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Radical Muslim jailed for calling for jihad against MPs

Judge describes Bilal Zaheer Ahmad as a viper in our midst before jailing him for 12 years for threats on websites An IT graduate who wrote messages on an Islamic extremist website calling on Muslims to “raise the knife of jihad” and attack and kill British MPs who voted in favour of the war in Iraq has been jailed for 12 years. Bilal Zaheer Ahmad, 24, posted the threats on the US-based RevolutionMuslim.com website with a full list of all MPs who had voted in the House of Commons in favour of the war and links providing personal contact details. He called on them to emulate Roshonara Choudhry , who had attempted to murder the Labour MP Stephen Timms with a knife at his East Ham constituency surgery six months previously, Bristol crown court heard. Ahmad, who worked for an insurance company in Telford, Shropshire, also posted a link to the Tesco website listing cheap knives, urging would-be fanatics to use them to carry out attacks. Jailing him for 12 years, with an additional five years’ extended period on licence, Mr Justice Royce said: “You became a viper in our midst willing to go as far as possible to strike at the heart of our system.” Ahmad, who holds British and Pakistani passports, had purported to be a British citizen, said Royce. “But what you stand for is totally alien to what we stand for in our country.” He added that his views were “corrosively dangerous”. “It’s important MPs can hold constituency surgeries without the threat of someone pulling out a knife and trying to kill them. You were intent on striking at the heart of our democracy and if our politicians are to be at risk from those like you, then the message must go out loud and clear that this country will not tolerate such threats to its democratic processes.” Ahmad posted his threat on 3 November, the day after Choudhry, a 21-year-old university student, was jailed for life for the knife attack on Timms in May last year. She stabbed him twice with a six-inch knife, damaging his liver and perforating his stomach. She later said she had been influenced by the radical sermons of Anwar al-Awlaki, a Yemen-based preacher and al-Qaida leader. Police arrested Ahmad, at the time living in Dunstall, Wolverhampton, on 10

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Joanna Yeates murder: Daily Mirror and the Sun fined for contempt of court

Articles on victim’s landlord a ‘risk to justice’, judges rule as eight national newspapers pay libel damages The Sun and the Daily Mirror were found guilty of contempt of court for publishing a series of “extreme” articles about a suspect who had been arrested by police investigating the murder of the landscape architect Joanna Yeates. The Daily Mirror was fined £50,000 and the Sun £18,000 after the high court ruled that the papers posed a “substantial risk” to the course of justice in their reporting on the arrest of Christopher Jefferies, Yeates’s landlord, who was later released without charge and was entirely innocent of any involvement. The Daily Mirror fine is the biggest against a British newspaper for contempt since 2004, when the Daily Star was fined £60,000 for revealing the identities of two Premiership footballers at the centre of high-profile gang rape allegations. In a separate legal action eight national newspapers, including the Daily Mirror and Sun, collectively paid six-figure libel damages to Jefferies following allegations made about him in January, when the police hunt for Yeates’s killer was at

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Two roadside bombs killed 19 people and wounded four today in Afghanistan as civilians are increasingly being caught in crossfire of the fighting between the Taliban and the US-led coalition. A minibus ran over a bomb in Nahri Sarraj district of Helmand province, with the blast killing all 18 passengers,…

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The crew piloting a doomed Air France jet over the Atlantic did not appear to know that the plane was in a stall, despite repeated warning signals, and never informed the passengers that anything was wrong before the jet plunged into the sea, according to new findings released today. Based…

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Nafissatou Diallo made her first public appearance last night, drawing more than 200 members of the media to Brooklyn’s Christian Cultural Center to hear her speak. The New York Times calls her two-minute speech “halting, nerve-racked, soft-spoken-to-the-brink-of-inaudibility,” and reports that she ended with a question: “I’ve been asking God, Why?…

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Zara Phillips and Mike Tindall’s ‘other’ royal wedding to be a humble affair

Couple decide against lucrative magazine deal for relatively small ceremony to be held at Edinburgh’s Canongate Kirk As a “private family occasion”, even one closing part of Edinburgh and costing taxpayers up to £500,000 in security, Saturday’s royal wedding is likely to reveal only the briefest public glimpses of bride and groom, Zara Phillips and Mike Tindall. Unlike the wedding, beamed across the globe three months ago, international TV anchors are not camping outside Canongate Kirk on the Royal Mile, as the Queen’s eldest granddaughter and 13th in line, marries the England rugby captain. “There doesn’t seem to be any American interest,” said Dickie Arbiter, formerly palace press officer now a royal pundit for Sky News. “Zara’s so far down the pecking order. She’s a Miss, not a princess. And Americans just don’t get rugby!” And unlike another “private family occasion”, the 2008 wedding of Phillips’s brother, Peter, to Autumn Kelly, there will be no pictures of the royals – such as Sophie Wessex, “getting it down” on the dancefloor – appearing in a £500,000 Hello! magazine exclusive deal. At the time some newspapers lambasted the “vulgarity” of it all, while simultaneously drooling over the magazine’s sales-boosting shots of princes William and Harry’s then girlfriends, Kate Middleton and Chelsy Davy, across 20 glossy pages. No such blatant commercialisation this time: though reports that the Queen had stamped a regal foot and forbidden her granddaughter from similarly cashing in seem wide of the mark. Phillips and Tindall made it plain from the moment of their engagement that there would be no magazine deal, one impeccably placed source stressed. “I’m not surprised,” said Joe Little, managing editor of Majesty magazine. “After all that damage, Peter Phillips will forever be known as the chap who sold his wedding to Hello! for half-a-million and upset the rest of the family. “Saturday’s going to be very different. Not sure what we’ll be allowed to see,

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Harry Reid tossed some zingers at Republicans last night after they failed to vote on John Boehner’s debt ceiling plan. Reid adjourned the Senate just before 11pm, the Hill reports, saying, “I apologize to everyone for the late hour, but we’ve been waiting for the House to conduct their business…

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Boris Johnson embroiled in new row over high-speed rail link

London mayor joins mounting opposition to proposed £32bn route linking London to Birmingham, Manchester and Leeds Boris Johnson, the London mayor, has become embroiled in a new row with David Cameron after government sources accused him of “overstepping the mark” by attacking plans for the £32bn north-south high-speed rail link. The prime minister has identified the 250mph route linking London to Birmingham, Leeds and Manchester as a potential vote winner in the north but Johnson has joined mounting opposition. In his submission to a public consultation on the High Speed Two (HS2) project, Johnson said aspects of the route were unacceptable while warning that it did not solve UK airport capacity problems. He said: “These proposals need to give consideration to their impact on residents in London. There is a great case for investing in a high-speed rail network but that must also be supported by the infrastructure to handle the extra passengers.” Johnson is calling for a new tube link at Euston station, the project’s proposed London terminus, amid fears that existing lines will be flooded with passengers. A senior government source said Johnson, whose interventions on spending cuts and a ban on airport expansion have angered the cabinet, had “overstepped the line in his opposition to HS2.” It is understood that Philip Hammond, the transport secretary, has dismissed Johnson’s request for more investment in London’s transport, on top of funding for the £16bn Crossrail project and a multibillion-pound tube upgrade. The source said: “Philip Hammond thinks high-speed rail is crucial for bridging the north-south divide. London did very well in the spending settlement and there is no case for the capital having even more major transport projects.” Rail companies have been asked to contribute £10,000 each to a pro-HS2 campaign amid fears the government will be outgunned by a well-funded opposition. The “no” camp is strongest in the home counties, where residents are angry about the London-to-Birmingham phase, which is due to open in 2026. The newly established Campaign for High Speed Rail accused Johnson of “hijacking” a national policy to secure more funding for London. “The government is busy trying to address the north-south divide, so it’s outrageous that Boris is trying to hijack this progress purely to secure more transport spending for London,” said Professor David Begg, the group’s director. “London already receives more transport spending per resident than anywhere else in the country, and the HS2 scheme as it stands will benefit London hugely in terms of jobs and transport infrastructure.” Once the London-to-Birmingham route is completed, a Y-shaped extension opening in 2032 will take the line to Manchester and Leeds. The full route is forecast to produce a £44bn boost to the UK economy with the first phase generating an estimated 40,000 jobs, as well as freeing up capacity on the west coast rail line for more commuter and freight services. However, opponents argue that the line will scar the landscape of Buckinghamshire, Warwickshire and Northamptonshire as well as the Chiltern Hills – all home to key Conservative constituencies. The no campaign also believes that taxpayer funds would be better spent on a cheaper upgrade of the rail network. Rail transport Transport Boris Johnson David Cameron Conservatives Dan Milmo guardian.co.uk

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Syrian protests and state violence expected to escalate during Ramadan

Activists predict street demonstrations rather than quiet reflection will mark the Islamic holy month this year It is usually the month of reflection and prayer, laying low in the heat of the day, before gathering to watch soap operas and feast as dusk falls. But this year Ramadan is anticipated in Syria for different reasons: as an opportunity to intensify protests against Bashar al-Assad, despite fears the regime may fight back even harder. Activists intend to exploit the increased daily attendance at mosques, which have over the past five months acted as gathering points for protests following Friday prayers. Many who do not regularly attend mosque do so during Ramadan, when prayers are believed to carry more weight that at other times of year. “It’s become a cliche to say it will be like Friday every day as people gather for prayer, but it will be,” said a former political prisoner who has strong links to the Sunni community, speaking in his house in Damascus. “Pressure on the regime will increase from more frequent protests and more people coming out.” On Friday, the last before Ramadan, at least nine people were killed as thousands defied a heavy security presence to take to the streets, including in the eastern city of Deir Ezzor, where deaths were reported earlier in the week. Ramadan, the lunar month when people fast in remembrance of the time when the first verses of the Qur’an were passed to the prophet Muhammad, is usually a quiet time. Business grinds to a halt, with people struggling to get through the heat of the day without water. But they do go to the mosque more often, especially for tarawih , the the special nightly

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George W. Bush was slow to react to news of the 9/11 attacks (or, as Reuters describes it, had a “blank face”) because he “wanted to project a sense of calm,” he tells National Geographic in a new interview. Bush says his first reaction upon hearing the news in that…

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