Nearly half of Japan’s voters don’t support any party

(Reuters) – Nearly half of Japan’s voters do not support any political party, according to a poll released on Monday, a sign of mounting frustration with both ruling and opposition parties ahead of a mid-year election.

World | Japan

Hoping to attract some of these dissatisfied voters, former finance minister Kaoru Yosano and other opposition Liberal Democratic Party (LDP) rebels are aiming to start a new party this week, but it is unclear how much support they can attract.

Prime Minister Yukio Hatoyama’s Democratic Party needs to win an outright majority in the mid-year upper house poll to avoid a policy stalemate, but voter concerns about his leadership skills, messy decision-making and funding scandals are dimming that prospect.

The survey by the Yomiuri newspaper showed voter support for the ruling Democrats fell to 24 percent and that for the main opposition Liberal Democratic Party dropped to 16 percent.

The tiny pro-reform opposition Your Party was gaining support and came in third in the poll but still lagged with support of just 4 percent.

When asked which party they plan to cast their ballots for in the upper house election, 44 percent said they had not decided.

With many disappointed by the premier’s leadership skills, support for Hatoyama’s government dropped to 33 percent, down 8 points from last month’s survey.

The survey showed 49 percent said Hatoyama should quit if he cannot resolve a row with Washington over a military base by a self-imposed deadline of end of May, exceeding 43 percent who said there was no such need.

That contrasted with recent polls showing fewer voters think Hatoyama should resign over a funding scandal.

Hatoyama said last week he has a plan to resolve the feud with security ally Washington over the relocation of a U.S. marine base on Okinawa island, but he said the time was not ripe to reveal it and dismissed questions about whether failure might force him to resign.

(Reporting by Yoko Nishikawa)

Obama identified with Hitler, Stalin

Washington, Sep.19 (ANI): Even as thousands of people packed the streets of Washington on Friday to protest against government spending, some of the agitators likened President Barack Obama to Nazi dictator Adolf Hitler.

According to a CBS report, most of those would have called themselves “patriots” arguing that their government was betraying traditional principles.

Steve Butler, a physician from Indiana was handing out copies of the Constitution. “If you read the quotes of Thomas Jefferson, these guys were conservatives and they said that the control should be with the people and not with the big government.”

There were plenty of signs identifying Obama with Hitler, or Stalin, that questions his citizenship, that seems to celebrate the death of a famous liberal.

But perhaps what most united these protesters was a broader discontent: a sense that they are not being heard, that their interests, and the national interests, are in the hands of a few. (ANI)

Porn as bad as guns for kids, says Oz politician

Melbourne, September 10 (ANI): A senior member of the Liberal Party of Australia has warned against children’s exposure to pornography at home, saying viewing of the restricted material is as dangerous as guns for kids.

Scott Morrison suggested that laws should be introduced Down Under forbidding parents from letting their kids watch the explicit content.

“It is not acceptable to knowingly or negligently expose a child to pornographic material. To do so in my view is child abuse, ” News.com.au quoted Morrison as telling Federal Parliament.

“Even those who would defend an adult’s right to porn would surely not oppose any restriction or sanction placed on parents who knowingly or negligently expose their children to this abuse,” he added.

The 41-year old also said that porn should be treated like dangerous firearms and kept under lock and key to protect youngsters from its risks, that include developing sexually deviant tendencies, committing sexual offences and having difficulties with intimate relationships.

Morrison said: “Any ammunition must be stored in a locked and separate container, it must be put in a locked receptacle which is very solid, and failure to meet these requirements attracts a jail sentence.

“If we can protect our children from guns then we should also be aware of the loaded gun that is lying around in the homes of thousands of Australians on their computer, on their coffee table, in their bathroom or in their bookcase.” (ANI)

Is Katie Green dating Lib Dem MP Lembit Opik?

London, July 5 (ANI): Brit model Katie Green seems to be dating Liberal Democrat MP Lembit Opik.

The curvy beauty was spotted enjoying a cosy meal with Lembit, ex-fianc‚ of Cheeky Girls Gabriela Irimia, in London on Thursday.

According to a friend, the two met at a party two months ago.

“They’re very close and she’s smitten,” News of the World quoted the pal as saying.

“They’ve been on several dates. She finds him witty and charming,” the pal added. (ANI)

Australia to hold ‘Harmony March’ in solidarity with Indian students

Dharamsala, July 4 (ANI): Australian lawmaker Michael Danby has said that Australia will hold a ‘Harmony March’ in Melbourne in solidarity with Indian students on July 12.

Talking to reporters here on Friday, Danby, who is heading a six-member Australian parliamentarian delegation said, “We are joining the premier of Victoria in a march to express the views of the overwhelming majority of Australians condemning these attacks. On July 12 something called the “Harmony March” which will be taking place in Melbourne…will be a public expression of the vast majority of Australians…about these attacks on Indian students.”

He also condemned the unending spate of attacks on Indian students in Australia recently.

“We want to react very strongly to these attacks on Indian students, because it is not the way of the Australians…it’s not Australia, all and all,” he said.he group of Australian lawmakers arrived in Dharamsala on Wednesday to meet the exiled Tibetan leader, the Dalai Lama, and representatives of Tibet’s government-in-exile.

The six-member delegation comprises, Labour lawmakers Michael Danby and Melissa Parke, Liberal lawmaker Peter Slipper, Independent Senator Nick Xenophon and Greens Senators Scott Ludlam and Sarah Hanson-Young.

The delegation are due to stay in Dharamsala till July 6. They are is accompanied by a handful of lawyers, journalists and activists.

The delegation met the Dalai Lama and sought greater access to Tibet for parliamentarians from across the world and media.

“We want that a group of Australian parliamentarians like European and Indian parliamentarians be allowed to visit Lhasa in Tibet, we want to (see) with our own eyes the condition of Tibetan people. We have told this to the Chinese authorities and we hope in good faith that they will respond to it,” said Danby. (ANI)

Blair urged Brown to hold Iraq war probe secretly

London, June 21 (ANI): British Prime Minister Gordon Brown decided to hold the independent inquiry into the Iraq war behind the closed doors because he was urged by his predecessor Tony Blair to do so, The Observer has claimed.

Blair was reportedly afraid of a “show trial” that he dreaded the prospect of giving evidence in public and under oath about the use of intelligence and about his numerous private discussions with US President George Bush over plans for war.

The report says that Blair, who resisted pressure for a full public inquiry while he was prime minister, deliberately didn’t express his view in person to Brown because he feared it might leak out.

Instead, messages on the issue were relayed through others to Sir Gus O’Donnell, the cabinet secretary, who conveyed them to Brown in the days leading up to the announcement of the inquiry last week.

A Downing Street spokesman, however, said: “This was a decision for the current prime minister, not for Tony Blair. We have always been clear that we consulted a number of people before announcing the commencement of the inquiry, including former government figures. We are not going to get into the nature of those discussions.”

The paper further claims that six weeks before the war, at a meeting in Washington, Bush and Blair were forced to contemplate alternative scenarios that might trigger a second UN resolution legitimising military action.

Bush told Blair that the US had drawn up a provocative plan “to fly U-2 reconnaissance aircraft, painted in UN colours, over Iraq with fighter cover.” Bush said that if Saddam fired at the planes, he would put Iraq in breach of UN resolutions and legitimise military action.

Nick Clegg, the Liberal Democrat leader, whose party opposed the war from the outset, said: “If this is true about Blair demanding secrecy, it is outrageous that an inquiry into the biggest foreign policy disaster since Suez is being muzzled to suit the individual needs of the man who took us to war.” (ANI)

BJP President Rajnath takes moral responsibility for election defeat

New Delhi, June 20 (ANI): Bharatiya Janata Party President Rajnath Singh took upon himself the responsibility for party’s defeat in the recent parliamentary elections on the first day of party’s National Executive meet which commenced here on Saturday.

Singh, however, stated in his message that there was no need to “single out one person” for the debacle.

“BJP believes in collective responsibility both in victory as well in defeat but if some people think that one person should take the responsibility then I, as the national president, take the responsibility,” Rajnath stated in a message read out by BJP General Secretary Ravi Shankar Prasad during the two-day meet.

“This concept of eternal, liberal and tolerant also represent the basic character of India.” Rajnath stated in his message.

Conceding BJP’s failure to put across party’s message clearly to the public, Rajnath stated in his message: “We could not convey the concept to the people. We could not articulate it properly and we need to articulate it in contemporary idiom.”

The party President in his message also stated that the verdict of Election 2009 was not a “nationwide defeat” for the party. (ANI)

Times poll predicts election humiliation for Labour Party

London, May 30(ANI): The British ministers’ expenses scandal has had a devastating impact on the Labour Party and on Prime Minister Gordon Brown, for according to a populus poll for The Times found the Labour’s overall position slide to 21 per cent, its lowest in polling history.

When asked how they would vote in next week’s European election, for the first time the Labour Party was placed way behind the UK Independence Party and the Tories.

With 62 per cent of those polled citing the Prime Minister as the most damaged, Gordon Brown appears to have taken the biggest hit in connection with the scandal. Only 14 per cent believe that Labour is likely to win outright in the next general election, compared with 51 per cent for the Conservatives.

Even minority parties including the Greens and the British National Party, have made striking advances in the past three weeks as the row over MPs’ allowances has engulfed all major parties.

On Friday, Elliot Morley became the most high profile Labour casualty when he announced that he would stand down as Labour MP for Scunthorpe at the next election. The former Environment Minister could face a criminal investigation after claiming 16,000 pounds in mortgage interest, 18 months after the mortgage was paid off.

“The last two weeks have been traumatic for me and I have to think of my family and health, both of which have suffered. I have never tried to duck responsibility for my mistake and have repaid the amount in full. I understand people’s anger over the whole issue of MPs’ expenses,” Elliot Morley said.

Since the Populus poll this month, the overall general election standings put the Conservatives at 41 per cent, with a two percentage gain, while Labour lost five points coming down to 21 per cent. The Liberal Democrats were on 15 per cent, down seven points.

However, a different picture emerges when people were asked how they would vote on Thursday.

The Conservatives dropped four points to 30 per cent, compared with the poll three weeks ago.

Labour dropped nine points to 16 per cent, and the Liberal Democrats fell eight points to 12 per cent.

UKIP are the beneficiaries, gaining 13 points to 19 per cent, ahead of Labour and the Liberal Democrats. The Greens rose to 10 per cent, and the BNP is up three points at five per cent. (ANI)

Labour slumps to lowest ever poll rating

London, may 15 (ANI): Britain’s ruling Labour party has slumped to its lowest ever poll rating in history in the wake of the revelations about MPs’ expenses.

According to the Daily Telegraph, a YouGov survey puts Labour on just 22 per cent, with the Conservatives on 41 per cent and the Lib Dems a close third with 19 per cent.

If the result were repeated at a general election, Tory leader David Cameron would be returned to Downing Street with a majority of 152.

In a Telegraph/YouGov poll just under a month ago, Labour was on 27 per cent, the Conservatives were on 45 per cent and the Liberal Democrats on 18.

The latest results came as the paper revealed how Justice Minister Shahid Malik was able to run up the highest expenses claim of any MP.

Since being elected in 2005, Malik has claimed 66,827 pounds over three years.

Last year, he claimed 23,083 pounds from the taxpayer for his London town house, equivalent to 443 pounds per week. (ANI)

Indian-origin Canadian MP, nannies set to testify

Ottawa/Toronto, May 12 (ANI): Indian-origin embattled Liberal MP Ruby Dhalla and the three Filipina caregivers who say they were mistreated while employed by her family are set to testify before federal politicians today.

According to the Globe and mail newspaper, Dhalla’s appearance before the Commons immigration committee will mark just the second time she has appeared in public since the story that has thrown her political career into jeopardy appeared in a Toronto newspaper last week.

Her first and only previous emergence from seclusion took place at a news conference last Friday at which she told reporters the allegations are part of a complex conspiracy to discredit her.

The caregivers who worked at her family home in Mississauga, west of Toronto, will appear by video camera, an arrangement that Dhalla’s lawyer, Howard Levitt, said would make it difficult to separate truth from fiction.

“It makes the process into a sham when [the caregivers] are not able to be directly cross-examined in the same room, but are simply shown on a screen in a different city with their supporters around them, potentially being shown off camera whatever cheat notes their advocates wish to display,” Levitt said on Monday.

The MP and her lawyer are writing off the allegations of nanny abuse surrounding her as a political conspiracy, but the country’s Immigration Minister doesn’t buy it.

The testimony of the women – Magdalene Gordo, Richelyn Tongson, and Lyle Alvarez – could help shed light on the controversy that threatens to deflate the popularity of the federal Liberals, who had topped the other political parties in recent polls.

The women, who were hired under the federal Live-in Caregiver Program for foreign workers to look after Dhalla’s mother, allege they were paid 250 dollars a week for 16-hour days of household chores – from shining shoes to shovelling snow – and cleaning the family’s chiropractic clinics.

Levitt asked Monday if it were possible that the caregivers made their allegations against the Dhallas as part of a bid to stay in Canada.

The law requires people who come to this country as caregivers to spend two of the first three years working in that capacity before they can apply for permanent residence. (ANI)

Brown set for humiliating third place in June 4 elections

London, May 10 (ANI): British Prime Minister Gordon Brown’s Labour Party is heading for a humiliating third place, trailing the Liberal Democrats as well as the Tories as it heads into the June 4 elections in 34 English local authorities.

Brown has been battered by revelations over ministerial expenses and a series of embarrassing climb-downs, which would be affecting his party’s election prospects in next month’s local elections.

An analysis for The Sunday Times by Colin Rallings and Michael Thrasher, predicted that Labour will lose all four of the councils it controls and half the 500 seats it is defending.

Senior aides have warned Brown that if Labour comes third in the elections next month, a challenge to his leadership is almost inevitable.

It comes as more Labour ministers and backbenchers faced embarrassing disclosures about taxpayer-funded expenses.

Hazel Blears, the Communities’ Secretary, faces questions over the sale of a flat she had designated as a second home. She made a profit of 45,000 pounds on the sale but paid no capital gains tax.

Work And Pensions Minister Kitty Ussher carried out a 20,000 pounds makeover on her run-down Victorian townhouse using taxpayer-funded expenses, The Times reports.

A YouGov poll for The Sunday Times puts the Tories on 43 percent, up two points on last month, with Labour down seven on 27 percent and the Liberal Democrats up two on 18 percent. It predicts Labour will get barely more than a fifth of the vote in European parliament elections, also to be held on June 4.

The prime minister suffered a new blow this weekend as a top Labour official, who had played a key role in Brown’s elevation to No 10, labelled him a “disaster”.

Peter Watt, former party general secretary, said: “At the moment the government appears to have absolutely no direction.” (ANI)

Canadian Indian origin MP cites political conspiracy behind nanny scandal

Ottawa/Toronto (Canada), May 9 (ANI): Canada’s Indian-origin Liberal MP Ruby Dhall on Friday described herself as a victim of a political conspiracy over allegations that she mistreated two Filipino caregivers.

“Who’s really behind them and who orchestrated or assisted or enabled these former employees of her brother to suddenly come forward one year after the last of them worked providing care for her mother?” the Globe and Mail quoter her lawyer, Howard Levitt, as saking.

Dhalla told reporters that her brother, Neil Dhalla, hired both the caregivers and that she understands the trials of immigrants, having been raised by an immigrant mother.

“Anyone who has ever entered our home has always been treated with love, with care, with compassion and respect,” Dhalla said at her constituency office in Brampton.

“As such, the allegations that have been brought forward against myself have come as a big shock and have been devastating to both myself and my family, friends and supporters,” she added.

She asked Canadians to “hold judgment and give my family the privacy as we go through this due process.”

Levitt said that receipts and other documents, which he held up at the conference, show not only that the allegations are false, but also that his client had nothing to do with the employment of the caregivers.

“I’m not going to permit Ruby Dhalla to deal with her brother’s issue or potentially her mother’s issue. … It’s not her issue. She was not the employer,” she said.

He called the claim that the caregivers cleaned the family’s chiropractic clinics “absolute nonsense,” and showed documents from contract cleaners who did the task daily.

“It’s easy to make allegations. … But again, the allegations are absolute nonsense,” he said.

The allegations first emerged on April 25 at a public meeting and then in a Toronto newspaper earlier this week. Two caregivers claimed they were forced to work in Dhalla’s family home, and were paid 250 dollars a week for 16-hour days of household chores.

Magdalene Gordo, 31, compared the job with slavery; Richelyn Tongson, 37, said Ms. Dhalla withheld her passport for weeks.

Dhalla stepped down from her post as the Liberal Party’s youth and multiculturalism critic this week, and a third worker came forward with similar allegations.

The executive director of Intercede, a Toronto-based agency that helps domestic workers, said she spoke with Dhalla about a year ago, after Tongson complained to them that her passport was being illegally withheld.

Agatha Mason said she called Dhalla and told her to return the caregiver’s passport or she would involve the police.

Mason said the conversation with Dhalla stood out in her mind because its tone was so unpleasant and because she was kept waiting on hold for some time.

Dhalla’s dramatic appearance comes a day after a Conservative MP announced that the two caregivers who allege they were mistreated will be called to testify before a Commons committee next week as other federal parties seize the chance to prolong Liberal woes.

Dhalla will also be asked to testify. And Ontario provincial Labour Minister Peter Fonseca and Education Minister Kathleen Wynne, who failed to act on the allegations they first heard at a meeting in Toronto on April 25, may be called. (ANI)

Canadian Commons committee asks Indian origin MP’s nannies to testify

Ottawa (Canada), May 8 (ANI): A Tory-led immigration panel has said that it would like to hear the version of Filipino immigrants who were allegedly mistreated by Indian-origin Liberal Party MP Ruby Dhalla.

The Two caregivers, who have found employment elsewhere, have charged Dhalla with mistreating them while in the employ of the family. They have now been asked to appear before a Commons committee next week and testify.

“The immigration committee is going to be studying the topic of migrant workers,” the Globe and Mail quoted Conservative MP David Tilson, the committee’s chairman, as telling reporters Thursday afternoon.

“We’ll certainly be inviting those particular nannies to come and talk about their experiences,” Tilson added.

Dhalla, who has been in seclusion since the allegations of her family’s former caregivers were made public, will also be asked to testify, Tilson said.

He also said that Ontario provincial Labour Minister Peter Fonseca and Education Minister Kathleen Wynne, who failed to act on the allegations they first heard at a meeting in Toronto on April 25, might be called.

The maids claim that Dhalla and her family had hired them under the federal Live-in Caregiver program for foreign workers to care for the MP’s mother. They say they were paid 250 Canadian dollars a week for 16-hours of household chores – from shining shoes to shovelling snow – and cleaning the family’s chiropractic clinics.

One, Magdalene Gordo, 31, compared the job with slavery; the other, Richelyn Tongson, 37, said Dhalla withheld her passport for weeks. A third unnamed woman came forward with similar allegations in a Toronto newspaper yesterday.

Few of Dhalla’s Liberal colleagues have jumped to her defence as the allegations dominated chatter in the corridors of Parliament.

The scandal threatens to knock some of the wind out of the sails of a party.

Dhalla did not talk to reporters yesterday, but released a statement saying she would ask the Commons Ethics Commissioner to investigate the allegations against her.

“I take these allegations very seriously, and believe that a transparent, third-party evaluation of the facts is required to clear my name. I have requested the Ethics Commissioner to commence a review to ensure that this matter is resolved in a fair and objective manner,” she said in a release.

The office of Ethics Commissioner Mary Dawson acknowledged that Dhalla’s request had been received, but it was unclear what, if any, jurisdiction she had to look into the matter. (ANI)

Four in five US Jews unwavering in their support for Obama: Gallup Poll

New York, May 3 (ANI): Despite fierce op-ed page debates over the Obama administration’s actions so far on Israel, Iran and the Middle East, American Jews are unwavering in their support of the new president, according to a new Gallup poll.

Tracking polls conducted through Obama’s first 100 days in office show that 79 percent of Jews approve of Obama’s performance so far, about the same percentage that voted for him last November, reports The Jerusalem Post.

Only Muslims gave Obama higher approval ratings, with 85 percent responding that they approve of the president. Respondents who identified themselves as non-religious also indicated overwhelming support, with 73 percent indicating approval.

Liberal Jews showed overwhelming support for the Democratic president, with 96 percent approving of his job performance. Among those who described themselves as moderate, 77 percent approved of Obama.

Jewish conservatives split evenly, with 45 percent approving of Obama and 45 percent disapproving.

The poll’s authors noted that Obama has taken a strong stand on the Middle East by appointing George Mitchell as a special peace envoy and dispatching Secretary of State Hillary Clinton to the region. The new administration has also signaled shifts in their approach to Iran’s nuclear program.

“It is not clear whether US Jews endorse Obama’s approach, but the fact that four in five approve of the job he is doing – consistent with their vote for him in the election – suggests they at least tolerate it,” they wrote. (ANI)

UK police trebled stop and search of Muslims in 2008

London, May 1 (ANI): British Police anti-terror stop and search powers trebled last year, prompting fears that the policy is alienating the country’s Muslim community.

According to The Independent, officers in England and Wales used Terrorism Act powers to search 124,687 people in 2007/8, up from 41,924 in 2006/7.

Nearly the Metropolitan Police, the country’s largest force, which recorded a 266 per cent increase in anti-terror stop and search, carried out 90 per cent of the searches. The Brown Government said the rise in anti-terror stop and search last year was in part linked to the failed bombings in London’s Haymarket district.

Liberal Democrat Shadow Home Secretary, Chris Huhne, said the new figures will “only fuel the fear” that anti-terror powers are being misused.

Corinna Ferguson, a lawyer for human rights group Liberty, said: “A threefold increase in anti-terror stop and search is the clearest signal that these powers are being misused. Only 6 in 10,000 people stopped were arrested for terrorism, let alone charged or convicted. And the disproportionate impact on ethic minorities is even greater than in previous years.”

Chris Grayling, the Shadow Home Secretary, said: “People will be highly suspicious about the scale of stop and search under terror laws. This will reinforce the view that anti-terror powers are used for unrelated purposes.”

Under terror and non-terror powers, 1,223,860 people and vehicles were stopped and searched by police last year, a 17 per cent increase. Most police searches are carried out under the Police and Criminal Evidence Act, which were up 9 per cent last year to 1,045,923, nearly half of which were for suspected drugs offences. It is the fourth year in a row that the number of stop and searches has increased.

Officers used powers to stop people and demand they account for themselves more than two million times last year, separate figures revealed.

Ministry of Justice statistics showed “stop and account” powers were used on 2,353,918 occasions in 2006/7, up a quarter from 1,601,196 in 2006/7. (ANI)

London police suspend second officer over G20 behaviour

London – A British police sergeant has been suspended following the emergence of video footage of him apparently hitting a female protestor during the April 1 G20 summit demonstrations, the BBC reported Wednesday. The officer is the second to be temporarily removed from his post since the demonstrations pending an investigation by the Independent Police Complaints Commission (IPCC).

In the latest video, the officer is seen to first hit the woman in the face as part of his efforts to restrain a crowd of protestors, and then take out his baton and strike her lower body when she confronts him to complain over the first strike.

A spokesman for London’s Metropolitan Police said that “the officer has been identified and suspended pending further investigation. The officer works as a sergeant in the territorial support group.”

The IPCC is already investigating the death of Ian Tomlinson, a newspaper vendor who died shortly after being knocked to the ground by an officer during the protests, although Tomlinson was not believed to have taken part in the demonstration.

The conduct of the police during the G20 protests has been widely called into question since the event, with accusations over the infringement of civil rights being made.

Shami Chakrabati, director of the human rights group Liberty was quoted by the BBC as saying over the latest case that it was difficult to understand what justified “a gargantuan police officer assaulting a smaller woman for having the audacity to complain.”

A spokesman for the opposition Liberal Democrat party called for a full-scale inquiry over the event. (dpa)

Canadian vote could decide carbon tax’s future

British Columbia campaign officially starts

* Seen as test on economy and carbon tax

* Candidates must compete with NHL playoffs

By Allan Dowd

VANCOUVER, British Columbia, April 14 (Reuters) – Politicians on Canada’s Pacific Coast hit the campaign trail on Tuesday for the start of a provincial election that could decide the fate of North America’s first comprehensive carbon tax.

British Columbia is the first province to hold an election since Canada slid into recession, although polls indicate the governing Liberal Party is headed for another victory over the New Democratic Party when voters cast their ballots on May 12.

NDP leader Carole James called on voters to punish Premier Gordon Campbell’s Liberals for mishandling the economic downturn, which has pushed unemployment in the province’s largely resource-based economy to 7.4 percent.

“British Columbia has had the worst job losses in the country. We need a change,” James told a rally near Vancouver.

The Liberals, who have governed the province since 2001, say the New Democrats mismanaged British Columbia’s finances when the economy was doing well in the 1990s and cannot be trusted to handle it now when times are tough.

“British Columbians know this election is critical to their future and that the progress we have made could all be lost in a heartbeat if they make the wrong choice on May 12,” Campbell said in a written statement.

A survey released by research firm Mustel Group showed the right-of-center Liberals with 52 percent support among decided voters, compared with 35 percent for the left-leaning NDP and 12 percent for the Green Party.

The campaign has created an unusual dilemma for the province’s environmental activists. They have traditionally sided with the New Democrats but now object to the NDP’s plans to scrap the carbon tax launched by the Liberals last year.

The tax applies to nearly all fossil fuels, including gasoline and home heating fuel, starting at C$10 per tonne of carbon emissions in 2008 and increasing by C$5 a tonne annually for four years.

The tax became a lightning rod for criticism when it was launched in July, when energy prices were already at record highs and drivers began paying an additional 2.41 Canadian cents on a litre of gasoline (about 9.13 cents per U.S. gallon).

The NDP’s “Axe the Tax” campaign coincided with a rise in the polls that briefly had them neck and neck with the Liberals in November, garnering particular support in rural areas of the province.

The NDP plans to replace the carbon tax with other caps on emissions aimed at industrial sources, but environmental groups complain that will do little to reduce greenhouse gasses and could end up costing jobs.

British Columbia is already part of the Western Climate Initiative, a coalition of U.S. states and Canadian provinces that have agreed to adopt a cap and trade system for carbon emissions starting in 2012.

Candidates from both main parties will also have to compete for voters attention with a high-profile, non-political distraction: the Vancouver Canucks begin their National Hockey League playoffs this week in a quest for the Stanley Cup.

($1=$1.21 Canadian) (Reporting Allan Dowd, editing by Rob Wilson)

Controversy in Britain over death of man at G20 protest

London – British politicians and civil rights groups Wednesday called for a criminal inquiry into how a 47-year-old man died from a heart attack on the fringes of anti-Group of 20 (G20) demonstrations in London after a police encounter last week.

Video footage published Wednesday on the website of the Guardian newspaper showed Ian Tomlinson walking with his back to a group of police officers, hands in his pockets, when a helmeted officer lunges at him from behind.

Tomlinson, who was not protesting, is seen falling heavily to the ground and complaining to the officers before being helped to his feet by passers-by on April 1, the eve of the G20 summit.

Tomlinson, a newspaper vendor, walked on, but collapsed with a heart attack shortly afterwards near the Bank of England, where the demonstrations had taken place and protestors were still milling around.

The Independent Police Complaints Commission (IPCC) watchdog is investigating the incident, but the opposition Liberal Democrats Wednesday demanded a criminal inquiry.

“There must be a full-scale criminal investigation. The officer concerned and the other officers shown in the video must immediately come forward,” said the party’s justice spokesman, David Howarth, Wednesday.

He said the footage, recorded by a New York fund manager in London’s financial district showed a “sickening and unprovoked attack” by police.

The family of the dead man also asked for “answers” and called for witnesses of the incident, stressing that Tomlinson, a keen football fan, would never have taken part in any political demonstration.

Scotland Yard has said it would “not be appropriate” to comment while the IPCC investigation was continuing.(dpa)

Moldovans protesting Communist vote win break into parliament

Chisinau – Hundreds of Moldovan students irate at a recent Communist win in national elections broke into the parliament building on Tuesday, breaking windows and setting furniture on fire.

Police initially used water cannon in an attempt to control the crowd in the central districts of the Moldovan capital. More than than 10,000 protestors had gathered in the centre by mid-afternoon with more arriving.

Police by mid-afternoon had apparently abandoned their defence of government buildings in the centre of the city. At least 10 policemen were injured in fights with the crowd.

One group of students tore the front door of the residence of the Moldovan President, and set it on fire, according to eyewitnesses.

Some youth during the chaos chanted “Moldova has awoken,” “We want to join Europe!” and “We want to join Romania!”

European Union and Romanian flags were visible hanging from windows of both the parliament building, and the Presidential residence.

Paper and debris littered courtyards in front of both buildings, as students hurled contents of government offices out onto the footpath.

One group of protestors threw rocks at Yury Roscu, leader of Communist-supporting Christian Democrat party, as they looked out the crowd from the seventh floor of the parliament building. The rocks failed to reach him.

Julian Fruntasu, a spokesman for the opposition Liberal Democratic Party of Moldova (LDPM), told the Infotag news agency the protests were justified “because the Communists lost the elections.”

But other opposition leaders said the students were “acting on their own”, without political party involvement.

Moldova’s Communist Party headed by President Vladimir Voronin captured some 55 per cent of popular support in Sunday voting for a new parliament.

Three opposition parties also were on track to place deputies in the legislature, but eight other parties failed to attract enough support to gain an MP slot.

International monitoring groups including the Organization for Security and Cooperation in Europe (OSCE) said the vote was generally democratic, with few violations of election law.

But opposition parties in the wake of the election claimed the vote was inherently unfair, as the election campaign was conducted with strong Communist party control of major media and regional governments. (dpa)