A former patient of the clinic owned and run by Michele Bachmann’s husband says he was urged to “pray away the gay” when he went for therapy there. He was told prayer could help him be “re-oriented” and “rid him of his homosexual urges,” ex-patient Andrew Ramirez tells the Nation…
Continue reading …Prison officers warn of insufficient staff numbers to oversee justice secretary’s proposals for improving inmate rehabilitation Plans to enable prisoners to work 40 hours a week inside jail are impractical because there is insufficient staff levels to oversee them, prison officers have warned the government. Steve Gillan, general secretary of the Prison Officers Association, told MPs the proposals for improving rehabilitation have not been allocated adequate resources. Giving evidence at the committee stage of the legal aid, sentencing and punishment of offenders bill, Gillan said: “We are broadly supportive of prisoners working but it has got to be meaningful. You have to look at the situation where companies may be laying people off outside and setting up workshops in prison.” In one jail holding 1,000 inmates, there were workshop places for only 30 prisoners at a time, Gillan explained. “We were very surprised when Ken Clarke [the justice secretary] announced that it would be 40 hours a week. There’s not the space or resources. Prison officers only work a 39-hour week. We believe, and there’s evidence to show, that the prison population will not fall as fast as envisaged and there’s still a £130m hole in the Ministry of Justice’s budget.” But Frances Crook, director of the Howard League for Penal Reform, welcomed the government’s proposals, suggesting inmates might even one day operate call centres from behind prison walls. “I see that BT has brought back its call centres from abroad,” she told MPs, “It could be that sort of work that could be done in prison, but it has to be run by outside businesses. “I have campaigned for work inside prisons for 15 years. Long-term adult prisoners should have the opportunity to do work, to contribute to society and to pay tax.” She doubted, however, whether legislation was necessary to give prisoners the opportunity to work because the powers already existed. “The only way savings can be made,” she said, “is by closing down institutions and switching to community [sentences] that will prevent people from reoffending.” At the start of the session the opposition accused the Ministry of Justice of trying to railroad through the bill and of failing to make enough time available for evidence to be heard. The Conservative MP Ben Wallace accused Labour members of “the pot calling the kettle black”, claiming bills had regularly been pushed through without adequate examination by the previous Labour administration. Prisons and probation Kenneth Clarke UK criminal justice Work & careers Owen Bowcott guardian.co.uk
Continue reading …Operator to seek $8bn from Cairo over disruption to gas exports after gunmen blow up terminal a week on from last attack A large explosion has rocked Egypt’s main gas pipeline through the Sinai peninsula, cutting off supplies to neighbouring Israel and Jordan for the fourth time this year. Masked gunmen entered a pipeline distribution station near the city of al-Arish on Monday night, according to Egypt’s official news agency. The saboteurs reportedly ordered security guards to leave before blowing up the terminal, causing 10-metre-high flames to leap into the air. By Tuesday morning emergency crews had brought the blaze under control. This latest incident is the fourth such attack on the pipeline since anti-government protests begin in January. Officials had been finalising repairs from a previous pipeline explosion a week ago when the gunmen struck. Earlier assaults in February and April shut down gas exports through the pipeline for several weeks. The pipeline has long been a source of political controversy in Egypt, particularly since the signing of a 20-year gas export deal with Israel in 2008. The final years of Hosni Mubarak’s rule were marked by widespread opposition to the agreement, both on the streets and in the courts. Campaigners claim that corrupt business dealings enabled Israel to buy gas at below-market prices, and argue that it was wrong to provide energy supplies to the county while it continued its blockade on the Gaza Strip. Although no group has yet claimed responsibility, Monday’s attack also underscored the ongoing tension between the Cairo-based government and Egypt’s Bedouin communities, who have complained of state-sponsored discrimination against them ever since Egypt reclaimed the Sinai peninsula from Israel in 1982. Activists claim that an official effort to “Egyptianise” northern Sinai through the resettlement of Nile valley dwellers on the peninsula has locked Bedouins out of jobs and housing opportunities and destroyed traditional ways of life. “There’s been a long-standing conflict simmering between Bedouin communities and the Egyptian state,” said Elijah Zarwan, senior north Africa analyst for the conflict resolution NGO International Crisis Group. “The Bedouin now are looking to make sure that they aren’t left out of the kind of sweeping changes that many Egyptians across the country are hoping to see in the aftermath of Mubarak’s fall. They don’t want to be left behind.” Shares in Ampal-American Israel Corp, which holds a 12.5% stake in the pipeline, tumbled further on Tuesday morning, having already seen its stock fall by 65% since the start of the year. Meanwhile the Eastern Mediterranean Gas Company, which is charged with operating the pipeline, said it would be seeking more than $8bn (£5.1bn) in damages from the Egyptian government over the repeated disruptions. But experts suggested that the long-term economic impact on Egypt would not be too great. “It will certainly have a short-term effect on the balance of payments, because the government is now not going to get the gas revenues they had been expecting from Israel and Jordan,” said Simon Kitchen, a strategist at Egyptian investment bank EFG-Hermes. But he pointed out that last year gas exports to Israel and Jordan through the pipeline totalled only 5.46bn cubic metres, a figure dwarfed by the almost 10bn cubic metres of liquefied natural gas that Egypt exported via tankers to Europe and elsewhere. “Israel and Jordan, especially the latter, rely on this gas heavily,” added Kitchen. “For Egypt the money is nice, but it’s not absolutely critical.” Egypt Middle East Africa Gas Hosni Mubarak Commodities Israel Jordan Arab and Middle East unrest Jack Shenker guardian.co.uk
Continue reading …Legal troubles for accused sex attacker Dominique Strauss-Kahn may be just beginning. French police are questioning the writer in France who is suing Strauss-Kahn for attempted rape. The interview will help investigators determine if there’s enough evidence to go ahead with a full-scale French criminal case against the former head…
Continue reading …The last words uttered by a 21-year-old Colorado man were: “Let’s play Russian roulette.” The man, who had been drinking beer with three friends, then put a handgun to his head and pulled the trigger, killing himself. Police believe he didn’t know the gun was loaded and are treating the…
Continue reading …Could Fox News and the New York Post get swept up in the fallout from the News of the World scandal? Determined Twitter and Facebook campaigns are urging the boycott of all Rupert Murdoch operations in the wake of the burgeoning phone hacking scandal at the shuttered British newspaper. Boycottmurdoch…
Continue reading …Cunning minds at the CIA devised a phony vaccination program in an effort to uncover Osama bin Laden’s hiding place, a Guardian investigation has found. A regional health official, was recruited to organize the vaccination drive in Abbottabad, beginning the program in a poorer part of town to make it…
Continue reading …Experts say oil company spent $16m on actor’s oil-water separation machines and gave top priority to testing his devices BP spent $16m (£10m) on an oil spill clean-up machine pitched by actor Kevin Costner at the height of last year’s Gulf of Mexico disaster – even though the machines failed their initial field tests. In the week of the one-year anniversary of the capping of the well, it has emerged that the oil company gave top priority to testing the devices – ahead of the 123,000 other suggestions from the public for plugging the well and scooping up more the millions of gallons of crude from deep water, marshes and beaches. However, technical experts in charge of sifting through those public ideas said Costner’s oil-water separator did not show particular promise. The device, a centrifuge designed to spin contaminated water through a cylinder to separate the oil, became gummed up by the thick, heavily weathered crude that was a defining feature of the BP spill. It was also not a particularly new technology, the experts said. The actor vigorously promoted the centrifuges after last year’s oil disaster , which followed the April 2010 explosion on the Deepwater Horizon oil rig , which killed 11 workers. In an appearance before Congress in June last year, Costner said he had spent some $24m (£15m) developing the devices since buying a patent from the Department of Energy in the early 1990s. He also told Congress that his devices would have been able to clean up 90% of the oil spilled by the Exxon Valdez tanker in less than a week. “It appeared to work in some conditions and did not appear to work in others,” said Kurt Hansen, a technical expert from the US Coast Guard’s research and development centre, who was part of the test team. “My impression from talking to people who have seen it is that it’s not any different than any other separators out there on the market that do the same thing.” Ellen Faurot-Daniels, an expert from California’s Office of Spill Prevention and Response, came to a similar conclusion. “His oil-water separator didn’t work very well on this oil. It was pretty waxy and a lot of oil-water separators had a lot of trouble dealing with it,” she said. “But he was given the opportunity to go back and improve the separator so it would do a better job.” And yet it is widely acknowledged among the scientists and technical experts who worked desperately last summer to plug the well and clean up the oil spewing into the Gulf that Costner went straight to the head of the line when it came to get a hearing from BP. “He was on TV. He was telegenic, and there were enormous amounts of money being spent,” said one government scientist. There is no indication that the preference shown to Costner directly impeded the development of another technology. Costner’s agent and his company, Blue Planet Water Solutions , did not respond to requests for comment. BP has been reluctant to revisit last year’s exercise in crowd sourcing “given the timing [one year after the well was capped]“, a spokesman, Daren Beaudo, said in an email. On the Costner separators, Beado wrote: “Costner’s device is one of the many technologies that were tested and used during the response. We appreciate all of the ideas that were submitted during this unprecedented response event.” It took three attempts before technical experts could see the centrifuges in action. The first attempt to deploy the centrifuges was called off for safety concerns. A second test, overseen by a senior vice-president from BP, failed when the pump that was supposed to feed the oiled water into the centrifuge became clogged. “The result of weathering and mixing and dispersant and natural organic matter in the ocean created a very very stable water and oil emulsion which had a viscosity like peanut butter,” said Eric Hoek, an associate professor of environmental engineering who took leave from his post at UCLA to work as a consultant to Costner’s company. The gooey thick substance simply could not be siphoned up into the centrifuges for processing. “The pump couldn’t pump it,” Hoek said. “They handed us a material that was not capable of being separated by any separation technology because you couldn’t pump it.” A third test, conducted off Port Jackson, Louisiana on 8 June last year, produced the desired results, Hoek said. The devices did succeed in separating out oil from water – though not quite to the high levels of purity Costner had claimed in his media appearances and before Congress. A week after that successful test, BP ordered 32 centrifuge systems. By the time the well was plugged on 15 July, 21 centrifuge systems had been deployed, with varying degrees of success , said Hoek. “There were days when the vessels collected oil and watery liquid and the centrifuge processed it,” he said. “There were days when the vessel pulled up but it was not processible, it was full of sticks, or peanut butter.” Costner has continued to champion the centrifuges. He visited the Gulf again this April to try to persuade BP and Louisiana parish presidents to invest in a permanent fleet of centrifuge-equipped monster barges , called Big Gulps, that would remain on the ready in case of another spill. The fleet, which Costner likened to an insurance policy for the Gulf, would cost $48m a year. Hoek, meanwhile, maintains that in research since then his team had figured out how to break down the stickiest – peanut-butter-like – oil so it could be pumped into the centrifuges. BP oil spill Oil spills Oil Pollution United States Oil BP Kevin Costner Suzanne Goldenberg guardian.co.uk
Continue reading …If a single person scoops the £166m EuroMillions jackpot they will become the 418th richest person in the country Tonight’s EuroMillions jackpot will be the largest lottery prize ever offered in the UK. After a series of rollovers it now stands at £166m, and because it has been capped at that amount prizes in the next tier down are also worth more than usual. No one scooped the jackpot on Friday, although two UK ticket holders did win £3.3m each for matching five main numbers and one lucky star. Their prize fund was boosted because the jackpot has been capped, meaning any extra money rolls down to bolster the prizes in the next tier down. The usual estimated prize for matching those numbers would be about £211,000, Camelot said. In anticipation of Friday’s bumper prize draw, the lottery operator saw sales of the £2 tickets hit about 3 million an hour, and high sales are expected again today. A National Lottery spokeswoman said: “The massive £166m jackpot is still waiting to be won, and all eyes now focus on Tuesday’s draw. In addition to the chance to win this life-changing prize, we could also see several UK millionaires created in the next prize level down.” This series of rollovers has also generated an additional £100m to be donated to charitable causes, the lottery operator said. If one player takes the £166m prize they would be the biggest lottery winner in Europe. They would become the 418th richest person in the UK and would be better off than the Beckhams with their fortune of £165m, according to the Sunday Times Rich List. According to Coutts bank, investing the money would earn the winner interest of £9,323 a day, or £3.4m a year. Consumer affairs National Lottery guardian.co.uk
Continue reading …European court says online marketplaces can be held responsible for the infringement of trademarks on counterfeit goods they promote, following a series of cases brought by L’Oreal to defend its brand Online shopping sites such as eBay may be liable for trademark infringements if they play an “active role” in promoting counterfeit goods, Europe’s top court ruled today. In an eagerly awaited ruling with huge implications for e-commerce, the European court of justice in Luxembourg said national courts could order online retailers to stop such infringements and prevent similar incidents in the future. The verdict followed a series of cases brought by cosmetics and beauty giant L’Oreal across the EU to defend its brand name. The company is challenging eBay – the world’s largest online auctioneer – to clarify the obligations of internet marketplaces under EU law. L’Oreal claims eBay is liable for the sale on its website of counterfeit goods and of “parallel imports” – L’Oreal-branded products not intended for the European market. The judgment said L’Oreal’s complaint against eBay included claims that, by buying keywords from paid internet referencing services (such as Google’s AdWords) corresponding to L’Oreal trademarks, eBay “directs its users towards goods that infringe trademark law, which are offered for sale on its website”. Last December, the EU court’s advocate-general said eBay should not be liable unless it had been notified by a trademark holder such as L’Oreal of an infringement and if the online offence continued. In today’s final verdict, the full panel of EU judges said it was the right of national courts to order companies such as eBay “to take measures intended not only to bring to an end infringements of intellectual property rights, but also to prevent further infringements of that kind”. The court said in a statement: “When the operator has played an ‘active role’ … it cannot rely on the exemption from liability which EU law confers, under certain conditions, on online service providers such as operators of internet marketplaces.” The court said action taken by member states must be “effective, proportionate and dissuasive, and must not create barriers to legitimate trade”. The judges said that even in cases where the operator had not played an “active role”, it could still be liable for trademark infringement “if it was aware of facts or circumstances on the basis of which a diligent economic operator should have realised that the online offers for sale were unlawful and, in the event of it being so aware, failed to act promptly to remove the data concerned from its website or to disable access to them”. Stefan Krawczyk, senior director and counsel government relations, eBay Europe, said: “The judgment provides some clarity on certain issues, and ensures that all brands can be traded online in Europe.” Consumer affairs Retail industry Court of justice of the European Union Europe Europe Rebecca Smithers guardian.co.uk
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