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FCC Rules Against Comcast for Blocking Web Access
Democracy Now - 4 Aug 2008
In a landmark decision, the Federal Communications Commission has ruled that cable giant Comcast violated federal policy when it blocked internet traffic for some subscribers and has ordered the company to change the way it manages its network. We speak with Craig Aaron, the communications director for Free Press, the group that helped bring the complaint to the FCC.
Anthrax Mystery: Questions Raised over Whether Government Is Framing Dead Army Scientist for 2001 Attacks
Democracy Now - 4 Aug 2008
The FBI’s prime suspect in the October 2001 anthrax letters case died last week in an apparent suicide. Bruce Ivins was an elite government scientist at the biodefense research lab in Fort Detrick, Maryland. He was among the nation’s top experts on the military use of anthrax. But many of his colleagues have expressed deep skepticism over the FBI’s claims. We speak to anthrax expert Dr. Meryl Nass and blogger Glenn Greenwald.
Headlines for August 4, 2008
Democracy Now - 4 Aug 2008
CDC Underestimated Number of New AIDS Cases by 40%, World Health Organization: AIDS Epidemic Is Far from Over, 16 Chinese Police Officers Killed in Attack in Xinjiang, Report: Evidence Against Anthrax Suspect Largely Circumstantial, Ex-FBI Official: White House Wanted to Blame Anthrax on al-Qaeda, FCC Upholds Net Neutrality; Rules Against Comcast, Obama Drops Blanket Opposition to Offshore Oil Drilling, McCain Suggests Adopting Iraq Tactics to Tackle Urban Crime, Hospitals Increasingly Deport Sick Immigrants, Wal-Mart Suggests Obama Victory Would Lead to Unionization, Unemployment Rate Jumps to 5.7%; GM Loses $15 Billion, Jena Six Judge Removed from Case, Egyptian Human Rights Activist Convicted, Russian Writer and Dissident Aleksandr Solzhenitsyn, 89, Dies, Black Activists to Obama: “What About the Black Community?”
Gaza organizations caught in the crossfire
Electronic Intifada - 4 Aug 2008
rr r r rr r rr r rr r rr r rr rrr rIn the past two weeks, the Hamas-dominated interior ministry in Gaza has closed scores of Gaza-based non-governmental organizations. According to Al Mezan Center for Human Rights in Gaza City, the Hamas-dominated government has closed 179 institutions in Gaza, including those providing services to women, children and people with disabilities. The Electronic Intifada correspondent Rami Almeghari reports.
Coal in a hole
UKWatch.net - 4 Aug 2008
A smiling child gazes up into lush green foliage ; boats float in a tranquil harbour ; a couple stand by a gate in a misty, magical landscape. These are some of the images that greet you when you visit the website of E On UK, ?Britain?s leading energy company?. The gentle giant provides energy for homes and schools, and more ? scroll down and the issues covered range from community volunteering to E On?s investment in renewable energy. Moreover, E On is taking the threat of climate change seriously, as the main sponsor of the Guardian?s ?climate change summit?, where it will convene a session examining ?the role of energy companies in finding effective ways to deliver the transition to secure, affordable and low-carbon energy?. More specifically, the website describes E On?s new ?clean coal? power station at Kingsnorth in Kent, which will replace existing plant and employ ?supercritical technology? to make it 20 per cent more efficient. To top it all, it will be built with the capacity to retrofit carbon capture and storage (CCS), a new technology designed to reduce emissions still further. E On, it seems, is trying very hard. So hard that it has recently hired Edelman, a world leader in the public relations field and the self-proclaimed inventor of ?environmental PR?. The threat ? The Camp for Climate Action, which will be coming to Kingsnorth this August. E On says it respects the right to protest, and just wants to be able to operate and provide power for its customers? homes and businesses. Seems reasonable enough ? Let?s look beyond the greenwash. Kingsnorth is a coal-fired power station. Coal may pose ?the greatest threat to the climate?, according to James Hansen, NASA scientist, but as a source of power generation it is very cheap. And there?s plenty of it, at least for the time being. So, as E On is firmly committed to maximising profits for its shareholders, it is firmly committed to coal. Which doesn?t really square with a ?low-carbon? goal. E On UK is part of the German-based E On group, which has at least eight new coal-fired power stations planned in Europe and one in the US in the next five years. This energy giant prides itself on working towards ?vertical integration? ? gaining control of the entire supply chain ? and its portfolio covers coal, oil, gas, nuclear and renewable energy. E On generates around 10 per cent of our electricity in the UK. Of that, for all the talk, renewables weigh in at a paltry 2 per cent, while coal accounts for a massive 61 per cent. E On has three coal-fired power stations including Kingsnorth, and their combined generation is greater than any other UK company?s. Since the winding down of the UK coal industry in the 1980s, the coal-fired stations built in the 1960s and 1970s have been ticking over. However, EU legislation limiting emissions means that most will have to close. It is this, rather than any aspiration to be environmentally responsible, that is driving the wave of seven proposed new coal-fired power stations in the UK. These will ensure that coal is burned for the next 50 years at least. The new plant at Kingsnorth will produce eight million tonnes of CO2 per year. ?Clean coal? is a contradiction in terms. Then we come to the big red herring that is CCS ? an as yet unproven technology whereby CO2 is sequestered and stored away. Even if it turns out to be technically feasible, it will be costly and, according to the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change, is unlikely to be commercially viable for decades ? far too late to have any impact on climate change. But this hasn?t stopped E On and companies like it from using CCS as a justification for new coal-fired power power stations such as at Kingsnorth. The alternatives are clear. If, as the government states, the UK is set to become a world-leader in technologies such as wind and wave power, the coal industry is ripe for what is known as a ?just transition? to green-collar jobs. The German environmental engineering sector has generated some 250,000 jobs in the past four years, a figure that dwarfs the 5,600 in UK coal. The revitalisation of the coal industry is a path the government and energy companies shouldn?t even be thinking of treading in the face of climate change. It is up to us to stand squarely in the way.
Ombudsman demands government fund for Equitable Life insurance and pension victims
UKWatch.net - 4 Aug 2008
A report by the parliamentary ombudsman, Ann Abraham, into the failed insurance and pension society, Equitable Life, took four years to compile. Published recently, it states that more than a million policyholders left with lower-than-expected retirement income were the victims of ?a decade of regulatory failure? by government departments and regulatory authorities. It identified 10 instances of maladministration by public authorities. The ombudsman called on the government to apologise and to set up a fund to compensate policyholders for losses. While the report does not give a figure for compensation, the Equitable Members Action Group (EMAG) says that assuming about 70 percent of policyholders can show that they have suffered a loss, this would amount to about 4.5 billion. Paul Braithwaite from EMAG welcomed the report, saying it was a ?devastating indictment? of the performance of regulators over many years. ?The UK regulators were fully aware for a decade that Equitable Life was effectively insolvent, yet they allowed the society to suck in another 20 billion in pension contributions from more than one million new investors.? The report is another political and financial crisis for Prime Minister Gordon Brown and the Labour government, which, with the Financial Services Authority, had sought to delay and rebut the original draft report with a 500-page rejoinder. Yet another of Brown?s measures?the financial services regulatory regime of which he was the architect during his 10-year stint at the Treasury?has come unstuck. Not one of the institutions involved in the regulation of the insurance industry over an 11-year period?the Treasury, the Government Actuary Department (GAD), the Department of Trade and Industry, the Financial Services Authority (FSA) and its predecessors, the auditors, Ernst & Young, and accountancy body, the Institute of Accountants in England and Wales (ICAEW)?comes out unscathed. The report reveals and confirms that the government?s real relationship with the City is one of complete subservience to the dictates of finance capital. The 246-year-old Equitable Life, the world?s oldest mutual life insurer and a venerable City institution, was a major pension provider, responsible for more than 26 billion of investors? cash. It announced in December 2000 that it would not be selling any new policies and was on the verge of collapse. This was the biggest crisis in the pensions industry. Its failure was not the result of a stock market collapse, but of its own practices. It followed a House of Lords ruling one year earlier that the society?s payment of a differential bonus to policyholders, and thus its refusal to honour promises to make minimum payments to 90,000 people who had invested in the ?guaranteed annuity rate? (GAR) pension policies, was illegal. Without the cash reserves of 1.5 billion needed to honour the agreement made when selling the policies between 1958 and1988, it was unable to find a buyer for the business. Since then, it has wound down its activities and sold off most of its operations, transferring its sales force and non-profits policies to the Halifax Building society for 1 billion in February 2001, its subsidiary University Life to Reliance Mutual in December 2006, its 1.7 billion worth of with-profits annuities to Prudential in December 2007 and 4.6 billion of its fixed pensions to Canada Life in February 2007. Its new management decided in 2001 to impose an across-the-board cut in policy values to the tune of 4 billion. The 1.5 million savers still with the society by 2001 faced low returns on their investment or a fall in the value of their policies if they moved them elsewhere. Those who continued to invest in Equitable Life?s with-profits policies saw the value of their savings slashed anyway, by more than 30 percent in three years, because there was not enough money to go around. This was also the case for some who were already receiving pension payments. About 500,000 people are still saving for their pensions in the society?s 7 billion with-profits fund, either as individuals or via group pension schemes. But some 30,000 of them have died over the last eight years. Many of them were forced to live their last years in very reduced circumstances. Fifteen more die every day. The parliamentary ombudsman?s report follows 12 other reports into different aspects of the Equitable Life fiasco commissioned by the government. One of these earlier reports commissioned by the Treasury, an interested party in the affair, by Lord Penrose, attributed most of the blame to the society. ?Principally, the society was the author of its own misfortunes. Regulatory failures were secondary factors,? Penrose wrote. His report said that serious failings among senior management went back to the 1980s, when the company had failed to set aside sufficient reserves for the guaranteed annual annuities. These were no longer sold after 1988 when the investment climate changed, making them too expensive to operate. There was ?a culture of manipulation and concealment,? and the society did not communicate details of its finances to either its policyholders or regulators. During the 1980s and 1990s, Equitable, as a mutual society without shareholders, had been paying out bonuses to its members?the policyholders?and concealing the fact that it had not built up sufficient reserves and was in effect running the guaranteed annuities on the back of new policyholders enticed by the bonuses and loans. Penrose particularly criticised the chief executive between 1991 and 1997, Roy Ranson, for failing to provide pertinent financial information. He wrote that non-executive directors were ?ill-equipped,? ?ill-prepared? and ?incompetent,? as regards the particular difficulties of supervising a complex life assurance firm. Ranson, in addition to being CEO, was appointed actuary at the firm from 1982 to 1997. This overlap of regulatory and executive functions led to confusion and conflicts of interest. Penrose could not avoid the glaringly obvious and, going beyond his remit, criticised the supervision of Equitable Life. His report found that the system of regulation, which handled Equitable with a light touch, was ?inappropriate.? The Department for Trade and Industry, in particular, had insufficient understanding of how to measure the solvency of a firm like Equitable, thereby allowing the society to get away with not putting aside sufficient reserves. The Government Actuary?s Department (GAD) was insufficiently tough on the society, failing to respond to changes in bonus policy and failing to demand disclosure from management. However, he argued that there was no evidence of ?maladministration or negligence? among regulators and said?letting the government off the hook?that as a general principle, ?building false expectations of regulators can lead to a destruction of public confidence,? and he stressed that regulators themselves must inform consumers about the realities of the financial system. ?Effective consumer education is essential.? EMAG, Equitable?s policyholders, were not satisfied with this and asked the parliamentary ombudsman to review its supervision. But her first report in 2003 cleared the Financial Services Authority (FSA), one of the society?s regulators, of any failure of supervision in the run-up to its collapse. EMAG pressed for another and fuller investigation. In 2005, the European parliament?s commission of inquiry?set up because the society had sold policies not just to UK citizens but to citizens in the EU?blamed the UK government for failing to ensure that EU legislation had been implemented properly. It also argued that the system of regulation was ?excessively lenient? in failing to ensure that Equitable was solvent. It pointed out that there was no real prospect of policyholders gaining any redress under the UK?s legal and regulatory system. Consequently, the government had an obligation to assume responsibility and establish a compensation scheme. The FSA tried to prevent the ombudsman from carrying out a second and more thorough investigation?and with good reason. Ms Abraham, whose remit by virtue of her statutory position was the effectiveness of the society?s regulation, reversed her original findings. Her report excoriated the government and regulatory authorities and accused it of maladministration for its role in the society?s collapse in 2000. She argued that ?those responsible for undertaking financial regulation should act in a way that is compatible with the duties and powers which Parliament has conferred upon them. Those responsible for the prudential regulation of Equitable Life failed to do so throughout the period covered in my report.? Her report revealed a catalogue of failings and maladministration. The Department for Trade and Industry and the Government Actuary?s Department (GAD) had regulated in a ?passive, reactive and complacent manner.? GAD had let one person hold the role of both CEO and appointed actuary for more than six years, which meant that there was no potential whistleblower to protect investors. GAD had failed to question or resolve any of the issues that were apparent in the insurer?s annual regulatory returns, GAD had allowed the introduction of a different terminal bonus to policy holders that was the subject of the legal case brought against the society and ultimately led to its collapse, but failed to tell the regulators and raise the matter with the society. While GAD and the FSA, which took over prudential regulatory responsibility in the last two-and-half years of the society?s life, ?often initiated discussions appropriately with equitable,? they still allowed Equitable to get away with non-compliance. For example, they let it take credit on their books for reinsurance contracts that had not been concluded and did not cover the issue at the heart of the House of Lords ruling. They failed to question the lack of crucial information on the society?s returns that gave an inaccurate picture of its financial situation, even though they knew that the ratings agencies were ?misconstruing the company?s financial strength,? thereby enabling it to declare a bonus in 1999. The net result was that investors were making decisions based on false information. In the words of the ombudsman, investors ?were thus actively misled.? Furthermore, the FSA failed to ensure that Equitable Life warned new policyholders of the serious implications of losing the legal case that was then under way. Even after losing the case, the regulators sill allowed the society to stay open for new business despite the fact that it was then unsound. Finally, after the society closed for new business, the FSA provided information that was ?misleading and unbalanced, with assurances being provided that the society was solvent, when that was in considerable doubt and was not the view of always held within the FSA.? Despite the ombudsman?s trenchant and very valid criticisms of the regulatory authorities, she never deals with the more fundamental question. Regulation was and can never be more than a cosmetic device to licence the essentially fraudulent nature of the pensions and insurance-selling industry. It doubles when the need arises as the industry?s public relations arm. In practice, ?regulation? consisted of asking questions but being satisfied with bland assurances; allowing the society to continue selling new policies when it was essentially insolvent and give out misleading information; giving ?advice? and not instructions; backing down when Equitable Life threatened a Judicial Review or ministerial intervention for going beyond its powers; and being fobbed off with reassurances about future profits, re-insurance arrangements and selling costs. While the society?s policyholders have welcomed the thoroughness of the report, it is far from clear that the government will establish and fund a compensation scheme for the policyholders, as the report recommends. Chancellor of the Exchequer Alistair Darling is likely to argue that the government cannot be held liable for all the losses suffered by investors. An earlier ombudsman?s report in 2006 that also found the government guilty of maladministration over advice given on occupational pension schemes that led to 125,000 people losing all or some of their occupational pension savings had recommended full compensation. The government immediately rejected her findings and the case went to the High Court, which ruled earlier this year against the government. One of its accusations was that the government had rejected the findings too quickly, which suggests that at the very least the government will drag its feet for as long as possible before making any announcement. Though the government stepped in to rescue Northern Rock and shore up the banks via a ?liquidity scheme? with hundreds of billions of taxpayers? money, it is reluctant to compensate policyholders when its own official bodies are found guilty of maladministration. EMAG has said it is ?digging in for a long fight? and getting its members to write to MPs and candidates in marginal constituencies. Some lawyers have argued that policyholders could have a claim for ?misfeasance in public office,? similar to the failed case brought by Railtrack?s shareholders. The Financial Times, the City?s mouthpiece, provides an insight into the thinking of the financial elite. It called in a self-serving editorial for the government to fund limited redress, arguing that it is not the job of the taxpayer to bail out completely investors who put their money into an institution that gets into financial trouble. This would remove responsibility from the institutions, their advisors and investors. But more importantly, it would also lead the financial regulators to behave too cautiously or to regulate strictly. That of course would never do. But there are, it argues, two strong reasons for partial compensation. Firstly, the moral case, since the authorities allowed Equitable to present misleading information to the public. ?Secondly, there is a public interest in encouraging people to make long term financial provision for themselves so that an aging population looks less to the state for its pensions.? As well as encouraging private pensions to slash welfare spending, the Financial Times is also concerned that nothing will disrupt the implementation of the government?s new national pension savings scheme, which would invest the public?s and employers? compulsory contributions in the Stock Market. Equitable Life is by no means the worst case in terms of the outcomes on guaranteed annuities. Patrick Collision of the Guardian newspaper noted that millions of pensions companies? customers have received payouts that are worse than those of Equitable Life. He went on to use this, plus the fact that most of Equitable?s victims were doctors, dentists and lawyers, as arguments to support the government?s expected refusal to provide compensation at the taxpayers? expense. He also pointed out that ?by mid-2003 virtually every insurance company in the UK was technically bankrupt and receiving ?waivers? from the FSA.? What he, like all the rest of the financial commentators will not say was that the case of Equitable Life and the failure of regulation to rein in the financial services industry demonstrate the absolute necessity for pensions to be publicly funded and provided.
Photostory: The month in pictures, July 2008
Electronic Intifada - 4 Aug 2008
rr r r rr r rr r rr r rr r rr rrr rThe following slideshow is a selection of images from the month of July 2008. The month in pictures is an ongoing feature of The Electronic Intifada. If you have images documenting Palestine, Palestinian life, politics and culture, or of solidarity with Palestine, please email images and captions to photos A T electronicintifada D O T net.
Syrian leader gets top billing in Middle East by doing nothing
Campaign Against Sanctions and Military Intervention in Iran (CASMII) - 4 Aug 2008
Summary: Asked if the Iranians were trying to develop a nuclear bomb, Mr Assad told the French President he had asked the Iranians this very question, they had replied in the negative and this was good enough for him. source: The Independentread more
On life, literature and Palestine, a tribute to Abdelwahab Elmessiri
Electronic Intifada - 4 Aug 2008
rr r r rr r rr r rr r rr r rr rrr rAbdelwahab Elmessiri passed away on Thursday, 3 July, in the Palestine Hospital in Cairo at the age of 70. There is a befittingly poetic resonance about the name of this hospital—the place of his final struggle—when one considers that Elmessiri had devoted almost his entire intellectual career to the defense of the Palestinian cause. Aslam Farouk-Alli remembers the life of the Egyptian writer and political thinker.

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