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Yes, because people who have learned to manipulate and game the economic system to make billions of dollars and have no experience with educating children (one of them who keeps a pair of brass testicles on his desk and rubs them during the trading day for good luck) are absolutely best suited to educate yours: A new group backed by two hedge-fund founders is taking aim at New Jersey’s largest teachers union. Better Education for Kids wants to end the use of seniority in teacher-hiring decisions, implement an effective teacher-evaluation system and weaken tenure. Much of this conflicts with the policies of the New Jersey Education Association, or NJEA, which represents about 200,000 teachers, retirees and education professionals. Better Education for Kids was started by New Jersey residents David Tepper and Alan Fournier, who founded the Appaloosa Management hedge fund and the Pennant Capital Management hedge fund, respectively. It’s the first major foray from the hedge-fund community into New Jersey’s education-reform scene. Hedge-fund managers and employees have been active in New York education circles for years, as support for charter schools came into vogue. Better Education for Kids last week launched a $1 million ad campaign. In September, the group will evaluate its next steps, with an eye toward not only this year’s November elections but also the 2013 legislative elections. In an unusual cycle, all 120 lawmakers are up for election in two straight cycles. The group has hired two high-profile political consultants: Mike DuHaime, a Republican and top adviser to Gov. Chris Christie, and Fox & Shuffler, a lobbying firm whose founders were in top positions with former Democratic governors.

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Blagojevich: ‘Frankly, I’m stunned’

Click here to view this media Former Democratic Illinois Governor Rod Blagojevich reacted with shock Monday after he was found guilty on 17 of 20 counts, including trying to sell the U.S. Senate seat vacated by President Barack Obama. “Patti and I are very disappointed in the outcome,” the former governor told reporters following the verdict. “I, frankly, am stunned.” “There is not much left to say other than we want to get home to our little girls and talk to them and explain things to them and try to sort things out. And I’m sure we’ll be seeing you guys again.”

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The battle over Zsa Zsa Gabor’s mansion

She swam naked in its pool every morning and entertained Hollywood royalty there. Now the ailing movie star’s house is up for sale – exacerbating a bitter family feud Zsa Zsa Gabor is selling her gated Bel Air mansion, and as you would expect from a Hollywood legend, this is no ordinary listing. The former movie star may be ailing but the anticipated $15m (£9.4m) sale has intensified a long-running family feud and turned into something of a drama. The decision to sell the property was

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US state department concerned by lack of UK help for abused embassy staff

International diplomats don cloak of immunity to mask trafficking of domestic servants from their home countries • Human trafficking: How the US maps your country The US state department has expressed concern about the abuse of domestic staff working in foreign embassies in London, saying repeated allegations of mistreatment have not been addressed by the government. A report on human trafficking published on Monday warned that international diplomats often exploit staff brought from their home countries, and then hide behind the cloak of diplomatic immunity. These workers are especially vulnerable, with some being held virtual prisoners in the embassies, their passports withheld, to work 16-hour days, seven days a week, for low pay. In the worst cases, they are bullied and assaulted. “We have seen enough allegations of diplomatic abuses of domestic servants in London that have gone unaddressed that we would like to work with our counterparts to come up with – what for want of a better word – an industry standard,” ambassador Luis CdeBaca, who heads the state department office to monitor and combat trafficking, said in an interview in Washington. He said the US was planning an international conference in the coming year to bring together countries that have a big diplomatic presence to come up with an agreement aimed at preventing such abuses. In its Trafficking In Persons Report, at more than 400 pages the most comprehensive survey of human trafficking worldwide, the state department lists examples of modern-day slavery ranging from trafficking for sex to child labour, and includes the abuse of embassy staff. It rates countries according to how well they attempt to eliminate trafficking. Britain is rated in the top tier but the report notes with regard to diplomatic abuses: “Some domestic workers reportedly are subjected to forced labour by diplomats in the UK. There are concerns that these diplomatic employers are often immune from prosecution.” CdeBaca said: “One of the things we have seen is that because of diplomatic immunities, which are an important part of international diplomacy, the remedies for people who are abused or enslaved by someone who has diplomatic status are limited.” CdeBaca said host nations could comply with international rules on diplomatic immunity and still constrain the behaviour of diplomats. “If diplomats know they are going to be held to the same standard of responsibility of treating their staff if they are in Paris, Brussels, DC or London, then hopefully that changes the general approach to treating staff across all of diplomacy.” There have been 19 recent cases of alleged trafficking of domestic workers by diplomats in London reported to the government’s anti-trafficking agency by the charity Kalayaan. Kalayaan, which supports victims of human trafficking and migrant workers suffering abuse or exploitation, believes the problem is much bigger than the reported cases. Many of those mistreated are too terrified to report their suffering for fear of losing their immigration status, and desperately need to work to support families. About 300 domestic workers accompany their diplomatic employers to the UK each year. The state department, in an effort to tackle such abuses in the US, last year called in foreign diplomats and put them on notice, saying domestic staff must be paid in future by electronic transfer. The diplomats were told how allegations of abuse would be handled, with warnings that embassies could be barred from bringing in domestic staff in the future. CdeBaca also praised progress made in Belgium, Austria and Switzerland. “We are hoping to get some of these countries that have a large diplomatic presence together sometime in the next year so that we can try to figure out what is the best practice, what is working, what is not working. Part of this is so that we can make our systems here in the United States better but also so we can come up with an industry standard,” CdeBaca said. Belgium, the host to both European Union and United Nations diplomats, demands that domestic employees have their documents regularly renewed. The employees attend interviews at the foreign ministry without their employers and if they confide abuse, diplomats can be expelled or prohibited from bringing in domestic staff from their own countries. “That is a pretty brave thing for a country to do,” CdeBaca said. Domestic staff working in London embassies are admitted under a special visa programme which prohibits alternative employment outside the diplomatic mission. A recent Kalayaan report said this increased their vulnerability to exploitation. There was a “high incidence” of passports being held by employers, and diplomatic immunity meant employers could escape sanctions for mistreatment. “Indeed, some diplomats use their status to intimidate their domestic staff. For example, one worker described how his employer told him in the UK he was effectively as powerful as the president of his country,” said the charity, in its report Ending the Abuse published in May. “This leaves such workers feeling they have little choice but to accept whatever treatment is meted out to them.” Based on its case studies, Kalayaan said 64% of diplomatic domestic staff work a seven-day week, 57% receive £50 per week or less, and 50% work 16-hour days. In addition, 65% have their passports taken away from them and held by their employer and 58% reported they had been bullied or psychologically abused. It is estimated 3.8% of diplomatic domestic workers in the UK are trafficked, compared with 0.2% of migrant domestic workers in private households. They represented one-third of all trafficking cases referred to the UK human trafficking centre by Kalayaan, even though diplomatic domestic workers make up one fiftieth of migrant domestic workers. Campaigners want diplomatic domestics to be accorded the same rights as other migrant domestic workers, who can change employers. On 9 June Damian Green, the immigration minister, announced a three-month consultation on employment-related settlement, which included proposals to limit diplomatic domestics to six- or 12-month stays, or to remove the migrant domestic workers visa. Kalayaan said limiting stays to up to one year was impractical as most diplomatic posts were for four years. “The UK government proposes to return us to slavery in the UK. They have ignored evidence that trafficking of domestic workers by diplomats is a problem and worse, have proposed to remove protections from all migrant domestic workers,” said Jenny Moss, community advocate for Kalayaan. Human trafficking Immigration and asylum United States Foreign policy US foreign policy Ewen MacAskill Caroline Davies guardian.co.uk

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Morning Joe: Media Bias Is Always That Republicans Are Stupid. Just Don’t Mention Bush, Palin, or Limbaugh

Click here to view this media The reaction on Morning Joe to Chris Wallace’s “flake” comment is, naturally, to play the victim card. Liberals and the “liberal media” have a horrible bias against Republicans, who are portrayed oh-so-falsely as being stupid. True to the gospel of conservative punditry, Scarborough obeys their third commandment: “Nothing shalt have happened after the Reagan Administration.” Joe uses examples of Eisenhower, Gerald Ford, and Reagan himself as victims of this “stupid Republican” media bias. Because who would want to add George W. Bush or Sarah Palin, or the extreme anti-intellectualism of the leader of the GOP, Rush Limbaugh, to the argument? Scarborough’s so-called “argument” falls apart at the mention of anti-intellectualism. Republicans promote candidates who are aw-shucks plain folks to run the free world. Remember that the argument FOR voting for George W. Bush was that you wanted to have a beer with him. Sarah Palin’s complete disinterest in….how shall I put this? …READING… is a charming attribute to her politically illiterate and sometimes functionally illiterate following. As Heather said to me in an email: “The other thing that kills me watching the coverage of Bachmann today is the media already has their talking points on her. She’s now officially declared “serious” because she managed to respond to Wallace without looking like a complete idiot. And now that she’s played the victim card like Palin and mean old Chris Wallace treated her unfairly, no one else in the media is allowed to ask that same question of her. So they’ve declared her now insulated. Unfriggin’ believable.” The beltway punditry that passes for journalism in this country is now fawning over Michele Bachmann because she paid big bucks to a political consultant — Ed Rollins — and is doing what her handler tells her to do. We’ve got serious problems and hard times ahead in the United States and the world. Bachmann’s answers to those problems include defunding “Obamacare” without a single idea to replace it, except voting for the Ryan Budget to turn Medicare into a private insurance voucher program. Then when it became obvious (even to her) that the Ryan vote was a political disaster, she put an “asterisk” on her vote . Perhaps she can put an asterisk on her comparison of taxing the young to the Holocaust . And another asterisk on the tireless efforts of the founding fathers to end slavery . The Beltway is erasing all memory of Bachmann’s crazy statements because those were made before Ed Rollins put his magic collar on her. Remember when Karl Rove was Bush’s Brain? Ed Rollins, who also worked for stellar candidates Ross Perot and Katherine Harris ( before he quit ), is now Bachmann’s Brain. Why? Because in the anti-intellectual cloister that is today’s Republican Party, a hired brain is the best you can do? When is the Republican Party going to admit you need a brain of your own to be qualified to run for President?

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SCOTUS Strikes Down AZ Public Campaign Finance Law

enlarge In a predictable 5-4 decision [PDF], conservatives on the US Supreme Court struck down Arizona’s public campaign finance law, claiming it would stifle private expenditures because of the trigger mechanism that would allow opponents to receive additional public funds. Here’s the logic, which I’ve tried to understand but don’t: The burden imposed by the matching funds provision is evident and inherent in the choice that confronts privately financed candidates and independent expenditure groups. Indeed every court to have considered the question after Davis has concluded that a candidate or independent group might not spend money if the direct result of that spending is additional funding to political adversaries. Arizona is correct that the candidates do not complain that providing a lump sum payment equivalent to the maximum state financing that a candidate could obtain through matching funds would be impermissible. But it is not the amount of funding that the State provides that is constitutionally problematic. It is the manner in which that funding is provided–in direct response to the political speech of privately financed candidates and independent expenditure groups. [Emphasis added] Elena Kagan’s magnificent dissent, which she read aloud from the bench today, outlines the issues before the court. Describing two states’ campaign finance structures, one that is corrupt and one seeking to end corruption, she describes the Arizona law this way: So the voters enact a program that carefully adjusts the money given to would-be officeholders, through the use of a matching funds mechanism, in order to provide this assurance. The program does not discriminate against any candidate or point of view, and it does not restrict any person’s ability to speak. In fact, by providing resources to many candidates, the program creates more speech and thereby broadens public debate. And just as the voters had hoped, the program accomplishes its mission of restoring integrity to the political system. The second State rids itself of corruption. And then goes on to express incredulity (and frustration) over the majority’s decision: A person familiar with our country’s core values—our devotion to democratic self-governance, as well as to “uninhibited, robust, and wide-open” debate, New York Times Co. v. Sullivan, 376 U. S. 254, 270 (1964)—might expect this Court to celebrate, or at least not to interfere with, the second State’s success. But today, the majority holds that the second State’s system—the system that produces honest government, working on behalf of all the people—clashes with our Constitution. The First Amendment, the majority insists, requires us all to rely on the measures employed in the first State, even when they have failed to break the stranglehold of special interests on elected officials. And that was the mild part of her dissent, which was joined by Justices Sotomayor, Breyer, and Ginsburg. Reading through the entire opinion — majority and dissent — reads like a contentious family argument. Toward the end of her dissent, Kagan wrote this: Arizona, remember, offers to support any person running for state office. Petitioners here refused that assistance. So they are making a novel argument: that Arizona violated their First Amendment rights by disbursing funds to other speakers even though they could have received (but chose to spurn) the same financial assistance. Some people might call that chutzpah . And this: As against all this, the majority claims to have found three smoking guns that reveal the State’s true (and nefarious) intention to level the playing field. But the only smoke here is the majority’s, and it is the kind that goes with mirrors. Justice Kagan was full of fire, and rightly so. Booman writes : I don’t know whether to laugh or cry. Elena Kagan’s dissent [it's a .pdf, and you'll have to scroll way down to find it] in ARIZONA FREE ENTERPRISE v. BENNETT basically treats Roberts’s majority opinion the same way our air forces treated Dresden during World War Two. It’s a carpetbombing that leaves nothing left but a smoldering pile of rubble. It’s a true pleasure to read. Yet, the inescapable tragedy is that she wrote the minority opinion. The five conservatives on the Supreme Court have once again done extreme violence to our democracy and all efforts to combat corruption and the undue influence of corporations. And that’s the problem. Just as it was in Wisconsin with the union-busting bill, so it is with the US Supreme Court and campaign finance. Some describe the divide as an inability to agree on the fundamentals of campaign finance. I think that’s too kind. Heather Gerkin at Balkinization : Justice Kagan and the three other liberals, in contrast, find it very hard to figure out why public finance systems that impose no constraints on privately financed candidates are remotely troubling. Justice Kagan said in oral argument that it seemed like the system promote “more speech all around,” and her blistering dissent makes precisely the same point. That is the core problem, in my view, in campaign finance. If the Justices cannot agree on the basic premises of the doctrine, no balancing test or factual record or choice about the level of scrutiny is going to bring agreement. This just isn’t an area where a middle ground is likely to be found. One is tempted to quote from Harry Potter: “neither can win while the other survives.” One view or another is going to have to win out. The Justices know it’s a fight to the finish, and they are writing their opinions accordingly. Nor should middle ground be found. There are two possibilities with those who think outside interests can and should spend unlimited amounts on candidate campaigns: They’re utopian idealists or they’re corrupt. I’ll give you three guesses as to what I think, and utopia has nothing to do with it. It’s not cynical to understand that political contributions are viewed as currency to use as leverage to further one’s goals, whether or not they’re in the general public interest. It’s also not a stretch to believe that flawed humans running for office will not bend to the heady rush of Big Money heading their way. If there is any single issue highlighting differences between “conservative” and “liberal” interpretations of the Constitution, it has to be campaign finance. This conservative majority is doing more harm to democracy than any Congress has, and I am in real fear for our future if we can’t clean up the court and toss the corrupt justices off, beginning with Clarence Thomas . John Amato: A Blue America favorite, Rep. Raul Grijalva emailed his thoughts on the decision to corrupt our democracy even more than it already is: Grijalva Calls Supreme Court Decision on Arizona Campaign Law “A Sign That Wealth Now Decides How Much Free Speech You Get” Tucson, Ariz. – The Supreme Court earlier today struck down a major portion of Arizona’s campaign finance law granting public funds to candidates whose privately funded opponents spend more than a certain amount during the course of the campaign. Rep. Raúl M. Grijalva, the co-chair of the Congressional Progressive Caucus, called the decision “a troubling sign that wealth now decides how much free speech you get.” — Grijalva said. “Working people’s voices continue to be drowned out by well financed corporations with expert marketing strategies. The Framers of our Constitution never meant for wealthy companies or individuals with their own agendas to drown out the rest of us in public debate, especially not by outspending us.”

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Rod Blagojevich, former Illinois governor, found guilty of corruption

Blagojevich, who was forced from office in 2009, faces 20 years in jail after being convicted of trying to sell Obama’s Senate seat Rod Blagojevich, the former governor of Illinois and one-time presidential aspirant, has been found guilty of trying to sell president Barack Obama’s old Senate seat. After 10 days of deliberation, a Chicago jury found Blagojevich guilty on 17 counts , including fraud, attempted extortion and bribery. He was acquitted of another bribery charge, and the jury was undecided on charges of attempted extortion. An earlier trial had ended in a deadlock. Blagojevich, 54, is the son of a steel worker from Serbia. He trained as a lawyer and married into one of Chicago’s most politically connected families, rising rapidly to become a star of the local Democratic party. Former aides say he once saw himself as a presidential contender. Two years ago Blagojevich was arrested on corruption charges following an investigation — codenamed Operation Board Games — launched just months after he took office. Under Illinois state law the governor was required to name a senator to replace Obama after his election to the presidency in November 2008. Tipped off about his plans, federal agents recorded hundreds of hours of expletive-filled tapes in which Blagojevich discussed what he wanted in exchange for the seat. The governor, commonly known as Blago, was recorded on tape saying Obama’s former senate seat was “a valuable thing – you don’t just give it away for nothing.” He said that unless he got “something real good” he would take the seat himself. The recordings also led to the charges of swapping state funds for campaign donations and attempting to intimidate the Chicago Tribune into sacking writers who had criticised him. Blagojevich said that his intention was to use the seat as leverage to pass legislation that would have benefited the residents of Illinois and not himself. A father of two, he now faces up to 20 years in jail. Blagojevich is the second consecutive Illinois governor to be convicted of corruption, and the fourth governor jailed in recent history. Former governor George Ryan is currently serving a six-and-a-half-year sentence. A University of Illinois study calculated that corruption in politics costs the state $300m (£188m) a year. Rod Blagojevich Illinois US politics United States Barack Obama Dominic Rushe guardian.co.uk

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China rebukes Cameron for pointing the finger over human rights abuses

Premier’s words contrast with praise for Germany but he said China would send two pandas to the UK as mark of friendship The Chinese premier, Wen Jiabao, issued a diplomatic dressing down of the British government by declaring the UK should stop “finger pointing” over human rights in discussions with Beijing. Wen also suggested the UK economy needed to do better, in remarks that appeared to differ from his warm words towards Germany, which he was also visiting on his European tour. The rebukes marred the signing of some £1.4bn of trade deals, the most important being an agreement between BG, the UK energy group, and Bank of China for up to $1.5bn of funding to expand projects in China. Britain, for its part, said it would welcome Chinese investment in UK infrastructure, as well as greater co-operation over international development. At a Downing Street press conference, Wen repeatedly aired his frustration at the way the UK government and media seemed to obsess about human rights. He said: “On human rights, China and the UK should respect each other, respect the facts, treat each other as equals, engage in more co-operation than finger-pointing and resolve our differences through dialogue. China is not only pursuing economic development but also political structural reform and improvement in democracy and the rule of law.” He said China had been exposed to untold sufferings in its 5,000-year history. “This has taught the Chinese never to talk to others in a lecturing way, but to respect nations on the basis of equality.” David Cameron said: “We applaud the economic transformation that has taken place in China … But, as I said in Beijing last November, we do believe the best guarantor of prosperity and stability is for economic and political progress to go in step together.” The prime minister said no issue had been left off the table but No 10 was reluctant to detail specific human rights abuses. He said: “There is no trade-off in our relationship. It is not about either discussing trade or human rights. Britain and China have such a strong and developed relationship. We have a dialogue that covers all these issues, and nothing is off limits in the discussions that we have.” Wen did say there was “no strategic conflict” between the UK and China and that “our common interests outweigh our differences”. It was a mark of this relationship that China would be sending two giant pandas, Tian Tian and Yangguang, to Edinburgh Zoo by the end of this year – as announced by China’s vice premier, Li Keqiang, in January. Cameron also pressed China to crackdown on abuses of intellectual property and patents, saying it was “absolutely essential” because of Britain’s strength in branded goods and in film, music and the arts. A “symposium” to discuss the issue has been set up. Chinese officials, involved in a month-long crackdown on civil rights activists, expressed irritation and said Britain was viewed less favourably in Beijing than Germany, France, Italy and Spain. There is anger that Cameron may have gone further than other European leaders when in China in raising human rights concerns. In a speech to the Royal Society, Wen admitted corruption and income disparities were harming people’s lives in China. “Without freedom there is no real democracy and without the guarantee of economic and political rights there is no real freedom,” he said. “To be frank, corruption, unfair income distribution and other ills that harm the people’s interests still exist in China.” Wen also expressed his differences with the British over Libya saying the solution lay in diplomacy. “Foreign troops may be able to win war in a place, but they can hardly win peace. Hard lessons have been learned from what has happened in the Middle East and Afghanistan.” China still supported the UN security council resolution that authorised air strikes to protect civilians, but the nations involved must comply with the strict terms. Wen added: “We hope that the issue of Libya will be resolved through political, peaceful means, to reduce the humanitarian harm and in particular the harm of innocent civilians.” Wen Jiabao China David Cameron Human rights Foreign policy Patrick Wintour guardian.co.uk

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China rebukes Cameron for pointing the finger over human rights abuses

Premier’s words contrast with praise for Germany but he said China would send two pandas to the UK as mark of friendship The Chinese premier, Wen Jiabao, issued a diplomatic dressing down of the British government by declaring the UK should stop “finger pointing” over human rights in discussions with Beijing. Wen also suggested the UK economy needed to do better, in remarks that appeared to differ from his warm words towards Germany, which he was also visiting on his European tour. The rebukes marred the signing of some £1.4bn of trade deals, the most important being an agreement between BG, the UK energy group, and Bank of China for up to $1.5bn of funding to expand projects in China. Britain, for its part, said it would welcome Chinese investment in UK infrastructure, as well as greater co-operation over international development. At a Downing Street press conference, Wen repeatedly aired his frustration at the way the UK government and media seemed to obsess about human rights. He said: “On human rights, China and the UK should respect each other, respect the facts, treat each other as equals, engage in more co-operation than finger-pointing and resolve our differences through dialogue. China is not only pursuing economic development but also political structural reform and improvement in democracy and the rule of law.” He said China had been exposed to untold sufferings in its 5,000-year history. “This has taught the Chinese never to talk to others in a lecturing way, but to respect nations on the basis of equality.” David Cameron said: “We applaud the economic transformation that has taken place in China … But, as I said in Beijing last November, we do believe the best guarantor of prosperity and stability is for economic and political progress to go in step together.” The prime minister said no issue had been left off the table but No 10 was reluctant to detail specific human rights abuses. He said: “There is no trade-off in our relationship. It is not about either discussing trade or human rights. Britain and China have such a strong and developed relationship. We have a dialogue that covers all these issues, and nothing is off limits in the discussions that we have.” Wen did say there was “no strategic conflict” between the UK and China and that “our common interests outweigh our differences”. It was a mark of this relationship that China would be sending two giant pandas, Tian Tian and Yangguang, to Edinburgh Zoo by the end of this year – as announced by China’s vice premier, Li Keqiang, in January. Cameron also pressed China to crackdown on abuses of intellectual property and patents, saying it was “absolutely essential” because of Britain’s strength in branded goods and in film, music and the arts. A “symposium” to discuss the issue has been set up. Chinese officials, involved in a month-long crackdown on civil rights activists, expressed irritation and said Britain was viewed less favourably in Beijing than Germany, France, Italy and Spain. There is anger that Cameron may have gone further than other European leaders when in China in raising human rights concerns. In a speech to the Royal Society, Wen admitted corruption and income disparities were harming people’s lives in China. “Without freedom there is no real democracy and without the guarantee of economic and political rights there is no real freedom,” he said. “To be frank, corruption, unfair income distribution and other ills that harm the people’s interests still exist in China.” Wen also expressed his differences with the British over Libya saying the solution lay in diplomacy. “Foreign troops may be able to win war in a place, but they can hardly win peace. Hard lessons have been learned from what has happened in the Middle East and Afghanistan.” China still supported the UN security council resolution that authorised air strikes to protect civilians, but the nations involved must comply with the strict terms. Wen added: “We hope that the issue of Libya will be resolved through political, peaceful means, to reduce the humanitarian harm and in particular the harm of innocent civilians.” Wen Jiabao China David Cameron Human rights Foreign policy Patrick Wintour guardian.co.uk

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China rebukes Cameron for pointing the finger over human rights abuses

Premier’s words contrast with praise for Germany but he said China would send two pandas to the UK as mark of friendship The Chinese premier, Wen Jiabao, issued a diplomatic dressing down of the British government by declaring the UK should stop “finger pointing” over human rights in discussions with Beijing. Wen also suggested the UK economy needed to do better, in remarks that appeared to differ from his warm words towards Germany, which he was also visiting on his European tour. The rebukes marred the signing of some £1.4bn of trade deals, the most important being an agreement between BG, the UK energy group, and Bank of China for up to $1.5bn of funding to expand projects in China. Britain, for its part, said it would welcome Chinese investment in UK infrastructure, as well as greater co-operation over international development. At a Downing Street press conference, Wen repeatedly aired his frustration at the way the UK government and media seemed to obsess about human rights. He said: “On human rights, China and the UK should respect each other, respect the facts, treat each other as equals, engage in more co-operation than finger-pointing and resolve our differences through dialogue. China is not only pursuing economic development but also political structural reform and improvement in democracy and the rule of law.” He said China had been exposed to untold sufferings in its 5,000-year history. “This has taught the Chinese never to talk to others in a lecturing way, but to respect nations on the basis of equality.” David Cameron said: “We applaud the economic transformation that has taken place in China … But, as I said in Beijing last November, we do believe the best guarantor of prosperity and stability is for economic and political progress to go in step together.” The prime minister said no issue had been left off the table but No 10 was reluctant to detail specific human rights abuses. He said: “There is no trade-off in our relationship. It is not about either discussing trade or human rights. Britain and China have such a strong and developed relationship. We have a dialogue that covers all these issues, and nothing is off limits in the discussions that we have.” Wen did say there was “no strategic conflict” between the UK and China and that “our common interests outweigh our differences”. It was a mark of this relationship that China would be sending two giant pandas, Tian Tian and Yangguang, to Edinburgh Zoo by the end of this year – as announced by China’s vice premier, Li Keqiang, in January. Cameron also pressed China to crackdown on abuses of intellectual property and patents, saying it was “absolutely essential” because of Britain’s strength in branded goods and in film, music and the arts. A “symposium” to discuss the issue has been set up. Chinese officials, involved in a month-long crackdown on civil rights activists, expressed irritation and said Britain was viewed less favourably in Beijing than Germany, France, Italy and Spain. There is anger that Cameron may have gone further than other European leaders when in China in raising human rights concerns. In a speech to the Royal Society, Wen admitted corruption and income disparities were harming people’s lives in China. “Without freedom there is no real democracy and without the guarantee of economic and political rights there is no real freedom,” he said. “To be frank, corruption, unfair income distribution and other ills that harm the people’s interests still exist in China.” Wen also expressed his differences with the British over Libya saying the solution lay in diplomacy. “Foreign troops may be able to win war in a place, but they can hardly win peace. Hard lessons have been learned from what has happened in the Middle East and Afghanistan.” China still supported the UN security council resolution that authorised air strikes to protect civilians, but the nations involved must comply with the strict terms. Wen added: “We hope that the issue of Libya will be resolved through political, peaceful means, to reduce the humanitarian harm and in particular the harm of innocent civilians.” Wen Jiabao China David Cameron Human rights Foreign policy Patrick Wintour guardian.co.uk

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