Arizona state lawmakers are considering a bill that one local columnist says amounts to a de facto attempt at secession. The bill would allow the state to ignore any federal law lawmakers deem unconstitutional, reports KPHO-TV . It would create a committee—comprised of 12 state House and Senate members—to…
Continue reading …What will David Letterman be doing in two years? No one knows, but one thing he apparently won’t be doing: hosting the Late Show . He let that little tidbit slip casually while interviewing Howard Stern last night. The clip in the gallery ends, of course, just before the comment, but…
Continue reading …Guardian reporters have hair-raising encounters with the Egyptian security forces and an angry mob The soldier appeared helpful at first, offering to walk us through to Cairo’s Tahrir Square as we attempted to cover the latest protests on what had been dubbed Mubarak’s “day of departure”. But it was not the square that we were being led to but the ministry of the interior. The next soldier, outside the ministry’s main door was not so friendly. He ordered us to kneel facing a wall with our hands behind our heads, an order that was quickly countermanded by another soldier. The soldiers were disciplined but firm, demanding to know who we were, querying a passport stamp for the Rafah border crossing into Gaza; others for Tunisia and Afghanistan. Soon there were more of us sitting with our backs against a wall: a freelance journalist from New Zealand, another Briton, a Dane and an Italian, and three students. Next came two officers in plain clothes, less friendly than the enlisted troops. “Israeli?” asked one of the plain clothes men. No, British, we replied. Our phones were taken despite our best efforts to hide them. The Dane’s bag was searched, as well as those belonging to the three students, who were French. The man who ordered us to kneel was sat by an armoured personnel carrier. With a flourish he took out five or six sets of handcuffs and racked them on a bar behind a metal shield. My colleague Jack Shenker’s packet of Strepsils attracted sudden suspicion. A soldier took them from my hand, demanding to know what they are. State television has been reporting that foreigners were directing the protests in Tahrir Square; that they have been handing out drugs to those occupying it and that the foreign press was telling lies. That is the background to our detention in a city fast descending into anarchy and mutual suspicion. It was also clear that the army had been given orders to harass us. What happened to this reporter and his colleague is far from unique. In the last few days, in what appears to be a co-ordinated campaign, journalists have been arrested, beaten, threatened, even stabbed. Cameras have been taken and broken, crews set upon, rooms and offices raided. Outside the interior ministry, the mood relaxed somewhat. Some of the young soldiers spoke English. We talked about football and the Hollywood star Russell Crowe. They gave us crisps and cigarettes, allowing us to stand one at a time to stretch. One of the soldiers warned us about the senior man in plain clothes, telling us that he’s “mad” and that we were unlucky to walk into the wrong checkpoint. “I’ll make a deal with you,” Ahmad, the “mad” officer said, after an hour and a half: “I’ll let you go but I’m afraid for you.” He repeated this several times. “You come near the square again things won’t be so good next time. Do you understand? Go far away from here.” A soldier walked us to the edge of their cordon and waved us out. It was then that our problems really began. Hailing a taxi, we were stopped immediately by an armed group. Two men jumped into the car. One took our passports while the other cradled a large machete. Behind us two men jumped up onto the bumper. Within minutes we were taken to another group of soldiers who released us after once again checking our documents. We tried again to head back to the hotel, but in the midst of a contested revolution this was no mean feat. The city reeked of paranoia and violence. Every hundred yards or so someone from the groups along the road – men with knives and scaffold poles – put their body in front of the car to stop us and demanded to see our passports. Another soldier prevented us reaching the hotel and sent us in another direction. We could see the building where we were staying close to Tahrir Square but suddenly we found ourselves among a crowd of Mubarak supporters. There was a tank 100m distant, but we were where the heaviest clashes of the day before took place, beneath a series of overlapping underpasses leading to the 6 October bridge. It remains perhaps the most dangerous spot in the city for foreign journalists. We reversed quickly, in the knowledge that these were the same groups who had been beating up reporters, and found ourselves immediately surrounded by a new crowd. The same barked questions were fired our way. By now we had decided to try an escape the city centre and head to another hotel in Zamalek, on the river’s other side. More men got into our car. They said they were leading us to the hotel but in Arabic we understood them to be saying they would take us to the army once again, this time to the defence ministry. We were questioned once more, this time by soldiers at the state-run TV station, getting more scared and frustrated in the knowledge that we were within a couple of hundred metres of our destination and relative safety. We were not there yet. Between us and the hotel, on the main roads lay pro-Mubarak crowds. An Egyptian journalist, being held along with his luggage, asked for an escort to the hotel. He was visibly as alarmed as we both felt. We asked the senior officer on the scene three times but he shrugged his shoulders and refused us. Instead a group of the neighbouring vigilantes walked us back down tiny, dirty back alleys guarded by young men with swords and knives and clubs, who upon seeing us accompanied by their neighbours smiled and welcomed us. We finally felt secure for the first time in several hours. Egypt Middle East Journalist safety Press freedom Newspapers & magazines Newspapers Peter Beaumont guardian.co.uk
Continue reading …Believe it or not, it turns out being a mega-campaign donor does not necessarily make you an awesome ambassador! A State Department report released yesterday absolutely savages Cynthia Stroum, a wealthy Seattle businesswoman whose prodigious campaign contributions landed her the post of ambassador to Luxembourg. She resigned less than a…
Continue reading …The nature of any regime it backs in the Arab world is secondary to control. Subjects are ignored until they break their chains ‘The Arab world is on fire,” al-Jazeera reported last week, while throughout the region, western allies “are quickly losing their influence”. The shock wave was set in motion by the dramatic uprising in Tunisia that drove out a western-backed dictator, with reverberations especially in Egypt, where demonstrators overwhelmed a dictator’s brutal police. Observers compared it to the toppling of Russian domains in 1989, but there are important differences. Crucially, no Mikhail Gorbachev exists among the great powers that support the Arab dictators. Rather, Washington and its allies keep to the well-established principle that democracy is acceptable only insofar as it conforms to strategic and economic objectives: fine in enemy territory (up to a point), but not in our backyard, please, unless properly tamed. One 1989 comparison has some validity: Romania , where Washington maintained its support for Nicolae Ceausescu, the most vicious of the east European dictators, until the allegiance became untenable. Then Washington hailed his overthrow while the past was
Continue reading …More sad news from Mexico: The parents of 25 children found abandoned in a Mexican border city on Monday were likely kidnapped, according to an official. The eight boys and 17 girls, who reportedly range from a few months in age to 10 years old, were found wandering the streets…
Continue reading …Almost half a billion adults—10% of the adult population worldwide—were obese as of 2008, a new study finds. That’s nearly twice the 1980 rate, reports Scientific American . On average, each decade has seen a body mass index inch up 0.4 to an average of 23.8 in…
Continue reading …Cairo office of Arabic language news channel ransacked as intimidation of journalists continues The Cairo office of al-Jazeera was ransacked by pro-government “thugs” today, as the Arabic language news channel also said its news website had come under attack by hackers. Al-Jazeera said its office had been stormed by a “gang of thugs” who burned equipment, on a day of reports of escalating violence against journalists covering the Egyptian uprising . The Qatar-based broadcaster added that the attacks appeared to be an attempt by “the Egyptian regime or its supporters” to hinder its widely watched coverage of the uprising in Egypt. It said its website had been hacked earlier today with a banner advertisement replaced with a slogan “Together for the collapse of Egypt”, which linked through to a web page with content critical of the network. The banner remained in place for two hours. “Our website has been under relentless attack since the onset of the uprisings in Egypt [and] we are currently investigating what happened today,” said a spokesman for al-Jazeera. “While the deliberate attacks this morning were an attempt to discredit us we will continue our impartial and comprehensive coverage of these unprecedented events.” Last week al-Jazeera’s Cairo office was closed by the Egyptian authorities. The broadcaster’s reporters have also had their press credentials revoked and nine were detained for periods of time. In other recent incidents, Swedish TV reporter Bert Sundstrom was in a serious condition in Cairo hospital after being stabbed in the back, according to Associated Press. Dan Nolan, al-Jazeera’s UAE correspondent, tweeted today that unfortunately the decision had been taken that it was now too dangerous to remain in Cairo . “Sadly I’m catching [a] plane out of Cairo today,” he said. “Threats to us been about too much. Need to spend some time with family and hope to return soon.” CNN’s star reporter Anderson Cooper, who on Wednesday was “roughed up” by thugs on a Cairo street, tweeted today that CNN was now broadcasting from an “undisclosed location” in the city to “stay live as long as we can”. Guardian journalists Peter Beaumont and Jack Shenker were prevented from entering Cairo’s Tahrir Square earlier today by both the Egyptian army and armed vigilantes. Beaumont said the pair were picked up by the army at a checkpoint and made to kneel facing a wall and interrogated. They then had to deal with machete-wielding vigilantes, he added. However, according to Reuters the Egyptian army has been instructed to assist foreign media and help protect them from groups who have attacked and beaten journalists. Britain and the US have criticised what the US called a “concerted campaign” to intimidate foreign reporters. Al-Jazeera Egypt Journalist safety TV news Television industry Newspapers & magazines Newspapers Press freedom Mark Sweney guardian.co.uk
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