From Moscow to Manila, workers marched to demand better rights, but in Oxford, 18,000 turned out to hear hymns at dawn While most of Britain was still sleeping off its national royal wedding hangover – notwithstanding the 18,000 bleary-eyed people who managed to stagger out on to the streets of Oxford at dawn – traditional May Day celebrations, rallies and protests were held around the world. One of the biggest turnouts was in Istanbul, where an estimated 200,000 people marched to demand better rights and wages for Turkish workers. It was the largest workers’ rally to be held in the central Taksim Square since 34 people died in a stampede in 1977. Trade unions were barred from holding May Day rallies in the square until last year. In South Korea, police said 50,000 joined a rally in Seoul, demanding government measures against inflation and rising food prices. In Moscow, supporters of the prime minister, Vladimir Putin, and trade union members rallied, with marchers carrying banners calling for “dignified work” – though the speeches by city and trade union leaders were greeted by an egg thrown from the crowd. It missed the dignitaries and splattered harmlessly on the stage. In a scene to bring tears of nostalgia to a traditionalist’s eyes, around 3,000 Communist party members marched past the Kremlin, brandishing red flags and carrying portraits of Lenin and Stalin. Workers also marched in Taiwan, Hong Kong, and in Manila in the Philippines, where an effigy of President Benigno Aquino III – complete with his luxury car, a second-hand Porsche that he was bitterly criticised for buying this year – was burned. Some marchers headed towards the presidential palace, but found their way barred by barbed wire and armed riot police. Aquino had earlier held a breakfast meeting at the palace with more moderate labour leaders. In Britain, Brighton got its May Day celebrations in early, with an anti-capitalist rally on Saturday afternoon which the organisers claimed brought together members of “Brighton Anarchist Black Cross, Smash EDO , Squatter Networks of Brighton and Brighton Hunt Saboteurs”, to “stand up for workers’ rights and resist oppression”. There were eight arrests, among around 200 demonstrators. Oxford has held May Day celebrations since at least the 17th century, with choristers in the tower of Magdalen College singing to greet the dawn. In previous years revellers have jumped from the nearby bridge into the river, leading to so many injuries that police closed it off for several years. The bridge was open again this year but the water level was so low, after months of drought, that only a few hardy souls went in, swimming from the bank instead. In an echo of the Puritans abolishing Christmas, the government has threatened to abolish May Day entirely, replacing it with a new autumn bank holiday. Morris dancers, Jacks in the Green and hobby horses gnashed their coconuts and tinkled their bells in protest over the proposal outside parliament last month. May Day Protest Turkey South Korea Russia Philippines Maev Kennedy guardian.co.uk
Continue reading …UK orders expulsion of Omar Jelban in retaliation for British embassy attack by pro-Gaddafi crowd in Tripoli Britain has ordered the expulsion of the Libyan ambassador to London, Omar Jelban, in retaliation for an attack on the British embassy by a pro-Gaddafi crowd in Tripoli. Jelban has been given 24 hours to leave the country. “I condemn the attacks on the British embassy premises in Tripoli as well as the diplomatic missions of other countries,” said the foreign secretary, William Hague. “The Vienna convention requires the Gaddafi regime to protect diplomatic missions in Tripoli. By failing to do so that regime has once again breached its international responsibilities and obligations. I take the failure to protect such premises very seriously indeed.” The statement went on: “As a result, I have taken the decision to expel the Libyan ambassador. He is persona non grata pursuant to article 9 of the Vienna convention on diplomatic relations and has 24 hours to leave the country.” According to Foreign Office sources, the building housing both the British embassy residence and its chancellery was burned down by a mob early on Sunday. The attacks on the British and other western embassies followed the Nato missile strike on one of Muammar Gaddafi’s villas , which the Libyan government says killed his youngest son, Saif al-Arab. The Gaddafi regime appears to have mounted a symbolic attack on empty diplomatic residences and embassies in Tripoli. There are no British diplomats in the Libyan capital. Other foreign residences were also targeted, as the UN announced it was taking all its remaining international staff out of Tripoli. The Italian foreign ministry said its embassy and several others in Tripoli were damaged by vandals and accused the Gaddafi regime of failing to take measures to protect foreign missions. The ministry issued a statement on Sunday following reports from Tripoli that a fire had broken out at the Italian embassy. A witness told Reuters news agency: “I am across the road from the Italian embassy. I can see smoke still coming out of the embassy. It was on fire. There is no one there now, just a security car to stop other people coming.” Some reports suggest that the buildings were attacked by mobs. Foreign correspondents in Tripoli have been unable to visit the sites to confirm the reports. Most of the diplomats pulled out of Tripoli when the Nato no-fly zone was imposed. The UK is maintaining a diplomatic presence in Benghazi, the rebel-held city in the east of the country. Libya Middle East Muammar Gaddafi Julian Borger Maev Kennedy guardian.co.uk
Continue reading …UK orders expulsion of Omar Jelban in retaliation for British embassy attack by pro-Gaddafi crowd in Tripoli Britain has ordered the expulsion of the Libyan ambassador to London, Omar Jelban, in retaliation for an attack on the British embassy by a pro-Gaddafi crowd in Tripoli. Jelban has been given 24 hours to leave the country. “I condemn the attacks on the British embassy premises in Tripoli as well as the diplomatic missions of other countries,” said the foreign secretary, William Hague. “The Vienna convention requires the Gaddafi regime to protect diplomatic missions in Tripoli. By failing to do so that regime has once again breached its international responsibilities and obligations. I take the failure to protect such premises very seriously indeed.” The statement went on: “As a result, I have taken the decision to expel the Libyan ambassador. He is persona non grata pursuant to article 9 of the Vienna convention on diplomatic relations and has 24 hours to leave the country.” According to Foreign Office sources, the building housing both the British embassy residence and its chancellery was burned down by a mob early on Sunday. The attacks on the British and other western embassies followed the Nato missile strike on one of Muammar Gaddafi’s villas , which the Libyan government says killed his youngest son, Saif al-Arab. The Gaddafi regime appears to have mounted a symbolic attack on empty diplomatic residences and embassies in Tripoli. There are no British diplomats in the Libyan capital. Other foreign residences were also targeted, as the UN announced it was taking all its remaining international staff out of Tripoli. The Italian foreign ministry said its embassy and several others in Tripoli were damaged by vandals and accused the Gaddafi regime of failing to take measures to protect foreign missions. The ministry issued a statement on Sunday following reports from Tripoli that a fire had broken out at the Italian embassy. A witness told Reuters news agency: “I am across the road from the Italian embassy. I can see smoke still coming out of the embassy. It was on fire. There is no one there now, just a security car to stop other people coming.” Some reports suggest that the buildings were attacked by mobs. Foreign correspondents in Tripoli have been unable to visit the sites to confirm the reports. Most of the diplomats pulled out of Tripoli when the Nato no-fly zone was imposed. The UK is maintaining a diplomatic presence in Benghazi, the rebel-held city in the east of the country. Libya Middle East Muammar Gaddafi Julian Borger Maev Kennedy guardian.co.uk
Continue reading …Click here to view this media (h/t Heather at VideoCafe) So this is what “protecting civilians” looks like . Not so pretty, is it? Can you say “mission creep”? BENGHAZI, Libya — The government of Col. Muammar el-Qaddafi said he survived an airstrike in Tripoli late Saturday night that killed one of his sons and three grandchildren, in the sharpest intensification yet of the NATO air campaign intended to pressure the Libyan leader from power. The son, Seif al-Arab Muammar el-Qaddafi, 29, and the grandchildren, all said to be younger than 12, were possibly the first confirmed casualties in the airstrikes on the Libyan capital . And while the deaths could not be independently verified, the campaign against Libya’s most densely populated areas raised new questions about how broadly NATO is interpreting its United Nations mandate to protect civilians. It is the second airstrike in seven days to hit a location intimately close to the Libyan leader, following a midnight attack last week that destroyed an office building in his compound where he and his aides sometimes work. In a news conference early Sunday morning in Tripoli, a Qaddafi government spokesman called the strike an illegal attack. “This was a direct operation to assassinate the leader of this country,” said the spokesman, Musa Ibrahim. “This is not permitted by international law. It is not permitted by any moral code or principle.” He said that the colonel and his wife, who were staying at the house along with “friends and family,” were not hurt. American and NATO officials have said they are not seeking to kill Colonel Qaddafi, and some have suggested it might not be very easy. But frustrated by the evasion and resilience of Colonel Qaddafi’s military, NATO has pledged to step up its strikes on the broader instruments of his power, including state television facilities and command centers in the capital .
Continue reading …Agreement with opposition to end months of protests looks in tatters as Ali Abdullah Saleh postpones signing ceremony A deal to end three months of anti-government protests in Yemen appears to be on the brink of collapse after the president, Ali Abdullah Saleh, refused to sign it, plunging the Arab state into further turmoil. The pact, brokered by the Gulf Co-operation Council , would have made Saleh, who has been in power for 33 years, the third ruler to be thrown out in the Arab spring. Yemen’s political opposition, furious over the last-minute change of heart, said it may now step up pressure on the international community to intervene. “We are studying the options of escalations and waiting for a US-European stance on Saleh’s refusal to sign,” a senior opposition leader told Reuters. A Gulf source said the opposition’s formal signing ceremony in Riyadh on Sunday would now not take place after Saleh’s own ceremony on Saturday was postponed. The source did not say whether or when it might be rescheduled. Arab foreign ministers were due to discuss the crisis in Riyadh, but Yemen’s opposition said it would now not join the talks, saying there was no reason to attend. Gulf Co-operation Council mediators told Yemen’s opposition Saleh would sign the deal – but only as leader of his party, and not in his capacity as president. The GCC secretary-general, who was in Sanaa for the signing, left Yemen without securing Saleh’s signature. A deal, if it is brought back on the table, would see Saleh appoint a prime minister from the opposition to head a transitional government, which would set a presidential vote for 60 days after he leaves. It would also grant immunity from prosecution to Saleh, his family and aides. Yemen’s opposition said it still hoped Gulf states would extract Saleh’s signature through negotiation, since both Saleh and the opposition, which includes Islamists and leftists, had agreed the deal in principle. “The matter is now with the Gulf states. If they are able to persuade Saleh, that would be good,” Mohammed Basindwa, an opposition figure tipped as a possible interim prime minister, said late on Saturday. The US and neighbouring Saudi Arabia want the Yemen standoff resolved to avert chaos that could make a Yemeni wing of al-Qaida a greater threat to the region. Protesters say they will stay on the streets until Saleh leaves. They also called for him to be put on trial for corruption and the deaths of an estimated 144 protesters. In further violence, gunmen launched attacks with rocket-propelled grenades and gunfire on Sunday against a government building in the southern province of Abyan, killing three soldiers guarding the site and wounding four others, according to a local official who blamed the attack on al-Qaida. Yemen Middle East Protest guardian.co.uk
Continue reading …Click here to view this media Well, it looks like birther king Donald Trump and his hair didn’t exactly get a warm welcome at the White House Correspondents’ Dinner tonight. The Wrap : Trump arrived on the red carpet at Washington’s Hilton Hotel with his wife, Melania, shortly at 7:00 p.m. (ET). After giving a brief interview with a group of several of media outlets, Trump — who was invited to the event as a guest of the Washington Post — walked away to a chorus of audible boos from the media members on the press line. (And it wasn’t because they wanted to hear Trump talk more.) Trump’s entrance briefly took the spotlight away from the other celebrity arrivals, including Mila Kunis, Scarlett Johansson, David Arquette, Elizabeth Banks, Mira Sorvino, Jeremy Piven and at least one of the Wayans Brothers. (Nicole:) Trump made himself an easy target for jokes at the annual Nerd Prom. Heather documents both President Obama and comedian Seth Myers rendering Trump completely ridiculous. And Keith Olbermann got tickled over the prank Twitter exec Katie Jacobs Stanton played on The Donald . Donald Trump said he will run as a Republican, which is surprising because I thought he was running as a joke. Well if wasn’t already, he certainly is now and his sour puss proved that he knew it too.
Continue reading …Firefighters battle blaze at industrial estate in Huddersfield A fire has ripped through an Oxfam warehouse in Huddersfield, destroying thousands of items of clothing. Scores of firefighters battled the blaze, which broke out at an industrial estate on Saturday. West Yorkshire fire and rescue service said the entire warehouse was engulfed in the flames and a structural engineer had been called because the building “was showing signs of collapse”. The single-storey building in Beck Road measures 55 metres by 40 metres and is home to Oxfam Wastesaver, which sorts thousands of tonnes of donated clothes and textiles. Twenty propane canisters were found at the scene by firefighters but were not involved in the fire. One crew, from Wakefield, remained at the scene early on Sunday, with another team set to relieve them at 8am. A fire service spokeswoman said: “We’re still putting a lot of water on it. Anything that’s got large-scale packed-up clothes is going to burn.” The cause of the fire has not yet been established. David McCullough, Oxfam’s director of trading, said the fire had badly hit the operation. He said: “It’s very sad, the loss of Wastesaver, which has been a feature of our operation since 1967 – one of which we’ve been very proud. “We’ve lost a lot of stock including some online stock. We don’t yet know if that material had already been bought or made ready to go out.” People living nearby said they heard a big explosion and loud popping noises after the fire started at about 6pm. Firefighters Charities Voluntary sector guardian.co.uk
Continue reading …Li Fangping went missing on Friday, the day that Chinese authorities released fellow lawyer Teng Biao Campaigners have warned that Chinese human rights lawyers remain under intense pressure, following the disappearance of another high-profile legal figure. Li Fangping went missing on Friday after ringing his wife to say state security agents were waiting for him – just as lawyer Teng Biao returned home after a two-month disappearance. The US had singled out Teng’s treatment and that of other missing lawyers in human rights talks the previous day . “The Chinese authorities are resorting to an old trick, the revolving-door approach – one in, one out – to create the impression that things are improving,” said Renee Xia of the Chinese Human Rights’ Defenders network. “The crackdown on lawyers has not stopped,” added Patrick Poon of the China Human Rights Lawyers Concern Group. He said he found this case particularly incomprehensible because while Li acted in high-profile cases he was careful not to discuss sensitive political issues. Li’s clients have included Zhao Lianhai , who founded a website about tainted baby milk after his son became sick, and activist and dissident Hu Jia . Phelim Kine, Asia researcher for Human Rights Watch, said Li’s disappearance suggested “a calculated effort to eviscerate China’s besieged rights defence movement”. Li’s wife told the South China Morning Post: “I believe [it] is related to his work. He has offended many people while helping the disadvantaged. I am not sure if state security officers are really the ones who have taken him away, or whether some gangsters are behind it.” Staff at Yangfangdian police station, where Li’s wife has reported his disappearance, said the matter was confidential. A Beijing police employee said staff were not available to comment. Asked about other missing lawyers last month, a foreign ministry spokeswoman said China protected its citizens’ rights, including freedom of expression, but citizens had to obey the law and should not harm the public interest. China Human rights Tania Branigan guardian.co.uk
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