Home » Archives by category » News » World News (Page 669)

A heartbreaking twist in the helicopter tragedy that claimed 38 US and Afghan lives: The rescue mission the troops were en route to may not even have been necessary. Special Operations forces in the remote Tangi Valley requested assistance after coming under fire from “several” insurgents, even though they were…

Continue reading …

Sarah Palin reportedly has a new grandchild—and this time, thankfully, Levi Johnston has nothing to do with it. Palin stalker/biographer Joe McGinniss breaks the news on his blog , saying that Track Palin and new wife Britta have given birth to a baby girl named Kyla Grace Palin. In a…

Continue reading …

Investigators say it appears Sheila Decoster was standing on porch when she leaned over, lifted lid on bin, and fell inside A woman who died after falling face-first into a recycling bin and wasn’t noticed until her husband came home had become stuck in a position in which she couldn’t breathe, a Toledo, Ohio, coroner said. Sheila Decoster, 62, was inside the bin for several hours before she was found on Friday, said Lucas County deputy coroner Diane Barnett. Her husband saw her legs sticking out of the container that sits alongside their porch. “Honestly, I thought it was a dummy,” Richard Decoster said. “I shook her leg and called her name, and I knew she was gone.” The couple, who were married for 43 years, kept their recycling and rubbish bins next to their porch, which does not have a railing. Investigators said it looked like Sheila Decoster was standing on her porch when she leaned over, lifted the lid on the bin and fell inside. Her husband said she had some medical issues, including dizzy spells and an aneurism on her brain, which could explain why she fell. She also had back problems and a recent knee-replacement surgery. There were many complaints about the large recycling bins when they were distributed two years ago. Residents said they were too big and difficult to move, especially for older and disabled people. “It’s tragic, but I think it’s definitely an extreme example,” said city spokeswoman Jen Sorgenfrei. Ohio United States guardian.co.uk

Continue reading …
Rick Santorum, butt of Savage humour | Richard Lawson

Dan Savage’s new video threatens to redefine ‘Rick’ if Santorum makes anti-gay remarks, but is such guerrilla blackmail justified? Back in the heady, Bush-dominated days of 2003, prickly sex advice columnist and guerrilla gay rightser Dan Savage waged a culturally successful war with then Senator Rick Santorum (Republican, Pennsylvania), after Santorum made public statements comparing homosexuality to bestiality and pedophilia. Savage, himself a content and settled gay man now with a husband and child, launched an internet campaign to create a neologism that described “the frothy mixture of lube and fecal matter that is sometimes a byproduct of anal sex” . The new word? Santorum. The newly coined term quickly rose to the top of Google rankings, thus forever associating Senator Santorum’s last name, were one to do an internet search, with one of the more unseemly, albeit common, aspects of gay sex. A mean, irreverent and not undeserved cultural victory! Now, eight strange and changing years later, Santorum is running for president of the United States under the banner of his tried-and-true ultraconservative Christian ideology. In response to this new campaign, and Santorum’s unwavering commitment to associating homosexuality with the darker and most abhorrent reaches of sexual subculture, Savage has created a new video, hosted on the Funny or Die comedy website , threatening to go after Santorum’s first name. In the video – which is mostly “bleeped out”, to create the sense of a truly disgusting and monstrous sexual act that is also likely a string of nonsense dirty words – Savage says that he will not redefine the name “Rick” if Santorum agrees to stop going after the gays in such determined fashion. Another mean, irreverent, funny, preemptive cultural victory for Savage? Not necessarily. The left’s response to the vitriol of the Fox News-stoked American political right surrounding President Obama’s election victory has been, in typical Democratic Pollyanna fashion, a call to cease the angry rhetoric, to make politics about polite discourse again, rather than the snarling bed of conspiracy theorising, wild accusations (“Obama is a Kenyan Muslim!”), and Hitler comparisons it became in 2008 and, with the ascendancy of the Tea Party movement, beyond. “There is too much meanness!” political spokespersons of the left cried, frustrated with being deemed anti-American pro-Communist nü-Fascists. Now that we are nominally in power, finally, we want to stop the madness. But of course, in actual practice, the left can still, in the bloggier corners of society, dish it out just as nastily as the right – Sarah Palin is a vituperative viper with “a secret non-baby”, Michele Bachmann is an addled Christian space alien. A formal call for reason and bipartisanship looks pretty hypocritical when you scan the scattershot, informal pages of, for instance, Daily Kos comments. The right has, of course, pointed out this double standard, and it does seem that a campaign like Savage’s new one offers more fuel for criticism. Last year, Savage became something of a beatified folk hero for creating the feel-good, gently revolutionary “It Gets Better” campaign , a series of YouTube videos made in reaction to a rash of tragic gay suicides (committed by young people feeling alone and desperate), which softened his go-for-broke offender reputation. Dan Savage was someone we could all love, all of a sudden, because he said nice things about family and hope! But now, the Savage of old comes rearing back with an admittedly slightly tongue-in-cheek Funny or Die video going after his defeated foe Rick Santorum. It’s probably too much. While we on the queer left (and our queer-friendly allies) might get a chuckle out of the latest anti-Santorum campaign – Santorum being a perfectly frustrating avatar of nasty bigotry couched in piousness – Savage’s latest effort gives the bigots too much power by deigning even to address them. Santorum and his fervid supporters won’t pay much attention to the nuances of the joke; they’ll merely see it as yet another personal attack lobbied by a sexual radical obsessed with scary dirty talk. And in a time when, for better or worse, LGBT activists are struggling and succeeding to push their just causes into the mainstream (this year’s New York City pride parade was as tame and square, yet celebratory, as any Fourth of July parade), Savage’s endeavour to turn our side of the argument, well, savage again is probably losing us ground in the political cachet game in the pursuit of a few mild laughs. I don’t know how seriously anyone really takes Dan Savage. But he has proven, as evidenced by a tear-inducing Google ad that highlighted the success of the “It Gets Better” initiative, a fairly resonant cultural figure. And though Rick Santorum’s beliefs and policies are vile and regressive, I think we’re at a juncture where we need to kill the opposition with, if not kindness, a certain high-minded betterness. If Santorum wants to blabber on about animal- and kid-screwing, he’s free to do so. But we here in the bourgeois queer movement should, I think, try to keep the rhetoric as elevated as possible. Savage has become a mainstream cultural hero, and whether it’s merely comedy or not, a new call to sully an individual’s name with a particularly blue schoolyard joke seems only petty and time-wasting. The likable Savage already, ahem, creamed Santorum. There’s no honour in kicking a frothy mixture of lube and fecal matter when he’s already down. Gay rights Republicans Sex US politics Tea Party movement United States Richard Lawson guardian.co.uk

Continue reading …
German ‘bubble curtain’ study hopes to protect whales’ hearing

Government looking into soundproofing for underwater construction sites to protect whales and porpoises in Baltic The German government is investigating ways to “bubble-wrap” underwater construction sites to protect whales and porpoises in the Baltic Sea from noise pollution from offshore wind farms. The mammals rely on echo-location to hunt and navigate and researchers say noise from pile-driving work to install the turbines interferes with the animals’ ability to find each other and their prey. Karsten Brensing, a biologist at the Whales and Dolphins Conservation Society said: “These animals are so dependent on their acoustic sense … we need an acoustically clean environment. But a report by the Federal Agency for Nature Conservation has suggested an ingenious solution. A “bubble curtain” could contain the disturbance. Using simple, low-cost technology, bubbles released from pipes on the seafloor would create a sound-insulating barrier. Germany is a leader in the field of wind-power technology and with the country’s phase-out of nuclear power, incentives are being offered to encourage the expansion of offshore wind farms. A Greenpeace campaigner, Thilo Maack, believes that if “bubble curtains” can mitigate the impact on wildlife, they should be used. But he also said quieter construction methods such as drilling need to be investigated. “We have to be sure that the wind parks don’t harm harbour porpoises and other marine mammals,” Maack said. “On the other hand, we need these renewable energies to fight the consequences of climate change.”.” Marine life Whales Germany Europe guardian.co.uk

Continue reading …
Rupert Murdoch to face Wall Street analysts’ questions

News Corp boss likely to be quizzed on plans for succession – but queries on phone hacking ruled out on legal advice Rupert Murdoch will address Wall Street for the first time since the phone-hacking scandal escalated in the UK in a conference call with analysts to discuss News Corporation’s full-year results on Wednesday. It will be the first time US analysts have been able to quiz the News Corp boss since the scandal that has seen the closure of the News of the World and the end of his bid to take full control of profitable UK satellite broadcaster BSkyB. Insiders said he will make a prepared statement, but analysts will be warned that questions about allegations of phone hacking and illegal payments to police in the UK will not be accepted on the grounds they could prejudice a later trial. Sources said Murdoch’s statement will not be as contrite as the ones he made in July in London, when he declared his appearance before the Commons culture select committee was “the most humble day of my life”. He is however expected to be quizzed on succession plans and whether, at 80, the News Corp chairman and chief executive is willing to hand over the reins to trusted lieutenant Chase Carey, the deputy chairman, president and chief operating officer. He may also face questions about the future plans for his son James, who until recently was seen as his heir apparent and was due to move to New York to take over as deputy chief operating officer. The company announced earlier in August that Rupert’s daughter, Elisabeth, had decided not to take up a seat on the board. Wall Street investors will be most interested, however, to discoverMurdoch’s plans for the $12bn (£7.5bn) earmarked for News Corp’s purchase of the 61% of BSkyB it did not already own. Some $3.2bn of this has already been set aside for a share buyback scheme announced in the wake of News Corp’s withdrawal of the bid for the satellite broadcaster. It is Murdoch’s first conference call in a year and underlines the company’s determination to reassure US shareholders, alarmed by the scandal in the UK, that everything is back under control after the events of the past month. But it is a high-risk strategy as Murdoch, as could be seen at the parliamentary select committee, is prone to going off message. The results call, for the fourth quarter and the company’s full-year results for the 12 months to the end of June, will be preceded by a News Corp board meeting in Los Angeles on Tuesday Directors will updated on the internal investigation into the News of the World’s alleged payments to police and phone hacking. Murdoch is expected to set out a road map of potential landmines that face News Corp as police inquiries and civil actions over invasion of privacy continue, and Lord Leveson’s judicial inquiry into phone hacking and wider media practices gets under way in the autumn. News Corp’s internal investigation is being conducted with the help of Williams & Connolly, one of the most prestigious law firms in Washington. •

Continue reading …
Paris gets its first 24-hour baguette dispenser – feel le pain

Bread is partially cooked before being put in the machine, then finished off when ordered and delivered crisp and hot – for €1 Few things in France are treated with the reverence and respect of bread in general and the baguette, the long wand of dough made from a recipe defined in French law, in particular. It is a bread on to which some still trace the sign of the cross before cutting into it every morning for breakfast, when it is mostly spread with butter and jam. But now one entrepreneurial baker has come up with an idea that sounds as sacrilegious as putting Dom Pérignon in wine boxes: selling baguettes in a vending machine. Jean-Louis Hecht has taken advantage of the August holiday period, when many of France’s 33,000 boulangers shut up shop, to install Paris’s first 24-hour automated baguette dispenser. “This is the bakery of tomorrow,” Hecht told the Associated Press. “It is answering a real need. People who work at night or early in the morning can get their fresh bread. To me it’s a public utility.” So far Hecht has only installed two machines, one next to his baker’s shop in Paris’s 19th arrondissement and a second in the north-eastern town of Hombourg-Haut, close to the German border, where he also has a shop. The baguettes are partially cooked before they are put in the machine, then finished off when ordered and delivered crisp and steaming for €1 each. Hecht first came up with his idea two years ago. Like many bakers he was living over his boulanger, in Hombourg-Haut and was often disturbed by customers knocking on the door for bread after he had closed. “My wife said: ‘We’ll never get any peace”, so I said, ‘We’ll put out a bread distributor and we’ll be left alone,” Hecht added. Marc Nexhip of the Paris bakers’ union admitted he had not yet tasted one of the vending machine baguettes, but told AP: “I’m not convinced that good taste can be maintained over time. Maybe for 15 minutes, but not for several hours.” Hecht is not discouraged. “It’s like with banks: before, everyone went to a teller; now, everyone uses cash dispensers. It will be the same with bread: today, everyone goes to the bakery; tomorrow, they’ll go to the baguette dispenser,” he said. France Europe Food & drink Food & drink industry Kim Willsher guardian.co.uk

Continue reading …

Jon Stewart was left dumbfounded by Standard & Poor’s downgrading of America’s credit rating , not so much by the rationale behind leaving the US with worse credit than Finland, Australia, Singapore, and even the Isle of Man, but by the reaction of financial institutions: “Flushing their money out of stocks…

Continue reading …

Although better left to the police, Rupert Myers explains the law when performing a citizen’s arrest Following the revelation that the TV historian Dan Snow rugby-tackled a rioter in London it seems timely to produce a basic guide to the citizen’s arrest. I’ve seen a few incidents of people intervening to try and prevent crime. Some of them have been successful, and others have resulted in those people becoming the victim of violent crime themselves. It’s always better to leave it to the professionals if you can, but the criminal justice system accepts that isn’t always possible. Hence the existence of law which amounts to what is commonly known as the citizen’s arrest. The law is certainly not a vigilante’s charter: the starting point is that detention of another person is, on its own, unlawful. The statutory power of any member of the public in England and Wales to detain someone they consider to be involved in criminal activity is to be found in section 24A of the Police and Criminal Evidence Act 1974 . A person “other than a constable” may arrest without a warrant anyone: Who is in the act of committing an indictable offence; or whom the person has reasonable grounds to suspect is committing an indictable offence. An indictable offence is one that can be tried in a crown court, in front of a jury. This alone isn’t much use to the average civilian, and astonishingly the government doesn’t seem to publish a complete list of offences which qualify, but examples include theft, criminal damage and assault occasioning actual bodily harm . Such an arrest can only be made if it does not appear reasonably practicable for a police constable to make the arrest instead, and if the person making the arrest has reasonable grounds to believe that such an arrest is necessary to prevent the person being arrested from: (a) causing physical injury to himself or any other person; (b) suffering physical injury; (c) causing loss of or damage to property; or (d) making off before a constable can assume responsibility for him. Anyone attempting such an arrest should also inform the subject of what is being done doing as soon as is reasonably possible, explaining the reason for arresting them, and what offence it is believed that they have committed. Anyone carrying out an arrest can only use reasonable force when arresting the person in question. This is a matter of degree, obviously. A civilian also has a broader (if somewhat vaguer) common law (i.e. judge-made) power of arrest where there is a “breach of the peace”, which itself is not really a crime, but can be said to occur whenever harm is actually done or is likely to be done to a person or, in his presence, to his property, or where a person is in fear of being harmed through an assault, affray, riot, unlawful assembly or other disturbance. A civilian may conduct an arrest in these circumstances if: (a) a breach of the peace is committed in his presence, (b) the person effecting the arrest reasonably believes that such a breach will be committed in the immediate future by the person arrested, or (c) a breach of the peace has been committed or the person effecting the arrest reasonably believes that a breach of the peace has occurred and that a further breach is threatened. If it goes to court for some reason, the court will determine whether the belief was reasonable having regard to the circumstances as perceived by the person carrying out the arrest at the time. Where a reasonable apprehension of an imminent breach of the peace exists, the preventive action taken must be reasonable and proportionate. On a practical level, it is usually best to avoid getting involved as this story and this story show. If you do intervene, do so carefully, respectfully, and with, at most, a reasonable and proportionate use of force — only having first checked that there is no possibility of a police officer doing the job for you. Always call the police, and make sure that anyone you have arrested is transferred to the police as soon as possible. Avoid acting alone, since if the person you have arrested later tries to suggest that you have assaulted them, or caused them some other wrong, you don’t want to find that it is just your word against theirs. Any video or sound recording of what led you to act, or the testimony of any friend or relative who watched the whole incident may be helpful when it comes to explaining to the police and to the Crown Prosecution Service why you have stepped in to the breach. Rupert Myers is a barrister specialising in criminal law UK criminal justice Protest UK riots Police Rupert Myers guardian.co.uk

Continue reading …
The state of the Arab spring: Q&A with Ian Black

The Guardian’s Middle East editor will be online for two hours from 11.15am (UK time) on Wednesday to answer your questions about the uprisings in the region It is getting harder to follow the twists and turns of the Arab spring, and not only because the Middle East and north Africa are now in sweltering high summer as well as in the middle of the Ramadan fast. The label that was attached to the revolutions in Tunisia and Egypt earlier this year has stuck firmly, but it is looking a little worn – and in some cases irrelevant. There have always been significant differences in the circumstances of the countries affected. But they have much in common as well: young populations, lack of opportunities, authoritarian political systems, corruption and a lack of accountability by governments that have been tolerated by the west because of oil, strategic interests, fear of Islamists or attitudes to Israel. Reactions to the opening session of Hosni Mubarak’s trial in Cairo were a reminder that many across the region hope to see their own rulers brought to account. But Egypt’s own future looks deeply uncertain, with the military still firmly in control and a new constitution yet to be written. There are lots of interesting and important questions worth asking. But there are few easy or clear-cut answers. Will other Arab autocrats end up in the dock? Syria’s Bashar al-Assad seems intent on using all-out repression to save his regime – and accuses his enemies of fomenting sectarian violence. Now even ultra-conservative Saudi Arabia , which tolerates little dissent at home, has spoken out against Assad. Its Gulf neighbours have done the same even as they work to help Sunni-ruled Bahrain to contain Shia unrest that they blame – though with little evidence – on Iran. Unlike the Syrian president, King Abdullah has not killed 2,000 of his own people in the past five months – but he has tried to buy off dissent. So double standards are part of the story too. Libya looks like a special case. It is remote from the rest of the Arab world with a deeply unpopular leader. Nato’s intervention is proving far from decisive while the Benghazi-based opposition looks ineffective both as a military force and a future government. Opinions are deeply divided over the western response. Is Nato’s action a laudable example of the “responsibility to protect” – whose absence led to the slaughter of thousands Bosnian Muslims in the 1990s? Or was it a mistake to get involved in someone else’s civil war – however odious the regime. Is it simply hypocrisy to act in Libya and leave Syria alone? And what about Yemen , the poorest country in the Arab world? Do western oil interests mean that Saudi Arabia and other Gulf states will remain exceptions to hopes for change? Or is it still possible that the Arab spring will push them toward peaceful reforms? What role should the US and other western countries be playing? What about the Palestinians – still stateless and struggling? Some argue that this 21st century Arab awakening has helped heal the bitter rift between the Islamists of Hamas and the secular nationalists of Fatah. Now there is a new wrangle over the wisdom of asking the UN to recognise an independent Palestine at the UN general assembly next month. How will Israel react if that happens? And how different might the Middle East and north Africa look by the spring of 2012? I look forward to discussing these and other questions with you. • Post your questions from 11.15am (UK time) on Wednesday, when Ian Black will be online for two hours to answer your questions and debate the issues Arab and Middle East unrest Middle East Ian Black guardian.co.uk

Continue reading …