Home » Archives by category » News (Page 272)
Guatemalan women hail single-sex buses

Transport project follows congresswoman’s petition over high incidence of sexual harassment of women in Guatemala City Guatemala City has introduced women-only buses aimed at reducing instances of harassment and violence against women on public transport across the Guatemalan capital. The project came about after a congresswoman, Zury Rios Montt, started a petition to draw attention to the fact that hundreds of women were sexually harassed on buses every year. According to the Association of Transport Users in Guatemala, of the 1,500 complaints received annually about passenger abuse, more than a third of them involve the sexual harassment of women and girls. “Women have the right to travel in safety, as demanded by law,” said Luis Gómez, vice-president of the city’s bus service, Transurbano. “It’s a shame we had to introduce this system, but people weren’t respecting women on mixed buses.” Roughly half of Guatemala City’s 3.5

Continue reading …
Alabama immigration law upheld by federal appeals court

Court rules that police are allowed to detain immigrants who are suspected of being in the US illegally A federal appeals court issued a ruling Friday that temporarily blocked parts of an Alabama law requiring schools to check the immigration status of students but let stand a provision that allows police to detain immigrants that are suspected of being in the country illegally. The 11th US Circuit Court of Appeals issued the order after the Justice Department challenged what is considered the toughest immigration law in the nation. The opinion also blocked a part of the law that makes it a crime for immigrants to not have proper documentation. A final decision on the law won’t be made for months to allow time for more arguments. Since a federal judge upheld much of the law in late September, many frightened Hispanics have been driven away from Alabama, fearing they could be arrested or targeted by police. Construction workers, landscapers and field hands have stopped showing up for work, and large numbers of Hispanic students have been absent from public schools. To cope with the labor shortage, Alabama agriculture commissioner John McMillan at one point suggested farmers should consider hiring inmates in the state’s work-release program. It’s not clear exactly how many Hispanics have fled the state. Earlier this week, many skipped work to protest the law, shuttering or scaling back operations at chicken plants, Mexican restaurants and other businesses. Immigration has become a hot-button issue in Alabama over the past decade as the Hispanic population has grown by 145% to about 185,600 people, most of them of Mexican origin. The Hispanic population represents about 4% of the state’s 4.7m people, but some counties in north Alabama have large Spanish-speaking communities and schools where most of the students are Hispanic. In addition to the Obama administration, a coalition of advocacy groups also filed a separate appeal of the law, claiming it has thrown Alabama into “chaos.” Alabama’s law was considered by both opponents and supporters to be stricter than similar laws enacted in Arizona, Utah, Indiana and Georgia. Federal judges in those states have blocked all or parts of those measures. Arizona Gov. Jan Brewer earlier this year asked the U.S. Supreme Court to resolve the legal fight over her state’s tough immigration law. The Justice Department has called the Alabama law a “sweeping new state regime” and urged the appeals court to forbid states from creating a patchwork of immigration policies. The agency also said the law could strain diplomatic relations with Latin American countries, who have warned the law could impact millions of workers, tourists and students in the U.S. The law, it said, turns illegal immigrants into a “unique class who cannot lawfully obtain housing, enforce a contract, or send their children to school without fear that enrollment will be used as a tool to seek to detain and remove them and their family members.” “Other states and their citizens are poorly served by the Alabama policy, which seeks to drive aliens from Alabama rather than achieve cooperation with the federal government to resolve a national problem,” the attorneys have said in court documents. State Republicans have long sought to clamp down on illegal immigration and passed the law earlier this year after gaining control of the Legislature for the first time since Reconstruction. Alabama Gov. Robert Bentley signed the measure, saying it was crucial to protect the jobs of legal residents amid the tough economy and high unemployment. US immigration Alabama United States guardian.co.uk

Continue reading …

The 11th Circuit U.S. Court of Appeals in Atlanta has overruled part of a lower judge’s decision and ordered Alabama to stop questioning grade-school students and parents about their citizenship status, the AP reports. But the court did let stand for now the part of the state law that requires local police officers to ask

Continue reading …
News Corporation parts company with law firm Farrer & Co

News Corp’s legal advisers to be replaced by Olswang, who will now advise on civil claims in relation to phone hacking News Corporation has parted company with the law firm used to defend the News of the World in lawsuits taken out by more than 60 alleged victims of phone-hacking. Farrer & Co and News Corporation’s management and standards committee said they had “mutually agreed” the move, according to a statement issued on Friday afternoon. The committee was established by Rupert Murdoch as an internal clean-up and investigations unit in July in the wake of revelations that the phone-hacking activities allegedly ordered by the defunct Sunday tabloid had affected more than 4,000 people, including the families of murder victim Milly Dowler. The move comes just days before Farrer partner Julian Pike is due to give evidence before the parliamentary committee that quizzed Murdoch and his son James over phone-hacking. Last month Pike revealed that one of the phone-hacking victims, Gordon Taylor, reportedly “wanted to be vindicated or made rich” when he was negotiating with the News of the World for compensation. This emerged in written evidence to the committee in relation to advice he gave News International ahead of a controversial £700,000 pay out to Taylor, the head of the Professional Footballers Association. Farrer & Co will be replaced by Olswang which have been asked to “advise News Group Newspapers on the appropriate resolution of civil claims in relation to phone-hacking”. The firm has also been asked to implement the £20m compensation fund that was set up earlier this year. News Group, publishers of the defunct Sunday tabloid, is facing six test cases in January to establish precedent for a total of 64 lawsuits brought against the paper. The management and standards committee comprises Will Lewis, Simon Greenberg and Jeff Palker, and reports to Joel Klein, who is also News Corp’s executive committee member responsible for News Corp’s educational initiatives. Separately, Klein was appearing alongside Rupert Murdoch on Friday at an Excellence in Education conference in San Francisco organised by Jeb Bush. A journalist asking about how Klein would develop News Corp’s educational business was ejected from the event, Olswang has been working for the committee since it was established in July. The law firm is also used by Guardian News and Media, as its external editorial legal adviser. • To contact the MediaGuardian news desk email editor@mediaguardian.co.uk or phone 020 3353 3857. For all other inquiries please call the main Guardian switchboard on 020 3353 2000. If you are writing a comment for publication, please mark clearly “for publication”. • To get the latest media news to your desktop or mobile, follow MediaGuardian on Twitter and Facebook News Corporation News of the World Phone hacking Media business Newspapers & magazines National newspapers News International Newspapers Lisa O’Carroll guardian.co.uk

Continue reading …
Syria is heading for full-blown civil war, top UN official warns

Ten people have died in the latest clashes as protesters urge more people to defect from the Syrian security forces Large rallies urging further defections from the Syrian security forces have been attacked by government gunmen, as a senior United Nations official warned that the country was sliding towards a full-blown civil war. At least 10 people were killed across Syria, taking the death toll in the six-month uprising to more than 3,000, not including loyalist members of the security forces who continue to target demonstrators. Deir Azour in the Kurdish north was a scene of violent clashes between security forces and defectors who had been urged to swap sides by thousands of chanting activists. In recent weeks a largely passive rights movement inside Syria has taken on a more militant tone, with activists openly seeking weapons and soldiers who have fled the army battling with their former colleagues. The Syrian government says around 1,100 security officers have been killed. On Thursday, at least 36 people were killed nationwide, 25 of them either former or serving security force members. Friday’s demonstrations were called in support of the defectors, who Syrian activists say hold the key to the future of an uprising that has become a grinding struggle. “We know the world is not coming to help us,” said one man speaking by phone from Homs. “We will do what we have to do. Our brothers in the security forces are increasingly waking up. And soon we will fight alongside them in large numbers.” The UN human rights commissioner, Navi Pillay, called for more to be done to stop the violence. “The onus is on all members of the international community to take protective action in a collective manner, before the continual ruthless repression and killings drive the country into a full-blown civil war,” she said in a statement. “As more members of the military refuse to attack civilians and change sides, the crisis is already showing worrying signs of descending into an armed struggle.” The UN and the international community have been accused of being flat-footed in their response to the crisis, in stark contrast to the enthusiastic intervention in Libya that led to Muammar Gaddafi’s ousting in August. The US and Europe have ruled out military intervention and Washington’s push for more aggressive sanctions against Damascus was stymied last week by the UN security council after Russian and Chinese vetoes. The US and Britain this week demanded that the Syrian regime stop intimidating activists abroad. US officials announced the arrest of a Syrian national who they claimed had filmed and threatened activists in Washington and then flown to Damascus to discuss opposition activities inside the US with the president, Bashar al-Assad, and his inner sanctum. Britain called in the Syrian ambassador to warn against using embassy officials to threaten UK-based activists. Amnesty International recently claimed regime monitoring of activists was taking place in around 30 capitals. In Lebanon, the Syrian ambassador Ali Abdul Karim Ali denied claims that Syrian officials had been responsible for the abduction of three opposition activists near Beirut. The Lebanese security force chief, Major General Ashraf Rifi, said the alleged evidence against the embassy was “conclusive”. Sources close to him said they had video evidence, written testimonies and intelligence evidence that proved the embassy was active in the abductions. Ali called on him to publicly reveal what he had. Assad this week claimed that the “most difficult phase” of the uprising had passed. His supporters staged a mass rally inside Damascus, which was cast almost as a victory parade. However, Friday’s protests erupted in areas that the regime was considered to have controlled in recent months. The city of Homs remains out of its control, with armed demonstrators protecting neighbourhoods and the Syrian military stationed on the city’s perimeter. The former Lebanese president Amin Gemayyel said Assad had little option but to continue with the lethal crackdown if he intends to try to cling to power. “Such a regime needs a minimum of brutal repression. Without it he won’t be able to lead the country,” he said. “His regime has been built on fear and repression and if you take that away he has no legitimacy. If the people start to lose their fear he is finished. But they are not there yet.” A protester from Homs said the city feared no one. “Tell Bashar he is finished and we will prevail,” he said. He would not give his name. Syria Middle East Martin Chulov guardian.co.uk

Continue reading …

Recession? If only.

No Comment

There’s been a lot of talk in recent months about the possibility of a double-dip recession. So far, despite all the bad signs, we’ve avoided that fate, as the economy has continued to eke out small levels of growth each quarter. But even that glimmer of comfort that may not be a positive sign. Neil

Continue reading …
Anita Perry: GOP, Media Attacking Husband ‘Because of His Faith’

Click here to view this media Texas First Lady Anita Perry says that her husband is being persecuted by the media and the Republican establishment “because of his faith. ” “It’s been a rough month,” Anita Perry told supporters at North Greenville University Thursday. “We’ve been brutalized, eaten up and chewed up in the press.” “After Rick had won being elected for the governorship for the third time in Texas, there was a nagging, a pulling at my heart for him to run for president,” she recalled. “You know what we have no leadership in Washington. We have nobody to guide our country… God was already speaking to me, but he didn’t want to hear it… He felt like he needed to see the burning bush. I said, ‘Look, let me tell you something. You may not see that burning bush but there are people who see that burning bush for you.” Anita Perry continued: “So he truly felt like he was called to do this. We still feel called to do this. We are being brutalized by our opponents in our own party. So much of that is, I think they look at him because of his faith.” “Someone came up to Rick and handed him a scripture and said, ‘Rick, I want to tell you, God is testing you right now. God is testing you because he wants you to know when you are in the White House, how you got there.” UPDATE : John Amato: Mrs. Perry looks like a nice lady and told her husband that she saw the burning bush which called to her first, (no not George) and reassured Rick that others have seen it too which was a sign that God wanted him to run. Perry’s camp must be feeling the heat of the bush if they decided to play the religious persecution card so early and used his wife to deliver the message. I do know that a another candidate running in the GOP primary had their faith called a cult by her party and he wasn’t named Perry.

Continue reading …
9 Creepy Photos That Appear In ‘Miss Peregrine’s Home for Peculiar Children’

I’ve been interested in photography since I was a kid, but it was only a few years ago that I started collecting photographs. Because I was a starving grad student at the time, prints by well-known photographers were way beyond my reach. I could, however, afford the old snapshots they sell at flea markets and swap meets around Southern California, swimming loose in giant bins for fifty cents or a buck apiece. You find a lot of junk when you’re searching through lost and tossed photo ephemera, but every so often you’ll find a gem, a wallet-sized masterpiece you’re certain could hang on the wall of a gallery if only someone with a name had taken it. Find one or two of those and you’re hooked for life. Every snapshot collector has obsessions. Some only collect photos of cars. Others like World War II, or babies, or old-timey girls in old-timey swimsuits. I happen to collect the weird stuff: photos that make the hair on the back of your neck stand up a little. The uncanny. I don’t mean circus freaks and kids in Halloween costumes, either — I mean photos that seem wrong in a way that’s hard to put your finger on, so unusual they make you look at them a second and then a third time, then reward you with uneasy dreams. The kind of photos that seem to stare at you from across a room. That’s what I looked for when choosing images for Miss Peregrine’s Home for Peculiar Children, my first novel, which weaves four dozen vintage photos into its story. Since it hit shelves, I’ve been getting emails from readers complaining about weird dreams and lost sleep, as well as questions about specific photos (usually along the lines of, “So that picture of the guy with a face painted on the back of his head — what is up with that?”). But because the photos are anonymous, long divorced from whatever context might have explained them, I don’t know what’s up with them any more than my readers do. All I know is that they creep me out. Each photo is an unsettling little mystery — and I like them that way. In the hopes that they might creep some of you out, here are nine of my favorites. Sweet dreams! Click “Full Screen” to really give you sleepless nights

Continue reading …
Google to launch MP3 store in coming weeks?

Details are still scarce here, but the New York Times is reporting that Google is about to launch a new MP3 store, as part of its ongoing foray into the music business. According to sources within the industry, the platform, not surprisingly, would be directly linked to Google Music Beta and may launch within the next few weeks — perhaps even before Apple unveils iTunes Match , at the end of this month. It remains to be seen, however, whether Big G will be able to finalize negotiations with record labels and publishers before launching the initiative in earnest — a potentially major hurdle, considering Google’s recent track record. As you may recall, previous negotiations over a proposed locker-type storage service ultimately broke down earlier this year, amid concerns over licensing and illegal file-sharing. As one label executive told the Times , the recording industry desperately wants to “make sure the locker doesn’t become a bastion of piracy.” An MP3 store, of course, isn’t exactly a radical proposal, but its future will likely hinge upon Google’s ability to mend relations with a sector it recently characterized as ” unreasonable and unsustainable .” Google to launch MP3 store in coming weeks? originally appeared on Engadget on Fri, 14 Oct 2011 13:04:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds . Permalink

Continue reading …

The alleged Iranian plot to assassinate Saudi Arabia’s man in Washington sounds far-fetched, but skeptical foreign governments have been presented with evidence, State Department officials say. President Obama, in his first remarks about the plot, promised to push for “the toughest sanctions” against Iran and said US officials know that…

Continue reading …