• Zardari denies Pakistan harboured bin Laden • Cameron: questions will be asked about Pakistan’s role • Global security clampdown at embassies and airports 8.58am: Welcome to our continuing live coverage of the aftermath of the killing of Osama bin Laden. One of the main subjects today looks set to be accusations that Pakistan had been harbouring bin Laden . Pakistan’s president Asif Ali Zardari dismissed such charges as “baseless speculation”. Writing in the Washington Post , he said: Some in the US press have suggested that Pakistan lacked vitality in its pursuit of terrorism, or worse yet that we were disingenuous and actually protected the terrorists we claimed to be pursuing. Such baseless speculation may make exciting cable news, but it doesn’t reflect fact. Pakistan had as much reason to despise al-Qaida as any nation. The war on terrorism is as much Pakistan’s war as it is America’s. In Britain, David Cameron chaired a 45-minute meeting of the government’s Cobra emergencies committee , and will update MPs on events in a Commons statement later today. Cameron said Pakistan had “lots of questions” to answer. But he warned against a “flaming great row” with Pakistan’s leaders, who he said were committed to tackling terrorism. Speaking to BBC Radio 5 Live, he said: We should deal with what we do know. And we do know that the Pakistan political leadership is fighting terrorism, we do know that country has suffered. We should work with those forces in Pakistan that want us to combat terrorism and extremism and make democracy take hold in that country. That is in our national interest. We could go down the other route of just having a flaming great row with Pakistan over this. I think that would achieve nothing. But we should deal with what we do know. And we do know that the Pakistan political leadership is fighting terrorism, we do know that country has suffered. We should work with those forces in Pakistan that want us to combat terrorism and extremism and make democracy take hold in that country. That is in our national interest. We could go down the other route of just having a flaming great row with Pakistan over this. I think that would achieve nothing. Osama bin Laden al-Qaida Middle East Pakistan United States Obama administration US foreign policy UN MDG summit 2010 Matthew Weaver guardian.co.uk
Continue reading …• Zardari denies Pakistan harboured bin Laden • Cameron: questions will be asked about Pakistan’s role • Global security clampdown at embassies and airports 8.58am: Welcome to our continuing live coverage of the aftermath of the killing of Osama bin Laden. One of the main subjects today looks set to be accusations that Pakistan had been harbouring bin Laden . Pakistan’s president Asif Ali Zardari dismissed such charges as “baseless speculation”. Writing in the Washington Post , he said: Some in the US press have suggested that Pakistan lacked vitality in its pursuit of terrorism, or worse yet that we were disingenuous and actually protected the terrorists we claimed to be pursuing. Such baseless speculation may make exciting cable news, but it doesn’t reflect fact. Pakistan had as much reason to despise al-Qaida as any nation. The war on terrorism is as much Pakistan’s war as it is America’s. In Britain, David Cameron chaired a 45-minute meeting of the government’s Cobra emergencies committee , and will update MPs on events in a Commons statement later today. Cameron said Pakistan had “lots of questions” to answer. But he warned against a “flaming great row” with Pakistan’s leaders, who he said were committed to tackling terrorism. Speaking to BBC Radio 5 Live, he said: We should deal with what we do know. And we do know that the Pakistan political leadership is fighting terrorism, we do know that country has suffered. We should work with those forces in Pakistan that want us to combat terrorism and extremism and make democracy take hold in that country. That is in our national interest. We could go down the other route of just having a flaming great row with Pakistan over this. I think that would achieve nothing. But we should deal with what we do know. And we do know that the Pakistan political leadership is fighting terrorism, we do know that country has suffered. We should work with those forces in Pakistan that want us to combat terrorism and extremism and make democracy take hold in that country. That is in our national interest. We could go down the other route of just having a flaming great row with Pakistan over this. I think that would achieve nothing. Osama bin Laden al-Qaida Middle East Pakistan United States Obama administration US foreign policy UN MDG summit 2010 Matthew Weaver guardian.co.uk
Continue reading …Two killed and 14 injured in New Zealand’s largest city in the wake of tornado which cut a three-mile path across suburb A tornado has ripped across part of New Zealand’s largest city, upturning cars and sending debris slicing through the air. Civil defence officials put the death toll at two, with at least 14 injured. The swirling dark-grey column of air and cloud cut a three-mile (5km) path across the Auckland suburb of Albany at mid-afternoon on Tuesday, tearing off roofs, flattening trees and tossing vehicles around, police and witnesses said. “There were kids in a car which turned upside down and they had to get help,” said Hamish Blair, whose golf supplies store was in the hardest-hit area. “There’s probably six or seven seriously damaged cars, and I saw cars flying off the ground about 30m (100 feet) in the air.” “We’ve got our fingers crossed that injuries are limited and that there are no further fatalities,” Auckland’s mayor Len Brown told Radio New Zealand. The tornado first touched down in Albany and then passed through neighbouring Birkenhead. Most of the serious damage was in Albany, where a shopping mall, a large hardware store and a supermarket were hit. Radio New Zealand reported that the roof of the Mega Centre mall in Albany collapsed. Tornadoes are not uncommon in New Zealand, particularly on the country’s North Island, where Auckland lies. But they tend to be smaller than those seen in the US midwest. Auckland generally gets one or two tornadoes a year, according to New Zealand’s ministry of civil defence and emergency management. New Zealand has been hit by several natural disasters in recent months, including an earthquake on 22 February that devastated the South Island city of Christchurch and killed at least 169 people. New Zealand Natural disasters and extreme weather guardian.co.uk
Continue reading …Hacker attack on security of Sony Online Entertainment network preceded PlayStation Network breach but was only discovered on Monday, electronics company says The crisis at Sony deepened on Tuesday as it admitted that an extra 25m customers who played games on its Sony Online Entertainment (SOE) PC games network have had their personal details stolen – and that they were taken before the theft of 77m peoples’ details on the PlayStation Network (PSN). The electronics giant said the names, addresses, emails, birth dates, phone numbers and other information from PC games customers were stolen from its servers as well as an “outdated database” from 2007 which contained details of around 23,400 people outside the US. That includes 10,700 direct debit records for customers in Austria, Germany, the Netherlands and Spain, Sony said. The dataset was stolen on 16 and 17 April, before the PSN break-in, which occurred from 17 to 19 April. Sony said that it had not previously thought that the data was copied by the hackers who broke into its systems. A Sony spokeswoman in Tokyo admitted that the company was unable to predict where or how or when the next attack would come. “They are hackers. We don’t know where they’re going to attack next,” she said. Another Sony spokeswoman said there was no evidence that the information taken had yet been used illicitly for financial gain. “We had previously believed that SOE customer data had not been obtained in the cyber-attacks on the company, but on May 1 we concluded that SOE account information may have been stolen and we are notifying you as soon as possible,” Sony said in a message to customers. The company denied on its official blog on Monday rumours claiming that the hackers who stole the PSN details had tried to sell back 2.2m credit card details. Though the latest credit card numbers did not include the CVV – the three-digit code used to verify credit card transactions – the hackers will almost surely be able to use the card details. The latest news will be a serious blow to Sony’s management, already reeling from the enormous revelation of the problems with the PSN, which has been offline for more than a week. Though there have been no reports of management changes, it is expected that there will be serious ramifications from the security breaches inside the company. The SOE network hosts games that are played over the internet on PCs, and is separate from the PSN, which connects PlayStations online. The SOE network was taken down on Monday and Sony suspended its SOE games on Facebook because they use “microtransactions” and the sale of virtual goods, if subverted could be used by hackers to make illiicit transactions. The company said it will grant players 30 days of additional time on their subscriptions, along with one day for each day the system is down. It is also working with the FBI and other authorities to investigate what it called “a criminal cyber attack” on its data centre in San Diego, California. The revelation comes after Sony No. 2 Kazuo Hirai announced measures had been put in place to avert another cyberattack like that which hit its PlayStation Network, hoping to repair its tarnished image and reassure customers who might be pondering a shift to Microsoft’s Xbox. The PSN incident has already sparked legal action and investigations by authorities in North America and Europe, home to almost 90% of the users of the network, which enables gamers to download software and compete with other members. On Monday, Sony declined to testify in person in front of a US congressional hearing, but agreed to respond to questions on how consumer private data is protected by businesses in a letter on Tuesday, said a spokesman for Rep. Mary Bono Mack, a Republican Congresswoman from California, who is leading the hearing. Sony denied on its official PlayStation blog on Monday that hackers had tried to sell it a list of millions of credit card numbers. Sony Hacking Data and computer security Charles Arthur guardian.co.uk
Continue reading …• Conservative Stephen Harper has won a majority government • Shattering defeat for the opposition Liberals • Leftist New Democrats projected to become the main opposition party Conservative Prime Minister Stephen Harper won his coveted majority government in Canada’s elections on Monday that also marked a shattering defeat for the opposition Liberals, with leader Michael Ignatieff accepting responsibility for the historic defeat. In another significant shift, the leftist New Democrats are projected to become the main opposition party for the first time in Canadian history with 106 seats, in a stunning upset over the Liberals who have always been either in power or leading the opposition. Harper, who took office in 2006, has won two elections but until now had never held a majority of Parliament’s 308 seats, forcing him to rely on the opposition to pass legislation. While Harper’s hold on the 308-member Parliament has been tenuous during his five-year tenure, he has managed to nudge an instinctively centre-left country to the right. He has gradually lowered sales and corporate taxes, avoided climate change legislation, promoted Arctic sovereignty, upped military spending and extended Canada’s military mission in Afghanistan. Elections Canada reported preliminary results on its website, giving the Conservatives 164 seats, which will mean four years of uninterrupted government for Harper. “It’s stunning. We’re elated,” Conservative lawmaker Jason Kenney said in an interview with CBC. “We’ll be a government for all Canadians.” The leftist New Democrats are projected to become the main opposition party for the first time in Canadian history with 106 seats, in a stunning upset over the Liberals who have always been either in power or leading the opposition. Former colleagues of Harper say his long-term goals are to kill the image of the Liberals the party of Jean Chretien, Lester Pearson and Pierre Trudeau as the natural party of government in Canada, and to redefine what it means to be Canadian. Harper took a major step toward that on Monday night as the Liberals dropped to 35 seats from 77, according to the preliminary results. Liberal leader Michael Ignatieff congratulated Harper and New Democrat leader Jack Layton and accepted responsibility for the “historic defeat.” “I will play any part that the party wishes me to play as we go forward to rebuild,” Ignatieff said. Stephen Clarkson, professor at the University of Toronto said Harper will now be considered a transformative figure in Canadian history. “It’s a sea change,” Clarkson said. The New Democrats’ gains are being attributed to Layton’s strong performance in the debates, a folksy, upbeat message and a desire by the French-speakers in Quebec, the second most populous province, for a new face after growing weary of the separatist Bloc Quebecois. The NDP’s gains marked a remarkable shift in a campaign started out weeks ago looking like a straight battle between Harper and Ignatieff, with the 60-year-old Layton recovering from prostate cancer and a broken hip. Harper campaigned on a message that the New Democrats stood for “higher taxes, higher spending, higher prices, protectionism. He called the election a choice between “a Conservative majority” and “a ramshackle coalition led by the NDP that will not last but will do a lot of destruction.” Canada Stephen Harper Michael Ignatieff guardian.co.uk
Continue reading …Abbottabad, a quiet military town in the Himalayan foothills, housed Osama bin Laden for many years Residents of Abbottabad might be forgiven for feeling confused . When they went to bed, theirs was a tidy, bucolic little place – a town of soldiers and schools, tucked into the foothills of the Himalayas, just a two-hour drive north of Islamabad. When they awoke, it had turned into something dark and notorious: the rumbled hideout of the world’s most wanted man, killed in a hail of gunfire by American special forces soldiers just a few hours earlier . The target was a house that, from the outside, appeared to differ little from the other homes in this well-to-do neighbourhood: two-and three-storey buildings, not exactly mansions, but spacious and well-appointed. Two men stared at the square, three-storey house in a well-to-do suburb, now swarming with soldiers and police, trying hard to make sense of it all. “It couldn’t have been Osama bin Laden,” declared 32-year-old trader Azhar Khan of the neighbour he had never known. “This is a very sensitive place, full of military and intelligence agencies. You can’t live here for years without anyone knowing.” But Naqeeb Khan, an 18-year-old engineering student, had another take. “I believe it. I saw it on CNN this morning. They confirmed it was Osama.” “Yeah, well we’ve heard a lot on television,” shot back Khan. “And it’s not always right.” The house was partially hidden by a red canvas screen that had been hastily erected by Pakistani soldiers – probably to hide the site where an American helicopter reportedly crashed to the ground in still murky circumstances. An armed soldier stood guard on the roof, gripping his weapon. Others surged through the surrounding fields, playing hide-and-seek with journalists they sought to keep at bay. “Please, please, leave,” begged one young colonel, trying to shoo the Guardian away. But it was too late: Abbottabad’s greatest secret was out. Nobody, of course, had ever seen Bin Laden. “Never in my wildest dreams would I have dreamed he was inside,” said one neighbour. But many knew two Pashtun men who owned the house – possibly Bin Laden’s trusted courier and his brother who unwittingly led American spies to their quarry last August. The Pashtuns kept to themselves, people said – burning their own rubbish, sending children to buy food at the shops, attending daily prayers but spurning small talk. Nobody seemed to know their names, or where they came from – some thought Afghanistan, others said Waziristan in the tribal areas. The army might have been more curious, though. Bin Laden’s suburban bolthole was just a few streets away from the Pakistan’s version of Sandhurst, a sprawling military academy complex of training fields and dorms that has been the training ground for the country’s officer corps for 60 years. In a decade of speculation Bin Laden has been reported to be dead, alive, sick and hiding in the sprawling slums of the cities or the perilous badlands of the tribal belt. But few would have suspected a town such as Abbottabad, famed for its tranquillity and tolerance. Schools and small universities line the main Karakoram highway, which climbs through the mountains towards the Chinese borders. As journalists flooded in, boys and girls skipped through the streets, wearing uniforms and carrying schoolbooks. Most residents are from the ethnic Hazara minority and speak Hindko, a language closer to Punjabi than Pashto. It is hundreds of miles from Waziristan in the tribal belt where CIA drone strikes have pummelled dozens of al-Qaida targets in the recent years. People in Abbottabad have been only peripherally affected by the recent turmoil – refugees arrived as the Taliban swept through nearby Swat in 2009; most have since gone home. “Osama – who cares? He’s just a creation of America,” said a mechanic, from under a broken vehicle. “We don’t care about him. Petrol prices are rising, food is more expensive, and our leaders are corrupt. That’s all we care about.” Yet, for those who looked closely enough, there have been hints that the town’s charms had also attracted al-Qaida. The recently released Guantánamo Bay files revealed that Abu Farj al-Libi, a senior Bin Laden lieutenant, moved here in 2003 and lived in the town until his capture two years later. He wasn’t the only one to chose Pakistan’s populated, urban areas, close to army power. In 2003, Khalid Sheikh Muhammad, the architect of the 9/11 attacks in New York, was captured in the military city of Rawalpindi. In retrospect, it makes sense, but retrospect is always wise. The truth is few in Abbottabad saw this coming. And many hope that life will soon get back to normal. Osama bin Laden al-Qaida Pakistan Global terrorism CIA United States Declan Walsh guardian.co.uk
Continue reading …Both sides of the aisle lauded Obama and U.S. troops for the victorious raid on Osama bin Laden’s hideaway. Reactions to bin Laden’s death ranged from joy to relief, but no matter what emotions were coursing through them, politicians almost unanimously thanked the nation’s Commander-in-Chief and his troops for a successful takedown of the world’s
Continue reading …Title: Salt Of The Earth Artist: The Rolling Stones I’ve been racking my brain to find a fitting song for the recent news but nothing comes to mind. Oh well, this track should suffice. Hope your week started well.
Continue reading …I have to say, I’m pleasantly surprised and fascinated by this trend. If it can happen in Hong Kong, bastion free market capitalism, it can happen anywhere — except the U.S., of course. The “beacon of liberty” that is supposed to be America is now all about cutting what little workers get, while Hong Kong is actually trying to bridge the wealth divide — because they think it’s a bad thing! Imagine that: Hong Kong has introduced a minimum wage that is expected to benefit 270,000 low-paid workers , or around 10% of the working population. Workers will now earn a minimum of HK$28 ($3.60; £2.18) per hour. The legislation was passed in response to public pressure to narrow the territory’s wealth gap. But the minimum wage has been resisted by the business community, who say it is too costly. Business leaders say small businesses will be forced to lay off staff. Critics also say the legislation is a departure from Hong Kong’s free-market roots. With the exception of Singapore, most Asian countries now have a minimum wage or are considering one. The move is expected to boost the pay of Hong Kong’s legions of street sweepers, security guards and restaurant workers. “The employers now cannot squeeze the lowest paid sectors of society,” said Lee Cheuk-yan, head of the Hong Kong Federation of Trade Unions and a legislator. Unions had campaigned for a minimum wage of HK$33 an hour and many workers say the wage increase will not cover rising living costs. The government said it was forced to introduce the legislation after a voluntary minimum wage scheme in 2006 met with a tepid response from businesses . What, you mean a rising tide didn’t lift all boats? Entrepreneurs didn’t want to share the wealth? Fancy that. At least in Singapore, they admit it.
Continue reading …I have to say, I’m pleasantly surprised and fascinated by this trend. If it can happen in Hong Kong, bastion free market capitalism, it can happen anywhere — except the U.S., of course. The “beacon of liberty” that is supposed to be America is now all about cutting what little workers get, while Hong Kong is actually trying to bridge the wealth divide — because they think it’s a bad thing! Imagine that: Hong Kong has introduced a minimum wage that is expected to benefit 270,000 low-paid workers , or around 10% of the working population. Workers will now earn a minimum of HK$28 ($3.60; £2.18) per hour. The legislation was passed in response to public pressure to narrow the territory’s wealth gap. But the minimum wage has been resisted by the business community, who say it is too costly. Business leaders say small businesses will be forced to lay off staff. Critics also say the legislation is a departure from Hong Kong’s free-market roots. With the exception of Singapore, most Asian countries now have a minimum wage or are considering one. The move is expected to boost the pay of Hong Kong’s legions of street sweepers, security guards and restaurant workers. “The employers now cannot squeeze the lowest paid sectors of society,” said Lee Cheuk-yan, head of the Hong Kong Federation of Trade Unions and a legislator. Unions had campaigned for a minimum wage of HK$33 an hour and many workers say the wage increase will not cover rising living costs. The government said it was forced to introduce the legislation after a voluntary minimum wage scheme in 2006 met with a tepid response from businesses . What, you mean a rising tide didn’t lift all boats? Entrepreneurs didn’t want to share the wealth? Fancy that. At least in Singapore, they admit it.
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