US anti-terror renewal bill raced through Congress and signed with ‘auto pen’ by Barack Obama from Europe to meet deadline The US Congress, racing the clock and rejecting demands for additional safeguards of civil liberties, passed a bill on Thursday to renew three expiring provisions of the anti-terrorism Patriot Act. Barack Obama, who is in Europe, signed it into law shortly before the provisions were set to expire at midnight. A White House aide said he used an “auto pen”, which replicates his signature. Obama acted shortly after the Republican-led House of Representatives and the Democratic-led Senate approved the bill overwhelmingly. It passed the House, 250-153, hours after it cleared the Senate, 72-23. Democrats and some Republicans favoured more protections of civil liberties in the legislation. But congressional leaders, facing the midnight deadline and possibly short on votes, agreed to a four-year, unaltered extension of the provisions to track suspected terrorists. The provisions empower law enforcement officials to get court approval to obtain “roving wiretaps” on suspected foreign agents with multiple modes of communications, track non-US nationals suspected of terrorism, and obtain certain business and even library records. “Although the Patriot Act is not a perfect law, it provides our intelligence and law enforcement communities with crucial tools to keep America safe,” said the Senate majority leader, Harry Reid. “The raid that killed Osama bin Laden also yielded an enormous amount of new information that has spurred dozens of investigations yielding new leads every day. “Without the Patriot Act, investigators would not have the tools they need to follow these new leads and disrupt terrorist plots.” The provisions are key parts of the act, which was enacted after the 9/11 attacks. While backers say the provisions bolster US security, critics say they could be abused and violate the rights of US citizens. The American Civil Liberties Union, which has long called for changes to the Patriot Act, said Congress missed an opportunity to amend the measure to include privacy protections. “Congress has once again chosen to rubberstamp the Patriot Act and its overreaching provisions. Since its passage nearly a decade ago, the Patriot Act has been used improperly again and again by law enforcement to invade Americans’ privacy and violate their constitutional rights,” said Laura Murphy, of the ACLU, in a statement. The chairman of the Senate judiciary committee, Patrick Leahy, a Democrat, together with Rand Paul, a Republican senator admired by the conservative tea party movement, offered steps to bolster oversight of the Patriot Act and increase civil-liberty protections. Their proposed changes cleared Leahy’s committee, but neither man was able to bring them up for a full Senate vote. Leahy said: “The extension of the Patriot Act provisions does not include a single improvement or reform, and includes not even a word that recognises the importance of protecting the civil liberties and constitutional privacy rights of Americans.” But the Republican leader in the Senate, Mitch McConnell, said: “The invaluable terror-fighting tools under the Patriot Act have kept us safe for nearly a decade, and Americans today should be relieved and reassured to know that these programs will continue.” The Senate had been tied up in procedural knots over the measure for days. It moved after pressure from the director of FBI, Robert Mueller, and the national intelligence chief, James Clapper, who wrote to congressional leaders, saying that renewal of the provisions was vital to national security. US Congress United States Global terrorism Republicans Democrats US politics Civil liberties – international Obama administration guardian.co.uk
Continue reading …• Call for 1 million strong march in Yemen despite fighting • The Syrian opposition plans another Friday of defiance • ‘Second day of rage’ planned in Egypt • Reports of Gaddafi on the run prompt Apache deployment 11.54am: More on Russia’s offer to mediate in Libya . According to Reuters, Mikhail Margelov, Moscow’s special representative on Africa, has told reporters at the G8 summit in France: We shouldn’t talk to Gaddafi himself but with members of his cabinet, possibly with his sons. And we are making such contacts, so there is a hope for a political resolution. Asked to specify who Russia’s main partner would be in such talks, he said: Can you imagine, if I give you this person’s name and his head were to be cut off the next day? But yes, we do have people in Gaddafi’s camp. 11.48am: More from Reuters at the G8 summit in Deauville, France, on Russia’s offer to mediate in the Libyan crisis ( see 11.14am ). Sergei Ryabkov, the Russian deputy foreign minister, said: If the respectful tone that Russia maintains in its dialogue with the Libyan authorities would help Mr Gaddafi take the right decision, I think this will become our serious and significant contribution to the resolution of the grave and potentially even more dangerous situation for Libya and the region. He added that he felt Gaddafi had lost all legitimacy and should step down. Colonel Gaddafi has deprived himself of legitimacy with his actions; we should help him leave. There are no disagreements about that with G8 partners, although the tone may differ. An aide to Dmitry Medvedev, the Russian president, told reporters later that Russia had partners in the Libyan leader’s entourage with whom it could negotiate his departure. Other G8 officials have said they are unsure what role Moscow might play in Libya. European diplomats said there were signs that Russian officials were apparently in contact with Libyans, but it was unclear to western governments what that involved. 11.37am: Three residents in Dael, a southern town close to Deraa, were shot dead by security forces this morning, Nidaa Hassan reports from Syria . Both the London-based Syrian Observatory for Human Rights and Reuters are reporting the killings, citing local residents. The death toll since mid-March has now reached more than 1,000 people, while thousands more have been detained. Reuters correspondent Suleiman al-Khalidi,who spent several days reporting from the southern protest hub of Deraa in March and was later detained by the Syrian security forces, has written a strong account of the scenes of torture he witnessed during his detention. “Mostly I was blindfolded, but the blindfold was removed for a few minutes,” he writes. “That allowed me – despite orders to keep my head down so that my interrogators should remain out of view – to see a hooded man screaming in pain in front of me. “When they told him to take down his pants, I could see his swollen genitals, tied tight with a plastic cable. ‘I have nothing to tell, but I am neither a traitor and activist. I am just a trader,’ said the man, who said he was from Idlib province in the north west of Syria. “To my horror, a masked man took a pair of wires from a household power socket and gave him electric shocks to the head.” Nidaa Hassan is a pseudonym 11.33am: UN officials say most of Choucha refugee camp in Tunisia , at the main border crossing with Libya, has been damaged and needs rebuilding; the Guardian revealed yesterday that locals burned and looted the camp . The Associated Press news agency reports: UN refugee agency spokeswoman Melissa Fleming said Friday at least two-thirds of the camp had been destroyed or looted after a fire in the camp last Sunday “set off a spiral of events” that led to the deaths of four Eritrean refugees and left numerous others injured. The UN withdrew staff because of the unrest. Some of the 3,500 refugees at the camp outside Ras Ajdir demonstrated over fears they will be sent back to home countries or abandoned. On Tuesday, a mob of local residents wielding clubs and iron bars attacked refugees. Tunisian troops fired tear gas and warning shots. 11.14am: Russia says it is prepared to mediate in the Libyan crisis following a request from its G8 partners, according to Reuters, citing Russia’s deputy foreign minister, Sergei Ryabkov. Earlier the US and France upped the rhetoric further against Muammar Gaddafi’s regime, by vowing to “finish the job” in Libya . Speaking at joint press conference with Nicolas Sarkozy, Barack Obama said: “Meeting the UN mandate of civilian protection cannot be accomplished when Gaddafi remains in Libya, directing his forces in acts of aggression against the Libyan people. We are joined in resolve to finish the job.” Meanwhile, Nato has given an update on the latest air strikes against Libya , amid reports that Apache attack helicopters will be deployed within the next 24 hours . 11.04am: Video from the Yemeni capital Sana’a shows families fleeing the violence on Thursday. It also shows sandbagged checkpoints as a gunshot rang out. _ Since the video was recorded there has been a lull in the violence, according to the Guardian’s Sana’a correspondent Tom Finn and the Yemen Post . 10.45am: Syrian opposition activists are planning to map today’s protests and reports of deaths in a Google map that will be updated throughout the day. The group the Local Coordination Committee of Syria has also been tracking the number of killings in Syria since the crackdown began, in an interactive chart . _ 10.32am: Egyptian blogger and activist Wael Khalil explains why protesters are taking to the streets again today in a “Second Day of Rage” . In a post on Comment is Free , he writes: The call for a “second revolution” chimes with a growing restlessness and impatience at the pace of developments and the overall performance of the governing Supreme Council of the Armed Forces … One concern is the growing talk and continuous leaks about intentions to pardon Hosni Mubarak and members of his regime from facing criminal trials. We demand no clemency for Mubarak, his family or his regime. The biggest grievance has been the manner in which the security forces – the military police, the army and the police – reacted when the protests got more heated. There has been more than one incident since the revolution when they have used disproportionate force, mass arrest, torture as well as live ammunition against protesters. We demand that not a single peaceful demonstrator should be confronted, arrested, beaten up or humiliated. The Egyptian people have earned themselves that right. The army have also extended their use of military trials against civilians to unprecedented levels, with hundreds of civilians having received severe and disproportionate prison sentences. 10.07am: Thousands and thousands are flocking towards the protest camp at Sana’a university, Yemen , amid reports that mediators have intervened to stop the fighting, Tom Finn reports from the Yemeni capital . “Every week we have seen more and more people filling up this motorway, which is a ring road round Sana’a. Last week it was four miles worth, this week it is going to be more,” he said. Troops loyal to General Ali Mohsin, who defected in March, will watch over the protest, Tom reports. On Thursday the general made a “fiery speech” urging soldiers not to obey Saleh, but so far his troops have stayed out of the fighting. Meanwhile, the battle between Saleh’s troops and the Hashid tribal militia have calmed in the last 24 hours, Tom says. There has been an eerie quiet hanging over Sana’a. I’m told there are tribal mediators doing some negotiations behind the scene. We haven’t heard any mortar fire or machine guns for at least 10 hours. A lot of people will be joining the protest because of the violence. They desperately don’t want to see Yemen dragged into a violent conflict, so they want to show their solidarity with peaceful protesters. Tom says reports of mediation to end the tribal fighting point to a possible involvement of Saudi Arabia. “They [Saudi Arabia] have lots of informal networks with politicians and businessmen and are able to pull the strings without people knowing about it. So it quite possible that they are involved in these negotiations.” Tom also warned Twitter users to be wary of “sensational and fear-mongering tweeting about Yemen”. _ 9.55am: Widespread protests are once again expected today – on the 11th Friday of Syria ‘s uprising, Nidaa Hassan reports from Damascus. Amnesty International said it had evidence that the Syrian government was implementing a “shoot-to-kill” policy , citing video footage. This matches with protesters’ accounts that bullets are predominantly being shot at the head and neck, and is raising the international pressure on the regime whose senior officials have already been hit by US and EU sanctions and a UN security council resolution is being prepared. Reuters, which has seen a draft of the text pushed by European countries, reports that the text says Syria’s actions may amount to crimes against humanity. Amnesty says officials should be referred to the international criminal court. As the protests continue to rumble on and the regime continues to hit back, opposition and diplomats say they are concerned that protesters will increasingly pick up arms. Some – a small minority – have already done so, say diplomats and protesters. This may account for a small number – though not all – of the deaths of Syrian security forces. Syrian government officials told AFP on Thursday that 112 soldiers and security troops and 31 police officers had been killed. Meanwhile, Syrian TV yesterday aired a statement by the prominent Deraa shiekh Ahmed Sayasna saying he was mistaken in backing activists. “I realised too late that there is a conspiracy and calls for bloodshed in Syria,” he said. Activists have condemned it as a fake confession extracted under pressure, pointing to the central role played by Sayasna, whose Omari mosque became a field hospital and focus for protesters in the southern hub as he spoke out against the government. Nidaa Hassan is a pseudonym 9.38am: The Yemeni capital Sana’a is now a city divided, Reuters reports. It claims that the north of the city is controlled, not by the militia leader Sadeq al-Ahmar, but by a general who until now has stayed out of the conflict. South Sana’a is under the control of President Ali Abdullah Saleh’s security forces, and the north is mainly controlled by General Ali Mohsin, one of Yemen’s most powerful military leaders, who defected in March to protesters demanding the end of Saleh’s nearly 33-year-old rule. Heavily armed soldiers behind barricades, sandbags and checkpoints separate the two sides as they continue a week-long battle that may decide the future of a failing state convulsed by protests for the past four months. The fighting, pitting forces loyal to Saleh against members of the country’s most powerful tribe, the Hashid led by Sadeq al-Ahmar, was the bloodiest Yemen has seen since anti-government protests began in January. 9.18am: Human Rights Watch has written to Formula One urging it to reconsider rescheduling the Grand Prix in Bahrain . F1 bosses are meeting next week to decide a new date for the Bahrain Grand Prix after the event was postponed in March due to security concerns. HRW suggested the event should be cancelled in protest at the continuing political repression in the Kingdom. In the letter, deputy programme director Tom Porteous, wrote: We seriously question whether a successful Formula One event can be staged in an environment characterised by an unrelenting official campaign of punitive retribution against many who participated in or otherwise supported the pro-democracy protests, which authorities from the prime minister on down have retrospectively characterised, with zero evidence, as a treasonous coup inspired by Iran. 8.59am: A colonel in Yemen ‘s Republican Guard is reported to have defected and issued a video condemning Saleh as a butcher whose orders should not be obeyed . Yemen watcher Jane Novak writes: This may be the straw that broke the camels back. It’s quite significant. The Republican Guards are the unit headed by Saleh’s son Prince Ahmed. Coupled with the earlier tribal excommunication, I’m nearly optimistic for a quick resolution. Tick tock. _ 8.08am: Welcome to Middle East Live. Will be tracking planned protests after Friday prayers in Yemen , Syria and Egypt today. In Yemen huge demonstrations are expected after protesters called for a “million-man” march and a “day of peaceful revolution to defy the small minority seeking violence” . In Syria the opposition is planning another Friday of defiance as dissidents prepare to meet in Turkey to set up a transition council to represents the Syrian revolution. In Egypt Cairo’s Tahrir Square will again be the focus as the opposition plans a Second Day of Rage . Marches are also planned in Alexandria and Suez. The Egyptian daily Ahram lists the protesters demands: There is no one demand that unites all participants, but the chief ones are: replacing the military council with a presidential one that would rule the country until the coming elections, designing a new constitution before parliamentary elections, holding former regime figures and above all ousted president Hosni Mubarak accountable through prompt fair trials, releasing all political detainees arrested in the last three months by military police, ending the trials of civilians in military courts, abolishing the emergency law, and lifting censorship from state-owned media. Here’s a round-up of the some of other key developments in the region. • Yemen edges closer to civil war as clashes between Hashid clan and president’s forces intensify. The foreign secretary, William Hague, urged Saleh to hand over power, reduced embassy staff and warned all British expatriates to leave Yemen immediately. • David Cameron has been told by UK intelligence that Muammar Gaddafi is increasingly paranoid, on the run, and hiding in hospitals by night. The MI6 report prompted Cameron to authorise a high-risk escalation of attacks by agreeing to deploy four Apache helicopters into Libya with orders to gun down regime leaders. • Libya’s battered regime has made its most plaintive plea yet for a ceasefire, offering to talk to anti-government rebels, move towards a constitutional government and compensate victims of the three-month conflict. The plan represents an advance on previous ceasefire bids, which had focused largely on implementing a proposal by the African Union that calls for international monitors to observe a negotiated truce. But Gaddafi’s name was again conspicuously absent from the new discussion about a ceasefire. • Britain is to set aside £110m over the next four years to foster democracy and economic growth in Tunisia and Egypt as part of a wider international package to show support for the Arab spring. David Cameron argued that if Britain did not help the fledgling democracies of north Africa the result would be poisonous extremism and waves of illegal immigration into the UK. Middle East Arab and Middle East unrest Yemen Syria Bashar Al-Assad Libya Muammar Gaddafi Protest Nato Saudi Arabia Egypt Bahrain Matthew Weaver Paul Owen guardian.co.uk
Continue reading …French finance minister is trying to garner support from emerging countries, some of which have strongly criticised the unwritten convention of appointing a European as head of the IMF French finance minister Christine Lagarde is taking to the road, visiting India first as she kicks off her campaign for the top job at the International Monetary Fund. Lagarde, the frontrunner to become the next managing director of the IMF, has support across Europe and from the US but faces opposition from developing economies angry that the top job in global finance should once again go to a European. French defence minister Gerard Longuet, who is on a two-day visit to India, said on Friday that Lagarde will visit New Delhi. She is trying to garner support from emerging countries, some of which have strongly criticised the unwritten convention of appointing a European as head of the IMF, which makes emergency loans to countries in crisis. Since its foundation in 1947, the IMF has always been run by a European, while the World Bank is usually headed by an American. Trying to overcome opposition from emerging economies, Lagarde admitted that there had been complaints about the lack of senior management from their countries. “If that was the case, which it very well might be … I would certainly apply the principles that in my previous roles I applied to gender,” she told the Financial Times , referring to her long-standing practice of choosing a woman over a man in appointments if they are equally qualified. “I would want to remedy the situation,” she added. “We need appropriate representation of high-level staff based on merit from various nationalities and academic backgrounds.” India, along with Brazil, Russia, China and South Africa, decried Europe’s “obsolete” grip on the IMF top job earlier this week . They argued in a joint letter that the choice of IMF head should be based on competence, not nationality. However, they have not come up with a common candidate to replace Dominique Strauss-Kahn, who stepped down after being charged with sexually assaulting a hotel maid in New York. Mexico’s central bank chief, Agustín Carstens, has emerged as Lagarde’s main rival for the IMF job. He has said he intends to carry “the flag of emerging markets”. Former South African finance minister Trevor Manuel has been mooted as a candidate, although he is currently involved in a racism row, and Russia has promised to back Kazakhstan’s central bank chief, Grigori Marchenko. Christine Lagarde IMF Economics Global economy India Julia Kollewe guardian.co.uk
Continue reading …French finance minister is trying to garner support from emerging countries, some of which have strongly criticised the unwritten convention of appointing a European as head of the IMF French finance minister Christine Lagarde is taking to the road, visiting India first as she kicks off her campaign for the top job at the International Monetary Fund. Lagarde, the frontrunner to become the next managing director of the IMF, has support across Europe and from the US but faces opposition from developing economies angry that the top job in global finance should once again go to a European. French defence minister Gerard Longuet, who is on a two-day visit to India, said on Friday that Lagarde will visit New Delhi. She is trying to garner support from emerging countries, some of which have strongly criticised the unwritten convention of appointing a European as head of the IMF, which makes emergency loans to countries in crisis. Since its foundation in 1947, the IMF has always been run by a European, while the World Bank is usually headed by an American. Trying to overcome opposition from emerging economies, Lagarde admitted that there had been complaints about the lack of senior management from their countries. “If that was the case, which it very well might be … I would certainly apply the principles that in my previous roles I applied to gender,” she told the Financial Times , referring to her long-standing practice of choosing a woman over a man in appointments if they are equally qualified. “I would want to remedy the situation,” she added. “We need appropriate representation of high-level staff based on merit from various nationalities and academic backgrounds.” India, along with Brazil, Russia, China and South Africa, decried Europe’s “obsolete” grip on the IMF top job earlier this week . They argued in a joint letter that the choice of IMF head should be based on competence, not nationality. However, they have not come up with a common candidate to replace Dominique Strauss-Kahn, who stepped down after being charged with sexually assaulting a hotel maid in New York. Mexico’s central bank chief, Agustín Carstens, has emerged as Lagarde’s main rival for the IMF job. He has said he intends to carry “the flag of emerging markets”. Former South African finance minister Trevor Manuel has been mooted as a candidate, although he is currently involved in a racism row, and Russia has promised to back Kazakhstan’s central bank chief, Grigori Marchenko. Christine Lagarde IMF Economics Global economy India Julia Kollewe guardian.co.uk
Continue reading …Dismissal of former Haringey council children’s boss Sharon Shoesmith was ‘tainted by unfairness’, court rules Former Haringey council children’s boss Sharon Shoesmith has won an appeal against her controversial sacking in the wake of the Baby P tragedy after a judge upheld her claim that she had been unlawfully removed from her post. The high court ruled that Ed Balls – children’s secretary at the time of her dismissal – had failed to give Shoesmith the opportunity to defend herself from criticisms in a specially commissioned Ofsted report . Balls used the report to support his dismissal of her at a live TV press conference in December 2008. In its ruling the court said: “She was denied the elementary fairness which the law requires.” The court also upheld her appeal against Haringey council, which formally sacked Shoesmith a week after Balls removed her. The ruling said the council’s procedures were “tainted by unfairness”. Shoesmith said after the hearing: “I’m over the moon. Absolutely thrilled. I am very relieved to have won my appeal and for recognition I was treated unfairly and unlawfully.” But she added that the sorrow of the child’s death would “stay with me for the rest of my life”. An attempt by Shoesmith to quash an Ofsted report into the case was rejected, however. The ruling said Ofsted had complied with the requirements of the statute and of the common law. Shoesmith was challenging a judicial review ruling made last year that cleared the regulator Ofsted, Balls and Haringey of acting unlawfully. Her lawyers had argued there was “procedural unfairness” in her removal from the £133,000-a-year post. She had claimed that the manner in which she was dismissed was a breach of natural justice and the result of media pressure. She was seeking compensation for two years of lost salary, reinstatement of her pension rights, and a negotiated settlement from Haringey. The court put off a ruling on compensation for Shoesmith, saying that the issue should be referred back to the high court for “further consideration.” Shoesmith was sacked in December 2008 after the childcare regulator’s report, ordered by Balls after the Baby P case, exposed failings in her department. The 17-month-old boy, since named as Peter Connelly, was on Haringey’s child protection register when he died violently at the hands of his mother, Tracey Connelly, her lover Steven Barker, and Barker’s brother Jason Owen, in August 2007. James Maurici, representing Shoesmith, told the appeal court in March that “buck passing” between Ofsted, Balls, and Haringey had led to her being denied natural justice and a fair hearing. He said Shoesmith had been a highly thought-of public servant with a successful 35-year career, but that she now faced ruin. She had held a number of senior education posts within local authorities and risen through the ranks before taking her post with Haringey in 2005. A year later she was singled out in an Ofsted report for providing “strong and dynamic leadership”. But in 2008, a “media storm” broke over Baby P’s death and she became the victim of a witchhunt and political pressure which led to a flagrant breach of the rules of natural justice, Maurici said. He added: “On 1 December 2008, while trapped in her flat by the media, she had the extreme misfortune to see on TV Ed Balls at a live press conference announce he was directing that Haringey remove her from her post ‘with immediate effect’.” Balls told the press she was “not fit for office”, and acted before Shoesmith had seen, or been given a chance to respond to, the report. Maurici said, although high court judge Mr Justice Foskett had found her sacking lawful in a judicial review ruling in March 2010, he had said he did not think that “any fair-minded person could think that this was a satisfactory state of affairs.” The appeal judges were told of the “catastrophic” personal impact on Shoesmith following Baby P’s death. Maurici said she had been unable to find any work since December 2008, experienced suicidal thoughts, and was still regularly hounded and vilified by the tabloid press. James Eadie QC, appearing for the government, defended Balls’s actions to the appeal court, saying urgent action had to be taken following Ofsted’s “ghastly findings”, which uncovered “dangerous” failings in Shoesmith’s department that threatened local and national confidence in effective child protection. Ofsted chief inspector Christine Gilbert welcomed the ruling, saying: “I am pleased that Ofsted has comprehensively won this case and that the original judicial review judgement in our favour has been upheld in every aspect on appeal. “Ofsted carried out a robust inspection and came to a sound conclusion based on evidence. On any view, our inspection report was extremely critical and there has been no challenge to the finding that services for children in Haringey were inadequate. The fairness of our process and rigour of our inspection has now been confirmed through the scrutiny of not just one, but two court hearings. “The most important thing, of course, is that Haringey’s children’s services are now much improved as a result and that children are better protected.” Baby P Child protection Local government Employment tribunals Work & careers Patrick Butler guardian.co.uk
Continue reading …Aid being compiled in Deauville aims to foster democracy and economic growth in countries such as Egypt and Tunisia Arab countries in transition to democracy are to be offered as much as £12bn in aid, loans and debt relief as a result of pledges being compiled at the G8 group of nations summit on Friday. The money will come from international financial institutions and members of the G8. Leaders of both Egypt and Tunisia, the two chief recipients of the aid, will speak to leaders of the G8, currently chaired by the French on the second day of its summit in Deauville, and stress that they need money urgently to ensure their shift to democracy is smooth and not hampered by economic crisis. Both countries have been severely hit by falling economic growth, high inflation, high youth unemployment and loss of tourism, on which both depend. Tunisia has been especially hit by the continuing war in neighbouring Libya. The aid is likely to be conditional on further steps to democracy; both countries are struggling with disputes over the pace of change. In Tunisia, the electoral commission is insisting elections are deferred from the summer to October to allow more time to prepare a workable electoral roll, a move that is disputed by the interim government. In Egypt, some of the groups responsible for the initial protests that led to the overthrow of Mubarak in February are calling for a second day of rage in Cairo on Friday to protest at the way in which the army appears to be dominating the transition process. Many groups, including the Muslim Brotherhood, have warned against further demonstrations. The £12bn ($20bn) figure, although impressive-sounding, will have to be examined carefully to see how much represents grants as opposed to loans. The money will predominantly come from the International Monetary Fund, the World Bank, the US and the EU. Both the UK and France have offered bilateral sums: France offered Egypt up to $250m a year in development aid on Thursday and David Cameron set aside £110m over four years for political and economic development. Cameron, who is under pressure from rightwing press over Britain’s aid budget, said: “We’re demonstrating that there is a chance for people in north Africa to choose their own future and their own freedom rather than having to put up with appalling dictators like Gaddafi.” The summit brings together the French president, Nicolas Sarkozy, with the leaders of the US, Britain, Germany, Japan, Russia, Canada and Italy in a windswept coastal resort. The presence of Russia has ensured there are tensions over the way in which Nato is escalating the bombing campaign in Libya – the Russians have repeatedly warned they regard the attacks on the regime go well beyond the parameters set out in the UN resolution allowing all necessary means to protect Libyan civilians. Britain and France have agreed to send ground attack helicopters to the region in a move that will intensify the attacks on the Libyan regime’s command and control sites. Britain will send as many as eight Apache helicopters. Sarkozy has tried to persuade the US to deploy A-10 attack aircraft and AC-130 gunships in Libya. The draft declaration by the G8 will urge Muammar Gaddafi to declare a ceasefire and agree to a political solution, officials said. The Arab Union meeting this week also called for a ceasefire, but did not call for Gaddafi to stand aside. Russia’s ambassador to France, Alexander Orlov, said the Nato coalition has gone “too far”. G8 Egypt Tunisia Arab and Middle East unrest Middle East Africa Foreign policy David Cameron Patrick Wintour guardian.co.uk
Continue reading …Serbian war crimes suspect having medical tests before resumption of hearing which is expected to send him to The Hague Doctors in Serbia are assessing the health of genocide suspect Ratko Mladic before he can resume his appearance at an extradition hearing which is expected to transfer him to a war crimes tribunal in The Hague. Europe’s most wanted war crimes suspect was undergoing medical tests in Belgrade to determine the length of sessions he could face, according to media reports. Mladic was said to be “in poor physical state” after his arrest in a north Serbian village 16 years after commanding the worst atrocity on the continent since the Nazi era. His speech was said to be slurred but coherent. Mladic, reported to have suffered strokes in the past and be paralysed in one arm, is expected to face continuous health checks during the extradition process, which is likely to last at least six days. War crimes prosecutors hoped Mladic would appear before the examining judge again on Friday to complete the first stage of the extradition process. This will be followed by a three-day gap and Mladic will have three days after that to decide whether to appeal. The Serbian ministry of justice will then determine the extradition request. Authorities in The Hague expect Mladic to be there next week and will give him a full medical examination. Mladic is waiting on the approval of the Belgrade judge to let his family visit him. His wife, Bosiljka, was seen entering the court building in Belgrade this morning, media reported. The surprise arrest of Mladic, who is wanted for the mass murder of almost 8,000 men and boys in Srebrenica, turned a page in the history of the Balkans, offering Serbia closure on decades as a virtual international pariah and giving the country a chance to take its place as a pivotal regional democracy eventually anchored in the European Union. The 69-year-old retired general, who commanded the Bosnian Serb military during the 1992-95 war and earned a fearsome reputation as the “butcher of Bosnia”, was taken to a special court pending extradition after being arrested at a cousin’s home in Lazarevo, north-east of Belgrade. When Mladic appeared in court he looked frail and walked slowly. He wore a baseball cap and could be heard on state TV saying “good day” to those present. Mladic’s lawyer said the judge cut short the questioning because the suspect’s “poor physical state” left him unable to communicate. “He is aware he is under arrest, he knows where he is, and he said he does not recognise The Hague tribunal,” Milos Saljic said. The deputy war crimes prosecutor Bruno Vekaric said Mladic was taking a lot of medicine, but “responds very rationally to everything that is going on”. Announcing the arrest of Mladic, President Boris Tadic said: “We have lifted the stain from Serbia and from Serbs wherever they live. We have ended a difficult period in our history.” More details have emerged of the capture of Mladic, who had been living under the alias Milorad Komadic. According to officials in Belgrade and accounts to the Serbian media, Mladic wore no disguise and put up no resistance when detained by the Serbian security services and Serbian war crimes unit. “I am the person you are looking for,” he reportedly said when arrested in part of a cottage once occupied by the now dead parents of his cousin Branko Mladic. He is said to have been dressed in multiple layers of clothing, including pullovers, although it is summer in Serbia. He had his own identity card, although it formally expired in 1999. There were two guns at the property. Asked why Mladic did not resist arrest, his lawyer is reported to have said the officers were “just children”, in other words very young. Reports about his life there differ. One version holds that he spent a lot of time indoors, while one 20-year-old has claimed to a newpaper that he had worked for a time in the nearby industrial town of Zrenjanin. After his arrest, Mladic indicated that he had been following media reports of the war crimes prosecutors’ long pursuit of him. President Tadic, who has been taking the credit for Mladic’s arrest, insisted to CNN that claims his government knew where Mladic was hiding were “rubbish”. “I will reiterate once again that we have worked very hard in order to arrest him and finally managed to do that.” On Thursday night residents took to the streets to show their support for Mladic, singing Serbian nationalist songs. “To us, Mladic is a hero, a military hero,” said one, who would only give his name as Paul. “He protected us from Croatia, Bosnia Herzegovina, even Slovenia. He saved our families.” The image of a frail and sickly rural retiree was a far cry from the strutting, imperious commander of the 1990s who was a monstrous figure to the Muslims of Bosnia. His name is synonymous with the Srebrenica massacre of July 1995 when Mladic’s forces overran the Bosnian Muslim “safe haven” hill town, then methodically rounded up the males and murdered almost 8,000. The arrest represents a huge boost to Serbia’s attempts to move on from a violent past and to try to catch up with other parts of the Balkans in the race towards integration in the European Union and possibly Nato. • Additional reporting by Kevin Burden in Lazarevo Ratko Mladic Serbia War crimes Bosnia and Herzegovina Europe Peter Beaumont Ian Traynor James Meikle guardian.co.uk
Continue reading …Third of Four Parts Books, newspapers, radio stations, TV stations, websites and cutting edge videos. The pieces of the George Soros media empire are as diverse as the nations of the world and just as widespread. From nakedly partisan left-wing media like Think Progress, the blog for the Center for American Progress, and a TV show on MSNBC, to the supposedly impartial National Public Radio, Soros has impact on the flow of information worldwide. It gives him incredible influence. Every month, reporters, writers and bloggers at the many outlets he funds easily reach more than 330 million people around the globe. The U.S. Census estimates the population of the entire United States to be just less than 310 million. That's roughly the entire population of the United States with the population of Australia thrown in for good measure – every single month. This information is part of an upcoming report by the Media Research Center's Business & Media Institute which has been looking into George Soros and his influence on the media. Just counting 13 prominent operations of the 180 media organizations he has funded equals 332 million people each month. Included in that total are big players like NPR, which received $1.8 million from Soros, as well as the little known Project Syndicate and Public News Service, both of which also claim to reach millions of readers. And that's really just the beginning. That tally takes into account only a few of the bigger Soros-funded media operations. Many numbers simply aren't available. 'Democracy Now!' – “a daily TV/radio news program, hosted by Amy Goodman and Juan Gonzalez' – is known for its left-wing take on global news. Its vitriol ranges from attacks on Blackwater founder Erik Prince and supporters of Andrew Breitbart (whom it calls 'Electronic Brownshirts' ), to claims the U.S. is opposed to Arab democracy . Just that one Soros-funded operation is heard 'on over 900 stations, pioneering the largest community media collaboration in the United States.” But it posts no formal audience numbers. Phone calls to 'Democracy Now!' were not returned. Laughably, Soros denies he has a media empire, despite spending easily mo re than $48 million on that empire and having top journalists from more than 30 major news organizations serving on the boards of groups he funds. “Another trick is to accuse your opponent of the behavior of which you are guilty, like Fox News accusing me of being the puppet master of a media empire,” wrote Soros in the introduction to his new self-promotional book “The Philanthropy of George Soros .” That book, appropriately, was written by former New York Times reporter Chuck Sudetic who now works for Soros' Open Society Foundations. It is the second such Soros promotional book written by a Times staffer. But Soros wildly understates his own impact. On April 8, House Democratic leader Nancy Pelosi headlined a Boston conference on “media reform”' She was joined by four other congressmen, a senator, two FCC commissioners, a Nobel laureate and numerous liberal journalists. The event was sponsored by a group called Free Press, which has received $1.4 million from Soros. Free Press has two major agenda items – undermining Internet freedom by pushing so-called “net neutrality,” and advocating for government-funded media to the tune of $35 billion a year. Many of those attending or speaking were affiliated with Soros-funded operations. Free Press is just one of the better funded Soros groups. They also include the Center for American Progress ($7.3 million) , which operates the heavily staffed Think Progress blog. That blog “now has 30 writers and researchers,” according to Politico. Other well-funded operations include the investigative reporting operations at the Center for Public Integrity ($3.7 million) and Center for Investigative Reporting ($1.1 million), as well as Media Matters ($1.1 million) and the Sundance Institute ($1 million). That's not all. “Soros' foundations gave 34 grants from 1997 to 2010 to local NPR member stations and specific programs that have totaled nearly $3.4-million,” said the foundations' [spokesperson Maria] Archuleta. Recipients included WNYC and Minnesota Public Radio,' wrote outgoing NPR ombudsman Alicia Shepard. In fact, Soros funds nearly every major left-wing media source in the United States. Forty-five of those are financed through his support of the Media Consortium . That organization “is a network of the country's leading, progressive, independent media outlets.” The list is predictable – everything from Alternet to the Young Turks. A report by the Media Consortium detailed how progressives had created an “echo chamber” of outlets “in which a message pushes the larger public or the mainstream media to acknowledge, respond, and give airtime to progressive ideas because it is repeated many times.” According to the report called “The Big Thaw,” “if done well, the message within the echo chamber can become the accepted meme, impact political dynamics, shift public opinion and change public policy.” That mindset plays out in much of what the consortium's members do. Alternet describes itself as an ” award-winning news magazine and online community that creates original journalism and amplifies the best of hundreds of other independent media sources.” It hates Tea Parties and complains about “hatemongering” as the “ugly side of Evangelical Christianity.” The site gets 1.5 million unique visitors to its unique view of the world. Brave New Films, also funded by the Media Consortium, is run by the same people who run Brave New Foundation. Robert Greenwald and Jim Miller produce and distribute videos attacking businesses and conservatives. The site brags about a 2008 election video “that exposes John McCain's double talk , for instance, and receive 9 million views around the world.” Their latest effort is yet another attack on Koch Industries, attempting to halt a much-needed pipeline from the Canada to the U.S. Then there's the Young Turks and MSNBC host Cenk Uygur. In 2010, he was welcomed to the network with a press release detailing his web impact. “One of YouTube's Top 100 Partners, the irreverent talk show averages over 18 million views per month and has over 320 million views overall on its YouTube Channel .” The list goes on and on. Project Syndicate calls itself “the world's pre-eminent source of original op-ed commentaries.'”It has wide reach. “As of May 2011, Project Syndicate membership included 462 leading newspapers in 150 countries.” Its monthly circulation is 72,815,528. Naturally, “support comes from the Open Society Institute,” the primary Soros foundation. Project Syndicate's columnist line-up, spread to 462 newspapers, is impressively left-leaning or globalist: UN Secretary General Ban Ki-moon, former President Jimmy Carter, former Soviet President Mikhail Gorbachev, as well as lefty economists Jeffrey Sachs and Nobel Prize winner Joseph Stiglitz. Those two are on the board of the Soros-funded Institute for New Economic Thinking, which was founded with $50 million from Soros. Public News Service describes itself as “a member-supported news service that advocates journalism in the public interest.” It is a 'network of state-based news services' in 33 states. It claims it reaches “a combined national weekly audience of 24 million.” PNS is proud of its 2010 success . “Last year the Public News Service produced over 4,000 stories featuring public interest content that were redistributed several hundred thousand times on 6,114 radio stations, 928 print outlets, 133 TV stations and 100s of websites. Nationally, an average of 60 outlets used each story.” The Soros “echo chamber” is even larger. Many of his organizations have a media component – from New Orleans, where he funds The Lens, to nations that were once part of the former Soviet Union. But he doesn't have a media empire. Dan Gainor is the Boone Pickens Fellow and the Media Research Center's Vice President for Business and Culture . His column appears each week on The Fox Forum. He can also be contacted on Facebook and Twitter as dangainor.
Continue reading …• Bin Hammam says Blatter knew of ‘payments allegedly made’ • Blatter hits back at Fifa presidential election rival Mohamed Bin Hammam, the Fifa presidential challenger accused of giving cash bribes to voters, has accused his opponent Sepp Blatter of effectively approving the alleged payments and called for him to be investigated as well. As Fifa’s warring family turned on itself and the governing body’s crisis deepened, the Qatari claimed the dossier of allegations against him also alleged that his co-accused Jack Warner had told Blatter about the payments and took no action. Fifa’s code of ethics places a duty of disclosure on any official to “report any evidence of violations of conduct to the Fifa secretary general”, for transfer to the ethics committee. Bin Hammam formally wrote to Fifa’s secretary general, Jérôme Valcke, on Thursday to request that the investigation be widened to include Blatter. If Bin Hammam is to be condemned he will seek to take Blatter down with him and, in a high stakes strategy, appears to accept that payments were made but claims that Blatter knew about them and said nothing. Amid febrile claim and counter-claim, further details emerged of the allegations contained in the dossier compiled by the US attorney John Collins at the behest of Fifa’s US executive committee member, Chuck Blazer, the Concacaf secretary general. The file, which contains signed affidavits from officials approached at a specially convened meeting of the Caribbean Football Union and offered payments of up to $40,000 from Bin Hammam, is believed to allege the “football development” cash was proffered in private briefings with the 25 attendees. Some of those who rejected the cash approached Blazer following the specially convened conference on 10 and 11 May, arranged after Bin Hammam said he was earlier unable to attend the confederation’s Congress in Miami for visa reasons. Concacaf, controlled by its controversial and much-criticised president, Jack Warner, has consistently played a pivotal role in presidential elections due to exercising its bloc of 35 votes of the 208 on offer. Bin Hammam arrived in Zurich on Thursday ahead of next week’s Fifa Congress and, as if to illustrate the air of unreality surrounding the crisis, will today take part in a meeting of the finance committee as planned. On Sunday, he will face the Fifa ethics committee alongside Warner and two CFU officials who are alleged to have been involved in distributing the cash. In a statement, Bin Hammam said the bribery claims were “without substance” and added: “The accusations also contain statements according to which Mr Blatter, the incumbent Fifa president, was informed of, but did not oppose, payments allegedly made to members of the Caribbean Football Union.” In a rambling article on the InsideWorldFootball website, Blatter insisted that he took “absolutely no joy” in the latest allegations and was “shocked, saddened and deeply unhappy at about the charges levelled against a man whose friendship I enjoyed for many years”. Blatter has insisted he had no knowledge of the dossier or the allegations, which were delivered to Valcke by Collins following his investigation, until he arrived in Zurich on Wednesday morning following a trip to Japan. He used the article to hit back at claims he orchestrated the affair or its timing: “To now assume that the present ordeal of my opponent were to fill me with some sort of perverse satisfaction or that this entire matter was somehow masterminded by me is ludicrous and completely reprehensible.” He again insisted he could be trusted to clean up the organisation, which sits on reserves of $1.28bn: “Fifa does not need a revolution. What Fifa needs is iron clad laws that are implemented forcefully … “When a Swiss farmer’s neighbour has a cow while he has none, the less fortunate farmer will work twice as hard so that one day he can buy a cow as well,” he said. “When another farmer, elsewhere, on an island, say, has no cow but his neighbour does, that farmer will kill the neighbour’s cow out of sheer malice. I’d rather be a Swiss farmer, like it or not.”The Football Association confirmed that it would pass its own report, compiled by James Dingemans QC in the wake of bribery allegations against four executive committee members made by former chairman Lord Triesman, to Fifaon Friday. The new claims against Bin Hammam and Warner, which took to nine the number of executive committee members facing bribery allegations, have plunged the organisation deeper into crisis and thrown plans for next week’s presidential vote and Congress into chaos. It is expected that if Bin Hammam is suspended, Fifa would seek to press on with the vote. Football officials in the US and in Australia are considering whether to lobby for the reopening of the 2022 bid process if Bin Hammam is suspended. The Qatari was not an official member of the bid team but played a pivotal role in delivering victory. Mohamed bin Hammam Sepp Blatter Football politics Fifa Owen Gibson guardian.co.uk
Continue reading …Heathrow to have busiest Whitsun bank holiday for 10 years with New York, Dubai and Dublin top three destinations More than 2 million people are expected to pass through UK airports this weekend as travellers start the half-term getaway. Heathrow will have its busiest Whitsun bank holiday for at least 10 years with New York, Dubai and Dublin the top three destinations for its expected 800,000 passengers. The Grimsvötn volcano in Iceland remained active on Thursday but was spewing out steam and smoke rather than the ash particles that grounded 900 flights in northern Europe at the start of the week, threatening a repeat of last year’s volcano crisis, when 100,000 flights were cancelled. Eurocontrol, the continent’s air traffic control body, said it expected a trouble-free weekend. “Any significant ash concentrations are far out over the sea, at very low altitudes and well away from the air routes or airports,” said Eurocontrol’s head of network operations, Brian Flynn. “The expectation for the next couple of days is that there will be no disturbances to air traffic whatsoever.” However, the UK’s unusual bank holiday luck this year seems certain to run out over the weekend, with cool and showery weather forecast until well into next week. In place of the sunlit Easter period, when temperatures topped 28C (82F), and the warmth over the royal wedding and May Day, much of the country will be lucky to manage more than 16C (61F). Barry Gromett at the Meteorological Office settled on a theme of “clouds and cloudiness” with only isolated periods of sunshine, mainly in the south-east. He said: “It looks like being a mixed bag, with plenty of outbreaks of rain.” Downpours will not match those on Thursday which delayed the start of the England and Sri Lanka Test cricket match at Cardiff until 3.30pm. There were also heavy falls in London and the Midlands, much to the relief of gardeners and water companies after a prolonged dry period. The AA says 15m cars will hit the roads with traffic building from Friday afternoon. It warned of particularly busy roads between 10am and 2pm on Saturday, with less congestion on Sunday and bank holiday Monday. According to Trafficmaster, the top five traffic hotspots will be: the A303 through Hampshire, Wiltshire and Somerset; the M5 from Bristol to Exeter; the M3, M27 and A31 between Winchester and the Dorset coast; the M6 north of Birmingham to Lancashire; and the westbound M25 between junctions 21 and 12. The AA warned that motorists could be caught out by high fuel prices because a £40 purchase at the pump will cover less distance than it did last year. Edmund King, AA president, said: “There are too many drivers out there running on fumes and the AA has experienced an 18% increase in call-outs call to drivers running on empty.” The Icelandic ash plume will bring an unexpected benefit to rail passengers travelling between London and Glasgow after Network Rail lifted engineering works on the west coast main line amid fears that Grimsvötn would erupt over the weekend. The works will not be reinstated. “We are just doing our bit,” said a Network Rail spokesman. More than 5 million rail passengers are expected to travel on the network this weekend. The major engineering works are at Liverpool Street station in London, where there will be no trains to Shenfield on Sunday and Monday. South London between London Bridge and Victoria and Tulse Hill will also be affected. Air transport Dan Milmo Martin Wainwright guardian.co.uk
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