Oil and mineral deals mean money and jobs, but Inuit leaders are concerned about the lack of a national debate on industrialisation and what it means for the traditional way of life “I certainly have seen the benefits that can come from [oil] royalties. Schools are better. There are swimming pools, gymnasium, cars – and jobs – all the result of billions of dollars.” Patricia Cochran, a former chair of the Inuit Circumpolar Council from Alaska, expresses the view of many indigenous people on industrial development in the Arctic. Vast oil and mineral wealth have brought huge benefits to some communities. But her own conflicted feelings about development neatly sum up the dilemma that indigenous leaders in the region face. In Barrow – Alaska’s oil capital – there are also high rates of suicide and depression, while offshore drilling is a threat to subsistence whaling and the hunting of seals and walrus, she points out. So despite the benefits, Cochran is personally quite negative about industrial development and questions the wider benefit to society. “I personally have a problem with it. I was raised in a traditional way and regard it as my job to be a steward of the land. I see this [industrialised] world of hedonism and consumption as a sign we have lost our moral compass.” And there are fears that the vast sums on offer can sometimes be too tempting. Aqqaluk Lynge, former president of the council, says the wave of money that big multinationals bring to their lobbying “overwhelms” local community organisations. “We have questions about how the democratic process is gone about and how decisions are reached,” he said. “How can we survive as a people under the pressure that comes from oil companies whose daily income can be higher than our annual budget? “Arctic people themselves must have the time to look into [proposed industrial projects] to ensure we are not risking losing our country, self-rule or livelihoods.” Lynge, a continuing activist based in Nuuk, the capital of Greenland, is most concerned about the decision by the government there to allow British-based oil explorer, Cairn Energy , to drill last summer and again this year . But he is also worried about moves by Canadian metals group, Alcoa , to try to press ahead with plans to build a massive aluminium smelter on the island. The Inuit leader accepts Greenland ministers have the democratic right to negotiate and to reach agreements with companies. But he says the consultation process is still fatally undermined by the imbalance between the financial resources of Cairn and the like, compared to that available to local indigenous communities. Greenland, whose population is 80% Inuit, has recently won a measure of self-rule from its traditional colonial masters, Denmark. The new government in Nuuk is desperately keen to win complete independence and understands this is impossible while the country is dependent on financial handouts from Copenhagen. But Inuuteq Holm Olsen , Greenland deputy foreign minister, says that environmental concerns should be balanced against economics. “We welcome focus and attention on environmental issues … What we don’t welcome is the notion that there should not be any industrial development in the name of environmental protection.” Lynge says he realises that Cairn and Alcoa may offer a get-rich-quick route for Greenland and therefore a fast-track to political self-determination. But he says that rushing into oil and mineral exploitation deals risks drowning out a proper debate within the country about the pros and cons of industrialisation which could further undermine the traditional Inuit way of life based around fishing and hunting. “We don’t have the proper democratic infrastructure in place for a public hearing mechanism. So Cairn can knock on one [government] door and win agreement for their plans. This is a problem. “We are not against development in general as such but what we really want to see is sustainable development that will enable us to live in the future in the way we have for hundreds of years around fishing. We know oil and gas is not ultimately sustainable because it will run out.” Other concerns are more particular – such as where the kind of skilled workforce will come from to deal with any oil or other largescale industrial schemes. Greenland’s workforce is just 32,000 people. If large numbers of workers are brought in from outside, indigenous people risk becoming a minority. There is also a fear that big business can use its financial muscle to buy off opposition while not having its own track records fully investigated. “Propaganda can be done in simple ways. Promises to give lots of work or money to local communities: people tend to say ‘yes’ to these things without necessarily thinking them through the consequences,” said Lynge. Inuit in Canada have 40 years’ experience with oil so have found their own way of accommodating change. But even there, local leaders of indigenous people have mixed views about who is really benefiting. And overall the “community” representing indigenous people is split down the middle over the issue. Certainly the big oil companies that have been active in the seas off Alaska since the late 1980s are keen to be seen consulting local people. Robert Blaauw, the Anglo-Dutch company’s spokesman on the Arctic said: “Many coastal native communities depend on fishing and hunting of sea mammals not only for survival but also to keep alive a cultural centrepiece that has thrived for centuries. With that experience comes a deep knowledge of the Arctic environment … We continue to be humbled by what we don’t know and we are constantly looking for ways to incorporate traditional knowledge into our operations. Not just for the advancement of our project, but out of respect for those who will live off the ocean long after we are gone.” Ove Gudmestad , a professor of marine and Arctic technology at the University of Stavanger in Norway, carries out academic research which is useful to oil companies, and has travelled widely in the far north region. He believes there are practical problems and a fundamental lack of trust between indigenous people and the oil industry. “Of course it is important to take local knowledge into account, but it is hard to speak local languages. Whether it is in the US or Norway, fishermen do not trust the politicians or the NPD [ Norwegian Petroleum Directorate ] – never mind the oil companies.” Gudmestad said local people were rightly wary that they could get sucked into a legal dispute that could last for decades and for which the oil companies are far better prepared and resourced. “Just remember that in the US for every petroleum engineer being trained there are 200 lawyers,” he jokes. Lynge would like to see a more holistic look at the future for the Arctic in the light of climate change which already threatens some coastal communities with flooding and dislocation. “I don’t like the way that the debate seems to be framed around the industrial opportunities created by global warming. I would rather see a much better study about how climate change will affect fish stocks and renewable energy sources to see what we can survive on in future.” Polar regions Mining Land rights Energy Fossil fuels Oil Oil Commodities Mining Arctic Greenland Alaska United States Indigenous peoples Terry Macalister guardian.co.uk
Continue reading …Some 23 passengers, many of them Americas, are still missing after a tourist boat sank off Baja, Mexico. Rescuers plucked five Mexicans and 16 Americans from waters after the boat was struck by a storm a day after it set sail from San Felipe on the Sea of Cortez. “We…
Continue reading …Leak of letter by Eric Pickles on welfare payments cap leads to Labour allegations that ministers ‘haven’t been straight with the House of Commons’ The Speaker has turned down a call by Labour to bring the work and pensions secretary, Iain Duncan Smith, to the Commons to explain whether he or his ministers had misled the house over the likely level of homelessness caused by his plans to impose a benefits cap. The call for ministers to be brought to the Commons had been made by the shadow work and pensions secretary, Liam Byrne, after a letter from the office of communities secretary Eric Pickles was leaked to the Observer . Speaker John Bercow’s decision suggests he did not regard the leaked paper as proof that any minister had misled the house and that the six month-old paper had been overtaken since it was written by Pickles’s personal secretary. The government argues that extra cash has been found since the paper was written to help with the cost of transition as the policy of the cap is introduced. Labour accused ministers of repeatedly misleading MPs about the impact of their £26,000 cap on welfare payments after Pickles secretly warned the plan would cost more money than it saved and increase homelessness by 20,000. Byrne insisted the minister’s comments, set out in a letter from his private secretary to No 10, showed that a succession of ministers “haven’t been straight with the House of Commons”. They have either dismissed claims that the cap would increase homelessness or insisted its likely impact was impossible to quantify, Byrne claims. The benefit cap, announced by George Osborne, the chancellor, to the delight of the Tory right at the Conservative party conference last autumn, is one of the most high-profile and controversial of the government’s myriad welfare reforms. The welfare bill still has to go through the Lords and Pickles’s letter will embolden peers seeking to amend it so the cap is less punitive. The letter, sent on Pickles’s behalf by Nico Heslop, his private secretary, explicitly says welfare cuts could make 40,000 families homeless. “Our modelling indicates that we could see an additional 20,000 homelessness acceptances as a result of the total benefit cap. This on top of the 20,000 additional acceptances already anticipated as a result of other changes to housing benefit,” Heslop wrote. The letter was sent in January. Since then, ministers and officials have made a series of Commons statements that Labour believes are hard to square with what Pickles was telling No 10 in private. Those highlighted by Labour include: • The Department for Work and Pensions (DWP) publishing an impact assessment in February saying that it was “not possible to quantify” the cost to local councils generated by the welfare cap and the likelihood that it will require councils to house some families made homeless. • Grant Shapps, the housing minister, citing the DWP’s impact assessment when specifically asked by a Labour MP if he had an estimate of the number of households that would be made homeless as a result of the benefit cap. • Maria Miller, a welfare minister, telling Karen Buck, a Labour MP, to “get real” when asked about the impact of the benefit cap on homelessness. “I do not accept that the policies we are advocating will have the impact on homelessness that she talked about,” Miller said. • Chris Grayling, another welfare minister, saying: “I do not deny that the benefit cap may result in individual cases of housing mobility [ie, people having to move], but I do not believe that the measure will exacerbate [the problem].” Byrne said on Sunday night: “The idea that you can go out and say that there is no further evidence that you are aware of, four months after the Department for Communities wrote to the prime minister saying there was different evidence, is breathtaking. “We want answers from Iain Duncan Smith in the House of Commons about why his department hid official government evidence that his policy would make 40,000 families homeless.” Byrne’s colleague Caroline Flint, the shadow communities secretary, said: “It has become clear that while Eric Pickles defends his government housing policies in public, in truth he doesn’t believe in them. The public and parliament have a right to know why time and again his department dismissed the very same housing concerns he secretly raised with the prime minister.” In the letter, the Department for Communities and Local Government suggested that the impact of the policy could by ameliorated by ensuring child benefit is not included in those benefits that count towards the cap. But on Sunday the DWP, which is in charge of the plan to impose a £26,000 cap on the total amount of benefits than can be claimed in any year by an unemployed family, confirmed that Pickles’s proposal had been rejected and that child benefit would be taken into account when the cap comes into force in 2013. In the letter, Heslop also claimed the benefit cap would cost the exchequer money. Although it was projected to save £270m, that sum “does not take account of the additional costs to local authorities [through homelessness and temporary accommodation],” he said. “In fact, we think it is likely that the policy as it stands will generate a net cost.” He said that up to 23,000 affordable rental units could be lost because the benefit cap would stop developers charging the rents they wanted, giving them less incentive to build property. The DWP said it did not recognise the figures in the letter and did not accept the cap would increase homelessness. “You know what councils are like – when they have concerns, they are very vocal about it,” one source said. “The cap only comes in at £26,000 and that’s equivalent to a gross income of £35,000 for a family that’s working. And the minute someone enters into part-time work, they are exempted from the cap,” the source went on. “There might be some people who have to move to a less expensive area. But that doesn’t mean they won’t have anywhere to live. We are very optimistic about the behavioural change that this will bring about. We have already started to change housing benefit. And have you seen droves of homeless people? No, you have not.” Welfare Iain Duncan Smith State benefits Family finances Homelessness Labour Patrick Wintour Andrew Sparrow guardian.co.uk
Continue reading …Lawyer for Tristane Banon says writer will formally accuse ex-IMF chief of attempted rape at 2002 interview The lawyer for a French journalist and writer claims she will file a lawsuit accusing former International Monetary Fund chief Dominique Strauss-Kahn of attempted rape. Lawyer David Koubbi told the Associated Press that Tristane Banon will file the suit on Tuesday in Paris. Banon has described an encounter several years ago in which Strauss-Kahn allegedly assaulted her. Strauss-Kahn was arrested in New York in May on charges that he tried to rape a hotel maid. Strauss-Kahn, who vigorously denied wrongdoing, was released without bail last week after questions emerged about the maid’s credibility. Koubbi had said in the past that they would not file a lawsuit until the US trial was finished. He said on Monday that they had decided to move forward now instead of waiting. Dominique Strauss-Kahn France Europe United States IMF guardian.co.uk
Continue reading …Apple is the latest target to get hit by hacker. The newly formed hacking group AntiSec uploaded a document to the Internet that members say contains 26 administrator usernames and passwords to an Apple server, reports the Wall Street Journal . Apple had no comment, but security experts said the targeted…
Continue reading …Group loosely connected to hacker collective says it took control of Twitter feed to claim President Obama assassinated A group loosely connected to the hacker collective Anonymous says it took control of the Fox News Politics Twitter account to claim that President Obama had been assassinated while campaigning in Iowa. The Fox News Politics account – @foxnewspolitics – was used to put out a number of fake tweets saying that President Obama had been shot in the head and died, and that vice-president Joe Biden had been installed in his place. The tweets went out at around 2am Pacific time (5am EST, 10am BST). Obama is in fact thought to be in Washington at the White House, where his schedule shows he is due to give a speech in the Rose Garden at 6.30pm. A representative of the group ‘Scriptkiddies’ said in an interview with Stony Brook University’s Think Magazine : “We are looking to find information about corporations to assist with antisec [a concerted hacker attack on corporate and government security]. Fox News was selected because we figured their security would be just as much of a joke as their reporting.” He warned too that Fox News might see more attacks: “I’ve looked into their security, and site defacement does not seem to be an option. Everything else is fair game.” The Script Kiddies representative added: “I would consider us to be close in relation [to Anonymous], two of the members of our group were members of Anonymous … I was a member of Anonymous. We hope to be working with them soon.” ‘Script kiddie’ is a generally insulting phrase used by hackers about inexperienced would-be hackers who used ready-made programs to attack sites. The group’s name here plays on that. The attack is the latest in a rapidly growing list of attacks this year on the online presence of corporations and governments since Sony’s PlayStation Network was hacked in April, exposing the details of more than 75 million users. Since then many other game and company sites have been hit, with varying degrees of disruption. The Script Kiddie representative told Think Magazine: “It will be a never-ending battle. The names change from time to time, like LulzSec and Anonymous or Script Kiddies. But there will always be a group of people that need to stand up for everyone else and attempt to keep the government in balance with its people. Without groups like Anonymous, what is there to prevent corruption?” The group tried to create a number of Twitter accounts, but they had all been suspended wtihin hours of being created. Meanwhile, “AnonymousIRC” – thought to be composed of some of the leaders of LulzSec – has continued to attack web systems belonging to the Arizona police. They also leaked the user names and encrypted passwords to a survey system belonging to Apple, saying: “Apple could be [a] target, too. But don’t worry, we are busy elsewhere.” Hacking Twitter Internet Blogging Fox News TV news Television industry US television industry Fox United States The news on TV Barack Obama Charles Arthur guardian.co.uk
Continue reading …Actor who won a string of awards – including a Bafta – for her stage and TV work died on Sunday after suffering from cancer The veteran actor Anna Massey has died at the age of 73, her agent said. Massey won a string of awards for her stage and TV roles, including a Bafta for her performance as a lonely spinster in the 1986 TV adaptation of Hotel du Lac. Her agent said in a statement: “Actress Anna Massey CBE passed away peacefully on Sunday 3rd July, with her husband and son by her side. “She will be remembered as a loving wife and mother, a cherished grandmother, a generous colleague and, always, a consummate professional. She will be greatly missed.” Massey had been suffering from cancer, her agent said. Her film work included roles in Alfred Hitchcock’s Frenzy, Possession with Gwyneth Paltrow and an adaptation of The Importance Of Being Earnest. Massey was well-known for her supporting roles, often playing a spurned or repressed maiden aunt. She received a CBE for services to drama at Buckingham Palace in 2005. Divorced from the late actor Jeremy Brett, she was alone for 27 years until she met the Russian scientist Uri Andres at a dinner party and married him three months later. Massey’s TV period dramas included Tess Of The D’Urbervilles in 2008, Oliver Twist in 2007, and the BBC’s version of Anthony Trollope’s He Knew He Was Right in 2004. Most recently, she appeared in Poirot and Midsomer Murders in 2009. In 2006, she played Baroness Thatcher in the TV film Pinochet In Suburbia. Massey was born into the business – both of her parents were actors and her godfather was the veteran director John Ford. guardian.co.uk
Continue reading …Pyongyang calls for 10-month sacrifice for construction projects before centenary of founding leader’s birth, says UK diplomat North Korea has reportedly closed its universities to moststudents and told them to start building as it ramps up a construction campaign ahead of its planned re-emergence next year as a “great and prosperous nation”. The UK ambassador to Pyongyang, Peter Hughes, told the Guardian that the almost year-long academic sacrifice was deemed necessary to reach production targets for new housing ahead of the centenary of founding president Kim Il-sung’s birth. To mark the occasion, Hughes said the government pledged to build 100,000 accommodation units in the North Korean capital, which has a chronic housing shortage. “I think they have built maybe 10% of that … Any country would be stretched to hit that accommodation target in two or three years,” he said. “As far as we can tell they are going all out to achieve as much as they can before then.” Building work for such prestigious state events is normally carried out by the military, but construction teams are at full stretch on monuments, residential blocks and other projects. North Korea has also recommenced work on the 105-storey Ryugong skyscraper, which was started in 1987 and was then halted during the years of starvation and economic hardship. Foreign engineers have been called in for consultation and the authorities have promised to finish the building by 2012. There has been no mention of the mobilisation in the domestic media. Japan’s Kyodo news agency has reported that all universities, except for graduating seniors and foreign students, had to cancel classes until next year. University World News said universities would be closed for up to 10 months from 27 June while students were dispatched to farms, factories and construction sites. The last time this is known to have happened for such a length of time was during the famines of the late 1990s. The food situation in the country remains precarious. Earlier this year, the UN launched an appeal for humanitarian aid. Hughes said the universities remained open, but many students were being shifted to outside tasks. “They are already out there building things. It’s difficult to know exactly what,” he said. “This has happened before, but for maybe a month or two. The only unusual thing is that they are out for 10 months.” North Korea Jonathan Watts Tania Branigan guardian.co.uk
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