Artist Banksy’s rat with suitcase stolen in Australia

(Reuters Life!) – Thieves have stolen a valuable painting of a rat carrying a suitcase, by the anonymous British graffiti artist Banksy, from a meter box outside a house in the Australian city of Melbourne, police said on Thursday.

Lifestyle

Police said the artwork was stolen between April 24 and May 15 from the door of a meter box outside the Melbourne home of underwear designer Mitch Dowd, but the theft was only discovered recently because Dowd had been out of town.

The theft came shortly after the value of the artist’s work hit the headlines when street cleaners in Melbourne painted over a stencil of a rat by Banksy elsewhere in the city.

Dowd said it was disappointing that thieves had targeted the artwork by the secretive Banksy, one of the world’s top street artists whose real identity remains unknown.

“The house faces right onto the pavement so everyone would walk by and see it all the time and now all that’s there is a black box,” Dowd said in a statement.

“It’s a well known rat carrying a suitcase that’s about eight inches high. It’s black on a red background and it’s been there for over a year. It’s sad that as soon as the articles on Banksy came out that people would think it was valuable.”

Banksy is famous for illegal outdoor graffiti, including painting the West Bank barrier and leaving a life-size figure of a Guantanamo Bay detainee at California theme park Disneyland.

From a small-time graffiti artist to a global star, Banksy’s work has become so valuable that several of his street works have been salvaged and sold, including a painting on a London wall that fetched 208,100 pounds ($340,000) in 2008.

(Writing by Belinda Goldsmith, Editing by Michael Perry)

Terror suspects were taking orders from Yemeni Al Qaeda: Saudi Arabia

Washington, Mar. 26 (ANI): Saudi Arabia has confirmed that several of over 100 suspects who allegedly plotted terror attacks on key oil and security facilities in Saudi Arabia, were waiting for a go ahead from senior Al Qaeda leaders in Yemen to strike.

Fox News quoted Saudi Interior Ministry spokesman General Mansour Al-Turki as saying that the arrest of the alleged plotters not only had prevented the attacks, but broken up a network of Al Qaeda-affiliated radicals that included two suicide bombing cells.

“They were ready but waiting for an order which fortunately didn’t come,” he said of the militants.

While Al-Turki declined to identify which facilities the suspects were allegedly targeting, he said one of the suspects, a Saudi national, was employed by a private Saudi industrial security company responsible for protecting oil sites and other critical infrastructure.

“As an employee, he had access to all of those sites and to current plans for protecting them,” he said.

He did not dispute news reports indicating that the plotters had been exchanging e-mails with a man in Yemen believed to be a senior leader of Al Qaeda in the Arabian Peninsula, or AQAP.

According to reports, members of the two suicide cells had been exchanging coded e-mails about the planned strikes with a man in Yemen whom the accounts called “Abu Hajer.”

One Saudi official said “Abu Hajer” is believed to be a nom de guerre for Said Al Shihri, a Saudi leader of AQAP.

He was released from the Guantanamo Bay detention center in December 2007 after being held there for six years, and he was taken to a Saudi rehabilitation center from which he disappeared. (ANI)

Bad coffee gets a bashing

Here’s something you’ll never see in writing. In fact, so deep and dark is the conspiracy to keep a lid on this that I may well be signing my death-warrant.

Here goes: why is Melbourne’s coffee so bad? I mean, seriously. It goes from the disgustingly bad variety served in the cafes of Lygon Street’s Little Italy to the gut-wrenching, undrinkably bad at Melbourne Airport. And this isn’t ‘bad’ as in ‘good’. Sometimes bad is just bad, and the stuff being served by this city’s poncy baristas is really bad.

How can you put it kindly? What passes for coffee on either side of the Yarra is – like 99 per cent of coffee served elsewhere in Australia – simply disgusting. It’s ferociously, unapologetically bitter and the coffee beans have been nuked beyond recognition by a smart-arse punk banging away at an oversized, imported coffee machine.

And don’t get me started on the milk – heated and re-heated to a point where it just wants to curdle up and die.

In short – it’s terrible, an insult to anyone with even a passing interest in what they drink. In fact, forget waterboarding: if we had sent a couple of young Melburnians with faux-Polynesian tattoos to serve up espressos in Guantanamo Bay, Osama bin-Laden would be in US hands.

All this, of course, is undeniable. In fact, that this city’s coffee is crap is the most self-evident of truths this country will ever have to confront. Just taste the stuff: there is simply no dialectical wiggle-room.

Why is it, then, that popular perception is the exact opposite? How could it be that Melbourne people swan around the country boring anyone they meet with stories of how great their coffee is and – by implication – how oh-so-very European we all are?

This is worse than omerta, because at least a culture of silence would ignore the problem. We’ve actually talked it up to the point that we’ve convinced ourselves black is white.

Sadly, the suppression of truth has come from an unholy alliance between two separate, but very powerful, social forces.

On the one hand there are Melbourne’s self-appointed Italian characters. These are the old restaurateurs who know how to camp-up the hand-waving when the cameras are rolling, and who have a very simple take on society. Before they opened their restaurants in the 1950s – they argue – Australian society had nothing to offer. The culinary culture was as boring as bat-poo.

Then there’s the self-flagellating, Anglo-Celtic upper middle-class. These are people who feel that their own cultural antecedents are somehow not quite exotic enough, so they seek out anything they suspect might have some ethnic authenticity. These are the patrons of the hand-waving restaurateurs, and when they’re told that the coffee they’re been served is the real-Italian-deal, they believe it.

And why wouldn’t they? On the cafes’ wall there are photos of buxom girls on vespas speeding through the streets of Rome, and the guy at the bar is really rude. It’s our little piece of Italy. So authentic – so Melbourne.

Why is it, then, that an Italian landing in Melbourne today would throw up after drinking a locally brewed coffee? And why would he laugh to see it being served in a glass?

There’s a truth here that dares not speak its name. The loud, obnoxious-but-so-Italian restaurateurs who flood local media with quotable quotes are – shock! horror! – just Australians with accents. Few of them had sold coffee before emigrating and when the espresso machines started to arrive they had to work out how to use them. It was trial and error.

That trial an error is continuing and Melbourne’s coffee drinkers are the guinea-pigs.

But why is it so? Why can you land at Fiumicino Airport and be served beautifully light, sweet and delicate macchiato while Australian baristas give every coffee-bean they encounter the Lucas Heights treatment?

What’s required is brutal honesty and the end of myth-making. Italian-Australians – starting with loud-mouthed cafe owners – need to be honest and recognise that in many aspects of their lives there is no continuity with Italian traditions. And the bored, Anglo-Celtic establishment should stop embracing these charlatans in its sad and insulting attempt to appear more European.

The only exotic side to Melbourne’s cafe culture is how many people want to wish it into existence.

‘Unfazed’ Mullah Omar appoints two new deputies following Baradar’s arrest

Kabul, Mar. 24 (ANI): Afghan Taliban leader Mullah Omar has named two new deputies to succeed his arrested military chief, Mullah Abdul Ghani Baradar.

The BBC quoted a senior Taliban leader as saying that the aim to appoint Abdul Qayuum Zakir and Mullah Akhtar Mohammad Mansoor is to send across a message that “one arrest will not affect our movement.”

Mullah Baradar was arrested in Karachi in February in what was seen as a blow to the militants as they gear up to face a major NATO offensive this year.

Earlier the Taliban denied Mullah Baradar’s arrest by Pakistani authorities but later a Taliban spokesman confirmed it.

“Such arrests will not deter us from carrying on our activities,” he told Newsweek.

The role of both new Taliban deputies will be vital at a time when the US is pouring in thousands of men as part of a troop “surge” before a withdrawal begins next year.

Abdul Qayuum Zakir, a former inmate at the US detention facility at Guantanamo Bay, is said to be very popular with the younger generation of Taliban fighters because of his willingness to fight on the ground beside his men.

According to reports, Zakir was detained in Guantanamo Bay until 2007 and then deported to Afghanistan before being freed in 2008.

Soon after his release, he was back amongst his old comrades and has risen swiftly up the ladder.

Mullah Akhtar Mohammad Mansoor is seen as a key behind-the-scenes leader.

Mansoor, who was part of the original Taliban leadership prior to the 9/11 attacks, has been instrumental in managing Taliban logistics and raising funds, especially from the Gulf countries. (ANI)

Habib wins damages from newspaper

An appeal court has ruled that former Guantanamo Bay detainee Mamdouh Habib was defamed by a Sydney newspaper.

Mr Habib sued the Daily Telegraph over a story about his treatment by authorities after his arrest in Pakistan in 2001.

He argued he was defamed because the story implied he knowingly made false claims about how he was treated.

In 2008 the New South Wales Supreme Court ruled in the paper’s favour, finding that he did make the false claims and the story was substantially true.

The court has overturned that decision and ruled Mr Habib is entitled to damages.

Last month the Federal Court left the way open for Mr Habib to sue the Australian Government for compensation over the way he was treated in detention.

Aafia Siddiqi’s uncle says she visited him in Islamabad to meet Taliban

Washington, Mar. 8 (ANI): The uncle of terrorism-accused Pakistani national, Dr Aafia Siddiqi, has told a New York jury that the neuroscientist visited him in Islamabad in January 2008, asking him to help her to reach the Taliban in Afghanistan.

The News quoted the New York Times as saying that S H Farooqi gave a signed affidavit to the authorities swearing that Dr Aafia visited him in January 2008.

A 12-member jury in New York convicted Dr Aafia in February this year for trying to kill US troops in Afghanistan in 2008.

According to court document, Dr. Aafia had a long involvement in Jihadi causes, even while a student at M.I.T. and, later, at Brandeis University.

The FBI had accused her of opening a post office box in 2002 in the name of Majid Khan – a suspected al-Qaeda member – who is being held in the United States military prison at Guantanamo Bay.

Court documents also show that after getting divorce from her first husband, Dr. Muhammad Amjad Khan, who is the father of her three children, she married Ammar Baluchi, the nephew of the suspected 9/11 mastermind, Khalid Shaikh Mohammad.

Dr Aafia disappeared from 2003 to 2008 and her whereabouts and those of her three children remained a mystery during this time.

While her sister Dr. Fauzia Siddiqui has attributed her disappearance to a conspiracy of Pakistani intelligence agencies under which they handed her over to the American officials, her first husband Dr. Amjad Khan claims that Dr Aafia was hiding in Pakistan all this while.

Meanwhile, Pakistani Prime Minister Yousuf Raza Gilani and opposition leader Nawaz Sharif have promised to push for the release of Dr Aafia, who they described as “daughter of the nation”.

Last week, Pakistan Senate passed a resolution to demand her return to Pakistan. (ANI)

Flip-flop-flip: Military trial for 9/11 suspects?

WASHINGTON: In a potential reversal, White House advisers are close to recommending that President Barack Obama opt for military tribunals for self-professed 9/11 mastermind Khalid Sheik Mohammed and four of his alleged henchman, senior officials said.

The review of where and how to hold a 9/11 trial is not over, so no recommendation is yet before Obama and he has not made a determination of his own, officials said.

Attorney general Eric Holder decided in November to transfer the accused terrorists from Guantanamo Bay prison to New York City for civilian trials.

That was initially supported by city officials, but later opposed because of costs and security concerns. ap

Al Qaeda strategist orders kidnapping of foreigners

Melbourne, Sep 16 (ANI): Veteran al-Qaeda adviser Mustafa Hamid alias Abu Walid al-Masri, who was married to Australian Rabiah Hutchinson in Afghanistan in 2001, has issued a directive to kidnap foreign civilians, including Australians in Afghanistan, in retaliation for the capture, detention and torture of al-Qaeda and Taliban prisoners by the US and its allies.

Hamid has been detained in Iran since 2003, but remains an influential figure in the militant movement and has maintained contact with his followers through jihadist websites, despite his imprisonment.

In an edict titled “The US Soldier in Afghanistan – the first step for the release of all prisoners of the war on terror”, Hamid argues that the capture of an American soldier by Taliban forces earlier this year should be used as a precedent in a campaign of abducting Western civilians to use as bargaining chips to negotiate the release detainees.

In the document uncovered by former Australian Federal Police senior counter-terrorism intelligence analyst Leah Farrall, Hamid argues that the US has “changed the rules of the game” on the treatment of prisoners of war by its detention and torture of inmates at Guantanamo Bay and elsewhere, The Australian reports.

He says it is now time for the Afghan mujahideen to change the rules and accept the principle approved and implemented by the enemy – the abduction of civilians who have nothing to do with the battle.

Hamid writes that soldiers from foreign countries such as Australia are fair targets.

Farrall, formerly a senior counter-terrorism intelligence analyst with the AFP, who is currently completing a PhD on al-Qaeda at Monash University and specialises in unearthing al-Qaeda documents, discovered the document.
“This is one of the most important things I’ve seen for a very long time. I have not (previously) seen any senior militant figure sanction a targeted campaign in direct response to American detainee policies and I find this extremely concerning,” she said.

Hamid advocates that mass abductions should be carried out under the direction of Taliban leader Mullah Mohammed Omar in areas of Afghanistan that his troops control. (ANI)

Swedish-origin ex-Guantanamo Bay detainee held in Pak’s tribal area

London, Sep. 11 (ANI): Mehdi Ghezali, a former Guantanamo Bay detainee of Swedish origin has been arrested in Pakistan.

Before being arrested at a checkpoint in the southern town of Dera Ghazi Khan, Ghezali was travelling with a group of foreigners to the South Waziristan tribal region, an al-Qaeda stronghold region, Times Online reports.

A laptop and 10,000 dollars were seized from Ghezali.

Ghezali is among three Swedes and four Turks who are now being interrogated by the Pakistani Intelligence on suspicion of entering the country illegally and to see if they have links with militants, the report adds.

According to Pakistani army sources, Ghezali had entered Pakistan via Iran.

Ghezali, 30, was arrested in December 2001 near the Tora Bora mountains in eastern Afghanistan and was handed over to the US military.

He spent more than two years at Guantanamo Bay before being released in 2004. (ANI)

Bush appointed Fed judges question Obama on terror policies

Washington, July 1 (ANI): President Barack Obama’s claims of broad executive authority to carry out the war on terror are drawing fire from an unexpected source: federal judges nominated by President George W. Bush, who asserted the sweeping powers in the first place.

In recent weeks, three different Bush appointees considering cases relating to war-on-terror detainees have rejected arguments from Obama’s Justice Department, which adopted virtually unchanged the positions the Bush administration had staked out.
In each case, according to Politico, the Bush-appointed judge said the executive branch was overstepping its authority and claiming more powers than the law allowed.

The irony, of course, is that Democrats railed against Bush for what many saw as a power grab in the months and years after the Sept. 11 attacks – when Bush and Vice President Dick Cheney asserted vast executive branch authority to wage wars in Afghanistan and Iraq and to hold prisoners in Guantanamo Bay and elsewhere.

In the years since, courts from the Supreme Court on down have begun to pare back that authority, saying in several high-profile rulings that Bush overstepped his bounds.

Since taking office, Obama has adopted many of these broad claims to executive authority as he’s inherited the war on terror from the past administration – but he is now facing some of the same legal constraints that Bush began to encounter in his closing years in office, sometimes in sharply worded decisions that show some courts have decided it’s time to rein in executive power.

In April, Judge John Bates turned aside the arguments of the Obama and Bush administrations in ruling that some prisoners at the U.S.-run Bagram Air Base in Afghanistan were entitled to challenge their detention in court if they were captured outside Afghanistan.

Earlier this month, San Francisco-based Judge Jeffrey White surprised many legal analysts when he refused to dismiss a lawsuit an alleged Al Qaeda operative and convicted terrorist, Jose Padilla, brought against former Justice Department attorney John Yoo over his alleged involvement in Bush’s decision to hold Padilla in a South Carolina Navy brig for more than three years.

And in a ruling last week, Judge Richard Leon second-guessed the Obama and Bush administrations’ claims that a Syrian detainee, Abdul Rahim Abdul Razak al-Janko, could be held at Guantanamo even though he was considered a spy by Al Qaeda and tortured at some length before he was captured by the U.S. in Afghanistan.

Several legal analysts said they doubted the judges were acting out of any desire to trip up Obama.

“I don’t think it’s partisan or personal,” said David Rivkin, a conservative attorney and lawyer for the administrations of Presidents Ronald Reagan and George H.W. Bush.

Rivkin called the rulings “bad” and “deeply violative of constitutional principles,” but he said the decisions from Bush judges were a logical outgrowth of Supreme Court decisions pushing the judiciary to assert itself.

Even after the stinging defeats, the Obama Justice Department is continuing to fight at least two of the rulings. (ANI)

Briton to take legal action over torture allegations

Briton to take legal action over torture allegationsLondon – A British man who claims that he was tortured in Bangladesh on suspicion of terrorism is taking legal action against the government over its alleged collusion with the intelligence service MI5, the government confirmed Wednesday.

The Home Office (Interior Ministry) said that lawyers representing Jamil Rahman, a former civil servant, had written to Home Secretary Jacqui Smith claiming that she colluded in assault, unlawful arrest, false imprisonment and breaches of human rights legislation.

According to The Guardian newspaper, Rahman says he was tortured over a two-year period in Bangladesh whilst two MI5 officers turned a blind eye to his treatment.

He was arrested in 2005 in connection with the suicide attacks on London’s transport network and is now living in Britain, the report said.

The Guardian said Rahman’s lawyers claim to have evidence including eyewitness testimony and medical information.

A Home Office spokeswoman said his legal team had written to the home secretary and said the government would respond “in due course.” The government denies using or condoning torture.

The claims follow accusations by former Guantanamo Bay detainee Binyam Mohamed, who said he was tortured in Pakistan and Morocco with the knowledge of MI5. He was freed in February.

Last month, Scotland Yard said it was investigating reports that the security services were complicit in the abuse of 29 prisoners, including Britons, abroad.(dpa)

Momentum in Afghanistan is with Taliban: US

Washington, May 26 (ANI): Defence Secretary Robert Gates has said the momentum in Afghanistan is with the Taliban, who are inflicting heavy American casualties and hold de facto control of parts of the country.

Gates further said American public support for the Afghan war would dissipate in less than a year unless the Obama Administration achieves “a perceptible shift in momentum.”

The Wall Street Journal quoted Gates as saying that the Obama Administration is rapidly running out of time to turn around the war.

“People are willing to stay in the fight, I believe, if they think we’re making headway. If they think we’re stalemated and having our young men and women get killed, then patience is going to run out pretty fast,” he added.

Gates, who was also Defenec Secretary during Bush’s Administration, waded into the debate over the Guantanamo Bay prison and Bush-era anti terror tactics.

He said critics of the Obama Administration’s plans to close Guantanamo and move some prisoners to the US were guilty of fear mongering.

Gates said government interrogators should be limited to the techniques contained in the Army Field Manual and barred from using harsher methods.

Gates also said Iran was harming US interests in Afghanistan by sending weapons to the Taliban and other armed groups.

He expressed particular concern that Tehran might step up its shipments of explosively formed penetrators, powerful roadside bombs capable of punching through even the strongest armour. (ANI)

Lankan refugee camps are not simply temporary shelters

Toronto, Mar 23 (ANI): Thousands of Sri Lankan Tamil families in the country’s south, who were divided for years by the war and finally able to see relatives in the north, are now learning that the government camps are not simply temporary shelters for those who have lost their homes.

The network, which spans the country’s north, holds almost 300,000 people, and is designed to separate the Liberation Tigers of Tamil Eelam fighters from the civilian population using former Tamil Tiger cadres as “witnesses.”

More than 40 per cent of those in the camps are children, according to surveys by UNICEF, and they will stay until their parents have been screened for Tiger affiliations.

The detainees are not just those who have fled the violence, but the entire civilian population of the northeastern conflict area, which is being swept clean of inhabitants by the military, Globe and Mail reports.

Sri Lankan officials say they face a problem: The LTTE effectively militarized large parts of the Tamil population in the breakaway state of Tamil Eelam, in the northern strip of land it controlled until its defeat on Monday.

Fighters, officers and trained suicide bombers are embedded in the civilian population, and include some younger teenagers and older children, so the screening process is bound to be complex, perhaps impossible.

To accomplish the task, they have created an elaborate hierarchy of 41 locations, most of them in remote northern areas, with no access to guests, family members or journalists, and with only restricted contact for aid agencies, the paper reports.

The Sri Lankan Government calls the first and largest tier of camps “welfare villages” and they currently house as many as 280,000 people, some in abandoned schools, but most in cities of tents provided by the United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees.

The largest of these is a cluster of camps north of Vavuniya, in the centre of the island’s north, containing more than 200,000 people over an area of 16 square kilometres.

The government had intended to put all Tamils in this complex, but abandoned that plan because “it got so large that it is swimming” in its waste, a health official said. Now there are subsidiary camps of 11,0000 detainees near Jaffna, in the far north, and of 6,000 in Pulmoddai, in the northeast, Globe and Mail reports.

Second are the “rehabilitation centres,” high-security facilities where suspected Tamil Tiger fighters, mainly male, are held indefinitely.

Military officials said that these centres, which hold almost 3,000 suspected fighters, are used to extract information about the identities of other rebels, and to prepare known fighters to identify former comrades in “screening” operations. It is not known what forms of interrogation are used here, the paper reports.

Finally, there is a very high-security facility on the south coast of Sri Lanka near Galle, where suspected senior LTTE officials and supporters are held and interrogated. One official, a junior officer involved with the screening process, said: “This is our Guantanamo Bay.”

All civilians are required to move into basic camps and are kept until they can be removed to “screening points” where they can be positively identified as non-combatants by panels of witnesses – Tamil Tiger officers who have been “rehabilitated” at tougher, more secure camps. (ANI)

Osama’s cook coming to New York to face charges in embassy bombing

Washington, May 22 (ANI): Al Qaeda chief Osama Bin Laden’s former Tanzanian cook is coming to New York to face charges for his role in the bombings of two U.S. embassies in East Africa 11 years ago, President Obama announced Thursday.

Ahmed Kalfan Ghailani will be moved from Guantanamo Bay as part of Obama’s controversial order to shut down the U.S. terror prison camps in Cuba over the objections of many lawmakers from both parties.

“Preventing this detainee from coming to our shores would prevent his trial and conviction,” Obama said in a Washington speech.

The baby-faced and diminutive Ghailani – known as “Foopie” – faced a bounty of 25 million dollars when he was nabbed in July 2004 after a 12-hour shootout at an Al Qaeda safe house in Pakistan.

Ghailani rose from an Al Qaeda “rank-and-file soldier” in Afghanistan before 9/11 to become Bin Laden’s cook and his most prolific passport forger and travel agent, according to a Directorate of National Intelligence biography.

Four other plotters were convicted in federal trials in the city for the Aug. 7, 1998, bombings of U.S. embassies in Dar es Salaam, Tanzania, and Nairobi, Kenya, which killed a dozen Americans and 211 others.

Ghailani was among the original 22 “most wanted” terrorists designated by ex-President Bush’s FBI after 9/11, even though the government admits he “was not directly involved in operational planning” by Al Qaeda. (ANI)

One in seven freed GITMO detainees have returned to terrorism: Pentagon report

Washington, May 21 (ANI): About one in seven of the 534 prisoners released from the Guantanamo Bay dentition center in Cuba, has returned to terrorism or militant activity, an unreleased Pentagon report has claimed.

This conclusion could strengthen critics’ arguments against the transfer or release of any more detainees as part of President Obama’s plan to shut down the facility.

Past Pentagon reports on Guantanamo recidivism have been met with skepticism from civil liberties groups and criticized for their lack of detail.

The Pentagon promised in January that the latest report would be released soon, but Bryan Whitman, a Pentagon spokesman, said this week that the findings were still “under review.”

Pentagon officials said there had been no pressure from the Obama White House to suppress the report about the Guantanamo detainees who had been transferred abroad under the Bush administration.

The report is the subject of numerous Freedom of Information Act requests from news media organizations, and Whitman said he expected it to be released shortly.

The report, a copy of which was made available to The New York Times, says the Pentagon believes that 74 prisoners released from Guantanamo have returned to terrorism or militant activity, making for a recidivism rate of nearly 14 percent.

Among the 74 former prisoners that the report says are again engaged in terrorism, 29 have been identified by name by the Pentagon, including 16 named for the first time in the report. The Pentagon has said that the remaining 45 could not be named because of national security and intelligence-gathering concerns.

Terrorism experts said a 14 percent recidivism rate was far lower than the rate for prisoners in the United States, which, they said, can run as high as 68 percent three years after release. ANI)

GITMO camp X-ray exposes MI5′s secret deals to recruit informants

London, May 6 (ANI): Britain’s MI5 secretly tried to hire British men held in Guantanamo Bay and other US prison camps by promising to protect them from their American captors and help secure their return home to the United Kingdom, The Independent has learnt.

One of the men, Richard Belmar, was told he would be paid “well” for his services if he was willing to work undercover for MI5.

A second detainee, Bisher Al Rawi, was told that if he agreed to work for the security service he would be “freed within months”.

Three other detainees were threatened with rendition and harsh detention regimes if they did not co-operate with their British and American interrogators.

But MI5 failed to honour the promises made by its agents, a former agent has told The Independent.

The source, who is close to the MI5 officers who conducted the interviews, has confirmed that “assurances” had been given to the British men while they were held in Pakistan, Afghanistan and Guantanamo Bay.

He said that senior officers in London had cleared the actions of its own officers but later reneged on the promises. This is backed up by sworn testimony lodged in the High Court from the former detainees.

The clandestine recruitment operation was being pursued at the same time that the British Government was supporting American claims that those held at the notorious US naval base represented a serious threat to world security.

All five men, and two other former Guantanamo detainees, are seeking compensation from the Foreign Office, the Home Office, MI5 and MI6 and the Attorney General. (ANI)

Majority Americans believe Obama’s foreign policies are good

Washington, Apr 25 (ANI): Few Americans are actually at odds with many of President Barack Obama’s specific positions, despite majority of them believing that the Obama Administration has performed its best in foreign policy in its first 100 days.

The latest FOX News poll finds a majority of Americans (55 percent) think Barack Obama has done the right thing in his diplomatic dealings with unfriendly dictators like Hugo Chavez and Fidel Castro.

About one third (34 percent) take the opposing view that Obama’s behavior was too “chummy” and therefore signalled US weakness. Almost seven in ten Republicans (69 percent) however, believe his behaviour toward these leaders has been too friendly.

Half of Americans (50 percent) think the president himself believes the US is engaged in a global war or terrorism, although just under four in ten Americans think he does not see such a conflict (37 percent) and another 13 percent remain unsure.

Again, there is partisan division on this issue, as a 52 percent majority of Republicans thinks Obama does not believe in a global war on terrorism.

Opinion Dynamics Corp. conducted the national telephone poll for FOX News among 900 registered voters from April 22 to April 23, 2009. The poll has a 3-point error margin.

There is also slim majority disapproval (52 percent) of the Obama Administration’s action to release White House memos detailing how the CIA interrogated top Al Qaeda members. Based on that release, slightly more Americans feel less safe (39 percent) than safer (34 percent).

With regard to the status of the Guantanamo Bay military prison (where allegations about harsher techniques are centered), a 53 percent majority opposes closing its doors, with one-third (33 percent) supporting a shutdown. (ANI)

Kristen Dalton crowned Miss USA 2009

LAS VEGAS: Miss North Carolina USA Kristen Dalton was crowned Miss USA 2009 on Sunday, beating out 50 other beauty queens
in the live pageant
Dalton is Miss USA
Miss North Carolina Dalton blows a kiss to a TV camera after being crowned Miss USA 2009 in Las Vegas. (Reuters Photo)
More Pictures
televised from Planet Hollywood Resort and Casino in Las Vegas.

The 22-year-old aspiring motivational speaker edged out first runner-up Miss California USA Carrie Prejean and second runner-up Miss Arizona USA Alicia-Monique Blanco.

Contestants from all 50 states and the District of Columbia competed in the pageant, aired live on NBC. Contestants were judged by their performance in swimsuit and evening gown modelling contests and their responses to a question asked onstage; unlike the rival Miss America pageant, Miss USA contestants do not perform a talent.

The top 15 contestants worked the stage in white string bikinis designed by pop star
Jessica Simpson’s swimwear line. Rocker Kevin Rudolf performed his song “Let it Rock,” followed by The Veronicas, who performed their single “Untouched” as the top 10 beauties showed off their choice of glittering evening gowns.

Dalton’s title comes with a year’s use of a New York apartment, a public relations team, a two-year scholarship at the New York Film Academy and an undisclosed salary.

She also will go to the Bahamas in August to compete in the Miss Universe pageant, where American beauties haven’t been lucky in recent years. Both Miss USA 2008 Crystle Stewart and her predecessor, Rachel Smith, fell on stage during the evening gown competition, becoming accidental YouTube stars.

Asked about the tumble during the show on Sunday, Stewart said it was a lesson in bouncing back from defeat.

“I think it was a true test of my character,” said the 27-year-old Texan, who worked to raise awareness for breast cancer as she travelled the globe promoting the beauty contest.

If there is a YouTube moment from Sunday’s show, it may be Miss California’s answer to a question about legalizing same-sex marriage. The tall blonde stumbled some before giving an answer that appeared to please the pageant audience.

“We live in a land where you can choose same-sex marriage or opposite marriage,” Prejean said. “And you know what, I think in my country, in my family, I think that I believe that a marriage should be between a man and a woman. No offence to anybody out there, but that’s how I was raised.”

Some in the audience cheered, others booed. The pageant had enjoyed a scandal-free year until earlier this month, when Miss Universe 2008 Dayana Mendoza was skewered for a blog posting from a trip to Guantanamo Bay. The entry described having “aloooot of fun” at a base that houses the notorious military prison; it was later deleted from the pageant’s Web site.

The contest, which is owned by NBC and reality TV mogul Donald Trump, was hosted by “Access Hollywood” co-anchor Billy Bush and Nadine Velazquez of the NBC sitcom “My Name is Earl.” This year’s judges included “Saturday Night Live” cast member Kenan Thompson, “Dancing with the Stars” winner Kelly Monaco and gossip blogger Perez Hilton.

GITMO inmate is first to give an interview from inside

London, Apr.15 (ANI): A Guantanamo inmate captured in Afghanistan at the age of 14 has become the first to give an interview from inside the camp.

Chad terror suspect Al-Guarani is one of a number of Guantanamo prisoners whose release has been ordered by an American judge. Evidence that he had fought with al-Qaeda in Afghanistan was found to be “unreliable”.

According to The Telegraph, Al-Guarani spoke to a former Guantanamo inmate who works for al-Jazeera, the international Arabic television channel.

Al-Guarani said he had refused to leave his cell because he “not been granted his rights”, such as to interact with other inmates and eat “normal food”.

A group of six soldiers wearing protective gear and helmets came into the cell, he said.

“They had a thick rubber or plastic baton they beat me with. They emptied out about two canisters of tear gas on me. After I stopped talking, and tears were flowing from my eyes, I could hardly see or breathe. They then beat me again to the ground. One of them held my head and beat it against the ground. I started screaming to his senior ‘See what he’s doing, see what he’s doing’ [but] his senior started laughing and said ‘He’s doing his job’, said al Guarani.

“He broke one of my front teeth. Of course they didn’t film the blood, they filmed my back so it doesn’t show.”

Journalists who visit the Guantanamo Bay facility in Cuba have to sign a document agreeing not to speak to the prisoners.

He is currently held in Camp Iguana, a transitional camp for those whose release has been ordered where they are given greater privileges, including the telephone calls.

Amnesty International says that at least four Guantanamo captives were under 18 when they were captured, and some were as young as 13. (ANI)

CIA no longer using secret prisons: US spy chief

In a U-turn to George Bush’s policies to deal with terror, the CIA has shut down its secret prisons where the US spy agency used to interrogate suspected terrorists using harsh techniques, including waterboarding.

In a letter to the agency’s employees, CIA Director Leon Panetta has said that he informed the US Congress of its detention policies, following an executive order by President Barack Obama this January to close down the secret detention sites as well as the camp at Guantanamo Bay in Cuba.

The US spy chief said in his letter, issued on Thursday, that the Central Intelligence Agency had discontinued “using contract employees to conduct interrogations” also.

“CIA no longer operates detention facilities or black sites and has proposed a plan to decommission the remaining sites. I have directed our agency personnel to take charge of the decommissioning process and have further directed that the contracts for site security be promptly terminated,” he wrote.

The now-empty “black sites” in unidentified countries were used to detain suspects who were captured in the “war on terrorism” launched by former American President George W Bush after the September 11 attacks.

However, Panetta said that the CIA would continue to question suspects, using “a dialogue style of questioning that is fully consistent with interrogation approaches authorized and listed in the Army Field Manual” which bans harsh methods, the US media reported.

“CIA officers do not tolerate, and will continue to promptly report, any inappropriate behaviour or allegations of abuse. That holds true whether a suspect is in the custody of an American partner or a foreign liaison service,” he said.