Wife was sunbathing on the shore when 30-year-old, named locally as Ian Redmond, was attacked A British man on his honeymoon has been killed by a shark in the Seychelles, less than a fortnight after a French tourist was also fatally bitten in the waters off the same island. The 30-year-old, named locally as Ian Redmond, was attacked on Tuesday while his wife was sunbathing on the shore, according to reports. The shark struck in the waters off Anse Lazio beach on the island of Praslin, the second largest in the Indian Ocean archipelago and a popular destination with honeymooning Britons. A tourist in a dinghy dragged him on board and brought him ashore and another holidaymaker then tried to save his life, according to a report in the Daily Mail. “We heard screaming and people started running down the beach towards the water,” an American tourist was quoted as saying. “Someone had seen a fin sticking out of the water, and then we saw a dinghy pulling a man from the water. “I saw the swimmer, who was missing a huge chunk of flesh from his left leg, so much so that I could see the bone of his thigh. He was sickeningly pale, but still had his flippers on both feet.” “At this point a woman ran over and started screaming. She said: ‘That’s my husband! We were just married.’ “Someone grabbed her and tried to keep her away. People all over the beach were just hugging whoever was close to them or trying to keep any children from witnessing what was going on.” Authorities in the Seychelles have asked for help from shark experts in South Africa to identify the animal while a temporary ban on swimming or entering the waters around parts of Praslin has been ordered. The Seychelles minister for home affairs and environment, Joel Morgan, also held an emergency meeting in the capital Victoria as the government moved to try to limit the potential damage to the tourism industry, the country’s main source of foreign exchange. The Seychelles’ profile was given a boost in the UK when the Duke and Duchess of Cambridge spent their honeymoon on North Island in May. Alain St Ange, the head of the Seychelles tourism board, told the Daily Telegraph: “It was a freak accident. We are closing the beaches pending the arrival of experts from South Africa.” Fatal shark attacks in the Seychelles are thought to be rare – prior to the death of the French tourist the last recorded fatal attack there was recorded in 1963 – according to local media reports. The Foreign Office said: “We can confirm the death of a British national in the Seychelles. We are providing consular assistance to the next of kin.” A French tourist who died while snorkelling on 1 August was named in the Seychelles media as Nicolas Francois Virolle, 36. Other tourists on the beach were said to have hauled his body from the sea but he died from a massive loss of blood. Seychelles Africa Ben Quinn guardian.co.uk
Continue reading …It is, of course, an article of wingnut faith that Fannie and Freddie crashed the economy by helping undeserving black and brown people get mortgages (Wall Street didn’t have a thing to do with it). So if Obama actually implements such a proposal, it will trigger yet another wave of right-wing outrage: President Obama has directed a small team of advisers to develop a proposal that would keep the government playing a major role in the nation’s mortgage market, extending a federal loan subsidy for most home buyers, according to people familiar with the matter. The decision follows the advice of his senior economic and housing advisers, who favor maintaining the government’s role as an insurer of mortgages for most borrowers. The approach could even preserve Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac, the mortgage finance giants owned by the government, although under different names and with significant new constraints, said people knowledgeable about the discussions. A decision to preserve a major government role would mark a big milestone in the effort to craft a new housing policy from the wreckage of the mortgage meltdown and could mean a larger part for Fannie and Freddie than administration officials had signaled. In a statement, the White House said it is premature to say that senior officials have agreed on any of the three main options outlined earlier this year in an administration white paper on reforming the housing finance system. “It is simply false that there has been a decision to move forward with any particular option,” said Matt Vogel, a White House spokesman. “All three options remain under active consideration and we are deepening our analysis around how each would potentially be implemented. No recommendation has been made to the president by his economic advisers.” But progressive economist Dean Baker hates the idea : It would be difficult to find an economic rationale for this policy other than subsidizing the financial industry. The government can and does directly subsidize the purchase of homes through the mortgage interest deduction. This can be made more generous and better targeted toward low and moderate income families by capping it and converting it into a tax credit (e.g. all homeowners can deduct 15 percent of the interest paid on mortgages of $300,000 or less from their taxes). There is no obvious reason to have an additional subsidy through the system of mortgage finance. Analysis by Mark Zandi showed that the subsidy provided by a government guarantee would largely translate into higher home prices. This would leave monthly mortgage payments virtually unaffected. The diversion of capital from elsewhere in the economy would mean slower economic growth and would kill jobs for auto workers, steel workers and other workers in the manufacturing sector .
Continue reading …Paul ‘Doug’ Peters, arrested in the US, is accused of attaching fake device after breaking into Sydney teenager’s family home The man accused of chaining a fake bomb to a teenager’s neck after breaking into her family home in Australia was tracked down using an email address on the ransom note, court papers reveal. Paul “Doug” Peters, 50, was arrested on Monday by an FBI Swat team at the home of his ex-wife in a suburb of Louisville, Kentucky, in an operation involving Australian police. On Tuesday a US judge ordered the Australian father of three be remanded in jail pending an extradition hearing set for 14
Continue reading …Paul ‘Doug’ Peters, arrested in the US, is accused of attaching fake device after breaking into Sydney teenager’s family home The man accused of chaining a fake bomb to a teenager’s neck after breaking into her family home in Australia was tracked down using an email address on the ransom note, court papers reveal. Paul “Doug” Peters, 50, was arrested on Monday by an FBI Swat team at the home of his ex-wife in a suburb of Louisville, Kentucky, in an operation involving Australian police. On Tuesday a US judge ordered the Australian father of three be remanded in jail pending an extradition hearing set for 14
Continue reading …Plan for European economic government with single leader, drawn up after mini-summit, cautiously welcomed by UK France and Germany have set out plans to create the first “true European economic government” headed by a single appointed leader, as part of major moves to synchronise tax and spending to save the failing eurozone. The French president, Nicolas Sarkozy, and German chancellor, Angela Merkel, announced the dramatic proposals after a two-hour mini-summit. They also called for the imposition of tighter restrictions on member country’s deficits and announced a synchronising of the tax policies of their own two countries. Sarkozy has also secured the support of Merkel for a Tobin tax – a financial tax on all international transactions – to raise funds to ease the crisis engulfing the European economy. The establishment of an economic government for the eurozone will be regarded by eurosceptics as a political power grab for Europe. On Tuesday night, the British government gave a cautious welcome to the move, saying they would adopt a “watch and see” policy. A treasury source said: “This looks like the right direction but we need to see how it pans out. We will continue to advance UK interests at every opportunity.” The government has no formal position on the Tobin tax, but has stressed that any such tax would need to be truly international to be successful and not disadvantage participating countries. The proposals, on the day of dire growth figures for Germany, normally considered one of Europe’s safest economies disappointed the markets. Sarkozy said the most important element was the plan “to create a real economic government for the eurozone”. Merkel said “there has to be a stronger coordination of financial and economic policy” to protect the euro, adding: “We will regain the lost confidence. That is why we go into a phase with a new quality of cooperation within the eurozone.” The European Council president, Herman van Rompuy, will be asked to head the new economic government, and will set and enforce a deadline for all 17 eurozone members to reduce their deficits, putting pressure on countries such as Greece and Portugal to shore up public spending. Merkel said they had rejected for now the idea of euro bonds, which would have pooled the members states’ governments’ debts to reduce the overall risk of the eurozone,but neither leader ruled their use out in the future. George Osborne has raised euro bonds as a possible mechanism for shoring up the eurozone, but the idea was politically unpalatable in the German coalition. There was also no movement on the expansion of the zone’s €440 billion rescue fund, the European financial stability facility, seen by some as crucial to the future of the zone. Merkel said all countries in the eurozone should enshrine balanced budgets in their constitutions. “I do not really think we can solve problems with stop-gap solutions,” she said. “We are looking at real, realistic step-by-step measures that we can use to gain back the trust that has been lost, and I do not think that euro bonds would help us in this. “It’s quite right that 17 countries need to make a step-by-step progress.” Euro Nicolas Sarkozy Angela Merkel European Union Currencies Europe Europe Polly Curtis guardian.co.uk
Continue reading …Comments from Lib Dems reveal deep concerns over David Cameron’s uncompromising law and order agenda Liberal Democrat politicians indicated on Tuesday that they have deep concerns over David Cameron’s uncompromising post-riots law and order agenda, with the party’s home affairs spokeswoman in the Lords telling the Guardian there should be “zero tolerance with zero tolerance”. Baroness Hamwee, the peer who led the Lords revolt against Tory plans for elected police commissioners earlier this year, said the pledge by the prime minister of “zero tolerance” on criminality was taking matters too far. Her comment suggests Cameron will meet stiff resistance when parliament returns in September. Lib Dem backbenchers went further when contacted by the Guardian and accused their coalition partners of short-termism and kneejerk reactions. David Ward, MP for Bradford East, described plans to withdraw benefits of offenders as “nuts” and Tessa Munt, the MP for Wells, said the plans were “bonkers, bonkers, bonkers”. She said: “Frankly, this all smacks of headline grabbing by Conservatives, not calm rational policy-making.” The vice-chair of the party’s federal policy committee, Evan Harris, said he would table an amendment at party conference asking members to vote to block Cameron’s contemplation of barring individuals suspected of causing social unrest from Twitter and Facebook. These signs of Lib Dem disquiet emerged after the party’s leader, Nick Clegg, sought to slow down a fast and furious run of Tory policy suggestions, including plans to evict the families of rioters from council houses and a consultation on ending benefit payments for offenders. The deputy prime minister instead stressed plans to rehabilitate offenders through the government’s work programme, softening the hardline language used 24 hours earlier by the prime minister. He also announced a cross-party inquiry into the causes of the riots, in a deal he had brokered between Cameron and the Labour leader, Ed Miliband. Clegg appeared to put the brakes on the benefit withdrawal plans, saying they would not be entered into without extensive consideration. He told a press conference in Whitehall: “We are going to take our time to look at this. Of course you need to be proportionate, of course you need to be careful, of course you don’t want to create unintended consequences where the taxpayer ends up footing more of the bill or we create more social problems or problems of law and order.” Baroness Hamwee warned that her party would take a dim view if Cameron pushed ahead with a “zero tolerance” approach. “I am worried,” she said. “I think there is something in the ‘broken windows’ theory of policing – that you can bring down crime by catching things early – but not zero tolerance. “I also think it is very important not to make policy on the hoof. My instinct is that it would be a great pity if what [justice secretary] Ken Clarke has been doing – finding a better way of sentencing – was to be undone. If it is, we will be taking a backward, regrettable step.” One senior Lib Dem government figure, who wished to remain anonymous, suggested the party would push to derail Cameron’s plans for elected police commissioners. The legislation has not yet been passed and is due for consideration again in the autumn. Meanwhile the party’s welfare spokeswoman, Jenny Willott, echoed deputy leader Simon Hughes’s opposition, laid out in the Observer on Sunday, to plans to evict people from council houses. She said the rehabilitation of people who had rioted required them having enough money to put a roof over their head and eat. “I feel strongly, I don’t think we can cut benefits,” she said. “I do understand that people feel strongly about this and so instead I think there is something to be said for taking a criminal record and whether someone was involved in the riots into account when considering the allocation of social housing. But what is currently being proposed is counter-productive.” At his press conference in London on Tuesday, Clegg said he wanted to end the “dismal cycle of repeat crime” by hardcore criminals. The majority of adults charged with riot-related offences already had a criminal record, he said. “We need to ensure that the treadmill, this dismal cycle of repeat crime, is stopped. We have thousands upon thousands of victims needlessly hurt because we have failed … to stop the cycle of repeat crime,” he said. In an apparent dig at both his coalition partners and the opposition, he said there was a tendency for parties to adopt “cardboard cut-out” positions to social problems with one side blaming the problems on a breakdown in society and the other blaming government policy. He rejected calls from the Tory backbenches for a marriage tax allowance to be introduced in their belief that it could help stabilise families. But he also stressed the coalition was committed to tax reliefs for the poorest before the wealthiest after George Osborne’s suggestion that the 50% rate of tax was under review. “The coalition is very clear that what takes precedence if you’ve got money and the ability to provide tax relief to people is tax cuts for millions of people on middle and low incomes,” he said. Liberal Democrats UK riots Nick Clegg UK criminal justice David Cameron Conservatives Police Welfare Allegra Stratton Polly Curtis Maev Kennedy James Meikle guardian.co.uk
Continue reading …Click here to view this media Michele Bachmann in Spartanburg, South Carolina this morning giving the King birthday wishes. The only problem, as every Elvis fan knows who mourns his loss, is that Elvis Presley died on August 16, 1977 . “Let’s all say Happy Birthday to Elvis Presley!” Said Bachmann. “We thought we’d celebrate his birthday as we get started celebrating Take Our Country Back Tour!” Oops. Another silly gaffe from a campaign prone to them.
Continue reading …Gov. Rick Perry is wasting no time in establishing his John Bircher/tea party credentials as he lashed out at Ben Bernanke and used thuggish and violent rhetoric to make his point. Texas Governor Rick Perry, who entered the presidential campaign on Saturday, appeared to suggest a violent response would be warranted should Federal Reserve Chairman Ben Bernanke “print more money” between now and the election. Speaking just now in Iowa, Perry said, “If this guy prints more money between now and the election, I dunno what y’all would do to him in Iowa but we would treat him pretty ugly down in Texas. Printing more money to play politics at this particular time in American history is almost treasonous in my opinion.” Treason is a capital offense. Talking treason is something knows well since he has articulated his belief that Texas should secede from the U.S . The only thing that surprises me in this clip is that he didn’t demand that America returns to the gold standard. If I were Ben, I’d stay clear of Texas. Perry seems to be in the race to take away Michele Bachmann’s supporters so that Mitt Romney can be the nominee. And maybe Rick gets the VP job as a thanks. But any way you look at it, politicians in the United States of America should not be threatening individual members of the government. There’s already been too much violence the last three years and some nut wouldn’t hesitate to lash out at Ben. What’s even more hilarious is that Karl Rove, the mastermind behind one of the worst president’s of all time is attacking Perry via GOP12: Click here to view this media This morning, Karl Rove called Rick Perry’s comments on Ben Bernanke “deeply unfortunate.” “It’s his first time on the national stage, and it was a very unfortunate comment. You don’t accuse the chairman of the federal reserve of being a traitor to his country and being guilty of treason and suggesting that we treat him pretty ugly in Texas — that’s not, again, a presidential statement.” Here’s the key, politically. “It’s not smart politics, either. Governor Perry is going to have to fight the impression that he’s a cowboy from Texas. This simply added to it.” Faiz then adds : Rove then argued that Perry and Bush are actually quite close: [In 1998, Bush] moved heaven and earth to get Rick Perry elected as his running mate…I know from the perspective of the former president that he has a cordial, personal strong friendship of nearly two decades with the governor. I think that’s true of the governor too. But why he falls into this pattern of sounding like he’s being dismissive of the former president is not smart politics strategically or tactically. Host Martha MacCallum observed, “It sounds like you feel like he’s been ungrateful to the Bushes. Many other Bushies are joining in on the criticism . Let’s get something straight: Rick Perry is not a novice at politicking. This wasn’t a slip by a newbie. He’s been around a long time and he’s playing to the teabirchers that have overtaken the GOP and also he knows how unpopular George Bush is. Digby writes: It sure looks like Rick Perry has it all. He’s a Fed hating, Christian Reconstructionist , neoconservative super-hawk Tea partier with a nasty, personal contempt for President Obama : In response to a question from Danny Yadron of the Wall Street Journal, who asked Perry if he was suggesting that Obama didn’t love this country, Perry replied: ” I dunno, you need to ask him.” Only WND, Oathers, Birthers and Newsmax supporters enjoy that kind of talk. Perry has been described as George Bush on steroids so guess who’s joining his team? The experts that he has reached out to include former Undersecretary of Defense for Policy Doug Feith, former NSC strategy guru William Luti, former Assistant U.S. Attorney and National Review columnist Andrew McCarthy, former Pentagon official Charles “Cully” Stimson, former Deputy Assistant Secretary of Defense for Europe Daniel Fata, former Pentagon China official Dan Blumenthal, the Heritage Foundation’s Asia expert Peter Brookes, and former U.S. Ambassador to Afghanistan Zalmay Khalizad. Politico reported that Donald Rumsfeld helped Perry set up the initial meeting with Feith, Luti, McCarthy, and Fata (Stimson was invited but couldn’t attend), but there have been several more since then and the Perry team is continuing to fly in experts to meet with the Governor in Texas . Holy moley. He’s made quite a splash. It’s all intellectually incoherent, of course, but that’s what makes him so darned attractive to the right wing. The more incoherent he is, the more the beltway media will praise him as an excellent campaigner. Bet on it.
Continue reading …Suspect named locally as Damian Rzeszowski tried to kill himself a few weeks ago, according to Kasia Krajewska The man suspected of stabbing to death six people, including three young children, in Jersey had apparently taken an overdose recently after allegedly discovering his wife had had an affair. However, friends claimed that the couple had appeared to be reconciled. The 30-year-old, named locally as Damian Rzeszowski remains under police guard in the general hospital in St
Continue reading …Texas governor’s attempt to assert hawkish credentials draws criticism from moderate Republicans and White House The Texas governor, Rick Perry, has staked out his challenge for the Republican presidential nomination as a hawk on economic policy by characterising the strategy of the Federal Reserve chairman, Ben Bernanke, as “treasonous”. Perry swiftly emerged as a leading contender for the Republican nomination after announcing his intention to run for president on Saturday , in part because he is governor of a state that has ridden the economic downturn better than most and has seen more jobs created than any other. He has won favour with the Tea Party movement and among other fiscal conservatives with his strong opposition to Barack Obama’s stimulus strategy. Addressing a political rally in Iowa on Monday, the Texas governor attacked suggestions by Bernanke that with the economy again struggling the Federal Reserve may resort to another round of buying trillions of dollars of bonds, known as quantitative easing. Perry said that would amount to little more than an attempt to buy support at next year’s election, at a huge cost to the country. “If this guy prints more money between now and the election, I dunno what y’all would do to him in Iowa but we would treat him pretty ugly down in Texas. Printing more money to play politics at this particular time in American history is almost treasonous – or treasonous in my opinion,” said Perry. He went on to accuse Obama of an economic strategy that endangered America. “I think the greatest threat to our country right now is this president trying to spend his way out of this debt,” he said. The White House denounced the remarks, saying presidential candidates should not try to interfere with Federal Reserve policy. “When you are president or running for president, you have to think about your words,” spokesman Jay Carney said during an Iowa stop of Obama’s three-day jobs bus tour. “The Fed’s independence is important.” Perry’s remarks were also condemned by some moderate Republicansm, who noted that Bernanke was appointed by Obama’s predecessor, George Bush. But attacks on the president’s stimulus strategy play well with many on the right as the Texas governor seeks to mark out distinctions with the other leading Republican candidates: the more mainstream Mitt Romney and the Tea Party supporter Michele Bachmann. Perry is constructing his bid for the presidency around what he portrays as his successful economic strategy in Texas of minimising government and promoting business ,which helped the state weather the worst of the recession and has seen it create nearly 40% of all new jobs in the US over the past two years. Critics say Perry has merely been lucky because Texas was shielded from the worst of the depression by an oil-based economy, when petroleum prices were at an all time high. They also say that whatever strategy Perry has pursued in Texas is not new to the state and cannot be applied to the country as a whole. But that did not stop Perry from contrasting his record as governor with Romney, the former governor of Massachusetts. “Take a look at his record when he was governor. Take a look at my record,” Perry said as he visited the Iowa state fair. “Running a state is different than running a business.” At one point Perry appeared to suggest he did not take Romney seriously as a candidate by blowing kisses at a camera and saying: “Give him my love.” Romney has sought to fend off the challenge from Perry by noting that he has no experience in the private sector. The Texas governor has held an elected office continuously since 1984, which critics say makes a mockery of his claim to be an outsider standing up to the political system. Romney said: “You know, I can tell you that I think my jobs record spans not just four years as governor, but also the 25 years that I’ve lived in the private sector. I think understanding how the economy works by having worked in the real economy is finally essential in the White House, and I hope people recognise that.” Perry’s past is also coming under scrutiny over his support for Al Gore’s 1988 challenge for the presidency. Perry was a Democrat at the time and Gore’s campaign chairman in Texas. That support is raising questions about Perry’s professed rejection of climate change theories, the issue Gore has embraced since leaving office but which is viewed by many on the right as a hoax. In a radio interview on Monday, Perry said that he backed Gore before he “got to be Mr Global Warming”. However, Politico reports that global warming was already an important issue for Gore at the time Perry was backing him. Gore made climate change a theme of his presidential run as early as April 1987. Rick Perry Republican presidential nomination 2012 Republicans US elections 2012 Mitt Romney Quantitative easing US politics United States Economics US economy Chris McGreal guardian.co.uk
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