Migrants had been fleeing unrest in Libya when the boats carrying them into Europe capsized, the UN said The bodies of 150 African refugees fleeing turmoil in Libya have been recovered off the Tunisian coast after the vessels carrying them illegally to Europe got into difficulty, a UN official said. “Up to now 150 bodies of refugees have been found off the shores of Kerkennah,” Carole Laleve, an official with the United Nations refugee agency UNHCR, told Reuters. She added: “Search operations are continuing.” The boats encountered problems on Tuesday about 12 miles off Kerkennah as they headed for Italy, Tunisia’s state news agency TAP reported. Tunisian coastguards and military rescued 570 people, but many others went into the water when a stampede to get off the small fishing boats – combined with the effect of rough seas – capsized some of the vessels, an official said. In all, about 250 people have been reported as missing. In Geneva, UNHCR spokesman Adrian Edwards said his colleagues in Tunisia had spoken to some of the survivors, who had said the boat they were on had been manned by “an ad-hoc recruited crew with little or no maritime experience”. Maeve O’Donnell, Tunisia operations assistant for the International Organisation for Migration, said a survivor had told her “taking that boat was the worst mistake of his life”. She added: “They were travelling for three to four days when the boat hit something under water. “They were stuck for several days and were reduced to drinking seawater, and water from the boat’s engine.” Elisabeth Byrs, of the UN Office for the Co-ordination of Humanitarian Affairs, said about 16,000 migrants had arrived in Italy and Malta since the beginning of the Libyan crisis. Refugees Tunisia Arab and Middle East unrest Africa Middle East Libya guardian.co.uk
Continue reading …• Fawaz Al Khalifa says ‘Mabrook, Bahrain, will host f1′ • Official adds: ‘FIA finalising date now’ A Bahrain government official has used Twitter to say that the Formula One Bahrain grand prix will go ahead this season. Fawaz Al Khalifa, the president of Bahrain’s information affairs authority, said on Twitter : “Mabrook, Bahrain, will host f1.” He later added: “FIA finalising date now.” The FIA’s world motor sport council met on Friday morning in Barcelona to discuss the restaging of the Bahrain race, which had been due to open the Formula One season on 13 March. The race was postponed in February, due to civil unrest in the Gulf state and across the Middle East – options for restaging it included running it on 30 October, in place of the Indian grand prix, which would then move to 11 December. Formula One teams had opposed such plans on grounds of cost and given the length of the season, which would in that case be the longest since 1963. The Formula One commercial rights holder, Bernie Ecclestone, said on Friday that financial concerns would have “nothing to do with” any decision on whether the race would go ahead, and that safety concerns in Bahrain would be paramount. Reports on Friday morning said that teargas and rubber bullets had been fired at protesters who were marching towards Pearl Square in Manama, the capital of Bahrain. Formula One Motor sport guardian.co.uk
Continue reading …• Hit auto-refresh (or whack F5) for all the latest action • Ping your emails to barry.glendenning@guardian.co.uk • Check out the French Open website • Follow Barry Glendenning on Twitter First set: *Murray 1-2 Nadal: Nadal goes 15-30 up, but Murray plays himself out of trouble with a booming serve and follow-up that keep Nadal penned into the corner, allowing Murray to whip a forehand into the vacant side of the court. Nadal gets the first break point of the match, but another whipped forehand from Murray makes it deuce. A baseline rally ends when Murray plays a backhand from deep into the bottom of the net: advantage Nadal. He breaks Murray with a straightforward passing shot down the line when the Scot was stranded at the net. “In the build up, Andrew Castle referred to Andy Murray as being ‘master of his domain’,” writes Mike Hale. “I wouldn’t have taken Castle for a Seinfeld fan but good to know Andy is resisting going solo during his extended stay in Paris.” First set: Murray 1-1 Nadal*: Murray passes Nadal at the net, but his whipped backhand lands millimetres outside the tram-line: 15-0. On point two, Nadal rushes towards the net and leaps to dispatch an attempted Murray lob with a backhand smash: 30-0. Murray pulls a point back, but Nadal makes it 40-15 when his opponent sends a forehand long in the first base-line rally of the game. A double-fault from Nadal makes it 40-30 and Murray comes out second-best from another baseline rally to hand the game to the birthday-boy from Mallorca. Going by the way the players’ shirts are rippling, I think it’s safe to say there’s a very stiff wind blowing in Paris, which isn’t going to help either player. First set: *Murray 1-0 Nadal: Murray serves and wins the opening three points after stepping into his own backhand and forcing errors out of Nadal in three short and sweet points. He lets the Spaniard in by sending a forehand into the net, but closes out the game by forcing Nadal into another mistake off his second serve. John Silk makes an interesting point: “If you were no good at directing the ball at the right height for you opponent to do smashes, doesn’t that make you a decent player?” he asks. Possibly, but it could be argued that a good player should be able to direct the ball at the right height for his opponent to “do” smashes, if he wants to. The umpire introduces the players: The man in the high chair looks a bit like Gary Dourdan, who used to play Warwick Brown in CSI: Crime Scene Investigation. It can’t be him, though, because Warwick was shot dead in an alleyway a couple of seasons ago, if memory serves me correctly. His agent must have tried to squeeze a few dollars too many out of Jerry Bruckheimer. The players are on court: Well, beside court. Rafa Nadal is sitting in his chair sucking on a bag of energy gel, a vision in turquoise shirt and headband, white shorts and socks. Murray is similarly attired (oh, the embarrassment!), but with a white baseball cap rather than a headband. They begin their bash-up, a pre-match ritual I used to hate when I played tennis, because I just wasn’t very good at sending the ball up to the requisite height for my opponent to practice his smashes. An email from Gary Naylor: “Kevin Mitchell wasn’t quite so keen on Andy Murray four years ago ,” he writes. To be fair to Kev, I think the Andy Murray of four years ago was a far more petulant, narky beast than the one of today. Meanwhile on Eurosport Annabel Croft and Mats Wilander are interviewing Francesca Schiavone. I’m not sure how much more of this excitement I can take. Not long now: If you think my preamble lacks a certain amount of pazazz, you should see what they’re showing on BBC Interactive at the moment. Nothing, that’s what! Unless you count a visually underwhelming still rectangular graphic with an add for imminent tennis. Good afternoon everybody . It’s been an interesting couple of weeks for fourth seed Andy Murray, whose Parisienne [anyone know the French for travails ?] have been well-documented in this wry scene-setter by the always excellent Kevin Mitchell . In a series of hapless misadventures you’d more readily associate with René Artois in an episode of ‘Allo ‘Allo! than a top tennis player trying to win a grand slam, Murray has injured his ankle, cut his own hair with hilarious consequences, got lost on the Metro and – cue stereotypically French accordion music – knocked out one of his own teeth while biting into a baguette. For all that misfortune, the young Scot remains one of only four men in with a shout of winning this year’s tournament and has also done his public image no end of good by greeting each and every misfortune visited upon him with stoicism and good humour. We wish him well. Murray’s opponent today is top seed Rafael Nadal, who celebrates his 25th birthday today. In 44 outings on the clay of Roland Garros, the Spaniard has only ever lost once, playing with two knacked knees against Robin Soderling in 2009. “Playing against Andy is always a big challenge because you know how good he is,” said Nadal. “He has all the shots. He can defend very well, he can attack very well, he runs fantastic. The only way that you can beat him is playing at a very, very high level. Without that it would be impossible. That’s what I’m going to try to do.” Whoever prevails in this encounter will face either Roger Federer or Novak Djokovic, who will take to the Court Philippe Chatrier shortly after the conclusion of this match. French Open Tennis Andy Murray Rafael Nadal Barry Glendenning guardian.co.uk
Continue reading …• Hit auto-refresh (or whack F5) for all the latest action • Ping your emails to barry.glendenning@guardian.co.uk • Check out the French Open website • Follow Barry Glendenning on Twitter First set: *Murray 1-2 Nadal: Nadal goes 15-30 up, but Murray plays himself out of trouble with a booming serve and follow-up that keep Nadal penned into the corner, allowing Murray to whip a forehand into the vacant side of the court. Nadal gets the first break point of the match, but another whipped forehand from Murray makes it deuce. A baseline rally ends when Murray plays a backhand from deep into the bottom of the net: advantage Nadal. He breaks Murray with a straightforward passing shot down the line when the Scot was stranded at the net. “In the build up, Andrew Castle referred to Andy Murray as being ‘master of his domain’,” writes Mike Hale. “I wouldn’t have taken Castle for a Seinfeld fan but good to know Andy is resisting going solo during his extended stay in Paris.” First set: Murray 1-1 Nadal*: Murray passes Nadal at the net, but his whipped backhand lands millimetres outside the tram-line: 15-0. On point two, Nadal rushes towards the net and leaps to dispatch an attempted Murray lob with a backhand smash: 30-0. Murray pulls a point back, but Nadal makes it 40-15 when his opponent sends a forehand long in the first base-line rally of the game. A double-fault from Nadal makes it 40-30 and Murray comes out second-best from another baseline rally to hand the game to the birthday-boy from Mallorca. Going by the way the players’ shirts are rippling, I think it’s safe to say there’s a very stiff wind blowing in Paris, which isn’t going to help either player. First set: *Murray 1-0 Nadal: Murray serves and wins the opening three points after stepping into his own backhand and forcing errors out of Nadal in three short and sweet points. He lets the Spaniard in by sending a forehand into the net, but closes out the game by forcing Nadal into another mistake off his second serve. John Silk makes an interesting point: “If you were no good at directing the ball at the right height for you opponent to do smashes, doesn’t that make you a decent player?” he asks. Possibly, but it could be argued that a good player should be able to direct the ball at the right height for his opponent to “do” smashes, if he wants to. The umpire introduces the players: The man in the high chair looks a bit like Gary Dourdan, who used to play Warwick Brown in CSI: Crime Scene Investigation. It can’t be him, though, because Warwick was shot dead in an alleyway a couple of seasons ago, if memory serves me correctly. His agent must have tried to squeeze a few dollars too many out of Jerry Bruckheimer. The players are on court: Well, beside court. Rafa Nadal is sitting in his chair sucking on a bag of energy gel, a vision in turquoise shirt and headband, white shorts and socks. Murray is similarly attired (oh, the embarrassment!), but with a white baseball cap rather than a headband. They begin their bash-up, a pre-match ritual I used to hate when I played tennis, because I just wasn’t very good at sending the ball up to the requisite height for my opponent to practice his smashes. An email from Gary Naylor: “Kevin Mitchell wasn’t quite so keen on Andy Murray four years ago ,” he writes. To be fair to Kev, I think the Andy Murray of four years ago was a far more petulant, narky beast than the one of today. Meanwhile on Eurosport Annabel Croft and Mats Wilander are interviewing Francesca Schiavone. I’m not sure how much more of this excitement I can take. Not long now: If you think my preamble lacks a certain amount of pazazz, you should see what they’re showing on BBC Interactive at the moment. Nothing, that’s what! Unless you count a visually underwhelming still rectangular graphic with an add for imminent tennis. Good afternoon everybody . It’s been an interesting couple of weeks for fourth seed Andy Murray, whose Parisienne [anyone know the French for travails ?] have been well-documented in this wry scene-setter by the always excellent Kevin Mitchell . In a series of hapless misadventures you’d more readily associate with René Artois in an episode of ‘Allo ‘Allo! than a top tennis player trying to win a grand slam, Murray has injured his ankle, cut his own hair with hilarious consequences, got lost on the Metro and – cue stereotypically French accordion music – knocked out one of his own teeth while biting into a baguette. For all that misfortune, the young Scot remains one of only four men in with a shout of winning this year’s tournament and has also done his public image no end of good by greeting each and every misfortune visited upon him with stoicism and good humour. We wish him well. Murray’s opponent today is top seed Rafael Nadal, who celebrates his 25th birthday today. In 44 outings on the clay of Roland Garros, the Spaniard has only ever lost once, playing with two knacked knees against Robin Soderling in 2009. “Playing against Andy is always a big challenge because you know how good he is,” said Nadal. “He has all the shots. He can defend very well, he can attack very well, he runs fantastic. The only way that you can beat him is playing at a very, very high level. Without that it would be impossible. That’s what I’m going to try to do.” Whoever prevails in this encounter will face either Roger Federer or Novak Djokovic, who will take to the Court Philippe Chatrier shortly after the conclusion of this match. French Open Tennis Andy Murray Rafael Nadal Barry Glendenning guardian.co.uk
Continue reading …Due to perpetually low ratings, we won’t see how former CBS Evening News anchor Katie Couric would dismiss Weinergate. But on her Twitter page on Thursday, Couric tweeted : “I'm curious if anybody thinks this Anthony Weiner Twitter scandal is a legit news story or just fodder for late-night comedians …thoughts?” So much for Couric's Twitter motto: “True journalism separates fact from fiction. Passionate about discovering what makes the world tick.”
Continue reading …Due to perpetually low ratings, we won’t see how former CBS Evening News anchor Katie Couric would dismiss Weinergate. But on her Twitter page on Thursday, Couric tweeted : “I'm curious if anybody thinks this Anthony Weiner Twitter scandal is a legit news story or just fodder for late-night comedians …thoughts?” So much for Couric's Twitter motto: “True journalism separates fact from fiction. Passionate about discovering what makes the world tick.”
Continue reading …Unrest continues in Yemen as civil war draws closer, while the fate of the Bahrain grand prix will be decided at a meeting of Formula 1′s governing body. Follow live updates here 12.42pm: Fawaz al-Khalifa is the Bahraini government official who appears to have broken the news – via Twitter. @fawaz_alkhalifa Mabrook, Bahrain will host f1.. Al-Khalifa has since tweeted saying that FIA are now “finalising [the] date”. 12.32pm: A Bahraini government official has said that the Bahrain grand prix will go ahead. More as we get it. 12.07pm: The Independent has an enlightening piece on how some Bahrain grand prix staff have been detained and mistreated . In the run up to the decision on Formula One, police patrols have sought to prevent any demonstrations and controversial trials of pro-democracy protesters have been postponed. Ayat al-Gormezi, the 20-year-old girl poet, who was to be tried by a military tribunal on a charge of stirring up hatred and insulting the King, has had her trial put off until 6 June. Of the 108 local staff of the government-owned Bahrain International Circuit (BIC), which hosts Formula One, some 28 were detained and mistreated according to a source in Bahrain close to the event. All of those arrested are Shia and have since been sacked. Five of these are still in prison including the chief financial officer Jaafar Almansoor, an employee of BIC told Reuters news agency. “They made us beat and kick each other,” said the employee, who did not want to be named, describing their 20 days in detention. “They said they’d rape us. They tried to touch you in various places to make you think it’s going to happen.” The prisoners were insulted for being Shia and, on being released, were told not to talk to the media. This morning Bernie Ecclestone, the Formula One commercial rights holder, said that a decision on whether to reschedule the postponed grand prix will have “nothing to do with money” . 11.56am: Yemeni security forces have shelled the Sana’a home of tribal leader Hamid al-Ahmar, Reuters is reporting. Jeb Boone, a freelance journalist based in Yemen, appears to have been close to the scene as it happened. He tweeted: @JebBoone Just said hi to an RPG on Hadda street by Hamid al-Ahmar’s house. #Yemen #YF Before adding: @JebBoone Thanks to a stunt driver cabbie, I made it out of Hadda. Its pretty bad up by Hamid’s house. #Yemen #YF 11.45am: Elsewhere, Vodafone’s claims that it helped inspire this year’s revolution in the Egypt (in fact it joined other mobile phone companies in following Egyptian government orders and implementing a communications blackout at the height of the revolution ) is not going down well – read Jack Shenker’s story on the saga here . (And here’s the advert in question ): – 11.33am: Associated Press reporting that Bahraini police have fired tear gas and rubber bullets at protesters marching toward Pearl Square in the country’s capital. The downtown square was the epicenter of weeks of Shiite-led protests against Sunni rulers earlier this year in the Gulf kingdom. Friday’s march in Manama comes two days after authorities lifted emergency rule. It was imposed in March to quell demonstrations by Bahrain’s Shiite majority demanding greater freedoms and inspired by uprisings across the Arab world. At least 30 people have died since February, when protests erupted in the tiny island nation, which hosts the US Navy’s 5th Fleet. There were no immediate reports of injuries. The eyewitnesses spoke on condition of anonymity, fearing reprisals. 11.26am: The bodies of 150 African refugees have been recovered off the Tunisian coast after the vessels carrying them illegally to Europe got into difficulty earlier in the week, according to a UN official earlier we heard 250 people were believed to be missing. 11.12am: Protests are planned in Syria today to mark “children’s Friday”, in memory of Hamza al-Khatib , a 13-year-old boy who was killed in the Deraa area and whose battered and mutilated corpse has become a rallying-point for anger at the regime of President Bashar al-Assad, Ian Black wrote yesterday . Ammar Qurabi, head of the Syrian Organisation for Human Rights, referred to the names of 1,113 civilians killed since the protests erupted on 18 March. International media are banned by a government which talks of facing “armed terrorist gangs” not largely peaceful protests. Although media are banned, it is possible to get some reports from the country. The Guardian has been told that the internet is not working “anywhere in the country” today – previously the al-Assad regime has attempted to block web access. 10.41am: The Times has an interesting piece today from Iona Criag in Sana’a, about water running out in the Yemeni capital ( paywall ). The price of water trebled overnight in Yemen’s battle-scarred capital and basic provisions were dwindling as thousands of tribesmen fought their way into Sana’a yesterday to join the rebellion against President Saleh… … Amid the ancient tower houses of Sana’a’s Old City, men, women and children rushed to a water tanker when it arrived outside a mosque yesterday. Tensions rose as residents jostled to fill cans and plastic containers. The cost of a water tanker delivery, usually 1,300 Yemeni rials (£3.50), soared to 7,000 amid the escalating conflict. With 40 per cent of Yemen’s 23 million people living on less than £1.50 a day, the prices will inevitable add to the cycle of violence. “They spend their money on bullets, but I can’t even afford water for my family,” shouted one desperate resident as he waited for his can to fill from a communal water tanker. Yemen already has really bad problems with water, with the wells of Sana’a expected to run dry by 2015 – check out this audio slideshow , produced before the Middle East unrest, on the water crisis in the country. 10.31am: Reuters reports that forces loyal to Yemeni President Ali Abdullah Saleh have fired at protesters in Sana’a this morning. In other parts of the capital, tribesmen siding with the protesters have fought pitched street battles with Saleh’s troops, including his special forces which were set up to fight al Qaeda, for control of government buildings. More than 350 people have been killed since the uprising started in January, but least 135 of them have been killed in the past 10 days in a marked escalation that began when tribal groups started fighting government troops in the capital Sana’a. Worries are growing that Yemen, home to a branch of al-Qaeda known as AQAP and next to the world’s biggest oil exporter Saudi Arabia, could implode and become a failed state that poses a risk to global oil supplies and security. Political veteran Saleh has backed away three times at the last minute from signing a Gulf-led deal to step down, clinging to power despite global pressure to resign and the defection of ministers and military leaders to the opposition. “But even if the president would agree, and so far he has shown no intention, one could not ensure the transition to go smoothly given that there are so many risks involved,” said Christian Koch, director of international studies at the Gulf Research Center in Dubai. Saleh’s special forces were deployed to help “clean up” a ministry held by tribal forces, the Defence Ministry said on Thursday, as battles near the airport briefly grounded flights. 10.15am: Good morning. • The US is increasing its efforts to persuade Yemen’s veteran president to step down before escalating fighting between the government and tribal rebels develops into civil war, Ian Black writes . Reports from Sana’a said Saleh’s forces were deploying heavy weapons at the entrance to the city to prevent the advance of rebels loyal to Sheikh Sadiq al-Ahmar, chief of the Hashid tribal federation, the country’s largest. At least 135 people have been killed in the last 10 days. • About 250 people are feared to have drowned after their attempt to flee the violence in Libya apparently ended in tragedy off the Tunisian coast, says John Hooper . Coastguards and military personnel are reported to have saved at least 570 people, all from sub-Saharan Africa, during a rescue operation in rough seas and shallow waters off the Kerkennah islands east of the Tunisian coast. • Formula 1′s governing body will meet today to decide the fate of the Bahrain grand prix. Bahrain had been due to host the opening race of the 2011 season but it was called off amid unrest in the country. Organisers have asked for the race to be rescheduled, although some have called for it to be cancelled. Follow live updates from across the region here. Middle East Yemen Bahrain Syria Tunisia Morocco Adam Gabbatt guardian.co.uk
Continue reading …Bosnian Serb commander says genocide claims are ‘monstrous’ while exchanging gestures and looks with victims’ families Ratko Mladic has made a defiant first appearance at the United Nations war crimes tribunal in The Hague, describing the charges of genocide against him as “obnoxious” and “monstrous” and taunting victims of the massacre he is accused of committing at Srebrenica. The 69-year-old former commander of the Bosnian Serb army appeared just after 10am in the special court on war crimes in the former Yugoslavia. He wore a grey suit and grey cap and saluted the public gallery and the judge. Mladic was asked if he wanted to hear the full indictment against him. He told the presiding judge, Alphons Orie: “I do not want to hear a single letter or sentence of that indictment read out to me.” The judge ignored him and read a summary of 11 counts of genocide, crimes against humanity and violations of the laws and customs of war. The charges relate to the massacre at Srebrenica, where more than 7,000 Bosnian Serb men and boys were killed by Mladic’s forces ; the shelling and sniping operation against Sarajevo; wider ethnic cleansing in the region; and taking hostage 200 UN peacekeepers and military observers to use as human shields. Asked if he wanted to plead guilty or not guilty or postpone his decision for 30 days, as allowed by the court, Mladic said: “Mr Orie, you are a bit older than I am. I would like to receive what you have read out just now, these obnoxious charges levelled against me. I want to read this properly and give it proper thought together with my lawyers because I need more than a month because these are monstrous words that I have never heard before, the words that are in this indictment.” His comments caused some consternation in the public gallery among the victims’ families, sitting in the second and third rows of the public gallery, who do not want the trial delayed. During the hearing Mladic made eye contact on several occasions with this group. After the indictment was read out he looked across at Kada Hotic, an elderly Bosnian Muslim woman who lost her son, husband and two brothers at Srebrenica. During an exchange through the glass he could be seen waving his finger at her and smiling. She wagged her finger at him too. She said he made a gesture to her with his thumb and forefinger indicating that she was small. Mladic could not have heard her and she could not hear him. “I looked through the glass and said to him I want you to know that you murdered my only son,” she said after the hearing concluded. On another occasion, as the judge addressed Mladic about procedures, he smiled and nodded to the group of victims and their families. One of them, Bakira Hascic, had been raped by Bosnian Serb forces and in total lost 27 members of her extended family. Another, Munira Subusic, lost 22 members of her family, including her youngest son, whose remains have never been found. At the end of the hearing they shouted “butcher” at him in Bosnian. Orie asked if Mladic had any points to make about his current conditions. Mladic took the opportunity to give the world a preview of what his defence might be. “I do not fear any journalist, any people, any nation, people or ethnicity,” he said. “I defended my people and my country, not Ratko Mladic. Now I am defending myself, Ratko Mladic, before you … I am Ratko Mladic, I did not kill Croats as Croats, and I am not killing anyone in Libya or in Africa … I was just defending my country.” He said he did not know how long the trial would last. “I just want to live to see that I am a free man.” Mladic struggled to stand up and had to be helped by two court security officers, but otherwise he appeared in better health than might have been expected given that his lawyer in Serbia had indicated he might not survive the trial. Movement in his right hand appeared to be inhibited and his speech was slightly slurred, but he seemed alert and responsive, jutting out his jaw, tipping his head back and once waving his fist while addressing the judge. He appeared keen to seem in command of events and at one point called for a time out using his arms to make a T-shape as if he was a basketball coach. The judge set a date for a second appearance at 10am on 4 July and told Mladic he would be returned to UN custody until then. Ratko Mladic Bosnia and Herzegovina Europe Serbia War crimes International criminal court Robert Booth guardian.co.uk
Continue reading …Supermodel said she was ‘shocked’ by campaign comparing her to a Dairy Milk Bliss bar Confectionery giant Cadbury is to issue a formal apology to Naomi Campbell after the supermodel claimed an advert comparing her to one of its chocolate bars was racist. The advert for Cadbury’s Bliss range of Dairy Milk chocolate bars used the strapline “Move over Naomi, there’s a new diva in town”. Campbell said she was “shocked” by the ad, intended as a tongue-in-cheek play on Campbell’s reputation for diva-style tantrums and behaviour. “It’s upsetting to be described as chocolate, not just for me but for all black women and black people,” she said. “I do not find any humour in this. It is insulting and hurtful.” Cadbury is expected to publish a statement on its UK website today in an attempt to draw a line under the row. Campaigning group Operation Black vote called the ad an “insult” to black women , while the supermodel’s mother Valerie said she was “deeply upset by this racist advert” . “This is the 21st century, not the 1950s,” she added. “Shame on Cadbury.” The ad was one of 15 developed by Fallon, the agency behind Cadbury’s famous drumming gorilla TV campaign . Cadbury, now part of the Kraft empire, pulled the ads and initially issued a statement saying it was “never our intention to cause offence” and it had positioned the campaign as a “light-hearted take on the social pretensions of Cadbury Dairy Milk Bliss”. However pressure has continued to mount on Cadbury for not issuing a full formal apology to Campbell . A spokeswoman for Cadbury confirmed that a statement would be published on its website today. •
Continue reading …But acquittals raise new questions about Babar Ahmad case because Met has already paid him £60,000 damages Four specialist police officers have been found not guilty of violently assaulting a British Muslim man during an early morning raid on his home. Babar Ahmad, 34, a terrorism suspect who remains in detention, had claimed he was punched, kicked and strangled by officers from one of the Met’s territorial support units during an arrest at his home in December 2003. But a jury at Southwark crown court has found police constables Mark Jones, Roderick James-Bowen and Nigel Cowley and detective constable John Donohue not guilty of assault occasioning actual bodily harm. The acquittals follow a civil case in 2009 in which the Met conceded Ahmad had been the subject of a “a serious, gratuitous and prolonged” attack – and paid him £60,000 in damages. The jury in the trial was not told about the civil case and the not guilty verdicts will put further pressure on the Met to explain exactly what happened during the arrest. Ahmad was arrested at his home in south-west London in December 2003. He claimed officers had stamped on his feet and repeatedly punched him in the head before he was forced into the Muslim prayer position while they shouted: “Where is your God now? Pray to him.” But during the trial officers denied the claims, saying Ahmad had battled like a “caged tiger” during his arrest, which came 11 months after detective constable Stephen Oake was murdered in Crumpsall, Manchester, by a terrorist suspect named Kamel Bourgass. On the morning of the operation police chiefs had briefed the arresting officers that Ahmad should be considered as dangerous as Bourgass. They said they feared he would resist. James-Bowen was the first officer into Ahmad’s bedroom and told the court the terrorist suspect had adopted a “fighting stance” and looked around for a samurai sword. Barrister Richard Atchley, acting for James-Bowen, said Ahmad had fought like a “caged tiger” during his arrest. Neil Saunders, representing Jones, said Ahmad’s account of the events of his arrest was a lie because his key allegations did not tally with a recording made by an MI5 bug that had been hidden in his home. He said the recording, played to the jury, did not include any screams of agony and that no officers could be heard mocking Ahmad’s faith by forcing him into a Muslim prayer position and asking: “Where is your God now?” During the trial Ahmad admitted travelling to Bosnia three or four times to fight during the bloody 1992-1995 war but insisted he was not the “al-Qaida superman” he was described as at the police briefing. The conclusion of the case means it is possible to report that two of the officers found not guilty – Jones and James-Bowen – had 40 separate allegations of assault against them between 1993 and 2007, the majority involving black or Asian men. The Met said that all the allegations of assault against Jones and James-Bowen had been found to be unsubstantiated following inquiries. They included a complaint from a man detained during a drug search in 2007 who, Ahmad’s lawyers told the high court, accused Jones of forcing him into the back of a TSG van before placing him on his knees, grabbing his throat and spraying teargas into his face. In another incident a “black male” arrested for non-payment of fines and driving without a licence or insurance claimed he was assaulted by Jones and another officer. The document submitted to the high court read: “In van repeatedly assaulted – kicks to the face, stamps on his head whilst handcuffed.” The victim said afterwards he “felt like he might die” and complained of “vomiting and blood coming out of his ears, black swollen eye, lip busted hands very swollen”. In a separate case Jones was acquitted following a trial of racially assaulting two teenage boys who had accused him of taking them into the back of a police van and shouting abuse about their ethnic backgrounds in front of his colleagues. The Independent Police Complaints Commission supervised an investigation into Ahmad’s arrest carried out by the Met but no officer was disciplined as a result. Asked about the string of allegations against the officers involved, the Met said that all but one had been found to be unsubstantiated following inquiries. During the civil hearing police said they had lost several large mail sacks detailing at least 30 of the complaints against officers involved in the attack. It also emerged that other crucial documents had been mislaid, including the officers’ contemporaneous notebooks and a taped recording of an interview with the senior officer in the case. The Met is expected to publish findings of a review into the case shortly and will carry out a misconduct hearing into the allegations surrounding the arrest. Ahmad has been in detention since he was rearrested in 2004 after a request from the US government over claims that he helped raise money to fund terrorist campaigns. Metropolitan police Police UK security and terrorism Matthew Taylor guardian.co.uk
Continue reading …