Category: UK

  • Britain scraps euro preparation plans

    Britain scraps euro preparation plans

    Chancellor of the Exchequer George Osborne has scrapped a government unit tasked with preparing for Britain’s hypothetical entry to the eurozone, as he unveiled the government’s first budget.

    Osborne reaffirmed his government will not join the eurozone in the next five years and said resources would no longer be wasted on planning for it.

    “I can confirm that, as set out in the coalition agreement, this government will not be joining the euro in this parliament,” he said.

    “Therefore … I have abolished the Treasury’s euro preparations unit — yes, one does exist — and the official concerned has been redeployed to more productive activities.

    Various Sources, London

  • Call for reform of stop and search powers

    Call for reform of stop and search powers

    Section 44 of the Terrorism Act 2000, has been ruled unlawful by the European court of human rights

    Owen Bowcott

    Police will need fresh powers enabling them to stop and search people at the Olympics opening ceremony, and in other sensitive circumstances, the government’s independent adviser on terrorism law is expected to warn today.

    Lord Carlile, who is due to deliver a keynote speech at Dorchester Abbey, near Oxford, this evening, will argue that a replacement is needed for section 44 of the Terrorism Act 2000, which has been ruled unlawful by the European court of human rights. That section, which allows officers to stop and search people without grounds for suspicion, has been at the heart of disputes between civil rights lawyers and ministers.

    Carlile, a former Lib Dem MP, was appointed as the independent reviewer of terrorism legislation in 2005. He has been criticised for his defence of control orders, which restrict individuals to virtual house arrest on the basis of secret evidence.

    In his lecture – entitled Terrorism: have we got the law right? –Carlile will call for the number of control orders to be reduced but will insist they were necessary in the absence of any acceptable legal alternatives for dealing with the detention of terrorist suspects who cannot be prosecuted.

    But his most controversial comments will be in relation to section 44 powers which expanded rapidly between 2004 and 2008 when they were used to question people more than 117,200 times. He will suggest that section 43 powers, which allow police to stop and search people if they have reasonable suspicions, should be more widely used insteadby counterterrorism officers. But he will contend that officers must be able to stop and search people on a broader and more random basis in certain limited types of circumstances.

    The powers, he will propose, would have to be compatible with the law and restricted to three categories:

    • Rapidly developing incidents such as in the context of counter-terrorism operations where arrests are being made.

    • In relation to restricted and sensitive infrastructure, such as places where international telephone lines come on to British shores.

    • National events where a risk assessment indicates a potential terrorist threat (such as the Olympics opening ceremony.

    Carlile will also address the political debate over the length of time terrorist suspects can be held for questioning before being charged. The last government extended the period from 14 to 28 days in the face of fierce opposition from civil liberties groups.

    Carlile will accept the need to retain the 28-day limit but request increased judicial oversight of the process, believing that in practice it will rarely be used.

    On “deportation with assurances” arrangements that enable the removal from Britain of those certified as international terror suspects, Carlile is expected to endorse their use.

    Some of these individuals, he will say, cannot be deported forcibly because the regimes to which they would be returned cannot be relied on to respect human rights.

    The special immigration appeals commission , the secretive court that deals with deportation on grounds of national security, needs to reconsider how to deal with these cases, Carlile will say.

    https://www.theguardian.com/law/2010/jun/24/stop-and-search-police-rights, 24 June 2010

  • European countries provide most of PKK’s weapons

    European countries provide most of PKK’s weapons

    Intelligence sources indicate that the biggest arms suppliers of the terrorist Kurdistan Workers’ Party (PKK) are allies of Turkey that are also members of NATO. Recently drafted General Staff reports say that many mines planted by the PKK were obtained from Italy and Spain.

    Turkey is ready to start a new round of diplomatic initiatives to stop countries that supply the PKK with arms. Turkey has undertaken similar initiatives in previous years.

    Over the past few months, the PKK has relied on arms from Mediterranean countries, intelligence reports indicate. The roadside bomb that exploded in Halkalı on Tuesday was of Portuguese origin, intelligence sources said, adding this country to the list of countries that supply arms to the terrorist organization. That attack was carried out by the PKK’s urban offshoot, the Kurdistan Freedom Falcons (TAK).

    The most crucial question is how the PKK is able to bring these arms supplies it obtains from Mediterranean countries to northern Iraq. US journalist Seymour Hersh claimed in 2007 that this was done via Israel.

    The General Staff has seized PKK arms and ammunition originating from 31 different countries. However, NATO-member countries have been the biggest suppliers. Most of the arms and ammunition seized are of Russian, Italian, Spanish, German and Chinese origin.

    In 2007 Turkey questioned the countries where the arms used by the PKK — particularly the heavy artillery the terrorist group uses — are mostly manufactured on how the PKK could have obtained these weapons. These diplomatic attempts must have produced some sort of a result, as all PKK weaponry seized in the past three years have had their serial numbers erased. The military has noticed that the PKK now generally erases serial numbers, especially on explosives. However, most of the time the origins of the ammunition can still be traced. Turkey is concentrating on finding the sources of not the lighter arms but of heavy artillery such as heavy machine guns, rocket launchers, mines and hand grenades.

    According to data from the General Staff, the Kalashnikovs used by PKK terrorists are from Russia and China. The rocket launchers, mines, hand grenades and heavy machine guns so far seized from the organization appear to have been manufactured in Italy, Germany, England, Spain, Portugal, Czech Republic and Hungary.

    The organization uses a third country to bring the weapons to northern Iraq and then into Turkey. What disturbs Turkey most is that the mines that have killed more than 100 Turks recently were all obtained from Italy.

    Another issue is that the PKK, which had been rather sloppy in using remote-controlled mines until 2008, has become more of an expert at such attacks. Terrorism experts say the PKK has been given special training, with many suspecting Mossad agents. In 2009, Interior Minister Beşir Atalay claimed that some Mossad agents had gone to northern Iraq and given training on remote-controlled explosives.

    According to documents from the General Staff, 72 percent of the Kalashnikovs used by the PKK are from Russia, 15 percent from China and the rest from Hungary and Bulgaria.

    In 2007, it was reported that more than 170,000 weapons donated by the US to the Iraqi army had ended up in the PKK’s hands. The US Defense Department started an investigation after Turkey’s discovery of this fact.

    Turkey is making a point to not publicly announce how it suspects these weapons are being brought into northern Iraq. Pulitzer-winning journalist Hersh, in an interview with the Takvim daily earlier this month, said Israel helped the PKK base in the Kandil Mountains bring in arms and supplies on helicopters.

    He said that Israel gives extensive support to the PKK and the related Iranian organization Party for a Free Life in Kurdistan (PJAK), especially in terms of arms supplies. He also said that Mossad operatives are active in the area, noting that Jewish Kurds who left northern Iraq 50 years ago returned to the region after the 2003 US occupation. He argued that most of these people are cooperating with the PKK and the purpose of these developments will become clear to all in the near future.

    Although this interview has attracted the attention of Turkish security units, there is a visible effort to avoid making any official statements at this point. Turkey recently made a decision to start diplomatically lobbying countries that supply arms to the PKK. If these countries fail to cut the support they provide for the PKK, then they will be warned openly in the international arena.

    24 June 2010, Thursday
    ERCAN YAVUZ ANKARA

    www.todayszaman.com, Jun 26, 2010

  • ‘Mossad Chief to leave post’

    ‘Mossad Chief to leave post’

    By JPOST.COM STAFF
    06/26/2010 00:21

    Report claims Meir Dagan’s request to keep his job was rejected.

    sadmos
    Photo by: AP

    Mossad Chief Meir Dagan is to leave his post in three months, Channel 2 news reported on Friday.

    According to the report, Dagan, who has been head of the Mossad for the last eight years, requested to work another year in the role, but was refused.

    Dagan was appointed to the position in 2002 by former prime minister Ariel Sharon.

    Since then his appointment has been extended twice and is due to expire at the end of 2010.

    The decision not to renew Dagan’s appointment is likely related to the fallout from the recent attempt to assassinate Hamas commander Mahmoud al Mabhouh in Dubai.

    A number of states who are normally friendly towards Israel were offended by the use of their passports in the killing. Britain has stopped issuing passports in Tel-Aviv and diplomats were expelled from Britain, Ireland and Australia.

    Source:  https://www.jpost.com/Israel/Mossad-Chief-to-leave-post

  • UK to stop development aid to Russia and China

    UK to stop development aid to Russia and China

    mitchell
    Mr Mitchell wants to redirect some of bilateral aid worth £2.9bn

    Britain will stop giving aid money to China and Russia, as “it is not justifiable” any longer, the UK government has said.

    International Developement Secretary Andrew Mitchell announced a review into how the UK funds overseas development work in around 90 countries.

    “The money will be redirected towards those countries where they can make the most difference,” he said.

    In 2008-09, China received more than £40m, while Russia got £190,000.

    Britain’s annual bilateral aid budget stands now at £2.9bn.

    Mr Mitchell said that, apart from Russia and China, “other country programmes which are less effective will be closed or reduced”.

    The news came on the same day as the head of the Ukrainian presidential administration, Serhiy Lyovochkin, told journalists that Russia had agreed to lend Ukraine $4bn.

    China is considered to be the fastest growing economy in the world, while Russia is also among the leaders.

    Mr Mitchell said: “I am determined to get value for money across my department’s work and focus on the big issues such as maternal health, fighting malaria, and extending choice to women over whether and when they have children.”

    https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/10334927, 16 June 2010

  • Spain Funeral For Brit Kids ‘Killed By Mum’

    Spain Funeral For Brit Kids ‘Killed By Mum’

    Adam Arnold, Sky News Online

    A funeral has been held in Spain for two British children apparently suffocated by their mother in a hotel room.

    Lianne Smith, 43, has admitted asphyxiating Rebecca, five, and her 11-month-old brother Daniel with a plastic bag and is in prison on suspicion of murder.

    She said she had been worried that the authorities would take them away, after her husband and the children’s father Martin Smith, 45, was arrested over alleged child sex offences.

    Mrs Smith will not be attending the funeral in the seaside resort town of Lloret de Mar where the youngsters were found dead.

    Their mother is currently in jail in Girona and was not released temporarily to go to the service on the Costa Brava.

    The children’s bodies were discovered at the Hotel Miramar on May 18. The funeral was held in Sant Roma church.

    The 16th century Gothic chapel was filled with white flowers and prayers were read at the ceremony, which lasted about half an hour.

    Representatives of the town’s civic administration were present along with British consular officials.

    The children were buried in the local cemetery afterwards.

    The priest who conducted the ceremony and did not want to be named described it as “moving”.

    It was a private affair “to show respect for the children”, he added.

    The Smith family fled the UK in 2007 after Mr Smith, originally from North Shields, was arrested.

    He allegedly jumped bail while facing charges of rape of a child under 16, gross indecency with a girl under 16, indecent assault of a girl under 16 and attempted rape of a girl under 16.

    Mr Smith had been one of Britain’s most wanted men until Spanish police tracked him down and detained him last month.

    Rebecca and Daniel Smith died around the time their father was then extradited to Britain.

    The Sky