It’s absolutely crazy that the one Republican presidential candidate who acknowledges that global warming is a man-made problem is the one least likely to make it through the GOP primary, simply because he told the truth. On This Week with Christiane Amanpour, Jake Tapper interviews Gov. Jon Huntsman: TAPPER: This was a big week for Texas Governor Rick Perry. He went out on the campaign trail and he raised a lot of eyebrows. He made some comments about evolution and he said this about climate change. PERRY: “I think there are a substantial number of scientists who have manipulated data so that they will have dollars rolling into their projects. And I think we are seeing almost weekly, or even daily, scientists are coming forward and questioning the original idea that man-made global warming is what is causing the climate to change. I don’t think, from my perspective, that I want America to be engaged in spending that much money on still a scientific theory that has not been proven, and from my perspective, is more and more being put into question.” TAPPER: These comments from Governor Perry prompted you to Tweet, quote: “To be clear, I believe in evolution and trust scientists on global warming. Call me crazy.” Were you just being cheeky or do you think there’s a serious problem with what Governor Perry said? HUNTSMAN: I think there’s a serious problem. The minute that the Republican Party becomes the party – the anti-science party, we have a huge problem. We lose a whole lot of people who would otherwise allow us to win the election in 2012. When we take a position that isn’t willing to embrace evolution, when we take a position that basically runs counter to what 98 of 100 climate scientists have said, what the National Academy of Science – Sciences has said about what is causing climate change and man’s contribution to it, I think we find ourselves on the wrong side of science, and, therefore, in a losing position. The Republican Party has to remember that we’re drawing from traditions that go back as far as Abraham Lincoln, Theodore Roosevelt, President Eisenhower, Nixon, Reagan and Bush. And we’ve got a lot of traditions to draw upon. But I can’t remember a time in our history where we actually were willing to shun science and become a – a party that – that was antithetical to science. I’m not sure that’s good for our future and it’s not a winning formula.
Continue reading …Sociologists have offered explanations including abortion laws, a fall in crack use and – most contentiously – longer sentences On one of the lifeless, uniform streets of America’s capital, a bulky former crack cocaine dealer who goes by the nom de guerre of Tiny laments the passing of the old Washington DC. “Back then they called it the murder capital of the world. These few blocks here were the murder capital of the murder capital of the world, and right here’s where I did my business. Made a lot of money too,” he says, hovering on a corner in the mostly black Trinidad neighbourhood a few blocks north of that largely white citadel, the Capitol. “Even sold it down by the White House. Could do anything back then. We owned this city. Now it’s like everywhere else. One giant coffee shop.” Tiny long ago moved on to the more legal if less lucrative, and certainly less adrenaline-pumping, enterprise of parcel delivery, which is why he is reluctant to give a name other than the one he used to be known by on the streets. Two decades ago, Washington DC had the highest murder rate in America. Now the drive-by shootings that claim the lives of innocent teenagers are infrequent enough to shock, and make the newspapers. Criminologists and sociologists have spent years grappling to explain the dramatic slide in violent and other serious crime in the US capital, but it’s not unique to Washington. The latest FBI figures show that murder, rape, robberies and other serious crimes have fallen to a 48-year low across the country. In Washington last year, 131 people were murdered, the lowest number in half a century. Two decades ago, there were 482 homicides in the city amid turf wars among drug gangs and crack-driven violent robberies. It’s a pattern replicated across the country. In 2009, New York City had the lowest number of murders since detailed FBI records began in 1963. There was a small increase last year but even so the total of 536 homicide victims was still well below the 2,245 murdered in 1990 when Times Square was infamous for peep shows and drug pushers, not the Disney Store. Twenty years ago, the murder rate for the whole US was 9.8 per 100,000 people. It has fallen by nearly half, although it is still twice the rate in France. It’s not just murder. Robberies were down nearly 10% last year and 8% the year before. There are a score of explanations offered by sociologists for collapsing crime figures, from theories that it is tied to legalisation of abortion or reduction of lead in fuel to the closing of mental institutions. One theory has it that better and swifter medical treatment has reduced the number of murders by saving the lives of assault victims who would otherwise have died. But that doesn’t explain why overall violent crime is also down. Anti-gun activists note that the cities with two of the sharpest falls in murder rates, New York and Washington, have enacted strict gun control laws by US standards. Yet Houston in Texas, where some regard it as criminal not to own a gun, has also seen a sharp drop in homicides. One of the most widely accepted explanations is also one of the most politically and socially sensitive – that the imposition of sharply stiffer prison sentences since the early 1980s, which has resulted in the US having the highest rate of incarceration in the developed world, has kept large numbers of criminals off the streets. The US imprisons 2.3 million of its citizens, a number that has risen dramatically since the 80s when state legislatures began greatly increasing prison sentences out of fear of the surging crime rate. “We now incarcerate four times as many people as we did 20 years ago,” said John Roman, director of the District of Columbia Crime Policy Institute, who has spent years studying crime trends in the city and the US. “Just by sheer size you’ve removed a lot of potential offenders from the street. I don’t think that’s very popular in many circles but it’s very hard to argue with.” James Wilson, author of Thinking About Crime, backed that view in the Wall Street Journal recently. “Imprisonment’s crime-reduction effect helps to explain why the burglary, car-theft and robbery rates are lower in the US than in England. The difference results not from the willingness to send convicted offenders to prison, which is about the same in both countries, but in how long America keeps them behind bars. For the same offence, you will spend more time in prison here than in England,” he wrote. But Wilson adds that cannot be the sole explanation, as Canada has experienced roughly the same decline in crime without the same lengthening of prison sentences. Roman says that in parallel with an ever-expanding jail population was the peak and collapse of the crack cocaine epidemic in major cities. “If you look at the crime statistics over time you see one big rise throughout the 70s and then an additional big rise at the end of the 80s. That big rise at the end of the 80s was almost entirely due to the crack epidemic and users committing crimes to support their habits and due to violence within gangs and drug trafficking networks,” he said. He said that the crack epidemic burned itself out, largely because a new generation saw the effect of the drug on older users and were discouraged. “As fewer and fewer new users entered the crack market it really started to dry up those networks and shrink them,” he said. On the streets of Washington, Tiny thinks there is something to both theories. “There’s a lot of guys who were from around here in jail. If you’re black and you do crack you go to jail for a long time. There’s guys who were selling here with me in the 80s who are still locked up,” he said. “But I went out of business because nobody wanted to buy anymore. Crack got a bad name on the streets.” Sociologists credit a couple of other important factors in falling rates of some crimes. It is considerably more difficult than 30 years ago to steal a new car given all the electronic security, and houses are better protected. An explanation favoured by some politicians and police officers traces back to New York’s “zero tolerance” strategy in the early 1990s, which followed the theory that arrests for minor crimes deter major ones, and that most serious crimes are committed repeatedly by a small number of hardcore criminals. Roman is sceptical, saying the strategy went hand in hand with a large increase in the size of the police force which led to more people being arrested for crimes in general. Also, detaining people for minor crimes, such as jumping the turnstiles at New York subway stations, led to a significant number of wanted criminals being nabbed. So the real effect was not so much to deter as to lock up. There is no shortage of other theories. One has it that the lead poisoning through paint and petrol of a generation raised in 60s and 70s caused violent behaviour as they entered their teens. Steven Levitt, co-author of the bestselling book Freakonomics, has argued that the 1973 supreme court ruling legalising abortion reduced the number of criminals by reducing the number of unwanted babies born to single mothers who would raise youths prone to crime. There are even those who believe the election of Barack Obama has inspired young black men to steer away from a life of crime, although that only works for the past two years and falls flat when trying to explain the past two decades. Some theories have had to be binned outright. A favourite of some sociologists was that economic hard times result in increased robbery and associated violence on the grounds that crime is a rational act prompted by particular circumstances. Yet, through the past three years of financial depression in the US, crime rates have not only continued to fall but the drop has accelerated in many cities. With growing support for the view that high rates of imprisonment and lengthy sentences are a leading factor in reducing crime, the debate is now shifting to whether that is an argument for maintaining a policy that critics say is disproportionately applied to black men and causes other social damage, including taking fathers away from their children for much of their upbringing. Roman thinks the policy may have served its purpose and should be changed. “If you look at the homicide statistics from major cities in 1990 they’re absolutely appalling. I think the reaction of the legislatures at the time was to say three strikes and you’re out, mandatory minimums, you have to actually serve the time. They were responding to what was in front of them which was an epidemic of violence and I think to some extent they were right,” he said. “You can make the case that mass incarceration hastened the end of the crime wave. You would have a much more difficult time making the case that a continuation of that mass incarceration is necessary. The benefit from preventing crime, since crime rates are so much lower, is a lot smaller than it used to be and the costs continue to go up. We’re investing more and more in prison and getting a smaller and smaller return.” But the public may not share that view. A recent poll showed most Americans feel crime is still getting worse. United States Washington DC New York US domestic policy Sentencing Chris McGreal guardian.co.uk
Continue reading …Rebels approach Tripoli and trigger uprising in suburbs as Gaddafi calls on ‘all patriots’ to help defend capital He has ruled Libya for 42 tumultuous years. But Muammar Gaddafi’s defiant regime was on Sunday entering its final hours, as an insurrection engulfed the capital Tripoli and rebels entered its outer suburbs. In another day of dramatic advances, opposition fighters pushed forward from the western town of Zawiya along the coastal highway to Tripoli. They are now a short car ride away from the capital. From the frontline in the village of Maya, the chimneys of Tripoli’s power station could be seen shimmering in the distance. The regime’s last moments are being played out in an attractive green landscape of orange groves, olive trees and seaside restaurants. Gaddafi’s troops are still fighting, directing mortars and sniper fire at the rebels, sometimes with deadly accuracy and on Sunday night the embattled dictator called for “all the patriots of Libya” to help defend the capital. But the fall of Tripoli is now very close. “They are becoming weak. They are very frightened,” Ahmad Gaid said of the government troops, who on Sunday retreated to and then further beyond the “27 bridge” – 27 kilometres from the centre of Tripoli. Gaid, a 25-year-old fighter, had taken temporary shelter together with a medical staff in a roadside house. Up ahead was an enemy sniper. Bullets whined past. A rebel pickup truck responded with 12.5 anti-aircraft artillery: an unmistakable, thunderous boom-boom-boom-boom. The fighters had sent in their one tank, which promptly broke down. “There was something wrong with its chamber,” Mohamad, a 25-year-old Libyan-American volunteer, said calmly. Rebel vehicles streamed to and from the battle. Some fighters were in a hypnotic daze. One staggered in and recounted how his vehicle veered off the road after its tyre was shot at. A bullet hit one of his comrades in the face. “What happened to him?” he inquired. “He died,” Mohamad replied. Mohamad said he was hoping to rescue his US-educated father and brother, both rounded up by the regime and now in jail in Tripoli. The rebels may lack heavy weaponry, but they have one supreme advantage: allied airpower. On the road from Zawiya to Maya an air strike had flattened a Turkish restaurant used by Gaddafi’s troops as a command point. The building was a skeletal ruin, the restaurant’s sandbagged entrance blown out. Nearby, opposition militiamen were combing through a dense forest of cypresses. Behind them was the town of Zawiya, definitively seized by the rebels on Saturday following a week-long battle, and now a ruined mess. Two plastic mannequins lay surreally in one street; most of the buildings in the central square have been destroyed. The city was peaceful on Sunday. The drama of Libya’s six-month revolution has now shifted to further along the coast; the final act awaits. The anti-Gaddafi fighters are pushing towards the capital from three directions – west, south, and east. On the southern road to Tripoli volunteers from the Tripoli brigade were on Monday massing near the government-held town of Aziziya, 40 kilometres south of Tripoli. They were camped out at a primary school awaiting orders. Up ahead, Nato jets were pounding the sites from where Gaddafi’s troops had been imprudently launching Grad missiles. “We will win this war,” Mohamad, a 24-year-old law student, declared. Why? “Because we believe in God. God and then Nato,” he replied. His faith wasn’t misplaced: every few minutes there was a loud percussive, earth-shaking rumble, as Nato jets pulverised the way ahead. After each strike the fighters resting up in the shade broke into chants of “Allu Akhbar”. “Morale is very high. The rebels are controlling most of Tripoli,” he added. On Saturday evening a Libyan opposition TV channel claimed that Gaddafi and two of his sons had fled the country. It offered no proof, and the regime flatly denied that the Libyan leader had fled. But the claim triggered a pre-planned and well-coordinated uprising in several parts of the capital, as well as celebrations in rebel-held Benghazi, Misrata, and Zintan, the opposition stronghold in Libya’s western mountains. According to Issam Mohmed Shebani, there is now fierce fighting raging inside the capital between Gaddafi’s soldiers and locals. The eastern suburbs of Tajura, Fashlum, and Souk al-Jouma had risen up against Gaddafi, he said. The pro-government west of the city was “pretty quiet”. Fighting was also taking place in the central Mansura district. Shebani, the son of a prominent Libyan exile, said at least 133 civilians had been killed so far, citing opposition sources. Other fighters preparing to launch the final assault on Tripoli said Gaddafi’s desperate soldiers were now firing mortars into residential areas. Nabil Nassar said he had spoken to his family bunkered down in Tripoli. “There is non-stop fighting since dawn. Most families have got some weapons. They are also managing to get ammunition. But government troops are firing on them from the top of the mobile network tower,” he said. Nassar added that he lived in Britain and had an MA in diplomatic relations. He left London two months ago to join the anti-Gaddafi war, he said, having tired of political tactics. “I got bored of taking part in protests,” he said. According to his relatives, opposition areas inside Tripoli had set up committees to protect residential areas, and were also manning their own checkpoints. Behind the frontline, there was mood of triumph and certainty that victory and the overthrow of Libya’s hated dictator was close. Families driving past checkpoints hooted and waved V-signs; rebels responded by cracking off celebratory shots. On a roadside skip someone had hung a stuffed effigy of Gaddafi. They had used a lot of white wool to improvise the leader’s unruly hairdo. A petrol station had reopened, prompting long queues; a stall had set up business selling seasonal coriander and fennel. And what of Gaddafi himself? The fighters made clear on Sunday what would happen to him when – and if – they got hold of him. “We will kill him very slowly,” one said. Libya Middle East Arab and Middle East unrest Muammar Gaddafi Africa Luke Harding guardian.co.uk
Continue reading …Jon Huntsman–sounding ever so much more adult and reasonable than the rest of his fellow Republican hopefuls–tells Jake Tapper that it’s time to get the hell out of Afghanistan. We need to bring people home from Afghanistan. This should not be a nation-building exercise when we have nation-building to do right here in our own country. This is a counter-terror effort. We need people in Afghanistan who can collect intelligence, Special Forces capabilities and some element to train the national — the Afghan national troops. But we should not be involved in nation-building. And we’ve got to basically call it for what it is and get back to strengthening the core of this country or we are of no value to the rest of the world. That light, that goodness that traditionally has radiated over the years, that speaks to democracy, that speaks to liberty, that speaks to open markets and human rights. We’re not projecting that goodness anymore. The world always is a better and a safer place with a strong America. And right now, we don’t have a strong America. Damn. I’m not used to agreeing with a Republican. I may need to sit down for a bit. But what Huntsman says is absolutely true. We are nation-building in Afghanistan…and not very well. There is no end point in our mission, no point in which we can say we’ve “won”. And it’s hurting this country with each year we stay in that country with no clear end game in sight.
Continue reading …Click here to view this media Republican pollster Frank Luntz said Sunday that there was “no room” in the Republican presidential race for Sarah Palin, but there was space for New Jersey Gov. Chris Christie and Rep. Paul Ryan (R-WI). “Karl Rove has said that he thinks Sarah Palin is going to run,” ABC’s Jake Tapper told Luntz. “Do you think Sarah Palin is going to run?” “I don’t think she can,” Luntz replied. “Michele Bachmann and Sarah Palin operate in the exact same space. They have similar personalities. They attract similar voters. There’s no space for her right now. There’s a space for Chris Christie, if he decided to do it, or for Paul Ryan. But I don’t see it for Sarah Palin.” “Chris Christie has the advantage he’s basically a blue-collar Republican. He says what he means, he’s in your face and Republicans love that. They see what he’s doing in New Jersey and they want to see that happen in Washington. And Paul Ryan’s case, they regard him as one of the smartest candidates, the intellectual capacity, and he’s got a plan.”
Continue reading …Candlelit ceremony in Oslo marks end of month of mourning for the 77 victims of the 22 July killings Norway’s prime minister urged his people to look after each other and be vigilant about intolerance as the country concluded a month-long mourning period with a candlelit memorial service to the 77 people killed by the rightwing extremist Anders Behring Breivik. Speaking at an arena in Oslo, Jens Stoltenberg said: “We need you. No matter where you live, no matter which god you worship, each and every one of us can take responsibility and can guard freedom.” Breivik, a 32-year-old Norwegian, has admitted carrying out the 22 July killings – first detonating a car bomb that killed eight people outside government offices in Oslo, then shooting dead 69 others at a youth camp on the island of Utøya, about 25 miles away. The prime minister, who received standing ovations from the 6,700 people in the audience during his speech, said: “Together we are an unbreakable chain of care, democracy and safety – that is our protection against violence. “Today time stops in order to remember those who died. We do it as one nation. Every candle has warmed, every thought has comforted, every rose has given hope. We are a small country, but we are a large people.” Norwegian singer-songwriter Susanne Sundfør opened the memorial service with a heartfelt performance of a classic Norwegian song, My Little Country, which has taken on special significance since the terror attacks and left many in the audience quietly wiping away tears. Addressing the gathering, Norway’s King Harald said he felt for each person in the country, but that he was certain Norway would surmount its pain. “I firmly believe that we will uphold our ability to live freely and securely in our country,” he said. Later, the Norwegian rap group Karpe Diem performed a song about tolerance. “I am a Muslim, Chirag is a Hindu and our friends they are also different, but we have never felt as Norwegian and we have not felt as much togetherness before as we do now, after 22 July,” rapper Magdi Ytreeide Abdelmaguid said before performing the song. As the names of each one of the 77 victims were read out loud, some broke out in loud sobs while others sat in silence. Elsewhere in the city, flags flew at half mast as people laid flowers and children blew soap bubbles outside the cathedral. Norway Anders Behring Breivik Europe guardian.co.uk
Continue reading …Candlelit ceremony in Oslo marks end of month of mourning for the 77 victims of the 22 July killings Norway’s prime minister urged his people to look after each other and be vigilant about intolerance as the country concluded a month-long mourning period with a candlelit memorial service to the 77 people killed by the rightwing extremist Anders Behring Breivik. Speaking at an arena in Oslo, Jens Stoltenberg said: “We need you. No matter where you live, no matter which god you worship, each and every one of us can take responsibility and can guard freedom.” Breivik, a 32-year-old Norwegian, has admitted carrying out the 22 July killings – first detonating a car bomb that killed eight people outside government offices in Oslo, then shooting dead 69 others at a youth camp on the island of Utøya, about 25 miles away. The prime minister, who received standing ovations from the 6,700 people in the audience during his speech, said: “Together we are an unbreakable chain of care, democracy and safety – that is our protection against violence. “Today time stops in order to remember those who died. We do it as one nation. Every candle has warmed, every thought has comforted, every rose has given hope. We are a small country, but we are a large people.” Norwegian singer-songwriter Susanne Sundfør opened the memorial service with a heartfelt performance of a classic Norwegian song, My Little Country, which has taken on special significance since the terror attacks and left many in the audience quietly wiping away tears. Addressing the gathering, Norway’s King Harald said he felt for each person in the country, but that he was certain Norway would surmount its pain. “I firmly believe that we will uphold our ability to live freely and securely in our country,” he said. Later, the Norwegian rap group Karpe Diem performed a song about tolerance. “I am a Muslim, Chirag is a Hindu and our friends they are also different, but we have never felt as Norwegian and we have not felt as much togetherness before as we do now, after 22 July,” rapper Magdi Ytreeide Abdelmaguid said before performing the song. As the names of each one of the 77 victims were read out loud, some broke out in loud sobs while others sat in silence. Elsewhere in the city, flags flew at half mast as people laid flowers and children blew soap bubbles outside the cathedral. Norway Anders Behring Breivik Europe guardian.co.uk
Continue reading …On August 15, the Boston Herald , the Boston Globe , and the Associated Press all reported that Massachusetts-based Evergreen Solar had filed for Chapter 11 bankruptcy. Oddly enough (no, not really), The New York Times, which published a 1,600-word report in January on the company's competitive difficulties, did not take note of Evergreen's filing. Each of the three reports cited gave readers the impression that Bay State agencies were the only ones which had provided the company any form of financial assistance during the past several years during which, according to its latest 10-K annual report ( large HTML file ), it was losing hundreds of millions of dollars annually (about $950 million in the past three calendar years): (from the Boston Herald's full report) Evergreen Solar Inc., the Massachusetts clean-energy company that received millions in state subsidies from the Patrick administration for an ill-fated Bay State factory, has filed for bankruptcy, listing $485.6 million in debt. … The Massachusetts Republican Party called the Patrick administration’s $58 million financial aid package, which supported Evergreen’s $450 million factory, a “waste” of money. … In January, after Evergreen announced it would close the Devens factory, Patrick told the Herald he was disappointed in the job losses but did not regret making the investment. (Boston Globe — Note: A terse, four-paragraph report) Evergreen Solar Inc., the once promising alternative energy company that received millions in state subsidies, revealed today that that it has voluntarily filed for Chapter 11 bankruptcy protection. (Associated Press — Note: Another terse, four-paragraph report) A solar energy company that received millions of dollars in grants and tax incentives from Massachusetts before closing one of its facilities in the state has voluntarily filed for Chapter 11 bankruptcy relief. It took David Mastio at the Washington Times to visit the White House's web site and note that Evergreen was identified in April 2009 as a beneficiary of federal ARRA (American Recovery and Reinvestment Act), or “stimulus,” funds. Here is portion of the White House's statement: To: Interested Parties Fr: White House Communications Da: April 22, 2009 Re: The Obama-Biden economic plan: creating jobs, strengthening the economy for Massachusetts families Facing the worst economic crisis since the Great Depression, President Obama started his Presidency with decisive action — proposing and quickly passing the American Recovery and Reinvestment Act (ARRA). … here’s a look at how his policies have impacted Massachusetts in the first three months of his administration. … Because of the Stimulus Bill and New Contracts, Green Energy Companies Are Looking to Hire Many New Employees. … Evergreen Solar, the Marlborough-based maker of solar panels, also is hoping to hire 90 to 100 people at a manufacturing plant in Devens, said Gary Pollard, vice president of human resources. … Evergreen Solar Was Hoping to Hire 90 to 100 People for Its Manufacturing Plant. “Evergreen Solar, the Marlborough-based maker of solar panels, also is hoping to hire 90 to 100 people at a manufacturing plant in Devens, said Gary Pollard, vice president of human resources. The plant, which opened last summer, is expected to employ more than 800 when it reaches full capacity.” [Boston Globe, 3/6/09] It's clear that at least the Globe knew that Evergreen was a beneficiary of significant federal government largesse, and chose to ignore that fact. The introduction to Its March 6, 2009 article (full article is behind the Globe's pay wall) reads as follows
Continue reading …Shane Bauer and Josh Fattal’s eight-year sentence has put further strain on relations between Iran and Washington The lawyer for two Americans convicted of spying in Iran has said he will appeal against their eight-year sentences. The verdict shocked their families, who hoped to see them freed after more than two years already spent in Evin, Tehran’s most notorious prison. Shane Bauer, 28, and Josh Fattal, 29, were arrested in 2009 on the border with Iraq, where they said they were hiking. They were found guilty of illegal entry and espionage at their closed trial , which ended on 31 July. The verdict is likely to further strain Iran’s already poor relations with Washington. “We have 20 days to appeal and I will try my best to use all legal means to annul the sentence,” lawyer Masoud Shafiee told Reuters. “It was my belief, and still is, that they are innocent and I have not seen any evidence that shows they are guilty.” “Josh and Shane were informed about the verdict yesterday,” Shafiee said on Sunday, adding that he had not seen them in person. The two years they had already served would count towards their eight-year sentences, he said. Hillary Clinton, the US secretary of state, expressed deep disappointment at the sentences: “We continue to call and work for their immediate release – it is time for them to return home and be reunited with their families.” Bauer and Fattal’s families said in a statement: “We appeal to the authorities in Iran to show compassion and allow them to return home to our families without delay.” Bauer’s girlfriend, Sarah Shourd, 32, was also arrested but was released on $500,000 bail in September and returned home to California, where she has been campaigning for their freedom. Confirming a leaked report of the sentence, the Tehran prosecutor-general, Abbas Jafari Dolatabadi, told a news conference that no verdict had been passed on Shourd, who did not return to Iran to stand trial. Iran Middle East United States Hillary Clinton guardian.co.uk
Continue reading …At the Bournemouth Air Festival people queued to sign a book of condolence and lay floral tributes to Flight Lieutenant Jon Egging In an outpouring of public grief at the Bournemouth Air Festival on Sunday, thousands of people queued to sign books of condolence and lay floral tributes to Flight Lieutenant Jon Egging, who crashed into a field minutes after performing with the Red Arrows on Saturday in front of an estimated 300,000 spectators. The festival’s final day of events went ahead as planned but a display by the Red Arrows was cancelled after the squadron’s first fatal crash in 33 years. Aviation enthusiasts and people living close to where the Royal Air Force plane came down paid tribute to the 33-year old pilot from Rutland for avoiding houses and crashing in a field on the edge of Bournemouth at 1.50pm on Saturday. Debbie Simpson, 46, had brought her family to pay their respects at Bournemouth Town Hall, partly because they had watched Saturday’s display but also because the Red Arrow crashed 150 yards from their home in the village of Throop. “It is a shock it happened so close to home and I think he is a hero. It makes me proud to be British that we have the Red Arrows,” she said. “I don’t think he had a thought for his own safety. He grounded his plane to avoid what could have been carnage.” The view was echoed by the leader of Bournemouth borough council, Peter Charon. “The fact nobody else was injured is testimony to his bravery,” he said. Tributes of flowers, inflatable Red Arrow planes, candles and teddy bears spread across the town hall lawn as a stream of more than 1,500 people made their way to sign first two, then four and finally six books of condolence, set up by the local council in honour of “Red 4″, as the pilot was known. Some sobbed behind sunglasses in bright south coast sunshine where the Red Arrows were billed the star turn at an air show suffused with military and patriotic pride. “RIP – You filled our skies with colour and our hearts with joy and excitement . Thank you!! Xxxxx” read one card. “Red Arrows=the pride of Britain. We all feel we have lost a dear friend and son,” said another. “Such a sad and tragic accident,” began one note. “You are such a hero for flying your plane away from shops and houses and sacrificing your own life. The town of Bournemouth is in shock.” The RAF suspended all Red Arrow displays using BAE Systems Hawk T1 aircraft until a full service inquiry “can give positive indications as to the air worthiness of the platform”. “It is too early to speculate on the cause of the accident,” said group captain Simon Blake. “It is too early to speculate on the future of the RAF aerobatic team for the remainder of the season. Clearly safety is paramount in our thoughts.” Earlier this month, a Red Arrow pilot was had to perform an emergency landing at Blackpool after a bird strike. Flt Lt Egging’s aircraft came down in a field near the village of Throop and ploughed to a standstill with its nose in the river Stour. It was about 150 yards from cottages, locals said. He was thrown from the plane and was found dead in the water. On Saturday, the pilot’s widow, Dr Emma Egging, had told of her pride in her husband having watched the display. “Jon was everything to those that knew him and he was the best friend and husband I could ever have wished for,” she said. “Watching him today, I was the proudest I have ever been. I loved everything about him and he will be missed.” Defence secretary, Liam Fox said he was “a gifted aviator, selected for one of the most demanding flying jobs in the RAF”. Among members of the public moved to express their grief was Barbara Lees, 64 from Fordingbridge in Hampshire. She laid “a red rose for the Red Arrow” at Bournemouth Town Hall and said her sense of loss was keen because the 300,000 spectators had heard the pilots’ voices over the public address system after they had completed a trick. “I feel awful, devastated and I am doing this today because we feel that we knew them,” she said. “They had just put on such wonderful show for us that for this to happen was horrid.” After the half hour display finished, a helicopter made a display followed by the Breitling wing walkers and then there was a break and it dawned on the spectators that something had happened, she said. As the afternoon progressed the news came through that Egging had died. On Sunday,down on the beachfront, the air show went on at what Cllr Charon said was “the express wish of the RAF”. After a tribute to the dead pilot over the public address system and a one minute silence, thousands watched the Battle of Britain memorial flight including a Lancaster, Spitfire and Hurricanes. The Red Arrows 4pm slot was filled with a display by a Vulcan Bomber and an RAF Tornado. But everywhere amid the holiday atmosphere, candy floss and bouncy castles, the talk was of the crash. Stuart Donovan, 56, the owner of a model aircraft stand was down to his last model Red Arrow and was all out of inflatable replicas. “I’m sold out,” he said. “I think it is because of the crash. People have responded so quickly. Earlier, I saw a man walking along wearing a T-shirt with the pilot’s face printed on the front and ‘Red 4′ on the back.” Military Plane crashes Robert Booth guardian.co.uk
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