Category: World

  • ‘Iranian Cyber Army’ hacks Twitter

    ‘Iranian Cyber Army’ hacks Twitter

    18 December 2009

    A hacker group called ‘Iranian Cyber Army’ hacked Twitter for an hour early on 18 December, redirecting users to a website containing a green flag and Arabic writing.

    Graham Cluley at Sophos, said in his blog: “Fortunately there isno indication at this point that the page was carrying malicious code, and this attack appears to have had political motivations rather than designed to steal confidential information from users.”

    INfo security

    Cluley pointed out that although the hacker group calls itself the Iranian Cyber Army, this does not necessarily mean they are from Iran. However, he pointed out that Twitter was widely used by anti-government protesters in Iran earlier this year, and that Twitter delayed planned maintenance to allow Iranians to continue to share information over the service.

    Part of the hacker message from the Iranian Cyber Army read: “The USA thinks they control and manage internet access, but they don’t. We control and manage the internet with our power, so do not try to the [sic] incite Iranian people.”

    Cluley expressed relief, however, that ‘all’ that happened was that Twitter users were taken to a site displaying a political message: “Just imagine what could have occurred if they had pointed people to a phishing site posing as Twitter (designed to steal login names and passwords) rather than a political message?”

    In a brief blog entry, Twitter’s Biz Stone said that the Twitter DNS records were compromised by an unauthorised party.

    Cluley explained that this does not necessarily mean that the Twitter servers were breached by the ‘Iranian Cyber Army’, but that someone managed to somehow change the DNS look-up for twitter.com.

    Although this of course raises the question of how the hackers managed to change the Twitter DNS records…

    Infosecurity (UK)

  • TURKEY WINS AWARD FOR ADVERTISING CAMPAIGN

    TURKEY WINS AWARD FOR ADVERTISING CAMPAIGN

    TURKEY WINS AWARD FOR ‘NEW YORK, TIMES SQUARE OUTDOOR ADVERTISING CAMPAIGN’ IN MOST PRESTIGIOUS TRAVEL MARKETING COMPETITION

    TurkeyNEW YORK,- The Hospitality Sales & Marketing Association International (HSMAI) will grant award to Turkey in its 53rd annual Adrian Awards Competition for the ‘Times Square Outdoor Campaign’ which is realized as part of the ‘Unlimited Turkey’ advertising campaign of Turkish Culture and Tourist Office in New York.

    The Adrian Awards is the largest and most prestigious travel marketing competition globally, considered by many as the ‘Oscars of the travel marketing community’, said Nihan Bekar, Director of Turkish Culture and Tourist Office in New York.

    ‘Times Square Domination,’ brought Turkey to the heart of Times Square with dueling digital displays on the 22-story Reuters sign and the 7-story Nasdaq tower wrap-around. With 19,200 sq. ft. of interactive power, vibrant true-life colors, and fast transitions, ‘Times Square Domination’ towered over crowds below with a mix of video footage and image sequences promoting the diversity of Turkey’s offerings, from upscale experiences in Istanbul to ruins and natural wonders. The campaign saw foot traffic averaging 2 million people per day, running 180 daily for a full month. Interviews conducted at the site elicited responses such as, ‘I didn’t know Turkey offered so many varied adventures,’ and, ‘I really want to visit NOW.’

    GO TURKEY

  • Man arrested at Silvio Berlusconi hospital

    Man arrested at Silvio Berlusconi hospital

    A man has been arrested in the grounds of hospital where Italian Prime Minister Silvio Berlusconi is being treated, police said.

    San Raffaele
    There is a heavy police presence at San Raffaele hospital in Milan

    A man of 26 was intercepted overnight by security guards at Milan’s San Raffaele hospital.

    Mr Berlusconi is being treated for facial injuries after being attacked by a man with a souvenir on Sunday.

    Doctors were due to examine the prime minister on Wednesday before deciding whether he could leave hospital.

    BBC

  • Israel fury at UK attempt to arrest Tzipi Livni

    Israel fury at UK attempt to arrest Tzipi Livni

    Israel has reacted angrily to the issuing by a British court of an arrest warrant for the former Israeli Foreign Minister, Tzipi Livni.

    Tzipi Livni

    The warrant, granted by a London court on Saturday, was revoked on Monday when it was found Ms Livni was not visiting the UK.

    Ms Livni was foreign minister during Israel’s Gaza assault last winter.

    It is the first time a UK court has issued a warrant for the arrest of a former Israeli minister.

    Ms Livni said the court had been “abused” by the Palestinian plaintiffs who requested the warrant.

    “What needs to be put on trial here is the abuse of the British legal system,” she told the BBC.

    “This is not a suit against Tzipi Livni, this is not a law suit against Israel. This is a lawsuit against any democracy that fights terror.”

    She stood by her decisions during the three-week assault Gaza offensive which began in December last year, she said.

    Israel’s foreign ministry summoned the UK’s ambassador to Israel to deliver a rebuke over the warrant.

    Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu said the situation was “an absurdity”.

    “We will not accept a situation in which [former Israeli Prime Minister] Ehud Olmert, [Defence Minister] Ehud Barak and Tzipi Livni will be summoned to the defendants’ chair,” Mr Netanyahu said in a statement.

    “We will not agree to have Israel Defence Force soldiers, who defended the citizens of Israel bravely and ethically against a cruel and criminal enemy, be recognised as war criminals. We completely reject this absurdity taking place in Britain,” he said.

    Pro-Palestinian campaigners have tried several times to have Israeli officials arrested under the principle of universal jurisdiction.

    ‘Cynical act’

    This allows domestic courts in countries around the world to try war crimes suspects, even if the crime took place outside the country and the suspect is not a citizen.

    Israel denies claims by human rights groups and the UN investigator Richard Goldstone that its forces committed war crimes during the operation, which it said was aimed at ending Palestinian rocket fire at its southern towns.

    The Palestinian militant group Hamas has also been accused of committing war crimes during the conflict.

    Israel’s foreign ministry said in a statement on Tuesday: “Israel rejects the cynical act taken in a British court,” against Ms Livni, now the head of the opposition Kadima party, “at the initiative of extreme elements”.

    It called on the British government to “act against the exploitation of the British legal system against Israel”.

    Addressing a conference in Tel Aviv on Tuesday, Ms Livni did not refer specifically to the arrest attempt.

    But she said: “Israel must do what is right for Israel, regardless of judgements, statements and arrest warrants. It’s the leadership’s duty, and I would repeat each and every decision,” Israeli media reported.

    ‘Strategic partner’

    Israel says it fully complies with international law, which it says it interprets in line with other Western countries such as the US and UK.

    On Monday Ms Livni’s office denied the reports that a warrant had been issued and that she had cancelled plans to visit the UK because of fears of arrest.

    It said a planned trip had been cancelled two weeks earlier because of scheduling problems.

    The British foreign office said it was “urgently looking into the implications of the case”.

    “The UK is determined to do all it can to promote peace in the Middle East, and to be a strategic partner of Israel,” it said in a statement. “To do this, Israel’s leaders need to be able to come to the UK for talks with the British government.”

    Palestinians and human rights groups say more than 1,400 people were killed during Israel’s Cast Lead operation between 27 December 2008 and 16 January 2009, more than half of them civilians.

    Israel puts the number of deaths at 1,166 – fewer than 300 of them civilians. Three Israeli civilians and 10 Israeli soldiers were also killed.

    The BBC’s Tim Franks says that, privately, senior Israeli figures are warning of what they see as an increasing anti-Israeli bent in the British establishment.

    In turn, our correspondent adds, there is clearly concern among British officials that should further arrest warrants be issued, relations with Israel could be damaged.

    BBC

  • Attacked Berlusconi says ‘love will overcome hate’

    Attacked Berlusconi says ‘love will overcome hate’

    In his first message since an attack that left him in hospital, the Italian prime minister has told his supporters that love always triumphs over hate.

    Berlisconi

    The brief message from Silvio Berlusconi was posted on the website of his People of Freedom party.

    Mr Berlusconi, struck in the face by a model replica of Milan’s cathedral after a rally in the city on Sunday, is to leave hospital on Wednesday.

    The object, flung from from close range, broke his nose and two teeth.

    Rest recommendation

    “Sincere thanks to the very many who have sent me messages of solidarity and affection,” Mr Berlusconi’s message reads.

    “I say again that everyone should stay calm and secure. Love always triumphs over envy and hate.”

    Mr Berlusconi’s personal physician, Dr Alberto Zangrillo, says he has told the prime minister to forgo public duties for at least two weeks to fully recover from the attack, during which the PM is reported to have lost almost half a litre (one pint) of blood.

    But his spokesman, Paulo Bonaiuti, said enforcing this recommendation would be “a problem, because it is very difficult to keep him away from his work”.

    The 73-year-old billionaire leader has already cancelled plans to attend the UN climate summit in Copenhagen as well as a meeting with Turkish Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan scheduled for Wednesday.

    The suspect, 42-year-old Massimo Tartaglia, is reported to have sent a letter via his lawyers to the prime minister, apologising for what he said was “a superficial, cowardly and inconsiderate act”.

    He is reported to have been undergoing treatment for mental health issues for several years.

    The attack has sparked an outpouring of sympathy for the Italian leader, who has in recent months been buffeted by political divisions, sex scandal allegations, court cases and an expensive divorce.

    World heads, including French President Nicolas Sarkozy as well as the British, Spanish and German leaders, and the Pope, have all sent messages of sympathy.

    Russian Prime Minister Vladimir Putin is reported to have phoned Mr Berlusconi on Tuesday, to tell him he had “behaved in a manly way in an extreme situation”, according to a spokesman cited by Agence France-Presse.

    Hostile climate

    On Tuesday, Interior Minister Roberto Maroni said the suspect had planned the attack, fuelled by a rage towards the prime minister which had been brewing for some time.

    The attack led to criticism of the security surrounding Mr Berlusconi, but Mr Maroni said police checked every area visited by the prime minister well in advance.

    Italian opposition lawmaker Francesco Rutelli, whose panel oversees Italy’s secret services, defended their work.

    “There were so many bodyguards around Silvio Berlusconi that you could look at it as a fluke that he was hit full in the face by the object that was thrown,” he said, according to AFP.

    He suggested that in the future perhaps Mr Berlusconi should be prevented from having contact with the crowd in high-risk situations.

    Mr Berlusconi was signing autographs when the object – described by Mr Maroni as an alabaster model – struck him full in the face.

    Amid chaotic scenes he was bundled into a car, his face bloodied, and driven to hospital.

    The attack on Italy’s often controversial prime minister has caused deep shock in Italy.

    The BBC’s Steve Rosenberg, in Milan, says politicians on the left and right are accusing each other of creating an atmosphere of hate in which the attack was made possible.

    Since the incident, pages on social networking sites praising the attacker have been joined by thousands of people.

    Mr Maroni accused them of “inciting hostility” towards Mr Berlusconi and said the government would introduce emergency measures to protect leaders on Thursday, including blocking websites that encouraged violence.

    BBC

  • British court issued Gaza arrest warrant for former Israeli minister Tzipi Livni

    British court issued Gaza arrest warrant for former Israeli minister Tzipi Livni

    Warrant issued over war crimes accusations was withdrawn when it emerged former minister had cancelled plan to visit

    • Ian Black and Ian Cobain
    • Monday 14 December 2009

    Tzipi Livni

    A British court issued an arrest warrant for Israel‘s former foreign minister over war crimes allegedly committed in Gaza this year – only to withdraw it when it was discovered that she was not in the UK, it emerged today.

    Tzipi Livni, a member of the war cabinet during Operation Cast Lead, had been due to address a meeting in London on Sunday but cancelled her attendance in advance. The Guardian has established that Westminster magistrates’ court issued the warrant at the request of lawyers acting for some of the Palestinian victims of the fighting but it was later dropped.

    The warrant marks the first time an Israeli minister or former minister has faced arrest in the UK and is evidence of a growing effort to pursue war crimes allegations under “universal jurisidiction”. Israel rejects these efforts as politically motivated, saying it acted in self-defence against Hamas rocket attacks from Gaza.

    Livni, head of the opposition Kadima party, played a key role in decisions made before and during the three-week offensive. Palestinians claim 1,400 were killed, mostly civilians; Israel counted 1,166 dead, the majority of them combatants.

    No one involved in the Westminster episode was prepared to confirm, on the record, what had transpired in a chaotic series of highly sensitive legal moves. But a pro-Palestinian group welcomed news of the abortive move as “long overdue”.

    The Foreign Office, clearly deeply embarrassed by the episode, said in a statement: “The UK is determined to do all it can to promote peace in theMiddle East and to be a strategic partner of Israel. To do this, Israel’s leaders need to be able to come to the UK for talks with the British government. We are looking urgently at the implications of this case.”

    Livni’s office said she had decided in advance not to come to the UK but lawyers seemed unaware of that when they approached the court last week. The judge refused to issue the warrant until it was clear Livni was in fact in the country, as he was erroneously informed on Sunday.

    The former minister had been scheduled to speak at a Jewish National Fund conference. “Scheduled meetings with government figures in London could not take place close to the conference and would have necessitated a longer-than-planned absence from Israel,” her office told the Ynet website.

    It is the second time in less than three months that lawyers have gone to Westminster magistrates court asking for a warrant for the arrest of an Israeli politician. In September the court was asked to issue one for the arrest of Ehud Barak, Israel’s defence minister, under the 1988 Criminal Justice Act, which gives courts in England and Wales universal jurisdiction in war crimes cases.

    Barak, who was attending a meeting at the Labour party conference in Brighton, escaped arrest after the Foreign Office told the court that he was a serving minister who would be meeting his British counterparts. The court ruled he enjoyed immunity under the State Immunity Act 1978.

    According to Israeli sources, ministers who wish to visit the UK in a personal capacity have begun asking the Israeli embassy in London to arrange meetings with British officials. These offer legal protection against arrest.

    Livni, crucially, cannot enjoy any such immunity as she is an ex-minister. Ehud Olmert, the former prime minister, is in the same position.

    Because of the potential damage to UK-Israeli relations – and because of legal pitfalls facing those who disclosed information about the application – few people with any detailed knowledge of it were prepared to comment today.

    The Ministry of Justice, Scotland Yard and clerks at the magistrates court refused to discuss the matter. A statement issued by HM Court Service implied that there had been no application for an arrest warrant, stating “there is no record of any such hearing”. A spokeswoman maintained that this was not a misleading statement.

    Samuel Hayek, chairman of the Jewish National Fund UK, the charity whose conference Livni had been due to attend, said: “I am not at liberty to confirm her precise reasons for not attending.” He added: “In any event, it is regrettable that the British government is unable to conduct free dialogue with Israel’s most senior statesmen and politicians.”

    Tayab Ali, the solicitor who tried to obtain a warrant for the arrest of Barak on behalf of 16 Palestinians, said his firm was “ready, willing and able to act for clients to seek the arrest of anyone suspected of war crimes” who travelled to the UK.

    Livni’s office described her as “proud of all her decisions regarding Operation Cast Lead”. It added: “The operation achieved its objectives to protect the citizens of Israel and restore Israel’s deterrence capability.”

    The Guardian