Wednesday, April 16, 2014

Funeral held for woman killed by Israel in West Bank



Palestinians in the occupied West Bank have held a funeral ceremony for a woman who passed away after inhaling teargas fired by Israeli troops in a refugee camp, Press TV reports.




According to the Palestinian officials, Noha Qatamesh died in a hospital in the town of Bethlehem on Monday.


Medical sources said that the victim’s respiratory system failed after Israeli forces fired teargas into and around her home at the Aida refugee camp.


During the ceremony, residents of the camp expressed their anger at Israel’s recent assaults by chanting slogans and calling on the Palestinian Authority to cease the so-called peace talks with the Israeli regime.


Local sources said that Israeli forces have carried out several attacks on the camp over the past few days, and fired teargas into homes and streets.


Meanwhile, Munther Amira, a leader of the Popular Resistance Committee, described Qatamesh as “the latest victim of the Israeli violence,” adding that the Tel Aviv regime has used numerous weapons against Palestinians, including teargas canisters, sound bombs and live ammunitions.


Israeli troops also shot and critically injured a 20-year-old man as they stormed the camp on Sunday.


The West Bank has been under Israeli military occupation since 1967. There are hundreds of checkpoints in the West Bank, which have made life difficult for the Palestinians.


Earlier this month, Palestinian Authority Minister of Social Affairs Kamal al-Sharafi said Israeli forces have killed 1,520 Palestinian children and wounded 6,000 more over the past fourteen years.


On March 22, Israeli troops killed three Palestinians in a nighttime attack in the Jenin refugee camp in the West Bank.


MR/AS/MHB



Obama’s School ‘Punishment Equality’ Folly


800px-Japanese_high_school_classroom George Leef, director of research for the North Carolina-based John William Pope Center for Higher Education Policy, authored a Forbes op-ed article titled “Obama Administration Takes Groupthink To Absurd Lengths.” The subtitle is “School Discipline Rates Must Be ‘Proportionate.’” (http://ift.tt/1evn8k9). Let’s examine some of the absurdity of the Obama administration’s take on student discipline.


Last January, the departments of Justice and Education published a “guidance” letter describing how schools can meet their obligations under federal law to administer student discipline without discriminating on the basis of race, color or national origin. Its underlying threat is that if federal bureaucrats learn of racial disproportionality in the punishments meted out for misbehavior, they will descend upon a school’s administrators. If schools cannot justify differentials in rates of punishment by race or ethnic group, they will face the loss of federal funds and be forced to undertake costly diversity training.


The nation’s educators can avoid sanctions by adopting a racial quota system for student discipline. So as Roger Clegg, president and general counsel of the Center for Equal Opportunity, predicts, “school officials will either start disciplining students who shouldn’t be, or, more likely, will not discipline some students who ought to be.” I can imagine school administrators reasoning this way: “Blacks are 20 percent of our student body, and 20 percent of suspensions this year have been of black students. In order to discipline another black student while maintaining our suspension quota, we will have to suspend some white students, whether they’re guilty or not.” Some administrators might see some injustice in that approach and simply ignore the misbehavior of black students.


Leef cites Manhattan Institute’s Heather Mac Donald, who wrote in City Journal (http://ift.tt/1evn8kd) that “the Departments of Education and Justice have launched a campaign against disproportionate minority discipline rates, which show up in virtually every school district with significant numbers of black and Hispanic students.


The possibility that students’ behavior, not educators’ racism, drives those rates lies outside the Obama administration’s conceptual universe.” She quoted Aaron Benner, a black teacher in a St. Paul, Minn., school who abhors the idea that school officials should go easy on black students who act up because (as a “facilitator” said) that’s what black culture is. “They’re trying to pull one over on us. Black folks are drinking the Kool-Aid; this ‘let-them-clown’ philosophy could have been devised by the KKK.” Benner is right. I can’t think of a more racist argument than one that holds that disruptive, rude behavior and foul language are a part of black culture.


If Barack Obama’s Department of Justice thinks that disproportionality in school punishments is probative of racial discrimination, what about our criminal justice system, in which a disproportionate number of blacks are imprisoned, on parole or probation, and executed? According to the NAACP’s criminal justice fact sheet, blacks now constitute nearly 1 million of the total 2.3 million people who are incarcerated. Blacks are incarcerated at nearly six times the rate of whites. The NAACP goes on to report that if blacks and Hispanics were incarcerated at the same rate as whites, today’s prison and jail populations would decline by approximately 50 percent (http://ift.tt/1evn8kh).


So what to do? For example, blacks are 13 percent of the population but over 50 percent of homicide victims and about 46 percent of convicted murderers. Seeing as the Obama administration is concerned about punishment disproportionality, should black convicts be released so that only 13 percent of incarcerated murderers are black? Or should the Department of Justice order the conviction of whites, whether they’re guilty or not, so that the number of people convicted of murder by race is equal to their number in the general population? You say, “Williams, that not only is a stupid suggestion but violates all concepts of justice!” You’re absolutely right, but isn’t it just as stupid and unjust for the Obama administration to seek punishment equality in schools?


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Live: Breaking news, traffic and travel across Teesside


The Evening Gazette's live breaking news blog brings you regular updates, pictures, video, tweets and comments covering the latest Teesside and North Yorkshire traffic, travel, weather, crime and council news for today, Thursday 17 April, 2014.


You can contribute to the live blog by posting your comment below, and you can also tweet us @EveningGazette to share breaking news stories, pictures and opinions.


Our Teesside breaking news live blog begins at 07:00am every weekday and is updated throughout the day and into the evening.



Global media thumbs down to Modi as PM


NEW DELHI: The international media has been largely unsparing towards BJP PM candidate Narendra Modi.


The most recent issue of The Economist had the PM hopeful on the cover, with a strongly worded editorial inside that said: “This newspaper cannot bring itself to back Mr Modi for India’s highest office. “While the piece created ripples among Modi supporters in India, it comes in a series of similar damning reports and editorials.



In an April 14 article in the Guardian titled ‘Narendra Modi : Britain can’t simply shrug off this Hindu extremist’, author Priyamvada Gopal made a case for the UK severing its links with the man. She writes: “In the face of a global resurgence of the right we must be alert to all its extremist forms. Britons committed to anti-fascism must not allow their country to abdicate morality.”


A piece by Thane Richard in the Quartz also went viral on social media last month. It spoke of how India would cross the “moral line of no return” if Modi becomes PM. Taking on Modi’s insistence on leveraging development over other issues, Richard writes: “Has India become so desperate for rapid economic growth… that she has forgotten basic humanity? It seems that, in the race towards higher GDP, the majority of India is willing to inject itself with the steroids of bigotry or ruthlessness . Ethics be damned.”


Even Modi’s recent admission of his marriage in his election affidavit came in for international attention.


The Pakistan press has, predictably, focused on Kashmir. Calling Modi a “challenge to the conscience of South Asia”, Sanjay Kumar writes in The Express Tribune, “Any attempt to question the status quo in Kashmir and reverse the nuclear doctrine will have a strong reaction.” The piece was titled, “Narendra Modi will be bad for Pakistan — and India”.



US airstrike kills woman, two children in E. Afghanistan


US warplanes conduct air patrol over a region in Afghanistan.



Local Afghan officials say at least three civilians– including a woman and two children — have been killed in a US-led airstrike in the country’s troubled east.



A spokesman for the governor of Afghanistan’s southeastern Khost province said the incident took place in the Zani Kheil area on Monday night.


The official added that a helicopter belonging to US-led foreign forces opened fire on a house during a training mission.


Civilian casualties caused by foreign forces have fuelled anti-American sentiment in Afghanistan.


Thousands of people have died in US-led airstrikes in Afghanistan since the invasion of the country.


A large number of Afghan civilians, including many women and children, have been also killed during night raids by foreign forces and CIA-run killer drone strikes.


The Afghan government has repeatedly called on foreign forces to stop the airstrikes on residential areas.


Civilian casualties caused by foreign forces have been a major source of tension between Kabul and Washington.


The casualties inflicted by US-led troops have sparked massive anti-US protests in the past.


The United States and its allies invaded Afghanistan in October 2001 as part of Washington’s so-called war on terror. The offensive removed the Taliban from power, but insecurity continues to rise across the country, despite the presence of thousands of US-led troops.


The US is now pushing the Afghan government to sign a security deal to allow US troops to stay in Afghanistan beyond 2014.


Afghan President Hamid Karzai has warned that he will not allow continued foreign presence if it means more bombs and civilian killings.


JR/PR



Muslim Brotherhood members banned from elections



A court in Egypt has banned members of the Muslim Brotherhood movement from running in upcoming elections.



On Tuesday, a court in the Mediterranean city of Alexandria ordered Egyptian officials to bar any candidacies by the members or former members of the movement in presidential and parliamentary elections.



“It is illogical to receive such candidacies after the government designated the Brotherhood a terrorist organization,” said Tareq Mahmoud, a lawyer from the group that filed a petition for the ban.



“We submitted videos, photos and documents showing terrorist acts carried out by the Muslim Brotherhood, which is why it is illogical that they lead the country or represent its people in elections,” he added.


In December 2013, the Muslim Brotherhood was blacklisted by the country’s military- installed government as a “terrorist group”.


Egypt is set to hold a presidential election on May 26-27, which is to be followed by parliamentary polls.


The country has been experiencing unrelenting violence since the first democratically-elected president, Mohamed Morsi, was ousted on July 3. Hundreds have lost their lives in the ensuing violence across the country.


Egypt’s military-backed government has launched a bloody crackdown on Morsi’s supporters and arrested thousands of Muslim Brotherhood members, including the party’s senior leaders.


The Egyptians launched a revolution against Hosni Mubarak’s pro-Israeli regime on January 25, 2011, which eventually put an end to the 30-year dictatorship of Mubarak on February 11, 2011.


NT/AS/MHB



Green wedge house plans in Ingleby Barwick thrown out by councillors


Stockton Council’s planning committee have unanimously rejected controversial plans for up to 550 new homes on green wedge land in Ingleby Barwick




Controversial plans for up to 550 new homes on green wedge land in Ingleby Barwick have been thrown out.


Stockton Council's planning committee yesterday unanimously rejected an outline planning application for the residential development on an 80-acre site adjacent to Thornaby Road and the new Free School site.


Similar plans for up to 550 homes at neighbouring Little Maltby Farm had been unanimously rejected by the committee in February.


An online petition had been set up against the new application with more than 250 signatures and 21 letters of objection lodged against it.


Concerns included loss of greenfield site; shortage of school places particularly at primary level; Ingleby Barwick does not need more housing and the impact on wildlife.


Stockton planners had recommended the scheme be refused, saying any benefits of the additional housing “would be outweighed by the harm the proposal would have to the green wedge and the wider character of the area.”


Ingleby Barwick independent councillor Kevin Faulks told the committee: “We have had hundreds of people objecting to this. We’re just creating more and more traffic on these roads.”


Louise Baldock, Labour parliamentary candidate for Stockton South, described the scheme as “a housing development in the middle of nowhere”.


“This development would be bigger than Maltby and Hilton added together,” she said.


Thornaby independent councillor Steve Walmsley, on the planning committee, said: “At some point you have to say enough is enough.”


Stockton South MP James Wharton welcomed the rejection of the housing development. But he warned that having turned the 550 houses down Stockton Council “now need to commit to fighting” any appeal by the developers “with full and good quality legal representation”.


“They must not allow these houses to get permission by the back door by refusing to fight the appeal,” he said.


“It will make a mockery of democracy if the appeal is allowed to go through with no resistance when the planning committee has made its position so clear.”


Jersey-based Tiviot Way Investments have already appealed to the Planning Inspectorate against the rejection of its scheme in February.



ICRC official: Humanitarian situation in Gaza ‘under much pressure’


ICRC LogoThe head of the International Committee of the Red Cross (ICRC) sub-delegation in the Gaza Strip, Christian Cardon, has said that the humanitarian and service situation in Gaza is “under much pressure” and urgently called to find sustainable solutions for the chronic problems.


Speaking to journalists on Monday, Cardon explained that basic services in the Strip are facing the danger of imminent collapse because of the accumulation of problems after eight years of Israel’s blockade against the Palestinians in Gaza.


He noted that unemployment, the continuous shortage of fuel and the loss of construction and other basic materials and equipment mark the daily life of Gaza’s residents. This causes negative effects on public health and infrastructure, like running water, hospitals and the electricity grid.


Regarding the health situation, Cardon said that there are severe shortages of medical equipment and medicines. The supply of medicines has declined by 35 per cent, and even when people do find the medicines they need they often cannot afford them. According to him, this contributes to the deterioration of public health in the already exhausted hospitals and clinics.


Cardon said that the local and regional political situation, including the closure of the Rafah Crossing and destruction of the tunnels, has contributed to the proliferation of problems facing the Strip. For example, the severe loss of construction materials had undermined production across many sectors.


According to his calculations, the unemployment rate in Gaza remains among the highest in the world. Last year, the unemployment rate increased by 10 per cent during the second half of the year after Egypt’s policies reinforced the Israeli siege and a total of 60,000 workers lost their jobs.


Another reason for the deteriorating situation is the increase in the price of basic goods. He noted that fuel prices alone doubled during the second half of 2013. He said that Gaza’s economy hardly fulfils 15 per cent of the people’s demand for fuel and 40 per cent for gasoline.


Regarding the construction materials, he said that the Strip is deprived of an average of 360,000 tons every month. Existing construction materials fulfil less than 10 per cent of the daily demand.


Cardon concluded that the further worsening of the humanitarian and service situation in the Strip will only lead to more problems of instability and violence among its residents.



The richest 1 percent of Americans pay a much lower tax rate than you



It’s tax time again, April 15, when our minds turn toward paying the taxes we owe or possibly getting a tax refund. But what we don’t think about enough is whether our tax system is fair. The richest 1 percent of Americans are now getting the largest percent of total national income in almost a century. So you might think they’d pay a much higher tax rate than everyone else.



But you’d be wrong. Many millionaires pay a lower federal tax rate than many middle-class Americans.


Some don’t pay any federal taxes at all. That’s because they‘re allowed to deduct from their taxable income such things as large interest payments on mortgages for huge homes, also the costs of business entertainment and conferences (aka vacations at golf resorts), and gold plated health care plans.


Some also take advantage of tax loopholes that let them park some of their earnings in offshore tax havens like the Bahamas or the Netherlands Antilles.


And other loopholes that allow them to treat some income as capital gains – subject to a much lower tax rate than ordinary income. If you happen to be a hedge-fund or private-equity manager, there’s a capital gains loophole designed especially for you.


Consider the Social Security payroll tax and the situation is even more lopsided. That tax applies to every dollar of income up to a cap — which this year is $117,000. Anything earned above the cap is not subject to Social Security taxes at all – meaning anyone with a high income pays a much smaller percentage of it in Social Security taxes than most people do.


Put these all together and you see why Warren Buffet, the second richest person in America, pays a lower tax rate than his secretary, as he readily admits.


State and local taxes are even more regressive. The poorest fifth of Americans pay an average state and local tax rate of over 11 percent, while the richest fifth pay only 5.6 percent. This isn’t small change. State and local taxes account for about 40 percent of all government revenues.


Believe it or not, Republicans want to make all this worse by cutting taxes on the wealthy even more. Paul Ryan’s new budget doesn’t just slice Medicare, education, and food stamps. It also lowers the top federal tax rate to 25 percent.


When the rich are let off the hook in all these ways, the rest of America has to pay more in taxes to make up the difference – or have services cut because government doesn’t have the funds.


AGB/AGB



Rs.260 crore unaccounted money seized so far: EC




New Delhi : Unaccounted cash totalling Rs.260 crore has been seized till Tuesday in the ongoing Lok Sabha election, the Election Commission said here.


Andhra Pradesh tops the list with Rs.129 crore seized so far, while Maharashtra ranks second with Rs.33.46 crore being seized.


In Tamil Nadu, Rs.19.87 crore was recovered.




US backs Ukraine’s ‘measured’ military operation against protesters



The United States has backed the Ukrainian government’s military operation against anti-Kiev protesters in the east of the country, describing it as “measured.”



On Tuesday, Ukrainian acting President Olexander Turchynov announced the start of an “anti-terrorist operation” against the protesters after they seized buildings in about 10 towns and cities across the country’s eastern provinces.


The aim of the operation is to “protect Ukrainian citizens, to stop the terror, to stop the crime, to stop the attempts to tear our country apart,” Turchynov said.


In response, White House spokesman Jay Carney said that the military action is not the preferred option, but that Kiev has to respond to “an untenable situation.”


Carney urged authorities in Kiev to take “all due caution,” but said they had a “responsibility” to maintain law and order in the country.


This comes as Russia says it is “deeply concerned” about reports of casualties in eastern Ukraine following the government’s military operation. Moscow has called on the international community to condemn Ukraine’s approach in dealing with the unrest in the country’s east.


Meanwhile, US President Barack Obama has accused his Russian counterpart Vladimir Putin of failing to offer a diplomatic solution to the ongoing crisis in Ukraine.


In a phone conversation on Monday, Obama said Russia’s actions in Ukraine were not conducive, according to a senior White House official.


Obama told Putin that Kiev had made “real offers” to address concerns about the decentralization of powers to local governments in the country.


“That is a matter for Ukrainians to decide,” the official said. “We have always and will continue to support an inclusive process.”


Putin rejected Western claims that Moscow is behind attacks on government buildings, saying they were “based on unfounded information,” the Kremlin said in a statement issued on Monday.


Earlier, Putin’s spokesman said Russia had received several requests for help from anti-Kiev protesters, who are seeking to follow in the footsteps of the Autonomous Republic of Crimean and force a referendum on joining the Russian Federation.


Tensions between Washington and Moscow further intensified following reports of a Russian fighter jet making repeated close-range passes near a US ship in the Black Sea over the weekend.


The Pentagon condemned the action, saying it was “provocative and unprofessional.”


GJH/ISH



View: 27-turbine Redcar Offshore Windfarm is officially opened


'I think they will end up being an attraction for people' says Energy Minister Michael Fallon as 27-turbine site is officially opened




The controversial 27-turbine windfarm off the coast of Redcar which will provide enough electricity for 40,000 homes was officially opened today.


Energy Minister Michael Fallon, as well as the chairman and chief executive of energy company EDF Energy Renewables, visited the site and unveiled a plaque at the Majuba Road car park.


The turbines, which stand 120m from base to blade tip, have been in place since last year and form EDF Energy Renewables’ first UK off-shore wind farm.


They are now producing enough low carbon energy to supply most of the homes in Redcar, Marske and Saltburn.


“It is appropriate that we are in Teesside, an area that has a long and proud history at they very fore front of industrial change," said Mr Fallon.


“Teesside has always been the vanguard of technological change, and this is why I was so pleased that it was chosen as a location by EDF.”


Mr Fallon said that, as more off-shore turbines are built, their cost will decrease - and will eventually mean household bills will go down.


And asked how he thought the 27 turbines looked, Mr Fallon said: “I think they will end up being an attraction for people.”


Around 950 direct and indirect jobs were created by the project - and around 300 of these were in Teesside.


A permanent servicing and maintenance team will continue to operate in Hartlepool through the life of the wind farm, which will support 20 jobs.



Managing the entire project was Middlesbrough man Tim Bland, who has worked with wind energy for 10 years.


The 55-year-old, who lived in Easterside and went to Middlesbrough High School and was responsible for delivering the project, said: “As soon as I found out about the project, I kept an eye on it and I was glad to be involved.


“It has been fantastic and I’m proud to have been involved.”


Redcar MP Ian Swales said: “Using our excellent ports and over 20 local suppliers in the construction process, the off-shore wind farm has been good for the local economy and continues to provide local jobs.


“Hate it or love it, the face of our coastline has changed and I congratulate EDF Energy Renewables on completing this difficult project.”


The Mayor of Redcar and Cleveland, Vic Jefferies, said: “It is a huge thing for this area.


"It is complimentary to our traditional major industries, like ICI and British Steel. We have to think of our children’s generation.”



Disability benefit fraud cricketer who made £24k from crime ordered to pay back more than £16k


Stewart Lorains, 54, of Liverton Mines, was an 'active and prominent cricketer' for Boosbeck Cricket Club while claiming disability benefits





A cricketer who batted for his local club while claiming disability benefits has been ordered to repay the state more than £16,000.


One-time boxing coach and football ref Stewart Lorains, 54, was back in court for a Proceeds of Crime hearing today.


Lawyers agreed he made £24,505 from crime and he was ordered to pay the “available amount” of £16,209.


He may have to sell his £74,500 home on St Cuthbert’s Walk, Liverton Mines to satisfy the order.


His barrister Tamara Pawson said: “That’s the only main asset.”


Judge Peter Bowers ordered Lorains to pay the money in six months, or serve a year in prison.


He told Lorains: “You’ll have to try and decide how you’re going to try and arrange to pay this sum.”


Teesside Crown Court heard of Lorains’ three-year benefit fraud when he was sentenced last September.


He started receiving disability living allowance legitimately in November 2008.


He said he suffered from medical conditions including diabetes, asthma and psoriatic arthropathy.


He said he walked very slowly, was in constant pain, had difficulty getting out of bed and needed help washing, dressing, eating and going to the toilet.


He failed to declare improvements in his health from May 2009 and was overpaid £22,340 in benefits, said the prosecution.


He was an “active and prominent cricketer” for Boosbeck Cricket Club between 2009 and 2012.


Investigators gathered statistics and watched him playing cricket when he kept wicket and opened batting.


Lorains admitted failing to notify the Department for Work and Pensions of a change in his circumstances affecting benefits, his first offence.


Ms Pawson said Lorains was an upstanding member of the community and an active sportsman and described cricket as his life before the onset of rheumatoid arthritis and other health problems.


She said he self-medicated to play cricket again when his condition slightly improved, exaggerated the extent of his poor health and continued with his claim.


He was the primary carer for his wife who had severe arthritis, diabetes and limited mobility.


At that stage, he offered to repay the DWP at the only rate he could afford, £5 per week.


Passing sentence, Judge Howard Crowson said: “These claims accumulate to what most people would regard as quite a lot of money, and there’s a lot of people doing it.


“So the community as a whole loses substantial sums. The reality is it harms us all.”


He told Lorains that his good character and good works saved him from prison, passing a four-month prison sentence suspended for a year.



Campaigners call for review of speed limit on a main road into Yarm


Some residents complain the 50mph and 40mph speed limits increase traffic noise throughout the day and night




Campaigners are calling for a review of the speed limit on a main road into Yarm on safety and environmental grounds.


The Leven Park development and the Levendale area both access the A1044 known as Green Lane to the west end and Leven Bank Road to the east.


Some residents have complained the 50mph and 40mph speed limits increase traffic noise throughout the day and night.


They say the problem is exacerbated when the A19 is closed and the A1044 becomes the diversion route and is widely used by heavy goods vehicles.


Recent planning approvals for new housing developments in the area are going to add more traffic onto this main route, say campaigners.


Stockton Council chiefs have now agreed to review the situation.


Conservative borough and town councillor for Yarm Andrew Sherris has backed residents saying: “These requests are nothing new and residents have been complaining for years. However, it is becoming particularly difficult to exit from Kirk Road onto Green Lane due to the speed of traffic.


“We campaigned successfully some years ago to have the limit reduced and indeed this was approved by the then Cabinet. Following this our highway engineers came back with the usual reason for not reducing the limit as it could not be enforced.


“Residents on Leven Bank have also been campaigning for lower speed limits to improve what is an accident blackspot and to reduce noise levels, particularly at night time.”


UKIP Yarm councillor Mark Chatburn added: “I have worked with Andrew Sherris and appreciate the strength of feeling on this. I have requested an urgent meeting with the Stockton chief executive and senior officers.


“With the Mt Leven Farm development receiving approval, and increased interest in the provision of recreation facilities on the south side of the road, this is an ideal time.”


Councillor Mike Smith, Stockton Council’s Cabinet member for regeneration and transport, said: “We have undertaken extensive and independently validated traffic modelling in the south of the borough and this takes into account housing developments that are proposed as well as those that have consent.


“Though this has not indicated a need to reduce the speed limit for Leven Bank Road, where we last reviewed the speed limit in 2009, we are mindful of residents’ concerns and will review our position.”


Residents living close to the A1044 on the Levendale estate gave a mixed response yesterday.


Pensioner Audrey Smith said: “It will probably take somebody being killed before they bring the speed down.”


But Sandra Docherty said: “They should leave it at 50mph. It’s not too bad.”


She said: “It’s so busy in the morning you can’t even do 20mph.”



Young women in US see sexual assault as normal, report finds



How does a crime committed against nearly 238,000 women a year go unreported 60 percent of the time? According to a new report, many victims of sexual assault may not actually see themselves as victims.



Heather Hlavka, a sociologist at Marquette University, analyzed interviews with 100 girls between ages three and 17 who may have experienced sexual assault.


Overwhelmingly, their accounts indicated that sexual violence had been normalized in their communities. They considered harassment an everyday part of life rather than a criminal act.


The study identifies several common reasons why girls do not report their assaults, including shame, fear of retribution and mistrust of authority. The most alarming conclusion, however, is that young women “regard sexual violence against them as normal.” Moreover, the girls interviewed believed that men “can’t help it” and perceived “everyday harassment and abuse as normal male behavior.”


One participant — only 13 years old — said harassment is standard in her school: “They grab you, touch your butt and try to, like, touch you in the front, and run away, but it’s OK, I mean… I never think it’s a big thing because they do it to everyone.”


Obviously, that “they do it to everyone” does not make such behavior “OK,” but those types of perceptions interact with other factors to diminish the likelihood that survivors of sexual violence will report their assaults, and that perpetrators of sexual assault will be held accountable.


Once sexual harassment is “normalized,” reporting it becomes a “big thing” likely to be perceived as an overreaction. Hlavka also found that when young women expect adult men to act inappropriately, it leads to a community-wide distrust of male authority figures, such as police officers, to whom sexual assault should be reported.


The girls whose interviews Hlavka considered also assumed that other young women would regard them as “sluts” and “whores” if they disclosed that they were assaulted. This paints a grim picture of the state of sexual assault reduction in many American communities.


The report reminds us that parents and trusted authority figures must teach young girls (and boys) that sexual violence is not acceptable — before media and community norms give the impression that it is. When it comes to sexual assault, the sooner we empower young women and men with agency and information, the better. The Huffington Post


AGB/AGB



Guisborough's Milwaukee Yamaha confident of opening weekend magic


Milwaukee Yamaha head to Brands Hatch this Easter weekend aiming for a flying start to the MCE Insurance British Superbike Championship




Guisborough's Milwaukee Yamaha head to Brands Hatch this Easter weekend aiming for a flying start to the MCE Insurance British Superbike Championship campaign.


Shaun Muir’s outfit head to the Kent circuit feeling positive after a strong winter testing programme.


Tommy Bridewell will be aiming to continue his momentum after scoring podium finishes in the final three rounds of last season.


And Australian Josh Brookes looks to realise the potential she showed at the recent official test at Donington Park, where he lapped under the current lap record.


“I would say I am more confident than I have been in previous years going into a season,” said Brookes.


“I expected to have a good pace in testing and of course Donington Park was really good for myself and the Milwaukee Yamaha team.


“I think that the first round always seems big improvements compared to testing for some riders and looking to Brands Hatch, Shakey (Byrne) will be the gauge but I am satisfied with how testing has gone and now we are ready to really get started.


“I was expecting to set a strong pace pre-season and I feel really comfortable on the Yamaha, so we are in a good range for Brands Hatch and ready to get the job started.


“We will be pushing to get the best results we possibly can this weekend.”


Bridewell too is in high spirits ahwead of the curtain raiser.


“Brands Hatch is going to be an interesting one I think for sure,” he said, “and I don’t really know what to expect.


“At the last test at Donington Park I wasn’t pushing anywhere near as hard as I could so obviously that will change for the first round as we want to have the best possible start.


“Shakey and my team-mate Josh have both showed good pace in pre-season testing but it is difficult to judge before we get out on track for the races.


“I think looking at it from this point now those are going to be the two to beat at Brands Hatch.


“I am capable of beating them and after achieving a double podium finish last year; my next goal that I want to tick off is a race win.”



Teesside beaches receive top marks in national Good Beach Guide


Water quality results off Teesside’s coast last summer were some of the best ever recorded





Teesside's beaches have received top marks in a national Good Beach Guide.


Water quality results off Teesside’s coast last summer were some of the best ever recorded - with Marske Sands, Redcar Coatham, Redcar Granville, Redcar Lifeboat Station, Redcar Stray and Saltburn beaches all recommended by the Marine Conservation Society (MCS).


Olwyn Peters, Redcar and Cleveland Council’s cabinet member for culture, leisure and tourism, said: “Our beaches are extremely popular over the summer with many visitors taking a dip in the water so this is great news for anybody who likes a day at the seaside, as well as the local businesses that rely on tourism and visitors to the beach.”


Other Teesside beaches, Seaton Carew Centre and Seaton Carew North Gare, also received the highest “recommended” rating from the MCS.


And Seaton Carew North beach received a “mandatory” rating in the Good Beach Guide, which was released yesterday.


Cattersby Sands beach at Skinningrove was the only local beach not to be tested, and was not included in the guide.


The upturn in water quality in Teesside, and across the country, has been partly explained by the fact that last year was the driest summer since 2003.


MCS coastal pollution officer Rachel Wyatt says she hopes the latest figures will be a boost to UK tourism after several wet summers led to a drop in bathing water quality, when pollution ran into the sea from rural and urban areas and overloaded sewers.


“It’s great news that we are able to recommend more beaches than ever for excellent water quality and it shows just how good British beaches can be,” said Rachel.


“The main challenge now is maintaining these standards, whatever the weather.”


By the end of the 2015 bathing season, all designated bathing waters must meet a new minimum European Union standard.


Under the new EU rules, beaches which do not meet the “sufficient” standard at the end of 2015 - which will be twice as stringent as the current minimum - will have to display signs warning beachgoers against bathing in the sea.



Teesside young guns off to flying start with impressive performances in curtain raiser to season


The Anne Marie Redshaw Open attracted competitors from New Marske Harriers, Billingham Marsh House Harriers and Middlesbrough AC




By Rick Betts


The annual North-east curtain raiser for outdoor track and field athletics at Shildon - the Anne Marie Redshaw Open - attracted competitors from New Marske Harriers, Billingham Marsh House Harriers and Middlesbrough AC who made light of the conditions to turn in some impressive performances.


In the Under-11 category, Eleanor Crame (New Marske Harriers) won the girls’ 60 metres in 9.20 secs before finishing second in the 150m in 23.50 secs.


On the field Charlotte Kelsey (Middlesbrough AC) equalled her personal best of 3.28m to win the long jump.


The Under-11 boys’ section saw three medal winning performances from Robert Savage (Middlesbrough AC) who won the 600m by some margin, in under two minutes before taking second places in the 150m and long jump.


Benjamin Savage (Middlesbrough AC) won the cricket ball throw with an excellent 38.97m while Max Butler (Billingham Marsh House) claimed silver in the 150ms and Benjamin Johnson (Middlesbrough AC) third in the long jump.


In the Under-13 boys’ section, Middlesbrough AC’s Hedley Wordsworth and Nathan Gordon-Wood provided the highlights.


Wordsworth completed an impressive sprint double taking the 100 metres in 12.90 secs to go fourth in the UK rankings then took the 200 metres in 27.60 secs.


Gordon-Wood, in his first ever athletics competition, had an excellent win in the 800 metres in 2 mins 35.7 secs before winning the long jump 4.31m.


Mathew Walker (New Marske) was third in the 100 metres and third in the long jump and club mate Dominic Shipman was second in the 800m.


Finn Cousin Dawson (Middlesbrough) was a double silver medallist with second in the 200 metres in 29.00 secs and second in the long jump.


In the girls ‘section Tamara Miller (Middlesbrough AC) set a personal best when winning the 100m in 13.80 secs.


The Under-15 age group saw three bronze medals for Teesside athletes.


Rebecca Hudson and Jasmine Clarke claimed third places in the 200m (28.70) and long jump (4.12m) respectively and Hannah Raine (New Marske Harriers) was third in the shot putt (6.65m).


In the Under-17s, Sam Day (Middlesbrough AC) took the 800 metres in 2 mins 05.4 secs and improvement of seven seconds on his previous best. Caitlin Harrison (Middlesbrough AC) was third in the 20m (30.00).


In the disability category, Amy Carr (Middlesbrough AC) won the 60 metres in a personal best 9.70 secs and the shot putt with a PB of 5.25m.


In the senior men’s events New Marske Harriers reigned supreme in the 3000m. Russell Best won in 8 mis 48.3 secs with Charlie Pasco second in 8 mins 57.8 secs making it a clean sweep in third place was Dean Newton taking 35 secs from his previous best in 9 mins 5 secs.


Danny McBride (New Marske) won the 100 mm in 11.20 secs and the 200m in 24.20 secs. Chris Waugh (New Marske) won the long jump with his best distance for five years - 6.13m - and also took third place in the 200 metres.


Sam Norton (Middlesbrough AC) took a full second off his personal best in the 400m to win t in 53.40 secs.


Amy Redman (New Marske) was a comfortable winner of the senior women’s 200m in 27.70 secs.


Lauren Beech had a debut competition to remember, competing in the senior T37 disability category.


She won the 60m in 10.10 secs and the 300m in 59.70 secs before placing third in the shot put with 4.81m.



New campaign seeks to suspend Israel’s FIFA membership


Show Israel the Red CardAmerican and Arab sports activists in the United States have launched the Red Card Israeli Racism campaign calling for Israel to be expelled from the Fédération Internationale de Football Association (FIFA) on the grounds of Israel’s repeated violations of Palestinian athletes’ rights and human rights in general.


The campaigners cite a historic precedent in which FIFA officially suspended the membership of South Africa between 1964-1992 as part of the international pressure that aimed to end the apartheid regime.


Football players Eric Cantona, Frederic Kanoute joined other international stars of the game to declare their rejection of the decision by the Union of European Football Associations (UEFA) to hold the men’s under-21 tournament in Israel. Arab-American activist Rahaif Awadallah called for the suspension of Israel’s membership in FIFA to pressure Israel to respect Palestinians’ human rights and allow Palestinian football players to play at home and abroad. Awadallah said it is now time that initiatives are taken to reinforce the sports boycott of Israel.


He accused the Israeli occupation of restricting football players’ mobility inside the West Bank and between the West Bank and Gaza, preventing players from participating in international tournaments and banning the entry of sports equipment that Palestinian teams and stadiums need. He also cited tens of cases in which Palestinian players were arrested, detained or killed.


He noted that there are well-documented cases in which Palestinian players in Israel were insulted by the audience in the stadium with chants including “death to Arabs” but the Israeli federation took no action to end such attacks.


UEFA is considering holding the women’s under-19 tournament in Israel in 2015. Israel was also selected as a venue for preliminary matches for Euro 2020. FIFA recently recognised some Israeli violations and created a task force aimed at facilitating the mobility of players and equipment in Palestine.


The Red Card campaign accuses the Israeli authorities of curbing the advancement of Palestinian football and sports through a number of procedures and restrictions that target the following aspects:


1. Sports’ infrastructure: Israeli procedures stand against the construction or development of stadiums. Israel sometimes demolishes existent Palestinian stadiums.


2. Restricting mobility: Palestinian players, visiting players, board members and journalists inside and outside the Palestinian territories often have their movements limited or travels banned.


3. Blocking sport shipments: Israel imposes complicated procedures that delay or prevent receiving shipments or donations sent by FIFA or the Asian Football Federation amongst other groups.


4. Political intervention: Overriding organised friendly matches between Palestine and teams of other states.


5. Human rights violations: Continuous violations of players’ rights through unexplained arrests and kidnaps



New York Police Department ends spying program on Muslims



The New York Police Department has announced that it canceled its controversial spying program on Muslim communities in the city.



The decision shows that William J. Bratton, the department’s new commissioner, is backing away from some of the post-9/11 intelligence-gathering practices of his predecessor, The New York Times reported on Tuesday.


In the program, the NYPD dispatched plainclothes detectives into Muslim neighborhoods to eavesdrop on conversations and built detailed files on where people ate, prayed and shopped.


“Our administration has promised the people of New York a police force that keeps our city safe, but that is also respectful and fair,” Mayor Bill de Blasio said in a statement.


“This reform is a critical step forward in easing tensions between the police and the communities they serve, so that our cops and our citizens can help one another go after the real bad guys,” he added.


The spying program was strongly criticized by civil rights groups. Muslims say the program, known as the Demographics Unit, was a sign that the police viewed their every action with suspicion.


“The Demographics Unit created psychological warfare in our community,” said Linda Sarsour, of the Arab American Association of New York.


“Those documents, they showed where we live. That’s the cafe where I eat. That’s where I pray. That’s where I buy my groceries. They were able to see their entire lives on those maps. And it completely messed with the psyche of the community.”


The Demographics Unit dates to 2003 and was renamed the Zone Assessment Unit in recent years.


AGB/AGB



‘Fixed’ interview deals a blow to Modi campaign


modi-apki-adalath.jpg


NEW DELHI: The election campaign for the Indian opposition prime ministerial candidate received a blow on Monday when senior journalist and editorial director at India TV, Qamar Waheed Naqvi, resigned in protest against Narendra Modi’s “fixed” interview that was telecast on the channel.

According to sources, Naqvi e-mailed his resignation to the management. Rajat Sharma, editor in chief of India TV, conducted the interview in his popular program “AAP Ki Adalat.”

Naqvi, who confirmed his resignation to mediakhabar.com, had been working as a news director at the channel for a long time.

The revelation has set the social media abuzz with incendiary comments from supporters and opponents of Modi. Critics of the interview argue that the interview was “stage managed” as a large section of the crowd was seen chanting pro-Modi slogans at regular intervals. Even during the interview, Modi posed a series of questions to the audience which were answered in unison



Pistorius trial to take a further break until early May


Judge Thokozile Masipa approves request from chief prosecutor, which was supported by the defence




The judge in the Oscar Pistorius murder trial has ruled that proceedings will adjourn for more than two weeks after tomorrow and resume on May 5.


Judge Thokozile Masipa said today that she was responding to a request for a break from the chief prosecutor, which was supported by the defence.


Pistorius’s trial started on March 3 and Judge Masipa said the case had lasted longer than expected.


Chief defence lawyer Barry Roux has said he will call between 14 and 17 witnesses. Forensic expert Roger Dixon, the third witness called by the defence, was giving evidence today.


Pistorius was charged with premeditated murder for shooting girlfriend Reeva Steenkamp in his home last year.


He says he shot her by mistake, but the prosecution says he killed her intentionally after an argument.


The judge said she granted the break because a member of the prosecution team has to attend to another case.


Judge Masipa also noted that the court record for the Pistorius trial is now almost 2,000 pages long. The trial was initially scheduled to last just three weeks.


“At the time, it was not envisioned that this trial would run this long,” Judge Masipa said.


She also noted that much of the evidence is “technical” and given by expert witnesses.


In his evidence, Mr Dixon, a former policeman, contradicted previous opinions given by a police expert and a pathologist on details of the wounds suffered by Ms Steenkamp when she was shot through the toilet door by the double-amputee athlete.


Police captain Christiaan Mangena said Ms Steenkamp was shot in the hip first, the second shot missed, and then the last two shots hit the model in the arm and head.


Mr Dixon disagreed with that order and said the first two shots hit Ms Steenkamp in the hip and arm in quick succession while she was close to the door, apparently backing Pistorius’s version that he shot in quick succession fearing an intruder was coming out of the toilet cubicle to attack him.


Mr Dixon also said that Ms Steenkamp’s right arm may have been stretched out towards the handle of the door, suggesting she may have been in the process of opening the door. The defence was using the evidence to try to cast doubt on the prosecution’s case that Ms Steenkamp was hiding from Pistorius after a late-night fight and had locked herself in the cubicle to seek refuge.


Chief prosecutor Gerrie Nel questioned whether Mr Dixon was qualified to analyse the circumstances of Ms Steenkamp’s death.



TTE training group offers a full package to land Nigeria contract


TTE Technical Training Group has secured a prestigious project to deliver a training programme for the West African energy industry




The TTE Technical Training Group has secured a prestigious project to deliver a training programme for the West African energy industry.


Following a complex tender process, TTE has been selected by Nigeria Liquid Natural Gas Company (NLNG) to provide a comprehensive new entrant process operator programme on Teesside for 28 trainees.


Lasting six months, the new NLNG employees will undertake a technical programme, which includes a cross-section of process, basic engineering, and instrumentation modules. This will include working on simulator rigs that help to replicate real industry scenarios they may have to face.


In addition to the practical training, TTE will also deliver a range of courses in health and safety, and leadership.


Throughout their stay in the UK the group will live in Hartlepool with TTE also providing extra-curricular and social activities for the trainees including the opportunity to experience British culture and places.


An Outward Bound course in the Lake District, Cumbria, will provide a range of experiences outside of the core technical training programme, and involve activities such as orienteering, canoeing and assault courses.


The aim is to help increase the trainees’ cultural awareness, leadership, and team building skills.


Steve Grant, Managing Director of TTE Technical Training Group, said: “This demonstrates how UK expertise is respected on an international scale.


“TTE’s Teesside training facilities are attracting overseas business from world-class companies.


“The contract also further cements the strong relationships that TTE has established with West Africa.


“We have delivered specialist, bespoke training to the region for a number of years and this project highlights our position as a valued training provider for African industry.


Steve added: “Recruiting new entrants and equipping them with core skills are key challenges for operators as they respond to changing industry demands and pre-empt any potential skills shortages.


“Working in partnership with an independent experienced technical training provider allows companies to plan workforce development and future company needs.”



CPI break ground on major drugs centre


The Centre for Process Innovation has officially started building work on its £38m state-of-the-art biologics centre




The Centre for Process Innovation (CPI) will officially break ground on its state-of-the-art national biologics centre today.


The £38m National Biologics Manufacturing Centre (NBMC), in Darlington, will help strengthen the UK’s life-science sector by cutting risks involved in developing new bio-pharmaceutical products for companies.


Bio-pharmaceuticals is a growing market for vaccines and other medicines that are created by biological processes, not chemicals


Due for completion in 2015, the centre is part of the Government’s ‘Strategy for UK Life Sciences’.


CPI’s team of scientists, engineers and sector specialists will help companies of all sizes develop, demonstrate, prototype and scale-up their ideas.


It means new products and processes can be shown to be feasible; on paper, in the lab and in the plant before being manufactured at an industrial scale, helping to speed up their route to market.


Steve Bagshaw, CEO Fujifilm Diosynth Biotechnologies and Sandy Anderson, OBE, Chair of Tees Valley Unlimited, attended the event.


Mr Bagshaw said: “The NBMC is an excellent opportunity to bring industry, academia and the funding agencies together to create the best possible environment for UK Biotechnology to grow.”


Sandy Anderson, OBE, Chair of Tees Valley Unlimited said the centre is an “excellent example of what can be achieved through genuine partnership”.


“The healthcare industry and CPI have worked closely with Darlington Council and TVU, the Local Enterprise Partnership for the Tees Valley, to make this investment in innovate technology possible.”


Bio-pharmaceuticals has grown steadily over the last decade.


It is currently being used by major companies to treat various forms of cancer and autoimmune diseases such as arthritis among others.



Teen cautioned after East Cleveland railway workers are shot at with an air rifle


A second teenager remains on police bail in relation to incident in which workers were targeted in Carlin How





A teenager has been cautioned after railway workers were shot at with an air rifle.


The 18-year-old man was cautioned by Cleveland Police officers, while another youth, 17, remains on police bail in relation to the incident.


Police were called to Kilton Beck Viaduct, in Carlin How on Friday, after receiving reports that two railway workers had come under fire.


Neither of the railway workers were injured in the incident.


The force helicopter was also sent up to find the suspects.


Officers later arrested the two youths on suspicion of possession of an air weapon.


And a Cleveland Police spokeswoman said: “The 18-year-old was given a caution and the 17-year-old is still on bail.”


Speaking earlier this week, one of the men fired upon, railway contractor Darren Aldridge, 38, said: “We were out weed spraying on the railway.


“We were working along this viaduct and when we came back to the van we heard about 10 shots whistle by us - I imagine if they were coming that close they must have been aiming at us.


“We didn’t know where they were coming from, but my friend said, ‘It’s a pellet gun.’”



Police seize drugs and weapons heading for Teesside - from parcels in the post


Cannabis, steroids, stun guns, pepper spray, knives and a knuckle duster were some of the items destined for Teesside




Several people have been arrested after illegal drugs and weapons were found in parcels heading for Teesside.


Officers from Cleveland Police community drug enforcement team and Border Force made the arrests following a joint operation.


Members of Border Force, based at international postal hubs at Heathrow and Coventry, seized the packages after they were found to contain the illicit materials.


These were then handed to Cleveland Police, whose officers carried out enforcement action.


A 19-year-old woman from Redcar was arrested on suspicion of possession with the intent to supply Class B drugs after police intercepted a parcel containing around £6,000 of cannabis.


She was bailed pending further investigation.


And a man, 20, from Marske was arrested and cautioned for importing two stun guns.


The weapons have since been destroyed by police.


A 54-year-old woman from Stockton was given words of advice after importing two pepper sprays and a 31-year-old man from Redcar was given words of advice after importing a knuckle duster.


This has also since been destroyed by police.


Other people spoken to included a 20-year-old man from Normanby who was interviewed about the importation of a stun torch.


Advice was given and the device destroyed.


Meanwhile, a 13-year-old boy from Guisborough was warned about the importation of two butterfly knives, which were also destroyed and a 31-year-old man was warned about the importation and use of Dianabol steroids.


Detective Inspector Christian Ellis from the community drug enforcement team said: “We will continue to work closely with our partners to address those who continue to flout the law by believing they can hide behind the virtual world to get their hands on illegal items.


“The message is simple; if you buy an item from abroad and it’s illegal in the UK, Border Force will tell us and we will be knocking on your door.”


Assistant director Ria Baxendale, head of Border Force postal operations, said officers carried out checks at airports and ports to tackle illegal drugs, weapons and other contraband entering the UK.


She said: “We work closely with the police and if you try to import something that is illegal you can expect action to be taken against you.”



Pressure mounts on UK over CIA’s ‘black site’ jail



A human rights group is urging Britain’s Foreign office to “come clean” over claims that a British-administered island in the Indian Ocean, Diego Garcia, was used as a secret “black site” detention center by the CIA.



“We need to know immediately whether ministers misled parliament over CIA torture on British soil,” Cori Crider, strategic director at Reprieve, a legal action charity group, said in a letter to UK Foreign Secretary William Hague.


“If the CIA operated a black site on Diego Garcia, then a string of official statements, from both this and the last government, were totally false,” Crider said.


The letter followed a report by the US Senate Intelligence Committee that Britain had allowed the US to run a “black site” prison on Diego Garcia to secretly hold suspects without accountability. The Diego Garcia prison held some “high-value” detainees and was operated with the “full cooperation” of the British government, US officials familiar with the Senate report said.


“Were ministers asleep at the wheel? Or, as the report suggests, have we been lied to for years?” Crider wrote.


Reprieve is also representing Abdel-Hakim Belhaj, a rebel military commander and opponent of the late Libyan leader, Mohamed Gaddafi, who was arrested in Malaysia and rendered to Libya, allegedly via Diego Garcia, in a joint US-UK intelligence operation.


“The Foreign Secretary must urgently clarify whether the CIA ran a secret prison on Diego Garcia, and whether our clients Abdel-Hakim Belhaj and his wife Fatima Boudchar were among its victims,” Crider said.


Belhaj became Tripoli’s military commander in 2011, after the rebels took over the capital and ousted Libyan leader Muammar Gaddafi. In 2004 Belhaj – the then-leader of the anti-Gaddafi Libyan Islamic Fighting Group – and his wife were detained by US intelligence officers at Bangkok airport, Thailand, when they were to fly to London to claim asylum.


Belhaj was then returned to Libya, allegedly due to a British tip-off, where he was tortured and jailed for almost six years, until Gaddafi was ousted.


Belhaj claims the UK helped the US to arrange his rendition. He launched legal action against the UK government, the former head of counter-terrorism at intelligence agency MI6, Mark Allen, and then-Foreign Secretary Jack Straw.


“The first time I heard that I had gone through a place called Diego Garcia was when I was told by the head of the Libyan intelligence, Moussa Koussa, during my first interrogation session in a prison outside Tripoli,” Belhaj said. “[Moussa Koussa] told me that he knew, and that the plane had landed on an island in the Indian Ocean called Diego Garcia.”


However, the UK court ruled that Belhaj could not sue MI6 as it would harm “national interests,” though the High Court judge concluded that Belhaj had a “well-founded claim” against intelligence officers.


The case could “jeopardize this country’s international relations and national security interests,” said Peregrine Simon, a British High Court judge.


“The government must come clean about the UK’s role in this dirty affair,” Polly Rossdale, deputy director at Reprieve, told The Observer on Sunday.


For years, the British government consistently denied that any detainees were held at Diego Garcia or that a secret CIA prison ever existed there. They only admitted in 2008 that two rendition flights carrying detainees stopped for refueling on Diego Garcia in 2002. “The US government confirmed that there have been no other instances in which US intelligence flights landed in the UK, our Overseas Territories, or the Crown Dependencies, with a detainee, on board since 11 September 2001,” UK Foreign Office minister David Liddington told the UK parliament in 2011.


The recent revelations about “the secret prison” are hugely troubling for the UK government as they spark questions about the UK’s relationship with the US.


Apart from the news about the CIA secret black site, the US Senate also found that the CIA purposely deceived the US Justice Department to attain legal justification for use of torture techniques. It also found that the CIA distorted how many detainees it held in “black site” prisons throughout the world and how many were subjected to “enhanced interrogation techniques” many amount to torture.


The Committee and the CIA have in recent weeks gone back and forth with accusations of spying, meddling, and misrepresentation, highlighting an on-going feud between the agency and the Committee since the Senate probe began in 2009.


SSM/AB



Police appeal to trace man after assault outside Flares nightclub in Middlesbrough


Police believe this man may be able to assist with inquiries after a 20-year-old man suffered a fracture to his eye socket in the assault




Police have released this image of a man they want to speak to in connection with an assault outside a Middlesbrough nightclub.


A 20-year-old man was outside Flares on Albert Road talking to a female some time between 1am and 3am on Saturday, March 29, when he was approached by an unknown man and was punched to his face.


The victim later attended James Cook University Hospital where it was confirmed that he had suffered a fracture to his eye socket.


The suspect is described as a white male, of large build and was wearing dark trousers and a T-shirt.


Police would like to trace the man in the picture as it is believed that he may be able to assist with inquiries.


It is believed that there were a number of people in the area at the time and additionally police would also like to speak to a woman who spoke to the victim.


She may also be able to assist with the investigation.


Anyone who may know the identity of the man in the picture or any witnesses to the incident are asked to contact Det Con Rob Sedlatschek from Middlesbrough Police on 101 or Crimestoppers, anonymously, on 0800 555 111.



Palestinians protest at limited access to al-Aqsa mosque



Palestinians have held a protest rally in southern Gaza Strip after Israeli police limited access for Muslims to the al-Aqsa Mosque in East al-Quds (Jerusalem).




The demonstrators in the city of Khan Yunis chanted anti-Israeli slogans and burned Israeli flags during the protest on Monday.


The demonstration came after the Israeli regime announced that only male Palestinians, who are above 50, are allowed to pray in the holy mosque as the Jewish Passover holidays begin.


Tel Aviv claims that the measure is a precaution which has been taken after a security assessment of the possibility of disturbances.


On Sunday, clashes broke out between Israeli forces and Palestinians at the al-Aqsa Mosque compound when Israeli police prevented Muslims from entering one of the gates of the compound.


Israeli forces used stun grenades to disperse protesters.


In recent months, Israeli forces and illegal settlers have stepped up their attacks on Palestinians visiting the mosque. This has led to violent confrontations between the two sides.


The Israeli regime has also imposed severe restrictions to stop Muslim worshippers from entering the mosque.


On February 25, the Israeli parliament (Knesset) discussed a plan to annex the compound.


The Organization of Islamic Cooperation has condemned the Knesset move as a “dangerous escalation,” calling it part of Israel’s goal to “Judaize Jerusalem.”


The al-Aqsa compound, which lies in the Israeli-occupied Old City of al-Quds, is a flashpoint. The compound, known to Jews as the Temple Mount, is the holiest site in Judaism. It is also Islam’s third-holiest site after Mecca and Medina in Saudi Arabia.


MR/AB/SS



Judge orders Stokesley scrap dealer to empty bank account of over £77k to pay Proceeds of Crime bill


Joseph McElvaney, 21, ordered to pay £77,236 to the state after he made almost £150,000 from selling scrap metal without a licence




A scrap dealer will have to empty his bank account of more than £77,000 to pay a Proceeds of Crime bill.


Young businessman Joseph McElvaney, 21, ended up in the dock for money laundering after he sold scrap for almost £150,000 without a licence.


He was given a suspended prison sentence last November, when he still held more than £77,000 in a bank account.


Judge Peter Bowers warned him at the time: “I dare say you won’t see much of the £77,000 in the bank account again.”


This week, he was ordered to pay £77,236 to the state.


He was back in court under the Proceeds of Crime Act, legislation designed to strip criminals of ill-gotten gains.


Lawyers agreed he made £147,606 from crime at Teesside Crown Court yesterday.


The rest of this sum will hang over McElvaney’s head like a debt after the “available amount” of £77,000 is paid.


The authorities can pursue him for more if they learn he has come into money.


The defence asked for the money to be paid not to the state, but as compensation to an alleged creditor who was not a victim in the court case.


A businessman claimed McElvaney owed him more than £130,000 from a series of scrap metal transactions.


Defence barrister Joe Hingston said the businessman was an indirect victim who had suffered as a consequence of McElvaney’s crime and was legitimately owed money.


“He is an individual who can be awarded compensation,” added Mr Hingston.


Prosecutor Harry Hadfield said: “The Crown are absolutely against that. He was never a victim.”


He said the scrap metal dealer never provided paperwork to back up his claims.


Judge Bowers rejected the compensation claim.


He said a “vague statement” from the businessman in South Wales - described as a friend, colleague or acquaintance of McElvaney - was not enough to justify the compensation.


He added: “The evidence is extremely vague.


“In the absence of any definitive evidence of debt, I’m not prepared to make any payment to him.”


McElvaney had been the sole director of a registered company named J & M Commercials and Recycling Ltd.


The firm’s bank account received £205,000 in just over a month, the court heard in the sentencing hearing last year.


Another firm transferred £147,606 into the account in nine transactions where scrap was weighed in and sold.


Afterwards, McElvaney withdrew most of this money in large amounts of cash.


There was no suggestion the scrap was tainted or stolen.


But neither McElvaney, of Hebron Road, Stokesley, nor his firm were registered to trade in scrap metals under the Scrap Metal Dealers Act 1964.


This meant the proceeds from the business became “criminal property”, of which he admitted possession.


Judge Bowers told McElvaney the rules were there to be enforced because the scrap industry was open to abuse.


McElvaney was given a six-month prison sentence suspended for two years with 200 hours’ unpaid work.


He was previously given a community order for fraud by false representation in a case where an elderly woman was overcharged for work.