Syrian regime angered by diplomats’ visits to Hama, as US accuses government of slow response to violence Angry Syrians loyal to President Bashar al-Assad have stormed the US and French embassies in Damascus to protest against their ambassadors’ visits to Hama over the weekend – criticised by the Syrian government as a “flagrant intervention” in its affairs. Demonstrators waving flags and pictures of the president surrounded the embassies, chanting slogans including “We will die for you, Bashar”. Protesters, many of them bused in, scaled the US embassy building and replaced the stars and stripes with the Syrian flag. Graffiti were scrawled on the buildings, tomatoes and litter thrown, and glass smashed. Men dressed in riot gear and security officers appeared to do nothing to restrain the crowds at the US embassy. At the French embassy, witnesses said shots were fired into the air to disperse the attacks. US ambassador Robert Ford’s residence also came under attack. Earlier, ad-Dounia, a TV station close to the regime, had called on people to send the ambassador a message. Washington and Paris condemned the attacks. The US secretary of state, Hillary Clinton, said: “We demand [Syria] meet their international responsibilities immediately to protect all diplomats and the property of all countries.” Under international law, host countries are obliged to protect foreign mission staff and property. “By either allowing or inciting this kind of behaviour by these mobs against American and French diplomats and their property, they are clearly trying to deflect attention from their crackdown internally and to move the world’s view away from what they are doing,” Clinton said. “It just doesn’t work.” Clinton also warned Assad and his supporters that there was no truth to suggestions by some that the US wanted to see the current regime stay in power for the sake of stability. “President Assad is not indispensable and we have absolutely nothing invested in him remaining in power,” she said. The US has repeatedly protested over the suppression of unrest during the past few months and urged Assad to reform or step aside. But, unlike in the case of Libya’s Muammar Gaddafi, it has not called explicitly for his overthrow. Human rights groups say more than 1,500 civilians have been killed and hundreds more injured as security forces try to suppress unprecedented and growing opposition to the Assad regime. Thousands have been detained and many tortured. The unprecedented scenes in the capital contrasted with those at the weekend in the flashpoint central city of Hama, which has become the focus of international attention after slipping out of government control. Despite drawing the ire of Syrian officials, Ford’s deliberately high-profile visit to Hama was met with roses and cheers on Thursday and Friday. The city, where the memory of a bloody 1982 crackdown endures, has become the heart of a popular fightback against the government. Then, under the president’s father, Hafez, the assault was to quell an armed Islamist uprising. Today Assad faces a movement of overwhelmingly unarmed protesters. “We are treated like animals rather than people and now we are starting to behave like citizens,” said one 55-year-old man, whose brother and father were killed in the 1982 assault. Government forces, including the security services, police – and on some days even the traffic police – withdrew the weekend after 3 June, a bloody Friday when more than 70 people were shot dead during protests after Friday prayers. Residents have since organised themselves, taking on the traditional role of the government in creating a functioning city, and since last weekend, when tanks approached the outskirts of the city, resisting any broad incursion by security services and the army. Names have been changed to protect identities. Nour Ali is a pseudonym for a journalist in Syria Syria Bashar Al-Assad United States France guardian.co.uk
Continue reading …Rush Limbaugh couldn’t resist pushing the envelope a bit today with a crack implying that Barack Obama is Muslim. In a segment on the debt ceiling spotted by Mediaite , Rush said, “So Obama’s out there pushing this magic Aug. 2 deadline to get this thing done. That’s because Ramadan starts…
Continue reading …Here’s an idea for a cigarette warning label: Kids exposed to secondhand smoke at home are 50% more likely to develop mental and behavioral disorders like ADHD, according to a new study. Researchers can’t prove that secondhand smoke causes the disorders, but say that if it does, 274,100 excess…
Continue reading …A lawyer for an alleged mobster is asking a judge for leniency in sentencing, saying his client’s small Maltese puppy was traumatized when an FBI team stormed into his Staten Island home and tossed concussion grenades. The dog was thrown across the room by the blast and “has not been…
Continue reading …Can a post-scandal Arnold Schwarzenegger still fill a multiplex? Lionsgate is about to find out. According to Nikki Finke’s Deadline Hollywood , the studio has signed the former Governator to star in Last Stand, a western that’s long languished in development. The damaged Schwarzenegger will reportedly make a whole lot less…
Continue reading …House Republicans resoundingly rejected even modest cuts in defense spending last week, sending an uncomfortable message to leaders negotiating cuts for a debt ceiling deal. After three days of floor debate, the GOP shot down even modest reductions of military spending, including cuts for military bands or the Pentagon’s sponsorship…
Continue reading …• Bailout fund may be used to buy back Greek debt • Markets in turmoil amid escalating anxiety European leaders bowed to the inevitable and conceded that Greece is likely to default on its massive debt burden, which would be a first among the 17 countries using the euro. They also abruptly shifted tack in the eurozone debt crisis by raising the possibility of using the eurozone’s bailout fund to buy back Greek debt on the markets, meaning sizeable losses for Greece’s private investors and reduced debt levels for Athens. Following 12 hours of fraught negotiations in Brussels haunted by the risks of contagion in the eurozone spreading to Italy, now being targeted by the financial markets for the first time in the 18-month crisis, the 17 governments of the eurozone pointedly failed to rule out a sovereign debt default by Greece. A statement that at the meeting the European Central Bank “confirmed its position that a credit event or selective default should be avoided”. There was no declaration of governments’ support for the ECB position. Both Jean-Claude Juncker of Luxembourg, president of the Eurogroup, and Olli Rehn, EU commissioner for monetary affairs, declined to offer one. “That does not mean that the Eurogroup as such would do everything to provoke a credit event,” quipped Juncker. As recently as last week, eurozone ministers stressed the need to avoid default in Greece, indicating the rapid shifts under way in an escalating crisis. Deep-seated divisions remained between the wealthy northern creditor governments and southern Europe, with market pressures pushing up Italian and Spanish borrowing costs and appearing to vindicate ECB warnings of the risks of contagion from Greece. Italian borrowing costs hit 5.7%, their highest levels in more than a decade, while the yields, or borrowing rates, on Spanish government bonds reached 6% – the highest level since the creation of the euro. Dealers reported a race to “safe havens” and gold priced in euros and sterling reached record levels of €1,110.48 and £979.89 an ounce in early trading before falling back, while the euro hit a record low against the Swiss franc – a safe-haven currency. Wall Street was also caught up in the anxiety, with US stocks falling 1% in early trading, while the FTSE 100 was also 1% lower. Analysts said there was little hope of calm returning to the markets while eurozone governments remained gridlocked over how to respond despite weeks of negotiations aimed at encouraging Greece’s private creditors to take part in a new bailout. France has proposed rolling over Greece’s privately held debt, mostly for 30 years, while Germany revived calls for a Greek debt swap, entailing “haircuts” for investors. The meeting remained split on the scale and modality of private creditor involvement in the new Greek bailout, the second in more than a year, EU officials said. European diplomats said the meeting needed to be “cathartic”, paving the way for a breakthrough to stave off a wider catastrophe in the months ahead. The major new developments were that eurozone governments accepted for the first time that a Greek default may be inevitable and that the eurozone’s €440bn euro bailout fund should be reconfigured to buy back Greek debt. “We stress our intention to make Greek debt more sustainable,” said Jean-Claude Juncker, the Luxembourg prime minister who chairs the 17-country Eurogroup. The interest Greece is paying on the bailout loans would be lowered, their maturities lengthened, and the “flexibility and scope” of the eurozone bailout fund would be “enhanced”. Sources said the proposal was to use the fund to reduce Greece’s debt burden by buying back Greek debt from bond-holders at a discount. This is likely to be contested by Germany, the central player among the creditor countries, and could run into problems in Germany’s parliament. The rules for the bailout fund would need to be rewritten, meaning the deal would need to go before MPs in Berlin, EU officials said. But the scheme would also require the participation of Greece’s private creditors who would suffer losses, long a German demand. There was no final agreement this morning amid murmurings of an emergency EU or eurozone summit being called before the end of the month. The outlines of the new rescue emerging this morning pitted Germany against the European Central Bank, with elements of the deal designed to accommodate both camps. Bailout fund buybacks are supported by the ECB, while private creditor losses are a German condition. Accepting that a Greek default was now impossible to avoid, EU governments are hoping it will be brief and “selective”, not triggering a “credit event” on the financial markets that could wreak havoc on the credit default swap markets, also in the US, and unleash contagion. Last week two of the three big ratings agencies predicted a Greek-style scenario for Portugal, downgrading its debt to junk, while predicting any private-sector involvement in the second Greek bailout being negotiated would be viewed as a default. Those verdicts provoked rage from the EU. Viviane Reding, the EU justice commissioner, said: “Europe can’t allow three private US enterprises to destroy the euro.” Either their “cartel” was smashed or “independent” European and Asian ratings agencies would be set up. “We can’t have a situation where a cartel of three US enterprises decides the fates of entire national economies and their citizens,” she said. European debt crisis European banks Financial crisis Banking Global recession Global economy Greece Europe European Union Ian Traynor guardian.co.uk
Continue reading …An 11-year-old is suing her father after he was shot in a road-rage clash—while she was in the car. At issue: Dad Thomas Timko gave another man the finger after the man cut him off while driving. That “escalated the situation” and ultimately led to the four shots being…
Continue reading …An Oklahoma pharmacist was sentenced to life in prison today for the shooting death of a teenager who tried to rob his store. Jerome Ersland, 59, was charged with first-degree murder, but will have the possibility of parole, reports MSNBC . As he left the courtroom, Ersland told a reporter the…
Continue reading …Hacker collective Anonymous claims that it will release “literally explosive” information this week, most likely obtained from intelligence contractors. The claim was made on a Twitter account reportedly run by an Anonymous leader who helped found the recently disbanded LulzSec group, Raw Story reports.
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