Solicitor at speeding hearing says police found ‘electronic device’ on England defender’s Range Rover England footballer John Terry’s car was “bugged” by members of the press, it was claimed in court on Friday. The allegation emerged as magistrates disqualified the Chelsea defender from driving for 28 days and fined him £750 after he admitted a speeding offence. Terry, who was not present at Staines magistrates court, in Surrey, was defended by solicitor Nick Freeman. Speaking after the hearing, Freeman said Terry had been caught by a speed camera doing 77mph in a 50mph zone along the A3 near Hook, Surrey, on 29 December last year. But Terry claimed he had only accelerated because he was being pursued by two photographers on motorbikes and he was concerned for the safety of his twin son and daughter, who were in the back of his Range Rover. Freeman said he told magistrates: “He was the number one target for paparazzi. He accepts he is a target and they have a job to do, but because of the level of attention he had been receiving for several months, he made a complaint to police. “Police swept his vehicle and found an electronic device that would have assisted whoever planted it there in knowing his whereabouts.” A spokesman for Essex police confirmed that officers had investigated the discovery of a tracking device on Terry’s car, but declined to say whether the investigation was ongoing. “I can confirm that Kent and Essex serious crime directorate did investigate the presence of a tracking device in respect of a car owned by John Terry,” said the spokesman. Freeman said Terry was not able to attend the hearing as he is on holiday with his wife Toni Poole. John Terry Chelsea Matthew Taylor guardian.co.uk
Continue reading …Solicitor at speeding hearing says police found ‘electronic device’ on England defender’s Range Rover England footballer John Terry’s car was “bugged” by members of the press, it was claimed in court on Friday. The allegation emerged as magistrates disqualified the Chelsea defender from driving for 28 days and fined him £750 after he admitted a speeding offence. Terry, who was not present at Staines magistrates court, in Surrey, was defended by solicitor Nick Freeman. Speaking after the hearing, Freeman said Terry had been caught by a speed camera doing 77mph in a 50mph zone along the A3 near Hook, Surrey, on 29 December last year. But Terry claimed he had only accelerated because he was being pursued by two photographers on motorbikes and he was concerned for the safety of his twin son and daughter, who were in the back of his Range Rover. Freeman said he told magistrates: “He was the number one target for paparazzi. He accepts he is a target and they have a job to do, but because of the level of attention he had been receiving for several months, he made a complaint to police. “Police swept his vehicle and found an electronic device that would have assisted whoever planted it there in knowing his whereabouts.” A spokesman for Essex police confirmed that officers had investigated the discovery of a tracking device on Terry’s car, but declined to say whether the investigation was ongoing. “I can confirm that Kent and Essex serious crime directorate did investigate the presence of a tracking device in respect of a car owned by John Terry,” said the spokesman. Freeman said Terry was not able to attend the hearing as he is on holiday with his wife Toni Poole. John Terry Chelsea Matthew Taylor guardian.co.uk
Continue reading …Polls say AKP leader Recep Tayyip Erdogan could score a crushing victory with up to 50% of the vote in Sunday’s election From a five-storey billboard on the Tarlabasi Boulevard in downtown Istanbul, Turkey’s prime minister is making some typically bombastic promises. Vote for me, says a shirt-sleeved Recep Tayyip Erdogan, and the traffic-congested megalopolis will be rewarded with a third airport and a third bridge across the Bosphorus. The pledges are just two examples of what even Erdogan describes as his “crazy projects” – the most memorable of which is probably his plan to build a mega-canal in Istanbul linking the Black Sea to the Sea of Marmara . The 57-year-hopes his grand designs will ensure that he not only wins a third term in Sunday’s national elections, but is elected with such a “supermajority” that he would be able to singlehandedly rewrite Turkey’s heavily criticised constitution in his own favour. Pollsters say his Justice and Development party (AKP) is likely to triumph with up to 50% of the vote, leaving the main opposition Republican People’s party (CHP) trailing at 28%. The extent of Erdogan’s victory will have wide repercussions for this country of 74 million people straddling east and west. Round the corner from the gargantuan poster, barber Hasan Keke cites Erdogan’s infrastructure projects when explaining his approval of the prime minister. Keke says everyday life has got easier since Erdogan took power in 2003. “I’ll give you an example,” says Keke, as he gives a customer a cut-throat shave. “In 2002, I used to have to bring water with me to work. Tarlabasi had such an unreliable water supply back then. Now,” he says, turning on a tap, “that isn’t a problem.” In the pre-AKP days, when inflation reached 138% and buying a kebab in the old currency cost a seven-figure sum, Keke was constantly raising his prices. They have stayed the same now for four years. And, like many Turks, he feels richer: “Before Erdogan came in, I had never been on a plane. Now, I can pay just 35 Turkish lira (£13.50) to fly back to my home town, Kayseri [500 miles away in central Turkey].” Most people agree that the AKP has done a good job of rescuing Turkey’s economy from the abyss it fell into in the 2001 crash, getting inflation down to a sensible 7.2% while increasing wages. Some analysts see storm clouds ahead, but Turkey now boasts the sixth strongest economy in Europe and the 17th largest in the world, allowing the country to meet two of the four Maastricht criteria for EU entry – more, as Erdogan never tires of pointing out, than many EU members. The AKP has dragged Turkey’s legal system into the 21st century, too: before 2004, rapists were able to get a reduced sentence if they agreed to marry their victims, for example. But human rights organisations say Turkey still imprisons far too many people on spurious charges – especially Kurds – and free speech is not yet a reality. The gulf in support between the AKP and CHP was illustrated last weekend at rival rallies at Istanbul’s Kazlicesme Square. Erdogan got to his rally on Sunday almost two hours late. He arrived by helicopter wearing aviator shades and strode on stage with his headscarved wife, Emine, to a rock star’s welcome. “Papa Tayyip!” chanted hundreds of thousands in the crowd, cheering as he promised everything from ebooks for all students to earthquake-proof housing. “We had to bring in 600 people overnight to completely rebuild the stage and site it by the old city walls to fit in all our supporters,” said one adviser. The party put on “thousands” of buses to ship in voters from around the city. The day before, the opposition leader Kemal Kilicdaroglu had set out to the Guardian what he sees as the dangers of continued AKP rule. “They are putting pressure on business people, they’re putting pressure on the media, on universities. We’re entering a crisis situation,” he said. Earlier this month, the campaign had got grubby when Erdogan started suggesting Kilicdaroglu was not a “real Muslim” because the opposition leader is believed to be an Alevi, a liberal branch of Shia Islam. “AKP is not a democratic party,” said Kilicdaroglu, who has been nicknamed Gandhi for his passing resemblance to the late Indian democratic leader. “Their goal is simply to never lose power. If Erdogan senses he is losing ground, he starts to come out with this stuff.” Under party laws, Erdogan cannot run again as prime minister in 2015. But if he wins 367 seats or more in the 550-seat legislature, he could push constitutional reforms through parliament without calling a referendum. His opponents claim his real desire is to turn Turkey into a presidential system, installing himself again in the top job. In Kasimpasa, the working-class district of Istanbul where Erdogan grew up, some people expressed criticism. Sakir Sefer is a rare critic of the local-boy-done-good. “On a personal level, I like the man – I’ve known him for 10, 12 years,” says Sefer, who runs a shop selling pizza-like pide . “But I don’t like the way he is starting to separate people rather than bring them together.” Overhearing this, a customer butts in. “Don’t listen to him” she says. “Erdogan is the apple of our eye.” Elsewhere, Sati Aydin, who runs a chicken kebab shop is furious with Erdogan for bringing religion into the elections. “Until recently, it wasn’t an issue that we were Alevi. No one mentioned it. I’m very angry that Erdogan has made this a topic of discussion in the elections.” Baker Ali says Erdogan’s politics have torn his family apart. “Because of him,” says the 49-year-old Kurd, “my sister and brother are in jail and I may lose my property.” His neighbourhood, the predominantly Kurdish Tarlabasi , is earmarked for a controversial urban regeneration project and his ramshackle house is one of 278 set to be bulldozed to make way for a luxury gated development. Ali blames Erdogan: the contractors given the tender are part of a conglomerate headed by the prime minister’s son-in-law. The imprisonment of Ali’s siblings, meanwhile, is directly related to what most commentators agree is Turkey’s biggest problem: the treatment of the estimated 14 million Kurds who make up about a fifth of the population. Ali’s 24-year-old sister gave birth to her first son in jail last year. A former town hall worker, she is one of 151 people – NGO workers, Kurdish politicians and their employees – charged in 2009 with supporting terrorism. His brother, meanwhile, is facing a seven-year sentence for throwing a stone at police during a demonstration. “In 2005, Erdogan said to us, I will solve this problem. He is a liar,” says Ali, referring to the landmark moment in 2005 when the prime minister became the first modern Turkish leader to admit the Kurds had been mistreated by Ankara administration . “We might have believed that he was going to help us at the last elections, but we’re not going to fall for it again.” The Kurds are still banned from using their own language in any official contexts , particularly in schools, and Ankara has not yet worked out a political solution to the bloody conflict between the Turkish army and the separatist Kurdistan Workers’ party (PKK), which is estimated to have claimed 45,000 lives since 1984. After a long honeymoon with commentators at home and abroad, it is clear Erdogan does not enjoy the support he once did. “He could have become the new Ataturk,” says Cengiz Aktar, professor of EU studies at Bahcesehir University in Istanbul, referring to the idolised founder of the secular Turkish republic whose likeness still adorns the walls of millions of Turkish homes and businesses today. “If you go back to the golden years of Turkish democracy – 2002, 2003, 2004 – Erdogan was on that track. “One example of that would be how the AKP managed to curtail the power of the army, which used to be a big problem in this country. But in 2004, he stopped reforming. Now he talks like an old conservative. He cares less and less about joining the European Union. He doesn’t think he needs to. This over-confidence is very much there, not just vis-a-vis the EU but also the whole world,” said Aktar, referring particularly to what many see as a failure of Turkey’s “zero problems with the neighbours” policy in the light of the Arab spring. But Sinan Ulgen, a former career diplomat in the Turkish foreign office who now runs the Centre For Economic and Foreign Policy Studies thinktank in Istanbul, says Turkey is an inspiration: “There are a number of areas were we can say that Turkey’s experience could be an aspiration or inspiration for Arab states. “For example, how Turkey has been able to combine a predominantly Muslim state with democracy and economic success, as well as social development.” But will Turkey still be an inspiration in years to come? Will it regress or progress? Shift to the east or the west? The result on Sunday night should provide a clue. Polls suggest the Justice and Development party (AKP) will win 45-50% of the vote, as in 2007, but whether this gives it a constitutional majority will depend on the performance of smaller parties. Under the current constitution, in order to send MPs into parliament in Ankara, a party must win at least 10% of the national vote. Though the CHP will almost certainly make that hurdle, the question is whether the far-right Nationalist Action Party (MHP) will manage the leap after a serious of grubby scandals involving sex tapes forced 10 senior members to resign. If the MHP does not make the grade, its votes will be divided between the AKP and CHP and could give the AKP a supermajority. If they end up with more than two-thirds of the vote, the AKP does not legally need to consult the rest of parliament when rewriting Turkey’s constitution – though Erdogan claims he will, whether he has to or not. All sides agree the constitution needs to be radically updated – although it has been amended a few times, it is essentially the 1982 text that was drafted by the army after a military coup in 1980. But Erdogan’s opponents fear that left to his own devices, he will simply install an AKP version of democracy which would concentrate too much control in his own hands. There are also worries that an AKP-approved constitution would put an end to Turkey’s EU hopes. The talks are already deadlocked over a number of issues and without some progress after the election, perhaps by a unilateral concession to allow Cypriot ships to dock in Turkish ports, the talks might yet break down. The parties Polls suggest the Justice and Development party (AKP) will win 45-50% of the vote in Sunday’s election but whether this gives it a constitutional majority will depend on the performance of smaller parties. Under the current constitution, in order to send MPs to parliament, a party must win at least 10% of the national vote. The Republican People’s party (CHP) will almost certainly make that hurdle, but it is unclear whether the far-right Nationalist Action party (MHP) will do the same after sex scandals forced 10 senior members to resign. If the MHP fails to make the grade, its votes will be divided between the AKP and CHP. If it gets more than two-thirds of the vote, the AKP does not legally need to consult the rest of parliament when rewriting the constitution – though Recep Tayyip Erdogan claims he would do so anyway. All sides agree the constitution needs to be radically updated: although it has been amended a few times, it is essentially the 1982 text that was drafted by the army after a military coup in 1980. But Erdogan’s opponents fear that left to his own devices, he would concentrate too much control in his own hands. There are also worries that an AKP-approved constitution would put an end to Turkey’s EU hopes. Turkey Middle East Europe Helen Pidd guardian.co.uk
Continue reading …Polls say AKP leader Recep Tayyip Erdogan could score a crushing victory with up to 50% of the vote in Sunday’s election From a five-storey billboard on the Tarlabasi Boulevard in downtown Istanbul, Turkey’s prime minister is making some typically bombastic promises. Vote for me, says a shirt-sleeved Recep Tayyip Erdogan, and the traffic-congested megalopolis will be rewarded with a third airport and a third bridge across the Bosphorus. The pledges are just two examples of what even Erdogan describes as his “crazy projects” – the most memorable of which is probably his plan to build a mega-canal in Istanbul linking the Black Sea to the Sea of Marmara . The 57-year-hopes his grand designs will ensure that he not only wins a third term in Sunday’s national elections, but is elected with such a “supermajority” that he would be able to singlehandedly rewrite Turkey’s heavily criticised constitution in his own favour. Pollsters say his Justice and Development party (AKP) is likely to triumph with up to 50% of the vote, leaving the main opposition Republican People’s party (CHP) trailing at 28%. The extent of Erdogan’s victory will have wide repercussions for this country of 74 million people straddling east and west. Round the corner from the gargantuan poster, barber Hasan Keke cites Erdogan’s infrastructure projects when explaining his approval of the prime minister. Keke says everyday life has got easier since Erdogan took power in 2003. “I’ll give you an example,” says Keke, as he gives a customer a cut-throat shave. “In 2002, I used to have to bring water with me to work. Tarlabasi had such an unreliable water supply back then. Now,” he says, turning on a tap, “that isn’t a problem.” In the pre-AKP days, when inflation reached 138% and buying a kebab in the old currency cost a seven-figure sum, Keke was constantly raising his prices. They have stayed the same now for four years. And, like many Turks, he feels richer: “Before Erdogan came in, I had never been on a plane. Now, I can pay just 35 Turkish lira (£13.50) to fly back to my home town, Kayseri [500 miles away in central Turkey].” Most people agree that the AKP has done a good job of rescuing Turkey’s economy from the abyss it fell into in the 2001 crash, getting inflation down to a sensible 7.2% while increasing wages. Some analysts see storm clouds ahead, but Turkey now boasts the sixth strongest economy in Europe and the 17th largest in the world, allowing the country to meet two of the four Maastricht criteria for EU entry – more, as Erdogan never tires of pointing out, than many EU members. The AKP has dragged Turkey’s legal system into the 21st century, too: before 2004, rapists were able to get a reduced sentence if they agreed to marry their victims, for example. But human rights organisations say Turkey still imprisons far too many people on spurious charges – especially Kurds – and free speech is not yet a reality. The gulf in support between the AKP and CHP was illustrated last weekend at rival rallies at Istanbul’s Kazlicesme Square. Erdogan got to his rally on Sunday almost two hours late. He arrived by helicopter wearing aviator shades and strode on stage with his headscarved wife, Emine, to a rock star’s welcome. “Papa Tayyip!” chanted hundreds of thousands in the crowd, cheering as he promised everything from ebooks for all students to earthquake-proof housing. “We had to bring in 600 people overnight to completely rebuild the stage and site it by the old city walls to fit in all our supporters,” said one adviser. The party put on “thousands” of buses to ship in voters from around the city. The day before, the opposition leader Kemal Kilicdaroglu had set out to the Guardian what he sees as the dangers of continued AKP rule. “They are putting pressure on business people, they’re putting pressure on the media, on universities. We’re entering a crisis situation,” he said. Earlier this month, the campaign had got grubby when Erdogan started suggesting Kilicdaroglu was not a “real Muslim” because the opposition leader is believed to be an Alevi, a liberal branch of Shia Islam. “AKP is not a democratic party,” said Kilicdaroglu, who has been nicknamed Gandhi for his passing resemblance to the late Indian democratic leader. “Their goal is simply to never lose power. If Erdogan senses he is losing ground, he starts to come out with this stuff.” Under party laws, Erdogan cannot run again as prime minister in 2015. But if he wins 367 seats or more in the 550-seat legislature, he could push constitutional reforms through parliament without calling a referendum. His opponents claim his real desire is to turn Turkey into a presidential system, installing himself again in the top job. In Kasimpasa, the working-class district of Istanbul where Erdogan grew up, some people expressed criticism. Sakir Sefer is a rare critic of the local-boy-done-good. “On a personal level, I like the man – I’ve known him for 10, 12 years,” says Sefer, who runs a shop selling pizza-like pide . “But I don’t like the way he is starting to separate people rather than bring them together.” Overhearing this, a customer butts in. “Don’t listen to him” she says. “Erdogan is the apple of our eye.” Elsewhere, Sati Aydin, who runs a chicken kebab shop is furious with Erdogan for bringing religion into the elections. “Until recently, it wasn’t an issue that we were Alevi. No one mentioned it. I’m very angry that Erdogan has made this a topic of discussion in the elections.” Baker Ali says Erdogan’s politics have torn his family apart. “Because of him,” says the 49-year-old Kurd, “my sister and brother are in jail and I may lose my property.” His neighbourhood, the predominantly Kurdish Tarlabasi , is earmarked for a controversial urban regeneration project and his ramshackle house is one of 278 set to be bulldozed to make way for a luxury gated development. Ali blames Erdogan: the contractors given the tender are part of a conglomerate headed by the prime minister’s son-in-law. The imprisonment of Ali’s siblings, meanwhile, is directly related to what most commentators agree is Turkey’s biggest problem: the treatment of the estimated 14 million Kurds who make up about a fifth of the population. Ali’s 24-year-old sister gave birth to her first son in jail last year. A former town hall worker, she is one of 151 people – NGO workers, Kurdish politicians and their employees – charged in 2009 with supporting terrorism. His brother, meanwhile, is facing a seven-year sentence for throwing a stone at police during a demonstration. “In 2005, Erdogan said to us, I will solve this problem. He is a liar,” says Ali, referring to the landmark moment in 2005 when the prime minister became the first modern Turkish leader to admit the Kurds had been mistreated by Ankara administration . “We might have believed that he was going to help us at the last elections, but we’re not going to fall for it again.” The Kurds are still banned from using their own language in any official contexts , particularly in schools, and Ankara has not yet worked out a political solution to the bloody conflict between the Turkish army and the separatist Kurdistan Workers’ party (PKK), which is estimated to have claimed 45,000 lives since 1984. After a long honeymoon with commentators at home and abroad, it is clear Erdogan does not enjoy the support he once did. “He could have become the new Ataturk,” says Cengiz Aktar, professor of EU studies at Bahcesehir University in Istanbul, referring to the idolised founder of the secular Turkish republic whose likeness still adorns the walls of millions of Turkish homes and businesses today. “If you go back to the golden years of Turkish democracy – 2002, 2003, 2004 – Erdogan was on that track. “One example of that would be how the AKP managed to curtail the power of the army, which used to be a big problem in this country. But in 2004, he stopped reforming. Now he talks like an old conservative. He cares less and less about joining the European Union. He doesn’t think he needs to. This over-confidence is very much there, not just vis-a-vis the EU but also the whole world,” said Aktar, referring particularly to what many see as a failure of Turkey’s “zero problems with the neighbours” policy in the light of the Arab spring. But Sinan Ulgen, a former career diplomat in the Turkish foreign office who now runs the Centre For Economic and Foreign Policy Studies thinktank in Istanbul, says Turkey is an inspiration: “There are a number of areas were we can say that Turkey’s experience could be an aspiration or inspiration for Arab states. “For example, how Turkey has been able to combine a predominantly Muslim state with democracy and economic success, as well as social development.” But will Turkey still be an inspiration in years to come? Will it regress or progress? Shift to the east or the west? The result on Sunday night should provide a clue. Polls suggest the Justice and Development party (AKP) will win 45-50% of the vote, as in 2007, but whether this gives it a constitutional majority will depend on the performance of smaller parties. Under the current constitution, in order to send MPs into parliament in Ankara, a party must win at least 10% of the national vote. Though the CHP will almost certainly make that hurdle, the question is whether the far-right Nationalist Action Party (MHP) will manage the leap after a serious of grubby scandals involving sex tapes forced 10 senior members to resign. If the MHP does not make the grade, its votes will be divided between the AKP and CHP and could give the AKP a supermajority. If they end up with more than two-thirds of the vote, the AKP does not legally need to consult the rest of parliament when rewriting Turkey’s constitution – though Erdogan claims he will, whether he has to or not. All sides agree the constitution needs to be radically updated – although it has been amended a few times, it is essentially the 1982 text that was drafted by the army after a military coup in 1980. But Erdogan’s opponents fear that left to his own devices, he will simply install an AKP version of democracy which would concentrate too much control in his own hands. There are also worries that an AKP-approved constitution would put an end to Turkey’s EU hopes. The talks are already deadlocked over a number of issues and without some progress after the election, perhaps by a unilateral concession to allow Cypriot ships to dock in Turkish ports, the talks might yet break down. The parties Polls suggest the Justice and Development party (AKP) will win 45-50% of the vote in Sunday’s election but whether this gives it a constitutional majority will depend on the performance of smaller parties. Under the current constitution, in order to send MPs to parliament, a party must win at least 10% of the national vote. The Republican People’s party (CHP) will almost certainly make that hurdle, but it is unclear whether the far-right Nationalist Action party (MHP) will do the same after sex scandals forced 10 senior members to resign. If the MHP fails to make the grade, its votes will be divided between the AKP and CHP. If it gets more than two-thirds of the vote, the AKP does not legally need to consult the rest of parliament when rewriting the constitution – though Recep Tayyip Erdogan claims he would do so anyway. All sides agree the constitution needs to be radically updated: although it has been amended a few times, it is essentially the 1982 text that was drafted by the army after a military coup in 1980. But Erdogan’s opponents fear that left to his own devices, he would concentrate too much control in his own hands. There are also worries that an AKP-approved constitution would put an end to Turkey’s EU hopes. Turkey Middle East Europe Helen Pidd guardian.co.uk
Continue reading …Click here to view this media As Cenk pointed out, while the media is busy with wall to wall coverage of the Anthony Weiner scandal, they’re completely ignoring stories like this one. Rep. Vern Buchanan’s former company violated law, Federal Election Commission says : The Federal Election Commission is asking a federal court to impose a $67,900 fine on a company formerly co-owned by Rep. Vern Buchanan that it says engaged in an “extensive and ongoing scheme” to reimburse employees who made contributions to the Sarasota Republican’s congressional campaign. In a motion for default filed Friday in U.S. District Court in Florida, the FEC says Hyundai of North Jacksonville — which Buchanan once partially owned — violated federal campaign finance law by making contributions in excess of the legal limit and by reimbursing employees who made the contributions. Buchanan is not named as a defendant in the suit. The owner of the company said Tuesday he’s acknowledged the company reimbursed employees, but said it was a “directive” issued by Buchanan. “I’ve done nothing wrong,” said Sam Kazran, who said he told the FEC he was unfamiliar with campaign finance law. “I am not a politician, just a regular Joe. I had no idea.” He said Buchanan told a group he needed to raise $1 million “to look good. “It was ‘This is what I need to do and this is what you need to do to take care of it,’ ” Kazran said. Read on…
Continue reading …Married father-of-two groomed at least one girl a year and showered her with gifts A primary school teacher filmed himself sexually assaulting pupils as young as six in his classroom, sometimes when other children were present, a court has been told. Nigel Leat, 51, a married father-of-two, groomed at least one girl a year and showered her with gifts, afforded her privileges and organised one-on-one teaching sessions. Leat would swear his victims to secrecy and even write letters to them in which he would describe what he wanted to do to them and ask them to reply to him. Leat pleaded guilty to 36 counts involving five pupils aged between six and eight at Hillside First School in Weston-super-Mare, Somerset over five years. The offences included sexual assault, attempted rape, voyeurism and possessing extreme pornography. Police believe they could have charged him with as many as 500 offences and said he may have been offending for 12 years. Leat will be sentenced on Tuesday. The abuse went undetected at the school – where he taught for 15 years – until last December when one victim told her mother that he had been touching her. He was arrested within hours and officers found hundreds of films of his abuse stored on memory sticks in his classroom. Simon Morgan, prosecuting at Bristol crown court, detailed the content of more than 30 videos. In many of them children could be seen holding cuddly toys, drawing at a table or practising their reading while Leat filmed and touched them or they touched him. Leat was heard in films referring to the girls as “sweetie pie” and “darling” and asking them how much they loved him. Morgan said: “It is clear from … the videos that these children were well-versed in doing what was expected of them. “The children were abused in the classroom, in the resources room, in the staff room. He arranged the rooms in such as way as to avoid detection from anyone who looked into the room.” Leat’s offending was uncovered when a girl identified only as Child E took home a book called My Perfect Pony he had given her. Her mother became suspicious about the gift and asked whether Leat had touched her. Morgan told the court: “She said that he had touched her on every day apart from when the teaching assistant was in class.” Leat, a former musician, bird watcher and cyclist, qualified as a teacher in 1984 and has only taught at Hillside. He was warned in 2008 about being too “tactile” with the girls in his class by the deputy head, as staff were worried that it might leave him open to accusations of improper behaviour. No further action was taken. A parent once expressed concern after he asked a girl if she had a webcam so they could stay in touch after she left his classroom. The concerns were not passed on to the authorities. The court was told Leat became interested in images of child abuse on the internet 10 years ago when his marriage became “asexual”. He then began abusing girls in his classroom. Nicholas Gerasimidis, for Leat, said: “It might be said that had he not been in the position that he was that this interest may never have found an opportunity for expression.” After the hearing, Detective Superintendent Geoff Wessell said officers continued to work with his victims. “The court has heard the full extent of the behaviour of Nigel Leat in the most shocking detail,” he said. “It is quite clear that the court has heard how he is a predatory paedophile who has broken the trust and confidence of both the parents that sent children to the school and its staff.” Crime Child protection Primary schools Steven Morris guardian.co.uk
Continue reading …Tens of thousands in Dadaab camp in Kenya face starvation after fleeing violence in Somalia, medical charity warns The biggest refugee camp in the world is full, creating a humanitarian emergency that threatens thousands of malnourished children, a medical charity has warned. Dadaab , a sprawling desert “city” in Kenya with a population expected to reach 450,000 by the end of the year, has run out of space, Médecins sans Frontières (MSF) said . Children who have fled war in neighbouring Somalia are left without food or shelter in dry heat of 50C (122F) and are said to be vulnerable to attack by animals. “We’ve got nothing to build a shelter with,” Fatima, a 34-year-old refugee from Mogadishu, told MSF. “It’s very unsafe here – at night, we’re scared that wild animals will eat the children, and we’ve had threats of violence from local people who say the land is theirs. Children are even being killed by hyenas because they have no protection.” Stranded in the barren desert of Kenya’s north-eastern province, surrounded by sand and scrubby bushes, the refugees – most of whom are women and children – arrive with no money, no food, no water and no shelter. MSF’s report said it takes an average of 12 days for new arrivals to receive a first ration of food and 34 days to receive cooking utensils and blankets from the UN’s refugee agency, which runs the camps. The last empty plot of land in Dadaab was allocated in August 2008. Since then, new arrivals have had to search for unoccupied space in which to build a hut. They use branches and brushwood, tied together to form domed structures which they cover with cardboard, polythene or torn fabric. The UN announced in 2008 that it had no more room for new arrivals, but conflict and the worst drought in years have forced 44,000 Somalis to seek admittance into Dadaab since the start of this year. Joke van Peteghem, MSF’s head of mission in Kenya, told AlertNet: “The camps are completely full. People are arriving and they do not find any space any more, meaning they don’t have access to water and other facilities. “You get more and more people sitting outside the camp without proper protection and proper support.” On arrival at the camp, 60% of families report illness, having walked through the desert for days. Some 40% of the children have never received vaccinations. “People, and especially children under five, are coming in worse physical condition,” van Peteghem said. “We are observing more and more children being malnourished. “If you take a week before they get proper food and they need healthcare, for sure the status of these children will deteriorate.” The in-patient therapeutic feeding centre for severely malnourished children is so full that tents were initially set up in the hospital grounds. In May, a new 60-bed extension ward opened to accommodate them. Gedi Mohammed, the director of the hospital, said: “Health indicators are now at an emergency level.” The underfunded and overcrowded Dadaab complex consists of three camps – Dagahaley, Ifo and Hagadera – established 20 years ago to house up to 90,000 people. An extension to the camps lies unfinished and empty following a breakdown in negotiations between Kenya and the UN last year. “More refugees are on their way,” Nenna Arnold, an MSF nurse, said. “We are already at bursting point, but the figures keep growing. This situation is a humanitarian emergency.” Somalia Refugees Africa Kenya David Smith guardian.co.uk
Continue reading …Click here to view this media [H/t Heather] Apparently, the SPLC’s intelligence director, Mark Potok agrees with our assessment of the Obama administration’s disastrous failure to take right-wing domestic terrorism seriously. Here is on The Ed Show the other night , discussing the report in the Washington Post on ex-Homeland Security analyst Daryl Johnson raising the red flag on the issue: POTOK: What it means in concrete terms is that law enforcement officials, agencies out there in the 50 states, are not getting the intelligence that was very useful to them in helping to understand what was going on out there. What DHS really did or used to do was to produce intelligence. It wasn‘t so much building actual criminal cases as in intelligence as to what was going on out there on the radical right. Daryl‘s report was really a very prescient report. It very much fell in line with our own independent findings. And of course, it was immediately confirmed. As it was being pilloried by people like Michelle Malkin, the columnist, by the American Leagues and so on, things were happening that absolutely confirmed it. Very shortly after the leak of the report, for instance, George Tiller, an abortion provider, was murdered. Not long after that, I‘m sure viewers will remember, a guard was murdered at the Holocaust Museum by a well-known neo-Nazi. And the list goes on and on. In January of this year, a man tried to murder hundreds of people at a Martin Luther King Day Parade in Spokane, Washington, A well known neo-Nazi, allegedly at least. Advertise | AdChoices SCHULTZ: Daryl Johnson— POTOK: So it‘s a disaster basically. SCHULTZ: You spoke with him. How adamant is he about the fact that this lack of resources being focused here is really playing into the increase of some of these events that you are talking about? POTOK: Well, Daryl is a friend. And I think that Daryl is really deeply concerned. And it is not only him. I know that he‘s received all kinds of messages in the last few days since he went public from other people in law enforcement, talking about how very right he was. And, you know, the shame of this, as you suggested in your intro, is that Secretary Napolitano essentially seemed to have acted out of mere political cowardice. You know, the fact is that the DHS report of 2009 did not pillory conservatives. It did not suggest that all veterans were potential Timothy McVeighs or people who were concerned about abortion or immigration were terrorists. And yet it was accused of all of those things. And the reaction of the Department of Homeland Security was after a very brief and kind of weak knee defense of the report, was to absolutely pull back and, moreover, to suggest that Daryl had gone out of normal channels, that this was an unauthorized release of the report, when in fact it had been fully authorized. The secretary was briefed on the report by Daryl personally before it was released. And then beyond that, as you suggested already, the unit was gutted. It has produced not a single substantial report since the report of 2009. Daryl has left the agency, as have four other senior analysts there. So essentially, the department is doing nothing because it is afraid of offending conservatives, or at least the leadership of the department. Of course, we’ve been writing about this issue for awhile now. But it is yet further confirmation — beyond simply the reported data already available — that we have a serious problem on our hands. Unfortunately, there has been no indication whatsoever from the administration that it intends to address the issue. Apparently it’s bought into the Beltway Village narrative that merely bringing up these matters is deeply uncivil.
Continue reading …Anti-Gaddafi forces say they desperately need helicopters to be sent in to help repel attacks from government forces Commanders in the besieged Libyan rebel enclave of Misrata have complained that Nato has ignored requests for air support during a week of heavy attacks by pro-Gaddafi forces. Government troops launched infantry and artillery attacks on Friday on the western end of the Misrata pocket, inflicting heavy rebel casualties. A Reuters journalist counted 10 bodies in a hospital after three rebel ambulances were destroyed on the road to the front. At Misrata’s Hikma hospital, a steady stream of ambulances brought wounded fighters in from the front. Radio Misrata reported that three Gaddafi tanks had joined infantry on an attack on the front line, but that the rebel positions had not been penetrated. After days of infantry assaults and bombardments in which dozens of rebel fighters have been killed and at least 45 wounded, the Misrata military council says pleas for Nato air support have gone unanswered. “We asked through the operations room in Benghazi for the Apaches [helicopters] to take part in the fight with Gaddafi troops but up to now we did not get any promise,” said Fathi Bashaga, who is responsible for Nato liaison. “What we expect from Nato is the introduction of their Apaches.” Four British Apaches went into action near Brega last weekend , 400 miles east of Misrata, along with French Gazelle attack helicopters. Late on Thursday, Apaches attacked a communications installation and a multiple rocket launcher near Misrata, a Nato spokesman said. French press said the Apaches hit 14 targets. Rebel commanders appeared unaware of the strikes, but officials involved in the Nato campaign say the frustration on the ground reflects tension between what the insurgents want to do and the mandate laid out by the UN. “Nato nations are in Libya to protect civilians. The rebels have proved themselves to be very courageous but we are not there to act as their air force,” said one. Officials say they are concerned about creating a situation where civilians are caught up in chaotic fighting between rebels and Gaddafi’s forces. This has been heightened by fears of a lack of co-ordination between rebels on the front line and Nato commanders, who are responsible for approving air strikes. “It’s getting better, but it’s not perfect,” said the source. Rebel calls for Nato air support have grown stronger as Misrata has come under the heaviest attacks since mid-April, when rebels secured the city from pro-Gaddafi forces. There have been heavy daily bombardments with mortars and Grad rockets, along with two major infantry attacks. Volleys of grad rockets were landing to the west of the city on Friday. “Gaddafi troops tried again to enter Misrata from three sides, the south, the west, the east,” said Misrata army spokesman Ibrahim Betalmal. “We ask Allah to be merciful to the martyrs who fell to the Gaddafi troops.” Privately, rebel commanders say they are baffled with the non-appearance of the Apaches, saying conditions are ideal for their use against Gaddafi’s infantry as troops attack in the open. Witnesses to a dawn attack on the eastern edge of the pocket told the Guardian that Gaddafi troops came across two miles of flat open grassland between the front lines in pickup trucks with their lights on, a seemingly obvious target for air power. That attack was beaten off by rebel units, as was an infantry assault on the western end of the pocket around Dafniya, but Betalmal said rebel forces were bracing for a third offensive. “We have information that several thousand Gaddafi troops are gathered, probably they will attack from seven sides,” he said, possibly referring to highways leading into the pocket. Rebel troops have begun building fortifications along their front line, constructing networks of trenches, bunkers and shipping containers filled with sand. Aggressive rebel patrolling has brought back a steady haul of prisoners, including three female soldiers, who Betalmal said were captured on the western front line. “As our fighters are good-natured, we released them,” he said. While the daily bombardments on the city are taking a steady toll, rebel fighters are outwardly confident they can hold their lines, saying Gaddafi’s infantry appear demoralised and unwilling to press home attacks. “Our fighters managed to inflict so many casualties among the Gaddafi soldiers,” said Betalmal. “We gained so many weapons and ammunition from them after they fled the battlefield.” A Nato spokesman said it was not clear whether Gaddafi’s forces west of Misrata were capable of mounting a major offensive against the city. The front lines west of the city, said Wing Commander Mike Bracken, spokesman in Naples for the Nato Libya mission, were “volatile and unstable,” but it was “unconfirmed” whether the regime troops could muster “the capability to launch a largescale attack”. Libya Arab and Middle East unrest Muammar Gaddafi Middle East Africa Nato guardian.co.uk
Continue reading …Anti-Gaddafi forces say they desperately need helicopters to be sent in to help repel attacks from government forces Commanders in the besieged Libyan rebel enclave of Misrata have complained that Nato has ignored requests for air support during a week of heavy attacks by pro-Gaddafi forces. Government troops launched infantry and artillery attacks on Friday on the western end of the Misrata pocket, inflicting heavy rebel casualties. A Reuters journalist counted 10 bodies in a hospital after three rebel ambulances were destroyed on the road to the front. At Misrata’s Hikma hospital, a steady stream of ambulances brought wounded fighters in from the front. Radio Misrata reported that three Gaddafi tanks had joined infantry on an attack on the front line, but that the rebel positions had not been penetrated. After days of infantry assaults and bombardments in which dozens of rebel fighters have been killed and at least 45 wounded, the Misrata military council says pleas for Nato air support have gone unanswered. “We asked through the operations room in Benghazi for the Apaches [helicopters] to take part in the fight with Gaddafi troops but up to now we did not get any promise,” said Fathi Bashaga, who is responsible for Nato liaison. “What we expect from Nato is the introduction of their Apaches.” Four British Apaches went into action near Brega last weekend , 400 miles east of Misrata, along with French Gazelle attack helicopters. Late on Thursday, Apaches attacked a communications installation and a multiple rocket launcher near Misrata, a Nato spokesman said. French press said the Apaches hit 14 targets. Rebel commanders appeared unaware of the strikes, but officials involved in the Nato campaign say the frustration on the ground reflects tension between what the insurgents want to do and the mandate laid out by the UN. “Nato nations are in Libya to protect civilians. The rebels have proved themselves to be very courageous but we are not there to act as their air force,” said one. Officials say they are concerned about creating a situation where civilians are caught up in chaotic fighting between rebels and Gaddafi’s forces. This has been heightened by fears of a lack of co-ordination between rebels on the front line and Nato commanders, who are responsible for approving air strikes. “It’s getting better, but it’s not perfect,” said the source. Rebel calls for Nato air support have grown stronger as Misrata has come under the heaviest attacks since mid-April, when rebels secured the city from pro-Gaddafi forces. There have been heavy daily bombardments with mortars and Grad rockets, along with two major infantry attacks. Volleys of grad rockets were landing to the west of the city on Friday. “Gaddafi troops tried again to enter Misrata from three sides, the south, the west, the east,” said Misrata army spokesman Ibrahim Betalmal. “We ask Allah to be merciful to the martyrs who fell to the Gaddafi troops.” Privately, rebel commanders say they are baffled with the non-appearance of the Apaches, saying conditions are ideal for their use against Gaddafi’s infantry as troops attack in the open. Witnesses to a dawn attack on the eastern edge of the pocket told the Guardian that Gaddafi troops came across two miles of flat open grassland between the front lines in pickup trucks with their lights on, a seemingly obvious target for air power. That attack was beaten off by rebel units, as was an infantry assault on the western end of the pocket around Dafniya, but Betalmal said rebel forces were bracing for a third offensive. “We have information that several thousand Gaddafi troops are gathered, probably they will attack from seven sides,” he said, possibly referring to highways leading into the pocket. Rebel troops have begun building fortifications along their front line, constructing networks of trenches, bunkers and shipping containers filled with sand. Aggressive rebel patrolling has brought back a steady haul of prisoners, including three female soldiers, who Betalmal said were captured on the western front line. “As our fighters are good-natured, we released them,” he said. While the daily bombardments on the city are taking a steady toll, rebel fighters are outwardly confident they can hold their lines, saying Gaddafi’s infantry appear demoralised and unwilling to press home attacks. “Our fighters managed to inflict so many casualties among the Gaddafi soldiers,” said Betalmal. “We gained so many weapons and ammunition from them after they fled the battlefield.” A Nato spokesman said it was not clear whether Gaddafi’s forces west of Misrata were capable of mounting a major offensive against the city. The front lines west of the city, said Wing Commander Mike Bracken, spokesman in Naples for the Nato Libya mission, were “volatile and unstable,” but it was “unconfirmed” whether the regime troops could muster “the capability to launch a largescale attack”. Libya Arab and Middle East unrest Muammar Gaddafi Middle East Africa Nato guardian.co.uk
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