Sunday, August 31, 2014

Live: Breaking news, traffic and travel across Teesside


The Evening Gazette's live breaking news blog brings you regular updates, pictures, video, tweets and comments covering the latest Teesside and North Yorkshire traffic, travel, weather, crime and council news for today, Monday 1st, 2014.


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


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



Jobs boost as IT specialist Razorblue plan to open Teesside office


IT specialist Razorblue is opening an office on Teesside, creating new jobs, after it secured contracts worth more than £2m.


The Catterick-based company has seen contracts grow by around 40% in the last year - more rapidly than expected - and hopes to increase by a further 50% in 2014.


Razorblue is based at Colburn Business Park with offices in Newcastle, Leeds and York.


It specialises in consultancy, managed IT services, hosted solutions and connectivity for a wide range of SMEs, business parks and public sector organisations across the UK.


The company is now searching for suitable premises on Teesside. It’s hoped the latest office will open before the end of the year, manned by a team of five with plans to increase numbers.


The new work includes a contract with Furlong Flooring based in Dublin, to provide bespoke software development and outsourced IT service to their European operation, as well as a range of IT services to FTSE100 listed company, Sports Direct.


Thanks to the new contract wins, Razorblue has recently recruited five new members of staff, now employing a team of 30, with plans to add another five before the end of the year.


In addition, the company has doubled its office space in Leeds, having moved out of the city centre to Airport West Business Park in Yeadon, close to Leeds Bradford Airport.


In the last year, Razorblue has invested more than £100,000 in its state-of-the-art network to provide faster, highly-resilient connectivity for its wide range of clients, which include SMEs, public sector organisations and large enterprises. This means that Razorblue can provide the best connectivity available that is both robust and cost effective for a variety of businesses.


Dan Kitchen, from Wynyard, established Razorblue in 2006 and is the company’s technical director. He said: “We’re growing faster than we anticipated which is thanks to the fantastic, multi-skilled team we have and the sophisticated technology that we have invested in and developed. It’s an exciting time as we take on new staff, expand our premises and work with more and more Europe-wide organisations.”


Chris Gill, commercial director of Razorblue, added: “In the last year we have invested hundreds of thousands of pounds in our business and that has not only allowed us to grow, but has led to us securing some major contracts. As a result, we’re creating jobs for both sales and technical experts in the North East as we constantly work to further enhance our services.”



Stokesley's Carlton Power appoints finance advisor for Trafford Power station


Carlton Power has appointed a financial adviser on raising debt and equity for one of the UK’s largest new power stations.


The Stokesley-based independent power station developer is pressing ahead with its 1.8 gigawatt Trafford Power combined cycle gas turbine (CCGT) project in Greater Manchester.


It has appointed Macquarie Capital as its exclusive financial adviser for the project, which is set to generate enough energy to power the equivalent of two million households - around a tenth of the UK’s total number of homes.


Carlton Power was instrumental in developing the Carrington Power Station in Manchester, which is the only new independent power station to start construction in the UK since 2008 and is due for completion later this year.


The Trafford Power station will be built next-door to the first facility.


Carlton Power will enter Trafford Power into the UK Government’s Capacity Market Auction that is to be held in December 2014. The Capacity Market will offer payment support for 15 years to new build power stations in return for guarantees to provide capacity at times of stress on the electricity system.


Subject to the outcomes of the auction and Carlton Power’s financing process, construction on the Trafford Power station is expected to start mid-2015 with operations commencing towards the end of 2018.


The project will utilise the latest CCGT technology, which has greater efficiency and flexibility than the UK’s current fleet of gas-fired power stations.


Macquarie Capital has been appointed to raise capital for the project and will be approaching potential equity investors and debt providers to commence discussions leading up to the auction.


Macquarie Capital is a leading infrastructure advisor globally, having advised on over £100 billion worth of infrastructure transactions in the last five years.


Carlton Power is also due to announce its chosen EPC contractor in the next few weeks.


Keith Clarke, Managing Director of Carlton Power, said: “We are delighted to have appointed such highly regarded financial advisers to assist with our Trafford project.


“Macquarie brings a wealth of experience of raising capital in the power and wider infrastructure industries. Their appointment comes at an exciting time for us as our Trafford project is now well advanced and on course for participation in the Capacity Market Auction at the end of this year and commercial operation in 2018. We are ready to begin active discussions with potential debt and equity investors.”


Mark Dooley, Head of Development Capital, Macquarie Capital said: “We are very pleased to have been appointed by Carlton Power to advise on the capital raise for Trafford Power station. The upcoming Capacity Market Auction is an important milestone for the UK energy sector and we believe that Carlton is extremely well positioned given its proven track record.”


Carlton Power has managed projects in the UK and Europe since it was founded in 1995.



‘No weapons for Israel!’ Protest group pours fake blood in Belgium airport


http://ift.tt/1r1ZwaI


A Belgian feminist activist group LilithS literally painted Liege Airport red with a hundred liters of fake blood at the facility’s role in arming Israel. The red pool of ‘blood’ symbolized their perceived ‘slaughter’ of Palestinians in Gaza by Israel.


Six women took part in the protest at 11.30 am on Tuesday. The members were all wearing t-shirts bearing the colors of the Palestinian flag as well as the slogans “Terrorism is real” and “Free Palestine.” They also unveiled a banner with the slogan: “How many tons of weapons for so many liters of blood?” the groups Facebook page stated.


Their man gripe was how they believe Liege Airport is being used to transport arms for Israel, which are used against the people of Palestine. LilithS says that the Belgian government and the European Union are turning a blind eye to this, as long as the military material being transported does not change vehicles.


26 Belgian non-profit organizations and other political parties have also spoken out against the lack of transparency shown by the airport.


Amsterdam’s Schipol airport in the Netherlands was used to transport Israeli arms from the United States. LilithS’s Facebook page states that from 2005 to 2006, more than 160 million explosives, 17 million weapons and one million cartridges, tear gas canisters and detonators were sent to Israel, via the Dutch capital. These weapons were used in Israel’s campaign against Lebanon in 2006 and led to the loss of over a thousand people, the group added


The US started to transport weapons to Israel via Liege after Amsterdam introduced tougher regulations to its Schipol air hub. LilithS says the Belgian airport has no such transparency policy.


However, Chirstian Delcourt, a spokesman for the airport says “there are no weapons that pass through this airport. This is an unfounded rumor, which you hear every time there is an escalation in the Israeli-Palestinian conflict,” the Belgian website dhnet.com reports.


He also stated that Liege Airport intends to file charges against the feminist activist group


For More:


http://ift.tt/1zY5LNW



Media Diversionary Tactics in Ferguson and Gaza


mk [To order William Kilpatrick’s new book Insecurity, click here.]


We hear a lot from the media about Israel’s disproportionate response to attacks from Hamas, but it may be time to focus on the media’s own disproportionate response to certain events.


Take the incident of the missing Malaysian airliner. Big story? Yes. But CNN’s decision to give it round-the-clock coverage for two solid months seems a little excessive, until you remember that there was an even bigger story unfolding around the same time—the Russian takeover of Crimea. The annexation of Crimea, the threat to the rest of Ukraine, and the possible re-ignition of the Cold War was a major historical event. It was also bad news for the Obama administration and its narrative that relations with Russia had been reset, tranquility had been established, and our military could be safely scaled back. It is in that context that CNN’s decision to refocus our attention to the possible whereabouts of the airliner should be understood.


The media’s current focus on the shooting of a black teenager by a white policeman in Ferguson, Missouri seems also designed to divert attention away from the big picture. The story provides an opportunity to shift the spotlight away from a number of other stories that reflect badly on the current administration—the failure of Obama’s Iraq policy, the inability to control the southern border, the IRS scandal, the President’s serial vacations, and the possibility of a Russian invasion of Ukraine. One might justifiably conclude that much of the media attention to Ferguson is fueled by ulterior motives.


By focusing on Ferguson, the media (with CNN once again playing a lead role) managed to blow it up into a much bigger story than it might otherwise have been. All that business about the IRS and the Mexican border suddenly faded from sight. And even though the coverage focused on the death of a young black American, it still managed to draw attention away from the major risk to young black Americans, in favor of a narrative which suggests that white racism is the root cause of black troubles. According to the established formula, America has never overcome the heritage of its “troubled racist past,” blacks are still the victims of unjust discrimination, and black youth live in constant fear of white police.


While that narrative was still valid in the fifties and sixties, it is now well past its expiration date. In Chicago this past weekend, seven people were killed and twenty-nine others wounded due to gun violence. All of the victims were black—most of them young. This is about par for a weekend in Chicago. And similar incidences of black-on-black violence occur every week in Philadelphia, Detroit, Baltimore, Atlanta, and New York—not to mention St. Louis, which is right next door to Ferguson. Many of the most violent cities have black mayors, black city councilmen, and black police chiefs. That’s a bit inconvenient for the press because it doesn’t fit into the white racism narrative, but the media stick to their story nonetheless. Yet the causes of black violence have been extensively studied by sociologists and criminologists, and they have been telling us for decades that the root cause is the breakdown of the black family due to high rates of illegitimacy.


If the mainstream media people were as concerned as they profess to be about the lives of young blacks, we would see numerous TV specials about the black family crisis, and instead of sending platoons of reporters and cameramen to Ferguson, CNN would dispatch them to cover the daily mayhem in Chicago. But that would require revising and updating the narrative that has served the media so well, and that, apparently, is just too much trouble.


Not only is the narrative about white racism dishonest, it’s destructive. It encourages grievances, keeps racial tensions alive, and perpetuates violent behavior. In short, the media’s favored formula is a self-fulfilling prophecy that only serves to guarantee a more polarized society.


On the other hand, the media’s distortion of the Ferguson affair does serve one useful purpose. It alerts us to the possibility that other stories are being handled in the same unbalanced way. The biggest story in the world today is the resurgence of Islam. And by-and-large, that story is being managed in the same dishonest fashion.


Which brings us back to the point where we started—the media’s lopsided attention to Israel’s supposedly disproportionate response to Hamas. The similarities to the media’s handling of the Ferguson situation are hard to miss. Some of the same reporters who were embedded in Gaza are now embedded in Ferguson. The media’s concern over innocent civilians in Gaza has now shifted to an innocent teenager in Missouri. And just as the blame for the troubles in Gaza is assigned to the disproportionate Israeli response, the problems in Ferguson and elsewhere are blamed on disproportionate encounters between well-armed cops and unarmed youth. The narrative is also the same. According to the media’s one-size-fits-all explanation, both rockets fired from Gaza and projectiles hurled at Ferguson store windows are caused by poverty and institutional oppression.


Moreover, in both cases, the media is being played like a violin—in Missouri by professional race-baiters and grievance-mongers, in Gaza by Palestinian propagandists who seem more media-savvy than the media itself, and who are adept at staging fake atrocity photo-ops which they know will be obligingly transmitted to TV screens across the world. Just as riots in Missouri feed on media attention, so does violence in Palestine.


But why, exactly, is Palestine given so much attention?


The other, and most irresponsible, aspect of the media’s disproportionate coverage is that in both cases, the stories are used to keep the public’s eye off the larger picture. The larger story that is being kept off-stage in Ferguson is the breakdown of the black family. The larger story in the Israeli-Hamas conflict is that the root cause of the troubles is Islam itself. You might prefer to say that the trouble lies in a violent and anti-Semitic interpretation of Islam, but that interpretation is now widespread. As I wrote recently:



Muslims are attacking non-Muslims in Syria, Iraq, Iran, Afghanistan, Pakistan, Nigeria, Kenya, Sudan, Somalia, Ethiopia, the Ivory Coast, Mali, Libya, Indonesia, Malaysia, India, the Philippines, and Thailand. There are no Jews to speak of in these places. So you can’t blame the violence on them. Given the propensity of Muslims to attack their neighbors, what are the chances that in the one place on earth where a Jewish government and an Islamist government are in conflict, it’s the Jews who are largely at fault?



The media coverage of jihadist activities in most of the above-mentioned places is minimal. So also is the coverage of Muslim attacks on Jews in France, Germany, the Netherlands, Denmark, England, and Australia. Nor will you hear much about the rocks, bottles, bricks, and Molotov cocktails thrown during the numerous Muslim riots in the EU and UK.


Likewise, just as the media avoids telling the story of black-on-black violence, it rarely focuses on the fact that the vast majority of Muslim deaths worldwide are caused by other Muslims. To do so would undermine the established narrative that Islam is a religion of peace and justice.


Thus, the obsessive concentration on Israel and Hamas. And thus, when the media does attend to hard-to-ignore cases of Islamic jihad, they are forced to pretend that each occurrence is an unusual departure from true Islam. For example, reporters treat the atrocities committed by ISIS—the beheadings, the sex slavery, the forced conversions, the payment of the jizya—as though they were exotic new phenomena, when, in fact, they were all integral elements of Islamic expansion for more than twelve hundred years.


When you step back from the Israel-Hamas conflict to get a broader view, you notice that groups like Hamas, ISIS, Boko Haram, al-Qaeda, and Al-Shabaab not only have much in common with each other, they share in a common heritage and a common devotion to Islam. The media, however, is trapped in a narrative that says otherwise. Hence, the need to put the onus on Israel. The thought that the violence emanating from Gaza is part of a worldwide movement to re-establish a seventh-century theocracy is a thought they dare not entertain.


Americans, including many black Americans, are catching on to the game the media is playing with race relations in America. Let’s hope that they will soon catch on to the very similar game being played in the Middle East.


Meanwhile, the Daily Mail reports that “ISIS militants and their supporters are using social media to encourage protesters in Ferguson to embrace radical Islam and fight against the U.S. government.” Ironically, the jihadist social media campaign to win over black Americans relies on the very same narrative pushed by the mainstream media. According to a Washington Post article, “One argument they’ve been making for years is that racism and discrimination are rampant in some parts of the West, and they’re hoping the Ferguson riots could help recruit black Americans.” According to one fan of the Islamic State interviewed for the piece, “In Islam there is no racism, and we think black people will wake up and follow the example of Malcolm X…” Some social media users put the matter more bluntly. One typical message reads: “Blacks in #Ferguson, there’s an alternative to this indignity: pick yourselves up with Islam, like #IS in #Iraq.”


Now that the media’s dishonest narrative has been picked up by ISIS and friends, it’s high time for them to reconsider the dangerous game they have been playing.


William Kilpatrick is the author of Christianity, Islam, and Atheism: The Struggle for the Soul of the West . His work is supported in part by the Shillman Foundation.



Group: Israel arrests nearly 600 Palestinians in August


RAMALLAH (AFP) — Israeli forces detained 597 Palestinians in the occupied West Bank and East Jerusalem in August, raising the number of Palestinians in Israeli prisons to more than 7,000, the Palestinian Prisoners Society said.



The majority of the arrests took place in East Jerusalem and Hebron, which is situated in the south of the West Bank, the NGO, based in Ramallah, said in a statement.


Many were arrested during demonstrations in support of Palestinians in Gaza, which was the focus of a deadly 50-day war between Israel and Hamas, the de facto ruler of Gaza.


Since the June kidnapping and murder of three Israeli teenagers in the southern West Bank, at least 2,000 Palestinians have been questioned and detained, according to the NGO



Israel extends detention of Palestinian for Facebook posts


HEBRON (Ma’an) — An Israeli court on Friday extended the detention of a Palestinian activist who was detained for political activities on Facebook for a week, a Ma’an reporter said on Saturday.



An Israeli court in Petah Tikva extended the detention of Suhaib Zahida, 31, until Sept. 4, after he was arrested on Thursday for creating a page on Facebook called “the Intifada of Hebron” in addition to leading a campaign for the boycott of Israeli products.


Zahida had previously participated in several nonviolent campaigns opposing the Israeli occupation and was an active member of groups working to oppose the recruitment of Palestinian citizens of Israel to the Israeli military.


Palestinians inside Israel have been previously detained for short periods of time and questioned regarding their political activities on Facebook, but such arrests rarely occur in the West Bank.


In October, Israeli authorities arrested Palestinian citizen of Israel Razi al-Nabulsi, 23, for a week as a result of Facebook posts they argued constituted “incitement.”



Maldives raises $2 million for war-torn Gaza


The yellow glow of burning fires lights up Gaza’s severely-damaged buildings on August 30, 2014.



The Maldives Islands has raised $2 million to help the Palestinians of the war-ravaged Gaza Strip after seven weeks of atrocities by Israel.



Media outlets raised the money in the Sunni Muslim archipelago to express solidarity with the Palestinians, a fundraising organizer said on Saturday.


“About 10 media institutions, including on-line and print, came together to raise this money,” said spokesman Ahmed Zahir by telephone from capital Male.


The sum was raised through a 36-hour telethon along with other public contributions by state and private companies.


According to the spokesman, 29.4 million rufiyaa ($1.91 million) was given to the Qatar Red Crescent this week to supply food and water and help Gazans reconstruct the sliver, which sustained extensive damage after 50 days of Israeli bombardment.


Maldives has also imposed a ban on Israeli products and has managed to revoke three cooperation agreements on health, tourism, and education with the regime.


The high-end holiday destination, which has a population of nearly 400,000, has also been a scene of hostility among its residents and Israeli tourists recently.


Israeli warplanes and tanks started pounding Gaza in early July, inflicting heavy losses on the Palestinian land.


On Tuesday, a truce took effect between the Israeli regime and the Palestinian resistance movement Hamas. The truce stipulates the ease of Israel’s seven-year-old blockade as well as the provision of a guarantee that Palestinian demands will be met.


Almost 2,137 Palestinians, mostly civilians, including women, children and the elderly, were killed in 50 days of the Israeli onslaught on Gaza. Around 11,000 others were injured.


Tel Aviv says 69 Israelis were killed in the conflict, but Hamas puts the number at much higher.


NT/NN/AS



Boko Haram kills scores in Nigeria’s northeast


Boko Haram Takfiri militants in Nigeria (file photo)



Nigeria’s Boko Haram Takfiri group has killed scores of civilians in a town near the border with Cameroon, reports say.



On Saturday, the Takfiri militant group continued atrocities in the twin towns of Gamboru and Ngala, in northeastern Nigeria, which they took over earlier this week, AFP reported.


Many of the town’s residents have crossed the border into Cameroon’s Fotokol in an attempt to flee violence in the volatile Borno State’s town.


“They are now killing people like chickens. They started by selective killings and later went on a killing spree,” said a Gamboru resident in Fotokol.


The town’s highest Muslim cleric and the head of the traders’ union were among those killed, said the witness,


“They threaten to kill anybody who refuses to leave the town. They say we don’t belong,” said another witness, adding, “Initially they said we were free to stay or leave but now they are saying all residents should leave the town.”


Boko Haram has stepped up its attacks in northeastern Nigeria and has seized territory in Borno.


Boko Haram has claimed responsibility for a number of deadly gun and bomb attacks in various parts of Nigeria since 2009.


Over the past four years, violence in the north of Africa’s most populous country has claimed thousands of lives.


NT/NN/AS



32 Philippine peacekeepers in Golan evacuated: UN


This photo shows Irish UN peacekeeping forces sitting on their armored vehicles in the occupied Golan Heights on August 28, 2014.



The United Nations says 32 of its Philippine peacekeepers who were attacked by anti-Syria militants in the occupied Golan Heights have safely been evacuated while others are still under fire.



In a statement on Saturday, the UN Disengagement Observer Force (UNDOF) said 32 Filipino personnel had been extricated and “are now safe.” They were part of a 72-member contingent deployed to two different positions in the Syrian side of Israeli-occupied Golan Heights.



According to the UN, those remaining in the other UN position are still under attack by “armed elements,” but the peacekeepers have responded to the assaults and prevented the attackers from entering the encampment.



Manila has deployed 331 peacekeeping soldiers and police officers to the UNDOF positions in Golan.


Meanwhile, the statement said the UN is now working to secure the safe release of the 44 Fijian UNDOF staff who had been abducted by the militants believed to be members of the al-Qaeda-affiliated al-Nusra Front near Quneitra since Thursday.


UN Secretary General Ban Ki-moon has strongly censured the attack on UNDOF positions and the detention of its peacekeeping forces.


Ban “demands the unconditional and immediate release of all the detained United Nations peacekeepers and calls upon all parties to cooperate fully with UNDOF to enable it to operate freely and to ensure full safety and security of its personnel and assets,” his spokesman said.


Al-Qaeda-linked militants are operating against the Syrian government forces and stray mortar rounds have hit the Israeli-occupied Golan Heights on several occasions.


Syria has been gripped by deadly violence since March 2011. Over 190,000 people have reportedly been killed and millions displaced due to the violence fueled by the foreign-backed Takfiri terrorists.


MKA/NN/AS



Reinstatement of Cops accused of fake encounters is clear indication that administration is helping them


By reinstating cops accused of fake encounters Gujarat Government is putting them in the same machinery which is prosecuting them. They can consequently threaten or cajole witnesses, believe Legal Experts.


By TwoCircles.net Special Correspondent,


“On availing the bail, the respective applicants shall not directly or indirectly make an inducement, threat or promise to any person acquainted with the facts of the case so as to dissuade him to disclose such facts to the Court or to any other authority”, said Bombay High Court while granting bail to IPS officer Abhay Chudasama and two others in the 2005 fake encounter case of Sohrabuddin. The order was pronounced on 28th April 2014 by Bombay High Court Justice A R Joshi.


Such caution by the high court in Chudasama’s case was not exception but the usual practice of court of law forewarning accused granted bail by the court with the intention that although court is releasing accused from prison but allegations against him still hold till judged ultimately by the trial court.




G L Singhal and Abhay Chudasama

G L Singhal and Abhay Chudasama

Because of this after releasing on bail he must remain away from everything which comes under the domain of evidence against him so that ‘his personal liberty’ granted by court should not influence or tamper any material evidence of the case nor even because of his simple physical presence.

Such admonition by court at the end of its order is not mere ceremonial but is inclusive in nature, violation of which may result into cancellation of bail by the court when such infringement is brought to its notice through a separate urging.


Two bright IPS officers of Gujarat viz. G L Singhal and Abhay Chudasama were charged by central investigating agency CBI with the criminal offences related to fake encounters of Ishrat Jahan (2004) and Sohrabuddin (2005) respectively and who have been released on bail after spending couple of years behind bars under such allegations, have assumed their positions in the Gujarat police force recently.


While G L Singhal has been reinstated to the position of Group Commandant in the State Reserve Police (SRP) on 28th May 2014, Abhay Chudasma has been made the Superintendent of Police (SP) of Vigilance Squad in the DGP’s office, Gandhinagar with the notification issued on the night of 14th Aug 2014. This means that Chudasama will have special powers with his posting to conduct raids anywhere in Gujarat state to curb crimes.


Both these officers were earlier suspended by Gujarat government following their arrests but their reinstatement soon after the grant of bail raises a few unanswered questions for the Anandi Ben led BJP government in Gujarat.


The foremost and utmost important question having legal implications is that reinstating such tainted officers, who have not yet been cleared from criminal charges, to an elite post in the state police force offering wide range of powers of summoning any person in the state or sanctioning prosecution against any accused person in the state can certainly influence the witnesses – many of whom are their subordinate police personnel. Who will assure that the witnesses against them in their own criminal cases will not be influenced or that prosecution evidences against them will not be hampered in any way due to their reinstatement?


Experts’ Opinions: Advocate Vrinda Grover, a Supreme Court lawyer who is representing Ishrat Jahan mother Shamima Kausar in the fake encounter trial, told TwoCircles.net , “There is a fundamental principle that when a case is going on against somebody, that person is asked to step down from their position, (but) here the reverse is happening,” adding that you are putting them in the same machinery which is prosecuting them.


She further pointed out that in the Ishrat Jahan case the witnesses are the subordinate police officers and the persons reinstated are now going to be their boss and they will be expected to go and give evidences against their boss, and wondered if ever it can happen in India.


Talking to TCN, Social Activist Tessta Setalvad too described the reinstatement as “very unfortunate” and “shocking,” adding, “The power that a police officer has in the hierarchy is very strong, and you have the same dispensation in power – if not the same person – and it would be very short sighted view to say that would not influence (the witnesses).”


Gujarat based Advocate Gagan Sethi of the Centre for Social Justice (CSJ) said that these officers have only been released on bail and therefore there is nothing which can suggest that they are free of their guilt.


“Bail as a right is available to all accused and that doesn’t minimize the gravity of the charge or the likelihood of a person being guilty or not”, Advocate Sethi told TwoCircles.net.


In an Email response to TCN, he further said, “Utmost caution needs to be exercised in reinstating such officers to duty; ideally they should be asked to proceed on leave or given postings where they cannot influence the outcome of trial, influence witnesses.”


In the eyes of law any crime committed within the territory of a state is supposed to have been committed against the state. Therefor the fake encounters in which these two IPS officers have already been charged by the CBI should be considered to have been committed against state. Gujarat government should have ideally acted as a prosecution against these officers. But the state government has maintained that these encounters were genuine and that those killed had terror links.


“Being put on posts which they can use to threaten or cajole witnesses, is a clear indication that the administration is helping them,” Sethi further told TCN. He feels that the matters should not be taken lightly and must be brought to the notice of the National Human Rights Commission (NHRC).



Saltburn model crowned second runner up in Miss Newcastle GB 2014


A Saltburn beauty did Teesside proud after being crowned second runner up in a pageant.


Beth Dooley, 19, just narrowly missed out on taking the title of Miss Newcastle GB 2014 on Friday night.


Now living in Newcastle, it is the first time 19-year-old Beth has entered a pageant competition.


The model, make-up artist and beauty therapist started modelling when she was 16.


Speaking before the pageant, she said: “I have always wanted to get into pageant work, but never thought I had the right look for it.


“It means so much to me to even be in the final.”


2013 Richard Powazynski Beth Dooley


Beth Dooley

Also representing Teesside in the competition was Ailish Shaw, 22, from Normanby.


Ailish, who works at Middlesbrough’s James Cook University Hospital for Cancer Research UK as an admin worker came in the top 15 at the Miss Great Britain finals last year after winning the national title Miss Photogenic in an online competition.


She had said: “I only started doing pageants last year.


“I did dancing for quite a few years and I’m very comfortable on stage - I like being on stage.


“I also like having my photo taken.”


Nineteen girls from across the region took part in the final, which took place at the Assembly Rooms in Newcastle.


There were different rounds including masquerade with a surprise, swimwear through the years and eveningwear.


On the night, Nicole Bailey from Jesmond took the crown and a contract with Headline Models.


She will now go on to represent Newcastle at The Miss Great Britain Grand Final at the Athena in Leicester in November this year.


Kate Graham was awarded first runner up.



Two arrested following robbery Norton Convenience Store in Norton


Two men have been arrested in connection with a robbery at a Stockton shop.


Norton Convenience Store, in Norton Road, Norton, was robbed at 9.03am today.


Two men entered the shop and following an altercation, they fled with cash and alcohol.


A spokesman for Cleveland Police said two men have been arrested on suspicion of robbery and are currently being questioned in police custody.



Fun, fitness and fundraising at the Middlesbrough 3K Fun Run



Runners of all ages put their best foot forward today when they took part in the Middlesbrough 3K Fun Run.


People dressed up for the Taylor Wimpey Tees Pride 10k, which was this year celebrating its 10th anniversary.


And runners were raising money for a host of different charities and good causes.


Crowds of people cheered the runners on when they competed in the race this morning, which started and finished in Hall Drive, Acklam.


The race was won by 13-year-old Josh Cowperthwaite from Acklam, Middlesbrough.


He said: “I’m really pleased. I came third last year so it’s great to win this time.”


Lorna Redpath, 13, from Great Ayton, was the first girl to cross the finish line.


She said: “This is the first time I have done this event. It has been great. The atmosphere was really good.”



Tees Pride 10k: Thousands take part in this year's run in Middlesbrough



The sun was shining as thousands of runners pounded the streets of Middlesbrough for the annual 10k run.


This year the was the tenth anniversary of the Taylor Wimpey Tees Pride 10k run which and thousands of people took part.


Crowds gathered in the streets to cheer on the runners.


The race was won by Ethiopian paralympian Wondiye Indelbu, 26, who lives in Middlesbrough.


He said: “I came third last year so it is fantastic to be able to win this time.


“It has been a great day.”


Paul Garrens, 41, an operations manager from Marton Road, Middlesbrough, ran the race dressed as Elvis.


He said: “This is the first time I have done this in fancy dress.


“I am raising money for Teesside Hospice. It is a great atmosphere and the weather couldn’t have been better.”



Rebuilding Gaza will take 20 years


1409056005237955400.jpg


JERUSALEM: An international organization involved in assessing post-conflict reconstruction says it will take 20 years for Gaza’s battered and neglected housing stock to be rebuilt following the war between Hamas and Israel.

The assessment by Shelter Cluster, chaired by the Norwegian Refugee Council with the participation of the UN refugee agency and the Red Cross, underscores the complexities involved in an overall reconstruction program for the Gaza Strip, which some Palestinian officials have estimated could cost in excess of $6 billion.

Any effort to rebuild Gaza will be hindered by a blockade imposed by Egypt and Israel since the Islamic militant group Hamas seized power in 2007. Israel has severely restricted the import of concrete and other building materials into Gaza, fearing that militants will use them to build rockets and reinforce cross-border attack tunnels. Egypt and Norway have raised the possibility of convening a Gaza donors’ conference at some point next month, but no firm arrangements have been made.

With a population of 1.8 million, Gaza is a densely populated coastal strip of urban warrens and agricultural land that still bears the scars of previous rounds of fighting.


In its report issued late Friday, Shelter Cluster said 17,000 Gaza housing units were destroyed or severely damaged during this summer’s war and 5,000 units still need work after damage sustained in the previous military campaigns. In addition, it says, Gaza has a housing deficit of 75,000 units.

Shelter Cluster said its 20-year assessment is based on the capacity of the main Israel-Gaza cargo crossing to handle 100 trucks of construction materials daily. There was no immediate comment from the Israeli government agency responsible for operating the crossing on whether it had future plans to ease restrictions on goods going into Gaza.

Israel and Hamas agreed on Tuesday to an open-ended truce. The cease-fire brought an immediate end to the fighting but left key issues unresolved. Hamas immediately declared victory, even though it has very little to show for the war



Pakistan crisis: scores injured in protests


Asad Hashim – Islamabad - At least 300 people have been injured as police clashed with thousands of anti-government protesters in the Pakistani capital, as the country’s political crisis turned violent outside the Prime Minister’s official residence.



The clashes broke out on Friday night after thousands of supporters of opposition leaders Tahir-ul-Qadri and Imran Khan attempted to remove a barricade as they approached the PM’s residence.


Police fired rubber bullets and tear gas at the protesters, some of whom fought back with wooden batons, while others threw stones and the occasional firebomb in the heart of Islamabad’s high-security “red zone”


By 3:00am local time on Sunday morning (22:00 GMT on Saturday), protesters had used vehicles to break down the boundary fence around the National Assembly and were occupying the building’s grounds.


“We left to occupy the area outside the PM house in a peaceful way,” said Muhammad Imran, 25, a Qadri supporter who suffered five rubber bullet wounds. “The police came and fired directly on us and on others in the crowd.”


At least 25 police personnel were also injured in the clashes.


“When we fired tear gas to disperse them, they started throwing rocks at us,” said Shakeel Ahmed, a 45-year-old police officer whose leg was injured by a thrown rock. “It was so intense that I had to run away.”


Supporters of Khan and Qadri have been holding a sit-in near the parliament since August 14 call for the resignation of the prime minister, Nawaz Sharif over alleged vote rigging.


Earlier on Friday, talks between government negotiators and teams from both Khan’s Pakistan Tehreek-e-Insaf (PTI) and Qadri’s Pakistan Awami Tehreek (PAT) broke down, as several earlier rounds had.


On Thursday the military, which has ruled the country for roughly half of its 67 years of independence, stepped into the crisis, assuming a “mediation role” between the protesters and government


Khan alleges vote rigging in the 2013 general election which Nawaz Sharif’s PML-N party swept to power.


Qadri, meanwhile, wants a “national government” of technocrats and bureaucrats, who would then draft a new constitution and system of governance for the country.


“There is no question of resignation by Nawaz Sharif, nor any member from the government,” read a statement released by the PM’s office earlier on Saturday.


Sharif is not present at the official residence in Islamabad, preferring to stay at his home in Lahore, where he normally resides.


For More;


http://ift.tt/1B5NeBz



Judge tells two-time Stockton drug dealer Michael Hunt 'I don't want to crush you'


A drug dealer was told by Teesside’s top judge that his three-and-a-half year prison sentence was “generous”.


Judge Simon Bourne-Arton QC told the twice-convicted dealer: “I don’t want to crush you at your age.


“You’ve had a life of crime. You’ve had a life of long sentences. If I gave you a long sentence now it may well crush you.”


The man in the dock at Teesside Crown Court was 36-year-old Michael Alan Hunt.


He has a record of 108 offences and has served sentences of six yearsand four years for robbery and five-and-a-half years for supplying Class A drugs.


He was arrested after he was asked by a PC on patrol to stop riding his bicycle on the pavement in Stockton town centre.


The policeman was suspicious about Hunt’s manner at about 11.50am on October 14 last year.


Hunt instantly resisted when told he would be searched for drugs, said prosecutor Victoria Lamballe.


He tried to escape in a brief struggle and the officer used his CS spray.


He threw away a plastic egg which contained 15 wraps of heroin.


Hunt, of Hartington Road, Stockton, admitted possession of a Class A drug with intent to supply and possession of a Class C drug - one tablet of the heroin treatment drug Subutex.


He was jailed for five-and-a-half years in June 2008 for possession of heroin with intent to supply.


In that case, he’d been caught with more than £16,500 worth of the drug.


He discarded most of it in a Stockton garden as he ran from police.


The rest was discovered in his home with digital scales and pieces of paper carrying his phone number.


Graham Silvester, defending, said Hunt was released from prison in 2012, still mixed with the same sorts of people and was in debt to a dealer.


“Effectively he was the equivalent of a bookie’s runner but with Class A drugs,” said Mr Silvester.


“He was stuck in that unenviable position of being a drug user in debt to a supplier and really with no prospect of getting himself out of that circle.


“He wasn’t dealing specifically for his own benefit to get cash. This was because he was under pressure to repay this debt.


“He accepts today that custody is inevitable. He knows it’s going to be of some length.”


Judge Bourne-Arton, the Recorder of Middlesbrough, told Hunt: “There is no substantial offending since 2008. You’ve shown some signs of trying to improve.”


He jailed Hunt for three-and-a-half years, saying: “In all the circumstances, Mr Hunt, that’s a generous sentence.”



Council leaders taking call for direct Middlesbrough-London rail link to corridors of power


North council leaders are taking their call for a direct train between London and Middlesbrough to the corridors of power.


Bill Dixon, leader of Darlington Borough Council, will meet with senior civil servants in the capital city on Tuesday to lay out plans for six daily trains to run between London and Teesside.


He said Teesside’s growing chemicals sector will suffer if a direct train link to London is not put in place.


“The economy is going to improve and Teesside will once again be cut off,” he said.


“There are large-scale global industries here in the Tees Valley and restricting their access to major cities makes no sense.


“The deputy mayor of Middlesbrough and myself will meet with senior civil servants next week to discuss electrification of the lines between Thirsk and Middlesbrough.


“There is no reason why this physically couldn’t happen and it would not be costly in terms of other railway investments.


“In fact, it would be cost effective. It would easily pay for itself within a few years.”


A recent report, called One North: a proposition for the Interconnected North, brings together five major cities in the north: Leeds; Sheffield; Manchester; Liverpool; and Newcastle.


The five cities are calling for a £15bn plan to improve road and rail connections in the region over the next 15 years. It includes plans for a new 125mph inter-city rail link, faster links and better access to ports and airports.


For the North East it would mean improvements to rail links between Newcastle and York in advance of HS2 being built – creating the capacity for 140mph trains which would speed up journey times and connections to the wider rail network.


However, Redcar and Cleveland Council leader George Dunning said it’s high time Teesside was better connected.


He said: “Middlesbrough is one of the largest towns in the country and it hasn’t got a direct link to London.


“You have to drive or get a bus to Darlington if you want to go to London and that is clearly putting people off coming to the area. It’s affecting our business and it’s affecting our tourism.


“George Osborne has proposed spending billions on high speed for the North, but the North doesn’t seem to mean the North East.


“The proposed HS2 project linking up to the north means the likes of Manchester, Liverpool and Leeds.


“There has also been talk of linking to Newcastle in some way, but there has been no mention of Middlesbrough. There’s an awful lot of England between Leeds and Newcastle.”



North councils left with funding shortfall after those left reeling from bedroom tax cry for help


Cash-strapped North councils have diverted more than £300,000 of funds to top up Government help for those left reeling by the bedroom tax.


Welfare reforms have seen changes made to benefits which have forced many to seek smaller housing while scores of others struggle to pay their rent.


Thousands applied for Discretionary Housing Payment (DHP) cash payments to get by, but now many councils have spent over the amount allocated by Government and have had to find extra funds from elsewhere.


Fears are also spreading the situation could get worse as authorities may be even more out-of-pocket next year when the Government will cease to offer DHP funding.


Hartlepool Council had one of the highest deficits - £115,239 - with the total spent on DHP hitting almost half-a-million pounds.


In Gateshead, the overspend was £90,000, after the authority spent £583,000. Chiefs will now bid for extra DHP cash as the council foresees a further shortfall.


Sunderland City Council spent £690,000 and had a shortfall of £32,000. North Tyneside Council reported an underspend while Durham County Council was granted additional DHP funds to cope with demand.


In Middlesbrough the figure was £37,420, Redcar and Cleveland spent £5,000, while Stockton was the lowest over their allocated funds at £932.


Both Hartlepool and Middlesbrough councils said they met the shortfall by using money from the Local Welfare Provision (LWP), which can also be used to help people struggling with welfare reforms.


But the LWP will also be removed by the Government from April 1, 2015.


South Tyneside Council was left with a shortfall of £8,000 after granting £314,000 worth of DHP applications.


Meanwhile Newcastle City Council - which by far paid out the most DHP grants at £1.5m - was granted an additional £861,000 in DHP cash from the Government to cope with almost 3,000 applications.


Coun Dave Budd, Middlesbrough’s Deputy Mayor and executive member for resources, said: “The Coalition Government’s welfare reforms have placed a great many people in real hardship.


“From a very early stage we have been working with many partners - including local housing providers and the Citizens Advice Bureau - to address issues which can have a devastating effect on people’s lives.


“With the removal of the funding for the Local Welfare Provision from April next year, it will become even tougher to help those most in need. However, we will continue to do everything in our power as a local authority to mitigate those impacts.”


Labour Parliamentary Candidate for Redcar Anna Turley highlighted the situation, saying: “David Cameron and Nick Clegg’s bedroom tax has been a disaster for the hundreds of thousands of people hit by the cruel levy and it has come at a huge cost for local taxpayers.”


However, the DWP says more than £20m specifically earmarked to help people adapt to welfare reforms was not spent by UK local authorities last year.


Figures show almost two-thirds (63%) of councils paid out less than their total DHP allocation to tenants.


A spokesman for Hartlepool Council said: “The council recognises the significant detrimental impact that the bedroom tax is having on households and as a council we are doing everything possible to ease the pain for residents.


“In 2013/14, the Government’s introduction of the bedroom tax resulted in reduced housing benefit entitlements in Hartlepool of over £1m and affected over 1,400 households.”


Minister for Welfare Reform, Lord Freud, said: “We tripled support for vulnerable people to £180m last year to ensure the right help was in place during our far-reaching welfare reforms.


“The figures also show that recent scare stories about councils running out of money were grossly exaggerated.


“Our vital reforms are fixing the broken welfare system by restoring fairness for hardworking people and making sure work always pays, as part of our long-term plan.”