In case you missed it, Snooki launched her own news show this week (watch the entire awe-inspiring three minutes here ), and she already has one very high-profile fan: Anderson Cooper. The CNN host called out “every news station in the world” last night on the Ridiculist for missing out…
Continue reading …Report backs Israel’s right to defend itself but says assault on pro-Palestinian flotilla was ‘excessive and unreasonable’ A United Nations investigation has backed Israel’s naval blockade of Gaza as legal but said its military assault on a flotilla of pro-Palestinian activists last year, in which nine Turks were killed, was “excessive and unreasonable”. The report notes that Israel has not satisfactorily explained how it is that most of the dead were shot multiple times, including in the back, and at close range. But it also said the organisers of the flotilla acted “recklessly” in attempting to breach the blockade. The report is expected to be released on Friday after months of delay because of a dispute between Israel and Turkey over its contents and Ankara’s demand for an apology from Israel for the deaths of its citizens. Turkey’s foreign minister, Ahmet Davutoglu, gave Israel one day to make the apology or face a further deterioration in relations with what had been the Jewish state’s closest ally in the region. Turkey has already withdrawn its ambassador from Tel Aviv. The Israeli government has repeatedly refused to make a full apology, although it has offered to express regret, saying it had a legal right to defend itself by maintaining the blockade of Gaza to prevent weapons reaching the Palestinian enclave. The 105-page report by a four person committee chaired by Sir Geoffrey Palmer, a former prime minister of New Zealand, backs Israel on that point and said it had the right to board six ships carrying protesters and humanitarian supplies. “Israel faces a real threat to its security from militant groups in Gaza. The naval blockade was imposed as a legitimate security measure in order to prevent weapons from entering Gaza by sea and its implementation complied with the requirements of international law,” the UN concluded. The report’s authors – who also include Alvaro Uribe, a former president of Colombia, and representatives Israel and Turkey – went on to criticise the flotilla’s organisers, a Turkish aid group. “Although people are entitled to express their political views, the flotilla acted recklessly in attempting to breach the naval blockade. The majority of the flotilla participants had no violent intentions, but there exist serious questions about the conduct, true nature and objectives of the flotilla organisers,” it said. The UN panel accepts Israel’s assertion that its forces faced armed resistance when they boarded one of the ships, the Turkish-registered Mavi Marmara. “Israeli Defence Forces personnel faced significant, organised and violent resistance from a group of passengers when they boarded the Mavi Marmara requiring them to use force for their own protection. Three soldiers were captured, mistreated, and placed at risk by those passengers. Several others were wounded,” it said. But the report said the Israeli force’s response was excessively violent in killing nine of the passengers and wounding many more. “No satisfactory explanation has been provided to the panel by Israel for any of the nine deaths. Forensic evidence showing that most of the deceased were shot multiple times, including in the back, or at close range has not been adequately accounted for in the material presented by Israel,” it said. The report goes on to criticise Israel for the “significant mistreatment of passengers” after they were taken off the ships including physical abuse, harassment, intimidation and unjustified confiscation of property. Israel will be pleased that the report backs the legality of its naval blockade – a move that Turkey is deeply unhappy with. But Israel will be embarrassed by the suggestion that its forces appear to have summarily executed some of the pro-Palestinian activists. The report recommends that Israel make “an appropriate statement of regret” and pay compensation to Turkey. Ankara wants more, including a full apology, before it returns its ambassador to its embassy in Tel Aviv. It also wants the blockade lifted or eased. Earlier this week, the Israeli prime minister, Binyamin Netanyahu, proposed that the Palmer report’s release be postponed once again while the diplomatic confrontation with Turkey is resolved. But Ankara rejected the move. Davutoglu told the Turkish newspaper, Today Zaman, that his government is not prepared to wait any longer. “For us the deadline is the day the UN report gets released, or we resort to Plan B,” Davutoglu said, but did not elaborate on what the alternate Turkish route would be. Davutoglu did not say what “Plan B” may be. However, the foreign minister recently told a news conference: “If the Palmer Report does not contain an apology, both sides and the United States know what we will do”. The report says that “the events of 31 May 2010 should never have taken place as they did and strenuous efforts should be made to prevent the occurrence of such incidents in the future”. That appears to be what happened when Greece prevented a second flotilla of eight ships from leaving its ports for Gaza in July. After several of the ships were put out of action by sabotage, including having propeller shafts cut, the remaining vessels were blocked by the Greek authorities under considerable diplomatic pressure. Palestinian territories United Nations Israel Turkey Middle East Chris McGreal guardian.co.uk
Continue reading …Catfight alert: Cameron Diaz is not a fan of Jennifer Lopez, her co-star in the upcoming What to Expect When You’re Expecting . Diaz has been griping about “nightmare” J.Lo’s diva attitude all over the set, and “even said that Jen should stick to her day job, meaning American Idol…
Continue reading …Gary Giordano, the man suspected by Aruban authorities in Robyn Gardner’s disappearance and apparent death, will be staying on the island another 60 days. He was ordered held yesterday as prosecutors prepare to file charges and ultimately try Giordano, who was listed as the “beneficiary in case of a mishap”…
Continue reading …Home secretary Theresa May accused of neglecting national security with proposal to revive relocation bans in terror bill The government has been accused of bungling national security policy after announcing plans for the “internal exile” of terrorism suspects in the event of an emergency. Civil liberties groups said the new powers were restrictions that ministers had said they would scrap for breaching human rights. Labour claimed the policy was now a mess and that ministers were “putting political deals and fudges ahead of national security”. In January the government replaced control orders – which were being used against suspects who had not been charged – with terrorism prevention and investigation measures (Tpims), which cut the length of house arrest and scrapped internal relocation orders. However, the government has now published draft emergency powers reintroducing internal relocation. The move will allow Theresa May, the home secretary, to ban alleged suspects from living in certain areas in “exceptional circumstances”. Labour sources said this was political expediency because of the amendment reintroducing “internal relocation orders” to next week’s terrorism bill, which would have attracted enough Tory rebels to defeat the government, already vulnerable on law and order. The plans are attracting criticism from some of the government’s own backers. The Tory MP David Davis said: “This seems to be at least as ill thought out as control orders, if not more so.” Davis said the point of internal relocation orders had been preventative, and so introducing them after the fact would be ineffective. “It must be preventative. How can they be preventative if they can only be passed after the event?” The government said it had always said it might announce such measures. But Davis said: “The impression we had was [that] one of the important changes, from control orders to Tpims, was losing internal exile.” Government sources insisted they had intended that an emergency provision be available but with much tougher safeguards than under Labour’s control-order regime. They did accept that MI5 and the police wanted the powers, those groups believing that, without them, they would lose the capability of keeping the public safe. Of 12 people under control orders now, nine were subject to “internal relocation”. The draft powers would also allow the home secretary to restrict suspects’ work, study, and with whom they associate. According to the draft emergency legislation the term work “includes any business or occupation (whether paid or unpaid); studies include any course of education or training”. The rules allow curbs on finances, limits on communications, such as via mobiles and computers, and curfews of up to 16 hours a day. The shadow home secretary, Yvette Cooper, attacked the government for being too soft on law and order, and for putting the need to hold together the coalition ahead of the needs of national security: “What the government is doing is irresponsible, incompetent and potentially dangerous … It does not give the police or security services what they need to keep communities safe, especially during Olympic year when the capital may need extra protection. The home secretary is putting political deals and fudges ahead of national security.” Senior Liberal Democrat sources in government insisted the new measures were still less draconian than control orders, and did not represent a U-turn on pre-election promises to take greater account of civil liberties. “This would be proposed following a serious national security incident, such as multiple attacks, such as on 7 July [2005], and not because we had heard a bit of chatter. Even then it has to be debated in parliament and voted on.” Shami Chakrabarti, the director of Liberty, said: “While politicians tinker with the deckchairs on the Titanic, community punishments without charge remain unsafe and unfair. You can call them control orders, Tpims, or whatever you like, but they still allow dangerous terrorists to live amongst us whilst innocent people are punished forever with no opportunity to stand trial and clear their name. Ten years into the ‘war on terror’, have we really learned so little?” Control orders were used against terrorism suspects who could not be prosecuted, through there being insufficient admissible evidence, or because they could not be deported from the UK. After announcing the scrapping of internal relocation in January, the home secretary went to court, four months later, to defend such an order she made in February, that was taken out against a suspect. The man known only as CD, was a British-Nigerian terror suspect whom MI5 said was a leading figure in a “close group of Islamic extremists in north London”. The order banned him from living in London. Counter-terrorism officials claimed he had met fellow plotters to develop plans, which were thought to be a gun attack on multiple targets in the UK. Mr Justice Owen, sitting in London, ruled that the restrictions imposed on CD’s freedom, including the decision to relocate him from London to a Midlands city, were a “necessary and proportionate measure for the protection of the public from the risk presented by CD and his associates”. Of the draft emergency legislation, a Home Office spokesperson said: “National security is the primary duty of government and we will not put the public at risk. Our absolute priority is to prosecute and convict suspected terrorists in open court. The Tpim system will provide effective powers for dealing with the risk posed by individuals we can neither prosecute nor deport. “We always said there may be exceptional circumstances where it could be necessary to seek parliamentary approval for additional restrictive measures.” Terrorism policy David Davis Liberal-Conservative coalition Yvette Cooper UK security and terrorism Police Vikram Dodd guardian.co.uk
Continue reading …Recently, the charitable organization Save the Children asked documentary photographer James Mollison to come up with an idea to get people thinking about the rights of children around the world. What he came up with was an unusual, but powerful project: a photo essay of more than 200 children and their bedrooms, called “Where Children
Continue reading …President Clooney? He wouldn’t be the first actor in the Oval Office, but he says he’ll never do it—partly because of the hard time our current president is having. “Look, there’s a guy in office who is smarter than anybody you know, and nicer, and he’s having an almost…
Continue reading …A horrifying story with a cruel twist: Vandals have graffitied a monument in Poland that marked the spot where as many as 400 Jews were burned alive in a barn during World War II. But in addition to defacing it with a spray-painted green swastika, they wrote the unthinkable: “They…
Continue reading …Awkward: The prize for a Republican fundraiser raffle in Arizona is … the same brand of gun used to shoot the state’s Democratic congresswoman, Gabrielle Giffords. And it’s in her own district: The Pima County Republican Party announced the raffle in an Aug. 26 e-newsletter, the Huffington Post reports. For…
Continue reading …Languishing in polls, Jon Huntsman veered to the right yesterday, laying out a sweeping economic plan that would scrap a variety of regulations, slash taxes dramatically for the wealthy, and eliminate loopholes. “Our tax code is too complex, our rates are too high, and the tax burden is carried by…
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