Cristina Fernández de Kirchner achieves 50% of votes, 38 percentage points ahead of her nearest rival, Raúl Alfonsín Argentina’s president, Cristina Fernández de Kirchner, has taken a major step towards re-election in the country’s first national primary. With more than 96% of the ballots counted, Kirchner had just over 50%, the government election authority said. She was nearly 38 percentage points ahead of the closest candidate, the centrist Radical Civic Union party congressman Raúl Alfonsín. The former president Eduardo Duhalde, of a conservative faction of the Peronist party, was third, also with 12%. Sunday’s primary elections were a nationwide opinion poll because most parties had already chosen their candidates and voters could cast ballots for any party’s candidate. To avoid a runoff, the winning candidate in the October elections must get at least 45% of the vote, or 40% with a lead of at least 10 points over the closest contender. The results showed Kirchner had no real competitor. Her two main opponents, Alfonsín and Duhalde, fared worse than expected, and the electoral law prohibits them from joining forces and forming a new alliance. If Kirchner gets a similar result in the first round of voting on 23 October, she will win a third term for her centre-left faction of the Peronists. Kirchner succeeded her husband, Néstor Kirchner, in 2007. Her victory was widely attributed to popular support for her husband, whom many Argentinians credited with reviving the county’s economy after its collapse in 2001, when Argentina suffered an acute financial crisis and defaulted on its sovereign debt. In 2008 her popularity rating fell below 30% after a four-month tax revolt by farmers, an important force in the country. But strong economic growth since then has helped to create jobs, increase wages and allow the government to extend welfare programmes. The death of her husband in October 2010 pushed her popularity ratings up again. Argentina Cristina Kirchner guardian.co.uk
Continue reading …Google to acquire US mobile company’s smartphone business to ‘supercharge the Android ecosystem’ Google is to acquire Motorola Mobility, the US mobile company’s smartphone business, in a $12.5bn (£7.6bn) cash deal. The takeover will boost Google’s increasing dominance in the nascent smartphone and tablet computer market. The $40 a share deal is a 63% premium on Motorola Mobility’s closing price on the New York Stock Exchange on Friday. Larry Page, Google chief executive, said: “Motorola Mobility’s total commitment to Android has created a natural fit for our two companies. Together, we will create amazing user experiences that supercharge the entire Android ecosystem for the benefit of consumers, partners and developers. I look forward to welcoming Motorolans to our family of Googlers.” Sanjay Jha, chief executive of Motorola Mobility, added: “This transaction offers significant value for Motorola Mobility’s stockholders and provides compelling new opportunities for our employees, customers, and partners around the world. “We have shared a productive partnership with Google to advance the Android platform, and now through this combination we will be able to do even more to innovate and deliver outstanding mobility solutions across our mobile devices and home businesses.” The deal represents Google’s biggest challenge yet to Apple, which has led the way in the smartphone and tablet markets with the iPhone and iPad. Other manufacturers, including Samsung and HTC, will be free to release phones using Google’s Android software. Google will run Motorola Mobility as a separate business. The takeover also pits Google, which has traditionally avoided involvement in hardware, against the manufacturing giant Nokia. The move comes just six months after the Finnish phone maker signed a strategic deal with Microsoft in an effort to rebuild its ailing fortunes. Motorola was the first mobile maker to partner with Google and release phones based on its Android operating system. Motorola spun off Mobility as a separate business in January this year. The manufacturing division primarily produces smartphones, such as the Motorola Droid and the Defy, but also makes tablet computers and digital set-top boxes. Analysts have long predicted that half of the world’s smartphones will be using Android software by the end of 2012, as manufacturers have rushed to adopt Google’s operating system rather than develop their own. The deal is subject to US regulatory approval, which could prove a larger hurdle than usual given that Google’s Android division is already being probed by anti-trust investigators. The companies said they expect the takeover to be completed in late 2011 or early 2012. Andy Rubin, senior vice president of mobile at Google, said: “We expect that this combination will enable us to break new ground for the Android ecosystem. “However, our vision for Android is unchanged and Google remains firmly committed to Android as an open platform and a vibrant open source community. We will continue to work with all of our valued Android partners to develop and distribute innovative Android-powered devices.” Google Mobile phones Telecoms Telecommunications industry Android Software Smartphones Digital media Media business Josh Halliday guardian.co.uk
Continue reading …President Obama’s approval rating has hit an all-time low, with just 39% of Americans satisfied with how he’s handling his job, the latest Gallup poll has found. The poll found 54% of Americans disapprove of Obama’s job performance, another record for the president, reports The Hill . Obama’s approval ratings have…
Continue reading …Security officials say move part of a series of measures designed to improve safety inside and outside holy site Explosives detectors are to be installed at the entrances to the Holy Mosque in Mecca as the Saudi authorities boost security around the city’s holy sites. Around 180 people work on a shift pattern to man the gates leading to the Masjid al-Haram, which surrounds the Ka’aba, the black granite cube that Muslims turn to when praying. But there are no other measures in place to screen pilgrims for weapons, explosive devices or other banned items, although there are more than 700 cameras tracking them for possible theft, pickpocketing and other criminal or immoral activity. Lieutenant Colonel Fawaz al-Sahafi, who heads the security team at the mosque, told the Saudi Gazette plans to fit “sophisticated metal and explosive detectors” at the multiple gates were under way. He also said there were proposals to monitor pilgrims’ movements and have plain-clothes officers mingling with worshippers to stop them from carrying unauthorised foodstuffs into the mosque. Another security official, Lieutenant General Saeed Bin Abdullah al-Qahtani, said cameras at pilgrims’ residential buildings, traffic initiatives and crowd management plans would improve safety inside and outside the Grand Mosque. There is a ban on private cars carrying pilgrims entering Mecca, and there will be greater intervention from guards to ease congestion and jostling. The Saudi authorities have revamped a key element of the Hajj to minimise the potential for stampedes and expedite the evacuation of worshippers, but similar initiatives have yet to materialise at other sites in Mecca. Islam’s holiest city has not experienced terrorist activity since 1979, when hundreds of people died following an armed takeover of the Grand Mosque, with overcrowding proving to be more of a threat in recent years. At any one time, almost 1 million pilgrims can fit into the Grand Mosque. It covers almost one-third of a square kilometre but, in the coming days, King Abdullah will lay a foundation stone marking an expansion project to accommodate more believers. Around 4 million Muslims visit Mecca to perform the Hajj, the Islamic pilgrimage, while millions more go there throughout the year. Islam Religion Saudi Arabia Middle East Riazat Butt guardian.co.uk
Continue reading …Prime minister delivers a speech describing last week’s rioting a ‘wake-up call’ for the country and says ministers will ensure policies address the causes of ‘broken Britain’ David Cameron pledged his government would “turn around the lives of the 120,000 most troubled families” by the next election as he said his broken society analysis is “back at the top of my political agenda”. He made the ambitious commitment in a speech delivered on Monday at a youth centre in his Witney constituency in Oxfordshire, in which he described the rioting as a “wake-up call” for the country. He said his ministers were now going to use the summer to ensure their departments’ policies address the causes of broken Britain. The government has assessed there are 120,000 families across the UK that cause much of the disturbance in communities across the country – and he is now to use the government’s success in turning around their lives as a benchmark against which he should be judged in 2015. Cameron made the pledge as he reasserted his analysis that Britain is broken, but he joined Ed Miliband in drawing a link between the riots, and recent scandals in banking, parliament and journalism, his words almost precisely mirroring those of the Labour leader. Cameron said: “In the banking crisis, with MPs’ expenses, in the phone-hacking scandal, we have seen some of the worst cases of greed, irresponsibility and entitlement. The restoration of responsibility has to cut right across our society.” “Do we have the determination to confront the slow-motion moral collapse that has taken place in parts of our country these past few generations?” “Irresponsibility. Selfishness. Behaving as if your choices have no consequences. Children without fathers. Schools without discipline. Reward without effort. “Crime without punishment. Rights without responsibilities. Communities without control. Some of the worst aspects of human nature tolerated, indulged – sometimes even incentivised – by a state and its agencies that in parts have become literally de-moralised. “So do we have the determination to confront all this and turn it around? I have the very strong sense that the responsible majority of people in this country not only have that determination; they are crying out for their government to act upon it. And I can assure you, I will not be found wanting.” He rehearsed many of the policies the government already has underway that he hopes will help to improve conditions in which children are raised to drain the conditions for rioting in future, but he suggested in many areas he wanted his ministers to seek to go further. The government is bringing in a national citizens service and Cameron said he wanted to make it available to all 16-year-olds: “Teamwork, discipline, duty, decency: these might sound old-fashioned words but they are part of the solution to this very modern problem of alienated, angry young people.” City academies which he said would have higher expectations of discipline and standards. “If young people have left school without being able to read or write, why shouldn’t that school be held more directly accountable? Yes, these questions are already being asked across government but what happened last week gives them a new urgency – and we need to act on it.” Cameron said he wanted to look at making tougher the welfare reform bill going through parliament. “I’m not satisfied that we’re doing all we can. I want us to look at toughening up the conditions for those who are out of work and receiving benefits… and speeding up our efforts to get all those who can work back to work.” The home secretary, Theresa May, would be setting out on Tuesday how the government intended to overhaul policing to enable them to do less paperwork and spend more time on the beat. Cameron also suggested the government would redouble its efforts to renegotiate the relationship between British and European law whereby the government has often felt thwarted by Strasbourg legislation in implementing some of its policies. He said his government would look at the “twisting and misrepresenting of human rights that has undermined personal responsibility” and the “obsession with health and safety that has eroded people’s willingness to act according to common sense”. Nonetheless, he said he had now ordered his ministers to conduct a review of all their departments’ policies to ensure they are helping ameliorate what Cameron described as a “moral collapse” in Britain. Setting out his central argument, Cameron said: “As we begin the necessary processes of inquiry, investigation, listening and learning, let’s be clear: these riots were not about race: the perpetrators and the victims were white, black and Asian. “These riots were not about government cuts: they were directed at high street stores, not parliament. And these riots were not about poverty: that insults the millions of people who, whatever the hardship, would never dream of making others suffer like this. No, this was about behaviour. “People showing indifference to right and wrong. People with a twisted moral code. People with a complete absence of self-restraint.” “Now I know as soon as I use words like ‘behaviour’ and ‘moral’ people will say – what gives politicians the right to lecture us? Of course we’re not perfect. But politicians shying away from speaking the truth about behaviour, about morality. This has actually helped to cause the social problems we see around us.” Cameron has honed this thesis over the last five years since before becoming leader of the opposition but he is, in the words of one aide, seeking to “re-energise” his ministers in the face of opinion polls suggesting the public believe his response to the riots was unconvincing, and that he has not fully understood the causes. He addressed head on the attack made in a speech by the leader of the opposition at nearly the same time on Monday morning in which Miliband said the difference between the pair’s positions was that Cameron believed a “culture” of depravity led some people to riot, while Miliband believed issues of social deprivation needed to be considered as a context but not as an excuse. Cameron said politicians must be braver in addressing decades of erosion of social values rather than clinging to moral “relativism”. While there were local triggers, most of the disturbances had been down to “criminality” and “indifference to right and wrong”. He said: “In my very first act as leader, I signalled my personal priority: to mend our broken society – that passion is stronger today than ever.” “Social problems that have been festering for decades have exploded in our face,” he said. “Now, just as people wanted criminals robustly confronted on our street, so they want to see these problems taken on and defeated. “Our security fightback must be matched by a social fightback. We must fight back against the attitudes and assumptions that have brought parts of our society to this shocking state.” UK riots David Cameron Social exclusion Crime Ed Miliband Allegra Stratton guardian.co.uk
Continue reading …Series of deadly explosions rip through cities across the country, ending period of relative calm during holy month of Ramadan Bomb blasts ripped through more than a dozen Iraqi cities on Monday morning, killing 56 people in a wave of violence that shattered what had been a relatively peaceful holy month of Ramadan. The violence struck from the northern city of Kirkuk to Baghdad and the southern Shia cities of Najaf, Kut and Karbala. The devices used included a combination of parked car bombs, roadside bombs and a suicide bomber driving a vehicle that rammed into a police station. The scale of the violence – seven explosions occurred in several towns in Diyala province alone – highlight the ability of insurgents to carry out attacks despite repeated crackdowns by Iraqi and US forces. Thirty-five people were killed in the southern city of Kut, 100 miles south-east of Baghdad, where construction workers were gathered in a market selling appliances. A police spokesman, Lieutenant Colonel Dhurgam Mohammed Hassan, said the first bomb went off in a freezer. Then as rescuers and onlookers gathered, a parked car bomb exploded. Officials said 64 were injured in the blasts. In Diyala province, seven bombs struck in the capital of Baquba and towns nearby. Five soldiers were killed in Baquba; six people were killed in other attacks around the province. Just outside the holy city of Najaf, a suicide car bomber ploughed into a checkpoint outside a police building. Officers opened fire on the vehicle when the driver refused to stop and the vehicle exploded. Four people were killed and 32 injured in the blast. Among the dead were two policemen. Outside Karbala, a parked car bomb targeting a police station was reported to have killed three officers and injured 14 others. In Tikrit two men wearing explosive belts drove into a heavily guarded government compound wearing military uniforms. The men parked their vehicle and then walked to a building housing the anti-terrorism police. When the men approached the guards ordered them to stop and then opened fire. One bomber was immediately killed but the other managed to get inside the building before blowing himself up and killing three people. Ten people were also injured in the attack. In Kirkuk, one person was killed when a motorbike bomb exploded. Thirty minutes earlier in the city a car bomb blew up outside a police patrol, injuring four officers. Some 30 minutes later one person was killed when a motorbike bomb exploded. Late on Sunday, four blasts damaged a Syrian Orthodox church in Kirkuk. In Baghdad, eight were wounded when a parked car bomb exploded near a convoy carrying officials from the ministry of higher education. The blasts were the first major act of violence since Iraq’s political leaders announced this month that they would begin negotiations with the US over whether to keep a small number of American forces in the country past 31 December. The last such single bombing spree occurred on 5 July, when 37 people were killed in an explosion in Taji, north of Baghdad. US forces plan to leave the country by the end of this year but officials from both sides have expressed concern about the ability of Iraqi forces to protect the country. Iraq Middle East guardian.co.uk
Continue reading …Our one-stop guide to the facts of global warming, from the science and politics to economics and technology Christine Oliver Giulio Frigieri
Continue reading …Our one-stop guide to the facts of global warming, from the science and politics to economics and technology Christine Oliver Giulio Frigieri
Continue reading …30-year-old man held at hospital in St Helier after deaths of six victims believed to be from same family Six people, three of them children, who were killed in a knife attack in St Helier, Jersey, on Sunday were all of Polish descent, it has been reported. They were said to come from two families, one including a mother, a six-year-old girl, a boy of 18 months, and a man, Sky News reported citing the Polish Embassy as its source. A man, another woman and a child also died. One of the women died from her injuries after undergoing surgery. A 30-year-old man in police custody at Jersey general hospital, also said to be Polish, is in a serious but stable condition after undergoing surgery. Jersey’s chief minister senator, Terry Le Sueur, said the island was “saddened and shocked”. He said the authorities would ensure support and counselling to local people as he appealed for the public not to speculate on the incident at a flat in St Helier. States of Jersey police said that officers were called to a flat in Victoria Crescent, Upper Midvale Road, in the town just after 3pm after reports of a multiple stabbing. The immediate area was sealed off while a major incident room was set up at police headquarters in St Helier. A large section of the road was cordoned off on Monday, including a grassy wooded area in front of the flats. The area, made up of smart houses with many converted into flats, was quiet on Monday morning though the scene was still guarded by police, including armed officers. A forensic team could be seen searching through undergrowth. A local resident said that on Sunday he saw a woman’s body on the ground covered in blood and watched as paramedics carried the bodies of two little girls out of the flat. “I’ve never seen so much blood. They were completely limp. The paramedics were crying. They were completely drenched in blood, one of the paramedics had to change his clothes.” He said the girls were blonde and were both wearing dresses. He said the woman was lying in the road and was also covered in blood and appeared lifeless. The man, who would give only his first name of John, said he had run to the scene after hearing a woman scream. “She shouted ‘please help me, please God help me’,” he said. Another witness, Andre Thorpe, said two ambulances attended the scene, which was within a mile of the ambulance station. “Then four or five police vehicles came,” he said. “They were trying to access a private house in the crescent. It was an old Victorian terrace – a lot of them are split into flats. “I saw police come running out with a child. It was a small child, I just saw the legs. They went off in an ambulance. When the paramedic came back, her shirt was covered in blood.” He said that the incident happened in a secluded area and not on a main road, adding: “You have to drive up a dead end to get in, you would not happen to be passing. “I was in the area collecting a friend’s car. I was first aware that something was happening when I saw people looking out for the ambulances as I walked up the road.” The attacks occurred in the flat and in the street, according to police, who are not believed to be looking for anyone else but are continuing with inquiries. A force spokeswoman said: “This is a close-knit community and we have had a fantastic response with information from locals that they believe would be useful.” The head of crime services, Stewart Gull, who is leading the investigation, said on Sunday that a number of the victims had been attacked “with a knife or knives” and that it had been a “pretty traumatic” incident for emergency teams to deal with. The deaths have shocked the community on the island, which has fewer than 100,000 residents and where crime has recently fallen to its lowest level in the past 10 years. “Jersey is an incredibly safe island, probably one of the safest places in the western world, and incidents of this nature are an extremely rare occurrence,” said Gull. “This is complex. We are trying to piece together exactly what happened this afternoon.” Gull later said that he believed the last murder on the island took place in 2004. Police figures for the first half of this year show violent crime down 20%. Nine out of 10 adults in Jersey considered their neighbourhood very or fairly safe, the 2010 Jersey annual social survey found. Gull, who led the Ipswich serial murders inquiry in 2006, said at a press conference: “It goes without saying that when you are dealing with multiple deaths of men and women and, in particular, young children, you would be inhuman not to be shaken yourself.” Le Sueur said: “I was deeply saddened and shocked by yesterday’s tragic events and I would like to extend my sincerest condolences to the friends and relatives of those involved. “This is now a police inquiry and we fully support States of Jersey Police officers as they carry out their investigations. “I have every confidence in the ability and professionalism of our police force in handling this investigation. We must now avoid speculation and allow them to continue with this important work. “Jersey is a very safe place and events of this terrible nature are very rare. This has greatly shocked the island’s community. Many will need support and counselling in the days ahead and we will ensure this is provided,” Le Sueur said, thanking emergency services and “especially paramedics and hospital staff for their tireless work”. Monsignor Nicholas France, head of the Catholic church in Jersey, said there was “great distress and anxiety” at the horrifying attack, and that prayers had been offered at a Polish mass on Sunday night for those involved. He told BBC Breakfast: “One’s picked up a great sense of sadness that this could happen, especially to a family. On a small island like this it’s a wound for the whole family, the whole community. The hospital’s emergency department was closed for more than two hours due to the volume of victims being admitted, and staff were called in on days off to help stretched colleagues. A number of witnesses who have come forward have been interviewed by police, who have urged anyone with information to contact them on 01534 612612. Jersey Channel Islands Europe James Meikle Ben Quinn guardian.co.uk
Continue reading …30-year-old man held at hospital in St Helier after deaths of six victims believed to be from same family Six people, three of them children, who were killed in a knife attack in St Helier, Jersey, on Sunday were all of Polish descent, it has been reported. They were said to come from two families, one including a mother, a six-year-old girl, a boy of 18 months, and a man, Sky News reported citing the Polish Embassy as its source. A man, another woman and a child also died. One of the women died from her injuries after undergoing surgery. A 30-year-old man in police custody at Jersey general hospital, also said to be Polish, is in a serious but stable condition after undergoing surgery. Jersey’s chief minister senator, Terry Le Sueur, said the island was “saddened and shocked”. He said the authorities would ensure support and counselling to local people as he appealed for the public not to speculate on the incident at a flat in St Helier. States of Jersey police said that officers were called to a flat in Victoria Crescent, Upper Midvale Road, in the town just after 3pm after reports of a multiple stabbing. The immediate area was sealed off while a major incident room was set up at police headquarters in St Helier. A large section of the road was cordoned off on Monday, including a grassy wooded area in front of the flats. The area, made up of smart houses with many converted into flats, was quiet on Monday morning though the scene was still guarded by police, including armed officers. A forensic team could be seen searching through undergrowth. A local resident said that on Sunday he saw a woman’s body on the ground covered in blood and watched as paramedics carried the bodies of two little girls out of the flat. “I’ve never seen so much blood. They were completely limp. The paramedics were crying. They were completely drenched in blood, one of the paramedics had to change his clothes.” He said the girls were blonde and were both wearing dresses. He said the woman was lying in the road and was also covered in blood and appeared lifeless. The man, who would give only his first name of John, said he had run to the scene after hearing a woman scream. “She shouted ‘please help me, please God help me’,” he said. Another witness, Andre Thorpe, said two ambulances attended the scene, which was within a mile of the ambulance station. “Then four or five police vehicles came,” he said. “They were trying to access a private house in the crescent. It was an old Victorian terrace – a lot of them are split into flats. “I saw police come running out with a child. It was a small child, I just saw the legs. They went off in an ambulance. When the paramedic came back, her shirt was covered in blood.” He said that the incident happened in a secluded area and not on a main road, adding: “You have to drive up a dead end to get in, you would not happen to be passing. “I was in the area collecting a friend’s car. I was first aware that something was happening when I saw people looking out for the ambulances as I walked up the road.” The attacks occurred in the flat and in the street, according to police, who are not believed to be looking for anyone else but are continuing with inquiries. A force spokeswoman said: “This is a close-knit community and we have had a fantastic response with information from locals that they believe would be useful.” The head of crime services, Stewart Gull, who is leading the investigation, said on Sunday that a number of the victims had been attacked “with a knife or knives” and that it had been a “pretty traumatic” incident for emergency teams to deal with. The deaths have shocked the community on the island, which has fewer than 100,000 residents and where crime has recently fallen to its lowest level in the past 10 years. “Jersey is an incredibly safe island, probably one of the safest places in the western world, and incidents of this nature are an extremely rare occurrence,” said Gull. “This is complex. We are trying to piece together exactly what happened this afternoon.” Gull later said that he believed the last murder on the island took place in 2004. Police figures for the first half of this year show violent crime down 20%. Nine out of 10 adults in Jersey considered their neighbourhood very or fairly safe, the 2010 Jersey annual social survey found. Gull, who led the Ipswich serial murders inquiry in 2006, said at a press conference: “It goes without saying that when you are dealing with multiple deaths of men and women and, in particular, young children, you would be inhuman not to be shaken yourself.” Le Sueur said: “I was deeply saddened and shocked by yesterday’s tragic events and I would like to extend my sincerest condolences to the friends and relatives of those involved. “This is now a police inquiry and we fully support States of Jersey Police officers as they carry out their investigations. “I have every confidence in the ability and professionalism of our police force in handling this investigation. We must now avoid speculation and allow them to continue with this important work. “Jersey is a very safe place and events of this terrible nature are very rare. This has greatly shocked the island’s community. Many will need support and counselling in the days ahead and we will ensure this is provided,” Le Sueur said, thanking emergency services and “especially paramedics and hospital staff for their tireless work”. Monsignor Nicholas France, head of the Catholic church in Jersey, said there was “great distress and anxiety” at the horrifying attack, and that prayers had been offered at a Polish mass on Sunday night for those involved. He told BBC Breakfast: “One’s picked up a great sense of sadness that this could happen, especially to a family. On a small island like this it’s a wound for the whole family, the whole community. The hospital’s emergency department was closed for more than two hours due to the volume of victims being admitted, and staff were called in on days off to help stretched colleagues. A number of witnesses who have come forward have been interviewed by police, who have urged anyone with information to contact them on 01534 612612. Jersey Channel Islands Europe James Meikle Ben Quinn guardian.co.uk
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