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Facebook and Google are among companies circling Twitter and considering a colossal buyout deal, insiders tell the Wall Street Journal . The talks haven’t gone anywhere ye but the price under discussion is somewhere between $8 billion and $10 billion—roughly 100 times the amount of revenue Twitter, which lost money…

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Activision’s former smash hit has gone from hero to zero. The company says Guitar Hero —which earned it more than $1 billion just 2 years ago—is being discontinued. Members of the Guitar Hero team will be among some 500 Activision employees to be laid off, the Los Angeles Times…

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Inside Story – The tool for revolution?

Social media has been dubbed the new tool for revolutionaries. But with many of the protesters on the ground having little or no access to the internet in Egypt, can social media really be credited with sparking the recent uprisings across the Middle East?

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A heartsick Swiss mother has turned to Facebook in a plea to the public to help find her young twin daughters, missing since they were snatched by their suicidal father. Alessia and Livia Schepp, both 6, were last spotted crying on a ferry to Corsica with their dad after he…

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After actively supporting Mubarak’s corrupt and violent rule, the west has a duty to help end it This week has seen the biggest protest in the history of Egypt . Millions have demonstrated in Cairo and other cities all over the country – north, south, east, and west. All had the same demands. The first, as the world knows now, is that the dictator Hosni Mubarak must step down. We managed to lay siege to the parliament, the government, and the notorious ministry of interior, sites that have witnessed the murder and injury of hundreds of Egyptians, and where I was hit by a sniper’s rubber bullet. This was proof that – contrary to the regime’s belief that time is on their side, and that the revolution will grow weaker as protesters tire and lose momentum – the revolution is actually getting stronger by the day. This revolution is not for bread as much as for freedom. It was made principally by the educated, rather than the crushed poorer classes. And it is getting more and more popular as Egyptians balance values such as democracy, freedom, justice, dignity and transparency on one hand, and despotism, oppression, injustice, humiliation and corruption on the other. Understanding this, the regime has gone back to the language of threats. So, the newly appointed vice-president, former intelligence chief Omar Suleiman , now warns that he won’t tolerate this much longer and that Mubarak is not leaving any time soon. Meanwhile, security forces are still kidnapping, interrogating and torturing activists, even taking them from their homes. Some of them are still in unknown locations. They do not understand that we, the activists, no longer control the will of the people. The will of the people has its own impulse and power. But why is this regime clinging to power so hard? Why are they willing to do whatever it takes to stay in control? They still murder protesters in parts of the country where they believe they can get away with it. On Tuesday they shot dead two and injured scores more in the city of Sohag, in the south. On Monday dozens were injured in the Oasis of Elkharga after live bullets were fired at them. The regime is doing this only to protect its loot. The wealth of Mubarak, in British and Swiss banks alone, is estimated at between $40bn and $70bn. And what about his bank accounts in other countries, property and real estate, gold and diamonds? He is not alone, either. All members of his regime, past and present, have huge fortunes in western banks that resulted directly from obscene corruption. Why has the west been silent about this corruption, about the terrible violations of human rights in Egypt and the region, and about the torture and killing? The west, including the UK, has been complicit in all these crimes by providing support and safe havens. It has mistakenly believed that democracy and freedom is dangerous if implemented in the Middle East, fearing that Islamists would take power. The world can see now, in both Tunisia and Egypt, how false this assumption was. It is clear those revolutions encompass all elements of society and seek values aspired to by people around the world – the most important of which is freedom. We were systematically punished for decades for a notion that only resides in the minds of western politicians and the lies of tyrants. We lived in a police state, occupied by a two million-strong militarised police force. Given this, isn’t there now a moral responsibility that the west bears? Britain, and other western powers, must take a moral stand in support of the people of Egypt and their demand for the right to be free. This should not be mere diplomatic words: real tangible support should include measures to ensure power is passed to the people, and to put an end to the regime’s efforts to kill this revolution. This is the least compensation our people deserve for the years of western support for these injustices. The money looted from Egypt should be returned and a democratic government should use it to resolve the huge problems this regime has been creating for decades. Dare we hope that these calls for support won’t be ignored again? Egypt Middle East Protest Hosni Mubarak Ahmed Salah guardian.co.uk

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The Interior Department has decided that walruses are endangered enough to warrant protection—but it’s not going to give it to them. The threat to the Pacific walrus from global warming reducing Arctic sea ice is very real, officials say, but limited government resources mean protection will have to wait…

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A house explosion in the eastern Pennsylvania city of Allentown last night has left at least four buildings on fire, downed power lines, and forced the evacuation of two entire city blocks. At least two people are unaccounted for, AP reports. The cause of the explosion is not yet known….

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Riz Khan – Haiti’s shaky democracy

How will the return of former president Aristide affect the country’s troubled democratic process? How could Haiti’s former leaders affect the presidential run-off vote?

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Former WikiLeaks spokesman Daniel Domscheit-Berg says he and other defectors took control of the site’s submissions system with them when they left the organization last year. The defectors, who also hold some leaked material, believed boss Julian Assange couldn’t be trusted to protect the site’s sources, said Domscheit-Berg, author of…

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International aid’s ‘dirty secret’ | Claire Provost

Images from the protests in Egypt have put the relationship between funding security and development in the spotlight Over the last two weeks, images emerged from Egypt revealing foreign aid as a crucial protagonist in the ongoing protests. Egyptian riot police had been photographed in the streets of Cairo hurling teargas canisters labelled “Made in the USA” , and fighter jets were filmed flying above the protests in a dramatic show of force. The images have propelled the relationship between security and development to the forefront of policy debates. What the development economist William Easterly had called “the dirty secret” of the international aid system – the nonchalance of donors in the face of government repression in recipient countries – is now (nearly) frontpage news. To be sure, US aid in Egypt has gone to fund programmes focused on health, education and trade, but the vast majority of the multibillion-dollar US aid package to Egypt has been spent on military and domestic security initiatives . Whether intentional or not, foreign aid to Mubarak’s regime is widely seen to have strengthened the government’s ability to confront popular movements. While the images from Egypt are extreme, the role of US foreign assistance there fits the trend of aid programmes becoming increasingly involved in “state-building” – training police, raising taxes and helping governments to win and maintain legitimacy. With budgets on the chopping-block in the US and a commitment to rapid deficit reduction in the UK, these images are a thorn in the side of those who argue that stability and security are essential preconditions of development (and thus argue for aid programmes to strengthen a state’s “capacity” to maintain such stability and security). Just last week, Britain’s shadow international development secretary, Harriet Harman, called on supporters of UK aid to remake the argument and relearn how to campaign for international development , arguing against those who say this is not the time to “grow the aid budget”. Development abroad “is in our national self-interest”, said Harman, as “poverty fosters conflict and drives global migration”. Andrew Mitchell, the UK international development secretary, last week unveiled plans to triple aid efforts in Somalia along precisely the same lines. Amid warnings of severe drought and an escalating malnutrition crisis , Mitchell said: “This is not just aid from Britain, it is aid for Britain too. Our aid to Somalia is helping to make Britain safer , because conflict doesn’t just claim innocent lives in Somalia, it also leads to international problems like piracy, migration and terrorism. None of these will be solved without tackling their root causes – ongoing instability and extreme poverty.” The increased focus on “fragile” and “conflict-affected” states – where the UK, for example, is set to increase spending from £1.8bn in 2010 to £3.8bn in 2014-15 – has renewed questions as to what exactly aid should be doing, and about what kind of relationship aid donors should have with recipients. Today, Oxfam releases a report on the “politicisation” of aid in conflict zones, outlining the human cost of blurring security and development policies and projects. On the ground, Oxfam points to the increased risk posed to those who give and receive aid. Meanwhile, the report argues that the subordination of needs-based aid decisions to national security objectives means that “strategic” countries – and “strategic” areas within countries – get disproportionate amounts of aid to the neglect of other equally poor, and equally “conflict-affected”, neighbours. Some would argue that there is nothing new about this, that aid has always been political, and that it would be unreasonable to expect states to ignore their own interests when signing off on budgets and overseas projects. Writing in Foreign Policy last month , Médecins Sans Frontières’ former country representative in Afghanistan, Michiel Hofman, said governments, along with private companies, “have made their choices and can claim neither neutrality nor independence” for themselves or for the aid projects they design and deliver. Hofman instead takes aim at NGOs that claim neutrality on the one hand and implement what he calls “nation-building projects” for government agencies on the other. By working with governments in a conflict zone, NGOs effectively choose sides in the war, says Hofman. But unlike government agencies, he argues that NGOs can and should make the choice to work independently and must reorient themselves so that they focus their assistance solely on needs. Others might reasonably point to forums like the UN, suggesting that the neutrality of aid could be better protected if funds flowed through multilateral organisations rather than through bilateral agreements between states. Though one could argue whether or not the UN could ever represent a truly even playing field, the hope of this argument is that the individual security interests of the wealthy and the powerful would at least be significantly diluted. Whether states would ever agree to send more of their aid through multilateral agencies is another question. Of course, a myriad of other questions remain. Even if NGOs distanced themselves from the security interests of governments, and even if more money flowed through multilateral organisations – diluting the influence of these security interests – what’s to say that aid projects would be any more effective? Could a “de-politicisation” of aid avoid producing casualties of its own? It’s clear that there are few other foreign policy debates as timely and as controversial as the relationship between security and development. Ongoing and intensifying scrutiny of government aid budgets offers an opportunity not (just) to “remake the argument for aid” or to “relearn how to campaign for aid”, but also to rethink what aid should do and reimagine relationships between aid donors and recipients. An opportunity not to be overlooked. Egypt Middle East Aid Claire Provost guardian.co.uk

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