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‘Gaddafi is the terrorist man’: Derna denies being al-Qaida hotbed

Angry reaction from town singled out by Libyan ruler as harbouring terrorists he says are behind country’s revolution It’s not the caricatures of Muammar Gaddafi that mark the crumbling Mediterranean town of Derna as unusual. Nor is it the messy graffiti cursing his 42-year-rule, which can be seen in cities across the east of the country in the so-called Free Libya that has existed since the revolution in February. Instead it is the neatly stencilled messages, appearing in English on walls and placards, that hint at how Derna is fighting two battles: one to rid the country of Gaddafi and the other to shed the town’s reputation as an outpost of Islamist extremism. “Yes to pluralism,” reads the slogan outside the port. “No to Qaeda [sic].” A banner outside the Sahaba mosque is more wordy, and more adamant. “We refuse to be linked with Al Qaeda & other terrorist groups,” it says. Derna’s rudimentary PR campaign, apparently led by university students, is clearly aimed at foreign journalists arriving in the town to seek evidence of claims made by Gaddafi’s regime. Tripoli has repeatedly said Libya’s revolution is being spearheaded not by people desperate for freedom but rather by al-Qaida militants seeking to create an Islamist state. As proof, it has pointed to Derna in the far east of Libya, much to the disgust of residents. “Gaddafi is using al-Qaida as a bogeyman, a scarecrow, to make western countries afraid,” said Abdulkarim Bentaher, an English professor who is a member of Derna’s local transitional council. “He wants to stop the west supporting us, and in some way he has succeeded. [But] there is no such thing as al-Qaida in this town.” While a day’s visit is not enough to verify this, or to understand the true motives and aspirations of people, there was nothing to suggest Bentaher was anything but sincere. The difficulty for the people of Derna is that Gaddafi’s argument has been boosted by the town’s history as a fertile recruiting ground for Islamist groups, and suicide bombers in particular. Along with other cities in eastern Libya, Derna supplied militiamen for the Libyan Islamic Fighting Group (LIFG), an anti-Gaddafi movement that sprang up in the training camps of Afghanistan in the early 90s. Even more damaging were the revelations that emerged after coalition forces, operating near the Syrian border with Iraq in 2007, recovered records of about 600 foreign fighters who had entered Iraq the previous year. Analysis of the information by the Combating Terrorism Centre at West Point in the US found that of the 440 fighters whose hometowns were listed in the data, 52 were from Derna – the highest of any town or city listed. On a per capita basis the statistic was even more remarkable. Derna’s population is around 100,000, while the Saudi capital, Riyadh – which provided 51 fighters – is home to several million people. In addition the Libyans appeared to have been especially fervent, with 85% of them listing their desired “work” as being a suicide bomber. Residents openly acknowledge that scores of young men from Derna fought in Afghanistan and Iraq, and that some of those who returned are now helping the rebel cause. “People here saw what was happening in Palestine and how America was supporting repressive regimes. So when they saw US in Iraq, a Muslim country, some people felt it was a reason for jihad,” said Mohamed El-Mesori, a lecturer in power mechanics who heads the executive arm of Derna’s council, which is dominated by secular figures. “But that does not mean they supported Bin Laden.” Yet similar anti-western sentiment would have been felt across much of the Arab world. So why did so many young people from Derna in particular choose to seek martyrdom? The answer to that is not easy. The town may be more religious than many others in Libya, but still appears to be fairly moderate. Indeed, many people here say the radicalisation had less to do with religion than Gaddafi’s oppression and deliberate neglect of the town. “There were no jobs for young people, no money, a lot of men in jail. People thought there was no future under Gaddafi so they started to get other types of thoughts,” said 34-year-old Faraj al-Faitory. Others said Gaddafi, who was one of the world’s biggest sponsors of terrorism in the 80s and 90s, actively encouraged young people from Derna to join jihad, helping them obtain the necessary travel documents. There is no way of proving that. What is certain is that there has long been opposition to Gaddafi in Derna – dating back to 1970, a year after he took power, town elders say. In turn, the town has been punished. Despite its beautiful location, sandwiched between the Mediterranean Sea and the Jebel Akhdar, or Green Mountains, Derna’s apartments and office blocks are shabby compared with elsewhere in the country, and sewage leaks on the main streets. One of the few well-maintained buildings is the Sahaba mosque. One of its halls has been turned into a sort of shrine for the hundreds of local victims of Gaddafi’s regime over the years. There are photographs of the five demonstrators killed on 17 February, when the town rose up against the regime. Other pictures date to the mid-90s, when several dozen political prisoners from Derna were among the 1,200 people massacred at the Abu Salim jail in Tripoli. Around the same time Gaddafi’s forces staged a brutal crackdown on the LFIG, conducting house-to-house raids in Derna. One the survivors of the regime’s brutality, Ati al-Mansoury, 60, a former army lieutenant who was jailed from 1975 to 1988 for plotting a coup, sat outside the mosque. “We in Derna don’t have a problem with anyone in the world,” he said. “Except Gaddafi.” Asked whether anyone in the town wanted an Islamist state, his friend Abdelwhab Sary, a 57-year-old teacher, blurted out: “No, no! We want freedom only, and democracy. Al-Qaida is rubbish for us.” In trying to prove the rebels’ terror links, Gaddafi’s regime has pointed to Abdulhakim al-Hasidi, a Derna native who went to fight in Afghanistan before 9/11 and was captured by US troops and held for several months. Now he leads a unit of rebels that has seen action in Ajdabiya and the western city of Misrata. He has denied any links to al-Qaida, and to people in town he is just another revolutionary – albeit one with useful skills. “He’s a good friend of mine,” said Bentaher, the English professor. “He is not a dangerous person at all.” Indeed, to people In Derna the biggest danger to Libya is the man still clinging to power in Tripoli. In the town’s training camp, Siraj Abidi, a 28-year-old farmer, was learning how to clean and reassemble an anti-aircraft gun. “Gaddafi is the terrorist man,” he said. “We are just ordinary people.” Libya Arab and Middle East unrest Muammar Gaddafi Middle East Africa al-Qaida Xan Rice guardian.co.uk

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Koch Brothers now under fire for corrupting hiring practices at FSU and other Colleges

Credit: FSU Donald Rasmussen, FSU Dean The Koch Brothers once again try to buy influence over America, but this time in a very unprecedented way. Paying off Florida State University with a 1.5 million dollars donation – with a caveat. They get to approve who gets hired and that is almost never allowed. A conservative billionaire who opposes government meddling in business has bought a rare commodity: the right to interfere in faculty hiring at a publicly funded university. A foundation bankrolled by Libertarian businessman Charles G. Koch has pledged $1.5 million for positions in Florida State University’s economics department. In return, his representatives get to screen and sign off on any hires for a new program promoting “political economy and free enterprise.” Traditionally, university donors have little official input into choosing the person who fills a chair they’ve funded. The power of university faculty and officials to choose professors without outside interference is considered a hallmark of academic freedom. Under the agreement with the Charles G. Koch Charitable Foundation, however, faculty only retain the illusion of control. The contract specifies that an advisory committee appointed by Koch decides which candidates should be considered. The foundation can also withdraw its funding if it’s not happy with the faculty’s choice or if the hires don’t meet “objectives” set by Koch during annual evaluations. David W. Rasmussen, dean of the College of Social Sciences, defended the deal, initiated by an FSU graduate working for Koch. During the first round of hiring in 2009, Koch rejected nearly 60 percent of the faculty’s suggestions but ultimately agreed on two candidates. Although the deal was signed in 2008 with little public controversy, the issue revived last week when two FSU professors — one retired, one active — criticized the contract in the Tallahassee Democrat as an affront to academic freedom . Conservatives have been attacking the institution of education ever since Ronald Reagan was in office and originally they tried to cut as much federal funds as they could out of our education system. Now, the Koch Brothers are bribing university officials to make sure they can vet candidates applying for position related to “political economy and free enterprise.” In other words they want to be able to ram Conservative economic policies down the throats of college students at FSU. It’s a shocking development Most universities, including the University of Florida, have policies that strictly limit donors’ influence over the use of their gifts. Yale University once returned $20 million when the donor demanded veto power over appointments, saying such control was “unheard of.” Jennifer Washburn, who has reviewed dozens of contracts between universities and donors, called the Koch agreement with FSU “truly shocking.” Said Washburn, author of University Inc., a book on industry’s ties to academia: ” This is an egregious example of a public university being willing to sell itself for next to nothing.” It’s bad enough that the Citizens United ruling has screwed up our election process and now the Koch Brothers have found a way to f*&k up education. As you know the Kochs and Gov. Rick Scott are tied to the hip when it comes to their political agenda. The foundation partnering with FSU is one of several non-profits funded by Charles Koch (pronounced “coke”), 75, and his brother David, 71. The aim: To advance their belief, through think tanks, political organizations and academia, that government taxes and regulations impinge on prosperity. The Koch philosophy is similar to that of Rick Scott, who, in one of his first acts as Florida’s governor, froze all new state regulations on businesses, and has pushed for tax cuts. And the Kochs haven’t only stopped at FSU. Now, rather than taking over entire academic departments, Koch is funding faculty who promote his agenda at universities where there are a variety of economic views. In addition to FSU, Koch has made similar arrangements at two other state schools, Clemson University in South Carolina and West Virginia University. Donald Rasmussen should be ashamed of himself. Oh, and you know Ayn Rand will be thrown into this deal in some form. A separate grant from BB&T funds a course on ethics and economics in which Ayn Rand’s Atlas Shrugged is required reading. The novel, which depicts society’s collapse in the wake of government encroachment on free enterprise, was recently made into a movie marketed to tea party members. “If somebody says, ‘We’re willing to help support your students and faculty by giving you money, but we’d like you to read this book,’ that doesn’t strike me as a big sin,” said Rasmussen of the BB&T arrangement, which the bank has with about 60 schools. “What is a big sin is saying that certain ideas cannot be discussed.” Nor does he fear that the agreements with Koch and BB&T will prompt future donors to demand control over hiring or curriculum. Said Rasmussen, “I have no objections to people who want to help us fund excellence at our university. I’m happy to do it.” Please call the Dean’s Office–(850) 644-6284 and ask Donald Rasmussen what else is for sale at FSU? Think Progress has more: Koch Fueling Far Right Academic Centers At Universities Across The Country ] As reporter Kris Hundley notes, Koch virtually owns much of George Mason University, another public university, through grants and direct control over think tanks within the school. For instance, Koch controls the Mercatus Center of George Mason University, an institute that set much of the Bush administration’s environmental deregulation policy. And similar conditional agreements have been made with schools like Clemson and West Virginia University. ThinkProgress has analyzed data from the Charles Koch Foundation, and found that this trend is actually much larger than previous known. Many of the Koch university grants finance far right, pro-polluter professors, and dictate that students read Charles Koch’s book as part of their academic study: – West Virginia University : As ThinkProgress reported last year, Koch funds an array of academic programs at West Virginia University, a public university. One Koch-funded academic at WVU, economics professor Russell Sobel, has written a book blasting regulations of all types. He even argues that less mine safety regulations will make coal miners more safe. As the St. Petersburg Times reported, a similar arrangement has been made with WVU as with FSU in accepting at least $480,000 from Koch. – Brown University : The Charles Koch Foundation funds the Political Theory Project at Brown, which provides funding for “Seminar Luncheons for undergraduates, academic conferences, research fellowships for graduate students, support for faculty research, and a postdoctoral fellowship program.” Amity Shales, a pop-conservative writer who argues that the New Deal made the Great Depression worse, an odd theory promoted by Charles Koch himself, has been a featured speaker at the Koch-funded Project at Brown. Moreover, Koch’s donation of at least $419,254 to Brown has underwritten a number of research projects in the Economics and Political Science deparments, including a paper arguing that bank deregulation has helped the poor . – Troy University : The Charles Koch Foundation, along with the Manuel Johnson and the BB&T Foundation, provided Troy University, a public university, a gift of $3.6 million to establish the Center for Political Economy last year. The Center’s stated goal is to push back against the belief following the financial crisis that markets need regulation. Notably, the entire Advisory Council for the Center is made up of Koch and BB&T-funded professors at other universities, including Russell Sobel at West Virginia University and Peter Boettke at George Mason University. Currently, the Center’s only staffer, Professor Scott Beaulier, is a board member of the ExxonMobil-funded attack group, American Energy Alliance, and a former staffer for Koch’s think tank at George Mason. – Utah State University : The Charles Koch Foundation has given nearly $700,000 to Utah State University, mostly for the Huntsman School of Business. The money has been used to hire five new faculty members, and establish a program for undergraduates to enroll and learn about Charles Koch’s “Science of Liberty” management theory. Professor Randy Simmons , the “Charles G. Koch Professor of Political Economy” at the school, helps select students — who must provide information about their ideological interests in their application form — to the Koch program. Simmons also works for several Koch-funded front groups , and writes papers against environmental regulations. Charles Koch’s book, “The Science of Success,” a book Forbes mocked for proclaiming a “ Marxist faith in ‘fixed laws’ that govern ‘human well-being,’” is part of the required reading list for the program. A representative for Utah State did not return ThinkProgress’ calls about conditional strings attached to the Koch grant. Charles Koch Foundation grants, along with direct Koch Industries grants, are distributed to dozens of other universities around the country every year, to both public and private institutions. Some of the programs, like the Charles Koch Student Research Colloquium at Beloit College, are funded by grants of little over $130,000 and simply support conservative speakers on campuses. We have reached out to several of the schools to learn more about the agreements, but none so far have returned our calls…read on Helping our education system to the Koch’s means indoctrinating them into Conservative policies.

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Speaker John Boehner will deliver the commencement address at the Catholic University of America on Saturday, inspiring a letter of protest from Catholic professors claiming the Republican budget resolution for 2012 “will hurt the poor, the elderly and the vulnerable, and that he therefore has failed to uphold basic Catholic moral teachings.” New York Times religion reporter Laurie Goodstein filed a respectful story that made the front of Thursday’s National section, ” Critical Letter By Catholics Cites Boehner on Policies .” Yet when President Obama delivered the commencement address at Notre Dame in May 2009 amid protests that the preeminent Catholic university shouldn't be honoring a president who supports partial-birth abortion, the Times' response was snippy and dismissive . And

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Milly Dowler jury visits scene

Judge and jury will follow route murdered Milly Dowler took on walk home from school nine years ago A judge and jury are walking in the final footsteps of murdered Milly Dowler as the trial of Levi Bellfield continues. They will follow the route the prosecution say she took before being abducted and killed nine years ago. The Old Bailey jury of five women and seven men has been told that she had chips in the cafe of Walton-on-Thames station, Surrey, before starting her 15-minute journey home. Milly, 13, used a friend’s mobile phone to ring her father, Bob, to tell him she would be a little late home after school but that she was fine. She was last seen walking along Station Avenue by a friend at a bus stop. Bellfield had been living off Station Avenue in Collingwood Place, jurors have heard. Bellfield, 42, denies abducting and murdering Milly in March 2002. He denies trying to abduct an 11-year-old schoolgirl the day before in nearby Shepperton. Bellfield is taking part in the site visit but viewing the scenes separately. The visit will begin in Upper Halliford Road, Shepperton, where schoolgirl Rachel Cowles, 11, was offered a lift by a stranger in a red car. Bellfield, a former wheelclamper and bouncer, was convicted in 2008 of murdering Marsha McDonnell, 19, Amelie Delagrange, 22, and attempting to murder Kate Sheedy, 18. Milly Dowler Crime guardian.co.uk

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Bullet found in package sent to Celtic manager Neil Lennon

Discovery made hours after two men detained when houses in Ayrshire raided by police investigating previous parcel bombs sent to Lennon Strathclyde police are investigating the discovery of a bullet in a suspicious package sent to the Celtic manager, Neil Lennon, at the Glasgow club’s home ground. The discovery comes hours after two men were detained when houses in Ayrshire were raided by police investigating previous parcel bomb attacks against Lennon, a republican group and two prominent fans. The raids also came after Lennon, a Northern Irish Catholic, was attacked by a rival fan during a match against Hearts – a traditionally Protestant team – in Edinburgh on Wednesday night. The man jumped over a barrier from a home supporters’ stand and ran down the touchline before attempting to strike the Celtic manager as he stood in the technical area beside the pitch. A 26-year-old man is due to appear at Edinburgh sheriff court on Thursday. The package containing the bullet was found at the Celtic Park stadium, in the Parkhead area of Glasgow, on Thursday morning, but police said they were not currently linking the package to the incendiary bomb investigations. Officers would not confirm the package’s exact contents, but it is understood that it contained at least one bullet. Lennon has had bullets sent to him in the past, allegedly from opponents linked to loyalist paramilitaries in Northern Ireland. A police spokeswoman said the bomb squad had not yet been called out to deal with the latest alert, and the stadium’s staff had not been evacuated. “There has been a suspicious package found this morning. Police are just at the scene and are carrying out inquiries to try to establish what it is,” she said. Strathclyde police raided a number of houses in the Kilwinning area just after dawn and held two men, aged 41 and 43, in a major operation over the posting of five viable incendiary devices in March and April. The force said the two men detained in Kilwinning were held under the Explosive Substances Act 1883, and that the operation would continue. Chief Superintendent Ruaraidh Nicolson, the force’s head of community safety, said: “Naturally, given the significant police presence here, people are bound to be concerned. “I would like to reassure everyone who lives here that they are not at risk and that we are fully in control of the situation. “I would expect that there will continue to be a fair amount of activity in this area throughout the day. I appreciate that that may well be inconvenient to people who want to go about their daily business. “I can assure you that we will be doing everything we can to keep disruption to a minimum and to get the local area back to normal as quickly as possible.” Alex Salmond, the Scottish first minister, said he had been briefed on the raids by police. “I am very pleased and satisfied that the police are making substantial progress in this important investigation,” he said. “I am sure that satisfaction will be shared by the Scottish public as a whole.” Lennon was the target of two devices, posted from the nearby town of Saltcoats in March. A third device was delivered to the office of Trish Godman MSP, a few days after she stood down as the deputy presiding office of the Scottish parliament. A fourth parcel bomb was posted to Paul McBride QC, Lennon’s prominent and outspoken lawyer, from a postbox in Kilwinning in April. It was the last of the devices to be sent during a seven-week period. A week after the letter-bombing campaign came to public attention last month, it emerged that a fifth incendiary device had been sent to the Glasgow-based republican campaign group Cairde na hÉireann in March. It was not delivered, but sent to the Royal Mail’s returned letter centre in Belfast. Neil Lennon Celtic Crime Scotland Severin Carrell guardian.co.uk

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Swell. So Democratic Congressional staffers are going to be even more obsequious than usual to lobbyists? We have to get the corporate money out of politics, and it’s going to take a Constitutional amendment to do it: WASHINGTON — Democratic congressional staffers are increasingly wary of alienating corporate lobbyists for fear of inciting a massive advertising blitz against their bosses , according to an informal survey by the consumer watchdog group Public Citizen. Almost 60 percent of the Democratic staffers responding to the survey said that the influence of lobbyists in the policymaking process has been strengthened by the 2010 “Citizens United” Supreme Court decision, which unleashed corporations to spend unlimited amounts of money on political advertising — in some cases, anonymously. Nine out of the 56 Democratic staffers who responded to the survey said they now feel a need to “respond differently” to lobbyists. “The prospect of a massive donation to an outside organization that would run ads against my boss and not have any identifying information about who is behind them has a chilling effect on our decision-making,” wrote one Democratic legislative director, in response to the survey’s open-ended question.

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House repossessions up by 15%

Council of Mortgage Lenders says house repossessions shot up in the last quarter but remain 10% lower than last year The number of UK homes repossessed by mortgage lenders rocketed by 15% to 9,100 in the first quarter of 2011, according to latest figures from the Council of Mortgage Lenders (CML). The figure is well up on the 7,900 homes repossessed in the final quarter of 2010, but is 10% lower than the same period last year and equal to the average quarterly number of repossessions throughout 2010. The number of mortgages with arrears equivalent to 2.5% or more of the outstanding balance fell to 166,900 from 170,000 last quarter, and represent 1.47% of the 11.3m outstanding first-charge (original) loans. But the number of arrears exceeding 10% of the mortgage balance increased slightly from 27,400 at the end of 2010 to 27,700. Howard Archer, chief economist at IHS Global Insight , said the quarterly rise in repossessions “highlights the fact that a significant number of homeowners are at risk, particularly if economic activity is muted and unemployment moves over the coming months as tighter fiscal policy bites. “Any rise in interest rates would be liable to send a significant number of financially stretched people over the edge.” David Birne, an insolvency practitioner at HW Fisher & Company chartered accountants, agreed: “The main reason the figures aren’t worse is the breathing space afforded to homeowners by the ongoing low interest rate environment. When this comes to an end it will be the end of the road for many overstretched households. “Throw further public sector job cuts, a stagnant economy and the soaring cost of living into the mix and there is every reason to believe arrears and repossessions will spike towards the end of the year and on into 2012.” Housing minister Grant Shapps said the figures “underline how the recession has brought difficult times for lots of people” and the government will “continue our efforts to tackle the record deficit to avoid the need for rapid increases in interest rates and keep the pressure off already stretched family budgets”. The CML’s director general, Michael Coogan, said the financial position of many households is “likely to be stretched for some while, and some will inevitably find themselves in difficulty”. He said lenders have a range of options to nurse borrowers through temporary problems and, if in doubt, consumers should “talk to their lender as they will want to help”, and take advice from Shelter , Citizens Advice or the National Debtline (0808 808 4000). The Mortgage Rescue scheme , introduced in January 2009, helped 5,039 households receive help and advice from their local authority in the first three months of 2011, but only 2,621 homeowners have completed the full process since the scheme’s launch. Repossessions Mortgage arrears Mortgages Property Borrowing & debt Housing market Mark King guardian.co.uk

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Judges accuse Ministry of Defence of stifling challenges over treatment of detainees

High court says cutting off funding for public interest cases about allegations of UK involvement in torture is unlawful The Ministry of Defence has been condemned by the high court for stifling legal challenges over the treatment of detainees in Iraq and Afghanistan. In a strongly-worded judgment , the former defence secretary Bob Ainsworth was accused of lobbying behind closed doors to avoid embarrassing court decisions in a way that was damaging and “frankly inimical to the rule of law”. Overturning restrictions on access to legal aid, Lord Justice Laws and Mr Justice Stadlen declared that cutting off funding for public interest cases about allegations of UK involvement in torture was unlawful. The judgment drew attention to a letter sent by Ainsworth in November 2008 to Lord Bach, then at the Ministry of Justice, which urged a review of the funding of judicial reviews. “The MoD has been faced with a series of judicial review applications arising out of the intervention in Iraq,” Ainsworth wrote. “In most of these cases the consequences of an adverse judgment would be extremely serious for our defence, security and foreign policy interests.” One case at the time related to the treatment of detainees handed over to the Afghan authorities. “This decision leads me to wonder whether the time is right for a look at the rules under which [the Legal Services Commission] makes its decisions in judicial review cases.” The letter, the judges said, asserted that “the consequences of an adverse result” were a “good reason for the denial of public funding to bring the case”. But, the judgment continued, “by law such a position is not open to government”. The judges added: “For the state to inhibit litigation by the denial of legal aid because the court’s judgment might be unwelcome or apparently damaging would constitute an attempt to influence the incidence of judicial decisions in the interest of government. It would therefore be frankly inimical to the rule of law.” The case was brought by Maya Evans, a human rights activist who has fought a legally-aided action on behalf of alleged victims of torture. She has accused the MoD of wanting to stop “politically inconvenient cases”. Commenting on the decision, Evans said: “In my previous case I had the opportunity to shine a light into the dark recesses of the UK’s torture policy in Afghanistan, to the benefit of hundreds of prisoners and, ultimately, the British public. “I am thrilled that similar opportunities are now preserved for future concerned citizens as a result of this victory.” Daniel Carey, of Public Interest Lawyers, who represented Evans, said: “These cuts to legal aid never were about saving money. They were about the government’s attempts to avoid accountability by cutting off litigation at its source. The court’s outright rejection of this is a significant victory for the rule of law.” Phil Shiner, the head of Public Interest Lawyers, said: “A senior court of appeal judge has made clear that the MoD’s behaviour in persuading the Ministry of Justice to change the rules secretly was an outrage to the rule of law. “The courts will not tolerate such covert dishonesty and the MoD must now face the consequences of what it sanctioned in Iraq and Afghanistan.” Lord Bach, who was recorded in one of the documents in 2009 as being “supportive of the concerns raised by Bob Ainsworth”, has since emerged as an opponent of the government’s plans to cut legal aid. In a statement issued by the Sounds Off For Justice campaign, Bach declared last month: “Access to justice must be a cornerstone of our democracy. The law should not be only for the very wealthy or large organisations, but is also for the poor and those who aren’t well off.” Legal aid Torture Human rights Bob Ainsworth Iraq Afghanistan Middle East Owen Bowcott guardian.co.uk

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Phone hacking: 45 messages from John Prescott were intercepted, court hears

The former deputy prime minister is seeking permission for a judicial review into police handling of the phone-hacking affair The private investigator at the centre of the phone-hacking affair intercepted 45 voicemail messages from the then deputy prime minister John Prescott and emailed them to the News of the World, the high court has heard. Lord Prescott’s lawyers told the court that he had been the victim of “an unfortunate history of misinformation” by the Metropolitan police, who had told him repeatedly that he was not a victim of hacking. But the court heard that the investigator Glenn Mulcaire had targeted Prescott by listening to messages which he left on the phone of his chief of staff, Joan Hammell. Mulcaire had then sent a News of the World executive an email containing 45 messages as well as instructions about how to continue accessing Hammell’s phone. The new evidence emerged in a hearing in which Prescott, the former Europe minister Chris Bryant and the Met’s former deputy assistant commissioner Brian Paddick are seeking permission for a judicial review of police handling of the affair. They say police failed to conduct an effective inquiry and failed to inform them they were victims. Lawyers for the Met conceded there had been “some operational shortcomings” and that there had been cases where some victims had not been informed even though the evidence was clear. But they said the evidence in the claimants’ cases had not been clear. They revealed that, having seized 10,000 pages of notes from Mulcaire, the original inquiry in 2006 had failed to enter the material on a computer system. In 2009, after the Guardian revived the affair, Scotland Yard had finally started transferring the material to a database but had overlooked numerous documents and scanned others in a form that was not searchable. The result for the police, according to James Lewis QC, was that: • Prescott was told there was no evidence that he was a target of Mulcaire, even though his name was listed on notes the investigator had kept about the hacking of Hammell. • Bryant was told only that his name and number had been found in Mulcaire’s notes, whereas in fact his name was linked to a list of 23 phone numbers that could only have been obtained by hacking his voicemail, according to Hugh Tomlinson QC. • Paddick was told there was no evidence he was a victim even though a print-out from Mulcaire’s computer named him as “a project” and handwritten notes included phone details for him, his partner, his former partner and numerous associates. The court heard that the email containing Prescott’s 45 messages had been handed to police by the News of the World in January this year. Mr Justice Foskett said he would deliver a judgment as to whether the judicial review should continue in the near future. Phone hacking News of the World News International National newspapers Newspapers Newspapers & magazines John Prescott Nick Davies guardian.co.uk

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Looks like Jon Stewart was just as frustrated as the rest of us here at C&L were when we saw the Sunday show lineup this past weekend and the Bushies running as Stewart put it, “out of their hidey-holes to take credit for killing bin Laden and at the hapless Democrats for reinforcing their talking points for them.

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