Overruled Karzai opens parliament

Former legislators listen to the head of special tribunal last weekThe 249-member lower house of parliament – the Wolasi Jerga – was originally due to open on Sunday

Afghan President Hamid Karzai is due to open parliament shortly, after failing to win a delay to allow September’s disputed elections to be investigated.

Mr Karzai had wanted a special election court to investigate fraud allegations.

But the newly elected MPs argued that it was unconstitutional, and just a means to eject opponents of the president from their seats.

They were backed by the international community, which was worried the standoff could spill onto the streets.

The 249-member lower house of parliament – the Wolasi Jerga – was originally scheduled to open on Sunday.

The BBC’s Paul Wood in Kabul say the new parliament’s inauguration will bring to an end a test of wills in which President Karzai was the loser.

He had wanted a further delay of at least a month to let his special election tribunal investigate the fraud allegations.

But the newly elected MPs said that was just a means to ejecting opponents of the president from their newly won seats.

The members of the new parliament were backed by the international community – Western officials in Kabul were worried that the confrontation could eventually spill onto the streets.

Winning candidates after receiving their certificates at the Election Commission in Kabul on 30 November 2010The head of the special tribunal has said there is evidence of electoral fraud countrywide

The US and the UN condemned in strong terms last week’s announcement by the president that he would delay the opening of parliament for a month.

President Karzai had accused “foreign hands” of trying to provoke a crisis in Afghanistan by taking sides with the MPs.

The special tribunal was set up by the Supreme Court to investigate allegations of fraud in September’s parliamentary elections.

About a quarter of the five million votes cast were thrown out and 24 early winners were disqualified.

Critics say Mr Karzai is not happy with the results of the parliamentary poll, which has produced a lower house with a larger, more vocal and coherent opposition than the previous chamber.

The new parliament contains bigger groups of ethnic Tajiks and Hazaras, who could challenge the president’s traditional power base among Pashtuns, Afghanistan’s largest ethnic group.

Although it is largely seen as weak in comparison with the president and his government, the legislature has successfully blocked many cabinet appointments and is a major dissenting voice in the country.

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Egypt threatens protester arrests

Water cannons fired at protesters in Cairo

The BBC’s Jon Leyne: “Tear gas and water cannon were used against protesters”

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Egypt has banned street protests, one day after thousands of people joined a “day of revolt” against the government of President Hosni Mubarak.

Public gatherings, protests and marches are all now prohibited, the country’s official news agency reports.

Anyone joining in unauthorised action will be detained and prosecuted, the interior ministry said.

Three people died during the nationwide web-inspired protests, which were broken up with tear gas overnight.

Police also used water cannon as they forced protesters from Tahrir Square, a symbolic city centre location in the heart of Cairo.

Protesters had been inspired by the recent uprising in Tunisia, vowing to stay until the government fell.

“The Egyptian government has an important opportunity to be responsive to the aspirations of the Egyptian people”

White House

The BBC’s Jon Leyne reported that some protesters began gathering again early on Wednesday.

He said there were few signs of a heavy police presence.

Protests are uncommon in Egypt, which President Hosni Mubarak has ruled since 1981, tolerating little dissent.

In Washington, the White House urged the Egyptian government to allow protests to go ahead, describing the situation as “an important opportunity” for the nation.

France’s foreign minister said she regretted the loss of life in Egypt but said democracy should be encouraged in all countries around the world.

Tuesday’s event had been co-ordinated on a Facebook page, where the organisers said they were taking a stand against torture, poverty, corruption and unemployment.

They said that the rally would mark “the beginning of the end”.

Our correspondent said that it had been unclear how many people would respond to the online call, but in the end, the turnout was more than the organisers could have hoped.

Poster of Hosni Mubarak torn down in AlexandriaA poster of Hosni Mubarak was defaced by protesters in Alexandria

Police were taken aback by the anger of the crowd and let protesters make their way to Tahrir Square near the parliament building, he says.

Opposition organisers urged a repeat demonstration on Wednesday, the AFP news agency reported.

Microblogging site Twitter also played a key part, with supporters inside and outside Egypt using the search term #jan25 to post news of the day.

However, Twitter confirmed later on Tuesday that it had been blocked inside Egypt from 1600 GMT, meaning many were unable to post updates from the scene.

“We believe that the open exchange of information and views benefits societies and helps governments connect with their people,” Twitter said on its official account.

The crowd’s anger was largely focused on the president on Tuesday, with thousands calling for his resignation and “Down with Mubarak” scrawled on the walls of buildings.

But at 0100 local time (2300 GMT Tuesday) police moved in, firing tear gas and driving protesters into nearby streets. There were reports that some people had been beaten by police.

“It got broken up ugly with everything, shooting, water cannon and [police] running with the sticks,” one of the last protesters to leave, Gigi Ibrahim, told the Associated Press.

State TV said one policeman had died in clashes.

Protests were also held out in other areas of the country on Tuesday, including the eastern city of Ismailiya.

Thousands joined protests in the northern port city of Alexandria, some chanting: “Revolution, revolution, like a volcano, against Mubarak the coward.”

Two protesters died in Suez, doctors there said.

In Washington, the White House said Egypt’s government had “an important opportunity to be responsive to the aspirations of the Egyptian people”.

In a statement, it said Egypt should “pursue political, economic and social reforms that can improve their lives and help Egypt prosper.”

“The United States is committed to working with Egypt and the Egyptian people to advance these goals,” it added.

The Egyptian government said it had allowed the protesters “to voice their demands and exercise their freedom of expression”.

Protesters in central Cairo (25 Jan 2010)There have been suggestions protesters will try to gather for a second day

It blamed the violence on the banned Islamist movement the Muslim Brotherhood, saying its supporters “began to riot, damage public public property and throw stones at police forces”.

However, our correspondent says that one opposition leader, Mohamed ElBaradei, had called on Egyptians to take part in these protests, the Muslim Brotherhood had been more ambivalent.

Tunisia’s President Zine al-Abidine Ben Ali was ousted from power and fled the country earlier this month, after weeks of protests in which dozens of people were killed.

Egypt has many of the same social and political problems that brought about the unrest in Tunisia – rising food prices, high unemployment and anger at official corruption.

However, the population of Egypt has a much lower level of education than Tunisia. Illiteracy is high and internet penetration is low.

There are deep frustrations in Egyptian society, our Cairo correspondent says, yet Egyptians are almost as disillusioned with the opposition as they are with the government; even the Muslim Brotherhood seems rudderless.

Our correspondent adds that Egypt is widely seen to have lost power, status and prestige in the three decades of President Mubarak’s rule.

Cairo map

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Aunt detained over Doherty murder

Kieran Doherty The 31-year-old father of one was found shot dead on the Braehead road outside Derry
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An aunt of dissident republian Kieran Doherty is being questioned by police in connection with his murder.

Priscilla Doherty, 40, was arrested along with Martin O’Neill, 42, in Londonderry on Tuesday. Both are being held at Strand Road police station.

Mr Doherty, 31, who was a member of the Real IRA was murdered by the organisation in 2010.

Independent security advisor Lord Carlile is investigating claims MI5 was involved in Mr Doherty’s murder.

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Two MPC members seek rate rise

Bank of England buildingThe Bank’s Monetary Policy Committee has kept rates at 0.5% since March 2009

Bank of England policymaker Martin Weale has joined Andrew Sentance in voting for an interest rate rise.

According to minutes of the Monetary Policy Committee’s most recent meeting the MPC explicitly discussed the case for raising rates in January.

The minutes reveal that members considered economic conditions pointed towards a possible rise.

For most members the risks to inflation “in the medium term had probably shifted upwards,” the minutes said.

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Man in court on Facebook charge

Bishop Street Court House

A 31-year-old man has appeared at Londonderry Magistrates Court charged with posting a grossly offensive, menacing, indecent or obscene, message on Facebook.

The charge relates to comments on the social networking site about DUP MP Gregory Campbell and his reaction to the Saville Report in June 2010.

Daryl O’Donnell, of Belvedere Park, Foyle Springs, denies the charge.

The case was adjourned until 16 February.

Around a dozen supporters of the defendant were in the courtroom for the hearing.

Afterwards, some of them attached leaflets to the railings outside the court building.

The case has been adjourned until next month.

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BBC confirms World Service cuts

BBC Television CentreThe BBC is taking over the cost of the World Service from the Foreign Office
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The BBC is due to outline its plans to close five of its World Service language services.

Staff are due to be informed of the redundancy details on Wednesday, and it is thought that about 650 jobs will be lost from a workforce of some 2,400.

The Macedonian, Albanian and Serbian services will be axed, as will English for the Caribbean and Portuguese for Africa, in a bid to save £46m a year.

Unions have called the move “ferocious” and condemned the “drastic cuts”.

Last October, the government announced the BBC would take over the cost of the World Service from the Foreign Office.

The service, which started broadcasting in 1932, currently costs £272m a year, and has an audience of 241 million worldwide across radio, television and online.

The BBC will make a statement on Wednesday about the latest wave of redundancies, to be phased over two years.

It is understood that two-thirds of the jobs will go in the first 12 months.

A reduction of programmes in another seven languages is also set to be announced.

Analysis

The BBC World Service has confirmed it is closing five of its 32 language services, but that’s just the start.

More savings will be announced shortly, including cutbacks in other language services and the probable loss of about 650 jobs. It’s not a total surprise.

In October, the Foreign & Commonwealth Office – which still pays for the World Service – said its grant would be cut by 16%, under the government’s Spending Review. (The World Service is not yet funded by the TV licence fee – but will be from 2014).

The BBC said it also faced extra costs – including a large pension contribution – which meant there would be service closures and significant job losses.

Even so, a cut of a quarter of the staff, if confirmed, would be dramatic by any measure. Protests are already planned. The National Union of Journalists is planning a “vigil” outside the World Service headquarters and is urging committees of MPs to review the planned cuts.

The National Union of Journalists (NUJ) said it would hold a demonstration outside the World Service headquarters in central London on Wednesday.

It has also written to the chairman of the House of Commons Foreign Affairs committee, Richard Ottaway, and the chairman of the Culture, Media and Sport Committee, John Whittingdale, calling on them to review the plans.

The NUJ said that if early reports were correct, the “drastic cuts” would “severely damage the national interest of the UK”.

“These ferocious cuts to a valued national service are ultimately the responsibility of the coalition government, whose policies are destroying quality public services in the UK,” general secretary Jeremy Dear said.

BBC global news director Peter Horrocks said the closures were “not a reflection on the performance of individual services or programmes”.

“They are all extremely important to their audiences and to the BBC,” he said.

“It is simply that there is a need to make savings due to the scale of the cuts to the BBC World Service’s grant-in-aid funding from the UK’s Foreign and Commonwealth Office, and we need to focus our efforts in the languages where there is the greatest need and where we have the strongest impact.”

On Monday, the BBC said it would cut about 200 websites and up to 360 posts from its online division as part of a plan to reduce its budget by £34m.

Among the websites set to close are teen services Switch and Blast, and the 606 football forum.

The corporation said the changes were intended to make its website more distinctive, and to reduce competition with commercial sites.

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Football row is ‘wake up call’

Football fans have been reacting to the decision to withdraw assistant referee Sian Massey from a League Two fixture in Crew last night, following a sexism row which saw Sky Sports’ presenters Richard Keys disciplined and Andy Gray sacked.

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UK terror laws ‘an over-reaction’

An armed officerThe counter terrorism review was launched by the Home Office in July 2010
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The government is set to publish its long-awaited proposed reforms to counter terrorism powers.

The review is expected to propose replacing control orders with a series of measures to monitor suspects.

Counter terrorism-related stop and search powers are also likely to be restricted.

The publication of the review, due on Wednesday, has been repeatedly delayed as coalition ministers have struggled to agree on the changes.

The Home Office launched the review in July 2010, saying it would be rapid and would be aimed at reconciling counter terrorism powers with civil liberties.

The parties agreed to scrap the power of police to hold a suspect without charge for 28 days – and the time limit has now reverted to the original 14 days, after ministers decided not to renew the legislation this month.

There are also expected to be changes to counter terrorism stop and searches, by only permitting their use in narrow and specific circumstances, such as during the 2012 London Olympic Games.

However, the coalition has struggled to reach a deal on the future of control orders – the controversial powers to restrict the movement of a small number of suspects who the government says cannot be prosecuted or deported where they are foreign nationals.

CONTROL ORDERS: NEW REGIME?End overnight curfews – but overnight residency at named locationTag suspects – same as nowBans on visiting locations difficult to keep under surveillanceAllow mobile phones – but only if numbers are suppliedForeign travel banBan on meetings with other suspectsFuture of control orders revealed

Security chiefs say the power is an essential tool in cases where there is intelligence that someone is involved in extremism but has not yet committed a crime, such as someone associating with known plotters.

The coalition ministers appear to have reached a deal to scrap control orders – but leaks in recent weeks have led critics to say the new system is little more than “control orders lite”.

The new restrictions are expected to include electronic tagging, a ban on overseas travel and visits to specific places or people.

The current regime of curfews of up to 16 hours is expected to be replaced by a more limited overnight home residency requirement.

Other control order restrictions expected to be ditched, include the power to move a suspect away from their home town.

The government is expected to say the changes will strike the right balance between security and liberties by being specific and proportionate to the threat.

It is unclear whether the package will be approved by Lord Macdonald QC, the former Director of Public Prosecutions, who has been overseeing the government’s review.

Writing in the London Evening Standard ahead of the review’s publication, shadow home secretary Yvette Cooper indicated the opposition could support measures that it believed were in the national interest rather than coalition politics.

“This review should be a chance for the home secretary to lead a serious debate and build a new consensus,” she said.

“We must update policies and powers in response to ever-changing threats, looking too at new risks, prevention of radicalisation, handling intelligence and the framework of accountability.”

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