Thursday, 29 August 2013

Ugandas top university Makerere to re-open

Makerere 

Makerere University staff yesterday assented to the council salary proposals that will see the institution reopen soon.
Mr Louis Kakinda, the academic staff association spokesperson, yesterday said: “We are concluding the meeting that has come up with a monumental agreement that will lead to the reopening of the university. Muasa and council have agreed on a tentative reorganisation to find salary incentives for all staff.”
Although Kakinda declined to give details of the agreement, he added that both the academic and support staff will meet on Thursday to adopt council proposals before the university is reopened.
“We shall have a meeting on Thursday for a joint assembly and it’s what will come out from this meeting that will determine whether the university will be reopened or not,” Mr Kakinda said soon after the meeting. He added: “The incentive that we have agreed on will replace the 100 per cent demand we are demanding. It was an in-house affair and we don’t want to tire it apart. We thought government would come in and help to fund the university but since government advised us to rear goats, we have found some goats at Makerere. But our demand is still on.”
Hope
Prof John Ddumba-Ssentamu, the university vice chancellor, yesterday confirmed that their meeting was materialising and that the university would reopen on Thursday after a board meeting. The council chairperson, Dr Charles Wana-Etyem, instituted a sub-council committee to look at the university internal budget to find the staff salary demand after government insisted there was no money to increase their salaries.
Subsequently, the government gave a two-weeks ultimatum to the governing body to ensure that the university is reopened. The committee, titled the Kabaasa staff loads and cost, is a sub-committee of the university council technical committee on staff enhancement.
In its findings, it proposed a 60 per cent salary increment for senior academic staff at the level of lecturers and above in humanity based disciplines, a 50 per cent increment for senior science lecturers and 30 per cent for assistant lecturers and below.

 

FINALLY PEACE IS RESTORED IN EGYPT

Egypt is quieter these days. Protests against the ouster of Islamist President Mohammed Morsi have subsided for now — although a Muslim Brotherhood-led alliance is calling for marches and civil disobedience Friday even as the military-appointed interim government retains a firm grip.
Yet, Egypt remains deeply polarized. And the middle is a lonely place to be.
Some of the young revolutionaries who led the 2011 uprising against the regime of Hosni Mubarak feel they are back to square one, battling authoritarian forces on both sides.
At 9:00 on a recent evening, Aalam Wassef stands on his balcony and bangs a spoon against a pot. The noise echoes in the neighborhood but no one else returns the clattering sound.
The video artist and activist yells "masmouaa," the Arabic word that means "to be heard."
Wassef's message? That there is a third way against the Muslim Brotherhood and against Egypt's military.
"This polarization — it's first aim is to change the conversation," Wassef says. "The real conversation that no one is talking about is bread, freedom, social justice and rule of law, none of which was supported ... by the Muslim Brotherhood and certainly not by the military regime, which has been ruling this country for over 60 years."
Since Morsi's ouster, Egypt is a country deeply divided in a zero-sum game: You are either with us or against us.
That's the view of the military, which now rules Egypt. Anyone who disagrees faces grave consequences. It's a warning to street activists like Wassef and to others like Nobel laureate Mohammed ElBaradei, who resigned as vice president after the bloody crackdown on pro-Morsi protesters. Now, ElBaradei faces charges of breaching national trust.
Wassef and his friend Khalid Abdalla, a young actor and activist, started the Masmouaa campaign to show people there is a middle ground. Every night at 9 p.m., they bang a pot and hope others will join.
"In that first bang, you are afraid and you feel alone. As people begin to respond, you begin to feel less alone," says Abdalla. "You begin to feel more courageous. You begin to feel like you can state your opinion."
"Barrier Of Fear" Returns
But very few people are speaking out now. When they do, they are quickly demonized as traitors.
Local television channels play constant montages about what is called "the war on terror," showing bearded men with guns and images of dead policemen. There is no outlet now for more critical voices. Islamist TV stations were shut down right after Morsi's ouster, and most independent journalists have been intimidated into silence.

British Parliament Votes Against Military Intervention In Syria

British Prime Minister David Cameron lost a vote endorsing military action against Syria by 13 votes Thursday, a stunning defeat that will almost guarantee that Britain plays no direct role in any U.S. attack on Bashar Assad's government.
A grim-faced Cameron conceded after the vote that "the British Parliament, reflecting the views of the British people, does not want to see British military action."
The prime minister said that while he still believed in a "tough response" to the alleged use of chemical weapons by Assad's regime, he would respect the will of Parliament.
Responding to the vote, the White House said that a decision on a possible military strike against Syria will be guided by America's best interests, suggesting the U.S. may act alone if other nations won't help.
The defeat was as dramatic as it was unexpected. At the start of the week, Cameron had seemed poised to join Washington in possible military action against Assad. The suspected chemical weapons attacks took place Aug. 21 in suburbs east and west of Damascus. The humanitarian group Doctors Without Borders has said the strikes killed 355 people.
Gruesome images of sickened men, women and children writhing on the floor drew outrage from across the world, and Cameron recalled Parliament from its summer break for an emergency vote, which was widely seen as a prelude to international action.
"The video footage illustrates some of the most sickening human suffering imaginable," Cameron told lawmakers before the vote, arguing that the most dangerous thing to do was to "stand back and do nothing."
But the push for strikes against the Syrian regime began to lose momentum as questions were raised about the intelligence underpinning the move. During a debate with lawmakers, he conceded that there was still a sliver of uncertainty about whether Assad truly was behind the attacks.
"In the end there is no 100 percent certainty about who is responsible," Cameron said, although he insisted that officials were still as "as certain as possible" that Assad's forces were responsible.
That was not enough for Britain's Labour Party, which is still smarting from its ill-fated decision to champion the invasion of Iraq in 2003. The party announced its opposition to the move despite Cameron's concessions, which included a promise to give U.N. inspectors time to report back to the Security Council and to do his outmost to secure a resolution there.
He also promised to give lawmakers a second vote in a bid to assuage fears that Britain was being rushed into an attack.
Cameron's impassioned pleas and hours of debate failed to dispel lingering suspicions that what was billed as a limited campaign would turn into an Iraq-style quagmire, and the prime minister lost the late-night vote 285-272. Some lawmakers shouted: "Resign!"
Tony Travers, the director of the government department at the London School of Economics, said Cameron had clearly miscalculated when he brought Parliament back early from its summer recess. He said the move had been unpopular even within Cameron's Conservative Party.
"Clearly this will be seen as a defeat, it suggests he got the politics wrong, both with the opposition and with some members of his own party," Travers said. "It's not great, it's not brilliant, nor is it the end of the world for him. He's lost votes before. It doesn't necessarily stop them taking further action, but they are going to have to start again really."
He said there was "not a lot" of public support for British military activity in Syria.
Defense Secretary Philip Hammond confirmed that British forces would not be involved in any potential strike, something he said would doubtless upset Washington – and please Assad.
"It is certainly going to place some strain on the special relationship," Hammond told BBC radio. "The Americans do understand the parliamentary process that we have to go through.... Common sense must tell us that the Assad regime is going to be a little bit less uncomfortable tonight as a result of this decision in Parliament."

Monday, 26 August 2013

CRAZY KENYANS SIGN A 'wife-sharing' deal

Kenyan trio in 'wife-sharing' deal

Sylvester Mwendwa  

Two Kenyan men have signed an agreement to "marry" the same woman.
The woman had been having affairs with both men for more than four years and apparently refused to choose between them.
The agreement sets out a rota for Sylvester Mwendwa and Elijah Kimani to stay in her house and states they will both help raise any children she bears.
Mr Mwendwa told the BBC he loved the woman and said the contract would "set boundaries" and "keep the peace".

Start Quote

She is like the central referee. She can say whether she wants me or my colleague”
Sylvester Mwendwa Co-husband
Lawyers said the "marriage" would only be recognised if they could prove polyandry - a woman having more than one husband - was part of their custom.
The BBC's David Okwembah in the capital, Nairobi, says polyandry is not practised by any community in Kenya.
People have reacted with shock to the "marriage", arguing that it is not acceptable in terms of their culture, religion or the law, he says.
Defending the "marriage", Mr Mwendwa told the BBC Focus on Africa programme that while he may acting in breach of the law, he had decided to enter into a contract with Mr Kimani to end their rivalry.
"It could have been very dangerous if the other man would have come to her house and caught me... So our agreement is good as it sets boundaries and helps us keep peace."
'No jealousy' Community policing officer Adhalah Abdulrahman persuaded the two men to marry the woman after he saw them fighting over her in Mombasa county, the local Daily Nation newspaper reports.
"We have agreed that from today we will not threaten or have jealous feelings because of our wife, who says she's not ready to let go of any of us," the agreement says, Kenya's NTV station reports.
"Each one will respect the day set aside for him. We agree to love each other and live peacefully. No-one has forced us to make this agreement," it adds.
Mr Mwendwa said her parents had given their blessing, while he is planning to pay the bride price.
The woman, a widow with two children, did not want to be named.
Mr Mwendwa told the BBC he did not marry the woman simply to satisfy his sexual desires but because he loved her and, most of all, her children.
"I have never been called a dad and her two children call me daddy," he said.
He said he hoped to have his own children with the woman, but she would have to decide.
"She is like the central referee. She can say whether she wants me or my colleague," he added.
Kenyan family lawyer Judy Thongori told the Daily Nation that the law does not explicitly forbid polyandry.
"The laws we have do not talk about it but for such a union to be recognised in Kenya, it has to be either under the statutory law or as customary marriage. The question we should ask now is whether these people come from communities that have been practising polyandry," she is quoted as saying.

No more diplomacy in SYRIA "UN inspectors' convoy hit by sniper fire"


Unidentified snipers have opened fire on a convoy of UN experts investigating suspected chemical weapons attacks in Syria's capital, the UN has said.
One car was shot at "multiple times", forcing the convoy to turn back.
Syrian state media blamed opposition "terrorists" for the attack, though the claim could not be verified.
The UN team later resumed its mission, entering the western district of Muadhamiya to gather evidence, before returning to central Damascus.
Hundreds died in alleged attacks on Wednesday in five districts near Damascus.
The US said there was little doubt that Syrian forces used chemical weapons in the attacks, which reportedly killed more than 300 people in rebel-held areas.
Syrian President Bashar al-Assad dismissed the accusation as "an insult to common sense" and warned the US against military intervention.
"If someone is dreaming of making Syria a puppet of the West, then this will not happen," he told the Russian newspaper Izvestiya.
'Intimidation'
The 20-member UN inspection team has been in Syria since 18 August to look into three earlier suspected chemical attacks. They were given permission on Sunday to examine the Damascus locations.
Picture from video posted by opposition activists which they say shows UN inspectors taking evidence of suspected chemical weapons attack near Damascus, 26 August 2013 The UN inspectors have been talking to doctors in Muadhamiya
The experts intend to take soil, blood, urine and tissue samples for laboratory testing but they are unlikely to apportion blame for any of the attacks.
Video footage posted online appears to show UN inspectors in Muadhamiya taking samples and talking to residents.
They went to a Red Crescent centre and spoke to doctors, opposition activists said.
On the video, which the BBC has not been able to fully authenticate, one resident is heard telling an inspector of heavy raids on the district, with "over 600 canister strikes...12 tanks, 100 soldiers".
Shortly after setting out from their hotel in Damascus, the inspectors' cars came under fire "multiple times by unidentified snipers", according to a statement from the UN.

Analysis

Whitehall officials say no firm decision is likely to be taken on how Britain will respond to last week's alleged chemical attack in Syria until at least Wednesday.
That is when UK PM David Cameron will be chairing a session of the National Security Council, attended by military and intelligence chiefs and senior ministers.
It follows intense consultations between London and Washington with Downing Street keen to stress the two countries are acting in concert.
Any military response, if it is decided on, is most likely to be confined to a one-off or limited guided missile strikes on selected Syrian military targets using Tomahawk cruise missiles fired from US Navy warships stationed hundreds of miles away in the eastern Mediterranean.
US vessels there are reported to have around 400 such missiles onboard, while a Royal Navy submarine in the region can also carry cruise missiles.
But Russia, Syria and Iran have all issued strong warnings against any western military action.
The team returned safely back to the government checkpoint before setting out again.
The convoy was "deliberately targeted" and it seemed someone was trying to intimidate the team, the UN Secretary General's spokesman, Farhan Haq, told the BBC.
The inspectors have now returned to their hotel and are expected to resume their work on Tuesday.
Military action
A year ago, US President Barack Obama said the use of chemical weapons by the Syrian government would be "a red line" that could trigger US military action.
Washington has recently bolstered its naval presence in the eastern Mediterranean, and military leaders from the US, UK and their allies are meeting in Jordan.
But the UN Security Council remains divided, with China and Russia appearing unlikely to drop their objection to stricter sanctions on Mr Assad's government.
Chinese Foreign Minister Wang Yi said on Monday that diplomats should be cautious in dealing with the chemical weapons issue, and Moscow warned Western nations not to prejudge the outcome of the inspections.
Western politicians have begun to suggest taking action outside of the UN system.
UK Foreign Secretary William Hague told the BBC that action could be taken without UN approval if there was "great humanitarian need" in Syria.
His French counterpart Laurent Fabius suggested the UN Security Council could be bypassed "in certain circumstances".
But in his latest comments on the crisis, Russian Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov said any intervention in Syria without a UN mandate would be a "grave violation of international law".
The West, he told a news conference in Moscow, had not been able to come up with any proof of chemical weapons use while "saying at the same time that the red line has been crossed and there can be no delay".
'Neurotoxic symptoms'
Western officials were unimpressed with Syria's decision to allow in the UN experts.
Mr Hague said evidence could have been tampered with, degraded or destroyed in the five days since the attack.
A senior White House official, quoted by AP news agency, dismissed the visit as "too late to be credible".
Medecins Sans Frontieres (MSF) said on Saturday that three hospitals it supports in the Damascus area had treated about 3,600 patients with "neurotoxic symptoms" on Wednesday morning, of whom 355 had died.
While MSF said it could not "scientifically confirm" the use of chemical weapons, staff at the hospitals described a large number of patients arriving in the space of less than three hours with symptoms including convulsions, pinpoint pupils and breathing problems.
Syria's security forces are widely believed to possess large undeclared stockpiles of mustard gas and sarin nerve agent.
It is one of seven countries that have not joined the 1997 convention banning chemical weapons.

Tinyefuza's Cold war against Museveni

Museveni “ordered murder of Kayiira, Kazini and many others”

In the letter to his Kampala lawyer, a copy of which was sent to us this morning, Gen Sejusa said the family of Gen Kazini is aware of who killed him. He said the late General’s brother ‘Singa’ who tried to follow up those that had killed the General, was also killed. “And the Kenyan team of private investigators which had been hired by the family, was attacked and it left the country at night,” Gen Sejusa revealed. He added: “And the family was threatened and their businesses targeted. Two very close senior relatives of Museveni organised this but I will not name them now, though their names are known by those with this information.”
Gen Sejusa warned President Museveni that he was now playing the same games against him since he left the country. “This time we shall not allow you to murder our people,” he wrote. “It started in the bush. Remember our army commander Sam Magara and those boys you used to kill him in cold blood? We kept their photos. They will be released for your enjoyment. This mischief must stop Mr President. You know we know you. You are dealing [now] with a different cup of tea. It will burn you. So go slow on your dirty tricks campaign,” Tinye said.
Gen Sejusa who before his flight to London was the coordinator of intelligence services in the UPDF, and is one of the allegedly 27 men who started the bush war that finally brought Yoweri Museveni to power in 1986, said Gen Museveni had in the past used money allegations against the late Dr Kayiira. He said: “For those in the know, again Andrew Kayiira was said to possess money before he was gunned down by Museveni’s goons.” The general had earlier on Saturday told The London Evening Post that he has a list of those who killed Kayiira, a personal friend then of this writer. In his letter to his lawyer, Gen Sejusa says: “The list of the killers [who attacked this writer's family 26 years ago] is known because the case was investigated by the best police in the world [New Scotland Yard]. So there is no debate about that. The reason given was money. Mr Museveni knows the real motive and the real executioners.”
The UPDF General went on to warn President Museveni that if he (Museveni) does not seek amnesty from the people of Uganda, his crimes would overwhelm him. “Let Scotland Yard allow [the] release [of] the report of [the] Kayiira murder and many, many others. The world will be shocked about the murders in our midst,” Gen Sejusa revealed, adding: “For now, your game is clear. It’s stupid because it’s reckless. But watch out. I can assure you that your every move is being watched. Those who died will live to haunt you.”
Defending himself against accusations that one of his relatives had smuggled money through British airports, Gen Sejusa denies all this in the letter to his lawyer. He told President Museveni: “I do not steal like you. The British Government knows my situation. Britain [is] not a banana republic like ours which you have destroyed through your corruption. They would not allow US$8million to be smuggled [through their] airport. It’s a foolish lie.”

Sunday, 25 August 2013

Navy ready to launch first strike on Syria

Navy ready to launch first strike on Syria

Britain is planning to join forces with America and launch military action against Syria within days in response to the gas attack believed to have been carried out by President Bashar al-Assad’s forces against his own people.

Royal Navy vessels are being readied to take part in a possible series of cruise missile strikes, alongside the United States, as military commanders finalise a list of potential targets.
Government sources said talks between the Prime Minister and international leaders, including Barack Obama, would continue, but that any military action that was agreed could begin within the next week.
As the preparations gathered pace, William Hague, the Foreign Secretary, warned that the world could not stand by and allow the Assad regime to use chemical weapons against the Syrian people “with impunity”.
Britain, the US and their allies must show Mr Assad that to perpetrate such an atrocity “is to cross a line and that the world will respond when that line is crossed”, he said.
British forces now look likely to be drawn into an intervention in the Syrian crisis after months of deliberation and international disagreement over how to respond to the bloody two-year civil war.

UGANDANS WILL NEVER GET NATIONAL IDs

Government suspends national ID project again


Government has halted the issuance of national Identity Cards amid reports of inter-agency fights over management of the multi-billion shilling project.
Ministry of Internal Affairs employees who have been giving out the IDs in Kampala since July 15, were, without explanation on Friday, ordered to halt the distribution and return the remaining ID batch to the headquarters.
Other sources claimed the army, under the pretext of national security, initially inserted itself quietly to run certain aspects of the National Security Information System project. The army appeared to have subsequently gained an upper hand to man the project entirely following the appointment of former Chief of Defence Forces, Aronda Nyakairima, as the new Internal Affairs minister.
The UPDF in February announced it had introduced the Integrated Resource Management System in readiness for capturing Ugandans’ bio-metric data. Gen Aronda was yesterday reported in Rwakitura for a meeting with President Museveni, but we were unable to establish if the national ID project was discussed.

In Kampala, Internal Affairs PS Stephen Kagoda downplayed the sudden suspension of the ID distribution and denied the reported rivalry between his ministry, the military, Electoral Commission, Uganda Bureau of Statistics and the National Information Technology Authority over the project. “What was being done was not a full blast exercise,” Mr Kagoda said in reference to issuance of the national identification documents. “It was an exercise intended to draw lessons on what would happen if we went full blast. If they have stopped it, maybe they have got the lessons.”

The National Immigrations and Citizenship board would have a final say, he said.
Separately, MPs on the Defence and Internal Affairs Committee want the ID exercise stopped to allow a forensic audit, including test-runs to establish if the equipment imported for mass registration of Ugandans works.

The equipment are stored at Uganda Printing and Publishing Corporation head offices in Entebbe. During a July 24 visit to the offices, MPs were reportedly upset by the poor shortage of the equipment which hosted dead lizards and cob webs.

MPs also discovered that the equipment had not been tested or installed yet their warranty expired a year ago.

“We want the exercise halted because you cannot audit it when people are being registered for or issued IDs,” said Shadow Defence Minister Hassan Fungaro, also a member of the Defence and Internal Affairs committee of Parliament.
He said the army’s intervention would remove the project away from public scrutiny, and registration of non-Ugandans would be difficult to detect. The UPDF Spokesman Lt Col Paddy Ankunda said he would cross-check whether either the Defence ministry or the army was now in-charge of the project as alleged, but he had by press time not reverted to us.
Officials say the Electoral Commission data processing in the run-up to 2011 elections was poor and contained incomplete information for the ID exercise, resulting in only 11.5 percent data validation success rate. Only 24, 707 out of 214, 700 verified data sets were found usable, MPs were told.
Recipients of the about 600 new IDs in Kampala have complained of basic mistakes on the documents such as wrong name spellings and area of residence. The documents also don’t have electronic chips to decode biometric information for cross-border checks as envisaged under the East African Community Common Market Protocol.

Rwanda Warns DRC "AFRICAN BROTHERS

Rwanda Warns DRC Forces After Cross-border Shelling

Rwanda’s army has warned neighbouring Democratic Republic of Congo, who it accuses of deliberate bombing over the border, that it will not stand by “indefinitely”, it said in a statement late Friday.
A combination of two pictures shows (left) Joseph Kabila, President of the Democratic Republic of Congo, and Paul Kagame, President of Rwanda. The two countries enjoy tense relations. FILE



A combination of two pictures shows (left) Joseph Kabila, President of the Democratic Republic of Congo, and Paul Kagame, President of Rwanda. The two countries enjoy tense relations.  

On Thursday, Rwanda accused Congolese troops of firing a rocket over the border into Bugu village, while on Friday afternoon it said five mortar bombs landed in the Rwandan villages of Bukumu, Kagezi, Kageyo and Rusura.

“The RDF (Rwanda Defence Force) remains prepared to take all necessary measures to ensure the safety of the population,” Rwanda’s army spokesman Joseph Nzabamwita said in a statement.
“Acts of provocation that endanger the lives of Rwandan citizens will not remain unanswered indefinitely,” he added, but stressed that Kigali “remains committed and active in the search of a sustainable solution”.
The bombings came amid fresh clashes outside the eastern DR Congo flashpoint city of Goma between the Congolese army, United Nations troops fighting alongside and the M23, a Congolese rebel group Rwanda is accused of backing. Rwanda denies the charge.
The M23 is made up of Congolese Tutsi who were integrated into the army following a 2009 peace accord. They mutinied in April 2012 saying the accord was never implemented.
In a tit for tat exchange, Kinshasa’s government has in turn accused Rwanda of firing rockets on Goma on Thursday to help the M23, claims Kigali denies.
The latest unrest erupted in mid-July and ended an almost two-month truce between M23 rebels and government forces.
“The nature and pattern of these shelling suggests that they are not occurring accidentally,” Nzabamwita said.
“The continued indiscriminate bombing of Rwandan villages by DRC armed forces is unacceptable and must stop immediately.”

RUSSIA WARNS AMERICA OVER SYRIA

Intervention in Syria would be 'tragic mistake', warns Russia

Russia said that the West would be making a "tragic mistake" by launching military strikes on its ally Syria as the international community headed for a repeat of the bitter diplomatic showdowns that preceded military action in Iraq and Kosovo.








syria russia
Moscow warned the West not to pre-empt the work of the United Nations inspection team that is due to investigate last week's alleged chemical attack.
The Kremlin is certain to join China to block any attempts by Britain, France and America to secure UN backing for a military response to Syria's alleged use of chemical weapons on its own people.
A Russian foreign ministry spokesman drew parallels with the US-led overthrow of Iraqi dictator Saddam Hussein to justify its stance – a comparison rejected by Britain and America.
"We strongly urge those who, by attempting to impose their own results on the UN experts, are raising the possibility of a military operation in Syria to use their common sense and refrain from committing a tragic mistake," said Alexander Lukashevich.
"All this is reminiscent of events from a decade ago, when the United States bypassed the UN and used fallacious information on the presence in Iraq of weapons of mass destruction to launch an adventure, the consequences of which are known to all."

Uganda demands permits for three or more people wanting to talk politics

Ugandans wanting to talk politics in groups of three or more will have to apply for permission a week in advance under a new law that critics say effectively criminalises opposition to President Yoweri Museveni.

Uganda makes 'political gatherings'   
Mr Museveni has presided over constitutional changes allowing him repeatedly to run for re-election

Police now have the power to arrest anyone at an unauthorised gathering where subjects of a political nature are discussed, even if they take place in people's homes.
Critics called the Public Order Management Bill a "blow to political debate" in a country to which Britain sends more than £95 million in aid each year, a fifth of it earmarked for "governance and security".
The bill, passed by Parliament on Tuesday, is the latest move in what is seen as a campaign to silence dissent against Mr Museveni, who seized power in 1986 and who has presided over constitutional changes allowing him repeatedly to run for re-election.
"The bill is a devastating blow for freedom of expression and assembly in Uganda," said Maria Burnett, senior Africa researcher at Human Rights Watch.
"Political demonstrations already face serious obstacles, including the use of live ammunition on innocent bystanders and demonstrators.


Saturday, 24 August 2013

Armstrong 's dop SAGA settlement with Sunday Times



Lance Armstrong 'agrees Sunday Times settlement'

Lance Armstrong

Disgraced cyclist Lance Armstrong has agreed a settlement with the Sunday Times after it sued him for about £1m, the paper has announced.
Armstrong, 41, had been paid £300,000 to settle a libel case in 2004 after the newspaper alleged he had cheated.
After US officials last year found Armstrong had led a "sophisticated" doping programme, the paper demanded the money back plus interest and costs.
The Sunday Times  said it had reached a "mutually acceptable final resolution".
David Walsh, the chief sports writer of the Sunday Times, first raised questions about Armstrong in 1999, when he won the Tour de France for the first time.
In 2004, the newspaper published an article saying it was right for questions about Armstrong's performance to be both "posed and answered".
The American cyclist's lawyers issued a writ and sought damages from the paper, Mr Walsh and then-deputy sports editor Alan English.
It was later ruled that the meaning of the article was that Armstrong was "a fraud, a cheat and a liar".
The Sunday Times settled that claim in June 2006.
Last year, the United States Anti-Doping Agency called Armstrong a "serial" cheat who had led "the most sophisticated, professionalised and successful doping programme that sport has ever seen". He was stripped of his seven Tour de France titles .
The cyclist had always denied doping during his career, but finally confessed in an interview with chat show host Oprah Winfrey in January.
In December last year, the Sunday Times wrote to Armstrong's lawyers saying it was now clear that the earlier proceedings brought by the athlete had been "baseless and fraudulent".
"Your representations that you had never taken performance-enhancing drugs were deliberately false," the letter added.
In the latest edition of the Sunday Times, the newspaper announced that it, Mr Walsh and Mr English had "reached a mutually acceptable final resolution to all claims against Lance Armstrong related to the 2012 High Court proceedings".
The paper said it was "entirely happy with the agreed settlement, the terms of which remain confidential.

Violence in Yemen turns bloody

Yemen violence: Explosion hits air force bus

Breaking news
A blast has struck a bus transporting air force personnel in the Yemeni capital, Sanaa, killing at least six people, officials say.
Several others are reported to have been wounded.
The attack took place near an air force base, on the road leading to Sanaa international airport.
Yemen's government is battling militants belonging to al-Qaeda in the Arabian Peninsula (AQAP), who often target the military.

Cameron and Obama threaten SYRIA GOV'T

Syria: Cameron and Obama threaten 'serious response'

Medecins Sans Frontieres said it could not scientifically confirm the use of chemical weapons
The UK and the US have threatened a "serious response" if it emerges Syria used chemical weapons last week.
Prime Minister David Cameron and President Barack Obama spoke on the phone for 40 minutes on Saturday, Mr Cameron's office said.
Both were "gravely concerned" by "increasing signs that this was a significant chemical weapons attack carried out by the Syrian regime".
The Syrian regime and opposition have accused each other over the attacks.
Rebels and opposition activists accuse forces supporting President Bashar al-Assad of carrying out chemical attacks around Damascus on 21 August, while state TV accuses the rebels.
"The UN Security Council has called for immediate access for UN investigators on the ground in Damascus," the Downing Street statement said.
"The fact that President Assad has failed to co-operate with the UN suggests that the regime has something to hide."
It said Mr Cameron and Mr Obama had "reiterated that significant use of chemical weapons would merit a serious response from the international community and both have tasked officials to examine all the options".
The statement said the two men had agreed it was "vital that the world upholds the prohibition on the use of chemical weapons and deters further outrages".
They would keep in "close contact", it added.
Syrian state TV broadcast footage of what it claims are chemical agents found in rebel-held areas
The US president earlier convened his National Security Council to discuss options on Syria.
"The president has directed the intelligence community to gather facts and evidence so that we can determine what occurred in Syria," a White House official told AFP news agency.
"We have a range of options available, and we are going to act very deliberately so that we're making decisions consistent with our national interest as well as our assessment of what can advance our objectives in Syria."
On Saturday, US Defence Secretary Chuck Hagel said the Pentagon had presented options to Mr Obama and he suggested that US forces were being moved ahead of a possible decision on taking action against Syria.
BBC political correspondent Iain Watson said he understood that the "serious response" mentioned in the UK statement would not include "boots on the ground".
But a range of other options was not ruled out, he said, potentially including air strikes.
Our correspondent added that some British Conservative MPs had made it very clear they did not want Mr Cameron to commit himself to any form of military intervention in Syria without consulting MPs first.
'Neurotoxic symptoms'
Meanwhile, medical charity Medecins Sans Frontieres (MSF) says hospitals it supports in Syria have treated about 3,600 patients with "neurotoxic symptoms", of whom 355 have died.
MSF, which says it cannot "scientifically confirm" the use of chemical weapons, said the patients had arrived in three hospitals in the Damascus area on Wednesday.
It says staff at the hospitals described a large number of patients arriving in the space of less than three hours with symptoms including convulsions, dilated pupils and breathing problems.
MSF director of operations Bart Janssens said the symptoms - as well as the "massive influx of patients in a short period of time" - strongly suggested mass exposure to a neurotoxic agent.
A team of UN weapons inspectors has been in Syria since 18 August to inspect three sites, but the government has not yet said whether it will allow them to expand their visit.
The UN says more than 100,000 people have been killed since the uprising against President Assad began more than two years ago.

HOSTILITY IN TUNISIA

Tunisia opposition in rally against Ennahda-led government

Anti-government protesters hold flares and shout slogans during  demonstration in Tunis. 24 Aug 2013 The protesters set off flares and chanted slogans
Thousands of Tunisians have rallied in front of the National Assembly in the capital Tunis calling for the Islamist-led government to resign.
The opposition National Salvation Front has called for a week of protests over what it says is the government's inability to guarantee security.
The protests come a month after the assassination of a prominent opposition politician.
It was the second such politically-motivated killing this year.
The governing Ennahda party has offered to support an all-party government but has ruled out calls to dissolve the constituent assembly or remove Prime Minister Ali Laaraiedh.
"The people want the fall of the regime," chanted the crowds, repeating the slogan used when Tunisians ousted President Zine el-Abidine Ben Ali in 2011. His downfall triggered revolts across the Arab world.
Correspondents say Tunisian opposition parties have recently been emboldened by the Egyptian army's ousting of Islamist President Mohamed Morsi.
Witnesses said police monitored Saturday's protests but there were no reports of violence.
'Living in fear' Protester Nejet Brissi, 41, said she wanted the government to step down and make way for a caretaker administration to oversee fresh elections.
"Since Ennahda came to power we have been suffering," she said.
"We have been crushed by the rising cost of living. There is no security any more. We are living in fear of terrorists."
Opposition politician Mohamed Brahmi was shot on 25 July, almost six months after secular opposition leader Chokri Belaid, a fellow leftist politician, was killed.
Tunisia's powerful UGTT trade union has been mediating between the Islamists and the opposition.
Ennahda said on Thursday it accepted in principle a proposal to form a technocratic government, but only after further negotiations.
The UGTT plans to continue its mediation work next week.
"We hope that we will find a solution responding to the interests of the nation above all, and which satisfies the different parties," said UGTT secretary general Hocine Abassi, after holding talks with President Moncef Marzouki.

Friday, 23 August 2013

Sexual Harassment


San Diego Mayor Resigns Amid Sexual Harassment Claims

San Diego Mayor Bob Filner apologizes for his behavior in this video produced by the city of San Diego, July 11, 2013.
Embattled San Diego Mayor Bob Filner has announced he will resign following a vote of 7-0 by the San Diego City Council that followed six weeks of sexual harassment allegations. Filner's resignation will take effect on Aug. 30.
Speaking before the committee today, Filner said that he "had no intention to be offensive. ... I have not sexually harassed anyone.
"I was trying to establish personal relationships," Filner said. "I sincerely apologize to all of you. ... For the part that I have played, for putting the city through a difficult time, I apologize."
View a compilation of some of the women claiming Filner sexually harassed them.
Moments after Filner spoke, Nicholas Pacilio, a spokesman for the California attorney general, confirmed that a criminal investigation is underway but declined to elaborate, the Associated Press reported.
Before the San Diego City Council's closed door vote, it held a public hearing, which included a testimony from one of Filner's accusers, his former deputy campaign manager Laura Fink, who urged him to resign.
Someone with knowledge of the negotiations told The AP before the vote that the main sticking points had been granting Filner indemnity and covering his legal fees in a sexual harassment lawsuit filed by Irene McCormack Jackson, Filner's former aide. The person was not authorized to comment publicly and spoke only on condition of anonymity.
City Council President Todd Gloria will temporarily replace Filner, and a special election will be held within 90 days, according to the city charter. Today's vote came after a series of allegations in which 18 women came forward, claiming that Filner, 70, had sexually harassed them over the course of his political career.
The City Council had previously said it would not pay Filner's legal fees in Jackson's lawsuit. "The city of San Diego has sued the mayor with unanimous City Council approval," City Attorney Jan Goldsmith said on July 30. "This is part of due process. If Bob Filner engaged in unlawful conduct and the city is held liable, he will have to reimburse us every penny the city pays and its attorney fees."
San Diego City Councilman Scott Sherman told ABC Affiliate KGTV, "It's going to be one of those tough, gut-check decisions, and I'm looking forward to seeing what's in the agreement."
Another city councilman, Kevil Faulconer, released a statement saying, "Protecting taxpayers has always been my top priority. This case is no different. I joined these mediation discussions to ensure the city gets the best deal possible for taxpayers. We must put this civic dysfunction behind us and return to providing city services to San Diegans."
Jackson's lawyer, Gloria Allred, made clear Thursday that the lawsuit had not been settled and mediation was ongoing. Allred had also emphasized that the city should not provide any funds for Filner and suggested the public hold a hearing to voice their opinions about the matter.
"There should be no payoff for Mayor Filner," Allred said.
Filner had defied demands that he resign, including requests from the Democratic Party that he do so.
Filner's attorney, James Payne, issued a statement Thursday saying Filner had returned to work at City Hall on Wednesday and that "Mayor Filner and representatives of the city of San Diego reached a tentative agreement.
"Due to the confidential nature of mediation and settlement discussions, we are unable to comment or make statements about any of the terms," the statement read.

Wildfires "600 Portuguese Firefighters Battle Deadly Blazes"


More than 600 Portuguese firefighters are battling six new wildfires a day after one firefighter was killed and nine others injured when gusting winds caused a fire to change direction.
Portugal's National Civil Protection agency said water-bombing planes were also being used to fight fires Friday in north-central Portugal.


In the hills near the small city of Tondela, Commander Antonio Ribeiro of the Serra de Caramulo firefighters said the crew ran from the flames and smoke Thursday but the firefighter who died fled in the wrong direction. That fire was brought under control late Thursday, but the agency said firefighters faced new six forest fires elsewhere in the region.

Israeli strike Lebanon once again

Israeli warplanes struck a target south of Beirut early Friday, a day after militants fired four rockets into northern Israel, the Israeli military and a Palestinian official said.

The Israeli military said that the aircraft targeted "a terror site located between Beirut and Sidon in response" to the rocket attack. It was the first air raid on the area since the 2006 war between Israel and Lebanon's militant Hezbollah group.

Ramez Mustafa, a Lebanon-based official with the Popular Front for the Liberation of Palestine-General Command, said the raid occurred at 4 a.m. and caused no casualties or material damage. He said the Israeli air force fired one missile at the area.

He said the warplanes struck the coastal town of Naameh, 10 miles (16 kilometers) south of Beirut. The Palestinian group is active in the area and has a base there.

An Associated Press photographer in Naameh said the raid targeted a PFLP-GC base in a valley in the town. Lebanese troops in the area prevented journalists from reaching the base.

An Israeli army statement issued after the air raid said: "Yesterday's attack is a blatant breach of Israeli sovereignty that jeopardized Israeli civilian life. Israel will not tolerate terrorist aggression originating from Lebanese territory."

On Thursday, militants in Lebanon fired four rockets into Israel, setting off air raid sirens and startling a nation already on edge over turmoil along its northern and southern borders.

Lt. Col. Peter Lerner, a military spokesman, said three rockets landed in northern Israel, while a fourth was intercepted by Israel's "Iron Dome" rocket defense system. No one was injured, and the military dismissed the attack as an "isolated incident."

Still, the rockets added to the nation's fears at a time it is nervously watching unrest in neighboring Syria, where the government has been accused of using chemical weapons against rebels and civilians this week. It's also worried about Egypt to the south, where Islamic militants have stepped up their activities near the Israeli border in the wake of a military coup.

The Abdullah Azzam Brigades, an al-Qaida-inspired group based in Lebanon, claimed responsibility for the attack in a post on the Twitter account of Sirajuddin Zurayqat, a prominent Islamic militant leader. Zurayqat said the rockets were capable of flying 40 kilometers, or 25 miles, putting the Israeli city of Haifa in its range. The group, designated a terrorist organization by the U.S., has claimed responsibility for past rocket attacks on Israel.

South Lebanon was the scene of bitter fighting between Israel and Lebanese militant Hezbollah guerrillas in 2006 and is considered a Hezbollah stronghold. Palestinian radical groups and Islamic militants in the area could also provoke a border incident, with radical Palestinian groups claiming responsibility for several past actions.

That summer war broke out after the Iranian-backed militant group's guerrillas crossed into Israel and captured two Israeli soldiers. The conflict killed about 1,200 Lebanese and 160 Israelis. The last serious clashes along the frontier took place in 2010 when Lebanese and Israeli troops exchanged fire across the border, killing at least three people.

"We are acting on all fronts, in the north and in the south, to defend the citizens of Israel from such attacks," Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu said in a videotaped statement.

"We employ various measures, both defensive and preventive, and we are acting responsibly," he added. "Our policy is clear: to protect and to prevent. Whoever tries to harm us should know we will harm them."
Lerner, the military spokesman, said the rockets were fired from a location south of the Lebanese port city of Tyre. He said two rockets landed in populated areas, while a third landed in an open field.

Israel's Channel 10 TV showed pictures from Gesher Haziv, a communal farm near the Lebanese border, of a large rocket fragment lying on the ground near a white car with shattered windows and flat tires and pocked with shrapnel holes in its side. Security men cleaned up rocket fragments from the ground.
Lerner said the attack was an "unprovoked attack on Israeli citizens" but that Israel did not retaliate.

He blamed "global jihad" elements for the attack, a term Israel uses when referring to groups either linked to or inspired by al-Qaida. Israel blamed the same elements for a rocket attack last week against the southern port city of Eilat. Those groups are active in Egypt's Sinai Peninsula, which neighbors Eilat.

Israel believes Hezbollah has recovered from the 2006 fighting and restocked its arsenal with tens of thousands of rockets and missiles. Officials believe Hezbollah is still wary of engaging in hostilities while it is involved in the civil war in Syria.

The Israel-Lebanon border has remained quiet since the monthlong 2006 war, although there have been sporadic incidents of rocket fire. Earlier this month, four Israeli soldiers were also wounded in a mysterious incident along the border.

The civil war in Syria has done more to elevate tensions, especially as Hezbollah has become increasingly involved in the fighting there.

Israel fears that Syria will transfer sophisticated weapons to Hezbollah and has carried out several airstrikes in Syria in recent months on suspected Iranian weapons shipments believed to be bound for the militant group. Israel has never officially confirmed the airstrikes.

In his statement, Netanyahu made his first comments about Syrian opposition claims that the Syrian army fired chemical weapons this week, killing more than 100 people. He called the reported use of chemical weapons against civilians "terribly disturbing."

"If verified, it will be a horrible addition to the roster of tragic crimes committed by the Syrian regime against the people of Syria," he said.

Netanyahu called it "absurd" that U.N. investigators inside Syria to investigate chemical weapons have been prevented from reaching the areas where the weapons were believed to have been used.

He also accused Iran, the key backer of Syria and Hezbollah, of using a Syria as a "testing ground." Israel accuses Iran of pursuing nuclear weapons and believes the international community has not been tough enough in stopping Iran's suspect nuclear program.

"Iran is closely watching whether and how the world responds to the atrocities committed by Iran's client state Syria and by Iran's proxy Hezbollah against innocent civilians in Syria," he said. "These events prove yet again that we simply cannot allow the world's most dangerous regimes to acquire the world's most dangerous weapons."

Egypt's bruised Brotherhood have lost all sympathy

Supporters of Muslim Brotherhood and ousted Egyptian President Mohamed Mursi shout slogans against the military and the interior ministry during a protest in front of Al Tawheed mosque which leads to Ramses Square in Cairo August 23, 2013. REUTERS-Amr Abdallah Dalsh
Mass protests called by Egypt's Muslim Brotherhood mostly failed to materialize on Friday as the movement reels from a bloody army crackdown on followers of ousted President Mohamed Mursi.
Troops and police had taken relatively low-key security measures before the "Friday of Martyrs" processions that were to have begun from 28 mosques in the capital after weekly prayers.
But midday prayers were canceled at some mosques and few major protests unfolded in Cairo, although witnesses said at least 1,000 people staged a march in the Mohandiseen district.
There were no reports of violence in that procession, but the Brotherhood's website said one person had been killed in the Nile Delta town of Tanta in clashes with security forces.
Brotherhood supporters also turned out in Alexandria, several Delta towns, the Suez Canal city of Ismailia, the north Sinai town of Rafah, and Assiut in the south, with minor skirmishes reported in some places.
"We are not afraid; it's victory or death," said Mohamed Abdel Azim, a retired oil engineer who was among about 100 people marching slowly from a mosque near Cairo University.
"They intend to strike at Muslims," the grey-bearded Azim said. "We'd rather die in dignity than live in oppression. We'll keep coming out until there's no one left."
Despite his defiant words, the mood of the protesters seemed subdued, perhaps a sign that the crackdown and the round-up of Brotherhood leaders has chilled the rank-and-file.
Some marchers carried posters of Mursi, who was toppled by army chief General Abdel Fattah al-Sisi on July 3 after huge demonstrations against his rule.
"No to the coup," they chanted.
"GOD WILL BRING DOWN SISI"
At another small protest in Cairo, a veiled nursery teacher with four children, who gave her name as Nasra, said: "God will make us victorious, even if many of us are hurt and even if it takes a long time. God willing, God will bring down Sisi."
Egypt has endured the bloodiest civil unrest in its modern history since August 14 when police destroyed protest camps set up by Mursi's supporters in Cairo to demand his reinstatement.
The violence has alarmed Egypt's Western allies, but U.S. President Barack Obama acknowledged that even a decision to cut off U.S. aid to Cairo might not influence its military rulers.
But he said Washington was re-evaluating its ties with Egypt. "There's no doubt that we can't return to business as usual, given what's happened," he told CNN in an interview.
Some U.S. lawmakers have called for a halt to the $1.5 billion a year in mostly military assistance to Egypt to bolster its 1979 peace treaty with Israel in 1979. Military cooperation includes privileged U.S. access to the Suez Canal.
The Brotherhood, hounded by Egypt's new army-backed rulers, had called for demonstrations across the country against the crackdown, testing the resilience of its battered support base.
Security forces kept a watchful eye, but did not flood the streets, even near Cairo's central Fateh mosque, where gun battles killed scores of people last Friday and Saturday.
The mosque's metal gates and big front door were locked and chained. Prayers were canceled. Two armored vehicles were parked down the street, where people shopped at a busy market.
Only one riot police truck stood by near Rabaa al-Adawiya square in northeastern Cairo, home to the Brotherhood's biggest protest vigil until police and troops stormed in, killing hundreds of people, bulldozing barricades and burning tents.
SYMBOLIC VICTORY
The mosque there was closed for repairs. Workmen in blue overalls stood on scaffolding as they covered its charred walls with white paint. Children scavenged through piles of garbage.
Troops used barbed wire to block a main road to Nahda Square, the site of the smaller of the two Brotherhood sit-ins.
The authorities declared a month-long state of emergency last week and they enforce a nightly curfew.
They have also arrested many leading figures from the Brotherhood, all but decapitating an organization that won five successive votes in Egypt after the overthrow of Hosni Mubarak in 2011.
In a symbolic victory for the army-dominated old order, Mubarak, an ex-military man who ruled Egypt for 30 years before he was toppled, was freed from jail on Thursday. His successor Mursi, Egypt's first freely elected president, remains behind bars.
The Brotherhood's "General Guide" Mohamed Badie, who was arrested on Tuesday, is due to go on trial on Sunday along with two other senior figures, Khairat al-Shater and Saad al-Katatni, on charges that include incitement to violence.
More than 1,000 people, including over 100 soldiers and police, have been killed in violence across Egypt since Mursi's overthrow. Brotherhood supporters say the toll is much higher.
Graffiti on a mosque wall in a rundown Cairo neighborhood illustrated the deep divisions that have emerged since Sisi's takeover. The spray-painted message "Yes to Sisi" had been crossed out and painted over with the word "traitor."
Slogans elsewhere read "Mursi is a spy" and "Mursi out". Someone had also written "Freedom, Justice, Brotherhood".
The Brotherhood, founded in 1928, operated mostly underground before emerging as Egypt's best-organized political force after Mubarak fell. Its popularity waned during Mursi's year in office when critics accused it of accumulating power, pushing a partisan Islamist agenda and mismanaging the economy.
The Brotherhood, which Egypt's new army-backed rulers have threatened to dissolve, says Mursi's government was deliberately undermined by unreformed Mubarak-era institutions.
Mubarak, 85, still faces retrial on charges of complicity in the killings of protesters, but he left jail on Thursday for the first time since April 2011 and was flown by helicopter to a plush military hospital in the southern Cairo suburb of Maadi.
The authorities have used the state of emergency to keep him under house arrest, apparently to minimize the risk of popular anger if he had been given unfettered freedom.