Earthquake of magnitude 6.9 hits north-eastern India and Nepal, damaging buildings and killing at least nine people A strong earthquake has shaken northeastern India and Nepal, killing at least nine people and damaging buildings. The quake, with a preliminary magnitude of 6.9, was felt across northeast India. It triggered at least two aftershocks of magnitude 6.1 and 5.3, Indian seismology official RS Dattatreyan said. He warned that more aftershocks were possible. At least four people in India’s Sikkim state were killed and an unspecified number of people were injured, state police chief Jasbir Singh told Associated Press. Nepal’s government said five people died and dozens were hurt there. The full extent of the damage was not immediately known because the region is sparsely populated, with many living in remote areas that were cut off by mudslides triggered by the quake, Singh said. TV stations reported collapsed buildings and cracked pavements in Sikkim’s state capital of Gangtok, 42 miles southeast of the quake’s epicentre. The Indo-Tibetan border police said two of its buildings had collapsed in Gangtok. Rescuers were searching for anyone pinned under fallen buildings in the city, which has a population of 50,000, Singh said. “We have sounded a high alert. Police are on the streets in Gangtok and other major towns,” he said. Electricity and some phone services were interrupted in the area. Power lines snapped in the West Bengal cities of Darjeeling and Kalimpong, which “are now in total darkness”, state chief minister Mamata Banerjee said. The Indian prime minister, Manmohan Singh, offered to send troops to help, and summoned the National Disaster Management Authority for an emergency meeting. The air force sent five planes to help with rescue efforts. In neighbouring Nepal and Bangladesh, the quake sent residents rushing out of their homes, offices and shopping centers. In Nepal’s capital, Kathmandu, members of parliament who were debating the national budget ran out of the assembly hall into a parking area. They returned 15 minutes later and resumed their session. The quake was felt as far away as the Indian capital, with New Delhi residents rushing out of shaking buildings. Nepal India guardian.co.uk
Continue reading …Click here to view this media While discussing the recent GOP debate cosponsored by CNN and the AstroTurf “tea party” on Fox’s so-called watchdog program, Fox News Watch, host Jon Scott asks former Iraq war propagandist and panel member Judith Miller if she thought there was anything “odd” about the two joining forces to host that debate. Coming from someone now working for Fox “News” and the right-wing rag Newsmax, the answer wasn’t terribly surprising. SCOTT: Judy, was pairing CNN with the tea party a little bit odd? MILLER: Well I think that was CNN’s effort to show that is is “fair and balanced”. And why not? You know, we can pretend that the mainstream media are completely fair and balanced. They are not. Everybody knows that most Democrats… most liberals… most people in the mainstream media are liberal Democrats. That comes out poll after poll. So why not try something like this? I think it made for a very interesting mix. What Miller failed to point out is that the “tea party” is primarily a media creation from her current employer Fox, and CNN, who have both been heavily promoting the so-called “movement” ever since Rick Santelli gave his preplanned rant back in 2009 that John wrote about here . Miller’s comments reminded me of the post Karoli wrote the week the debate aired — The Most Trusted Name in News: TeaNN : For a very long time, I have been ranting about how CNN is trying to keep the tea party viable and present them as something other than what they are. From their hiring of Dana Loesch and Erick Erickson to their shameless promotion of the very corporate, AstroTurf Tea Party Express bus tours , CNN has been on the job. All that positioning as the best tea party network in television should reflect in the ratings their little tea party debate receives tonight. After all, this group is less popular than just about anyone else in the country, even among their own members! TeaNN. The network with less news, more bluster. Brought to you by the Tea Party Express, FreedomWorks, and corporate interests everywhere. And finally as to Miller’s assertion that our media is somehow “liberal”, I’d just say go read Will Bunch’s article here — Journalism’s confession: Playing Twister…to the right .
Continue reading …• Hit F5 or use the autorefresh tool for the latest updates • Send yours thoughts to alan.gardner.casual@guardian.co.uk • Follow today’s games with our live scores centre 3.36pm: Did anyone see that coming ? Other than Gary Neville, of course. 3.30pm: So, Fernando Torres starts for Chelsea, even though there is no Nemanja Vidic for him to terrorise. I suspect that he and Sturridge will not both play as out-and-out strikers, with one dropping off a la Wayne Rooney for United. For the home side, Darren Fletcher makes his first league start of the season to form an industrious centre-midfield partnership with the rejuvenated Anderson. For stardust, we’ll have to look to the flanks, with Nani and Ashley included in Sir Alex Ferguson’s side and the exciting Juan Mata starting for Chelsea. The teams are in , and it’s good news for Manchester United Nando: Man Utd (4-4-2): De Gea; Smalling, Jones, Evans, Evra; Nani, Fletcher, Anderson, Young; Rooney, Hernandez. Subs: Lindegaard, Berbatov, Giggs, Park, Carrick, Fabio Da Silva, Valencia. Chelsea (4-4-2): Cech; Bosingwa, Ivanovic, Terry, Cole; Lampard, Ramires, Meireles, Mata; Sturridge, Torres. Subs: Turnbull, Luiz, Romeu, Mikel, Malouda, Lukaku, Anelka. Today’s designated scapegoat: Phil Dowd (Staffordshire) Preamble: Hello and welcome to the glacé cherry on today’s Super Sundae offering, the first meeting of the season between the Premier League’s two biggest beasts, Manchester United and Chelsea. Manchester City may have aspirations to break up the cartel but since Chelsea brusquely shouldered Arsenal aside at the start of the 2004-05 season, these two have won 15 of the 21 major domestic trophies on offer in this country – not to mention contested the only all-English European Cup final. United, the reigning champions, have scorched their way to the top of the table after four games but Chelsea are lurking in their shadow, just two points behind after a low-key start to life under André Villas Boas. And as with objects in the rear-view mirror, Chelsea may loom larger in United’s mind than an objective analysis would dictate. Ostensibly still a work in progress, as Villas-Boas attempts to coax Chelsea’s old guard to stop doddering around and pass the ball a bit quicker, maybe even consider running , the Blues arrive at Old Trafford with a better Premier League record at United’s home than any other team. The season before last, Chelsea effectively sealed the title with a 2-1 victory there – though in 2010-11, United won four out of five encounters between the sides (including the Charity Shield). It surely won’t be that simple again. Added to the usual mix of my-team-is-better-than-yours mewling are enough subplots for a Dickens novel. How will Villas-Boas’s mixture of natty ties and touchline squat thrusts fare when pitched against the wiliest cat in town, Sir Alex Ferguson? Can Chelsea reinvent themselves whilst maintaining the girder-like constitution that has long seen them overtake Arsenal as London’s No1 challenger to the Manchester hegemony? Will Fernando Torres ever get his mojo back ? And can anyone stop Wayne Rooney? Let’s find out. Premier League 2011-12 Manchester United Chelsea Premier League Alan Gardner guardian.co.uk
Continue reading …Speaking at Lib Dem conference on behalf of Hacked Off campaign, Grant criticises Met police’s attempt to force Guardian journalists to reveal their sources Hugh Grant has accused the Metropolitan police of behaving in a “worrying and deeply mysterious” way after Scotland Yard invoked the Official Secrets Act to demand journalists reveal their sources. In an appearance at the Liberal Democrat conference, the actor warned that police were turning on the “goodies” after Scotland Yard applied for an order under the 1989 act to require the Guardian to identify its sources on phone hacking. Grant, who is speaking at all three party conferences on behalf of the Hacked Off campaign, said: “It is a very worrying and upsetting development. A lot of us victims and campaigners had come to the view that the new police inquiry – [Operation] Weeting under Sue Akers – were good cops. “It was a new investigation. They were embarrassed by the behaviour of their predecessors and colleagues. So for them to suddenly turn on their fellow goodies in this battle is a worrying and deeply mysterious.” The actor met Nick Clegg in Birmingham at lunchtime on Sunday as he began a tour of the three party conferences to ensure that politicians continue to show “balls” on hacking after the establishment of the Leveson enquiry. “Ultimately it is going to be politicians who get the job done, who get the thing fixed,” Grant said. “So I am here with Hacked Off to have a look at the politicians in all three parties and see which of those politicians who appear to have grown balls in July actually still have them and get something done.” “The judgment is yet to be made. They had no choice back in July. The revelations were so shocking to the whole country that they had to talk a good game. Whether or not they will now play a good game really remains to be seen. That is one of the reasons we are going to these conferences – to put pressure on them to make sure they do as they said they’d do.” Grant was critical of the House of Commons culture select committee for its cross-examination of Rupert and James Murdoch. “I am just slightly disappointed in them. I thought their cross-examination was disappointing,” he said. “I am still waiting for their report. Where the hell is that report? What is going on?” Evan Harris, the former Lib Dem MP who speaks for Hacked Off, intervened to tell Grant that the report had been delayed because the committee was demanding the return of James Murdoch. Grant said of his criticisms: “Maybe that is unfair.” The actor launched a scathing attack on the tabloids as he called on quality journalists to get out of the “fucking bath” and disassociate themselves from the tabloids. Challenged by the BBC’s John Pienaar on how he likes to promote his films in the tabloids, Grant said: “That is a great myth propagated by the tabloid industry – the privacy invaders – that people like me need or want or thrive on publicity. It is actually not true. “My business is entirely making films. With good films people go and see them. With bad films they don’t. The fame comes from whether the films are any good or not.” Grant illustrated his point by criticising the model Jordan. “You can be a Big Brother star or Jordan and have an immense amount of publicity – way more than me – and be front to back of Closer. But it won’t get you a big film fee. The two things are totally unrelated. It always slightly saddens me when I see people buying this propaganda because it is simply not true. “It is true there may be the Jordans of this world, the Big Brother contestants, who enjoy their moment in the sunlight. But for the vast majority of people who go into music, acting, film-making – publicity is not what you making your living off. You make your living of being either being good or bad at what you do. “It is a form of conceit, it is a form of arrogance on the part of the tabloids to assume it is they who make or break these people. They are almost entirely irrelevant to it. Anyone who is written about in the parish magazine for the jumble sale where their bottle stall gets a gets a good review feels chuffed. But it doesn’t mean to say it is important for their career.” Grant, who famously posed as a journalist from Horse and Hounds in the film Notting Hill to interview Julia Roberts, said that granting an interview does not give the media a right to pursue a celebrity. “The papers don’t give people privacy for free. It is done as a sort of barter when it is done. If I give an interview to a magazine they get something out of it, I get something out of it. But the deal is over. If I have sold you a pint of milk for 50p you can’t come to me forever after saying you once sold milk, I can help myself to your milk for free. It is patently absurd.” There was a lighter moment when Pienaar asked Grant how he would play David Cameron. “I only ever play one part. Don’t be ridiculous.” Metropolitan police Hugh Grant Liberal Democrat conference 2011 Phone hacking Liberal Democrats Newspapers Police Nicholas Watt guardian.co.uk
Continue reading …Taliban takes control of debris from unmanned US aircraft after it crashes near Jangara village in tribal South Waziristan region Pakistani soldiers have fought Taliban militants to seize precious debris from a suspected US drone that crashed in a rugged tribal area near the Afghan border, Pakistani intelligence officials said. The unmanned aircraft crashed on Saturday night near Jangara village in the South Waziristan tribal area, said the officials, who were speaking on condition of anonymity because they were not authorised to talk to the media. The village is near the border with North Waziristan. The officials said they learned of the crash by intercepting Taliban radio communications but do not know what caused it. Both North and South Waziristan are home to many Taliban fighters, though it is unclear whether they shot down the aircraft or if it crashed because of technical problems. The debris was first seized by the Taliban. Several hours after the crash, the Pakistani army sent soldiers in to wrest it out of militant hands, sparking a fight with the Taliban in which three militants were killed, said the officials. Three militants and two soldiers were also wounded in the clash, they said. Nawab Khan, a government official in South Waziristan, confirmed the drone crash and the subsequent clash between militants and army troops. But he did not know whether the army had successfully seized the debris. Neither the Pakistani army nor the US embassy responded to requests for comment. The US normally does not acknowledge the covert CIA-run drone programme in Pakistan, but US officials have said privately that the attacks have killed many high-level militants, most recently al-Qaida’s second in command, Atiyah Abd al-Rahman, and its chief of operations in Pakistan, Abu Hafs al-Shahri. The US president, Barack Obama, has dramatically increased the number of drone attacks against militants in Pakistan’s semi-autonomous tribal region since taking office in 2009, partly in response to Pakistan’s failure to target militants who stage attacks against US troops in Afghanistan. Pakistani officials regularly denounce the drone attacks as violations of the country’s sovereignty, but the government is widely believed to have supported the strikes in the past and even allowed the aircraft to take off from bases within Pakistan. That support has come under strain in recent months, especially in the wake of the US commando raid that killed the al-Qaida chief Osama bin Laden in a Pakistani garrison town on 2 May. Pakistan was outraged that the US did not tell it about the operation beforehand. Elsewhere in Pakistan’s tribal region, militants attacked a security checkpoint, killing a police officer and two members of an anti-Taliban militia, said Farooq Khan, a local government administrator. The attack took place late on Saturday night in the Aka Khel area of the Khyber tribal region, said Khan. The checkpoint is located on a key route that Nato uses to transport supplies to forces in neighbouring Afghanistan. Security forces and local tribesmen fought back against the militants, killing 10 of them, said Khan. No group has claimed responsibility for the attack. But the Pakistani Taliban have staged frequent attacks against security forces and tribesmen who have opposed them. Pakistan Taliban Unmanned drones US military United States Afghanistan guardian.co.uk
Continue reading …• Nick Clegg’s interview with Andrew Marr – summary • Sarah Teather’s speech – summary 1.37pm: Here’s a Lib Dem lunchtime summary. • Nick Clegg has denied claims that he plans to stand down as Lib Dem leader after one term in government . Commenting on claims to this effect in the Daily Mail, he said: “I intend to serve well beyond one term.” (See 9.19am.) • Nick Clegg and Vince Cable have said that they will only support the abolition of the 50p top rate of tax if it is replaced with an alternative wealth tax. “If the 50p does not raise money, as we had hoped, from the very, very wealthy, then of course we need to look at other ways to make sure that they pay their fair share,” Clegg said. Cable put it like this: “There has to be a tax measure in place which makes it absolutely clear that the wealthiest people in the country are making a contribution.” (See 9.19am and 11.36am • Hugh Grant, the actor, has criticised Scotland Yard for using the Official Secrets Act to try to force the Guardian to reveal details of how it obtained information about phone hacking. “Generally speaking in this I had come to the view, a lot of us victims had come to the view, that this new police investigation Weeting were good cops,” he told a Hacked Off press conference in Birmingham. “So for them to suddenly turn on their fellow ‘goodies’ in this battle is worrying and deeply mysterious.” Grant also dismissed the idea that his involvement in the campaign could lead to a career in politics. “No, I have no Ronald Reagan plans. I do not have that brainpower,” he said. And he dismissed the idea that he might play David Cameron on screen. “I only ever play one role,” he said. “Don’t be ridiculous.” • Sarah Teacher, the education minister, has announced that the pupil premium will double next year, rising to £1.25bn . (See 12.50pm.) • Lib Dem delegates have criticised the party for the “authoritarian” vetting procedures used at the conference. As the Press Association reports, in a heated and occasionally ill-tempered debate at the gathering in Birmingham, party members passed a motion condemning the system of police accreditation, arguing it infringed upon their human rights. 1.05pm: Danny Alexander, the chief secretary to the Treasury, used his speech to the conference to attack “the enemies of growth”. At one point he said these were Eurosceptics (because they are opposed to the extension of the single market) and Scottish nationalists (because they are opposed to the union with England). But later in the speech he suggested the enemies of growth included congested roads, slow railways, inadequate broadband and defenders of the current planning system (presumably the National Trust and the Daily Telegraph). Alexander’s speech was designed to show that the Lib Dems are taking on the enemies of growth. Here are the main points. • Alexander announced a “new” £500m “growing places fund”. This would use government money to kickstart infrastructure projects, he said. Whether this is really new money seems debatable. According to Lib Dem sources, the money will come from unallocated funds in the Department for Transport, the Department for Communities and the Treasury. (But unallocated does not mean it was not going to be spend, so it may be the case that Alexander is just shuffling money around from one budget to another. I’ll post more details when we get them.) Here’s how Alexander explained it. Half a billion pounds that will kick start developments that are currently stalled. Half a billion pounds that will deliver key infrastructure and create jobs. Putting local areas in the driving seat, to boost the local economy and get people into work. Providing flexibility to local areas to recycle funding for other projects once development is completed. In South Gloucestershire, £300 million of private investment, 3,000 jobs and 2,200 homes is being unlocked with £6 million of public money to build a link road. Just think what we will be able to do with £500 million. • He said that councils would be able to spend an extra £100m a year on housing as a result of his decision to cut the interest rate they have to pay central government. (That was how Alexander explained the public works loan board gobbledygook I mentioned earlier – see 12.38pm.) • He said high earners faced a new crackdown from HM Revenue and Customs. An extra 2,250 HMRC staff will start work on anti-evasion and anti-avoidance, he said. Some 1,000 of those jobs are being advertised this month. Alexander also said a new “affluent team” would start work soon targeting the 350,000 wealthiest taxpayers. Last year Alexander told the Lib Dems that measures like this would raise an extra £7bn over the course of this parliament. Today he said this initiative would raise £2bn this year alone. • He said the Lib Dems wanted to raise the income tax threshold to £12,500 in the next parliament. Raising it to £10,000 during this parliament will save most working people £700 a year, he said. • He was heckled when he accused Gordon Brown of spending too much. “Rubbish,” one delegate shouted. 12.50pm: The text of Sarah Teather ‘s speech to the conference is now on the Lib Dems’ website. There were several announcements in the speech, but what was also interesting was how she stressed the link between Lib Dem campaigning when the party was in opposition and the government’s decision to launch a pupil premium. Nick Clegg made a similar point in his speech to the Lib Dem rally last night – arguing that the low paid were only being taken out of tax because Lib Dem activists championed the idea. It’s as if Lib Dem ministers constantly need to remind delegates that being in government is worth it. Here are the main points. • Teather said the money available for the pupil premium would double next year, rising to £1.25bn. • She said the government would consult on allowing councils to offer 15 hours of early years education to a wider range of two-year-olds. Children from poor families (where children would be eligible for free school meals) already benefit, but Teather said children with special needs could benefit too. • She said the government would soon begin piloting voluntary parenting classes for every parent of a child under five in three or four areas. • She claimed the Lib Dems offered a “more thoughtful” approach to the riots than the other parties. 12.38pm: Danny Alexander probably needs a new speechwriter. He has just delivered an announcement. But his soundbite is unlikely to make it onto the lunchtime news. Here’s what he said: I can today announce my decision to reduce the interest rate offered to local authorities by the Public Works Loan Board to finance the £13bn of debt needed to leave the Housing Revenue Account subsidy system. I’ll post a full summary of the speech when I’ve read the full text. 12.23pm: Danny Alexander has just started his speech. Now. He started with a tribute to his grandfather, who is in the audience and who has been a Liberal since 1936. But then he had a couple of rocky moments. He told a rather lame ‘it’s all Balls” joke about Labour (which was very funny when Michael Heseltine first tried it in the 1990s, but which made us groan in the press room). And then, when he talked about Gordon Brown’s “unsustainable spending”, someone shouted “rubbish”. 12.00pm: I’ve just taken a look at the Daily Mail’s new rightwing comment website, RightMinds, to see if Simon Heffer and his colleagues are going to respond to Nick Clegg’s attack on their journalism. (See 9.19am.) Sadly, RightMinds doesn’t yet seem to have noticed it. 11.36am: Vince Cable , the business secretary, was on Sky earlier this morning. Three points stood out. Here they are. I’ve taken the quotes from PoliticsHome. • Cable confirmed that the Lib Dems could support the abolition of the 50p top rate if were replaced by an alternative wealth tax. “There has to be a tax measure in place which makes it absolutely clear that the wealthiest people in the country are making a contribution,” he said. • He insisted that was was not in favour of “bashing the rich”. He had to clarify his stance when asked about an interview he has given to the Sunday Times (paywall). This is how the Sunday Times reported his comments, under the headline: “Cable clamps down on top pay”. New powers are planned to block excessive pay packages for chief executives amid mounting government concern about runaway salaries. Vince Cable, the business secretary, wants to make it easier for ordinary shareholders to prevent FTSE 100 bosses being awarded huge sums if they are not delivering exceptional results. He claims British companies have a “particular problem” with exorbitant pay and says shareholders need to step in. “The performance of companies has not demonstrably improved, yet people are being paid an awful lot more. There’s something happening that isn’t right,” he said. And this is what Cable told Sky. I’m not actually in favour of bashing the rich – if we have entrepreneurs that create business, create wealth, create jobs, they should be rewarded. I have no issue with that. The issue about executive pay is a rather difficult one. What’s happened over the last decade is executive pay has risen massively at a time when ordinary share prices for the owners of companies… they haven’t risen at all and basic salaries haven’t risen. So something isn’t right here – there are rewards for failure and that’s what we have to deal with. And what the discussion paper is that we’re talking about is looking at the various options by which the owners of companies – the shareholders – can exercise more effective control. • He said that Britain should keep open the option of joining the euro in the “distant future”. This is not a time to think about joining the eurozone – they’ve got to sort out its problems. It could happen in the distant future – we don’t know what will happen – we’ve got to keep out options open. 11.30am: Sarah Teather has just said that next year the amount of money available for the pupil premium will double, rising to £1.25bn. 11.25am: Sarah Teather, the education minister, is delivering her speech to the conference now. I’ll post a summary once I’ve read her text. 11.22am: My colleague Paul Owen has just come back from a Q&A with Simon Hughes, the Lib Dem deputy leader who has produced a report on barriers to post-16 education for the government . He was answering questions on his report from Lib Dem delegates. Hughes made an interesting point about “take your daughter to work” days, as are common in the US. He said the trouble with this approach is that it only allows children to see the type of work their parents do. Hughes said: “I want the daughter of the cleaner to go to the accountant’s workplace and I actually would be quite keen for the daughter of the accountant to go to the cleaner’s workplace.” 10.48am: There is a lot of polling relating to the Lib Dems today. Here are some of the ones I’ve seen. • YouGov has a poll which it has done for the Sunday Times saying that the number of people who think the Lib Dems have a lot of influence in government has almost doubled since May. But it is still only 15% (compared with 8% in May). The full tables are here. And here’s an extract from Anthony Wells’ commentary on the poll at UK Polling Report. On the Liberal Democrats and the coalition, almost half (48%) of people think that entering the coalition was the wrong decision, a proportion mirrored amongst those who voted Lib Dem at the last election (although amongst the remaining Lib Dem supporters 71% think it was the right thing to do). There is a similar split in opinion on whether they should stay in the coalition now – 36% think they should stay (including 78% of their remaining supporters), 45% think they should leave. Despite Nick Clegg’s low approval ratings, 41% think he should stay as Lib Dem leader compared to 32% who would like him to stand down. A majority (63%) of people did not know who would make the best replacement leader for Clegg (unsurprisingly given the relative low profile of third party politicians – Vince Cable was the top choice, but with only 16%, and this was probably because he was the least anonymous). On the question of how much influence the Liberal Democrats have within government, most Conservative and Liberal Democrat supporters think they have a little influence, with Conservatives thinking that is about right or too much, and most Liberal Democrats thinking the party should wield greater influence. Labour supporters tend to see the Lib Dems as not having much influence in government. Overall they are seen as somewhat more influential than they were when we asked the same question in May – back then only 8% thought they had a lot of influence, that has now risen to 15%. 46% of people see the Conservatives as having benefited the most from the coalition, compared to just 19% who see the Liberal Democrats as the main beneficiaries. Looking to the future, 36% of people think that the Liberal Democrats have permanently damaged their party by entering the coalition, 23% think they will recover in time [once the coalition is over and] 21% think they will eventually benefit from having been in government. • ComRes has a poll in the Independent on Sunday says 68% of people expect the Lib Dems to do “much worse” at the next election. John Rentoul has full details on his blog. • The Lib Dem Voice website has published a poll of party members. It shows that 84% of members support the party being in coalition with the Conservatives, even though 59% of them think this will be bad for the party’s electoral prospects at the next election. Stephen Tall has more details here. Alert readers will note a common theme. Ordinary voters and party members both seem to agree that being in coalition is seriously damaging the Lib Dems. 10.33am: Do you want to be a Guardian Twitter correspondent? I’m looking for people who will be going to some of the Lib Dem fringe meetings at lunchtime and who will report what’s said on Twitter. Once I know who’s going to what, I’ll post links to the appropriate Twitter feeds on this blog. I can’t give you any money, I’m afraid, but you might pick up a few more Twitter followers. I’m particularly interested in the following fringe meetings, all starting at 1pm. Phone hacking: Hugh Grant, the actor, Alan Rusbridger, the Guardian editor, Don Foster, the Lib Dem MP and Jo Glanville, editor of Index on Censorship. Labour and the Lib Dems: Norman Lamb, Nick Clegg’s chief parliamentary advisers, and possibly Labour frontbenchers Sadiq Khan and Emily Thornberry on whether Labour and the Lib Dems should be working together. Europe: Charles Kennedy, the former Lib Dem leader, on the outlook for Europe’s economy. New Media and Democracy: Jeremy Browne, the Foreign Office minister, and Charlie Beckett, the media academic. State education: Sarah Teather, the education minister, Christine Blower, the general secretary of the NUT, and Chris Keates, general secretary of the NASUWT. If you are going to any of these and fancy reporting them on Twitter, drop me a line on Twitter – I’m @AndrewSparrow – before 1pm and I’ll try to flag up your feed. 10.23am: The TUC are organising a rally in Birmingham today to highlight their opposition to the Lib Dems and the government’s spending cuts. This is what Frances O’Grady , the TUC general secretary, is going to say when she addresses it. We are sending a powerful message to the Lib Dems and to the government that we are strong and united, that we will fight their savage cuts, and that we will not let them destroy people’s jobs, services and livelihoods. 10.11am: Meanwhile, back in the conference …. The debate on getting delegates to submit personal data when applying for a conference pass so that they can be vetted by the police generated quite a lot of anger. By a healthy majority delegates passed a motion saying the conference “condemns the system of police accreditation adopted for this conference which requires party members to disclose personal data to the police and which is designed to enable the police to advise that certain party members should not be allowed to attend”. 9.19am: Nick Clegg has gone to war with the Daily Mail. That, I’m afraid, is probably the highlight from Clegg’s interview with Andrew Marr. Here are the key points. • Clegg insisted that he would not step down before the election. There has been a lot of speculation about his future, because he’s become an emblem for Lib Dem unpopularity, and there is a theory that he could become Britain’s next European commissioner before 2015, giving him an excuse to vacate the leadership. This was fuelled by the publication of extracts from a new biography of Clegg in the Daily Mail yesterday claiming that Clegg has told his wife, Mariam, that he will only serve one term. This is how Clegg responded when Marr asked him about it. Can I put this mildly? I really wouldn’t believe a word you read in the Daily Mail. This is the paper that called me a Nazi. They and other papers have got a bee in their bonnet about the coalition. They come up with drivel every single day. I’m in this because I believe it’s the right thing to do … Miriam supports me fully in this and I want to see us succeed in the coalition and beyond. Marr then asked him if he was remain as Lib Dem leader “beyond one term”. Clegg said he was. Absolutely. I intend to serve well beyond one term. There you go. Daily Mail wrong. • Clegg said he had “no idea” whether his aide, Polly Mackenzie, had drawn up a list of policies that the Lib Dems wanted to negotiate with the Conservatives for the second half of the coalition. This was another claim in the extract from Gerard’s book in the Mail yesterday. I have no idea,” he said. “I don’t control what people do on their desktops every single day.” • Clegg said he would oppose cutting the 50p top rate of tax “unilaterally”. In other words, it would be wrong to cut it before cutting taxes for low earners, he said. If Treasury research shows that the 50p rate really is not raising any money, then it should be replaced by a substitute tax on high earners. I don’t think it is morally or economically right to unilaterally lower the tax burden on the very wealthiest when we have not made much more progress, as I want us to, lowering taxes for millions of people on ordinary incomes … If the 50p does not raise money, as we had hoped, from the very, very wealthy, then of course we need to look at other ways to make sure that they pay their fair share. • He said the government would use capital spending to get more private sector investment into the economy. Danny Alexander, the chief secretary to the Treasury, would today be announcing a £500m investment in infrastructure, he said. And he mentioned the speech he gave last week saying infrastructure spending would be accelerated. There is this ludicrous caricature that because we’re balancing the books, the government can’t do anything, that somehow we’re turning the clock back to the 80s or the 30s. As a proportion of this country’s wealth, this government will be spending more in public spending at the end of this parliament after all these cuts, than Tony Blair and Gordon Brown were when they came into power. Clegg said said the government was getting “new money” into the economy. Through these innovations like the green investment bank, yes there is new money … We calculate about £18bn of new money will go into building, for instance, renewable energy infrastructure during this parliament. That is not to be sniffed at. Only £3bn of that is taxpayers’ money. We use that money to then make sure that the private sector brings in other money. 9.09am: Marr turns to the story in yesterday’s Daily Mail suggesting he would stand down after one term. Clegg says you should not believe everything you read in the Daily Mail. This is the paper that called him a Nazi, he says. That story was “drivel”? Q: So you are not just in this for one term? No, says Clegg. He wants to go on well beyond one term. Q: Are you negotiating a new coalition agreement? [Marr says Clegg's aide has drawn up a list of new demands.] Clegg says he has not seen such a list. Q: Isn’t it time for a new agreement? You’ve achieved some of the things in the first agreement. Clegg says that for the government to be successful, it has to have a “common purpose”. That common purpose involves sorting out the economy and promoting social mobility. Promoting social mobility is his passion. 9.04am: Marr turns to the human rights act. Q: Many ordinary people think the human rights act got in the way of punishment for those involved in rioting. Clegg says the human rights act is not the problem. The problem is that the criminal justice system has been too soft on prisoners who just come out of jail and reoffend. That’s why he supports Kenneth Clarke’s plans to encourage more rehabilitation. Q: What do you say to Tories who want to repatriate powers from the EU? Clegg says the single market was a British creation. It was set up by a British commissioner and championed by the Thatcher government. Clegg says he wants to widen that free market. Attacking directives is a “distraction”. There are directives he does not like. But the important thing is to extend the single market. Q: Do you still want to join the euro? Clegg says there is no prospect of this government joining the euro. Q: But you are still in principle in favour? Clegg says he is in principle in favour of recognising reality. Britain is a member of the EU. 8.59am: Marr is now talking about planning. Clegg says confidence is a key factor. The government needs to give people the confidence to start building homes. Marr turns to tax. Q: If the Treasury concludes that the 50p top rate of tax is not bringing money into government, can it go? Clegg says if it is concluded that the 50p rate is not raising money, then “of course” he would be in favour of finding other ways to get the wealthy to pay tax. But it would be “incomprehensible” to lower the tax rate for the wealthy when other people were being squeezed. Q: So will the 50p rate go? Clegg says it is up to George Osborne to take this decision. Q: But you would block its abolition if there is no substitute? Clegg says it would not be “morally right” to unilaterally cut taxes for the wealthy. His priority is to cut taxes for people on low incomes. And if the 50p rate is not raising any money, the government should find another way of ensuring that “the wealthiest pay their fair share”. Clegg says the Lib Dems are on the side of the millions of people who “work hard and play by the rules”. 8.54am: Nick Clegg is being interviewed by Marr now. He is talking about the government’s plans to use capital spending to promote growth. Q: You’re cutting spending. Taxes are high. So where is the money going to come from for new infrastructure projects? Clegg says the government is spening £700bn a year. There is a “ludicrous caricature” that the government cannot do anything. At the end of the cuts, the government will still be spending more as a proportion of GDP than Tony Blair’s government was when it came into office. Q: How much extra money will there be? Clegg says billions of pounds will be invested in infrastructure. These are projects the government has already announced. Q: But this is not new money, is it? Clegg says government spending on capital projects will release extra money from other sources. For example, spending on renewable energy will release a total of £18bn. 8.47am: It’s Groundhog day. This morning the BBC are leading on the news that Danny Alexander, the chief secretary to the Treasury, will use his speech to the conference to announce a crackdown on tax evasion. Here’s an extract from the story on their website. More than 2,000 tax inspectors will be recruited to crack down on tax evasion among the wealthiest people in the UK, a Liberal Democrat minister has said. Danny Alexander, Chief Secretary to the Treasury, told the BBC he would announce the move at his party’s conference in Birmingham later. He will also promise £500m to kick-start stalled public works projects and £100m for council housing in England. Does that ring any bells? It did with me, because this is how the Guardian reported Alexander’s speech to the conference last year. The Liberal Democrats today promised an attack on those who have made tax evasion a lifestyle choice, as the party announced government plans to raise an extra £7bn by 2014-15 by tackling tax avoidance and fraud. The Treasury would be “ruthless with wealthy individuals and business who think paying extra tax is an optional extra”, vowed its chief secretary, Danny Alexander. Much of the clampdown will involve more intensive scrutiny of those liable for paying the new 50p tax band introduced by the Labour government. Revenue and Customs currently looks at 5,000 high net-worth individuals, but will expand that number to 150,000. He also promised a more robust criminal deterrent against tax evasion by increasing the number of criminal prosecutions by Revenue and Customs fivefold. Alexander revealed the Treasury will strengthen a team of investigators to catch those hiding money offshore. 8.34am: It’s the first full day of the Lib Dem conference and we’ve got a packed agenda, starting with Nick Clegg on the Andrew Marr show shortly. Here’s the agenda for today. 9am Nick Clegg is interviewed on the BBC’s Andrew Marr show. 9am: Delegates debate a motion on the accreditation arrangements for this year’s party conference. Some members are angry about the fact that they were asked to submit personal data so that they could be vetted by the police. 9.45am: A short Q&A session on gender balance and diversity in the party. 10am: Alistair Carmichael , the chief whip, Lord McNally , the leader in the Lords and Fiona Hall, the leader in the European parliament, host a Q&A on party business. 10.55am: Sean Brennan, the leader of Sutton council, delivers a presentation. 11.15am: Sarah Teather , the education minister, delivers a speech. 11.35am: Delegates debate a motion saying part-time students should not have to start repaying their tuition fee loan until they have finished their degree. Under the government’s plans, part-time students have to start repaying three and a half years after the start of their course. 11.45am: Hugh Grant , the actor, and Evan Harris , the former Lib Dem MP, hold a press conference with Hacked Off, the group campaigning against phone hacking. 12.20pm: Danny Alexander , the chief secretary to the Treasury, delivers a speech. 2.30pm: Delegates debate a motion calling for the pupil premium to be beefed up and turned into an education credit, which would be more generous and would be available to a wider range of disadvantaged children. 3.30pm: Teather, Simon Hughes, the deputy leader and the government’s advocate for access to education, Steve Webb, the pensions minister, and Lady Hussein-Ece, a commissioner at the equality and human rights commission, take part in a Q&A session on social mobility. 4.20pm: Tim Farron , the Lib Dem president, delivers a speech. 4.40pm: Delegates debate a motion calling for the partial decriminalisation of drugs. As usual, I’ll be covering all the conference events on the blog, including looking at the papers, which I’ll get round to later. I’ll post a lunchtime summary at around 1pm and an afternoon one at about 5pm. My colleague Paul Owen will then take over the blog and keep it going into the evening. Liberal Democrat conference 2011 Liberal Democrat conference Liberal Democrats Nick Clegg Andrew Sparrow guardian.co.uk
Continue reading …Riot police disperse a protest against the factory, which is accused of dumping toxic waste in Haining Residents of a village in east China have accused riot police of heavy-handed tactics after a three-day protest against a solar panel factory accused of dumping toxic waste was brought to an end. “We are being silenced,” said a protester who would only give his surname as Cao, at an industrial park on the outskirts of Haining in Zhejiang province as police in riot gear sealed off the site. “Some people were beaten up during the protests. Why can we not just tell the truth about this pollution? Now people talking to reporters are also being detained. What justice is there?” The protests began on Thursday, when as many as 500 people stormed a compound owned by the New York-listed Jinko Solar Holding Co, the official news agency Xinhua reported on Sunday. Protesters overturned vehicles before being dispersed, but they continued to camp outside the factory until the riot police with helmets, vests, batons and shields arrived late on Sunday. Toxic waste from the factory, which manufactures photovoltaic panels, cells and wafers, has killed large numbers of fish in a nearby river, and authorities had already ordered the company to suspend operations, the news agency said. Protesters put up banners with the slogan: “Return our lives to us, stay away from Jinko,” according to photographs published on the website of the National Business Daily newspaper on Sunday. An elderly woman who did not want to give her name complained bitterly about the local government’s tactics. “The factory has been polluting us all this while and now that we make some noise, the government shuts us up. They are all in this together. Now we just have to die here silently. You can see all these riot police here. We are just helpless villagers.” Xinhua quoted an environmental official as saying that Jinko had failed to bring the problem under control and the factory’s waste disposal facilities had been failing pollution tests since April. Pollution has emerged as one of the biggest problems facing China’s ruling Communist party, which has struggled to contain growing public anger against industries improperly dumping toxic waste. Thousands of protesters forced the closure of a deadly paraxylene plant after marching on the city square in Dalian, north-eastern China, in August. China Solar power Protest Human rights Renewable energy Energy guardian.co.uk
Continue reading …Live Video!Watch Floyd Mayweather vs Victor Ortiz online free live stream Live Video!Watch Floyd Mayweather vs Victor Ortiz online free live stream Live Video!Watch Floyd Mayweather vs Victor Ortiz online free live stream webcommunicatie says: RT @/promotemyvideo2011Watch Mayweather vs Ortiz live stream online free HD video sopcast link – ERE Media (blog): The GuardianWatch …
Continue reading …Independent and Evening Standard owner ‘neutralises’ fellow TV debate guest in reaction to the latter’s ‘threatening manner’ The Russian billionaire Alexander Lebedev may pride himself on not interfering with the editorial policy of his UK newspapers, the Independent and Evening Standard, but there was no sign of such restraint when he took exception to the words of a fellow guest on Russian television. Clad in very tight grey jeans, Lebedev showed a glimpse of his past as a KGB agent as he launched two blows at the former property developer Sergei Polonsky during a television debate on the financial crisis. Polonsky, once ranked Russia’s 40th richest man, had said he wanted to “stick one in the mouth” of Lebedev. In the clip posted on the NTV channel’s website, Polonsky was sent tumbling to the floor and Lebedev then stood over him in a crouched fighting stance. The newspaper baron said later that he had been reacting to Polonsky’s threatening manner. The colourful proprietor was quoted as saying: “In a critical situation, there is no choice. I see no reason to be hit with the first shot. I neutralised him.” Polonsky later posted photographs online showing a cut on his arm and a tear in his trousers. Alexander Lebedev Russia Europe Haroon Siddique guardian.co.uk
Continue reading …• Clegg wants to lead party ‘well beyond one term’ • Opposes cutting 50p top rate of tax ‘unilaterally’ • Alexander to unveil £500m infrastructure investment • Follow all the latest developments in our live blog Nick Clegg, the Liberal Democrat leader, has insisted he intends to stay at the helm “well beyond one term” amid claims that he did a deal with his wife, Miriam, to step down in 2015 . The deputy prime minister told The Andrew Marr Show that he was in coalition “because I believe it is the right thing to do” as he defended his party’s record in government. Clegg was speaking the day after delivering a combative speech to party’s annual conference in which he sought to assert the “distinctive Liberal Democrat voice” in government as he justified the decision to join forces with the Conservatives – “our political enemies” – in the national interest. Amid fears that the party leadership had become too close to their Conservative coalition colleagues, the Lib Dem leader told delegates on Saturday night that the party was “punching above our weight” in government and doing a “remarkable amount” in delivering Lib Dem priorities. The party had proved wrong those who doubted it was “up to the job” of coalition working, he said in a well received speech. But polling published to coincide with the party’s second autumn conference since joining the coalition suggests the party has failed to convince voters they are a “credible party of government”. Just 24% of the public believe the party is up to the job while only 23% believe they have “done a good job of moderating conservative policies”, according to the ComRes Poll for the Sunday Mirror and Independent on Sunday. Clegg fares the worst of the three major party leaders when it comes to persuading voters what he stands for, with 61% of respondents telling pollsters they “did not know”, compared with 42% who did not know what David Cameron stood for, and 57% who were unsure about Ed Miliband’s priorities.. The poll found 68% of voters believed the Lib Dems would do “much worse” at the next election and just 47% of those who backed the party at the last election would do so again. Overall Lib Dem support has flat-lined at 11%, while Labour have dropped two points to 38% since last month, bringing them level with the Conservatives. In an interview ahead of the second day of conference business, the deputy prime minister set out his pitch as head of a party which he described as having “both head and heart”. But he was also forced to confirm that he intends to stay the course following reports that he had agreed with his wife a timeline for quitting the job. Confronted with the claim of an agreement, made in a book about his rise to high office by journalist Jasper Gerard, Clegg said: “I am in this because I believe it is the right thing to do. Miriam supports me fully in this. And I want to see us succeed in the coalition government and beyond.” Pressed to state his future intentions, he added: “I intend to serve well beyond one term.” Clegg, under pressure to sway doubting party members that the Lib Dems are successfully warding off rightwing policies from the Tory party that would widen inequality and benefit the rich, outlined his party’s determination to face down any move by the chancellor, George Osborne, to scrap the 50p top rate of tax unless it is replaced with another tax on the wealthy. “It stays unless we can first make more progress on lowering the tax burden on people on low and middle incomes, and secondly making sure as the chancellor himself has said we can find other ways the wealthiest can pay their fair share,” said Clegg. Osborne has ordered a review of whether the higher levy is justified by the amount of extra revenue it generates, saying “inefficient” taxes are pointless. Danny Alexander, the Lib Dem chief secretary to the Treasury, will use his conference speech on Sunday lunchtime to announce that a crack team will make sure the richest are paying up. A 100-strong “affluence team” is being drawn from 2,250 newly-recruited tax inspectors expected to be in place within weeks. They will concentrate on the 350,000 people in the UK whose personal wealth is more than £2.5m. Alexander told the Independent on Sunday the move had been “driven forward” by the Lib Dems and would target “particularly people who might be eligible to pay tax at the 50p rate”. Both the Lib Dem leader and business secretary, Vince Cable, signalled on Saturday that the party would only entertain the abolition of the top rate in the long run if it was not raising much revenue and if it was replaced by new taxes on “unearned income”. These could include a 1% annual “mansion tax” on homes worth more than £2m, a land tax, and restricting tax relief on pensions to the basic 20p rate. Clegg told Marr: “I don’t think that it is morally or economically right to unilaterally lower the tax burden on the very wealthy when we haven’t made much more progress as I want us to on lowering tax for the millions of people on ordinary incomes. That remains my principal concern.” Clegg said his party’s “real preoccupation” were the “millions of people in lower or middle incomes”. He said: “They often get overlooked in this debate about what happens to the benefit system at the bottom the wealthiest at the top. The Liberal Democrats are there to really support and be on the side of the millions of people who play by the rules, work hard, pay their taxes and are feeling under an enormous amount of pressure right now.” But he rounded on critics who say the government should slow down its spending cuts agenda: “I think people who advocate that just need to think this through,” he said. “Does anyone seriously think that by ripping up the plan to balance the books that somehow you will create growth by next Tuesday? Actually, it is a complete illusion. What you create is outright market panic, high interest rates and more unemployment.” He said the Liberal Democrat party is “a party of the head and of the heart”, which reflected a balance between social fairness and economic responsibility. “I think if you look at what the country’s been through in the last few years… there are millions of people who want a political party that believes you can create a strong economy and a fair society, and don’t like being told that you have to choose between one and the other. And that’s what the Liberal Democrats are about – we are a party of the head and the heart.” Meanwhile, Cable has pledged to crack down on Britain’s culture of excessive pay for senior executives by signalling moves to make it easier for ordinary shareholders to prevent company bosses being awarded huge sums without delivering exceptional results. In an interview with the Sunday Times, Cable said remuneration had “exploded” and UK firms had a “particular problem”. “The performance of companies has not demonstrably improved, yet people are being paid an awful lot more. There’s something happening that isn’t right,” he said. “You don’t have this problem to anything like the same extent in Scandinavia, Germany, France. It’s a particular feature of our markets. “There is lots of evidence of reward for failure.” Clegg also used his interview to reject any moves to pull back from the European Union. The former MEP called for the British “bulldog confidence” to come to the fore to push for the completion of the single market. “Our absolute overriding priority if we want to protect jobs, if we want to protect communities, if we want to protect families, is to actually deepen and widen that liberal and open free market right on our doorstep,” he said. He said he hoped the eurozone countries would “get their act together” and make it a success, adding: “The last thing we should do is say ‘oh in that case we wash our hands of the whole enterprise and we’ll get out’. That will destroy jobs and destroy prosperity in this country.” Asked if the government should slow down the cuts programme, Clegg said: “I think people who advocate that just need to think this through. “Does anyone seriously think that by ripping up the plan to balance the books that somehow you will create growth by next Tuesday? Actually, it is a complete illusion. What you create is outright market panic, high interest rates and more unemployment.” Liberal Democrat conference 2011 Liberal Democrat conference Liberal Democrats Nick Clegg Income tax Tax Liberal-Conservative coalition Danny Alexander Hélène Mulholland guardian.co.uk
Continue reading …