Kingdom divided

Mourners carry the body of Ali Isa al-Saqer before his funeral in Sehla, Bahrain - 10 April 2011Ali Isa al-Saqer is one of several detainees who died in police custody

Anti-government protests in Bahrain have been squashed but resentment of the Sunni monarchy simmers among the tiny Gulf kingdom’s Shia majority, reports the BBC security correspondent Frank Gardner in the capital, Manama.

Bahrain is now under what is officially called a state of national security – imposed last month when the government’s patience with protesters and their roadblocks snapped.

But it is martial law by any other name.

Police checkpoints are up all over the country, there are tanks stationed in the centre of the capital Manama, a curfew from midnight until early morning and more than 1,000 troops and police from neighbouring Arab Gulf states helping to guard vital installations.

That’s fine by us, say many Bahrainis from the ruling Sunni minority, as well as expatriates.

They feel reassured, not threatened, by the checkpoints that have replaced the protesters’ anarchic and intimidating roadblocks. But most Shia Muslims tell a different story.

In Manama’s suburb of North Sehla we went to a packed Shia funeral for one of several detainees to die in police custody.

Accused of trying to run over a policeman during a protest, Ali Isa al-Saqer had handed himself over to police after his family say they were threatened.

Six days later he died in their custody, they say he fought his jailers.

“Making an enemy of a whole section of the population who are now unemployed, angry and clever is not wise, it is sowing the seeds for future trouble”

Western diplomat in Bahrain

His family, seeing his battered body for the first time since his arrest, collapsed in howls of grief; his wounds were quite simply horrific.

Beaten black and blue, his lacerated back resembled a bloody zebra; he appeared to have been whipped with heavy cables, his ankles and wrists manacled.

I brought up his case with the health minister, Dr Fatima al-Beloushi, who is also minister for human rights.

At first she said that the opposition had altered the images to invent the lacerations. But when I replied that we had been to the funeral and seen them ourselves she immediately promised a full investigation.

Daniel Williams, a senior researcher with Human Rights Watch, told me after seeing Mr al-Saqer’s body: “If he had been in a car wreck he might have been better off.”

Opposition activists have frequently been prone to exaggeration, claiming wrongly for example that they were being fired on by helicopters.

But they are certainly suffering now.

Police check identity at a roadblock in Manama, Bahrain - 28 March 2011Bahrain’s security forces are now out in force after weeks of protests

In the last few days the security apparatus appears to have stepped up its intimidation of anyone even suspected of opposition.

People are grabbed at two in the morning from their beds, beaten in front of their families then dragged away by heavily-armed masked men and taken off to unknown cells.

The family is rarely, if ever, told where.

More than 400 people have been detained this year. Four have reportedly died in custody.

Not surprisingly, this is inflaming large parts of the Shia community.

Coupled with this is an organised programme of humiliation of Shia by “baltajiya” – thugs who come at night and smash up community gathering places and spray pro-ruling family graffiti on the walls of Shia areas with antagonising phrases like “the al-Khalifa are a crown upon your head”.

Large numbers of people, mostly Shia, including doctors and other professionals, have recently lost their jobs, officially for absenting themselves from their jobs during the protests.

As one Western diplomat put it to me: “Making an enemy of a whole section of the population who are now unemployed, angry and clever is not wise, it is sowing the seeds for future trouble.”

On the island of Muharraq, just next to the capital, we found unease too among the Sunni community.

Bahrain security forces clear protesters' roadblock in Malkiya, Bahrain - 27 March 2011Roadblocks set up by anti-government protesters have been dismantled

At Friday prayers at this Sunni mosque we met a community largely supportive of the government’s crackdown.

Worshippers told me they welcomed the Saudi troops that Iran and many Shia have branded as “invaders”.

They said the protesters had gone too far, paralysing the country’s economy with their vigilante roadblocks.

I asked Sheikh Abdullatif Al-Mahmoud, the spiritual leader of Bahrain’s sizable Sunni minority, what he thought would happen if protesters from the Shia majority ever deposed the Sunni ruling family.

Sheikh Abdullatif al-Mahmoud, the spiritual leader of Bahrain’s sizable Sunni minority, warned of terrible consequences if the Shia majority ever deposed the Sunni ruling family.

“If they manage to seize power, Sunnis in Bahrain will suffer and we’ll see bloodshed and killings in Bahrain,” he told me.

For now, the country is holding its breath.

One month into the three-month state of emergency there are attempts to pretend everything is “getting back to normal” despite the sand-coloured armoured vehicles at junctions and a row of tanks guarding what used to be Pearl Roundabout, the now-bulldozed centre of the protests in February and March.

After losing patience with the opposition and their changing demands, the regime’s hardliners have got their security clampdown, the reformers have been sidelined and negotiations on political reform have stalled.

It is as if a lid has been clamped back onto a boiling pot, while at the same time the fire beneath it is being stoked.

This article is from the BBC News website. © British Broadcasting Corporation, The BBC is not responsible for the content of external internet sites.

US Congress approves budget bill

House Speaker John Boehner on WednesdayRepublicans led by House Speaker John Boehner earlier pressed for $61bn in cuts
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The US Congress is set to approve a budget that would cut $38.5bn (£23.6bn) from last year’s spending levels in the remainder of the fiscal year.

The deal was agreed on Friday, six months after the last budget expired.

With its passage, Republicans and Democrats in Congress will turn their attention to what is expected to be a bitter fight over next year’s budget.

Republicans have pushed for greater spending cuts than Democrats have been willing to concede.

The bill, which is expected to pass both houses of Congress on Thursday and be signed by Mr Obama immediately afterwards, was crafted after weeks of fraught negotiations between the White House and congressional Democrats and Republicans.

The ballooning US deficit is forecast to reach $1.5 trillion (£921bn) this year.

It is set to be a top issue in the 2012 election campaign, with Democrats and Republicans offering voters starkly contrasting visions about how to close it.

The bill expected to pass on Thursday, which covers the fiscal year up to 30 September, slashes some domestic spending but also relies on accounting changes that some economists say create the illusion of deeper spending cuts.

Though Republican negotiators led by Speaker John Boehner in the House of Representatives initially pressed for $61bn in budget cuts, many analysts in Washington have scored the budget bill as a victory for the Republicans.

The debate over the budget for the fiscal year 2012, which begins on 1 October, has already begun in earnest.

Last week, Republican House budget committee chairman Paul Ryan introduced a budget proposal that would slash $6.2 trillion in government spending over the next decade.

It would achieve those cuts in large part by requiring the elderly to pay more for their healthcare than they do currently and cutting healthcare and social programmes for the poor.

Meanwhile, it would lower taxes for the wealthy, a move conservatives say will boost US economic growth.

On Wednesday, US President Barack Obama laid out his own fiscal policy plan, proposing a mix of tax increases for the wealthy and changes to social programmes, while rejecting the fundamental revisions Republicans proposed.

This article is from the BBC News website. © British Broadcasting Corporation, The BBC is not responsible for the content of external internet sites.

Two arrests over girl’s shooting

Thusha KamaleswaranThusha Kamaleswaran was shot in the chest

Police have arrested a 21-year-old man and a 17-year-old boy over a shooting in a shop in which a girl and a man were wounded.

Five-year-old Thusha Kamaleswaran and 35-year-old Roshan Selvakumar were shot inside the Stockwell Food and Wine store in south London on 29 March.

The girl suffered a chest wound while Mr Selvakumar, 35, suffered a head wound.

Two men have already been charged with attempted murder of both victims.

Kazeem Kolawoli, 18, of Black Prince Road, Lambeth, and Anthony McCalla, 19, of Oakdale Road, Streatham, have both been charged and were remanded in custody to appear at the Old Bailey on 10 June.

This article is from the BBC News website. © British Broadcasting Corporation, The BBC is not responsible for the content of external internet sites.

Belarus shows ‘metro bomber’ CCTV

The suspected Minsk metro bomber is picked out with a white circle in a CCTV still released by prosecutors The suspected bomber is picked out with a white circle in a CCTV still
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Prosecutors in Belarus have released images said to show a person planting a bomb that killed 12 people and injured 200 on the metro in the capital, Minsk.

One image shows what appears to be a man carrying a hold-all in the central aisle of a metro station as people board a train beside him.

The time shown is nearly 1744 (1444 GMT) – 12 minutes before the blast.

Three more arrests have been made, bringing the total to five, while no motive has yet been forwarded.

Deputy Prosecutor General Andrei Shved said on Thursday that the five, including the suspected bomber himself, were Belarusians under the age of 30, and another official reportedly added that one of them was a woman.

“The perpetrator [of the attack] has been found,” Mr Shved told reporters in Minsk.

The suspected Minsk metro bomber is picked out with a white circle in a CCTV still released by prosecutors Another CCTV still appears to show the suspect leaving the station aisle seconds before the blast at 1756

“Some of his accomplices have been identified.”

Earlier, Belarus’s authoritarian President, Alexander Lukashenko, announced that two of the detainees had confessed to the attack.

Oleg Voronin, an official at the prosecutor general’s office, told Russia’s Ria-Novosti news agency that one of the detainees was a woman.

The exploding bomb showered rush hour commuters at the Oktyabrskaya metro station with nails and ball bearings.

Terrorist attacks are almost unheard-of in Belarus, where the authorities have been widely accused of seeking to stifle political opposition to Mr Lukashenko, in power since 1994.

Mr Lukashenko said the suspects arrested earlier were linked to two previous bombings – one in Minsk in 2008 and one in the western city of Vitebsk in 2005 – in which some 50 people were injured.

This article is from the BBC News website. © British Broadcasting Corporation, The BBC is not responsible for the content of external internet sites.

Homes badly damaged in explosion

A number of homes have been damaged – some of them severely – after a suspected explosion at a building site in Kilsyth, North Lanarkshire.

The incident is believed to be linked to a site, operated by Dawn Homes, near a quarry off Kilsyth’s Stirling Road.

Emergency services were called to the scene at about 1420 BST. There are no reports of any injuries.

One local resident said it was “a miracle” no-one had been hurt.

Yvonne Ross, who lives in nearby Ladeside Drive, saw the damage to houses on her estate after she arrived home with her children.

She told BBC Scotland: “The police and fire brigade were here when I got back. The street was cordoned off and they were checking everyone’s house.

“Rocks from the explosion went through the roofs of houses. In one case a boulder went right through into the lounge.

“One of bricks has broken our front step but the damage is quite minor. It must have travelled quite a distance to reach my door.”

Mrs Ross said debris from the explosion went right through a brick wall in one garden and “right through a conservatory and bathroom wall” in another home.

She added: “No-one has been injured which is quite surprising really. It’s a total miracle.”

Do you have pictures – still or moving – of this incident? Send them to the BBC Scotland news website at [email protected]

Please ensure when filming or photographing an incident that you make your safety and the safety of others a priority.

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Road to death

Scene in a camp, painted by Arnold DaghaniCamp life as painted by Arnold Daghani

An historian is claiming that a can of film found in a Devon church could help finally prove the guilt of a suspected Nazi war criminal.

The film, which was rescued from the rubbish during a clean-out at Cullompton Baptist Church back in 2006, turned out to be a home movie featuring senior SS officers.

The 11 minutes of grainy black-and-white footage shows images of high-ranking Nazis off-duty, drinking tea, and chatting with women working in their office.

One man is seen to dominate the proceedings. He is pictured inspecting a camp, ordering other officers about, and taking delivery of a column of slave labourers.

“They were worked to the point of exhaustion, forced to dig pits by the side of the road, and then they were machine gunned to death ”

Dr Harry Bennett Plymouth University

Now Dr Harry Bennett, associate professor of modern history at Plymouth University, says he has identified the main figure in the film.

After extensive research, Dr Bennett is convinced that the man is SS officer Walter Gieseke, a Nazi in charge of building a 1,000-mile road across Ukraine that cost tens of thousands of slave labourers their lives.

Dr Bennett says that the film was made in 1943 and shows the building of a road which was officially called the DG IV, but which became known as The Street of the SS.

The road was one of the largest building projects ever undertaken by the Nazis, and it was intended to take millions of Germans to a new breeding ground for the master race in the East.

Fifty-thousand Russian prisoners of war, 50,000 Ukrainians and 25,000 Jews were forced to work on the road. But, as Dr Bennett explains, this was not simply a building project.

“Death rates were high amongst the Russian and Ukrainian workers, but almost all of the Jews were murdered. They were worked to the point of exhaustion, forced to dig pits by the side of the road, and then they were machine-gunned to death. This was an extermination programme.”

 SS officer Walter GiesekeWalter Gieseke died in 1974, having always denied involvement in the road building

One man who was forced to work on the road was a Jewish artist named Arnold Daghani. He managed to escape, carrying with him sketches and paintings he had made, which he hoped would serve as testimony to the atrocities he had witnessed.

When the war ended Mr Daghani campaigned for 20 years to get those responsible for the road brought to justice.

Thanks largely to Mr Daghani’s work, Mr Gieseke, and many other former Nazis, were eventually questioned by war crime investigators.

Mr Gieseke flatly denied having any direct involvement with the building of the road, and he was never brought to trial.

“Gieseke always maintained that he was simply a pen-pusher, with no knowledge of conditions on the road,” says Dr Bennett, “but this footage from Cullompton blows that alibi out of the water. We can see him at the scene, hands on, very much the man in charge, he is responsible, he is powerful.”

Mr Daghani spent the rest of his life painting images from the slave labour camps, and compiling lists of the dead, and of those he held responsible.

He died in 1985 a frustrated man, and his work is now held in a special collection at the University of Sussex.

Mr Gieseke died in 1974, taking many secrets with him to his grave, but he left behind a reel of film which could now, at last, show his true face to the world.

Quite how the film came to be in a Devon church remains unclear, but it was found among other film cans that had belonged to Reg Whitton, a member of the congregation.

Mr Whitton was known to be a film enthusiast, and he ran a haulage firm that carried out work across Europe at the end of World War II, but no-one knows exactly how he came by the film or why he kept it hidden for all those years.

Map of camps along the route, drawn Arnold Daghani plotted the camps along the strategic military road in Ukraine

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Salmond says Koussa ‘a witness’

Libyan defector Moussa KoussaMoussa Koussa arrived in the UK at the end of March

Libyan defector Moussa Koussa has been removed from the EU sanctions list, the Treasury has announced.

In a notice issued on Thursday, the former head of Libyan intelligence was deleted from the list of people and companies who have their assets frozen by the EU.

Mr Koussa fled Libya and Col Muammar Gaddafi on 30 March for the UK.

He has been accused of involvement in the 1988 Lockerbie bombing during his time with Libya’s intelligence service.

He is the most high-profile minister to flee Libya as rebels opposing Col Gaddafi continue their campaign, and Nato leads an international operation to enforce a no-fly zone.

The EU sanctions froze the assets of Col Gaddafi and members of his family, and banned the supply of arms, ammunition and any equipment that could be used for “internal repression”.

In March, the list was extended to include the country’s sovereign wealth fund and central bank.

A Foreign Office spokesman said the decision to remove Mr Koussa from the list was taken at the EU Council in Luxembourg on Tuesday.

He said sanctions were introduced to target members of Col Gaddafi’s regime and encourage “behavioural change”.

As Mr Koussa has chosen to leave the regime, the sanctions have been removed.

Foreign Secretary William Hague told Parliament on 4 April that he would be seeking to have him removed from the list.

Mr Hague said at the time: “In the case of anyone currently sanctioned by the EU and UN who breaks definitively with the regime, we will discuss with our partners the merits of removing the restrictions that currently apply to them while being clear that this does not constitute any form of immunity whatsoever.

“Sanctions are designed to change behaviour and it is therefore right that they are adjusted when new circumstances arise”.

This week Mr Koussa left the UK for Qatar, where it was understood he would meet the Qatari government and a range of other Libyan representatives in the capital city Doha, the Foreign Office said.

The former foreign minister had been staying at an undisclosed location in the UK after travelling from Tunisia.

This article is from the BBC News website. © British Broadcasting Corporation, The BBC is not responsible for the content of external internet sites.

One dead, six hurt in road crash

One person has died and six have been injured in a road crash involving five vehicles.

The collision happened on the A4119 near Tonyrefail in Rhondda Cynon Taf on Thursday.

The Welsh Ambulance Service said the injured were taken to hospital in Cardiff and Llantrisant with a range of conditions, including leg fractures and neck pain.

The road was reported to have been closed in both directions.

South Wales Fire and Rescue Service said crews from Tonypandy, Pontypridd and Bridgend attended the incident, after being alerted by police at around 1720 BST.

This article is from the BBC News website. © British Broadcasting Corporation, The BBC is not responsible for the content of external internet sites.

Google sees strong revenue growth

Google logoGoogle has seen a rise in the number of people looking at paid-for adverts
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Internet giant Google has reported a sharp rise in first-quarter earnings, the first figures with co-founder Larry Page back at the helm as boss.

The world’s leading search engine reported $6.54bn (£4bn) in net revenue in the first quarter, up 29% from $5.06bn the same time a year ago.

Google has about a 65% share of the US search engine market and about 90% in Europe.

The firm said it would continue “to invest for the long term”.

Announcing the results, Patrick Pichette, Google chief finance officer, said: “These results demonstrate the value of search and search ads to our users and customers, as well as the extraordinary potential of areas like display and mobile.”

During the quarter, paid clicks – which measures the number of times people click on Google ads that are sponsored by the advertisers – rose by 18%.

Meanwhile, average cost-per-click for its search advertisements increased by about 8% on the same quarter 12 months earlier, and decreased about 1% from the fourth quarter of 2010.

However, on some measures Google came in below analysts’ expectations.

Revenues from the UK were $969m, representing 11% of income in the first quarter of 2011, against 13% in the first quarter of 2010.

The firm has been engaged on a staff hiring spree, looking to employ more than 6,000 workers this year, but that has been driving up its costs.

“Clearly the company is still in growth mode and for Google that means spending too,” said Jordan Rohan, analyst at financial services firm Stifel Nicolaus.

He said Google was spending on sales and marketing, and “they’ve hired 1,900 more people this quarter, which might be a new high”.

In trading of its shares after the New York Stock Market closed, Google stock fell by 4% to $553.09.

This article is from the BBC News website. © British Broadcasting Corporation, The BBC is not responsible for the content of external internet sites.

Pancreas cancer vaccine trialled

Fergus WalshBy Fergus Walsh

Pancreatic cancer vaccine

How does the pancreatic cancer vaccine work?

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A trial has begun on a vaccine treating pancreatic cancer, which has the lowest survival rate of all common cancers.

More than 1,000 patients with advanced pancreatic cancer have joined the TeloVac trial at 53 UK hospitals.

Vaccines are usually associated with preventing infections, but this is part of a new approach to try to stimulate the immune system to fight cancer.

The trial involves regular doses of vaccine together with chemotherapy and compares this with chemotherapy alone.

The vaccine contains small sections of a protein, telomerase, which is over-produced by cancer cells. The aim is to stimulate the immune system to recognise the telomerase which sits on the surface of the cancer cells and to target the tumour.

“For someone who’s never smoked and hardly ever drank, it was a big shock”

Rhona Longworth Patient

Professor John Neoptolemos from Royal Liverpool University Hospital, who is helping to co-ordinate the trial, said: “The problem is tumours are clever and are able to turn the immune cells into traitors which help to guard the tumour.

“The vaccine takes away the masking effect of the tumour.”

Pancreatic cancer has the worst survival rate of all common cancers. Just three in 100 patients survive the disease for five years or more.

Rhona Longworth, 43, who was diagnosed with the cancer in February, said: “For someone who’s never smoked and hardly ever drank, it was a big shock.

“I just hope the vaccine works and I’m one person who goes on to live a happy, healthy life after this.”

Joan Roberts, 69, said the vaccine appeared to have few side effects and she is keeping her fingers crossed about the impact on her cancer.

“I’m pleased that it’s stable and it hasn’t got any bigger. You’ve got to remain positive,” she said.

“There is rarely positive news about pancreatic cancer. It has the worst survival rate of all common cancers – worse even than lung cancer”

Read Fergus’s latest Medical Files

The TeloVac trial is being funded by Cancer Research UK. The charity is supporting trials against a range of cancers, using vaccines or antibody treatments to stimulate the immune system.

Cancer Research UK’s chief clinician Professor Peter Johnson said: “One of big problems with cancer treatment is you are almost always left with a few malignant cells and it is from those few cells that the cancer can regrow.

“If you can programme the immune system to recognise those cells and get rid of them altogether or keep them in check then you can effectively stop the cancer from growing back lifelong.”

The South Korean manufacturer of the vaccine, KAEL-GemVax, is planning a lung cancer trial later this year using the same technology.

Last year the first therapeutic cancer vaccine was licensed in the US as a treatment against prostate cancer.

The Phase III or final stage TeloVac trial should produce results in just over a year which will show whether the vaccine has a positive effect.

Cancer Research UK is keen to stress that the vaccine is not a cure, but if it works, might prolong life.

This article is from the BBC News website. © British Broadcasting Corporation, The BBC is not responsible for the content of external internet sites.

Kissing men ‘ordered out of pub’

Jamie Morton, 23, James Bull, 23, said he felt “belittled” and was “shaking” after the incident
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A man has told of how he was ordered to leave a central London pub after a staff member objected to him kissing a man he was on a date with.

James Bull, 23, said he and Jonathan Williams, 26, were thrown out of the John Snow on Broadwick Street, Soho.

Mr Bull said he was “shaking” after a woman claiming to be the pub’s landlady removed them for being “obscene”.

The Metropolitan Police are investigating the incident, while the John Snow pub is yet to comment.

Samuel Smith’s brewery, the owner of the pub, declined to comment on the incident.

“I felt belittled. I felt physically sick and we were both shaking,” said Mr Bull, a charity worker from Kentish Town in north London.

“It made me feel dirty. I’ve never experienced anything like this before.”

Mr Bull said a man claiming to be the pub’s landlord first raised objection to their kissing shortly after 0945 BST.

“We were kissing and a guy who claimed to be the landlord came over and told us to stop. I don’t want to see that. It offends me,” he said.

“We had just kissed. It was nothing obscene. He said if we didn’t tone it down, we would have to leave.

“We were going to finish our drinks and leave but another person at the bar said the man had no right to do that.”

Jamie Morton, 23, from Canary Wharf, who witnessed the incident, said: “I was really shocked. I said: ‘That’s outrageous – you can’t say that.'”

Mr Bull said: “We had another drink and, getting up to leave, I gave Jonathan a quick peck on the lips.”

A woman claiming to be the landlady came over and said: ‘You need to leave, you’re being obscene.'”

“The man who said he was the landlord grabbed Jonathan by the collar before we left.”

Mr Morton said: “It was shocking and aggressive. There was a lot of venom and anger inflicted on these polite guys who were were genuinely doing nothing wrong at all.”

A Metropolitan Police spokesman said: “Police are investigating an incident which occurred at approximately 1050 BST on Wednesday at a venue in Broadwick Street, W1.

“There have been no arrests and inquiries are ongoing.”

This article is from the BBC News website. © British Broadcasting Corporation, The BBC is not responsible for the content of external internet sites.

Java Web Function

We need a small web function(not mobile app) that works exactly like what androidify app does. Namely, to allow web users to draw/dress/decorate their selected figures freely.
reference link: http://androidify.com/

Rule:
1)Use html5 and JavaScript ONLY.
2)Do not use flash or silverlight.
3)Must use java and mysql,cus we’ll need to print out the output from our web users.
-we can provide needed pics if you don’t know how to pull out pics from androidify.com

We only allow bidders who has 10 or above ratings to participate and we’ll need your previous Java profile to verify your qualification.

Thank you.