Wednesday, December 17, 2014

Hamas dismisses Assad’s accusation that it intervenes in Syrian affairs


Dr Sami Abu Zuhri


Hamas dismissed Syrian President Bashar Al-Assad’s allegation that the movement is “intervening in Syria’s internal affairs”.


Hamas’s spokesperson Sami Abu Zuhri told the Anadolu Agency that his movement is the only Palestinian faction that left Syria after the start of the revolution in 2011 so as to avoid being a party to the ongoing conflict there.


He dismissed the allegation reportedly made by Al-Assad – that Hamas is intervening in Syria’s internal affairs – as unfounded.


Abu Zahri emphasised that, as a resistance movement, Hamas benefited from its presence in Syria but it did not and will not intervene in the internal affairs of any Arab country.


Yesterday, Syrian media outlets reported that Assad accused Hamas of intervening in his country’s internal affairs.


Before the Arab uprisings, Hamas maintained strong and long-lasting relationships with the Syrian regime in the context of what was known as the Resistance Axis – which comprised Iran, Syria, Lebanon’s Hezbollah and Hamas – as opposed to the Moderate Axis, which included Mubarak’s Egypt, Saudi Arabia, the UAE and Jordan.


However, the outbreak of the Syrian revolution in 2011 and Hamas’s refusal to support the Syria regime caused tensions between Damascus and the Palestinian movement. This led to Hamas’s leadership moving out of the country



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, Thursday 18th December, 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.



The Derby win will count for nothing if Boro lose at Ipswich warns Adam Reach


The thrilling victory over Derby will count for nothing if Boro slip up at Ipswich warns Adam Reach.


The 21-year-old winger insists the players won’t be taking anything for granted when Saturday’s game kicks off at Portman Road.


For one thing, the Tractor Boys are one of the Championship’s form teams with the second best home record in the division with seven wins and two draws from 10 league fixtures so far this season.


Boro’s next three fixtures, on paper at least, look tough, with the visit to Ipswich followed by the Boxing Day clash with Nottingham Forest at the Riverside and, two days later, a trip to Blackburn.


The mood in the Boro dressing room is one of quiet confidence and Reach revealed that the players are looking beyond Ipswich.


“It’s about the next game,” he said. “We have a couple of tough games coming up but we’ve just played arguably the toughest game against Derby and we won 2-0.


“If you can beat the top of the league I don’t think you should fear anyone else but we’ll take each game as it comes.


“Ipswich are doing well but that result on Saturday will mean nothing if we disappoint ourselves by coming away with no points, hopefully we can bring all three points home in readiness for Forest.”


Boro have a pretty good record against the division’s current top teams.


Aitor Karanka’s men drew with Bournemouth and Watford at the Riverside, more than holding their own on both occasions.


Derby (2-0) and Brentford (4-0) were beaten convincingly, again on home soil, while Ipswich are the only members of the top six still to play Boro.


It should also be noted that Norwich were in the play-off zone when they were beaten 4-0 at the Riverside early last month.


So far, Boro have shown that they done well when they’ve been tested, particularly since the first international break in September.


Since the 1-0 home defeat to Reading at the back end of August, Karanka’s team have lost just once in 16 Championship fixtures, climbing from 16th up to second, level on points and goal difference with leaders Bournemouth.


Asked what the secret of Boro’s success has been, Reach said: “We don’t live in the past at this club, in the dressing room we forget about the last result as soon as it’s over and look ahead to the next game.


“You’ve got to say, whether you are at the top of the table or the bottom of the table, the biggest test is the next game and it’s the most important game.”



Obama’s Bailout for Communist Dictators


Mandela memorial service (30) The Soviet Union did not have to fall. If Carter had won a second term and Mondale had succeeded him, the Communist dictatorship might have received the outside help it needed to survive.


And we would still be living under the shadow of the Cold War.


Carter couldn’t save the Soviet Union, but he did his best to save Castro , visiting Fidel and Raul in Cuba where the second worst president in American history described his meeting with Castro as a greeting among “old friends”.


Raul Castro called Carter “the best of all U.S. presidents.”


Obama’s dirty deal with Raul will make the worst president in American history, Castro’s new best friend.


Carter couldn’t save Castro, but Obama did. This was not a prisoner exchange. This was a Communist bailout.


Obama boasted that he would increase the flow of money to Cuba from businesses, from bank accounts and from trade. When he said, “We’re significantly increasing the amount of money that can be sent to Cuba”, that was his real mission statement.


The Castro regime is on its last legs. Its sponsors in Moscow and Caracas are going bankrupt due to failing energy prices. The last hope of the Butcher of Havana was a bailout from Washington D.C.


And that’s exactly what Obama gave him.


Obama has protected the Castros from regime change as if Communist dictators are an endangered species.


From the beginning, Obama put his foreign policy at the disposal of Havana when he backed Honduran leftist thug Manuel Zelaya’s attempt to shred its Constitution over the protests of the country’s Congress and Supreme Court. And its military, which refused to obey his illegal orders.


Obama’s support for an elected dictator in Honduras should have warned Americans that their newly elected leader viewed men like Zelaya favorably and constitutions and the separation of powers between the branches of government unfavorably. It also showcased his agenda for Latin America.


His embrace of Raul Castro brings that agenda out into the open even if he still insists in wrapping it in dishonest claims about “freedom” and “openness” while bailing out a Communist dictatorship.


Obama began his Castro speech with a lie, declaring, “The United States of America is changing its relationship with the people of Cuba.”


The Cuban people have no relationship with the United States because they have no free elections and no say in how they are governed. The only Cubans who have a relationship with the United States fled here on rafts.


Obama did not make his dirty deal with the Cuban people. He made it in a marathon phone call with the Cuban dictator.


When Obama claims that his deal with Raul Castro represents a new relationship with the people of Cuba, he is endorsing a Communist dictatorship as the legitimate representative of the Cuban people.


This is a retroactive endorsement of the Castro regime and its entire history of mass murder and political terror. Obama is not trying to “open up” Cuba as he claimed. He likes Cuba just the way it is; Communist and closed.


Obama did not consult the Cuban people, just as he did not consult the American people. He disregarded the embargo, Congress, the Constitution and the freedom of the Cuban people.


His dictatorial disregard of the embargo, which can only be eliminated by Congress, in order to support a dictatorship, is a disturbing reminder that the road he is walking down leads to a miserable tyranny.


Cuban-American senators from both parties have been unanimous in condemning the move. These senators are the closest thing to Cuban elected officials. But Obama disregarded Senator Menendez, a man of his own party, Senator Marco Rubio and Senator Ted Cruz.


Instead Obama chose to stand with Raul Castro and his Communist dictatorship.


Obama tried to whitewash his crime by exploiting Alan Gross, a USAID contractor who was imprisoned and abused by the Castro regime, as if the release of an American hostage justified helping the men holding him hostage stay in power. And the media, which was reprinting Castro’s propaganda claiming that Gross’ imprisonment was justified, is busy now pretending that it cares about his release.


He had similarly tried to whitewash his Taliban amnesty by using Bergdahl and his parents as cover. If a deal is struck with Iran, the release of Robert Levinson, Saeed Abedini or Amir Hekmati will almost certainly be used to divert attention from the fact that their own government has collaborated with the thugs and terrorists who took them hostage.


Even though Obama criticized European countries for paying financial ransoms to ISIS, his own ransom paid to the Castros is worth countless billions. And the blood money pouring out of American banks into the Castro regime will encourage other dictatorships to take Americans hostage as leverage for obtaining concessions from the United States. Americans abroad will suffer for Obama’s dirty deal.


No European country recognized ISIS in exchange for the release of hostages. Only Obama was willing to go that far with Cuba, not only opening diplomatic and economic relations, but promising to remove the Communist dictatorship from the list of state sponsors of terror despite the fact that the last State Department review found that Cuba continued to support the leftist narco-terrorists of FARC.


FARC had taken its own American hostages who were starved and beaten, tortured and abused.


Now Obama has given in to the demand of a state sponsor of terror to be removed from the list of state sponsors of terrorism in exchange for releasing a hostage.


Obama has sent a message to Iran that the best way to secure a deal is by wrapping it in an American hostage. He has told ISIS that we do negotiate with terrorists. And he has once again demonstrated that his vaunted “smart power” is nothing more than appeasement wrapped in excuses and lies.


But Obama did not act to help Alan Gross. He did not even act because he genuinely thought that diplomatic relations would open up Cuba. In his speech, Obama used the claim commonly put forward by Castro apologists that the very fact that the Castros were still in power proved that sanctions had failed. Yet the lack of sanctions against Cuba by the rest of the world certainly did not usher in the new spirit of openness that Obama is promising. Rewarding dictators with cash never frees a nation.


This was not about saving Alan Gross. It was about saving Raul Castro.


Obama and Castro are both weakened leaders of the left. Like the Castros, Obama has lost international influence and his own people have turned on him. The only thing he has left is unilateral rule.


If Obama saw something of his own hopes and aspirations to engage in a populist transformation of the United States in Manuel Zelaya or Hugo Chavez, his horizons have narrowed down to those of Raul Castro. His ability to remake the world has vanished and the American people are revolting against his collectivization efforts. They want open health care markets, free speech and honest government.


Obama can no longer remake the Middle East, he certainly can’t bring the Soviet Union back from the dead, but he could still bail out Raul Castro and maintain Communist rule in Cuba.


No matter how often Obama claims to be “on the right side of history”, the Castros are a living reminder that to be on the left is to be on the wrong side of history.


Obama did not want to see the “Berlin Wall” fall in Havana on his watch. After watching his own grip on the United States collapse, he did not want to see the left fail again.


We can never know how history might have been different if Carter had gotten a second term or if Mondale had replaced Reagan. But Obama’s deal with Castro reminds us that the end of the USSR was not inevitable. It happened because we stood up against the tyrants in the Kremlin and their useful idiots in the White House.


A good man like Reagan could make a difference by bringing down the USSR. A bad man like Obama can make a difference by keeping Cuba Communist.


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The Suicidal Hashtags of the West


twitter_2094423b On Monday, Australian police stormed the Lindt Chocolate Cafe in Sydney, where an Islamist terrorist named Man Haron Monis had taken dozens of hostages and held them for 17 hours. Three people were killed, including Monis, and several others were wounded. Monis, an Iranian immigrant, had a long criminal record, including 40 charges for indecent and sexual assault, as well as an outstanding charge for accessory to murder in the killing of his ex-wife. Before his death, Monis requested an ISIS flag, and forced hostages to hold up the so-called Shahada flag, which proclaims in Arabic, “There Is No God But Allah, and Muhammad Is His Messenger.”


In response to this Islamist terror attack on a civilian hub in the center of their city, Australians all over the country took action: They tweeted with the hashtag #illridewithyou. This hashtag came from the mind of one Rachel Jacobs, who witnessed a Muslim woman removing her hijab on the local train after the news of the hostage situation broke. Jacobs tweeted, “I ran after her at the train station. I said ‘put it back on. I’ll walk with u’. She started to cry and hugged me for about a minute — then walked off alone.” Soon, the hashtag had been launched, and quickly trended globally.


Australia’s race discrimination commissioner, Tim Soutphommasane, added, “Let’s not allow fear, hatred and division to triumph.”


Yes, Australia has a race commissioner, but nobody who thinks it’s a bad idea to let Islamist fanatics immigrate, or to keep those same Islamist fanatics in jail after they’re charged in the stabbing of their ex-wives.


Priorities!


Never mind that nobody had said a word to the woman in the hijab — pre-emptive anti-Islamophobia was the first response to an Islamist taking Western hostages in a Western capital.


Across the globe, in the United States, two dueling hashtags debated the relative guilt of American law enforcement. After New York City man Eric Garner resisted arrest, and then died thanks to his pre-existing health conditions after being taken down by police, the hashtag #ICantBreathe went viral.


That hashtag fought for prominence with one dedicated to Michael Brown, the 18-year-old black man who was shot to death after attempting to take a gun from a police officer and charging the police officer: #HandsUpDontShoot. Never mind that the first hashtag was taken wildly out of context — Garner was not choked to death — and that the second was completely fictitious — autopsy showed Brown did not have his hands up when he was shot.


These hashtags aren’t just the work of lazy activists with nothing better to do. They’re signifiers of a suicidal west that believes it bears bloodguilt. No real allegations of Islamophobia or racism are necessary — those can be assumed. We immediately go into preliminary disassociation mode, attempting to demonstrate to our friends and neighbors that while our civilization may be Islamophobic and racist, we are not. After all, we even tweeted using the day’s popular hashtag!


Here’s the problem: Islamists don’t care about hashtags when they can take hostages and earn the sympathetic hashtags of others. Those who resist law enforcement or attack police officers outright are happy to do so when they become causes celebre, no matter what they do wrong.


The West has its evils. There are instances of racism and Islamophobia. Nobody with a brain would deny that. But to slander the West with a sort of communal guilt for an Original Sin, even as the West is under fire from those who would seek to destroy its civilizational foundations, is nothing less than barbaric.


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Obama’s Revolution in America — on The Glazov Gang


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This week’s Glazov Gang was guest-hosted by Michael Finch, the president of the David Horowitz Freedom Center. He was joined by Morgan Brittany, Conservative TV and Movie Star, Nonie Darwish, author of “The Devil We Don’t Know” and Mell Flynn, the president of Hollywood Congress of Republicans.


The Gang gathered to discuss Obama’s Revolution in America, analyzing how the Radical-in-Chief is tearing the foundations of the country down from every angle (starts at the 9:30 mark). The episode also focused on Feinstein’s Destructive Torture Charade, Ferguson and an Arsonist-in-Chief, and much, much more:


Don’t miss the Glazov Gang’s special episode with Geert Wilders on “The West’s Battle for Freedom.”


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Yemen: Houthis storm office of state-owned newspaper, dismiss its editor


File photo of Houthi rebels outside the home of Sanaa's governor, after they had captured it earlier this year


Members of Shia Houthi rebels yesterday stormed the office of one of the country’s largest state-owned newspapers.


A source from the newspaper told the Anadolu Agency that armed Houthi rebels, backed by members of staff, stormed the office of Al-Thawra newspaper, which is located in the Hasba area of the capital Sanaa. They sent a message to Al-Thawra‘s Editor-in-Chief Faisal Markam, who was not present at his office at the time, ordering him not to come to work again because of his alledged involvement in corruption cases.


The Houthi militants assigned the newspaper’s Deputy Editor-in-Chief Marwan Damaj the job of managing the newspaper, the source added.


No one from the Houthi group was available for immediate comment.


On January 2013, Yemen’s president had issued a decree appointing Faisal Makram as chairman of Al-Thawra Establishment for Printing and Publishing and Marwan Ahmed Damaj as deputy chairman and deputy editor-in-chief for journalistic affairs



14-year-old Palestinian girl wins international math competition



HEBRON (Ma’an) — A 14-year-old Palestinian girl won first place in an international competition for intelligence after solving 240 math problems in six minutes.


Dania Husni al-Jaabari from Hebron won first place in The Mental-Arithmetic International Competition in Singapore. Ahmad Ayman Nashwiyeh, 8, also from Hebron, came in second place as he solved 180 problems in six minutes.


Some 3,000 participants from more than 15 countries took part in the competition.


Dania and Ahmad joined a mental-arithmetic program in Hebron two years ago where students practiced using a two-hand abacus mental-arithmetic teaching system; the system depends on using the fingers of the left and right hands to compute simultaneously, creating stimulation in both the left and right sides of the brain.


The governor of Hebron, Kamel Hmeid, congratulated Palestinians and Dania al-Jaabari



Teesside's MasterChef finalist from Stockton sails through the first round of the finals


Teesside Masterchef star Danny Parker cooked up a storm tonight to see him through to the next phase of the tough cookery competition.


Danny, 24, of Bishopton in Stockton sailed through the first round of finals week on the BBC2 show.


“Danny for me is a talented chef,” declared show judge and Michelin-starred chef, Marcus Wareing.


In tonight’s programme, after getting through an invention test and elimination, Danny cooked for 25 of Britain’s greatest chefs.


He is now one of four remaining chefs battling it out for the 2014 MasterChef: The Professionals coveted title.


Having began his career aged 14 at The Talbot in Bishopton as a pot washer, Danny progressed to sous chef. He then moved to Wynyard Hall around four years ago where he worked as chef de partie and later sous chef.


Paul Mackings, chief executive of Cameron Hall Developments which owns Wynyard Hall, said: “There was always something quite special about Danny.


“Not many chefs come in and work with food the way Danny did.


“He had that special relationship with food rather than just cooking it.


“I am not surprised that he has made the finals.”


During his time at Wynyard Hall, Danny also helped the restaurant to gain national recognition.


Paul, 53 said: “When Danny was here, along with the head chef, Alan O’Kane, he helped to take us from one AA rosette to three rosettes.



“It is a great accolade to achieve and they did an exceptional job.


“Chefs tend to move around and follow their passion. They are always looking for bigger and better things.


“You knew there was something more to come from Danny.


“There are some chefs that come in and then walk away and don’t think about their work until the next day.


“Danny lives and breathes it, you can tell.


“He has got the drive. He will be a star of the future definitely.”


At the beginning of this year, Danny became head chef at Kenny Atkinson’s House of Tides restaurant on Newcastle’s Quayside.


Owner Kenny Atkinson, 38, said: “Danny is a passionate young lad and is very driven. He knows what he wants to do and where he wants to go and that shone through.”


Kenny’s wife, Abbie, who is also part of House of Tides, originally pushed Danny to apply for MasterChef.


“I am not surprised at all that Danny is in the finals. He has been outstanding so far,” added Kenny.


“Danny understands the industry and he has the right focus that I look for in a chef.


“Obviously he wants to make a name for himself but on the back of that he is giving our profile a massive boost and our business too.


“Danny has still got years ahead of him. He is going to go far there is no doubt about it.


“He is definitely on the road to big things.”


MasterChef: The Professionals airs again tomorrow at 8pm on BBC Two



30 Palestinians injured as thousands lay Qalandiya man to rest



RAMALLAH (Ma’an) — Over 10,000 people on Tuesday afternoon participated in the funeral procession of Mahmoud Adwan who was killed hours earlier during an Israeli raid on Qalandiya refugee camp.


Over 30 Palestinians were injured with rubber-coated steel bullets in clashes that broke out near Qalandiya checkpoint. Most of the injured were taken to Ramallah medical complex while the rest were treated on the scene.


Adwan’s body was taken to al-Quds University forensic institute before his funeral started from the camp’s mosque to al-Shuhada cemetery.


Participants in the funeral chanted calls for retaliation and raised Palestinian flags as some masked participants fired shots in the air.


A general strike was observed in Qalandiya, Kafr Aqab, Samirameis, and the Umm al-Sharayt area north of Jerusalem



'It's destroyed everybody's Christmas': More than £10,600 stolen from Stockton pub's savings club


Around 30 members of a pub’s Christmas saving club were left devastated when the entire £10,600 pot was stolen this week.


The majority of members of the scheme, at The Garrick Hotel in Stockton, were pensioners and had been paying in for the last year - anything from £1 to a £100 a week.


Owner of The Garrick, Walter Cook, had to break the news to his customers at what was meant to be a Christmas party on Monday to hand out the cash.


“They were all just full of gloom, it destroyed everybody’s Christmas,” he said.


“One lady is on benefits and her entire Christmas present buying revolved around this.


“There was not a penny left, all of it was stolen.


“People here had saved all year, with nothing but that money to spend at Christmas.”


Stockton pensioner and Garrick regular Colin Carter, 70, had saved £1,060 to buy Christmas presents for his family.


“A lot of people were relying on this money,” he said. “Liz, Walter’s wife, was so upset - you should have seen her face.”


Stephen Miller, manager of the Yarm Lane pub, said the Christmas club members were “absolutely gutted, devastated”.


“People were angry and in disbelief,” he said. “The majority of the savings club are pensioners, that’s why they do it so they know they are comfortable at Christmas.”


When Walter, 64, posted about the theft on his Facebook page one local mum replied: “I’m disgusted and so is my 14-year-old son.


“This year my son saved his pocket money and bought food to make hampers for the needy and those that can’t afford things over Xmas. He has asked if he can donate it to you to do with what you please, maybe raffle it to make a bit of money back.”


Walter, who has been in the pub trade 44 years, said he was touched by the kind offer but turned it down. Instead he and his family rallied together to make up the stolen cash.


“My son Mark donated his savings which he intended to spend on his firstborn baby,” he said. “My other son sold his Rolex watch, another son gave me his holiday savings and my daughter Emma gave me her savings.”


Another son sold bags of rock salt at £5 a bag to chip in and Walter himself got an overdraft from the bank “to make the money up”.


“I couldn’t not,” he said. “I’m morally obliged to my customers.”


Mr Carter said all the Christmas club members were very grateful to Walter and his family for reimbursing their savings - which were handed out at a rescheduled Christmas party at the pub today.


“Walter has always been very fair with all of us,” he said.


A spokesperson for Cleveland Police said a 37-year-old woman had been arrested on suspicion of theft and has been bailed pending further inquiries.



Emergency service currently at the scene of 'multi-vehicle' accident on the A19


Commuters are currently facing major delays after a “multi-vehicle” accident on the A19.


Police, ambulance and fire crews are currently at the scene of an incident on the northbound carriageway, just after the Thornaby/Acklam sliproad.


One witness has told The Gazette there are four fire crews, two ambulances and four police cars at the scene.


He added that there are “lengthy tailbacks” on the road.


More to follow.



What CIA torture report is missing



The meticulously documented 528-page Senate Intelligence Committee report on the CIA’s secret rendition, detention, and interrogation program is remarkable for its candor. In blunt language it describes the horrors of the black site secret prisons and the efforts that were made to get terrorist suspects to talk. It effectively makes two overriding points, first that the interrogations were brutal, worse than anyone had been led to believe, and second, that they did not produce any information that might not have been developed otherwise.



Regarding oversight of the program, the report claims that the Agency deliberately misrepresented the value of the program and did not adequately brief congress on exactly what it was doing. Even a supportive President George W. Bush was not provided any details until 2006. One suspects that the Senate committee is to a certain extent hypocritically avoiding responsibility for what has become a political football. Congressmen quite likely did not want to know all the details regarding the interrogation program and some are certainly now feigning ignorance of it even if they were initially briefed. “Striking back” after 9/11 was, after all, bipartisan and there continued to be a broad national consensus on the need to “do something” about Middle Eastern terrorism up until the time when the occupation of Iraq began to go sour.


The CIA’s 136-page heavily redacted rebuttal to the Senate report chooses to ignore the brutality of the interrogation program, though current Director John Brennan has described some procedures as “abhorrent” and the Agency concedes that some “mistakes” were made. The rebuttal ignores the ethical, constitutional, and rule-of-law issues by insisting that no actual torture took place. It maintains that the activity at the black sites was effective, producing information that would not have been obtained otherwise, though Brennan is now claiming in conciliatory fashion that it is impossible to separate intelligence obtained by enhanced interrogation from other information developed from the same source without coercion, making an assessment of relative value “unknowable.”


Other Agency defenders have identified a number of suspects who were questioned successfully in enhanced fashion, including a key link that they claim eventually led to Osama bin Laden. They insist, mantra-like, that “enhanced interrogation” saved thousands of American lives. Indeed, a website they have established to argue their case is called CIASavedLives.com.


The Senate report examines those same claims but comes to the opposite conclusion, i.e. that no intelligence produced by torture was ever uniquely actionable, that all the useful information was obtainable by less coercive means. Further, at least 26 detainees were “wrongfully held” while others could not even be identified. Inexperienced contract interrogators sometimes started torturing suspects even before asking a single question, and several cooperating detainees were tortured anyway. Inept management meant that one junior officer who allowed a prisoner to die of hypothermia later received a cash reward of $2,500.


Coercive interrogation frequently also produced misleading or fabricated intelligence. Sifting through the details provided by both sides, the Senate Committee appears to win this argument, and one might note that this was also a conclusion arrived at by FBI interrogator Ali Soufani (who deplored the Agency methods) as well as by a review conducted by CIA’s own Inspector General in 2004.


The other argument being made by the CIA is that the interrogations were legal because government lawyers said that that they were so. It is similar to the “legal orders” argument made by defendants at Nuremberg and at the Tokyo war crimes tribunal, a number of whom were hanged. To my mind, no one can reasonably argue that the loathsome physical abuse detailed in the report, including beatings, repeated waterboardings, and anal penetrations referred to as “rectal hydration,” in addition to threatening family members, can conceivably be construed as anything but torture. That CIA is hanging its hat on the presumed legality of acts that are best described as loathsome or horrific is self-defeating, and no one should pay any attention to what is clearly a shoddy attempt to shift the argument.


But definitions aside there is a major flaw in the Senate investigation, namely that it is completely dependent on documents. No victims of the black sites were interviewed, while the CIA refused to allow its employees to testify. Some defenders of the Agency are consequently now objecting that the report was prepared without interviewing the participants in the process, notably the senior managers at CIA who conceived of the program and oversaw its operation. The Agency managers who were most intimately involved in the program were Directors George Tenet and Porter Goss, Deputy Director John McLaughlin, Deputy Director for Operations Jim Pavitt, Director of the Counter Terrorism Center Cofer Black, and Black’s Deputy Jose Rodriguez who later succeeded Black and then Pavitt. For the Agency defenders, this is a useful argument with considerable current resonance given the media frenzy over accounts of gang rape at several universities where the alleged rapists were tried and convicted by the press without being able to tell their side. CIA defenders claim that they would have liked to see the people most involved rebut the claims being made regarding their malfeasance.


But as usual the devil is in the details. Agency supporters assume that Tenet and company would have been able to blow enough smoke up a sufficient number of derrieres to obfuscate the charges against them. I would argue instead that the Senate should indeed have spoken to participants, but would have been better served by concentrating on the bottom of the food chain. The actual torturers should have been identified, subpoenaed, and forced to testify in detail under oath. If necessary they could have done so in alias to protect their cover. Why go to that trouble? Because it appears to me that what the Senate discovered might only be the tip of the iceberg in terms of what actually occurred, and the only way to get at the truth and come to some reconciliation over the horrors perpetrated by our government on our behalf would be to talk to the guys who were tightening the thumb screws.


Against legal advice, in 2005 Jose Rodriguez ordered destroyed the 92 interrogation videotapes that were maintained at a black prison site in Thailand. This was a federal offense that the Justice Department chose not to prosecute. Rodriguez claimed he did it to protect the identity of the interrogators but the argument is ridiculous. I have seen interrogation tapes and the interrogator is only a voice. The suspect is the focal point of the filming, not the interrogator. The tapes were destroyed one day after Sen. Carl Levin proposed an independent investigation of the interrogation program. Given that as well as the content of some internal CIA emails it is clear that the videos were destroyed to eliminate evidence of what was surely a war crime and to put paid to any prospects for criminal charges against the perpetrators.


It is also safe to assume that other records on the interrogation program were either destroyed or, more likely, never produced in the first place. The Senate report describes documentation as often “sparse and insufficient” or even “non-existent.” Anyone who has ever served in a CIA station overseas knows that stations operate on a basis of what might be described as permanent damage control. Bear in mind that nearly everything CIA does overseas is illegal. Anything that occurs that is either embarrassing or likely to produce negative fallout in Washington is culled or massaged to either make it go away or to produce a result that would be construed positively. The Senate committee noted that the interrogation program produced information that was either exaggerated or even false. That is exactly what one should expect.


The ability to selectively shape the narrative does not mean that there was not considerable pushback by Agency officers who were appalled by what was taking place. The documents reveal that many questioned the value of the program but were ignored or overruled by senior management. As early as January 2003, CIA’s director of interrogations complained that the terrible treatment of prisoners was a train wreck “waiting to happen and I intend to get the hell off the train before it happens.” He admitted to “serious reservations” regarding the program and refused to continue to be involved “in any way.” Torturing people might have been a good career move in 2003 but many of the participants in the process must have realized even back then that it could easily blow back.


So a document-driven investigation into the activities of a clandestine U.S. government organization that is accustomed to covering its tracks is only likely to discern part of the story. The other element that needs some airing is the whole issue of accountability, because without accountability the sorry episode is likely to be repeated if there is another major terrorist incident in the United States. Indeed, such a response is more than likely as Agency supporters, including most Republicans in Congress are largely unrepentant, believing as they do that exposing government torture is worse than the torture itself. Many do not appear to believe that there was anything wrong with what the CIA did. Former Vice President Dick Cheney has already said “If I had to do it all over again, I would do it.”


In an attempt to avoid the accountability issue, the Senate report summary does not actually blame anyone and does not recommend any legal action against the senior officials either at CIA or in the White House who ordered the torture. Nor are the actual torturers being held responsible for what they did. President Barack Obama, who has admitted that “We tortured some folks,” long ago decided that there would be no criminal charges ostensibly because he wanted to avoid going head-to-head over policies initiated by his predecessors in office. The White House, however, went further than that, recently seeking to block release of the report summary. When it was published the president oddly cautioned that “it is important for us not to feel too sanctimonious in retrospect about the tough job that those folks had.”


The administration also should be held to account for relentlessly hyping the danger that might result from the report’s publication, advising that American travelers overseas and diplomatic missions might be targeted, as if the parameters of the torture program have not been well known to interested parties for a number of years. The assertion that its release would damage relationships with foreign intelligence services was also dutifully trotted out, a specious claim that has been re-issued after every intelligence flap or breach since 1975, when the Church Committee met and rogue Agency case officer Philip Agee wrote Inside the Company: A CIA Diary. Intelligence agencies do not share information because they like each other. They do it because it is an essential part of doing business.


So if there is a problem with the Senate report it is that it is incomplete. Someone should have made greater efforts to interview the actual victims, as well as the torturers and the bureaucrats who sent them on their merry way, in order to find out what was not contained in the six million pages of documents examined. The perpetrators and enablers of “enhanced interrogation” must be held accountable for what they did, and the United States government, collectively speaking, should admit in plain language that torture was indeed what took place and that it was and is unacceptable. Wrongfully detained Canadian citizen Maher Arar, who was “rendered” to Syria and tortured, observes that “Torture does not tell you anything about the person being tortured but tells you volumes about the person who’s doing the torture.”


The Declaration of Independence and Constitution established the principle that the United States would behave as a moral country in which citizens have inherent rights. One fundamental right is the expectation that the government will behave lawfully and fairly. The Declaration of Independence also acknowledges “a decent respect for the opinions of mankind.” If the United States is ever to regain its honorable place among nations it must completely and unambiguously acknowledge what occurred between 2002 and 2007, and it must take steps to ensure that such depravity never takes place again.


Philip Giraldi, a former CIA officer, is executive director of the Council for the National Interest.


NT/NT



Watch: Joe Rigatonis owner opens Teesside's newest cocktail bar in Linthorpe Road building


Move over Joe Rigatonis - there’s a new girl in town.


Macy Brown’s is the latest cocktail bar in Middlesbrough by the owner of the famous Italian chain of restaurants.


Paolo Arceri’s Middlesbrough branch of Joe Rigantonis closed earlier this year.


But new life has been breathed into the well-known Linthorpe Road building as it has been replaced by new cocktail bar Macy Brown’s and neighbouring restaurant Uno Momento.


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Paolo, 46, who lives in Darlington, said: “We retained this bit of the building for ourselves.


“I just fancied the name Macy Brown’s as - similar to Joe Rigatonis - I like double barrelled names.


“The decor is eclectic and busy - and the music is retro. No chart stuff. Nothing banging.”


Joe Rigatonis has a popular branch in Darlington and before the closure of the Middlesbrough restaurant in March the venue was one of the town’s most well known places to eat - established for 17 years.


It was then briefly a bar and restaurant called Koochi.


Paolo said: “It’s a great trading place and it’s somewhere where I would like to go to myself - not like all of these huge pubs.


“It’s somewhere where you could go with your girlfriend or wife and also for girls on a night out.”


A food menu is set to be launched in January - and will offer sharing platters all served on boards.


Music has a retro feel with lots of soul and Motown.


A wide range of cocktails are available from £5.95 - and during happy hour punters can currently win 50% off their round if they guess a game of ‘heads or tails’ correctly.


The bar had a ‘soft’ opening this week with an official opening party set for January.


Paolo added: “The product is good. I’m excited.”


Macy Brown’s is open to the public now. Happy hour is between 6pm and 7pm and 9pm and 10pm.


It’s open on an evening from 6pm and in January will be open throughout the day too.


For more information visit the Facebook page .



Teenager found crying behind wheel after leading police on 100mph chase across Teesside


A brave policeman used his car as a barrier to stop a speeding teenager after a chase across Teesside.


The officer drove into the path of Anthony Murphy’s car to prevent it heading back into Middlesbrough town centre on a Saturday night.


Army applicant Murphy, 18, had swerved dangerously close to another officer setting a “stinger” device to stop the wayward vehicle.


He had torn up and down the A66 at speeds up to 100mph with four frightened passengers in his Fiat Punto, a court heard.


He was finally brought to a halt by a police driver who positioned his car so that Murphy collided with its side.


The teenager was found crying behind the wheel, saying: “I’m really sorry. I didn’t mean to do it. I was so stupid.”


He was in tears in the dock at Teesside Crown Court as he faced his sentence today.


Prosecutor Sue Jacobs described Murphy’s “prolonged, persistent, deliberate course of bad driving” at about 4am on Sunday, August 3.


She told how Murphy was first approached in his car by a PC on Albert Road in central Middlesbrough.


He pulled away and sped along Borough Road towards North Ormesby at 50mph.


He ran red lights before he was pursued on to the A66, westbound then eastbound back to Middlesbrough.


Other motorists had to brake sharply as he overtook and swerved between lanes of the 50mph road.


He struggled to grip and keep control as he hurled the car around bends and roundabouts, coming off and on the dual carriageway at the Urlay Nook and Elton exits.


He twice moved as if to leave the road, only to veer dangerously back across the hatched markings.


He came off at the Cannon Park interchange and sped through red lights at over 40mph.


A taxi had to mount the pavement to avoid a head-on collision before the teenage driver was finally stopped by police on Newport Road.


One of the officers involved in the pursuit suffered whiplash.


Murphy, of Borough Road, Middlesbrough, admitted dangerous driving.


He told police he was in the car with his friend and three girls when police tried to stop him.


He said he was scared because he had been drinking, tried to get away and kept saying sorry to his passengers.


Graham Silvester, defending, said: “He simply panicked and thereafter he really didn’t know what to do.


“We’re all young and stupid on occasion. This is an extreme example of what that leads to.


“It was absolutely wrong. This has had a salutary effect upon him.


“His Army application awaits the outcome of this case.”


Judge John Walford said Murphy risked lives, drove at “grossly excessive speed” and executed dangerous manoeuvres, scaring and unnerving other road users.


After reading pre-sentence and psychiatric reports, he told Murphy: “One thing is clear - that you deeply regret what happened that night.


“This in my judgment is as bad a case of dangerous driving as you could get.”


He accepted Murphy was genuinely distraught by his behaviour and took into account the “unfortunate episodes” Murphy had to endure in his life.


But he said: “I would be failing in my duty if I was not to send you to custody.”


He sent Murphy to a young offenders’ institution for nine months and banned him from driving for two years.



US, NATO boost operations near Russia: Pentagon official



The US military and its NATO allies have increased military operations near the borders of Russia in order to keep “peace and stability” in the region, a Pentagon official says.



The unnamed official told RIA Novosti on Tuesday that the United States was “transparent” in its military operations.


“Current US European Command efforts through Operation Atlantic Resolve are a demonstration of our continued commitment to the collective security of NATO, the long-term peace and stability in the region,” the official said.


“The United States took several immediate steps to demonstrate solidarity with our NATO allies, such as augmenting the air, ground and naval presence in the region, and enhancing previously scheduled exercises.”


The head of the Russian Defense Ministry’s joint military command center, Lieutenant-General Mikhail Mizintsev, said that NATO has increased military activity near the Russian borders.


He added that the alliance’s flights have doubled to about 3,000 in 2014.


Relations between Moscow and the West have been strained over the crisis in Ukraine.


The United States accuses Russia of sending troops into eastern Ukraine in support of the pro-Russian forces, an allegation denied by the Kremlin.


Last week, the Pentagon threatened Russia with redeploying nuclear cruise missiles to Europe, accusing Moscow of violating two arms control treaties.


White House spokesman Josh Earnest said on Tuesday that US President Barack Obama would sign anti-Russia sanctions into law.


“The president does intend to sign the bill,” Earnest said.


The announcement followed a unanimous approval of the Ukraine Freedom Support Act.


The bill aims to put more pressure on Moscow by authorizing more sanctions on weapons companies and investors in its high-tech oil projects and to provide the Kiev government with extra military aid.


AGB/AGB



MasterChef finalist Danny Parker will be a star of the future, according to employers


Past and present employers of Teesside’s MasterChef star, Danny Parker, are hardly surprised by his performance ahead of the show’s finals tonight.


Danny, 24, of Bishopton in Stockton, will be one of five remaining chefs battling it out for the 2014 coveted title and after tonight’s opening cook-off the judges will send one more home.


Having began his career aged 14 at The Talbot in Bishopton as a pot washer, Danny progressed to sous chef. He then moved to Wynyard Hall around four years ago where he worked as chef de partie and later sous chef.


Paul Mackings, chief executive of Cameron Hall Developments which owns Wynyard Hall, said: “There was always something quite special about Danny.


“Not many chefs come in and work with food the way Danny did.


“He had that special relationship with food rather than just cooking it.


“I am not surprised that he has made the finals.”


During his time at Wynyard Hall, Danny also helped the restaurant to gain national recognition.


Paul, 53 said: “When Danny was here, along with the head chef, Alan O’Kane, he helped to take us from one AA rosette to three rosettes.


“It is a great accolade to achieve and they did an exceptional job.


“Chefs tend to move around and follow their passion. They are always looking for bigger and better things.


“You knew there was something more to come from Danny.


“There are some chefs that come in and then walk away and don’t think about their work until the next day.


“Danny lives and breathes it, you can tell.


“He has got the drive. He will be a star of the future definitely.”



At the beginning of this year, Danny became head chef at Kenny Atkinson’s House of Tides restaurant on Newcastle’s Quayside.


Owner Kenny Atkinson, 38, said: “Danny is a passionate young lad and is very driven. He knows what he wants to do and where he wants to go and that shone through.”


Kenny’s wife, Abbie, who is also part of House of Tides, originally pushed Danny to apply for MasterChef.


Kenny, who has won the Great Britsh Menu twice himself, said:“I am not surprised at all that Danny is in the finals. He has been outstanding so far.


“Danny understands the industry and he has the right focus that I look for in a chef.


“Obviously he wants to make a name for himself but on the back of that he is giving our profile a massive boost and our business too.


“Danny has still got years ahead of him. He is going to go far there is no doubt about it.


“He is definitely on the road to big things.”


The judges will begin tonight by setting the five finalists an invention test with a difference - they must create one dish without any meat, fish or poultry.


From a selection of fruit, vegetables, eggs, cheeses, grains, nuts, herbs and spices, they must deliver a dish showcasing all their culinary talents.


MasterChef: The Professionals finals start tonight at 8pm on BBC Two.



Frozen toys, a Barbie and...no shouting please mummy! What's on Teesside children's Santa lists might surprise you

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To Santa, I’ve been really good this year and I would like...


Teesside kids have been busy penning their Santa list for AGES. From around July - at least!


But despite many claiming that Christmas has become a commercial exercise the true spirit of the festive season can often be seen in these adorable letters to St Nick.


Add your little one’s letter to our gallery here.


Sophie, six, Middlesbrough


Dear Santa Claus, I would like for Christmas a baby brother, Frozen stuff, One Direction stuff, a Barbie Glam bag and Elsa’s dress please.


Mum Lucy Hubbard, Guisborough


My nine-year-old broke my heart with her letter this year...She asked for a cure for Type One diabetes. She was diagnosed aged 23 months. She’s hidden it somewhere because it made me cry.


Phoebe Moore, six, Ormesby


Dear Santa, This year I would like a BMX bike, a Doc McStuffins outfit, a Snow White and a happy life. I mean by that I don’t want to get shouted at at home and school - so I need to be good. With love from Phoebe.


Grace McConnell, three, Thornaby


Dear Father Christmas, I have been a very good girl at my new nursery. For Christmas I would like please Frozen toys, Noddy toys and a Mickey Mouse bike for my brother.


Caitlin Watson, four, Ingleby Barwick


Dear Santa, I have been a good girl this year and a fantastic big sister! For Christmas I would like Lego, Elsa/Frozen wellie boots and an Anna cuddly doll. Thank you v much, Love Caitlin.


Logan Dunnill-Rowley, four, Norton


Dear Santa Claus, For Christmas I would like a train, buses, a bus stop, a car, games. I have been a good boy. Love from Logan.


Wyatt Moor, two, Ormesby.


A dinosaur


Jake Tennant, four, Linthorpe, Middlesbrough.


A dumper truck, Lego. cars, toy oven. Santa jumper and Mega Bloks



Toll in Pakistan school massacre climbs to 148


Children were the majority of the 148 people killed Tuesday in a Taliban attack on a school run by the Pakistani army in the northwestern city of Peshawar, near the border with Afghanistan.


The fatalities included 132 students and nine school employees, the military’s director of public information, Gen. Asim Bajwa, told a press conference.


Another 122 students were wounded, as well as nine of the soldiers who retook the school from the insurgents.


More than 900 people were inside the compound at the start of the assault, Bajwa said.


Seven Taliban fighers dressed in army uniforms entered the school through a back door shortly before midday, police spokesperson Seid Wali said.


The attackers hurled grenades and fired burst of gunfire as they went from classroom to classroom, Wali added.


One of the students, a 14-year-old boy, told The Express Tribune that two men burst into his classroom and began shooting indiscriminately.


The Pakistani army launched an operation to liberate the school, which serves grades 1-10, but progress was slow as the troops had to contend with explosives planted inside by the attackers.


Soldiers eliminated the last of the insurgents by 6:20 p.m., authorities said.


Television stations broadcast scenes of chaos around the school and the sounds of explosions and gunfire were clearly audible in the background.


The attackers never planned to take hostages and were simply out to kill as many people as possible, Gen. Bajwa said.


After securing the school, the military embarked on a anti-insurgent sweep across Peshawar and the surrounding province of Khyber Pakhtunkhwa.


Pakistan’s main Taliban group, known as the TTP, claimed responsibility for the attack and said it was in reprisal for the what the militants claimed was the targeting of their families by the military.


A counterinsurgency operation six months ago in the Khyber and North Waziristan areas left more than 1,100 insurgents dead, according to Pakistan’s army.


Prime Minister Nawaz Sharif called the assault on the school “a national crisis”, declared three days of mourning and convened a meeting Wednesday in Peshawar with leaders of all parties represented in the Pakistani parliament.


US President Barack Obama condemned the attack, as did Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi and Afghanistan’s Ashraf Ghani.


Malala Yousafzai, the Pakistani girl who was shot by the Taliban in 2012 for her outspoken advocacy on behalf of girls’ education and went on to share this year’s Nobel Peace Prize, said she was “heartbroken by this senseless and coldblooded act of terror in Peshawar.”


–IANS



Hartlepool United under new management as consortium completes takeover


Hartlepool United have new owners, a new manager and have slashed prices for their next two home games.


The struggling League Two outfit have been bought out by South Yorkshire-based consortium TMH 2014 Ltd as oil firm IOR finally agreed to sell their majority share holding.


And they wasted no time in appointing former Tranmere and Rotherham boss Ronnie Moore as manager.


Sam Collins becomes his assistant. Long-time chief executive officer Russ Green continues in his role.


Moore, 61, inherits a club rock bottom of the Football League and is the third full-time occupant of the hot heat this season following the departures of first Colin Cooper and then Paul Murray.


Pools’ new owners are eager to win the backing of fans who have grown increasingly estranged after years of decline under IOR, who took over in 1997.


And they have cut admission to the club’s forthcoming games against Oxford United this Saturday and Morecambe on Sunday, December 28 to a knockdown £10. Fans can also watch both games for £15.


“We’re looking for the whole town to get right behind the football club now and hopefully this offer can attract as many fans to The Vic as possible,” said new chairman Peter Harris.


“We understand that the club’s supporters can play a key role in our drive away from the bottom of the table and that starts this weekend.”


Fans wishing to purchase tickets for both games for the offer price of £15 must do so in advance from the ticket office.


Those who have already bought tickets for the game can also claim a refund from the ticket office by returning their full match ticket.



BJP helping ISIS to spread in Gujarat :Vaghela


Maverick Congress leader Shankersinh Vaghela who once was RSS blue eyed boy and ex-Bjp leader on Tuesday alleged that the BJP has been helping terror outfit ISIS spread its network in Gujarat as reported in First post epaper.


Vaghela claimed that the BJP always took help of such ‘anti-social elements’ for political gains.The BJP can go up to any limit. In Gujarat, ISIS is spreading it’s network with the help of the BJP,” Vaghela alleged in a press release.


Bjp always took help on Anti Indian Muslim leaders who are for sale.Vaghela attacked and said very boldly that the country security and communal harmony is being disturbed .


Without naming Prime Minister Narendra Modi, Vaghela alleged that BJP had put aside important issues to gain power.


In recently held elections to J and K Modi and other BJP leaders didn’t say a word about Article 370 or Pakistan sponsored terrorist activities. They shamelessly begged for votes and didn’t even hesitate to hold talks with anti Indian separatist leaders.



Legal action launched against Middlesbrough Council after ex-worker dies of asbestos-related disease


The widow of a former Billingham mechanic is fighting for justice after he died from asbestos-related disease.


Former Middlesbrough Council worker James Parker died in April, aged 79, after a short battle with mesothelioma, a lung cancer caused by exposure to hazardous asbestos dust.


At an inquest at Teesside Coroner’s Court in August, a verdict of death by industrial disease was recorded.


Before his death, James and his wife Catherine instructed law firm Irwin Mitchell to investigate his alleged exposure to asbestos while working on council-owned vehicles at depots on Stockton Road, Norton High Street, Norton and Cowpen Lane, Billingham, between 1969 and 1998.


Irwin Mitchell has now launched legal proceedings against Middlesbrough Council after a number of James’ former colleagues came forward with information following an appeal in the Gazette.


James believed he was exposed to asbestos at each of the depots as dust was created as he and his colleagues serviced the brakes and clutches of local authority refuse lorries.


He also recalled asbestos falling from the underside of the roof or floating in the air while working at the Stockton Road depot.


His widow Catherine, 68, said: “It was a huge shock to watch James deteriorate so quickly after he was diagnosed with mesothelioma.


“We are thankful to James’ former colleagues for coming forward with the information our legal team required.


“We hope that by issuing court proceedings we will be able to secure justice for James and honour his memory after losing him in such a terrible way.”


Roger Maddocks, a partner and expert asbestos-related disease lawyer at Irwin Mitchell’s Newcastle office, said: “Mr Parker’s family have been completely devastated by their loss and hope to seek justice after losing him so suddenly.


“We have now issued court proceedings and hope that we can finally find some answers for James’ family about his exposure so they can have the justice they deserve.”


A spokesperson for Middlesbrough Council said it would be inappropriate to comment while legal proceedings were active.



Spain slams move to erase Islamic past of Cordoba cathedral


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MADRID: The regional government of southern Andalusia is protesting what it says are moves by the Catholic Church to downplay or eliminate references to the Islamic past of Cordoba’s ancient Mosque-Cathedral, one of Spain’s leading tourist attractions.

The region’s tourism department says the practice by church authorities who own the complex of calling it simply “The Cordoba Cathedral” on its website, pamphlets and tickets could hurt tourism and confuse the 1 million-plus tourists who annually visit the “mezquita” (mosque), as it is known popularly.

Cathedral officials deny the name-change, saying the official title has been “The Cathedral of Santa Maria of Cordoba” since the 13th century, when the mosque was transformed into a cathedral. The department said Monday it had sent a letter seeking a meeting with the church



Nativity 2014: Levendale Primary School, Yarm

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This was the scene at Levendale Primary School, Yarm, as the school held its nativity.


Pupils took part in the school's nativity recently and you can see pictures from the occasion in the gallery above.


The Gazette's photographers will be taking pictures at nativities at schools across Middlesbrough, Stockton and Redcar and Cleveland in the build-up to Christmas.


You can see all the pictures we have taken so far - as well as last year's pictures - by clicking here.



Missing man Stanislav Mielko found safe and well


Missing man Stanislav Mielko has been found safe and well in the London area.


Mr Mielko, 36, from Poland, had last seen at around 5.30pm yesterday in the Thornaby area .


Police have thanked the public and the media for their assistance.



Your School: Whinstone Primary School, Ingleby Barwick

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School: Whinstone Primary School


Address: Whinstone Primary School, Lowfields Avenue, Ingleby Barwick, Cleveland, TS17 0RJ


Head: Mike Poppitt


How would you sum your school up? Our school is an amazing school with kind, helpful pupils and staff.


We treat each other with respect and trust and we are a safe environment.


Our school is talented, friendly, happy caring and respectful and we try to make our pupils all they can be and achieve their goals.


We have two playgrounds, two halls, 20 classrooms, two computer suites, a drama studio, 612 smiley pupils, a numerous amount of awards including the international school award 2012-2015 and let’s not forget all of our great teachers, teaching assistants and whole school support.


Tell us something we didn’t know about your school? Our school is big which makes us stand out and we have teachers who specialise in certain talents or areas of education.


We are in the top 5% of schools in Britain because of our great phonics and we have better progress than other schools. We are also the oldest school in Ingelby.


What is your pupil’s biggest achievement? Our school was the first to enter and win the Sainsbury’s games bronze awards in Stockton.


What school clubs do you run? We run many school clubs - before school, in school and after school.


We run breakfast club, reading club for UKS2, gardening club, choir, football, netball, maths booster, cookery and Whinstone after-school club.


What is your school motto/ethos? Whinstone is a happy school and we reach to achieve students potential and goals so we are ready when we go to secondary school.


Voice of the playground: ‘Wonderful! Lovely children and behaviour, friendly and nice sense of community and we are supportive! 11/10! - Mrs Squires and Mrs Stephenson, year six teacher.


‘A nice caring, happy school and we are like one big family. We respect each other and care for each other.’ - Mr Poppitt, head teacher


‘A happy, friendly and a cheerful school.’ - Mrs Hinchley, year 3 teaching assistant.


‘Fun and talented.’ - Megan Smith year six pupil.


‘Lovely, supportive and keen to learn language.’ - Madame Aurelie René, French teacher.


‘A happy and fun school.’ - Mrs Allonby. Secretary.



Nativity 2014: Berwick Hills Primary School, Middlesbrough

VIEW GALLERY

This was the scene at Berwick Hills Primary School, Middlesbrough, as the school held its nativity.


Pupils took part in the school's nativity recently and you can see pictures from the occasion in the gallery above.


The Gazette's photographers will be taking pictures at nativities at schools across Middlesbrough, Stockton and Redcar and Cleveland in the build-up to Christmas.


You can see all the pictures we have taken so far - as well as last year's pictures - by clicking here.



Jimmy Floyd Hasselbaink left purring at Bryn Morris' potential


Jimmy Floyd Hasselbaink believes the world is at Bryn Morris’ feet and has been left purring by his recent displays.


The 18-year-old has started consecutive matches for League Two high-flyers Burton Albion, since clinching a one-month loan move away from the Riverside.


Morris made his Brewers bow in a 1-1 draw against Exeter, and caught the eye again against hometown club Hartlepool United on Saturday when Hasselbaink’s men ran out 4-0 winners.


Ex-Boro striker Hasselbaink admits he has been impressed with the England Under-19s captain, and says he represents “pure football”.


“I’ve brought in Bryn from Middlesbrough and it’s his first loan deal at a club,” Hasselbaink told the Derby Telegraph.


“He’s a very good professional and he has a bright future ahead. He’s also the England U19 captain but he’s still learning the game.


“It’s his first loan so you do have to be careful with him and you do have to protect him.



“He’s all about pure football and he’s always looking to pass even when we can’t pass, so he’s still learning that side.


“But he’s somebody who can make us better.


"We have to look in January if we will extend Bryn’s loan.”


Morris isn’t the only Boro player that is excelling while on loan away from Teesside.


Bradley Halliday earned the man of the match award during York City’s defeat against AFC Wimbledon on Saturday, and has since seen his loan spell at Bootham Crescent extended for another month.


Emmanuel Ledesma has been ever-present for Rotherham United in recent weeks, while Andy Halliday and Luke Williams are excelling with League One sides Bradford City and Scunthorpe United.


Meanwhile Jason Steele is Blackburn’s number one goalkeeper this season.



Ann Charlton Lodge hoping for your Wish support to help continue providing care


A charity-run home for multiple sclerosis sufferers is hoping this year’s Wish campaign will help them to fund new aids for residents.


Based in Redcar, Ann Charlton Lodge is a non-profit home which also cares for sufferers of other disorders of the central nervous system.


The home currently has 23 permanent residents and two who visit the home for respite.


To be able to continue providing their care, the home relies on the generosity of firms and the general public to keep the home running.


Last year, the home used the support they received from The Gazette’s readers to help buy three electronic beds for residents.


Pauline Madden, of the home, said: “This year we are intending to buy some over-the-bed tables for our residents.


“The over-the-bed tables we have now are getting old and sometimes don’t stay up.”


Every year The Gazette’s Wish campaign gives away thousands of pounds to not-for-profit groups and organisations benefiting the Teesside community.


Each registered group will be guaranteed a share of our £40,000 fund.


The more tokens a group collects, the bigger its share of the prize pot.


Tokens are now appearing daily in The Gazette. The last token will appear on January 21.


Submissions for tokens will close at 5pm on Monday, February 23.


To help Ann Charlton Lodge, send your tokens to: Ann Charlton Lodge, Edenhall Grove, Redcar, Cleveland, TS10 4PR.



Police urgently looking for man who they say could pose a danger to the public


Police are urgently looking to find a man who they say could pose a danger to the public.


Stanislav Mielko, 36, from Poland was last seen at around 5.30pm yesterday in the Thornaby area .


He has links to the Northumbria area and it is believed that he could have travelled to London.


Police say he may appear to be in a very agitated state and could pose a danger to the public if challenged.


He is described as being around 6ft tall and has various tattoos about his body. He was last seen wearing a dark grey hat, a dark grey hooded top, dark grey jeans, black trainers and was carrying a red rucksack.


Anyone who knows the whereabouts of Stanislav is asked not to approach him and to contact police on 999.



Morning news headlines: Sydney gunman latest; first woman Bishop to be announced; Nurses coming from overseas


Australian prime minister Tony Abbott has revealed he did not speak to the gunman in the Sydney cafe siege on police advice, as he announced an urgent review into the self-styled cleric's handling by security services.


Mr Abbott told reporters he wanted answers to why hostage-taker Man Horan Monis had been released on bail, had dropped off a terrorism watch list five years ago and had a gun licence.


Questions have raged in Australia over the gunman's background since the hostage crisis at the Lindt Chocolat Cafe in Sydney's busy financial and legal district which saw three people killed, including Monis.


Church to announce first woman Bishop


The Church of England is to announce the appointment of its first woman bishop.


It is believed a female priest is to be elevated to the position a month after the Anglican General Synod made history by approving the legislation.


The change to canon law was passed by an overwhelming majority with a simple show of hands at a meeting in London, 20 years after the first women were ordained as Church of England priests.


Four in five nurses hired from overseas


Four out of five nurses hired in NHS hospitals in the last year were recruited from overseas, new figures suggest.


Three-quarters of the 140 acute hospital trusts in England filled a shortfall in registered nurses with 5,778 foreign staff, according to an investigation by the Health Service Journal.


But experts have warned overseas recruitment was just a "Band Aid" on the "serious" shortage of UK-based nurses.


Questions on public health fund


A £2.7 billion fund to improve public health is not always being spent where it is most needed, according to a watchdog.


Records of how the cash has been allocated by some local authorities are also inaccurate, the National Audit Office found.


During an inquiry into how well money is being used to encourage healthier lifestyles and reduce health inequalities, it highlighted recently published NHS research that showed alcohol-related incidents are costing £3.5 billion a year.


Al-Sweady inquiry to deliver report


A long-running inquiry into claims that British troops killed and tortured Iraqi civilians a decade ago will deliver its final report today.


The judge-led Al-Sweady inquiry, which has cost the taxpayer around £25 million, will deliver its conclusions following a five-year process.


It has examined claims that 20 or more Iraqis were unlawfully killed in custody, bodies were mutilated and detainees were ill-treated following a fierce firefight known as the Battle of Danny Boy in May 2004.


MPs urge joint enterprise review


A shake-up of so-called joint enterprise legislation - which was used to convict the killers of black teenager Stephen Lawrence - could be needed in murder cases to stop "minor" players from being condemned to spend life in prison for another person's crime, a group of MPs has said.


The Justice Committee wants the Government's law reform advisers to consider scrapping the rule that in a joint enterprise murder it is not possible to charge secondary figures - who did not encourage or assist the crime - with a lesser offence such as manslaughter but only with murder.


Joint enterprise law allows for several people to be charged with the same offence, even though they may have played different roles in the crime. While it can apply to all offences, it has recently been used as a way to prosecute murder - especially in cases involving gangs of young men.


Boy, 13, in court for man's murder


A 13-year-old boy will appear in court today charged with the murder of a man who died after a "verbal altercation" with a group of youngsters.


Christopher Barry, 53, also known as Jack, was stabbed at his home in Edmonton, north London, on Sunday evening after he was said to have been involved in an incident with a group trying to get into a party at another address in the block of flats where he lived.


The teenager was charged with his murder last night and has been remanded in custody to appear at Highbury Corner Youth Court, Scotland Yard said.


Boxer Crolla in slab attack horror


Boxing world title hopeful Anthony Crolla is in hospital after a "sickening" attack by burglars who smashed him over the head with a concrete slab.


The 28-year-old lightweight has a possible fractured skull and a broken right foot after he was attacked by two people he was chasing away from his neighbour's home, according to his trainer Joe Gallagher.


Sports promoter Eddie Hearn tweeted: "Gutted to confirm that @ant-crolla is in hospital with a head and ankle injury after confronting burglars at/near his property."


Government hopes for good jobs news


The Government is hoping for more good news on the jobs front today when the latest unemployment figures are expected to show another cut in the dole queues.


Employment has been rising and unemployment falling all year, and the new data from the Office for National Statistics is set to continue this trend.


Last month's figures showed that more than 30 million people were in work, an increase of almost 700,000 on a year ago, while the jobless total was just under two million, over half a million lower than last year.


MPs warn over new trains contract


Taxpayers have been left with all the risk over two multibillion-pound contracts for new trains, a report by MPs has said.


The Department for Transport (DfT) decided to lead on procurements of new trains for the Intercity Express programme and for the Thameslink project "despite having no previous experience of doing so", the House of Commons Public Accounts Committee said.


Its report went on: "By buying the trains directly, the department has taken on the risk of passenger demand forecasts being wrong."



Boro Under-21s boss Paul Jenkins welcomes loan interest in his rising stars


Boro Under-21s boss Paul Jenkins admits he is loving the challenge of developing the club’s brightest talents.


Long-serving coach Jenkins took charge of the Under-21s this summer after working with the Under-18s last season.


The young guns have performed well under his stewardship, bringing the curtain down on 2014 with a 0-0 draw at Aston Villa on Monday.


That result moved Boro to joint second in the Barclays Under-21 Premier League, two points behind leaders Newcastle.


Jenkins’ side have also progressed into the last 16 of the Premier League Cup, and are one point away from a semi-final spot in the Final Third Development League Cup.


That success is even more impressive given that a number of the team’s experienced regulars have been sent out on loan this season - but Jenkins admits such interest is welcome.


“The lads are doing well”, he said. “They are going out and performing, and that’s why teams are coming in to take them on loan.


“It’s a feather in their cap when teams show interest in them.


“I’ve thoroughly enjoyed working with this group. As a coaching team we’ve had challenges imposed on us through injuries and players heading out on loan, but we knew that would happen.


“The fact we’re still sitting high in the league table is testament to the lads. The club is in a buoyant mood at the moment.”


One youngster experiencing life away from the Riverside is Bradley Halliday, who has extended his stay at York City for another month. He will now stay at Bootham Crescent until January 17.


But Bradley Fewster is back on Teesside after ending his season-long loan spell at Preston North End prematurely for “personal reasons”.