Saturday, August 23, 2014

Algerians gather in solidarity with Gaza


Algerian protesters against Israeli attacks on Gaza


Thousands of Algerians participated in a gathering in Harsha Hassan Hall in Algiers, organised by the Movement of Society for Peace (MSP), Anadolu reported.


A number of Islamic leaders spoke, including the deputy leader of the Salvation Islamic Front Ali Belhadj and the spokesman of the Palestinian Islamic Movement Hamas, Ismail Ridwan.


The gatherers chanted: “the nation wants to liberate Palestine” and “Oh, Hamas… Jihad is the basis.” They also held posters with anti-US slogans written on them –”US arms terrorism” and “US, we will not forget Abu-Ghraib prison.”


One of the speakers described what is happening in the Gaza Strip as a “tragedy.” Another said: “Without weapons, Gaza will never be liberated.”


Belhaj denounced the Algerian authorities for banning marches and protests in the capital. “Closed halls are not enough for Algerians who support Gaza,” he said. “Algerians want streets to march in even if this causes them trouble.”


Algerian authorities banned marches and protests in streets in 2001, four days after a protest in Algiers for the rights of the Amazigh (Berbers.) It resulted in the looting of some shops and clashes with the police, demonstrators and local youths



Palestinians rally in support of Gaza in West Bank



Palestinians in the occupied West Bank have held massive demonstrations in support of the Palestinian resistance in the besieged Gaza Strip.




A huge turnout of Palestinian protesters rallied across the West Bank including in the cities of al-Khalil (Hebron), Nablus, Tulkarm, Qalqilya and Jenin.


In Hebron, demonstrators met resistance from the Palestinian Authority’s security forces who also made arrests while firing tear gas at them.


Attacks by the Palestinian Authority have brought increasing pressure on acting Palestinian Authority Chief Mahmoud Abbas.


Protesters have been staging ongoing rallies in the West Bank in condemnation of the Israeli aggression against the besieged Gaza Strip.


Meanwhile, Palestinians in the Gaza Strip have called for more retaliatory responses to Israeli attacks after three senior commanders of the Palestinian resistance movement, Hamas, were killed in an airstrike in Rafah on Thursday.


Senior Hamas leader Ismail Haniyeh decried the killing of the three commanders, saying that Palestinians will continue their fight against the Tel Aviv regime and will not accept anything less than the complete lifting of the Israeli siege on Gaza.


Tensions have been running high in occupied Palestine since Israel launched a deadly military operation against the Gaza Strip on July 8.


The death toll from the Israeli war in Gaza stands at nearly 2,090. Some 10,300 others have been wounded since the Israeli aggression began.


In response, Palestinian resistance fighters have continued to rain a barrage of rockets onto the Israeli-occupied Palestinian territories.


The UN Security Council has called for an “immediate” and “unconditional” ceasefire in the Gaza Strip.


GMA/AB/SS



‘I didn’t think of Iraqis as humans,’ says U.S. soldier who raped 14-year-old girl before killing her and her family


Steven Green, pictured in April 2009, is serving five life sentences for rape and murder in Iraq. He has launched appeal but doesn't have 'much hope' of ever being freedAn Iraq War veteran serving five life terms for raping and killing a 14-year-old Iraqi girl and killing her parents and sister says he didn’t think of Iraqi civilians as humans.


‘I was crazy,’ Green said in the exclusive telephone interview from federal prison in Tucson, Arizona. ‘I was just all the way out there. I didn’t think I was going to live.’


Green talked about what led up to the March 12, 2006, attack on a family near Mahmoudiya, Iraq, that left him serving five consecutive life sentences.


‘There’s not a word that would describe how much I hated these people,’ Green said. ‘I wasn’t thinking these people were humans.’



Spc. James P. Barker of Fresno, California, testified that he pitched the idea of going to the al-Janabi family’s home to Sgt. Paul E. Cortez of Barstow, California, who was in charge of the traffic checkpoint.

Green, who talked frequently of wanting to kill Iraqis, was brought along.


Cortez testified that Barker and Green had the idea of having sex with the girl and that he didn’t know the family would be killed.


Green, then a private,saidhe had ‘an altered state of mind’ at the time. ‘I wasn’t thinking about more than 10 minutes into the future at any given time,’ Green said. ‘I didn’t care.’


At the Iraqi home, Barker and Cortez pulled Abeer into one room, while Green held the mother, father and youngest daughter in another.


Pfc. Jesse V. Spielman, of Chambersburg, Pennsylvania, stood guard in the hall. As Barker and Cortez raped the teen, Green shot the three family members, killing them.


He then went into the next room and raped Abeer, before shooting her in the head. The soldiers lit her remains on fire before leaving. Another soldier stood watch a few miles away at the checkpoint.






Luhansk welcomes Russian aid convoy


A convoy of trucks with humanitarian aid is setting off from the Izvarino checkpoint in Ukraine on August 22, 2014.



A Russian humanitarian aid convoy has been enthusiastically welcomed by residents of the eastern Ukrainian city of Luhansk.



Reports say the people in Luhansk rushed to meet the aid convoy after it reached the city on Friday.


The trucks were sent to warehouses, equipped with refrigerators prepared by self-proclaimed Luhansk People’s Republic (LPR) authorities during the week.


According to the administration of the LPR, 24 aid distribution centers have been set up in the city, 12 of which are to open on Saturday morning.


The speaker of the parliament of the Union of the Donetsk and Luhansk People’s Republics, Oleg Tsaryov said that local authorities have already compiled a list of people who were in most need of aid.



“Pensioners, families where both parents work in public sector, refugees who suffered from bombardments, invalids and hospital patients will be the first to receive the relief aid,” he said.



The humanitarian aid convoy, includes a total of 70 trucks loaded with food, water, generators and sleeping bags.


Earlier in the day, Ukrainian President Petro Poroshenko said the entry of the Russian convoy represented a “flagrant violation of international law.”


Ukraine’s mainly Russian-speaking regions in the east have witnessed deadly clashes between pro-Moscow forces and the Ukrainian army since Kiev launched military operations to silence the pro-Russians.


Violence intensified in May after the two flashpoint regions of Donetsk and Luhansk held local referendums, in which their residents voted overwhelmingly in favor of independence from Ukraine.


SRK/MHB/MAM



Irom Sharmila re-arrested on charges of attempt to suicide


IMPHAL: Three days after being released following a sessions court order, civil rights activist Irom Sharmila Chanu was on Friday rearrested from a makeshift camp in Imphal where she had been continuing her fast.






Despite strong opposition from Sharmila and her supporters, police took her away around 10.30 am. The makeshift camp is located near the state-run JNIMS hospital, where she was being forced-fed nasally, and her residence. Sharmila, who was taken inside the JNIMS hospital, refused to take liquid food through her nose, sources said, adding she was administered IV drops.


Demanding repeal of the controversial Armed Forces (Special Powers) Act, 1958, the 42-year-old activist has been on a fast since November 2000.


Manipur deputy chief minister Gaikhangam, who also holds the home portfolio, said Sharmila was picked up since her health had deteriorated. “The government’s duty is to save the lives of its citizens, for which she was picked up,” the minister said.


Despite strong opposition from Sharmila and her supporters, police took her away around 10.30 am on Friday. (PTI photo) Police were tight-lipped about the charges under which they had taken Sharmila away. She was likely to be produced before the chief judicial magistrate (Imphal East) on Saturday.


On Tuesday, an Imphal sessions court had ordered Sharmila’s release, accepting her plea that she did not fast unto death and hence did not attempt suicide. She had continued to fast after being released from jail on Wednesday.


On Thursday, Sharmila had said she would continue to fast until the oppressive Act is repealed. “The deterioration of my health during my struggle is not a concern,” she had said. “I’m not attempting to end my life.”



Israel had dropped 20,000 tons of explosives on the 139 square mile (360 sq km) territory



The explosives’ engineering police of the Gaza Ministry of Interior said in a statement that Israel had dropped 20,000 tons of explosives on the 139 square mile (360 sq km) territory.


“Flechette shells, fuel-air bombs (which explode twice, including after impact), dime shells, and flechette shells saturated with uranium were fired at Gaza Strip,” the statement added, stressing that the weapons “affect the environment, soil, and water and will affect the next generations by spreading diseases especially cancer.”


The statement said that areas near the border like Khuzaa, eastern Rafah, Shujaiyya, eastern al-Mughazi, al-Bureij and Juhr al-Dik were hit with “the lion’s share of Israeli shells and missiles.”


The statement said that of the total number of explosive, 8,000 were dropped from warplanes, “killing entire families and crossing them out of the Palestinian civil register.”


Drones, Apache, F15, F16 and “vertical” warplanes were used during the offensive, firing MK82, MK83 and MK84 shells.


The statement added that the Israeli artillery deployed in eastern Gaza City had fired high-explosive shells at homes and civilian property causing massive damage, especially in Rafah, Khan Younis, Shujaiyya and Beit Hanoun.


More than 60,000 artillery shells of different sizes were fired at Gaza.


During the assault, Gaza police bomb disposal experts said that engaged in 1731 different missions including treating explosive devices, suspicious devices. and vehicles, among other tasks.


Major Hazem Abu Murad, deputy head of the explosives engineering department, and Major Taysir al-Hum were killed while dismantling suspicious objects in northern Gaza Strip, the statement added.


According to the statement, Major Abu Murad was one of the most important experts and trainers in explosives engineering in Gaza.


Other engineering police members were killed or detained during the Israeli offensive on Gaza Strip, the statement added, without identifying them



Three killed in US terror drone attack in Afghanistan



At least three civilians have been killed in a US assassination drone attack in Afghanistan.




The airstrike, which also injured two Afghans, happened in the war-torn country’s eastern province of Logar on Friday.


According to reports, Afghan authorities have begun an investigation into the incident.


Civilian casualties from US-led attacks have been a serious bone of contention between Kabul and Washington.


The US carries out “targeted killings” through drone strikes in several Muslim nations such as Yemen, Pakistan, Afghanistan and Somalia.


Washington claims the targets of the drone attacks are militants, but local officials and witnesses maintain that civilians have been the main victims of the attacks over the past few years.


The Afghan people and the country’s officials have protested against the civilian casualties on numerous occasions, but the US drone attacks continue unabated.


The United Nations and several human rights organizations have identified the US as the world’s number one user of “targeted killings,” largely due to its drone attacks in Pakistan and Afghanistan.


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


MSM/MHB/MAM



View: Pictures from the 1980s and 1990s at Middlesbrough's Keldholme School



Twenty five years ago three pupils at Middlesbrough’s Keldholme School were in for a surprise.


The trio had been busy with their paintbrushes creating huge paintings of Boro stars Bernie Slaven, Tony Mowbray and Gary Pallister back in 1989 - and when the players dropped in to the classroom to autograph the finished works, Lisa Kelly, Paula Tranter and Jacqueline O’Callaghan got to meet them.


Do you remember the day? It is the turn of pupils at Keldholme to take a trip down memory lane this week as we’ve dipped in to the Gazette archives and dug out some pictures from school days gone by.


The school started life as Springfield Secondary Modern in the 1950s before being renamed Keldholme in the early 1980s - it was replaced by Unity City Academy on Ormesby Road in 2003.


Were you a pupil there? Take a look through our gallery - and tell us if you recognise yourself in any of our pictures.



Picture gallery: Boro 2 Sheffield Wednesday 3



The brushing aside of Birmingham City felt a long time ago as Boro were outplayed by Sheffield Wednesday in their second league game at home this season.


Boro handed Wednesday a three goal headstart and although they scored two late penalties to put a gloss over the full time scoreline , it was a game Boro never looked like getting anything from.


Aitor Karanka was fuming with the display afterwards and will be hoping for a response from his players against Preston in the Capital One Cup on Tuesday night.


Take a look back at the action from today's game in this gallery of pictures from the Riverside.



Picture gallery: Boro 2 Sheffield Wednesday 3



The brushing aside of Birmingham City felt a long time ago as Boro were outplayed by Sheffield Wednesday in their second league game at home this season.


Boro handed Wednesday a three goal headstart and although they scored two late penalties to put a gloss over the full time scoreline , it was a game Boro never looked like getting anything from.


Aitor Karanka was fuming with the display afterwards and will be hoping for a response from his players against Preston in the Capital One Cup on Tuesday night.


Take a look back at the action from today's game in this gallery of pictures from the Riverside.



Karanka slams his players after "the worst performance" since he was appointed Boro boss


AITOR Karanka slammed his side's 3-2 defeat to Sheffield Wednesday as the "worst performance" he has seen since taking over as Boro boss nine months ago.


An Atdhe Nuhui brace and a first Owls goal for Stevie May maintained Wednesday's unbeaten run this season.


Despite Grant Leadbitter twice converting from the spot in the second half, Boro were condemned to a second league defeat in three matches with a horror defensive performance and were put to the sword by a prolific Wednesday attack at the Riverside.


After the match Karanka pulled no punches and questioned whether some of this players' attitude.


The Boro boss said: "It's difficult to explain and I would prefer to keep calm now and analyse the game when I go home.


"For me it's difficult to explain what happened.


"I prefer to take the good things today and you may think I'm crazy saying we have any good things to take today, but we had the opportunity to draw the game in the last second - even with the way we played.


"It was the worst game we've played since coming here.


"I'll now go home as soon as possible and start analysing the game.


"(Conceding) three goals from set pieces was the worst thing, and the second worst was the way some players played today. I don't know if they thought they were untouchable, but for me there aren't any players that are untouchable."


Boro will have the opportunity to bounce back from their setback with a Capital One Cup second round clash with Preston North End on Tuesday, before welcoming Reading to the Riverside next Saturday.



Early warning: increasing hate crimes alarm religious minorities


By John Dayal,


Several political columnists have in recent weeks noted how elements of the Rashtriya Swayamsewak Sangh, professing a right wing ultra-nationalist and Hindu majoritarian political ideology, have moved from the fringes where they were for decades, to the centre stage of the national discourse in India after Mr. Narendra Modi came to power in May this year in the wake of a massive electoral victory of the Bharatiya Janata Party, BJP.


The BJP is unabashed about its links with the RSS and the expanding group of organisations it has spawned, collectively known as the Sangh Parivar. Mr. Modi is himself a former RSS leader, as are several of his Cabinet colleagues. Some ranking RSS officials have in recent weeks been inducted as general secretaries of the BJP, leaving absolutely no one in any doubt of the seamless fusion of the political party and the Sangh which styles itself as social and cultural organisations.




Photo of a recent function on gulden jubilee celebration of VHP. Courtesy: Facebook Page of RSS

Photo of a recent function on gulden jubilee celebration of VHP. Courtesy [Facebook Page of RSS]

RSS Chief Mr. Mohan Bhagwat has repeated asserted that everyone in India is Hindu, including Muslims and Christians, because this is the land of the Hindu people and civilisation. The Sangh ideologue MG Vaidya said on 19th May, three days after the election results, that they can now tackle issues such as the building of the Ram temple on the site of the Babri mosque they demolished in 1992 Vishwa Hindu Parishad leader Mr. Ashok Singhal, said “if [Muslims] keep opposing Hindus, how long can they survive?”.

Mr. Seshadri Chari, former editor of RSS mouthpiece Organiser and member of the BJP national executive, who enjoys a deserved reputation as a sober and reflective commentator, is quoted in the Outlook Magazine saying says that Hindus have always been a majority in India but the manifestation of majoritarianism has been reflected in the cultural and social field. “Now it is reflected in the politics of the country. A large number of foot-soldiers in the RSS-BJP do believe that the political Hindu has arrived.”


This was apparent in the absolutely poisonous and acrid discussion that took place in the Lok Sabha, the lower house of Parliament two days before Independence Day, when the BJP’s lead speaker, Adityanath, the deputy head of religious cult in Gorakhpur in Uttar Pradesh, got away with demonising the Muslim community and others. The Congress was ineffective in rebutting him and his colleagues, and so were the others in pinning down the very aggressive and very big BJP group in the Lok Sabha. The Lok Sabha debate, the fielding of Adityanath as the key speaker for his party, and the applause he received from the leaders and other members on the BJP benches, set to rest any polite talk that Mr. Modi’s political high command distances itself from the lunacy of the Sangh Parivar.


That in itself would not been much of an issue where its lax electoral laws turn a blind eye to many religious groups – including Sikhs, Muslims and even Christian apart from Hindus – intervening in the political process with registered political parties that contest and win elections, and occasionally even control state governments.


The crisis comes, as it has this time, when rogue elements choose to challenge the law and indulge in targetted mass violence assuming, and seemingly correctly, that the new dispensation will stop them. One group even set up a “Hindu Helpline” to assist anyone from the majority community who is being harassed by Muslims.


The rash of violence against Muslims in north India, and increasing incidents of coercion and assault against Christians in Central and north India, has alarmed religious minorities in the country.


The figures of communal violence, and actions that fell just sort of violence, are not officially declared, but estimates of cases since the BJP victory announcement on 16th May 2014 range upwards of 1,000, most incidents taking place in Uttar Pradesh, Maharashtra which face elections later this year to state legislatures. Reputations of Mr. Modi, his Gujarat lieutenant and now the new BJP president Amit Shah, and the RSS, are at stake..


The violence against Muslims has been well recorded. The anti-Christian violence has gone under the radar. Taken together, they indicate a massive drive to saffronise the countryside, villages, small towns and tribal areas away from the big towns which were the foci of violence in past years. Bastar in Chhattisgarh is the new flashpoint.


The Christian leadership has expressed alarm at the sharp rise in hate campaigns by the Sangh’s political and cultural organisations. This threat of purging Christians from villages extends from Chhattisgarh and Madhya Pradesh to now Uttar Pradesh, to the borders of the national capital of New Delhi. Condemning the threat of Shuddhhikaran, [purification], they say it in real terms means forcible conversion to Hinduism.


There has been no response from the state and federal governments yet to the June 2014 dictat by several village Panchayats in the Bastar region of Chhattisgarh, to ban the entry of Christian workers in their areas. The Panchayats decided only Hindu religious workers will be allowed into the village areas in the Tribal belt, and only Hindu places of worship could be constructed henceforth. This decision is of course entirely illegal, and violative of the provisions in the Constitution of freedom of expression and of movement.


The coercive methodology of branding every Tribal as a Hindu has led to much violence in several central Indian states, including the pogrom in Kandhamal in Orissa in August 2008. Such threats by Sangh Parivar groups were largely heard in a big way during the early years of the NDA government of Mr. Atal Behari Vajpayee, especially in the tribal areas of Gujarat


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Next phase to transform Teesside University central campus gets under way


The next phase of the £20million project to develop Teesside University’s central campus is to get under way.


The move follows the permanent closure earlier this year of a section of Southfield Road to create a new pedestrianised area.


Landscaping works, carried out by Cleveland Land Services and managed by Middlesbrough Council, are due to start on Tuesday.


Initial works on the section from Centre House to the junction with Woodlands Road will see the removal of existing street furniture and major re-landscaping of the road surface, footpaths and immediate surroundings.


The scheme will feature a high quality, pedestrian-friendly granite finish with single-level disabled access, high-efficiency street lighting and high quality street furniture.


The university intends the development to create a “campus heart”.


The building will include teaching spaces and a 200-seat lecture theatre - while also allowing expansion in the current library and improvements to the Students Union building.


But it does not come without controversy.


Over the past year, hundreds of locals have protested about the controversial pedestrianisation of a section of Southfield Road, near the building site, during a series of heated meetings - one of which saw Mayor Ray Mallon pelted with eggs.


However, Councillor Charlie Rooney, Middlesbrough Council’s Executive Member for Regeneration, said the new campus heart will create a focal point for students and community life.


He said: “High quality landscaping will play an important role in the creation of a busy and thriving hub and a dynamic and safe environment for students, local residents and visitors.”


Malcolm Page, the university’s Chief Operating Officer, said the development will “transform the campus”.


The whole project is due for completion by early September 2015.



Indian minister: Highlighting gang rapes affects tourism


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NEW DELHI: The father of a student who died after being gang-raped on a moving bus in New Delhi spoke of his anger Friday after a senior minister referred to the infamous attack as a “small incident.”

Finance Minister Arun Jaitley said at a tourism conference on Thursday that “one small incident of rape in Delhi, advertised the world over, is enough to cost us millions of dollars in terms of lower tourism.”

Speaking to AFP, the 23-year-old victim’s father said that Jaitley’s televised comments had “reopened wounds” over the attack in December 2012 and had left the family deeply upset. The student’s gang-rape in December 2012 triggered nationwide protests about the levels of sexual violence in India which drew massive international media coverage.

“Whatever he has said is very wrong. I cannot express in words how much it has hurt us,” said the father, who cannot be named for legal reasons.

“He is talking about losses to the treasury. What about the irreparable loss that we have suffered? Does he even have an idea what the family of a rape victim has to undergo each day?“

Although the word “small” was removed from the copy of the speech published on the government website, Jaitley later expressed regret that his comments had “been construed as insensitive.”

“I have always been very outspoken on issues related to crimes against women,” Jaitley, who is also India’s defense minister, told reporters.

Jaitley’s comments also drew widespread condemnation from campaigners. “No rape is small, each rape is shameful because it violates women’s rights not because it affects tourism,” said women’s rights activist Kavita Krishnan. Although India did register a slight increase in visitor numbers last year, the level of growth was well down on the two previous years.

Around seven million foreigners visited India in 2013 — just a quarter of the numbers who traveled to Thailand or Malaysia



WHO warns of W Africa’s Ebola ‘shadow zones’



Families hiding infected loved ones and the existence of “shadow zones” where medics cannot go mean the West African Ebola epidemic is even bigger than thought, the World Health Organisation has said.


Some 1,427 people have died among 2,615 known cases of the deadly virus in West Africa since the outbreak was first identified in March, according to new figures released by the WHO on Friday.


Under-reporting of cases is a problem especially in Liberia and Sierra Leone, currently the two countries hardest hit.


“As Ebola has no cure, some believe infected loved ones will be more comfortable dying at home,” the WHO said in a statement detailing why the outbreak had been underestimated.


“Others deny that a patient has Ebola and believe that care in an isolation ward – viewed as an incubator of the disease – will lead to infection and certain death.”


Corpses are often buried without official notification. And there are “shadow zones”, rural areas where there are rumours of cases and deaths that cannot be investigated because of community resistance or lack of staff and transport.


The WHO said it is now working with Medecins Sans Frontieres (MSF) and the US Centers for Disease Control and Prevention to produce “more realistic estimates”.


On Friday, the WHO said it had drawn up a draft strategy plan to combat the disease in West Africa, and details would be released early next week.


David Nabarro, Senior United Nations System Coordinator for Ebola, who was travelling with the WHO’s Fukuda in Liberia, said the strategy would involve ramping up the number of health workers fighting the disease.


“It means more doctors, Liberian doctors, more nurses, Liberian nurses, and more equipment,” he said. “But it also means, of course, more international staff.”


Ballooning numbers


Despite initial assertions by regional health officials that the virus had been contained in its early stages, Ebola case numbers and deaths have ballooned in recent months as the outbreak has spread from its initial epicentre in Guinea.


“We think six to nine months is a reasonable estimate,” Keiji Fukuda, the WHO’s Assistant Director-General for Health Security, said during a visit to Liberia, speaking of the time the agency now believes will be required to halt the epidemic.


An Ebola outbreak will be declared over in a country if two incubation periods, or 42 days in total, have passed without any confirmed case, a WHO spokesperson said.



Imran Khan’s party quits Parliament


ISLAMABAD: The party of Pakistan opposition politician Imran Khan, who has led a week of anti-government protests in the capital, has resigned from parliament in its latest bid to drive Prime Minister Nawaz Sharif from power over alleged election fraud.




The move came a day after parliament presented a united front against Imran Khan, with opposition parties backing a resolution rejecting his calls for Sharif’s resignation as unconstitutional despite the presence of thousands of protesters just outside. Imran Khan and Tahirul Qadri have led twin protests over the past week calling on Sharif to step down.

Thousands of their supporters have gathered in the heart of Islamabad, in the so-called Red Zone housing government buildings. Imran Khan and Qadri have called for electoral reforms and the appointment of a caretaker government to hold a new vote. The ruling Pakistan Muslim League-N party has said it is willing to discuss all of their demands except for the prime minister’s resignation.

In recent days, Khan had issued a series of ultimatums calling on Sharif to step down, and at times it seemed his protesters might besiege parliament or enter the premier’s nearby office. But on Friday he appeared to have backed down. His party said it was resuming talks with the government aimed at ending tense protests.

Pakistan Tehreek-e-Insaaf (PTI) party said dialogue was restarting through contact with the governor of Punjab, Pakistan’s most populous province.

“We are resuming talks with the government,” PTI vice-chairman Shah Mehmood Qureshi said. Senior members of Qadri’s team have said they are ready for “meaningful dialogue” to end their protest, though little concrete progress appears to have been made since initial contact began on Wednesday.

The two protest movements are not formally allied and have different goals, beyond toppling the government. Neither movement has mobilized mass support beyond their core followers and opposition parties have shunned Khan’s call to unseat the government and begin a campaign of civil disobedience.

Maulana Fazalur Rehman, chief of the Jamiat Ulema-e-Islam (JUI-F) party said the protests had no support from the majority of Pakistan’s 180 million population.

“They have been isolated and people of Pakistan have rejected them — there are maximum 5,000 to 6,000 people combined with them at night,” he said. Despite rumors that the military had some hand in the protests, the Minister for Water and Power Abid Sher Ali, a PML-N stalwart, insisted there was “no pressure on us from any state institution to resign.”

“It is the imagination of some lawless and outside elements camping out there,” he said.



Live: Boro v Sheffield Wednesday from the Riverside Stadium


After three consecutive away games Boro can enjoy home comforts over the next week - starting with today's visit of Sheffield Wednesday.


Stuart Gray's side are unbeaten in the Championship so far this season and would have gone joint-top had they not conceded a last gasp leveller at home to Millwall in midweek.


Boro bounced back from their painful defeat at Elland Road with a win at Bolton on Tuesday night.


Aitor Karanka will be hopeful his side can build on their promising start to the season with another three points against Wednesday.



Stockton man stormed into woman's home and threatened to 'stab up; her and her son


A man who stormed into a mum’s home and threatened to “stab up” her and her son starts a prison sentence today.


The mother was woken at 7am by shouting and banging at her Stockton home and saw Nathan Davis, 21, smashing her windows with bricks and plant pots.


Another man, 20-year-old Kenneth McGuinness, smashed a window by punching it, Teesside Crown Court was told yesterday.


Davis got into the house via a broken window and went into the woman’s bedroom looking for her son.


He pushed the mum around as he searched from room to room and told her: “Where is he? I’m going to stab him up.”


Prosecutor Dan Cordey said Davis left, telling the mother: “Give my name to the police and I’ll stab you up too.”


The victim detained McGuinness, who hadn’t entered the house, outside until his arrest.


Davis ran off. When he was caught he told police he was paralytic drunk at the time.


He said he went to the house to fight the woman’s son, in response to a phone call from him.


Davis, of Wylam Road, and McGuinness, of Greta Road, both Stockton, admitted the March 9 affray. Both had previous convictions.


Andrew Turton, defending Davis, said he was “somewhat set up” with messages designed to make him lose control, and he took the bait.


He said: “He has no recollection because of the condition he was in. Drink and other substances, it would appear.


“It does involve people he’s known for the best part of his life.”


Mr Turton said Davis’ time inside had not altered his attitudes and the Probation Service could help him tackle his “poor thinking, impulsivity and loss of self control”.


He said Davis was showing “green shoots of maturity” after more than four months remanded in custody, needed help and could turn his life around.


Davis had proposed to his girlfriend, sworn off drugs, realised the evils of drink and had a job offer as a labourer.


Nigel Soppitt, for McGuinness, said he was young, immature, easily influenced, and put up no resistance to the victim at the scene of the crime.


The judge, Recorder Philip Kramer, told Davis: “She must have been terrified. Only custody is the right sentence.”


He jailed Davis for 10 months and two weeks.


He told McGuinness: “It seems to me you’re an impressionable young man who sometimes falls into bad company.”


McGuinness was given a one-year community order with 150 hours’ unpaid work and a four-month tagged curfew from 7pm to 7am.



England and Middlesbrough footballer who missed his GCSE English exam scores a grade B


England and Middlesbrough football talent Hayden Coulson is celebrating after netting high scores in his GCSEs.


Hayden, 16, who plays for England U16 team and is in the Middlesbrough FC youth squad, had to miss his English language exam while playing for his country against Northern Ireland in the Victory Shield.


But he got a second chance to take the test at the Joseph Swan Academy in Gateshead . . . and was awarded a grade B.


He also got 3 Bs in PE, RE and art and 4 Cs in maths, English literature, history and science.


Hayden - one of thousands of North pupils taking home their all-important results this week - said its been tough balancing his career and classes.


“It’s been hard training five days a week and finding the time to do school work,” said Hayden, 16, who lives in Low Fell, Gateshead.


“My aim now is to play for Middlesbrough and I’m playing football full time.


“I’m really pleased with my results and that I got my grade in English.”


The youngster has a busy few months ahead of him, and also hopes to make it into the U17 England team.


The defender dreams of playing for Middlesbrough FC and hopes to make his mark while under contract with them until June 2016.


However the club have been firm on making sure their young players keep up with their studies and pass their exams at grade C and above.


He said staff their made sure they were studying hard for their English and maths exams while keeping up with training and if any exams had to be missed due to fixtures that they would find a date when they could re-take them.


“I was very happy with my results,” said Hayden. “I passed everything I needed to for my football.


“I’m over the moon with my English because that was one of my weak points and I passed that.


“Middlesbrough has been great and I’m down there full time now on a scholarship.”


Head teacher of the Joseph Swan Academy, Heather Scott, said Hayden had been a credit to the school with exactly the right attitude towards combining his sports career with education.


She said: “He is compassionate, caring and a true sportsman - we are incredibly proud of him and his GCSE results and the fact that he was studying for his exams whilst training as an England U16 player.


“We look forward to seeing him representing England at full senior team level and wish him every success for the future.”


This week saw a rise in GCSE grades across the North East compared to last year, but figures show the region is still behind the rest of the country.


The percentage of A*-C grades across North East schools rose from 64.7% in 2013 to 65.7% this year.


Across England the percentage of A*-C grades stands at 68.6%, up from 68.1% last year.



Teesside Councils reveal 2014 GCSE statistics which show drop in pass rate


Fewer than half of pupils in Middlesbrough left school with five GCSEs at grade C or above in key subjects after a fall in the pass rate, it has emerged.


The percentage of pupils getting five A* to C grades, including Maths and English, slipped to 49% from 50.3% in 2013.


However, Middlesbrough Council defended the decline saying it “demonstrates a resilient performance by the town’s schools when compared to steep declines seen in other local authority areas across the North-east.”


Councillor Jan Brunton, Middlesbrough Council’s Executive Member for Education and Skills, said: “It is naturally disappointing to see any decrease in achievement, regardless of how small the percentage may appear to be.


“Nationally, volatile English results were expected due to significant changes in assessment and reporting arrangements and this has obviously played its part.



“In Middlesbrough, the council has previously recognised the need to support secondary school improvement and work is already underway to that effect.


“We will now be studying the results in more detail to find the best way forward for our schools to deliver improved results in 2015.


“Finally, it is also important at this moment that we offer congratulations to all our young people who have received their results and can begin looking forward to taking their next steps in life.”


The fall in performance comes after Middlesbrough Council was strongly criticised by education watchdog Ofsted earlier this year.


In Stockton, 57% pupils achieved five A* to C grades, including English and Maths - the same pass rate as last year.


Councillor Ann McCoy, Stockton Borough Council’s Cabinet Member for Children and Young People, said: “The major changes to the exams system have made it a particularly challenging year for our schools but today’s results are very encouraging indeed.


“I’d like to say a huge well done to pupils, teachers, support staff and governors from all of our schools, not forgetting parents and carers and of course, our own Council staff who work so hard to support school improvement.


“Special praise must go to Northfield, which has recorded its best results for five years as well as Egglescliffe, All Saints and Conyers for consistently maintaining a high performance.”


Councillor McCoy added: “It would be remiss though, not to go into some of the changes our schools have had to endure in greater detail because it’s important that people are aware of the context in which these results have been achieved.”


She said grades achieved in exam resits are not taken into account and that this has “had major implications for our schools”.


“Overall though, this is still a very good set of results. Good GCSE results provide pupils with a strong platform from which to fulfil their dreams and I wish them all every success in their futures.”


Redcar and Cleveland Council were unable to provide The Gazette with their figures.



Israel fired rockets to justify airstrikes: Uri Avnery


The war was over. Families returned to their kibbutzim near Gaza. Kindergartens opened up again. A cease-fire was in force and extended again and again. Obviously, both sides were exhausted. And then, suddenly, the war came back. What happened? Well, Hamas launched rockets against Beersheba in the middle of the cease-fire. Why? No why. You know how the “terrorists” are. They can’t help it.




But it is not so simple. The Cairo talks were near success, or so it seemed. But Benjamin Netanyahu was in trouble. He hid the Egyptian draft agreement for a long cease-fire even from his Cabinet colleagues. They learned about it only from the media, which disclosed it from Palestinian sources. Apparently, the draft said that the blockade would be greatly relaxed, if not officially ended. Talks about the building of a port and airport were to start within a month.

What? What did Israel get out of this? After all the shooting and killing, after all the grandiose speeches about our resounding victory, was that all? No wonder Netanyahu tried to hide the document.

The Israeli delegation was called home without signing. The exasperated Egyptian mediators got another 24-hour extension of the cease-fire. It was to expire at midnight on Tuesday, but everybody on both sides expected it to be extended again and again. And then it happened.

At about 1600 hours, three rockets were fired at Beersheba and fell into open spaces. No warning sirens. Curiously enough, Hamas denied having launched them, and no other Palestinian organization took responsibility. This was strange. After every previous launching from Gaza, some Palestinian organization has always proudly claimed credit. As usual, Israeli airplanes promptly started to retaliate and bombed buildings in the Gaza Strip. As usual, rockets were fired on Israel. (I heard the interceptions in Tel Aviv).

Business as usual? Not quite. First it became known that an hour before the rockets came in, the Israeli population near Gaza was warned by the army to prepare their shelters and “safe spaces.”

Then it appeared that the first Gaza building hit belonged to the family of a Hamas military commander. Three people were killed, among them a baby and his mother. And then the news spread: It was the family of Mohammed Deif, the commander of the Izz Al-Din Al-Qassam Brigades, the military wing of Hamas. Among those killed this Tuesday were Deif’s wife and baby son. But it seems that Deif himself was not there.

That in itself is no wonder. Deif has survived at least four attempts to assassinate him. He has lost an eye and several limbs, but always came out alive. All around him, his successive commanders, political and military peers and subordinates, dozens of them, have been assassinated throughout the years. But he has led a charmed life. Now he heads the Israeli hit list, the most wanted and hunted Palestinian activist. He is the No. 1 “Son of Death,” a rather biblical appellation used in Israel for those marked for assassination.

Like most inhabitants of the Gaza Strip, Deif is a child of refugees from Israel. His family comes from the village Kawkaba, now in Israel, not far from Gaza. I passed through it in the 1948 war, before it was razed to the ground. For the Israeli Security Service, he is a prize for which it is well worth breaking the cease-fire and reigniting the war. For many security agencies around the world, including the American and the Russian, assassination is a sport and an art. Israel claims to hold the gold medal.

An assassination is a complicated operation. It requires a lot of time, expertise, patience and luck. The operators have to recruit informers near the victim, install electronic devices, obtain precise information about his every movement, execute their design within minutes once the opportunity presents itself. Because of this, there is no time for confirmation from above. Perhaps the Security Service (usually called Shin Bet) got permission from Netanyahu, its sole political chief, perhaps not.

They obviously were informed that Deif was visiting his family. That was a golden opportunity. For months, indeed for years, Deif has been living underground, in the literal sense – somewhere in the maze of tunnels his men had dug beneath the Strip. He was never sighted.

Since the beginning of this war, all the other prominent Hamas leaders have also been living under the ground. From Ismail Haniyeh down, not one of them has been seen. The unlimited command of the air by Israeli planes and drones makes this advisable. Hamas has no anti-air weapons.

It seems to me highly unlikely that Deif would risk his life by visiting his family. But Shin Bet obviously got a lead and believed it. The three strange rockets fired on Beersheba provided the pretext for breaking the cease-fire, and so the war started again.

Real aficionados of the art of assassination are not very interested in the political or military consequences of their actions. “Art for art’s sake.”

A propos, the last Gaza war, two years ago, started the same way. The Israeli army assassinated the de-facto Al-Qassam leader, Ahmed Jaabari. The ensuing war with its many hundreds of dead was just collateral damage. Jaabari was at the time filling in for Deif, who was convalescing in Cairo. All this is, of course, much too complicated for American and European diplomats. They like simple stories.

The White House immediately reacted to the resumption of hostilities by condemning the Hamas launching of rockets and reaffirming that “Israel has a right to defend itself.” The Western media parroted this line. For Netanyahu, whether he knew in advance of the assassination attempt or not, it was a way out of a dilemma. He was in the unfortunate position of many leaders in history who start a war and do not know how to get out of it.

In a war, a leader makes grandiloquent speeches, promises victory and bountiful achievements. These promises seldom come true. (If they do, like in Versailles 1919, that may be even worse.)

Netanyahu is a gifted marketing man, if nothing else. He promised a lot, and the people believed him and gave him a 77 percent rating. The Egyptian draft proposal for a permanent cease-fire, though markedly pro-Israel, fell far short of a victory for Israel. It only confirmed that the war ended in a draw. Netanyahu’s own Cabinet was rebellious, public opinion was souring perceptibly. The resumption of the war got him out of this hole. But what now?

Bombing the Gaza population draws more and more criticism from world public opinion. It also has lost its appeal in Israel. The maxim “Let’s bomb them until they stop hating us” obviously does not work. The alternative is to enter the Gaza Strip and occupy it completely, so that even Deif and his men have to come up to the surface to be assassinated. But that is a dangerous proposition.

When I was a soldier in the 1948 war, we were taught never to get into a situation which leaves the enemy no way out. In such a case, he will fight to the end, causing many casualties. There is no way out of the Gaza Strip. If the Israeli Army is sent to conquer the entire Strip, the fighting will be ferocious, causing hundreds of Israeli and thousands of Palestinian dead and injured, and untold destruction. The prime minister will be one of the political victims. Netanyahu is fully aware of that. He doesn’t want it. But what else can he do? One can almost pity the man.

He can of course, order the army to occupy only parts of the Strip, a village here, a town there. But that will also spread death and destruction, to no manifest gain. In the end, public discontent will be the same. Hamas threatened this week to open “the gates of hell” for us. This hardly affects the inhabitants of Tel Aviv, but for the villages and towns near Gaza this is really hell. Casualties are few, but fear is devastating. Families with children leave en masse. When calm returns, they try to go home, but then the next rockets drive them away again.

Their plight evokes a very strong emotional response throughout the country. No politician can ignore it. Least of all the prime minister. He needs to end the war. He also needs a clear image of victory. But how to achieve this?

The Egyptian leader tries to help. So does Barack Obama, though he is furious with Netanyahu and hates his guts. So does Mahmoud Abbas. But as of now, the man who has the final decision is the Son of Death, Mohammed Deif, if he is alive and kicking. If not, his successor.

If he is alive, the assassination of his wife and baby son may not have made him gentler and more peaceable.



Email: avnery@actcom.co.il



Redcar Bears exact quick revenge with win over Sheffield Tigers


Redcar Bears gained quick revenge over injury-ravaged Sheffield Tigers by registering a 53-37 victory with what manager Jitendra Duffill hailed as “a great all-round team performance.”


Duffill was lreluctant to single anyone out as all seven Ecco Finishing Bears riders contributed strongly, with no-one being paid for less than six points.


It was only the Bears second win in six matches and came barely 24 hours after going down by an agonising two points in the reverse fixture at Sheffield’s Owlerton Stadium.


As so often this season skipper Aaron Summers led the way with 12+1 points but this time the quietly spoken Australian received splendid support from all quarters with Carl Wilkinson and Rafal Konopka notably getting among the points.


The pair had managed just three between them in the previous night’s 40-38 defeat but Wilkinson’s battling 10+2 and Konopka’s controlled 6+1 were among the highlights of a match the Teessiders never looked in danger of losing.


“I know Sheffield came with a pretty decimated team but we can only beat what is put out in front of us,” commented a delighted Duffill.


“And with a number one like (England International) Simon Stead and reserves like Taylor Poole and Josh Bates, it was never going to be easy.


“I’m really pleased for everyone.


“You never get anything less than 100% from Carl but we found a major fault with his bike which we believe is why he might have been lacking for speed recently and he was able to race like he wanted to, so I feel we may see a few more performances like that in future.


“Rafal has so much enthusiasm and not scored the points he has deserved.


“Speedway is performance based and if you are not scoring points then you are not earning money and money is something he has been struggling for recently.


“So it was nice to see him get a race win and we must remember that he still hasn’t been riding that long, so it’s a steep learning curve for him."


Redcar led from the first heat with veteran one-time Cleveland Park favourite Stuart Robson, now with Newcastle, proving a fine guest for absent number one Richard Lawson.


Hugh Skidmore, who was presented the annual Norman Willis Memorial Trophy by his widow Roslyn for the “best young Bear of the year”, also gained two tenacious heat wins while mid-season signing Mark Lemon, top scorer at Sheffield, chipped in with paid seven.


The Tigers relied heavily on a slightly below par Stead, still suffering from the affects of tonsillitis, and their two young reserves Poole and Bates, although Argentinian newcomer Nico Covatti looked lively once he’d weighed-up the Redcar track.


But Wilkinson’s stunning blast through from third place to win heat 14 epitomised the returning confidence in the home camp and ensured the Bears maximum league points for only the second time since June 12th.


BEARS: Aaron Summers 12+1, Carl Wilkinson 10+2, Stuart Robson (guest) 8+2, Hugh Skidmore 7+1, Mark Lemon 6+1, Rafal Konopka 6+1, Jan Graversen 4+2.


TIGERS: Taylor Poole 10+2, Nico Covatti 9+1, Simon Stead 9, Josh Bates 7, Ben Wilson 2, Nathan Greaves (guest) 0, Rider replacement for Leigh Lanham



More than 2,065 dead in Gaza, as Israel intensifies attacks



More than 40 Palestinians have been killed in the Gaza Strip over the past two days, taking the death toll from Israel’s war against the Palestinian enclave to over 2,065.




At least 10 Palestinians, including six members of one family, lost their lives in an overnight attack on their homes in the city of Rafah in southern Gaza.


Six people, including four children were also killed in Gaza City. According to Palestinian medical sources, at least four others have been wounded in the air raids in Beit Lahia and Gaza City.


The Al-Qassam Brigades, the Palestinian resistance movement Hamas’ military wing, has said that three of its commanders were killed in an Israeli raid on Rafah’s Tal Sultan neighborhood.


Tel Aviv’s recent attacks have been focusing on Gaza City’s Zeytoun neighborhood, Rafah, and Deir al-Balah.


Meanwhile, the Ezzedine al-Qassam Brigades, the military wing of Hamas fired rockets in response to Israeli raids, setting off sirens in Shfela, Ein HaShlosha, Nirim, and Nahal Oz.


The fresh Israeli attacks come as the United Nations Security Council called on Hamas and Tel Aviv to reach a deal on a long-term truce.


Meanwhile, Israel has deployed more soldiers to areas near Gaza.


Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu has also said that Tel Aviv may extend its military campaign against Gaza.


More than 10,200 Palestinians have also been injured in the Israeli war on Gaza, which started on July 8.


The military wing of Hamas, has been launching retaliatory attacks against Israel.


SZH/HJL/HMV



Human rights groups call on Israel to allow them entry to Gaza



Amnesty International and Human Rights Watch said the Israeli authorities have denied them entry into the Gaza Strip to investigate allegations of human rights violations using various bureaucratic excuses, the Anadolu news agency reported.


The organisations announced, in a joint statement yesterday, that they had asked the Egyptian authorities to allow them to enter Gaza through the Rafah crossing, but Cairo did not respond to their request.


The statement did not mention the date the requests were submitted.


Anne FitzGerald, Amnesty International’s director of Research and Crisis Response, said: “The Israeli authorities appear to have been playing bureaucratic games with us over access to Gaza, conditioning it on entirely unreasonable criteria even as the death toll mounts.”


“The victims’ and the public’s right to know about what happened during the recent hostilities requires the Israeli authorities to ensure full transparency about their actions and to refrain from hindering independent and impartial research into all alleged violations.”


The statement pointed out that “since the beginning of Israel’s military operation on July 8, 2014, in Gaza, code-named “Protective Edge”, Israeli authorities have denied repeated requests by both Amnesty International and Human Rights Watch to enter Gaza via the Israeli-controlled Erez Crossing.”


Meanwhile, Middle East and North Africa director at Human Rights Watch, Sarah Leah Whitson said: “If Israel is confident in its claim that Hamas is responsible for civilian deaths in Gaza, it shouldn’t be blocking human rights organisations from carrying out on-site investigations. Public pronouncements by a warring party don’t determine whether attacks violated the laws of war, but field investigations could.”


The statement pointed out that “Since July 7, Amnesty International’s International Secretariat has submitted three applications for permission to enter Gaza via the Erez Crossing to Israel’s Civil Administration, which operates under Israel’s Defence Ministry.”


It continued: “In each case, the Civil Administration said it could not process the requests, and that the Erez Crossing was closed,” noting that “journalists, United Nations staff, humanitarian workers, and others with permits have been able to enter and exit via Erez throughout this period.”


Fitzgerald said: “Valuable time has already been lost and it’s essential that human rights organisations are now able to enter the Gaza Strip to begin the vital job of verifying allegations of war crimes.”


The statement pointed out that Amnesty International and Human Rights Watch have some teams already working on the ground in Gaza, but the sheer size of reported violations requires providing further assistance to the investigators.


The two organisations called on the Israeli government to “allow all allegations of war crimes and other violations to be independently verified and the victims to obtain justice. Active human rights monitoring on the ground can also help serve to prevent further abuses being carried out – by all sides.”


The Israeli authorities last allowed Human Rights Watch entry into Gaza Strip through the Erez crossing in 2006, and Amnesty International in the summer of 2012