Thursday, July 3, 2014

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, Friday 4th, 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.



Yemen on brink of economic collapse: UN


United Nations: Yemen is “on the brink of an economic collapse,” a UN humanitarian official said here Wednesday, blaming the mild, but popular, drug khat, for much of the Aden Gulf nation’s woes.


“This is one of (the) largest humanitarian challenges in scale and in scope that we face in the world,” John Ging, operations director for the UN Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs (OCHA), told reporters here at a briefing, Xinhua reported.



“It is extremely fragile there at the moment,” Ging said.


“Khat really is an issue that is undermining the development of this country in a fundamental way,” Ging said. “It affects the health; it affects the economy; it affects so many aspects of the functioning of society.”


Khat, a shrub whose young leaves contain a compound with effects similar to those of amphetamines, is popular in many countries of the Arabian peninsula.


According to media reports, about 90 percent of men and one in four women in Yemen are estimated to chew khat.


Khat chewers experience euphoria followed by depression. Khat can also affect sleep, leading to rebound effects such as late awakening, decreased productivity and day-time sleepiness.


The effect of khat on the cardiovascular system is rather less dramatic, but increased heart rate and blood pressure are common side-effects, making khat very harmful for hypertensive patients.


On the drug’s debilitating effect, Ging said the leadership in Yemen raised concern over khat because of its effect “as a particular problem that requires a completely new approach” because it was “fundamentally undermining the functioning of society in every dimension, socially and economically and it also links in to security as well”.


“Seventy percent of the water resources are estimated to be used for the growing of this drug, highlighted to us by so many people,” he said. “There needs to be a plan to address this scourge.”


“What was quite impressive for us was that in our engagement with the political leadership, with civil society leadership, with people themselves, they were all pointing to this problem and they were also asking us to engage more effectively in support of the country’s leadership to have a strategy with this growing problem, ” said the OCHA operations director, who visited Yemen June 22-26.


“It’s already a mega-problem and it is even getting worse,” Ging said. “People were appealing to us to help them with that.”



Israel held responsible for murder of Palestinian teen


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RAMALLAH: The Palestinian leadership said Wednesday it held Israel responsible for the murder of an east Jerusalem teenager in a suspected revenge attack for the killing of three Israelis. Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas in a statement demanded that Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu condemn the murder and punish those who carried it out.

“I demand the Israeli government punish the killers if it wants peace between the Palestinian and Israeli people,” Abbas said. Israel must also “take concrete steps on the ground to stop (revenge) attacks and the chaos caused by the Israeli escalation,” he said. Shortly afterwards, Netanyahu issued a statement condemning the “despicable murder” and urging the authorities to expedite an investigation into the reasons behind it.

Presidential spokesman Nabil Abu Rudeina in a separate statement heaped blame on the Israeli authorities.

“Israel is fully responsible for the killing of the teenager and we demand that the perpetrators are found and held accountable,” he said. The violence has triggered a wave of rioting in the east Jerusalem neighborhood of Shuafat, with hundreds of masked Palestinians hurling stones at Israeli police in riot gear.

Israel police have confirmed finding a body in a forest in west Jerusalem but have not formally said it is that of 16-year-old Mohammed Abu Khder who was reported kidnapped from the Arab eastern sector of the city before dawn. However, Public Security Minister Yitzhak Aharonovitch confirmed there was a link between the missing youth and the body found in a forest in west Jerusalem, the Walla news website reported.

In a conversation with Aharonovitch, Netanyahu asked that the investigating authorities “work as quickly as possible to find out who was being the heinous murder of the youth and what is the background to the incident.”

Netanyahu also “called on all sides not to take the law into their own hands” as fears grew that the killing was an act of revenge for the murder by Palestinian militants of three Israeli teenagers, whose bodies were found on Monday



Is the BJP emulating the worst of Congress’ political culture?


Prashant Jha, Hindustan Times


Chief Justice of India RM Lodha has finally spoken. A week after the controversy over the government’s objection to the Gopal Subramanium being elevated as an SC judge – as proposed by the SC collegium – the CJI has taken strong objection to the executive’s move. He has reiterated his commitment to the independence of judiciary and clearly said the executive’s unilateral move was not proper.



The only quibble with Lodha’s statement can be that it has come a bit late in the day, but he has done great service in standing up to a government, which, riding fresh on an overwhelming mandate, appears to think that it need not respect institutional autonomy. Subramanium’s move to withdraw his candidature may appear a bit hasty, but the manner in which his name was segregated shows the Modi regime had an axe to grind with him. This, Subramanium has argued, relates to his role as amicus curiae in the Sohrabuddin encounter case.


The objection to Subramanium’s name is ostensibly because of a CBI input, but we do know that his name was cleared by security agencies only a few weeks ago. The tendency of government agencies to toe the line of the political regime and tailor reports accordingly is not new- Congress, in fact, was a master at this. Remember the manner in which former Law Minister Ashwini Kumar sought to influence the CBI in the Coalgate case.


The BJP must remember that it has been a political beneficiary of the UPA’s moves to cripple institutions. This dented the previous government’s credibility, eroded the checks and balances within the system, and may have made certain ministers more powerful in their respective turfs temporarily but caused more lasting damage to the larger ecosystem of governance. It is natural for those in power to seek to expand their power, and get rid of ‘inconveniences’. But they have to operate within the rules of the game.


The signs in the first month of the Modi government are not encouraging in this regard. Its willingness to bring in an ordinance – after criticising UPA for ordinance raj – to appoint its own man as the PM’s principal secretary: the tendency to bypass elected representatives and rely on bureaucrats even though it is the minister who is accountable to Parliament; the desire to appoint their own loyalists as governors; and now the Subramanium issue are all instances of a certain unhealthy trend.


Make no mistake, this is all exactly what the Congress has done all these years. But weren’t we told that BJP is different, that there will be change, and acche din are about to come?


For More:


http://ift.tt/VjpJpf



Space for 625,000 more created at Grand Mosque


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Custodian of the Two Holy Mosques King Abdullah has instructed Grand Mosque authorities to open the newly expanded annex buildings of the Grand Mosque for the use of worshippers during Ramadan.

A source at the Presidency of the Two Holy Mosques said the king’s directive would provide extra prayer space for more than 625,000 worshippers inside the mosque and its courtyards. The royal gesture would help reduce congestion among worshippers inside and outside the mosque, he added.

The king has also ordered that pilgrims be allowed to make use of the expanded “mataf” (circumambulation area around the House of God) on the ground floor, as well as on the first floor, to accommodate 40,000 pilgrims per hour. Nearly two million worshippers, including foreign pilgrims, attend taraweeh prayers at the mosque and a large number of them stand on roads leading to the mosque. School vacation in the Arab world has increased crowding in the holy city.

Maj. Gen. Abdul Rahman Al-Qahtani, director of communications, said that more than 1,250 cameras have been set up inside and outside the mosque to monitor the movement of pilgrims and worshippers and ensure their safety. “We monitor pilgrims through 270 TV screens and if we find anything wrong, we inform field officers to take corrective action.”

Yousuf Al-Wabil, vice chairman of the committee of religious consultants, said the presidency would not allow people to hoard space at the Grand Mosque for other people.

“This is a wrongful practice and we want to change this system by spreading awareness and preventing people from practicing it.”



Meet Gordon Dalton: The Eston artist who's inspired by Teesside's 'smog'

Pictures: You can grab one of Gordon Dalton's 'smoggy cloud' creations for between £1,000 and £5,000 per piece



A love letter home is how artist Gordon Dalton describes his latest exhibition featuring our so-called smog.


Fetching between £1,000 and £5,000 apiece, his latest exhibition features Teesside’s industrial landscape - which he says is very similar to where he now lives in South Wales.



Originally from Eston, Gordon, 43, moved to South Wales in 1991 when he'd completed his foundation degree at the Cleveland College of Art and Design.


He said: “South Wales is pretty much like Teesside.


“There is lots of industry but also lots of coastline and countryside.”


The artist, who has exhibited across the world, said: “Without being dramatic I’d say it’s a mid-career show as it’s been about 20 years since I graduated.


“I have started thinking about Middlesbrough a lot more.


“I’m kind of calling it a love letter back home.


“There’s also a humour about it - a lot of northern humour.


“It’s Teesside in that it’s self-depreciating. Always the first to laugh at yourself.”


Here he takes us through work from his latest exhibition.


A hole where the hope falls out (acrylic on canvas)


I’m originally from Middlesbrough and moved to South Wales in 1991. They share a very similar landscape and mentality. If you’re lucky enough you can be on the beach or in the countryside within 30 minutes but the industrial landscape is equally amazing and sad with all that has happened.


This show has plenty of smoggy clouds belching out from all angles, which could be about stopping smoking, cartoon explosions and fart jokes, but more sincerely, a love letter home and seeing the beauty in the industrial landscape I pass everyday as I pass the steel works at Port Talbot, which looks and feels like Middlesbrough.


Does anyone ever get this right (acrylic on canvas)


More smoggy clouds, with an initially jarring colour scheme. You can make out two rows of bottles and containers, like there is a fire in a larder. The bottles take on human forms, like they are queuing for a bus, or stood outside the office having a sneaky fag.


There’s also the first sighting of a rather large tennis ball, which seems to pop up a lot in my work, like some kind of signature. Not sure why, I don't even like tennis – that middle swirly line is great to paint though, as are the smoky clouds.


Derty Gerty (acrylic on canvas)


Derty Gerty from number 30...do people still use that? Anyway, another tennis ball, and this one, and the whole composition is taken from a Paul Nash painting, with added smog and a dirty feel to it, a seemingly offhand approach that denies any superficial finesse to reveal a love of awkward imagery, polluted colours and scruffy surfaces.


The paintings both attract and repel, daring you to like them, to share in their stuttering, bad grammar. By bad grammar I mean something that trips you up and makes you look again. It’s just wrong in books, but can work in painting.


Juicy Lucy (acrylic on canvas)


I’d always wanted one of those almost cartoon, teenager’s wardrobes where everything is spilling out – rubber chickens, footballs, cricket bats stuffed in dark, dusty cupboards with dirty canvases propped up and held together with sticks and bits and bobs. I spend my time trying to cram it all in and then opening that wardrobe door.


This has that kind of feel, with layers of oily surfaces rubbing up against dried out areas, with what I seem to remember thinking was a draft excluder snake slithering across the surface.


Expensive holes to bury things (acrylic on canvas)


This is definitely another wardrobe full of stuff painting, with canvases, mirrors, and what I call daffy duck holes – those he used to lay down to escape. There’s a whoopee cushion in there too.


I’ve always liked the idea of Dr Frankenstein, sticking on bits and bobs, odds and ends to make a ‘monster’, with the baying mob outside with pitchforks and flaming torches. I feel like I have a full wardrobe of bits and bobs, memories, observations, objects that I’m sticking on, chopping off, seeing if it works. Then again, most of the time I feel like the baying mob.


They don’t get you (acrylic on canvas)


Another mucky painting. There are muckier ones in the show, in both senses of the word. I like the idea of sticking two fingers up. This has all of that, it wants you to look harder at what it is, to make you look again.


I was thinking about smoking and smokestacks. At one point it was called ‘The obituaries should have shown pictures of smokestacks’ so it was probably done after Thatcher died. It’s another love letter to Teesside and South Wales, like two old postcards pinned to the wall.


I’d hope my work has a melancholic, dour humour, questioning their seriousness and intention, but always one step away from a toilet gag or slapstick pratfall.


• Quiet Riots: Some Paintings by Gordon Dalton is at Bay Art, Bute Street, Cardiff from July 4 until August 1



Tailbacks after crash on A19 Tees flyover


A collision on the A19 led to long rush hour tailbacks for commuters.


The accident involved two motorcycles and a car on the A19 Tees flyover southbound caused delays for those travelling towards Middlesbrough.


Traffic queued southbound from the flyover back past the A689 turn off near Wolviston services after the accident, which took place between the A66 and Pennine Way near Midddlesbrough at around 4.55pm on Thursday.


Police say they have not been called to the incident, which they described as a “minor bump”.



Islamic banking rebrands in attempt to go mainstream


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Islamic banking is based on core principles of the religion. So it is striking that some banks are removing the word “Islam” from their names — a sign of both the potential of Islamic finance to grow, and the obstacles to it becoming mainstream.

In January, Dubai-based Noor Islamic Bank changed its name to Noor Bank. Abu Dhabi Islamic Bank (ADIB), the emirate’s largest sharia-compliant lender, now plans to call itself Abu Dhabi International Bank when operating abroad.

In both cases, the changes are part of the banks’ plans to expand. They aim to move well beyond a relatively small group of customers who stress religious permissibility, to a much larger customer base for whom pricing and service quality are key. This approach could help Islamic banks establish themselves globally, not just in the Muslim-majority regions of the Gulf and southeast Asia, and appeal to larger numbers of non-Muslims as well as Muslims.

But the banks feel that to broaden their appeal and compete directly with conventional institutions for customers, they need to play down their Islamic nature among the general public.

“Rebranding is an essential part of widening the appeal of the industry, whether we call it ethical, alternative or sustainable finance,” said Yerlan Baidaulet, a member of the board of executive directors at the Saudi Arabia-based Islamic Development Bank, a multilateral institution.

“Our mindset has to be global, we have to think wider in terms of customer appeal. Why monopolize the concept and keep calling it only Islamic?“



Recap: 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, Tuesday July 1st, 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.



Recap: 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, Friday 27th June, 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.



Recap: 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, Monday 30th June, 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.



Bid to extend opening hours for Stockton nightclub Rehab opposed by over-stretched police


A later licence for a Stockton nightclub could “drain” police resources across the town, say Cleveland Police.


An application for the Rehab club, on Prince Regent Street in Stockton town centre, to be allowed serve alcohol until 4am and open until 4.30am, has been submitted to Stockton Council.


In a statement to Stockton Council’s licensng committee, Cleveland Police said: “The premises is a nightclub situated in Stockton town centre which, by its very location, already suffers from alcohol related crime and anti-social behaviour. Cleveland Police have received numerous complaints to this effect.


“It is of concern to Cleveland Police that another licenced premises wishes to extend the hours, and the nature of this extension may lead to a drain on already limited police resources for the town centre area.”


The police say their current late night operation - Tranquility - sees additional officers working until 3am on Friday and Saturday to cover the night time economy.


Any offences occuring after 3am would then have to be dealt with by “officers who would normally be used to cover the rest of Stockton district”.


The statement to the council, signed by the solicitor to the Chief Constable, continues: “I believe this will have a detrimental effect in these areas as police will be too busy dealing with problems in the town centre.”


In the application, submitted by licence holder James Lightwing, a number of measures have been set out to combat anti-social behaviour including a 24 hour CCTV system, a drugs policy with visible notices and a hardbound drugs register, a challenge 21 policy, and a book to document every time someone is refused alcohol sales.


The club, which was reopened in April after years of standing empty, has been using temporary event notices to stay open until 4am on a Friday and Saturday, say police.


Rehab’s current licence allows it to serve drinks until 2am.


Members of Stockton Council's licensing sub committee will decide on whether to grant the extension at a meeting at the Council Chambers at Stockton Town Hall, on High Street, at 2pm on Tuesday.



One year on, regrets overwhelm the partners of the 30 June demonstrations


Woman Signing Tamarrod petition


On the first anniversary of the 30 June demonstrations, which paved the way for the military coup which ousted President Mohammed Morsi under the pretext of fulfilling the will of the masses, a state of sorrow and regret is dominating a large number of celebrities and leaders who took part in the protests.


Political and human rights activities have expressed their sorrow for taking part in the Tamarrod campaign and for signing the petition that withdrew confidence in President Morsi.


A quick look at the celebrities who called for the 30 June, 2013, demonstrations unveils that most of them were affiliated with the political parties and groups that formed the Salvation Front. Many of them are now held in prison, such as Ahmad Maher, Ahmad Douma, Muhammad Adel and Alaa Abd Al-Fattah, or have left the country after coming under attack such as Muhammad Al-Baradie and Alaa Al-Aswani, or are banned from appearing in the media, including many of the leaders of the Salvation Front.


‘I shall never forgive myself’


Human rights activist Aydah Seif Al-Dawlah has described the Tamarrod petition, which was used as an excuse in order to topple President-elect Morsi last year, as a big lie.


Al-Dawlah, who set up Al-Nadim Centre for Human Rights, published, via Facebook, a picture of the petition sheet she herself signed last year and said: “I shall never ever forgive myself for having believed in the petition and signed this form.”


She was one of many human rights activists who signed the petition organised by the Tamarrod campaign. She was also one of those who urged the masses to demonstrate in order to bring down President Morsi.


Ahmad Qanawi, Tamarrod Movement’s coordinator within the Journalists Syndicate, said 30 June did not offer Egypt anything and did not make the country a better place to live in as they were hoping but made it much worse in all areas.


In an interview with Al-Jazeera Mubasher Masr channel on Monday evening, Qanawi said: “The Tamarrod demands for the sake of which millions took to the streets did not achieve a thing. Crises are deeper and deeper. We went out demanding freedom and democracy for Egypt but Egypt has turned into a dictatorial police state. The ruling regime knows nothing but the language of suppression and persecution.”


He added: “I challenge Sisi to convince five per cent of the masses that took to the streets last year on 30 June to do the same once more.”


Tahrir Square for Al-Sisi supporters only


Groups who supported the revolution, which were among the most important forces that called for demonstrating on 30 June, announced their refusal to participate in any commemoration of the first anniversary of those demonstrations in public squares.


They stressed that 30 June was not a revolution like 25 January and that the real objectives of the revolution had not been accomplished especially as a number of activists have been imprisoned as a consequence of the demonstrations law which was legislated by an authority that came to power by means of demonstrating.


Sharif Al-Rubi, member of the political bureau of 6 April, the democratic front, has said that his movement will not celebrate especial since Tahrir Square, the emblem of the revolution, is now closed and is only accessible to the supporters of President Abdel Fatah Al-Sisi.


Al-Rubi wrote on his Facebook page that the revolutionary forces that took place in the 30 June demonstrations are now reconsidering their position and drawing a clear vision for their activities in the coming period in order to accomplish the objectives of the 25 January revolution and fulfil its demands of honourable living, freedom, social justice and human dignity.


Shaymaa Hamdi, member of the political bureau of the Youth for Justice and Freedom Movement and founding member of Revolution Road Front, has condemned any celebration of the 30 June anniversary for it was those demonstrations that sent the country back to the beginning again. She stressed that she would continue the struggle until the military rule, which is imposing its hegemony on the country, is brought down.


Halim Hnaish, human rights activist at Al-Nadim Centre, has stressed that he does not regret taking part in the events of 30 June but regrets the condition the country has deteriorated into. He also says he does not regret 25 January but regrets what came afterwards whether during the time when Egypt’s Supreme Council of the Armed Forces (SCAF) ruled or when the Brotherhood ruled.


Decline


One of the parties that took part in the events of 30 June is Al-Dustur (Constitution) Party. Its founder, Muhammad Al-Baradie, took part in the coup declaration and briefly assumed the position of vice president before resigning and moving to Austria.


In a communique issued on Monday, the party criticised the failure to achieve any of the 25 January revolution objectives. It added that a year after the 30 June events, democratic forces find themselves in a state of decline where fighting terrorism is carried out in exchange for relinquishing the basic rights the Egyptians gained over the past three and a half years.


Al-Dustur’s statement said: “Whereas we were hoping for a new chapter to be opened in the aftermath of implementing the second most important article in the road map, namely the presidential elections, we now find ourselves confronted with more restrictions imposed on the right to peaceful demonstrating and assembly. More and more of the youth who took part in the 25 January revolution and the 30 June uprising are being thrown in to prison for weeks and months in accordance with a draconian demonstrations law.”


Similarly, Salafist Al-Noor Party issued a press statement on Monday, a copy of which was received by Arabi 21, in which it said it would not take part in commemorating the first anniversary of 30 June, calling on the Egyptian people to engage in work and production.


The first anniversary takes place while the party is increasingly shunned by nearly all political groups in the country, whether loyalists or opponents. Party cadres have been banned from delivering Friday sermons in mosques.


Wael Qandil, chief editor of Al-Arabi Al-Jadeed newspaper, described the events of June 30 as the lie of the age. He called on those who signed the Tamarrod petition to go back and read its articles and ask themselves: “Which of these articles have been achieved?”


In an interview with Al-Jazeera, Qandil added that 30 June was a counter revolution orchestrated by members of the Mubarak regime. He noted that the first anniversary comes at a time when Egyptian society is severely divided.


Translated from Arabi21 , 1 July, 2014



BBC dragged to tribunal for constantly misreporting Jersusalem as an Israeli City


Campaigners are taking the BBC to a tribunal in a bid to find out why the corporation insists on promoting Jerusalem as an “Israeli city.”


An appeal was filed last week with the First-Tier Tribunal (Information Rights), part of the UK court system, by two UK-based human rights organizations.



The two groups, Palestine Solidarity Campaign and Friends of Al Aqsa, are attempting to force the release of BBC documents which would reveal how the BBC Trust reached a decision in 2013 that BBC journalists are can refer to the whole of Jerusalem as “Israeli.”


Palestine Solidarity Campaign (PSC) has been challenging the BBC since 2012 over its reporting on its online pages and radio broadcasts that Jerusalem is an “Israeli city,” with no distinction being made between East Jerusalem, considered by the United Nations to be occupied Palestinian territory, and West Jerusalem.


These challenges led to the BBC Trust confirming in May 2013 that the BBC is justified in referring to Jerusalem as an Israeli city, because of the facts on the ground created by Israel. At that time, the Trust wrote to PSC saying it had sought advice from its senior editorial strategy advisor, Leanne Buckle. Buckle concluded that there was no inaccuracy or bias in the BBC preferring to use the Israeli government’s territorial claims to the whole of Jerusalem in its reporting.


The Trust wrote: “The advisor [Buckle] acknowledged that Israel’s sovereignty over the whole of Jerusalem was not recognized under international law. However, she considered that Israel had de facto control over the entire city in a political, administrative and military sense. She also noted that Jerusalem was administered as a single entity by the Jerusalem municipal authority which made no distinction between East and West.”


BBC overrides international law


Buckle’s over-riding of international law in order to accept Israel’s illegal facts on the ground as a basis for BBC reports on Jerusalem led Palestine Solidarity Campaign and Friends of Al Aqsa to investigate how and why her decision was made.


With the support of CorporateRegister.com, PSC and Friends of Al Aqsa submitted a Freedom of Information request to the BBC, asking the corporation to disclose all documents relating to Buckle’s decision and the subsequent Trust decision, sent to PSC in May 2013.


“To make reference to either East or West Jerusalem, while reporting, would be so easy, and would result in accurate journalism,” PSC’s director, Sarah Colborne, told The Electronic Intifada. “However, the BBC seems to be more concerned with portraying the Israeli line on the status of Jerusalem, at the expense of accuracy and impartiality, and we want to find out why.”


The BBC rejected the Freedom of Information application on the basis that the Freedom of Information Act 2000 only covers information held by the BBC and other public service broadcasters if that information is held for “purposes other than those of journalism, art or literature.”


The BBC argued that “journalism, art or literature … seems to be intended to cover the whole of the BBC’s output in its mission (under article 5 of its Royal Charter) to inform, educate and entertain the public.”


Palestine Solidarity Campaign and Friends of Al Aqsa then took their challenge to a higher level, appealing to the Information Commissioner’s Office. The organizations said that the BBC’s policy of referring to Jerusalem as an Israeli city neither “educates” nor “informs” the public.


In fact, by reporting that the whole of Jerusalem is an Israeli city when it is not, the BBC is actually and actively misinforming the public, and therefore should not be protected by the derogation clause of the Freedom of Information Act.


Propaganda or journalism?


At the end of last month, the Information Commissioner’s Office responded to PSC in a written letter – and upheld the BBC’s right to be excluded from the Freedom of Information Act, concluding that “if the information is held for the purpose of journalism, art or literature, it is caught by the derogation.”


Palestine Solidarity Campaign and Friends of Al Aqsa have now lodged an appeal with the First-Tier Tribunal. The appeal will be heard in the fall.


In the grounds for appeal, submitted last week to the Tribunal, the organizations write:



The view of Jerusalem as a wholly Israeli city is one that is held only by Israel in the international community. Israel attempts to promote this view as a form of propaganda, and an attempt to create facts on the ground. When the BBC also promotes this view, it becomes complicit in Israel’s propaganda. The view being promoted by the BBC is not, therefore, journalism, but it is propaganda.


…The BBC is well aware of international law and international opinion on the subject of Jerusalem. It knows that Jerusalem is not, in its entirety, an Israeli city. Therefore, when it refers to Jerusalem as an Israeli city in its output, it is knowingly reiterating Israeli propaganda. This is contrary to all the principles of journalism.


…To find out what led to this decision is in the public interest. The BBC is a public body and, if it is broadcasting and publishing information which it knows to be false, the public has a right to know why.



Palestine Solidarity Campaign and Friends of Al Aqsa conclude by pointing out that the definition of propaganda “accurately applies to the BBC in the instance of its determination to refer to Jerusalem, in its entirety, as an Israeli city, which it is not, but which the Israeli government wishes the public to believe it is, as part of Israel’s attempts to secure Jerusalem for itself with or without a negotiated settlement.”


Influencing audiences


This is the definition of propaganda which PSC and FOA have presented to the Tribunal in their grounds for appeal:



Propaganda is a form of communication aimed towards influencing the attitude of a population toward some cause or position. Propaganda is information that is not impartial and used primarily to influence an audience and further an agenda, often by presenting facts selectively (thus possibly lying by omission) to encourage a particular synthesis.



In the fall, the judge of the First-Tier Tribunal will decide whether the BBC’s misreporting on the status of Jerusalem constitutes propaganda aimed at influencing its audiences towards the Israeli position, or whether it is, in fact, accurate and impartial journalism.


If the judge decides on the former, and orders the release of the documents explaining the BBC Trust’s ruling, those documents will make interesting reading indeed.


This article was first published on The Electronic Intifada



Teesside one of country's arson hotspots with over 40% of 'primary' fires started deliberately


Teesside remains one of the country’s arson hotspots, new figures show.


Government statistics for April 2013 to March 2014 show a 41.5% rise in the number of fires in Cleveland - one of the biggest rises in Britain - from 2,634 to 3,728.


Of those, 616 were “primary” fires - blazes in buildings, vehicles, involving casualties or rescues or attended by five or more fire appliances. And with 43.5% of those started deliberately, it gives Cleveland the highest percentage in the country.


Cleveland saw a 54.7% rise, from 1,998 to 3,091, in the number of “secondary” fires - the majority of outdoor blazes, usually involving grassland and refuse fires. But again, the “deliberately set” percentage, up 55.8% year on year, is one of Britain’s highest.


But while Cleveland Fire Brigade’s director of community protection, Phil Lancaster, admits there is a problem with deliberately set fires, he says there are explanations for - and optimism behind - the headline figures.


He said: “We do have a problem with deliberate fire starting, but we’ve been running an educational campaign, Enough is Enough, for two years and it has had a major impact.


“We do lots of work with children and young people because they tend to be the key group who start deliberate fires.


“And local people can do a lot to help us stop these fires by reporting them through Crimestoppers.”


“It is a concern, but it’s all about education.”


Mr Lancaster said Teesside University was doing a study “on why people think it’s acceptable to start fires.”


He added: “The results are due hopefully by the autumn and we will be interested to see what comes out of that research. But it used to be the case we had 90% deliberate starts - it was that serious a problem, but things have improved significantly.”


Mr Lancaster said much of the rise in total fires was due to the contrast between the bad weather of 2012-13 and the dry summer of last year. He said: “Comparing year on year, it’s very difficult if we have two extreme years. In the first three months of this year, for example, we’ve got back to where we were and numbers have come down significantly. And our trend lines, which are what we focus on, are down on all the major indicators we measure.


“We’ve also seen a significant reduction in fires in the home, where people are in greatest danger. The 2013-14 period was the lowest year we’ve ever had - 145 accidentally started fires in the home, which is an incredibly low number - the lowest, per head of population, of any brigade. Much of that is down to us going into people’s homes, giving life-saving advice and fitting fire alarms.”


* Call 01429 874063 to book a free Home Fire Safety Visit.



Redcar Bears can be the team that dethrones the Monarchs


Mighty Edinburgh Monarchs visit Teesside tonight with a proud unbeaten record from all their 21 matches this season.


But Redcar Bears team manager Jitendra Duffill says he wouldn’t be surprised if his men become the first to lower the Armadale club’s colours in 2014 at South Tees Motorsports Park this evening (7.30pm start).


The Ecco Finishing Bears strengthened their side this week with the signing of veteran former Australia international Mark Lemon.


And Lemon, who rode for Middlesbrough Bears in 1991 and 1992, made an instant impact with a paid nine return in Redcar’s excellent 45-45 draw at Peterborough on Tuesday.


His arrival puts Jan Graversen at reserve and suddenly the team has a balanced look about it again.


“I thought we put up a decent show at Peterborough,” said Duffill, whose side also visit Edinburgh tomorrow, “and that’s seven points we’ve taken away from home this season now which is a good return.


“Peterborough are a strong side and they demolished Berwick away last weekend so to draw there is no mean feat.


“Mark gave a great performance on his debut and it showed we’ve turned from a team that was struggling to a team that is challenging for a place in the play-offs.


“We were maybe a little fortunate to beat Peterborough at home last Thursday after they had Lasse Bjerre withdrawn because of injury.


“But we look like a proper team again now. The side has got a balanced look to it again.


“Tonight’s meeting is going to be a serious test for us - their record speaks for itself.


“All I can ask of my riders is that they give 100% and if they do that I can have no complaints, win, lose or draw.


“It’s going to be our biggest test of the season but I wouldn’t be surprised if we became the first team this season to beat them. We’ve got a great team spirit and if we can give the sort of performance we did at Peterborough and Mark keeps up that form, we’ve certainly got a chance of doing that.


“We’ve got a No 1 (Richard Lawson) who can match their No 1 (Craig Cook), we know what our top five is capable of, and now we have Jan back at reserve and he’s been riding very well.”


The Bears will also be hoping for another good performance from in-form second string Hugh Skidmore who dropped just a single point last Thursday and scored 10 at Peterborough - a match in which his side battled back from being 10 points down to snatch a draw, without needing a tactical ride.


The visitors track two former Bears in Justin Sedgmen and Steve Worrall, the latter of whom has been in flying form but now moves into the top five with Derek Sneddon going to reserve.


BEARS: Jan Graversen, Rafal Konopka, Richard Lawson, Hugh Skidmore, Mark Lemon, Aaron Summers, Carl Wilkinson.


MONARCHS: Craig Cook, Aaron Fox, Max Fricke, Sam Masters, Justin Sedgmen, Derek Sneddon, Steve Worrall.


THE main event is followed by a Northern Junior League match between Redcar Cubs and Northside Stars.


CUBS: Ben Basford, Carl Basford, Kyle Bickley, Dale Lamb.


STARS: Paul Bowen, Lloyd Ditchburn, James Hitchen, Luke McKenna.



Able UK bosses 'disappointed but not surprised' Costa Concordia won't be scrapped on Teesside



“Disappointed” Able UK bosses say Italy’s decision to dismantle the Costa Concordia wreck in its home country should give future “food for thought” for the UK Government.


As revealed by The Gazette last month, the stricken cruise liner will not be towed to Teesside after the Billingham firm lost out to a yard in Genoa.


Able UK, which had previously dismantled the former French aircraft carrier Le Clemenceau, and the US MARAD fleet, had been a front-runner for the work.


Able UK group development director Neil Etherington said he was ‘disappointed but not entirely surprised’ by the decision, amid reports that Italian authorities wanted decommissioning work to be kept within the country for environmental and economic reasons.


If the reports are true, he has claimed, then it should influence the UK Government to do the same with future disposal and dismantling of UK vessels.


He said: “We were confident that, given our long track record for dismantling offshore structures and ships for major clients and to the highest environmental standards, we were strong contenders for the contract as far as the technical requirements were concerned.


“However, given that the decision on which bidder should be awarded the contract was subject to approval by the Italian government, we were aware that there was a strong likelihood, and risk, that the preference would be for the work going to an Italian yard.


“If, as seems likely that did influence the decision, it might perhaps provide food for thought for our own Government in future decisions on the disposal and dismantling of UK vessels.


“In recent years we have seen numerous instances where naval vessels have ended up being dismantled abroad when clearly high-quality facilities exist in the UK.”


Able is recognised as one of the world’s most experienced and capable organisations in the field of decommissioning and recycling of end-of-life marine structures.


Since 1985, it has imported over 60 structures for major companies and organisations. Earlier this year it was announced that it had been awarded the contract for the disposal at Able Seaton Port of four offshore structures from the Shell operated Brent Field in the North Sea.


The Costa Concordia sank off an Italian island in 2012, killing 32 people.



E-Rickshaw first scam of Modi Govt.


NAGPUR: Union road transport minister Nitin Gadkari on Tuesday came under attack from opponents for allegedly promoting the use of e-rickshaws for the benefit of a company run by his wife’s brother.



Reacting to the disclosure of links between Purti Green Technologies Private Limited (PGTL), one of the manufacturers of e-rickshaws, where Gadkari’s brother-in-law Rajesh Totade is a director with 50% stake, Congress, AAP and CPM attacked the minister who last month boosted the use of the battery-operated three-wheelers by declaring that these would be exempt from the Motor Vehicles Act.


PGTL was formed under the Purti Group which was promoted by Gadkari though he resigned as chairman of the Group in 2011.


Even the BJP-ruled Nagpur Municipal Corporation in its budget presented on Tuesday announced for the first time that Rs 3 crore will be set aside to purchase e-rickshaws (solar or battery operated) that will then be distributed to handicapped people. At approximately Rs 1 lakh a piece, which is the cost of ‘Maxi’, 300 units can be purchased.


Gadkari a businessman first, Digvijaya says


Congress general secretary Digvijaya Singh said Gadkari is a businessman first and a politician next. “It is natural that whatever he is doing is what he should be doing,” said Singh underlining Gadkari’s links with Purti Group, an association which had sparked a controversy leading the minister’s resignation as BJP president.


AAP which is locked in a serious competition with BJP for the sympathy of burgeoning numbers operating e-rickshaws said Gadkari’s “established link” pointed to a conflict of interest and accused him of camouflaging his business concerns as public interest and demanded that he be divested of the road transport portfolio.

CPM leader Sitaram Yechury also expressed suspicions about the conduct of Gadkari.



Ray Mallon slams Ofsted for giving Middlesbrough schools a 'raw deal'


Ray Mallon has blasted schools regulator Ofsted and claimed Middlesbrough's schools have received a "raw deal" from the watchdog.


Mr Mallon told councillors he had visited all seven secondary schools in the town recently and said: “Actually I think they’re not bad. In fact I think they’re pretty good.


“I think they have got a real good future and I have got confidence in all seven secondary schools. I have got confidence in the headteachers and teaching staff.


“I will tell you who I don’t have confidence in - Ofsted.”


The mayor said that some inspectors were “very good” but others were “frankly dysfunctional” adding that some of the town’s schools had received a “raw deal” from the education watchdog.


His tirade on Ofsted followed a comment from Cllr Joan McTigue, Beechwood ward councillor, who said that if more high end houses were built in the town then those buyers would want a private school to send their children.


He disagreed with the comment saying that people generally could only afford to either live in a more expensive house or send their children to a private school and most chose the property.


The last Ofsted ratings for Middlesbrough's secondary schools are: Acklam Grange School - Requires Improvement; Macmillan Academy - Good; Ormesby School - Requires Improvement; Outwood Academy - awaiting first Ofsted inspection; The King’s Academy - Good; Trinity Catholic College - Requires Improvement; Unity City Academy - Good.


Mr Mallon was speaking last night at the first full meeting of Middlesbrough Council where filming was allowed.


He also announced plans for another 7,500 houses in the town.


The Gazette has asked Ofsted for a comment on Mr Mallon’s remarks and is awaiting a reply.



Carter Bequest Hospital staff and public find out more on proposals to close Middlesbrough hospital



Staff from a Middlesbrough hospital which could be closed under plans to shake up healthcare services for the South Tees area aired their fears for the future at a public consultation event.


Carter Bequest Hospital, off Cambridge Road in Linthorpe, currently houses 140 community hospital beds, mainly used for rehabilitation following such events as strokes.


Under proposals put forward by the NHS South Tees Clinical Commissioning Group (CCG), which is responsible for ensuring good healthcare is provided on Teesside, changes would be made to four community hospitals, including the closure of Carter Bequest.


The plans are part of a wider shake-up of health care services and aim to tackle a growing population of older patients with long-term conditions.


CCG director of commisioning Craig Blair said: “Evidence shows that people actually make a better recovery in their own home. These proposals include investing in more care within the community.”


Chairman of the CCG Dr Henry Waters added: “Having worked at Carter Bequest since 1977, I can say it has been a lovely little hospital. But care needs are changing. Forty of those beds were not used last year, which means a problem of £2m being spent on unnecessary beds.”


Services currently provided from the Linthorpe hospital would be relocated.


One of those at the event was 27-year-old Debbie Wilson, of Stokesley, along with her mum Bernadette, a health care assistant at Carter Bequest.


Debbie said: “It would be a real shame, my mum’s worked there for nearly 20 years and loves it.


“I work in a care home myself and I think people need that extra recovery time before going home.”


Bernadette added: “I think there’s a need for these hospitals. I think there’s a lot of scope for this to go wrong.


“Elderly people often feel safer in a hospital environment. Although their home is familiar, many of them aren’t going home to anyone who can look after them.”


Both Carter Bequest and the Guisborough Primary Care Hospital have been earmarked for closures in the plans due to their age and condition and “long-term viability”. Over the next five years, it would cost the NHS an estimated £2.7m in maintenance to keep these hospitals up to an acceptable standard.


Other changes proposed include to relocate the minor injury service at Guisborough Hospital and close its stroke unit, and to invest in community-based services and to develop unused space at East Cleveland Primary Care Hospital in Brotton.



Syria: Regime killed 10 children daily in June


Syrian child walking in rubbles


Some 10 children were killed every day in Syria at the hands of the regime’s forces in June, the Syrian Network for Human Rights (SNHR) said yesterday.


Of the total 1,732 civilians who were killed last month, 293 were children while 166 were women. The percentage of women and children killed by the regime’s forces reached 27 per cent of the total number of victims killed in June.


The report noted that at least 300 persons, including two children under the age of 18, were tortured to death in the regime’s prisons; an average of 10 people were tortured to death daily.


Since March 2011, the popular revolution that called for the ouster of Bashar Al-Assad’s regime has turned into an armed conflict after weapons were used to suppress it. As a result, three million Syrians sought refuge in neighbouring Jordan, Lebanon, Iraq and Turkey, and six million were displaced within Syria, according to UN statistics.


The conflict has resulted in the death of more than 160,000 Syrians, according to the Syrian Observatory for Human Rights, a human rights organisation based in Britain.



Tata's job losses in Wales won't affect Teesside


Major job losses at Tata Steel in South Wales will not affect the company’s Teesside sites, bosses have said.


Around 400 jobs are set to go at the global steel producer’s Port Talbot site - 10% of the workforce there.


The company, which employs around 1,500 staff at sites in Redcar, Hartlepool and Skinningrove, says the cuts are necessary to improve the competitiveness of its steelmaking business in South Wales.


Back in May, Indian-based Tata’s European operations recorded profits of £360m for 2013-14 ending March 31, on the back of major losses the previous year.


A Tata Steel spokesperson said: “This announcement does not concern Teesside.”


Tata says the proposed changes would enable the UK Strip Products business to compete in Europe’s “lower market demand era”.


Karl Koehler, Tata Steel’s European chief executive, said: “Steel demand and prices are likely to be under pressure for some years. Our business rates in the UK are much higher than other EU countries’ and our UK energy costs will remain uncompetitive until new mitigation measures come into effect.”


Roy Rickhuss, chair of the UK trade unions’ steel committee which is made up of the Community, Unite and GMB unions, said: “This news also demonstrates that, despite the Government’s trumpeting of economic recovery, the steel sector remains under real pressure.


“This sector, vital for so much of British manufacturing, must be an area of real focus for the UK’s industrial policy.”


Tata’s Port Talbot site supplies Hartlepool with sheet steel, which is turned into welded tube.



Stockton-based Catalytic Technologies warded major prize


A Teesside chemical innovations company has taken a top prize in the Royal Society of Chemistry’s Emerging Technologies Competition 2014.


Catalytic Technologies, based in Stockton, impressed judges to secure £10,000 in prize money and one-to-one mentoring from the competition’s multinational partners.


Director Dr Alan Cooper and technical manager Dr Richard Ward were presented with their award after impressing a panel of commercial experts with their pitch about a new titanium catalyst that improves the manufacturing process of polyethylene terephthalate (PET) plastic.


They have used their technology to make plastic bottles that are lighter than the current standard, without compromising on bottle strength.


The judges declared them the winners in the competition’s environment, materials and process chemistry category for developing a new catalyst technology “that will have economic, safety and environmental impacts across the supply chain in PET markets”.


Dr Ward said: “We really didn’t expect to win as the standard in the final was so high.


“Plastic bottles aren’t particularly sexy science either so it’s really great to see our technology getting some recognition for the potential impact it can have.


“The technology is patent-pending so we’ll be using our cash prize to hire a patent attorney to help us to the next step. We also want to do some new product development to strengthen our IP position as we move towards commercialisation and full scale product trials.”


Chief Executive of the Royal Society of Chemistry, Dr Robert Parker, added: “Innovation is essential if we are to push the boundaries of science and chemistry to deliver even more solutions to the global challenges we face.


“The cutting-edge technologies on show at the Emerging Technologies final demonstrate that the UK continues to produce some of the very best innovative talent in the world.”



A Report Card on a Radical-in-Chief — on The Glazov Gang


rc [Subscribe to The Glazov Gang and LIKE it on Facebook.]


This week’s Glazov Gang was joined by conservative entrepreneur and walking encyclopedia Monty Morton, who came on the show to provide A Report Card on a Radical-in-Chief, outlining how Obama’s domestic and foreign policy is crippling America:


Don’t miss this week’s second episode with Nick Adams, an internationally renowned Australian speaker, lecturer, author, and media commentator. He is best known for his work in the field of American exceptionalism.


He came on the show to discuss his new book, The American Boomerang: How the World’s Greatest ‘Turnaround’ Nation Will Do It Again .


Don’t miss it!


To watch previous Glazov Gang episodes, Click Here .


LIKE Jamie Glazov’s Fan Page on Facebook.



Gang of youths armed with knives steal alcohol from Bargain Booze in Ormesby


A gang of youths armed with knives stole alcohol from a Middlesbrough off licence.


Police were called to Bargain Booze on High Street, Ormesby, at 8.30pm last night following the incident involving seven youngsters.


The gang, two of whom were said to be armed with knives, entered the store and stole a quantity of alcohol.


The woman in the store said she was not threatened but that the youngsters had tapped on the shop window using the weapons.


A Cleveland Police spokeswoman said the gang ran off in the direction of Stewart Park.


The woman decided to close the store for the evening after the incident.



Google’s 3D sensing tablets coming to consumers next year


Thanks to a manufacturing partnership with LG, soon you’ll be able to measure your home, map your physical surroundings or play incredibly immersive games with nothing more than a tablet.



Google has been working for some time with universities, research labs, developers and other tech companies to develop the capabilities to map and sense the world in three dimensions via a smartphone or tablet. Dubbed Project Tango, it was officially announced in February, and the idea is that it will give devices a sense of their place in the world akin to our own and therefore open up a wealth of possibilities for new smartphone and tablet uses and features.


For example, using Google Maps on a normal smartphone will get you to the front door of an office building. But what if you needed to get to a room on a specific floor? With an understanding of the 3D environment, a Project Tango device could make sure you found the right door. Or it could just as easily remember on which level of the multi-storey car park the car is waiting.


But, just like Google Glass, its smart headset, Project Tango was thought to be at a very early stage of development. There are prototype devices available for developers who want to build apps for them, but they cost over $1000 each and in terms of design, won’t be giving Apple’s Jony Ive any sleepless nights.


So it came as a little bit of surprise when Google announced that it was working with LG and planned to offer the technology in consumer tablets early in 2015.


http://ift.tt/1og5AdZ


And although it didn’t mention specifications or pricing, Google did also confirm that it is working with the Unity and the Unreal game engine and chip-maker Qualcomm as part of the consumer development.


As well being able to give directions in three dimensions or automatically measure every aspect of every room in a house automatically — something that could cause shockwaves in the interior design community — Project Tango opens up a host of possibilities in gaming, and contextual awareness, not to mention in helping people with disabilities such as impaired vision to gain greater independence.