New powers to store suspects' DNA
BBCJan 02
Powers allowing police forces to keep the DNA of people accused of sexual or violent offences have come into force.

The measure will allow the police to store such information on a database, even if there is no conviction. Currently, DNA must be destroyed if it belongs to an accused of sexual or violent crimes if there is no conviction obtained.

The changes are contained in the Police, Public Order and Criminal Justice (Scotland) Act 2006. ... (more)


Bush 'to reveal Iraq troop boost'
BBCJan 02
US President George W Bush intends to reveal a new Iraq strategy within days, the BBC has learnt.

The speech will reveal a plan to send more US troops to Iraq to focus on ways of bringing greater security, rather than training Iraqi forces.

The move comes with figures from Iraqi ministries suggesting that deaths among civilians are at record highs.

The US president arrived back in Washington on Monday after a week-long holiday at his ranch in Texas.... (more)


Tyranny’s healer, democracy’s assassin: The true legacy of Gerald Ford
Online JournalJan 02
Gerald Ford, like Richard Nixon and Ronald Reagan before him, is being posthumously deified. A real and dark history is being rewritten in a haze of nostalgic foolishness and distortion. In fact, Ford was a lifelong political criminal and a liar, like every modern US president. Ford fed, nourished and protected tyranny, laying the foundation for the unabashedly criminal empire of Bush, and decades of war and destruction.

Master of cover-up

Ford, a care
... (more)

USA Today ignores prewar evidence in claiming that Saddam's lack of WMD was "learned too late"
Media MattersJan 02
Summary: A USA Today editorial asserted that the U.S. "learned too late" that the first Gulf War had "limited" Saddam Hussein's "ability to develop weapons of mass destruction." But this assertion ignores prewar evidence that contradicted the Bush administration's claims that Iraq had WMD or was reconstituting its WMD programs.

A January 2 USA Today editorial about the execution of former Iraqi President Saddam Hussein said that he "was less a threat to the USA than was
... (more)

DNI Awards $2 Million in Hush-Hush Money
Washington PostJan 02
Director of National Intelligence John D. Negroponte awarded $200,000 grants earlier this month to 10 scientists in the intelligence community, one of whom could not be named and several of whom declined to be interviewed, for projects whose details remain secret.

The DNI office issued a news release with nine of the recipients' names, agencies, job titles and educational backgrounds. One awardee's information was omitted "because of the sensitive position he occupies in his organ
... (more)

The Barbaric Lynching of President Saddam Hussein
Tun Dr. Mahathir MohamadJan 02
On the Holy day of Eid, the world watched in horror at the barbaric lynching of President Saddam Hussein of Iraq, allegedly for crimes against humanity. This public murder was sanctioned by the War Criminals, President Bush and Prime Minister Blair.

This sadistic act broadcasted to the whole world is a travesty of justice, and was meant to demonstrate the imperial power of the United States and serves as a warning to peace loving peoples that we must either bow to the dictates of
... (more)

Road pricing revolt is gathering speed
The TelegraphJan 02
The grassroots revolt against plans to introduce pay-as-you-drive road pricing was growing last night, with more than 71,000 people signing an online Downing Street petition calling for the scheme to be scrapped.

Thousands of opponents are adding their names daily — the number of signatories has risen from 9,000 on Dec 2. The petition (http://petitions.pm.gov.uk) is due to remain online until Feb 20.

As the campaign, launched by Peter Robert
... (more)

Secret U.S. plan to overthrow Syrian government
Aljazeera MagazineJan 02
The Bush administration is secretly funding political opposition to the Syrian government in a bid to topple President Bashar al-Assad's regime, according to a classified document seen by the Time Magazine.

The two-page document states that the U.S. is already “supporting regular meetings of internal and diaspora Syrian activists" in Washington, Europe and even Syria to facilitate “a more coherent strategy and plan of actions for all anti-Assad activists."
... (more)

Over 200 Arrested on Tiananmen Square on New Year's Day
Epoch TimesJan 02
On the morning of January 1, 2007, Chinese authorities arrested over 200 protesters on Tiananmen Square. Tiananmen public security, armed police and plainclothes officers were on the scene to interrogate and arrest demonstrators.

Voicing a variety of complaints, the majority of these protesters came from all across China. Demonstrators were arrested in several groups near the exit of an underground tunnel leading to the Square. Police hauled off five vehicles full of protesters.
... (more)

The Court-Martial of Ehren Watada Begins
TruthOut.orgJan 02
A pre-trial hearing is scheduled to take place Thursday in Tacoma, Washington, in the court-martial of Ehren Watada, the 28-year-old Army lieutenant who is the first commissioned officer to publicly refuse to deploy to Iraq on the basis that the war is illegal.

Watada's court appearance comes on the same day the new Democratic-controlled Congress returns to work and begins to investigate one of the lingering questions surrounding the nearly four-year-old war. It
... (more)

'Illegal' Execution Enrages Arabs
Inter Press ServiceJan 02
BAGHDAD, Jan 2 (IPS) - The execution of former Iraqi dictator Saddam Hussein carried out at the start of the Muslim festival Eid al-Adha has angered Iraqis and others across the Middle East.*

Saddam Hussein was hanged on what is held to be a day of mercy and feasting in the Islamic world. It is usually celebrated with the slaughter of a lamb, which represents the innocent blood of Ishmael, who was sacrificed by his father, the prophet Abraham, to honour God.

Judge R
... (more)

CNN apologizes for Obama gaffe in Bin Laden graphic
Raw StoryJan 02
A Monday night broadcast of CNN's Situation Room with Wolf Blitzer confused America's "number one enemy" with one of America's most popular senators, RAW STORY has learned. CNN apologized for the error, which came after a series of incidents in recent months in which Illinois Democrat Senator Barack Obama was subtly or directly linked with militant Islamic personalities who have been hostile to the United States.

During the Jan. 1 broadcas
... (more)

'Frankenstein farming' fears
Herald SunJan 02
CONSUMER groups have warned of "Frankenstein farming" after US food chiefs declared meat and milk from cloned animals safe to eat.

The US Food and Drug Administration concluded cloned animals were no different from conventional livestock and food from them will not need to be labelled as such.

But the UK Food Commission, Britain's independent food watchdog, condemned the proposal as "a giant step in the wrong direction".

If the FDA fully approves clon
... (more)

Thanks for the memories
EricBlumrich.comJan 02


Health fears lead schools to dismantle wireless networks
The TimesJan 02
  • Radiation levels blamed for illnesses
  • Teacher became too sick to work

    Parents and teachers are forcing some schools to dismantle wireless computer networks amid fears that they could damage children’s health. More schools are putting transmitters in classrooms to give pupils wireless access from laptops to the school computer network and the internet.

    But many parents and some scientists fear that low l
    ... (more)

  • Australia has betrayed Hicks, says Fraser
    AAPJan 02
    Former prime minister Malcolm Fraser says he never thought he would see the time Australia departed from providing justice to all citizens like it has with David Hicks.

    Hicks has been detained by the US at its Guantanamo Bay, Cuba, detention centre since January 2002, a month after his capture among Taliban forces in Afghanistan.

    The 31-year-old Adelaide man has recently refused visits from Australian consular officials.

    Asked what he saw as different
    ... (more)

    US 'licence to snoop' on British air travellers
    The TelegraphJan 02
    Britons flying to America could have their credit card and email accounts inspected by the United States authorities following a deal struck by Brussels and Washington.

    By using a credit card to book a flight, passengers face having other transactions on the card inspected by the American authorities. Providing an email address to an airline could also lead to scrutiny of other messages sent or received on that account.

    The extent of the demands were disclosed in "u
    ... (more)


    Dollar Dethroned By Red Ink
    Paul Craig RobertsJan 02
    Will Congress allow President Bush to waste another year on his Iraq misadventure while serious problems overwhelm the United States?

    During 2006 while the US government focused on the deteriorating situation in Iraq, the US dollar declined sharply against many currencies. By December China’s central bank was expressing its concern that the massive US trade deficit could lead to a run on the dollar and to an international financial crisis.

    Since WW II the US d
    ... (more)


    Death of One Tyrant a Coverup of Crime by Another
    Wm. Terry LeichnerJan 01
    Once again the barbarians have succeeded in professing human dignity while ignoring human life's sanctity. My thoughts are filled with disgust as the so called civilized world revels in the hanging of Saddam Hussein yesterday.

    Don't mistake my total distaste of the execution of Hussein for any alliance or sympathy for the tyrant killer. I just tire of the "morally superior" position of this nation (U.S.) when it comes to the administration's posturing around the capture, trial and
    ... (more)

    Saddam is Dead, Long Live Saddam Hussein
    Kurt NimmoJan 01
    If there is one constant in regard to the Iraq imbroglio, it is the fact that the neocons told big fat brazen lies to get the United States to invade and occupy the country and they continue to tell lies to keep us there.

    It would seem that Bush and the neocons have told so many lies, engineered so many falsifications and illusions, that it is no longer considered news and many people take it for granted Bush and crew are pathological liars. Of course, this says something d
    ... (more)

    Hang 'em High in Baghdad: the Object Lesson of Saddam's Execution
    Kurt NimmoJan 01
    It was like a scene from a Sergio Leone spaghetti western—Saddam Hussein, or somebody we are told is Saddam Hussein, was marched to the gallows and strung up, a victim of frontier justice, the frontier in this case being a country illegally and brutally invaded for the sake of Israel, as Philip Zelikow unabashedly tells us, not that the corporate media pays attention to such bothersome details.

    In old B-movies, characters often declared the guilty to be “hung at
    ... (more)

    Former Longtime Confidant Accuses Ariel Sharon of Assassinating Yasser Arafat
    UruknetJan 01
    Longtime and now recently deceased confidant to former Israeli Prime Minister Ariel Sharon, Uri Dan, published a book in France that may have been his 2006 one titled Ariel Sharon: An Intimate Portrait in which he accused the former prime minister of assassinating Palestinian Authority (PA) President Yasser Arafat by poisoning him. Dan claimed Sharon got approval from George Bush by phone early in 2004 to proceed with his plan after he told the US president he was no longer committed to "not" li... (more)

    Missouri: Police Roadblock Harassment Caught on Tape
    The NewspaperJan 01
    A teenager harassed by police in St. Louis, Missouri caught the incident on tape. Brett Darrow, 19, had his video camera rolling last month as he drove his 1997 Maxima, minding his own business. He approached a drunk driving roadblock where he was stopped, detained and threatened with arrest when he declined to enter a conversation with a police officer about his personal travel habits. Now Darrow is considering filing suit against St. Louis County Police.

    "I'm scared to drive for
    ... (more)

    Scarlett, author of the Iraq war dossier, is knighted
    The IndependentJan 01
    John Scarlett, who took responsibility for the error-ridden dossier that justified the war in Iraq, is knighted in today's New Year's Honours list. The award will enrage peace campaigners, who have accused the veteran spymaster of saving Tony Blair's skin over the flawed case for the invasion.

    The news came as a British soldier was killed by a roadside bomb in Basra yesterday, the 127th to die since the invasion in 2003.

    Sir John, the head of MI6, played a key role
    ... (more)

    Iraq dossier author's honour 'looks dodgy'
    The TelegraphJan 01
    The knighthood awarded to the man behind the Government's "sexed-up" dossier on Iraq has been condemned as "disgraceful" and "shameless".

    Politicians and peace campaigners have hit out at the decision to honour the head of MI6, John Scarlett, who was in charge of the 2002 dossier that claimed Iraq possessed chemical and biological weapons and could deploy them within 45 minutes.

    The dossier was used by the Government to bolster the case for war, but the notorious 4
    ... (more)

    'NY Times' Only Major Paper to Show Dead Saddam on Front Page
    Editor and PublisherJan 01
    NEW YORK It's a rare day when the august New York Times tops the New York Post -- and every other major paper in the U.S. -- in grisly or sensationalistic front page coverage, but it did so on Sunday. An E&P survey of front pages from around the country reveals that the Times was the only major paper to include a picture of executed Iraqi dictator, Saddam Hussein, on its front page, after his hanging.

    It was even above the fold.

    The picture, showing Saddam on the fl
    ... (more)

    Poll for Military Papers Finds Troops' Support for War Plunging
    Editor & PublisherJan 01
    NEW YORK It's often written or said in the media that, despite public opposition to the Iraq war here at home, military personnel strongly back President Bush's handling of the conflict. But a poll for the Military Times newspapers, released Friday, shows that more troops disapprove of the president’s handling of the war than approve of it.

    It came on the day that at least four more Americans died in the war, pushing the monthly total to 107, the high point for the year -- a
    ... (more)



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