Twenty-four injured in suspected terrorist attack in downtown area of Ankara A car bomb which exploded outside a secondary school in Ankara has killed at least three people and injured 24. The blast on Tuesday, near government buildings, including the prime minister’s office in the Turkish capital, was a terrorist attack, the prosecutor’s office said. “The explosion occurred in a place where car and people traffic is intense. It looks like the intention was to inflict as much harm to people as possible,” said the interior minister, Idris Naim Sahin. He said the bodies of three people were found in a building near the car in central Ankara and five of the injured were in a critical condition. The deputy prime minister, Bulent Arinc, blamed the blast on a bomb planted on a vehicle. Bulent Tanik, a local mayor, said a witness told him someone threw a burning gas canister on to the vehicles from a nearby building. “If true, that canister might have triggered the blast of a liquefied petroleum gas (LPG) tank on a vehicle,” he said. Witnesses said vehicles were thrown through the air by the force of the blast and shops were destroyed beyond recognition. The parked car that triggered the blast was purchased a week ago but had not been registered. There was no claim of responsibility but Kurdish rebels, Islamists and leftist militants have all carried out bombings on Turkish soil. Turkey analyst at Chatham House, Fadi Hakura, said if it was confirmed to be a bomb, the method and targets of the attack suggested it was the work of the Kurdistan Workers’ party (PKK). “The PKK is the only group in Turkey with the capacity and wherewithal to carry out such an attack,” said Hakura. He added that Islamists have tended to attack high-profile foreign targets in the Nato-member country, while the PKK had past form of striking against civilians, although he said the Kurdish rebels tended to claim attacks only when they were against foreign targets. Reyhan Altintas, a neighbourhood administrator, said she rushed outside after hearing a loud blast. It was followed by three other blasts, apparently caused by cars catching fire. “I had never heard anything like it in my life,” witness Adnan Yavuz said of the initial blast. “Then came another explosion and parts of a car dropped from the tree.” The wounded were initially treated in the schoolyard before medics arrived at the scene and took them to hospitals, NTV television said. Authorities evacuated the school as parents rushed to pick up their children. Police detained a woman at the scene who shouted “long live our struggle” as she was escorted away by officers, Dogan news agency video showed. The PKK, which is fighting for autonomy in the south-east, has stepped up attacks on Turkish targets since July. In response, Turkey launched a series of cross-border airstrikes last month, which it said killed up to 100 Kurdish guerrillas in northern Iraq. Just days later, Kurdish rebels were blamed for a small bomb attack in the Mediterranean resort town of Kemer that wounded 10 people, including four Swedes. While most PKK operations target the military, police and state employees in the largely Kurdish south-east, the group has previous form of striking at the capital. In 2004, four bombs exploded at branches of British bank HSBC bank in Ankara and Istanbul. Three years later, the PKK was blamed – but denied responsibility for – a suicide bombing in Ankara that killed six people . Turkey Middle East Europe Global terrorism Haroon Siddique guardian.co.uk
Continue reading …Scotland Yard has dropped bid to force the Guardian to reveal confidential sources behind phone hacking stories Scotland Yard has dropped its forthcoming attempt to force the Guardian to reveal confidential sources for stories relating to the phone-hacking scandal. The police wanted a court order to force Guardian reporters to reveal confidential sources for articles disclosing that the murdered teenager Milly Dowler’s phone was hacked on behalf of the News of the World. They claimed that the paper’s reporter Amelia Hill could have “incited” a source to break the Official Secrets Act. The Yard said it would not go to the high court on Friday to demand the information. A police spokesman said: “The Metropolitan Police’s Directorate of Professional Standards consulted the Crown Prosecution Service (CPS) about the alleged leaking of information by a police officer from Operation Weeting. “The CPS has today asked that more information be provided to its lawyers and for appropriate time to consider the matter. “In addition the MPS has taken further legal advice this afternoon and as a result has decided not to pursue, at this time, the application for production orders scheduled for hearing on Friday 23 September. We have agreed with the CPS that we will work jointly with them in considering the next steps.” The Met’s attempt to identify potential police leaks was widely condemned. The statement put out by the Met announcing its retreat left open the possibility that the production order could be applied for again, but a senior Yard source said: “It’s off the agenda. There will be some hard reflection. This was a decision made in good faith, but with no appreciation for the wider consequences. “Obviously the last thing we want to do is to get into a big fight with the media. We do not want to interfere with journalists. “In hindsight the view is that certain things that should have been done, were not done, and that is regrettable.” The Guardian’s editor-in-chief, Alan Rusbridger, said: “We greatly welcome the Met’s decision to withdraw this ill-judged order. Threatening reporters with the Official Secrets Act was a sinister new device to get round the protection of journalists’ confidential sources. We would have fought this assault on public interest journalism all the way. We’re happy that good sense has prevailed.” The police force applied for production orders as part of Operation Weeting, its investigation into phone hacking. An officer working on the operation was arrested last month on suspicion of misconduct in public office relating to the unauthorised disclosure of information. He has been suspended from the Met and is on bail. Scotland Yard said the investigation into the alleged leaks had not concluded however, and stressed their investigation was “about establishing whether a police officer has leaked information, and gathering any evidence that proves or disproves that”. The Met added: “Despite recent media reports, there was no intention to target journalists or disregard journalists’ obligations to protect their sources. “It is not acceptable for police officers to leak information about any investigation, let alone one as sensitive and high profile as Operation Weeting.” They said the application for production orders had been made under the Police and Criminal Evidence Act rather than the Official Secrets Act. Senior Scotland Yard sources last night said the force “regretted” the attempt to get the Guardian to hand over its notes and reveal sources. The picture painted by the Metropolitan Police is that a relatively junior officer took the decision, without consulting his superiors, setting off a calamitous chain of events that saw the Metropolitan Police roundly condemned for an attempted assault on press freedom. Sources said that the senior investigating officer who was inquiring into whether a member of the Weeting team had leaked information, had on his own, taken the decision to seek the production order. The senior source said that even deputy assistant commissioner Mark Simmons had not been told about the decision in advance. Simmons is the head of professionalism issues at Scotland Yard and is seen as a rising star within the force. The senior source said: “There was not a lot of happy people at our place over the weekend because it was a decision made by the SIO. There was no referral upwards, and you would have thought on something as sensitive as this there would have been.” The decision for the Met to end its attempt to get the Guardian to hand over its notes and reveal sources, said the source, came after the force finally consulted the CPS and consulted again with its own lawyers. Simmons and the incoming new Commissioner, Bernard Hogan-Howe, did discuss the issue, as the chorus of criticism grew, but the source said the commissioner had left it to Simmons to take the decision, and that there was no instruction or directive. he Met stressed that Hogan-Howe, despite as Deputy Commissioner being in charge of professional standards, was not involved in the original decision to seek a production order, and that Simmons had taken the decision, after the firestorm of criticism to review the application by the SIO. Phone hacking Metropolitan police Police Newspapers & magazines National newspapers Newspapers guardian.co.uk
Continue reading …President Barack Obama's nicknaming his new tax increases on the wealthy the “Warren Buffett rule” is fitting since the billionaire has spent a decade campaigning for a tax hike, a campaign his friends in the liberal media have been more than willing to join. For over 10 years the media promoted Buffett's complaint that the wealthy in America don't pay enough in taxes, spurred on by a Buffett's anecdote that he pays less in taxes than his receptionist.
Continue reading …• Click here for all tonight’s latest scores • Email simon.burnton@guardian.co.uk • Hit F5 or turn on autorefresh for updates 26 mins: Fabio is booked, and then commits another foul moments later but without further sanction. And then Diouf is booked for fouling White. 24 mins: Paul Taylor has fairly accurately pointed out that the photo currently at the top of this page looks quite a bit like the alien landing in Close Encounters of the Third Kind . If you’re reading this MBM later, after I’ve changed the picture, don’t worry – aliens haven’t landed in Leeds (though questions have been asked about Ken Bates). 22 mins: Clayton hammers a 25-yard shot at goal, but it’s straight into Amos’s arms. It already looks like LUFC are most likely to score from a set-piece, but it’s a fairly bright opening from them, goal excepted. 20 mins: “What about my home town team FC Groningen in The Netherlands,” ponders Machiel Akkerman, taking the discussion away from the League Cup and towards knockout tie comebacks in general, but let’s go with it. “Last year we were challenging for a place in the Europa League in two legged play-off vs ADO den Haag. The first leg was away and we lost 5-1. The return seemed to be a foregone conclusion but we beat them 5-1 as well, only to loose in the penalty-shoot. Are there more agonising defeats out there?” Probably not, though if you ask me it’s better than losing both legs 5-1. 18 mins: Unpromisingly for LUFC, Leigh Bromby was having a real, genuinely angry go at Snodgrass after the goal. GOAL! Leeds United 0 Manchester United 1! (Owen, 15 mins) Michael Owen breaks the deadlock with a scuffed shot after a very fine MUFC move. Park played the ball to Berbatov in midfield and then got on his bike, Berbatov returned it to the Korean – now totally unmarked – and he squared to Owen, who shifted the ball onto his left foot and then produced a shot which bobbled into the corner. 11 mins: 10 minutes and 31 seconds. For the record, that’s how long it took for a commentator to mention Eric Cantona. 10 mins: Michael Owen goes down on the edge of the penalty area, but the referee is unimpressed. Ben Amos is in goal for MUFC. It’s three years this week since he made his debut for the club in this competition, and this is the third match he’s played for them since. 7 mins: Down to the other end, where Dimitar Berbatov passes to Federico Macheda in the penalty area, but he dallies long enough for Leeds to regroup and crowd him out. 6 mins: Goal-line scramble/melee/clearance! LUFC win a corner, and the header beats the goalkeeper and is heading in only for Dimitar Berbatov to get a foot to it. Two further shots are blocked before the ball is finally cleared. 5 mins: Diouf scoots from the centre of the pitch into the left side of LUFC’s penalty area, lines up a left-footed shot and then … totally misses his kick and falls over. 4 mins: “Hardly a ‘heroic’ comeback,” pooh-poohs Ian Williams of Aston Villa v Tranmere circa 1994. “We (Tranmere) hit the inside of the angle in the final minute, and Mark Bosnich (who starred in the subsequent penalty shootout) should have been sent off. Everyone knows that!” More dissent from Joseph Harden. “Surely, if you’re talking about great league cup games & tranmere, the 4-3 game against Southampton is a better example – 0-3 at half time, 4-3 at the end, Paul Rideout, John Aldridge going crazy … good times.” 2 mins: Fryers gets the third touch of the game, Michael Owen passing it straight to him. He’s bouncing around like an overexcited lamb. Bless. 1 min: Peeeeep! And they’re off! I’m hoping to avoid furious emails tonight, and will therefore refer to the teams as LUFC and MUFC, and won’t call either of them simply “United”, unless by accident. 7.41pm: The teams are out, kick off is moments away. Gird those loins, folks… 7.37pm: Elliot Carr-Barnsley proposes Aston Villa’s 1994 semi-final, second leg fightback against Tranmere as the all-time League Cup greatest match ever. Only vague recollections at this end I’m afraid… 7.26pm: Manchester United’s official website profile of Ezekiel “Zeki” Fryers describes him as “a tall and athletic left-sided full-back”. So he should have no problem making his first-team debut at centre-half alongside Michael Carrick, then. 7.25pm: Here are some proper teams, with substitutes and everything: Leeds United: Lonergan, Lees, Bromby, O’Dea, White, Snodgrass, Howson, Clayton, McCormack, Keogh, Becchio. Subs: Rachubka, O’Brien, Vayrynen, Brown, Forssell, Nunez, Tayor. Manchester United: Amos, Da Silva, Valencia, Diouf, Fryars, Carrick, Park, Giggs, Owen, Berbatov, Macheda. Subs: D’Gea, Wellbeck, Brown, Keane, Thorpe, Pogba, Cole. Referee: M Jones. 7.22pm: “I’m a Leeds fan, on my way in to Manchester town centre to watch the game alone in a pub, just so I can go to a gig afterwards as well,” writes Matthew Briton. “The worst part? I’m at the bottom of my overdraft and only have £6.47 to drink the pain away after the inevitable loss.” Don’t do your team a disservice, M, defeat isn’t inevitable. Likely, sure, but not inevitable. Particularly with United lining up with a flat front five. 7.19pm: “Has Fergie been reading Jonathan Wilson’s column today and the comments below the line?” ponders David Wall. “Surely setting out that formation as 4-4-2 is a ruse and he’s really going to play 2-3-5 just to show that it can still be done, with Fryers and Fabio at the back, Carrick, Giggs, and Park in midfield, and five forwards in Valencia, Macheda, Diouf, Owen, and Berbatov. Takes being bloody-minded to an extreme…” 7.10pm: And Leeds’s line-up looks like this: Lonergan; Lees, O’Dea, Bromby, White; Snodgrass, Clayton, Howson; Keogh, McCormack, Becchio. 7.09pm: Manchester United’s team is in! And it looks like this: Amos; Valencia, Fryers, Carrick, Fabio; Giggs, Park, Macheda, Diouf; Owen, Berbatov. Er, so that’s Michael Carrick at centre-back, then? And Valencia at right-back? Are you sure ? 7.04pm: Hello world! Well, while excitement builds at Elland Road I welcome you with two very special treats of varying relevance to the game in hand. Item 1: some early team news. This, you’ll probably agree, is pretty relevant. Anyway, United include Fabio, Michael Owen, Michael Carrick, Dimitar Berbatov and Ezekiel Fryers are in United’s squad. Nope, I’m not sure who that Fryers chap is either. Leeds will name as good a team as they’ve got. “Man U could run all over us,” says Simon Grayson, unpromisingly. “This is an opportunity for our players and it’s a game where we have nothing to lose at all.” Item 2: Highlights of the single most ridiculous and memorable Carling Cup (or whatever it was then) fixture I have ever seen or probably ever will, a match so energising and enthralling that, having watched my side ship six at home, I came out absolutely buzzing . First-minute goals, missed penalties, unbelievably good performances by Jürgen Klinsmann, it had the lot. I did, on the negative side, emerge from that night with a hatred of Ian Walker that remained with me for the rest of his career. Did you know that he’s now managing Bishop’s Stortford? They’re currently 21st in the Blue Square Bet North, so he’s got a way to go before he’s emulating his dad. Anyway, if you know of any games that beat this I’d like to hear about them. Simon will be here from 7pm. In the meantime, here’s an excerpt from Rob Bagchi’s preview on why the festering rivalry between these two clubs should guarantee that this match is an experience to remember … Manchester United return to Elland Road in the Carling Cup on Tuesday night for the first time in eight years to renew a rivalry that remains among the fiercest in Europe. Following Leeds United’s relegation in 2004, the two sides have met only once, in an FA Cup tie at Old Trafford in January 2010 when the visitors, then of League One, incongruously registered their first away victory against Manchester United since 1981, at the 18th attempt. Before that match, Sir Alex Ferguson spoke wistfully about the long absence of Leeds from his side’s fixture list. “I don’t have to spell out what Leeds have meant to Manchester United over the years,” he said. “It would be a fantastic, feisty occasion every time we met. It always carried a degree of hostility. I used to enjoy the games. The atmosphere was always electric.” You can read the full article here . Carling Cup 2011-12 Carling Cup Leeds United Manchester United Simon Burnton guardian.co.uk
Continue reading …It’s no secret that over the last few years the Democratic base has been fuming at President Obama’s strategic tactics of governing. He had a vision of leading which was one of compromise and bipartisanship, the type of governance which might have worked in the 50′s, 60′s, ’70s or ’80s, but certainly not after Clinton became President and the office was demeaned and defaced by conservative pundits, AM hate talk radio and the beltway media like never before. And if they held out hope that the way things worked would be different in DC after the many failures of Bush and Conservatism they should have received a clue how things were going to go after Fox created the tea party. That being said Ezra Klein writes : Why the White House changed course The White House could have been hammering that message since the day the House Republican Conference passed Ryan’s budget. They didn’t. The truth is, they didn’t want to. The president doesn’t think of himself as that kind of Democrat. He believes that there are sensible cuts that can be made to both Medicare and Social Security. He would like to win by governing effectively, by cutting deals with the other party, by making Washington work. He doesn’t want to run a generic Democratic campaign hammering Republicans for being willing to cut Medicare even as they cut taxes on the rich. And for the last few months, he gave what Sarah Palin might call “the hopey-changey thing” a shot. But it failed. The choice, it turned out, wasn’t between winning by making tough choices and hard compromises and winning by running as a populist. It was between losing because he was unable to get Washington to make tough choices and hard compromises and trying something else. So now the White House is trying something else. Ronald Reagan, who was despised by the young conservatives for being a squish , He cut deals with Democrats to save Social Security and raised taxes numerous times which did not make them happy. However, the political landscape has changed so much so since the New Right began to sprout their corrosive roots after Reagan took office that President Obama’s vision never had a chance to succeed. The new breed of hard core conservative activists, who were looked upon as the tea party of their day were composed of actors like Jack Abramoff (right wing street theater), Ralph Reed (religious right) Grover Norquist (defunding the left and strangling the federal government), Bill Kristol ( neoconservatism ) Edwin Meese and Clint Bolick (federalist Society) Roger Ailes and Rush Limbaugh (conservative thought transmitters through the media) Homer Ferguson (attacking public servants) just to name a few. It’s taken the Conservative movement 50 years to develop into what we now see as the “tea party.” They are as far right as a person can go without falling into the ocean and are as much a part of Jerry Falwell and Pat Robertson (social conservatives) as they are Barry Goldwater. This bridging the gap of all the extreme elements of the right makes Grover Norquist proud these days because through all those decades of watering extremist seeds, Conservative finally rule the GOP. I believe the constant criticisms from the base (bloggers, Dem Party members and activists), who have been hammering home that our social safety nets must be protected have helped sway the administration away from their original intentions. Though the tea party’s actions have also finally sunk in. Obama’s speech yesterday was much more confrontational and drew real lines that define the differences between the two parties. As Greg Sargent noted, this new posture is one to get back his base, but also to win back the independents . His threat of a veto has been cited often today and maybe he’ll use it. I’ve been writing that it was a mistake for the president to jump into the deficit hysteria that the right-wing was fermenting because deficits only matter when a Democratic politician occupies the Oval Office. I also despised it because we are in a bad economy and as history has taught us, government spending is needed to dig us out of this hole, not cuts. Austerity only buries us deeper. I believe if not for our push, the president would have talked more about his desire of cutting a grand deal which would have included cuts to medicare than they were Monday. It still upsets me that they continue to discuss reforms because first, it’s bad policy and second, it can be manipulated against him and the entire party in an election year. The new theory goes something like this: The first-bes t outcome is still striking a grand bargain with the Republicans, and it’s more likely to happen if the Republicans worry that Democrats have found a clear, popular message that might win them the election. The better Obama looks in the polls, the more interested Republicans will become in a compromise that takes some of the Democrats’ most potent attacks off the table. But the second-best outcome isn’t necessarily looking like the most reasonable guy in the room. It’s looking like the strongest leader in the room. That’s why Obama, somewhat unusually for him, attached a veto threat to his deficit plan: If the supercommittee sends him a package that cuts benefits for Medicare beneficiaries but leaves the rich untouched, he says he’ll kick the plan back to Congress. Rather than emphasizing his willingness to meet Boehner’s bottom lines, which was the communications strategy during the debt ceiling showdown, he’s emphasizing his unwillingness to bend on his bottom lines. Even after all that’s transpired, the president still would rather have his grand bargain passed. It’s mind numbing and the idea that they hope him appearing to be stronger will help him accomplish this goal is ludicrous. And to the second-best point. He should have always looked like the strongest leader in the room. He’s the PRESIDENT. Again, strategy matters. We all understand that each one of us live in our own bubbles. You have yours, I have mine and the White House has theirs, but it’s certainly taken an exorbitant amount of abuse from the GOP for the administration to break out of their cocoon and come to the same conclusions the DFH bloggers drew a long time. Digby writes a nice recap: My first thought is that it appears the administration has finally decided that there’s nothing to be gained with exclusively delivering post-partisan pablum. It certainly sounds as though he’s thrown down the gauntlet. Unfortunately, the President appears to want to have two fights going into this election, one over job creation and one over whose plan to cut the deficit is better, which I think is a confusing waste of time. (Focus like a laser beam on jobs and tell the Republicans they’ll have to go through you to get to the safety net and I think people would instinctively understand that he’s on their side.) But that isn’t this president’s style and perhaps it wouldn’t be believable if he did it. So, this is at least a change of tactics, more confrontational in tone, which is his best hope for reelection since it turns out people aren’t really all that impressed that he’s the most reasonable guy in the room if it appears that he gets punk’d every time. Unfortunately, I think the decision to include Medicare cuts (even though they seem to be provider based and means tested) is a big mistake politically. The Democrats needed to run against Ryan, and it was clean and simple before, now it’s muddled and incoherent. Those provider cuts, if they were absolutely necessary, could certainly have waited until after the election. (And opening up the can of worms of military retirement benefits is daft. I don’t know why anyone would dream of doing such a thing in an election year.)But the president is in a tough position having bought into austerity a long time ago and now it’s hung around his neck, impeding his available solutions. Still, he shouldn’t have touched one of the best arguments the Democrats have. I’m fairly surprised they did it. Threatening a veto is good stuff. He should do more of it. But he frames it as a “shared sacrifice” so that people still believe it’s right to trade essential middle class benefits for millionaire chump change. I hate that formulation and I think it’s a mistake to perpetuate it. However, just making any threat is a good thing — sounds like he’s drawing lines in the sand and considering the political dynamics in the congress I think it makes it less likely that any of these cuts will actually happen. I do hope as Digby does that cuts will not happen. Let’s keep our fingers crossed.
Continue reading …Proposed overhaul of Labour party’s structures includes creating registered supporters’ group to vote in leadership elections Ed Miliband has tabled proposals billed as the biggest change to the party’s structures for 20 years, including a registered supporters’ group to vote in elections for the Labour leader and deputy leader. The supporters’ group, to be administered by local parties, would vote in the union section, so diluting the unions’ influence. Unions currently hold a third of the vote in the leadership electoral college, with MPs claiming another third and constituency party members the remaining third. Tens of thousands of registered supporters would need to be recruited to counterbalance the 3.5 million people who pay union levies. However, as few levy payers actually vote, registered supporters might represent half the union section within five years. Miliband has been forced to defer plans to change the voting powers at the Labour conference, leaving unions to keep 50% of the vote. In practice, Unite, Unison and the GMB control 40% of the vote at conference, making it almost impossible for constituencies to defeat them. Miliband has proposed a review, due to be completed in the spring, to make conference voting more democratic. Options considered include giving Labour’s national policy forum a larger vote at conference. The Liberal Democrats described the changes as fiddling round the edges. The Conservative chairwoman, Lady Warsi, said: “It’s no surprise Ed Miliband has failed to curb the unions’ power over Labour leadership elections and Labour conference. After all, he’s only Labour leader because of trade union votes, and his party is only solvent because of trade union money. This failure to reform Labour’s relationship with the unions is a real blow to Ed Miliband’s credibility.” Miliband is a genuine believer in the union link, but he would like to breathe life into the relationship between the party and political levy payers. He is also proposing to curtail multiple voting. MPs in the leadership election will only be allowed to vote in their section, and not in the party membership section of the college. Union affiliates will be able to vote twice if they are party members: once in the union section and once in the party membership section. Union leaders are likely to be pleased that they have not felt forced to give ground yet. They fear any dilution of their power at conference, believing it might open the way for a long-term programme that will see their power dismantled. The registered supporters’ scheme will be run by local parties, but it remains to be seen whether there is a group of people interested in supporting but not joining the party. Previous efforts to set up registered supporters’ schemes foundered both in the Conservative party and Labour. But if the scheme took off, some Labour officials believe registered supporters could open the way to US-style primaries. Party sources said the unions had agreed that local parties would be able to communicate directly with union levy payers in their constituencies. They might be expected to pay a nominal sum, rather than the full cost of membership. At present, local parties do not have access to union political levy membership lists, leading to complaints that unions are controlling their members and not letting them be contacted by leadership candidates directly. During the last leadership election, David Miliband’s team complained that once a union executive decided to back his brother Ed, the union remained closed to their campaign team. Unions have been resisting handing over membership lists to local parties on the basis that it might breach the data protection act, arguing that names and addresses cannot be handed to a separate external organisation without the permission of the membership. The proposals are due to be discussed by the national executive, and will go before the party conference next week. Research from academics at the University of Bristol claims the 2010 Labour leadership election did not meet the definition of a “free and fair democratic election”. It claimed that the trade unions created a “block vote” in favour of their preferred candidate, Ed Miliband. Labour Ed Miliband Labour party leadership Trade unions Patrick Wintour guardian.co.uk
Continue reading …Truce, negotiated by Yemen’s vice-president, follows worst violence since protests against President Saleh began An uneasy ceasefire in the Yemeni capital has followed a day of gruesome fighting in which government forces shelled a protest encampment, killing six people and injuring dozens. The truce, negotiated by Yemen’s vice-president Abedrabbo Mansour Hadi and several foreign envoys, follows the worst bout of violence seen in Yemen since protests against President Ali Abdullah Saleh began in earnest in February. Sixty-two people, most of them young men, have been killed and hundreds wounded in three days of violence in Sana’a. International attention is once again fixed on the Arab world’s poorest country and its eight-month fight to oust Saleh. At dawn, the muezzin’s call to prayer was drowned out by the sound of mortar fire as troops loyal to Saleh fought with a division of renegade soldiers for control over strategic parts of the capital. As the conflict raged through the morning, mortars crashed into Change Square, causing havoc in the tented shanty town, where protesters have been camping out since February. In the doorway to a restaurant lay a blood-soaked rag and a pair of sandals. “My friend was sleeping under that blanket,” said a young man, pointing at the spot. “The mortar, it just crushed him.” Tariq Noman, a doctor working in a nearby field hospital, said five others were killed by the shelling. The past three days of violence have left Yemen reeling. A 10-month-old boy and a young cameraman were among those shot dead on Tuesday. Doctors say the gaping wounds they have observed in some of the bodies indicate that heavy weaponry, such as anti-aircraft weapons, is being used on protesters. But the bloodshed did not seem to have fazed those who returned to Change Square. An elderly man with a Yemeni flag draped around his shoulders was among those pushing toward the front, shouting: “We fear Allah only!” The heart of the conflict is a roundabout at the edge of the protest encampment called Kentucky, a busy intersection that divides the north and south of the capital. What began as a government crackdown on a march on Sunday is shifting into a fierce military showdown between the Republican Guard – an elite force headed by Saleh’s son Ahmed – and defected soldiers loyal to Ali Mohsen, a powerful general who joined the opposition in March. A spokesmen for Mohsen, a relative of the president, said: “We’re defending, not attacking. We will not sit and watch government troops attacking innocent protesters – our job is to help them.” But opinion among the inhabitants of Change Square remains divided over the role of the renegade troops, with some touting them as “heroes and protectors of the revolution” and others deriding them for derailing their peaceful protest. “We had no say in this. Ali Mohsen and his solders are giving them more of a justification for the crackdown,” said Ahmed Al-Sarbi, a 24-year-old activist. Saleh, who has been recuperating in Saudi Arabia since surviving an assassination attempt in early June, has so far rebuffed calls to hand over power. On Monday King Abdullah of Saudi Arabia met with Saleh in Riyadh, infuriating demonstrators who took it as a sign that the kingdom was supporting the beleaguered leader. UN secretary-general Ban Ki-moon’s office has said he is “gravely concerned” and has called on all sides to exercise the utmost restraint and desist from provocative actions: “He strongly condemns the excessive use of force by government security forces against unarmed protestors in the capital Sana’a, resulting in scores of people killed and many more injured.” Yemen Middle East Arab and Middle East unrest Tom Finn guardian.co.uk
Continue reading …Been wondering when you were gonna get a chance to smear fingerprints all over 7-inches of Android 3.2 , courtesy of Huawei’s MediaPad ? Well, if you happen to live in Malaysia, it should be by the middle of October. The rest of you shouldn’t fret though — the company plans to have it on shelves in the US, China, Hong Kong and Thailand before the end of the year. Meanwhile, folks in Singapore can already place pre-orders for $598 GSD, roughly $473 USD. It’s a bit later than the Q3 ship date we were originally told but, as they say, better late than never. Though, we’re more apt to cry “gimme, gimme, gimme.” Huawei gives October shipping date for MediaPad in Malaysia, US and China by year’s end originally appeared on Engadget on Tue, 20 Sep 2011 14:29:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds . Permalink
Continue reading …Civil servants trying to answer questions on free schools had requests blocked by adviser to education secretary Civil servants attempting to answer parliamentary questions about the Tories’ free schools programme had their requests blocked by a key adviser to education secretary Michael Gove, leaked emails reveal. Civil servants feared they would be “seen as … obstructing parliament” if they failed to respond to the MP’s inquiry, the emails show. The questions related to the New Schools Network, a charity set up to provide advice and guidance to the schools. Labour MP Caroline Flint had asked Gove how many “expressions of interest” in setting up free schools the New Schools Network had received in her constituency, Don Valley, and in Doncaster. She also asked how many private schools had made either expressions of interest or formal proposals to become a free school. Dominic Cummings, a confidant of Gove who was freelancing for the charity at the time, told a senior civil servant: “NSN is not giving out to you, the media or anybody else any figure on ‘expressions of interest’ for PQs, FOIs or anything else. Further, NSN has not, is not, and will never answer a single FOI request made to us concerning anything at all.” Cummings is now at the centre of a row over the use of private emails by Gove’s closest advisers when conducting government business. The Information Commissioner’s office is investigating claims that civil servants were unable to find these emails when asked to retrieve them under the Freedom of Information act. Emails seen by the Guardian show that Cummings directed civil servants not to comply with the parliamentary question. An official at the department replied to this by saying, in an email: “Our advice is clear: we need to respond as fully as possible to parliament.” The purpose of parliamentary questions is to hold ministers accountable, obliging them to explain and defend government policy to MPs. In response to Flint’s questions, schools minister Nick Gibb said : “New Schools Network does not receive expressions of interest.” Gibb also told parliament that there had been one free school proposal in Doncaster and 45 private schools seeking to convert. At the time of the email exchange, in July last year, Cummings was freelancing at the New Schools Network. He was appointed as one of Gove’s special advisers in February this year. Prior to that appointment, he was closely involved in government work. In response to an FOI request, the Department for Education has disclosed that “prior to his appointment, Mr Cummings attended a range of meetings at the department to allow him to become familiar with the portfolio of a special adviser”. Charities are not subject to the FOI act, which applies only to public authorities. However, critics say the email raises fresh questions about Gove’s advisers and their “secretive” attitude to official business. Andy Burnham, the shadow education secretary, said: “These extraordinary exchanges shed further light on the murky dealings around Michael Gove. We already know that Dominic Cummings lobbied for cash to be given to the New Schools Network ‘without delay’ , an organisation he went on to work for. We now learn that on arrival he sought to implement a restrictive and secretive approach to dealing with parliamentary enquiries. “It would seem that Dominic Cummings holds an arrogant disregard for government processes and accountability to parliament. I have asked the cabinet secretary to investigate the actions of Dominic Cummings and other advisers to Michael Gove.” Shortly after the election, David Cameron declared that the government must “set new standards” for transparency. In a letter to government departments , he wrote: “Greater transparency across government is at the heart of our shared commitment to enable the public to hold politicians and public bodies to account.” Critics say the free schools programme has been characterised by a lack of transparency. The government has refused to disclose details of applications to set up free schools next September. The department has declined an FOI request by the Association of Colleges, which represents further education and sixth form colleges, to see the list of applications to open free schools for 16-19-year-olds. Martin Doel, chief executive of the Association of Colleges, said: “It is the Secretary of State’s statutory duty to consider the impact of new schools on other local providers. “New schools need to start with the support of the local community, other local schools and Colleges. If this information is not made public, we could see the unnecessary duplication of some good College provision for 16-19-year olds. Some Colleges may have to close particular courses if class sizes became unsustainable.” The Financial Times has reported that Gove and his advisers conducted government business on private emails. Civil servants were then unable to find these emails, which included discussions of replacing DfE personnel, when asked to retrieve them under the FOI Act. In response, a spokesman for the DfE said: “The Cabinet Office is clear that private email accounts do not fall within the FOI Act and are not searchable by civil servants. Neither the secretary of state nor special advisers have been asked to disclose emails sent from private accounts.” Maurice Frankel, director of the pressure group Campaign for Freedom of Information , said: “If [Gove] or his special advisers used their private email accounts to carry out government business, those emails are subject to the FOI Act.” The DfE spokesman added that Sir David Bell, the permanent secretary, is looking into the FT allegations, and added: “The permanent secretary is satisfied that ministers and special advisers act within the law.” Michael Gove Free schools Education policy Jeevan Vasagar guardian.co.uk
Continue reading …Jonathan Djanogly is piloting controversial proposals which could net insurance industry £1bn a year Jonathan Djanogly, the justice minister piloting controversial plans to cut legal aid and curb payouts, which could benefit the insurance industry to the tune of £1bn a year, has stockmarket investments worth at least £250,000 in companies with insurance arms. He is also weighing up proposals which may have a profound effect on his brother-in-law’s business which advertises compensation claims for accidents. Labour wrote to the cabinet secretary, Sir Gus O’Donnell, on Monday night to demand an investigation following the Guardian’s inquiry. Djanogly, a Conservative MP the legal services minister, is pushing a bill through parliament which will attempt to slash the budget for legal aid by £350m as well as shifting part of the costs of bringing cases on a “no-win, no-fee” basis from losing defendants to winning claimants. This reduces the costs liabilities of companies and their insurers if they unsuccessfully defend a claim as it will force claimants to pay out of any awarded damages their lawyers’ success fees and insurance policies that cover court costs. Last week the Guardian revealed that the minister could personally profit from the changes. In the past three years Djanogly has been entitled to an average annual payout of £41,000 from being a “minority partner” in his family’s firm of insurance underwriters, The Djanogly Family LLP. The 46-year-old, considered to be one of the 10 richest MPs, is heir to a £300m family fortune and has amassed a sizeable personal stake in the insurance industry. In the most recent declaration of MPs interests he continues to hold shareholdings of worth at least £195,000 in three banks with insurance arms – Barclays, HSBC and Lloyds TSB. He also has at least another £65,000 in Amlin insurance stock. Djanogly also declares in the ministerial register of interests that his “brother-in-law owns ‘Going Legal Ltd’ and ‘Legal Link Introductory Services Ltd’”. Both are claims management companies, which advertise “no-win, no-fee” compensation claims for accidents and charge a referral fee for passing on potential cases to lawyers and insurance firms. According to company accounts, Ben Silk, Djanogly’s brother in law, saw a combined profit from the two firms last year of £130,000. Going Legal, according to its website, deals with employment cases and Legal Link asks: “Suffer an injury caused by someone else?” on its homepage. Both offer 0800 telephone numbers for people to call. The regulation of the claims management industry is part of Djanogly’s ministerial duties. Last week, after pressure from former Labour justice secretary Jack Straw, he announced that “rising insurance costs will be tackled by a ban on referral fees” while admitting there was “no universally recognised definition of ‘referral fees’.” Labour’s justice spokesman, Andy Slaughter, has written to cabinet secretary Gus O’Donnell calling for an investigation into Djanogly. Slaughter points out a slew of conflict of interests claims given that the minister has neither resigned or removed himself from discussions from which he could personally profit. The letter argues that the minister’s assertion that his financial interests are in “blind trust/blind management arrangement” does not bear scrutiny as the “minister’s holdings are concentrated into financial services companies with exposure to the insurance market and The Djanogly Family LLP is explicitly set up to act in the insurance and reinsurance market”. Slaughter argues that as Djanogly “did not resign from the LLP and dispose of his interests (he has a) fiduciary duty to promote the interests of The Djanogly Family LLP”. This, says Slaughter, is in conflict with “his duty as a minister to promote the public interest”. Slaughter says “his shareholdings, weighted towards financial services companies and those with insurance interests, are incompatible” with being a minister adding that Djanogly “holds stocks in Lloyds and Tesco, both of which responded to consultation” backing the Jackson changes. The Labour MP adds that “given the minister’s role as regulator of claims management companies and his brother-in-law’s ownership of two claims management companies, it is reasonable to perceive a conflict of interest”. “Given the sums of money involved, the multiple ways in which the minister would benefit from this legislation, this would appear to be a severe breach of the code.” Slaughter says that if the MoJ’s permanent secretary, Sir Suma Chakrabarti, was informed of these arrangements it calls into question his judgment. In some cases when particularly complicated issues surrounding a minister’s investments prove too difficult for his or her own department to resolve the matter is sent to Downing Street. Slaughter notes: “In the event the prime minister was consulted, as per clause 7.9 of the Code, this poses serious questions as to the judgment of the prime minister.” The ministerial code states that “ministers must scrupulously avoid any danger of an actual or perceived conflict of interest between their ministerial position and their private financial interests”. It advises ministers to dispose of interests or recuse themselves from discussions and policy if there could be even a perception of a “conflict of interest”. The Cabinet Office said it had received the letter from Labour’s justice team. A spokesman for Djanogly said: “As Mr Djanogly made clear on Friday, his financial interests are a matter of public record, in declarations made both as a minister and as an MP. The government’s reforms to the no-win, no-fee system are based on an independent review by Sir Rupert Jackson.” Djanogly’s Liberal Democrat colleague at the Ministry of Justice, Lord McNally, described the Guardian story as an “example of shoddy journalism” at the party fringe on Tuesday in Birmingham saying there was “no breach of the ministerial code”. Djanogly told Radio 4 earlier this year his reforms, based on a report by Lord Justice Jackson in 2010, would change the current system which “help[s] claimants to the detriment of defendants, who would normally be the insurance companies” earlier this year. Experts say the changes to legal aid will benefit the insurance industry, which has to pay out compensation in personal injury cases, by at least “hundreds of millions of pounds”. The Association of British Insurers admits that industry will benefit from the reforms but argue that consumers, not shareholders, will benefit – pointing out that in Ireland similar measures to those contained in the legal aid, sentencing and punishment of offenders bill saw motor insurance premiums drop by up to 16%. Conservatives guardian.co.uk
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