As NewsBusters reported first , MSNBC anchor Martin Bashir insisted on his May 31 program that Sarah Palin's Northeast bus tour amounted to a “breach in federal law.” After a number of sites linked to the original NewsBusters piece, Bashir responded today to the “abusive messages” he's allegedly endured in the fallout of his controversial remarks, although he avoided addressing his bizarre claim that the former Alaska governor violated federal law by flying the American flag on her tour bus. [Video embedded after the page break.] “And judging by the number of abusive messages to myself and my family online and on my office voicemail, there's been quite the reaction to my comment regarding Sarah Palin and the real purpose of her bus tour,” complained Bashir. The British-born Bashir went on to flash his green card to prove to his alleged detractors that he is indeed a legal resident: “For the avoidance of any doubt, I want to assure you that I am a legal, permanent resident of the United States. This is my green card.” While the former ABC Nightline anchor doubled down on his contention that Palin is only interested in making money, he explicitly refused to address his most egregious comment. On Tuesday, Bashir questioned Palin's patriotism and suggested she's a criminal: “In fact, the whole thing could be in breach of a federal law because the United States Flag Code establishes important rules for the use and display of the stars and stripes, the flag of the United States.” But on Thursday, Bashir pretended to have never uttered such offensive bile, even though it was those comments that were the most controversial. Still waiting for you to “Clear the Air,” Martin. –Alex Fitzsimmons is a News Analysis intern at the Media Research Center. Click here to follow him on Twitter.
Continue reading …At ‘the Cinema Paradiso of Zanzibar’ old films are watched under open sky – director Nick Broomfield hopes to put the roof back on Every Friday they come, seven or eight elderly men gathered in a ramshackle auditorium of cobwebs and broken chairs. Sitting under an open sky – the roof fell in long ago – they watch the flickering images of old films projected on a wall. “It’s the Cinema Paradiso of Zanzibar,” said Martin Mhando, director of the annual Zanzibar International Film Festival (Ziff), which takes place on the Tanzanian island next month. “Cinema Paradiso was heavenly compared to what’s there.” This is the Majestic, one of Africa’s first cinemas, an art deco gem from the 1920s that lost its lustre. Mhando is leading a campaign to restore the ruin to its former glory, all the more vital, he says, because where Tanzania and its islands once boasted 53 cinemas, now there are only two. The effort in Zanzibar’s Stone Town is backed by the award-winning British film-maker Nick Broomfield, known for documentaries such as Biggie and Tupac, Aileen Wuornos: The Selling of a Serial Killer and Battle For Haditha. Broomfield said he is inspired by the diehards who keep the Majestic alive despite its decline. “Even though the cinema doesn’t have a roof, people are using it and setting up their own projector,” he said from Los Angeles. “It probably has a lot of memories for them. It was the place where people went on dates and met their first girlfriends. “Cinema is a shared experience. As a film-maker, the most wonderful thing about watching with a group of people is that you can tell which parts of the film are working and which aren’t. “It’s a bonding thing, a way of holding a group or locality together. When I was growing up, everyone went to the cinema on Saturday morning to see the cartoons. It was social cohesion and that’s one of the exciting things that could happen with the Majestic in Zanzibar.” Broomfield will be running workshops at the Ziff and is set to shoot his next feature film in Tanzania. “East African film-making is going to grow and become more important,” he said. “The Majestic is a wonderful piece of architecture. In terms of the east African film-making community, the relevance of Zanzibar would be enshrined in the Majestic. It would be an encouragement for people to take cinema seriously. It would also be a fantastic venue for the Zanzibar International film festival.” The first Majestic, designed by colonial architect John Sinclair in about 1922, burned down after a projector fire and was rebuilt a few years later. With about 500 seats, it showed mainly Indian and Egyptian films along with some western favourites such as James Bond. The economic failure of the 1980s saw cinemas shut down all over Tanzania. The last of three on Zanzibar, Cine Afrique, recently closed and was converted into a supermarket. Even the Majestic is said to be under threat of being turned into an office block for civil servants. Mhando said the Ziff uses a cinema on nearby Pemba island but it does not operate full-time. That leaves Tanzania with two multiplexes in the capital, Dar es Salaam. “The economy got bad in the 1980s,” Mhando recalled. “Tickets had cost $1-2, but we knew if it got to $3 the cinema economy would collapse and that’s what happened. People could no longer afford to watch movies. Videos came along and they stayed inside. By 1996, all the cinemas were closed.” Despite this gloomy backdrop, the Ziff claims to be east Africa’s biggest arts and film festival since launching 14 years ago. “At Ziff we have full houses of 1,500 people every night. So we started thinking about rebuilding the Majestic. If it was refurbished properly, people could go to movies there on a regular basis. It still has beautiful art deco.” Mhando hopes to raise awareness of the Majestic’s plight with a view to making a cost assessment and raising funds. He would like to see it become a minimum 200-seat multipurpose venue with space for corporate events, seminars and workshops along with a cafe. Then, he hopes, the faithful who gather there each Friday will be joined by a new generation. “The old men still have their dreams of watching movies every week. They remember the old splendour of the Majestic and the moment of their youth. That’s the relevance of cinema culture to them. Once you’ve been bitten by the bug, there’s no escaping it.” Tanzania Africa Architecture David Smith guardian.co.uk
Continue reading …At ‘the Cinema Paradiso of Zanzibar’ old films are watched under open sky – director Nick Broomfield hopes to put the roof back on Every Friday they come, seven or eight elderly men gathered in a ramshackle auditorium of cobwebs and broken chairs. Sitting under an open sky – the roof fell in long ago – they watch the flickering images of old films projected on a wall. “It’s the Cinema Paradiso of Zanzibar,” said Martin Mhando, director of the annual Zanzibar International Film Festival (Ziff), which takes place on the Tanzanian island next month. “Cinema Paradiso was heavenly compared to what’s there.” This is the Majestic, one of Africa’s first cinemas, an art deco gem from the 1920s that lost its lustre. Mhando is leading a campaign to restore the ruin to its former glory, all the more vital, he says, because where Tanzania and its islands once boasted 53 cinemas, now there are only two. The effort in Zanzibar’s Stone Town is backed by the award-winning British film-maker Nick Broomfield, known for documentaries such as Biggie and Tupac, Aileen Wuornos: The Selling of a Serial Killer and Battle For Haditha. Broomfield said he is inspired by the diehards who keep the Majestic alive despite its decline. “Even though the cinema doesn’t have a roof, people are using it and setting up their own projector,” he said from Los Angeles. “It probably has a lot of memories for them. It was the place where people went on dates and met their first girlfriends. “Cinema is a shared experience. As a film-maker, the most wonderful thing about watching with a group of people is that you can tell which parts of the film are working and which aren’t. “It’s a bonding thing, a way of holding a group or locality together. When I was growing up, everyone went to the cinema on Saturday morning to see the cartoons. It was social cohesion and that’s one of the exciting things that could happen with the Majestic in Zanzibar.” Broomfield will be running workshops at the Ziff and is set to shoot his next feature film in Tanzania. “East African film-making is going to grow and become more important,” he said. “The Majestic is a wonderful piece of architecture. In terms of the east African film-making community, the relevance of Zanzibar would be enshrined in the Majestic. It would be an encouragement for people to take cinema seriously. It would also be a fantastic venue for the Zanzibar International film festival.” The first Majestic, designed by colonial architect John Sinclair in about 1922, burned down after a projector fire and was rebuilt a few years later. With about 500 seats, it showed mainly Indian and Egyptian films along with some western favourites such as James Bond. The economic failure of the 1980s saw cinemas shut down all over Tanzania. The last of three on Zanzibar, Cine Afrique, recently closed and was converted into a supermarket. Even the Majestic is said to be under threat of being turned into an office block for civil servants. Mhando said the Ziff uses a cinema on nearby Pemba island but it does not operate full-time. That leaves Tanzania with two multiplexes in the capital, Dar es Salaam. “The economy got bad in the 1980s,” Mhando recalled. “Tickets had cost $1-2, but we knew if it got to $3 the cinema economy would collapse and that’s what happened. People could no longer afford to watch movies. Videos came along and they stayed inside. By 1996, all the cinemas were closed.” Despite this gloomy backdrop, the Ziff claims to be east Africa’s biggest arts and film festival since launching 14 years ago. “At Ziff we have full houses of 1,500 people every night. So we started thinking about rebuilding the Majestic. If it was refurbished properly, people could go to movies there on a regular basis. It still has beautiful art deco.” Mhando hopes to raise awareness of the Majestic’s plight with a view to making a cost assessment and raising funds. He would like to see it become a minimum 200-seat multipurpose venue with space for corporate events, seminars and workshops along with a cafe. Then, he hopes, the faithful who gather there each Friday will be joined by a new generation. “The old men still have their dreams of watching movies every week. They remember the old splendour of the Majestic and the moment of their youth. That’s the relevance of cinema culture to them. Once you’ve been bitten by the bug, there’s no escaping it.” Tanzania Africa Architecture David Smith guardian.co.uk
Continue reading …While Medicare has been the focal point on most of the criticisms coming out of the Democratic Party against Paul Ryan’s un-brave and callous GOP budget, many writers on C&L and bloggers on the left have been making sure that Medicaid is not left behind or served up as a main course for some kind of “grand bargain.” NEC Director Gene Sperling recently destroyed Paul Ryan over his proposed Medicaid block grant cuts to it also. It’s nice to see Sen, Menendez jump abroad the ship of sanity with us and hold the line on Medicaid. Cuts to Medicaid are no more palatable than cuts to Medicare, Sen. Robert Menendez (D-N.J.) told reporters Wednesday. Medicaid advocates and some congressional Democrats are worried that Medicaid could become a more ripe target for funding cuts amid the political firestorm over proposed changes to Medicare. But House Republicans’ proposal to convert federal Medicaid funding into block grants for the states “is not, in my mind, a plan that will find currency in our caucus,” Menendez said. “While Medicare has been the focus … Medicaid, certainly in the context of block granting, is also not acceptable,” he said. Millions of Americans depend on Medicaid and the fear seniors have over these draconian proposals that hit at the heart of their survival is real. Boehner is right about one thing. The time is now to keep the pressure on the Democratic Party and vote Conservatives out of office in the process.
Continue reading …Phillip Garrido sentenced to 431 years to life for kidnapping and raping Dugard and holding her captive for 18 years A convicted sex offender and his wife have been jailed for life for kidnapping and raping Jaycee Dugard when she was 11 and holding her captive for nearly 20 years. Phillip Garrido, 60, was sentenced to 431 years to life in prison by a California court after pleading guilty to kidnapping and 13 sexual assault charges, including six counts of rape and seven counts of committing lewd acts captured on video. El Dorado County district attorney Vern Pierson described Garrido as “a sexual predator who stole the childhood and innocence from an 11-year-old child”. Garrido’s wife Nancy, 55, who also pleaded guilty, was handed a 36-year sentence. Before the couple were sentenced in the court in Placerville, the victim’s mother, Terry Probyn, read out a statment by Dugard, now 31, in which she described her 18-year ordeal at the Garridos’ hands. “I chose not to be here today because I refuse to waste another second of my life in your presence,” Dugard wrote, addressing Phillip Garrido. “Everything you ever did to me was wrong, and I hope one day you will see that. “I hated every second of every day for 18 years. You stole my life and that of my family.” Following her kidnapping in South Lake Tahoe, California, in 1991, Dugard was confined to a hidden backyard compound which she later shared with two daughters fathered by Phillip Garrido. Dugard called Garrido a liar, and said what his wife did to her was evil. She said she hoped both of them would have as many sleepless nights as she had. “There is no God in the universe that would condone your actions,” Dugard said, addressing Nancy Garrido. Dugard, who has written a memoir set to be published next month, said she was doing well now, and told Phillip Garrido: “You do not matter any more.” The plea deal was designed, in part, to spare Dugard and her children from having to testify at a trial. Both Garridos have waived their right to appeal. Dugard was grabbed by Nancy Garrido from the street where her family lived and forced into a car driven by Phillip Garrido on 10 June 1991. The abduction took place as Dugard’s stepfather watched her walk to a school bus stop. The couple held Dugard prisoner at their home in Antioch for the next 18 years, four months and 16 days. She was initially locked in a backyard shed and then confined to a series of tents she would later share with the daughters fathered by Garrido and delivered by his wife. Dugard last year received a $20m (£12m) settlement from the state of California under which officials acknowledged repeated mistakes were made by parole agents responsible for monitoring Phillip Garrido. California has since increased monitoring of sex offenders. The case drew international attention after Dugard and her daughters were discovered in August 2009. Dugard has written a memoir, A Stolen Life, which will be released in July. Jaycee Lee Dugard kidnap United States David Batty guardian.co.uk
Continue reading …Obama adviser holds emergency talks in Riyadh as fighting between Yemeni government and tribal rebels escalates Ian Black Middle East editor The US is stepping up efforts to persuade Yemen’s veteran president to step down before escalating fighting between the government and tribal rebels develops into fully-fledged civil war. Diplomats said that Washington was now pressing hard to convince Ali Abdullah Saleh to reconsider his rejection of a peace plan brokered by Saudi Arabia and other Gulf states alarmed by the prospect of growing instability in the region. John Brennan, Barack Obama’s counter-terrorism adviser, held talks in the Saudi capital, Riyadh, where the government has strong ties with Yemeni tribes but has been slow to act. It has been accused of sending mixed signals to Saleh, who is seen as desperate to cling on to power after 32 years. Brennan has previously worked closely with Saleh on fighting al-Qaida – a key US and western concern. The Yemeni leader has reneged on an accord which would see him hand over power to his deputy in return for an amnesty from prosecution. He has agreed to sign the deal on several occasions but then backed out, apparently holding out for terms that would wring new concessions from his rivals. The official Yemeni news agency Saba quoted a government source on Thursday as saying that he was now ready to sign, but the claim appeared to make little impact. “It’s all about getting him to sign that piece of paper,” said one western official. “It’s the only game in town but he clearly hasn’t grasped that yet.” Reports from Sana’a said Saleh’s forces were deploying heavy weapons at the entrance to the capital 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 alone. The situation in Yemen remains confused and communications are difficult. Al-Jazeera TV reported that an estimated 2,000 members of opposition tribal groups, which were “armed and ready to fight,” had entered the capital to confront forces loyal to Saleh. “We expect [the tribal fighters] to take control of different government complexes,” said the editor of the Yemen Post, Hakim al Masmari. A military official told the Associated Press that government warplanes would attack the fighters if they tried to advance on the capital. “There are orders and instruction that if they approach and engage, we can strike them with airplanes,” the official said, speaking on condition of anonymity according to regulations. For their part, the tribesman said they were awaiting orders to approach. “We won’t leave al-Ahmar alone and will enter Sanaa to stand with him and to fight alongside him,” Mohammed al-Hamdani, a tribal leader, told AP. Video clips showed heavy fighting in the Hasaba area, where 15 people were killed overnight. One casualty was a seven-year old girl struck by a stray bullet. Sana’a international airport was closed briefly because of shelling, fuelling fears the country would be cut off from the wider world. But it reopened later as the authorities insisted all was normal. Russia urged its citizens to leave Yemen in the wake of the violence. The US and Britain have advised their nationals to depart and their embassies are both operating with reduced staff. A Yemeni government official said street fighting had intensified because special forces were now involved. Civilians have been fleeing Sana’a in their thousands, hurriedly packing possessions in their cars. “It felt as if the artillery shells were flying next to my head,” resident Sadeq al-Lahbe tolds Reuters before leaving. “My wife, my daughter were screaming. It was horrible. There is no electricity, no water and violent strikes shaking the house. Is this life?” In the central city of Taiz, where anti Saleh activists have held massive demonstrations since the start of the uprising, military police were seen firing live ammunition at protesters. The UN said at least 50 people had been killed there since Sunday. The battles in Yemen are being fought on several fronts, with street fighting between tribal groups and Saleh’s forces in Sana’a, popular protests across the country, and a battle against al-Qaida and Islamist militants who have seized the coastal city of Zinjibar, east of Aden. Government forces have been pounding the city for several days. Brennan’s Gulf mission followed mounting alarm and frustration in Washington and London at the way the crisis is unfolding. On Wednesday the US secretary of state Hillary Clinton said Yemen’s conflict would not end unless Saleh and his government made way for the opposition to begin a political transition. “We cannot expect this conflict to end unless President Saleh and his government move out of the way to permit the opposition and civil society to begin a transition to political and economic reform,” Clinton said. Yemen Arab and Middle East unrest Middle East Global terrorism al-Qaida Obama administration US foreign policy US politics United States Ian Black guardian.co.uk
Continue reading …Britain and US accept insurgents’ demand to end sanctions on ex-Taliban leaders including notorious Mohammed Qalamuddin Britain and the United States are pressing for United Nations sanctions against 18 former senior Taliban figures to be lifted later this month in the strongest indication yet that the western powers are looking for a negotiated peace with the Taliban. Candidates include the controversial former head of the regime’s religious police, Mohammed Qalamuddin, whose officers were responsible for some of the worst atrocities under the Taliban regime. Officals believe the move would send a clear signal to insurgents that reintegrating into Afghan society is possible if they put down their arms. The sanctions were imposed in 1999, when the Taliban were in power, and were expanded after the 9/11 attacks on America. They ban about 140 individuals from travelling or holding bank accounts. Removing the restrictions has been a key demand of insurgents in Afghanistan and has long been supported by the Afghan government. The removal of men like Qalamuddin is likely to be controversial. Patrols run by the religious police chief beat women and men in the street to enforce the Taliban’s rigorous interpretation of Islam. As a minister, Qalamuddin also issued his own edicts, including a ban on women wearing makeup or high heels. Other candidates include well-known figures who have acted as intermediaries in contacts between the Afghan government and the insurgents in recent years such as Arsala Rahmani, a former Taliban education minister, as well as Qalamuddin, who has kept a low profile since being released from prison in 2005. An Afghan minister also said that lifting the sanctions on such men would facilitate the establishment of a political office for the Taliban in a third country as it would allow key intermediaries, mainly former senior figures in the movement now living in Kabul, to travel. Turkey, Turkmenistan and Qatar have all offered to host such an office, Afghan and western officials in Kabul have told the Guardian. Senior Afghan officials in Kabul also said that contacts with the Taliban leadership could now be described as “systematic” and a “significant advance” on earlier “disorganised” discussions. The talks involve an envoy travelling between Kabul and Pakistan on a regular basis relaying proposals and counterproposals, said the minister, who has direct knowledge of the “peace process” as it is known in the Afghan capital. The meetings come at a time of intensifying effort to find a negotiated solution to the 10-year-old conflict in Afghanistan as western governments prepare to withdraw troops. It was recently disclosed that US officials and a Taliban representative have held three meetings in the last two months, two in Qatar and one in Germany. In another important development, representatives of the Haqqani network, one of the most effective and intractable of the insurgent factions, visited Kabul “very recently”, the officials told the Guardian. The Haqqani network, named after its leader Jalaluddin Haqqani, is widely believed to have a relationship with the ISI, Pakistan’s main military intelligence service. In the last six years only 15 names have been removed from the sanctions list. A key shift has been in Washington where there is now almost unanimous support for the delisting of dozens of individuals. Delisting requires the assent of the five permanent members of the UN security council. Russia has made clear that it currently opposes any such move and may block any mass lifting of sanctions. France supports the move while China appears ambivalent. A request for the delisting of 47 individuals was supposed to be submitted by Kabul to the UN sanctions committee before a key meeting on 16 June. However, the necessary documentation for only 18 individuals was assembled in time by Afghan officials. Further opportunities to remove individuals will come later in the year. Britain and America are also keen to scrap entirely or split the sanctions list to distinguish between al-Qaida and the Taliban. However, the proposed lifting of UN sanctions has not been met with universal approval in Afghanistan. “If there is a deal with the Taliban and people like him [Qalamuddin] come back to power it will all go back to being like before and we will lose all our freedoms,” said Monisa, a 24-year-old female NGO worker in Kabul. Earlier this week Qalamuddin told the Guardian the restrictions weighed on him “as a human being” and that he has “rights like anyone else”. Active Taliban are unlikely to be among those removed from the sanctions list, officials told the Guardian. “Don’t expect to see Mullah Omar [the Taliban overall leader] among them,” one said. Taliban Afghanistan United Nations US foreign policy Foreign policy Jason Burke guardian.co.uk
Continue reading …“Based on how you eat pizza, Donald, I want to see your long-form birth certificate. I don’t think you were really born in New York.” — JON STEWART, concluding an on-air rant in which the late-night comedian lambasts Trump for taking former Alaska Gov. Sarah Palin for New York pizza at Famiglia, an Albanian-owned pizza
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