Eighteen-year-old from Streatham held by police after arrests of two other suspects over weekend A third man has been arrested in connection with the shooting of five-year-old Thusha Kamaleswaran. The 18-year-old was arrested on Sunday and taken to a south London police station, where he remains in custody, Scotland Yard said. He is also being held in connection with the shooting of 35-year-old Roshan Selvakumar in the incident at a shop in Stockwell, south London. Last week, Thusha’s mother urged people to help the police and save another family from suffering the same tragedy. Sharmila Kamaleswaran said what had happened to her daughter had left her feeling empty inside. “This incident has caused much shock for me and my family,” she said. “As any mother, I have deep love for all my children and what has happened to my daughter Thusha has left me feeling empty inside. “I cannot eat or sleep properly until she opens her eyes. “My daughter Thusha is such a sweet, quiet and helpful child, always smiling and laughing. I cannot wait to hear her voice again and hold her. “I thank everyone who is praying for her. I ask for any person who knows about those responsible for this to come forward and speak to the police. I do not wish this to happen to another family.” She spoke as a man was remanded in custody charged with two counts of attempted murder following the double shooting. Anthony McCalla, 19, Streatham, south London, will appear next at the Old Bailey on 10 June. He appeared at Camberwell Green magistrates court on Saturday charged with shooting the little girl and Selvakumar. McCalla, wearing a brown and white striped top and blue jeans, listened intently during the 15-minute hearing and spoke only to give his name, address and date of birth. District Judge Sue Green refused an application for bail. On Friday night, a 14-year-old boy arrested on suspicion of attempted murder in connection with the shootings was bailed to a date later this month. Relatives are maintaining vigils at Thusha’s hospital bedside while detectives build up a “continuity trail” of the attackers’ movements. Police said both victims remained in a “serious but stable” condition. Gun crime Crime London guardian.co.uk
Continue reading …Michael Gove’s measures to enforce school discipline will include giving heads power to press criminal charges Headteachers will be able to press criminal charges against pupils who make false allegations against teachers in England, under guidance issued by the government. The policy was announced by the education secretary, Michael Gove, as part of a package of measures designed to enforce discipline, which includes allowing students’ mobile phones to be searched for inappropriate material. As well as having the power to press criminal charges, headteachers will be able to temporarily or permanently exclude pupils who make false allegations. Teachers will also get added protection through an assumption that they have behaved reasonably until the contrary is proved, and confirmation that they can use reasonable force to control children. At present, they can be suspended on the word of a pupil. Nearly 30% of school staff have been the subject of a false allegation of misconduct by a pupil, according to a 2009 survey by the Association of Teachers and Lecturers, which said that false claims blighted careers and damaged private lives. The survey of private and state school staff found that police were notified in 16% of cases and took no further action in 55 of the 67 cases they investigated. Guidance on discipline being published by the Department of Education as part of the package will also reduce the regulations from 600 pages to a 50-page document. Gove said: “Improving discipline is a big priority. Teachers can’t teach effectively and pupils can’t learn if schools can’t keep order. These changes will give teachers confidence that they can remove disruptive pupils and search children where necessary. The government is also appointing Charlie Taylor, a headteacher and consultant who has taught in and advised some of London’s toughest schools, as an adviser on pupil behaviour. Taylor, who is a critic of New Labour policies such as league tables but who also straddles both left and rightwing thinking, has described his approach as “very basic”, including focusing on tackling rudimentary gaps in the children’s development, such as teaching them to welcome affection. “The appointment of a head of Charlie Taylor’s calibre shows how serious we are about dealing with this issue,” said Gove. “He has an excellent track record in improving discipline in some of the most challenging schools in the country.” Gove promised a “new deal” for teachers on classroom discipline last year as he prepared to unveil a range of measures, including the abolition of the so-called “no touch” rules that discourage teachers from restraining or comforting schoolchildren. Teaching Pupil behaviour Schools Conservatives Liberal-Conservative coalition Michael Gove Education policy Ben Quinn guardian.co.uk
Continue reading …Michael Gove’s measures to enforce school discipline will include giving heads power to press criminal charges Headteachers will be able to press criminal charges against pupils who make false allegations against teachers in England, under guidance issued by the government. The policy was announced by the education secretary, Michael Gove, as part of a package of measures designed to enforce discipline, which includes allowing students’ mobile phones to be searched for inappropriate material. As well as having the power to press criminal charges, headteachers will be able to temporarily or permanently exclude pupils who make false allegations. Teachers will also get added protection through an assumption that they have behaved reasonably until the contrary is proved, and confirmation that they can use reasonable force to control children. At present, they can be suspended on the word of a pupil. Nearly 30% of school staff have been the subject of a false allegation of misconduct by a pupil, according to a 2009 survey by the Association of Teachers and Lecturers, which said that false claims blighted careers and damaged private lives. The survey of private and state school staff found that police were notified in 16% of cases and took no further action in 55 of the 67 cases they investigated. Guidance on discipline being published by the Department of Education as part of the package will also reduce the regulations from 600 pages to a 50-page document. Gove said: “Improving discipline is a big priority. Teachers can’t teach effectively and pupils can’t learn if schools can’t keep order. These changes will give teachers confidence that they can remove disruptive pupils and search children where necessary. The government is also appointing Charlie Taylor, a headteacher and consultant who has taught in and advised some of London’s toughest schools, as an adviser on pupil behaviour. Taylor, who is a critic of New Labour policies such as league tables but who also straddles both left and rightwing thinking, has described his approach as “very basic”, including focusing on tackling rudimentary gaps in the children’s development, such as teaching them to welcome affection. “The appointment of a head of Charlie Taylor’s calibre shows how serious we are about dealing with this issue,” said Gove. “He has an excellent track record in improving discipline in some of the most challenging schools in the country.” Gove promised a “new deal” for teachers on classroom discipline last year as he prepared to unveil a range of measures, including the abolition of the so-called “no touch” rules that discourage teachers from restraining or comforting schoolchildren. Teaching Pupil behaviour Schools Conservatives Liberal-Conservative coalition Michael Gove Education policy Ben Quinn guardian.co.uk
Continue reading …Formally announcing his candidacy would allow Obama to start to start raising money for the 2012 campaign US President Barack Obama is likely to announce plans to run for re-election and file campaign papers with the Federal Election Commission as early as Monday, Democratic officials said. Filing with the Election Commission would allow Obama to start raising money for the 2012 campaign that is expected to shatter records in political spending. Two Democratic officials said no final decision has been made about the timing of an announcement or filing. Obama is in the middle of a budget battle with congressional Republicans and has focused his message in recent weeks on reducing US dependence on foreign oil and investing in innovation and education – themes he likely will highlight in his bid to hold on to the White House next year. At the same time, Obama has been defending US involvement in military operations in Libya. Republicans are pressing Democrats to make deep spending cuts to shrink the US deficit, another issue that could play a crucial role in the campaign. The Republican field of presidential challengers is still wide open, however, and no one has formally announced a bid. Obama is expected to avoid overt campaigning while his potential Republican opponents compete against each other. But he has started doing some fundraising events for his party in recent weeks. Formally announcing his candidacy would allow Obama to start filling his own campaign’s coffers directly, too. The president got a boost on Friday with a Labor Department report showing a slight decline in the US unemployment rate to 8.8%. An improving economy is seen as critical to his re-election hopes. Opinion surveys show US voters are split over Obama. A Real Clear Politics average of several polls showed 47.4% of Americans approving of his performance in office and 46.6% disapproving. Poll averages also show Obama beating potential Republican rivals including former Massachusetts Governor Mitt Romney, former Alaska Governor Sarah Palin and former Speaker of the House of Representatives Newt Gingrich. Obama, a US senator from Illinois before winning the 2008 US presidential election, intends to base his re-election campaign out of Chicago. Obama’s former White House chief of staff Rahm Emanuel was elected major of Chicago in February and will take office May 16 when longtime Mayor Richard M. Daley retires. United States US politics Barack Obama Democrats Republicans US elections 2012 guardian.co.uk
Continue reading …Click here to view this media (h/t Heather at VideoCafe ) Fox News Sunday pundit Brit Hume just can’t understand how Afghan Muslims could be so upset by something as “trivial and minor” as Pastor Terry Jones’ nasty little stunt of burning Korans, despite being asked by the State Department months ago not to , out of fear of inflaming anti-American sentiment in the Middle East. In Hume’s mind, because Terry Jones is the head of such an insignificant following (Mara Liasson’s estimation of two dozen followers may be generous), it’s not that big a deal that he desecrated the holy book for 1 billion Muslims worldwide. Right, and Fred Phelps and his church comprised of 18 family members shouldn’t bother the families of fallen servicemen when they demonstrate at military funerals . There’s nothing that can justify the irrational lost of life of those NATO workers. But likewise, this kind of violence was predictable and avoidable. I doubt very much that Brit and Co. would be as sanguine if some imam burned a stack of Bibles and a crucifix as a statement of the evils of Christianity. In fact, conservatives have been less than tolerant of what they view as condemnations of Christianity, from Jesse Helms and Alfonse D’Amato demanding Serrano’s Piss Christ be removed from exhibition , to Boehner and Cantor demanding the National Portrait Gallery remove Wojnarowicz’ “A Fire In My Belly,” to Maine Gov. Robert LePage not wanting to be reminded of the labor movement in a mural in the state building . Over and over again, they demand that their intolerance be respected above all else. But when the shoe is on the other foot… We can invade, destroy, then abandon and re-occupy a country, sending 10,000 Afghanistan civilians to their death , millions of Afghans left homeless , evidence of the callousness of the American servicemembers in their treatment of regular citizens rounded up and imprisoned and tortured at Bagram and even posing with the bodies of other Afghans like hunting trophies . Is it any wonder that Afghans–already pushed to the limits of stress for having lived in a war zone for more than five years–feel murderous rage towards those who claim to want democracy for them? And then Terry Jones in all his righteous and oblivious hatred, shows them (and seriously, do you think it matters to them if there are 10 or 10,000 members in his church?) even more callous disrespect by desecrating their holy book. Sure, his Freedom of Speech rights give him the right to act that way…but it does not mean Freedom from Consequence, and in this case, it was not Jones who suffered the consequences. Hamid Karzai has asked for Washington to condemn Jones’ actions , and I hope that they do as well as condemn the killings of the NATO workers…to show that this is not a war against Islam, that we have tolerance for all religions and respect for human life.
Continue reading …Police open fire and use teargas against demonstrators attempting to march to presidential palace More than 400 people have been injured after police fired live rounds and used teargas on protesters attempting to march to a presidential palace in Yemen’s Red Sea city of Hudaida, according to doctors. The violence broke out at a march scheduled to take place at 2am local time (11pm GMT) in protest against a security crackdown on rallies in Taiz, south of the capital, that killed two and wounded hundreds on Sunday. A few thousand demonstrators were said to have taken part in the march, local residents told Reuters. Protests inspired by uprisings in Egypt and Tunisia have brought President Ali Abdullah Saleh’s 32-year rule to the verge of collapse. But the president called on Sunday for an end to the violence, signalling he has no intention of resigning. “They suddenly gathered around the province’s administrative building and headed to the presidential palace, but police stopped them by firing gunshots in the air and using teargas. I saw a lot of plain-clothes police attack them too,” a witness told Reuters by phone. Doctors at a local hospital said nine people had gunshot wounds, 350 suffered from teargas inhalation, and around 50 had been wounded by plain-clothes police hurling rocks. The presidential palace in Hudaida is one of several homes kept by Saleh, 68, around the country. He was most likely at the presidential palace in capital Sanaa on Monday. Earlier on Sunday, at least two people died and hundreds were hurt when police tried to break up protests in Taiz, the site of some of the largest and angriest protests against the president’s rule, and where doctors said they had treated hundreds suffering from tear gas inhalation. Protesters have been camping out in main squares throughout Yemen for weeks and have been coming under regular attack. Saleh’s top security official in Taiz, Abdullah Qiran, is accused by demonstrators of orchestrating some of the most brutal crackdowns. In an address to visiting supporters from Taiz province, Saleh said: “We call on the opposition coalition to end the crisis by ending sit-ins, blocking roads and assassinations, and they should end the state of rebellion in some military units,” Saleh told visiting supporters from Taiz province. “We are ready to discuss transferring power, but in a peaceful and constitutional framework,” he added to chants of “No concessions after today!”. Saleh’s ruling party also said it had not received a proposed transition plan from opposition parties that envisages Saleh handing power to a vice president while steps are taken towards creating a national unity government and calling new elections. At least 97 demonstrators have been killed in Yemen since protests began on 11 February, according to human rights activists in the country. About 49 were killed several weeks ago when snipers on rooftops opened fire at demonstrators in the capital, Sanaa. Yemen Protest Middle East Ben Quinn guardian.co.uk
Continue reading …• Regime seeking way out, says Greek foreign minister • Turkish ship overwhelmed in evacuation mission Renewed signs that key figures in Muammar Gaddafi’s regime are seeking an end to the crisis emerged on Sunday when the deputy foreign minister, Abdul Ati al-Obeidi, flew to Greece using the same route out as defector and his former boss, Moussa Koussa apparently with a message from the Libyan government seeking a way out of the crisis. After meeting Obeidi Greece’s foreign minister, Dimitris Droustas said: “From the Libyan envoy’s comments it appears that the regime is seeking a solution.” Droustas added that Greek officials had underlined the international community’s call for Gaddafi to end hostilities. The message, Droustas said, was: “Full respect and implementation of United Nations decisions, an immediate ceasefire, an end to violence and hostilities, particularly against the civilian population of Libya.” In a further sign of willingness within the regime to negotiate an end to the crisis, it was also claimed that Saif al-Islam, one of Gaddafi’s sons and a pivotal figure in the regime, was proposing a compromise resolution to the country’s civil war involving the Libyan leader relinquishing power to a new constitutional democracy. Saif was said to be suggesting a transition under his direction as a possible way out of the impasse between the regime, in Tripoli, and the rebel forces in Benghazi. The report coincided with another from a well-placed Arab source of an approach by Gaddafi to the former UN secretary-general, Kofi Annan. Gaddafi is said to have offered political reforms during a transition period overseen by one of his sons, the source said. Annan was involved in important aspects of bringing Libya in from the cold during his decade running the UN from 1997 to 2007. Saif’s move followed a visit to London by Mohammed Ismail, a key Gaddafi aide, revealed by the Guardian on Friday, to explore possible exit strategies for the Libyan regime. The diplomatic moves came as a Turkish effort to assist civilians trapped in western Libya brought a reminder of the plight of Libyans on the ground. A Turkish ship that sailed into Misrata to rescue about 250 wounded people had to leave after crowds pressed forward on the quayside. “It’s a very hard situation … We had to leave early,” Turkish consular official Ali Akin told Reuters after the ship stopped to pick up more wounded in the eastern rebel stronghold, Benghazi. Turkey’s foreign minister ordered the ship into Misrata after it spent four days waiting for permission to dock. It arrived under cover from 10 Turkish air force F-16 fighters and two navy frigates. Misrata, Libya’s third city, rose up with other towns against Gaddafi’s rule in mid-February, but it is now surrounded by government troops. After weeks of shelling and encirclement, Gaddafi’s forces appear to be gradually loosening the rebels’ hold on the city. David Cameron has sent a small Foreign Office team to Benghazi to undertake further consultations with rebels on a possible ceasefire and the makeup of a new government in the event of Gaddafi leaving. The team, led by the British ambassador to Italy, Christopher Prentice, arrived in Benghazi on Saturday, leaving Richard Northern, the British ambassador to Tripoli, in London to oversee operations. Prentice has spent much of his career in the Middle East including Iraq and Jordan. British officials want to know more about the nature of the transitional council, its accountability, and whether it would give Gaddafi safe passage out of the country rather than force him to face trial. It would also discuss the prospect of arming the rebels, but the foreign secretary, William Hague, said on Sunday that Britain was unlikely to be involved in this. With Hague due to make a statement on last week’s defection of Libya’s foreign minister, Moussa Koussa, other defections and the general state of the civil war, it was reported that Obeidi would travel next to Turkey and Malta, in a sign that Gaddafi’s regime may be softening. Reports out of Tunisia had noted that Obeidi left Libya via Tunisia, the same route taken by Koussa. Obeidi, the Libyan minister of European affairs, had previously accompanied Koussa to the Tunisian town of Djerba last Wednesday but returned to Tripoli while Koussa flew on to London. A former prime minister, Obeidi is a highly trusted figure and veteran of some of the most sensitive chapters of his country’s recent diplomatic history. He negotiated the controversial release of the Lockerbie bomber, Abdelbaset al-Megrahi, in 2009. Officials in Greece said there had been high-level contacts with Britain, Qatar and Libya before Obeidi’s mission to Athens. There have been widespread rumours since Koussa’s defection last week that other senior officials may follow. The speculation has been encouraged by western governments, which see the implosion of the regime as desirable. The Nato-led coalition currently undertaking air strikes against the Libyan military has been divided over whether regime change is a legitimate goal. According to a report in the New York Times, Saif al-Islam – who holds no formal position – is proposing a transition to a constitutional democracy under his direction. However, British sources have stressed there is no suggestion that Gaddafi is willing to accept the proposal. With M16 heavily involved in an effort to destabilise the regime, the rumours of deals being offered by senior Gaddafi figures are hard to verify. The Interim National Council, which is heading the rebellion, has insisted that Gaddafi must relinquish power and is unlikely to accept his family’s involvement in a move to a new government. Although Saif has launched belligerent attacks on the uprising in the east and has publicly pledged that his family will “live and die in Libya”, some see him as more pragmatic than his father. He has had a long association with western figures, including Tony Blair and Lord Mandelson, and studied at the LSE. Hague insisted it was right to let former Libyan intelligence chief Koussa come to Britain, and denied there had been any deal involving his asylum. He said his officials would meet Scottish police today to discuss when they would be allowed to interview Koussa about the Lockerbie bombing and other crimes, saying: “We want more information about past events.” The Foreign Office said only that Koussa would be “entitled to apply for asylum”. But Tory MP Ben Wallace, parliamentary aide to justice secretary Ken Clarke, told the Mail on Sunday: “This man should not be granted asylum or any other special treatment. The only proper outcome is to bring him to justice.” Hague declined to say whether Koussa had been contacting ex-colleagues urging them to follow his example. “I think that when someone like that says they want to get out it would be quite wrong to say no, you have got to stay there,” he told the BBC’s Andrew Marr Show. He said he did not believe that the conflict would end in a stalemate. “Let’s be clear, if the Libyan regime tries to hang on in this situation, they are internationally isolated, they can’t sell any oil,” he said. “There is no future for Libya on that basis, and so I think even the prospect of stalemate should encourage people in Tripoli to think, ‘Well, Gaddafi has now got to go.’” Arab and Middle East unrest Moussa Koussa Libya Middle East Greece Harriet Sherwood Ian Black Patrick Wintour guardian.co.uk
Continue reading …Click here to view this media Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid (D-NV) worried Sunday that the government might be shut down if Republican leadership continued to be cowered by the tea party movement. “The Republican leadership in the House has to make a decision whether they’re going to do the right thing for the country or do the right thing for the tea party,” Reid told CBS’ Bob Schieffer. “The tea party, you see, they spent weeks organizing here. The day came for their demonstration a couple days ago. They didn’t have thousands of people there. They didn’t have hundreds of people. They had tens of people. If you really stretch it, you might have had 150 people there. The tea party is is not looked at very strongly around the country. The only attention they get is in the House of Representatives. They shouldn’t be getting that attention,” he said. “Are you saying that Speaker Boehner and the Republicans who have been here for a while are afraid of the tea party? Is that what’s going on here?” Schieffer asked. “That’s a pretty good choice of words. The answer is yes. The tea party is dictating a lot that goes on in the Republican leadership in the House. They shouldn’t,” Reid explained.
Continue reading …The disgustingly sanctimonious Howard Dean gave a lecture at Carnegie Mellon University on March 24 wherein he once again attacked Fox News calling it a propagandist arm of the Republican Party that lies to the American people. Ironically, during his one hour speech, the former Vermont governor committed some laughable whoppers of his own (multi-segment video follows with commentary, apologies in advance for problems in the original recording): This first segment was the typical, run-of-the-mill nonsense from Dean about Hillary Clinton's vast right-wing conspiracy and how Rush Limbaugh is just today's Father Coughlin.
Continue reading …Robot submarines locate wreckage from still unexplained disaster but flight recorders remain missing Pieces of wreckage from an Air France plane that crashed in the Atlantic in 2009 with 228 people on board have been recovered by underwater teams, according to French investigators. A fourth attempt began last month to locate remains of the aircraft, and particularly its flight recorders, in the hope of determining the cause of the still unexplained disaster. The wreckage was recovered at the weekend by a salvage vessel equipped with unmanned submarines, the French air accident investigation agency, the BEA, said on Sunday night. The agency said the pieces were identified as parts of flight 447, which crashed on 1 June 2009 en route from Rio de Janeiro to Paris. In what was the worst loss of life involving an Air France plane in the firm’s 75-year history, those who died included more than 30 nationalities. Search operations that took place in the wake of the crash led to the recovery of 50 bodies as well as hundreds of pieces of the aircraft, including its torn-off tail, but the last search ended in May 2010 after it had failed to find the plane’s voice and data recorders. The latest search, which is being carried out using a deep-sea vessel called Alucia and is being financed by the plane’s manufacturers, Air France and Airbus, has been designed to cover an area of approximately 3,900 sq miles. Robotic equipment has been used to forage in depths of up to 4,000 metres in an area of the ocean floor between Africa and Brazil. Finding the black boxes is seen as essential to help crash experts and relatives understand why flight 447 plunged into a remote part of the Atlantic during an equatorial storm. “This is very good news because it brings with it the hope that at last we will get some information on what caused this accident, which to this day remains unexplained,” Air France-KLM’s chief executive Pierre-Henri Gourgeon said. Speculation about the cause of the crash has focused on the possible icing-up of the aircraft’s speed sensors, which appeared to give inconsistent readings seconds before the plane vanished. But an accident report said it was impossible to establish a clear cause without further data held in the missing recorders. “We do hope that the discovery will lead to the retrieval and reading of the two recorders because this data is essential for the understanding of this accident,” said a spokesman for Airbus. A passenger jet carries two recorders, one for cockpit voices and another to log data from the aircraft’s systems. Air France and Airbus were both placed under formal investigation over the crash last month as part of a French criminal investigation into the causes of the crash. Groups representing victims’ families have criticised the way previous searches were carried out. Plane crashes France Europe Air transport Airline industry Ben Quinn guardian.co.uk
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