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The eccentric Texas libertarian is up to his usual antics, this time speaking out against the US operation that killed Osama bin Laden. According to Politico , the congressman – a contender for the Republican presidential nomination – said the operation “absolutely was not necessary,” and that “respect for the rule of law and world law and international law” should apparently preclude any such operation. Check out more from Politico below the break. “I think things could have been done somewhat differently,” Paul said this week. “I would suggest the way they got Khalid [Sheikh] Mohammed. We went and cooperated with Pakistan. They arrested him, actually, and turned him over to us, and he's been in prison. Why can't we work with the government?” Asked by WHO Radio's Simon Conway whether he would have given the go-ahead to kill bin Laden if it meant entering another country, Paul shot back that it “absolutely was not necessary.” “I don't think it was necessary, no. It absolutely was not necessary,” Paul said during his Tuesday comments. “I think respect for the rule of law and world law and international law. What if he'd been in a hotel in London? We wanted to keep it secret, so would we have sent the airplane, you know the helicopters into London, because they were afraid the information would get out?” Putting aside political questions, is there any validity at all to what Paul is claiming? Was the operation illegal under either US or international law? Do you think killing OBL was, in fact, necessary?

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China blocks Ai Weiwei online editorial

Article in the Southern Metropolis Daily marking anniversary of Sichuan quake made unmistakable references to detained artist A daring editorial marking Thursday’s third anniversary of the Sichuan earthquake , featuring unmistakable references to detained artist Ai Weiwei , has vanished from the website of the newspaper that ran it. The article in the Southern Metropolis Daily – one of the “bolder” Chinese papers – appeared to allude to the work of Ai and jailed activist Tan Zuoren in attempting to tally the deaths of children in the many schools that collapsed. An estimated 90,000 people were killed or remain missing following the 7.9-magnitude earthquake, which rocked the south-western province in May 2008. But authorities suppressed discussions of the high death toll among schoolchildren and harassed protesting parents after it became an increasingly potent subject. Many blamed the number of deaths on shoddy construction linked to official corruption. Although written in a highly literary, allusive style, the editorial includes several phrases clearly reminiscent of Ai’s work. They include a reference to victims who “lived happily on this earth for seven years, or for longer or shorter periods of time”. Ai’s installation Remembering used 9,000 children’s backpacks to spell out a grieving Sichuan mother’s words: “She lived happily for seven years in this world.” A later section goes further, noting: “On the day of mourning we called them home and wished them peace. We gathered together all the human evidence of them we could. We read their names together … We did so much, and yet we did too little … We can but present the steel zodiac, offer up porcelain sunflower seeds, symbolic memorials to your lives once so tangible.” Ai sought to compile a list of all the dead children; his work Missing is a three and a half hour recording of volunteers reading out their names. His installation Sunflower Seeds at Tate Modern, made up of 100m porcelain seeds, has become one of his best-known works, while his re-creation of bronze fountainheads in the shape of the 12 animals of the Chinese zodiac was unveiled at Somerset House in London on Wednesday. “For people who are aware of Ai Weiwei’s work there is an unmistakable implication pointing to his work relating to reckoning the Sichuan earthquake and responsibility for it,” said David Bandurski of Hong Kong University’s China Media Project. “Stylistically this is a fairly typical example of ‘spring and autumn’ writing … writing around the topic. [But] even though it is not very direct stylistically, I think its implications are very direct.” He added that while many links to the piece were now dead, the Shenzhen-based news portal QQ.com had posted it. Ai, 53, was stopped by officials at Beijing airport on 3 April. Officials say he is under investigation for economic crimes, but police have not notified his family of any detention and relatives believe he has been targeted because of his activism. China Ai Weiwei Human rights Censorship Protest Tania Branigan guardian.co.uk

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Forty-eight women raped every hour in Congo, study finds

Research shows 12% of the country’s women have been raped at least once, and the problem is not confined to conflict areas About 48 women are raped every hour in the Democratic Republic of the Congo, according to a new study. The study, due to be published in the American Journal of Public Health in June, found sexual abuse rampant not only in conflict areas but in the home, with nearly one woman a minute subjected to some form of sexual abuse. The DRC has been racked by conflict, with rapes widely documented in the conflict-heavy east of the country . However, the study suggests the problem is bigger and more pervasive than previously thought, and goes further in documenting domestic sexual abuse. It finds 1,152 women are raped every day – a rate equal to 48 per hour. That rate is 26 times more than the previous estimate of 16,000 rapes reported in one year by the United Nations. “Not only is sexual violence more generalised,” the study’s researchers said, “but our findings suggest that future policies and programmes should focus on abuse within families.” The findings of the study, carried out by three public health researchers from the International Food Policy Research Institute, Stony Brook University in New York, and the World Bank, and partly financed by the US government, were based on figures from a nationwide household survey of 3,436 Congolese women in 2007 aged 15 to 49. A breakdown of the figures showed 12% of women had been raped at least once in their lifetime and 3% of women across the country were raped between 2006 and 2007. About 22% had also been forced by their partners to have sex or perform sexual acts against their will. The study also revealed alarming levels of sexual abuse in the capital, Kinshasa. The UN has called the country the centre of rape as a weapon of war. Commentators have also called the Congo the worst place on Earth to be a woman . Over the past 15 years, civilians have been drawn into the conflict, which has been driven by a weak government and rich mineral resources, often in remote, forest-covered areas. The highest levels of rape were found in North Kivu, an eastern province ravaged by the conflict and where nearly 7% of women had been raped at least once between 2006 and 2007, according to the study. Comprehensive statistics on rape in the DRC have been difficult to collate, although widespread anecdotal evidence has been collected on atrocities. There have been many reports and witness accounts of the gang-rape of young girls and elderly women by armed militia, and also accounts of male rape. Because of the stigma of rape, many married women find themselves abandoned by their husbands . “There are two big surprises in the study,” said Anthony Gambino, a former mission director for the US Agency for International Development in the Congo. “First, the magnitude of the problem – rates of rape that are much higher than seen elsewhere. And, second, that these alarming, shockingly high rape statistics are found in western Congo as well as northern and eastern Congo.” Gambino said 40 years of “steady economic and political decline” may explain the high incidence of rape in the DRC. While the authors have extrapolated their figures to show that as many as 1.8 million women out of the country’s population of 70 million have been raped, with up to 433,785 raped in a one-year period, some have urged more caution in the interpretation of the figures and their date. Michael VanRooyen, director of the Harvard Humanitarian Initiative, which has sent doctors to Congo to treat rape victims, said that there were “some limitations in the methodology, such as the sampling methods and the sample sizes” of the new rape study. But, he said, “the important message remains: that rape and sexual slavery have become amazingly commonplace in this region of the DRC and have defined this conflict as a war against women”. However, Michelle Hindin, an associate professor at Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health, who specialises in gender-based violence, said because the figures were collected during face-to-face interviews, where women could be less forthcoming, the figures could be much higher. Margot Wallstrom, the UN special representative for sexual violence in conflict, said the figures in the study were higher than the UN’s because they covered all sexual violence, including domestic and by known partners. She said UN figures tended to be conservative because they had to be verified by the UN itself. “The number of reported violations are just the tip of the iceberg of actual incidents,” she said. Democratic Republic of the Congo Rape War crimes Africa Jo Adetunji guardian.co.uk

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John Demjanjuk found guilty of Nazi war crimes

German court sentences 91-year-old Ukrainian to five years for his part in killing 28,060 Jews at Sobibór concentration camp A 91-year-old Ukrainian man has been sentenced to five years in prison for his part in the killing of 28,060 Jews at a Nazi extermination camp in 1943. John Demjanjuk was convicted of being an accessory to mass murder for his actions as a guard at the Sobibór concentration camp in occupied Poland, where he herded Jews to their death in the camp’s gas chambers. Demjanjuk sat in a wheelchair before the judges as they announced their verdict, but showed no reaction. It was not immediately clear how much credit he would get for time already served. Defence attorneys had said during the 18-month trial they would appeal a conviction. Demjanjuk was a Red Army soldier allegedly captured as a prisoner of war by the Wehrmacht in 1942 and trained as an SS guard before being sent to work at a death camp near Sobibór, a village close to the border between Poland, Ukraine and Belarus. He has been described by one Nazi expert as “the littlest of the little fishes” and is the lowest ranking person ever to be put on trial for war crimes in Germany. The prosecution has presented no evidence that Demjanjuk committed a specific crime, but claims his presence at Sobibór is enough to charge him with being an accessory to murder. It is the first time this legal argument has been tried in German courts. The case against Demjanjuk was that he was one of the guards who forced Jewish prisoners into rooms, knowing that engine fumes were to be pumped in. Demjanjuk is then alleged to have dragged out the corpses and thrown them into a mass grave, where they were later burned in an attempt to leave no trace. Demjanjuk said he was a victim, not a perpetrator, of Nazi crimes. His lawyer, Ulrich Busch, told the court on Wednesday that high-ranking Germans, such as the commander of the Trawniki SS camp where Demjanjuk allegedly trained, had been acquitted by German courts. “Should foreigners pay for the crimes of the Germans … in order to acquit Germany of its responsibility alone for the Holocaust?” Busch said. Demjanjuk’s son, John Demjanjuk Jr, accused German prosecutors of ignoring the facts. “My dad is a survivor of the genocide famine in Ukraine, of the war fighting the Nazis, of the Nazi POW camps … and now of Germany’s attempt to finish the job left unfinished by Hitler’s real henchmen,” he said in an email to the Associated Press on Wednesday. “While some who refuse to accept the history of that period may take satisfaction from this event, nothing the Munich court can say will erase the true suffering he has endured to this day.” A Dutch Nazi war crimes expert, Professor Christiaan Rüter, has said Demjanjuk was not a key Nazi lieutenant but “the littlest of the little fishes”. The long, often interrupted proceedings attracted international attention after some legal experts suggested it could be the last trial of a Nazi war criminal in Germany. However, Cornelius Nestler, a lawyer for families of Sobibór victims who joined the trial as co-plaintiffs, said on Wednesday that “if there is a verdict for accessory to murder because one was a guard in a camp where many people were killed, it could be a beginning of new last wave of many [such] proceedings”. The trial was listed for 35 days when it began at the end of November 2009, but Demjanjuk’s poor health, plus countless legal arguments, have strung it out for 18 months. Hearings were sometimes cut short when Demjanjuk complained about his numerous health problems, which include early onset leukaemia and gout. The court was only able to sit for two 90-minute sessions a day after a doctor said the accused could cope with no more. Demjanjuk was carried into the court precinct each day on a stretcher and lay inside the courtroom on a bed with his eyes shut, or hidden behind sunglasses, as his alleged crimes were read out in horrific detail, translated loudly into his ear in Ukrainian. The trial was derailed by the death of a key witness in November last year. Samuel Kunz, 89, had been a Nazi guard at Sobibór and could also have stood trial for mass murder. Kunz’s death meant that no living witness could testify to having seen Demjanjuk at the concentration camp. The prosecution instead relied on written records and an SS identity card alleged to have belonged to Demjanjuk, who fled to the United States in 1952 and spent decades working in an Ohio car factory. In February, his lawyers asked the judge to stop the trial after a declassified FBI file emerged which suggested the ID card might have been forged by the KGB. The case continued after prosecutors argued that subsequent examinations had proved its authenticity. Demjanjuk, who changed his first name from Ivan when starting his new life in the US, spent more than seven years in prison in Israel, five of them on death row, after being found guilty of being a notorious concentration camp guard at Treblinka known as Ivan the Terrible. He was set free when his lawyers proved it was a case of mistaken identity. Demjanjuk spent 10 months in a US jail while awaiting extradition to Germany. He has been on remand in the hospital wing of Stadelheim, the jail where Hitler once served time, since 12 May 2009. Last November, on the first anniversary of the trial’s opening, Busch read out a statement in which Demjanjuk said he was just “a simple prisoner of war” who was being unfairly singled out and persecuted by German authorities who had let far more serious Nazi war criminals slip through the net. Busch had suggested at the start of the trial that Demjanjuk was a victim rather than a murderer. “Ultimately, my client is not different from Thomas Blatt, who did what he could to stay alive,” he said. Eighty-four-year-old Blatt, one of two plaintiffs who survived the camp, managed to stay alive by working as a shoeshine boy to the camp commandant before escaping in October 1943. Another survivor, Jules Schelvis, whose whole family was murdered at Sobibór, has said he is less interested in seeing Demjanjuk sentenced to die in jail than seeing justice done. “Justice must be done and be seen to be done, the sentence is almost irrelevant,” he said as the trial opened. Outside the courtroom on Wednesday, David van Huden, a 79-year-old Dutchman whose mother, father and sister were murdered within hours of arriving at Sobibór in 1943, said he saw the trial as a chance “to defend our rights as Holocaust survivors and the rights of our parents”. Helen Hyde, headteacher at Watford grammar school for girls, whose aunt, uncle and cousin were killed at the camp, said: “The horrors of Sobibór must never be forgotten.” Germany Europe Holocaust Second world war War crimes Helen Pidd guardian.co.uk

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BA and Unite reach deal to end cabin crew strikes

Union members to vote on settlement with British Airways that restores travel privileges and takes sackings into arbitration An agreement has been reached to end the long-running British Airways cabin crew dispute, the Unite union has confirmed. The deal is being put to a mass meeting of Unite members near Heathrow airport and is expected to be recommended for acceptance in a ballot. The deal will end 18 months of hostilities that included 22 days of walkouts. It includes the restoration of travel concessions for cabin crew, the issue that was holding up a settlement. The Unite leader, Len McCluskey, said he was “delighted” to have reached an agreement and it was good news for the workers, the airline and its customers. Bassa, Unite’s main cabin crew branch, said in email to members: “The talks have now concluded to the satisfaction of both parties. “If the branch agrees, the negotiated settlement will be put to the full membership in a postal ballot.” McCluskey said: “We always said that this dispute could only be settled by negotiation, not by confrontation or litigation. And so it has proved. “We are delighted to have reached an agreement which I believe recognises the rights and dignity of cabin crew as well as the commercial requirements of the company. This agreement will allow us to go forward in partnership together to strengthen this great British company – good news for BA, its employees and its customers alike. “I am particularly pleased that staff travel concessions will be restored in full with the signing of the agreement and the implementation of the new structure for working together that we have negotiated. A customer-oriented business can only succeed with all its employees valued and respected. Two previous peace agreements were scrapped after Unite declined to recommend them because of concerns over sanctions against crew members who took part in strikes last year. It is understood the agreement restores staff travel perks stripped from thousands of crew who took part in the strikes, as well as allowing arbitration of the dozens of disciplinary cases – including sackings – that were linked to the dispute. BA’s worst ever industrial relations dispute began in 2009 when the airline unilaterally reduced staffing levels on long-haul flights after a voluntary redundancy programme. Unite launched a strike ballot in protest at the cuts and the lack of consultation, triggering a year of high court hearings, strike votes and walkouts. Changes in leadership on both sides this year raised hopes of a deal being struck. Willie Walsh, who had been BA’s chief executive, moved upstairs to the airline’s parent group and Tony Woodley, the joint general secretary of Unite, handed over the reins to McCluskey. In a bizarre interlude in the peace talks between Walsh and Woodley last year, members of the Socialist Workers party broke into discussions at the Acas conciliation service. British Airways Unite Airline industry Travel & leisure Trade unions Dan Milmo guardian.co.uk

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Barnicle: Newt ‘A Delusional Loser’

Mike Barnicle has greeted Newt Gingrich's announcement of his presidential candidacy with a sneer, calling the former Speaker of the House “a delusional loser.”

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Happy anniversary for the coalition? – video | Julian Glover and Shehani Fernando

Video: A year on from the coalition, the AV campaign has caused bad blood, but Julian Glover finds that in their commitment to localism there are strong bonds between the two parties Shehani Fernando Julian Glover

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Fix banks to avoid eurozone meltdown, IMF warns

The Washington-based IMF stressed the importance of a new series of stress tests on banks The International Monetary Fund has warned that the eurozone debt crisis could spread across the region unless European countries step up efforts to fix their banks. In its latest economic outlook for Europe , the IMF said that the debt crisis in Greece, Portugal and Ireland could hit the wider eurozone by hitting bank lending and delivering a confidence shock, despite the rescue packages that are already in place. “Financial linkages between countries with sovereign debt troubles and the rest of Europe could potentially pose more risk to the outlook,” the IMF said on Thursday. “Restoring fiscal health, squarely addressing weak banks, and implementing structural reforms to restore competitiveness are key.” The Washington-based organisation stressed the importance of stress tests on banks, saying they are a key opportunity to force those found to be weak to raise new capital to bolster their finances. The European banking regulator is busy running a new round of stress tests and will publish the results in June. Tests conducted last year were regarded as too easy. The IMF estimates that the eurozone will grow by 1.7% this year, the same as in 2010, and 1.9% next year, assuming debt crises don’t derail the economy. It also expressed concern about Britain’s economic position. The UK faces “considerable short-term uncertainty, as growth turned flat in late 2010 – taking out temporary weather-related effects – and fiscal consolidation accelerates,” said the IMF. However, the drop in sterling and low interest rates should help mitigate the effects of the “sizeable” government spending cuts, it added. The report was issued just hours after Finland agreed to support a rescue package for Portugal. The Finnish finance minister said that Finland was prepared to sanction the €78bn (£67bn) aid deal, as long as Portugal started negotiations to persuade private investors to keep their funds in the country. Shocks could spread fast With banks in countries like Germany, the UK and France holding bonds from highly indebted nations, “a shock to confidence could spread quickly throughout Europe,” the organisation warned. A default or restructuring of Greek, Portuguese or Irish debt could hit those banks so hard they would have to cut lending to companies and threaten the European recovery. Morgan Stanley estimates that France’s BNP Paribas is the most exposed of the non-Greek banks to Greek debt, holding about €5bn of bonds, but fellow French bank Société Générale and Germany’s Commerzbank are also at risk. The IMF report said: “Restoring confidence in the euro area’s banking system is a prerequisite to turning the page on the crisis. The upcoming round of strong, broad, and transparent stress tests provides an opportunity to address remaining vulnerabilities. But to be effective, the stress tests need to be followed by credible restructuring and recapitalisation programmes. Efforts to strengthen the banking systems in vulnerable countries will need to accelerate.” European debt crisis IMF Economics Global economy European banks Banking Julia Kollewe guardian.co.uk

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David Laws suspended for ‘serious and substantial’ breaches of expenses rules

Laws suspended from the house for seven days and forced to apologise to MPs after standards watchdog rules former minister deceived Commons for seven years David Laws, once the rising star of the coalition government, is to face one of the toughest sanctions of the expenses scandal after a year-long inquiry ruled that he seriously and extensively broke the rules to claim rent which was paid to his partner. Laws will be suspended from the house for seven days after the standards commissioner, John Lyon, ruled that over seven years he deceived the Commons authorities by submitting claims to pay a landlord with whom he was in a relationship and sharing a home. The deception was “serious” and the sums involved “substantial”. Laws has already paid back nearly £60,000 and will now also be forced to apologise to the Commons. Lyon accepted what Laws has always claimed: that he broke the rules to protect his privacy and prevent people finding out that he was in a gay relationship, rather than to profit and that the way he claimed reduced the cost to the taxpayer. But he also suggests that the amount claimed in rent as a “lodger” in the property may have been above market value while he also claimed for other costs, such as maintenance work, that was justified as a cohabitee but were in conflict with the rules if he was simply a lodger in the property. Inadvertently or not, his partner, the lobbyist James Lundie, “benefited” under the arrangements. He said that he had “great sympathy” with the MP’s predicament, that to be honest about his relationship would have forced him to be open about his sexuality describing it as a “conflict between his private interest in secrecy and public interest in him being open and honest in relation to his expenses claims.” But whatever the MP’s motivation the deception was serious. He should have either been open with the Commons about the true nature of relationship, or not claimed expenses at all, the report says. Lyon’s report says: “I consider that Mr Laws’ breaches of the rules in respect of his second home claims were serious. I have no evidence that Mr Laws made his claims with the intention of benefiting himself or his partner in conscious breach of the rules. But the sums of money involved were substantial. He made a series of breaches. Some of them continued over a number of years.” In the accompanying report by the Commons standards and privileges committee, MPs accepted Lyon’s judgment and recommended the seven-day suspension. It is likely to dash any immediate hopes of a return to government for Laws though its understood it is very unlikely that he will resign his Yeovil seat. He will appear in the Commons this afternoon to make his apology. Laws said in statement following the publication of the report: “I accept the conclusions of the inquiry and take full responsibility for the mistakes which I have made. I apologise to my constituents and to parliament. Each of us should be our own sternest critic, and I recognise that my attempts to keep my personal life private were in conflict with my duty as an MP to ensure that my claims were in every sense above reproach. I should have resolved this dilemma in the public interest and not in the interests of my privacy.

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Boy, 15, dies after south London stabbing

Police have launched a murder hunt after boy was attacked in Camberwell and died six hours after he was taken to hospital A teenage schoolboy who as stabbed in a south London street has died. Police say the 15-year-old who was set upon in Camberwell, south London, was pronounced dead at 10.30pm on Wednesday – six hours after he was taken to hospital. His family has been informed. Police sources confirmed a murder hunt had been launched. Emergency services arrived at Cormont Road on Wednesday afternoon and found the teenager with stab wounds to his body. Police are investigating the death and are understood to have made several arrests overnight. Detectives are still trying to establish a motive for the attack and it is not yet known if the murder was gang-related. Formal identification of the victim has yet to take place. The victim is the fifth teenager to be stabbed to death in the capital this year, Scotland Yard said. The Guardian is interested in covering this story in more depth. Please contact matthew.taylor@guardian.co.uk if you have any information about this case. Knife crime Crime London Matthew Taylor guardian.co.uk

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