Sunday, August 17, 2014

Damia Abella vows to get up to speed quickly and show Boro fans his best


Boro new boy Damia Abella says fans will see the best of him once he gets right up to speed.


The Spanish full-back was thrown straight into action in the 1-0 defeat at Leeds within 24 hours of finally getting his international clearance.


And his debut came after just one week of training with Boro and a limited pre-season at old club Osasuna.


“It wasn’t easy for me because I don’t really know my teammates yet,” he explained,


“And I am not fully match fit. I started pre-season late so I haven’t played much. I have just had two 45 minutes with Osasuna.


“So I know I need to improve and get fitter and I need to to get as many minutes as I can and keep working hard, and I will improve.”


Despite the result Abella, who has a La Liga medal from his time at Barcelona and who played in the UEFA Cup with Real Betis, enjoyed his debut at hostile Elland Road.


“It was was a great experience for me, “ he said. “I enjoyed it.


“I think it was a game that deserved to be a draw. It was Leeds’ first match at home and they wanted to fight and the played hard and they had a bit of luck.


“ It was one shot that Tomas Mejias could not keep hold of or push away and their striker was fast.


“The way we play we had time on the ball but we need to create more occasions in front of goal.


“We played well but we need to create more opportunities to score.”



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, Monday 18th August, 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.



Boro's 'food' review could lead to £30,000 a year savings


Middlesbrough Football Club has signed a deal to carry out a review of its food-related procurement, in a move that could save it £30,000 a year.


The partnership, with Pelican Procurement Services, will review food-related purchasing for the club’s Riverside Stadium facilities and its Rockliffe Park training ground.


Pelican has already achieved a 10% saving on food for the club, with further work now underway.


The firm will oversee supplier tendering, product sourcing, pricing negotiations and also centralise supplier invoicing and payments.


A number of specific categories are being reviewed as part of the contract, including fruit and vegetables, food wholesale, fresh seafood, confectionery and beverages.


Mark Ellis, Chief Operating Officer for Middlesbrough Football Club, said: “As a club, we host on average 25 football games per year, which brings crowds of around 16,000 on the concourses, in addition to serving around 700 meals in the hospitality areas.


“We also host a range of conferences, banquets, weddings and other events.


“Our chefs are responsible for creating menus for the varying events, however I felt it was time to bring in a procurement specialist to help not only reduce our food costs, but decrease the time our chefs spend on purchasing and administration.”


He added: “We selected Pelican for a number of reasons: the cost savings were clear and we are aiming to save at least 12% across all our food purchases over the course of the next 12 months.


“In addition, Pelican offered the most transparency, simpler terms and from our chefs’ perspectives, they trusted Pelican to deliver the products they want, when they want.”


As part of the partnership, Middlesbrough Football Club is adopting Pelican’s Purchasing Intelligence (Pi) online portal, which is a cloud-based procurement solution that is designed to provide complete visibility, management and control over purchasing spend, budgets, stock valuation and supplier invoices.


Shabaz Mohammed, Managing Director of Pelican Procurement Services said: “We are delighted to be working with Middlesbrough Football Club to manage its food-related procurement.


“Our comprehensive service enables the Club to completely outsource its purchasing requirements to us for its main Riverside Stadium facilities and also its training ground, Rockliffe Park.


“We pride ourselves on delivering a fully transparent, highly professional service and the team looks forward to creating both financial savings and operational efficiencies for Middlesbrough Football Club.”



Israel: No Gaza deal until security needs met



Israel will not agree to any long-term ceasefire in Gaza unless its security needs are clearly met, Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu has said.


His comments came as Egyptian-brokered, indirect talks between Israel and Palestinian factions resumed in Cairo on Sunday. A five-day truce between the two sides is set to expire at midnight on Monday.


“The Israeli delegation in Cairo is acting with a very clear mandate to stand firmly on Israel’s security needs,” Netanyahu told ministers at the start of the weekly cabinet meeting in Jerusalem.


“Only if there is a clear answer to Israel’s security needs, only then will we agree to reach an understanding,” he said, as Israel’s negotiating team made its way back to Cairo for indirect talks with the Palestinians over a long-term arrangement to end more than a month of bloodshed in Gaza.


Al Jazeera’s Kimberly Halkett, reporting from West Jerusalem, said the prime minister faces deep divisions within his cabinet on whether to support plans for a long-term ceasefire


She said hardliners are opposed to any discussions of the development of a seaport in Gaza, one of the key demands of the Palestinian negotiators.


Hamas ‘commited to achieving Palestinian demands’


In Gaza, Hamas spokesman Sami Abu Zuhri said the Palestinians would not back down from their demands, central of which is a lifting of Israel’s seven-year blockade on the enclave, and that the outcome of the talks was in Israel’s hands.


“We are committed to achieving the Palestinian demands and there is no way back from this. All these demands are basic human rights that do not need this battle or these negotiations,” Abu Zuhri told the AFP news agency.


“The ball is in the Israeli occupation’s court.”


But Netanyahu warned that Hamas, which he said had suffered a major military blow, would not walk away from the Cairo talks with any political success.


“If Hamas thinks it will make up for its military losses with a political achievement, it is wrong,” he said.


“If Hamas thinks that by continuing the steady trickle of rocket fire it will force us to make concessions, it is wrong. As long as there is no quiet, Hamas will continue to suffer heavy blows.


“Hamas knows we have a lot of power but maybe it thinks we don’t have enough determination and patience, and even there it is wrong, it is making a big mistake,” he said.


At least 1,980 Palestinians have been killed in Gaza since fighting began on July 8, as well as 64 soldiers and three civilians on the Israeli side.The Gaza strip, home to 1.8 million Palestinians, has been under blockade since 2007, which has restricted the flow of goods as well as the movement of Palestinians in and out of the coastal enclave.



UK lobbied to hide role in CIA torture program



A newly-released report has revealed that British authorities have lobbied to hide the UK’s role in the US Central Intelligence Agency’s (CIA) torture and interrogation program.




The report, published by The Guardian on Saturday, said the UK ambassador to the US met members of the Senate on several occasions between 2012 and 2014, while they were investigating the CIA’s rendition program.


Under the extraordinary rendition program, American military forces and intelligence operatives would snatch “terror suspects” overseas and transport them to one of the many CIA-run interrogation and torture centers in allied countries across the globe and the US.


According to the report, which is based on released logs, the British ambassador, Peter Westmacott, met US Senators at 11 occasions, including two meetings with intelligence committee chair, Diane Feinstein, at a time when the committee was deciding how much of its report into the CIA program should be revealed to the public.


The released documents have prompted fresh concerns that the British government lobbied to censor key parts of the US Senate report referring to its Indian Ocean territory Diego Garcia, which is leased to the US as a military base.


Human rights groups believe the British territory played a key role in facilitating the CIA’s rendition program.


Clare Algar, the executive director at Reprieve, said the released documents give “more evidence of the desperate attempts being made by the UK to censor the Senate’s report on CIA torture.”


A confirmation that the British territory was involved in extraordinary rendition could leave the British government vulnerable to legal action.


Last month, the European Court of Human Rights ruled that Poland broke the European human rights convention by allowing the CIA to run a secret jail on its territory. The court ordered the Polish government to pay two suspects detained at the secret jail 100,000 euros and 130,000 euros respectively in compensation.


CAH/HJL/SS



Bill Whittle: The Struggle for Stupidity

Sci-Fi Author Jerry Pournelle recently re-published a sixth grade reader from 1914. In his latest FIREWALL, Bill Whittle explains how full comprehension of a single paragraph from that hundred-year-old elementary school textbook eludes virtually all of today’s college graduates; shows why it is such a sin, and reveals the Progressive Struggle for Stupidity in all of its undeniable venality.



AMERICAN EDUCATION AND THE STRUGGLE FOR STUPIDITY


Hi everybody. I’m Bill Whittle and this is the Firewall.


Science fiction writer Jerry Pournelle has republished, with his additional commentary, a completely forgotten – but far from forgettable – book called Literature Reader, Sixth Year, by Leroy E. Armstrong.


Literature Reader, Sixth Year, by Leroy E. Armstrong is not a novel or a scientific treatise or a book or Mr. Armstrong’s poetry. It’s a textbook – a California textbook: a collection of written tales and their analyses, the basics of literature, story structure and all the rest: that’s it and that’s all.


On a whim, I looked it up on Amazon, and on another whim, I clicked on a random link, and scanned the first paragraph I laid eyes on, which read:


Then Jason lighted the pile, and burnt the carcass of the bull; and they went to their ship and sailed eastward, like men who have a work to do. Three thousand years and more they sailed away, into the unknown Eastern seas; and great nations have come and gone since then, and many a storm has swept the earth; and many a mighty armament, to which Argo would be but one small boat; English and French, Turkish and Russian, have sailed those waters since; yet the fame of that small Argo lives forever, and her name is a proverb among men.


This is what sixth graders were reading one hundred years ago, in 1914, but if a college kid today graduated with a full and complete understanding of that one single paragraph they would be better educated than they are after a quarter-million dollars or so of student debt.


Reduced to a movie – which would be the only way to get a 6th grader to meet Jason and the Argonauts today – It would be:


EXT. WIDE SHOT – THE BEACH


Jason lights fire to the bull. After a moment, his men turn and walk to the ship. Casting off the lines, they set sail out into the harbor.


CLOSE UP – JASON


He looks out to sea, a look of determination on his face.


CUT TO…


And that would be it. But that’s just the surface of the paragraph, and that’s all 6th graders in 2016 get – the only the surface of everything. A hundred years ago, these same-aged children would have imagined – they would have seen in their minds – the great ship setting sail for the eastern sea, and then be shocked that the Greek author did not talk abut sailing for three hundred miles bur rather for three thousand years. They saw the mighty fleets of the English and French and Turks and Russians – sailing ships, battleships – come and go and only the small Argo remain on these waters of eternity. Only this small band of men, in a little boat, sailing across the ocean of history and legend human history, like men who have a work to do.


For a random paragraph from an obscure textbook, that is a profound insight. No doubt it is why Leroy E. Armstrong decided to include it in his reader.


The Progressives have had to fight against that 1895 or 1914 level of education, and it hasn’t been easy for them. It took them at least half a century to win this struggle for stupidity: elimination of standards, grading on the curve, the self-esteem movement, new math, gender studies, speech codes and all the rest – the det-ritus of the battle against educated citizens, in harness to the socialist paradise that is so obviously doomed to failure – well…obvious to people who know math, history, and economics, anyway.


And now, with Common Core, soon it will be against the law for your child to hit the jackpot, against all odds, and end up with a Leroy E. Armstrong. No, the final battle in the Struggle for Stupidity will be to make it illegal to be taught anything other than Standard State Stupid. They have succeeded in taking a generation that go to the moon with slide rules, doing the math in their head, to a generation that is amazed to discover that the movie Titanic is based on a true story.


And through it all – through the rise and fall of England and France and Turkey and Russia and now us, the United States of America – the Argo sails on alone, unread, undiscovered, waiting for a time when people begin to search for her once again.



Confronting the Muslim Brotherhood in the American Heartland — on The Glazov Gang


Tri Faith Logo [Subscribe to The Glazov Gang and LIKE it on Facebook.]


This week’s Glazov Gang was joined byDr. Mark Christian, the President and Executive Director of the Global Faith Institute. He is the son and nephew of high ranking leaders of the Muslim Brotherhood in his home country of Egypt. After his conversion from Islam to Christianity, Dr. Christian dedicated his life and work to the proposition that “the first victims of Islam are the Muslim themselves.”


Dr. Christian joined the show to discuss Confronting the Muslim Brotherhood in the American Heartland , explaining Global Faith’s battle to stop Muslim Brotherhood front groups’ malicious plans within the “Tri-Faith Initiative” in Omaha, Nebraska. He also shared his conversion from Islam to Christianity, the dangers he has faced for doing so, his views on ISIS’s Islamic inspirations, and much more:


Don’t miss this week’s second episode with Dr. Anna Geifman, the author of her most recent book, Death Orders: The Vanguard of Modern Terrorism in Revolutionary Russia. She is currently a Research Associate in the Political Science Department at the University of Bar-Ilan (Israel).


Dr. Geifman returned on the show this week (see Part I here) to continue her analysis of Hamas and Terrorists’ Child Sacrifice, explaining why Islamic terrorists — and totalitarians in general — target children. She also expanded on her Aliyah back to Israel, what terrorists do when they capture power, the similarities between Islamic Jihad and Bolshevik terror, and much, much more:


To watch previous Glazov Gang episodes, Click Here .


LIKE Jamie Glazov’s Fan Page on Facebook.



Saharanpur riots report: Committee questions role of BJP


A policeman during violent clashes between two communities over a land dispute in Saharanpur on Saturday. (Source: PTI) A policeman during violent clashes between two communities over a land dispute in Saharanpur on Saturday. (Source: PTI)


A five-member committee headed by UP minister Shivpal Yadav, which probed the communal violence in Saharanpur that left three persons dead, has blamed administrative lapses for the incident and questioned the role of BJP.


“The report has been submitted by the committee to chief minister in which a BJP MP has also been named besides laxity of administrative officers”, Samajwadi Party’s National General Secretary Naresh Agarwal said.


BJP has dismissed the report as an attempt by the Samajwadi Party to gain political mileage.


The report of the committee has blamed laxity of some officers and said the government should take stern action against them to give a message to the bureaucracy, Agarwal said.


“As role of a BJP MP has also come to the fore, we can say that the party (BJP) has a role in the Saharanpur incident”, he said.


The committee in its report, sources said, has alleged that a local BJP MP provoked the rioters which led to attempts to torch shops.


It alleged that the administration became active only after the violence broke out.



Kurds fight to retake Iraq’s largest dam


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BAGHDAD: Kurdish forces backed by US warplanes battled Saturday to retake Iraq’s largest dam from Islamic State jihadist fighters, whose latest atrocity was a massacre in a Yazidi village. Two months of violence have brought Iraq to the brink of breakup, and world powers relieved by the exit of long-time premier Nuri Al-Maliki were flying aid to the displaced and arms to the Kurds. Kurdish forces attacked the IS fighters who wrested the Mosul dam from them a week earlier, a general told AFP.

“Kurdish peshmerga, with US air support, have seized control of the eastern side of the dam” complex, Major General Abdelrahman Korini told AFP, saying several jihadists had been killed. Buoyed by the air strikes US President Barack Obama ordered last week, the peshmerga have tried to claw back the ground they lost since the start of August.

The dam on the Tigris provides electricity to much of the region and is crucial to irrigation in vast farming areas in Nineveh province.

The recapture of Mosul dam would be one of the most significant achievements in a fightback that is also getting international material support. A day after the European Union foreign ministers encouraged the bloc’s member countries to send arms to the Kurds, German Foreign Minister Frank-Walter Steinmeier visited Iraq.

Steinmeier, whose country hosts the largest Yazidi diaspora in the West, visited the autonomous region to assess the needs of the displaced and the peshmerga. Fear of an impending genocide against the Yazidi minority, whose faith is anathema to the Sunni Muslim extremists, was one reason Washington cited for air strikes it began on August 8.

Obama declared the Mount Sinjar siege over on Thursday, but vulnerable civilians remain in areas taken by the jihadists. In Kocho, senior Kurdish official Hoshyar Zebari said the jihadists “took their revenge on its inhabitants, who happened to be mostly Yazidis who did not flee their homes.”


Human rights groups and residents say IS fighters have demanded that villagers in the Sinjar area convert or leave, unleashing violent reprisals on any who refused. A senior official of one of Iraq’s main Kurdish parties said 81 people had lost their lives in the Friday attack, while a Yazidi activist said the death toll could be even higher.

The village lies near the northwestern town of Sinjar, which the jihadists stormed on August 3 sending tens of thousands of civilians, many of them Yazidi Kurds, fleeing into the mountains to the north. They hid there for days with little food or water. Mohsen Tawwal, a Yazidi fighter, said he saw a large number of bodies in Kocho on Friday.

“We made it into a part of Kocho village, where residents were under siege, but we were too late,” he told AFP by telephone.

“There were corpses everywhere. We only managed to get two people out alive. The rest had all been killed.”

The Pentagon announced that US drones had struck an IS convoy leaving the village on Friday after receiving reports that residents were under attack. The outcome of the latest US strike was not immediately clear.


Amnesty International, which has been documenting mass abductions in the Sinjar area, says IS has kidnapped thousands of Yazidis since it launched its offensive in the region on August 3. Members of the Christian, Turkmen and other minorities have also been affected by the violence.

In New York, the UN Security Council unanimously adopted a resolution aimed at weakening the jihadists, who control large areas of neighboring Syria as well as of Iraq. The resolution “calls on all member states to take national measures to suppress the flow of foreign terrorist fighters,” and threatens sanctions against anyone involved in their recruitment.

When jihadist forces began their Iraq offensive on June 9, Kurdish peshmerga forces initially fared better than retreating federal soldiers, but the US-made weaponry abandoned by government troops turned IS into an even more formidable foe. They were able to sweep through the Sunni Arab heartland north and west of Baghdad in early June, encountering little effective resistance. Many in and outside Iraq say the Shiite-led government was partly to blame by pushing sectarian policies that have marginalized and radicalized the Sunni minority.

Outgoing premier Nuri Al-Maliki was seen as an obstacle to any progress, and his announcement on Thursday that he was abandoning his efforts to cling to power was welcomed with a sigh of relief at home and abroad. In another potentially game-changing development, 25 Sunni tribes in the western province of Anbar, including some that had previously been on the fence, announced on Friday that they were launching a coordinated effort to oust IS fighters



Pakistan protesters rally for ‘peaceful revolution’


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ISLAMABAD: A fiery anti-government religious scholar led a massive rally of thousands of protesters in Pakistan’s capital who defied pouring rain to demand Prime Minister Nawaz Sharif step down over alleged fraud in last year’s election.

Tahirul Qadri also called for all four provincial assemblies and Pakistan’s national assembly to be dissolved because they were formed in “unconstitutional” manner, in a wide ranging list of demands made on Saturday.

Qadri, along with Imran Khan, have drawn thousands of demonstrators to dual protests that have disrupted life across Islamabad.

Addressing protesters he had led from Lahore, Imran Khan said he would stage a sit-in that would continue until Sharif leaves office.

But the fiery rhetoric by the opposition figures was not matched by manpower: Of the million promised in Islamabad by Khan and Qadri, just thousands remained in the capital by Saturday evening.

Khan himself spent a portion of the day at his residence in the suburbs of the capital, explaining he had to rest after the long journey while commanding his supporters to stay firmly put on Islamabad’s streets.

Qadri earlier told his supporters to continue protesting until they bring about a “peaceful revolution.”



The horrors of violence by Muslim against Muslim



The Middle East is today caught up in the vortex of the worst violence to visit the region in years. Were Huntington to land in the Middle East today, he would be inclined to revise his “clash of civilisations”.


The absurdity of viewing the violence gripping the Middle East through a “civilisational prism” is obvious to all. The violence begotten from the current disharmony, intolerance, archaic forms of rule – with a contemptible interpretation of sacred texts by many learned scholars – spells a state of discord “fitna” in the body politic of the global Muslim community.


The “clash” is within – not outside – the abode of Islam itself.


The killing fields spanning this region of Muslim-majority societies do not bode well for the viability of states or the durability of communities with the potential to sustain age-old norms of peaceful intermixing of identities, sects and plurality in general.


Have leaders and citizens alike become so desensitised to the spread of violence and death that nothing is being done to stem the tide of rising bloodshed in Muslim lands? With very few qualified exceptions, have Muslim states and fragmented circles of self-appointed “learned scholars” thrown in the towel, by aiding violence instead of stopping it?


What clash?


Huntington is right. The power vacuum left by the retreat of the former superpowers accounts for dispersed violence all over the world. Maybe the bipolar global system of the Cold War contributed to keeping a lid on the explosion of conflict spawned by supposedly “clashing” religions and cultures.


But no evidence of that is at hand. Not even the events of 9/11 fulfilled Huntington’s far-fetched prophecy. Non-state actors dot the global geography of violence, more so than his scenario of warring states bordering civilisational fault-lines.


The mixed lineage and cultural background of the 44th US president is one example that renders Huntington’s concept of monolithic civilisations futile and largely unfeasible.


And instead of disharmony caused by irreconcilable religions and cultures, many African, Confucian, Japanese, Hindu, Latin-American, Muslim, and Slavic-Orthodox identities – Huntington’s seven civilisational “boxes” – stand united via mercantile interests and as stakeholders in the global market. Capitalism is their quasi-religion, with their cultural etiquettes and norms concurring at more than one level, across boundaries of theistic religion, history, and geography.


The Chinese are happily plugged into the global economy and will soon lead it. They squabble with the Americans or the Japanese over shares and profits – not religious precepts and edicts. The Muslim capitalists are no exception – they buy and sell instead of worrying about paradise and hell in the global market. Muslim and Western religious wars have thus far turned out to be, fortunately, no more than a figment in a cultural purist’s sophisticated imagination.


Muslims’ biggest worry right now is the ease with which violence explodes uncontrollably, and how Islam’s ideal of the sanctity of life that once commanded awe and loyalty among believers is today taken for granted and is in jeopardy.


Today, in Islam the most worrisome “clash” is within.


The new iconography of violence


The Muslim world is drenched in the blood of its children, and the horrors of violence by Muslim against Muslim. Spiralling violence from Morocco in the west of North Africa to Pakistan in South Asia signals further doom and gloom.


The spectre of violence, cruelty, brutality, sectarian strife, misogyny and uncertainty haunts many Muslim states and societies. They are daily news, and almost ubiquitous practice. Worse still, they are committed in the name of Islam, by Muslims against their co-religionists.


The silent majority may smoulder in indignation. Their distaste for the violence, extremism and obscurantism taking over their lives is invisible. What the world sees are the iconic images of burnt planes belching out fumes portending darkness in Libya; the agonising parents of girls abducted by Boko Haram in North-East Nigeria; Syrian and Iraqi children’s faces of despair and fear in displacement camps; Syrian children maimed by the unabated violence; the aftermath of car bomb explosions in Iraq, Lebanon and Syria; Muslim women and children scrambling for food; the rubble of the Mosul mosque that housed the tomb of the Prophet Jonah, destroyed by the Islamic State group in late July.


The artificial Sunni-Shia divide is now claiming not only tens of thousands of fatalities, but has sunken to the nadir of Muslim-Muslim discord. The result is a failure to understand the difference between intellectual polemy and war and catastrophe.


The franchising of violence is now consuming the Muslim world. Al-Qaeda has now been cloned in North Africa and the Salafi-Jihadist Islamic State group mimics Al-Qaeda’s hatred of Shias and its ruthlessness in using violence against Muslim and non-Muslim alike. There is no exact count of the Muslim deaths and injured they have caused. Most probably, the toll is in the hundreds of thousands. And for what? When the madness will ever stop? Perhaps when the so-called “jihadists” take over Mecca?


These are groups whose nihilistic horizon is so broad that learned scholars have endorsed the dark days of “sexual jihad” “jihad al-nikah”, the victims of which have galvanised at least one Muslim country – Tunisia – to raise the alarm after the discovery that a number of its citizens had ended up in Syria to be used as “comfort women” – not unlike sex slaves of World War II.


The Muslim hero-saviour “al-batal al-munqidh” is a brand of masculine violence that sows death, and creates the spiral of violence that breeds more violence. It ignores the fact that in Islam the “ink of scholars” matters more than the “blood of martyrs”.


‘Manipulating jihad’


Violence is not specific to Muslims. What is specific to Islam – theoretically at least – is the ban on Muslim-Muslim bloodletting. It is at once a stereotype and an ongoing practice. It unfortunately defines the Muslim as “jihadist”, and erases the iconography of the Muslim genius that once contributed to science, philosophy, astronomy, medicine, geography, mathematics and more.


Abuse of “jihad”, “sexual jihad”, and “takfeer” are all old shibboleths, manipulated for political and ideological ends, and have nothing to do with Islam. For nothing in Islam sanctions illegal killing of any kind, and especially not the killing of Muslim by Muslim.


Noxious systems across the vast Muslim geography have allowed the excessive “politicisation” of Islam to the point of the total fragmentation of religious authority. The price is paid by both states and societies, and humanity at large. Many elaborate regime apparatuses of oppression – from Syria, Iraq, Yemen and Pakistan to Saudi Arabia – turn a blind eye to scholars’ edicts for jihad of Sunni against Shia, and vice versa, of Sunni against Alawites; of Sunnis against Ahmadis, etc. It is a recipe for long wars of “all against all”.


Violence is today tectonic in the Muslim world – earth-shattering and life-changing. Muslims today suffer from insecurity, fear, violence, uncertainty, confusion and loss.


The answer does not lie with the US invading Syria or re-invading Iraq, or NATO putting boots on the ground in Libya, Afghanistan or Yemen


For More:


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Russia raises hopes in Crimea



Like many taxi drivers, Anatoly likes to talk. He explains the situation as he guns his car round the twisting, pine-scented roads of Yalta. Like his rusting car, Crimea may have seen better days.


‘There are a million fewer tourists this year’ he tells us, ‘and food prices are soaring.’ This will hit Yalta hard.


It is ultimately a tourist town.


This year the Ukrainians aren’t coming because they feel it’s been stolen from them. And despite encouragement by the Russian government, there aren’t yet enough rich Muscovites here to make up the numbers.


Anatoly is trying to look on the bright side, though. He’s a pensioner making some extra cash, and since Crimea returned to Mother Russia’s bosom early this year, his pension has doubled.


This region was always a draw on the Ukrainian budget, rather than a contributor. And Russia is digging deep into its pockets to stop the patriotic buzz of annexing Crimea from crashing hard.


That’s why pretty much the entire Russian State Duma is here this week.


The glitzy hotel complex of Mriya seems a long way from the ramshackle streets, and souvenir stalls of Yalta. But it’s only a 20km drive into the mountains.


The nearly finished ‘pansionat’ is being built by Russia’s state bank, Sberbank. And it’s the setting for an unusual political event.


Russia’s parliamentarians would normally still be on their summer holidays at the moment. Some would probably have been in European beach resorts or cities.


But this year there’s been a three-line whip not to travel abroad. And anyway, they’ve just been hauled down to Yalta for some grand show-and-tell.


United Russia deputy Valery Trapeznikov tells us, ‘A vacation is a vacation. But here we are needed to show they are not alone. We are together.’


Under the multi-coloured spotlights of the hotel’s conference hall, this feels more like a charity gala than a parliamentary meeting. Maybe it is.


Putin is pledging big money -$19 billion for job creation and infrastructure improvements. He’s promising that Crimea’s telecommunications problems will be fixed, and energy supplies will be boosted.


He reaffirms recognition of Crimea’s three main languages: Russian, Ukrainian, and Crimean Tatar.


And he reminds people of the bloodshed taking place to the north – what he calls the ‘humanitarian catastrophe’ of the war being fought in eastern Ukraine.


The message of this event is clear. Have patience. You’re better off with us. And at least you’re not being killed in your own homes



Russell Brand calls for Israel boycott


Russell Brand has gone one step further in his condemnation of the Israel-Gaza conflict than simply critiquing the way various media outlets have approached coverage.



Now, the comedian is urging banks, pension funds and other big businesses to sever investment ties with Israel, or any deals that he feels “facilitate the oppression of people in Gaza”.


Using Barclays as an example, he said the bank manages “the portfolios of an Israeli defence company called Elbit, which makes the drones that bomb Gaza.”


“The message they give us is the exact opposite of the reality, they’re acting like they’re part of our community,” he said during his new episode of The Trews, which you can watch below.


“But if we’re aware of the reality of what they do, then we have the power to influence them.”


He went on to encourage his viewers to sign a petition on the Avaaz campaign website, to put pressure on companies such as Barclays, computer company HP, security giants G4S, pension fund ABP and heavy machinery Caterpillar brand to rethink their investments


“In the wake of the terrible violence unfolding in Israel-Palestine, we, citizens from around the world, are deeply concerned about your companies’ continued investment in companies and projects that finance illegal settlements and the oppressive occupation of the Palestinian people,” the mission statement on the petition reads.


“17 EU countries recently issued warnings to their citizens against doing business or investing in illegal Israeli settlements. Given those legal considerations, you now have the opportunity to withdraw investments and respect international law. This is a chance to be on the right side of history.”


Some of the firms listed in the petition had previously spoken of their decision to maintain financial ties in Israel.


HP claimed that “respecting human rights is a core value” of their business and said that they used Israeli checkpoints to allow people to “get to their place of work or to carry out their business in a faster and safer way”


Meanwhile, Caterpillar said that while it “shares the world’s concern over unrest in the Middle East”, it doesn’t believe it has “neither the legal right nor the means to police individual use of its equipment”.


Brand’s comments come after the business secretary Vince Cable threatened to halt 12 export licences to Israel if the violence in Gaza resumes, including components for combat aircraft, tanks and radar systems.


The government have, however, exported £42million of military equipment to Israel since 2010



Coulby Newham mum jumps into the sea at Whitby to help save drowning boy


A Teesside mum risked her life to save a young boy who was drowning in the sea at Whitby.


Gemma Grieveson was enjoying a family day out in the seaside town when someone on the beach said a seven-year-old boy was struggling in the water.


Ms Grieveson, from Coulby Newham, and another member of the public, believed to be from Darlington, leapt into the water, fully clothed, to try and save the boy.


The pair managed to bring him back to shore after a life-ring was thrown to them from the pier.


The boy was given CPR at the scene before being airlifted to hospital buy air ambulance.


Ms Grieveson, 29, said: “It was just mother’s instinct that made me go in the water. I didn’t even think about it.


“If it was my child, I would hope someone would do the same.”


The incident happened on Saturday at about 3pm. Ms Grieveson was on the beach with her partner Lee Jones, step-son Joshua, 10, and one-year-old son Louie.


She said: “A little girl had gone over to a woman, who I think was her aunty, and was saying that a boy had gone and she couldn’t help him.


“I think he had been playing on some rocks and had fallen in.


“Myself and another woman ran to the sea and we started swimming towards where he was.


“The current was really bad and it was throwing me about. At one point, I thought we were all not going to make it. The other woman got to the boy first, then someone from the pier threw in a life-ring. I got that and managed to get it to the boy and the other woman.”


Ms Grieveson’s partner Lee and two other men helped pull the life-ring back to the pier and the boy was brought to shore.


Ms Grieveson said: “When he was on the shore, the boy was being sick quite a lot. It was so frightening. We were just so relieved and grateful that he was alive.


“I do think that if there hadn’t have been two of us that went in, we wouldn’t have been able to get him back.”


It is believed the young boy had been with his aunty and grandmother.


Ms Grieveson said: “His grandmother was very upset and panicky.


“I have had a call from a police officer who said the boy was kept in hospital on Saturday night and was maybe staying in another night.


“I was so pleased to hear that he is OK and I hope he gets well soon.”


Lifeguard Christie Milner said: “Thanks to the quick actions of the lifeguards and members of the public, the casualty was quickly pulled from the water.


“It is very unusual for anyone who isn’t breathing to start breathing again on their own after just one rescue breath, but it’s a fantastic result. We all wish him a speedy recovery.”


Do you know the young boy who was rescued? Call Sophie Barley on 01642 234217.



Israeli forces shoot 2 Palestinians inside Silwad home


RAMALLAH (Ma’an) — Israeli soldiers on Friday shot and injured two young Palestinian men inside their home in the village of Silwad east of Ramallah, locals told Ma’an.



Witnesses said that one of the two was struck several times in the foot, while the other was hit by shrapnel from the gunshots.


The victims were identified only as members of the al-Nahl family, whose house was stormed by Israeli soldiers during the course of a military raid on the village.


The incident took place following fierce clashes in the village between local young men and Israeli soldiers who had stormed the village.


Locals threw stones and empty bottles at the Israeli forces, while the soldiers fired tear gas, rubber-coated bullets, and live bullets at the protesters.


As clashes took place in the streets and alleyways of the village, numerous bystanders and locals inside their homes including elderly people and children were hurt by the tear gas, which locals say Israeli soldiers used excessively and indiscriminately.


An Israeli military spokeswoman said forces were “called to the scene” after a few Palestinians threw rocks at an Israeli military post in the area.


There was then a “violent riot” in which 200 Palestinians “attacked Israeli forces on site” with rocks.


One Palestinian attempted to attack an Israeli soldier with a concrete block and Israeli forces “opened fire at his local extremities,” injuring him, the spokeswoman said.


The injured man was transferred to Palestinian medics for treatment.


Another Palestinian was arrested during the clashes, the spokeswoman said.



Egypt’s anti-coup alliance rejects calls for ‘armed resistance’


Rabaa badge


The Anti-Coup National Alliance reaffirmed that it will not resort to violence in resisting the coup, a statement said Friday.


Following recent announcements by a number of youth groups that armed struggle has become the only viable way of resisting the coup, the pro-Morsi alliance disavowed these calls, stressing that it rejects “any calls for violence or justification of violent acts.”


The statement also hailed the “persistence of the revolutionaries who fill the streets of Egypt despite the terrorism and bloody betrayal of the coup,” and called for the continuation of protests “until the downfall of the coup and the restoration of rights.”



Police probe after bottle allegedly thrown at bus full of Boro fans as it arrived at Elland Road


Police are investigating after a bottle was allegedly thrown at a bus full of Boro fans, smashing a window.


The incident happened as the bus carrying Boro supporters was arriving at Elland Road on Saturday for the away clash against Leeds United.


The coach, carrying members of the Twe12th Man fan group, was allegedly targeted as it was stuck in traffic getting into the ground.


The outer pane of the bus was smashed, although luckily no-one was injured.


A spokesman for West Yorkshire Police confirmed the force would be investigating reports of damage to a coach close to Elland Road on Saturday.


He said: “There was a coach with a broken window. How it happened, I cannot comment because I do not know. We will be looking into it.”


John Donovan, a supporter with the Twe12th Man, said: “We had two coaches travelling to the game. I was on the other bus.


“It happened on the M621 approaching the turn off to Elland Road. The traffic was really slow.


“There was quite a few things being thrown at the buses. Then obviously something smashed a window.


“It damaged the outside of the window pane, although thankfully no-one was injured.


“We had stuff thrown at our bus too, but there was no damage caused.


“When I got off the bus, I informed a police officer about what had happened and he said he was already aware of the incident.”


Jess Dalton was on the bus when the alleged incident happened. She said: “Luckily it only hit one side of the window, it was double-pane so inside was fine, but if it had gone through, people would have been seriously hurt.”


Mr Donovan, who travels to all away games, said this was the first time he had known of this happening.


He said: “You obviously do sometimes get a bit of trouble, but never on this scale. There wasn’t any other trouble on Saturday after that. It’s a shame that it happened.”


Ms Walton said she could not be certain those who threw the bottles were Leeds United fans, but she said it was clear their bus was carrying Middlesbrough fans.


She said: “Our bus said Jack’s Coaches of Middlesbrough very clearly on the side.”



Blaze that left Stockton flat badly damaged being treated as 'suspicious'


Firefighters say they are treating as “suspicious” a blaze which left a Stockton flat badly damaged.


Crews from Stockton Fire Station were conducting arson awareness patrols on Norton Road, Stockton, on Saturday when they discovered flames coming from a first floor flat, above the Lifestyle Express convenience store.


The fire, which was discovered at around 9.30pm on Saturday, is believed to have been started suspiciously.


Fire crews returned to the scene yesterday afternoon to carry out more investigations.


Watch manager Stuart Simpson said: “Luckily we were in the area at the time when we noticed smoke coming from the gaps of the bay windows above the a shop.


“We moved quickly to get inside the property, and called for back-up.


“The door of the property was unlocked and was unoccupied at the time. The fire was contained to a bedroom.”


Two appliances from Stockton and one from Thornaby were sent to the scene to tackle the flames. They used two hose reel jets, four breathing kits, a ventilator and a thermal image camera once inside.


It took almost two hours for crews to ensure the property was completely safe.


A mattress on the floor of the bedroom was destroyed in the fire, as well as the carpet and floor boards. The rest of the property was heavily smoke damaged.


Mr Simpson added: “We can’t be sure exactly how the fire started, but as the door to the property was open, we are treating it as suspicious.


“We are currently working alongside police to determine the cause of the fire.”



Homeless Palestinians shelter on grounds of Gaza hospital



GAZA CITY (Ma’an) — Dozens of families who fled their homes during the Israeli offensive on Gaza took refuge in al-Shifa hospital in Gaza City, and many Palestinians whose houses were destroyed have continued to shelter there as the situation has calmed.


For some, al-Shifa seemed like the safest place to stay while the bombs fell. Um Yazen and eight members of her family fled the Shujaiyya neighborhood of Gaza City amid Israeli onslaught and are still sleeping on the hospital’s grounds.


“We could not find a nearby house to flee to. Random shelling was everywhere and we did not expect to stay alive,” Um Yazen told Ma’an.


“There is no life in my house that was bombed — we do not have power or water,” she said.


Entire blocks were flattened in Shujaiyya as Israeli forces bombed and shelled the neighborhood on July 20, in an attack that has been dubbed the “Shujaiyya massacre.” At least 70 Palestinians were killed in the area in a single night.


“Life is dead in Shujaiyya. We do not have a house anymore and all the houses around us collapsed and were destroyed.”


Another woman from the Shujaiyya neighborhood, Um Rabah, is in a similar situation with 20 members of her family.


“We received calls and texts telling us to evacuate the house … but we could not find any safe place in Shujaiyya,” Um Rabah said.


Amid the calm, she and her family have set up a tent in front of their now destroyed house in the neighborhood, where they wait until sunset before heading back to al-Shifa hospital to sleep.


“Where are we going to go in winter? Where are we going to live?” Um Rabah said.Some of the Palestinians on the grounds of al-Shifa said there was no room for them at the UN schools that housed many of the hundreds of thousands of displaced people during the assault.


According to the UN Office for the Coordination for Humanitarian Affairs, some 365,000 Palestinians in Gaza are currently homeless and are living at UN schools, with host families, or in other shelters.


The homes of some 100,000 Palestinians have been destroyed or severely damaged by the Israeli assault, an Aug. 15 OCHA report said.


Israel’s five-week offensive on the Gaza Strip has left over 1,980 Palestinians dead and nearly 10,000 injured. The vast majority of the victims have been civilians



34 killed in fresh Central African Republic attacks



A local official says at least 34 people have been killed after members of the Seleka movement carried out a series of attacks on remote villages in the violence-plagued Central African Republic (CAR).




Bienvenu Sarapata, mayor of the Mbres commune north of the capital, Bangui, said on Saturday that the attacks were committed over the last week.


Witnesses in Mbres say Seleka fighters have threatened to storm other villages in the coming weeks before the UN peacekeepers arrive on the ground in mid-September.


The CAR descended into chaos last December, when Christian armed groups launched coordinated attacks against the Seleka group that toppled the government in March 2013.


On December 5, France invaded its former colony after the United Nations Security Council adopted a resolution giving the African Union and France the go-ahead to send troops to the country.


In March 2014, UN Undersecretary General for Humanitarian Affairs and Emergency Relief Coordinator Valerie Amos said almost all of more than 100,000 Muslims once residing in the capital, Bangui, had fled the violence perpetrated by the armed Christians.


The new prime minister of the CAR, Mahamat Kamoun, has vowed to reconcile the factions that are in conflict along ethnic and religious lines in the country.


On August 11, Kamoun said his top priorities were to form an “inclusive” government, restore security, and deal with the African country’s humanitarian crisis.


“You have questions of…humanitarian challenges that need to be addressed,” Kamoun said during his first press conference.


MP/AB/SS



Eston Residents' Association nominated for Community Champion award


Click here to nominate unsung local heroes, parents, children, community groups and businesses in our 2014 Community Champions awards


Without the dedicated work of a band of proud volunteers, Eston wouldn’t be half the place it is to live.


That’s the view of Dave Fisher, chairman of Eston Business Association, who believes the work of Eston Residents’ Association makes the town a better and brighter place.


As part of the Eston in Bloom project, the group - formed 18 years ago - has spent the last nine years planting flowers, weeding, tidying and adding a touch of colour to Eston square and surrounding streets.


Their work has also attracted national attention by winning a host of awards including three Duke of York awards - and most recently the silver gilt and the Heritage Award in Britain in Bloom, as well as gold and overall winner of the Urban Community Category for Northumbria in Bloom, in 2013.


Dave Fisher, who runs Katie’s Cardz in Eston, said: “They do such incredible work. They brighten the place up, they never stop and it brings people into Eston. They are proud of the area, and their work makes other people proud of the area.


“The flower displays are beautiful, but it isn’t just that. They came round before Britain in Bloom and were sweeping the streets, taking the grass and weeds up from between pavements. If they didn’t do it, then nobody else would.


“A community spirit is vital and they have that in abundance.”


Mr Fisher is nominating the Eston Residents’ Association for The Gazette’s Community Champion Green Champion Award, sponsored by the Banks Group.


The award recognises groups, projects, businesses or individuals who have shown outstanding initiative and determination in active environmental work.


Ann Higgins, who chairs the Eston Residents’ Association, said: “I am completely shocked, but very pleased that we have been recognised.


“We try our best for Eston - what we do is to try the area in its best light. We are proud of our area and visitors can see that.”


The group works with local schools, raise their own funds and the ten committee members do it all from their own homes - as they have no office or community centre.


They hosted an Eston heritage exhibition at the Heritage Gallery at the Cargo Fleet Offices, and even find time to put 20 Christmas trees around Eston every year.


But it hasn’t all been plain sailing - they have long suffered from their displays being targeted by vandals.


“We have had 12 incidents of vandalism since June this year, but we are determined not to be beaten, and to show Eston in the best light,” added Ann.



Armed robber threatened Lingdale village shop staff with knife before stealing cash


Police are hunting an armed robber who threatened staff at a village shop with a knife before stealing cash.


The robbery happened at a shop in the high street in Lingdale, near Saltburn, at 6.15am yesterday.


The man walked into the shop and threatened the staff with a knife.


A spokeswoman for Cleveland Police said he made off with a quantity of cash and cigarettes.


No one was injured in the incident.


The man is described as wearing a dark hooded jacket, dark tracksuit bottoms and dark trainers.


Anyone who may have seen the man prior to or just after the robbery, or who has information is asked to contact Detective Constable Mark Casey at Redcar Integrated Neighbourhood Team on the non-emergency number 101.


Alternatively the independent charity Crimestoppers can be contacted on 0800 555 111.



Kimberly Wyatt expecting a baby girl - and she'll raiser her in the UK


Got To Dance judge and former Pussycat Doll Kimberley Wyatt is to have her first child and plans to bring her up in the UK.


The US star, 32, discovered she was pregnant while on honeymoon in New York with husband Max Rogers, who is the same age, in April. Their baby, a girl, is due in December.


Revealing her pregnancy in Hello! magazine, she said: "I love the life Max and I have built here. England is home for me now.


"And there is nothing cuter than having a baby growing up with a British accent," added Wyatt, who is back on screens in the new series of Sky1's Got To Dance.


One of the first people to guess she was expecting was best friend and former bandmate Ashley Roberts.


"Ashley knew straight away. We are like sisters. Ashley knows everything about me, so she only looked at me and guessed right away, " said Wyatt.


"When I told her, it was so emotional - she was thrilled for us, which was lovely."


She said she had managed to keep her bump largely under wraps, and even did a naked photoshoot for a fitness campaign, without arousing too much suspicion, but added: "I feel like in the last day or two I have literally gone 'pop'."


Male model Rogers also told of his delight: "We went for the second scan, at 20 weeks, and they said, 'You're going to have a daughter'.


"And then when I felt her kick, it really connected with me - I'm just delighted."



Billingham divers hope your Wish Sport tokens will help more people to discover the underwater world


Divers are hoping that this year’s Wish Sport campaign will help more people to discover the underwater world.


Established more than 20 years ago, Atlantis 449 is a scuba-diving club, based at Billingham Forum, which welcomes all ages and abilities.


The club currently has around 25 members aged between 12 and 60.


The club’s training programme is tried and tested over many years and is internationally recognised by the Sub Aqua Association and CMAS, the World Underwater Federation.


The divers meet every Friday night to train in both a pool environment and out in open water.


They are also given a one hour lecture prior to each training session which teaches different aspects of diving before they go into the pool to learn the skills.


Having entered the Gazette’s Wish Sport campaign last year, the diving club used the cash they received to buy some new equipment.


John Bennett of the club said: “Any money we get from the Wish Sport campaign this year will be put towards buying new equipment for younger and smaller people who are wanting to learn to scuba-dive.”


The Gazette has teamed up with Middlesbrough and Teesside Philanthropic Foundation, which is providing £30,000 to share between not-for-profit groups across Teesside.


Tokens are printed in the Gazette every day for groups to collect. The more collected, the greater the share of the prize pot.


This year the tokens collected will be worth a share of £25,000, with the remaining £5,000 up for grabs during two online bonus days.


All groups will be in with a chance during the bonus days to win a share of the additional money pot – the four that receive the most votes on http://ift.tt/1md60Qe will get the cash.


One of the charity’s founding trustees, Tanya Garland, managing director of communications agency Cool Blue, one of the foundation’s first-ever patrons, said: “This charity has done some amazing things and made a real difference across Teesside but this project stands out as one of our best in many ways, not least because we are helping local sports clubs to shape their own financial destiny and continue the amazing work that they do.


“As a proud Teesside business, we’re delighted to support the foundation and the Wish Sport project.”


To help Atlantis 449, send your tokens to 41 Wollaton Road, Billingham, Cleveland, TS23 3BD.


Today’s tokens are on Page 32.



"Unlucky" rescue pet names revealed


The names Buster, Coco and Max have long been favourites when it comes to christening pets.


But a charity reckons the popular monikers also make them among the most unlucky names when it comes to avoiding being rehomed.


Battersea Dogs and Cats Home says the likes of Charlie, Princess and Tigger could also find themselves more likely to wind up at an animal centre.


The most common names of dogs and cats being brought into the animal charity's three centres by their owners over the last 12 months include Max, Charlie and Buster for dogs, while Coco, Tigger and Princess lead the way for cats.


In between July 2013 and July 2014, the most common dog breed arriving at Battersea was the Staffordshire Bull Terrier, and the average age of animals arriving was one year and one month old for cats and nine months for dogs.


Carly Whyborn, Battersea's head of operations, said: "Out of the 9,000 animals Battersea takes in every year, there are certain names which seem to be more unlucky for pets.


"The top five names in each category are lovely but seem to be more common in our three centres in London, Brands Hatch and Old Windsor. Battersea cares for all these homeless dogs and cats, regardless of their name, and hopes animal lovers will give a second chance to all the unwanted Busters, Charlies and Cocos out there."


Nine-year-old Coco is one example of a cat whose owner could no longer care for her and was brought to Battersea in London with her brother Romeo. The black and white duo can live with children over 13 years old and will need to be rehomed to a house with a garden.


For more information on rehoming a cat or a dog from Battersea, call 0843 509 4444 or visit www.battersea.org.uk.



Chadian forces rescue 85 Nigerians kidnapped by Boko Haram


A screen grab taken on July 13, 2014 from a video released by the Nigerian Takfiri terrorist group Boko Haram shows its leader Abubakar Shekau (C).



Chadian troops have rescued some 85 Nigerians who had been abducted last week by Takfiri Boko Haram militants in northeast Nigeria.



On August 10, Boko Haram militants stormed the village of Doron Baga on the shores of Lake Chad and kidnapped some 100 young men and several women. At least 28 people were killed and several houses were burnt in the raid, according to residents.


On Saturday, a senior security official in Nigeria’s Borno State said Chadian forces intercepted a convoy of buses “carrying 85 Nigerians believed to have been kidnapped by Boko Haram terrorists from Baga.”


“The convoy being led by six Boko Haram gunmen was stopped on the Chadian part of the border along Lake Chad for routine checks and the huge number of people in the convoy raised suspicion,” he said.


An official of the National Human Rights Commission (NHRC) in Maiduguri, the capital of Borno, said 65 men and 22 women were subsequently rescued while some 30 others are still being held by the militants.


Boko Haram has also claimed responsibility for a number of deadly gun and bomb attacks in various parts of Nigeria since 2009. It has repeatedly targeted civilians, killing more than 2,000 people since January.


SAB/HJL



HRW researcher: Mass killing continues in Egypt


Human Rights Watch logo


A researcher at Human Rights Watch, Omar Shaker, has confirmed that the facts documented in the latest HRW report on the Rabaa massacre are unquestionable, and that the killing of protesters is still ongoing.


In an interview with Aljazeera, Shaker, who contributed to the report, said that the Egyptian judiciary has not done justice to the martyrs and wounded.


He added that accountability for the killings will be an uphill battle, but that officials should be aware that they will not escape prosecution.


“The problem is that we live in a world without complete justice. But everyone should agree that flagrant violations of human rights should be addressed, and those responsible should be held accountable,” he said.


He added that what happened in Rabaa and Nahda was “a planned violent dispersal” by authorities, and that there was no justification for police to open fire on unarmed protesters the way they did on 14 August.



Fringe success Pete Firman is out to bring a touch of magic back home to North East


Pete Firman isn’t giving anything away. The Middlesbrough-born talent, who has made a name for himself melding comedy with magic in the kind of mind-boggling act that is proving a runaway success at the Edinburgh Fringe, is the kind of showman that likes to surprise us.


And, as his regular slot on the festival circuit proves, he manages that every time.


We might not know what to expect at a Firman night, but we know we won’t be disappointed.


He likes to keep himself on his toes too, he explains, which is why he loves the uncertainty of a live show.


“This is my eighth consecutive Edinburgh Festival,” he says of new show Trickster, which he’ll be taking on a national tour this autumn, stopping off in his home region on October 7.


“I’m not going to say exactly what it’s about because it’s full of surprises. You’ve got to try keeping the momentum going.


“In the past, I’ve done magic tricks with mind-reading, so I thought ‘how can I ring the changes and do that in a slightly different way?’, and I can tell you that in my new show I get two people out of the audience and one reads the other’s mind. It’s a good moment in the show!”


The 34-year-old tells how his interest in magic started out when his mam bought him a magic book as a child, and his unique mix of sleight-of-hand skills and sharp humour has gone on to make him a star, with memorable performances across the UK and abroad and a huge range of TV appearances from primetime BBC hit The Magicians, to guest slots on the likes of The One Show, BBC Breakfast and The Sarah Millican Television Programme, saying of his fellow North East comedian: “I love Sarah”.


He’s written a book too – Tricks to Freak Out Your Friends, which includes such tips as how to take a bite out of a glass and swallow a knife.


Again, he’s not giving anything away, but Trickster does have a stand-out moment.


“You know Russian Roulette?” he asks. “I call this Middlesbrough Roulette – it doesn’t use guns, but people do watch through their fingers.”


He’s looking forward to bringing his show to the Stockton Arc on October 7.


“It sounds a cliché, but it’s nice to come home,” says the now London-based performer; not least because his friends and family will be among the audience, although those who know him best are probably the hardest to catch out.


“If my dad asks ‘how do you do that?’, I know I’ve got a good trick on my hands!”



Almost 200 under-18s are hospitalised with alcohol poisoning across the North East


Hospitals in the North East are admitting thousands of patients with alcohol poisoning each year - including almost 200 aged under 18 or under.


The pressure placed on hospitals by excessive drinking was revealed by Health Ministers in Parliament.


County Durham and Darlington NHS Foundation Trust, which runs the Darlington Memorial Hospital and University Hospital of North Durham, treated 1,101 adults diagnosed with alcohol poisoning last year.


South Tees Hospitals NHS Foundation Trust, which runs the The James Cook University Hospital in Middlesbrough and the Friarage Hospital in Northallerton, treated 1,155 adults diagnosed with alcohol poisoning.


And hospitals in the region treated 198 people under the age of 18 who were diagnosed with alcohol poisoning, including 145 aged 16 or younger.


The figures only include people diagnosed with alcohol poisoning either as the main medical problem or as a secondary condition. Other cases are not included even if alcohol played a role, such as people who suffered an injury after drinking.


The Department for Health said it was fighting against alcohol abuse with a schools programme to discourage young people from drinking.


But Ministers have rejected calls for a legal minimum price for alcohol, which campaigners say would discourage binge drinking and under-age drinking.


The Government announced plans for a minimum price for alcohol in 2012.


An consultation paper published by the Home Office recommended a price of 45p per unit, which would mean around 76p for a 440ml can of ordinary strength lager, and said this could cut alcohol-related hospital admissions by 24,600 - and save 714 lives each year.


But in 2013the Government scrapped the policy. Instead, it introduced a ban on the sale of alcohol below cost price, defined as the level of alcohol duty plus VAT, which means a can of average strength lager cannot be sold for less than 40p.


According to NHS guidance, alcohol poisoning occurs when someone drinks a “toxic” amount. Symptoms include confusion, vomiting, seizures, and hypothermia. In extreme cases it can lead to unconsciousness, coma and death.


Think tank Demos has urged the government to introduce tougher punishments for parents, siblings and friends who buy alcohol for children.


Police should do more to enforce on-the-spot fines and prosecute adults and those caught buying booze for children should be “named and shamed” on posters by shop counters. Police already have the power to issue on-the-spot fines of £90.


Figures for hospital admissions due to alcohol poisoning were published by Health Minister Jane Ellison in response to a written Parliamentary question.


Sue Taylor, Partnerships Manager at Balance, said: “Here in the North East we continue to suffer from some of the worst levels of alcohol harms.


“The fact is that too many people are drinking too much too often and it is having a devastating impact on the region. This is driven by alcohol that is too cheap, too widely available and too heavily marketed.


“Partners across the region are working extremely hard to tackle the issues we face. However, we also need Government to implement evidence-based measures which tackle the price, promotion and availability of alcohol. This includes a minimum unit price which will protect the most vulnerable people in our society which includes young people and heavy drinkers. Only then will we truly be able to tackle alcohol harms.”


“Balance is the North East of England’s alcohol office, the first of its kind in the UK. It aims to encourage people in the North East to reduce how much alcohol they drink so they can live healthier lives in safer communities.


Number of finished admission episodes with a primary or secondary diagnosis of alcohol poisoning, 2012-13


County Durham and Darlington NHS Foundation Trust


18 and over: 1,101


Under 18: 65


11 to 16: 55


Northumbria Healthcare NHS Foundation Trust


18 and over: 983


Under 18: 42


11 to 16: 30


South Tees Hospitals NHS Foundation Trust


18 and over: 1,155


Under 18: 52


11 to 16: 30


South Tyneside NHS Foundation Trust


18 and over: 354


Under 18: 18


11 to 16: 16


The Newcastle upon Tyne Hospitals NHS Foundation Trust


18 and over: 686


Under 18: 19


11 to 16: 14



Plan is launched for multi-million pound refurbishment of iconic Tuxedo Royale


A floating nightclub could be brought back to life in a bold plan to transform it into a training centre.


The iconic Tuxedo Royale is most famously known as a nightclub popular with party-goers on Tyneside.


A campaign has been launched to transform the run-down boat, which has been gradually sinking in the River Tees, where it is now berthed, since it ceased operating eight years ago.


Around £14m is needed to complete the restoration and turn it into a training centre for young shipbuilding engineers - but there is optimism the target can be reached.


Businessman Terry Owens, of Yarm, Stockton-on-Tees, is spearheading the campaign and believes the project could hinge on whether the vessel can become a listed ship.


He said: “Hopefully we will soon be in a position to sit down with the Heritage Lottery Fund to see what help we can get.


“They have said they would be willing to support us but to what extent we don’t know yet. It is going to be a major refurb and in order for the project to work we need a large amount of money.


“We’re trying to convince them that this is a worthwhile project.”


Getting the boat on the historic ships register would be a major step forward for the project as it would give it protection similar to that of a listed building.


A ship is only eligible for the register when it reaches 50 years old, meaning the Tuxedo Royale would be able to apply in eight months’ time.


Terry said: “Hopefully if we can do this it would support our application.


“At the moment it is a battle against time because we can’t leave it for much longer.”


In its heyday, thousands of people partied aboard the boat and its sister vessel, the Tuxedo Princess, when they were berthed under the Tyne Bridge.


The Tuxedo Royale closed in 2006 and owners Absolute Leisure went into administration three years later.


After receivers decided they did not want the boat, dismantling company Able UK agreed to provide a temporary home in Middlesbrough, where it remains today.


However bosses at the firm have previously said it is a “potential hazard” that is not doing the town “any good.”


Terry says it is going to take around £350,000 just to move the vessel to a dry dock.


After that, he hopes to refurbish the ship in keeping with its roots.


“We want what we do to reflect the life the boat has had,” said Terry. “We are looking to highlight its cross-Channel history, its ferry links to Dover, plus its recent entertainment past.


“We are trying to get some famous personalities on board and perhaps organise a charity concert.


“We need something like that because it can raise a significant amount of money in one fell swoop, and that’s what we need.”


The ship remains an icon at the Port of Dover, where it is known as the TSS Dover.


As part of the project, young engineers from the south coast could be brought in to do work on the vessel while it is on Teesside, with engineers from the North East going in the opposite direction when it is eventually re-homed in Dover.


The former site of the nightclub, on the Gateshead side of the Quayside, remains undeveloped despite plans in recent years for an new office block to be built.


Gateshead Council assistant Chief Executive, Sheila Johnston, said: “This is a prominent riverside site and we are actively looking at ways to bring forward a vibrant new development that will do justice to this important location.”



Fresh clashes in Egypt leave seven people killed and several others injured



Seven people have been killed in fresh clashes between police and supporters of ousted Egyptian president, Mohamed Morsi, in the capital Cairo and the city of Giza.




A source from the pro-Morsi National Alliance for the Defence of Legitimacy said five protesters were shot dead by security forces in Giza on Friday.


Two young men were also killed by live fire in Cairo, the source added.


Five people, including a police officer, were reportedly wounded during the clashes in the capital.


More than a dozen demonstrators were killed on Thursday and Friday across Egypt.


Over 190 people were arrested during the protests, security officials told Egypt’s MENA news agency.


It has been reported that the Egyptian police have used excessive force to suppress the nationwide demonstrations. Eyewitnesses say the police have been using tear gas and rubber bullets to disperse the crowds.


The killings occurred following the Friday prayers during demonstrations held in different cities to mark the first anniversary of a bloody crackdown on a protest in the capital.


On August 14, 2013, after then army chief and now president, Abdel Fattah el-Sisi, declared that Morsi was no longer in office, the security forces launched a brutal crackdown on thousands of the Morsi supporters at protest camps in Rabaa al-Adawiya and Nahda squares, leaving hundreds of people dead.


Egypt has been the scene of anti-government protests with continuous clashes between security forces and supporters of Mohamed Morsi since his ouster in July last year.


SSM/HSN/HRB



Turkish medical delegation in Gaza to treat war casualties


Turkish medical staff in Gaza


A joint Palestinian medical task force said on Friday that a Turkish medical delegation arrived in the Gaza Strip to help treat Palestinian casualties caused by the Israeli war, Anadolu news agency reported.


In a statement the task force said that the Turkish delegation, which consists of six senior surgeons, passed into the Strip through the Erez Crossing between Gaza and Israel to join Palestinian medical staff at Al-Shifa Hospital, the largest in Gaza.


The task force consists of representatives from several ministries, including the health and welfare ministries. It was formed by the Palestinian reconciliation government to coordinate assistance and aid delegations entering into Gaza.


Anadolu said that it had not had an opportunity to check with the Egyptians why the Turkish delegation was not allowed to enter to the Strip through the Rafah Crossing, between Gaza and Egypt.


Turkey transferred 25 wounded Palestinians on two plane trips with Turkish Airlines to its hospitals in Ankara. This was part of its plan to treat 200 people in its hospitals. Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan announced that his country is ready to treat all of the wounded.


For about two weeks Egypt has been brokering ceasefire talks between Palestinian fighters and the Israeli occupation. Currently, Palestinian and Israeli sides are discussing a new Egyptian 11 point proposal and are to resume indirect talks through Egypt on Sunday.


The Israeli war on Gaza claimed the lives of more than 1,960 Palestinians and wounded more than 10,000 others.


Official Israeli statistics says that 67 Israelis were killed, including three civilians and 64 troops. More than 1,000, including 650 troops were also wounded. Hamas’ military wing said that it counted 161 Israeli troops killed by its fighters in the battlefield



Muslim student murdered in UK for hijab: Report


Nahid Almanea was captured on CCTV moments before her death.



A PhD student from Saudi Arabia has been stabbed to death for wearing Islamic dress while walking to her university campus in Essex, northeast of London, a report says.



Nahid Almanea, 31, was stabbed 16 times on a footpath with officers believing that she was targeted for wearing a traditional Muslim dress, a long robe and a headscarf, the Huffington Post reported.


According to Essex police, Almanea died on the spot after receiving the knife wounds in her body, neck, head and arms.


The University of Essex said Almanea was a “very hard-working and conscientious” student and was expected to finish her studies later this year.


Her body was later transferred to Saudi Arabia’s al-Jawf Province where a large crowd gathered to take part in her funeral ceremony.


A 52-year-old man was reportedly arrested in connection with her death.



“This isn’t the first attack on a Muslim student and certainly is not the last on a member of the Muslim community in the UK. We will naturally wait for all evidence to become clear. However, if the attack turns out to be Islamophobic in nature because of her Muslim appearance, then it will correlate with the disturbing exponential increase in hate crimes against Muslims here in the UK,” said Omar Ali, president of the Federation of Student Islamic Societies (FOSIS).



The attack prompted strong reactions from people in the UK and Saudi Arabia, who all condemned such attacks on Muslims. Several Saudi nationals even called on the Saudi Embassy in London to suspend business ties with the UK.


SAB/KA/SS