Category: Non-EU Countries

  • The Queen joins Facebook

    The Queen joins Facebook

    New site will contain authoritative record of engagements, videos, photographs and the Court Circular

    The Queen in Maldonjpg
    Queen Elizabeth II and the rest of the royal family now have their own page on Facebook. Photograph: Geoff Pugh/PA

    Already on Twitter, YouTube and Flickr, Britain’s royal family now has a presence on Facebook. Launching this morning, Facebook.com/TheBritishMonarchy has videos, photos and the Court Circular, the 200-year-old authoritative record of engagements also on Buckingham Palace’s website. The royal Facebook does not have a personal profile, so users cannot ask the royals to be their Facebook “friend”; instead they can click to “like” the page. Several unofficial pages already exist on Facebook; one, the professional-looking The-British-Monarchy page, is “liked” by more than 20,000 people.

    https://www.theguardian.com/uk/2010/nov/07/the-queen-joins-facebook, 7 November 2010

    Have you “liked” Turkish Forum’s facebook page yet?

  • BBC apologises to Bob Geldof over Band Aid claims

    BBC apologises to Bob Geldof over Band Aid claims

    BBC admits it was wrong to have given ‘impression’ that money from charity song ended up being spent on weapons

    Bob Geldof

    Not many people come away from a clash with Bob Geldof unscathed. And for the BBC it has proved no different. Today, across BBC1, Radio 4 and the World Service, it will broadcast an apology to the singer-philanthropist and the Band Aid Trust he founded.

    Accused by Geldof of causing “appalling damage” to the famine relief charity he founded in 1985, the BBC will admit that it was wrong, in a story broadcast in March this year, to have given the “impression” that money raised from the Band Aid single Do They Know It’s Christmas ended up being spent on weapons rather than charity. It is a climbdown that Geldof said would “begin to repair some of the appalling damage done” to the reputation of Band Aid, and he welcomed it “on behalf of all those members of the public who have so magnificently donated to Band Aid and Live Aid over the last 26 years”.

    Once, the BBC’s relationship with Geldof was very different. It was dispatches by BBC reporter Michael Buerk from famine-hit Ethiopia that prompted Geldof to record the song in the first place, and it was the corporation that broadcast the Live Aid concert in 1985.

    But goodwill evaporated this year when the World Service’s Africa editor, Martin Plaut, broadcast a story featuring a former Ethiopian rebel commander who claimed that in 1985 only 5% of the $100m destined for famine relief in the northern province of Tigray reached the starving.

    The BBC now admits that Assignment programme failed to clearly distinguish that in fact no Band Aid cash was diverted for arms sales – an embarrassing admission that Geldof said was a “lapse in standards” by the corporation.

    An inquiry by the BBC’s editorial complaints unit stressed that Assignment “did not make the allegation that relief aid provided by Band Aid was diverted” but conceded that “this impression could have been taken from the programme” because viewers would have assumed that claims made by the former rebel applied to the money he helped raise.

    The programme also carried an allegation from another former rebel that the Tigrayan People’s Liberation Front had tricked aid workers into giving them money meant to buy food for the starving. The story was picked up by BBC news bulletins, including the Six O’Clock News.

    The BBC said it “should have been more explicit in making it clear that the [Tigrayan] allegations did not relate specifically to Band Aid. There will be on air apologies and corrections and we are looking at the lessons that can be learnt.”

    Today Sir Brian Barder, the British ambassador to Ethiopia between 1982 and 1986, said: “I welcome the BBC’s far-reaching apology to the Band Aid Trust for the seriously unfair and misleading impression given by the BBC World Service Assignment programme about alleged diversion of famine relief aid in limited rebel-held areas of the Ethiopian province of Tigray in the 1980s.

    “The apology makes it absolutely clear that none of these allegations applied to the Band Aid relief effort.”

    The publicity will be a blow to the BBC, just a day after world affairs editor John Simpson compared last month’s hastily negotiated licence fee settlement with “waterboarding”, arguing it leaves the corporation “at the government’s mercy”. To add to the corporation’s woes it is also facing a 48-hour strike from Friday by BBC journalists over pension changes.

    The Guardian

  • 101,000 stop and searches. No terror arrests

    101,000 stop and searches. No terror arrests

    Heavy-handed police tactics have harmed race relations, human rights groups warn

    By Robert Verkaik, Home Affairs Editor

    stop and searchNot one person stopped and searched under anti-terrorism powers in Britain was arrested for terrorism-related offences last year, the Government’s own figures show.

    The alarmingly high use of random searches is more evidence of heavy-handed policing which will alienate all communities, human rights groups said yesterday.

    The Home Office statistics also revealed that no terror suspects had been held in custody before charge for longer than 14 days since 2007. In all, 101,248 people were stopped and searched in England, Wales and Scotland under Section 44 of the Terrorism Act, which does not require a police officer to have reasonable suspicion that an offence might have been committed.

    Of the 506 arrests that resulted, none were terrorism-related. Since July, police are not allowed to stop and search people unless they “reasonably suspect” them of being a terrorist.

    Of all the searches, four out of five were made in the Metropolitan Police area, with almost a fifth being made by British Transport Police. Shami Chakrabarti, director of the civil rights group Liberty, said the statistics highlighted what a “crude and blunt instrument” stop and search had been. “It costs us dearly in race equality and consent-based policing with very little return in terms of enhanced security,” she added. 

    Overall, 59 per cent of the people stopped described themselves as white, 17 per cent as Asian or Asian British, 10 per cent as black or black British and 2 per cent as of mixed ethnicity, the figures showed. The use of stop and search powers fell by 60 per cent compared with 2008-09.

    Detention and stop and search powers are being looked at as part of a review of the Government’s counter-terrorism policy by the Liberal Democrat peer Lord Ken Macdonald, whose findings are to be published shortly.

    The former shadow home secretary David Davis said the figures showed “what a massively counter-productive policy this is”. He added: “A policy which fuels resentment and antagonism amongst minority communities without achieving a single terrorist conviction serves only to help our enemies and increase the terrorism threat.”

    Massoud Shadjareh, chairman of the Islamic Human Rights Commission, said it was clear that some ethnic groups were still being disproportionately targeted and that the powers were “irrelevant and useless, as well as a waste of money and resources”.

    But the Policing and Criminal Justice minister, Nick Herbert, said: “The [terrorism] threat to the UK remains at severe. I commend the hard work of the police, the agencies and the CPS in foiling those who would do us harm and in bringing them to justice.

    “The Government is committed to ensuring that all counter terrorism powers are used proportionately and the Counter Terrorism Review will report back shortly.”

     http://www.independent.co.uk/news/uk/crime/101000-stop-and-searches-no-terror-arrests-2119529.html, 29 October 2010

  • BNP leader Nick Griffin could lose Euro seat as party faces bankruptcy

    BNP leader Nick Griffin could lose Euro seat as party faces bankruptcy

    By Tom Mctague
     
    Griffin could lose Euro seat as party faces bankruptcy
     
    nick griffin

    BNP leader Nick Griffin faces being axed as a Euro MP as he fights to avoid bankruptcy over his party’s soaring cash crisis.

    He is among top officials thought to be personally liable for the racist group’s £700,000 debts – which it admits it cannot pay.

    Anyone made bankrupt is legally barred from being an MP or Euro MP.

    The BNP’s money woes were laid bare by ex-chief fundraiser James Dowson in a letter seen by the Mirror.

    Mr Dowson told North-East printers who produced its newsletter that the finances were like “a shipwreck”

    He added: “Cash is in very short supply… [it is] impossible for the BNP and persons associated with it to pay outstanding bills in anything like a normal timescale, if indeed at all.” The “very grave” crisis meant it could only pay 20% of what it owed, he added.

    Its money problems have been made worse by having to settle a legal row after illegally using Marmite in an ad and the cost of fighting the Equality and Human Rights Commission over its whites-only admission rules.

    Meanwhile, electoral chiefs are still probing its 2008 accounts as they contain gaps that breach the law.

    The BNP’s debt meltdown comes amid a spate of defections and expulsions.

    Mr Dowson and media officer Paul Golding have left while campaigns chief Eddy Butler and London Assembly member Richard Barnbrook were recently expelled.

    Mr Griffin was not responding to our requests for a comment last night.

    , 3/11/2010

  • EDL men charged with Israel demo offences

    EDL men charged with Israel demo offences

    By Jessica Elgot
    Three EDL members charged with affray and public order offences during a “Tea Party” rabbi’s speech at Speakers Corner have had their case sent to Crown Court.

    Shortly after their demonstration on Sunday outside the Israeli Embassy in Kensington, EDL supporters made their way to Hyde Park where Rabbi Nachum Shifren, the so-called “surfing rabbi” from California, gave a short speech.

    The rabbi had earlier called Muslims “dogs” and told the EDL “We will never surrender to the sword of Islam.”

    Bryan Kelso, 28, from Luton, Christopher Long, 38, from Roehampton and Brian Bristow, 37, from Doncaster were charged with affray and public order offences.

    They appeared today at Westminster Magistrates Court. No pleas were entered and the men were given conditional bail.

    , November 3, 2010

  • The mosque in the contemporary city

    The mosque in the contemporary city

    A two day event: Faith and the City: The mosque in the contemporary urban west, with a presentation of case studies of recent mosque building across Europe.

    • Wednesday 10 November 2010, 7pm
    • Rich Mix, 35-47 Bethnal Green Road, London E1 6LA
    • Thursday 11 November 2010, 2-6pm
    • The Architectural Foundation Project Space, Ground Floor East, 136-148 Tooley Street, London SE1 2TU

    Keynote lecture:

    • Michel Abboud – architect and Principal SOMA, Architectural design consultants for New York’s Park51 Community Centre

    Symposium contributors include:

    • Michel Abboud – architect and Principal SOMA
    • Ergün Erkoçu – architect and author
    • Foreign Architects Switzerland
    • Lukas Feireiss – curator, writer, artist and editor, Studio Lukas Feireiss
    • Alen Jasarevic – architect and founder, Jasarevic Architekten
    • Ali Mangera – architect and founder, Mangera Yvars Architects
    • Ziauddin Sardar – writer, broadcaster, cultural critic

    Organised by the Architectural Foundation