Anti-terrorist officers from several countries comb site for clues to who was behind remote control device Anti-terrorist experts from several countries have been sifting through the wreckage of the Marrakech cafe where 15 people died on Thursday, as officials said a remote control bomb caused the blast. A video released before the attack by al-Qaida in the Islamic Maghreb reportedly claimed responsibility for the attack, with terrorism experts saying the group was one of several likely candidates. While police from both Morocco and Spain could be seen working at the wrecked cafe in Jamaa el-Fnaa Square, friends and family of the victims gathered at the city’s Ibn Tofail hospital. Mouhou Rachid, a cafe worker, said at least one of his co-workers died and another was in hospital with serious injuries. “The explosion was terrible. When I recovered consciousness I saw people picking up victims. My friend has injuries in the stomach, face and head.” Morocco’s interior ministry said seven of the 15 dead had been identified, including two French citizens, two Canadians, a Dutch national and two Moroccans. Israel’s foreign ministry said two of the victims, a man and a woman, were Jews living in Shanghai. The attack, in which 23 people were also injured, is the deadliest in Morocco since 12 suicide bombers killed 33 people in co-ordinated strikes in Casablanca eight years ago. The latest attack was a blow to Morocco’s most important tourist city. Tourism is Morocco’s biggest source of foreign currency and the second biggest employer after agriculture. “We are going to work very hard so that this does not have an impact on tourism in Marrakesh,” said Salaheddine Mezouar, the finance minister.”To go to a country as a tourist and return dead is a terrible thing.” Fernando Reinares, a terrorism expert at Spain’s Royal Elcano Institute, told RNE radio there were few doubts that jihadists were behind the attack. “Morocco and its monarchy are a target for al-Qaida and for the north African groups that have been associated with al-Qaida.” The attack adds to the challenges facing Morocco’s ruler, King Mohammed VI, at a time when he is trying to prevent uprisings elsewhere in the Arab world from reaching his normally stable kingdom. He recently pardoned a raft of political prisoners, including some alleged militant Islamists. The monarch has promised to reform the constitution to placate pro-democracy protesters. But more protests are planned for Sunday. Morocco Global terrorism al-Qaida Giles Tremlett guardian.co.uk
Continue reading …Click here to view this media I’ll bet the sweet ladies of the Spring Mountain Republican Women’s club in Nevada weren’t really prepared for this. Speaking before several GOP women’s groups who invited him to Las Vegas, Donald Trump launched into a profanity-laced tirade against President Obama and his administration’s policies. Among the bons mots , as you can hear in the amateur video above [ originals here ]: — Trump would deal with OPEC in order to lower oil prices just by being tough: “We have nobody in Washington that sits back and said, you’re not going to raise that f—-ing price,” — Here’s how he’d tell China he intends to slap a tariff on their exports: “Listen you mother——ers we’re going to tax you 25 percent!” He sprinkled obscenities throughout, including one not in the video, describing Iraq: “We build a school, we build a road, they blow up the school, we build another school, we build another road they blow them up, we build again, in the meantime we can’t get a f—king school in Brooklyn.” Oh, and apparently he believes that the idea that Iraq could become a democracy is a joke. Which makes you wonder about his audience of former George W. Bush devotees — especially when they applaud this loudly. Now, I understand that, you know, when in Rome, blah blah blah. But you gotta wonder if Franklin Graham or the rest of the Religious Right still think Trump is a good horse to be backing, you know what I mean? Not to mention the Spring Mountain Republican Women’s Club.
Continue reading …President Barack Obama released his long-form birth certificate on Wednesday, but not even that could put the birther myth to bed for The Nation magazine's Washington editor Chris Hayes. Guest hosting the April 28 edition of “Last Word,” Hayes seized the moment to equate those who believe the president was not born in America with those who exercise healthy skepticism about anthropogenic global warming. “The issue of the president's origins is one thing,” began Hayes. “The reality is global warming quite another. There seem to be the same dynamics at play in both.” [Video embedded after the page break.] Hayes brought two guests to flesh out his opening salvo: Chris Mooney, described as a “science and political journalist” for Mother Jones magazine, a left-wing publication, and Jonathan Kay, managing editor of Canada's National Post newspaper, who wrote a book about conspiracy theorists. Responding to Hayes's attempt to compare birthers to global warming skeptics, Kay explained, “Well, ultimately, conspiracy theories are a way to reconcile people's ideology with reality. It's a bridge between the world they want to be and the world that exists.” Throughout the segment, Hayes probed Kay and Mooney about how the minds of conspiracy theorists operate, not-so-subtly suggesting global warming skeptics have some sort of neurological disorder. “Are conspiracy theories a difference in kind or a difference in degree from regular belief formation?” asked Hayes, who cited the UN's Intergovernmental Panel Climate Change report as an example of such belief formation. “Is there something that delineates conspiracist belief formulations from sort of normal belief formation?” Kay was eager to give Hayes the answer he was looking for: “It's a pathological way of thinking, which is utterly different from rational thought.” For his part, Mooney turned a discussion about ostensibly fact-driven scientific research into a partisan screed against Republicans that was devoid of fact and research. “I think there's a reality gap between the parties,” asserted Mooney. “Republicans and Democrats believe different things about a lot of issues and it turns out Republicans are more likely to wrong.” Wrapping up the lengthy segment, Hayes pressed Mooney and Kay to explain how to “combat” the “conspiracists” who don't blindly subscribe to global warming theories: Because that strikes me, in the case of global warming particularly, which is a very, very high-stakes conspiracy theory, that a majority of Republicans out there share – John, what did you learn about how you break – you sort of break this kind of vicious cycle that conspiracists are under? Kay went a step further than Hayes, not only likening birthers to global warming skeptics, but also conflating global warming skeptics with racists, sexists, and homophobes. “We have taught ourselves to get around racism, for the most part,” argued Kay. “We've taught ourselves to get around homophobia and sexism in some cases. We have to teach people that conspiracism is a way of thinking that is pathological, and you have to exercise your mental self discipline to try to get around it.” Speaking of using circuitous logic and baseless assertions to argue that those who question global warming are pathological nutcases akin to birthers, ThinkProgress noted yesterday that the storms which killed more than 280 people struck states “represented by climate pollution deniers .” The left-wing blog cited Kevin Trenberth, head of the Climate Analysis Section at the National Center for Atmospheric Research, to make the case that it's not absurd to draw a causal connection between severe weather events and global warming: “Since global warming is unequivocal, the null hypothesis should be that all weather events are affected by global warming.” In science, the null hypothesis is usually that there is no relationship between two variables and it is the role of the researcher to disprove the null hypothesis by showing such a relationship exists. Apparently the liberals at ThinkProgress and MSNBC only care about scientific method when it advances their political agenda. A transcript of the segment can be found below: MSNBC Last Word April 28, 2011 8:40 p.m. EDT CHRIS HAYES, The Nation: Last night, Stephen Colbert joked about birthers still not being satisfied with the long-form birth certificate released by the president yesterday. Satire these days is never too far from the truth. A snap robo-poll done by Survey USA shows that 18 percent of respondents still have doubts about where the president was born. Another 10 percent say the long-form version released yesterday is a forged document. At some level, I got to say, these are heartening numbers, because frankly I thought they'd be higher. Still, I won't be surprised if we see those numbers creep back up as the forces of denial re-group, and launch their inevitable bevy of conspiracy theories about the document's authenticity. At the end of the day, the birther issue is not the biggest deal in the world. People believe all kinds of crazy stuff. The real issue is the relationship our public life and political debates bear to reality, how facts link up to policy. That has become disturbingly un-moored over the last decade. The issue of the president's origins is one thing. The reality is global warming quite another. There seem to be the same dynamics at play in both. Former White House Spokesman Robert Gibbs said yesterday “There are no more arbiters of truth, so whatever you can prove factually, somebody else can find something else to point to it with enough ferocity to get people to believe it. We've crossed some Rubicon into the unknown.” Well said. Case in point, the same day President Obama released his long-form birth certificate, Oklahoma State House approved a birther bill, requiring presidential candidates to provide proof of citizenship to get on the ballot. Joining me now, Jonathan Kay, managing editor of Canada's National Post newspaper and author of “Among the Truthers: a Journey through America's Growing Conspiracist Underground,” and Chris Mooney, science and political journalist, and author of “We Can't Handle the Truth” in the current issue of Mother Jones. Both are excellent reads. I recommend them highly. Jonathan, let me start with you. For the new book, you spent three years immersed in the world of conspiracy theorists. And I wonder what you ended up concluding about what powers them, what draws people to them and keeps people attached to them? JONATHAN KAY, National Post: Well, ultimately, conspiracy theories are a way to reconcile people's ideology with reality. It's a bridge between the world they want to be and the world that exists. So in the case of the birthers, there are a lot of people who just cannot get their head around the fact that Americans elected a somewhat left-wing president and it doesn't jibe with their view of the United States. It doesn't jive with their view of the way reality should be. So they have created a sort of mythology that allows them to believe it didn't really happen, that Obama is actually illegitimate, that all they have to do is unmask him as a sort of hoax president and history will be that set right. It allows them to, as I say, reconcile the world they want, which is a right-wing America with a right-wing president, with the world that actually exists, with Obama in the White House. HAYES: I like this phrase, “the bridge from ideology to reality.” Chris, in the article you wrote for Mother Jones sort of about the science of belief formation – there's a lot research that sort of backs up that premise, right? CHRIS MOONEY, “MOTHER JONES”: There is a science of why we deny science, right? There are facts about why we can't accept facts. Basically, it's a theory called motivated reasoning. What it does is it takes modern neuroscience and shows, you know, how our processes of reasoning are actually driven by emotion. And we make up our minds subconsciously before we are even actually consciously thinking what we think and then we are down a path and we're already rationalizing. HAYES: And so the rational thought is actually this sort of this retroactive construction. So here's the question I have for both of you: you know, the big question I think is – and the profound one is are conspiracy theories a difference in kind or a difference in degree from regular belief formation? I mean, are we – because at the end of the day, people who are watching this are trusting that I'm not lying to them. And when I read a newspaper or when I read the Intergovernmental Panel Climate Change report from the UN, I trust that the whole thing isn't a fabricated hoax. So how different is – John, maybe you can answer this. Is there something that delineates conspiracist belief formulations from sort of normal belief formation, with all of its biases, et cetera? KAY: Yes, there is. And that is the fact that if you take a normal, rational person and you give them contrary evidence to what they believe, they will re-examine their original hypothesis. Whereas if you take a conspiracy theorists and give them contrary information, they will always simple expand the circle of conspirators. So, for instance, in the case of the Birthers, if you way, well, you know, the secretary of health and the governor, they have all said the birth certificate is legitimate, they will simply draw a bigger circle around the conspiracy and say, well, they're in on it too; the media is in on it too; the justice system is in on it too. It's a pathological way of thinking, which is utterly different from rational thought. I actually compare it to religion, in the sense that if you're a committed Christian or a committed Jew or a committed Muslim, it doesn't matter what your faith is. If someone gives you contrary evidence to your beliefs, you wont simply say, well, I guess I'll re-examine my religious beliefs. You'll say I take this on faith. And that's the way I believe. Conspiracy theories, in many ways, are a religious faith for a secular age. HAYES: Chris, that sounds – everything that you just said reminds me somewhat uncannily of some of the social science results that you cite in your article, which is that you do give people confounding information, and they simply reassert the original error. MOONEY: I would say that it is just an extreme version of something to which we are all susceptible. When people read my piece, they said this is kind of like arguing with my spouse. This is kind of like arguing with a member of my family who has different politics. They will never change their mind. They will never change their mind. It's the same process, but it goes farther. And some of us learn checks on the process. Journalists are supposed to learn checks. Scientists are supposed to learn checks. But even these groups, as we know, fall all the time for biases. HAYES: So here's my question. So let's say there's some sort of background. John, you sort of go through a lot of psychological dispositions that might lead people to conspiracist thinking. You talk about our just general biases and the way sort of our brains work. The question is, is Robert Gibbs right that the nature of American public life at this moment makes these problems worse, exacerbates them as opposed to mitigates them? KAY: I think the big problem is the technology. Because this has always been part of human psychology. The problem is now technology, in particular the media on the Internet, allow people to inhabit their own reality on websites. The conspiracy theorists that I interviewed don't watch shows like this. They don't watch the mass media. Typically, they are in their own little self- contained Internet bubble of people who think like they do. So in their mind, they are not outsiders because they are surrounded every day, virtually, by people who think the way they do. This has never existed in American society prior to the Internet. Conspiracy theorists always had to go outside, interact with people, turn on the mass media, read a newspaper eventually, because that's the only way to get news. And so they were confronted with the fact that they were outsiders. That reality doesn't exist now. They can go into a custom made reality, inhabited only by people who share their esoteric beliefs. That is new. HAYES: Chris, is it your sense of the Internet – this is like knock number one on the Internet, right, that the Internet is sort of reinforcing this cocooning, this sort of knowledge cocooning. MOONEY: It's a role, but I don't think it's the only factor. I think there's a reality gap between the parties. Republicans and Democrats believe different things about a lot of issues and it turns out Republicans are more likely to wrong. We can talk about that. But one of the factors is, you know, everyone has their own experts now. There's been a 30, 40-year campaign to build right wing think tanks to fight back against academic experts. And so, you know, everyone can say I've got a PhD who thinks this. And for every PhD, there's an equal and opposite PhD. HAYES: Finally, in the vaunted tradition of cable news, I want to give each of you 30 seconds to say what we can do to combat it. Because that strikes me, in the case of global warming particularly, which is a very, very high-stakes conspiracy theory, that a majority of Republicans out there share – John, what did you learn about how you break – you sort of break this kind of vicious cycle that conspiracists are under? KAY: Well, ultimately, you have to teach people that conspiracism, which is what I call this way of thinking, is akin to any other pathological way of thinking. We have taught ourselves to get around racism, for the most part. We've taught ourselves to get around homophobia and sexism in some cases. We have to teach people that conspiracism is a way of thinking that is pathological, and you have to exercise your mental self-discipline to try to get around it. HAYES: Chris, you get the last word on this. MOONEY: Well, it seems like emotions are what drive us down the wrong path. So we need to de-emotionalize issues. We often, if we want to change somebody's mind, if not hit them with facts, we have to hit them with a different way of thinking about them that is more constant with what they feel is the way the world should work. It's a different strategy. HAYES: Chris Mooney, science journalist, has a great piece in Mother Jones, “The Science of Why We Don't Believe in Science.” John Kay from The National Post, author of a great new book called “Among the Truthers.” Gentlemen, thank you so much. I really appreciate it. –Alex Fitzsimmons is a News Analysis intern at the Media Research Center. Click here to follow him on Twitter.
Continue reading …Esther Addley discovers that sharp elbows are the weapons of choice for position-protecting royalists One doesn’t choose to spend the night on the pavement, wrapped in a union flag and wearing a Burger King cardboard crown, for the quality of the rest, and so the huddled forms stretched out on the Mall were in no position to complain about the impromptu bursts of God Save the Queen, some time before 5am. What does matter a great deal, however, is the view. And so any attempt to step over an occupied sleeping bag and into a prime spot was policed ferociously by the early arrivals on behalf of their neighbours. From such territorial alliances, relationships were forming. “We’re new friends!” said Moira Smith from Penrith of Mancunian Marilyn Hughes, whose camping chair was perched next to hers, a few rows back from the barriers and opposite Clarence House. They had been talking about what their menfolk were up to (“I hope mine is painting the kitchen,” said Hughes) and the quality of bras from Primark, but also, of course, about what a lovely girl Kate seemed to be, and what a good king William would make, and how this was a little slice of history in the making. It was, perhaps inevitably, that sense of historical significance – the rarity of the event, the memorable experience for the children – that was cited again and again by the eager flagwavers lining the Mall and Parliament Square. “It just seemed like a fun thing to do,” said 16-year-old Ruairidh Morgan from Reigate, who had gallantly spent the night in a chair so that his Canadian cousin and her friends could take the tent. He’d had a bit of stick from his mates for coming – “there was some hating, but it’s cool”. Ultimately, though, he said: “You don’t get many chances to do this, do you?” Six friends from University College London had dressed in charity shop wedding dresses – “to upstage Kate” – with a number of them still wearing their pyjamas and furry boots underneath. Greg Kendrick and Susan Simmonds had travelled from Ontario especially, bedecking themselves in maple leaves. “Well, he’s Diana’s son,” said Simmonds, “and I cherished her. I mean, I wouldn’t have come if it had been Princess Beatrice getting married.” Mostly, she said, they felt they really had to see it. Quite what they were going to see was unclear, however. With the Metropolitan police estimating spectator numbers at a million, half of them on the Mall alone, many of those who came for “the spectacle” will have seen little more than a brief flash of helmet, or a glimpse of a yellow hat. The most devoted, of course, took no chances. Among professional royal watchers, the most sought-after pavement real estate was that outside the west door of Westminster Abbey, with a prime view not only of the bride and groom in their first moments together as man and wife, but also – if they were lucky – glimpses of Ben Fogle and Tara Palmer-Tomkinson. Here the true royal devotees, identified by their well-worn union flag hats and jackets and detailed knowledge of the workings of the camera crews, waved small plastic flags on demand and bellowed at the assembled broadcasters to interview them (“Don’t talk to her, she’s just arrived,” one shouted). Eleanor Abadesco had flown from the Philippines for the occasion. “I’m a bit of a royal addict,” she said. Chandrani Kasturiratne was here for Charles and Diana in 1981, and arrived here early on Wednesday with her granddaughter Daniella. Having followed the lives of the royals so closely for so long, it felt like a family occasion, she said, expressing as did several others a sense of pride in William, on behalf of the absent Diana. “I think he’s the son she would be really proud of.” But things had changed since 1981: “I wouldn’t say the atmosphere is as electric as it was then. There’s no one singing and dancing in the streets.” Daniella, 17, had been shocked at the “feisty” territorial aggression. “Everyone’s been fighting over their plot. When you go to sleep, people are trying to move you out of the way. I think people are a bit nicer on the Mall.” That was a moot point. On the Mall they were still arriving but with the crowd already seven deep on both sides of the boulevard, there were some attempts at sharp-elbowed manoeuvring. The police, dressed in traditional uniforms rather than fluorescent jackets, were beginning to be concerned about the crush at the end of Horse Guards Parade and were sending newcomers on lengthy detours. Though the dedicated royalists and committed overnighters in the front rows were overwhelmingly white, the crowd mingling more loosely behind them was much more diverse, with young Asian families in headscarves and union flags mingling with tourists from Brazil, China, Mexico and elsewhere. At about 10am, things finally started happening, as dignitaries and the royal B-list set off from Buckingham Palace in hired minibuses – which at least could be glimpsed, if not seen into – followed by smart black cars. The Sperlings from Staines, on the St James’s Park side of the Mall, had found a couple of periscopes; even with them, however, they could see no more than the top inch or two of what may have been the Earl and Countess of Wessex. Kate Middleton and her father were carried up the Mall by a bubbling cheer that started with a murmur and swelled to an excitable shriek as they passed. Finally, when the procession had passed, the ranks broke and made a bolt for the burger vans and the long rows of portable toilets. After the service – Jerusalem got a cheer and the national anthem got the full last-night-of-the-Proms flag-waving – it was back in position for the return leg. “William and Kate are on the Mall!” someone shouted. Then: “I saw something! A bit of white!” and “Did she have a tiara?” It didn’t matter that they had seen less than almost anyone else with an interest in the day, watching at home on TV. “We’ve got it videoed at home,” said Susanne Parsons from Eastbourne. “We’ll be watching it tonight if we can find our coach home.” Finally came the much-anticipated opening of the Mall and Buckingham Gate, though the decision to shepherd the crowd along the length of the road was met with testy shouts and even some booing among those closest to the palace, many of whom had been there longest, who suddenly found themselves at the very back of the crowd. “Everybody’s tired,” said one woman to her agitated neighbour. One mother, witnessing the swelling roadblock of bodies around the Victoria Memorial as the royals emerged from the palace, grabbed her two young daughters by the hands and halted them were they were. “Right, William and Kate are on the balcony,” she said, relaying events from a radio speaker in one ear. “He’s on the right, she’s on the left, the bridesmaids are there. They’re pointing and waving.” A cheer. “OK he’s kissed her. Come on girls, let’s go.” Royal wedding Monarchy Weddings Prince William Kate Middleton Esther Addley guardian.co.uk
Continue reading …Attempt by Libya loyalist soldiers to retake a key crossing from rebel hands leads to border skirmish with Tunisian forces The Libyan civil war has briefly spilled into Tunisia as the west of the country saw heavy fighting on two fronts and Nato reported that Muammar Gaddafi’s forces were laying anti-shipping mines in the sea off Misrata. Loyalist troops made incursions over the border into Tunisia in a battle to retake a key crossing from rebel hands, drawing condemnation from Tunis. Libyan soldiers were captured by Tunisian forces after firing indiscriminately in clashes that lasted about 90 minutes, according to reports. Witnesses said three Tunisians were injured. Any sign of the Libyan conflict stretching into Tunisa would have serious regional implications. “Given the gravity of what has happened … the Tunisian authorities have informed the Libyans of their extreme indignation and demand measures to put an immediate stop to these violations,” the Tunisian foreign ministry said. Rebels later claimed the Wazin-Dehiba crossing was back in their hands. “Gaddafi forces are no longer in Dehiba. They were defeated,” a witness named as Akram told the Associated Press. Control of the crossing has changed several times in the past 10 days. More than 30,000 refugees have flooded across the border since fighting intensified about three weeks ago, and it is a critical supply and escape route for the besieged opposition. The area is dominated by Berbers, who have suffered systematic repression under the Gaddafi regime. Nato said it was mounting air strikes against loyalist targets in two towns in the region, Zintan and Yafrin. It said its aircraft have destroyed a dozen tanks in the area this month. Heavy fighting in Misrata centred on the area around the airport, the last position held by Gaddafi’s forces after being defeated in the city centre. After several days of low-intensity clashes, rebels attacked early in the morning with automatic weapons, rocket-propelled grenades and heavy machine guns. Government troops responded with missiles and tanks, setting fire to a shoe factory and sending a pall of black smoke across the city. “It’s very difficult against tanks,” said Rami Pengharpia, 21, a rebel fighter wounded in the back by shrapnel. “Only Nato can do something against them.” On the western side of Misrata, where rebels have been slowly forcing Gaddafi’s forces back along the road to Tripoli, there was close-quarter fighting near the satellite town on Zawiya al-Majhoub. Tanks fired at rebel positions, and into civilian areas. Mortars were also used. By mid-afternoon at least 15 rebel fighters and civilians had died, according to doctors in Misrata. Several dozen people were injured, including three young siblings, two boys and a girl, hurt by shrapnel after a shell fired by Gaddafi’s forces struck their house. “Gaddafi knows that he cannot win in Misrata as long as Nato is flying above,” said Dr Khalid Abu Falgha. “But he is still trying to kill as many people as he can by shelling indiscriminately.” Gaddafi’s army also continued shelling the port, the city’s lifeline, as Nato said its warships had caught government naval forces trying to lay mines in the harbour. Brigadier Rob Weighill, the British director of Nato’s Libyan operations, said his ships had intercepted small boats laying mines in the harbour, which is the only entry point for food and medical supplies into Misrata. “It again shows [Gaddafi's] complete disregard for international law and his willingness to attack humanitarian delivery efforts,” Weighill said in Naples. Aid agencies have evacuated thousands of civilians and injured people from the port. Rebels have also brought in light weapons from eastern Libya by sea. The leader of the rebellion in Misrata made an urgent plea to the international community for weapons that would allow his fighters not just to defend the besieged city, but to topple Gaddafi. Khalifa al-Zwawi, an appeal court judge who heads Misrata’s transitional council, told the Guardian that rebel forces would eject the last of Gaddafi’s troops from the city very soon. “The most important thing for us now is arms. We need weapons that are suitable to take on Gaddafi. As soon as our freedom fighters reach people in other cities they will join our revolt,” he said. Zwawi said the number of dead in Misrata, excluding Gaddafi’s forces, exceeded 1,000. More than 4,000 have been injured, with hundreds more kidnapped by loyalist troops and taken to other cities. Nato said it has conducted more than 4,200 sorties over Libya since taking control of the international alliance’s military operation. More than 1,700 were air strikes, not all of which identified or struck targets. In addition 19 Nato ships are patrolling the central Mediterranean. Among the targets hit during the aerial onslaught were 220 tanks and armoured personnel carriers, 200 ammunition facilities and 70 surface-to-air missile systems. Libya Muammar Gaddafi Tunisia Arab and Middle East unrest Middle East Harriet Sherwood Xan Rice guardian.co.uk
Continue reading …Daimler follows trend for growing confidence in car industry and doubles first-quarter profits as Chinese sales rise 82% Booming demand for luxury cars in China has helped Daimler double its profits in the first quarter of the year and highlighted a wider turnaround in confidence for automobile makers. Sales of Mercedes-branded cars and sports utility vehicles (SUVs) increased by 82% in the world’s most populous nation compared to 4% growth in western Europe and America. The German-based carmaker reported earnings of €1.18bn (£1.05bn) compared with €612m in the same period of 2010, while revenues were up 15% at €24.7bn. “We achieved excellent earnings in the first quarter. This puts us well ahead of our planning and confirms our positive outlook for the year 2011,” said Dieter Zetsche, chairman of Daimler and head of the Mercedes division. The strong performance confirms a trend highlighted by other companies recently, including Volkswagen, Volvo and particularly Ford, which had its best quarter for 13 years . The industry has been in a parlous position since the banking crisis of 2008 triggered a global recession and a slump in car sales that led governments to introduce a “cash for clunkers” financial incentive scheme. Recent upsets have included the Japanese earthquake which has disrupted output among companies such as Toyota with major British production factories. Daimler itself said it had been forced to write down €49m at its Daimler Truck division, which has a joint venture in Japan, and a further €29m at Daimler Financial Services. But the truck operation – the biggest in the world – generally performed very strongly, raising operating earnings from €130m in the first quarter of 2010 to €415m this year. Overall, Daimler sold 15% more cars and commercial vehicles in the first three months of this year while Mercedes’ operating profits rose 60% to €1.2bn. Bodo Uebber, chief financial officer at Daimler, said there was no indication that demand in China for Mercedes would ease off in the near future and the group expected the marque to hit record sales of 1.2m cars this year helped by its top-of-the-range S-Class model. Similar trends – a burgeoning middle class seeking out luxury vehicles – can be seen in India. However, the City was not impressed by Daimler’s figures after far stronger than expected results from others. Daimler shares were trading down 2%. Tim Schuldt, a car industry analyst at Equinet Bank, said: “While the first quarter was definitely a good quarter for Daimler, it also shows that it becomes more difficult for the company to surprise positively as expectations are high.” Volkswagen announced this week that it had tripled its profits in the first quarter, crediting mounting demand in China for its VW and Audi brands. Volvo has also doubled its earnings and said its European orders were up by nearly 50% and its North American ones more than tripled, while Ford said US sales had risen by 16% as customers sought fuel-efficient vehicles such as the Escape. This helped Ford’s total vehicle sales to reach 1.4m, up by 150,000 vehicles. But some firms are still struggling. Spyker Cars – the owner of the Saab marque – has reported a net loss of €76.3m as it struggled to find cash to restart production at its factory in Sweden. Output has been at a standstill since earlier this month after Spyker ran out of money to pay Saab suppliers. Spyker has been trying to interest a handful of Chinese carmakers to put up some cash for Saab, while China’s state-owned SAIC now owns the MG brand and has just launched the new MG6 fastback . The Society of Motor Manufacturers and Traders in Britain reported last week that 135,052 cars were produced in the UK last month – a 14.8% increase on the March 2010 figure. Automotive industry Volkswagen (VW) Ford Germany China Terry Macalister guardian.co.uk
Continue reading …New York festival honours Man and Boy but top awards go to Swedish and Israeli directors A British film about the death of a suspected paedophile has won the award for best narrative short at the Tribeca film festival in New York. Man and Boy, which was directed by David Leon and Marcus McSweeney, stars Eddie Marsan. It was inspired by the case of Scott Campbell, who fell to his death from a tower block in 2008 after trying to flee a mob who thought he had sexually assaulted a boy. The jury said: “The jury liked this film’s marriage of brilliant acting, superb technical prowess and provocative subject matter. It’s a movie memorable for upending expectations.” There was another UK success at the festival when the British writer and director Jerry Rothwell won the best feature film prize in an online competition involving visitors to the Tribeca website. His documentary film, Donor Unknown, is about JoEllen Marsh, a woman who was one of the first generation of children conceived through donor insemination and decided to embark on a quest find her biological father. The top honours were taken by She Monkeys, a Swedish film about two teenage girls on a young women’s equestrian acrobatics team whose friendship turns to rivalry; and a documentary, Bombay Beach, about a range of characters living on the fringes of a ghost town in the Californian desert. She Monkeys, the first feature length production by Sweden’s Lisa Aschan, won best narrative feature and was described by a jury as “haunting, resonant but never posed”. “This film speaks of sex, adolescence, power and ambition. It is original and authentic,” the jury said. Bombay Beach, by the Israeli director Alma Har’el and featuring music by Bob Dylan, won the best documentary prize for its depiction of the remains of a community in the Salton Sea area, a once thriving holiday destination that was abandoned by visitors decades ago. The documentary jury said the choice was unanimous for the film’s “beauty, lyricism, empathy and invention”. Ramadhan ‘Shami’ Bizimana won best actor in the Rwandan and Australian film about genocide, Grey Matter, which is director Kivu Ruhorahoza’s first feature. Carice van Houten was named best female actor for Black Butterflies, a drama based on the life during apartheid of South African poet Ingrid Jonker. The awards were announced at a ceremony on Thursday night. Now in its 10 year, Tribeca was created in a bid to revive the New York neighbourhood after the 11 September 2001 attacks on the World Trade Centre. Awards and prizes United States Ben Quinn guardian.co.uk
Continue reading …Campaigners are pressing for an examination of Jimmy Mubenga’s death during removal on Heathrow flight The United Nations special rapporteur on torture is being asked to examine the circumstances surrounding the death of an Angolan man who collapsed while being deported on a commercial flight from Heathrow. Campaigners are sending a file on Jimmy Mubenga to the UN and each member of the Commons home affairs select committee, calling for a comprehensive review of the way people are deported from the UK. Deborah Coles, of the Inquest charity, said: “Given the profound human rights issues that this case raises we felt we needed to put pressure not only on parliament but also on the UN so that these issues are examined properly by the state and international human rights mechanisms to ensure enforceable and accountable learning.” Mubenga collapsed and died as he was being deported on a commercial flight from Heathrow in October. Passengers told police they saw three G4S security guards heavily restraining Mubenga, who they said had been complaining of breathing difficulties before he collapsed. The guards were later arrested in connection with the death and have been bailed until 4 May. However, campaigners fear any legal process could take months or even years to complete and warn that there needs to be a comprehensive review of UK deportations to prevent a further tragedy. Mubenga’s wife, Adrienne Makenda Kambana, who lives in east London with the couple’s five children, said she was supporting the move. “Jimmy was a loving and caring father and husband. My children and I don’t understand why he was being deported … We don’t want this to happen to anyone else. We want to know how and why this happened to Jimmy. Why did he die?” The file is being sent to UN special rapporteurs on extra-judicial summary executions, torture and contemporary forms of racism as well as the Council of Europe’s committee on the prevention of torture. Coles said: “The legal processes underway will mean that the systemic issues raised by this death will not be dealt with in a comprehensive or holistic way for a very long time thus frustrating the learning process and the risk of further deaths.” Earlier this year four G4S whistleblowers submitted evidence to the home affairs committee, obtained by the Guardian, that alleged serious failings by G4S. It also contradicted some of what senior G4S officials told MPs at a hearing after Mubenga’s death. Police have interviewed three of the whistleblowers who included a G4S charter operations manager who said he warned seniors they risked “playing russian roulette with detainees’ lives”. Detectives are also seeking to track down other individuals from G4S known to have concerns about safety standards and training at the company. Keith Vaz, the Labour MP who chairs the home affairs committee, said the possibility that whistleblower evidence could assist the police investigation represented progress. The committee has yet to decide whether to recall the G4S officials or hold further evidence sessions. Immigration and asylum United Nations Jimmy Mubenga G4S Keith Vaz Matthew Taylor Paul Lewis guardian.co.uk
Continue reading …Intelligence analyst suspected of passing government secrets to WikiLeaks has undergone a medical and mental evaluation The intelligence analyst suspected of illegally passing government secrets to the WikiLeaks website has been found competent to stand trial, the U.S. Army has said. Spokesman Gary Tallman says a panel of experts completed its medical and mental evaluation of Bradley Manning on April 22, and had informed Army officials of the conclusion. Tallman says no date has been set yet for the initial court hearing, and added that the evaluation board’s findings “have no bearing on the guilt, innocence, or any potential defences of the accused.” Manning’s case is under the jurisdiction of the Army’s Military District of Washington. The Army private is suspected of obtaining hundreds of thousands of classified and sensitive documents while serving in Iraq and providing them to the website. He faces about two dozen charges, including aiding the enemy, that can bring the death penalty or life in prison. Manning was transferred from a Marine Corps prison near Washington last week to a new facility in the Midwest state of Kansas. He passed the lengthy physical and psychiatric evaluation given to new inmates there and received final clearance Thursday to live alongside other inmates, according to the facility’s commander Lt. Col. Dawn Hilton. He had been held at the Marine prison for the eight months after his arrest, and the conditions of his incarceration triggered protests and international inquiries. At that prison, Manning had to surrender his clothes at night and was required to wear a military-issued, suicide-prevention smock. Manning’s attorney and supporters said that was unnecessary and argued his living conditions, including his isolation from other inmates, were inhumane. Pentagon officials consistently said he was being held under appropriate conditions given the seriousness of the charges against him. Bradley Manning US military WikiLeaks United States guardian.co.uk
Continue reading …