK: Well, this guy was misguided, but he wasn’t trying to bring down the United States — at least, from what he told me. He believed the Fed was destroying the dollar — and, really? That’s a hard stretch, isn’t it? You, by the way, have to watch this show on Friday — because there is some truth to that. The unbelievable history of the Fed. The, uh — what is it, the uh, ‘Monster,’ is that what it was called? The Monster? The Creature of Jekyll Island. We will give you the truth and none of the crazy conspiracy theories on the Fed on Friday. Anyway. Beck is referencing one of the widest-read conspiracist works about the Federal Reserve, G. Edward Griffin’s The Creature from Jekyll Island , and it appears — vows to eschew conspiracy theories notwithstanding — that he intends to cite it as a credible source, much as he did with Jonah Goldberg’s fraudulent Liberal Fascism thesis in his “documentary” exposing the nefarious fascist roots of modern progressivism. In that case, he promised to eschew “conspiracy theories” too. Beck, as we all know, has previously demonstrated a fondness for the Birch Society, and this is consistent with that: Griffin, after all, was a close personal friend and longtime associate of Birch Society founder Robert Welch, and wrote a popular Birch book published in 1964, The Fearful Master: A Second Look at the United Nations. The Creature from Jekyll Island is in many ways a compendium of previous works claiming that the Federal Reserve is a fundamentally illegitimate — and therefore deeply nefarious — organization. Most of these theories were deeply anti-Semitic in nature, since they depicted the Fed’s bankers as part of a Jewish cabal intent on destroying white American society. What sets Griffin’s work apart is that — like most Birch texts, which assiduously avoided anti-Semitism — he manages to scrub out the anti-Semitic elements while keeping the paranoid conspiracist elements intact. Since its publication in 1994, Griffin’s book has become a popular text for a large number of right-wing extremists, particularly tax protesters and Patriot movement believers. Griffin himself was involved in organizing a gathering on Jekyll Island last year that the Southern Poverty Law Center credits with helping revive the militia movement . It has been debunked thoroughly, of course — probably most notably by historian Gerry Rough, whose three-part series on the origins of the Fed, “Another Twist on the Jacksonian Bank War,” pretty thoroughly reveal just how fraudulent Griffin’s text really is. You can read it here: Part 1, Part 2, and Part 3. Another terrific debunking of far-right Federal Reserve theories generally, including Griffin’s texts, was provided by Edward Flaherty at Public Eye. From the first part : The problem with the Aldrich Plan was that the regional banks would be controlled individually and nationally by bankers, a prospect that did not sit well with the populist Democratic party or with Wilson. As the debate began to take shape in the spring of 1913, Congressman Arsene Pujo provided good evidence that the nation’s credit markets were under the tight control of a handful of banks – the “money trusts” against which Wilson warned.1 Wilson and the Democrats wanted a reform measure which would decentralize control away from the money trusts. The legislation that eventually emerged was the Federal Reserve Act, also known at the time as the Currency Bill, or the Owen-Glass Act. The bill called for a system of eight to twelve mostly autonomous regional Reserve Banks that would be owned by the banks in their region and whose actions would be coordinated by a Federal Reserve Board appointed by the President. The Board’s members originally included the Secretary of the Treasury, the Comptroller of the Currency, and other officials appointed by the President to represent public interests. The proposed Federal Reserve System would therefore be privately owned, but publicly controlled. Wilson signed the bill on December 23, 1913 and the Federal Reserve System was born.6 Conspiracy theorists have long viewed the Federal Reserve Act as a means of giving control of the banking system to the money trusts, when in reality the intent and effect was to wrestle control away from them. History clearly demonstrates that in the decades prior to the Federal Reserve Act the decisions of a few large New York banks had, at times, enormous repercussions for banks throughout the country and the economy in general. Following the return to central banking, at least some measure of control was removed from them and placed with the Federal Reserve. It is true that the Fed was a progressive institution at the outset. And doing away with it and returning control of the banking system to the banks would be the opposite of progressive. Moreover, ending the Fed is really more about the larger far-right enterprise of gutting the power of the federal government on a number of fronts: taxes, regulating the financial sector, civil-rights laws, public education, the environment. It will be interesting to watch Friday and see just how deeply into this morass Glenn Beck dives. Given his track record, it likely will be a headfirst plunge.

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Is state school too tough for Tarquin?

While academies and free schools proliferate, middle-class parents are concerned with just one thing – keeping their kids away from Dave Mania. Ex-teacher Fielding advises… In my roles of moral icon, sage, clot and dotard, I have been asked many questions. The most frequent goes thus: “Can we send Hugo/Rhapsody/Electra to your school?” “Yes! Turn right at the lights. Multiple assassins and wolf children apart, we are fiercely inclusive.” But this is no time for levity. For this is the great question. The white-knuckled, middle-class, bad-faith and very tedious question. What they really want to know is: “Can nice middle class children cope in the inner-city comp?” “Can they meet the naughty working class and still end up at a Russell Group university?” “Should we rather leg it to more leafy climes, or get religion, or build our own academy – or bottle it completely and go private?” They are wracked with worry, gripped by gaudy nightmares. The comp is seen as a sort medieval leprosarium, or a hippy Strangeways. At my old school, there were tabloid rumours of vice rings, and skinny-dipping in the sixth-form pond, and grocers’ plurals, and daggers and dealers in skunk-fogged toilets. Marvellous. Parents drove by in their Chelsea tanks and spotted my little charges chillin’ on corners, talking in tongues, gnawing on dogburgers, when they should have been at home reading Jane Austen or conjugating Latin verbs like they did at St Custards. This lot looked like something from The Wire. Can I offer solace? Wise words? I want to quote the Lovin’ Spoonful’: “Your worst nightmares are their cartoons.” But it’s not that simple. There are no easy answers. We’re all caught in a complex, crossfire of class and culture. Like Luke in year 13. He lives in Paddington with his single mother, a leftwing lawyer. How has he survived for seven years? A few nice chums, death metal music, skateboarding, some fabulous teachers – and a terrifically sane mother. He did go half daft in year 8, but who doesn’t? He did get clobbered by Dave Mania for being too clever by half and having a rich interior life, but that’s all part of an English tradition of decking intellectuals. Now, he’s mostly fine. He ducks and weaves and has moved on to Vampire Weekend and Albert Camus and writes quite appalling verse. “Why am I surrounded by such fucking dickheads, sir?” sighs he. “It will stand you in good stead for later life.” It just might. Does this exemplum offer you solace? Hope so. He’s bright as pins and replete with A*s, Oxbridge-bound and inner-city sussed. So relax. Urban comps can reach those parts the leafy boroughs can’t. And that’s my final dotard word. Schools Secondary schools Pupil behaviour Teaching Fielding guardian.co.uk

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German city to neuter all stray cats

City of Bremen to take drastic action to tackle out-of-control feline population, which threatens local songbirds All stray cats in the north German city of Bremen are to be neutered under plans by the local council which campaigners hope could be extended to the whole country. The drastic measure has been proposed by Bremen’s interior minister, Ulrich Mäurer, in an attempt to control the city’s burgeoning feline population, which is threatening local songbirds. The local cat shelter used to look after around 120 cats at any one time. Now it has 378 on its books and fears that number will soon reach 500. In addition, at least 1,000 stray cats roam the streets, chasing birds and, it is feared, spreading disease. “There are so many that the situation has got out of control,” said Wolfgang Apel, chairman of the Bremen Animal Protection Society, which has started a petition inviting visitors to support mandatory castration. “They are becoming a burden to the public,” he told the Süddeutsche Zeitung newspaper. Under the mooted new law, anyone who allowed their cat to run free would be forced to pay to have it neutered. It currently costs between €130 and €150 (£113 to £131) to spay a female cat, and €100 to castrate a tomcat. Apel hopes that if the law is passed in Bremen, it will lead to nationwide legislation. In Germany’s parliament, the Bundestag, Green MP Undine Kurth said the government should take responsibility for the growing problem. “It would help a lot,” said Kurth, “if the federal ministry of agriculture would initiate a debate on the wretched situation.” A number of small German towns already advocate the compulsory neutering of stray cats, including Paderborn in North Rhine-Westphalia, which was home to 40,000 stray cats before it introduced forced castration three years ago. Now, pet owners in Paderborn must tattoo their cats, or implant them with a microchip. If they are found to have abandoned their cats, they are handed a €500 fine. Germany Animal welfare Animals Europe Helen Pidd guardian.co.uk

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Somewhere the ghost of George Orwell cringes in recognition. In her eagerness to please, Rachel Maddow occasionally collides headlong into immutable facts of economic reality. To wit, cutting taxes does not constitute new government spending, at least outside of doctrinaire Marxist analysis. Here's MSNBC's Little Miss Sunshine giving her two-cents' worth on this Tuesday night (video below page break) — Anybody who reports that Republican governors and legislatures are taking drastic measures to close their states' budget gaps is not reporting this truthfully. In New Jersey, where the governor's cuts to education from last year were just ruled unconstitutional today, in New Jersey the justification for those cuts was of course that New Jersey's broke, right? What does Gov. Christie want to do to fix that problem of New Jersey being broke? He wants the state to spend $200 million a year that it is not spending already to cut taxes on estates and corporations. Maddow criticizes unspecified reporting in the media as not being done “truthfully” — followed by her engaging in the same practice she condemns. Operative sentence here — “He wants the state to spend $200 million a year that it is not spending already to cut taxes on estates and corporations.” I'm reminded of Orwell's observation in his essay “Politics and the English Language,” written in 1946, that “in our time, political speech and writing are largely the defense of the indefensible. … Thus political language has to consist largely of euphemism, question-begging and sheer cloudy vagueness.” Maddow achieves an Orwellian trifecta here – euphemism (tax cuts as new spending), question-begging (“that it is not spending already …”?) and sheer cloudy vagueness (as evident by Maddow stumbling over the gratuitous “that is is not spending already”). Maddow's claim, streamlined to its dishonest essence — He wants the state to spend $200 million a year to cut taxes on estates and corporations. Absent its intentionally vague qualifier, the sentence collapses under its own contradiction. More accurately, Christie wants to prevent the state from spending $200 million a year by keeping the money from being collected as taxes to begin with. The only way Maddow's claim makes sense would be if Christie wanted to cut $200 million in taxes annually while maintaining the same level of state spending. But this clearly isn't the case, as shown by Maddow pointing out that Christie cut education spending last year. By doing this, and other measures as well, Christie deprives liberals like Maddow of criticizing him for tax cuts that aren't “paid for.” What do they do in response? Label tax cuts as new spending, since the notion of shrinking bloated government programs or eliminating them altogether is unthinkable to left wingers. In fact, the source cited here by Maddow, the Center on Budget and Policy Priorities, states this in the same excerpt cited by Maddow — At the same time, the governor has proposed substantial pay decreases for state employees, applied for a waiver from federal Medicaid rules that would likely reduce significantly the number of people with access to the program, and other spending cuts.

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Fierce festival’s local legacy-building

There are bigger, showier festivals but Fierce understands it’s not just the party that matters, but the traces it leaves “A poet’s hope: to be like some valley cheese, local but prized elsewhere,” wrote WH Auden . Harun Morrison, joint artistic director of Birmingham’s Fierce festival , argues that you can say the same of festivals. But to continue the cheese theme, as Jonathan Holloway, late of the Norwich and Norfolk festival and now heading Australia’s Perth festival , says: “Two cheeses on a plate do not make a festival.” You can chuck a few pieces of work together and brand it as a festival, but you won’t kid anyone that it’s the real thing. After a day spent in Birmingham at the start of Fierce – the first festival since 2008 – it’s clear to me that Morrison and his co-director, Laura McDermott, are eschewing both the chuck-it-in-and-hope-for-the-best approach and the cherry picking-style curation typical of so many festivals. Everyone always claims that their festival reflects their own particular city – Brighton has responded to its lack of performance spaces with site-responsive productions; Hat Fair turns the whole of Winchester into a glorious, outsized village fete – but in too many cases it feels as if the work has been made elsewhere, then parachuted in. The rising number of performance festivals across the country are often driven as much by economic as artistic considerations, and leave no real legacy for either artists or audiences. Yet long before yesterday’s first day of performances and installations, Fierce was busy leaving its own snail trails across Birmingham, drawing on the work of local artists such as Stan’s Cafe , but also working with many other artists who have been spending time in the city over the last year. The relationship is a long-term one: this year’s artists won’t simply be replaced by next year’s shinier models. In a city where theatre output has been dominated by conventional forms demanded by the Birmingham Rep building (currently being redeveloped as part of the new library complex to include a new 300-seat theatre, bridging the gap between The Door and the main house), Fierce is getting out from behind closed doors and playing all over, in its museums (do catch Lundahl and Seitl’s mind-boggling Symphony of a Missing Room if you can), its canals , its streets, its train stations and its open spaces. It’s also offering space for West Midlands voices, too, in pieces such as James Webb’s Prayer , an exquisite sound installation featuring recordings of prayers from 40 different faith groups from across the city. There are showier and more high-profile festivals, but Fierce understands that it’s not just the party itself that matters, but the traces it leaves behind. Those traces change our relationship with the city, not just for the duration of the festival but for ever. Festivals Dance Theatre Communities Lyn Gardner guardian.co.uk

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