Monday, March 16, 2015

John Kerry’s End-Run Around Congress on Iran


U.S. Secretary of State John Kerry gestures during a news conference after nuclear talks in Geneva Secretary of State John Kerry disgraced his office yet again during his appearance before the Senate Foreign Relations Committee on March 11th. He sharply criticized an open letter to Iran’s leadership drafted by Arkansas Senator Tom Cotton and signed by 47 Republicans, which simply made the point that in our democratic republic the president does not get to bind our country irreversibly to an executive agreement he signs unilaterally with another country. “My reaction to the letter was utter disbelief,” Kerry lamented. He declared that “this letter ignores more than two centuries of precedent in the conduct of American foreign policy. It purports to tell the world that if you want to have any confidence in your dealings with America they have to negotiate with 535 members of Congress.” He called such an idea “both untrue and profoundly a bad suggestion.”


In any event, added Kerry, Congress would not be able to change the terms of any nuclear deal entered into by President Obama and the other five negotiating partners with Iran. His explanation was pure Orwellian doubletalk. Kerry asserted that what he was negotiating would not be considered a “legally binding plan,” but would have “a capacity for enforcement.”


At one fell swoop, Kerry displayed contempt, hypocrisy and evasiveness to members of a co-equal branch of our government and to the American people.


Perhaps Secretary of State Kerry forgot what Senator Kerry did shortly after entering the Senate in 1985 and joining the Senate Foreign Relations Committee. He was then a junior senator, just like Senator Cotton is today. However, unlike Senator Cotton, Senator Kerry did not just write an open letter to the leader of a country with which the United States had an adversarial relationship. He went much further – literally.


At the time, a core element of the Reagan administration’s foreign policy was to oppose any dealings with the Communist leaning government in Nicaragua led by President Daniel Ortega Saavedra and to support rebels, known as contras, who were challenging the regime.


Kerry did not like the Reagan policy towards the Nicaraguan regime and opposed providing any aid to the contras. That would have been fine if he had confined himself to his legislative duties. However, Kerry decided to actively interfere with the Reagan administration’s foreign policy. Joined by then Senator Harkin of Iowa, Kerry traveled down to Nicaragua and met with Nicaraguan President Ortega for face-to-face discussions. Said Kerry at the time: “Senator Harkin and I are going to Nicaragua as Vietnam-era veterans who are alarmed that the Reagan administration is repeating the mistakes we made in Vietnam. I am willing….. to take the risk in the effort to put to test the good faith of the Sandinistas.”


Senator Kerry brought back Ortega’s offer of a cease-fire if Congress rejected aid to the rebels.


Kerry described Ortega’s peace proposal as “a wonderful opening.” On the Senate floor he said, “Here, in writing, is a guarantee of the security interest of the United States.”


Shortly after Kerry returned from his trip with his “guarantee” from Ortega in hand, Ortega visited Moscow where his regime was granted a $200 million loan.


White House Deputy Press Secretary Robert Sims said the proposal, which had not been made formally to the U.S. Embassy, contained “nothing new” and did not provide for “a dialogue of reconciliation.” He said its main purpose appeared to be aimed at influencing a Congressional vote against providing aid to the Nicaraguan rebels.


Secretary of State George P. Shultz condemned the trip. “We cannot conduct a successful policy when (congressmen) take trips or write ‘Dear Comandante’ letters with the aim of negotiating” with the Nicaraguan government, Shultz said. “I’m sure it’s a quite a problem for us when Senators run around and start dealing with the Communists themselves.” Schultz called the Ortega offer delivered by Kerry and Harkin a “fraud” that was “designed to distract attention” just before Congress was preparing to vote on aid to the rebels.


Former Secretary of State Henry Kissinger also weighed in. “If the Nicaraguans want to make an offer, they ought to make it in diplomatic channels,” Kissinger said. “We can’t be negotiating with our own congressmen and Nicaragua simultaneously.”


Kerry denied that he had negotiated with Ortega. But that is exactly what he and former Senator Harkin had done, waving Ortega’s peace offer that Ortega made directly to them.


Flash forward 30 years to Secretary of State John Kerry’s hypocritical condemnation of the Republican senators’ open letter to the leaders of Iran. No senator traveled to Iran to meet with its Supreme Leader or president, as Senator Kerry had done when he took it upon himself to meet with Ortega. All the Republican senators did was to write the equivalent of an op-ed piece, framed as an open letter to Iran, informing them of Congress’ constitutional role in connection with any negotiated nuclear arms deal with Iran. President Obama brought this on himself when he cavalierly indicated his intention to veto any legislation that would give Congress the right to review, much less approve, the terms of any deal with Iran before it goes into effect.


While Kerry was crystal clear in his criticism of the Republican senators’ action, his declaration that what he was negotiating would not be considered a “legally binding plan,” but would have “a capacity for enforcement,” is another matter. At first blush, it seems to be internally contradictory. How can something be non-binding yet enforceable? The answer to Kerry’s cryptic statement lies in the United Nations Security Council.


The five permanent members of the Security Council – the United States, the United Kingdom, France, China and the Russian Federation – are negotiating a nuclear deal with Iran. Germany is also represented on what is called the P5+1 negotiating team. If the framework of a deal is finalized with Iran, the United States or one or more of the other members of the Security Council can submit a resolution to the Council that endorses the agreement framework. The resolution could call for incorporation of the deal’s terms into a final agreement and its full implementation, including inspections by the International Atomic Energy Agency. The resolution would likely include a statement that the Security Council reserves the right to impose unspecified consequences if Iran violates any provisions of the agreement. If Iran shows evidence of compliance, the sanctions previously imposed on Iran by the Security Council could be lifted. Such a resolution would be considered legally binding under international law with “a capacity for enforcement” under Chapter VII of the United Nations Charter. It would not be subject to rejection by Congress. In other words, by using the United Nations to endorse and effectively incorporate by reference the terms of the deal, the Obama administration would be presenting Congress and the American people with a fait accompli.


This is not just a theory. Reuters reported exclusively on March 12th that talks are underway on a UN Security Council resolution “to lift U.N. sanctions on Iran if a nuclear agreement is struck, a step that could make it harder for the U.S. Congress to undo a deal.” This would not automatically affect the separately imposed sanctions by the United States and its allies. However, it would give President Obama more leverage in arguing that such sanctions should be eased as well so as not to be out of sync with such an internationally supported Security Council resolution. Of course, the resolution would have been set in motion by the Obama administration itself in order to neutralize any Congressional opposition to a deal negotiated with Iran.


Iranian Foreign Minister Javad Zarif said earlier this week, in criticizing the Republican senators’ open letter, that if the current negotiations result in a Joint Comprehensive Plan of Action, it “will not be a bilateral agreement between Iran and the US, but rather one that will be concluded with the participation of five other countries, including all permanent members of the Security Council, and will also be endorsed by a Security Council resolution.”


The State Department is being cagier. In an exchange with reporters at the March 11th daily State Department press conference, the State Department spokesperson Jen Psaki alluded to the role that the Security Council played with regard to the chemical weapons disposal agreement worked out with the Syrian regime. However, she avoided answering whether the same model might be used to render a deal with Iran legally binding under international law:



PSAKI: Well, I used the example of Syria, right, as an example. This framework was not legally binding and was not subject to congressional approval. It outlined steps for eliminating Syria’s chemical weapons and helped lay the groundwork for successful multilateral efforts to move forward. So I’m just conveying what we’re talking about as it relates to the political understandings and what we’re discussing with the parties.


QUESTION: I guess maybe this a question you could ask the lawyers, because I’m sure it’s not there. But I mean, if it was nonbinding, why did the Syrians comply with it


PSAKI: Well, as you know, we – there was an agreement – there were discussions, and they agreed to certain terms.


QUESTION: Right.


PSAKI: And then it went to the OPCW and then it went to the UN. So —


QUESTION: Actually, in the case of the security – the Syrian agreement, there was a Security Council vote, which I think made it binding.


PSAKI: Well, that – I just said. And then it went to the UN to the Security Council vote…


QUESTION: The Iranians have talked about this, whatever it is, that if anything happens, that it being – the idea that the UN Security Council would at least endorse it if not enshrine it in some kind of a resolution. Is that something that you think would be useful?


PSAKI: I’m just not going to get ahead of how this would be implemented at this point in time.



At the March 12th press briefing, Ms. Psaki continued to avoid being pinned down on any specific future role for the Security Council, indicating that it was too early to say. However, she was more explicit about the analogy between the handling of the chemical weapons deal with Syria, which included a Security Council resolution, and the handling of a possible nuclear deal with Iran. She said that “this would be the same kind of arrangement as many of our previous international security initiatives, which I think everybody feels were worthwhile in making – so such as the framework negotiated with Russia to destroy Syria’s chemical weapons…”


Reading between the lines, the Obama administration appears ready to skirt any formal Congressional role in reviewing a negotiated deal with Iran. It will make no difference whether the deal includes a sunset clause after which all bets are off. It will also make no difference whether the deal allows Iran, in the meantime, to maintain as many as 6500 operational centrifuges enriching enough fuel to make nuclear bombs, while also allowing Iran to plow ahead unimpeded with its missile delivery systems. Instead, President Obama and Secretary of State Kerry appear prepared to use the UN Security Council to convert a non-binding deal into a binding legal commitment under international law and begin immediately easing pressure on Iran from the UN imposed sanctions. Obama’s executive actions to erode U.S. sanctions will surely follow. In hiding behind the UN, Obama and Kerry will freeze Congress out of the process and jeopardize the security of United States and its allies.


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The Truth About the Cuban ‘Embargo’ — on The Glazov Gang


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This week’s Glazov Gang was joined by Humberto Fontova, the author of four books including his latest, The Longest Romance; The Mainstream Media and Fidel Castro.


Humberto came on the show to discuss The Truth About the Cuban ‘Embargo’, analyzing Obama’s rescue of a fascist tyranny.


Don’t miss the Glazov Gang’s second episode this week with Dr. Mark Christian, the President and Executive Director of the Global Faith Institute (GFI). He is an Egyptian-born Christian convert from Sunni Islam and is related to high-ranking leaders of the Muslim Brotherhood. (Learn more about his background and contemporary battle with the Muslim Brotherhood here.)


He came on the show to discuss the pro-Israel evening he is hosting in Omaha, “Israel in the Heartland,” on March 19 to honor Israel. It is the first ever pro-Zionist event to be held in the United States heartland and the state of Nebraska:


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Life is sweet for Marske cake maker David after five-figure investment


A wholesale dessert and cake maker has secured a five-figure investment from the North East Microloan Fund to expand into the ice cream market.


Sweet Art Patisserie, run by David Wrigley and his wife in Marske, produces handmade bespoke desserts and breads that are supplied to large hotels and restaurants in the region.


Middlesbrough Football Club and York Racecourse are among the pair’s customers and now they are hoping to expand the business with an ice cream range.


The directors of spotted a demand in the region for high quality ice cream and decided to buy equipment that would allow them to manufacture in-house.


The recent North East Microloan Fund investment, via fund managers Rivers Capital Partners, will be used to buy specialist kit as well as expand their existing product ranges.


Mr Wrigley said: “We didn’t want to approach our bank as they are not ‘business friendly’. Rivers Capital were very interested in getting to know our business. They wanted to help us and find the right path to grow.


“The process was very straight forward. All you needed was a good business plan and cash flow forecasts, along with a good idea.


“The whole experience was like sailing down a meandering river. The whole process was a pleasure from start to finish.”


The Microloan Fund aims to help grow businesses by removing the traditional barriers to finance which can them back. Businesses from a wide variety of sectors can apply for a loan anywhere between £1,000 and £25,000, tailored to their individual business needs.


Nikita Bazko, fund manager at Rivers Capital Partners, said: “In the next three years with the boost from the Microloan Fund we expect the company to continue growing from strength to strength, building up a good strong client base.


“The Microloan Fund is a valuable source of funding in the North East and can provide affordable credit even if you have been turned down by traditional lenders. The Fund differs from traditional lenders by focussing upon the quality of business models and not on the assets held by the company.


“As a result their approach means there’s an easy application process with a decision in two weeks. It’s fast and hassle-free, with professionals to talk you through every step of the way.”



North East Exporters' Awards 2015: Success often down to the efforts of a strong team


Success in exports is often down to the efforts of a strong team - and the North East Exporters’ Awards highlights the best of the bunch.


Its Export Team of the Year gong goes to the group of people that has added the most value to their business.


The search is on for the region’s brightest export stars ahead of the 2015 awards dinner, which takes place at Ramside Hall Hotel on June 25.


Sponsored by the North East Chamber of Commerce, the team that wins the Export Team of the Year accolade will have been able to demonstrate adoption of innovative techniques, personnel development, and successful implementation of the companies’ export sales strategy.


Judges are looking at factors including the product range that’s being exported, the complexity - and number - of markets, including more lucrative high-growth markets.


Other criteria include obstacles or barriers to success and the development of an export strategy through to percentage of growth in export sales and staff development measures undertaken.


Last year’s winner was Darlington-based Solo Thermal Imaging.


The family-run firm designs and manufactures the smallest, lightest thermal imaging cameras in the world. The company was originally set up to serve the fire fighting industry, but has found new markets as word spreads about its innovative fire safety helmets and clever thermal imaging cameras.


It has increased export activity in recent years, with the cruise ship sector one of its biggest markets. It has also designed a totally integrated helmet with thermal camera, breathing apparatus and communications to assist in extreme fire fighting conditions. Clients include Costa Cruises, P&O cruises and Regent and Oceania cruise ships. Last year the business secured a five-year deal in Russia, and also has representation in Pakistan, Bangladesh, China, Bulgaria and South Africa.


Based on Darlington’s Morton Park, Solo Thermal Imaging has recently supplied thermal imaging helmets to the £470million cruise liner Royal Princess.


The safety equipment will be used in the event of a fire breaking out on the liner, the thermal imaging camera for searching the sea in ‘man overboard’ situations or for detecting aggressive approaches to the vessel by pirates.


The company also supplied cameras to the South African police to help the fight against ivory poaching. And on home turf, a Solo camera has also been used by the Wildlife and Wetlands Trust this springtime to help protect a Great Crane nest at its reserve at Slimbridge - the first time the bird has laid an egg in Britain for 400 years. The company is also enjoying increasing success with equine thermography equipment used by race horse trainers and vets in the diagnosis of injuries and ailments in horses. A Solo Ti camera was used in the preparation of a Melbourne Cup winner in Australia and the company has recently secured an order for 35 cameras for Australian horse racing stables.


The North East Exporters’ Awards is run by The Gazette and its sister paper, The Journal, on Tyneside - with support from the NECC, UKTI, HSBC and PD Ports.


To make a nomination for the other categories, reserve a table or find further information, visit http://bit.ly/1BT0qNK .


Alternatively contact Andy Forster, events manager, on 0191 201 6430 or email andrew.forster@trinitymirror.com.


The deadline for entries is May 1.


Brian Dakers, International Trade Manager, NECC Brian Dakers, International Trade Manager, NECC


Brian Dakers, International Trade Manager at NECC, said:


“The North East Chamber of Commerce is proud to be sponsoring the Export Team award.


“As the region’s largest business membership organisation, world class connectivity and championing the North East as a major asset for UK PLC is one of our top priorities, and we understand the challenges facing our region’s exporters.


“The North-east has a strong record as an internationally trading region with a positive balance of trade. We fully support our region’s exporters and the infrastructure that makes it possible for them to do business.


“Therefore, we are very pleased to be supporting this category once again.


“International businesses face particular challenges, and organisations must develop their skills sets accordingly to ensure efficient and effective trading in a multitude of markets. Through our work delivering services specifically designed for international businesses we have experience of working with companies in all sorts of industries and this category seeks out those companies which have done the often overlooked but vital work of creating and developing the expertise required.


“Working with more than 700 of the region’s exporters, we are confident the applications will be plentiful, and look forward to the difficult process of shortlisting from amongst our fantastic exporting community.


“These awards are about celebrating the success of the companies who are opening the doors of the North-east to the world, boosting our economy and putting us on the centre stage of a global marketplace.


“Best of luck to all who apply, we look forward to seeing your applications.”



#OnThisBoroDay 2005: Boro put up a brave fight but tumble out of the UEFA Cup at Sporting Lisbon


Scenes of sheer joy and scenes of heartbreak.


Dumped out of Europe but with their heads held high; brave Boro believed they were capable of upsetting the odds in Lisbon on this day in 2005 and put up an almighty fight.


The result, a 1-0 win on the night for the Portuguese giants, was harsh on Boro. In truth, McClaren’s side created more than enough chances to overturn the 3-2 deficit from the first leg and this was an injury-ravaged and severely weakened Boro side.


But in soaring March temperatures in the Portuguese capital, Boro proved they could handle the pressure cooker of European football, and players and fans alike wanted more.


For the diehards who roared Boro on at the Estadio Josede Alvalade, it was unforgettable trip. They did the club proud as much as the players had.


A day basking in the sunshine in Lisbon’s centre square followed by a night watching Boro on the big stage.



And they could have been planning another trip had McClaren’s men taken the numerous glorious opportunities they managed to carve out.


Had the boss been able to call upon his first choice strikers instead of Szilard Nemeth and Joseph Job it could well have been a different story.


But Boro’s display was worthy of praise on the whole rather than criticism for passing up those opportunities in front of goal.


That said, the thousands who embraced their heroes and sang in the stands well beyond the full-time whistle must have wondered whether they would have been celebrating a memorable victory and a spot in the last eight if Joseph Job had hit the net instead of shooting wide when an empty net was at his mercy early in the second half.


VIEW GALLERY


A last-gasp Pedro Barbosa goal was harsh on Boro but had no impact on the final result and certainly didn’t dent McClaren’s pride in his players.


“We’ve gone out through inches,” he told the Gazette.


“We blew the best three chances in the game.


“We needed one to go in but fate was not with us last night.


“I am proud of the whole football club for the way they have dealt with this whole European experience.


“It’s been a great journey.”



Dear George: What's top of Teesside firms' wishlists for the Budget tomorrow?


RICHARD SICE, Director of Corporate Development at Fast Track China, who has helped manufacturing and service industry businesses to export their products across Europe, the Middle East and Asia.


“If the Chancellor can provide measures to encourage greater exporting, it will help many companies to open up new avenues for growth. Markets, such as China, offer great potential, which can be unlocked with support for businesses to take UK innovation, products and service to the rest of the world.”


Jonathan Willett director of Henderson Insurance Brokers, Map House, Preston Farm Jonathan Willett director of Henderson Insurance Brokers, Map House, Preston Farm


JONATHAN WILLETT, Director at Henderson Insurance Brokers Teesside office


“Further investment in the UK’s road infrastructure is badly needed. Although the Government has allocated additional money to deal with the pothole repairs backlog, more money needs to be ploughed in to deal with this problem.


“We are finding that commercial fleet operators are increasingly submitting insurance claims for damage to their vehicles caused by deep cracks and depressions in the road.


“Also, there should be tax breaks to help hard-pressed farmers, many of whom are experiencing a fall in income from traditional agricultural activities, to diversify and branch out into new or alternative commercial ventures.”


David Nicholson David Nicholson


DAVID NICHOLSON, managing director Nicholson’s Transport


“Increasing minimum wages discourages young people from wanting to aim towards skilled work.


“The gap between the minimum wage and the pay for skilled workers is closing all the time and that disincentives people to work harder towards qualifications or skilled trades as they can see that there is not that much to gain.”


“Minimum wage can put strain on businesses, particularly smaller firms with tight margins such as those in the transport sector. Instead, politicians should address how people move on in their careers, through training and better skills, helping them move to higher paying roles over time.”


Peter Davison, Managing Director of family-run RPD Builders Peter Davison, Managing Director of family-run RPD Builders

PETER DAVISON, Managing Director of Billingham-based RPD Builders


“As a member of the SME community, I would like to see a Budget that has measures to help SMEs invest, innovate and grow and therefore create jobs and opportunities.


“The Chancellor’s 2014 Budget put SMEs at the heart of economic growth and I would like to see more of the same. The Chancellor should introduce more funding for growth for SMEs across all sectors to propel future UK economic development.”


Warren Portues, Owner of North Eastern 4x4 Warren Portues, Owner of North Eastern 4x4


WARREN PORTUES, Co-owner of Stockton-based North Eastern 4x4


“As a small business that services and repairs vehicles and employs five full-time members of staff and three apprentices, I would like to see assurances in the Budget that the Government has no plans to introduce new taxes on diesel powered engines. Such an introduction could have a detrimental effect on the day-to-day running costs of many businesses.”


Amanda Vigar, managing partner, V&A Vigar (Darlington) LLP - aka the Business Battle-axe Amanda Vigar, managing partner, V&A Vigar (Darlington) LLP - aka the Business Battle-axe


AMANDA VIGAR, Managing Partner of V&A Vigar & Co (Darlington) LLP


“It is vital that for an enterprise culture to thrive more people are taken out of the tax/NIC net, that the rates burden for small businesses is reduced and that entrepreneurship and investment is rewarded by giving growing companies and investors more tax breaks.”


George Rafferty, Chief Executive of NOF Energy George Rafferty, Chief Executive of NOF Energy


GEORGE RAFFERTY, Chief Executive of NOF Energy


“The industry has made strong representations to the Treasury regarding the fiscal regime in the UK oil & gas sector, which we support, and we hope they are heard. Most significantly there is the need for investment allowances that encourages exploration.


“Exploration is crucial to securing the future of operations in the UK North Sea as it is the catalyst for the entire industry from the recovery of resources through to programmes of decommissioning, all of which involve the support of a technology-led supply chain.”


He added: “The importance of the energy industry to the UK economy is multi-faceted and it’s essential for the Chancellor to continue to recognise this in his Budget.


“In addition to making sure the lights don’t go out, the industry makes considerable contributions to the Treasury. This is both in terms of the tax-take from recovered resources, but also from the several thousand companies in the supply chain, and the tens of thousands of people they employ, that contribute to the economy thanks to their skills, products and services that are delivered in the UK and exported around the world.”


Andrew Nicholson, managing director of Nicholson Consultancy Andrew Nicholson, managing director of Nicholson Consultancy


ANDREW NICHOLSON, managing director of The Nicholson Consultancy, a management and training consultancy based at Newton Aycliffe


“Businesses would benefit greatly if the following issues were addressed in the Budget - the raising of the Employee National Insurance threshold, ideally in line with PAYE; a reduction in Employer’s National Insurance, which would help boost job creation; continued business rates relief for small companies; further encouragement for companies to invest in technology; and a real focus on deregulation and simplification, which is always promised but never seems to be delivered.”


Managing Director of Ebac in Newton Aycliffe, Pamela Petty.


PAMELA PETTY, managing director of Ebac, which is shortly to bring the first British made washing machines for many years to the market


“I’d really like the Chancellor to announce something that would drive demand for British made goods, maybe a tax on imported white goods and textiles or a real financial incentive for manufacturing here at home some of the things we import.


“This country has a proud history of making things, and it is no surprise that the growth we are seeing in the economy is coming at a time when UK manufacturing is on the rise.”


Steve Pugh at Nortech Steve Pugh at Nortech


STEVE PUGH, Group Business Development Manager at Nortech Group, a professional engineering design and project management company based at Wynyard


“There is urgent need for regulatory and fiscal reform to restore the international competitiveness of the UK oil and gas industry.


“The international market is being driven by ever increasing production from the Middle East and reduced demand from the slowing economic growth in developing nations. This is creating the perfect storm.


“Nobody within the industry is looking for hand-outs, but the UK oil and gas industry is suffering disproportionately on the global stage from high costs and a tax burden of between 60 and 80 per cent.


“Any update to the fiscal regime should reflect the current realities. That means strong incentives for both exploration and development with upfront capital allowances. These should also be extended to new companies coming in to manage late life development of the remaining reserves in and around existing fields.”


Mohammed Bashir, owner of Boro Taxis Mohammed Bashir, owner of Boro Taxis


MOHAMMED BASHIR, founder of Boro Taxis, Teesside largest taxi firm


“Fuel is the lifeblood of our business and costs, such as fuel, directly affect customers of taxi firms.


“We, along with other companies in the transport sector, would like to see a cut in the disproportionate amount of tax levied on fuel.”


Colin Fyfe Colin Fyfe


COLIN FYFE, Chief Executive of Darlington Building Society


“Darlington Building Society would like to see concerted actions to help the UK’s home buyers, particularly younger buyers to take their first steps into home ownership. With the monies raised through the issue of NS&I 65+ Bonds we see a real opportunity for Government to use these funds to offset the initial investment in housing projects.


“These monies could make a significant difference if used to fund affordable homes. This approach would have the additional merit of using funds which deliver (interest) benefit to those aged 65 and over to provide affordable housing for younger people, an intergenerational win-win.


“We would also like to see further support from Government to boost the range of providers within the house building sector, including specific support for SME builders, custom and self-build, co-operative housing models and shared ownership as more mainstream options for house buyers. The UK’s volume house-builders alone cannot alleviate the acute shortage of housing in the UK.”



Pamela Geller Wins Right to Run Ads in Philly


re A federal court has struck a blow for the First Amendment by ordering Philadelphia’s public transit system to accept an eye-opening ad that spotlights Islamic Jew-hatred and urges the United States to cut off foreign aid to Muslim countries.


The hard-hitting public service announcement, which contains a photograph of a real-life meeting between Adolf Hitler and Muslim leader and Nazi collaborator Hajj Amin al-Husseini, is sponsored by the American Freedom Defense Initiative (AFDI), which was co-founded by conservative leader and blogger Pamela Geller. AFDI sued and placed the ad in New York City and Washington, D.C. public transit systems after litigating the matter in court. It has also attempted to place ads in transit systems in Chicago, Houston, Phoenix, San Francisco, and elsewhere.


It’s just the latest in a string of legal victories for Geller.


For example, in 2012 Geller won her legal fight to post an anti-Islamist ad in the New York City subway system. Quoting Ayn Rand, the ad read, “In any war between the civilized man and the savage support the civilized man. Support Israel. Defeat Jihad.” The ad was a response to ads in the NYC subway promoting Islam and others accusing Israel of a number of things including being an obstacle to peace in the Middle East.


In Geller’s view, Philadelphia desperately needs ads about the true nature of Islam because city council members there have honored Palestinian terrorist supporter Laila Ghannam. Ghannam, who is the District Governor of Ramallah for the Palestinian Authority, glorifies “some of the most horrific Palestinian terrorist murderers, presenting them as heroes and role models, and promising to follow in their path.” Ghannam has said that Islam sanctions the murder of Israeli civilians. Philadelphia also hosted the national anti-Israel boycott, divestment and sanctions conference in 2012, which took place at the University of Pennsylvania.


It should be noted that Geller, an outspoken opponent of the Islamization of America and advocate of the State of Israel, has been the subject of over-the-top attacks from the Left for years. The more successful Geller is at warning of the dangers of Islamism, the viler the attacks on her become.


Last week the left-wingers at the Jewish Daily Forward attacked Geller for running a separate ad drawing attention to Jews that Geller believes are undermining Israel by supporting the New Israel Fund.


The New Israel Fund is a 501(c)(3) nonprofit that has served as an administrator in the Middle East for Ford Israel Fund, which is an arm of the radical left-wing Ford Foundation. As FrontPage contributor Ronn Torossian has written, the New Israel Fund has “granted nearly $27 million to left-wing and progressive NGOs in Israel” and “systematically works to destabilize Israel.”


Criticizing left-wing Jewish leaders who back the fund constitutes “McCarthyism,” in the eyes of oped authors Deborah Lipstadt, Professor of Modern Jewish and Holocaust Studies at Emory University, and David Ellenson, Chancellor Emeritus of the Reform movement’s Hebrew Union College-Jewish Institute of Religion. They write:



Unfortunately, McCarthy’s tactics are apparently still alive and well in the Jewish community today. Ronn Torossian and Pam Geller have attacked Karen Adler, Alisa Doctoroff, Edith Everett, and Carol Zabar — among the most prominent leaders of our community — as supporters of the BDS campaign against Israel who seek to undermine the Jewish state. Torossian did so in a New York Post opinion piece and Geller’s group has sponsored bus ads repeating the charge.



Attacks from Geller and others “on these outstanding Jewish leaders reflect a disturbing new development in contemporary Jewish life,” Lipstadt and Ellenson write.


“Rather than disagree civilly and engage in polite and constructive debate there is name-calling and defamation. This is character assassination of the worst kind. Our community should not tolerate it,” they write. And then, after denouncing defamation, they engage in it, implying Geller and others are “the true enemies of the Jewish people.”


Meanwhile, AFDI’s black and white ad in Philadelphia reads “Islamic Jew-Hatred: It’s in the Quran.” It continues: “Two Thirds of All US Aid Goes To Islamic Countries. End All Aid To Islamic Countries. IslamicJewHatred.com.”


It features a photograph of a 1941 get-together between Adolf Hitler and the Grand Mufti of Jerusalem, who is described as an ally of Hitler and a Palestinian leader. The photo caption reads, “Adolf Hitler and his staunch ally, the leader of the Muslim world, Hajj Amin al-Husseini.”


Al-Husseini helped the Nazis recruit Bosnian Muslims for the Waffen-SS. Waffen-SS members committed many war crimes, deporting Jews from Eastern Europe, guarding concentration camps, and massacring Jews and others.


The Southeastern Pennsylvania Transportation Authority (SEPTA) argues the ad runs afoul of “minimal civility standards” and the authority’s “anti-disparagement” policy and may appeal the ruling rendered last week by U.S. District Judge Mitchell S. Goldberg.


Gino J. Benedetti, SEPTA’s general counsel, previously explained that he rejected the ad because he believed it “put every single Muslim in the same category [of] being a Jew hater.”


SEPTA concluded the ad is not protected speech



“because it utilizes deliberate or reckless falsehoods in order to demean a group based on its religion, uses intentionally provocative language and images in the hope of eliciting a violent response, and embraces the very hatred of religious groups it purports to condemn.”



But Judge Goldberg found that the Constitution’s free speech protections trump SEPTA’s efforts to prevent hurt feelings. SEPTA has carried ads promoting viewpoints on issues such as birth control, animal cruelty, fracking, and religion, he noted.


“It is clear that the anti-disparagement standard promulgated by SEPTA was a principled attempt to limit hurtful, disparaging advertisements,” Goldberg found. “While certainly laudable, such aspirations do not, unfortunately, cure First Amendment violations.”


The Philadelphia office of the Council on American-Islamic Relations (CAIR), a group that is associated with Hamas and the Muslim Brotherhood, maintains that the ad is “dishonest.”


“The court did what it had to do under the Constitution,” said Jacob Bender, executive director of CAIR-Philadelphia. “Now it is on all of us, Philadelphians of all faiths, to find a way to respond to these ads in a way that promotes truth and dialogue over ignorance and division.”


Except that the ad is entirely truthful. Antipathy towards Jews has been deeply ingrained in Islam since it began in the 7th century A.D.


The Koran demonizes Jews at length. The Islamic holy book attributes the following negative qualities and behaviors to Jews: dishonesty, argumentativeness, hypocrisy, wishing ill on others, taking pleasure in others’ suffering, arrogance, haughtiness, opportunism, impoliteness, murderousness, mercilessness, heartlessness, cowardice, and miserliness.


And an infamous hadith urges the mass slaughter of Jews by Muslims.


According to Sahih Muslim 6985, nature itself will rise up and help the followers of Mohammed exterminate the Jews:



Abu Huraira reported Allah’s Messenger (may peace be upon him) as saying: The last hour would not come unless the Muslims will fight against the Jews and the Muslims would kill them until the Jews would hide themselves behind a stone or a tree and a stone or a tree would say: Muslim, or the servant of Allah, there is a Jew behind me; come and kill him; but the tree Gharqad would not say, for it is the tree of the Jews.



According to Encyclopedia Britannica, a Hadith is a “record of the traditions or sayings of the Prophet Muhammad, revered and received as a major source of religious law and moral guidance, second only to the authority of the Qurʾān, the holy book of Islam.”


The entry continues,



It might be defined as the biography of Muhammad perpetuated by the long memory of his community for their exemplification and obedience. The development of Hadith is a vital element during the first three centuries of Islamic history, and its study provides a broad index to the mind and ethos of Islam.



A survey even found that 73 percent of 1,010 Palestinians in the West Bank and Gaza agreed with the hadith “quoted in [the] Hamas Charter about the need to kill Jews hiding behind stones, trees.”


Clearly, Pamela Geller is onto something.


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Freeing Drug Dealers Is Not a Conservative Solution


dd Grover Norquist’s Americans for Tax Reform and a number of right-libertarian groups have joined together with the ACLU and the Center for American Progress to form The Coalition for Public Safety. Headed by Obama’s former associate director of legislative affairs for Drug Control Policy, the Coalition seeks to lower prison populations through ‘soft on crime’ reforms. Its libertarian partners argue that spending on the criminal justice system is out of control and that it’s time to go easy on some criminals.


While spending on the criminal justice system is high, this is due to the extreme regulatory burdens created by lawyers and judges as well as by the uncontrolled immigration supported by Norquist and some other members of the left-right coalition. A genuine conservative prison reform policy would speed up executions, cut public defender entitlements and slash immigration from high crime countries.


It is these immigration policies that have led to sharp crime increases in states like Utah. Reformers argue that Utah’s prison population growing 258 percent from 1982 to 2007 is a sign of overcriminalization. But around the same Utah’s foreign born population grew from 3 percent to 8.3 percent. Utah’s demographics are changing and its majority minority prison population reflects that.


Maine has one of the lowest crime and incarceration rates in the country. It also has a foreign born population below 5 percent. The price of cheap labor is very expensive crime. If you want a cheap day laborer, you have to be willing to spend millions keeping him in prison after he robs a liquor store.


The Coalition claims that the problem is the incarceration of non-violent offenders. Right on Crime, another member of the ACLU/CAP/Norquist coalition, calls for “prison alternatives” for non-violent offenders. One of its recent push polls urges probation for first time offenders.


Like amnesty, these “reforms” are being sold with misleading claims about enforcement first. A Coalition whose goal is helping criminals has not come together for “Public Safety”. Public safety is served by locking criminals up, not by setting them loose. Nor has the ACLU ever been interested in public safety.


The agenda is spun with misleading claims about the non-violent offender which imply that he’s just some poor kid caught smoking pot.


The first thing to understand about the myth of the non-violent offender is that he isn’t necessarily non-violent. Prosecutors reduce charges in plea deals that allow violent offenders to plead to non-violent offenses. Alternatively a violent offender may not have actually hurt or threatened anyone.


Burglary, for example, may or may not be a violent crime, depending on the state and depending on whether anyone was on the premises. Weapons possessions also, may or may not be a violent crime. On the other hand election fraud and child neglect are considered violent offenses in some jurisdictions.


A non-violent offender might have broken into a home while carrying a gun. A violent offender might have left his kids in the car.


The term doesn’t tell you that one is safe and that the other is a danger to society. Selling reforms based on it creates a misleading comfort level that is not warranted by how the system actually works.


The Bureau of Justice found that a third of non-violent offenders had a history of arrests for violent crimes. 95% had been arrested in the past. 8% had used a weapon during their offense.


The non-violent offender is still a career criminal. Often a violent one.


The reform pitch focuses on non-violent offenders convicted of drug offenses, but the majority of these non-violent offenders, 1 in 5, had been convicted of drug trafficking.


We’re being sold the myth of prisons filled with innocent minority kids whose only crime was being caught with a joint. The prisons are actually a revolving door for drug dealers. There are cases of unjust sentences, but for the most part the book is being thrown at the people it ought to be thrown at.


Only 4 percent of the inmates in state prisons are there for drug possession. 12 percent are there for manufacturing, trafficking and selling drugs.


What is really on the table is making life easier for drug dealers. This is not about a kid smoking a joint in a corner. This is about the drug dealing that led to an epidemic and nationwide support for a crackdown.


Just as with amnesty, the left side of the partnership is more honest about the endgame than the right. It is willing to talk openly about drug dealers as non-violent offenders and about the impossibility of significantly lowering the prison population numbers without freeing violent criminals. The libertarians meanwhile offer soothing nonsense about non-violent offenders camouflaged in ‘security first’ rhetoric.


They talk about vague “drug offenses” committed by “non-violent offenders” and “first-time offenders”. How could such harmless people possibly be dangerous? Surely it’s wrong to lock them up for life.


The ACLU’s profile of the kinds of non-violent offenders it thinks are wrongly locked up includes Jesse Webster, who was convicted of a conspiracy to distribute around 500 pounds of cocaine. Webster has become a cause célèbre for the left which is demanding that Obama commute his sentence.


Another non-violent offender, Robert E. Booker, ran a crack house and was caught with three assault rifles.


The ACLU describes them as “first-time offenders” and “non-violent offenders” when they were really dangerous drug dealers. The reforms it wants would help that harmless “first-time offender” selling millions in cocaine or the heavily armed “non-violent” criminal running a crack house.


“First-time offender”, like “non-violent offender”, is a misleading term that makes us think of a man who only made a single mistake. But the real mistake is falling for those misleading terms.


Are these the kinds of non-violent first-time offenders that conservatives are comfortable with freeing?


We’ve already tested the left’s crime theories in the past. They don’t work.


Being soft on crime destroys cities. It kills innocent people. The justice system isn’t perfect, but making common cause with the left-wing pro-crime lobby will take us back to a truly broken society.


There are no simple solutions to the problems we face and the reformers don’t have any to offer us. Instead they’re selling the same old liberal policies as fiscally conservative. While prison is expensive, having entire neighborhoods run by men like Booker and Webster is a lot more expensive. Having cities where the weekend begins with six shootings and ends with a full morgue is downright priceless.


The Democratic Party has become powerful through this way of life. Perpetuating it only plays into their hands and alienates potential voters who won’t see a difference between Republicans and Democrats because both seem to care more about illegal aliens and about criminals than about working Americans.


Conservatives have known this all along.


President Reagan said, “We do not seek to violate the rights of defendants. But shouldn’t we feel more compassion for the victims of crime than for those who commit crime?” Unleashing criminals isn’t compassionate. It’s the worst form of cruelty.


When Reagan talked about criminal justice reform, he meant putting away more criminals behind bars. He understood that to win, Republicans had to boldly talk about the real problems instead of launching yet another futile attempt to beat the left by adopting its agenda.


“We figured out how to deal with the crime problem,” Charles Murray wrote. “The key insight was a very old one; Lock ‘em up, as we have done in unprecedented numbers.”


The Coalition for Public Safety believes that’s a problem. The low crime rates say it’s a solution.


We’ve been down this road before. It doesn’t work. We don’t need prison reform. We need social reform. A society with values can reach bad men and prevent kids from turning into them. A society without values will instead romanticize them and fight for their freedom as if it were a moral cause.


The Republican Party cannot succeed if it forgets that it appeals to those Americans who believe in a nation of values. That too has been tried and it has failed. It is failing now all over again.


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Al-Jazeera journalist finds his father dead in Syrian jail


Al-Jazeera


Al-Jazeera producer Khalid Al-Zoubi was surprised to find his father among those discovered tortured to death inside the Syrian regime’s prisons, Al-Sabeel newspaper reported yesterday.


Al-Zoubi, who appeared in a short video speaking about his story, said: “Al-Jazeera obtained a group of pictures and documents about Syrians tortured to death inside the prisons of the Syrian regime.”


“While assorting the pictures and documents, I was surprised to spot the picture of my 75-year old father, who went missing three years ago, among the dead.”


It was an emotional moment, Al-Sabeel reported, as the devastated journalist broke down and his colleagues consoled him.


Al-Jazeera General Manager Yasser Abu Hilala sent his condolences to the journalist and his family and prayed that God would shower His mercy on them


Source: MEMO



Turkey arrests three UK teenagers in Istanbul


Turkey arrests and returns three ISIL-bound British teenagers. (file photo)


Turkey has arrested three British teenagers in the city of Istanbul before they crossed the border into neighboring Syria to join ISIL terrorists.


The three from northwest London, who have not been named, were seized after a tipoff from British counterterrorism police and have since been flown back to London and arrested.


Scotland Yard said counterterrorism officers were told on Friday that two 17-year-old boys had gone missing and were believed to be traveling to Syria.


A spokesman said, “Inquiries revealed that they had travelled with a third male, aged 19 years. Officers alerted the Turkish authorities who were able to intercept all three males, preventing travel to Syria.”


“On Saturday, 14 March the three males returned to the UK and at approx 23:10hrs were arrested on suspicion of preparation of terrorist acts contrary to Section 5 of the Terrorism Act 2006.”


All three are now being held in a central London police station, the Telegraph reported.


At least 600 Britons are estimated to have slipped into Syria to wage war against the government there since 2011.


Turkey has been accused of failing to control its 560-mile long border with Syria and allowing terrorists easy passage. Ankara has in turn complained that European police forces have been slow to share information on extremists traveling through the country.


GHN/GHN



Just 6 months after war, Hamas says Gaza bases near border rebuilt



GAZA CITY (Ma’an) — The military wing of Hamas on Saturday said that it had rebuilt a number of military bases near the Israeli border in the Gaza Strip, asserting that it had recovered from Israel’s summer offensive and was “not afraid” of confronting the occupation again.


“No sooner has the war come to an end, than the al-Qassam Brigades started a new stage of the conflict in preparation for the battle of liberation,” a report on the official website of the Izz al-Din al-Qassam Brigades said.


The report said that fighters from the group had rebuilt military training sites near the border in the north, east, and west of the Gaza Strip, giving lie to Israeli claims that “Operation Protective Edge” in July-August 2014 had caused the group serious damage.


Israel’s aim in the operation had been to end rocket fire from Gaza, which Hamas says comes in response to Israel’s continued occupation of the West Bank and Gaza Strip.


But at the end of 50 days of warfare, Palestinian militant groups continued firing rockets into Israel. They also managed to confront Israeli forces in a number of battles across Gaza after the military launched a ground invasion.


The Palestinian military resistance left nearly 70 Israeli soldiers dead, the highest casualty rate for the force since Israel was forced to withdraw from Lebanon in 2006 during a partial land invasion targeting Hezbollah.


Hamas claimed victory at the end of the Israeli assault in August, even though the group suffered extensive losses in its military arsenal.


2,200 Palestinians died during the Israeli assault as well, the vast majority civilians. A few hundred Hamas fighters are also believed to be among the dead.


The report released by Hamas Saturday quoted a military official as saying that the group plans to continue military training near the border “without fear of the occupation’s threats.”


The official added that the training sites were being developed and enlarged so they could host all “the training the mujahedeen could need.”


The report claimed that Israeli residents of communities on the other side of the the border had begun to “panic” as they could hear the sounds of missiles and explosions coming from the training sites.


“They complained about Hamas preparing for the coming war,” the report said, quoting Israeli media outlets.


The main group of training sites are known as al-Yarmouk and are located east of the al-Shujaiyya neighborhood of Gaza City, an area that suffered heavy destruction during Israel’s offensive.


The other site, the report said, is called “Palestine” and is located near the former Israeli settlement of Nisanit in the northern Gaza Strip.


The settlement was evacuated by Israel in 2005 during the Second Intifada, almost 40 years after Israel first occupied Gaza.



Grangetown mum who set up fundraising page for Nathaniel Artley praises 'incredible strength' of his mum


A mum who set up a fundraising page to help with the recovery of a four-year-old Nathaniel Artley who was hit by a taxi has praised the “incredible strength” of his mother.


When Grangetown mum Louise Ingoe, 33, heard about the plight of four-year-old Nathaniel and his mum Katrina Verrill, she decided she wanted to do something to help.


Nathaniel was left with horrific life-threatening injuries after being hit by a car in Cotswold Avenue, Middlesbrough, on Sunday March 8. He underwent major surgery and was put on a life support machine at Royal Victoria Infirmary in Newcastle.


Louise, mum to Kelsey, 11, and Owen, 10, said: “I didn’t know the family but I’ve got young children myself. When I heard what had happened, I contacted Katrina through Facebook. Since then I’ve been in touch with her on a daily basis.


“We’re going to raise quite a lot money for them. We want to raise about £5,000 to provide some financial support for her.


“People have asked me why I’m doing it. Well, I know she doesn’t have a lot - I’m a mother and I’ve been there myself.”


From left to right, Carlos, Nathaniel and Lennox VIEW GALLERY


Read more: Four-year-old hit by car in Pallister Park moved from Newcastle to Teesside after condition improves


Nathaniel’s condition has since improved and he has been taken off life support and has been moved to James Cook University Hospital, Middlesbrough.


Mum-of-three Katrina, 35, who barely left her youngest son’s bedside, told The Gazette about the moment she found out he was going to survive.


She said: “I was prepared for the worst but I’ve been told he is going to survive, I’m overwhelmed. The hospital staff have been absolutely amazing. They’ve been caring for him around the clock.


“Because of his injuries, I’ve been told he’s going to have brain damage - it’s going to be a case of taking it day by day - but he’s alive.”


Pic Doug Moody Photography Louise Ingoe from Derwentwater Road, who has set up a Gofundme account for Nathaniel Artley who was critically injured when hit by a taxi


Louise Ingoe from Derwentwater Road, who has set up a Gofundme account for Nathaniel Artley who was critically injured when hit by a taxi

Louise said: “She’s a fantastic mother. How she’s had the strength I don’t know. She hasn’t left his bedside, she’s shown incredible strength.


“To have a child with a disability she’ll need all the help she can get.


“If one of my kids was in the same situation I’d hope someone would do the same for me.”


Friends of Nathaniel’s family have set up a gofundme page to raise money to help with Nathaniel’s recovery. To donate visit Nathaniel’s Recovery Fund at http://bit.ly/1G7j0jx .


Police previously appealed for the the owner of the ice cream van on the scene of the incident to contact the, The force has now confirmed the owner has come forward.


Enquiries into the circumstances around the accident are still on-going.



Cluster bombs recently used in Libya conflict: HRW

Cluster bombs recently used in Libya conflict: HRW

The photo shows the tail unit of an RBK cluster bomb recently found outside the city of Sirte, Libya.


Human Rights Watch (HRW) says there is “credible” evidence that banned cluster bombs have been used during the conflict in Libya over the past four months, as the security situation further deteriorates in the conflict-ridden North African country.


“There is credible evidence of the use of banned cluster bombs in at least two locations in Libya since December 2014,” the New York-based international non-governmental organization said in a statement released on Sunday.


It said the remnants of RBK-250 PTAB 2.5M cluster bombs were found in the town of Bin Jawad, located 650 kilometers (400 miles) east of the capital, Tripoli, in February and in the city of Sirte, situated 450 kilometers (280 miles) east of Tripoli, in March.


“The good condition of the paint on the bomb casings and lack of extensive weathering indicated that the remnants had not been exposed to the environment for long and were from a recent attack,” the organization said.


“It is not possible to determine responsibility on the basis of available evidence,” HRW said, however.


It also called on Libyan authorities to join the 2008 Convention on Cluster Munitions, which prohibits the use of cluster munitions in any circumstances.


For More:


http://bit.ly/1EqYnPq



Grangetown mum who set up fundraising page for Nathaniel Artley praises 'incredible strength' of his mother


A mum who set up a fundraising page to help with the recovery of a four-year-old Nathaniel Artley who was hit by a taxi has praised the “incredible strength” of his mother.


When Grangetown mum Louise Ingoe, 33, heard about the plight of four-year-old Nathaniel and his mum Katrina Verrill, she decided she wanted to do something to help.


Nathaniel was left with horrific life-threatening injuries after being hit by a car in Cotswold Avenue, Middlesbrough, on Sunday March 8. He underwent major surgery and was put on a life support machine at Royal Victoria Infirmary in Newcastle.


Louise, mum to Kelsey, 11, and Owen, 10, said: “I didn’t know the family but I’ve got young children myself. When I heard what had happened, I contacted Katrina through Facebook. Since then I’ve been in touch with her on a daily basis.


“We’re going to raise quite a lot money for them. We want to raise about £5,000 to provide some financial support for her.


“People have asked me why I’m doing it. Well, I know she doesn’t have a lot - I’m a mother and I’ve been there myself.”


From left to right, Carlos, Nathaniel and Lennox VIEW GALLERY


Read more: Four-year-old hit by car in Pallister Park moved from Newcastle to Teesside after condition improves


Nathaniel’s condition has since improved and he has been taken off life support and has been moved to James Cook University Hospital, Middlesbrough.


Mum-of-three Katrina, 35, who barely left her youngest son’s bedside, told The Gazette about the moment she found out he was going to survive.


She said: “I was prepared for the worst but I’ve been told he is going to survive, I’m overwhelmed. The hospital staff have been absolutely amazing. They’ve been caring for him around the clock.


“Because of his injuries, I’ve been told he’s going to have brain damage - it’s going to be a case of taking it day by day - but he’s alive.”


Pic Doug Moody Photography Louise Ingoe from Derwentwater Road, who has set up a Gofundme account for Nathaniel Artley who was critically injured when hit by a taxi


Louise Ingoe from Derwentwater Road, who has set up a Gofundme account for Nathaniel Artley who was critically injured when hit by a taxi

Louise said: “She’s a fantastic mother. How she’s had the strength I don’t know. She hasn’t left his bedside, she’s shown incredible strength.


“To have a child with a disability she’ll need all the help she can get.


“If one of my kids was in the same situation I’d hope someone would do the same for me.”


Friends of Nathaniel’s family have set up a gofundme page to raise money to help with Nathaniel’s recovery. To donate visit Nathaniel’s Recovery Fund at http://bit.ly/1G7j0jx .


Police previously appealed for the the owner of the ice cream van on the scene of the incident to contact the, The force has now confirmed the owner has come forward.


Enquiries into the circumstances around the accident are still on-going.



Fundraisers to help tot whose rare genetic condition will shorten her life unless cure is found


When gorgeous little Nell Ramsay went from trying to feed herself at nine months old to being unable to hold a spoon two months later her mum knew something wasn’t right.


Finally, after a barrage of tests, the youngster, who turns two next month, was diagnosed with a rare genetic condition with symptoms which doctors likened to an adult having a stroke.


There’s no cure for Rett Syndrome - and Nell has been left unable to speak or walk - but soon the tot will be able to communicate her needs more easily thanks to kind-hearted fundraisers.


“She started sitting up at nine months old and I knew that was quite late,” said Nell’s mum Debs Henderson, of Billingham.


“My sister has twins and spending time with them, I did wonder, why is Nell not doing things?


“But as a first-time mum you always worry so I thought it was just that.


“Then she started losing skills. She couldn’t sit up anymore, and she became very withdrawn and wasn’t engaging.


“At nine months she was holding a spoon and trying to feed herself, at 11 months she couldn’t do that. She could chew food and she stopped doing that.”


Nell was taken for tests, including MRI scans but all came back clear.


“It was a really scary time,” added Debs, 29, who also lives with partner and Nell’s dad, Adam Ramsay, 34.


Finally, genetic blood tests led to a diagnosis of Rett Syndrome in November.


Rett syndrome, which affects around one in every 10,000 females, affects the development of the brain, and is rarely seen in boys as it is linked to the X chromosome.


Nell Ramsay Nell Ramsay


Debs said: “It all started to make sense why she was losing skills.


“The doctor said ‘imagine having a stroke’.”


The lifespan of someone with the condition is generally shortened, with many girls not living beyond their teens.


“We felt so helpless,” added Debs.


“It affects every girl differently. The benefit we’ve had is we’ve caught it early and been able to put things in place such as physiotherapy and speech therapy,” said Debs.


“She’s starting to engage again. She understands everything we’re saying. “All we can do is make Nell comfortable and happy.”


A Go Fund Me page “Hope 4 Nell” has been set up, and a number of events have already been held, taking the amount so far up to around £7,300.


Funds are to go toward equipment for Nell, including a Tobii Eye Gaze which will allow her to learn and communicate using her eyes, and her parents also hope to create a sensory room in their home.


Money will also go towards research and support for the condition.


Next month, a family fundraiser will be held at Wynyard Golf Club, organised by family friend Charlie Phillips, supported by the company she works for, Nortech.


The event, on Sunday, April 19 from 11am-3pm will include stalls, children’s entertainment and a fashion show.


The following day, on April 20, Billingham man Gav Dawson is to set off on a Hawes to Hull sponsored kayak challenge. The route is 150 miles, which Gav is expecting to take five days.


Debs said: “Friends and family have been so supportive, and even strangers like Gav have come forward to help. It’s overwhelming.”


For more details on the family day, visit http://on.fb.me/1CmFkXj.


Anyone wanting to sponsor Gav, or donate to the cause, can do so via Nell’s page at http://bit.ly/1CmFkXp.


You can also keep up to date with Gav’s challenge on http://on.fb.me/1CmFiig.



Philip Tallentire: It's time for a supporters' bill of rights - Sky have got fans over a barrel


Who'd be a football fan?


Imagine, if you can, that you'd shelled out hard earned money for a concert ticket or a West End show in London and booked a seat on a train.


Then, a month or so ahead of the show, the promoter announced the start time had been brought forward by three hours, thereby throwing your travel plans up in the air.


Worse still, imagine that the start time for the gig had been brought forward to the previous day?


There's no point imagining that because it wouldn't happen.


But, that's an issue football fans have to deal with on a regular basis.


The price of success in the Championship is high in terms of the impact on supporters' schedules.


Sky's deal with the Football League allows the broadcaster to move kick-off times and dates at relatively short notice.


And things won't be any better if Boro win promotion to the Premier League.


The crucial game at Brentford on January 31 was moved from 3pm to 12.15pm and Saturday's six-pointer against Bournemouth at The Goldsands Stadium has suffered the same fate.


These games aren't just around the corner, they are at the other end of the country, entailing pre-dawn alarm calls for those who have tickets and plan to attend.


Boro fans have packed out away stands around the country this season


If you want to travel by public transport, you have to book your seats well in advance of the fixture otherwise you're likely to pay well over the odds.


Before the end of the season, Boro will pay Watford at 12.30pm on Easter Monday and Norwich at 7.45pm on Friday, April 17.


There's also a strong possibility that the potentially critical final away game of the season at Fulham could be chosen for live broadcast.


It's currently scheduled for 3pm on Saturday, April 25 but how can Boro fans book transport for that game when they won't find out the kick-off time of that game until next Monday, March 23?


As things stand, the game could kick-off at 3pm or 12.15pm on April 25, or 8pm on Monday, April 27.


It also happens to be London Marathon weekend, so the prices for train seats are already sky high and spaces will be at a premium.


So what can be done?


The choice for fans is simple: put up with the inconvenience and extra expense to follow your team, or stay at home and watch the match on the box.


The problem is, the authorities and broadcasters have got fans over a barrel.


Withdraw your support and miss out on seeing your team live or pay the money and play into their hands.


If a supermarket, garage or cafe makes life tough for their customers, those customers have the option of using alternatives elsewhere in town. Fans don't.


Clubs want - and in most cases desperately rely on – the cash that comes from the TV deals so they're not going to start telling broadcasters where to get off.


In the Premier League, where the payments from Sky will be a minimal £99m per season, it's understandable if regrettable but in the Championship it's harder to justify.


I know of one Championship chairman who suggested a couple of years ago that the Football League should consider going its own way and signing up with a rival broadcaster.


If that happened, a more fan-friendly system could be introduced.


In the meantime, supporters have to simply grin and bear it.


In the longer term, fans deserve a charter, a bill of rights, call it what you will.


Perhaps the notice for changing a kick-off time can be increased to three months and the distances supporters have to travel can be taken into account?


But, as far as the Premier League is concerned, coin is king.


With top flight Friday night fixtures on the cards when the next deal comes around, fans of the elite 20 clubs face more disruption, not less.



Anger in Hebron as Israeli FM visits Ibrahimi Mosque

Anger in Hebron as Israeli FM visits Ibrahimi Mosque


BETHLEHEM (Ma’an) — Hebron governor Kamel Hamid on Sunday condemned a visit by the Israeli foreign minister to the Ibrahimi Mosque earlier in the day, calling it part of a “growing call for desecration of holy places and the creation of chaos.”


He also accused Lieberman — the second Israeli leader to visit the flashpoint Palestinian city this week — of “sabotaging the stability that the Palestinian National Authority has created in the city.”


Israeli foreign minister Avigdor Lieberman visited the mosque, known as the Cave of the Patriarchs in English, as part of his outreach to the extremist Jewish settler vote that forms an important constituency for his Yisrael Beitenu (“Israel is Our Home”) party, and comes amid the last days of Israel’s election season.


The visit also came only a week after he said that disloyal Palestinians should have their heads chopped off, comments made during an election rally in the coastal city of Herzliya that raised ire among Palestinians but went widely unremarked upon in the Hebrew-language press.


During Sunday’s visit, Lieberman was quoted by the Israeli press as saying that Hebron, a West Bank city where a few hundred Jewish settlers have forcibly taken over a few areas in the overwhelmingly Palestinian center, is a Jewish city and will remain as such.


He also took the opportunity of his visit to the mosque, which is holy to both Jews and Muslims, to strike out at Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu.


He told the audience of settlers during his visit that the Israeli leader had signed the 1997 Hebron protocol that ended Israeli soldiers’ direct occupation of the newer parts of central Hebron, known as H1. The agreement left them in control of H2, however, where thousands of Palestinians and a few hundred Israeli settlers live



Dear Chancellor: the NECC's wishlist for a 'Northern Powerhouse'


Road upgrades, the £15bn Transport for North (TfN) proposal - and continuing to back Heathrow as a national asset - are all part of the North East Chamber of Commerce’s wishlist for Wednesday’s Budget.


Ross Smith, NECC Director of Policy, says the UK economy remains ‘too geographically imbalanced’ despite the progress that’s already been made.


The £15bn transport devolution package is ‘absolutely necessary to fire up the Northern powerhouse’, he says.


And he also claims there’s a ‘strong case’ for greater regional devolution - as the region is uniquely exposed to the Scottish economy, which could divert investment and activity from it.


The Chamber is calling for the North-east to be empowered to deliver more if the region is going to be at the forefront of the ‘Northern powerhouse’.


It wants the Chancellor to use the upcoming Budget to introduce policy designed to leverage the North-east’s strengths to far greater effect, rather than continue to hinder its progress.


In the pre-Budget submission to George Osborne, Mr Smith says decisions need to be more responsive to local and regional economic conditions if the North-east is to succeed and build on the economic momentum gathered in recent months.


In order to promote the North-east as an integral part of the Northern Powerhouse, the NECC continues to push the Government to prioritise investment to unlock access to major employment centres and international gateways.


It’s hoped upgrades previously announced for North-east roads will be carried out as soon as possible and the NECC will continue to back Heathrow airport as a national asset.


Ross Smith, North East Chamber of Commerce's NECC Director of Policy Ross Smith, North East Chamber of Commerce's NECC Director of Policy


Ross said: “TfN represents a massive opportunity for the North. It will not only help improve investment in Northern transport infrastructure, it will help us fight collectively for a bigger slice of the cake as a more effective counterweight to London and the South East. We back IPPR North’s request to George Osborne to use this budget to create a £15bn transport devolution package. This is absolutely necessary to fire up the Northern powerhouse.


“North-east businesses know they can make a stronger contribution and we require policy to support this.


“We face many challenges in the coming year, but I believe these can also be used as opportunities.


“The North-east is uniquely exposed to a Scottish economy with powers to increase levels of inward investment support and reduce taxation, diverting investment and activity from the North-east.


“Generating growth against the pull of such incentives is incredibly difficult.


“Greater regional devolution will enable local decision makers to develop policy with better and more locally relevant information. With meaningful resources, there is a strong case for devolving finance and decision making powers to regions such as the North-east.”


NECC, which represents around 4,000 member businesses - more than a third of the region’s workforce - .


raised concerns about potential future skills shortages.


The organisation’s latest Quarterly Economic Survey shows members consistently cite skills as a barrier to growth.


“The future of funding support for skills remains uncertain,” said Ross. Businesses fear proposed changes would place funding with employers and will lead to significant bureaucratic hurdles for SMEs. We want the Government to adjust funding for apprentices and hope to see a more appropriate set of proposals brought forward.”


NECC has urged the Chancellor to bolster the North-east economy.


“Our economy has more strength and depth than ever before,” said Ross. “As well as an international trade record better than any other part of the UK, real wages are among the highest in the country, while productivity and the overall cost of doing business make the North East a great asset for the national economy.


“If we are to maintain a strong record as an internationally trading region with a positive balance of trade, the region’s exporters must receive more support. To realise the Government’s target to source 500 new North East exporters by 2020, the UKTI budget should again be increased with enhanced flexibility in spending at a regional level.


“We also need a better joined up offer from Government support organisations, including the Manufacturing Advisory Service, Growth Accelerator, Innovate UK and UKTI.”


This has been echoed by David Elliott, tax partner at KPMG in Newcastle.


He said: “Creating conditions that stimulate innovation, investment and employment has got to be the primary objective of any government’s tax regime. Our clients are broadly pleased with the direction of travel in UK legislation: they don’t want headline grabbing initiatives. So the message to the Chancellor is to focus on improving and simplifying.”


Making more of existing North East resources is a recurring theme in the NECC’s budget submission. Ross said: “The UK has abundant energy resources yet they are not being exploited and uncertainty over subsidies and planning hinders investment.


“The Government must be better focused on developing measures that will encourage investment in both offshore and onshore wind. Carbon capture and storage is vital but successive Governments have failed to grasp this opportunity.”


Development is high on the agenda too. The North-east’s capacity for development is vast, with an abundance of potential development land, great resource availability and lower population densities.


Ross added: “The North-east should be a prime development area, but policy and economic conditions must be conducive to capitalise on potential.”


“Housing need and barriers to delivering more homes are different in each region. Policy must be attuned to these differences and formulated with the active involvement of regional stakeholders who understand the market. Any assessment of the national housing market for judging national policy should exclude London, which is a unique market within the UK that distorts the national picture.”


Ross said: “Championing the North-east as a major asset for UK PLC; meeting our future skills needs; supporting business and driving growth drives growth; world class connectivity and energy infrastructure; and tackling the cost of doing business remain at the forefront of what the NECC does for its members and this is what we have addressed in our ask of the Chancellor.”