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Global paedophile network smashed

More than 180 people arrested worldwide after online ring uncovered A global online paedophile network has been smashed in a worldwide police operation that has led to hundreds of arrests and many convictions. The investigation exposed more than 50,000 members in the UK, US, New Zealand, Australia and Thailand, where some of the first arrests were made. A total of 230 children are said to have been taken out of danger, 60 of them in the UK. Worldwide, 184 suspects have been arrested, 121 of them in Britain. Details were revealed at a press conference in The Hague, the Netherlands, where the website’s server was based. The network hid behind a legal online forum, boylover.net, which operated from a server based in the Netherlands but had members from around the world. The site operated as a discussion-only forum where members could share their sexual interest in young boys without committing specific offences. Having made contact, members would move to more private channels such as email to exchange and share illegal images of children being abused. The investigation, Operation Rescue, was led by the UK’s national centre for child protection and joined by the Australian federal police, the US Immigration and Customs Enforcement Agency, New Zealand police, Europol, the Zaanstreek-Waterland police in the Netherlands and the Royal Canadian Mounted Police. It targeted 670 offenders. Peter Davies, who leads the Child Exploitation and Online Protection Centre (Ceop), said: “The scale and success of Operation Rescue has broken new ground. Not only is it one of the largest operation of its kind to date – and the biggest operation we have led – it also demonstrates the impact of international law enforcement agencies working together with one single objective: to safeguard children and bring offenders to justice. That drive has been the hallmark of all the forces and teams involved. “What we show today is that while these offenders felt anonymous in some way because they were using the internet to communicate, the technology was actually being used against them. Everything they did online, everyone they talked to or anything they shared could and was tracked by following the digital footprint. “We are grateful to the support of our law enforcement colleagues both nationally and internationally who have supported Ceop in this operation.” Operation Rescue began in 2007, after Ceop and Australian police independently discovered the site. They were already working together as part of the Virtual Global Taskforce to target online child sexual abuse and joined forces. Covert investigators infliltrated the site to identify members who posed the biggest risk to children Child protection Children Crime Karen McVeigh guardian.co.uk

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Fox nuclear ‘experts’ sound just like J. Frank Parnell: ‘Ra-di-a-tion. Yes, indeed. You hear the most outrageous lies about it.’

Click here to view this media Not only is Fox News now racing to promote the narrative that the meltdown the Fukushima nuclear plant in Japan, in the wake of this week’s killer earthquake and tsunamis, is really nothing for anyone (and especially not Americans!) to worry about, but the other night on Hannity, one of their “experts” — Jay Lehr of the Heartland Institute — tried to claim that everything was working according to plan and no harm would come to anyone’s health as a result of the radiation released. HANNITY: How realistic is this threat? LEHR: Sean, it’s not at all realistic. I can tell you with the utmost confidence there will not be a health impact from anything that’s going on at the Fukushima power plant. Lehr was featured throughout Hannity’s show, and he continued on in this vein — minimizing the health effects of disasters like Chernobyl and Three Mile Island, and attacking a nuclear engineer for saying that there is at least some concern about fallout drift to the West Coast of the USA. As Digby sez : “Call me nuts but that fellow doesn’t sound all that trustworthy.” He reminds Digby of a movie character, Gen Buck Turgidson. He reminds me, on the other hand, of another character altogether. You remember J. Frank Parnell, don’t you? Click here to view this media J. Frank Parnell: Ever been to Utah? Ra-di-a-tion. Yes, indeed. You hear the most outrageous lies about it. Half-baked goggle-box do-gooders telling everybody it’s bad for you. Pernicious nonsense. Everybody could stand a hundred chest X-rays a year. They ought to have them, too. When they canceled the project it almost did me in. One day my mind was full to bursting. The next day – nothing. Swept away. But I’ll show them. I had a lobotomy in the end. Otto: Lobotomy? Isn’t that for loonies? Parnell: Not at all. Friend of mine had one. Designer of the neutron bomb. You ever hear of the neutron bomb? Destroys people – leaves buildings standing. Fits in a suitcase. It’s so small, no one knows it’s there until – BLAMMO. Eyes melt, skin explodes, everybody dead. So immoral, working on the thing can drive you mad. That’s what happened to this friend of mine. So he had a lobotomy. Now he’s well again.

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The wonder and tragedy of penicillin

Penicillin was hailed as a wonder drug, but creeping bacterial resistance has robbed it of its potency

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The wonder and tragedy of penicillin

Penicillin was hailed as a wonder drug, but creeping bacterial resistance has robbed it of its potency

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Magic roundabouts: search launched

A contest aims to find which ones make motorists’ heads spin, and which are quite pleasant – in a roundabout way Blooming flower beds, velvety lawns, graceful silver birches, the gentle background hum of happy cars – to Tom Hemmingway, earth hath very little more to show more fair than a little patch of paradise, the roundabout in Nottingham outside the BBC’s offices. He is so impressed by it – “one of the very best in Nottingham and possibly the best in the whole UK”, that he has nominated it in a quest to find the nation’s best (and worst) roundabouts . Hemmingway, who regularly drives past it, is quite lyrical about his promised land: “It even looks gorgeous with its colourful flowers and trees,” he says. “It never struggles to cope even on match days when its proximity to Nottingham’s two football clubs and to Trent Bridge cricket ground means it’s heaving with cars. The roundabout takes it all in its stride and doesn’t miss a beat.” Letchworth Garden City claims the honour of the first UK roundabout, built in 1909, but they really took off in the 1960s, when Swindon acquired its legendary Magic Roundabout, which has been known to reduce motorists to tears. Many stir deep emotions, particularly among those who feel a lifetime is ebbing away during the hours spent trapped in their orbit. If anything the roundabout at Queen’s Gardens in Newcastle-under-Lyme is even more densely planted than Nottingham’s charmer, with grass, several trees and a bristling thicket of spiny shrubs. It fills James Welch, from Stoke, with revulsion. “I have the misfortune to have to navigate this appalling road island twice every working day, and it’s not only a eyesore, it’s also a catastrophe. The Queen’s Gardens roundabout is plagued by constant beeping and motorists struggling to find the right lanes. “The best thing to do would be to take a JCB to it and plough the whole thing up and start again.” The search, inevitably dubbed Roundabout Idol, has been launched by the car leasing firm Central Contracts, which promises to praise the best and name and shame the worst. “Rather than making our journeys easier, certain roundabouts have been plaguing our commutes and have us risking both vehicle and sanity to reach the other side,” a spokesman said. “We are asking motorists to tell us what roundabout makes their head spin, their stomach churn and their temper rise.” Maev Kennedy guardian.co.uk

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Ivory Coast abuse detailed in report

Human Rights Watch hears victims from Mali, Nigeria and Burkina Faso tell of executions and rape by Gbagbo foot soldiers The systematic persecution and murder of foreign nationals in Ivory Coast has been revealed in a harrowing eyewitness account obtained by human rights monitors. A 21-year-old Malian man told Human Rights Watch how he and six other west Africans were forced to their knees in a dark basement and beaten with an iron bar. Five of the men were executed at point-blank range but he resisted and escaped. The watchdog said it had documented the beating or burning to death of at least 14 west African immigrants in Ivory Coast. Its report chronicles rising atrocities on both sides of the country’s political divide and said those committed by president Laurent Gbagbo’s forces may constitute crimes against humanity. The Malian national, who was not named, told the NGO how he narrowly avoided death on 6 March when he and six others were abducted and forced into two vehicles by militiamen. “That day I was wearing dirty clothes from working as a porter,” the man was quoted as saying. “That’s how they knew I was Malian – we’re most of the porters. As I was walking, six guys with Kalashnikovs came up behind me, and one of them stuck it into my back and pushed me toward the road. They did the same thing to a couple of others, and soon they had seven of us in total. “We were all west African nationals. They forced us into two taxis, and when we arrived at an unfinished house they forced us to go down to a basement, where there were other guys with Kalashes waiting. It was dark down there, so they used their cellphones for lights to take us down. It smelled horrible.” He continued: “They beat us with an iron bar and a belt that had a sharp metal buckle. Four of them stood at guard with guns pointed on us at all times. All of them in the basement wore balaclavas. Then they attached black bandannas over the eyes of the first two guys, and one of the [pro-Gbagbo Young] Patriots executed [them] at point-blank range. “Another guy was lighting the area for him with a cellphone to make sure he didn’t miss, even though the distance was only two metres. They did the same to the next three guys, as they were begging for their lives. Five executed right next to me, as they were on their knees. The whole time they kept saying we were rebels, we were rebels. “When they tried to put the bandanna on my head, I fought back. Every time they tried, I’d fight. So then they again beat me with the iron bar. I kept refusing to let them put the bandanna on, as did the guy next to me, a youth from Niger. Eventually I heard them say they would finish us off elsewhere, and they took us back outside.” The man concluded: “They forced the Nigerian guy into a taxi, but I saw another car coming and I took the chance to run for it. They fired two gunshots from behind, but didn’t hit me. I ran and then once I got out of their sight, I found a spot to hide. Eventually I made it back home.” Ivory Coast has been locked in violent turmoil since a disputed November election between Gbagbo and his rival Alassane Ouattara, widely recognised as the winner. Human Rights Watch described an organised pattern of xenophobic attacks. It said the homes, shops and mosques of hundreds of west Africans have been burned, and many have been chased out of their neighbourhoods under threat of death at the hands of pro-Gbagbo militias. The majority of these attacks came immediately after Gbagbo’s youth minister, Charles Bl Goud, called for “real” Ivorians to set up roadblocks in their neighbourhoods and “denounce” foreigners. A militant pro-Gbagbo group has warned Burkina Faso nationals to leave the country by 22 March. Witnesses described to the watchdog how west Africans were killed by militiamen after being pulled out of taxis. Two marketplace porters were tied up, stuffed into their handcarts and set ablaze. A handicapped man from Burkina Faso accused by militiamen of hiding rebels in his house was brought into an abandoned building and set on fire. Attackers amputated the penises of two other men, then killed them. The report said: “Residents from Mali, Burkina Faso, Nigeria, and Niger gave detailed accounts of daily attacks by pro-Gbagbo security forces and armed militias, who beat foreign residents to death with bricks, clubs, and sticks, or doused them with gas and burned them alive.” Human Rights Watch also documented the rape of nine women by groups of militiamen and police operating together; all the victims were active and public members of Ouattara’s political party. In two cases, the women were raped in front of family members, and the husband and father of the victims were then arbitrarily detained and remain “disappeared”, the group said. The report detailed how victims of political violence have been beaten to death with clubs, large pieces of concrete, knives, axes and machetes. Others had their throats slit or were doused with petrol and set ablaze. It criticised gunmen claiming allegiance to Ouattara – who have taken over parts of north Abidjan in the past three weeks – for summary executions of 11 pro-Gbagbo troops captured since they rose up against the incumbent. Daniel Bekele, Africa director at Human Rights Watch, said: “The time is long overdue for the UN security council to impose sanctions against Gbagbo and his allies directly implicated in the grave abuses of the post-election period. The international community should also send a clear message to Ouattara’s camp that reprisal killings will place them next on the list.” Ivory Coast Mali Nigeria Niger Burkina Faso David Smith guardian.co.uk

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This video is the best illustration I’ve seen of the amount of seismic activity the Japanese have had to endure this week. I wonder how much longer this is going to go on. Between the quakes and the nuclear disaster there it’s just horrifying to imagine what the people of that country are going through right now. h/t tekisui at DU . From Gremo who made the video: Quick video showing earthquakes in Japan between 9 March and 14 March. 1 hour ~ 1 second. Big one is around 1:17 . You can find the kml file here: http://jumpjack.wordpress.com/2011/03/13/animazione-googleearth-terremoto-gia… And one of the commenters at DU sent this link — Earthquakes In The Last Week

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Orange prize longlist in pictures

Take a look at all the titles in the running for the Orange Prize for Fiction and read our reviews

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Bryan Robson battles throat cancer

• Former Manchester United captain had tumour removed • Thailand’s manager able to continue in his current job The former Manchester United and England captain, Bryan Robson, is battling cancer. Robson, 54, who is currently Thailand’s national team manager, underwent an operation to remove a tumour from his throat on 3 March in a Bangkok hospital, a United spokesman confirmed. A laboratory report revealed a cancerous tumour which will need further treatment, according to the Manchester Evening News. The spokesman added that surgeons were “confident” the condition could be treated. They added: “At this moment, Bryan is fine to continue with his role as Thailand coach and his role as ambassador of Manchester United. “Bryan and family have requested that he can continue with his treatment in private and ask that their privacy is respected.” Robson, a hero at Old Trafford, joined United in 1981, making 345 appearances and helping the club to two Premier League titles, three FA Cups and the European Cup Winners’ Cup. Despite a succession of major injuries, Robson won 90 caps for England, 65 of which were as captain and he was dubbed “Captain Marvel” by the then manager, Bobby Robson. Robson left United in 1994 and became player-manager at Middlesbrough, before retiring from playing in 1996. While at Middlesbrough, he won promotion to the Premier League in 1995. In 1997, Middlesbrough reached both the FA Cup and League Cup finals, but lost against Chelsea and Leicester City respectively, and they were relegated at the end of the season. However, Robson led Middlesbrough to promotion the following season. They also reached the League Cup final again in 1998, but lost 2-0 to Chelsea. Robson eventually left Middlesbrough at the end of the 2000-01 season, going on to manage Bradford City, West Bromwich Albion and Sheffield United, before taking the Thailand job. Bryan Robson Manchester United England guardian.co.uk

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Cameron defends health bill

PM tells prime minister’s questions that Labour leader should not ‘set his face’ against needed reforms David Cameron stood firm on the government’s health bill amid mounting opposition and Labour claims that the reforms are “threatening the fabric of the NHS”. The Labour leader, Ed Miliband, attacked the plans, which have come under fire in recent days from the British Medical Association and Liberal Democrat activists. Cameron told MPs at prime minister’s questions that the changes outlined in the health and social care bill would improve patient care and were about “abolishing” NHS bureaucracy, telling Miliband that he should not “set his face” against needed reforms. The prime minister was pressed on the government’s health reforms amid the first signs that dissent is spreading beyond unions and the opposition to Conservative ranks. A cross-party motion signed by four Tory MPs – Dr Sarah Wollaston, Charles Walker, Douglas Carswell and Anne Main – urges ministers to listen to the concerns of patients groups, professional bodies and independent experts and work with them to achieve a strengthened NHS. The motion, in the form of an amendment to a Labour motion due to be debated in the Commons on Wednesday, is a sign that Tory MPs are becoming concerned that Andrew Lansley, the health secretary, is not taking health professionals with him in his radical reform plans. The BMA voted on Tuesday to call for Lansley to withdraw the bill. Miliband triggered a heated exchange when he seized on the level of opposition mounting against the bill to ask Cameron whether “any new” amendments would be made. Miliband said the bill “creates a free market free-for-all and threatens existing NHS services”. “He’s threatening the fabric of the NHS,” said Miliband. “This bill shows everything people don’t like about this government. Broken promises, arrogant, incompetent and ignoring people who know about the health service. Doesn’t it show once again, as the BMA said yesterday, as the Liberal Democrats said on Saturday, you can’t trust the Tories on the NHS?” The Liberal Democrats overwhelmingly passed a motion on Saturday calling on the government to refashion the reforms away from competition and marketisation. A group of Liberal Democrat MPs led by Greg Mulholland has also tabled an amendment for Wednesday’s debate calling for the health bill to be amended and agreeing with Labour that reforms represent a damaging and unjustified market-based reorganisation. Cameron told MPs that the bill had already been strengthened, but declined to answer directly whether any further amendments might be considered in future. “These reforms were drawn up as a coalition to improve the NHS,” said Cameron, “and to answer his question very directly we have already made some real strengthenings to this bill. First of all we have ruled out price competition in the NHS, and also the issue raised by the Liberal Democrats – that I completely agree with – that we must avoid cherry-picking by the private sector in the NHS.” He then turned his fire to Labour, adding: “He might care to reflect that under the last Labour government the private sector was given £250m for operations that were never carried out. Perhaps he’d like to apologise for that cherry-picking and support our anti-cherry-picking amendment.” Miliband said Cameron was “wrecking” Labour’s record of new hospitals, shorter waiting times, and more doctors and nurses than ever before. He asked Cameron to confirm that the bill would make healthcare subject to EU competition law “for the first time in history”. Citing clauses of the bill that related to competition, Miliband told him: “What’s that got to do with healthcare?” The prime minister pointed out that Labour’s manifesto for the 2010 general election had promised that patients requiring elective care “would have the right in law to choose from any provider which met NHS standards and NHS quality”. Cameron said: “They were in favour of competition in their last manifesto. All that’s changed is that they’re jumping on every bandwagon, supporting every union, blocking every reform, and opposing the extra money into the NHS.” He added: “The fact is we support extra money going into the NHS, money that he doesn’t support. What we recognise with an ageing population, with more expensive treatment, with new drugs coming on stream, [is that] we need to reform the NHS to go with the extra money that is being provided. Why is he setting his face against that?” Cameron also warned Miliband against citing the BMA to shore up his argument. “He should remember the fact that the BMA opposed foundation hospitals, they opposed GP fundholding, they opposed longer opening hours for GP surgeries,” said Cameron. “Isn’t it typical that just as he has to back every other trade union, just because he has no ideas, he comes here and reads out a BMA press release.” Health policy PMQs House of Commons David Cameron Ed Miliband Health Hélène Mulholland guardian.co.uk

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