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NPR Devotes Over 4 Min. to Supposed Ethics Issues of Thomas, Scalia, Alito; Barely Touches on Kagan

NPR's Nina Totenberg spent more than 4 minutes on Wednesday's Morning Edition to supposed ethical conflicts of interest for conservative Supreme Court Justices Clarence Thomas, Samuel Alito, and Antonin Scalia. By contrast, Totenberg devoted only 17 seconds to the more current issue of liberal Justice Elena Kagan's service in the Obama administration as a factor in upcoming cases before the Court. Host Renee Montagne introduced the correspondent's report by noting how both ” liberal groups have chastised conservative justices for attending private conferences put on by conservative political interests, and conservative groups have responded by leveling some criticism in the other direction.” However, the journalist devoted the first three minutes of a seven-and-a-half minute segment on the criticism launched at Clarence Thomas's wife from the left: TOTENBERG: It seems clear that some liberal groups are on the prowl for conservative conflicts of interest and ethical missteps. Common Cause, for instance, discovered the Justice Clarence Thomas had failed to report his wife's income when she worked for the conservative Heritage Foundation from 2003 to 2007. That failure was indeed a clear violation of the law, but it was also the kind of oversight that occurs routinely on disclosure forms . And Thomas quickly amended his filings for a 13 year period, saying he had misunderstood the requirements. More incendiary, in media terms, was the very public role Mrs. Thomas played as co-founder, president, and CEO of Liberty Central, which advertised itself as linked to the Tea Party movement . Here's how she put it last year in a speech to the Conservative Political Action Conference in Washington. VIRGINIA THOMAS: I have come to know and love the Tea Party Patriots. It has been a privilege to become a bit of an ambassador, of sorts, for the national board. TOTENBERG: Ethics experts agree that while Mrs. Thomas's political activities may be unseemly to some, there's nothing in the judicial code of conduct that would require her husband to recuse himself from cases involving the issues she's spoken so publicly about . They also say her public opposition to the Obama health care law does not require Justice Thomas to recuse himself from cases challenging that law…. What did trouble legal experts about Mrs. Thomas's activism was her salary from an organization funded by secret donors . Liberty Central was started with two large gifts totaling $550,000, and under the tax law governing non-profits, neither the identity of those two donors or subsequent donors had to be disclosed. That's because her group is organized under a section of the tax code called the 501(c)(4)…. In the end, Mrs. Thomas stepped down from her position at Liberty Central to take another job that also has a political nature, but far less visibility. While Mrs. Thomas staunchly defended her right to be a political activist, there's every reason to believe that Justice Thomas's colleagues, his fellow justices, and perhaps the chief justice, quietly made clear that Mrs. Thomas's activities could harm the Supreme Court's credibility as an institution. Totenberg then touched on a six-year-old issue concerning Justice Scalia, as well as concerns surrounding his conservative colleague Samuel Alito: TOTENBERG: There are indications the justices also exerted pressure on Justice Antonin Scalia in 2004, when he participated in a case challenging then-Vice President Dick Cheney's use of executive power. Three weeks after the Court agreed to hear the case, Scalia went on a long-planned duck hunting trip with Cheney. That prompted two months of drum-beating criticism in the press . He finally issued a 21-page memorandum, explaining that the trip was an annual event with his son-in-law, that he was one of 13 hunters, and that he had never been alone with Cheney on the trip. Almost immediately, that particular attack lost its sting. Here's the Brookings Institution's Russell Wheeler: RUSSELL WHEELER, BROOKINGS INSTITUTION: By the time he was through reading it, I said, well, there's not a problem here. But why did he wait, though, so long? Why not just deal with these things up front? TOTENBERG: Justice Samuel Alito has also come in for criticism over his repeated attendance, and, on one occasion, his keynote speaking role, at fundraising dinners for The American Spectator magazine, which is published and supported by conservative political activists . The judicial code of conduct bars judges from fundraising activities because, as Professor Gillers puts it: GILLERS: It's very hard to say no to a judge. Finally, five minutes into the segment, the NPR correspondent devoted just 23 seconds to questions surrounding the activities of former Justice O'Connor, and the 17 seconds to Kagan: TOTENBERG: In response to stories suggesting ethical shortcomings by conservative justices, Judge Laurence Silberman, a well-known conservative appeals court judge, blasted critics as hypocrites, pushing phony concerns. The real ethical concern, he said, should be the activities of retired Supreme Court Justice Sandra Day O'Connor, who has spoken out forcefully and often against state judicial elections. The conservative watchdog group, Judicial Watch, has also suggested that Obama Supreme Court nominee Elena Kagan should recuse herself from participating in any upcoming case challenging the Obama health care law, because she had been a legal official in the Obama administration. Towards the end of her report, Totenberg played a sound bite from Harvard University Law School Professor Noah Feldman, who stated that “it would be very difficult, I think, for the justices to hide any true improprieties, and I think the Court is actually, therefore, an extremely ethical place.” But given all the time she spent on supposed ethical questions concerning the three conservative justices, the journalist definitely gave the impression that the right-leaning legal official are more prone to ethics concerns, even with the more current and relevant topic of Kagan's service in the Obama administration. The full transcript of Nina Totenberg's report from Wednesday's Morning Edition: RENEE MONTAGNE: At times of partisan stress in American politics, the Supreme Court can become part of the game, and the ethics of individual justices can come in for criticism. In recent months, liberal groups have chastised conservative justices for attending private conferences put on by conservative political interests, and conservative groups have responded by leveling some criticism in the other direction. NPR legal affairs correspondent Nina Totenberg has that story. NINA TOTENBERG: It seems clear that some liberal groups are on the prowl for conservative conflicts of interest and ethical missteps. Common Cause, for instance, discovered the Justice Clarence Thomas had failed to report his wife's income when she worked for the conservative Heritage Foundation from 2003 to 2007. That failure was indeed a clear violation of the law, but it was also the kind of oversight that occurs routinely on disclosure forms. And Thomas quickly amended his filings for a 13 year period, saying he had misunderstood the requirements. More incendiary, in media terms, was the very public role Mrs. Thomas played as co-founder, president, and CEO of Liberty Central, which advertised itself as linked to the Tea Party movement. Here's how she put it last year in a speech to the Conservative Political Action Conference in Washington. VIRGINIA THOMAS: I have come to know and love the Tea Party Patriots. It has been a privilege to become a bit of an ambassador, of sorts, for the national board. TOTENBERG: Ethics experts agree that while Mrs. Thomas's political activities may be unseemly to some, there's nothing in the judicial code of conduct that would require her husband to recuse himself from cases involving the issues she's spoken so publicly about. They also say her public opposition to the Obama health care law does not require Justice Thomas to recuse himself from cases challenging that law. NYU law professor Steven Gillers, author of a leading text on legal ethics, notes that federal law bars judges from participating in any matter in which they or their family have a financial interest. But ideological or political interests are another matter entirely. STEVEN GILLERS, NEW YORK UNIVERSITY: A spouse of a judge can have a full political life, and take positions on political issues and legal issues, even ones that come before his or her spouse. TOTENBERG: What did trouble legal experts about Mrs. Thomas's activism was her salary from an organization funded by secret donors. Liberty Central was started with two large gifts totaling $550,000, and under the tax law governing non-profits, neither the identity of those two donors or subsequent donors had to be disclosed. That's because her group is organized under a section of the tax code called the 501(c)(4). Professor Gillers: GILLERS: The crunch point comes if Mrs. Thomas's 501(c)(4) gets substantial contributions from companies or trade associations that have interests in matters that are pending at the Supreme Court, or headed for the Supreme Court. TOTENBERG: In the end, Mrs. Thomas stepped down from her position at Liberty Central to take another job that also has a political nature, but far less visibility. While Mrs. Thomas staunchly defended her right to be a political activist, there's every reason to believe that Justice Thomas's colleagues, his fellow justices, and perhaps the chief justice, quietly made clear that Mrs. Thomas's activities could harm the Supreme Court's credibility as an institution. As Professor Gillers observes, the first line of defense should be self restraint. GILLERS: You don't want to do something that's unseemly because you can. TOTENBERG: There are indications the justices also exerted pressure on Justice Antonin Scalia in 2004, when he participated in a case challenging then-Vice President Dick Cheney's use of executive power. Three weeks after the Court agreed to hear the case, Scalia went on a long-planned duck hunting trip with Cheney. That prompted two months of drum-beating criticism in the press. He finally issued a 21-page memorandum, explaining that the trip was an annual event with his son-in-law, that he was one of 13 hunters, and that he had never been alone with Cheney on the trip. Almost immediately, that particular attack lost its sting. Here's the Brookings Institution's Russell Wheeler: RUSSELL WHEELER, BROOKINGS INSTITUTION: By the time he was through reading it, I said, well, there's not a problem here. But why did he wait, though, so long? Why not just deal with these things up front? TOTENBERG: Justice Samuel Alito has also come in for criticism over his repeated attendance, and, on one occasion, his keynote speaking role, at fundraising dinners for The American Spectator magazine, which is published and supported by conservative political activists. The judicial code of conduct bars judges from fundraising activities because, as Professor Gillers puts it: GILLERS: It's very hard to say no to a judge. TOTENBERG: In response to stories suggesting ethical shortcomings by conservative justices, Judge Laurence Silberman, a well-known conservative appeals court judge, blasted critics as hypocrites, pushing phony concerns. The real ethical concern, he said, should be the activities of retired Supreme Court Justice Sandra Day O'Connor, who has spoken out forcefully and often against state judicial elections. The conservative watchdog group, Judicial Watch, has also suggested that Obama Supreme Court nominee Elena Kagan should recuse herself from participating in any upcoming case challenging the Obama health care law, because she had been a legal official in the Obama administration. Whatever the merits of each of these examples, they illustrate how the Court is being buffeted by interest groups over ethics questions. Harvard law professor and Supreme Court historian Noah Feldman says both the left and the right have used ethics as a tool for de-legitimizing the opposition. NOAH FELDMAN, HARVARD UNIVERSITY LAW SCHOOL: Criticism on ethics issues is often a proxy for political disapproval with how you expect a justice to vote. Beyond saying I think you have a bad interpretation of the Constitution, if you can say, I think you're unethical, then you've switched the conversation in a way that can sometimes be politically powerful. TOTENBERG: Feldman doesn't deny that there can be ethical violations, but he adds in the modern world, he's doubtful they're a real threat. FELDMAN: Today, with information moving as fast as it does, it would be very difficult, I think, for the justices to hide any true improprieties, and I think the Court is actually, therefore, an extremely ethical place. TOTENBERG But many ethics experts believe the Court is asking for trouble by not being formally adopting the same judicial code of conduct that applies to lower court federal judges. Federal law bars all judges, including Supreme Court justices, from financial conflicts of interest. But the judicial code of conduct, a longer and more comprehensive set of rules, does not, strictly speaking, apply to the Supreme Court, and many court experts think it should. GILLERS: I think that their credibility would be enhanced. TOTENBERG: Professor Gillers: GILLERS: If the public begins to believe that the political agenda- that it's not something dictated by our legal tradition, the Court's credibility, the willingness of the public to accept its decisions, will be harmed. TOTENBERG: And that would be a cost far higher than any set of rules could impose. Nina Totenberg, NPR News, Washington.

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Tea Party Gov. Rick Scott Freezes State Agency Regulation, Is Slapped Down By Florida Supreme Court

‘Florida Supreme Court, why will you not grant me Supreme Power?’ Look at this — every once in a while, the judiciary does its job, even in states like Florida! Nice to see Gov. Scott get slapped down in what is yet another of his ruthless power grabs: Gov. Rick Scott overstepped his authority and violated the separation of powers by freezing state agency rulemaking, the Florida Supreme Court ruled today. Shortly after he was sworn in as governor on Jan. 4, Scott suspended agency rulemaking and required the proposed rules be vetted by his office. He later created the “Office of Fiscal Accountability and Regulatory Reform” to review the rules, saying he wanted to make sure they did not slow down government, create barriers for businesses or cost taxpayers money. Sez the CEO whose company had to pay a $6 million fine to the federal government and admitted he should have hired more auditors to make sure his health care company was in compliance with those pesky Medicare regulations. Apparently the lesson learned is, whenever possible, simply do away with regulations! But in a 5-2 ruling, the court found that Scott’s executive orders “infringe upon the very process of rulemaking and encroach upon the Legislature‘s delegation of its rulemaking power as set forth in the Florida Statutes.” Chief Justice Charles Canady and Judge Ricky Polston, both appointed by Gov. Charlie Crist, dissented. Scott acted within his constitutional authority as the state’s chief administrative officer whose duty is “to manage, plan, and hold agencies under his charge accountable to State laws, including the APA. The actual facts before us do not demonstrate otherwise,” Polston wrote. Canady called the majority opinion an “ill-conceived interference with the constitutional authority and responsibility of Florida‘s Governor.” Scott also saw it that way. “It doesn’t make any sense to me,” Scott said of the court ruling. “I don’t think it follows the constitution. It’s a disappointment.

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Tea Party Gov. Rick Scott Freezes State Agency Regulation, Is Slapped Down By Florida Supreme Court

‘Florida Supreme Court, why will you not grant me Supreme Power?’ Look at this — every once in a while, the judiciary does its job, even in states like Florida! Nice to see Gov. Scott get slapped down in what is yet another of his ruthless power grabs: Gov. Rick Scott overstepped his authority and violated the separation of powers by freezing state agency rulemaking, the Florida Supreme Court ruled today. Shortly after he was sworn in as governor on Jan. 4, Scott suspended agency rulemaking and required the proposed rules be vetted by his office. He later created the “Office of Fiscal Accountability and Regulatory Reform” to review the rules, saying he wanted to make sure they did not slow down government, create barriers for businesses or cost taxpayers money. Sez the CEO whose company had to pay a $6 million fine to the federal government and admitted he should have hired more auditors to make sure his health care company was in compliance with those pesky Medicare regulations. Apparently the lesson learned is, whenever possible, simply do away with regulations! But in a 5-2 ruling, the court found that Scott’s executive orders “infringe upon the very process of rulemaking and encroach upon the Legislature‘s delegation of its rulemaking power as set forth in the Florida Statutes.” Chief Justice Charles Canady and Judge Ricky Polston, both appointed by Gov. Charlie Crist, dissented. Scott acted within his constitutional authority as the state’s chief administrative officer whose duty is “to manage, plan, and hold agencies under his charge accountable to State laws, including the APA. The actual facts before us do not demonstrate otherwise,” Polston wrote. Canady called the majority opinion an “ill-conceived interference with the constitutional authority and responsibility of Florida‘s Governor.” Scott also saw it that way. “It doesn’t make any sense to me,” Scott said of the court ruling. “I don’t think it follows the constitution. It’s a disappointment.

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Tampa police thwart teen’s Columbine-style plot

Bomb-making materials, maps of school and written statements found at Florida home Florida police say they have thwarted a plot by a 17-year-old to attack his former school, after discovering bomb-making material at his home. “We were probably able to thwart a potentially catastrophic event the likes of which the city of Tampa has not seen and hopefully never will,” Tampa police chief Jane Castor told a news conference. Tampa police said Jared Cano’s target was the Freedom high school in Hillsborough county. The local police chief, Jane Castor, said Cano, who had been expelled from the school, had hoped “to cause more casualties than were suffered at Columbine”. In April 1999, two students at the Columbine high school in Colorado killed 12 students and one teacher in one of the deadliest school massacres in US history. Castor said Tampa police, acting on a tip from an informant, learned that Cano had been planning an attack for the first day of term next week. Florida United States Global terrorism guardian.co.uk

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Tampa police thwart teen’s Columbine-style plot

Bomb-making materials, maps of school and written statements found at Florida home Florida police say they have thwarted a plot by a 17-year-old to attack his former school, after discovering bomb-making material at his home. “We were probably able to thwart a potentially catastrophic event the likes of which the city of Tampa has not seen and hopefully never will,” Tampa police chief Jane Castor told a news conference. Tampa police said Jared Cano’s target was the Freedom high school in Hillsborough county. The local police chief, Jane Castor, said Cano, who had been expelled from the school, had hoped “to cause more casualties than were suffered at Columbine”. In April 1999, two students at the Columbine high school in Colorado killed 12 students and one teacher in one of the deadliest school massacres in US history. Castor said Tampa police, acting on a tip from an informant, learned that Cano had been planning an attack for the first day of term next week. Florida United States Global terrorism guardian.co.uk

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New Explosive Evidence in News of the World Scandal Shows Phone Hacking Was ‘Widely Discussed’

Click here to view this media Sadly the latest news on Rupert Murdoch and his son James and the recent developments in the News of the World phone hacking scandal haven’t gotten a lot of play recently in the United States, but David Shuster filling in for Keith Olbermann on Current TV gave it some coverage this Tuesday. Shuster talked to former Nixon staffer and author John Dean and got his thoughts on the recent developments on the story and whether Rupert Murdoch will be held accountable for the actions taken by his company in light of these phone hackings. Dean seemed to think, and I agree with him, that his son James is probably not going to come out of this as well as his father and will probably be the one taking the fall for this as he’s likely to be called back again to appear before the UK parliament, this time, under oath. Here’s the latest from The Guardian — Phone hacking: News of the World reporter’s letter reveals cover-up : Disgraced royal correspondent Clive Goodman’s letter says phone hacking was ‘widely discussed’ at NOTW meetings Rupert Murdoch , James Murdoch and their former editor Andy Coulson all face embarrassing new allegations of dishonesty and cover-up after the publication of an explosive letter written by the News of the World’s disgraced royal correspondent, Clive Goodman . In the letter, which was written four years ago but published only on Tuesday, Goodman claims that phone hacking was “widely discussed” at editorial meetings at the paper until Coulson himself banned further references to it; that Coulson offered to let him keep his job if he agreed not to implicate the paper in hacking when he came to court; and that his own hacking was carried out with “the full knowledge and support” of other senior journalists, whom he named. The claims are acutely troubling for the prime minister, David Cameron, who hired Coulson as his media adviser on the basis that he knew nothing about phone hacking. And they confront Rupert and James Murdoch with the humiliating prospect of being recalled to parliament to justify the evidence which they gave last month on the aftermath of Goodman’s allegations. In a separate letter, one of the Murdochs’ own law firms claim that parts of that evidence were variously “hard to credit,” “self-serving” and “inaccurate and misleading.” Goodman’s claims also raise serious questions about Rupert Murdoch’s close friend and adviser, Les Hinton, who was sent a copy of the letter but failed to pass it to police and who then led a cast of senior Murdoch personnel in telling parliament that they believed Coulson knew nothing about the interception of the voice mail of public figures and that Goodman was the only journalist involved. News of the World reporter’s letter reveals cover-up” rel=” Read on…

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CNN host Piers Morgan argued for tax hikes during interviews with two separate guests on his Tuesday night show. The former British tabloid editor tried to persuade Rudy Giuliani, a possible GOP presidential candidate, that the Tea Party is in the minority in its stance against higher taxes and should consider spending cuts paired with increased tax revenues to cut the deficit. [Video below the break.] Later on in the show, Morgan hosted libertarian author Penn Jillette and stumped for raising taxes. “The solution is probably to raise taxes, to cut spending, to do special incentivizing for small business people,” he told Jillette. Morgan used poll numbers and the words of billionaire Warren Buffett to support his position. “Recent polls seem to be more and more in favor of tax increases. And then you have Warren Buffett, for example, one of the richest men in the country, almost pleading to be taxed more,” he told Giuliani. “Why not have a two-tier attack on this economy where you have more revenue, but you also dramatically reduce spending? What is wrong with that?” he posed. During his interview with Jillette, Morgan touted a liberal view on the role of government. When his guest spoke of his concern that people are “thinking that somebody above us, someone in power, can take care of all of us, can fix everything,” the CNN host replied “They should. It's their job in government, isn't it?” He added that “when you've had these great recoveries from difficult times, they've come through great leadership and good government and big ideas.” In this case, Morgan was referring to strong leadership and not necessarily big government. However, his previous quote lends to the thought that he believes in both. He also said that in order for the rich to give financial assistance to the poor, “They have to be directed by government.” A transcript of the segments, which aired on August 16 at 9:10 p.m. and 9:42 p.m. EDT respectively, is as follows: [9:10] RUDY GIULIANI, former New York City mayor: And I think the President should pay less attention to the Republican candidates and more attention to the economy. I also think, you know, his criticism of the Republicans saying they wouldn't raise revenues, and his desire to get higher revenues is kind of a big mistake. What it shows is he's addicted to spending. He can't seem to get himself off the idea that he needs more revenue so he can spend more money. The reason I wouldn't raise revenues has nothing to do with the rich or poor or these class warfare battle that he gets into. I wouldn't give the government any more money to waste. I think this government is a profound waster of money. Just like I wouldn't give a business more money to waste, I wouldn't give this government more money to waste. MORGAN: Recent polls seem to be more and more in favor of tax increases. And then you have Warren Buffett, for example, one of the richest men in the country, almost pleading to be taxed more. So although I understand the Tea Party in particular, and many Republicans alongside the Tea Party have got a bit of traction with this “we will not raise taxation” campaign – the reality is it wouldn't be that unpopular, would it? So why rule that out? Why not have a two-tier attack on this economy where you have more revenue, but you also dramatically reduce spending? What is wrong with that? [9:42] PIERS MORGAN: Give me the atheist way to get out of economic strife? In other words, harsh reality, with your business brain, successful guy, where has America gone wrong? What's the answer? PENN JILLETTE, author, “God, No!”: I always seem to think that the most important thing is individuals. And the most important thing is diversity. And the most important thing is to have someone like you, someone like me, who disagree on a very important issue – constantly talking, constantly working it out. I think that the problem is maybe thinking that somebody above us, someone in power, can take care of all of us, can fix everything. MORGAN: They should. It's their job in government, isn't it? That's why you vote for people. It's why they get elected. It's why they run for office. JILLETTE: I'm not sure that's exactly the way I see it. MORGAN: But that's how it ought to be. When America has been revived in the past, whether it's FDR or Harry Truman or John F. Kennedy or Bill Clinton or Ronald Reagan – when you've had these great recoveries from difficult times, they've come through great leadership and good government and big ideas. JILLETTE: That's not – the way it feels to me is that when you wait for a decision to be made from someone in power above you, and you give up your personal responsibility, you give up your own power. That's where the danger comes. MORGAN: Yeah, but right now, small business people, for example, they have absolutely no mechanism out there to get their businesses going again. They just don't. It's just not there. JILLETTE: Right. MORGAN: So what do you say to those people? How do they – how do they operate? In this government – JILLETTE: – the solution to give them government money? MORGAN: I think the solution is probably to do a bit of that. The solution is probably to raise taxes, to cut spending, to do special incentivizing for small business people. (…) JILLETTE: But we know – there is a place for charity and there is a place for compassion. MORGAN: It's not charity, though. That's completely the wrong response. It's not about me or you giving a few handouts to these people. This is about a system in America that's gone horribly wrong. When one in seven Americans is living off stamps, this system is broken. JILLETTE: Well that's six in seven Americans that can help them. MORGAN: Yes. How? They have to be directed by government. JILLETTE: They do? MORGAN: I think so. JILLETTE: You don't think can you help people directly? I've seen experience of helping people directly. MORGAN: On a mass scale that can change – JILLETTE: Yeah. I think so. I think so. MORGAN: Really? JILLETTE: I think, you know, you got your Keva doing the micro loans all over the world that are making huge changes without any government force at all. Micro loans have ended up doing huge things overseas and now they're working a bit in the USA.

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Gaddafi troops fight to maintain positions in strategic city of Zawiyah

Tripoli under threat as regime forces struggle to hold on and rebels claim they have cut oil supply to capital Libyan rebels launched an assault on the only functioning oil refinery in Zawiyah on Wednesday, with reports of heavy clashes in the key city, which is only 30 miles from the capital, Tripoli. While rebel commanders elsewhere in Libya reported significant advances, in Zawiyah the opposition’s struggle for control was hampered by resistance from troops loyal to Colonel Muammar Gaddafi, including snipers and rocket and artillery positions located outside the city. Gaddafi’s troops are reported to hold the main hospital to the east of the town – with government snipers firing from the roof and doctors unable to enter or leave – as well as several other areas straddling the main motorway to the capital. One rebel fighter, Ramadan Keshadat, said that his forces controlled parts of the refinery complex in the city’s north on the Mediterranean coast, while some regime troops and workers remain inside. He said rebels and regime forces clashed there on Tuesday; then the rebel fighters pulled out at nightfall and made a new push in daylight. An AP photographer who entered the refinery with the rebels reported hearing sniper fire. Another rebel told the AP that the oil pipeline to the capital had been cut, but this could not be confirmed. Elsewhere, anti-government fighters told the Guardian they had taken control of Badr, a small town on the edge of the rebel-held western mountains, and the site of a government army base. Four rebels were killed in fighting, with two pro-Gaddafi houses putting up fierce resistance, they said. At the Dehiba border crossing between Tunisia and rebel-controlled western Libya, one fighter claimed that rebels were now in control of Garyan, a crossroads between Tripoli and the Gaddafi stronghold of Sabha. “Garyan is free. They have seized a lot of weapons from Gaddafi’s forces,” one fighter said. At the border crossing, wounded rebel fighters were being evacuated to Tunisia while others – shot in previous encounters – were returning in the other direction to the frontline. Esam Omeish, a Washington-based Libyan doctor bringing in medical supplies, claimed that the momentum was overwhelmingly with rebel forces. “Five big cities have fallen in the last three days,” he said. “Garyan is fallen, which is central to the control of the south. I’m in touch with a lot of folks from Tripoli. They are in high spirits.” Rebels in Misrata said they had made significant advances out of the city, threatening to cut Tripoli’s last remaining highway linking it to the rest of the country. Fighters in armed pickup trucks swept 30 miles south across the desert to take the small village of Bir Durfan, saying they met no resistance. “There are no Gaddafi troops, they are broken,” said broadcaster Ramadan Maiteeg from Misrata’s Radio Freedom Voice. “They will reach Bani Walid soon.” A second advance pushed down the coast road, with fighting raging in the small town of al-Heesha, 70 miles south-east of Misrata. The advance, if confirmed, leaves Gaddafi facing the prospect of a siege of Tripoli with all roads cut and the sea and air controlled by Nato. But the rebels’ difficulties in Zawiyah, where a small number of snipers and artillery outside the town have slowed the advance, are indicative of the uphill struggle they will face if they have to fight for the capital Tripoli itself. On Wednesday afternoon, an al-Jazeera correspondent in Zawiyah reported Grad missiles landing near a rebel position under a key bridge. While Nato air strikes have helped destroy Gaddafi’s ammunition dumps, military facilities and vehicles in the open, their use will be hampered in heavily populated urban areas where the front lines have been fluid, involving building-to-building fighting of the kind already seen in Misrata. Although the distance to Tripoli from Zawiyah is short, rebels – still relatively few in number – now face the largest concentration of pro-regime forces, including the best trained and best equipped units, who have shown no signs yet of splitting from Gaddafi and his family. Tripoli is also home to a large concentration of those with both tribal and political loyalties to the regime.The Libyan rebels made a dramatic advance over the weekend out of their bases in the western mountains near the border with Tunisia into Zawiyah The rebel advance, however, is tightening the noose around Tripoli – which could set the stage for a different kind of stalemate in the short term with no sign either of a hoped for uprising by Tripoli residents in areas like the large suburb of Tajoura which saw a brutal crackdown at the beginning of the uprising. The fighters are closing in on the capital from the west and the south, while Nato controls the seas off Tripoli, which sits on the Mediterranean coast. Elsewhere rebels claimed Gaddafi forces further west had abandoned two towns and were retreating toward the Tunisian border. “Gaddafi’s forces this morning withdrew from the towns of Tiji and Badr because they felt surrounded from all sides,” said the spokesman, named Abdulrahman, told Reuters by telephone from Zintan, a rebel headquarters in the Western Mountains. “The revolutionaries have now entered Tiji and Badr. The [Gaddafi] brigades retreated to Zuwarah and Jameel, near the Tunisian border. I think they will surrender soon because roads to Tripoli are closed,” he added. Libya Muammar Gaddafi Nato Middle East Africa guardian.co.uk

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Gaddafi troops fight to maintain positions in strategic city of Zawiyah

Tripoli under threat as regime forces struggle to hold on and rebels claim they have cut oil supply to capital Libyan rebels launched an assault on the only functioning oil refinery in Zawiyah on Wednesday, with reports of heavy clashes in the key city, which is only 30 miles from the capital, Tripoli. While rebel commanders elsewhere in Libya reported significant advances, in Zawiyah the opposition’s struggle for control was hampered by resistance from troops loyal to Colonel Muammar Gaddafi, including snipers and rocket and artillery positions located outside the city. Gaddafi’s troops are reported to hold the main hospital to the east of the town – with government snipers firing from the roof and doctors unable to enter or leave – as well as several other areas straddling the main motorway to the capital. One rebel fighter, Ramadan Keshadat, said that his forces controlled parts of the refinery complex in the city’s north on the Mediterranean coast, while some regime troops and workers remain inside. He said rebels and regime forces clashed there on Tuesday; then the rebel fighters pulled out at nightfall and made a new push in daylight. An AP photographer who entered the refinery with the rebels reported hearing sniper fire. Another rebel told the AP that the oil pipeline to the capital had been cut, but this could not be confirmed. Elsewhere, anti-government fighters told the Guardian they had taken control of Badr, a small town on the edge of the rebel-held western mountains, and the site of a government army base. Four rebels were killed in fighting, with two pro-Gaddafi houses putting up fierce resistance, they said. At the Dehiba border crossing between Tunisia and rebel-controlled western Libya, one fighter claimed that rebels were now in control of Garyan, a crossroads between Tripoli and the Gaddafi stronghold of Sabha. “Garyan is free. They have seized a lot of weapons from Gaddafi’s forces,” one fighter said. At the border crossing, wounded rebel fighters were being evacuated to Tunisia while others – shot in previous encounters – were returning in the other direction to the frontline. Esam Omeish, a Washington-based Libyan doctor bringing in medical supplies, claimed that the momentum was overwhelmingly with rebel forces. “Five big cities have fallen in the last three days,” he said. “Garyan is fallen, which is central to the control of the south. I’m in touch with a lot of folks from Tripoli. They are in high spirits.” Rebels in Misrata said they had made significant advances out of the city, threatening to cut Tripoli’s last remaining highway linking it to the rest of the country. Fighters in armed pickup trucks swept 30 miles south across the desert to take the small village of Bir Durfan, saying they met no resistance. “There are no Gaddafi troops, they are broken,” said broadcaster Ramadan Maiteeg from Misrata’s Radio Freedom Voice. “They will reach Bani Walid soon.” A second advance pushed down the coast road, with fighting raging in the small town of al-Heesha, 70 miles south-east of Misrata. The advance, if confirmed, leaves Gaddafi facing the prospect of a siege of Tripoli with all roads cut and the sea and air controlled by Nato. But the rebels’ difficulties in Zawiyah, where a small number of snipers and artillery outside the town have slowed the advance, are indicative of the uphill struggle they will face if they have to fight for the capital Tripoli itself. On Wednesday afternoon, an al-Jazeera correspondent in Zawiyah reported Grad missiles landing near a rebel position under a key bridge. While Nato air strikes have helped destroy Gaddafi’s ammunition dumps, military facilities and vehicles in the open, their use will be hampered in heavily populated urban areas where the front lines have been fluid, involving building-to-building fighting of the kind already seen in Misrata. Although the distance to Tripoli from Zawiyah is short, rebels – still relatively few in number – now face the largest concentration of pro-regime forces, including the best trained and best equipped units, who have shown no signs yet of splitting from Gaddafi and his family. Tripoli is also home to a large concentration of those with both tribal and political loyalties to the regime.The Libyan rebels made a dramatic advance over the weekend out of their bases in the western mountains near the border with Tunisia into Zawiyah The rebel advance, however, is tightening the noose around Tripoli – which could set the stage for a different kind of stalemate in the short term with no sign either of a hoped for uprising by Tripoli residents in areas like the large suburb of Tajoura which saw a brutal crackdown at the beginning of the uprising. The fighters are closing in on the capital from the west and the south, while Nato controls the seas off Tripoli, which sits on the Mediterranean coast. Elsewhere rebels claimed Gaddafi forces further west had abandoned two towns and were retreating toward the Tunisian border. “Gaddafi’s forces this morning withdrew from the towns of Tiji and Badr because they felt surrounded from all sides,” said the spokesman, named Abdulrahman, told Reuters by telephone from Zintan, a rebel headquarters in the Western Mountains. “The revolutionaries have now entered Tiji and Badr. The [Gaddafi] brigades retreated to Zuwarah and Jameel, near the Tunisian border. I think they will surrender soon because roads to Tripoli are closed,” he added. Libya Muammar Gaddafi Nato Middle East Africa guardian.co.uk

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Riot sentence rift opens between Liberal Democrats and Conservatives

Lib Dem peers warn of ‘loss of proportion’ and Simon Hughes calls for ‘relative leniency on first-time offenders’ Two of the most significant figures in the British legal establishment have made urgent warnings about tough sentencing for riot-related offences as the split in the coalition over the response to last week’s violence dramatically widened. Lord Macdonald, who led the prosecution service in England and Wales for five years, warned that the courts risked being swept up in a “collective loss of proportion”, passing jail terms that lack “humanity or justice”. Meanwhile his fellow Liberal Democrat peer Lord Carlile, the barrister who was until this year the government’s independent adviser on terrorism strategy, warned against ministerial interference in the judicial process, arguing that “just filling up prisons” would not prevent future

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