Tehran’s claim that tripling its uranium enrichment speed will help develop cancer treatments is dismissed as ‘a provocation’ Western capitals have reacted angrily to an announcement by Iran that it is installing more advanced centrifuges in a uranium enrichment plant with the aim of accelerating its nuclear programme. “The installation of new centrifuges with better quality and speed is ongoing,” Ramin Mehmanparast, the Iranian foreign ministry spokesman, told reporters at his weekly press briefing. “We have announced it and the agency [the International Atomic Energy Agency] has full supervision of them. They are fully aware that Iran’s peaceful nuclear activity continues to progress. This is another confirmation of the Islamic republic’s successful strides in its nuclear activities.” However, France said Iran’s move – which Tehran claims could triple the rate at which it enriches uranium – confirmed suspicions that the Iranian nuclear programme had “no credible civilian application”. The French foreign ministry said: “Iran has just given in to another provocation by announcing the imminent installation of next generation centrifuges. “This is a new violation of six security council resolutions and 10 resolutions by the council of governors of the International Atomic Energy Agency [IAEA].” The British Foreign Office said the announcement “further undermines Iran’s claim that its nuclear programme is designed for purely peaceful purposes, and demonstrates the urgency of increasing pressure on Iran … Iran must understand that we will not be distracted by events in the region and it should not doubt our resolve”. Iran Nuclear weapons International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA) Middle East Julian Borger guardian.co.uk
Continue reading …Conservative party sources say advice had nothing to do with phone-hacking inquiry Hacking suspect Neil Wallis may have provided “informal advice” to David Cameron’s communications chief Andy Coulson before the general election, the Conservative party has said. Sources in the party said the advice had “nothing to do with the phone-hacking inquiry”. A spokesman insisted Wallis was never employed by the Conservative party. The spokesman said: “There have been some questions about whether the Conservative party employed Neil Wallis. “We have double-checked our records and are able to confirm that neither Neil Wallis nor his company has ever been contracted by the Conservative party, nor has the Conservative party made payments to either of them. “It has been drawn to our attention that he may have provided Andy Coulson with some informal advice on a voluntary basis before the election. We are currently finding out the exact nature of any advice. “We can confirm that apart from Andy Coulson, neither David Cameron nor any senior member of the campaign team were aware of this until this week.” The Metropolitan police commissioner, Sir Paul Stephenson, and his assistant commissioner John Yates, who both appeared before the home affairs select committee on Tuesday, resigned after being linked to Wallis, who was deputy to Coulson during his time in charge at the News of the World. It was also alleged that Wallis arranged a stay at the luxury health resort Champneys for Stephenson and his wife as he recovered from surgery. But Scotland Yard has insisted the accommodation and food was provided by Champneys’ managing director, Stephen Purdew, a family friend of the commissioner. Wallis denies any involvement in the stay. The shadow culture secretary, Ivan Lewis, said: “This revelation raises further serious concerns about David Cameron’s judgment in appointing Andy Coulson. “He must now come clean about Neil Wallis’s role and activities in supporting Andy Coulson, both in his capacity as director of communications for the Tory party, and then the prime minister.” Phone hacking Andy Coulson David Cameron News of the World Newspapers & magazines National newspapers Newspapers Conservatives guardian.co.uk
Continue reading …enlarge I figured Karl Rove and his friends at Crossroads weren’t going to wait much longer before cutting Michele Bachmann’s candidacy off at the knees, and here it is: A report in the Daily Caller (Tucker Carlson’s private high-school newsletter) leaking the story about how people are “concerned” about her migraines and alleged heavy use of medications. They say they’re talking about it now because if she gets the nomination, the story will come out too late to stop Obama: The Minnesota Republican frequently suffers from stress-induced medical episodes that she has characterized as severe headaches. These episodes, say witnesses, occur once a week on average and can “incapacitate” her for days at time. On at least three occasions, Bachmann has landed in the hospital as a result. “She has terrible migraine headaches. And they put her out of commission for a day or more at a time. They come out of nowhere, and they’re unpredictable,” says an adviser to Bachmann who was involved in her 2010 congressional campaign. “They level her. They put her down. It’s actually sad. It’s very painful.” Bachmann’s medical condition wouldn’t merit public attention, but for the fact she is running for president. Some close to Bachmann fear she won’t be equal to the stress of the campaign, much less the presidency itself. “When she gets ‘em, frankly, she can’t function at all. It’s not like a little thing with a couple Advils. It’s bad,” the adviser says. “The migraines are so bad and so intense, she carries and takes all sorts of pills. Prevention pills. Pills during the migraine. Pills after the migraine, to keep them under control. She has to take these pills wherever she goes.” To staff, Bachmann has implausibly blamed the headaches on uncomfortable high-heel shoes, but those who have worked closely with her cite stress, a busy schedule and anything going badly for Bachmann as causes. Alice Stewart, a spokeswoman for Bachmann, said ”she suffers from migraines and they’re under control with medicine.” Stewart contested descriptions of the episodes as “incapacitating” Bachmann but did not specify how the descriptions were wrong. “The information you have is incorrect,” Stewart said. She declined to discuss Bachmann’s hospital visits at all, saying, “I’m not going to go into her medical history.” On the evening of May 13, 2010, Bachmann flew to Los Angeles for a series of political and fundraising events. In part because of complications with her flight schedule, Bachmann’s mood plunged. During the entire six-hour flight, she was desperately sick from headaches. Of particular concern to some around her is the significant amount of medication Bachmann takes to address her condition. The former aide says Bachmann’s congressional staff is “constantly” in contact with her doctors to tweak the types and amounts of medicine she is taking. Marcus Bachmann helps her manage the episodes. Sources who spoke to The Daily Caller said they did so because they are terrified about the impact the condition could have on Bachmann’s performance if she actually became president. They also worry that the issue could blow up in the general election campaign, giving President Obama an easy path to re-election. “It’s a careful choice of words I used: ‘incapacitated,’” the adviser says.
Continue reading …MSNBC contributor Mike Barnicle perpetuated the liberal line of Republican obstinacy over the debt ceiling on Tuesday's Morning Joe using a poor analogy to home buying. “Did you ever compromise or negotiate on the price with the then owner of the home?” asked Barnicle. [VIDEO BELOW THE FOLD] The Wisconsin Senator responded by noting that Republicans actually are willing to come to the table. “I'm happy to work with anybody who's serious about fixing the problem,” said Johnson. “But the fact of the matter that the President comes to the table three week before – about a month before the deadline, and insists on raising taxes, and let's face it, he couldn't raise taxes when his party was in total control of the government.” Johnson could have also pointed out that the home buying analogy is useless; the debt ceiling debate is an argument among borrowers, not an argument between buyer and seller. Barnicle continued to press Johnson on his refusal to agree to tax hikes: “Let's talk about raising taxes then.” Johnson pointed out that Democrats have not come forth with any meaningful proposals. “I'm happy to close loopholes. Show me the real loopholes, show me the real deal as opposed to legitimate business expenses, because that's what they're normally talking about.” Barnicle then tried to play the class warfare card by throwing hedge funds and capital gains tax rates in Johnson's face. “Hedge funds – lot of money. Billions of dollars. You get taxed capital gains rate, 15%. Why not tax it as income?” asked Barnicle. Johnson again had to return to the point that the Democrats have not proposed any serious solutions. “Has the President proposed that? Is it on a piece of paper?” asked Johnson. Johnson then explained why the process was moving as slowly as it has been: “First of all we haven't passed a budget in the United States Senate in two years. The Democrats are in total control of the Senate. I don't have a whole lot of power in the Senate to be proposing these things that don't even get brought up. The House actually did pass a budget. The Democrats simply refuse to put their plan on the table because they don't want to have the American people see what their plan is. Their plan primarily is to raise taxes.
Continue reading …Speculation that consignment of weapons removed from military depot in Mediterranean was secretly supplied to Libya The Italian government has blocked an investigation into the whereabouts of a massive consignment of weapons removed from a military depot in the Mediterranean, amid speculation that the cargo was secretly supplied to Libya. The weapons were from a consignment that included 30,000 Kalashnikov AK-47 automatic rifles, 32m rounds of ammunition, 5,000 Katyusha rockets, 400 Fagot wire-guided anti-tank missiles and some 11,000 other anti-tank weapons. They were transferred from a store on the island of Santo Stefano, off the north coast of Sardinia, and transported to the mainland where they were loaded onto army trucks , a source familiar with the operation told the Guardian. But what happened to them after that is a mystery – and now a secret. The arms were said to have been moved about a month after Silvio Berlusconi radically shifted his stance on Libya. Firmly allied to Colonel Muammar Gaddafi until the outbreak of hostilities, he was initially reluctant to do more than provide base facilities for France and Britain. But on 26 April, after a telephone conversation with Barack Obama, he announced that Italian planes would join the air strikes on Libya in an attempt to break the deadlock on the ground. His announcement wrong-footed his coalition allies in the Northern League, who have repeatedly deplored Italy’s subsequent involvement. A prosecutor in the town of Tempio Pausania opened an investigation into the destination of the weapons but his inquiries were blocked by an order from the prime minister’s office warning that the affair was covered by official secrecy, according to reports in two daily newspapers. The prime minister’s office was unable immediately to confirm or deny the report and the prosecutor’s office in Tempio Pausania could not be reached for comment. The weapons are understood to have been seized on board a ship intercepted by British and Italian warships at the mouth of the Adriatic during the Balkan wars of the 1990s. It emerged in subsequent court proceedings that the 19,400-ton Jadran Express was carrying enough weaponry to equip an army. The ship, with a cargo of 47 containers supposedly packed with Egyptian cotton, was bound for the Croatian port of Rijeka when it was forced off course in an operation involving the British and Ukrainian intelligence services. Italian judges ordered the arms to be destroyed. But they were instead moved to a munitions dump on Santo Stefano from where that the arms were reportedly removed between 18 and 20 May. Not the least mystifying aspect of the operation is that the Italian navy used commercial ferries to transport the weapons. Italy Libya Europe John Hooper guardian.co.uk
Continue reading …The antiviral was manufactured in GM tobacco with a view to using the same technique to slash the cost of other life-saving drugs in the developing world An antiviral drug synthesised by genetically modified plants is being tested on a small number of women in the UK to establish its safety, bringing closer the possibility of cheap modern medicines for the developing world. The drug’s developers hope it can be used to prevent HIV infection, but the real breakthrough is that the research demonstrates it is possible for similar molecules – known as monoclonal antibodies – to be produced relatively cheaply in plants to the high standards needed for their use in humans. The human trial has been approved by the UK licensing body, the Medicines and Healthcare products Regulatory Agency (MHRA), and is taking place in Guildford at the clinical research centre of the University of Surrey. Pharma-Planta is a project launched seven years ago with the objective of using GM plants to slash the cost of drugs that are hard to produce. The scientists’ aim is to increase the availability of these modern medicines – which are often highly effective – in the poorest countries of the world. Access to medicines in the developing world is extremely limited. The World Health Organization estimates that 23 million infants worldwide do not get adequate basic immunisation and 1.7 million children under five die from vaccine-preventable diseases. “The driver was to produce these medicines economically and at a level that would satisfy global demand,” said Professor Julian Ma from St George’s University, London, who is the joint co-ordinator of the European Union-funded project. Many medicines are synthesised at great expense in fermentation vats containing bacteria or mammalian cells. By contrast Pharma-Planta produced the anti-HIV monoclonal antibody in GM tobacco plants grown in soil in greenhouses in Germany. After 45 days, they were harvested, their leaves were shredded and “highly purified antibodies” were extracted. The researchers say there is little risk of such GM plants spreading or contaminating other crops because they are contained and would not be grown on anything like an agricultural scale. Ma said it was “a red letter day” when they received the go-ahead from the drugs regulator. “The approval from the MHRA for us to proceed with human trials is an acknowledgement that monoclonal antibodies can be made in plants to the same quality as those made using existing conventional production systems. That is something many people did not believe could be achieved,” he said. Eleven healthy women have volunteered to take part in the trial and two of them have been given the antibody so far, with a third woman having been given a placebo. The trial is designed only to demonstrate the safety of the antibody, called P2G12, at different dosages. Much bigger trials in women at risk of contracting HIV would be necessary to test whether it could prevent infection. If it does prove effective, the drug would probably have to be used in combination with other monoclonal antibodies to minimise the chance that the virus developed resistance, as it easily does to antivirals. The process is between 10 and 100 times cheaper than conventional production systems, said Professor Rainer Fischer of the Fraunhofer Institute for Molecular Biology and Applied Ecology in Aachen, Germany, where the plants were grown. The most useful monoclonal antibodies, such as the anti-cancer drug Herceptin, are still covered by patents owned by major pharmaceutical companies, but once these expire the new technique could offer a way to make cheap versions available in poor countries. Drugs Biochemistry and molecular biology Genetics Plants Immunology Medical research Biology HIV infection Sexual health GM Pharmaceuticals industry Sarah Boseley guardian.co.uk
Continue reading …• Former News International chief executive faces the Commons culture, media and sport committee • Read full coverage of all today’s earlier hearings – Rupert Murdoch, James Murdoch, Sir Paul Stephenson and John Yates – here 6.14pm: Back in the committee, Jim Sheridan is asking questions. Q: What did Brooks mean when she told journalists at the NoW that in a year’s time they would understand why the company needed to close the paper? Brooks says she has no “visibility” in relation to the documents in the possession of the police. After a year or more people will get to the bottom of what happened. Q: During the Tommy Sheridan perjury case the court was told that News International emails had got lost? Brooks says the emails were not lost. Q: Why haven’t the retrieved emails been given to Sheridan’s defence team? Brooks says there was a problem with suppliers in India. 6.13pm: Outside the hearing, following evidence from Sir Paul Stephenson, the outgoing Metropolitan police commissioner to the home affairs committee earlier, the Met has released more details about the number of people in its press office who have worked for News International. Here’s its statement. In the Directorate of Public Affairs (DPA) there are 45 press officers as well as a number of non-press office roles. There are a total of 68 staff roles. Of this total number ten people have previously worked or taken work experience at News International newspapers. Of these ten half had also worked at other non News International owned national or London newspapers. In addition four other members of DPA have previously worked or taken work experience from non News International owned national or London newspapers. Only four people have worked for national or London newspapers within the last five years. The majority of all the work undertaken at the papers was on a freelance casual shift basis and did not overlap with their current employment. 6.04pm: Louse Mensch , the Tory MP, is asking questions now. Q: Piers Morgan in his book, the Insider, writes about using phone hacking. He says this was behind the Mirror’s scoop of the year. (For more on this, read Guido Fawkes.) Isn’t it the case that everyone was using hacking? Brooks says after Operation Motorman all papers had to accept that they had gone to far in using private detectives. Q: Were payments to the police widespread across Fleet Street? Brooks says in her evidence to the culture committee in 2003, she was going to explain what she meant about paying the police. But the session was terminated. She has clarified her point herself. She has never paid a police officer herself. She has never knowingly sanctioned a payment to a police officer. In her experience, the information to papers from the police comes “free of charge”. Q: If you thought these practices were endemic in the industry, why did you not think they were going on at the NoW? Brooks says, after the What Price Privacy? report, there was a culture change in Fleet Street. 6.03pm: Watson is still asking questions. Q: Do you have any regrets? Of course, says Brooks. What happened to Milly Dowler’s family was “abhorrent”. 6.02pm: Back to the committee, Watson is asking about Glenn Mulcaire. Brooks says she did not know Mulcaire worked for the NoW when she was editor. She did not hear his name until 2006. Q: Did you ever receive information for the paper from him? Brooks says, now that she knows what she knows, she realises that he was involved with the paper from the late 1990s. At his trial the judge said he did legitimate work for the paper. Q: Did you have any contact with Jonathan Rees? Brooks says she knows a lot about Jonathan Rees now. He rejoined the NoW in 2005 or 2006. Q: Is it odd that, having been jailed for a serious offence, he was rehired? Brooks says this is extraordinary. Q: Who hired him? Brooks says she does not know. Q: Who signed his contract? She does not know. Q: Why haven’t you investigated this? Brooks says the internal investigation has focused on phone hacking. Brooks worked for other people, including Panorama. She does not know what he did for the NoW. Q: Isn’t it incredible that, as chief executive, you did not know? It may be incredible. But it is the truth. 5.57pm: If you hit refresh, you can follow the hearing live with our video stream at the top of the page. 5.56pm: The BBC are just breaking the news that the Conservative party has announced that Neil Wallis, the former News of the World deputy editor, provided informal advice to the party before the general election. 5.55pm: Brooks says that until evidence emerged during the course of civil litigation, she did not realise the extent of phone hacking. Part of the problem is that News International do not have all the paperwork. The police have it, she says. Tom Watson is asking questions now. He says the scope of his questions will be limited because he does not want to prejudice any legal proceedings. Q: Why did you sack Tom Crone? Brooks says Crone mainly worked for the News of the World. That has closed. Q: But there are still News of the World legal cases to deal with? Brooks says Crone was the day-to-day legal manager. But the paper closed. Q: As a journalist how extensively did you deal with private detectives? Brooks says the information commissioner looked into this. He found that Take a Break magazine used private detectives more than the Sun. The Observer was one of the top four papers using detectives. Paul Farrelly interrupts. He says he used to work for the Observer. It was not in the top four. Brooks says it may have been in the top six. 5.44pm: Rebekah Brooks has begun her evidence to MPs on the culture, media and sport committee now. Here is a reading list for this hearing. • Nick Davies’s list of the questions that Rebekah Brooks has to answer . • The Observer’s list of the questions that Brooks has to answer . • The Guardian’s Janine Gibson on where Brooks went wrong . • A profile of Brooks in the Daily Mail . Brooks began with an apology to the victims of phone hacking. Read coverage of the hearing featuring Rupert Murdoch, James Murdoch, Sir Paul Stephenson and John Yates here . In brief, here was Andrew Sparrow’s view of the Murdochs: Rupert Murdoch “Most humble day of my career” was the soundbite he gave us, but humility wasn’t really what anyone will remember. It will be the short, gruff answers, delivered as if he was not entirely clear what had been going on. Was it because he’s 80 and he can’t hear very well any more, or was it because he didn’t really want to engage? Probably a mixture of the two. But he did seem unflappable when the “foam hacker” struck. Tough bugger. James Murdoch Evasive, but in a way that was smooth and articulate. He kept telling the MPs how good their questions were and launching into long answers that weren’t always particularly illuminating. And here were his key points from the Murdoch hearing: 5.34pm: That was meant to last an hour. It lasted three. Here are the main points . • Rupert Murdoch has had a plate of shaving foam thrust in his face by a protester. The attacker has been arrested. Labour’s Chris Bryant said that attack was “despicable” and a contempt of parliament. • Rupert Murdoch said that giving evidence to the committee was “the most humble day of my career”. • The Murdochs confirmed that News International carried on paying some of Glenn Mulcaire’s legal fees after his conviction for phone hacking in 2007. One MP suggested that this could be interpreted as News International funding a cover-up (because Mulcaire has been fighting demands that he should disclose full details of his phone-hacking activities). James Murdoch said that he was “surprised and shocked” when he heard about these payments. Rupert Murdoch said that he would stop future payments, as long as there were no contractual reasons why he should not do so. • Murdoch said that he did not feel that he was personally responsible for what went wrong at the company. • The Murdochs said they had “no plans” to set up a Sunday title. They conceded that they had discussed this, but they said it was not priority. • James Murdoch said that he agreed to the £700,000 payment to Gordon Taylor because he thought it was a hangover from the original court case. • Rupert Murdoch said he did not find out about the Taylor payment – which has been perceived as hush money – until it was publicised in the Guardian. • Rupert Murdoch said that he thought that the phone-hacking matter had been settled after 2007. “The police ended their investigations and I was told that News International conducted an internal review,” he said. (Interestingly, Murdoch is blaming the police for not investigating the matter more thoroughly in 2006. But last week Peter Clarke, the officer in charge of that investigation, said he could not carry it out properly because News International did not co-operate.) • Rupert Murdoch played down his influence on his British newspaper editors. He did not even phone the editor of the News of the World every week, he says. Of all his papers, he pays most attention to the Wall Street Journal, he said. • Rupert Murdoch said in his opening statement: “I hope our contribution to Britain will one day … be recognised.” • Rupert Murdoch said Downing Street asked to him to use the back door when he visited David Cameron at No 10 after the general election. • Rupert Murdoch said that he hoped to repair his relationship with Gordon Brown. Full coverage of all the day’s previous events here We are having technical problems with our previous live blog , so we have started this one in its place. Phone hacking Rupert Murdoch Rebekah Brooks News of the World News International Metropolitan police John Yates Sir Paul Stephenson Newspapers Newspapers & magazines Live video Andrew Sparrow Ben Quinn guardian.co.uk
Continue reading …Michael Gove announces new PFI school-building programme, acknowledging ‘deep disappointment’ at cancellation of Labour’s Building Schools for the Future Up to 300 schools will be rebuilt under private finance schemes with an “upfront cost” of around £2bn, Michael Gove has announced in the Commons. The first of the restored schools is due to open in September 2014, the education secretary said in a statement acknowledging the “deep disappointment” caused by his cancellation of Labour’s school-building programme . Gove said the government will cover the contractual liabilities of six councils after it scrapped Building Schools for the Future. It will offer to pay the costs they have run up with private contractors, which run into millions of pounds. Luton council has said the late cancellation of the scheme left it with liabilities of £3.6m, while Waltham Forest said it stands to lose £275m. But the cancelled programmes will not be reinstated. Instead, between 100 and 300 schools in the worst condition nationally will be rebuilt under a new PFI scheme. The new school building scheme will be “rigorously policed” to ensure it does not incur the excessive costs of previous PFI projects, Gove said. Gove told the Commons that BSF, which triggered the worst political crisis of his first year in office, did not prioritise the greatest need or procure buildings as cheaply as possible. From now on, schools should be built to a standard design to save costs, he said. Gove announced a further £500m to fund more school places in areas where population growth has put classrooms under pressure. The preferred option will be a free school or academy. A baby boom has triggered record shortages of primary school places for this autumn and the number of pupils in state primary schools is projected to increase about 14% from 3.96m last year to 4.5m by 2018. The rise will be steepest in London. The PFI scheme goes partway to meeting a shortfall in capital funding which includes an estimated £8.5bn school repair bill. Gove said that £1.4bn had been made available this year to deal with maintenance. PFI, which involves private contractors paying upfront for schools and hospitals then leasing them back for up to 30 years, has become increasingly expensive since the financial crisis. The government has been warned against PFI by its own spending watchdog , the national audit office. Schools currently being built under PFI will be expected to improve energy efficiency, let out floor space, and reduce decorating costs in order to shave budgets, the Treasury announced separately on Tuesday. The government has also launched a consultation on a new “national funding formula” to even out disparities between the operational cash distributed to schools in different areas. Gove said: “At present, similar schools in different areas can receive very different amounts of funding for their pupils. “This is not fair on headteachers, on teachers or on pupils.” This reform could see individual school budgets set from Whitehall, effectively bypassing local authorities, although Gove said there would be “appropriate room for local discretion”. Shadow education secretary Andy Burnham questioned whether the government saw any future for local authorities in education. An “all-academy world” in which schools were directly funded by central government would look very different to the existing system, he said. Ty Goddard, director of the British Council for School Environments, an association of councils, schools and private contractors, said: “Today’s announcement recognises the profound need for investment in our school buildings. A decent school environment matters. “Key to the new capital funding programme’s success will be a common sense approach to allocation, which takes into account the needs of schools which apply. “We must guard against some of the problems that were a hallmark of early PFI-funded schools.” The National Association of Head Teachers welcomed the consultation on a national funding formula. Russell Hobby, the NAHT’s general secretary, said: “For too long, schools have suffered with inconsistent and unclear funding. Inexplicable differences across local authority boundaries have led to similar schools receiving more than £1,000 per pupil difference in levels of funding. “This is completely untenable. “The consultation shows that thinking around school funding is heading in a sensible direction but we realise that there is still a long way to go. Issues such as support for small schools, meeting the cost of pupils with special educational needs and funding across the whole of the school sector are complex.” School building programme Schools School funding Primary schools Private finance initiative Michael Gove Jeevan Vasagar guardian.co.uk
Continue reading …Select committee brought to halt as activist attempts to hit News Corp chief in face with paper plate covered in shaving foam The Murdochs’ appearance before MPs for a grilling about the phone-hacking scandal was brought to a dramatic halt after an activist attempted to hit Rupert Murdoch in the face with a paper plate covered in shaving foam. Murdoch’s wife Wendi Deng, who was sitting behind her husband in the culture, media and sport committee hearing, leapt up to defend her husband and appeared to hit out at the attacker as security guards and police rushed across the room to apprehend him. The attack happened just before 5pm on Tuesday and the News Corp chairman and chief executive was back answering MPs questions within 20 minutes, having removed his foam-spattered suit jacket. The man, who was sitting four rows back in the committee meeting room at Portcullis House near the Houses of Parliament, apparently identified himself on Twitter shortly before the attack as a standup comic and UK Uncut activist called Jonnie Marbles. Marbles appears to have tweeted moments before he invaded today’s hearing. “It is a far better thing that I do now than I have ever done before #splat,” he wrote on the social media network. Moments after the committee chairman, John Whittingdale MP, suspended the meeting, a man wearing a checked shirt was seen outside the meeting room at the House of Commons in handcuffs. Cries of “no, no,” could be heard as the man ran towards Rupert Murdoch, who was sitting in front of MPs on the committee alongside his son James. “He was sitting four rows back,” said Guardian journalist Jane Martinson, who was among the reporters in the room when the attack took place. “He walked calmly to the front and smacked it in Rupert’s face.” Marbles had earlier tweeted: “I’m actually in this committee and can confirm: Murdoch is Mr Burns.” He added: “Rupert Murdoch appears to be going senile.” He also tweeted: “It might be quicker if Baby Murdoch simply listed all of the things that he does know. “One gets the sense that they haven’t really done the required reading ahead of their presentation. Think they may fail this module.” Marbles describes himself on his Twitter page as an “activist, comedian, father figure and all-round nonsense. Tweeting in an impersonal capacity.” But UK Uncut swiftly moved to distance itself from the invader. “The pie in Murdoch’s face was NOT a UK Uncut action, everyone!” it tweeted soon after. The Guardian’s Jane Martinson said: “The man lobbed a plate of shaving foam into Murdoch’s face at point-blank range. There was an astonishing reaction from Wendi who, sitting behind her husband, immediately returned fire. “James looked stunned, several members of room gasped, but Wendi then sat on the desk calmly wiping foam from her husband’s face. There was foam all over her blue-painted toes a s well as two police officers who immediately grabbed him. There was shock that he got the foam in given the tight security. Another man with a long beard was also questioned.” She added: “All the press were kept in an overspill room as the committee resumed. I’m not sure how the foam man hid the paper plate. He was wearing black combat trousers and walked straight past me from the back row where the public was sitting to within inches of Murdoch. “Wendi was on her feet lobbing the plate back at her husband’s assailant before James got up. Another woman – small and dark-haired – was the one who accosted the assailant first.” Labour MP Tom Watson, one of the members of the select committee, told Murdoch: “Your wife has a very good left hook.” Louise Mensch, a Tory MP and fellow select committee member, said Murdoch had shown “huge guts” in being willing to carry on. Another Labour MP, Chris Bryant, described the attack as “just despicable”. He said witnesses should not be treated in such a manner and described it as contempt of parliament. Associates of Marbles said he “lives and breathes politics” and had been involved in previous UK Uncut protests. •
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