Saturday, May 3, 2014

I’m not Modi’s friend: Ahmed Patel


New Delhi: The Congress Friday called Narendra Modi a “serial liar” following his reference to Ahmed Patel as a good friend in an interview to Doordarshan, with the Congress leader also emphatically denying “any closeness” to the Gujarat chief minister.


Patel, who is political secretary to Congress president Sonia Gandhi, said he would leave public life if it could be proved that he had visited Modi’s house or office.



BJP’s prime ministerial candidate Modi, in an edited-out portion of his interview to state-run Doordarshan, had referred to Patel as a “good friend who’s stopped taking calls”.


With TV channels telecasting the edited-out portion of Modi, Patel told reporters: “I totally deny any closeness to a man who is set to divide India.”


“I will leave public life if Modi can prove I have gone to his house or office since he became chief minister (of Gujarat). How can a man who doesn’t have friends in his own party claim friendship with me,” Patel added.


Patel said he had never visited Modi’s house or office or asked him for any favour.


Modi in the edited-out portion of the interview had referred to Patel as among his best friends of the past in the Congress.


“Ahmedbhai is among the best friends I have in Congress but not now… I had a good friendship with him and would have preferred that it had remained so… but he now runs away from me and doesn’t take my calls,” Modi said in the interview.


He also said they had even dined at each other’s house.


Modi’s office later released the unedited version of the interview.


Congress spokesperson Sanjay Jha termed Modi a “serial liar”.


“It (Modi’s comments) establishes beyond doubt that he is constantly spreading lies with a clear purpose of misleading the people, the party and the country,” Jha told IANS.


He added that Modi has a “laundry list” of having made distortions in his public speeches.


“His comment is a brazen lie. He is a serial liar,” Jha added



ICC rejects MB call to probe Egypt military crimes



The International Criminal Court (ICC) has rejected a bid by Egypt’s Muslim Brotherhood to probe the military’s alleged crimes against humanity.



The court said it dismissed the bid because it was not presented on behalf of the concerned state.



“A communication seeking to accept the jurisdiction of the ICC over Egypt has been dismissed as not presented on behalf of the concerned State,” the ICC said in a press release issued on Thursday.


Egypt has not ratified the Rome Statute, the founding treaty of the ICC. The court’s prosecutors said they can only investigate the country in response to a request from the United Nations Security Council or the Egyptian government.


The Brotherhood filed the complaint last December on behalf of the Freedom and Justice Party of the ousted president, Mohamed Morsi.


It demanded a probe into the murder, unlawful imprisonment and torture of protesters. It also included claims of targeted shootings and bulldozers running over the demonstrators.


On August 14 last year, at least 627 people were killed when riot police and military troops stormed Cairo’s Rabaa al-Adawiya Square to disperse the protest camps of Morsi’s supporters. It was the deadliest mass killing in Egypt’s recent history.


The developments come as more Brotherhood members have recently been given death sentences and lengthy jail terms.


Mohamed Badie, the senior leader of the Muslim Brotherhood, said the mass death sentences against him and other members of the group will result in the downfall of military-backed authorities.


On Tuesday, he described the verdict as “the last nail in the coffin of those who ousted the country’s first democratically-elected president, Morsi.”


Egypt has launched a heavy-handed crackdown against the supporters of Morsi following his ouster last July. Over 1,400 people have been killed and thousands have been sent to jail since then.


JR/MHB/SS



26 Muslims killed within 24 hours in Assam, Army called in



May 02:


The alleged failure of migrant Muslims to vote for a tribal party candidate in Kokrajhar Lok Sabha constituency has claimed 26 lives in western Assam’s Baska and Kokrajhar districts since Thursday evening. The death toll is expected to go up with many reported missing.


Kokrajhar is the headquarters of the ethnically volatile areas under Bodoland Territorial Council (BTC), which is ruled by the Bodoland People’s Front (BPF), a constituent of the Congress-led government in Assam.


Officials in the affected districts said the attacks, presumably by Bodo tribal militants, has made Muslims and other minority groups flee their villages to safer locations. The administration in adjoining Dhubri district has opened up two relief camps, fearing a rerun of the 2012 communal clashes that took the lives of 108 people.


An umbrella group of 21 non-Bodo organisations has attributed the violence to BPF legislator Pramila Rani Brahma’s view on April 30 that her party candidate (for Kokrajhar seat) and Assam minister Chandan Brahma could find it hard to win because Muslims did not vote for him. Violence had preceded polling in Kokrajhar on April 24.


Muslims are a major constituent of this group that fielded Naba Kumar alias Hira Sarania, a former United Liberation Front of Asom rebel, as an independent candidate in Kokrajhar. Non-Bodos including other tribes have never won this seat despite constituting two-thirds of the population.


“BPF chief Hagrama Mohilary is responsible for instigating his cadres to attack non-Bodo villagers, particularly Muslims, because his party has realised it could lose the Kokrajhar seat,” Sarania said.


Mohilary refuted Sarania’s claim, saying BPF was not responsible for the killings. “We urge the religious minorities not to flee their villages. We will provide them protection,” he said.


Congress leader Abdul Khaleque has sought Pramila Rani’s arrest for her ‘incendiary’ comment while All Assam Minority Students’ Union Abdur Rahim said the BTC administration had planned the mayhem after the votes were cast.


The Assam police suspect the Sangbijit National Democratic Front of Boroland behind the attacks that left 23 dead in four villages. “The assailants used automatic weapons and set several villages on fire,” said AP Rout, ADG (law and order).


Confirming the toll, state home commissioner GD Tripathi said: “Indefinite curfew has been clamped in Baska and Kokrajhar districts. Ten army columns have been deployed in the sensitive areas.”


Chief minister Tarun Gogoi, who cancelled his trip to Germany following the violence, appealed for peace. “We will provide R3 lakh as ex-gratia for the next of kin of each victim while the centre will pitch in with another R3lakh,” he said.


Meanwhile, the centre has sought strong action against NDFB(S) for bloodshed and instigating people to indulge in riots. “We have rushed 10 additional companies of paramilitary forces to Assam and the army has been requested to remain on standby,” said Shambhu Singh, joint secretary (Northeast) in the Union home ministry



NAM opposed to colonial usurpation of Palestine



A political analyst says the call by the Non-Aligned Movement (NAM) for an end to the Israeli occupation of the Palestinian territories is an objection to “colonial settler usurpation,” Press TV reports.




In a Wednesday interview, Ralph Schoenman, the author of the Hidden History of Zionism, described NAM’s condemnation of Israel’s occupation of Palestine as “a very fundamental issue.”



“The Non-Aligned Movement in opposing occupation of Palestinian land is essentially objecting to a colonial settler usurpation of the sovereign rights of the Palestinian people,” Schoenman said.



Palestinians are seeking to create an independent state on the territories of the West Bank, East al-Quds (Jerusalem), and the besieged Gaza Strip and are demanding that Israel withdraw from the occupied Palestinian territories.



“The Non-Aligned Movement has embraced the right of the Palestinian people to an independent Palestine in all of the land of Palestine and for all those who have been driven out and who remain targeted across the Arab world,” the analyst added.



On April 29, Iranian Deputy Ambassador to the United Nations Gholam-Hossein Dehqani, whose country holds the rotating presidency of NAM, called for an end to the Israeli occupation of the Palestinian territories at a UN Security Council session.


Dehqani slammed Tel Aviv’s land grab and expansionist policies, which continue unabated while the Palestinian people are denied their rights.


He added that Israeli crimes are the main obstacle to establishing peace and security in the whole region.


IA/NN/HMV



Four year old girl struggles at GMCH after Bodo militants’ attack Muslims


By TwoCircles.net Staff Reporter,


Guwahati: The little girl was screaming at her bed at Guwahati Medical College Hospital. The four year old Taslima Khatun of Narasingbari village in Assam’s Baska district has lost her finger and received bullet injuries as armed militants of National Democratic Front of Bodoalnd (NDFB) opened fire killing four people in front of her on Thursday night.


The little girl does not know anything but she can feel the acute pain and she wants of get rid of it as her mother Farida Khatun, another lucky survivor in the incident tries her best to console her daughter. “What was the fault of this girl that she has to suffer like this? Is this humanity? I wish I would have died instead of seeing my daughter like this,” a dejected Farida Khatun told TwoCircles.net said.




Four year old Taslima Khatun is battling for her life at Guwahati Medical College Hospital

Four year old Taslima Khatun is battling for her life at Guwahati Medical College Hospital

Taslima was sitting with her grandmother Champa Bewa (60) along with a few neighbours after having dinner at her village at Narasingbari village area near Anandabazar, under Gobardhan police station in Baska district. Suddenly a group of armed militants appeared at the scene and started to open fire indiscriminately aiming the people who were sitting at the courtyard.

Three people including Taslima’s grand mother died on the spot and another one, Rashida Khatun (12) breathed her last on the way to hospital. Taslims’s neighbour Sona Miah (40) and his wife Ramisa Khatun (35) died on the spot.


“Before we could realize what had happened we heard the cry. We rushed out of the house to see them (people sitting on the courtyard) lying on the ground,” Farida said.


Taslima is one of the lucky survivors after suspected armed militants of National Democratic Front of Bodoland (S) gunned down 11 people in different places at Bodoland Territorial Areas District (BTAD) on late Thursday and early Friday. Besides losing her thumb, the little Taslima has also sustained injury at cheek and her upper chest.


The doctors attending the girl, however, said that her condition is stable and she is expected to recover soon. The doctors have found no major problems with her vital organs including the eye sight.


“We hope that she recovers as soon as possible. This is the plight of democracy where no one can assure safety and security to the common people like us. I wish that the state government and the BTAD authorities will take immediate and appropriate measures so that no more such incidents take place in future,” said Samsul Hoque, uncle of Taslima.


Though, All Bodoland Minority Students’ Union (ABMSU) and others have blamed the Bodoland People’s Party (BPF) for triggering the violence, the family members said that they just want to live in peace. “We are common and very poor people. We have no idea how politics work. We just want to live in peace,” Hoque added.


Another injured Bipin Boro who was shot at and injured in his house by two suspected militants at Nizdefeli is also out of danger and stated to be stable by the GMCH superintendent Ramen Talukdar



Toll in Assam rises to 30, triggers exodus of hundreds of Muslims


GUWAHATI: Toll in Assam violence rose to 30 as seven more bodies were recovered from Narayanguri area of Baksa district in Assam early Saturday, according to TV reports.



The police have arrested 12 people in Baksa in connection with the terror attacks. Eight people have been picked up for questioning in Kokrajhar.


Assam chief minister Tarun Gogoi has called for an emergency meet over the violence.


Indefinite curfew has been imposed in Kokrajhar, Baksa and Chirang districts of Assam after Bodo militants killed 30 people.


Bloodletting in Assam’s disturbed district of Kokrajhar had flared up on Friday with Bodo militants massacring 23 Bengali-speaking Muslims in the belief that they hadn’t voted for their candidates in the April 24 Lok Sabha elections.


Curfew was imposed in parts of western Assam following the killing by militants loyal to the National Democratic Front of Bodoland (IK Songbijit faction) which began late Thursday evening. Officials said militants first raided Narsingbari village in Baksa district bordering Bhutan, about 250 km west of Guwahati, around 7.30 pm on Thursday. They were on bicycles and fired indiscriminately at a house killing three women on the spot and wounding two critically.


“Early on Friday, another band of Bodo militants raided Balapara village in Kokrajhar and fired at three houses. Seven people were killed in this attack,” the official said. A three-year-old girl injured in the firing died on her way to hospital. By 3.30 pm on Friday, Bodo militants had attacked settlements near Manas National Park in Baksa and shot dead 12 Bengali-speaking Muslims and burnt down 30 thatched houses.


The attacks triggered exodus of hundreds of Bengali-speaking Muslims from Duramari and Dotoma areas in Kokrajhar. Bodoland Territorial Council chief executive member Hagrama Mohilary rushed to those villages and asked people not to run away. He promised to give them security.


Chief minister Tarun Gogoi had appealed for calm saying, “We request people not to flee their homes. We will do everything possible to frustrate the designs of the insurgents and apprehend them at the earliest.”


A Bodoland People’s Front leader said, “Everything was fine till April 23. We were assured that we would get about 80% Muslim votes in the third phase of the Lok Sabha elections in Kokrajhar on April 24. But all Muslim votes went in favour of Naba Kumar Sarania alias Heera Sarania.”


Sarania, a reformed Ulfa militant, was supported by non-Bodos, who are opposed to the creation of Bodoland state as demanded by Bodo groups. The killings were a grim reminder of the widespread violence between Bodos and Bengali-speaking Muslims that led to the death of 105 people and displacement of 4,45,586 people from both communities in 2012.


The government requisitioned the Army which carried out flag marches in sensitive areas of Kokrajhar and Baksa districts. Union home minister Sushil Kumar Shinde spoke to Gogoi in the morning following which 10 additional companies of central paramilitary forces were ordered to move to the two districts.


Shinde was briefed by Gogoi about the attack by NDFB-Songbijit. The home ministry then directed security forces to take strong action against NDFB militants. Reinforcements were sent into the area to check violence to bolster 33 companies of CAPF already in the area. Ten more companies were deployed after the attack.


“We have directed the security forces to take strong action against the NDFB militants responsible for the killings. They are instigating people to indulge in riots. We will not allow this to happen,” said Shambhu Singh, joint secretary (Northeast) at MHA.


Assam DGP Khagen Sarma said, “We have enough forces in the Bodoland Territorial Areas District. Four additional companies of paramilitary forces have already reached there. We are expecting six more companies there.”


The Songbijit faction has refused to sit for talks with the Centre even as other groups of NDFB have laid down their weapons to join the peace process.


Intelligence sources said the Union home ministry had alerted Assam Police and other security agencies about the possibility of attacks by Bodo militants a few days ago. “The home ministry gave specific inputs about the Songbijit faction’s plans to target the minorities from Thursday evening,” they added.


On Monday, the Songbijit faction had warned of retaliation against the killing of three Bodo youths by police branding them its cadres in Tezpur in upper Assam on April 30. “So, we the revolutionaries, decided our tit-for-tat retaliation against both the governments of Assam and India as soon as possible for their mistake,” the outfit had said.



Trout topics: Thomas is hooked after tempting a big brown


Young Thomas Sivills, aged six, is hooked on trout fishing after catching a 5lb 2oz brown at SCALING DAM




Young Thomas Sivills, aged six, is hooked on trout fishing after catching a 5lb 2oz brown at SCALING DAM.


The Brotton youngster fished Green PowerBait and worm from the west end of the dam to tempt the big brown.


Michael Lee from Ormesby went home with four rainbows including the reservoir’s biggest of the season, at 10lb 11oz.


It took lemon fizz PowerBait in the east end bay.


Fly angler Paul Tyreman from Liverton Mines worked the east end bay and moorside and was rewarded with five rainbows caught on a Bibio.


Dave Garbutt from Loftus took advantage of Northumbrian Water’s credit cruncher and had a good afternoon on the moorside taking four lovely rainbows from the big tree and groyne area on a Black and Peacock Spider.


Over the week 75 anglers caught 224 trout.



  • ANDREW Bogan had a top week at LOCKWOOD BECK. In his best session he caught 22 to 5lb 8oz on Black Klinkhamers, Beetles and Cut Throat Cat from the top moor side block.


Earlier in the week he and his sister Katie caught 12 to 4lb 8oz between them.


Andrew had eight and Katie four from the bottom of the moor side. Andrew caught all his fish on a Cut Throat Cat and Katie took hers on dries.


Both of them also hooked and lost fish.


There was thick fog for much of the week, but that didn’t deter Paul Drummond.


He fished for six hours and caught six to 4lb 8oz on Cut Throat Cat fished very slowly along the bottom in about three metres of water.


As with the bank anglers Paul found the takes were really gentle making it hard to hook the fish.


Bernard Fitzhugh caught 10 on small black Klinkhamers from the moor side, and in three lively hours Keith Bunnett caught nine on the same pattern fished from the holly bush.


John McGarrell was on top form, catching 28 to 6lb, all on Foam Beetles. John caught from all areas of the lake and nine of the twenty seven fish he returned were over 3lb. Yesterday he caught one of 5lb.


Another batch of superb fish have been stocked, including a couple of blues of between 13 and 14lb.


In total around 250 were stocked, including several doubles, others over 4lb, with the majority of fish stocked averaging 2lb 2oz.


The Scierra Pairs boats match scheduled for May 18 has been called off because of a lack of entries.


However the adult novice courses are proving popular, with some fully booked and just one place remaining for the June 14 course. More courses are arranged until September.



  • WILLIAM Porham of Stockton caught 22 fish, the best estimated at 7lb, in a lively week at WEST HOUSE.


Most of his fish took either Beetles or Black Buzzers.


Season ticket holder Shaun Burnside also caught 22 on a variety of patterns.


The dry fly action is good at times, especially to small black beetles or F flies fished on the edge of the ripple.


This week a further 200 fish have been stocked, among them rainbows to 14lb and browns between 6 and 8lb.


The rod average has reached 7.9. The lake is now open each day until 8pm.



  • PAUL Runec from Great Ayton caught a 16lb 4oz rainbow at SHARPLEY SPRINGS.

  • Several other doubles were caught in a week in which twitched and pulled dries, drifted wets and suspended pupae all caught fish.

  • AT WITTON CASTLE 70 anglers caught 245 fish. Top patterns have been: Shipman’s Buzzer, Wicked White Buzzer and CDC f-fly.


Witton Castle host a Country Sports Experience on Saturday May 17 from 1pm until 4pm.


The event will offer free fly fishing coaching, and a chance to try out clay pigeon shooting with a BASC qualified coach.


At the castle grounds there will be a display from Northside Falconry.


There is no admission fee and everyone is welcome. More details can be found at http://ift.tt/1q0TFDZ


OTHER returns:


DERWENT: 241 anglers caught 896 trout to 6lb 8oz. Bait: Pink PowerBait Eggs and Magic Dust. Patterns: Black Fritz, Humungus, Cat’s Whisker, Blue Zulu, Dawson’s Olive. 500 stocked.


GRASSHOLME: 204 anglers caught 850 trout to 5lb. Bait: Orange PowerBait, Magic Dust, Toby spinners. Patterns: Black Fritz, Cat’s Whisker, Black Zonker. 850 stocked.


HURY: 68 anglers caught 190 trout to 3lb. Patterns: Cat’s Whisker, Black Hopper, Kate McLaren, Dawson’s Olive. 200 stocked.


FONTBURN: 163 anglers caught 838 rainbows to 7lb 4oz. Bait: Ledgered Red Gulp or Pink PowerBait Eggs. Patterns: Mallard & Claret, Cats Whisker, Orange Fritz. 500 stocked.


KIELDER: 78 anglers caught 453 trout to 2lb 8oz. Bait: worm and sweetcorn. Patterns: Cat’s Whisker, Clan Chief. 1,200 stocked.



Guisborough Town’s cup final victory will live long in their memories


Guisborough Town’s North Riding Senior Cup win over Boro at the Riverside Stadium will live long in the memory of the club’s fans




Guisborough Town’s North Riding Senior Cup win over Boro at the Riverside Stadium will live long in the memory of the club’s fans.


And manager Chris Hardy says it was one of the best results he’s been involved in since taking charge at the KGV.


The Priorymen rose to the occasion as they recorded a 1-0 upset victory over Boro’s Under-21 side.


Northern League top scorer Danny Johnson scored the winner - his 57th of the season in all competitions - after 31 minutes when he challenged Boro keeper Joseph Fryer and knocked the ball into the back of the empty net when play was allowed to continue.


While Johnson - who has had a recent trial with Boro - did the business at one end of the pitch for Guisborough, on-loan Boro keeper Luke Coddington was equally impressive against his parent club at the other end of the field.


Boro created several chances after the break but Coddington was equal to all of them as he denied Charlie Wyke, Thomas McAloon and Bradley Fewster.


A delighted Hardy said: “It was a monumental task for us going up against a strong Boro side in their own back yard.


“They had a lot of possession in the second half but we stood firm after Johnson’s goal and held out for one of the best results I’ve been involved with in my time at the club.


“It will be an evening that will live long in the memory of the Guisborough Town faithful and one that all associated with the football club can be very proud of.”


Guisborough are currently fifth in Northern League Division One and finish their campaign this afternoon with a home game against newly crowned champions Spennymoor (3pm).



Family of John Clayton hold special charity fundraising football match in his memory


Charity match in memory of popular Billingham man who died from a heart attack after playing football




A popular Billingham man who died from a heart attack after playing football was being remembered with a special fundraising match today.


John Clayton was only 43 when he collapsed shortly after playing in a charity football match in April 2010.


Members of John’s family, including his brother Peter and Peter’s wife Lisa, have since joined Arrhythmia Alliance’s Hearts & Goals campaign to buy automated external defibrillators (AEDs) in John’s memory.


AEDs dramatically improve the chance of survival from sudden cardiac arrest. They can be used by anyone, without special training, to shock a person’s heart back into normal rhythm. The machines increase the chance of someone surviving from 9% to 50% when compared to the use of CPR alone.


John’s family has already raised thousands for charity in his memory and was holding a second annual fundraising football match and family fun day at Billingham Town Football Club in his honour today.


The funds raised will go towards more AEDs as part of the Hearts & Goals campaign, fronted by former footballer Fabrice Muamba.


The family has to date successfully placed three AEDs at locations across Billingham with funds from last year’s event.


Peter, John’s younger brother, who is organising the event along with John’s wife Annette and their four children, Adam, Alex, Sam and Serena, said: “Last year’s event was such a success and we are keen to see it grow this year.


“There will be 15 stalls, selling crafts and sweets, so something for all the family. Paul Scott from local company Medisport will be our first aider for the day and provide CPR and AED demonstrations.”


Peter added: “By throwing ourselves into fundraising we are providing a lasting legacy for John and helping the many others who might one day benefit from an AED in the event of an emergency.”


Today’s fundraising event was due to run from 2pm to 6pm at Billingham Town Football Club, with free entry. The match was kicking off at 4pm.




Would-be burglar jailed for break-in attempt at Middlesbrough care home


A dad-of-two has been jailed after an attempted break-in at Bramble Lodge nursing home in Middlesbrough




A would-be burglar who targeted an old folk’s home for money to pay off his debts has been jailed.


Staff at the Middlesbrough home heard the sound of a break-in at a window at 2.40am and they disturbed a raider who ran off.


Police found a hacksaw outside with a fingerprint of Mark Jackson, 30, who lived half a mile away, and he confessed.


Dad-of-two Jackson, who had previous convictions for theft and handling stolen goods, had been given a suspended jail sentence only a month before.


Prosecutor Rachel Masters told Teesside Crown Court that Jackson claimed he was the lookout for another man who had tried to climb through the window on a corridor of Bramble Lodge nursing home in the early hours of March 4.


Miss Masters said that an aggravating feature of the raid was that there were vulnerable residents in the home that night.


Jackson said that he had met up with a man who he would not name, who had a bag of tools. The man had suggested that they should break into the home to steal items which he knew would be there.


Jackson had seven convictions for nine offences, and when he failed to answer bail he was arrested on a warrant.


On February 8 he had been given a three-month jail sentence suspended for 24 months for stealing diesel from a vehicle on a car park in Middlesbrough.


Graham Silvester, defending, said that Jackson was in a steady relationship, with two children aged seven and nine, but he had a history of crime from his involvement with alcohol and drugs. He was in severe financial difficulties, and that night he had taken drink and drugs.


Mr Silvester added: “He did not think matters through.


“He knows he did wrong and he foolishly acted impulsively. Obviously an old people’s home is vulnerable. It was opportunistic and that meeting with the other man was not pre-arranged.


“They tried to get some money from that place, but there was minimal harm to the residents and the property.”


The judge told Jackson that it was a serious offence which involved an element of planning. Recorder Patrick Palmer said: “This particular address was targeted by you as a possible target, and this residence was occupied at the time.”


Jackson, of Windlestone Drive, Middlesbrough, was jailed for 12 months after he pleaded guilty to attempted burglary and breach of a suspended sentence.



Thornaby Academy brought out of worst Ofsted category since opening


Staff at Thornaby Academy are delighted that their hard work has resulted in the school coming out of the worst Ofsted category




A Thornaby school has come out of the worst Ofsted category - inadequate - for the first time since opening in 2010.


Thornaby Academy opened in place of the failing Thornaby Community School after it was placed into special measures by inspectors, and staff have battled ever since to make improvements needed.


The academy, which opened the doors on its new £5.5m building in June last year, was rated inadequate when inspectors visited in October 2012 and given a “serious weaknesses” designation.


In each monitoring visit since then, inspectors said they were seeing improvements being made.


And now in the academy’s first full inspection since 2012, staff were delighted to have their hard work recognised by being rated an overall 3 - “requires improvement” - with leadership and management being given a “good” 2 rating.


While leaders know there is still a lot of improvement to be made, this judgment is confirmation that things are finally moving in the right direction, said academy principal Maryssa O’Connor.


Ofsted’s report said the school requires improvement because there is too much variation in the progress students make in different subject areas, and in the way different groups of students progress.


It said students’ writing skills are underdeveloped and they do not routinely think things through for themselves. The report added: “Teachers’ comments on students’ work are sometimes too hard for less able students to understand. Some teachers’ questioning skills do not extend students’ thinking.


“Students do not always follow-up teachers’ written comments and so continue to make the same mistakes. The number of students who gained five good grades at GCSE including English and mathematics rose sharply last year but remained below the national average.” But the report picked out many positive aspects, including that teaching is improving strongly, that leaders “are bringing about rapid improvements in students’ achievements, behaviour and attendance”, and have resolved significant staffing issues.


The report said: “There is a growing proportion of good and better teaching.” But it added: “Teaching is not consistently strong across the academy and the quality varies within subject areas.” Of the students, the report said: “Their conduct around the academy and in classrooms is mature and sociable.”


Inspectors added: “Significant success has been achieved in the last year or so and continues to gather pace.” The academy had “strong capacity for further improvement.”


Mrs O’Connor said: “The report is an endorsement of the hard work of all members of the academy and the ongoing support we receive from parents and the wider Thornaby community.


“I expect our next Ofsted report to show that we are good in all areas, if not outstanding. This is an ambitious academy, our staff and students expect nothing less than the best from everyone.” She added that lead sponsors Teesside University were proud of the progress made.



Jeremy Clarkson put on final warning by the BBC after using the n-word in unseen Top Gear clip


Presenter told he will be sacked if he utters another offensive remark




Jeremy Clarkson has been told by the BBC that he will be sacked if he makes one more offensive remark.


The TV presenter issued a grovelling apology on Thursday over his use of the n-word during an unseen Top Gear clip.


And he used his column in today's Sun to admit he had run out of chances.


Clarkson, 54, said he remembered well the "raw footage," adding: "I also remembered that when I reached the offensive word in this old rhyme, I mumbled so it would not be audible.


"I wasn't worried. I knew I hadn't (said the n-word).


"However, by mid-morning, the story was starting to appear on the television news.


"I had somehow become more important than the capsized ferry and the missing airliner.


"And everyone was starting to believe that I really had used the worst word in the world.


"I was going to be sacked.


"Top Gear was going to be dropped.


"And all because of something I hadn't said in a sequence that wasn't shown."


Clarkson goes on to explain how BBC bosses ordered him to make an apology, a plan he described as "not very good".


He added: "I've been told by the BBC that if I make one more offensive remark, anywhere, at any time, I will be sacked.


"And even the angel Gabriel would struggle to survive with that hanging over his head.


"It's funny.


"I've always thought I'd be sacked for something I said.


"Not for something that actually, I didn't say."


In his video apology, released after showdown talks with BBC bosses in London, a sombre and tired-looking Clarkson said: "Ordinarily I don't respond to newspaper allegations but on this occasion I feel I must make an exception.


"A couple of years ago I recorded an item for Top Gear in which I quoted the rhyme "eeny meeny miny moe".


"Now of course I was well aware that in the best known version of this rhyme there is a racist expression that I was extremely keen to avoid.


"The full rushes show that I did three takes.


"In two I mumbled where the offensive word would normally occur and in the third I replaced it altogether with the word teacher.


"Now when I viewed this footage several weeks later I realised that in one of the mumbled versions, if you listen very carefully with the sound turned right up, it did appear that I'd actually used the word I was trying to obscure.


"I was mortified by this. Horrified.


"It is a word I loathe and I did everything in my power to make sure that version did not appear in the programme that was transmitted.


"In fact I have here the note I sent at the time to the production office and it says: 'I didn't use the n-word here but I've just listened through my headphones and it sounds like I did. 'Is there another take that we could use?'


"Please be assured I did everything in my power to not use that word."


He then ended the statement saying he was "begging for your forgiveness" and that "my efforts weren't quite good enough".


The BBC said: "Jeremy Clarkson has set out the background to this regrettable episode.


"We have made it absolutely clear to him, the standards the BBC expects on air and off.


"We have left him in no doubt about how seriously we view this."



UK detention policy in Afghanistan illegal



A High Court judge has ruled that Britain’s detention policy in Afghanistan is “unlawful”.



Justice George Leggatt examined the case of Serdar Mohammed, an Afghan farmer who was arrested on suspicion of being a Taliban commander and was held in custody for 110 days by British forces without any charges.



The judge ruled on Friday that while Mohammed’s initial detainment was lawful, there has been no excuse for British forces to hold him more than 96 hours.


Mohammed claimed that he was not allowed access to a lawyer and British forces tortured him into giving a false confession after being transferred to the Afghan National Directorate of Security (NDS) facility in Lashkar Gah.


Last week, an Afghan fact-finding committee said that it had uncovered secret jails in southern Afghanistan run by US-led foreign forces.


The commission was appointed by Afghan President Hamid Karzai to probe jails run by US and British forces in the country.



“We have conducted a thorough investigation and search of Kandahar Airfield and Camp Bastion and found several illegal and unlawful detention facilities run and operated by foreign military forces,” said Abdul Shakur Dadras, the head of the committee.



Dadras also noted that the committee members were sent to Kandahar and Helmand provinces to review the jails at two foreign forces’ bases — Kandahar Airfield, controlled by the US forces, and Camp Bastion run by the UK military.


The US-led International Security Assistance Force (ISAF) said in a statement that it was aware of “their investigative team looking into the detention facilities in Kandahar and Helmand.”


The issue is considered as the latest dispute over the detention of Afghans by US-led foreign forces.


Earlier this year, the Afghan government freed dozens of detainees held in the US-run Bagram prison.


In November 2012, President Karzai ordered Afghan forces to take control of the prison and accused US officials of failing to fully comply with the terms of the Memorandum of Understanding on Detentions signed between Kabul and Washington.


According to human rights groups, the Bagram detainees were abused and kept in solitary confinement in windowless cells.


HRM/MHB/MAM



Boro fan rapped for disrupting minute’s silence in memory of Hillsborough disaster


Police have slammed a disrespectful Boro fan who disrupted the minute's silence in memory of the Hillsborough disaster




A football fan who disrupted the minute’s silence at Turf Moor in memory of the Hillsborough disaster has been slammed by police.


But Stephen Bentley, 38, has escaped a football banning order after being convicted of being drunk at the April 12 Championship fixture between Burnley and Middlesbrough.


The Boro fan was even set upon by his fellow supporters in the David Fishwick Stand at the ground and he had to be led away by stewards.


Bentley, of Maddren Way, Middlesbrough, admitted being drunk at a designated sporting fixture and was fined £85 with £85 court costs.


Magistrates’ chairman Wilcox-Wood said: “You must be a good football fan to come all the way from Middlesbrough and not see any of the match.”


But the bench declined to make a football banning order against Bentley on the grounds it would be “disproportionate” and he was lightly-convicted in the past.


Speaking after the case, Insp Phillip Hutchinson of Burnley Police said: “Bentley’s actions were highly disrespectful during what should have been a time of quiet reflection by football fans in memory of fellow football fans.


“It should be said that Bentley’s actions are in no way representative of football fans, as shown by the fact Bentley’s fellow Middlesbrough fans remonstrated with him immediately and alerted the club’s stewards to his actions.


“Bentley’s aggressive behaviour towards both club stewards and police officers was also highly unacceptable, and we welcome the court’s decision to fine him.”


Fellow Boro fan Liam Campbell, 27, of Fawcus Court, Redcar, also admitted using threatening behaviour for being overly-aggressive during a stand-off between chanting Burnley and away fans before the game on Belvedere Road.


But Laura Heywood, defending, said her client had been coming to the aid of a fellow supporter who had fallen to the ground during the incident, though he accepted his behaviour could have been seen as aggressive.


Campbell was fined £75 with £85 costs and no banning order was similarly imposed.



Police investigation launched after body of woman found in Middlesbrough home


Police were called to a house on Parliament Road in Middlesbrough after reports of a serious assault




Investigations are underway after the body of a woman was found at a house.


Police were called to the address on Parliament Road in Middlesbrough at around 3.35am this morning after body of a woman, who has not yet been named, was discovered.


Crime Scene Investigators were seen at the house and detectives were also seen making house-to-house inquiries.


An investigation into the woman’s death, which is currently being treated as sudden and unexplained, has begun and enquirers continue today.



A police cordon is in place at the scene close to Union Street and Bargain Booze off-licence.


Anyone with information is asked to contact Cleveland Police on 101 or Crimestoppers anonymously on 0800 555 111.



North East ambulance service criticised after crews hired with criminal convictions


Ambulance chiefs have been slammed after a report revealed 57 people were given frontline crew jobs despite having criminal convictions




Ambulance chiefs have been slammed after a report revealed 57 people were given frontline crew jobs despite having criminal convictions.


The North East Ambulance Service (NEAS) was given a formal warning after a watchdog found no background or suitability of prospective staff checks had been carried out since 2009.


An urgent review was launched after the Care Quality Commission (CQC) discovered the NEAS failed to meet four out of six national standards.


A statement released by the ambulance service confirmed checks carried out since the CQC inspection revealed 57 staff working as ambulance crews or in the patient transport services had unknown minor criminal convictions.


It requires improvements in recruitment procedures, medicines management, supporting workers and monitoring service quality.


Of the remaining three staff, two are currently off work for an unrelated issues and the other is on alternative duties until their risk assessment is complete.


Julie Walton, the CQC head of hospital inspections for the North-east, said: “The issues we identified are a real concern and we have told the trust where further improvements must be made to ensure patients receive the service they are entitled to expect.


“We will return to check that the necessary changes have been made and that they can be sustained for the future.”


Simon Featherstone, NEAS chief executive, said: “The findings in this report are disappointing but I am pleased that our staff have been recognised by the CQC inspectors for the wonderful and caring job they do for our patients.


“The CQC has agreed with my view that this organisation has been ‘running hot’ for some considerable time now, in that we are extremely busy and under increasing demands to achieve performance and quality targets within our financial budgets.


“We recognise that some of the issues highlighted in the inspectors’ report require investment in frontline leadership, which is why we have taken the decision to plan a £1.7m deficit in our budget this year - the first in the Trust’s history – to invest in recruiting team leaders to support the frontline.”


The inspection also found 97.4% of emergencies received an ambulance within 19 minutes, above the 95% national average.



22 Muslims killed in sectarian attacks in India’s Assam village


Four year old Taslima Khatun is battling for her life at Guwahati Medical College Hospital


GUWAHATI, India: Separatist rebels wearing black masks opened fire on Muslim villagers in remote northeastern India, killing at least 22 people, mostly women and children, in two overnight attacks, police said Friday. Police said they suspected the militants behind the overnight killings were members of the Bodo tribe.

“The gunmen entered the house and shot them dead on the spot,” a senior police officer in the state capital, Guwahati, with knowledge of the investigation told Reuters.He was referring to an incident in which the militants shot dead three members of a family, including two women, while wounding a baby. In a second attack, eight people were killed by a group of guerrillas.

Bodo people have frequently clashed with Muslims they say have illegally entered from neighboring Bangladesh and encroached on their ancestral lands near the Himalayan kingdom of Bhutan. Candidates in India’s general election, including opposition front runner Narendra Modi, have contributed to anti-Bangladeshi feeling in Assam.

Modi, a Hindu nationalist, last week said immigrants from Bangladesh in a nearby state should have their “bags packed” in case he came to power. He accuses the state government of being soft on immigration. Voting was held over several days in Assam to help security forces handle any violence from several separatist and tribal militant groups active in the state. Polling in the Bodo region ended on April 24, in what residents say was a tight race between a Bodo and a non-tribal candidate. Election results are due on May 16.

Police reinforcements were sent to the two districts where the attacks took place, which have a history of sectarian violence. Dozens of police in military style uniforms and armed with automatic rifles patrolled the area, television pictures showed.”The authorities will take firm action against those involved in this crime,” said state government spokesman Nilamoni Sen Deka.

Two years ago, dozens of people were killed in clashes between Bodo people and Muslim settlers in the same area and about 400,000 people fled from their villages. The state government, led by the ruling Congress party, was criticized for not acting quickly enough to stop rioting



George Friend canvassing to get Middlesbrough FC up in the polls


George Friend hopes next term’s Championship team of the season includes a few Boro stars - because it will mean the team are up at the top




George Friend hopes next term’s Championship team of the season includes a few Boro stars - because it will mean the team are up at the top.


This year’s Professional Footballers’ Association divisional team, revealed this week, included three players each from promoted Leicester and Burnley and two more from third-placed Derby.


And Friend, Boro’s PFA dressing room rep, said: “It would be nice to see a few Boro players there next year, definitely.


“It would mean that we had had a successful season because the XI usually reflects the teams that have done well over the whole season.


“And there’s no reason that can’t happen for us. There’s a lot of very good players in our squad and I think they have good reputations throughout the league and from playing in higher leagues as well.


“A little more success and a little more consistency from the team and those players will be far more prominent in people’s minds when it comes to casting next year’s votes.”


The defender - who won the Boro supporters’ club player of the year award this week - says the PFA team is a good guide to the Championship’s best.


“To be honest, it is hard to argue with the team the players have picked,” he said.


“Over the season they are the players that have been the most consistent and that means they will have done well against almost everyone that is voting.”


Every player nominates a 1-11 and also votes for the main Player and Young Player of the Year gongs, won by Luis Suarez and Eden Hazard.


Friend revealed that four of his own picks made the line-up.


“I picked Kasper Schmeichel and Wes Morgan of Leicester, Andy Reid of Forest and Ross McCormack,” he said. “That’s not a bad spine to a team.


“Schmeichel and Morgan are part of the title winners and have been very strong at the back.


“Andy Reid has been very influential and I’m sure it is no coincidence they have dipped while he has been out injured.


“And Ross McCormack - its a shame we never got him here because he is a very good player, he has scored a lot of goals and Leeds will do very well to hold on to him.


“The team is pretty fair to be honest. It is hard to dispute anyone who is included.


“Maybe a few who feel a little bit agrieved. There will be a few who must have been very close.


“But it is generally a good guide. Most of those players could easily play in the Premier League. A lot of them have.


“I’d like to think we could have a few lads in next year.


“If we stamp some authority on the league and have a good season then as well as celebrating as a team hopefully we could have a few individuals honoured in that way too.”



We'd love to have Lukas Jutkiewicz sign for Wanderers says Jermaine Beckford


Lukas Jutkiewicz would be a terrific signing for Bolton, claims fellow Wanderers striker Jermaine Beckford




Lukas Jutkiewicz would be a terrific signing for Bolton, claims fellow Wanderers striker Jermaine Beckford.


The Boro front man moved to the Reebok Stadium on loan in January and has been impressive but as things stand, he’ll play his last game for the Trotters today against Birmingham City before returning to his parent club.


Beckford, who played briefly with the 25-year-old at Everton before linking up with him again at Bolton, hopes a permanent deal can be thrashed out.


“Hopefully, we’ll still be able to do something in the summer, fingers crossed,” he said. “It was one of those things – he wasn’t available earlier in the season but once we did get him, he’s been fantastic.


“He’s been something I personally think we could have done with a lot sooner.”


Beckford added: “He was exactly the same back then (at Everton), he’s a very strong guy and he brings other players into play really well.


“That makes the guys around him, especially myself, enjoy the game that much more because you know that the pressure is not on you to fight a couple of defenders, bring the ball down and then put the ball in the top corner.”



Police probe fresh allegations against Max Clifford as disgraced PR guru spends his first night in jail


Detectives are looking into fresh allegations against disgraced PR guru Max Clifford, Scotland Yard has said.


The 71-year-old has spent his first night in prison after being jailed yesterday for eight years for a string of indecent assaults against young women.


He was convicted of eight counts of historic abuse, carried out between 1977 and 1984, using his celebrity connections to lure women.


Following sentencing a spokesman for Scotland Yard confirmed that other people had since come forward with allegations.


The spokesman said: “We have received further information and this is currently subject to review.”


Passing sentence at Southwark Crown Court, Judge Anthony Leonard told Clifford his personality and position in the public eye were the reasons his crimes were not revealed earlier.


Judge Leonard said: “The reason why they were not brought to light sooner was because of your own dominant character and your position in the world of entertainment which meant that your victims thought that you were untouchable, something that I think you too believed.”


He told the veteran media expert: “These offences may have taken place a long time ago, when inappropriate and trivial sexual behaviour was more likely to be tolerated, but your offending was not trivial, but of a very serious nature.”


The judge said that due to the age of the offences, that occurred between 1977 and 1984, Clifford was charged under an act from 1956, which set the maximum term for each charge at two years.


Under later legislation passed in 2003, the maximum term would have been 10 years, and for the worst instances would have been charged as rape or assault by penetration, which attract a maximum life term.


Clifford repeatedly shook his head as the judge made his comments to a packed courtroom, and later his solicitor said he may launch an appeal.


The former celebrity agent, who branded his accusers “fantasists”, remained defiant ahead of his sentencing, saying: “I stand by everything I have said in the last 17 months.”


A string of his clients have moved to distance themselves from him in the wake of his conviction, the first under the sex crime inquiry Operation Yewtree.


During his trial, prosecutors portrayed Clifford as a well-practised manipulator, who promised to boost his victims’ careers and get them to meet celebrities in exchange for sexual favours.


He offered to get them casting appointments, pretending to be Hollywood bigwigs including Steven Spielberg, James Bond film producer Albert “Cubby” Broccoli and Michael Winner on the phone, and bizarrely bragged about having a tiny penis.


Victims included one girl who said Clifford abused her on a number of occasions after he met her family on holiday in Torremolinos in Spain in 1977 when she was 15.


She later wrote him an anonymous letter saying he had made her life “a living hell”.


Another alleged victim, who was an extra in the film Octopussy, claimed she was targeted at Clifford’s office in 1981 or 1982, aged 19.


An 18-year-old dancer was also targeted by the PR expert, who took her into a nightclub toilet in the early 1980s and forced her to touch his penis, saying “Who is going to believe you?”.


She said Clifford persuaded her to take a phone call from someone who said if she wanted a screen test, she would have to tell him if Clifford was circumcised.


The court also heard from a number of women as supporting witnesses, whose allegations did not meet the criminal standard, or in one case happened abroad.


The most serious claim came from a woman who said he forced her to touch his penis when she was just 12 years old during a holiday in Spain. Judge Leonard said if this had not occurred in Spain, at a time when offences abroad could not be charged in the UK, Clifford would have been charged for indecently assaulting that girl too.


The jury cleared Clifford of indecently assaulting another two women, and could not reach a verdict on a third.


Prosecutors said they will not pursue a retrial on that outstanding charge.


Judge Leonard condemned Clifford’s “contemptuous” behaviour during the trial, referring to a strange encounter when he was filmed mimicking Sky News reporter Tom Parmenter as he recorded a piece to camera.


Describing the ordeal of the victim who was abused from the age of 15, the judge said: “Not unnaturally, what she looks for is some sort of apology from you or an acknowledgement as to what you have been responsible for.


“She has been extremely upset by your public denials before trial, the reports of your attitude during trial - laughing and shaking your head in the dock at the accusations made against you.


“For my part, I would add something that since the jury have returned verdicts I have discovered, that you appeared behind a reporter outside this court whilst he was making his report of your evidence and during which you mimicked his actions in a way that was designed to trivialise these events.


“I find your behaviour to be quite extraordinary and a further indication that you show no remorse.”


Speaking outside court, Detective Chief Inspector Michael Orchard said Scotland Yard had seen an additional 1,400 allegations of sexual abuse in the last 12 months.


He said: “I would like to again thank all the victims for their courage, strength and bravery in coming forward. Without their support we would not have secured this conviction.


“My officers carried out a painstaking investigation to identify all historic and current evidential opportunities without fear or favour to ensure this case was brought to trial.


“I hope this gives other victims the courage to come forward knowing we will make every effort to investigate their claims regardless of the passage of time.


“Our specially trained officers along with CPS colleagues will continue to work tirelessly to bring sex offenders, whether recent or not, to justice.”



Fears for thousands of Afghans after landslide hits north east of country


Rescuers and locals continue search for missing persons




At least 350 people have died and as many as 2,000 are missing in Afghanistan after a landslide hit.


Rescuers and hundreds of residents from nearby areas are trying to help people in a small village in northeastern Afghanistan hit by a massive landslide, officials say.


Abdullah Homayun Dehqan the director of Badakshan province’s National Disaster Department says hundreds of local people have gathered near where the landslide hit on Friday, armed with shovels.


But he said there are fears that another landslide might strike.


He said he did not have an exact figure on how many people were killed. The United Nations on Friday said at least 350 people were killed while the provincial governor said as many as 2,000 people were feared missing.


Rescuers have struggled to reach the remote area in northeastern Afghanistan. Heavy rains earlier this week contributed to the landslide.



Sri Lanka MPs call on president to protect Muslims


Sri Lankan Muslims protest in Colombo (file photo)



Sri Lankan legislators have called on President Mahinda Rajapaksa to protect the country’s Muslim minority against Buddhist extremists.



The Muslim Council of Sri Lanka said Friday that 16 out of the 18 Muslim parliamentarians have asked the president to take action to stop hate crimes committed against Sri Lankan Muslims.



“Muslim parliamentarians wish to bring to Your Excellency’s kind attention the continued hate campaign, intimidation and threats to Muslims, carried out by some Buddhist extremist elements,” the MPs said in a joint letter.



There are rising concerns over the recent attacks by Buddhist extremists targeting mosques and churches across the island nation.


In January, mobs led by Buddhist extremists attacked Christian prayer centers and mosques in southern Sri Lanka. Sri Lankan police are accused of not taking appropriate action in this regard.


Muslims remain the second-largest religious group in the country, making up nearly 10 percent of the Asian country’s population.


Sri Lanka is emerging from nearly four decades of ethnic war, which according to the UN has claimed at least 100,000 lives between 1972 and 2009.


President Mahinda Rajapaksa maintains that peace, stability and the chance of greater prosperity have prevailed across Sri Lanka following the end of the civil war.


GMA/AB/SS



Afghan landslide: More than 2,000 believed trapped


1399062200238127000.jpg


KABUL: More than 2,000 people are trapped after a landslide smashed into a village in a remote mountainous area of northeastern Afghanistan, a spokesman for the local governor said, prompting a massive search and rescue effort.

“There were more than 1,000 families living in that village. A total of 2,100 people — men, women and children — are trapped,” Naweed Forotan, a spokesman for the Badakhshan governor, said. A senior police official earlier said up to 500 people were missing, believed dead.

Three bodies have been pulled out of the rubble in Argo district and at least 100 people are being treated for injuries, Col. Abdul Qadeer Sayad, a deputy police chief of Badakhshan province, said.

The landslide, which follows a week of heavy rain at a time of melting spring snow, crushed hundreds of houses and damaged hundreds more, he said. Villagers were attempting to recover their possessions after a smaller landslide crashed into the village. No one was hurt in the first slide, officials said. The second deadly slide struck a few hours later.

President Hamid Karzai ordered Afghan officials to start emergency relief efforts immediately, a palace statement said. Badakhshan Gov. Shah Waliullah Adeeb said the landslide buried some 300 homes in the area — about a third of all houses there. He said rescue crews were working but didn’t have enough equipment, appealing for shovels.

“It’s physically impossible right now,” Adeeb said. “We don’t have enough shovels; we need more machinery.” US President Barack Obama bemoaned the “awful tragedy” in Afghanistan.

“Our thoughts are with the people of Afghanistan who have experienced an awful tragedy,” Obama said.

“We stand ready to help our Afghan partners as they respond to this disaster,” Obama said at a joint press conference in Washington with German Chancellor Angela Merkel