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Rescuers searched through the wreckage of a packed express train for people trapped inside after it derailed in northern India today, killing at least 21 and injuring more than 100 others, officials said. The Kalka Mail train was on its way to Kalka, in the foothills of the Himalayas, from…

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(AP) Hollywood royalty mingled with the real thing as the Duke and Duchess of Cambridge spent a sun-splashed day on the polo fields of Santa Barbara County followed by a diamond-studded night amid movie glitterati at the midpoint of their tour of California. Prince William wowed the crowd with four…

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Silvio Berlusconi’s firm told to pay €560m over bribery

Fininvest ordered to pay out for bribing judge in 1991, dealing heaviest blow yet to Berlusconi’s business career As one international media tycoon was flying to London to deal with the crisis in his empire, another cut short a visit to the Mediterranean island of Lampedusa and hastened to Rome after being dealt the heaviest blow yet in his controversial business career. Silvio Berlusconi learned on Saturday that judges in Milan had ordered his company Fininvest to hand over more than half a billion euros to his deadliest rival. The money is compensation for bribery of a judge to rule in Berlusconi’s favour in his struggle with the industrialist Carlo De Benedetti for control of Mondadori, Italy’s biggest publishing house. Last week it was discovered that a clause had been inserted in a package of budgetary adjustments that would have meant Fininvest did not have to pay the compensation until it had exhausted the appeals process. In Italy, that can take years, or even decades. Several ministers have since said they knew nothing about the insertion until it was reported in the media. But the prime minister has insisted it was discussed in cabinet. Berlusconi himself was put on trial for bribery in connection with the Mondadori judgment, but the charges against him were dropped in 2001 after being timed out by a statute of limitations. In their written ruling, however, the Milan appeals court judges said he was “jointly responsible” for the corruption. They said it was “beyond any plausible reasoning” that Fininvest’s lawyers would have been given the money to bribe the judge while “the owner of the company that paid and benefited was kept in the dark”. It was obvious they would not have acted “in the absence of an unequivocal order” from Berlusconi, the judges said. The prime minister had not given any reaction to the sentence by Sunday afternoon. But his daughter Marina Berlusconi, president of Fininvest, told the Corriere della Sera newspaper the case would be taken to Italy’s highest appeals court. “My father has never anything wrong,” she said. She noted that the 1991 ruling at the centre of the dispute was underwritten by three judges, only one of whom was subsequently convicted of accepting the bribe. A lower court had fixed the compensation at €750m. The Milan appeals court reduced the figure to €560m. Marina Berlusconi said the lower figure was still out of all proportion. Fininvest’s 50% holding in Mondadori, she said, was worth less than half that amount. The Mondadori group includes nine publishers and more than 40 magazines including the news weekly Panorama and the Italian edition of Cosmopolitan. Silvio Berlusconi Italy Europe John Hooper guardian.co.uk

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Rights groups fear wave of deaths as Thailand faces new drugs crackdown

Pledge by PM-in-waiting as methamphetamine addiction rockets echoes brother’s 2003 war on gangs At first the tablets made life easier for Santhisuk: they helped him endure the long hours lugging heavy fabric bales in a Bangkok textiles factory. Gradually he noticed he was angrier and more aggressive on the days he skipped them. But it was only when arrested for a third time – and sent to rehabilitation at a Buddhist temple – that he admitted his addiction to methamphetamine. Now clean, the 19-year-old labourer is worrying about what will happen when he leaves the sanctuary of Wat Saphan and returns home. “It will be difficult because all my friends still take it. Drug use is so widespread now that everybody thinks it’s normal,” he said. Monks at the temple in Klong Toey, one of Bangkok’s poorest areas, say they have seen a huge increase in addiction rates. The problem has spread far beyond the Thai capital. The number of methamphetamine users in Thailand will reach 1.1 million this year, the head of the country’s anti-drug police told the Guardian – equivalent to one in every 60 citizens. The number of users has soared by 100,000 annually over the last five to six years, said Lieutenant-General Atitep Panjamanond. Yingluck Shinawatra, the prime minister in waiting, has already pledged “a new war on drugs” to eliminate them within 12 months, alarming human rights groups who fear a repeat of her brother’s 2003 crackdown. More than 2,500 people died in three months after Thaksin Shinawatra ordered police to draw up blacklists of suspected dealers and act “decisively and without mercy”. Though the police blamed gang crime for most of the deaths – they said 68 were shot by officers “in self-defence” – human rights groups say there is compelling evidence of extra-judicial killings. A committee later reported that more than half the dead, including a nine-year-old boy, had not been involved in the drugs trade. But the campaign was hugely popular and as drug use rises, many want a return to tough action. “Personally, I think the killings were a good thing. If you leave it to the courts [dealers] just cycle in and out of prison,” said Aminna Bedinlae, 84, who lost her son to drugs and now runs anti-abuse programmes in Klong Toey, where 46 residents were shot. Substance abuse had always been rife in the Bangkok slum, but in the past glue-sniffing was more common, said the 84-year-old. “Now they start off sniffing glue at six or seven and move on … [Methamphetamine] is more expensive so they get involved with crime – theft or burglary– and it makes them more aggressive. “My neighbour’s son steals from the family and demands 300 baht [for drugs] every day. If she hasn’t got it, he hits her.” Drivers and labourers have long relied on methamphetamine tablets – known here as yaba or “crazy drug” – to sustain them through gruelling work sessions. But Atitep said recreational use was extremely common and that children as young as 13 are taking it, with five- and six-year-olds being used as mules. Last month the public health minister said 6,700 children aged 7 to 17 were rehabilitated in the first half of this year. Experts warn regular use can lead to addiction and psychiatric problems, and say the drug is associated with violent and aggressive behaviour . Atitep said about 70% of methamphetamine comes across the Burmese border and blamed ethnic militias for churning out more drugs to fund their fight against the regime . The price of a tablet has fallen to as little as 150 baht (£3) in places; half the 2004 price. His department seized 33m tablets in 2009, and 60m last year. “That doesn’t give me pleasure, because there is a lot more supply,” the police chief said. “Today we seize 1m tablets. Tomorrow they produce 2m.” One of his teams had just seized 30,000 tablets in Nakhon Pathom province. But officers who traced the gang bosses behind the deal discovered they were already jailed and had continued to trade via smuggled mobile phones. Atitep said changes in values and society were contributing to increasing drug use. Others say the economic fall out from 2008′s global downturn, and the distraction of authorities by political turmoil, have exacerbated problems. Some allege that corrupt officers are facilitating the trade. At Wat Saphan, monks fear another crackdown would only push problems underground. “When Thaksin came along it was brutal. There was shooting — bam, bam, bam – and were the results worth it?” asked one monk, Phra Kru Manit. “Do you know who the kingpins are? Do you know which officials are involved? Deal with that, then deal with the problem on the streets.” The real solution lay in rehabilitation programmes and better educational and economic opportunities for residents, he argued. Yingluck told AFP before the election that she would “handle the drugs policy with care [for] human rights”. Montira Kantapin, a spokeswoman for Yingluck’s Puea Thai party, said a working group was considering options. “No one is disputing the government’s desire to take on the drugs industry. It is the means we are concerned about,” said Benjamin Zawacki, Amnesty International’s south-east Asia researcher. Sunai Phasuk of fellow charity Human Rights Watch said Yingluck’s pledge to eradicate drugs was the group’s biggest concern. The outgoing government had identified suspects in a similar way but “with the Democrats’ approach they are sent to a bootcamp facility [without proper medical help to quit]; with Thaksin’s approach they might end up dead,” he said. He said that many of those killed in the 2003 crackdown had been “victims of personal revenge or sloppy categorisation”. One couple was shot dead after acquiring suspicious wealth; it later emerged that they had won the lottery. Thailand Drugs trade Thaksin Shinawatra Human rights Tania Branigan guardian.co.uk

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Martine Aubry hits back over alcoholism rumours

Socialist hopeful in French election threatens legal action over rumours and allegations her husband is Islamist Martine Aubry, a challenger for the Socialist ticket in next year’s French presidential election, has threatened legal action over allegations that her husband is an Islamist and denounced rumours that she has suffered from alcoholism. Politicians on the left have long warned that the 2012 French presidential race risked descending into a battle of personal smear campaigns. Charges of attempted rape against the former Socialist frontrunner Dominique Strauss-Kahn in New York and a new legal complaint over an alleged attempted rape in France, as well as stories on his wealth and pursuit of women, have intensified the scrutiny of presidential hopefuls. Aubry, the Socialist leader and mayor of Lille, threatened to sue websites which did not remove references to her husband, the lawyer Jean-Louis Brochen, as an “Islamist” or “Salafist”. In 1993, before France’s law banning religious symbols in schools, Brochen defended schoolgirls threatened with exclusion for wearing headscarves and a Jewish boy who wore a skull cap. Brochen, a staunch secularist, has said it was a lawyer’s role to defend all sorts of cases. The Journal du Dimanche reported that Aubry made telephone warnings to people she suspected of slandering her husband or spreading rumours that she had fought alcoholism or suffered health problems. These included a former minister under Jacques Chirac and a senior figure at the Elysée. The paper said one former government minister had said in private, without producing proof, that Aubry had undergone two detox treatments for alcohol use in a clinic in the south of France. Socialists suspect the Elysée and Nicolas Sarkozy’s ruling rightwing UMP party of stoking gossip against Aubry. This charge was rejected outright by Nadine Morano, minister for learning and vocational training, who said Aubry was portraying herself as a victim to detract from the shortcomings of the Socialist campaign. In recent days, Aubry has repeatedly dismissed the rumours. Le Monde reported that on a Turin trip, Aubry joked to media: “You all know I swig whisky hidden under my djellaba [north African loose robe].” The former rightwing prime minister Dominique de Villepin, who also has ambitions to challenge Sarkozy for the presidency, said rumours about Aubry were “scandalous” and “foul” and warned that no one should play dirty politics. The latest poll, for Ifop, found that 46% of French people felt the Socialist François Hollande was most capable of beating Sarkozy, followed by Aubry on 27%. France Europe Angelique Chrisafis guardian.co.uk

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Moammar Gadhafi is again threatening to bring the fight to Europe with a wave of suicide bombings, reports the LA Times . “Hundreds of Libyans will martyr in Europe,” said Gadhafi late Friday in a speech in Tripoli’s Green Square. “I told you it is eye for an eye and tooth…

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Syrian ‘national dialogue’ conference boycotted by angry opposition

Vice-president says talks will lead to ‘the transformation of Syria’, but dissidents refuse to attend while crackdown continues Opposition leaders boycotted a “national dialogue” conference on reform with Syria’s ruling Ba’ath party on Sunday, vowing not to meet the regime while protesters were still being killed in the streets. Opening the two-day conference, Syria’s vice-president, Farouk al-Sharaa, portrayed it as a potential turning point in the country’s political history. “We hope that it will lead to … the transformation of Syria into a pluralistic, democratic state where its citizens are equal,” Sharaa told delegates at the Sahara hotel in Damascus. But the 200 delegates consisted mainly of Ba’ath party members, intellectuals close to the regime and independent parliamentarians. Opposition figures, activists in the Local Co-ordinating Committees (LCC) who represent protesters and exiled dissidents, said they rejected email invitations due to the continuing killing and lack of trust in the regime’s promises to reform. “While the regime is meeting – and that is what today was – there are funerals in other cities and people continue to be killed and arrested,” said Razan Zeitouneh, a lawyer and LCC member in Damascus. Human rights groups say at least 1,500 civilians and 350 security force members have been killed since Syria’s uprising started in mid-March and thousands more have been detained. The conference was organised to discuss short-term reforms, such as a review of the restrictive media laws, and to draw up a political road map to democracy, but the government has not said how long that process should take. Reforms such as the lifting of emergency law have been promised but not fully implemented. Most international journalists remain banned from the country, despite pledges to create a free media. Most analysts say the regime cannot reform without losing its grip on power. “Any true reform, such as a move to democracy, is a dream because it would weaken the regime,” said one opposition figure who asked not to be named. “But today’s meeting is good because it shows how far the street has pushed and, by making promises, the regime is raising the bar for itself.” In Midan, a central Damascus neighbourhood which suffered its first casualty of the uprising on Friday, many residents were sceptical about the meeting. “We don’t want to talk two days after someone died here,” said one 31-year-old man. Activists in the neighbourhood said 25-year-old Mohamed Dakdak died after being shot in the head during protests on what the opponents called “No Dialogue Friday”. At least 14 people were reportedly killed across the country on Friday but Dakdak’s death marked the first instance that live ammunition has been fired at people rather than into the air in this sensitive area in the capital, and it could lead to the spread of unrest in Damascus. Although protests in the capital remain small, acts of resistance have become more common. In some neighbourhoods locals have distributed lists of informers, some Damascenes have donated money to protesters, and acts of civil disobedience targeting the economy have proliferated. Pro-regime supporters have become increasingly bullish, throwing rubbish and tomatoes at the French embassy on Sunday and protesting outside the US embassy. The US and French ambassadors were summoned to see foreign minister Walid al-Moallem after their trip to the city of Hama at the weekend, which Syria’s government deemed “flagrant interference in Syria’s domestic affairs”. Hama’s residents welcomed US ambassador Robert Ford with roses, saying he had stopped a bloody crackdown on Friday after four weeks during which the government lost control of the city. Nidaa Hassan is a pseudonym for a journalist in Damascus Syria Middle East Arab and Middle East unrest Nidaa Hassan Julian Borger guardian.co.uk

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US suspends Pakistan military aid as diplomatic relations worsen

Decision to withhold $800m taken as relations become increasingly fraught following the killing of Osama bin Laden The Pakistan military declared it did not need US military aid as the White House confirmed that it would withhold some $800m (£498m) in assistance to the country’s armed forces. The row will worsen the already poisonous relationship between the two “allies”, which since the unilateral US raid to kill Osama bin Laden in May has lurched towards breakdown. Pakistan recently expelled US military trainers from the country, limited the ability of US diplomats and other officials to get visas, and restricted CIA operations on its territory. “The Pakistani relationship is difficult but it must be made to work over time. But until we get through these difficulties we will hold back some of the money that the American taxpayers have committed to give them,” William Daley, the White House chief-of-staff, told ABC News on Sunday. At stake is Pakistani co-operation against al-Qaida, the Taliban and other extremist groups, which the increasingly bitter relationship is putting at risk. Much of al-Qaida’s remaining leadership is believed to be hiding in Pakistan, while Pakistani territory is used as a safe haven by Afghan Taliban and the allied Haqqani network, fighting across the border in Afghanistan. The new US defence secretary, Leon Panetta, said over the weekend that he believed Bin Laden’s successor, Ayman al-Zawahiri, was in Pakistan’s tribal area and “he’s one of those we would like to see the Pakistanis target”. Pakistan responded by asking for the US to share the intelligence on Zawahiri’s whereabouts. Nuclear-armed Pakistan is meanwhile fighting its home-grown extremists in the tribal area on the border with Afghanistan, where a new offensive was launched earlier this month. Major General Athar Abbas, the chief spokesman for the Pakistan military, said that the military had received no formal notification of any aid being cut. He also pointed out that the army chief, General Ashfaq Kayani, had already declared that cash reimbursements to the military, known as coalition support funds, should go instead to the civilian government, where there was more need. “We have conducted our [anti-extremist] military operations without external support or assistance,” said Abbas. “Reports coming out of the US are aimed at undermining the authority of our military organisations.” Critical stories about Pakistan are leaked on an almost daily basis to the American press, riling Pakistani public and official opinion against Washington. Many in Pakistan believe there is a concerted American effort to weaken Pakistan and its armed forces, which are some of the largest in the world. For Washington, Pakistan’s refusal to launch an offensive against the Haqqani network and suspicions that Bin Laden benefited from some kind of official support to live in Pakistan has corroded ties. There are also questions hanging over future civilian aid, which is meant to provide $1.5bn a year in economic help. Cyril Almeida, a columnist with Pakistan’s Dawn newspaper, said the country was in danger of becoming internationally isolated, while US policy towards Pakistan was muddled. “The US can’t decide they if they want to stay in this relationship or cut Pakistan off,” he said. “These leaks and pressure tactics just confirm to the army generals the view that America is no friend of Pakistan and it wishes Pakistan harm.” Since 2001, the US has provided $21bn in civilian and military assistance, including $4.5bn in the 2010-2011 financial year, as aid was increased under the Obama administration. Two proposed bills in Congress over the last week, which were voted down, would have cut off aid to Pakistan altogether. Pakistan’s economy is spiralling downwards, with electricity shortages shutting down industry, and rising food and fuel prices causing protests on the streets. Karachi, the country’s economic powerhouse, is often shut down by ethnic gang violence, which has claimed more than 100 lives in the current spate of bloodshed. Pakistan United States US military US foreign policy al-Qaida Global terrorism Taliban Saeed Shah guardian.co.uk

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It’s been an extra-bloody 24 hours in Mexico this weekend, with more than 40 people killed in three cities in Zeta drug-cartel-related violence on Friday night and yesterday, reports the AP . At least 20 were killed in a bar in Monterrey late Friday when at least two gunmen launched an…

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“Thank You & Goodbye,” reads the final headline of the News of the World , closing in the wake of a disastrous phone-hacking scandal . For the newspaper’s final edition, 5 million copies were printed, twice its usual run, with money from sales slated for charity. “For Rupert Murdoch, it’s a bitter…

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