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Activists Avaaz turn fire on Murdoch

New York-based Avaaz has launched huge campaigns on issues including the BSkyB takeover and Bradley Manning If you had been on the Strand in London on the day that the high court was considering how to proceed with scores of civil actions against the News of the World for its phone-hacking escapades, you would have seen a peculiar sight. About 30 people were gathered on the steps of the court, the palms of their hands painted red, bearing banners that read: “Murdoch’s men caught red-handed.” On the same day, outside a Sainsbury’s store in Godalming, Surrey, where the culture secretary, Jeremy Hunt, was holding his weekly constituency surgery, another group of 25 people had gathered. They were leafleting shoppers about the News of the World scandal and calling on the government to delay approval of Rupert Murdoch’s bid to takeover BSkyB until a full public inquiry could be held. Both events were the work of one of the most successful of a new breed of internet campaigner, in this case a global activism network called Avaaz , which means voice in Urdu and several other languages. It put out an alert to its half a million UK members calling for activists to attend the two stunts, with impressive results. To get a sense of what Avaaz is and how it operates you have to switch the lens 3,000 miles to a pleasantly light-filled office with great views overlooking Union Square in Manhattan. This is where Avaaz has its headquarters – if an organic network of internet activists can be said to have a headquarters. Avaaz, formed in 2007, has more than eight million members in 193 countries and can claim to be the largest online activist community in the world. This year alone it has attracted an extra one million members and it is now wholly self-funding with about $20m (£12m) raised so far in online donations. “We have no ideology per se,” says director Ricken Patel. “Our mission is to close the gap between the world we have and the world most people everywhere want. Idealists of the world unite!” A Canadian who holds dual British citizenship, Patel was involved in student activism while at Oxford University studying PPE and later at Harvard. After three years working for aid groups around the world and a stint at the UN, he witnessed the power of the internet as a volunteer for the US liberal campaign MoveOn.org . What MoveOn tries to do with domestic American politics, Avaaz applies globally. Its weekly meeting of staff, held via a Skype conference call, gives a taste of its ambitions. With the Guardian listening in, several of the 35 Avaaz staffers join the call from their bases in San Francisco, Toronto, Mexico City, Rio, London, Paris, New Delhi and Sydney. The team cheered when the US staff began by talking about this week’s news that Bradley Manning, the alleged WikiLeaks source, had been moved to a new, more lenient, prison. Avaaz had organised an online petition signed by 530,000 members calling on President Barack Obama to “end the torture” of the US soldier. Next, the Canadian staff talked about an Avaaz campaign to force the Ottowa government to release a report into alleged misuse of G8 funds, while the Delhi staff gave an update on the health of Anna Hazare, an activist they are backing who has been on hunger strike in protest at Indian political corruption. While most of Avaaz’s projects are initiated by the staff themselves, every few days they survey a random collection of 10,000 members to ask them which campaigns they want to prioritise. They also monitor constantly online statistics that reveal which campaigns are attracting most interest among members, enabling the membership itself to chose the network’s focus. “Democratic accountability is hard-wired into the way we work. Each campaign is only as successful as the number of people who choose to join it,” Patel says. The idea of a campaign against the News of the World was received with great enthusiasm by Avaaz’s members, particularly in the UK. Patel says: “We have long seen Rupert Murdoch as a powerful threat to the health of our democracies through his domination of the media environment. When we polled our members, they were strongly in favour of trying to stop his takeover of BSkyB until a full public inquiry into News Corp could be held.” Avaaz teamed up with its fellow online lobbying group 38 Degrees to send 60,000 submissions opposing the Murdoch bid to Ofcom. Late last year, Avaaz members sent 50,000 messages to David Cameron and Hunt calling for a review by the Competition Commission, supported by a petition signed by 400,000 global members. To press home the point, it targeted 10 key constituencies of politicians involved in the bid decision and invested in TV and newspaper adverts arguing against the takeover. The overall aim, according to Avaaz’s Bristol-based campaign director Alex Wilks, was to get “tens of thousands of citizens signing up, even just for five minutes, so they can express themselves and make a difference”. But he says it is not enough just to sit back and rely on the internet to do the heavy lifting: “We have also to get into politicians’ faces and make sure they know how many people feel passionately about what they are, or are not, doing.” Phone hacking BSkyB News Corporation Rupert Murdoch BSkyB News International Jeremy Hunt News of the World Bradley Manning Television industry Media business Newspapers Newspapers & magazines National newspapers Protest Barack Obama Internet United States Ed Pilkington guardian.co.uk

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Osborne faces key test of austerity

• Economists predict slight growth after winter chill • Warm Easter may cause spike in second quarter George Osborne faces a key test of his austerity policies this week when official data will demonstrate whether Britain’s economy has returned to growth after the shock 0.5% contraction at the end of last year. Such is the level of interest in the GDP numbers for the first three months of 2011 that the Office for National Statistics is taking the unusual step of holding a live briefing. The last time the ONS made such a move was in January 2010, when Britain’s recession was deemed to have ended. The contraction in the economy in the last quarter of 2010 was blamed on the unusually heavy snow; without the impact of the weather, said experts, the growth in the economy would have been flat. Economists such as Howard Archer, chief UK and European economist at IHS Global Insight, are forecasting that the economy will have grown by 0.6%-0.7% in the first quarter of this year – but caution that it will not signal a strong recovery. “While at first glance this looks a decent performance, in actual fact it would represent a far from dynamic performance after the weather-influenced contraction of 0.5% in the fourth quarter of 2010 … just as the fourth quarter 2010 contraction overstated the economy’s weakness, so growth in the first quarter of 2011 will highly likely overstate its strength,” Archer said. The coalition is aiming to rebalance the economy and stimulate manufacturing and may be encouraged by suggestions that one of the UK’s largest car manufacturers is considering an expansion that could create more than 1,000 jobs. Jaguar Land Rover is reportedly considering whether to build a new engine plant in the UK, with Wolverhampton and south Wales the potential destinations. A spokesperson for the Indian-owned manufacturer declined to comment but said the company had “ambitious” plans for growth. The UK car industry has recovered from its nadir in the 1970s and 80s and exports £5bn worth of motor vehicles a year – although Japanese manufacturers in the UK are being hit by a lack of parts caused by last month’s earthquake. Even before the first-quarter numbers are published, economists are already focusing on the second quarter and trying to gauge the impact of the late Easter and royal wedding on the economy. Some argue that the loss of official working days will reduce growth; others argue that consumer spending could be artificially inflated by the public holidays coinciding with unseasonably hot weather. PwC predicted that London’s economy could benefit by £107m from the wedding as people travel to the capital. Waitrose, the supermarket arm of John Lewis, said the wedding had boosted sales. It said sales in the week ending 23 April were 10% higher than the week before Easter last year. Easter Saturday saw record sales of barbecue items such as Pimm’s and free-range sausages. Mark Price, managing director of Waitrose, said: “Shoppers are already stocking up for their royal wedding celebrations, whether it’s a fully fledged street party or simply a glass of English fizz with family and friends.” In the coming months, Archer expects growth to “moderate appreciably as the fiscal squeeze increasingly kicks in from early April, some temporary growth drivers wane and consumers limit their spending in the face of serious headwinds, most notably the major squeeze on their purchasing power”. The economy data will be scrutinised by the Bank of England’s monetary policy committee, which is split over whether to raise interest rates from their historic 0.5% low to counter inflation. Chris Williamson, chief economist at Markit, said: “Only an especially strong GDP reading would risk tipping the heavily split Bank of England’s policymakers towards tightening in early May.” Economic growth (GDP) Economics Economic policy George Osborne Liberal-Conservative coalition Conservatives Jill Treanor Dan Milmo guardian.co.uk

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Chris Matthews’ Entire British Panel Corrects His Claim Blair Was Closer to Clinton – No, It Was Bush

There was a marvelous moment on this weekend's “Chris Matthews Show” when the host literally stuck his foot in his mouth claiming in front of four British journalists that former Prime Minister Tony Blair “was much closer emotionally and politically to Bill Clinton” than George W. Bush. Guest's Andrew Sullivan of the Daily Beast and Gillian Tett of the Financial Times both immediately shook their heads as the BBC's Katty Kay and Matt Frei said “No” and “Wrong” (video follows with transcript and commentary): MATT FREI, BBC: I think Katty has a point there. I mean, you mentioned the word marriage earlier. The special relationship is like an arranged marriage. And for that arranged marriage to be happy, it needs genuine love. We had the love between Tony Blair and George W. Bush. It was perhaps a bit of a fatal attraction. We didn't have the love between Bush's father and John Major. You remember John Major? But we had the love between Reagan and Thatcher. So there needs to be some genuine affection. The chemistry at the top needs to work for everything else to click in, otherwise Katty’s point about schizophrenia is right. We Brits we tend to swing from adulation to revulsion when it comes to… CHRIS MATTHEWS, HOST: Revulsion, okay. Well let me ask you, Gillian. I actually, just to correct one thing. I thought that Matt, that Tony Blair was much closer emotionally and politically to Bill Clinton, that's what I thought. [DAILY BEAST’S ANDREW SULLIVAN AND FINANCIAL TIMES’S GILLIAN TETT SHAKE THEIR HEADS] KATTY KAY, BBC: No. FREI: No. KAY: He was closer to Bush. FREI: Wrong, wrong. Emotionally and intellectually probably closer to George Bush. KAY: And that surprised Brits a lot and disappointed Brits a lot. MATTHEWS: It disappoints me. Yes, I imagine it does, but not as much as being proved wrong by all of his guests with cameras rolling. Nice job, Chris.

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US scientists get glimpse of antihelium

Heaviest particles of antimatter seen in a lab survive for about 10 billionths of a second before crashing into collider’s detector They were gone as soon as they appeared, but for a fleeting moment they were the heaviest particles of antimatter a laboratory has seen. Scientists in the US produced a clutch of antihelium particles, the antimatter equivalents of the helium nucleus, after smashing gold ions together nearly 1bn times at close to the speed of light. The discovery of antihelium at the Relativistic Heavy Ion Collider at Brookhaven national laboratory in New York will aid the search for exotic phenomena in the distant universe, including antimatter versions of stars and even galaxies. Antimatter looks and behaves like normal matter but has one crucial difference: particles of antimatter have an equal and opposite charge to those that make up the world around us. When antimatter meets matter, the two annihilate one another, leaving nothing but a burst of energy. Researchers at the US laboratory recorded 18 antihelium particles that survived for about 10 billionths of a second before they crashed into the collider’s detector and vanished in the tiniest of fireballs. “Antihelium is stable, so if it doesn’t encounter anything it will survive forever,” said Aihong Tang, a physicist at the laboratory. “Unless there is a major breakthrough in accelerator technology, this will be the heaviest antimatter made for decades to come.” Antihelium is the heaviest breed of antimatter created by scientists, with each particle is roughly 10 million billion times lighter than a grain of sand. The next heaviest that is stable is antilithium, but this is so rare the Brookhaven collider would have to run for thousands of years to detect just one particle. Antimatter is central to one of the greatest mysteries of our existence. Equal amounts of matter and antimatter were created in the Big Bang and should have destroyed each other in one enormous cosmic explosion. But for reasons unknown, only normal matter seems to have survived to make up all we know in the visible universe. Particles of antimatter were first discovered in 1932 when a US researcher found antielectrons, or positrons, among the debris of cosmic ray collisions. Cosmic rays are highly charged streams of particles that can span vast stretches of space. Paul Dirac, the British physicist who predicted antimatter, speculated that some regions of the universe might be home to entire galaxies made of antimatter. The latest research, published in the journal Nature , is a benchmark for space-based experiments that will hunt for antimatter elsewhere in the universe. Next week, the penultimate mission of the space shuttle will deliver a $2bn instrument called the alpha magnetic spectrometer (AMS) to the International Space Station. From there, it will scour space for signs of heavenly bodies made from antimatter. “Collisions among cosmic rays near Earth can produce antimatter, but the odds of these collisions producing an intact antihelium nucleus are so vanishingly small that finding even one would strongly suggest that it had drifted to Earth from a distant region of the universe dominated by antimatter,” said Hans Georg Ritter at the University of California, Berkeley. “Antimatter doesn’t look any different from ordinary matter, but AMS finding just one antihelium nucleus would suggest that some of the galaxies we see are antimatter galaxies.” Particle physics Physics Ian Sample guardian.co.uk

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A brief guide to dictator lit

When not tyrannising their people, it seems despots such as Colonel Gaddafi and Saddam Hussein like to turn their hand to writing books Colonel Gaddafi is a man of eccentricities. There is his bodyguard of “revolutionary nuns”, the heavily armed young women who follow him at all times. There are his flamboyant interviews and dotty gestures, such as last month’s announcement that all Libya’s soldiers and policemen had been simultaneously promoted. Then there are his stories. Yes, when he is not massacring rebels or inspecting women’s uniforms, Gaddafi is a

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North Wales police and Health and Safety Executive launch joint investigation after 11-year-old falls from ride at theme park in Snowdonia An 11-year-old boy has died after falling from a zip wire ride at a forest theme park. North Wales police and the Health and Safety Executive have launched a joint investigation after the boy fell from the ride at GreenWood Forest Park, in Snowdonia. Steve Williams, the operations manager at the theme park, said: “I can confirm that an 11-year-old boy has very sadly passed away. “The Health and Safety Executive have been informed and will be carrying out an investigation, as will we.” Williams said the boy fell from the zip wire ride, which goes up to 30ft at its highest point. He added: “All the safety kit was examined in line with our safety procedure. All was in order.” A spokesman for North Wales police said: “Police were called to the GreenWood Forest Park at 4.40pm following a report that an 11-year-old boy had fallen from one of the rides.” Police said the boy, who has not yet been named, was airlifted to hospital, where he later died. According to the theme park’s website, the zip wire ride, named the SwampFlyer, was launched last week. The website states: “The SwampFlyer is the longest zip wire in Wales.” The attraction spans the entire wooded valley in which the park lies. guardian.co.uk

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It’s never a pretty sight when a “religious” leader whose popularity and financial wellbeing are so closely linked to the welfare of the Republican party has to rationalize the insanity that is extreme Republican politicians. But at least we have the comic relief of the shameless Rev. Franklin Graham trying to look serious as he struggles to find positive things to say about Donald Trump on This Week with Christiane Amanpour: The Rev. Franklin Graham, whose family has served as spiritual advisers to numerous prominent political figures, told “This Week” anchor Christiane Amanpour that businessman Donald Trump might be his candidate of choice in 2012 and that he does not think former Alaska Gov. Sarah Palin will run for president. “Donald Trump, when I first saw that he was getting in, I thought, well, this has got to be a joke,” said Graham. “But the more you listen to him, the more you say to yourself, you know, maybe this guy’s right.” “So, he might be your candidate of choice?” Amanpour asked. “Sure, yes,” Graham responded. Trump has received growing support from conservatives since his name entered the arena as a 2012 Republican contender and currently ranks at the top of polls along with former Massachusetts Gov. Mitt Romney. Amanpour also inquired about Graham’s feelings toward Romney. Graham replied, “No question he is a very capable person, he’s proven himself.” Despite the indications of approval, Graham did not outright back Romney. Nope, and as a fundie, he won’t back a Mormon until he has to — since so many evangelical Christians believe Mormons aren’t even Christians and we won’t want to antagonize the base, will we? (One of the main bones of contention is — and this probably won’t surprise you — is that Mormons don’t believe in a universal hell for all non-believers like fundies do . Which, I guess, is why they lean so heavily instead on social ostracism to keep the members in line.) In December 2010, Graham and Sarah Palin travelled together to Haiti to assist with relief efforts after the country’s devastating earthquake. Amanpour asked Graham about his thoughts on a possible Palin presidential campaign. “I think she likes speaking on the issues, and I agree with many of the issues that she brings up,” Graham told Amanpour, “but I believe – I don’t see her as running for president.” Ah, the bloom is off the Palin rose! More to the point, the Republican establishment is closing ranks to cut off oxygen to a possible Palin candidacy, to the point where even Franklin Graham is saying nice things about serial philanderer Donald Trump. Maybe it’s because they’re both sons of self-made men who inherited their father’s businesses ?

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Yemen leader says he will stand down

President’s warning he will not give in to ‘coup’ follows reports he agreed to quit within a month in exchange for immunity Yemen’s political crisis has reached a new peak with a defiant President Ali Abdullah Saleh warning that he will not give in to a “coup”, a day after reportedly agreeing to leave office within a month. Opposition activists claimed that Saleh, ready to step down in exchange for immunity from prosecution, was playing for time to avoid the fate of the presidents of Tunisia and Egypt, both overthrown by unprecedented displays of people power that have changed the Middle East and north Africa in the last three months. With Libya engulfed in a bloody civil war and escalating violence in Syria apparently signalling a determination by President Bashar al-Assad to crush mounting protests, the Arab Spring appears to be taking another ominous turn. Reports from the Yemeni capital, Sana’a, described thousands of demonstrators out on the streets demanding Saleh give up power at once and chanting: “No negotiation, no dialogue – resign or flee.” Saleh had on Saturday reportedly accepted a Saudi-led Gulf states initiative under which he would stand down in 30 days in exchange for immunity – evidently fearing the fate of Egypt’s Hosni Mubarak. But he sent a different signal in an interview on Sunday , fuelling suspicions that the move was just another tactical manoeuvre. “I will not accept being overthrown in a coup,” the Yemeni president insisted to BBC Arabic. “To whom shall I hand over power? Those who are trying to make a coup? No. We will do it through ballot boxes and referendums. We’ll invite international observers to monitor – but a coup is not acceptable.” Saleh, like Gaddafi and more recently Assad, warned that in “the storm of recent events” in the Arab world, al-Qaida stands to gain from chaos in his country. He also blamed Arab satellite TV channels and the western media for misrepresenting the situation. “Al-Qaida is moving into army camps,” Saleh said. “It’s a very dangerous situation. Why is the west not looking at this terrorist activity and the dangers it holds for the future?” In Syria, opposition supporters said 120 people had been killed in the weekend’s violence, most of them on Friday. William Hague, the foreign secretary, urged Assad to “respond to the legitimate demands of the Syrian people” and warned that Britons should leave the country as soon as possible. Syrian troops and security forces set up checkpoints across the country on Sunday amid reports of new shootings and mass arrests by the secret police as funerals took place for people killed on Saturday. Calls for Assad’s overthrow were heard at a funeral attended by thousands in the southern town of Nawa, where four protesters and five members of the security forces were reported killed. “It’s starting to look like the West Bank,” warned Radwan Ziadeh, the US-based head of the Damascus Centre for Human Rights, who has contacts across the country. Yemen Middle East Arab and Middle East unrest Ian Black guardian.co.uk

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Yemen leader says he will stand down

President’s warning he will not give in to ‘coup’ follows reports he agreed to quit within a month in exchange for immunity Yemen’s political crisis has reached a new peak with a defiant President Ali Abdullah Saleh warning that he will not give in to a “coup”, a day after reportedly agreeing to leave office within a month. Opposition activists claimed that Saleh, ready to step down in exchange for immunity from prosecution, was playing for time to avoid the fate of the presidents of Tunisia and Egypt, both overthrown by unprecedented displays of people power that have changed the Middle East and north Africa in the last three months. With Libya engulfed in a bloody civil war and escalating violence in Syria apparently signalling a determination by President Bashar al-Assad to crush mounting protests, the Arab Spring appears to be taking another ominous turn. Reports from the Yemeni capital, Sana’a, described thousands of demonstrators out on the streets demanding Saleh give up power at once and chanting: “No negotiation, no dialogue – resign or flee.” Saleh had on Saturday reportedly accepted a Saudi-led Gulf states initiative under which he would stand down in 30 days in exchange for immunity – evidently fearing the fate of Egypt’s Hosni Mubarak. But he sent a different signal in an interview on Sunday , fuelling suspicions that the move was just another tactical manoeuvre. “I will not accept being overthrown in a coup,” the Yemeni president insisted to BBC Arabic. “To whom shall I hand over power? Those who are trying to make a coup? No. We will do it through ballot boxes and referendums. We’ll invite international observers to monitor – but a coup is not acceptable.” Saleh, like Gaddafi and more recently Assad, warned that in “the storm of recent events” in the Arab world, al-Qaida stands to gain from chaos in his country. He also blamed Arab satellite TV channels and the western media for misrepresenting the situation. “Al-Qaida is moving into army camps,” Saleh said. “It’s a very dangerous situation. Why is the west not looking at this terrorist activity and the dangers it holds for the future?” In Syria, opposition supporters said 120 people had been killed in the weekend’s violence, most of them on Friday. William Hague, the foreign secretary, urged Assad to “respond to the legitimate demands of the Syrian people” and warned that Britons should leave the country as soon as possible. Syrian troops and security forces set up checkpoints across the country on Sunday amid reports of new shootings and mass arrests by the secret police as funerals took place for people killed on Saturday. Calls for Assad’s overthrow were heard at a funeral attended by thousands in the southern town of Nawa, where four protesters and five members of the security forces were reported killed. “It’s starting to look like the West Bank,” warned Radwan Ziadeh, the US-based head of the Damascus Centre for Human Rights, who has contacts across the country. Yemen Middle East Arab and Middle East unrest Ian Black guardian.co.uk

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Yemen leader says he will stand down

President’s warning he will not give in to ‘coup’ follows reports he agreed to quit within a month in exchange for immunity Yemen’s political crisis has reached a new peak with a defiant President Ali Abdullah Saleh warning that he will not give in to a “coup”, a day after reportedly agreeing to leave office within a month. Opposition activists claimed that Saleh, ready to step down in exchange for immunity from prosecution, was playing for time to avoid the fate of the presidents of Tunisia and Egypt, both overthrown by unprecedented displays of people power that have changed the Middle East and north Africa in the last three months. With Libya engulfed in a bloody civil war and escalating violence in Syria apparently signalling a determination by President Bashar al-Assad to crush mounting protests, the Arab Spring appears to be taking another ominous turn. Reports from the Yemeni capital, Sana’a, described thousands of demonstrators out on the streets demanding Saleh give up power at once and chanting: “No negotiation, no dialogue – resign or flee.” Saleh had on Saturday reportedly accepted a Saudi-led Gulf states initiative under which he would stand down in 30 days in exchange for immunity – evidently fearing the fate of Egypt’s Hosni Mubarak. But he sent a different signal in an interview on Sunday , fuelling suspicions that the move was just another tactical manoeuvre. “I will not accept being overthrown in a coup,” the Yemeni president insisted to BBC Arabic. “To whom shall I hand over power? Those who are trying to make a coup? No. We will do it through ballot boxes and referendums. We’ll invite international observers to monitor – but a coup is not acceptable.” Saleh, like Gaddafi and more recently Assad, warned that in “the storm of recent events” in the Arab world, al-Qaida stands to gain from chaos in his country. He also blamed Arab satellite TV channels and the western media for misrepresenting the situation. “Al-Qaida is moving into army camps,” Saleh said. “It’s a very dangerous situation. Why is the west not looking at this terrorist activity and the dangers it holds for the future?” In Syria, opposition supporters said 120 people had been killed in the weekend’s violence, most of them on Friday. William Hague, the foreign secretary, urged Assad to “respond to the legitimate demands of the Syrian people” and warned that Britons should leave the country as soon as possible. Syrian troops and security forces set up checkpoints across the country on Sunday amid reports of new shootings and mass arrests by the secret police as funerals took place for people killed on Saturday. Calls for Assad’s overthrow were heard at a funeral attended by thousands in the southern town of Nawa, where four protesters and five members of the security forces were reported killed. “It’s starting to look like the West Bank,” warned Radwan Ziadeh, the US-based head of the Damascus Centre for Human Rights, who has contacts across the country. Yemen Middle East Arab and Middle East unrest Ian Black guardian.co.uk

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