Monday, 18 July 2011

Death of Sean Hoare – who was first named journalist to allege Andy Coulson knew of hacking – not being treated as suspicious

Sean Hoare, the former News of the World showbiz reporter who was the first named journalist to allege Andy Coulson was aware of phone hacking by his staff, has been found dead, the Guardian has learned.

Hoare, who worked on the Sun and the News of the World with Coulson before being dismissed for drink and drugs problems, is said to have been found dead at his Watford home.

Hertfordshire police would not confirm his identity, but the force said in a statement: "At 10.40am today [Monday 18 July] police were called to Langley Road, Watford, following the concerns for the welfare of a man who lives at an address on the street. Upon police and ambulance arrival at a property, the body of a man was found. The man was pronounced dead at the scene shortly after.

"The death is currently being treated as unexplained, but not thought to be suspicious. Police investigations into this incident are ongoing."

Hoare first made his claims in a New York Times investigation into the phone-hacking allegations at the News of the World.

He told the newspaper that not only did Coulson know of the phone hacking, but that he actively encouraged his staff to intercept the phone calls of celebrities in the pursuit of exclusives.

In a subsequent interview with the BBC he alleged that he was personally asked by his then-editor, Coulson, to tap into phones. In an interview with the PM programme he said Coulson's insistence that he didn't know about the practice was "a lie, it is simply a lie".

At the time a Downing Street spokeswoman said Coulson totally and utterly denied the allegations and said he had "never condoned the use of phone hacking and nor do I have any recollection of incidences where phone hacking took place".

Sean Hoare, a one-time close friend of Coulson's, told the New York Times the two men first worked together at the Sun, where, Hoare said, he played tape recordings of hacked messages for Coulson. At the News of the World, Hoare said he continued to inform Coulson of his activities. Coulson "actively encouraged me to do it", Hoare said.

In September last year, he was interviewed under caution by police over his claims that the former Tory communications chief asked him to hack into phones when he was editor of the paper, but declined to make any comment.

Hoare returned to the spotlight last week, after he told the New York Times that reporters at the News of the World were able to use police technology to locate people using their mobile phone signals in exchange for payments to police officers.

He said journalists were able to use a technique called "pinging" which measured the distance between mobile handsets and a number of phone masts to pinpoint its location.

Hoare gave further details about the use of "pinging" to the Guardian last week. He described how reporters would ask a news desk executive to obtain the location of a target: "Within 15 to 30 minutes someone on the news desk would come back and say 'right that's where they are.'"

He said: "You'd just go to the news desk and they'd just come back to you. You don't ask any questions. You'd consider it a job done. The chain of command is one of absolute discipline and that's why I never bought into it, like with Andy saying he wasn't aware of it and all that. That's bollocks."

He said he would stand by everything he had told the New York Times about "pinging". "I don't know how often it happened. That would be wrong of me. But if I had access as a humble reporter … "

He admitted he had had problems with drink and drugs and had been in rehab. "But that's irrelevant," he said. "There's more to come. This is not going to go away."

Hoare named a private investigator who he said had links with the News of the World, adding: "He may want to talk now because I think what you'll find now is a lot of people are going to want to cover their arse."

Speaking to another Guardian journalist last week, Hoare repeatedly expressed the hope that the hacking scandal would lead to journalism in general being cleaned up and said he had decided to blow the whistle on the activities of some of his former News of the World colleagues with that aim in mind.

He also said he had been injured the previous weekend while taking down a marquee erected for a children's party. He said he had broken his nose and badly injured his foot when a relative accidentally struck him with a heavy pole from the marquee.

Hoare also emphasised that he was not making any money from telling his story. Hoare, who has been treated for drug and alcohol problems, reminisced about partying with former pop stars and said he missed the days when he was able to go out on the town.

 

Tuesday, 3 May 2011

Britain criticises Hamas' mourning of bin Laden

Foreign Secretary William Hague on Tuesday criticised the militant Islamic movement Hamas for mourning Osama bin Laden's death.
After the Al-Qaeda chief was killed by US forces, the head of the Hamas government in the Gaza Strip, Ismail Haniya, said: "We condemn any killing of a holy warrior or of a Muslim and Arab person and we ask God to bestow his mercy upon him."
Speaking a day before Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu visits Britain for talks, Hague told parliament that he believed unity in welcoming the killing would help the stalled Middle East peace process.
Hague said: "It would assist that cause if it was possible to show across many different divides in the world a good deal of unity about what happened on Sunday night and the removal of the author of some of the world's greatest terrorist acts from the scene.
"It would have been better for Hamas to join the welcome to that. That would have been a boost in itself to the peace process."
Netanyahu will hold talks with Prime Minister David Cameron on Wednesday and is expected to point to a reconciliation deal between Hamas and the Western-backed Fatah in his efforts to block UN recognition of a Palestinian state.
Netanyahu on Tuesday called on Palestinian president Mahmud Abbas to "completely cancel" the reconciliation deal with Hamas that was signed in Cairo earlier in the day, and warned it was a "hard blow" to the peace process.

 

Pakistan's directorate for Inter-Services Intelligence, or ISI, is once again facing accusations of double-standards over its role in the fight against al-Qaeda and the Taliban.

Pakistan's directorate for Inter-Services Intelligence, or ISI, is once again facing accusations of double-standards over its role in the fight against al-Qaeda and the Taliban.

Many observers find it hard to believe the organisation had no idea that Osama Bin Laden had been living under the nose of the Pakistani military until his death.

As to the US special forces raid that killed the al-Qaeda leader, questions abound about what the ISI knew and when it knew it.

Similar Western doubts over the ISI's loyalties have been a recurring theme in recent years.

In documents leaked in April 2011 on the Wikileaks website, US authorities described the ISI as a "terrorist" organisation on a par with al-Qaeda and the Taliban.

In the same month the US military's top officer, Adm Mike Mullen, also accused the ISI of having links with the Taliban.

He said it had a "long-standing relationship" with a militant group run by Afghan insurgent Jalaluddin Haqqani, which targets US troops in Afghanistan.

The list does not end there.

In June 2010 the ISI was accused of giving funding, training and sanctuary to the Afghan Taliban on a scale much larger than previously thought.

The paper published by the London School of Economics said that Taliban field commanders suggested that ISI intelligence agents even attend Taliban supreme council meetings - and that support for the militants was "official ISI policy".

Much of the high level of concern among some Western countries over the role of the ISI was expressed by British PM David Cameron in 2010.


The ISI has admitted lapses in the lead-up to Bin Laden's death
He accused the country of "looking both ways" when it came to fighting terrorism and suggested that elements in Pakistan were guilty of promoting the "export of terror".

The Pakistani government has consistently rejected all the allegations against the ISI as "negative propaganda" by the US and its allies.

It has also dismissed suggestions that the ISI is run as "a state within a state", subverts elected governments and is involved in drug smuggling.

Turbulent politics
The truth will no doubt always be murky - because like many other military intelligence organisations, the shadowy ISI zealously guards its secrets and evidence against it is sketchy.

What is not in doubt however is that the agency is a central organ of Pakistan's military machine and has played a major - often dominant - role in the country's volatile politics.

The ISI was established in 1948 - as Pakistan engaged India in the first war over Kashmir - to be the top body co-ordinating the intelligence functions of its army, air force and navy.

In the 1950s, when Pakistan joined anti-communist alliances, its military services and the ISI received considerable Western support in training and equipment.

The ISI's attention was focused on India, considered Pakistan's arch-enemy.

But when Ayub Khan, the army commander-in-chief, mounted the first successful coup in 1958, the ISI's domestic political activities expanded.

As a new state bringing together diverse ethnic groups within what some described as contrived borders, Pakistan faced separatist challenges - among Pashtuns, Balochis, Sindhis and Bengalis.

Much of the country's early history was shaped by politicians seeking regional autonomy and the central civilian and military bureaucracies trying to consolidate national unity.

The ISI not only mounted surveillance on parties and politicians, it often infiltrated, co-opted, cajoled or coerced them into supporting the army's centralising agenda.

Defeat and disgrace
The army ran the country from 1958 to 1971, when East Pakistan broke away with Indian and Soviet help to become Bangladesh.


Gen Zia ul-Haq was a keen supporter of the ISI
The ISI and the Pakistani military were thoroughly discredited and marginalised after the war.

But they gained fresh purpose in 1972 when Zulfiqar Ali Bhutto, the new civilian leader, launched a clandestine project to build nuclear weapons.

A year later military operations were launched against nationalist militants in Balochistan province.

These two events helped rehabilitate the ISI and the military.

After Bhutto was ousted by Gen Zia ul-Haq in 1977, the Balochistan operations were ended but the nuclear programme was expanded.

In the dark
The Soviet invasion of Afghanistan in December 1979 transformed the regional setting.

All foreign assistance to mujahideen rebels at that time arrived via Pakistan, to be handled by the ISI whose Afghan bureau co-ordinated operational activities with the seven guerrilla militias.


The aims of the Pakistani army and the ISI have not always tallied
This was done in such secrecy that the Pakistani military itself was kept in the dark.

Foreign money helped to establish hundreds of madrassas (religious schools) in Pakistan's cities and frontier areas.

These turned out thousands of Taliban (students) who joined the mujahideen in the anti-Soviet campaign.

The ISI managed this operation, handling tens of thousands of tons of ordnance every year and co-ordinating the action of several hundred thousand fighters in great secrecy.

In 1989, the Soviet Union withdrew its forces.

The 10-year-long Afghan war not only bestowed on the ISI huge experience of covert warfare, it also created for it a vast reserve of motivated manpower that could be used as its proxy in the geo-strategic horseplay of regional powers.

Despite denials from Islamabad, correspondents say there is plenty of evidence that in 1988, without directly involving Pakistan in a conflict, the ISI moved Islamic militants from Afghanistan to Indian-administered Kashmir to start an insurgency there.

India has repeatedly accused Pakistan, and especially the ISI, of involvement in Kashmir and in attacks elsewhere in India - including the 2008 Mumbai (Bombay) attacks in which gunmen killed 165 people.

Muammar Gaddafi's alleged assets have been identified by the Swiss government, ready to be frozen

The Swiss government says it has identified potential assets to be frozen worth 830m Swiss francs (nearly $1bn or £600m) belonging to Libyan leader Muammar Gaddafi and the ousted presidents of Egypt and Tunisia.

Swiss president and foreign minister Micheline Calmy-Rey, speaking in the Tunisian capital, Tunis, said the assets include 360m Swiss francs that may belong to Gaddafi or his entourage.

She said Switzerland had also linked 410m Swiss francs to the former Egyptian president, Hosni Mubarak, and 60m Swiss francs to Tunisia's deposed autocrat, Zine El Abidine Ben Ali.

Switzerland has ordered banks and other financial institutions to freeze possible assets belonging to the three men and their key supporters to prevent the funds from being secretly withdrawn. The Swiss government has said Tunisia and Egypt have already started legal proceedings to claim the assets.

The government added that neither country has yet provided the necessary evidence of possible criminal wrongdoing involving the money.

Switzerland froze assets linked to Ben Ali and 40 people in his entourage on 19 January, less than a week after he was toppled by popular revolt. On 11 February, Switzerland froze assets of Mubarak and his associates.

The Swiss government sent diplomatic cables to Tunisia and Egypt in late March explaining they must submit evidence so authorities can decide if the offences are punishable in Switzerland. In both cases, the money will remain locked away for three years while the two countries satisfy Swiss legal requirements.

The Swiss also have asked a court to authorise the seizure of millions of dollars frozen in accounts belonging to former Haitian dictator Jean-Claude "Baby Doc" Duvalier.

The Swiss finance department said it has initiated proceedings before the federal administrative court, a quarter-century after the funds were first frozen in Switzerland. That was shortly after Duvalier's removal from power in 1986.

Earlier this year, Switzerland also froze funds tied to Laurent Gbabgo, the former president of Ivory Coast who refused to cede power and finally was captured.

Switzerland is trying hard to shed its reputation as a favoured location for dictators' money because of its banking secrecy rules, and has established an investigative unit to help track down hidden funds.

The three-year freeze on assets is the norm, which Calmy-Rey and the other six members of Switzerland's governing federal council have said is meant to give nations time to draft possible criminal cases against former leaders.

Calmy-Rey says Switzerland is willing to help make those cases because it wants to avoid being used to hide funds illegally. A new law affecting the seizure of assets went into effect on 1 February that makes it easier for the Swiss government to freeze and seize the money.

 

Friday, 29 April 2011

The death late Wednesday of Ibrahim Coulibaly, head of the so-called Invisible Commandos,

Troops of Ivory Coast President Alassane Ouattara have killed an insurgent warlord once loyal to the new president, in a new round of violence that highlights the difficulty of reuniting the West African nation edging back from civil war.


The death late Wednesday of Ibrahim Coulibaly, head of the so-called Invisible Commandos, could remove one of the many obstacles Mr. Ouattara faces as he tries to re-establish political stability and revive the economy of the cocoa-producing giant, two weeks after former president Laurent Gbagbo was pulled from a basement bunker at his residence. Mr. Ouattara and Mr. Gbagbo were engaged in an armed conflict after the latter refused to relinquish his president's post following his loss of in the November election.

Mr. Ouattara's government has been trying to restore electricity and water supply in Abidjan, the country's commercial hub, and to reopen the main ports to cocoa exports. Retail banks were scheduled to open for business on Thursday. The president called on civil servants to return to work early next week.

The new leader also has had to quell sporadic uprisings by Gbagbo supporters since the ex-leader's departure.

Although Mr. Coulibaly's forces helped oust strongman Mr. Gbagbo, they also have so far refused to lay down arms for his elected successor, Mr. Ouattara. And unlike many military commanders who pledged allegiance to Mr. Ouattara after Mr. Gbagbo's arrest, Mr. Coulibaly declined to do so.

He was expecting political reward in exchange for his help in ousting Mr. Gbagbo, people familiar with the matter said.

"You cannot expect a general to do the work and then be tossed aside," a top official within the Invisible Commandos said.

On Wednesday, government troops raided Mr. Coulibaly's stronghold in Abobo, a district in Abidjan. Mr. Coulibaly was killed during the subsequent fighting, a government spokesman said.

The death of Mr. Coulibaly, who once guarded Mr. Outtara's wife, could spark more fighting, should allies to IB—as Mr. Coulibaly called himself—opt to challenge the president's authority.

So far, residents in the Abobo area said Thursday that calm had returned to the area. They expressed hope that Mr. Coulibaly's death would mean the end of fighting between the Invisible Commandos and Mr. Ouattara's forces.

"This is going to make our lives easier," Daouda Doumbia, a 32-year-old electrician and Abobo resident, said in a telephone interview.

Mr. Coulibaly, 48 years old, previously had spear-headed a 2002 coup attempt against Mr. Gbagbo, which led to the country being cleaved into a government-controlled south and rebel-held north. He led a force of some 5,000 fighters.

The Invisible Commandos again became active after November's disputed presidential election. Though the United Nations certified results showing challenger Mr. Ouattara had won with 54% of the vote, President Gbagbo also claimed victory. The incumbent president later entrenched himself in the basement of a presidential residence in Abidjan. He was arrested by Mr. Ouattara's troops after U.N. and French forces crushed Mr. Gbagbo's last pockets of resistance.

Now, Ivory Coast prosecutors have launched preliminary criminal probes against Mr. Gbagbo, his wife and about 100 members of their entourage, government officials said. Prosecutors are seeking to determine their roles in the nearly five-month standoff that dragged the country into civil conflict.

Lawyers for Mr. Gbagbo said the former president was unduly held on house arrest.

"How can you restrict the freedom of a man when no charges have been laid against him?" asked Habiba Toure, one of five French lawyers hired to defend Mr. Gbagbo. Ms. Toure said the lawyers have had no direct contact with Mr. Gbagbo since he was arrested on April 11.

Government officials said Mr. Gbagbo was being detained following a decision by Ivory Coast's interior ministry aimed at preventing public unrest.

Any trial of Mr. Gbagbo would amount to a complex political and judicial equation because the former president still has many supporters in Ivory Coast and because several allies of Mr. Ouattara are suspected of being behind some of the mass killings that took place during the recent conflict.

Earlier this month, prosecutors at The Hague-based International Criminal Court said they were planning to launch an investigation into alleged widespread killings in Ivory Coast, a probe that could involve both sides of the conflict.

Mr. Ouattara has said judicial authorities would investigate all crimes, even if perpetrated by his own supporters.

Libya angers Tunisia as conflict crosses border

Forces loyal to Libyan leader Moammar Gadhafi battled rebels on Thursday for control of a border crossing into Tunisia, provoking an angry protest from Tunis as fighting spilled on to its territory.

Early in the day Gadhafi's troops stormed the Dehiba-Wazin crossing on Libya's western frontier, in what appeared to be part of a broader government offensive to root out rebel outposts beyond their eastern heartland.

Tunisia strongly condemned incursions by government forces, when Libyan artillery shells also struck the Tunisian side of the crossing, and demanded that the Libyans put a stop to them. "Given the gravity of what has happened ... the Tunisian authorities have informed the Libyans of their extreme indignation and demand measures to put an immediate stop to these violations," a statement from the Foreign Ministry said.

Rebels rapidly staged a counter-offensive for the border post they took only a week ago, and which controls the sole supply road for rebels in Libya's Western Mountains.

Both sides in the civil war, where Gadhafi is fighting to prolong more than four decades of rule over the oil-producing nation, also disputed whether government forces had overrun a remote desert town in the southeast of the country.

After weeks of advances and retreats by rebel and government forces along the Mediterranean coast, fighting has settled into a pattern of clashes and skirmishes.

Government troops again shelled the besieged rebel outpost of Misrata, where aid ships bring in emergency supplies and evacuate the wounded, killing at least nine civilians, one rebel spokesman said. There was no independent confirmation.

Rebel spokesman Abdelsalam said from Misrata that there had been sporadic clashes on the road to the port and shelling of residential areas. "Those areas are packed with civilians who fled the fighting in the city centre," he said.

"The ball is now in NATO's court. After Gadhafi's soldiers and snipers were driven out from the city centre and Tripoli Street by the rebel fighters, their strategy has been to shell the city from the outskirts. This can only be solved by NATO."

The western alliance has been conducting airstrikes on Libya under a UN Security Council resolution calling for civilians to be protected. But it has been reluctant to fire on Gadhafi's forces in Misrata for fear of hitting civilians, although rebels said on Wednesday it had destroyed 37 military vehicles overnight.

Having secured Misrata's port, rebels were bolstered by the arrival of a ship carrying humanitarian supplies including food and medicines, as well as at least one boat loaded with arms, a correspondent with Agence France-Presse reported.

Othman Belbeisi of the International Organisation for Migration said 1,091 people were evacuated to the eastern rebel stronghold of Benghazi on Thursday despite heavy shelling.

 

NY jury finds Russian pilot guilty

The jury at  a federal court in New York found Russian pilot Konstantin Yaroshenko guilty, Ria Novosti news agency reports.  The sentence will be announced in three months. 

The pilot, who was  scooped up by US officials in Liberia last year, taken to a Manhattan jail and  charged with an attempt to  smuggle cocaine to South America, Africa and Europe from Liberia and Venezuela.

The Russian Foreign Ministry has denounced the pilot’s arrest as a violation of international law.

Yaroshenko denies the charges.

 

Wednesday, 27 April 2011

Family of slain German tourist returns to San Francisco

Nearly eight months after the stunning and still unsolved murder that shook The City, the family of a German tourist killed near Union Square was set to return to the place that has forever altered their lives.

Stefan Schröer of Minden, Germany, told The San Francisco Examiner he has no hard feelings toward San Francisco after his wife was shot dead on Aug. 8.

A gun battle between groups of teenagers at a nearby party erupted at Mason and Geary streets just before nightfall. Mechthild Schröer, 50, was shot amid the madness of flying bullets.

The couple had been on a three-week U.S. vacation to celebrate their wedding anniversary and Mechthild’s birthday. At the time of the shooting, they were searching for a restaurant.

No one has been held accountable for the murder. Arrests were made shortly after the killing, but the suspects were set free due to insufficient evidence.

Stefan Schröer has said he wants justice served, but added that the tragedy could happen in any city.

On Sunday, he was scheduled to return to The City with his two sons, Tobias and Jonas. He said he wanted to show his sons their mother’s favorite American city.

People have gone to great lengths to welcome back the Schröer family. Heartbroken locals have come forward with offers of hotel stays, dining and other accommodations.

Kimpton’s Hotel Monaco is providing a complimentary stay for the Schröers’ visit, which ends Thursday. Man J. Kim, owner of Union Square’s Lori’s Diner and Sears Fine Foods, offered complimentary dinner for the family.

Longtime San Franciscan Gerhard Woelke said he plans to lead the Schröers on a walking tour in The City, possibly over the Golden Gate Bridge to Sausalito.

“It would be ‘wunderbar’ if San Francisco could give them a real warm welcome to the city,” said Woelke, a retired Lufthansa airlines employee who volunteers with the San Francisco Opera House.

District Attorney George Gascón plans to meet with the family and answer any questions he can about the murder investigation, his spokeswoman said. After the death, Gascón expressed shock that San Franciscans weren’t more outraged about the violence.

On Wednesday, a memorial service is set to be held for Mechthild at a German-speaking church in the area. The church’s pastor said the family wishes to keep the memorial private. The German Consul, which helped put together the memorial, is expected to attend.

Given the months that have passed since Mechthild’s death, the memorial will be “a celebration of life rather than a focus on loss and grief,” the pastor said.

 

The world's largest atom smasher is rumoured to have found the Higgs boson, the subatomic particle otherwise known as the 'God particle'.


The speculation is based on a leaked internal note, said to be from physicists at the Large Hadron Collider (LHC), a 17 mile-long particle accelerator near Geneva, Switzerland.

The rumours started when an anonymous post disclosed part of the note on Columbia University mathematician Peter Woit's blog, Not Even Wrong.


While some physicists are dismissing the note as a hoax, others say the find could be a huge particle physics breakthrough in understanding the workings of the universe.

Physicist Sheldon Stone of Syracuse University said: 'If it were to be real, it would be really exciting.'

 
The genius who shrank the globe: Why after 70 years we should celebrate jet engine inventor Frank Whittle
The Higgs boson is predicted to exist by the particle physics theory known as the Standard Model. The Higgs boson, physicists believe, bestows mass on all the other particles and was crucial to forming the cosmos after the Big Bang.

It has long eluded physicists who believe it could explain why objects have mass.



Huge atom smashers — like the LHC and the Tevatron, at Fermilab in Illinois — have long been searching for the Higgs and other subatomic matter.

These accelerators slam particles together at enormous speeds, generating a shower of other particles.

The leaked note suggests that the LHC's ATLAS particle-detection experiment may have picked up a signature of the elusive Higgs.

The signal is consistent, in mass and other characteristics, with what the Higgs is expected to produce, according to the note.


Some other aspects of the signal, however, don't match predictions.

Mr Stone said: 'Its production rate is much higher than that expected for the Higgs boson in the Standard Model.'

The signal may be evidence of some other particle, Mr Stone said, adding: 'Which in some sense would be even more interesting, or it could be the result of new physics beyond the Standard Model.'

He pointed out that the note is not an official result of the ATLAS research team, so speculation about its validity or implications, therefore, may be a little premature.

Mr Stone said: 'It is actually quite illegitimate and unscientific to talk publicly about internal collaboration material before it is approved.

'So this "result" is not a result until the collaboration officially releases it.'


Nerve centre: Scientists have been analysing the bump data for more than a year at the main Tevatron control room

Other researchers joined Mr Stone in urging patience and caution before getting too excited about the possible discovery, Fox News reports.

Caltech physicist Sean Carroll said: 'Don't worry, Higgs boson! I would never spread scurrilous rumours about you. Unlike some people.'

Some researchers have already been casting doubt on the possible detection.

Tommaso Dorigo, a particle physicist at Fermilab and CERN, which operates the LHC thinks the signal is false and will fade upon closer inspection.

Mr Dorigo points out, for example, that scientists at Fermilab didn't see the Higgs signal in their Tevatron data, which covered similar ground as the ATLAS experiment.

He feels strongly enough to put his money where his mouth is.

Plans have been drawn up to evacuate 700 British citizens from Syria,

Plans have been  drawn up to evacuate  700 British citizens from Syria, as President  Assad stepped up the suppression of his people yesterday.

William Hague threatened the British-educated dictator with punitive sanctions unless he ends the violence.

In a statement to MPs, the Foreign Secretary revealed he has put contingency plans in place to airlift stranded Britons from Syria.


Action: As plans to evacuate 700 Britons from Syria are drawn up, William Hague (left) has threatened Syria's British-educated dictator, President Assad, with punitive sanctions unless he ends the violence

Human rights groups estimate that about 350 people have died since pro-democracy campaigners took to the streets five weeks ago. Another 500 opposition supporters have been detained in raids by the security services.

Mr Hague warned that Syria was ‘at a fork in the road’ and continuing down the path of violent repression would lead to international reprisals.

Officials said Britain is discussing slapping travel bans and asset freezes on members of the regime in tandem with the European Union.

 


Mr Hague told MPs: ‘Syria is now at a fork in the road. Its government can still choose to bring about the radical reform which alone can provide peace and stability in Syria and for the long term, and we urge it to do so. Or it can choose ever more violent repression, which can only bring short-term security for the authorities there.

‘If it does so we will work with our European partners and others to take measures, including sanctions, that will have an impact on the regime.’

He added: ‘We are doing initial work on what action the European Union should take.’
The Foreign Office is advising against all travel to Syria, and has urged British nationals with no pressing need to remain to leave by commercial means immediately.

Some 700 British passport holders are in Syria, though some of them are dual nationals who do not wish to leave their families behind.

Thousands of soldiers backed by tanks were yesterday reported to have poured into the city of Daraa, where the uprising against President Assad began, before dawn.

They opened fire indiscriminately on civilians, and tanks later moved in as electricity, water and mobile phone services were cut.

There were reports of bodies lying on the streets.

Knife-wielding security agents made house-to-house sweeps in what activists called a campaign to intimidate protesters.

Residents said an army brigade led by President Assad’s younger brother Maher had cut off roads, were shelling homes, storming houses and rounding people up.

Other crackdowns and arrest sweeps were reported on the outskirts of Damascus and  the coastal town of Jableh.

One resident in Daraa, Abu Khaldoun, said: ‘In the street I am in, there are around ten tanks. Their aim is just to destroy and destroy ... They are shelling homes and demolishing them.’

His cousin, Abu Tamer, said: ‘Maher al-Assad’s forces have spread everywhere and with their roadblocks Daraa has become a big prison.

‘You cannot go out without endangering your life.

Fraudsters have obtained data on millions of online video gamers – including three million Britons - after targeting Sony’s PlayStation Network.

Fraudsters have obtained data on millions of online video gamers – including three million Britons - after targeting Sony’s PlayStation Network.
The electronics giant is contacting around 70 million customers warning that details including their names, addresses, dates of birth, passwords and security questions have been stolen.
Sony also admitted that the hackers may have gained access to people’s credit card details.
The network provides online video gaming services and allows streaming of films and music via the internet.
It requires members to submit credit card and personal details to subscribe.

Monday, 28 March 2011

Highly radioactive water has been found for the first time outside one of the reactor buildings at Japan's quake-hit Fukushima nuclear plant, officials say.

Highly radioactive water has been found for the first time outside one of the reactor buildings at Japan's quake-hit Fukushima nuclear plant, officials say.

The leak in a tunnel linked to the No 2 reactor has raised fears of radioactive liquid seeping into the environment.

Plutonium has also been found in soil at the plant, but not at levels that threaten human health, officials say.

Earlier, Japan's government strongly criticised the plant's operator, Tepco, over mistaken radiation readings.

Tepco announced on Sunday that a highly radioactive pool of water in the No 2 reactor was 100 times more radioactive than it actually was.

Officials said the radiation scare was caused by a partial meltdown of fuel rods.

Thursday, 24 March 2011

disgraced former Tory MEP faces criminal charges unless he pays back over £345,000 in "misused" staffing expenses paid to a family company

disgraced former Tory MEP faces criminal charges unless he pays back over £345,000 in "misused" staffing expenses paid to a family company in a European Union case that has dwarfed similar Westminster scandals.
Den Dover was the Conservative European whip until a scandal over his use of expenses emerged from an investigation in The Daily Telegraph three years ago.
He was expelled from the Tories in Nov 2008 after the European Parliament attempted to recover money that should have funded staff salaries but instead had been put towards family expenses.
Mr Dover, 72, stepped down as an MEP in May 2009 and remains entitled to two publicly funded pensions worth over £35,000 a year for a decade of service in the EU assembly.
After refusing to pay back the money and a two year legal battle, EU judges on Thursday ruled that the European Parliament was right to act over Mr Dover's "significant and serious misuse" of expenses.
The former North West Conservative MEP now faces an investigation by Olaf, the EU's anti-fraud agency and calls for him to be arrested by British police.

British Olympic Association chairman Lord Moynihan and chief executive Andy Hunt have been suspended from the board of Locog

British Olympic Association chairman Lord Moynihan and chief executive Andy Hunt have been suspended from the board of Locog - the London 2012 organising committee - following the legal row over the financial surplus from the Games, the BBC has learned.
Locog has suspended them because of a conflict of interest and both Lord Moynihan and Hunt did not attend a meeting of the board on Thursday.
The BOA has been invited to nominate replacements until the case, which is to be considered by the Court of Arbitration for Sport, is resolved.
But by suspending the pair Locog is sending the clearest indication yet of the seriousness of the dispute which is overshadowing London's preparations.
A Locog spokeswoman said: "Colin Moynihan and Andy Hunt remain directors of Locog.
"The Locog board has decided to exclude them from board meetings whilst they are individually and actively involved in pursuing a dispute against Locog.
"Both have been invited to send alternate representatives to board meetings. The BOA is ably represented on the Locog board by HRH the Princess Royal, Sir Craig Reedie, Sir Philip Craven and Adam Pengilly."
Meanwhile, in a separate development, the International Paralympic Committee has accused the BOA of undermining its vision for London 2012.

Tuesday, 11 January 2011

Accused Arizona shooter’s lonely descent into instability and paranoia - The Globe and Mail

Accused Arizona shooter’s lonely descent into instability and paranoia - The Globe and Mail: "For a time, Jared Loughner appeared to be no more than a troubled teenager, the kind that causes heartache for parents but doesn’t make headlines. He got drunk at school, smoked pot regularly and sent friends strange stories he had written.

Soon, though, there were signs he was sliding toward something far darker. By this past spring, his odd outbursts and twisted ramblings had begun frightening his classmates and alarming his professors. One teacher later described him as “someone whose brains were scrambled.”"

Three injured in suspected gangland assassination attempt - Haaretz Daily Newspaper | Israel News

Three injured in suspected gangland assassination attempt - Haaretz Daily Newspaper | Israel News: "Three people were lightly wounded after an explosive device detonated inside a SUV on Highway 5 on Monday, in what police say may have been a gangland assassination attempt."

Friday, 7 January 2011

Microsoft confirms new Windows zero-day bug - Computerworld

Microsoft confirms new Windows zero-day bug - Computerworld: "Microsoft today confirmed an unpatched vulnerability in Windows just hours after a hacking toolkit published an exploit for the bug.

A patch is under construction, but Microsoft does not plan to issue an emergency, or 'out-of-band,' update to fix the flaw.

The bug was first discussed Dec. 15 at a South Korean security conference, but got more attention Tuesday when the open-source Metasploit penetration tool posted an exploit module crafted by researcher Joshua Drake.

According to Metasploit, successful attacks are capable of compromising victimized PCs, then introducing malware to the machines to pillage them for information or enlist them in a criminal botnet.

The vulnerability exists in Windows' graphics rendering engine, which improperly handles thumbnail images, and can be triggered when a user views a folder containing a specially crafted thumbnail with Windows' file manager, or opens or views some Office documents.

Microsoft acknowledged the bug in a security advisory, and said Windows XP, Vista, Server 2003 and Server 2008 were vulnerable. The newest operating systems, Windows 7 and Server 2008 R2, were not."

Surge in Britons converting to Islam - Telegraph

Surge in Britons converting to Islam - Telegraph: "The number of converts to Islam may have risen from around 60,000 in 2001 to up to 100,000, according to estimates in a report for the Faith Matters organisation.
A study by Kevin Brice, of Swansea University, on behalf of Faith Matters, found 5,200 people converted to Islam in the UK last year.
A survey of 122 converts last year showed 56% were white British, with women making up 62% of respondents. The average age at conversion was just over 27.
The majority reported difficulties after converting because of the negative attitude of their family, but over time this attitude became more ''positive'' according to the report.
The majority of the converts saw themselves as both British and Muslim and did not feel disillusioned with British society and culture."

Three Argentines detained in Spain with 900 kilos of cocaine - BuenosAiresHerald.com

Three Argentines detained in Spain with 900 kilos of cocaine - BuenosAiresHerald.com: "Two sons of a retired Argentine brigadier were detained when they arrived at Barcelona’s El Prat airport in a private plane from the Argentine company Medical Jet with more than 900 kilos of cocaine, according to sources from Spain’s police.
Investigators reported that those detained are the pilot, identified as Gustavo Juliá, and his brother. Spanish police also detained a third man also from Argentina who was the copilot of the plane, identified as Gastón Miret.
Meanwhile, a fourth person who travelled in the plane from the Argentine company was apprehended, but later police confirmed he was not linked to the case.
Juliá and his brother are sons of the retired brigadier José Juliá, ex chief of the Argentine Air Force, and one of the main shareholders of the Medical Jet Company.
The plane, a Challenge04 jet, arrived in Barcelona on January 2 from Cape Verde, Africa. The investigation states that the accused might have gotten the cocaine from the African country.
Members of the Spanish Civil Guard were waiting for the plane and once it landed, they detained the suspects."

Divers: Wreck of Adm. Perry ship discovered off Rhode Island - USATODAY.com

Divers: Wreck of Adm. Perry ship discovered off Rhode Island - USATODAY.com: "team of divers say they have discovered the remains of the USS Revenge, a ship commanded by U.S. Navy hero Oliver Hazard Perry and wrecked off Rhode Island in 1811.
Perry is known for defeating the British in the 1813 Battle of Lake Erie off the shores of Ohio, Michigan and Ontario in the War of 1812 and for the line 'I have met the enemy and they are ours.' His battle flag bore the phrase 'Don't give up the ship,' and to this day is a symbol of the Navy.

The divers, Charles Buffum, a brewery owner from Stonington, Connecticut, and Craig Harger, a carbon-dioxide salesman from Colchester, Connecticut, say the wreck changed the course of history because Perry likely would not have been sent to Lake Erie otherwise. Sunday is the 200th anniversary of the wreck."

LinkWithin

Related Posts Plugin for WordPress, Blogger...