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The FBI’s investigation into allegations that News of the World reporters hacked the phones of 9/11 victims must be heating up, because Attorney General Eric Holder himself will meet with families of the dead next month to discuss the probe’s progress, the Guardian reports. A lawyer for 20 of the…

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People close to Amy Winehouse say she left a trove of unreleased music, but no decision has been made about whether it will be released. There is “plenty” of material, but there have been no discussions yet about releasing anything, says her spokesman. The Guardian today quoted an unnamed spokesman…

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Dan Savage knows Rick Santorum is pretty unhappy with him for turning the word “Santorum” into a less-than-pleasant sexual term —but Savage actually “displayed remarkable restraint,” he says, by only redefining Santorum’s last name. He’ll do the exact same thing to Santorum’s first name, Savage warns on Funny or Die…

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Arctic scientist who exposed climate threat to polar bear is suspended

US government conducts ‘integrity inquiry’ on federal biologist amid lobbying by oil firms for Arctic permits It is seen as one of the most distressing effects of climate change ever recorded: a polar bear dying of exhaustion after being stranded between melting patches of Arctic sea ice. But now the government scientist who first warned of the threat to polar bears in a warming Arctic has been suspended and his work put under official investigation for possible scientific misconduct. Charles Monnett, a wildlife biologist, oversaw much of the scientific work for the government agency that has been examining drilling in the Arctic. He managed about $50m in research projects. Some question why Monnett, employed by the US Bureau of Ocean Energy Management, Regulation and Enforcement, has been suspended at this moment. The Obama administration has been accused of hounding the scientist so it can open up the fragile region to drilling by Shell and other big oil companies. “You have to wonder: this is the guy in charge of all the science in the Arctic and he is being suspended just now as an arm of the interior department is getting ready to make its decision on offshore drilling in the Arctic seas,” said Jeff Ruch, president of the group Public Employees for Environmental Responsibility. “This is a cautionary tale with a deeply chilling message for any federal scientist who dares to publish groundbreaking research on conditions in the Arctic.” The group filed an official complaint on Monnett’s behalf on Thursday, accusing the government of persecuting the (PDF) scientist and interfering with his work. It seeks his reinstatement and a public apology. Monnett was on a research flight tracking bowhead whales, in 2004, when he and his colleagues spotted four dead polar bears floating in the water after a storm. The scientists concluded the bears, though typically strong swimmers, had grown exhausted and drowned due to the long distances between patches of solid sea ice. It was the first time scientists had drawn a link between melting Arctic sea ice and a threat to the bears’ survival. Two years later, Monnett and a colleague published an article in the science journal Polar Biology, writing: “Drowning-related deaths of polar bears may increase in the future if the observed trend of regression of pack ice and/or longer open water periods continues.” The paper quickly heightened public concern for the polar bear. Al Gore, citing the paper, used polar bear footage in his film Inconvenient Truth. Campaigners focused on the bears to push George Bush to act on climate change, and in 2008, the government designated the animal a threatened species. It was the first animal to be classed as a victim of climate change. In 2010 the Obama administration began an investigation into his work. The scientist was suspended with pay on 18 July. He is said to be under a gagging order and forbidden from communicating with his colleagues. The employee group’s complaint alleges that the investigation is a thinly veiled attempt to disrupt scientific work on the Arctic. Oil firms, which want to drill in the pristine environment of the Chukchi and Beaufort seas, have been complaining of delays caused by environmental reviews. This month Obama issued an order to speed up Arctic drilling permits. A spokeswoman for the Bureau of Ocean Energy Management Regulation and Enforcement (Boemre) said the government would continue to carry out research on the potential impacts of Arctic drilling, despite Monnett’s suspension. “All of the scientific contracts previously managed by Mr Monnett are being managed by the highly qualified scientists at Boemre,” Melissa Schwartz said in an email. She noted that the investigation was being overseen by the inspector general, which is independent, and that it was being conducted according to the Obama administration’s new guidelines on scientific integrity. However, Peer argues the exercise is intended to discredit Monnett’s brief paper on the polar bear. Other organisations also accused the government agency of a long record of meddling in science. A 2009 report by the Government Accountability Office found huge gaps in Boemre’s research on the impacts of drilling in the Arctic. And the Alaska Wilderness League stated: “Alaska Boemre has continued to ignore science and traditional knowledge in its decision-making about oil and gas development.” Documents posted on the League’s website include a transcript of a conversation between investigators and Jeffrey Gleason, another government scientist on the 2004 trip. Gleason, who works for the government, in the Gulf of Mexico, said he did not necessarily share Monnett’s conclusions that the polar bears were killed as a consequence of climate change. “It’s something along the lines of the changing environment in the Arctic,” he was quoted as saying. United States Arctic Polar regions Obama administration US politics Oil Royal Dutch Shell Oil Suzanne Goldenberg guardian.co.uk

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Go ahead and get the family plan, because cell phones don’t increase the risk of brain tumors in kids or adolescents—the groups that should theoretically be most vulnerable—according to a new study. The European study, which involved nearly 1,000 participants, was prompted by fears that kids’ developing…

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Libyan rebels launch major offensive to capture key towns

Heavy fighting as rebels attack government positions in Ghazaya and Al Jawsh in attempt to clear supply lines Libyan rebel forces in the Nafusa mountains, south-west of Tripoli, launched a major offensive against government positions in an attempt to capture the strategic town of Ghazaya. Reports in opposition media said the rebel fighters had reached the outskirts of Ghazaya with heavy fighting involving tanks and artillery. The town is significant because it is close to the Tunisian border and is a base for government forces shelling roads leading over the border that are used by rebels to bring in supplies. “We have started attacking Ghazaya with rockets and tanks,” a rebel spokesman, Mohammed Maylud, told Reuters. A second town, Al Jawsh, was reportedly captured but then rebels were unable to hold it, despite deploying several tanks captured from forces loyal to Muammar Gaddafi. Nafusa is a narrow chain of mountains running east into Libya which rebel fighters have dominated for more than a month. But, to date, their lightly armed forces have struggled to move off the high ground to capture important roads and towns they need to consolidate their position and pose a direct threat to Tripoli. Radio reports from rebel sources said four fighters had been killed and 18 pro-Gaddafi soldiers captured. One injured pro-Gaddafi soldier, who gave his name as Hassan, told Reuters: “We don’t want to keep fighting. Everybody is against us.” Guma el-Gamaty, the UK co-ordinator of the National Transitional Council (NTC), said he had spoken to military commanders who hoped to “retake and clear” several towns and villages in the mountain area within days. “That will be a strategic shift,” he said, explaining that capture by the rebels would put the towns out of reach of Gaddafi forces’ missiles. He added: “The other strategic benefit of retaking these villages and towns is that it literally clears the way [from the Tunisian border down the coast towards Tripoli].” Yesterday’s offensive came amid confusion surrounding the rebels’ military commander, Abdel Fatah Younis, who was reported to have been arrested and detained at a military base in Benghazi. The former interior minister, who served under Gaddafi until he defected in February, was reported to have been questioned over alleged links with the regime in Tripoli. That could not be confirmed. Al-Jazeera television reported that rebel troops loyal to the general, had returned from the eastern front and were in the streets brandishing firearms and demanding his release. As Libya approaches the Muslim holy month of Ramadan, there is little sign of an imminent resolution to the five-month conflict. Yesterday, el-Gamaty sought to play down any suggestion that the NTC would agree to a settlement that would see Gaddafi staying in the country – a proposal briefly floated in recent days by Britain and France, and by the rebel leader Mustafa Abdul-Jalil. “I think we are coming to the end of all these silly political initiatives and all this talk about Gaddafi staying in Libya,” said Gamaty. He added: “Will he be allowed to stay in Libya? Will he not be allowed? Will he resign? Will he not resign? All these political initiatives, if they are not based on Gaddafi and all his sons leaving power and leaving Libya, these are initiatives that are not even worth talking about.” The NTC received another diplomatic boost when Portugal followed the example of Britain and others by saying it had granted official recognition to the rebels. In a statement, the foreign ministry said it supported “the Libyan people’s aspirations in the construction of a free and democratic society”. In London, a day after Hague announced the expulsion of all remaining Gaddafi regime diplomats from the Libyan People’s Bureau, attention shifted to the financial consequences of the recognition. Gamaty said he hoped all the £12bn-worth of Libyan assets frozen by Britain since the start of the conflict would be unblocked. Britain is to attempt to unfreeze some of the assets, running into the hundreds of millions of pounds, but the bulk is expected to remain blocked until Gaddafi falls. “The NTC cannot run two-thirds of Libya on just a few hundred millions … we need billions for that,” said the UK’s rebel co-ordinator. He insisted the money would be used for basic services and medical supplies in the war-torn nation, and not for the purchase of weapons. However observers have said that in practice this would be hard to regulate. Libya Arab and Middle East unrest Muammar Gaddafi Middle East Africa William Hague Chris Stephen Lizzy Davies guardian.co.uk

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Harry Reid and John Boehner each made progress in their quest for votes yesterday—but that actually drove them further away from a compromise. House Republicans and Senate Democrats “seemed to operate in alternate realities,” the New York Times observes, with each sure the other would eventually cave and accept…

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Pakistan’s military accused of escalating draconian campaign in Balochistan

Human rights groups criticise lack of action by civilian leaders to check torture and execution of nationalists in border region Pakistan’s military has escalated its brutal campaign of abduction and extra-judicial execution targeting nationalist rebels in Balochistan province, human rights groups have said. In a new report on “enforced disappearances” by military and intelligence officials, Human Rights Watch (HRW) criticised the failure of Pakistan’s civilian leaders to halt what it termed a human rights “free-for-all”. “The national government has done little to end the carnage,” said HRW’s Asia director, Brad Adams. “President Asif Ali Zardari has to realise it cannot just be wished away.” Covered in desert, mineral-rich and strategically located between Iran and Afghanistan, Balochistan is home to some of the most brutal state-led human rights abuses in Pakistan. Suspected nationalist rebels or sympathisers are routinely picked up in broad daylight, taken to centres where torture is rife and, in an increasing number of cases, later found dead on the roadside with a bullet wound in the head. Local groups have counted more than 180 bodies, mostly of men who reportedly disappeared at the hands of the Inter-Services Intelligence agency (ISI) in co-operation with Frontier Corps paramilitaries. The military leadership is accused of orchestrating the violence as it seeks to crush a small rebel force it believes is being covertly boosted by arch-rival India – an accusation some western spies say is true. The nationalists are also guilty of gross human rights violations, in particularly the targeted killing of Punjabi “settlers”, teachers, politicians and anyone deemed to be co-operating with the military. A sense of lawlessness and impunity reigns in the province, which covers 43% of Pakistan’s land mass but accounts for just 5% of the population. One former detainee said his captors told him: “We can torture you, or kill you, or keep you for years at our will. It is only the army chief and the [intelligence] chief that we obey.” Army spokesman Major General Athar Abbas said the accusations were false. “We’ve responded to all this before. It’s basically untrue,” he said. Conflict in the western province receives relatively little attention because unlike the Taliban, Baloch rebels have secular politics and pose little serious threat to the army. Pakistani security officials estimate there are just 1,000 nationalist fighters, whose leaders are largely exiled in the UK, Switzerland and Dubai. But analysts say the barbarity underscores the fragility of Pakistani unity and could be a harbinger of unrest elsewhere. The rebels want independence from Pakistan, saying that after decades of neglect from the centre they would be better off on their own. The fighting is small-scale: rebels attack electricity pylons, rail tracks and military convoys; the military responds by detaining those thought to be responsible. HRW says that in military detention camps, prisoners are beaten, hung upside down and deprived of food and sleep for long periods. Over the past year the bodies of detainees have turned up on the roadside across the province, triggering protests in the provincial capital, Quetta. The exact number of those detained is unclear. In 2008 the interior minister, Rehman Malik, said at least 1,100 people were missing, but last January the Balochistan home minister put the figure at just 55 people. Targeted killings of “settlers” and other accused collaborators by rebels is carving up the province along worrisome ethnic lines – in Quetta, for instance, non-Baloch doctors refused to work in Baloch areas, fearing harm. The Zardari government has tried to appease nationalist sentiment through a generous aid package and greater funding, but the disappearances and deaths have fuelled nationalist sentiment. A supreme court judge said last year that disappearances from Balochistan posed “the most burning issue in the country”. But a judicial enquiry into the matter has been largely toothless due to a lack of military co-operation. Pakistan Asif Ali Zardari Inter-Services Intelligence (ISI) Declan Walsh guardian.co.uk

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The death toll from South Korea’s massive landslides has reached 67, with at least 10 still missing, Reuters reports, and this terrifying video shows some of the destruction. In the wake of the flash flooding and mudslides, caused by the heaviest rains in a century, residents were warned to be…

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Is it the return of the long-lost Maverick? John McCain came out swinging at both the left and the right yesterday, calling Harry Reid’s debt plan “full of smoke and mirrors,” but reserving his harshest language for conservatives, reports the LA Times . Reading from a Wall Street Journal editorial , McCain…

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