Home » Archives by category » News » Politics (Page 991)
Sex, Bias, and Weinergate

For several days, NewsBusters readers have been asking why we haven't commented on the growing controversy surrounding Congressman Anthony Weiner (D-N.Y.) and an indecent picture sent from his Twitter account to a 21-year-old girl in Seattle, Washington. As there seem to have been far more questions concerning this sensitive matter than answers, we have been observing the press reaction trying to assess how a media that is typically protective of Democrats handled the scandal. Our conclusion at this time? All things considered, the coverage has been surprisingly good. The story first broke Saturday at various conservative blogs including Andrew Breitbart's Big Government as well as Gawker. The only mainstream coverage that day came in a short piece at Politico. By Sunday, the Associated Press and UPI jumped on the story with the former publishing seven articles and the latter two. The only newspaper to cover the issue was the New York Post. Still nothing on national television although not everything gets transcribed on weekends. Things really picked up Monday with coverage by New York's Daily News, the New York Times, the New York Post, the Washington Post, and the Washington Times. CNN did reports on the 5PM and 6PM installments of “The Situation Room” as well as “John King, USA.” As the long holiday weekend ended, and folks got back to work Tuesday, the reporting on this scandal rose even further. AP did 25 stories on its various state, local, and national wires. The New York papers continued with their coverage, and there were articles at the Chicago Tribune and the Orlando Sentinel. For its part, CNN through 4PM had filed reports during ten different hourly segments Tuesday. As Fox News and MSNBC only transcribe their prime time programming, it's unknown what their respective coverage has been. Add it up, and there's been in excess of 90 reports on a story with more questions than answers. To be sure, many of these seemed to give Weiner the benefit of the doubt while ignoring key elements that further implicate him. However, in this kind of a situation, the best way for media to protect a politician they like is by reporting nothing at all. It took the press nine months to pay attention to the John Edwards sex scandal after it was first revealed by the National Enquirer. By that time, the junior senator from Illinois had already been nominated by his Party. Newsweek's Michael Isikoff had the Monica Lewinsky affair ready for publishing only to have folks at the top of the magazine decide not to. Maybe we never would have heard about what was going on in the Oval Office if someone at Newsweek hadn't leaked it to Matt Drudge. But this kind of censorship surprisingly isn't just employed for Democrats. Although the media's coverage of Congressman Mark Foley's (R-Fla.) sex scandal in 2006 was absolutely deplorable, what many forget is that it took ten months for his electronic messages to male pages to come to light after the first news outlets were made aware of them. The St. Petersburg Times, the Miami Herald and Fox News all had copies of some of these messages in November 2005 and decided not to run the story. Harper's magazine got possession of them in May 2006 but also chose not to publish anything. ABC's Brian Ross, the national media representative that finally broke the story in September 2006, sat on these communications for over a month because he was working on something else. As such, despite numerous outlets having these email messages, it took ten months before the first report on this sex scandal. By contrast, we're only four days into this one – assuming there even is a scandal – and there's already been at least 90 reports on the subject. Does that mean they've all been good? Hardly. We've certainly witnessed sides being taken. But we've also seen Weiner get grilled by press representatives in the following report aired by CNN Tuesday: Seem like softballs to you? I particularly liked the question, “Could you tell us why you were following a 21-year-old college student [on Twitter]?” As Weiner only follows 198 people on this social networking site, and this was the girl the indecent picture was allegedly sent to, this seems particularly valid. I'd also like someone to ask Weiner why he was also following a high school girl with a thing for married men as well as a porn star. Such was reported by Verum Serum whose work on this scandal has been exhaustive.

Continue reading …
Iranian activist dies in scuffle at her father’s funeral

Haleh Sahabi, daughter of veteran dissident Ezatollah Sahabi, reportedly clashed with security forces The daughter of a prominent veteran Iranian dissident has died after reportedly scuffling with security forces at his funeral. Haleh Sahabi, 54, also an opposition activist and women’s rights campaigner, had been allowed out of prison to attend the funeral of her father, Ezatollah Sahabi, on Wednesday. She fell to the ground in the scuffle and died of a cardiac arrest, according to the opposition website Kaleme. The semi-official Fars news agency confirmed Sahabi’s death but denied there had been a clash with police and accused the opposition movement of seeking to politicise the incident. “Fars reporters present at the funeral service said there was no clash between the mourners and security forces,” it said. Alireza Janeh, head of security matters at the Tehran governor’s office, said there were no clashes and that Sahabi had died of heart problems exacerbated by stress and hot weather at his funeral. Sahabi’s death is likely to anger women’s rights campaigners and supporters of Iran’s opposition movement whose massive street protests after the re-election of President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad in 2009 were crushed by the government and whose leaders have been put under house arrest. Sahabi was arrested during the post-election crackdown and was given a two-year jail sentence. “Security forces tried to interfere in the carrying of the body, she objected and security forces confronted her and other people present,” Kaleme said, adding that Sahabi was pushed to the ground. Another opposition site, Sahamnews, said security forces punched her in the stomach. Kaleme said she was holding a picture of her father to her chest and fell when security forces tried to take it from her. “She fell and did not get up,” it said. Prominent opposition figures and former moderate officials attended the ceremony in the north-eastern Tehran suburb of Lavasan for Ezatollah Sahabi, who was jailed both before and after the 1979 Islamic revolution and spent a total of 15 years in prison. Iran Middle East guardian.co.uk

Continue reading …
Olympics: Man gets £11,000 of tickets after bidding for £36,000

Insolvency practitioner Stephen Hunt said first payment was rejected but he was given second chance days later Hundreds of thousands of people may have missed out on their chance to experience the Olympics first hand, but one man has won £11,000 worth of tickets after bidding on a total of £36,000 worth. Stephen Hunt, an insolvency practitioner, said he had surpassed his credit limit and did not have the available funds to pay for the tickets. “My assumption was, based on the rules, that I would get nothing,” he told the Today programme. He received an email telling him the payment of £11,000 had been rejected but he would be given a “second chance” if he could have funds available in a couple of days. Otherwise he would lose all of the tickets. “I had this horrible choice on Monday, either I had none or I [spent] £11,000,” he said. The amount was about double the figure he wanted to spend but after talking to his wife they decided to increase their credit limit. According to Olympic ticketing rules ticketholders can sell tickets to family and friends but have to be present as the lead booker. Hunt suggested that as an insolvency practitioner it was likely to be the first time in his career that he was popular. “I’d rather scrimp and save for a bit extra rather than be disappointed and I’ve seen so many people who have bid a relatively normal amount of money and not been successful.” Speaking to the programme after bidding £36,000, he told presenter John Humphrys that he thought he chances of getting even one ticket were small. “Really?” asked Humphys. “I think so, I hope so,” replied Hunt. Organisers have confirmed that unlike Hunt, at least 250,000 people have been left without tickets and will have to scramble on a first-come, first-served basis for seats at less popular events such as handball and basketball in a “second chance” sale. People are still in the dark about which tickets they have bought and will only hear which events they have qualified for by 24 June. Those left ticketless will be contacted by email and offered an “exclusive window” later this month to buy tickets for events where demand was relatively low. The demand for Olympics tickets was overwhelming, with 20m applications from 1.8 million people for the 6.6m tickets available to the public via the controversial ballot. More than 1m bids alone poured in for tickets to the opening ceremony and the men’s 100m final. A typical applicant received fewer than a third of the tickets requested – they have now had the money debited from their accounts. The remaining tickets will mostly be for ball games in big stadiums, such as football, volleyball, handball, basketball and hockey. Sessions in smaller arenas, such as the popular 6,000-seat velodrome, have almost sold out. It is expected that some people who were successful in the ballot will have had their payments rejected over the past week. More than 100 applicants had their purchases declined after a mistake by Barclaycard in which the transactions were flagged as suspicious. There will be frustration and anger from some who failed to get tickets after it emerged that at some events 50% of the tickets will go to sponsors and officials. Organisers say in total only 8% of the 8.8m tickets have been set aside for sponsors. Officials refuse to say how many of the tickets for the opening ceremony have been reserved for VIPs. “All we are able to say at this stage is that there are as many tickets at £20.12 as there are at £2,012,” said a spokeswoman. Two million tickets to the Paralympics will go on sale from 9 to 30 September. Only after that process has been completed will any unsold tickets to the Olympics go on general sale to the public, probably in early December. Olympic Games 2012 Alexandra Topping Patrick Collinson Fiona Walsh guardian.co.uk

Continue reading …
Ratko Mladic to be arraigned on genocide charges at UN tribunal

Former commander faces charges of crimes against humanity, including massacre of 7,000 Muslims at Srebrenica The former Bosnian Serb general Ratko Mladic will be arraigned on 11 charges including genocide and crimes against humanity on Friday morning, judges at the international criminal tribunal for the former Yugoslavia have announced. The former commander of the Bosnian Serb army faces accusations that forces under his command massacred over 7,000 Bosnian Muslim men and boys in Srebrenica in July 1995. The indictment also alleges his troops tortured, mistreated and physically, psychologically and sexually abused civilians confined in 58 detention facilities in 22 municipalities. Mladic is also facing charges for the shelling and sniping of Sarajevo, during which thousands of civilians were killed and wounded. The announcement of his arraignment came after Mladic spent his first night in the United Nations detention unit in a seaside suburb of the Dutch capital. He was flown from Serbia on Tuesday afternoon and was taken under police escort into a isolation cell at dusk where he underwent a medical examination. Mladic, 69, will be asked to enter pleas on all charges relating to his alleged masterminding of atrocities throughout the 1992 – 1995 Bosnian war. The tribunal has appointed Judge Bakone Justice Moloto of South Africa, Judge Christoph Flügge from Germany and Judge Alphons Orie from the Netherlands to preside over the trial. If Mladic complies with the schedule, his arraignment on Friday could bring him into the same court building as his superior during the Bosnian war, Radovan Karadzic. The former Bosnian Serb president is currently on trial for similar charges. On Wednesday, Karadzic was in court dressed in a smart black suit and crisp white shirt and followed his case closely on two computer monitors. He looked relaxed, yawned and itched his nose. His trial has already been under way for 18 months and observers at the court point out they are not even halfway through the evidence. Before he left Serbia, Mladic’s lawyer, Milos Saljic, insisted he was not well enough physically or mentally to stand trial. He tried to slow the proceedings by sending his appeal by post at the last possible moment on Monday, but Serbia’s war crimes court rejected it almost as soon as it arrived on Tuesday. Ratko Mladic War crimes United Nations International criminal court Serbia Bosnia and Herzegovina Robert Booth guardian.co.uk

Continue reading …
Steve Martin victim of German art forgery gang

Actor bought fake Heinrich Campendonk painting in biggest art forgery scandal in Germany’s history The actor Steve Martin has found himself caught up in the biggest art forgery scandal in German history after it emerged he bought a painting “by” German-Dutch modernist Heinrich Campendonk, which turned out to be a fake. Martin purchased the piece, Landscape With Horses, in 2004 from a Parisian gallery. He has since resold it and told the New York Times earlier this week that he is not yet certain if he is liable to compensate the buyer. “The gallery that sold me the picture has promised to be responsible to me, if I’m responsible, but it’s still unclear,” Martin, who is not accused of any wrongdoing, told the Arts Beat art blog. “It wasn’t clear that it was a fake until after Christie’s had sold the picture – it was a long time after that, that it became known.” The actor, a long-term art aficionado who has referenced his passion in films such as LA Story, added that the forgers “were quite clever in that they gave it a long provenance and they faked labels, and it came out of a collection that mingled legitimate pictures with faked pictures”. Martin’s purchase – he paid $850,000 and sold the painting for a loss at $500,000 to a Swiss businesswoman in 2006 – is just one of many believed to have been faked by a German forgery gang arrested by police last year. Alleged mastermind Wolfgang Beltracchi, his wife Helene, her sister Jeanette and accomplice Otto Schulte-Kellinghaus are accused of selling 44 of the paintings over the past decade. They include fakes of early 20th-century works by Campendonk, Max Pechstein, Max Ernst and several others. The paintings are said to have been excellent forgeries, fooling a number of experts in the art field. The forgery gang invented backstories for most of them, suggesting they were part of two collections saved during the Nazi years: one from Helene and Jeanette’s grandfather, Werner Jagers, the other from Schulte-Kellinghaus’s grandfather, a tailor named Knops. Several of the paintings ended up in French galleries, including Cazeau-Béraudière, where Martin made his purchase. An expert had supposedly confirmed the piece’s authenticity prior to the actor handing over his money. Steve Martin Germany Art Painting Ben Child guardian.co.uk

Continue reading …
May Been there competition: urban – in pictures

Here are the shots that best capture May’s urban theme. Click through our gallery to see which photograph judge Natalie Mayer picked to win a £200 Point101 voucher, and a chance of winning the grand prize of a photographic safari to South Africa with &Beyond

Continue reading …
May Been there competition: urban – in pictures

Here are the shots that best capture May’s urban theme. Click through our gallery to see which photograph judge Natalie Mayer picked to win a £200 Point101 voucher, and a chance of winning the grand prize of a photographic safari to South Africa with &Beyond

Continue reading …
May Been there competition: urban – in pictures

Here are the shots that best capture May’s urban theme. Click through our gallery to see which photograph judge Natalie Mayer picked to win a £200 Point101 voucher, and a chance of winning the grand prize of a photographic safari to South Africa with &Beyond

Continue reading …
May Been there competition: urban – in pictures

Here are the shots that best capture May’s urban theme. Click through our gallery to see which photograph judge Natalie Mayer picked to win a £200 Point101 voucher, and a chance of winning the grand prize of a photographic safari to South Africa with &Beyond

Continue reading …
May Been there competition: urban – in pictures

Here are the shots that best capture May’s urban theme. Click through our gallery to see which photograph judge Natalie Mayer picked to win a £200 Point101 voucher, and a chance of winning the grand prize of a photographic safari to South Africa with &Beyond

Continue reading …