Returning to Grand Slam tennis after a year away with health problems , Serena Williams opened her Wimbledon title defense today by beating Aravane Rezai in three sets—then burst into tears on Centre Court. After serving her 13th ace to close a 6-3, 3-6, 6-1 victory, Williams buried her face…
Continue reading …Roger Ebert shifted away from Twitter and took to a place where he could address the “Jackass” situation in more than 140 characters: his Chicago Sun-Times blog. There, the movie critic wrote, “I regret that my tweet about the event was considered cruel. It was not intended as cruel. It…
Continue reading …Big news for Gabby Giffords and husband Mark Kelly: He is retiring from NASA, and the two will write a memoir together about their careers, courtship, and the Arizona shooting, reports USA Today . “After thinking about it, and talking about it, we decided it was the right thing to do…
Continue reading …Iranian president under increasing pressure from MPs after supporting foreign minister’s controversial appointment of deputy Ministers in Iran moved a step closer towards impeaching the president, Mahmoud Ahmadinejad, after a series of clashes with supporters of the supreme leader, Ayatollah Ali Khamenei. Impeachment proceedings were launched against foreign minister Ali Akbar Salehi for appointing a man close to Ahmadinejad’s chief-of-staff, Esfandiar Rahim Mashaei, as his deputy. MPs warned that impeachment proceedings against Ahmadinejad would begin soon. The power struggle between Ahmadinejad and the establishment emerged after the controversies surrounding Mashaei became public. Khamenei’s supporters, who include the overwhelming majority of the parliament, say Mashaei has too much influence over Ahmadinejad. They accuse him of attempting to undermine clerical power and increasing his own power base. Deputy foreign minister Mohammad Sharif Malekzadeh was appointed last week but resigned on Tuesday. However, despite the resignation Iranian MPs went ahead with the impeachment motion.The parliament also rejected Ahmadinejad’s nominee for the new post of minister of sport and youth. Ali Motahari, an influential MP, told news website Khabaronline that the motion to impeach Ahmadinejad would be delivered within 10 days. “In a meeting with the parliamentary clerics, we decided to launch the motion [to impeach the president] in 10 days and avoid any delays.” Iran Middle East Mahmoud Ahmadinejad Ayatollah Ali Khamenei Saeed Kamali Dehghan guardian.co.uk
Continue reading …Two unrelated bits of news today on colon cancer: Stand up: In another sitting-is-bad-for-you study, Australian scientists say people who worked 10 years or more in sedentary jobs had twice the risk of colon cancer as those who never had a sit-all-day job, along with a 44% increased risk of…
Continue reading …Kenneth Clarke’s prison plans dashed by PM’s call for tougher sentencing for violent and sexual offences and knife crime David Cameron has announced plans to impose a surprise tough “two strikes and you’re out” mandatory life sentence in a move that looks set to dash justice secretary Kenneth Clarke’s hopes of stabilising the record 85,000 prison population in England and Wales. Cameron announced hardline plans for serious violent and sex offenders to spend longer in jail and an automatic six-month jail term for “aggravated knife possession”. Prison reformers warned that the plans risked fuelling a fresh rise in what are already record jail numbers. Whitehall sources conceded that Cameron’s fresh “tough on crime” rhetoric was now likely to derail the justice secretary’s liberal “rehabilitation revolution”, as well as force Clarke to look elsewhere for £130m further savings in his department. The publication of Clarke’s legal aid, sentencing and punishment of offenders bill showed that the justice secretary had been forced by Downing Street to ditch more than 60% of his original proposals. These included the wholesale abandonment of his original plan for a maximum 50% discount for early guilty pleas – described by the prime minister as “too lenient” – which would have provided 3,400 of the estimated 6,450 prison places to be saved. Cameron said this proposal would have “sent the wrong message” if it had gone ahead, adding that restoring public confidence in the criminal justice system was the public’s only test. At a rare No 10 press conference, he fended off suggestions that his government was looking weak due to repeated policy U-turns. He argued that a willingness to listen and change policy was a sign of strength, an assertion backed by Downing Street’s own polling. Cameron went out of his way to praise Clarke’s stewardship of the Ministry of Justice and Clarke brushed aside questions about his future, saying: “I have been on probation for the last few decades, and I am just about getting the hang of it.” The justice secretary has also quietly dropped his original plan to restore the discretion of judges on sentencing by scrapping David Blunkett’s 2003 minimum mandatory sentences of 15 years, 30 years and “whole life” for the most serious murders. A Ministry of Justice (MoJ) impact assessment estimates the redrawn sentencing package will save just 2,650 prison places each year – or £80m – compared with the original 6,450 and £210m saving. MoJ officials said that proposals in the bill would have a “broadly neutral” impact on the prison population by 2014/15 as it is already projected to rise by a further 3,000 by then. But that fails to take account of the tougher punishments unveiled by Cameron, most of which are not contained in the new bill. The MoJ said that it had no estimate as yet for the tougher extra measures to be added to the bill this autumn but penal reformers said they were bound to boost prison numbers. They include the resurrection of Michael Howard’s 1996 “two strikes and you’re out” mandatory life sentence for the most serious repeat offenders, and a proposal to delay the earliest release date for 6,500 serious sexual and violent offenders from halfway until two-thirds of the way through their sentence. The government has also postponed its immediate plans to revise the release test for 6,000 prisoners on the indeterminate sentence for public protection (IPP). Instead an “urgent review” will now be undertaken to replace the current IPP regime with “a much tougher determinate sentencing framework with a greater number of life sentences”. This will report in the autumn and include the new mandatory life sentence for repeat serious offenders. The plan to introduce a mandatory six-month sentence for threatening someone with a knife is already in the legislation. The impact assessment says the move will need 100 extra prison places, at a cost of £5m a year. The prime minister failed to honour a deal that Clarke has struck with the Treasury that it would make up most of the difference if savings were not realised as result of a change of government policy. Instead the justice secretary will have to find the “missing” £130m from his own budget over the next four years. He denied that the probation service budget, which has been protected so far from 23% cuts, would be a particular target, but said it was not yet making the same level of savings as was being required of the police. Frances Crook, director of the Howard League for Penal Reform, described the new mandatory sentences on knives and repeat offenders as “worrying” saying they would compromise judicial discretion. “Given around 5,000 people are convicted of carrying knives each quarter, what constitutes using a knife to threaten will have to be very tightly defined to avoid prison numbers spiralling out of control,” she said. The shadow justice secretary, Sadiq Khan, said the government’s policies on law and order were “in complete shambles”. But the former Tory home secretary Lord Howard said the government had taken a “perfectly sensible” approach. Prisons and probation UK criminal justice Sentencing David Cameron Kenneth Clarke Conservatives Alan Travis Patrick Wintour guardian.co.uk
Continue reading …Less than 24 hours after two men were left with gunshot wounds following sectarian violence, fresh conflict breaks out Fresh skirmishes have erupted in east Belfast less than 24 hours after two men were left with gunshot wounds following sectarian violence that police believe was orchestrated by loyalist paramilitaries. Police brought in water cannon and used baton rounds after missiles hit their lines and bricks and bottles were thrown between nationalists and unionists. Several hundred people gathered near interfaces close to the Newtownards Road, and masked youths pelted each other with stones and fireworks. Police say 11 shots were fired during the riot on Monday, six by nationalists and five by loyalists. Two shots fired at police vehicles were being treated as attempted murder. Petrol and smoke bombs, fireworks, bricks and stones were thrown by an estimated 500 men in masks and crash helmets as violence broke out at about 9pm on Monday in the Lower Newtownards Road and Short Strand area of the city, a mainly nationalist area. For four hours, missiles were hurled at homes on both sides of the sectarian divide along the main routes into Belfast’s city centre. The shooting happened just before 1am. Two Protestant men, both shot in a leg, were taken to hospital. One officer suffered a serious eye injury when rioters targeted police with lasers . The Police Service of Northern Ireland (PSNI) confirmed that officers had fired a number of stun grenade rounds and said the service was investigating a report of an attempted hijacking of a bus. Police said the violence had been planned by members of the Ulster Volunteer Force (UVF). Assistant Chief Constable Alistair Finlay said: “There certainly were people masked up and there were certainly people wearing surgical gloves … There was some planning around this event, it just didn’t spirit itself out of the ether.” One nationalist resident who asked not to be named said he had seen a gang gathering at about 3pm. “I saw all these men, not young lads, massing outside a local loyalist drinking den, all wearing crash helmets. I thought they were going on an outing, just messing around. But it was the same gang who came down later on … It’s the worst I’ve seen in years and years.” Belfast’s mayor, Niall Ó Donnghaile, a councillor based in the Short Strand area, said a number of Catholic residents had been injured, including one man who was knocked unconscious when he was hit with a brick. “There is no doubt that this was unprovoked and was a carefully orchestrated and planned attack on the area,” he said. “Homes have been attacked with petrol bombs and paint bombs, bricks, golf balls. I saw what happened.” A member of Northern Ireland’s legislative assembly, Sinn Féin’s Alex Maskey, said: “The UVF launched an attack on the Catholic community in this area. I
Continue reading …Greek PM wins parliamentary vote by 155-143 and must now attempt to force through hugely unpopular austerity measures Greece’s embattled prime minister has survived the first of a trio of tests that could sink the Greek economy and lay waste to Europe’s single currency, winning a parliamentary vote of confidence in his reshuffled government. George Papandreou must now try to drive through a package of savage spending cuts and national assets sales in order to secure a new EU bailout. With the complex effort to stave off a Greek sovereign default moving towards a climax and anti-government and anti-EU protesters laying siege to central Athens, Papandreou won the vote by 155-143 in the 300-seat chamber. Brussels and other EU capitals anxiously watched the drama in Athens prior to a crucial summit of EU leaders. “Good news for Greece and for the EU as a whole,” said Jose Manuel Barroso, the president of the European commission. Papandreou’s victory removed “an element of uncertainty from an already very difficult situation. His government can now focus all efforts on building support in parliament for the ambitious series of fiscal measures and privatisations.” The vote kicked off a crucial three weeks that could make or break the euro. Leaders in Brussels spoke of the worst crisis in Europe since the second world war, the International Monetary Fund (IMF) set ultimatums before the 17 countries of the single currency, and international ratings agencies classified the bailout terms for Greece as a likely default. In order to secure an immediate €12bn lifeline and then EU agreement on a second bailout running to more than €100bn over three years, Papandreou now has to persuade parliament to back a radical programme of spending cuts, tax increases, and a mass assets sell-off by the end of next week. The roll-call ballot took place in an electric atmosphere with Greeks from all walks of life converging on Syntagma Square. Angrily punching the air as politicians debated the country’s parlous economic plight, protesters shouted: “We give a vote of no confidence.” Riot police looked on and, as tensions rose, many protesters lobbed bottles of water at the parliament. “In this country we take our democracy seriously,” said Ioanna Deloudi, one of thousands of demonstrators. “And we will protest until we are blue in the face because we are not to blame for the debt that has piled up. “Asking the little man on the street, the low-income salary earner, to endure endless austerity to solve this crisis, when not that long ago we didn’t even know the problem existed because no politician ever talked about it, is totally unfair.” Some of the protesters had walked from as far as Sparta, the historic town in the southern Peloponnese, to make their voices heard. “This is about our dignity as a nation,” said Kalli Kyriakopoulou. “Every week you hear of another cut when there is no guarantee that any of them will get Greece out of this debt hole. Now they want to privatise everything, sell off our nation’s wealth, our monuments, our islands, our land, to solve the problem. What country would agree to that?” If Greece fails to agree the austerity measures, the IMF will pull the plug on the latest €12bn tranche of its current €110bn bailout. Greece would be insolvent, with immense implications for European banks and the fate of the single currency. Before the victory for the government, however, the expectation that Papandreou would prevail lifted stock markets all over the world. The FTSE 100 in London closed 81.92 points higher at 5775.31 and the FTSEurofirst 300 index of leading shares rose 1.5%, its biggest increase for two months. The Dow Jones industrial average was up more than 100 points at lunchtime in New York. At the summit in Brussels, EU governments will now be under intense pressure to seal the new three-year Greek bailout worth as much as the current rescue fund. The expectation was that leaders would agree to guarantee the new bailout, leaving the details to be hammered out by 3 July. “We’re at a critical point in the most serious crisis since the second world war,” warned Olli Rehn, the European commissioner for monetary affairs. A group of 15 leading public figures, including six former EU prime ministers, delivered a message of doom and gloom to European leaders, warning that the EU faced a future on the international sidelines. “Europe isn’t in a good place these days,” said the group, all allied with the Brussels Friends of Europe thinktank. “The drive towards closer integration is losing momentum and appears in great danger of slipping backwards … European leaders risk the EU becoming a marginal player in a globalised world whose rapid change is clearly not to Europe’s advantage.” Chancellor Angela Merkel of Germany, a central figure in the crisis, voiced confidence that Europe would rise to the challenge, while reiterating German demands that Greece’s private creditors should volunteer to roll over the debt as part of the rescue. “We believe some burdens can be put not only on taxpayers but that banks must also participate,” Merkel said. “These three components – Greece’s tasks, EU solidarity and the voluntary participation of banks – are the solution.” Fitch, one of the three big international ratings agencies warned that it would view a voluntary rollover of Greek debt as a default. “Fitch would regard such a debt exchange or voluntary debt rollover as a default event and would lead to the assignment of a default rating to Greece,” said Andrew Colquhoun, head of Asia-Pacific sovereign ratings with Fitch.The jury still seems to be out on this, however, with detailed arguments raging across the EU over how, when, and whether Greece would be deemed to be in default. The process of persuading the banks, insurance companies and pension funds holding Greek debt to remain exposed after redeeming their loans is also an exacting task which could take weeks without any certainty of success. The markets and the European business elite believe that in the end Greece will need to restructure its unmanageable debt with major writedowns for its creditors. A poll of German executives yesterday showed almost 9 out of 10 believed Greece would not be able to avoid a debt restructuring. Greece Europe European debt crisis European banks IMF Economics Global economy Euro European Union Ian Traynor Helena Smith guardian.co.uk
Continue reading …Well, this probably won’t help their already fragile relationship : Ryan O’Neal thinks family drama, much of which revolved around his kids, may have caused partner Farrah Fawcett’s fatal cancer. “What bothers me the most is that there was turmoil during my love affair with Farrah. A lot of it caused…
Continue reading …Scott Walker loves talking about his “powerful” job-creating policies. “The very first day I was elected, I put up a sign that said, ‘Wisconsin is open for business,’” Walker said at a US Chamber of Commerce summit yesterday, waving a bumper sticker bearing the same message. There’s just one…
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