Publications omit front-page pictures, claiming three photojournalists were coerced into false confessions Several major newspapers and websites in Georgia have published their front pages without pictures in a co-ordinated protest against the arrest of three photographers accused of spying for Russia. Giorgi Abdaladze, a stringer for the Associated Press newswire; Zurab Kurtsikidze of the European Pressphoto Agency; and Irakli Gedenidze, the personal photographer of Mikheil Saakashvili, Georgia’s president, were detained in the early hours of 7 July. All three were charged with espionage and have reportedly confessed to photographing secret documents, including details of Saakashvili’s itinerary, and selling them to Russian military intelligence. They face up to 12 years in prison in a trial due to start on 1
Continue reading …Publications omit front-page pictures, claiming three photojournalists were coerced into false confessions Several major newspapers and websites in Georgia have published their front pages without pictures in a co-ordinated protest against the arrest of three photographers accused of spying for Russia. Giorgi Abdaladze, a stringer for the Associated Press newswire; Zurab Kurtsikidze of the European Pressphoto Agency; and Irakli Gedenidze, the personal photographer of Mikheil Saakashvili, Georgia’s president, were detained in the early hours of 7 July. All three were charged with espionage and have reportedly confessed to photographing secret documents, including details of Saakashvili’s itinerary, and selling them to Russian military intelligence. They face up to 12 years in prison in a trial due to start on 1
Continue reading …Mohammed al-Rashi attends funeral of Damascus demonstrators as celebrities pick sides in fight to topple President Bashar al-Assad The Syrian TV star Mohammed al-Rashi has joined Syria’s anti-regime demonstrators just days after a group of intellectuals and artists protested in Damascus. In a video posted online the actor is seen attending a number of funerals in the Damascus neighbourhood of Qaboun, where at least 15 people were shot dead on Friday, the highest number of deaths reported in a single day in the capital since the revolt began four months ago. Rashi joins a list of stars including the actor Fares al-Heloo who have spoken out against the regime. On Wednesday 30 of about 200 actors, writers and intellectuals who protested in the Midan neighbourhood of the capital were arrested, including the leading actor May Skaf, film directors Nabil Maleh and Mohammed Malas and writer Rima Fleihan. All have since been released. But as those fighting to topple President Bashar al-Assad and those supporting him seek the backing of the rich and famous, many of Syria’s celebrities have shown loyalty to the regime. The singer George Wassouf performed before thousands of people at a pro-regime concert in the central Omawiyeen Square on Sunday evening. Wassouf, one of Syria’s most famous singers who hails from a town in the governorate of Homs, is among a number of stars who have drawn fierce criticism for supporting a regime that continues to crack down brutally on protesters. The concert, described as a show of loyalty to the homeland, started with a minute of silence for the dead. Others have hedged their bets. The actor Muna Wassif, the mother of the democracy activist Ammar Abdulhamid, who runs a blog on Syria’s revolution, called in May for an end to the killing and the lifting of sieges on villages but stopped short of calling for the regime to go. In May a group of international filmmakers signed an online petition denouncing the killing of protesters for making “demands of basic rights and liberties”. Nour Ali is the pseudonym of a journalist in Damascus Syria Arab and Middle East unrest Bashar Al-Assad Protest Middle East guardian.co.uk
Continue reading …Mohammed al-Rashi attends funeral of Damascus demonstrators as celebrities pick sides in fight to topple President Bashar al-Assad The Syrian TV star Mohammed al-Rashi has joined Syria’s anti-regime demonstrators just days after a group of intellectuals and artists protested in Damascus. In a video posted online the actor is seen attending a number of funerals in the Damascus neighbourhood of Qaboun, where at least 15 people were shot dead on Friday, the highest number of deaths reported in a single day in the capital since the revolt began four months ago. Rashi joins a list of stars including the actor Fares al-Heloo who have spoken out against the regime. On Wednesday 30 of about 200 actors, writers and intellectuals who protested in the Midan neighbourhood of the capital were arrested, including the leading actor May Skaf, film directors Nabil Maleh and Mohammed Malas and writer Rima Fleihan. All have since been released. But as those fighting to topple President Bashar al-Assad and those supporting him seek the backing of the rich and famous, many of Syria’s celebrities have shown loyalty to the regime. The singer George Wassouf performed before thousands of people at a pro-regime concert in the central Omawiyeen Square on Sunday evening. Wassouf, one of Syria’s most famous singers who hails from a town in the governorate of Homs, is among a number of stars who have drawn fierce criticism for supporting a regime that continues to crack down brutally on protesters. The concert, described as a show of loyalty to the homeland, started with a minute of silence for the dead. Others have hedged their bets. The actor Muna Wassif, the mother of the democracy activist Ammar Abdulhamid, who runs a blog on Syria’s revolution, called in May for an end to the killing and the lifting of sieges on villages but stopped short of calling for the regime to go. In May a group of international filmmakers signed an online petition denouncing the killing of protesters for making “demands of basic rights and liberties”. Nour Ali is the pseudonym of a journalist in Damascus Syria Arab and Middle East unrest Bashar Al-Assad Protest Middle East guardian.co.uk
Continue reading …Claims Crown’s lawyers failed to disclose evidence in several cases, including the Mark Kennedy environmental activism affair The Crown Prosecution Service faces a crisis following the abandonment of a series of trials after allegations of serious wrongdoing were made against its staff. Senior officials at the CPS stand accused of repeatedly failing to meet their legal obligation to disclose crucial evidence and ensure fair trials. Sir Christopher Rose, a former appeal court judge, has been appointed to lead an inquiry into claims the CPS suppressed evidence relating to the undercover police officer Mark Kennedy. His inquiry will test whether prosecutors in the Kennedy case met the fundamental obligation of disclosure, to give lawyers for the accused any evidence that could assist their defence. The Guardian can reveal that the same CPS lawyer in the east Midlands allegedly implicated in the Kennedy case has been accused of non-disclosure in two other trials. The cases – one concerning fraud, the other drugs – were abandoned in recent months after prosecutors were alleged to have withheld evidence. The development threatens to widen the controversy stemming from the Kennedy affair, which until now has focused on prosecutions of environmental campaigners. On Tuesday, 20 activists convicted of planning to break into the Ratcliffe-on-Soar power station will challenge the guilty verdicts at the court of appeal. If successful, their case will be considered a shocking miscarriage of justice. Failure to disclose surveillance tapes led in January to the abandonment of a trial of six other activists, who were accused of conspiring to break into the same power station. The Ratcliffe case and the fraud and drugs trials involved the same senior CPS lawyer, Ian Cunningham. His name first came to light on 6 January, when the fraud trial at Nottingham crown court collapsed after it emerged that three defendants – Mark Taylor, Robert Sankey and Neil Lievesley – had been wrongly accused of fraud by a business partner. The three businessmen were connected to Aussie Mole, a company making pneumatic hammers for laying pipes and cables. The CPS told the judge it had dropped the case, after it realised evidence in its possession suggested the men’s business partner – the key witness – was not, as the judge put it, “a witness of truth”. Judge Andrew Hamilton demanded to know why the prosecution, costing up to £20,000 in public funds, had been mounted. “This is entirely wasted money,” he said. “Who has been responsible for wasting this money?” He added: “These three men have been in fear of being locked up. They’ve no doubt spent a pretty rotten year or more worrying about what’s going to happen to them and it’s all for no purpose.” Demanding a written explanation, the judge said he wanted to know why Cunningham had initially withheld the crucial evidence – a statement from a principal witness in the case – from defence lawyers. “It’s indefensible … this is not a police constable who doesn’t know what’s what. Mr Cunningham is a senior crown prosecuting solicitor. I just cannot fathom how he could have made such a decision.” On Monday, a CPS statement confirmed that an explanatory letter was sent to the judge on 16 February. The CPS said a key witness statement had been originally marked as being not for disclosure to the defendants. It was given to them seven months before the case was dropped, the CPS added. “Disclosure was carried out, albeit late, and a full explanation was given to the judge, which he has raised no further questions on,” the statement said. “While it is clear some aspects of the case could have been handled better, this case was not dropped due to the disclosure issues.” But the case raises serious concerns. Every criminal investigation generates masses of documents. Police and the CPS select those documents which they believe will help secure a conviction. It is a cornerstone of the justice system that prosecutors must also disclose to the lawyers working for the defendants any relevant document that would help their defence. The fraud allegations were first made against the three in 2007, but CPS officials in Derbyshire decided not to prosecute. The file was later passed to the complex case unit of the CPS, which deals with “particularly sensitive and high profile” cases. Cunningham decided to revive the prosecution as he believed the witness was credible. It was Cunningham’s name that was at the centre of controversy that erupted four days later in the same Nottinghamshire courthouse. The Kennedy case hit the headlines on 10 January , when the CPS announced it would abandon its prosecution of six climate change campaigners accused of planning to break into the Nottinghamshire power station. Prosecutors acted after it emerged that a transcript of Kennedy’s surveillance of the activists had not been disclosed to the defence. It was not until last month that the Guardian revealed police allegations that Cunningham had withheld the material from defence lawyers, leading the director of public prosecutions, Keir Starmer QC, to announce an independent inquiry . That development had a domino effect on the third abandoned trial in which the CPS has been accused of suppressing evidence. Details of that trial cannot be reported for legal reasons, but it involved accusations of conspiring to supply drugs. Before the prosecution opened its case, defence lawyers lodged an “abuse of process” application, calling for the charges to be cast aside. The complaints involved concerns that the defendants would not get a fair trial because police and prosecutors, including Cunningham, had failed to disclose important evidence. Defence lawyers wanted to know why Cunningham, one of two CPS officials running the prosecution, had decided not to disclose the evidence – questioning whether he had been misled, behaved dishonestly or simply not looked at the documents. The dispute resulted in Cunningham having to attend court where, under cross-examination, he told a judge he had not handed material to the defence because he wanted to give himself more time to consider the question. In his ruling, the judge found there were some failings in the disclosure process, but he rejected the application – essentially ruling in favour of Cunningham and the police. That decision was overtaken when lawyers for the defendants arrived in court with copies of the Guardian, which contained details of allegations against Cunningham in the Kennedy case. The judge first adjourned the hearing while he read the articles and then cancelled the trial. A new jury will be sworn in, after the Rose inquiry has determined whether Cunningham was at fault in the Kennedy case. A CPS spokesman said: “There have been no findings against Ian Cunningham at this stage. We await the outcome of the independent inquiry into the Ratcliffe-on-Soar case.” Mark Kennedy Activism UK criminal justice Keir Starmer Police Surveillance Rob Evans Paul Lewis guardian.co.uk
Continue reading …Death of Sean Hoare – who was first named journalist to allege Andy Coulson knew of hacking – not being treated as suspicious Sean Hoare, the former News of the World showbiz reporter who was the first named journalist to allege Andy Coulson was aware of phone hacking by his staff, has been found dead, the Guardian has learned. Hoare, who worked on the Sun and the News of the World with Coulson before being dismissed for drink and drugs problems, is said to have been found dead at his Watford home. Hertfordshire police would not confirm his identity, but the force said in a statement: “At 10.40am today [Monday 18 July] police were called to Langley Road, Watford, following the concerns for the welfare of a man who lives at an address on the street. Upon police and ambulance arrival at a property, the body of a man was found. The man was pronounced dead at the scene shortly after. “The death is currently being treated as unexplained, but not thought to be suspicious. Police investigations into this incident are ongoing.” Hoare first made his claims in a New York Times investigation into the phone-hacking allegations at the News of the World. He told the newspaper that not only did Coulson know of the phone hacking, but that he actively encouraged his staff to intercept the phone calls of celebrities in the pursuit of exclusives. In a subsequent interview with the BBC he alleged that he was personally asked by his then-editor, Coulson, to tap into phones. In an interview with the PM programme he said Coulson’s insistence that he didn’t know about the practice was “a lie, it is simply a lie”. At the time a Downing Street spokeswoman said Coulson totally and utterly denied the allegations and said he had “never condoned the use of phone hacking and nor do I have any recollection of incidences where phone hacking took place”. Sean Hoare, a one-time close friend of Coulson’s, told the New York Times the two men first worked together at the Sun, where, Hoare said, he played tape recordings of hacked messages for Coulson. At the News of the World, Hoare said he continued to inform Coulson of his activities. Coulson “actively encouraged me to do it”, Hoare said. In September last year, he was interviewed under caution by police over his claims that the former Tory communications chief asked him to hack into phones when he was editor of the paper, but declined to make any comment. Hoare returned to the spotlight last week, after he told the New York Times that reporters at the News of the World were able to use police technology to locate people using their mobile phone signals in exchange for payments to police officers. He said journalists were able to use a technique called “pinging” which measured the distance between mobile handsets and a number of phone masts to pinpoint its location. Hoare gave further details about the use of “pinging” to the Guardian last week. He described how reporters would ask a news desk executive to obtain the location of a target: “Within 15 to 30 minutes someone on the news desk would come back and say ‘right that’s where they are.’” He said: “You’d just go to the news desk and they’d just come back to you. You don’t ask any questions. You’d consider it a job done. The chain of command is one of absolute discipline and that’s why I never bought into it, like with Andy saying he wasn’t aware of it and all that. That’s bollocks.” He said he would stand by everything he had told the New York Times about “pinging”. “I don’t know how often it happened. That would be wrong of me. But if I had access as a humble reporter … ” He admitted he had had problems with drink and drugs and had been in rehab. “But that’s irrelevant,” he said. “There’s more to come. This is not going to go away.” Hoare named a private investigator who he said had links with the News of the World, adding: “He may want to talk now because I think what you’ll find now is a lot of people are going to want to cover their arse.” Speaking to another Guardian journalist last week, Hoare repeatedly expressed the hope that the hacking scandal would lead to journalism in general being cleaned up and said he had decided to blow the whistle on the activities of some of his former News of the World colleagues with that aim in mind. He also said he had been injured the previous weekend while taking down a marquee erected for a children’s party. He said he had broken his nose and badly injured his foot when a relative accidentally struck him with a heavy pole from the marquee. Hoare also emphasised that he was not making any money from telling his story. Hoare, who has been treated for drug and alcohol problems, reminisced about partying with former pop stars and said he missed the days when he was able to go out on the town. Phone hacking News of the World Andy Coulson News International Newspapers & magazines National newspapers Newspapers Amelia Hill James Robinson Caroline Davies guardian.co.uk
Continue reading …enlarge Credit: Blue Gal Whose idea was it to hold a GOP Candidate ” Tea Party Twitter Debate ” with questions from you, the Tweeters ? They sure have a lot of Chootzpah . A number of journalists are going to have a hard time following Rick Perry’s answers, since he’s blocked them. The questions, sent to @140townhall will appear at the debate’s website with the candidates appearing on Wednesday July 20 at 3 pm Eastern.
Continue reading …Never trust a source as cited by Rachel Maddow. It's not the sources themselves that are deceitful, at least much of the time. It's what she does with the information they provide that is. On her MSNBC show Friday night, for example, Maddow was riding one of her favorite hobby horses, alleging that new voter ID laws enacted or proposed in 40 states are little more than GOP-led efforts to suppress voter turnout among core Democrat constituencies. To bolster her argument, Maddow said this about a new voter ID law in Texas (video after page break) — Occasionally Republicans tip their hand on this, as they have done in Texas, when Texas Republicans were cranking down voting rights, making it harder to vote in that state than it has ever been before, Texas Republicans carved out an exception to their new you-have-to-show-an-ID-to-vote-now rule. The exception is? (pause for dramatic effect) For anybody who has a concealed carry permit for a weapon. (Stated as story from Texas Observer shown, on new voter ID law, with words “concealed handgun license” broken out from story and prominently displayed). What do you think it is about having a gun that makes the Republican legislators of Texas relax about your eligibility to vote? What is it about the leftist shills at MSNBC that causes them to relax when it comes to journalism standards? Anyone checking the source cited by Maddow will see that Texas Republicans carved out no such “exception.” Here's how the relevant passage in the Observer story reads — The legislation requires voters to present one of five acceptable forms of photo ID — a driver's license, military ID, passport, concealed handgun license or a special voter ID card provided free of charge by the state. Possessing a concealed handgun license doesn't exempt anyone from the new voter ID law — it allows a person holding such a license to comply with the law.
Continue reading …Federation of Small Businesses calls for sector-specific VAT reductions to 5% after survey shows dramatic quarterly decline George Osborne must reverse his VAT hike to restore confidence and boost growth, according to a leading business lobby group. The rise to 20% in January is battering hard-hit industries that have yet to recover from the recession, the Federation of Small Businesses said after its quarterly survey showed a dramatic decline in business confidence in the three months to the end of June. The federation’s chairman, John Walker, called on the government to follow the lead of several other EU countries and cut VAT in the construction and tourism sectors to 5% for a year “to help give the economy a real boost”. The VAT rise in January from 17.5% to 20% is a key element of the chancellor’s deficit-reduction plan and was widely supported by many business leaders. The tax is expected to raise about £12bn for the government. But the move has come under fire from Labour, City economists and increasing numbers of businesses following a sharp slowdown in economic activity after a strong recovery last year. Walker said: “Consumer demand is a large barrier to economic growth so a VAT cut would encourage people to spend in these areas.” The federation’s Voice of Small Business index fell by 6.4 points in the first quarter from +6.7 to +0.3. Walker said it was striking that confidence in 13 out of 18 sectors covered by the index showed business confidence below zero. Five sectors fell from a positive to a negative reading. A figure below zero shows that survey respondents believe business activity is contracting rather than expanding. Previously booming industries were among the biggest fallers, with car retailers and repair shops the least confident after a 65-point drop on the previous quarter to an index score of -45. Confidence among hotels, restaurants and bars slipped nine points from +13 to +4 in the first quarter. Large numbers of firms reported lower revenues in the second quarter. A record number said they feared the third quarter would see a further drop in revenues. Walker said: “The economy is still in a fragile state and these figures clearly show that the government’s growth strategy is just not working. In an economy characterised by high unemployment and muted demand, more needs to be done to encourage businesses to take on staff and grow their business so that the recovery can really get back on track. “Since the start of 2010, the FSB Index has proved to be a good barometer of the path that economic growth will take, so the news that it has fallen back to almost zero paints a very worrying picture for GDP.” Labour cut VAT to 15% in response to a 6% contraction in GDP following the banking crash. The decision to raise the rate to 20% effectively increased the level of tax on consumers by £24bn between 2009 to 2011. Britain has yet to recover lost production from 2009. The National Institute of Social & Economic Research said last week that the economy was unlikely to surpass its 2008 level of output until 2013, making it the longest period of depression for more than 80 years. The shadow minister for small business and enterprise, Chuka Umunna, said he was concerned at the steep falls in confidence outside the east and East Midlands, which were the only regions to enjoy a slight boost. “Confidence has dropped particularly badly in certain regions, tumbling from 2 to minus 30 in north-east England. Revenue expectations have also fallen, and small businesses are continuing to have to reduce the size of their workforce. Umunna added: “The government’s policies are holding back economic growth, hampering businesses and putting jobs at risk. A temporary cut in VAT would put money in consumers’ pockets now, which would boost jobs and growth and so help get the deficit down for the long term.” Economic growth (GDP) George Osborne Tax and spending Construction industry Travel & leisure Recession Economic policy Conservatives Labour Phillip Inman guardian.co.uk
Continue reading …Robert Zoellick speaks out amid fears the Doha round could fail, leading to a new era of protectionism The president of the World Bank, Robert Zoellick, blamed Barack Obama has for the deadlock in global trade talks and called on the White House to show the leadership that would bring almost a decade of fruitless negotiations to a successful conclusion. Amid growing concern that a complete failure in the stymied Doha round could result in a new era of protectionism, Zoellick accused the United States of peddling “excuses” when officials in Washington called the World Trade Organisation’s (WTO) talks structurally flawed. Zoellick, who was the US’s chief trade negotiator under George W Bush, told reporters in Geneva: “I think the facts speak for themselves on whether you have excuses or leadership.” The Doha development round of negotiations was launched in the Qatari capital in November 2001 with the intention of spreading the benefits of free trade from rich western countries to poorer nations of Africa, the Caribbean, Latin America and Asia. But attempts to open up markets in the manufacturing, agricultural and service sectors have foundered as a result of disagreements between the round’s five big players: the United States, the European Union, India, Brazil and China. Pascal Lamy, the WTO’s director general, is resigned to the US continuing to adopt a hardline stance until after Obama has sought re-election in November 2012, but has floated the possibility of a so-called “Doha light” that would salvage some parts of the negotiations, including a package for developing countries. “The mini-deal will probably be about as hard as the big deal,” Zoellick warned at the launch of a programme in Geneva designed to disseminate data on trade. Privately, many trade negotiators agree with the assessment of the World Bank chief that it will be hard to get the US to agree even to a slimmed-down Doha round, since it would leave Washington with nothing to show for 10 years of talks. Zoellick said that rather than settle for a more modest agreement, the 150-plus WTO members should aim for more. “I urge the WTO members to get bolder: double down on Doha.” If countries were ambitious but failed, it would be easier to apportion blame, he said. The World Bank chief predicted that only a push by political leaders would end what he called a “death watch” on Doha. “The world needs a global growth strategy and opening trade drives growth,” said Zoellick. “We’ve seen it with proven effectiveness all throughout the past 60 or 70 years.” World Bank Doha trade talks Economics Global economy International trade Larry Elliott guardian.co.uk
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