Campaigner reunited with activist wife Zeng Jinyan but subject to attentions of police and security guards One of China’s leading dissidents has returned home after completing the three-and-a-half year prison sentence imposed for his human rights work and championing of Aids sufferers, his wife has said. Hu Jia, 37, was j ailed for “inciting subversion of state power” in internet articles and interviews with foreign reporters. Well-known for his environmental activism and for promoting the rights of Aids patients and Tibetans among others, he won the Sakharov human rights prize while in prison. Campaigners said he was “freer, not free” because of the strict conditions placed on him. He spent months confined to his home in Beijing even before his detention in 2008 and is assumed to be back under house arrest. “He is back home with his parents and me,” his wife, Zeng Jinyan, told Reuters in a brief telephone call on Sunday. “I don’t know if he can speak later. At the moment, I want everything to be peaceful. I’m worried that doing interviews at this stage might cause problems. Please understand.” In a Twitter message, she said he returned home at 2.30am on Sunday, adding: “Safe, very happy. Needs to recuperate for a period of time.” Hu’s mother, Feng Juan, told Reuters he was in a good mood but his health was “so so”. He has hepatitis B and his family fear he did not get adequate care in prison. News agencies reported that numerous police officers and security guards were patrolling the apartment complex where Hu and Zeng live in east Beijing. Hu’s release comes days after police allowed outspoken artist Ai Weiwei to return home on bail , following more than two months of detention. Four of Ai’s associates – his driver and cousin Zhang Jinsong, accountant Hu Mingfen, designer Liu Zhenggang and friend Wen Tao – have subsequently been released. Experts disagree as to whether Ai’s release was influenced by the Chinese premier’s visit to Europe. Wen Jiabao arrived in the UK on Saturday night and will meet David Cameron on Monday. Some believe the unusual attention attracted by Ai’s case, and the expectation that Cameron and German chancellor Angela Merkel would press Wen hard for his release, precipitated the decision. Others point to Ai’s silence since his release, suggesting authorities felt it safe to release him because he had agreed to comply. Human rights groups stress that they see no signs that China is pulling back from what is the most serious crackdown on activists and dissidents for a decade or more. “Hu is freer but he is not free. He has returned to a particularly strict form of house arrest,” said Nicholas Bequelin, Asia researcher at Human Rights Watch. It is common for political prisoners to be prevented from giving interviews on release, but Bequelin said: “It is not only about talking to the media or carrying out activism, but whether he can go to a restaurant to celebrate with friends. He spends three and a half years in prison and comes home and cannot see his daughter.” Zeng left their young child with relatives rather than allow her to live under house arrest. “For this one year, the focus should be on treating his cirrhosis, caring for parents and child, to avoid being arrested again,” Zeng, who is also an activist, wrote in an online posting last week. Several people have been held incommunicado following their release from prison in the past year, including grassroots lawyer Chen Guangcheng. Last week, his wife reported he had been beaten unconscious after the release of a video he filmed detailing their situation. Her allegation came in a letter smuggled out of their home in Shandong, eastern China, and passed to a human rights organisation. Hu Jia China Protest Human rights Tania Branigan guardian.co.uk
Continue reading …Click here to view this media On Fox’s sorry excuse for a media watchdog show, Fox News Watch, host Jon Scott brought in Greg Gutfeld, the host of their late night show, the Red Eye, to defend Fox News Sunday’s Chris Wallace and to attack Jon Stewart after the dressing down Stewart gave Wallace last Sunday . Nothing like having the host of a show that’s so painfully bad it really is unwatchable for more than a few minutes from the Republican propaganda channel come on to lecture Jon Stewart about political ideology.
Continue reading …Alan Colmes and Cal Thomas had a humorous exchange about the media's love for Obama on Saturday's “Fox News Watch.” After Thomas asked when the press will come to their senses and admit they were wrong about the messiah-like powers of the former junior Senator from Illinois, Colmes replied, “You keep presuming the media is supporting this guy and they're not” (video follows with transcript and commentary): CAL THOMAS: You know what the press is really reluctant to do, and I think they're going to have to do it at some point? We’ve said on this show before they were cheerleaders leading up to 2008 election. This was the guy who was going to part the waters. He was going to smooth out the crooked places, do all of these things, cure tooth decay, falling hair, everything else, and now they’re realizing he's mortal just like every other president. When are they coming to their senses and say, “You know, we were wrong about this guy?” ALAN COLMES: You keep presuming the media is supporting this guy and they're not. THOMAS: Well, they certainly did in 2008. COLMES: They’re not. THOMAS: Well, then they were wrong. COLMES: You know what, whenever some liberal gets elected, and he's not even that liberal… THOMAS: [Laughs] COLMES: …it’s the media that did it. Whenever a conservative does, it’s the people have spoken. So Colmes doesn't only believe the media haven't been supporting Obama, he also thinks the current White House resident isn't that liberal. Do you need to know anything more about the value of his opinions?
Continue reading …A live stream of the production, the first of its kind undertaken by any UK opera house or UK newspaper. The stream will be available for seven days after the initial broadcast and is free of charge to viewers
Continue reading …First it started with ATMs, which banks used to cut their workforce. Then it was debit cards, which automatically processed transactions that used to be done manually. Every step of the way, banks have figured out how to get us to do the work for them, and now they’re looking to charge us for the privilege . And yet, the administration doesn’t understand why we want Elizabeth Warren running the financial consumer protection bureau? Because we need someone who’s on our side: For years, banks subsidized most debit card holders by levying heavy fees on retailers and overdrawn consumers. Merchants paid a processing fee averaging 44 cents every time a shopper swiped a card. And careless cardholders at major banks typically got dinged $35 every time the bank covered an overdraft. Last year the nation’s banks collected more than $50 billion from merchant fees and overdrafts, including checking and ATM balance-busters as well as debit card transactions. That’s likely to decline, however, thanks to new rules Congress mandated after the financial crisis. Starting next month, merchants will pay just 12 cents for debit processing, unless bank lobbyists persuade the Federal Reserve to tack on a surcharge for fraud prevention. Even then, the fee would probably not exceed 18 or 20 cents. In addition, new rules that took effect last year prohibit banks from automatically charging consumers for debit card and ATM overdraft protection on everyday transactions; instead, cardholders now must opt in. The bottom line is that banks stand to lose more than $10 billion a year in merchant fees and more than $6 billion in overdraft fees. They’ll be looking to make it up somewhere — and it’s likely to be from the mainstream debit card users, not just the sloppy ones. Already, JPMorgan Chase & Co., Wells Fargo & Co. and many other banks are reducing or phasing out rewards programs that gave users cash back for using debit cards. Chase has been testing a monthly $3 fee for debit cards in some states, and Bank of America Corp. and Citigroup Inc. have added new fees to some checking accounts. Consumer advocates are steamed. Electronic debits are much less expensive to process than checks or cash; banks have saved billions in operating costs , said Ed Mierzwinski, consumer program director at the U.S. Public Interest Research Group. But the industry has largely pocketed those savings rather than pass them along to customers, he said, and now they’re looking to charge users for the convenience. “We were trained to use cards, and now they’re telling us it’s not enough, wanting to charge us for the privilege,” Mierzwinski said. “It’s diabolical.”
Continue reading …As she steps into her new role as CBS News Chief White House correspondent, Norah O'Donnell may have made a good impression on the man she'll now be covering with comments she made this weekend. While chatting with the panel of “The Chris Matthews Show,” O'Donnell told the host that President Obama has more aggressively prosecuted the War on Terror than George W. Bush (video follows with transcript and commentary): NORAH O’DONNELL: I covered the Bush White House. He started the war in Afghanistan. But it took President Obama to finally capture and kill bin Laden. There have been more drone attacks under the Obama administration than the Bush administration. There’s an argument that can be made, and there are numbers that support that Obama has more aggressively prosecuted the quote unquote War on Terror – if you like that phrase, some don’t – than Bush did. In reality, you can make an argument about anything you choose, but that doesn't mean it will be cogent. If you were to add up all the terrorists – including high-value targets such as Saddam Hussein, Khalid Shaikh Mohammed, and Abu Musab al-Zarqawi – that were captured or killed during Bush's two terms, there's no question that total would far exceed the number since Obama was elected. The lives saved as a result of Hussein and KSM's capture alone far exceed any as yet realized benefit from bin Laden's death which could in the end be more symbolic than anything else. The primary goal of the War on Terror when Bush began it was to prevent a further attack on the American homeland, and that has clearly succeeded. Have there been some significant victories since January 20, 2009? Certainly, with the murder of bin Laden being the boldest. However, George W. Bush kept America safe for over seven years following 9/11. Until Obama exceeds that, this “argument” is specious.
Continue reading …David Cameron pays tribute to ‘a big rock in my life’ after Shale is found in toilet on day his strategy documents were leaked A close political ally of David Cameron has been found dead in a portable toilet in a backstage area at Glastonbury festival. Christopher Shale, the chairman of West Oxfordshire Conservative Association (Woca), was found dead on Sunday morning. The prime minister said he was “devastated” by his friend’s death, which came just hours after Shale was quoted in a Conservative strategy document leaked to a Sunday newspaper, as saying the Tories had come across over the years as “graceless, voracious, crass, always on the take” and needed to radically change. Cameron, whose Witney constituency is in west Oxfordshire, released a statement in which he said: “Sam and I were devastated to hear the news about Christopher. He was a great friend and has been a huge support over the last decade in west Oxfordshire. “A big rock in my life has suddenly been rolled away. Christopher was one of the most truly generous people I’ve ever met – he was always giving to others, his time, his help, his enthusiasm and above all his love of life. “It was in that spirit that he made a massive contribution to the Conservative party both locally and nationally. Our love and prayers are with Nikki and the family. They have lost an amazing dad, west Oxfordshire has lost a big and wonderful man and like so many others, Sam and I have lost a close and valued friend.” Shale’s death coincided with the publication of the article in the Mail on Sunday revealing the contents of a document said to be written by Shale arguing the local party needed to change radically to boost membership, using the codename Operation Vanguard. The causes of Shale’s death are unknown, but Glastonbury festival organiser Michael Eavis told a press conference on site on Sunday afternoon that a “senior Tory party member” had died. “We’re told it is a suicide situation,” Eavis said. “It is very, very sad.” Police said it was too early to say what the cause of his death was, while other sources suggested it was a heart attack. Inspector Chris Morgan of Avon and Somerset police said: “At 9am this morning, a male has been found down by the press office in the toilet area. At the moment we’re working to establish the cause of the gentleman’s death.” Eavis said teams had been out looking for Shale “through the night”. His body was found at around 9am and officers were seen comforting a woman. An area between the Pyramid stage and the Other stage was cordoned off this morning, but reopened on Sunday afternoon, with only a minor police presence. Shale was a successful businessman as chief executive of Oxford Resources Ltd, the corporate cost-reduction company based in Chipping Norton. Previously he was chief executive of SGL Communications. He was also a director of the Centre for Policy Studies and a sponsor of OpenEurope, the eurosceptic thinktank. He was a donor to William Hague’s office in opposition and also went with the social action team organised by Conservatives in Rwanda so was seen as a modernising right winger. The memorandum, reported by the Mail on Sunday, said that the prime minister’s own association gained only 22 members in the past year, and Shale was reported to have proposed “a transformational increase” in membership in ways that can others follow nationally. According to the paper, Shale wrote that “collectively we are not always an appealing proposition”. Shale criticised the association’s fundraising efforts, saying: “Over the years we have come across as graceless, voracious, crass, always on the take.” He concluded that people don’t join because they “think we’ll beg and steal from them. And they’re right”. Shale added: “When we are together we are not always a group of people to whom many of our potential members are going to be magnetically drawn.” He went on to warn: “When we come together as a group we sometimes morph into something different, less attractive. Our [Woca] environment alters us.” His solution offered was: “We must look different – when we communicate, when we’re together. We must sound different – in what we say, how we say it, the language we use, our tone of voice. We must behave differently – try to see ourselves as others see us.” He claimed that the country can be divided into two groups, “politics-heavy” people and “politics-light” ones, who aren’t interested in the subject except at general elections. He calculated that 98% of the population is “politics light” and that “politics heavy is a big turn off for politics-light people”. Shale likened changing the membership package away from political activity to what Cameron did to the national party: “It’s what, pre-2005, DC used to call double ham and eggs: We’ve offered them ham and eggs repeatedly. They don’t want it. So how can the solution possibly be double ham and eggs?” Instead, under Shale’s strategy, “Woca is, in effect, going into the event management business”. He proposed the association put on events with “money can’t buy appeal”. One idea was for “The PMQ DIY Lunch: Bring your own sandwiches to watch PMQs in a different fine country house in the constituency (by courtesy of a PPC member) every week; glass of wine, cup of coffee, informal discussion, yours for a fiver”. He also proposed party supporters are given access to politicians in the US in return for cash. “We might have ‘Just Another Ordinary Day: We’ll organise it but choose how you get there, stay where you like for as long as you like and on one of the days breakfast briefing with a senior staffer, tour of the White House, lunch with a senator … yours for cost plus a £1,000 donation to Woca.” Conservatives David Cameron Glastonbury festival Patrick Wintour Adam Gabbatt guardian.co.uk
Continue reading …Education secretary says planned walkouts over pensions on Thursday are premature and will hit single parents worst The education secretary, Michael Gove, has warned against union “militancy” ahead of a planned walkout by teachers and public sector workers. Gove said the government was doing everything possible to keep schools open on Thursday, including appealing to parents to help out. He warned the planned action by teaching unions would damage the reputation of the profession and was “premature” as negotiations over controversial pension reforms were taking place. Gove told BBC1′s Andrew Marr Show: “If schools aren’t open on Thursday there will be massive inconvenience for working parents, in particular single parents, who will have to rearrange childcare at very short notice. “I think it is wrong for people who are working hard to have their lives disrupted in this way. “So I think it is right that schools to stay open. Maybe they won’t be offering the traditional menu but I think they should be open so the children are doing something purposeful and people aren’t inconvenienced.” He added: “I do worry that taking industrial action, being on the picket line, being involved in this sort of militancy will actually mean that the respect in which teachers should be held is taken back a little bit and I think that will be a shame for all of us who want a better education system.” Gove said the government would “do everything possible to make sure schools stay open” with arrangements which could see “parents going in to help”. He said anti-strike legislation “has to be kept under review” and acknowledged that different options were being looked at following reports a minimum threshold on strike ballot was being considered by ministers. But he added: “The one thing I don’t want to do is to ratchet up the rhetoric because I think it is important we get back to talking.” However he warned the unions: “The public have a very low tolerance for anything that disrupts their hard-working lifestyles.” He added: “You don’t see hospital consultants going on strike and I don’t believe teachers and headteachers should. “It’s within their rights, it’s a civil right, but I think it is wrong in terms of the reputation of the profession.” On Thursday, up to 750,000 teachers, lecturers, civil servants and other public sector workers take action over and there are threats of further walkouts throughout the summer and autumn. Speaking on the same programme, shadow cabinet minister Peter Hain declined to urge people to go to work on Thursday and added that they went on strike if they “really think they have got no option”. “Teachers and others are not strike-happy. What this government should do is withdraw their unilateral, reckless attacks on these workers and get round the negotiating table like everyone wants them to do.” Former prime minister Tony Blair also urged the unions today to “engage with the process of change”. Speaking to BBC1′s The Politics Show, he said the unions had “got to modernise” and not end up as “small c conservatives”. “I said this constantly when I was leader and they used to think that meant I was anti union,” he said. “I’m not, I’m in favour of strong trade unions, I think it’s great. But you’ve got to understand today how fast the world is changing. And what you’ve always got to be careful of – particularly with public sector unions, is you don’t become ‘small c’ conservatives.” Asked about the public sector strikes over pensions, Blair added: “I just think the best thing is for them to engage with the process of change.” In an interview with The Guardian yesterday, the Labour leader, Ed Miliband, said the unions needed to get their message across better and see strikes as “the very last resort”. “The most important thing for the unions is to get the public to understand what their argument is,” he said. “I don’t think the argument on public sector pensions has yet been got across as to some of the justices contained on what the government is doing. I think strikes must always be the very last resort.” Michael Gove Schools Teaching Trade unions Liberal-Conservative coalition guardian.co.uk
Continue reading …Judge says tape on which energy secretary and ex-wife discuss speeding penalty points should be given to Essex police Police investigating allegations that the cabinet minister Chris Huhne persuaded his estranged wife to take speeding penalty points on his behalf have obtained a court order to take possession of a tape recording in which they apparently discuss the case. The Sunday Times reported that a judge at Chelmsford crown court had ordered that the tape be handed to Essex police. The paper said it was considering an appeal. The recording – disclosed by the Sunday Times in May – features a conversation between Huhne, the Liberal Democrat energy secretary, and his former partner, Vicky Pryce. Huhne urges her not to talk to journalists about the allegations, saying there was no evidence to support the story “unless you give it some legs by saying something”. Pryce, an economist, says: “It’s one of the things that worried me when I took them, when you made me take the points in the first instance.” The estranged couple were interviewed by detectives last month over the claims that he persuaded her to accept a penalty on his behalf in March 2003 so he could escape a driving ban. Images of Pryce’s driving licence have emerged indicating that she received points for an offence in the Essex area on the date in question. However, she is believed to have told police she was actually at an event in London and Huhne was behind the wheel. Huhne denies the allegations. Both the prime minister, David Cameron, and his Lib Dem deputy, Nick Clegg, have insisted there is no reason he should resign. Chris Huhne Liberal Democrats Police Sunday Times guardian.co.uk
Continue reading …Body of man said to be in mid-50s was found in backstage area on Sunday morning A man has been found dead in a portable toilet in the VIP area at the Glastonbury festival, police have said. Avon and Somerset police confirmed that the man, said to be in his mid-50s, was found in the backstage area at the festival on Sunday morning. A woman was seen being comforted by officers. His body was found at 8.45am. An area between the Pyramid stage and the Other stage has been cordoned off. The area includes the VIP section of backstage camping, where Wayne Rooney is rumoured to be among those staying. Glastonbury 2011 Adam Gabbatt guardian.co.uk
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