A Confederate flag painting has been removed from a Georgia college’s gallery following a public outcry, Gawker reports. Heritage? , which features the flag decorated with images of a lynching and a Klansman, was displayed at a Gainesville State University campus gallery until the administration called for its removal. University faculty…
Continue reading …Al Jazeera’s Joanna Gasiorowska reports on day two at the Qatar Masters, which sees world number one Lee Westwood fail to make the cut while a little-known Austrian pursues an unlikely dream.
Continue reading …Egyptian president has cash in British and Swiss banks plus UK and US property President Hosni Mubarak’s family fortune could be as much as $70bn (£43.5bn) according to analysis by Middle East experts, with much of his wealth in British and Swiss banks or tied up in real estate in London, New York, Los Angeles and along expensive tracts of the Red Sea coast. After 30 years as president and many more as a senior military official, Mubarak has had access to investment deals that have generated hundreds of millions of pounds in profits. Most of those gains have been taken offshore and deposited in secret bank accounts or invested in upmarket homes and hotels. According to a report last year in the Arabic newspaper Al Khabar, Mubarak has properties in Manhattan and exclusive Beverly Hills addresses on Rodeo Drive. His sons, Gamal and Alaa, are also billionaires. A protest outside Gamal’s ostentatious home at 28 Wilton Place in Belgravia, central London, highlighted the family’s appetite for western trophy assets. Amaney Jamal, a political science professor at Princeton University, said the estimate of $40bn-70bn was comparable with the vast wealth of leaders in other Gulf countries. “The business ventures from his military and government service accumulated to his personal wealth,” she told ABC news. “There was a lot of corruption in this regime and stifling of public resources for personal gain. “This is the pattern of other Middle Eastern dictators so their wealth will not be taken during a transition. These leaders plan on this.” Al Khabar said it understood the Mubaraks kept much of their wealth offshore in the Swiss bank UBS and the Bank of Scotland, part of Lloyds Banking Group, although this information could be at least 10 years old. There are only sketchy details of exactly where the Mubaraks have generated their wealth and its final destination. Christopher Davidson, professor of Middle East politics at Durham University, said Mubarak, his wife, Suzanne, and two sons were able to accumulate wealth through a number of business partnerships with foreign investors and companies, dating back to when he was in the military and in a position to benefit from corporate corruption. He said most Gulf states required foreigners give a local business partner a 51% stake in start-up ventures. In Egypt, the figure is commonly nearer 20%, but still gives politicians and close allies in the military a source of huge profits with no initial outlay and little risk. “Almost every project needs a sponsor and Mubarak was well-placed to take advantage of any deals on offer,” he said. “Much of his money is in Swiss bank accounts and London property. These are the favourites of Middle Eastern leaders and there is no reason to think Mubarak is any different. Gamal’s Wilton Place home is likely to be the tip of the iceberg.” Al Khabar named a series of major western companies that, partnered with the Mubarak family, generated an estimated $15m a year in profits. Aladdin Elaasar, author of The Last Pharaoh: Mubarak and the Uncertain Future of Egypt in the Obama Age, said the Mubaraks own several residences in Egypt, some inherited from previous presidents and the monarchy, and others the president has commissioned. Hotels and land around the Sharm el-Sheikh tourist resort are also a source of Mubarak family wealth. Hosni Mubarak Egypt Middle East Phillip Inman guardian.co.uk
Continue reading …MetroPCS is a cell phone carrier known mostly for its low cost—so when it announced plans to offer 4G coverage, for a cheaper price than most other carriers charge for 3G, and introduced a 4G phone, it “sounded to good to be true” to Farhad Manjoo. “And, boy, was…
Continue reading …When it comes to the budget deficit, Sen. Rand Paul says fellow Republicans “aren’t maybe yet brave enough to talk about the cuts to come.”” The new House GOP budget plan is “really not going to touch the problem,” he told ABC News . While the plan would cut non-security discretionary…
Continue reading …Correspondents from the Guardian, Der Spiegel and El País report from around the region on reaction to protests in Egypt Here’s another set of interviews with reporters from a group of media organisations who have teamed up with the Guardian to provide comprehensive coverage of the seismic events in Egypt and the shockwaves they are sending through the region. Today, we hear from correspondents with El País and Der Spiegel, as well as Guardian journalists. Jordan: Martin Chulov of the Guardian in Amman “There is a mood to give the king and the new government a bit more time … People will watch to see whether the king does have the capacity to push the reforms that he’s promising because if he doesn’t the situation here will turn very quickly. So far, so calm. The atmosphere doesn’t seem to be nearly as ripe as it was in Tunis or in Egypt but people do share similar frustrations. For now they are quietly confident that they can achieve what they want without taking to the street and forcing revolution.” Egypt: Enric González of El País in Cairo “Things are much quieter than yesterday when we were sometimes running for our lives and the situation was chaotic in the square … The majority of regular people who are not going to the square are watching TV very anxiously. They cannot buy tomatoes or eggs and they can’t go to work and they are waiting for something to happen. They want some normality. The Tiananmen [square] option is still open, although it’s very unlikely. Inside the regime, they are probably trying to cook up a solution that allows some normality for a country that cannot wait much longer.” Egypt: Volkhard Windfuhr of Der Spiegel in Cairo “There is a general sigh of relief [from protesters that protests today have been non-violent]. People feel that the so-far silent unarmed majority has now become the victors. They really gave a heavy blow — maybe a fatal blow — to an oppressive regime. That’s the feeling, although there are still obstacles to overcome … The army knows it will no longer be the only backbone of Egypt once the political reforms are put into effect — not in the way they have been — but I do think the vast majority of Egyptians are certain that the army will not play a negative role in the days to come.” Yemen: Tom Finn of the Guardian in Sana’a “People here are very aware of what’s happening in Egypt and are following the news very closely. But while people watch it, they don’t really seem to draw parallels with Yemen. The people I have spoken to don’t see any similarities between Mubarak and Saleh. I think there’s a lot more support for Saleh in Yemen than there is for Mubarak in Egypt.” Egypt Middle East Sam Jones guardian.co.uk
Continue reading …It’s another example in the growing field of what New Scientist dubs “armchair archeology”: An Australian scientist has used Google Earth to identify nearly 2,000 sites of interest in otherwise hard-to-reach Saudi Arabia. More than half appear to be ancient tombs made of stone, though only an on-the-ground investigation…
Continue reading …Jonathan Freedland has Riazat Butt and Jon Henley in the studio for another instalment of the Week in review . The panel begin by discussing the 10 days of violence in Egypt that’s left the country on the brink. How will the revolution taking place before our very eyes affect the region – and a watching world? Middle East editor Ian Black shares his thoughts. Also in the podcast, we talk lies, damn lies, and botched statistics. David Schneider gives his take on the much-vaunted police crime map, which crashed shortly after its launch. Plus, with hundreds of millions spent in the final days of English football’s transfer window – we wonder whether the pampered millionaires of the Premier League will remain forever insulated from the economic chill. Finally, the Guardian’s resident HBO expert Steve Busfield gives us the skinny on Boardwalk Empire as we try to tackle the question tormenting Guardianistas everywhere: It could be the greatest TV channel of all time, but is it worth selling your liberal soul to Rupert Murdoch to get Sky Atlantic? Jonathan Freedland Ben Green Riazat Butt Jon Henley Steve Busfield Ian Black
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