Residents in city of Homs claim government forces and ‘death squads’ are firing indiscriminately on civilians Spiralling violence took hold of the Syrian city of Homs on Tuesday as troops and militiamen loyal to President Bashar al-Assad killed 16 people in an apparent escalation of a security crackdown against a focal point for pro-democracy protests. This brings the death toll in the country’s third biggest and most mixed city in the past few days alone to at least 40 people, in addition to an estimated 1,500 killed since the Syrian uprising began five months ago. The latest fatalities added to mounting concern that events in Homs, which has a population of 1.5 million, are taking on a dangerously sectarian character. In a grimly familiar pattern, Tuesday’s dead included three mourners at a funeral for 10 people who were killed by security forces on Monday, activists said. “We could not bury the martyrs at the city’s main cemetery, so we opted for a smaller cemetery near the mosque when the militiamen began firing at us from their cars,” one mourner told Reuters. “We have to leave, we can’t stay – it’s too
Continue reading …The US got its first openly gay male federal judge last night. J. Paul Oetken, a former lawyer for the Clinton administration, was confirmed by the Senate on an 80-13 vote and could take his Manhattan seat this week, the New York Times reports. “The old barriers that existed in…
Continue reading …Court of appeal quashes convictions of 20 eco protesters citing non-disclosure of taped evidence by undercover Mark Kennedy The convictions of 20 environmental protesters for attempting to shut down a power station were quashed on Tuesdayafter three court of appeal judges ruled that crucial evidence recorded by police spy Mark Kennedy had been withheld. The lord chief justice, Lord Judge, said that the convictions were “unsafe because of significant non-disclosure” of secret surveillance tapes recorded by Kennedy. He said: “We have reached the clear conclusion that all these appeals against conviction will be allowed.” The campaigners left the high court in London vindicated in their belief that their original convictions had been a miscarriage of justice. However, police and prosecutors are left facing questions over their conduct in securing the unsafe convictions. Seven inquiries have so far been launched into the prosecution of the campaigners and the infiltration of Kennedy into the ranks of the protest movement. Two inquiries, one of which is led by a retired court of appeal judge, are scrutinising whether police or the Crown Prosecution Service were responsible for suppressing the vital evidence which cleared the names of the 20 protesters. The failure to disclose the Kennedy tapes also led in January to the abandonment of the trial of six other campaigners arrested over the same plot. In all, none of the 114 protesters arrested in a controversial police operation two years ago have been convicted. From the beginning, the £300,000 operation was criticised as it stemmed from the largest number of pre-emptive arrests of political activists in the UK. It later emerged that the activists had been infiltrated by Kennedy, who had spent seven years undercover in the environmental movement, using the name Mark Stone, sparking claims that his deployment was a waste of public funds. Acting on intelligence from Kennedy, police burst into a primary school during the night in April 2009 and arrested the activists hours before the planned break-in at Ratcliffe-on Soar power station. Using his fake identity, the spy helped organise the planned protest. Kennedy was later exposed by environmental campaigners and, growing sympathetic to their cause, revealed that he had covertly recorded the meetings of the activists. He said these tapes would help exonerate them. On Tuesday, Lord Judge, sitting with Mr Justice Treacy and Mr Justice Calvert-Smith, told the court of appeal: “It is clear that there was a non-disclosure of material which would have been supportive of the defence case advanced at trial.” He identified the tapes and a statement made by Kennedy as the evidence, adding that the Crown Prosecution Service “accepts that the conviction is unsafe”. He said he would give an explanation for the ruling this morning. On the steps of the high court afterwards, Mike Schwarz, the lawyer for the activists, said they would make a fuller statement after hearing the judges’ reasons. He said the quashing was a “small success in the context of a bigger picture” of the policing of protest. The 20 activists had been found guilty of conspiracy to commit aggravated trespass in December after a three-week trial at Nottingham crown court. Judge Jonathan Teare gave the activists a range of sentences ranging from 18 months’ conditional discharge to 90 hours’ unpaid work. Teare told them that they had “acted with the highest possible motives” and were “all decent men and women with a genuine concern for others and in particular for the survival of planet Earth in something resembling its present form”. During their trial, the 20 activists had admitted that they were going to break into the power station, but argued that they had a “lawful excuse” to do so as they were acting to prevent the greater crimes of death and serious injury caused by climate change. They said they would have stopped the emission of 150,000 tonnes of carbon dioxide. Some police officers are furious that the campaigners have now walked free even after they admitted that they were going to occupy the power station. At December’s trial, the prosecution had said the campaigners were motivated by a desire to get publicity for their cause. During Tuesday’s court of appeal hearing, Matthew Ryder, the campaigners’ QC, called on the three judges to carry out a detailed investigation of how and why Kennedy’s evidence was suppressed. He said the campaigners were still “in the dark” and had “legitimate concerns” to find out what had happened. But Lord Judge questioned why it was necessary for the judges to do that, when there were already seven inquiries. He asked for a full list of the inquiries and their remits. Following allegations in the Guardian, Sir Christopher Rose, a former court of appeal judge, was appointed to examine claims that prosecutors suppressed Kennedy’s evidence. His appointment by Keir Starmer, the director of public prosecutions, followed three internal inquiries into the claims by his agency. The investigation into the alleged suppression of the tapes by Nottinghamshire police is being conducted by the Independent Police Complaints Commission. Mark Kennedy Protest Coal Police Carbon emissions Court of appeal Energy Rob Evans Paul Lewis guardian.co.uk
Continue reading …More than eight months after banks and mortgage companies promised to put an end to robo-signing , the practice continues. Thousands of suspicious signatures have been found on mortgage documents in three states since last fall, the AP reports. In one notable example from Massachusetts, the name “Linda Green” has been…
Continue reading …Government support for ethanol has led to an increase in corn production and a steep rise in soybean imports Demand for biofuels in the US is driving this year’s high food prices, a report has said. It predicts that food prices are unlikely to fall back down for another two years. The report, produced by Purdue University economists for the Farm Foundation policy organisation , said US government support for ethanol, including subsidies, had fuelled strong demand for corn over the last five years. A dramatic rise in Chinese imports of soybeans was also putting pressure on prices and supply, the report said. Since 2005, a growing number of US farmers have switched to corn and soybeans from other crops. Farmers in other countries have also switched to corn but, the report said, the demand kept growing. “In 2005, we were using about 16m acres [6.4m hectares] to supply all of the ethanol in the United States and Chinese soybean imports,” Wallace Tyner, one of the authors said. It took 18.6m hectares (46.5m acres) last year, just to satisfy that demand. The US department of agriculture reported earlier this month that US ethanol refiners were for the first time consuming more corn than livestock and poultry farmers. It took 27% of last year’s corn crop to meet the demand for corn ethanol. Only about 10% went to make ethanol in 2005, Tyner said. The Centre for Agricultural and Rural Development at Iowa State University has estimated that 40% of the US corn crop now goes to make ethanol. But Tyner said the cobs and husks of corn used to make ethanol would go on to be used for animal feed. The other driver of rising food prices was China, which has been building up its soybean reserves since the last big global food price rises of 2008. But the report focused strongly on a US government mandate for ethanol production and $6bn (£3.7bn) in annual subsidies for ethanol refineries. Others have also been putting the corn ethanol industry in the spotlight. In an interview with the Financial Times, General Mills, which produces Cheerios cereal, Häagen-Dazs ice-cream and other major brands, also blamed ethanol subsidies for driving up food prices. Ken Powell the company’s chief executive said the price of corn and oats was up by 30 to 40% over last year. “We’re driving up food prices unnecessarily,” Ken Powell, chief executive of General Mills, said in the interview . “If corn prices go up, wheat goes up. It’s all linked.” Even if US ethanol production plateaus, as the report predicts, food prices are unlikely to recede – at least within the next year – because global soybean and corn crops are now in relatively tight supply. The authors warned there just was not enough cropland available to shift to corn and soybeans. “We don’t think these prices are going to come down in a year,” said Tyner. “It’s going to take at least a couple of years to see a significant reduction in price.” The report warned that US corn and soybean stocks were also dangerously low, with the department of agriculture projecting supplies at about half typical levels. “These are scary, scary numbers,” said Christopher Hurt, another author. “The cupboard is absolutely bare. We just are going to get out of this, at least on the basis of crops for this year.” Biofuels Food Farming Energy Renewable energy United States China Food & drink industry Commodities Energy industry Suzanne Goldenberg guardian.co.uk
Continue reading …Announcement expected from humanitarian co-ordinator for Somalia based on data from the food security and nutrition analysis unit The UN is expected on Wednesday to declare that parts of southern Somalia are now in famine amid the worst drought to hit east Africa in 60 years. Mark Bowden, humanitarian co-ordinator for Somalia, is expected to make the announcement in Nairobi, based on data from the food security and nutrition analysis unit, part of the Food and Agriculture Organisation. The drought in east Africa has left an estimated 11 million people at risk, but Somalia has been the worst hit country as it is already wracked by decades of conflict. There has not been an official famine since 1984-85 , when about 1 million people in Ethiopia and Sudan died. A famine is measured by rates of hunger, malnutrition and deaths, but the key to it is that it must be widespread. Technically, a famine is a crude mortality rate of more than two people per 10,000 per day; acute malnutrition reaching more than 30%; water consumption becoming less than four litres a day; and intake of kilocalories of 1,500 a day compared with the recommended 2,100 a day. The UN refugee agency, the UNHCR, said it was seeking further security guarantees from armed rebels in Somalia in order to deliver greater amounts of assistance and prevent more hungry people from becoming refugees, Reuters reports. Al Shabaab, Islamist insurgents affiliated to al-Qaida, control pockets of the capital Mogadishu and parts of southern and central Somalia. The group last week said it would allow foreign aid agencies into territories it controlled, reversing a ban imposed two years ago on the grounds that they were anti-Muslim. Hundreds of thousands of people have fled Somalia due to the drought and conflict, and refugees are dying of causes related to malnutrition either during the journey or very shortly after arrival at aid camps. On Sunday, the UNHCR began emergency airlift flights in Nairobi to help hundreds of thousands of Somalis who have taken refuge in neighbouring countries. A giant cargo jet chartered by UNHCR landed in Nairobi with 100 tonnes of tents for the Dadaab refugee camp complex near the Kenya-Somalia border. The airlift will support efforts to help more than 430,000 Somali refugees in Kenya and Ethiopia, including 164,000 who have arrived in the two countries since the beginning of the year. Three thousand continue to arrive daily, fleeing continuing insecurity, drought and hunger in Somalia. UN agencies have asked for $1.6bn to pay for essential programmes in east Africa, but have only received half that amount. Kenya, Somalia, Ethiopia and Djibouti are all facing a crisis that is being called the worst in 50 years. One in 10 children in parts of Somalia is at risk of starving to death, the International Committee of the Red Cross (ICRC) said last week. The independent aid agency, one of very few with access to Somalia’s worst-hit areas, said that even in the Bay and Lower Shabelle regions, Somalia’s traditional breadbaskets, nearly 11% of children under five had severe acute malnutrition . An appeal by the Disasters Emergency Committee , an umbrella group of UK charities, has raised £20m since it launched its east Africa appeal. Famine Malnutrition Somalia Africa United Nations Mark Tran guardian.co.uk
Continue reading …Tehran’s claim that tripling its uranium enrichment speed will help develop cancer treatments is dismissed as ‘a provocation’ Western capitals have reacted angrily to an announcement by Iran that it is installing more advanced centrifuges in a uranium enrichment plant with the aim of accelerating its nuclear programme. “The installation of new centrifuges with better quality and speed is ongoing,” Ramin Mehmanparast, the Iranian foreign ministry spokesman, told reporters at his weekly press briefing. “We have announced it and the agency [the International Atomic Energy Agency] has full supervision of them. They are fully aware that Iran’s peaceful nuclear activity continues to progress. This is another confirmation of the Islamic republic’s successful strides in its nuclear activities.” However, France said Iran’s move – which Tehran claims could triple the rate at which it enriches uranium – confirmed suspicions that the Iranian nuclear programme had “no credible civilian application”. The French foreign ministry said: “Iran has just given in to another provocation by announcing the imminent installation of next generation centrifuges. “This is a new violation of six security council resolutions and 10 resolutions by the council of governors of the International Atomic Energy Agency [IAEA].” The British Foreign Office said the announcement “further undermines Iran’s claim that its nuclear programme is designed for purely peaceful purposes, and demonstrates the urgency of increasing pressure on Iran … Iran must understand that we will not be distracted by events in the region and it should not doubt our resolve”. Iran Nuclear weapons International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA) Middle East Julian Borger guardian.co.uk
Continue reading …Conservative party sources say advice had nothing to do with phone-hacking inquiry Hacking suspect Neil Wallis may have provided “informal advice” to David Cameron’s communications chief Andy Coulson before the general election, the Conservative party has said. Sources in the party said the advice had “nothing to do with the phone-hacking inquiry”. A spokesman insisted Wallis was never employed by the Conservative party. The spokesman said: “There have been some questions about whether the Conservative party employed Neil Wallis. “We have double-checked our records and are able to confirm that neither Neil Wallis nor his company has ever been contracted by the Conservative party, nor has the Conservative party made payments to either of them. “It has been drawn to our attention that he may have provided Andy Coulson with some informal advice on a voluntary basis before the election. We are currently finding out the exact nature of any advice. “We can confirm that apart from Andy Coulson, neither David Cameron nor any senior member of the campaign team were aware of this until this week.” The Metropolitan police commissioner, Sir Paul Stephenson, and his assistant commissioner John Yates, who both appeared before the home affairs select committee on Tuesday, resigned after being linked to Wallis, who was deputy to Coulson during his time in charge at the News of the World. It was also alleged that Wallis arranged a stay at the luxury health resort Champneys for Stephenson and his wife as he recovered from surgery. But Scotland Yard has insisted the accommodation and food was provided by Champneys’ managing director, Stephen Purdew, a family friend of the commissioner. Wallis denies any involvement in the stay. The shadow culture secretary, Ivan Lewis, said: “This revelation raises further serious concerns about David Cameron’s judgment in appointing Andy Coulson. “He must now come clean about Neil Wallis’s role and activities in supporting Andy Coulson, both in his capacity as director of communications for the Tory party, and then the prime minister.” Phone hacking Andy Coulson David Cameron News of the World Newspapers & magazines National newspapers Newspapers Conservatives guardian.co.uk
Continue reading …Atlantis left the International Space Station for the very last time today, heading home to end the 30-year run of a vessel that kept Americans flying to and from orbit longer than any other rocketship. The space shuttle slipped away after performing a partial lap around the space station. Ten…
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