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There’s a huge logic drop off in the Bush administration’s public relations push to elbow into credit for Bin Laden’s capture and killing. If what the Bush administration did–waterboarding, rendition, etc.–was effective in gathering information that led to locating Bin Laden, why would they have closed down the Bin Laden unit in 2005 ? Why would Bush go on record several times saying that he’s just wasn’t all that concerned about Bin Laden in 2006 ? For people eager to grab and hold credit for this killing, they didn’t seem to have a whole lot of work in that arena for the final years of the Bush administration. So when former CIA Director (and current Principal of the Chertoff Group ) comes on Fareed Zakaria GPS and says that the trail had been “cold” for some time, is that true…or is it more correct to say that the Bush administration–more interested in doubling down in the quagmire in Iraq than anything going on in Pakistan–just ignored the trail altogether? Hayden tries to rationalize that a US$25M bounty doesn’t mean that much to the tribal mentality in Pakistan. That may be true, but does that also take into account the fear of the Pakistanis of rendition for speaking up? Or the anger of predator drones in Pakistan killing innocent civilians making people less inclined to help the US? Here’s what it comes down to, although the Bushies simply don’t want you to realize it: The Bush administration actively ignored any alleged intelligence that they got for minimally five years in the hunt for Bin Laden, going as far as closing down the Bin Laden unit. And they will never–ever–be honest that their actions may have hurt any attempt to find him.

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The pain of playing Shylock

What’s it like to play Shakespeare’s most controversial character? As a new RSC production opens, Patrick Stewart, Antony Sher and other former Shylocks reveal all Patrick Stewart Bristol Old Vic, 1963; Royal Shakespeare Company, 1978-9; stars in new RSC production Each time I come to Shylock , I come with a different perspective. The last time I played him, it was as a very brutal and angry man, a man not overly sensitive to the world around him, to his daughter, to Antonio. This time, I have found an individual who is more open and sensitive, still vengeful and angry but with seemingly more

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The nurse who blogged the tsunami

An anonymous blog written by a Japanese nurse as she cared for victims of the tsunami has given strength to survivors and fellow relief workers Few aid workers could have imagined the scenes that awaited them as they set out for north-east Japan in the immediate aftermath of the tsunami in March. For days after the waves destroyed vast stretches of the Tohoku region’s coast, patients filled the corridors of hospitals deprived of heat and water, and doctors examined thousands of patients, knowing essential drugs had been swept away by the walls of muddy water. And while they waited for supplies, they watched helplessly as elderly patients who had survived the tsunami succumbed to hypothermia. When aid workers arrived, they were greeted by scenes of devastation that would not look out of place in a war zone. But this tragedy was being played out in one of the world’s wealthiest countries, fewer than 200 miles from the neon-lit opulence of its capital, Tokyo. One of them, a nurse who was part of an emergency medical team dispatched from Tokyo, has written about her experiences in a blog that offers one of the most detailed accounts yet of the tsunami’s toll on the tens of thousands who survived. Thanks to an anonymous translator , every word of her online journal is available in English. The blog has received scant coverage in the mainstream Japanese media. But it has generated thousands of online comments, most of them messages of gratitude from evacuees and fellow aid workers, and others who simply drew strength from her words. The nurse has declined potential book and interview requests, and clung to her anonymity, as has the blogger who translated her journal into English in a single sitting. Painstakingly tapped into the nurse’s mobile phone at the end of exhausting days touring evacuation zones and hospitals, the blog chronicles eight days that begin with trepidation and end with a reluctant return to Tokyo. In between, there are moments of despair and optimism, even humour. And floods of tears. The blog opens with the nurse preparing for her imminent assignment to Rikuzentakata, a town in Iwate prefecture where 2,000 of the 23,000 residents died and 80% of its 8,000 homes were destroyed. Before they leave, she and her fellow medical workers are told what they can expect to find, and warned to keep their emotions in check. The team leader tells them: “The situation over there is beyond your worst imagination. If any of you have signed up with optimistic outlooks or [out of] a spirit of volunteerism, please leave the team now. “No matter what happens at the site, DO NOT CRY. We are not going there to express our sympathy. We are going there to provide nursing and medical care. If you think YOU want to cry, think about how much the people there want to cry. The tears of a rich medical team from Tokyo will only be bothersome or even insulting to them.” The nurse describes the moment she arrives in a snowbound Rikuzentakata, her nose irritated by a “sharp, burnt odour”, the only sound that of military and media helicopters circling a town that, aside from a few gutted buildings, no longer exists. Her journey on foot to an evacuation site is punctuated by pauses to clasp her hands in prayer as troops pull yet another body from the rubble. She spends the first of many nights sleeping on the floor, “packed like sardines, regardless of gender” in a prefabricated hut located next to a makeshift mortuary. At the end of that first night, exhausted but unable to sleep, she begins her chronicle, pausing occasionally in a futile attempt to seek comfort in browsing old photos and messages from friends: “I’d held in my tears all day, so I wrapped myself in a bath towel and cried until morning came.” On her walks through ruined neighbourhoods she encounters residents in shock and eager to share their experiences with someone from the outside: “They tell us that a pitch-black tsunami about 15 metres high went back and forth and swallowed everything whole. There were many people who were washed away while preparing to run or even while running away after the call for evacuation was made. “We have religious ceremonies several times a year to pay respect to the ocean, and we’ve always lived feeling grateful . . . for the ocean, and still . . . our guide was shedding tears as we walked. “I was already on the verge of crying myself, but I promised not to cry no matter what, so I turned my eyes away from reality and watched the clouded sky instead. “As the wind blows, a sepia-colored photograph and a new year’s greeting card with a picture of someone’s baby come flying to my feet. And at every step or two, there is a red flag fluttering in the wind. A whole slew of flags – too many to even begin to count. These red flags are standing to mark places where bodies have been found. “An old lady is standing in front of one of the flags. She might be about the same age as my own grandmother. ‘Dear nurse from Tokyo, there was a house here that my husband worked so hard to build after the war. He never got sick once but now he’s dead.’ “It was impossible not to cry.” The extraordinary speed with which tens of thousands of troops cleared rubble from the roads through Rikuzentakata and dozens of other communities was a symbolic, yet ultimately cosmetic, sign of recovery. Beneath the ruins, the human tragedy was still unfolding: “The streets have been fixed, and much heavy machinery has finally come into Rikuzentakata. And as the rubble is cleared, many dead bodies have emerged. “Beneath the rubble, I heard the ringtone of a cell phone that finally had reception since the system recovered the day before. It was very difficult . . . painful when the body of a pregnant woman came out.” Her moments of self-doubt – she muses on the futility of applying bandages to people suffering deep emotional trauma – are offset by small triumphs: the appearance of the sun after days of snow, the arrival of medical supplies, and a “gourmet” meal of rice balls, bread and Yakult. The unannounced return of lighting to one shelter is greeted by spontaneous applause: “When everyone’s effort takes shape in a visible form like this, it makes me feel like I’ve been pushed forward to work harder than ever before.” The nurse witnesses firsthand the two most painful threads running through Japan’s post-tsunami narrative: the large number of elderly victims, and the displacement of tens of thousands of children. Police figures released last week show that more than two-thirds of the 11,000-plus victims identified so far were aged 60 or over – and that 90% of them had drowned. The advanced age of many of those who died has come to be a defining characteristic of the tsunami. Japan has one of the greyest societies on earth; in the Tohoku region, the over-64s make up almost a third of the population. They also comprise a large proportion of the shelters’ inhabitants. In the first week after the tsunami, Japanese media carried a report about troops arriving at a hospital in Futaba, 10km from the Fukushima nuclear power plant, to find 128 elderly patients, some of them comatose, who had apparently been left to fend for themselves. Fourteen later died, including two who did not last the bus journey to an evacuation centre. No one knows for sure yet how many children have lost both parents, although the official count is already more than 100. They include a four-year-old girl now living with her grandmother, and a teenage brother and sister who were taken in by their dance instructor. In one of her most emotional posts, the nurse writes about her friendship with an “adorable” six-year-old girl named Luna, whose mother’s body was pulled from the rubble clutching her daughter’s favourite dolls and books. In another passage, she recounts talking to a young boy who is poring over a mud-spattered comic about Doraemon, a blue cat with magical powers: “I talked to a boy who had a fever and a loss of appetite. He showed me a Doraemon book covered in mud. I asked him what his favourite was of all of Doraemon’s tools. ‘I used to like the ozashiki tsuribori (indoor fishing mat), but now my favorite is the taimu furoshiki (wrapping cloth of time). I want to wrap up the whole city with the taimu furoshiki and make it go back to how it was before the earthquake.” By the time the nurse returns to Tohoku in the summer, the medical focus will have shifted from the acute to the chronic phase, as people run the risk of succumbing to illnesses associated with life as evacuees: blood clots, stress-induced ulcers, pneumonia, high blood pressure and depression. Children will require counselling to overcome the trauma of seeing their homes and, in some cases, relatives and friends swept away. In April , many began a new academic year in schools with too many empty desks. Health workers are bracing themselves for a dramatic rise in the number of people with mental health problems, particularly among those who face months living in cramped shelters. Long-term care will require efforts as heroic as those that earned Takeshi Kanno, a 31-year-old doctor in Minamisanriku who saved countless lives on the day of tsunami, a place in TIME magazine’s 100 most influential people. “For a lot of people who up until this point have been able to ignore reality and what actually happened, as they get back on their feet they realise that their house is gone, or their children are dead, and they’re being forced to confront these facts,” said Toru Hosada, a volunteer doctor in Yamada, a port town in Iwate prefecture. “A lot of them are extremely uncertain as to what they can do.” Meanwhile, the anonymous nurse’s blog seems to have brought comfort to many readers. “On behalf of the people of Iwate and the whole Tohoku region I want to express my appreciation for your work. Thank you,” says one. Another, who has family in Rikuzentakata, writes: “There are many people whose homes have been swept away, their relatives swallowed up by the sea or saved. Knowing that you are there makes me feel better about not being there myself. It might make you angry to hear this, but please shed tears for all of those who have died. Thank you so much. It’s dangerous underfoot there, so please take care.” As she prepares to return to Tokyo on 23 March, the nurse is no longer troubled by the minor deprivations of life in the field. She “bathes” with baby wipes, stops fretting about her “sticky hair” and cleans her “dirty, makeup-less face” using tissues moistened with oolong tea. And as for the town she entered with such foreboding just over a week earlier: “Rikuzentakata has become my second home, and I wish for the restoration of my homeland with all my heart . . . “The truly hard times are still ahead of us. As news about the disaster begins to disappear from the TV and other media outlets, everyone else will start to forget, and the problems faced in the affected areas will only increase. More people falling ill, more sadness. It is of course a good thing that the rest of us make an effort to be cheerful and strong and return to our usual lives as best we can, but we must never forget about March 11.” Read blog in English jkts-english.blogspot.com or Japanese blog.goo.ne.jp/flower-wing Japan disaster Japan Justin McCurry guardian.co.uk

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Suicide threat advice for Jobcentres

Employees ‘receive six-point plan telling them to take each threat seriously’ as clamp on benefits takes effect Staff working for jobcentres and other Department for Work and Pensions contractors have been given guidelines on how to deal with suicide threats from claimants as the squeeze on benefits takes hold. A document sent to jobcentre staff in April details what it calls a “new policy for all DWP businesses to help them manage suicide and self-harm declarations from customers”. The guidelines include a “six-point plan” for staff to follow which says: “Some customers may say they intend to self-harm or kill themselves as a threat or a tactic to ‘persuade’, others will mean it. It is very hard to distinguish between the two … For this reason, all declarations must be taken seriously.” The internal document was sent to the Guardian by a senior jobcentre employee who has worked for the DWP for more than 20 years. It was accompanied by a letter from the source that said: “Absolutely nobody has ever seen this guidance before, leading staff to believe it has been put together ahead of the incapacity benefit and disability living allowance cuts.” The employee, who asked to remain anonymous, said: “We were a bit shocked. Are we preparing ourselves to be like the Samaritans? The fact that we’ve dealt with the public for so many years without such guidance has made people feel a bit fearful about what’s coming.” The DWP said that the new guidelines were not related to any recent policy changes and had been in development since 2009. “This guidance is about supporting our staff and ensuring we can help our customers. “It is right that a customer-facing organisation that serves over 20 million, including the most vulnerable in our society, has guidance such as this in place.” The team leader said the guidance had alarmed people in their team: “We’ve suddenly got this new aspect to our job. The bigger picture is people here are wondering how savage these cuts are going to be. And we’re the frontline staff having to deal with the fallout from these changes. ” Julie Tipping, an appeals officer for Disability Solutions, represents claimants who try to overturn decisions made following work capability assessment tests that they are fit for work. She says that in the last year, two of her clients have made “real attempts” at suicide after a decision was made that they were fit for work. Both were taken to hospital and subsequently sectioned. “It’s real and true. A lot of people think these people are crying wolf to get their money, but that’s not the case. They are suffering from real problems and can’t face it any more.” Tipping said the pressure on vulnerable clients was “the cumulative effect of all these welfare changes. The test is simply not fit for purpose for assessing mental health problems. That’s on top of moving people on to jobseeker’s allowance, and all of the conditionality and risk of sanctions that goes with that.” The Guardian revealed last month that some jobcentres were setting targets for advisers to stop people’s benefits for not meeting conditions attached to their jobseeker’s allowance. A whistleblower said that the pressure on staff was leading to vulnerable claimants being targeted for sanctions. The targets have since been removed. But thousands of claimants of incapacity benefit and employment support allowance are being reassessed to see if they should be considered fit for work and moved on to jobseeker’s allowance. Another jobcentre adviser said: “People have been coming off sickness benefits and thrown onto jobseeker’s allowance. It’s problematic because some customers are clearly not fit to work, and they are clearly very distressed. When you sense this you feel really upset because the system is allowing them to get like this and you feel part of the processing machine.”Eleanor Lisney, of Disabled People Against Cuts , said that the thought of being moved on to jobseeker’s allowance was like a sword hanging over the heads of disabled groups and she feared an increase in related suicides. Unemployment Job hunting State benefits Pensions Disability Public sector cuts Public finance John Domokos guardian.co.uk

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Nato units left 61 migrants to die of hunger and thirst

Exclusive: Boat trying to reach Lampedusa was left to drift in Mediterranean for 16 days, despite alarm being raised Dozens of African migrants were left to die in the Mediterranean after a number of European and Nato military units apparently ignored their cries for help, the Guardian has learned. A boat carrying 72 passengers, including several women, young children and political refugees, ran into trouble in late March after leaving Tripoli for the Italian island of Lampedusa. Despite alarms being raised with the Italian coastguard and the boat making contact with a military helicopter and a Nato warship, no rescue effort was attempted. All but 11 of those on board died from thirst and hunger after their vessel was left to drift in open waters for 16 days. “Every morning we would wake up and find more bodies, which we would leave for 24 hours and then throw overboard,” said Abu Kurke, one of only nine survivors. “By the final days, we didn’t know ourselves … everyone was either praying, or dying.” International maritime law compels all vessels, including military units, to answer distress calls from nearby boats and to offer help where possible. Refugee rights campaigners have demanded an investigation into the deaths, while the UNHCR, the UN’s refugee agency, has called for stricter co-operation among commercial and military vessels in the Mediterranean in an effort to save human lives. “The Mediterranean cannot become the wild west,” said spokeswoman Laura Boldrini. “Those who do not rescue people at sea cannot remain unpunished.” Her words were echoed by Father Moses Zerai, an Eritrean priest in Rome who runs the refugee rights organisation Habeshia, and who was one of the last people to be in communication with the migrant boat before its satellite phone ran out of battery. “There was an abdication of responsibility which led to the deaths of over 60 people, including children,” he claimed. “That constitutes a crime, and that crime cannot go unpunished just because the victims were African migrants and not tourists on a cruise liner.” This year’s political turmoil and military conflict in north Africa have fuelled a sharp rise in the number of people attempting to reach Europe by sea, with up to 30,000 migrants believed to have made the journey across the Mediterranean over the past four months. Large numbers have died en route; last month more than 800 migrants of different nationalities who left on boats from Libya never made it to European shores and are presumed dead. Underlining the dangers, on SundaySunday more than 400 migrants were involved in a dramatic rescue when their boat hit rocks on Lampedusa. The pope, meanwhile, in an address to more than 300,000 worshippers, called on Italians to welcome immigrants fleeing to their shores. The Guardian’s investigation into the case of the boat of 72 migrants which set sail from Tripoli on 25 March established that it carried 47 Ethiopians, seven Nigerians, seven Eritreans, six Ghanaians and five Sudanese migrants. Twenty were women and two were small children, one of whom was just one year old. The boat’s Ghanaian captain was aiming for the Italian island of Lampedusa, 180 miles north-west of the Libyan capital, but after 18 hours at sea the small vessel began running into trouble and losing fuel. Using witness testimony from survivors and other individuals who were in contact with the passengers during its doomed voyage, the Guardian has pieced together what happened next. The account paints a harrowing picture of a group of desperate migrants condemned to death by a combination of bad luck, bureaucracy and the apparent indifference of European military forces who had the opportunity to attempt a rescue. The migrants used the boat’s satellite phone to call Zerai in Rome, who in turn contacted the Italian coastguard. The boat’s location was narrowed down to about 60 miles off Tripoli, and coastguard officials assured Zerai that the alarm had been raised and all relevant authorities had been alerted to the situation. Soon a military helicopter marked with the word “army” appeared above the boat. The pilots, who were wearing military uniforms, lowered bottles of water and packets of biscuits and gestured to passengers that they should hold their position until a rescue boat came to help. The helicopter flew off, but no rescue boat arrived. No country has yet admitted sending the helicopter that made contact with the migrants. A spokesman for the Italian coastguard said: “We advised Malta that the vessel was heading towards their search and rescue zone, and we issued an alert telling vessels to look out for the boat, obliging them to attempt a rescue.” The Maltese authorities denied they had had any involvement with the boat. After several hours of waiting, it became apparent to those on board that help was not on the way. The vessel had only 20 litres of fuel left, but the captain told passengers that Lampedusa was close enough for him to make it there unaided. It was a fatal mistake. By 27 March, the boat had lost its way, run out of fuel and was drifting with the currents. “We’d finished the oil, we’d finished the food and water, we’d finished everything,” said Kurke, a 24-year-old migrant who was fleeing ethnic conflict in his homeland, the Oromia region of Ethiopia. “We were drifting in the sea, and the weather was very dangerous.” At some point on 29 or 30 March the boat was carried near to a Nato aircraft carrier – so close that it would have been impossible to be missed. According to survivors, two jets took off from the ship and flew low over the boat while the migrants stood on deck holding the two starving babies aloft. But from that point on, no help was forthcoming. Unable to manoeuvre any closer to the aircraft carrier, the migrants’ boat drifted away. Shorn of supplies, fuel or means of contacting the outside world, they began succumbing one by one to thirst and starvation. The Guardian has made extensive inquiries to ascertain the identity of the Nato aircraft carrier, and has concluded that it is likely to have been the French ship Charles de Gaulle, which was operating in the Mediterranean on those dates. French naval authorities initially denied the carrier was in the region at that time. After being shown news reports which indicated this was untrue, a spokesperson declined to comment. A spokesman for Nato, which is co-ordinating military action in Libya, said it had not logged any distress signals from the boat and had no records of the incident. “Nato units are fully aware of their responsibilities with regard to the international maritime law regarding safety of life at sea,” said an official. “Nato ships will answer all distress calls at sea and always provide help when necessary. Saving lives is a priority for any Nato ships.” For most of the migrants, the failure of the Nato ship to mount any rescue attempt proved fatal. Over the next 10 days, almost everyone on board died. “We saved one bottle of water from the helicopter for the two babies, and kept feeding them even after their parents had passed,” said Kurke, who survived by drinking his own urine and eating two tubes of toothpaste. “But after two days, the babies passed too, because they were so small.” On 10 April, the boat washed up on a beach near the Libyan town of Zlitan near Misrata. Of the 72 migrants who had embarked at Tripoli, only 11 were still alive, and one of those died almost immediately on reaching land. Another survivor died shortly afterwards in prison, after Gaddafi’s forces arrested the migrants and detained them for four days. Despite the trauma of their last attempt, the migrants – who are hiding out in the house of an Ethiopian in the Libyan capital – are willing to tackle the Mediterranean again if it means reaching Europe and gaining asylum. “These are people living an unimaginable existence, fleeing political, religious and ethnic persecution,” said Zerai. “We must have justice for them, for those that died alongside them, and for the families who have lost their loved ones.” Additional reporting by John Hooper and Tom Kington in Rome, and Kim Willsher in Paris Refugees Libya Nato Middle East Jack Shenker guardian.co.uk

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National Security Adviser: No Decision Yet On Whether To Bring Home Additional Troops From Afghanistan

On This Week with Christiane Amanpour, National Security advisor Tom Donilon addresses the U.S. relationship with Pakistan after the revelation that Osama bin Laden was not only in Pakistan, but living in a town that was that country’s equivalent of West Point. Amanpour wonders how the U.S. can trust them after this, and also pushes him on whether this means the U.S. will bring more troops home than planned: AMANPOUR: But can you deal with these very people who you’ve had to deal with? DONILON: Well, let’s go — let’s go through that, yeah. I think that — I think, though, on this issue, we need to work with them on a couple of things. First of all, we need to know how this happened and they need to know how this happened, if they weren’t involved, right? They need to know how this happened. Secondly, we need to work with them on assessing all the evidence out of that compound and all of the evidence associated with Osama bin Laden’s presence there for six years. They have in their custody all the noncombatants from the compound, including three wives of Osama bin Laden. We’ve asked for access, obviously, to those — to those folks. They took additional materials. We talked to them first about the materials that we had. They had additional materials. We need access to that. But I would be remiss if I didn’t make another point. More people have died, right, more terrorists have died — have died and been captured, excuse me, on Pakistan soil than any place else in the world. They have been an essential partner of ours in the war against Al Qaida and in our efforts against terrorism. And that really can’t be dismissed . This is an important relationship with the United States, so we need to assess this, Christiane, in a cool and calm way. And my job as national security adviser is to do this in a way that advances our interests. AMANPOUR: If today the president had to make that decision to go after Zawahiri in Pakistan, would you tell the Pakistanis? DONILON: Well, we’ll have to look at the specifics of the operation. This really wasn’t a matter of trusting or not trusting; it was a matter of operational security. AMANPOUR: So would you do this again, then, in Pakistan, go in without telling them? (CROSSTALK) DONILON: It would depend on the operation, right? It would depend on the risk assessments, right? We do many, many joint operations with the Pakistanis. This was a singular operation, a very unique operation, indeed, the most important military operation that we’ve undertaken in a long, long time. AMANPOUR: I have to ask you a final question. DONILON: Of course. AMANPOUR: You talked about the death of Osama bin Laden… DONILON: Yes. AMANPOUR: … as a huge milestone on your mission to defeat Al Qaida. DONILON: Yes. AMANPOUR: Your Afghanistan policy is about defeating Al Qaida. DONILON: Yes. AMANPOUR: Does this mean that you will withdraw more troops? DONILON: Well, what it means is this, that… AMANPOUR: Because people are saying that now. DONILON: Yeah. Yeah, I understand. It is a — it’s an important milestone toward strategic defeat and it’s an important step towards our achieving our goals. And the president has laid out quite clearly and worked with our allies on this that we’ll begin a withdrawal in July of X number of troops. AMANPOUR: Will you bring more than you had expected? DONILON: We haven’t made those determinations yet, is the absolute honest answer. AMANPOUR: Thanks so much for joining us. DONILON: OK, thank you. AMANPOUR: Thank you.

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I was tempted to use Palin’s new world dictionary , but resisted the urge in the headline. I also thought Condi was going to give longer interviews so I wondered if the Bin Laden PDB that she ignored would have been brought up, but it wasn’t. BEN-VENISTE: Isn’t it a fact, Dr. Rice, that the August 6 PDB warned against possible attacks in this country? And I ask you whether you recall the title of that PDB? RICE: I believe the title was, “Bin Laden Determined to Attack Inside the United States.” On the flip side Condi, why have you forsaken RushBo? Doesn’t she know the consequences of never agreeing with the voice of the GOP? Fareed Zakaria’s GPS: ZAKARIA: We’re hearing some Republicans, people like Rush Limbaugh say Obama really doesn’t deserve much credit for this. You know – the operation was a routine operation. You’ve been in the White House, do you think that the President at key moments had to make difficult calls, whether to use a drone, whether to use special operations? RICE: I’ve been in the White House, and I’ve seen a president make difficult decisions. And there were difficult decisions in this. What that – what President Obama has done, indeed it was a – it was a brave decision. Now it is absolutely the case that the United States of America has been fighting this war for at least ten years, and really a bit longer. And so this is a victory across presidencies. It’s a – it’s a victory for having learned more how to fight the counter terrorism fight. But there’s no doubt that as President Bush had to make some very, very hard calls that frankly helped to set this up, President Obama had to make some very difficult calls to bring it to conclusion. She’ll always defend her old boss, but defying Limbaugh’s will could cause her incredible grief. Not only did she say it was a difficult decision, but that it was brave. Most Republicans that take on Rush always go on his show and back track what they say. Limbaugh does his best of trying to claim Bin Laden was no big deal at all and the media is building him up suddenly. And it’s not only Limbaugh acting as a Dead Ender, the entire right wing megaphone has it’s freak on They even went as far as claiming Obama removed the American flag at the Ground Zero tribute. One problem. It isn’t true. Multiple photos show that the flag was on full display when Obama arrived at Ground Zero. Tapper’s tweet was posted at 6:30 pm — hours after the President had left. In all likelihood, Tapper was saying that the flag was being removed before his live shot for ABC World News when he made his tweet.

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Protest planned over disability cuts

Protest organised by hundreds of disabled people’s groups to culminate with lobby of MPs Thousands of disabled people and their families and supporters will converge on Westminster this week to protest against government cuts and their impact on key benefits such as the disability living allowance and the employment and support allowance . Afterwards they will lobby MPs as the welfare reform bill reaches a critical stage in the House of Commons. Wednesday’s protest, dubbed the Hardest Hit march, is being coordinated by hundreds of disabled people’s organisations and charities and groups including Scope , Leonard Cheshire Disability , Mencap , the RNIB and Sense . Organisers say that disabled people will be hit disproportionately hard by the cuts, which, they estimate, could result in families losing £9bn of support over the next four years. Jaspal Dhani, chief executive of the United Kingdom Disabled People’s Council , said the cuts would have an adverse effect on disabled people’s rights and their ability to live independently. “We believe that disabled people stand to lose most from these cuts,” he said. “We hope to show both the government and the community at large just how fearful disabled people are about the impact the cuts will have. It’s about taking direct action because it seems government ministers are simply not listening.” Dhani said the cuts would result in disabled people being institutionalised and treated unfairly as local authorities try to save money by cutting funding to the bodies that support them. Rebecca Rennison, co-chair of the Disability Benefits Consortium ‘s policy group, agreed that disabled people were likely to feel the cuts far more keenly than the rest of the population. “They’re experiencing the same cuts as everyone else and then experiencing additional ones, so it’s cuts on top of cuts,” she said. “The disability living allowance (DLA) is vital to people’s independence. They are taking away the mobility component that pays for things like taxis and allows people to get out of their homes. The impact will be devastating and people are saying enough’s enough. That’s why people from all over the country are coming to London to make their views known.” The rally will begin on Victoria Embankment on Wednesday morning and move to Westminster. Protesters will then lobby MPs in Westminster Hall and Methodist Central Hall. between 13.30 and 17.30. Disability Welfare London Karen McVeigh Sam Jones guardian.co.uk

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Greece bailout fails to halt debt woes

Secret talks reveal Greece is unable to meet obligations under last year’s €110bn eurozone rescue package The eurozone’s first ever bailout of a debt-laden member country is failing and will need to be renegotiated exactly a year after the €110bn (£96bn) rescue package was agreed for Greece. Following secret talks in Luxembourg on Friday between Athens and some of the key EU players, it emerged that Greece will not be able to meet the terms of last year’s rescue and is hoping to ask the eurozone for more funds. As Britain made clear it did not want to offer any more support for Greece as part of an EU package or a bilateral loan, investors remain unconvinced of the ability of Athens to sustain its €340bn debt load. Signalling that Athens will struggle to finance itself on the bond markets by next year – which was part of the deal struck with the eurozone and the International Monetary Fund – the Greek finance minister, George Papaconstantinou, said: “We will either go out to markets or use the recent decision by the EU that allows the European fund to buy Greek bonds. “The markets continue to disbelieve in our country.” His trip to Luxembourg had been kept so quiet in Athens that only the prime minister, George Papandreou, knew about the discussions, which were led by Jean-Claude Juncker, the Luxembourg prime minister and president of the group uniting the 17 countries using the single currency. Juncker confirmed that the Greek bailout would need to be renegotiated amid alarmist reports that the country was contemplating reintroducing the drachma. After the talks – attended by the finance ministers of Germany, France, Italy and Spain as well as Olli Rehn, European monetary affairs commissioner – Juncker said the Greek package needed a “readjustment”. Haggling over a new Greek deal is set to dominate the weeks ahead. EU finance ministers will debate the topic next week and the Germans, in particular, are digging in their heels. The chancellor, George Osborne, made clear that Britain felt it had done enough to support Greece. He told the Andrew Marr Show: “We certainly don’t want to be part of any bailout of Greece, a second bailout. There are some very difficult questions that Greece has to address now because the whole assumption when the eurozone put together a rescue package last year was that Greece could come back into the market next year and borrow. The market is quite sceptical about that happening, and I suspect a lot of my time over the next few weeks is going to be with other European finance ministers and others talking about how we try and help the Greeks get through this situation.” Britain provided a bilateral loan to Ireland last year, but Osborne said: “I can’t see us ever writing a cheque directly from the British taxpayer to the Greeks or the Portuguese or indeed anyone else. Ireland was a special case.” Over the weekend, tensions mounted in Ireland after the Irish Central Bank governor was accused of contributing to Ireland’s financial crisis by woefully “miscalculating” the extent of losses in the country’s banks. The attack on Patrick Honohan came amid reports that the IMF-European Union and European Central Bank troika had agreed a behind-the-scenes interest rate cut in Ireland’s €85bn bailout which could save the country £400m a year. Experts from the troika are arriving in Athens amid heightened urgency over the handling of the crisis. The Greek government had hoped that the announcement of a mid-term fiscal plan, whose centrepiece is a €50bn privatisation program, would help assuage the criticism of the socialist government’s recent performance in implementing a draconian programme of fiscal consolidation. The normally cool Papaconstantinou appeared uncharacteristically glum after the meeting where sources said Greece had used the occasion to press ahead with its request that eurozone member states soften the terms of the agreement reached on the bailout loans by further extending repayment deadlines. Adding to the ever growing sense of a government under siege Papandreou slammed critics at the weekend saying: “I call upon everyone in Greece and abroad, and especially in the EU, to leave Greece alone to do its job in peace.” European debt crisis Greece European banks European Union Ireland bailout Ireland Financial crisis Global recession Banking European Central Bank Europe Europe Ian Traynor Helena Smith Nicholas Watt Lisa O’Carroll guardian.co.uk

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Libyan woman ‘raped by troops’ flees

Iman al-Obeidi has reportedly been given refuge in Tunis after escaping with help of defecting military officer Iman al-Obeidi, the Libyan woman who claimed she was raped by Muammar Gaddafi’s soldiers, has reportedly fled to Tunisia with the help of a defecting military officer. Obeidi, who drew worldwide attention when she burst into a Tripoli hotel to describe to foreign journalists her alleged ordeal at the hands of 15 men, has been given refuge in Tunis by western officials. Obeidi told CNN she had entered Tunisia with a refugee document and was considering her next move. She claimed her court case against the soldiers – who she said had seized her at a checkpoint near Tripoli – had barely progressed. After passing numerous checkpoints disguised in a veil that hid her face except one eye, Obeidi passed the Dehebi crossing on Thursday without trouble. Obeidi’s story of being brutalised by 15 drunken men over two days – some of whom she claims were close to Gaddafi’s inner circle – has become a rallying call for revolution. Her ordeal has been seized upon by members of the revolutionary council in Benghazi. She was dragged away from reporters at the Rixos hotel on 26 March after she started angrily detailing her alleged attack. Government officials promptly labelled Obeidi a prostitute and suggested she may have been a provocateur sent by rebels from eastern Libya, from where part of her family reportedly hails. It is rare in Libyan society for a woman to go public with a claim of rape, which is widely seen as dishonouring the victim and her family, rather than the attacker. Obeidi was initially jailed, but was freed under an order from Gaddafi’s son Saadi, and had since been with her family in Tripoli. The vicious standoff between Gaddafi loyalists in west Libya and western-backed rebels in the east shows little sign of ending. Nato jets have been largely absent from the skies since Wednesday. Several regime targets were hit over the weekend in the western mountains, where rebels maintain their only anti-government foothold in the west of the country. In Tripoli, some queues for fuel stretch for several miles. Bread too is in drastically short supply with bakers fled to their native Egypt when fighting erupted in mid-February yet to return. The economic siege of the capital is clearly taking a toll, with many stores in the old city remaining closed and almost all construction sites having ground to a halt. Libya Middle East Arab and Middle East unrest Martin Chulov guardian.co.uk

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