Friday, 26 August 2011

50 years of the most lavish welfare state on earth? What an abject failure

Bitter laughter is my main response to the events of the past week. You are surprised by what has happened? Why? I have been saying for years that it was coming, and why it was coming, and what could be done to stop it.

I have said it in books, in articles, over lunch and dinner tables with politicians whose lips curled with lofty contempt.

So yes, I am deeply sorry for the innocent and gentle people who have lost lives, homes, businesses and security. Heaven knows I have argued for years for the measures that might have saved them.

But I am not really very sorry for the elite liberal Londoners who have suddenly discovered what millions of others have lived with for decades. The mass criminality in the big cities is merely a speeded-up and concentrated version of life on most large estates – fear, intimidation, cruelty, injustice, savagery towards the vulnerable and the  different, a cold sneer turned towards any plea for pity, the awful realisation that when you call for help from the authorities, none  will come.

Just look and see how many shops are protected with steel shutters, how many homes have bars on their windows. This is not new.

As the polluted flood (it is not a tide; it will not go back down again) of spite, greed and violence washes on to their very doorsteps, well-off and influential Left-wingers at last meet the filthy thing they have created, and which they ignored when it did not affect them personally.

No doubt they will find ways to save themselves. But they will not save the country. Because even now they will not admit that all their ideas are wrong, and that the policies of the past 50 years – the policies they love – have been a terrible mistake. I have heard them in the past few days clinging to their old excuses of non-existent ‘poverty’ and ‘exclusion’.

Take our Prime Minister, who is once again defrauding far too many people. He uses his expensive voice, his expensive clothes, his well-learned tone of public-school command, to give the impression of being an effective and decisive  person. But it is all false. He has  no real idea of what to do. He  thinks the actual solutions to the problem are ‘fascist’. Deep down,  he still wants to ‘understand’ the hoodies.

Say to him that naughty children should be smacked at home and caned in school, that the police (and responsible adults) should be free to wallop louts and vandals caught in the act, that the police should return to preventive foot patrols, that prisons should be austere places of hard work, plain food and discipline without TV sets or semi-licit drugs, and that wrongdoers should be sent to them when they first take to crime, not when they are already habitual crooks, and he will throw up his well-tailored arms in horror at your barbarity.

Say to him that divorce should be made very difficult and that the state should be energetically in favour of stable, married families with fathers (and cease forthwith to subsidise families without fathers) and he will smirk patronisingly and regard you as a pitiable lunatic.

Say to him that mass immigration should be stopped and reversed, and that those who refuse any of the huge number of jobs which are then available should be denied benefits of any kind, and he will gibber in shock.

Yet he is ready to authorise the use of water cannon and plastic bullets on our streets (quite useless,  as it happens, against this sort of outbreak) as if we were a Third World despotism.

Water cannon and plastic bullets indeed. What an utter admission of failure, that after 50 years of the most lavish welfare state in the solar system, you cannot govern your country without soaking the citizenry in cold water and bombarding them with missiles from a safe distance. Except, of course, that it is because of the welfare system that this is so.

Here is an example of how little he knows about Britain. He says that the criminals of August will face the ‘full force of the law’. What ‘force’?

The great majority of the looters, smashers, burners and muggers have not been arrested and never will be. Our long-enfeebled police were so useless at the start that thousands of crimes were committed with total impunity.

Now we know why they don’t call themselves ‘police forces’ any more. But they aren’t ‘services’ either, for they certainly don’t serve us or do what we want them to do, preferring to arrest us for defending ourselves. The criminals, who are cunning without being intelligent, all know this. They will wait for the next chance.

The loping, smirking, shuffling creeps who eventually appeared before the courts were the ultimate losers – the ones who came late to the looting and  who were too slow or too stupid to run before they were put in the bag.

And what courts they are. In the one I sat in last week, self-confessed thieves are courteously addressed by magistrates and clerks as ‘mister’ and asked politely to stand up or ‘accompany the officers’ back to the cells or – more often – out into the street on bail. In the part of the dock reserved for those already free on bail, nobody has bothered to clean up the scribbled and disrespectful graffiti.

Why should anyone respect or fear this chamber of indifference? The wall-hangings behind the magistrates are scruffy and scratched. There is no sense of awe or determination or of much purpose. There is only a strong sense of going through the motions for the sake of appearances.

Nobody is directly punished for what he has done. Excuses must first be sought, and indulgence arranged where there should be cold rage. There will be ‘social inquiry reports’ and ‘youth offender teams’ who bustle smilingly in and out ready to start work on yet another ‘client’.

All this piffle enshrines the official (and hopelessly wrong) view that crime is caused by circumstances and background, not by unleashed human evil. It is precisely because of this windy falsehood that the cells are crammed with young men who broke the law because they felt like it.

Hulking louts – black and white, for this was an equal-opportunity crimewave – are accompanied before the bench by alleged ‘parents’ who are obviously afraid of their broods. Nothing is said or done to express official disapproval of crime. The accused are treated more like patients than like wrongdoers.

Many in this rogues’ parade are still trying to qualify for prison, but are only, as it were, at the GCSE stage. They have sheaves of previous convictions, no doubt a tiny sample of their many acts of spite, selfishness and cruelty.

You can bet their neighbours hate and fear them. Some are on bail for other offences, a state of affairs so common that it is almost funny. At least one is subject to a ‘suspended’ prison sentence, one of the many fake penalties handed down by the courts to fool the public into thinking that something significant happens to criminals.

They have all learned what most British politicians somehow cannot grasp – that the more encounters you have with our justice system, the less you fear it. A few ‘exemplary’ sentences – none of which will be served in full, or anything near it – will only help to spread the word that arson, robbery, violence, spite and selfishness are not punished here any more. Indeed these are the things we are now famous for around a world that once respected us.

And that is why we have many more nasty surprises waiting for  us, here in The Country Formerly Known as Great Britain.

 

Thursday, 18 August 2011

1,005 charged over London riots

Scotland Yard has now charged more than 1,000 suspects over the rioting which swept through the capital.
Metropolitan Police Acting Commissioner Tim Godwin hailed a "significant milestone" as he said a total of 1,005 suspects had been charged after 1,733 arrests so far.
Mr Godwin - who said at the weekend that the force was targeting 3,000 convictions - added that the investigation is "far from over".
Meanwhile, a man arrested on suspicion of attempted murder after two police officers were mown down in east London while chasing looters during last week's riots is being questioned for a second day.
The 31-year-old was detained after he handed himself in at an east London police station.
Scotland Yard has released CCTV footage of the incident.
It shows the officers being hit by a green Citroen which was driven at them at speed in Waltham Forest as they dealt with reports of a group looting a clothing store at around 1am on August 8.
Detectives investigating the attempted murder of the officers said the footage had been released to encourage people to come forward and identify those responsible.
A Scotland Yard spokesman said the Citroen was driven at the Pcs, both based at Paddington Green police station, in Royston Avenue as they tried to deal with reports of looting at the Aristocrats clothing store in Chingford Mount Road.
One officer suffered knee and leg injuries and the other sustained shoulder injuries, the spokesman said. They were both taken to hospital and are recovering at home while they wait for further specialist treatment.

 

Sunday, 14 August 2011

At least six people, including two children, have died in a knife attack at a flat in St Helier, Jersey.


A 30-year-old man was in police custody at Jersey general hospital where he is also recovering from surgery following the incident at around 3pm in a residential area close to the town centre.

States of Jersey Police said that officers were called to a flat at Victoria Crescent, Upper Midvale Road, St Helier, just after 3pm following reports of a multiple stabbing.

The immediate area around where the incident occurred was sealed off while a major incident room was set up at police headquarters in St Helier.

An eyewitness, Andre Thorpe, said he believed all the victims were members of the same family, and that two ambulances arrived at the scene, which was within a mile of the ambulance station.

"Then four or five police vehicles came" he said. "They were trying to access a private house in the crescent. It was an old Victorian terrace, a lot of them are split into flats."

"I saw police come running out with a child, it was a small child, I just saw the legs. They went off in an ambulance. When the paramedic came back her shirt was covered in blood."

He added that the area where the incident happened was quite secluded and not on a main road.

The head of crime services, Stewart Gull, who is leading the police investigation, said: "Clearly this complex investigation is in its very early stages as we try to establish exactly what happened.

"We are appealing to anyone who may have any information to contact us.

"We are mindful, too, of the impact of any such serious and tragic incident on the local community, and we have police officers in the area to support the investigation and local people."

Corrupt, inefficient and cowardly police force that is not fit for purpose,Cameron musn't let the police top brass bully him into silence

The police have been busy defending themselves this weekend against any criticism of their performance. They aim is to stop elected politicians from making any comment on their performance. But David Cameron should not—and must not—back down from both his criticism of police tactics and his conviction that the force urgently needs reforming.

The truth is that the initial police response to the riots was hopelessly inadequate. If senior police officers really do think that the Met’s performance on Saturday, Sunday and Monday was adequate, then that in and of itself makes the case for reform. Losing control of the streets in sections of the capital is a failure. As one senior minister said to me yesterday, if Sir Hugh Orde wants the police to take the credit for the success of the police operation on Tuesday night, then the police must also take the blame for the ineptitude of the police response on the first three nights of looting.

Dealing with the fallout from these riots is now central to the success of Cameron’s premiership. He cannot allow ministers, the bureaucracy or vested interests to stand in the way of the necessary policy responses.

To that end, Cameron needs to tell Theresa May that Bill Bratton---the world’s most successful policeman—must be allowed to apply for the top job at the Met. May’s decision to bar Bratton from even sending his CV in by unnecessarily stipulating that all applicants must be British is exactly the kind of obstructionism that Cameron can’t afford to tolerate in the current circumstances.

I am increasingly coming to the view that the success or failure of Cameron’s premiership depends on whether or not he is prepared to move from being a chairman of the board-style figure to being a chief executive. Whether or not he makes May back down on the Bratton question, is an early test of whether he understands that this is what he has to do.

 

Wednesday, 10 August 2011

Identify yob filmed torching shop

 

Exposed ... face of yob

Exposed ... face of yob

Creating havoc ... lout leans into window display of store

Creating havoc ... lout leans into window display of store

 

The fire quickly engulfs a red dress on a mannequin in the display.

 

Photos taken minutes later show the entire store consumed by the fire — showing the appalling danger arsonists van create.

 

Retreat ... hooded thug walks away to hide in crowd

Retreat ... hooded thug walks away to hide in crowd

 

 

 

 

 

 

Destruction ... flames engulf Miss Selfridge store minutes later

Destruction ... flames engulf Miss Selfridge store minutes later

 

BlackBerry becomes a weapon for rioters in Britain

With rioters in Britain using BlackBerry to direct fellow looters to spread mayhem in cities across the country, Blackberry maker Research In Motion (RIM) has promised to cooperate with British authorities.

The riots erupted last week after police shot dead 29-year-old Mark Duggan who in last message to his girlfriend from his BlackBerry said: "The Feds are following me.''

Since then, rioters have made extensive use of BlackBerry to send encrypted messages to mobs to riot, the Globe and Mail said in a report from London.

"If you're down for making money, we're about to go hard in east London," read BlackBerry message from one looter, the report said.

Other rioters used the encrypted smart phone to direct looters to stores selling expensive stereo equipment, designer clothes, alcohol and bicycle, the report added.

It said masked or hooded youths could be seen typing messages on their cell phones as rioting engulfed shops, vehicles and buildings in British cities.

BlackBerry's messaging system (BBM), which comes free, is used by over 45 million people worldwide to instantly convey text messages and pictures. Since BBM messages are encrypted, police cannot trace them. .

Blackberry has rejected demand from British lawmaker David Lammy, who represents the riot-hit Tottenham area, for suspending its messaging service, saying that shutting down BBM will hit more than 45 million people who use it globally.

But the BlackBerry company, based at Waterloo near Toronto, has said that it is complying with British legislation on interception of messages and co-operating with Scotland Yard. Hackers reportedly compromised BlackBerry's blog site in retaliation for its promise to co-operate with British police, the report said.

 

Technology may have been a potent tool used by London rioters in mobilizing their numbers, but it may very well be the same tool that will take them down.

Technology may have been a potent tool used by London rioters in mobilizing their numbers, but it may very well be the same tool that will take them down.

The UK Metropolitan Police on Tuesday opened up their stream on photo storage site Flickr and uploaded several CCTV images of suspected criminals and alleged looters, calling on the public to provide them with information should to identify any of the individuals in the photos.

In what they call "Operation Withern," police said they will be releasing photographs of suspects as the investigation of the crime progresses.

"If anyone recognises individuals in the photographs or has any information about the violence and disorder that has occurred they should contact the Major Investigation Team," the police said.

Some of the photos uploaded on the account include those of several men wearing hooded jackets and scarves over their mouths, forcibly entering one shop.

Another photo showed a woman in a tank top, whom the police said "carried items from Richer Sounds," one of the shops in the area.

In another photo, a young man is seen carrying handfuls of jewelry from on of the shops in Church Road.

About 15 similar images depicting looters and rioters were uploaded by the police to the photo set on Tuesday.

In a similar effort, technology blog TechCrunch said a new Google Group has sprung up aiming to use facial recognition technology to identify the looters appearing in photos spreading online.

"The group appears to be thoughtfully considering its actions, in threads titled 'Ethical Issues,' and 'Keeping Things Legal,' for example. They’ve also stated that 'it’s important we only use legal sources for images'," the blog said.

One commenter in the group reportedly suggested using Face.API, a tool which could help identify people in photos posted on Facebook, Flickr and Twitter.

While the online group remains largely inaccessible to the public, a brief description of the group on the sign-up page reads: "The police are giving us access to CCTV images of the rioters and looters. Let's use existing technology like facial recognition and social networks proactively to help the justice process happen a little quicker."

 

People are fighting back. It's their neighbourhoods at stake' Shopkeepers who have turned out to defend their streets and property from rioters criticise lack of police action

When the rioters came to attack the premises of Kurdish and Turkish businesses in Hackney's Stoke Newington High Street and Kingsland Road on Monday night, the owners were waiting for them.

"It was between about nine and 10 at night," said Yilmaz Karagoz, sitting in his coffee shop next to a jeweller's shop that has been shuttered since Sunday when the rioting began and a pharmacy that closed a day after.

"There were a lot of them. We came out of our shops but the police asked us to do nothing. But the police did not do anything so, as more came, we chased them off ourselves." The staff from a local kebab restaurant ran at the attackers, doner knives in their hands. "I don't think they will be coming back," Karagoz said.

On Green Street in East Ham a similar-sized group of rioters was chased away by several hundred Asian residents. And in Bethnal Green local shopkeepers came out to defend their property.

Tuesday night there were further reports of communities taking steps to defend themselves. Dozens of men were guarding the main Sikh temple in Southall, west London.

Around 200 people were walking around the centre of Eltham, south-east London, following rumours that the area was going to be the latest place to be hit by disturbances. The group, predominantly men, had been congregating in pubs since the rumours began to circulate in mid-afternoon. "This is a white working-class area and we are here to protect our community," said one man. In Enfield, north London, about 70 men were seen chasing a group of youths.

Further anecdotal evidence also suggested that in other cities hit by Monday night's violence, communities were also remaining vigilant. On Amazon sales of baseball bats and truncheons rocketed overnight. Sales of one aluminium bat increased 65-fold in a day, albeit from low initial sales, while a truncheon jumped from a sales rank of 5,973 to 136.

Deputy assistant commissioner Stephen Kavanagh had already said it was not baton rounds or water cannon that would defeat the rioters – it was communities themselves. "We are already seeing a community kickback. People are angry. This is their neighbourhoods that are at stake," he said.

Before Monday evening's events there were warnings that Turkish shopkeepers in Tottenham were forming "protection units" to stop their businesses being looted, while retailers in nearby Wood Green were said to have equipped themselves with crowbars and other weapons after holding emergency meetings.

When the trouble came, hairdressers, sales assistants and butchers were among the scores of Turkish and Kurdish workers who stood outside their businesses in Green Lanes, Haringey, from 8pm having been warned by police to expect trouble.

The Guardian filmed others – some armed with baseball bats – on guard outside shops and restaurants in Kingsland Road, only a mile away from Hackney's burning high street. Three workers from Re-Style Hairdressers were among those out in Green Lanes, after word spread that an attack was imminent at about 4pm.

"I was here with my brother and my boss waiting for them until about midnight," said 16-year-old Huseyin Beytar. "If some guy ever breaks a window in this street, all the Turkish Kurdish people come down to protect the shops. We're like a family."

"We have to do things for ourselves," said Huseyin. "We have to look after each other. If they come here tonight there will be a fight, a big fight."

"We were outside ready and expecting them," said the manager of Turkish Food Market, who asked not to be named.

"But I felt very panicky because we are not safe from either the rioters or police.

"We put all of our efforts into this shop. It took 20 years to get it like this. But we do not know about our rights.

"I'm scared that the police and the government will attack us if we defend our businesses.

"We are being squeezed between the two."

Debbie Mumdy, 41, who lives nearby, said: "Most of the residents are really relieved that the Turkish community has been protecting the area. It's thanks to these guys that Kingsland High Street wasn't attacked."

And Nick Smith, chairman of a charity fundraising business based near Dalston Junction, said: "It's brilliant. These guys are obviously going to keep the trouble down. I don't think this particular area is going to be attacked."

But a 23-year-old council worker, who had just been evacuated from Hackney town hall due to fears of further rioting, said he was concerned tensions between communities could increase.

"It is just going to make matters worse. I would hate to see this turn into a generational or racial battle."

In his coffee shop in Stoke Newington, Karagoz tried to explain another feature of these riots – why Turkish and Kurdish youths had generally not joined the looting.

"We have businesses and work hard for what we have. As parents we want our children to work, earn money and be able to buy what they want, not steal it. Our young people know we would be ashamed of them if they were doing this."

 

A man left in a life-threatening condition after bravely remonstrating with rioters has not been identified - because the thugs who attacked him fled with his wallet and phone.



Hopelessly outnumbered, a single police officer watched as the lone man, said to be white and aged in his mid-40s to 50s, was set upon by a large mob of armed black teenagers after he confronted them for setting two industrial bins alight.

His relatives still don't know that he was attacked by the pack of rioters - because police haven't been able to work out who he is so they can break the bad news.






This morning he remains in a serious condition in a west London hospital after being beaten and punched in the face.

The man, believed to be from the area, was sent crashing to the ground by thugs who robbed him as he lay unconscious on the pavement.

The aftermath of the attack was caught on camera as the man, in a checked shirt and apparently wearing glasses, lies face down on the ground.



Horrific: The man, in his 60s, lies injured on the floor in Ealing, west London, after attempting to put out a fire lit by rioters

The brutal attack in Ealing, west London, happened in front of a police officer, who frantically  radioed for help in tackling the mob heavily armed with weapons, including bottles and bricks.

Riot squad officers who rushed to the scene had to push back the mob to reach the injured man while being pelted with missiles. A line of officers then held back the yobs as paramedics arrived.

His masked attackers are believed to have earlier looted a supermarket in the affluent west London suburb when they fought running battles with police.

 

Police were called around 10.45pm on Monday night as the mob torched buildings and cars, looting shops and streaming down quiet residential streets and breaking into homes.

One local businessman said: ‘I went up to Spring Bridge Road to check on my other shop and saw him on the ground.

‘The rioters had set a bin alight and then they jumped on him when he tried to put it out. They ran away when the police arrived, and they put him in the recovery position. I could see he was wearing shorts and T-shirt, with grey hair.’

The witness said the rioters were also mugging customers in a nearby restaurant. He added: ‘Customers were sitting at the tables and they were just grabbing stuff from them. They were 17, 18, 20 years old.’


Concern: A police officer and another man come to the victim's aid in one of the most horrifying pictures to emerge from the rioting

Terrified residents described how their multi-million-pound homes were broken into while they slept as marauding gangs used the cover of the riots to commit burglaries as thinly stretched police lines tackled trouble spots elsewhere.

One large 200-strong gang, scarves pulled over their faces, surrounded a block of flats and banged on the windows and doors.

Rioters armed with petrol bombs also smashed windows and looted scores of stores.

Shopkeepers whose businesses were wrecked by rampaging mobs of teenagers yesterday branded the thugs ‘feral rats’.

Polka Rastovic, 53, who owns Crispin’s Wine Bar in Ealing, told how she cowered behind her till when she heard the mob approaching.

‘It was terrifying. I had locked my door but could see a shadow approaching and hear the windows of nearby shops and restaurants being smashed as they closed in.

‘When they finally arrived I fled to the kitchen at the back and locked myself in. I could see them jumping on the counter, stealing bottles and going for the till.’


Ablaze: Cars were burned in arson attacks by youths in Ealing last night

Council leader Julian Bell said: ‘It was a roaming mob who came to an affluent area determined to steal and grab as much loot as possible without any regard for the people they terrorised or hurt in the process.

‘For them it was rich pickings. The police were helpless. It was very fluid and very frightening.’

The scene of the attack on the man near the Arcadia Shopping Centre was cordoned off yesterday as forensic experts scoured the area.

Police are checking CCTV tapes of the incident.

Vigilantes'' stretch police resources further

Police are being hampered in their attempts to quell rioting because so-called vigilantes are taking to the streets, claiming that they will not stand by while their properties are being damaged. The Metropolitan Police said their resources were being stretched even further than before now they are having to deal with vigilante groups.

Three Asian men in Birmingham who were planning on taking to the streets to defend their area were killed when a car mounted the pavement and mowed them down.

And a group of people who live in Enfield – appearing to call themselves the Enfield Defence League – have set themselves up to fight back against looters but seem to have achieved very little other than causing problems for the police.

The Met's Deputy Assistant Commissioner Steve Kavanagh told Sky News: "What I don't need is these so-called vigilantes, who appeared to have been drinking too much and taking policing resources away from what they should have been doing – which is preventing the looting."

He went on: "These are small pockets of people. They're frustrated, they're angry and that's totally understandable. The sadness of those images through the night and the night before last will affect everyone. But the support that we need is to allow those officers to prevent looting and prevent crime. Ironically, when you see those images with no police available, the police are now having to go and do the vigilantes as well as the other problems that they've got. That needs to stop."

 

Police in Birmingham have launched a murder inquiry after three British Asian men were killed by a car

Police in Birmingham have launched a murder inquiry after three British Asian men were killed by a car in an incident that has raised fresh tensions over protection for neighbourhoods and businesses from young looters.

A tearful and resentful crowd gathered outside the City hospital following the incident early on Wednesday morning, with police protecting the building against any incursion as feelings ran high.

A man has been arrested and a car impounded following the crash near a mosque in the Dudley Road area of England's second city. Neighbours said the men had just left the mosque and were among large numbers of local people determined not to allow the fluid series of grab-and-run attacks in the city centre to spread to their area.

Unconfirmed reports suggested that two of the men were brothers. The BBC has interviewed the father of another victim, Haroon Jahan, 21.

Emergency ambulances found around 80 people already trying to help the victims when they arrived at the scene, which is close to a petrol station on Dudley Road. Throughout Tuesday, large numbers of British Asians had gathered outside shops and other businesses in Handsworth, Lozells and other inner-city areas, sometimes in tense face-offs with small groups of mostly Afro-Caribbean youths.

Confrontation with the British Asian community or inter-communal violence would take the disturbances onto a new level and police have worked rapidly on the murder inquiry. It comes on top of 19 court appearances due on Wednesday after 43 arrests on Tuesday, and a further 37 on Tuesday night as violence dogged pockets of Birmingham and neighbouring West Bromwich and Wolverhampton.

West Midlands ambulance service said two of the victims died at the scene and the third in the City hospital early on Wednesday morning. Forensic experts are examining the scene and the impounded car and an appeal has made for witnesses.

Police do not yet know if there is any link to the troubles beyond the fact that unusually large numbers of people were on the streets in Winson Green and neighbouring suburbs. A spokesman for the West Midlands force said: "The incident took place close to the Jet filling station on Dudley Road in Winson Green at approximately 1.15am. Three ambulances, two rapid response vehicles and an incident support officer was sent to the scene.

"When crews arrived, they found around 80 people at the scene with resuscitation ongoing on three men. Crews used their advanced life support skills while police officers provided support."

Violence in Birmingham on Tuesday night was on a much-reduced scale compared with Monday, but its spread to West Bromwich and Wolverhampton in contrast to the relative calm in London attracted growing attention. Police are growing increasingly used to troublemakers' use of Twitter and other swift links to spot unprotected areas and zero in on them.

David Cameron has given the green light for water cannon to be used on the British mainland for the first time and condemned pockets of society as “sick

The Prime Minister said water cannon – until now only ever seen in the UK in Ulster - will be available at 24 hours notice to deal with the “despicable violence” being carried out in cities across the country.
And in a sign that other more draconian crowd control measures will now be at the disposal of the police he said: “We will do whatever is necessary. Nothing is off the table.”
In his strongest comments yet on the perpetrators of the violence, Mr Cameron said: “There are pockets of our society that are not only broken, but frankly sick...It is a complete lack of responsibility in parts of our society, people allowed to feel that the world owes them something.”
Water cannons have been used this summer by police in Ulster and have been a regular sight at disturbances in the province. But despite calls for it to be used on the mainland – including after last year’s student riots in London – ministers have always ruled it out.
Mr Cameron spoke after chairing a meeting of the Cobra emergency committee. He rebutted criticisms from Boris Johnson about proposed cuts in police numbers. The London Mayor today caused anger in Downing Street by saying London’s police strength should not be lessened.

 

Hundreds of rioters have brought "shame on the streets of Salford and Manchester

Hundreds of rioters have brought "shame on the streets of Salford and Manchester", Greater Manchester's assistant chief constable has said.

Fire bombs have been thrown at shops and looters have stolen clothes, electrical items and alcohol.

Assistant chief constable Garry Shewan said: "This has been senseless violence and senseless criminality of a scale I have never experienced in my career before."

The idea that a capitalist economy can support a socialist welfare state is collapsing before our eyes

Which of these is the most important question to ask in the present economic crisis: how can we promote growth? Should we pay off government debt more or less quickly? Is the US in worse trouble than Europe? Answer: none of the above.
The truly fundamental question that is at the heart of the disaster toward which we are racing is being debated only in America: is it possible for a free market economy to support a democratic socialist society? On this side of the Atlantic, the model of a national welfare system with comprehensive entitlements, which is paid for by the wealth created through capitalist endeavour, has been accepted (even by parties of the centre-Right) as the essence of post-war political enlightenment.
This was the heaven on earth for which liberal democracy had been striving: a system of wealth redistribution that was merciful but not Marxist, and a guarantee of lifelong economic and social security for everyone that did not involve totalitarian government. This was the ideal the European Union was designed to entrench. It was the dream of Blairism, which adopted it as a replacement for the state socialism of Old Labour. And it is the aspiration of President Obama and his liberal Democrats, who want the United States to become a European-style social democracy.
But the US has a very different historical experience from European countries, with their accretions of national remorse and class guilt: it has a far stronger and more resilient belief in the moral value of liberty and the dangers of state power. This is a political as much as an economic crisis, but not for the reasons that Mr Obama believes. The ruckus that nearly paralysed the US economy last week, and led to the loss of its AAA rating from Standard & Poor’s, arose from a confrontation over the most basic principles of American life.
Contrary to what the Obama Democrats claimed, the face-off in Congress did not mean that the nation’s politics were “dysfunctional”. The politics of the US were functioning precisely as the Founding Fathers intended: the legislature was acting as a check on the power of the executive.

The Tea Party faction within the Republican party was demanding that, before any further steps were taken, there must be a debate about where all this was going. They had seen the future toward which they were being pushed, and it didn’t work. They were convinced that the entitlement culture and benefits programmes which the Democrats were determined to preserve and extend with tax rises could only lead to the diminution of that robust economic freedom that had created the American historical miracle.
And, again contrary to prevailing wisdom, their view is not naive and parochial: it is corroborated by the European experience. By rights, it should be Europe that is immersed in this debate, but its leaders are so steeped in the sacred texts of social democracy that they cannot admit the force of the contradictions which they are now hopelessly trying to evade.
No, it is not just the preposterousness of the euro project that is being exposed. (Let’s merge the currencies of lots of countries with wildly differing economic conditions and lock them all into the interest rate of the most successful. What could possibly go wrong?)
Also collapsing before our eyes is the lodestone of the Christian Socialist doctrine that has underpinned the EU’s political philosophy: the idea that a capitalist economy can support an ever-expanding socialist welfare state.
As the EU leadership is (almost) admitting now, the next step to ensure the survival of the world as we know it will involve moving toward a command economy, in which individual countries and their electorates will lose significant degrees of freedom and self-determination.
We have arrived at the endgame of what was an untenable doctrine: to pay for the kind of entitlements that populations have been led to expect by their politicians, the wealth-creating sector has to be taxed to a degree that makes it almost impossible for it to create the wealth that is needed to pay for the entitlements that populations have been led to expect, etc, etc.
The only way that state benefit programmes could be extended in the ways that are forecast for Europe’s ageing population would be by government seizing all the levers of the economy and producing as much (externally) worthless currency as was needed – in the manner of the old Soviet Union.
That is the problem. So profound is its challenge to the received wisdom of postwar Western democratic life that it is unutterable in the EU circles in which the crucial decisions are being made – or rather, not being made.
The solution that is being offered to the political side of the dilemma is benign oligarchy. Ignoring national public opinion and turbulent political minorities has always been at least half the point of the EU bureaucratic putsch. But that does not settle the economic predicament.
What is to be done about all those assurances that governments have provided for generations about state-subsidised security in old age, universal health provision (in Britain, almost uniquely, completely free), and a guaranteed living standard for the unemployed?
We have been pretending – with ever more manic protestations – that this could go on for ever. Even when it became clear that European state pensions (and the US social security system) were gigantic Ponzi schemes in which the present beneficiaries were spending the money of the current generation of contributors, and that health provision was creating impossible demands on tax revenue, and that benefit dependency was becoming a substitute for wealth-creating employment, the lesson would not be learnt. We have been living on tick and wishful thinking.
So what are the most important truths we should be addressing if we are to avert – or survive – the looming catastrophe? Raising retirement ages across Europe (not just in Greece) is imperative, as is raising thresholds for out-of-work benefit entitlements.
Lowering the tax burden for both wealth-creators and consumers is essential. In Britain, finding private sources of revenue for health care is a matter of urgency.
A general correction of the imbalance between wealth production and wealth redistribution is now a matter of basic necessity, not ideological preference.
The hardest obstacle to overcome will be the idea that anyone who challenges the prevailing consensus of the past 50 years is irrational and irresponsible. That is what is being said about the Tea Partiers. In fact, what is irrational and irresponsible is the assumption that we can go on as we are.

 

Monday, 1 August 2011

The Foreign Office has warned Britons holidaying in Dubai this summer that eating, drinking or smoking in public during Ramadan could land them in prison

The Foreign Office has warned Britons holidaying in Dubai this summer that eating, drinking or smoking in public during Ramadan could land them in prison.

In new guidance, published to coincide with the Islamic month of fasting that starts today, it says "failure to comply" with local laws "could result in arrest" and that "discretion should be exercised" even in the case of young children, pregnant women and nursing mothers. Dubai police have said that non-Muslims will receive one warning before arrest.

The Foreign Office advice reads: "Do not eat, drink or smoke in public view during the daytime (including in your car). This is considered highly disrespectful. It is also against the law and failure to comply could result in arrest. Pregnant, nursing women, and young children are exempt from the provisions, but discretion should be exercised.

"The majority of eating and drinking establishments will be closed during daylight hours, but you can find some coffee houses with screens that are intended to allow people to eat during the daytime away from public view.

"Be careful about your dress during Ramadan. Skimpy clothes should not be worn at any time in the UAE, but during Ramadan the standards may be policed even more carefully than usual."

Its "British Behaviour Abroad" report, based on consular statistics, found that of the 20 countries in the world with the largest British expatriate populations, Britons were more likely to be arrested in the UAE than in any other country covered in the report except Thailand.

"This is largely because the UAE laws and customs are very different to those in the UK. There may be serious penalties for doing something that might not be illegal in the UK," said the Foreign Office. Last month a British woman living in Dubai was fined AED3,000 - around £497 - for insulting Islam on Facebook.

Sean Tipton, from the Association of British Travel Agents, recommended that holidaymakers study the Foreign Office advice.

He said: "In addition, we will be reminding ABTA members who sell trips to the UAE to signpost their customers to this information. However, whilst we fully understand and appreciate the importance of Ramadan, we would strongly recommend that the Dubai authorities practise these enforcement measures with a degree of sensitivity and discretion so as to avoid causing unwarranted distress to foreign visitors and the risk of significant damage to their tourist industry."

Major hotels in Dubai are also working to help their guests stay within the law. The Jumeirah Group, which runs a number of properties including the distinctive Burj Al Arab, is issuing a new booklet "to communicate to non-Muslim guests the etiquette surrounding such an important religious time". The group said it normally issued guidelines but did not "actively promote" them as Ramadan was an annual event.

Although scorching temperatures of 45C (113F) and above will see a lull in Dubai's tourist trade during August, tens of thousands of Britons are still likely to flock to its beaches and shopping malls.

casino worker was sentenced today for laundering thousands of pounds of drug money with her father, police said.



Nicola Rosser, 36, of King Street, Margate, Kent, used the training she had surrounding money laundering to carry out the crime alongside Derek Rosser, 63.

Canterbury Crown Court heard the pair were guilty of laundering thousands of pounds of cash - the proceeds of a profitable international drug-trafficking plot - into euros.

They were arrested after they were stopped while driving along Thanet Way near Faversham on June 29 last year.

Police searched the vehicle and discovered a blue drawstring bag containing £9,300 in cash. Neither occupant of the car was willing to explain why they had the money so both were arrested on suspicion of money laundering.

A later search of a vehicle belonging to Nicola Rosser revealed documentation relating to three cash transactions on June 28 last year, in which euros worth £18,420 were bought.

CCTV from two of the three money shops revealed her as the person buying the euros.

When police searched her father's home at Waterways Caravan Park, Reculver, near Herne Bay, they seized a blue cash box containing £4,000 and 2,000 euros.

He appeared at the court on June 17 where he pleaded guilty to three charges of converting criminal property and three charges of possession of criminal property under the Proceeds of Crime Act 2002.

Today he was handed a two-year jail sentence for being in possession of £93,600 of criminal property, and a further five sentences of eight months each to run concurrently, a spokeswoman for Kent Police said.

His daughter had admitted three charges of converting criminal property and was given an eight-month sentence suspended for two years. She was also made the subject of a six-month night-time curfew, the spokeswoman said.

Detective Sergeant David Ecuyer of Kent and Essex Serious Crime Directorate led the investigation.

He said: "This investigation concerns a known criminal with previous convictions for the importation of drugs and his daughter, a woman who because of her employment in a casino, has benefited from training into money laundering.

"This combination means that these offenders knew very well what they were doing and the amount of cash concerned is a significant amount.

"Both have been given ample opportunity to give a plausible explanation for their actions but have elected to remain silent.

"International drug trafficking is a profitable business and the laundering of the proceeds will form an integral part of the criminality concerned, especially when assisted by professional enablers such as Nicola Rosser.

"If the harm to the community through drug abuse is to be abated, it will in part be by making the trafficking a less profitable enterprise."

A Proceeds of Crime Act confiscation hearing is expected to take place early next year.

Related Posts Plugin for WordPress, Blogger...

 
Design by Free WordPress Themes | Bloggerized by Lasantha - Premium Blogger Themes | Blogger Templates