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Afghan governor shoots at attacker in Taliban raid on government compound

Provincial governor takes gun from bodyguard and fires as last surviving attacker approached after 18 people killed in raid A machine gun-wielding provincial governor took part in tackling a team of Taliban suicide bombers on Sunday when insurgents launched another brazen attack on a government facility in Afghanistan. Officials said 18 people were killed, including three policemen and 10 local government workers, and 35 were wounded, some badly enough that they had to be transported to Kabul for treatment. A Taliban spokesman claimed credit for the violence in Charikar, a city where they had made barely any inroads in the last 10 years. Abdul Basir Salangi, governor of Parwan, had been in his office holding a meeting with the province’s police chief and Nato foreign advisers when the six-man insurgent squad drove up to the compound in a Toyota Corolla. Various witnesses said one insurgent detonated a suicide device at a secured gate, allowing the rest of the group to enter the compound firing guns. Other members of the squad were killed inside the compound, but a final survivor got close to the governor. Salangi, a former guerrilla commander who fought as an insurgent himself back in the 1980s, took a weapon from his bodyguard and fired at the attacker. “The second attacker was shot in the corridor of the office by a policeman, and then three more were also killed inside the building,” said Sher Ahmad Malatbani, the police chief. He said the final attacker was 15 metres away when he was shot before he could detonate his explosives. Salangi, a close ally of Hamid Karzai, survived another assassination attempt earlier this month. The Afghan president condemned the latest attack and scolded “the enemies of Afghanistan” for killing civilians “even in the holy month of Ramadan”. There has been little support for the insurgency in the agricultural plains north of Kabul but the Taliban and allied groups have much to gain from sowing fear there. Charikar straddles a vital road that links Afghanistan to its Central Asian neighbours. Engineer Zalmai, a local elder whose hand was damaged by bomb shrapnel, said the authorities must find out quickly whether the insurgents had received any local support and, if so, why. “There are two problems that anger people: the joblessness and the fact that officials here are all appointed because whoever is appointed to the local administration only hires people who are their friends or relatives,” he said. The Taliban is waging a concerted effort to kill many leading Afghan officials, including some of Karzai’s most important allies. In recent months suicide gunmen and suicide attackers have killed Ahmed Wali Karzai, a brother of the president, and other powerbrokers who have a vital for controlling the south of the country. In May General Daud Daud, one of the more effective regional police bosses, was killed by a suicide bomber in northern Afghanistan. Afghanistan Jon Boone guardian.co.uk

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Pawlenty Drops Out of Presidential Race

Click here to view this media Only 12 hours after a disappointing showing in the Iowa Straw Poll, Tim Pawlenty is dropping his bid for the Republican presidential nomination. “There is a lot factors that go into a successful campaign, obviously,” Pawlenty told ABC News Sunday. “We had some success raising money, but we needed to continue that and Ames was a benchmark for that. And if we didn’t do well in Ames, we weren’t going to have the fuel to keep the car going down the road. “But, also, there is a lot of other choices in the race. For me, what I brought forward I thought was a rational established, credible, strong record of results based on experience, governing two term governors of a blue state. But I think the audience, so to speak, was looking for something different.”

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West Brom v Manchester United | Jacob Steinberg

• Hit F5 for all of the latest updates from the match • Stats centre: league tables, top scorers and much more • And you can email jacob.steinberg.casual@guardian.co.uk GOAL! West Brom 1-1 Manchester United (Long, 37 min): 35 min: De Gea makes a fantastic save to deny Paul Scharner. The Austrian managed to sneak away from Anderson and burst into the area. Ferdinand came across, but wasn’t quick enough, allowing Scharner to hit a shot which De Gea pushed past the left post with both hands. The corner comes to nothing. 34 min: Rooney tees up Young, who runs around the ball and whips a shot towards the far corner from 25 yards out. Tamas gets his knee in the way. Meanwhile Tom Cleverley is playing very well indeed. He’s neat and tidy in possession, and is showing a great deal of strength too. 33 min: To those of you asking for us to turn the auto-refresh tool on, we can’t. Sorry. F5. 31 min: West Brom need to get Shorey in the game. I’ve got money on this. Oh God. I’ve caught Ingle. 30 min: “Man U are looking very fluent and strong in attack, but on the other hand I think West Brom aren’t looking that bad either, think they could well grab an equalizer if Man U aren’t careful, though Man U certainly have more goals in them,” says Oliver Lewis. “Their defence needs fixing though.” 29 min: From a Young corner from the left, the grotesquely overrated Foster pats the ball straight down to Nani, who hooks his volley over the bar from 12 yards out. United could be 3-0 up but for Nani’s profligacy. 27 min: Shane Long, who’s barely had a touch, evades Anderson snatches a shot wide of the left post from 30 yards out. Meanwhile Phil Neville is in with the United fans. “So, with De Gea continuing his flapping, the question must be asked if Maarten Stekelenburg would have been a better option?” asks Rob Hisnay. “And in 5 years, Sir Alex will need to replace De Gea anyways, when he has to sell him to Real Madrid as Casillas’ replacement. 25 min: United deal with another Brunt corner. “Woah, yet another MBM officiated by Jacob Steinberg!” observes Ryan Dunne. “In addition to the Reader Competition , maybe there should be a league of MBM officiating guardian hacks, with a cup going to the winner? It might help develop empathetic relationships with Lord Ferg et al if you guys were all aspiring to silverware too.” 24 min: A Chris Brunt free-kick falls at the feet of Reid on the edge of the area and his shot is deflected wide by Fabio. Brunt’s corner is cleared however. 22 min: What a miss from Nani. United are so slick and are attacking at such pace. West Brom can’t live with one-touch football at the moment. With a first-time pass, Rooney turned the ball through for Welbeck, who just had to check back, meaning he couldn’t shoot. Although the chance was gone for him, he managed to touch it back to Rooney and with West Brom utterly exposed, he shuffled the ball to the left for Nani, who leant back and wafted the ball over with his right foot from 10 yards out. It should be game over. 21 min: Young is enjoying plenty of joy on the left flank and Reid is in for a long afternoon. He’s not getting close enough to stop the cross, which isn’t a good idea. 20 min: Vidic is struggling with a knock – I’m not sure what – but has given himself five more minutes to try to run it off. Jonny Evans is getting ready though. 19 min: United look very fluent in attack. 17 min: Morrison, who scored a sumptuous volley in this fixture last season after Rooney had put United ahead, tries to make history repeat itself, but his scuffed shot from 25 yards is well wide. 14 min: Rooney’s rampaging through again, and West Brom back off and back off and back off, until it would have been positively rude for the forward not to shoot. He does but this time with his right foot, his powerful drive flashes at least five yards wide of the left post. Foster is furious. At this rate, Rooney could rack up the golden boot this afternoon. GOAL! West Brom 0-1 Manchester United (Rooney, 13 min): This is a lovely goal. On the halfway line, Fabio drove a pass towards Rooney who had his back to goal. Instead of laying it off, he produced a glorious backheeled flick to the left for Young, who was away. He cut inside and passed it to Rooney, who’d made it up to the edge of the area. The pass was slightly behind him but with West Brom affording him too much time and space, he was able to turn, get it on to his left foot and slam a shot through Tamas’s legs, which left Foster unsighted as the ball fizzed into the bottom-right corner. That’s an excellent finish. 11 min: Much better already from West Brom after their nervy start. Now they’re on top and Ferdinand has to come across to halt Tchoyi’s run, but at the cost of a corner. Brunt takes it again but the whistle blows for a foul on Vidic. 10 min: Vidic holds his hands out in disbelief, claiming he was fouled as he tried to clear a West Brom free-kick. No dice. Corner to West Brom. Brunt sends it in and again De Gea is all over the place. He comes and gets nowhere near it as Olsson stands his ground. The ball falls to Tchoyi on the left, just outside the six-yard box but after feinting to shoot, his drive is blocked. 8 min: West Brom are looking to see what De Gea is made of after his display against Manchester City last week. From 45 yards out, Scharner has a pop, the ball flying harmlessly wide. That’s a tad disrespectful really. 7 min: From the left, Morrison curls the free-kick into the area. De Gea looks uncertain but the ball passes all the way through the area and United survive. By the way, my colleague Simon Burnton informs me that Rafael is out for ten weeks with a shoulder injury. 6 min: At last West Brom mount an attack and Tchoyi bundles and tricks his way past Anderson on the left. He’s wrestled to the ground just outside the area. 5 min: Young seems to have settled very quickly at United. He’s a great winger and will not give his full-back any rest all afternoon. 3 min: What a start by United, who are all over West Brom like a wag wannabe and a Premier League footballer. Now Young isolates Reid on the left, and draws the foul. He dusts himself off and flashes the free-kick into the six-yard box. It’s a brilliant delivery and has Foster all at sea. Another corner to United, on the right. Anderson takes it and Foster punches clear. West Brom haven’t been out of their half. 2 min: United are on the front foot immediately. Anyone would think they’re the champions. On the left, Young and Fabio combine well, the young Brazilian getting round the back and firing a cross into the near post for Rooney. The ball gets stuck under his feet and is cleared, but only as far as Young, whose curler from 25 yards is deflected wide. The corner is whipped in from the right and under pressure in the six-yard box, Foster spills it, leading to an almighty scramble. Tchoyi desperately hacks it away. 1 min: Apologies if I get very excited whenever Nicky Shorey gets the ball. I’ve got him to score last in the office sweepstake. This will be openly biased towards him. Anyway, we’re off, United taking the kick-off and attacking from right to left. Their fans are in fine voice, but the West Brom fans are in a hugely positive mood. The teams are in the tunnel. And now they’re on the pitch, walking out to a nightclub beat. This is football in the 21st century. Consider this fair warning. I’ve done two minute-by-minutes already this weekend and both games have finished 0-0. Number 19 is in the bag. The quest for No 12 begins in earnest at The Hawthorns, one of five grounds where Manchester United won on their travels last season. Five wins away from home and they still won the league. Improve on that this time and the rest might as well forget about challenging them this time. Still, although West Brom lost, they did force Gary Neville into retirement and on to the Sky Sports sofa. United got the points, West Brom ended a man’s career. Neville’s been followed by Edwin van der Sar and Paul Scholes. Only Ryan Giggs remains. And Sir Alex Ferguson of course. He’s never leaving. In fact, it’s 10 years since he went what into was meant to be his final season at Old Trafford and look how that turned out. No, there’s a strong chance he’s going to be the first ever ghost manager. A younger look to United this season then. David de Gea, Phil Jones and Ashley Young have all come in, while there are high hopes for Tom Cleverley, Danny Welbeck and potentially Paul Pogba. But this isn’t a case of packing the team with kids. Indeed Alan Hansen wasn’t necessarily wrong after United’s 3-1 defeat to Aston Villa on the opening day of the 1995-96 season. Sure, there were youngsters in the team – if the Neville brothers can ever really be called young – but they were also surrounded by Peter Schmeichel, Steve Bruce, Gary Pallister, Dennis Irwin, Roy Keane and Eric Cantona. Rio Ferdinand, Nemanja Vidic, Patrice Evra, Giggs and Wayne Rooney provide the guidance now. United have a good record at West Brom, who were in danger of becoming the definitive yo-yo club until they stayed up last season. Aside from a mid-season slump under Roberto Di Matteo, which led to his sacking and Roy Hodgson’s appointment, they enjoyed a largely stress-free campaign and there’s no reason why they can’t finish in mid-table again. I’m not the biggest fan of Ben Foster, but he’s better than Scott Carson, and they’ve held on to their key players. That said, speculation still remains about Peter Odemwingie’s future. It’s just as well they’ve signed Shane Long. West Brom (4-4-1-1): Foster; Reid, Ollson, Tamas, Shorey; Morrison, Scharner, Mulumbu, Brunt; Tchoyi; Long Subs: Fulop, Cox, Jara Reyes, Fortune, Dawson, Dorrans, Thorne. Manchester United (4-4-2): De Gea; Smalling, Rio, Vidic, Fabio; Nani, Anderson, Cleverley, Young; Welbeck, Rooney. Subs: Lindegaard, Jones, Evans, Berbatov, Giggs, Park, Carrick. Premier League 2011-12 West Brom Manchester United Premier League Jacob Steinberg guardian.co.uk

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Libya rebels claim Tripoli advance

Rebels opposed to the Gaddafi regime claim they are advancing on the capital on three fronts and meeting little resistance Libyan rebels claim to be advancing on Tripoli on three fronts and meeting only sporadic resistance. Thirty-five miles west of the city, television pictures appeared to confirm reports that they are in control of much of the town of Zawiya, including the coastal highway to the Tunisian border. Fifty miles to the south, opposition fighters say they have pushed out of the Nafusa mountains to capture Ghariyan, cutting one of only two main highways linking Tripoli to the rest of Libya. To the east, rebel forces in Misrata have this weekend completed their capture of Tawarga. The attacks have been accompanied by heavy Nato air strikes with the alliance website reporting 51 military targets destroyed in three days of bombing. An al-Jazeera report from inside Zawiya showed rebels apparently in control of streets and the coastal highway, countering claims from Tripoli that government units had retaken the town. There was no independent confirmation of the capture of Ghariyan, but in Misrata, rebels said resistance by government forces to the east collapsed after a brief battle, allowing fighters to gain control of the neighbouring town of Tawarga. Pro-Gaddafi forces fled the town along with many civilians, abandoning vehicles and equipment including heavy artillery, with rebels further claiming that there were no enemy formations ahead. “We left one road open, we watched them drive away down it,” said rebel fighter Abdullah Maiteeg. He said the advance east from Misrata, which has claimed five rebel lives, had stopped because of concern that units might be mistaken for government forces by Nato jets. In Tripoli, a spokesman insisted Zawiya was under government control but gave no further details. Libya Arab and Middle East unrest Muammar Gaddafi Chris Stephen guardian.co.uk

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Anders Behring Breivik reconstructs Utøya shootings for police

Norwegian police arranged eight-hour trip to island amid security operation to prevent escape attempts or revenge attacks Anders Behring Breivik, the Norwegian man who confessed to killing 69 people at an island youth camp has reconstructed his actions for police at the crime scene. Police said they took Breivik, 32, back to Utøya on Saturday for a hearing about the 22 July attacks, when he shot dozens of people dead on the island after killing eight people in Oslo with a bomb. He described the killings in detail during an eight-hour trip to the island, prosecutor Paal-Fredrik Hjort Kraby said. “The suspect showed he wasn’t emotionally unaffected by being back at Utøya … but didn’t show any remorse,” he added. Images of the reconstruction published in the Norwegian daily VG show Breivik pretending to fire shots into the water where panicked teenagers had tried to escape on 22 July. The hearing took place amid a security operation that aimed to avoid escape attempts by Breivik and protect him against potential avengers. Breivik’s lawyer said he has admitted to the attacks, but denies criminal guilt because he believes the massacre was necessary to save Norway and Europe from Muslims, and to punish politicians who have embraced multiculturalism. Initial speculation suggested others were involved in the attacks, but prosecutors and police said they are certain Breivik planned and committed them alone. Breivik faces up to 21 years in prison if convicted on terrorism charges. If he is still considered a danger to the public after serving his sentence, an alternative custody arrangement may be found. could keep him behind bars indefinitely. Norway Anders Behring Breivik Europe Gun crime Global terrorism guardian.co.uk

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Grassley Rails About President Obama Taking Responsibility for His Policies – Too Bad He’s Not Willing to do the Same

Click here to view this media During the lead up to the Ames Straw Poll in Iowa, their senior senator, Chuck Grassley, made an appearance and took the opportunity to rail on about Obama not taking responsibility for his policies and apparently was very unhappy with Republicans being blamed for any of our economic problems. He also lied and repeated the same tired old line we’ve heard out of them time after time: GRASSLEY: By any measure of the economy or the fiscal policy, you [President Obama] have made every statistic worse. I hate to break it to the good senator, but no, he hasn’t as the article linked from Media Matters documents. He went on to say we need new leadership and a president who will take responsibility for their actions. What followed was a lot of cheerleading for American “exceptionalism” and more repetition promoting what we know are the failed fiscal policies of conservatism that we’ve seen slowly destroy what’s left of our middle class over the last thirty or forty years. President Obama is not far enough to the left to suit me. And I’ve been extremely irritated to see his administration adopting way too much of the same language from the right on anything from deficit reduction to tax cuts, to the confidence fairy to you name it. That said, a member of what has been a part of one of the most obstructionist Senates in the United States in history that continually blocked the hundreds of bills that were passed by the House of Representatives that could have improved our economy when the Democrats had control of both houses of Congress has absolutely no credibility whatsoever railing on about how President Obama hasn’t done more to get Americans back to work and our economy back on track. Our own Jon Perr wrote about that in March of last year here — GOP Wins Filibuster Gold Medal . And one of the biggest welfare queens with his farm subsidies has no business railing on about the evils of big government. Grassley loves that big government just fine as long as it’s lining his pockets and those of his family. Not so much when it comes to reducing poverty or taking care of the elderly or the least among us. When Chuck Grassley wants to take some responsibility for his own actions and how he’s governed, then he’s got a leg to stand on to complain about what President Obama has done or not done. He and his party and President Bush were pushing this country into the abyss when Bush left office and now he’s got the nerve to rail on about how their mess wasn’t fixed in the last two and a half years when they’ve done everything in their power to make sure that our economy does not get better, all for political gain in the hopes that the president doesn’t get reelected. This is the same Congress where it was a legitimate question to ask as Steve Benen did, if this debt ceiling hostage taking is The worst thing the GOP has ever done? when it comes to just pure fiscal recklessness. Grassley wants to blame President Obama for our fiscal problems, but as the New York Times reported, this chart clearly illustrates just who is to blame for the problems with our deficit. enlarge Credit: The New York Times And this is the same Congress that is refusing to do any more stimulus and that’s causing job losses at the state and local levels as Steve Benen explained in his post this week — The easy-to-save jobs we’re losing anyway : Every month, when the new job numbers come out, we tend to see the same thing: the private sector is faring relatively well, adding jobs, while the public sector is shedding jobs quickly. The former number is generally much larger than the latter, which means the economy is still adding jobs, but the public-sector losses are a significant drag on a weak employment market. The Center on Budget and Policy Priorities’ Nicholas Johnson explained the other day, “Since August 2008, state and local governments have slashed 611,000 positions, and the cuts have been getting worse — 340,000 of those jobs were lost in the last 12 months. July was the ninth consecutive month, and the 29th out of the last 35, in which total state and local employment shrank.” This chart, via Ezra , helps drive the point home: enlarge Credit: Bereau of Labor Statistics I know I talk about this a lot, but given the jobs crisis and the public demand that policymakers address unemployment, it’s important to realize one of the key factors dragging down the economy. Layoffs at the state and local level were mitigated in 2009 by the Recovery Act, which saved thousands of jobs that would have otherwise been eliminated. Those funds have since been exhausted, and the public sector is back to making severe layoffs. It’s why that column on the right is the most severe. This is what David Leonhardt recently described as “ an unforced economic error ” — with all of the problems we can’t control, this is one problem we know exactly how to prevent. We just choose not to, because the Republicans’ ideology dictates that these job losses are actually good for us. No, really, the GOP looks at the above chart and sees this as a positive development. Under the Republican economic model, the public sector is supposed to lose jobs, and as part of the party’s austerity agenda, this is a problem that must get worse on purpose. Earlier this year, for example, House Speaker John Boehner (R-Ohio) was asked about his spending-cut plans and the fact that the cuts would force thousands of public-sector workers from their jobs. “ So be it ,” the Republican said. In other words, deliberately making unemployment worse wasn’t seen as a problem. This is a feature of the GOP model, not a bug. And on a final note on whether President Obama has made the economy worse since he took office, here’s Steve Benen’s latest jobs chart from this month — Private sector jobs also improving . enlarge Credit: The Washington Monthly If Sen. Grassley thinks those red lines when George Bush was in office are something we should be returning to with the new “strong leader” he was touting the need for here, I’d like to know what he’s been smoking. Chuck Grassley wants President Obama to take responsibility for his fiscal policies and what they’ve done to our nation’s economy. In response I would ask, just when is he and his party going to do the same? I suspect the answer is never since apparently admitting reality and what got us to this point, much taking responsibility for that reality is something they’re completely incapable of.

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Tim Pawlenty quits race for Republican presidential nomination

Former Minnesota governor Tim Pawlenty says ‘the pathway forward for me doesn’t exist’ after finishing third in Iowa vote Former Minnesota governor Tim Pawlenty dropped out of the race for the Republican presidential nomination on Sunday, hours after finishing a disappointing third in the Iowa straw poll . “I wish it would have been different, but obviously the pathway forward for me doesn’t exist so we are going to end the campaign,” Pawlenty said on ABC’s This Week programme. He had told supporters on a conference call shortly before the broadcast interview that he was ending his White House bid. “I thought I would have made a great president, but obviously that pathway isn’t there,” Pawlenty said. “I do believe we’re going to have a very good candidate who is going to beat Barack Obama.” The two-term former governor of a Democratic-leaning state was on John McCain’s shortlist for the vice-presidential nomination in 2008. He spent two years laying the groundwork for his 2012 campaign and hoped to become the alternative to the national frontrunner, Mitt Romney. But this summer he unexpectedly found himself in a grudge match with the Minnesota congresswoman Michele Bachmann, who won the straw poll in Iowa. Pawlenty acknowledged that he needed a strong showing in the poll to quiet concerns that his campaign was faltering, and spent the bulk of his campaign account on TV ads ahead of the contest and on a statewide tour. After finishing well behind Bachmann and the Texas congressman Ron Paul, Pawlenty initially suggested to supporters that he was not dropping out. But hours later, he reversed course. Pawlenty, 50, had seemed to have all the right ingredients as a candidate. His blue-collar upbringing offered him a natural rapport with middle-class America. He governed as a fiscal hardliner in a left-leaning state, winning his second term in a year when Republicans elsewhere got drubbed. He made inroads with the right crowds and assembled an all-star cast of advisers with plenty of presidential campaign experience. But he struggled to connect. He came off as bland and rehearsed next to more dynamic contenders, and languished in the polls. Rick Perry’s announcement of his candidacy on Saturday pushed Pawlenty further to the side. Tim Pawlenty Republicans US elections 2012 US politics United States guardian.co.uk

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Tim Pawlenty quits race for Republican presidential nomination

Former Minnesota governor Tim Pawlenty says ‘the pathway forward for me doesn’t exist’ after finishing third in Iowa vote Former Minnesota governor Tim Pawlenty dropped out of the race for the Republican presidential nomination on Sunday, hours after finishing a disappointing third in the Iowa straw poll . “I wish it would have been different, but obviously the pathway forward for me doesn’t exist so we are going to end the campaign,” Pawlenty said on ABC’s This Week programme. He had told supporters on a conference call shortly before the broadcast interview that he was ending his White House bid. “I thought I would have made a great president, but obviously that pathway isn’t there,” Pawlenty said. “I do believe we’re going to have a very good candidate who is going to beat Barack Obama.” The two-term former governor of a Democratic-leaning state was on John McCain’s shortlist for the vice-presidential nomination in 2008. He spent two years laying the groundwork for his 2012 campaign and hoped to become the alternative to the national frontrunner, Mitt Romney. But this summer he unexpectedly found himself in a grudge match with the Minnesota congresswoman Michele Bachmann, who won the straw poll in Iowa. Pawlenty acknowledged that he needed a strong showing in the poll to quiet concerns that his campaign was faltering, and spent the bulk of his campaign account on TV ads ahead of the contest and on a statewide tour. After finishing well behind Bachmann and the Texas congressman Ron Paul, Pawlenty initially suggested to supporters that he was not dropping out. But hours later, he reversed course. Pawlenty, 50, had seemed to have all the right ingredients as a candidate. His blue-collar upbringing offered him a natural rapport with middle-class America. He governed as a fiscal hardliner in a left-leaning state, winning his second term in a year when Republicans elsewhere got drubbed. He made inroads with the right crowds and assembled an all-star cast of advisers with plenty of presidential campaign experience. But he struggled to connect. He came off as bland and rehearsed next to more dynamic contenders, and languished in the polls. Rick Perry’s announcement of his candidacy on Saturday pushed Pawlenty further to the side. Tim Pawlenty Republicans US elections 2012 US politics United States guardian.co.uk

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UK riots aftermath – Sunday 14 August 2011

• Growing rift between the government and police officers over tactics, strategy and resources • Magistrates courts will continue to hear cases • Two charged with the murder of three Asian males from Birmingham due in court •  Senior Lib Dems call for an end to ‘kneejerk’ reactions 3.45pm: UPDATE: We are still to receive an official statement from Greater Manchester Police in regards to the armed response incident as reported by The People newspaper , but we understand that armed officers were called after a member of the public spotted a suspected firearm. GMP has told the Guardian that they believe the response was warranted. Arrests have been made in connection with the incident. 2.56pm: West Midlands Police said they have recovered a third vehicle which they believe was involved in the crash. An black Audi A3 is undergoing forensic tests. Detective Chief Inspector Anthony Tagg said: “We are now confident we have recovered all three vehicles which we believe were involved in the murder in Dudley Road in the early hours of Wednesday August 10.” 2.23pm: Home secretary Theresa May got a bit of a grilling on BBC Radio 4′s The World at One . She was asked about her use of the phrase “I ordered” in regards to her public comments during the riots. Here’s the exchange between her and Shaun Ley: Ley: [Officers] will also have heard last week the home secretary going on the radio and saying “I’ve ordered”, “I’ve ordered” that was the word you used, “I’ve ordered that type of approach to be taken by other forces and cancelled police leave”. Now the home secretary is not the general of an army. The home secretary is separate to the police and yet you have effectively said, “I don’t believe in that any more, I give orders to the police”. May: What I was absolutely clear about…was making sure that police knew what I expected of them and what the public expected from them. And the public were not happy about what they were seeing on the streets. When asked about Cameron’s appointment of US cop Bill Bratton, May appeared to undermine Bratton’s status as a special advisor. She said that alongside Bratton she would be “bringing together a group of people from across the world to learn from best practise”. On police budget cuts, May was crystal clear that there would be no reversal of policy despite calls by senior officers to do just that. I’m absolutely clear that police budgets can be cut without effecting the ability of the police to do the job that they want to do, that I want them to do, and that the public want them to do. 2.04pm: Reports from the Press Association suggest that delays at Westminster magistrates court are also being caused by “normal” defendants – in police custody for non-riot crimes – being processed at the same time. District judge Susan Williamson, hearing cases in court two said: “I don’t know how we have ended up in this rather parlous state.” 1.50pm: MP Mark Pritchard, secretary of the 1922 Committee of Tory backbenchers, has hit back at ACPO chief Hugh Orde and his comments in the press Sir Hugh Orde’s very public and ill-judged remarks underline the need for the coalition Government to push ahead with elected police commissioners. Senior officers are not a law unto themselves and should not think they have a monopoly of wisdom. At a time when national unity of purpose is required, the remarks of some senior officers do more harm than good – and reveal how out of touch some of them are. 1.36pm: The People newspaper has published a dramatic picture of a police officer holding a “semi-automatic” gun over the head of a young white male as he lays on the ground outside a branch of Greggs bakery in South Manchester. They report that: The boy…was among a group of seven aged 11 to 15 who spent 15 minutes pinned to the floor before the gun cops made an arrest in front of more than a hundred terrified shoppers. A mum of 28 who watched with her six-year-old daughter told The People: “I was absolutely petrified. You wouldn’t normally expect to see anything like this around here but then we had these riots.” Their report quotes another witness to the event: There was a group of lads sitting around on their bikes in the middle of the precinct. Then I heard shouts of “armed police” and “get down”. It was all so fast. The boys flew on to the ground and the police had the guns close to their heads. There were three armed police and about another 10 back up officers. For the next 15 minutes the lads on the ground were being searched and had names and addresses taken. The police seemed particularly interested in a bag one of them had. They tore it open but there just seemed to be boxes of Smarties and other stuff from Greggs. We have asked Greater Manchester police for further information on the incident. 1.11pm: More anger from senior cops. A statement released today by West Midlands chief constable Chris Sims contains a thinly veiled attack on “zero tolerance” policing: I continue to work with the Police Authority to develop a policing response that is consistent with available good practice but is not slavishly adopting empty slogans. The ethos of local policing has been the bedrock which has allowed collective common sense to prevail. It also contains a call for “compassion” towards the rioters: We must not at this time abandon all compassion for some of our very damaged young people who have been caught up in these incidents 1.04pm: Tory MP and novelist Louise Mensch has just tweeted this : So @JamesDelingpole excusing the inexcusable I’m afraid. Not too much of a surprise there. 12.46pm: The David Starkey Newsnight “racism” row continues in the Telegraph courtesy of James Dellingpole who believes that the historian’s comments were not racist. Dellingpole, picks up on Starkey’s comment that MP David Lammy sounded like a white person as opposed to a black one, and the subsequent on air retort from Starkey’s co-panellist, Chavs author, Owen Jones . On Friday night’s show Starkey said:”Listen to David Lammy, an archetypal successful black man. If you turn the screen off so that you are listening to him on radio you would think he was white.” Jones replied: “You said David Lammy when you heard him sounded white and what you meant by that is that white people equals respectable.” Dellingpole’s take is this : This is classic Owen Jones, classic BBC. Note that what Starkey is saying here is actually pretty reasonable. If you listened to David Lammy on the radio you could indeed very easily think that his educated, non-ethnically identifiable (and mildly effete) speaking voice belonged to a white person rather than a black person. But in Jones’s world – and that of his puppetmaster the BBC – the truth in these matters is no defence. 12.34pm: And whilst we are on the subject of reports and the young, here’s another massive study from the OECD in 2008 called ‘ Growing Unequal’ which found that younger people living in developed countries were more likely to be poorer than their older counterparts now than any time during the last 25 years. And this was before the downturn. 12.31pm: A comment piece by Observer columnist Will Hutton today focusses in on the situation of the young and an interesting Unicef report back in 2007 which found that British youth had the worst quality of life across 21 developed nations . The Unicef report that in 2007 placed Britain bottom of 21 industrialised countries in the way it treated its children did not only single out child poverty as a cause of the problem – other factors included the factory-like education and training system, poor relationships with family and friends, the low subjective sense of wellbeing and the risks of everyday life. Add to that picture private shopping centres that allow no public place for kids to gather, inadequate and now closing youth clubs, being routinely questioned by police just for being under 25, and being ordered to disperse, even if there are only two of them – all these impact on an entire age group. The dutiful, non-rioting young may work hard for their qualifications, degrees and apprenticeships. But they too could be forgiven for asking themselves: for what? The country is economically stagnating. For anybody young and unlucky to be trapped in one of our sprawling sink estates through the bad luck of birth, what chance is there? Are their vanishing prospects in any sense deserved or fair? And the larger question that hangs over them all – where is Britain going? 12.17pm: More on the growing row between top cops and the government. Appearing on Sky News this morning, British Transport Police chief Andy Trotter has hit back against policing cuts saying that the government should stop “pretending” that 20% funding reduction won’t affect front line services: We accept that everyone in public service has to play their part in dealing with the state of the economy. We have got to be sensible in the way we do it. But we cannot pretend that the scale of cuts we face will not impact on the front line of policing…It is simply not possible.” 11.57am: This is a very sad report from freelance contributor Rachel Pugh about an international flautist who lost lost pretty much everything including rare instruments and her two cats during the riots after her Croydon flat was burned down. An internationally-known flautist has lost an irreplaceable collection of instruments made for her, when rioters burned her Croydon flat to the ground as part of the weekend disturbances. Carla Rees, 34, is reeling from the loss of more than 10 flutes including two specially made Kingma flutes built for her in the Netherlands and on which she has based her international contemporary music career. She has also lost her music library, including a unique collection of 600 pieces of unpublished music written for her and her ensemble Rarescale, complete with composers’ comments that she says are almost as important as the sheets of music themselves. Her two cats also perished in the fire that completely gutted the building on London Road where she had her second-floor flat. The whole building is having to be demolished. “I am lucky to be alive,” says Carla, who studied at the Royal College of Music in London. She and her boyfriend had just come back from a weekend coaching the National Youth Wind Orchestra, when they encountered gangs of youths and smashed cars in the street. Fearful of the atmosphere, they grabbed clean clothes, fed the cats and booked into a hotel. An hour later, her home was in ruins. A website to help her has already been set up. 11.40am: BREAKING : Two males charged with the murder of three Asian men who were hit by a car whilst protecting local businesses in Birmingham have appeared in court this morning. This is from the Press Association: Joshua Donald, 26, from Kelsall Croft, Ladywood, appeared before magistrates charged with three counts of murder. Donald and a 17-year-old male from Winson Green, who cannot be named because of his age, were arrested on Thursday and were charged late last night after police were granted extra time to question them. Donald, who appeared in court sporting a beard, wearing dark jeans and a black hooded top, spoke only to confirm his name, age and address. In the hearing, which lasted less than five minutes, District Judge Michael Wheeler said to him: “It is said that on August 10 you murdered Shazad Ali, it is also said you murdered Haroon Jahan and you also murdered Abdul Musavir.” Mr Wheeler told the defendant his case could not be dealt with at magistrates’ court and he was to be remanded in custody to appear at Birmingham Crown Court tomorrow. As Donald was taken down by a dock officer a woman in the public gallery mouthed “I love you” to him. The 17-year-old defendant is also due to appear in court today but the case has yet to be heard. 11.34am: Apologies for that technical hitch. The comments section has now been turned on. 11.19am: An update from my colleague Matthew Taylor who is at Westminster magistrates court today. He says that two court rooms are sitting and that they have 60 cases to get through – a fair whack for any day let alone a Sunday. He describes the scene as “low level chaos” with many of the lawyers including those from the CPS lacking the right papers. Hearings were supposed to start at 10am but proceedings are already running over an hour late. Court officials have told him that they expect to be there until late afternoon but a security guards thinks has been told he’ll be there until 8pm. 11.06am: Here’s Cameron’s retort to Orde in the Sunday Telegraph. Asked by columnist Matthew D’Ancona whether he was all for zero tolerance and new policing strategy Cameron replies : Yes, I do. This is why I am so keen on police accountability, where you see police chiefs accountable to elected representatives, as you do in London, I don’t think it is any surprise London was one of the first places to introduce that sort of beat-based policing with a far greater degree of zero tolerance. 10.49am: Sir Hugh Orde, head of the Association of Chief Police Officers (ACPO), has given an interview to the Independent on Sunday about the appointment of Los Angeles ‘super cop’ Bill Bratton who has been brought in to advise David Cameron on ‘zero tolerance’ style gang policing. The interview contains some firm words for the prime minister: I am not sure I want to learn about gangs from an area of America that has 400 of them. It seems to me, if you’ve got 400 gangs, then you’re not being very effective. If you look at the style of policing in the States, and their levels of violence, they are so fundamentally different from here. “What I suggested to the Home Secretary is a more sensible approach, maybe to look across far wider styles of policing; and, more usefully, at European styles – they, like us, are bound by the European Convention. My sense is, when we’ve done that, we will find the British model is probably the top. We will not get things right all the time. It’s sad it takes an event like this to counter some of the more negative attacks on policing which is totally unjustified. As background Orde, who is generally well respected and has a lot of public order experience having spent years in Northern Ireland, is one of the current contenders for the position of the head of the Met. It is also worth noting that he and his other senior officers have been brewing since the start of the year over government plans to introduce elected police chiefs – a move to a more US style of policing. 10.35am: Good morning. Welcome to continuing coverage of the aftermath of the riots which began striking English cities eight days ago. Here’s a brief round-up and what’s happened and what’s to come: • The rift between the government and police officers over tactics and policing strategy has continued to widen. The appointment of US senior cop Bill Bratton to advise on gangs and policing strategy has caused a strong reaction from ACPO chief Sir Hugh Orde . • In continued unprecedented opening hours, magistrates courts around the country will be sitting today and hearing cases . Also expected in court are those charged with the murder of the three Asian males from Birmingham who were killed after they were struck by a car while trying to protect local businesses. •  A number of magistrates’ sentences are causing controversy , most notably that of a 24-year-old mother of two who received six months for handling a stolen pair of shorts . Harsh sentences and plans to evict rioters and their families from council housing have cause serious disagreement between members of the coalition as senior Lib Dems call for an end to “kneejerk” reactions . • Operations around the country to arrest those involved in the looting are expected to continue. The latest figures from the Metropolitan police are that 1,401 people have been arrested with 808 being charged with offences. UK riots Police London Crime David Cameron Theresa May Birmingham Manchester Shiv Malik guardian.co.uk

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UK riots aftermath – Sunday 14 August 2011

• Growing rift between the government and police officers over tactics, strategy and resources • Magistrates courts will continue to hear cases • Two charged with the murder of three Asian males from Birmingham due in court •  Senior Lib Dems call for an end to ‘kneejerk’ reactions 3.45pm: UPDATE: We are still to receive an official statement from Greater Manchester Police in regards to the armed response incident as reported by The People newspaper , but we understand that armed officers were called after a member of the public spotted a suspected firearm. GMP has told the Guardian that they believe the response was warranted. Arrests have been made in connection with the incident. 2.56pm: West Midlands Police said they have recovered a third vehicle which they believe was involved in the crash. An black Audi A3 is undergoing forensic tests. Detective Chief Inspector Anthony Tagg said: “We are now confident we have recovered all three vehicles which we believe were involved in the murder in Dudley Road in the early hours of Wednesday August 10.” 2.23pm: Home secretary Theresa May got a bit of a grilling on BBC Radio 4′s The World at One . She was asked about her use of the phrase “I ordered” in regards to her public comments during the riots. Here’s the exchange between her and Shaun Ley: Ley: [Officers] will also have heard last week the home secretary going on the radio and saying “I’ve ordered”, “I’ve ordered” that was the word you used, “I’ve ordered that type of approach to be taken by other forces and cancelled police leave”. Now the home secretary is not the general of an army. The home secretary is separate to the police and yet you have effectively said, “I don’t believe in that any more, I give orders to the police”. May: What I was absolutely clear about…was making sure that police knew what I expected of them and what the public expected from them. And the public were not happy about what they were seeing on the streets. When asked about Cameron’s appointment of US cop Bill Bratton, May appeared to undermine Bratton’s status as a special advisor. She said that alongside Bratton she would be “bringing together a group of people from across the world to learn from best practise”. On police budget cuts, May was crystal clear that there would be no reversal of policy despite calls by senior officers to do just that. I’m absolutely clear that police budgets can be cut without effecting the ability of the police to do the job that they want to do, that I want them to do, and that the public want them to do. 2.04pm: Reports from the Press Association suggest that delays at Westminster magistrates court are also being caused by “normal” defendants – in police custody for non-riot crimes – being processed at the same time. District judge Susan Williamson, hearing cases in court two said: “I don’t know how we have ended up in this rather parlous state.” 1.50pm: MP Mark Pritchard, secretary of the 1922 Committee of Tory backbenchers, has hit back at ACPO chief Hugh Orde and his comments in the press Sir Hugh Orde’s very public and ill-judged remarks underline the need for the coalition Government to push ahead with elected police commissioners. Senior officers are not a law unto themselves and should not think they have a monopoly of wisdom. At a time when national unity of purpose is required, the remarks of some senior officers do more harm than good – and reveal how out of touch some of them are. 1.36pm: The People newspaper has published a dramatic picture of a police officer holding a “semi-automatic” gun over the head of a young white male as he lays on the ground outside a branch of Greggs bakery in South Manchester. They report that: The boy…was among a group of seven aged 11 to 15 who spent 15 minutes pinned to the floor before the gun cops made an arrest in front of more than a hundred terrified shoppers. A mum of 28 who watched with her six-year-old daughter told The People: “I was absolutely petrified. You wouldn’t normally expect to see anything like this around here but then we had these riots.” Their report quotes another witness to the event: There was a group of lads sitting around on their bikes in the middle of the precinct. Then I heard shouts of “armed police” and “get down”. It was all so fast. The boys flew on to the ground and the police had the guns close to their heads. There were three armed police and about another 10 back up officers. For the next 15 minutes the lads on the ground were being searched and had names and addresses taken. The police seemed particularly interested in a bag one of them had. They tore it open but there just seemed to be boxes of Smarties and other stuff from Greggs. We have asked Greater Manchester police for further information on the incident. 1.11pm: More anger from senior cops. A statement released today by West Midlands chief constable Chris Sims contains a thinly veiled attack on “zero tolerance” policing: I continue to work with the Police Authority to develop a policing response that is consistent with available good practice but is not slavishly adopting empty slogans. The ethos of local policing has been the bedrock which has allowed collective common sense to prevail. It also contains a call for “compassion” towards the rioters: We must not at this time abandon all compassion for some of our very damaged young people who have been caught up in these incidents 1.04pm: Tory MP and novelist Louise Mensch has just tweeted this : So @JamesDelingpole excusing the inexcusable I’m afraid. Not too much of a surprise there. 12.46pm: The David Starkey Newsnight “racism” row continues in the Telegraph courtesy of James Dellingpole who believes that the historian’s comments were not racist. Dellingpole, picks up on Starkey’s comment that MP David Lammy sounded like a white person as opposed to a black one, and the subsequent on air retort from Starkey’s co-panellist, Chavs author, Owen Jones . On Friday night’s show Starkey said:”Listen to David Lammy, an archetypal successful black man. If you turn the screen off so that you are listening to him on radio you would think he was white.” Jones replied: “You said David Lammy when you heard him sounded white and what you meant by that is that white people equals respectable.” Dellingpole’s take is this : This is classic Owen Jones, classic BBC. Note that what Starkey is saying here is actually pretty reasonable. If you listened to David Lammy on the radio you could indeed very easily think that his educated, non-ethnically identifiable (and mildly effete) speaking voice belonged to a white person rather than a black person. But in Jones’s world – and that of his puppetmaster the BBC – the truth in these matters is no defence. 12.34pm: And whilst we are on the subject of reports and the young, here’s another massive study from the OECD in 2008 called ‘ Growing Unequal’ which found that younger people living in developed countries were more likely to be poorer than their older counterparts now than any time during the last 25 years. And this was before the downturn. 12.31pm: A comment piece by Observer columnist Will Hutton today focusses in on the situation of the young and an interesting Unicef report back in 2007 which found that British youth had the worst quality of life across 21 developed nations . The Unicef report that in 2007 placed Britain bottom of 21 industrialised countries in the way it treated its children did not only single out child poverty as a cause of the problem – other factors included the factory-like education and training system, poor relationships with family and friends, the low subjective sense of wellbeing and the risks of everyday life. Add to that picture private shopping centres that allow no public place for kids to gather, inadequate and now closing youth clubs, being routinely questioned by police just for being under 25, and being ordered to disperse, even if there are only two of them – all these impact on an entire age group. The dutiful, non-rioting young may work hard for their qualifications, degrees and apprenticeships. But they too could be forgiven for asking themselves: for what? The country is economically stagnating. For anybody young and unlucky to be trapped in one of our sprawling sink estates through the bad luck of birth, what chance is there? Are their vanishing prospects in any sense deserved or fair? And the larger question that hangs over them all – where is Britain going? 12.17pm: More on the growing row between top cops and the government. Appearing on Sky News this morning, British Transport Police chief Andy Trotter has hit back against policing cuts saying that the government should stop “pretending” that 20% funding reduction won’t affect front line services: We accept that everyone in public service has to play their part in dealing with the state of the economy. We have got to be sensible in the way we do it. But we cannot pretend that the scale of cuts we face will not impact on the front line of policing…It is simply not possible.” 11.57am: This is a very sad report from freelance contributor Rachel Pugh about an international flautist who lost lost pretty much everything including rare instruments and her two cats during the riots after her Croydon flat was burned down. An internationally-known flautist has lost an irreplaceable collection of instruments made for her, when rioters burned her Croydon flat to the ground as part of the weekend disturbances. Carla Rees, 34, is reeling from the loss of more than 10 flutes including two specially made Kingma flutes built for her in the Netherlands and on which she has based her international contemporary music career. She has also lost her music library, including a unique collection of 600 pieces of unpublished music written for her and her ensemble Rarescale, complete with composers’ comments that she says are almost as important as the sheets of music themselves. Her two cats also perished in the fire that completely gutted the building on London Road where she had her second-floor flat. The whole building is having to be demolished. “I am lucky to be alive,” says Carla, who studied at the Royal College of Music in London. She and her boyfriend had just come back from a weekend coaching the National Youth Wind Orchestra, when they encountered gangs of youths and smashed cars in the street. Fearful of the atmosphere, they grabbed clean clothes, fed the cats and booked into a hotel. An hour later, her home was in ruins. A website to help her has already been set up. 11.40am: BREAKING : Two males charged with the murder of three Asian men who were hit by a car whilst protecting local businesses in Birmingham have appeared in court this morning. This is from the Press Association: Joshua Donald, 26, from Kelsall Croft, Ladywood, appeared before magistrates charged with three counts of murder. Donald and a 17-year-old male from Winson Green, who cannot be named because of his age, were arrested on Thursday and were charged late last night after police were granted extra time to question them. Donald, who appeared in court sporting a beard, wearing dark jeans and a black hooded top, spoke only to confirm his name, age and address. In the hearing, which lasted less than five minutes, District Judge Michael Wheeler said to him: “It is said that on August 10 you murdered Shazad Ali, it is also said you murdered Haroon Jahan and you also murdered Abdul Musavir.” Mr Wheeler told the defendant his case could not be dealt with at magistrates’ court and he was to be remanded in custody to appear at Birmingham Crown Court tomorrow. As Donald was taken down by a dock officer a woman in the public gallery mouthed “I love you” to him. The 17-year-old defendant is also due to appear in court today but the case has yet to be heard. 11.34am: Apologies for that technical hitch. The comments section has now been turned on. 11.19am: An update from my colleague Matthew Taylor who is at Westminster magistrates court today. He says that two court rooms are sitting and that they have 60 cases to get through – a fair whack for any day let alone a Sunday. He describes the scene as “low level chaos” with many of the lawyers including those from the CPS lacking the right papers. Hearings were supposed to start at 10am but proceedings are already running over an hour late. Court officials have told him that they expect to be there until late afternoon but a security guards thinks has been told he’ll be there until 8pm. 11.06am: Here’s Cameron’s retort to Orde in the Sunday Telegraph. Asked by columnist Matthew D’Ancona whether he was all for zero tolerance and new policing strategy Cameron replies : Yes, I do. This is why I am so keen on police accountability, where you see police chiefs accountable to elected representatives, as you do in London, I don’t think it is any surprise London was one of the first places to introduce that sort of beat-based policing with a far greater degree of zero tolerance. 10.49am: Sir Hugh Orde, head of the Association of Chief Police Officers (ACPO), has given an interview to the Independent on Sunday about the appointment of Los Angeles ‘super cop’ Bill Bratton who has been brought in to advise David Cameron on ‘zero tolerance’ style gang policing. The interview contains some firm words for the prime minister: I am not sure I want to learn about gangs from an area of America that has 400 of them. It seems to me, if you’ve got 400 gangs, then you’re not being very effective. If you look at the style of policing in the States, and their levels of violence, they are so fundamentally different from here. “What I suggested to the Home Secretary is a more sensible approach, maybe to look across far wider styles of policing; and, more usefully, at European styles – they, like us, are bound by the European Convention. My sense is, when we’ve done that, we will find the British model is probably the top. We will not get things right all the time. It’s sad it takes an event like this to counter some of the more negative attacks on policing which is totally unjustified. As background Orde, who is generally well respected and has a lot of public order experience having spent years in Northern Ireland, is one of the current contenders for the position of the head of the Met. It is also worth noting that he and his other senior officers have been brewing since the start of the year over government plans to introduce elected police chiefs – a move to a more US style of policing. 10.35am: Good morning. Welcome to continuing coverage of the aftermath of the riots which began striking English cities eight days ago. Here’s a brief round-up and what’s happened and what’s to come: • The rift between the government and police officers over tactics and policing strategy has continued to widen. The appointment of US senior cop Bill Bratton to advise on gangs and policing strategy has caused a strong reaction from ACPO chief Sir Hugh Orde . • In continued unprecedented opening hours, magistrates courts around the country will be sitting today and hearing cases . Also expected in court are those charged with the murder of the three Asian males from Birmingham who were killed after they were struck by a car while trying to protect local businesses. •  A number of magistrates’ sentences are causing controversy , most notably that of a 24-year-old mother of two who received six months for handling a stolen pair of shorts . Harsh sentences and plans to evict rioters and their families from council housing have cause serious disagreement between members of the coalition as senior Lib Dems call for an end to “kneejerk” reactions . • Operations around the country to arrest those involved in the looting are expected to continue. The latest figures from the Metropolitan police are that 1,401 people have been arrested with 808 being charged with offences. UK riots Police London Crime David Cameron Theresa May Birmingham Manchester Shiv Malik guardian.co.uk

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