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  • 16
    Feb
    2013
    4:32am, EST

    'Fraud on a massive scale': Europe's horse meat scandal keeps on growing

    Bernd Thissen / AFP - Getty Images

    A laboratory assistant prepares a sample of lasagna for a DNA test at a veterinary research facility in Germany Thursay.

    By Ian Johnston, Staff Writer, NBC News

    LONDON -- When officials in Ireland made a routine check on a few hamburgers, what they found made them nervous: One burger was actually nearly one-third horse.

    It was a discovery that has sent shock waves reverberating across Europe.

    Since the disturbing DNA test results were disclosed last month, horse meat has been found masquerading as beef in countries including the U.K., France, Germany, Sweden and Norway. 

    A small amount of horse meat was also found by British officials to contain a banned drug that, in high enough doses, could be fatal, although U.K. Chief Medical Officer Sally Davies has stressed there is a "very low risk indeed" that eating contaminated meat would be harmful.

    As supermarket shelves were cleared, meat suppliers in Ireland, the U.K., France, Cyprus, the Netherlands, Romania and elsewhere have come under scrutiny.

    Jean-Philippe Arles / Reuters

    A dump truck is filled up with blocks of meat at French meat processor Spanghero's factory in Castelnaudary near Toulouse, France, Friday.

    Some in Western Europe have pointed the finger particularly at Romania, where a ban on horses in cities and the tough economic climate have been cited as reasons for a rise in exports of horse meat. The Romanians have insisted the meat was properly labeled as horse when it left the country, Reuters reported. 

    According to French investigators, one French firm alone made a profit of $733,800 over six months by selling cheaper horse meat as beef in a supply chain involving 28 companies in 13 countries, Reuters reported. The company, Spanghero, protested its innocence Friday.

    Intelligence agency Europol -- normally tasked with combating the trafficking of guns, drugs and humans -- was brought in to investigate what one British lawmaker has described as an “international criminal conspiracy.” Three arrests -- the first over the scandal -- were made in the U.K. on Thursday. 

    Expert: Watch what you eat
    Some officials believe only the “tip of the iceberg” has been revealed, and on Friday the European Union endorsed a major DNA-testing program to establish just how much unlabeled horse meat is being sold as beef or other foods.

    For ManMohan Sodhi, a professor specializing in supply chains at London’s City University, the news has been a revelation.

    “If you had talked to me a month ago, I would have said: ‘No, it would never happen; I completely believe in the [food supply] system,’” he said.

    Now his message is “Watch out for what you eat.”

    The U.K. has ordered thousands of beef products be tested - as companies recall ready-to-eat meals bought by millions after finding horsemeat in lasagna. ITV'S Chris Choy reports.

    Sodhi compared the current situation to the first signs of the gross mismanagement of subprime mortgages that led to the banking crisis. “People began to uncover risks and suddenly there were too many problems,” he said.

    He said large supermarkets like to deal with large suppliers who are in turn supplied by other firms and so on down to farmers and other actual food producers. At any point in the chain, someone could decide to cut costs by replacing a high-cost food with a cheap substitute.

    Sodhi explained it was not in the interest of supermarkets to check their suppliers. This, he said, would be an added expense and would also make them legally liable if something went wrong.

    Taking goods on trust meant they instead had “plausible deniability,” he said. “Then if something bad happens, all I do is put out an advertisement and say, ‘We really care about our customers, we’re doing everything we can … too bad somebody did something horrible.”

    In a video message, Tim Smith, group technical director of supermarket giant Tesco, spoke of the firm's "unreserved apology" over the discovery of horse DNA in its frozen hamburgers and said it had dropped a supplier in Ireland.

    But he also stressed the company was taking steps to ensure this never happened again.

    Smith said Tesco planned to "launch a new program of activity which will test on a DNA fingerprinting basis all the meat and meat products that we source from our suppliers ... adding another layer of surveillance to help protect our customers."

    On Thursday, a Tesco spokesman was unable to clarify exactly how extensive the DNA tests would be.

    'Cynically and systematically duped'
    Sodhi’s opinion that things could be far worse than they currently appear might be dismissed by some.

    But a committee of British lawmakers that investigated the situation published a report Thursday that concluded the discoveries so far were “likely to be the tip of the iceberg” amid “suggestion of fraud on a massive scale.”

    The committee concluded that it appeared consumers had been “cynically and systematically duped in pursuit of profit by elements within the food industry.”

    “This scandal has also raised broader food policy questions about cheap food production, transparency, consumer confidence and pressures within the supply chain,” it added.

    There are suggestions that traditional butcher’s stores have benefited from the furor.

    Toby Melville / Reuters

    Danny Lidgate hangs meat in the cold store area of Lidgates butchers in London Wednesday, as traditional butchers report a surge in demand from consumers.

    Roger Kelsey, of the National Federation of Meat & Food Traders, estimated his members had seen an increase of up to 50 percent in demand for sausages, ground beef and burgers, according to the BBC. The British Retail Consortium, which represents supermarkets, has insisted their sales have not suffered.

    Family-run store Aubrey Allen, of Leamington Spa, was named the U.K.’s Butcher’s Shop of the Year 2012 and was recently given a royal warrant to supply meat, poultry and game to Britain’s Queen Elizabeth II.

    Russell Allen, who was born into the business, said supermarkets would “push and squeeze” and “bully their suppliers” to cut costs.

    But he also said ordinary people shared some of the blame for the horse meat scandal by providing the demand for very cheap food.

    “If you are buying five burgers for a pound ($1.55), I kind of think you get what you deserve," he said. "It suggests you don’t care, so why would you suddenly care?”

    Allen said he thought people should eat better quality meat and have it less often.

    He lamented the loss of a culture of cooking. Now, he said, people don't know what to do with cheaper cuts of meat and view him as strange for having homemade soup for lunch.

    “Generally people say, ‘I don’t have time to cook’ and I say, ‘Well, you’ve got time to watch people cooking [on television],’” he said.

    Allen said butcher’s shops were making something of a comeback after many were put out of business by supermarkets in the 1970s and 1980s.

    But he admitted mass-produced food was probably here to stay. “I think it’s possibly a necessary evil on some levels. Not everyone can afford to, not everyone has the luxury of eating quality products all the time,” he said.

    'Going on for years'
    Frenchman Michel Roux Jr., whose restaurant Le Gavroche is one of Britain’s best, also criticized supermarkets for putting pressure on their suppliers and suggested the horse meat scandal was not a recent occurrence.

    “I’m sure that it’s been going on for years, absolutely years,” he said. “It’s being done on a nod and a wink.”

    Roux said he remembered as a child eating roast horse and horse burgers. And he suggested a legitimate market for horse meat might be a positive step.

    Related: Horse slaughtering legal in US, but public won't bite

    “Horse meat is a good meat … maybe in Britain we should embrace it, we should be eating more,” Roux said.

    He said the flavor was “not too dissimilar to beef, slightly sweeter and richer,” admitting it wasn’t his favorite.

    However, asked if he would put horse meat on his menu, he replied, “Not as yet.”

    In Ireland, the officials who uncovered that first horse meat burger and several others with trace amounts can scarcely believe what has transpired since they went public on Jan. 15. 

    Ray Ellard, director of The Food Safety Authority of Ireland, said they had been “not expecting to find too much” when they carried out a small survey of beef products.

    “We were kind of … I wouldn’t say taken aback, but that’s kind of the truth,” Ellard said. “We were wondering, ‘What’s going on here?’ and wanted to be absolutely sure of the science of what we were doing.”

    “We set out to do something fairly simple. We didn’t know it was going to end up where it is,” Ellard added. “It’s been painful for a lot of the food industry, some people have had reputational damage.”

    “We’re glad in one way. Systems will all improve and the potential for defrauding people will be a lot less. We’re glad that that’s happened, but we had a nervous few days, I can tell you.”

    Reuters contributed to this report.

    Related:

    European horse meat scandal spreads amid fears harmful drug entered human food chain

    'Criminal conspiracy' blamed for European horse-in-burger scandal

    Hamburgers pulled from UK supermarket shelves after tests reveal horsemeat


    373 comments

    Well driving a friend of mine to his daily burger king lunch, i couldnt help but notice he stamped his foot 3 times when asked, how many burgers he wanted!

    Show more
    Explore related topics: france, ireland, europe, food, world, family, uk, beef, featured, supermarkets, horsemeat, ian-johnston
  • 29
    Nov
    2012
    8:30am, EST

    Rupert Murdoch's papers, UK media condemned in phone-hacking report

    Senior judge Brian Leveson remarks on the findings of his yearlong inquiry into the phone-hacking scandal that shook up British media.

    By Carol Grisanti, Keir Simmons and Ian Johnston, NBC News

    Updated at 10:35 a.m. ET: LONDON — Rupert Murdoch’s newspapers and other British media were reckless in the pursuit of sensational stories "almost irrespective of the harm" caused, according to a major report on Britain's phone-hacking scandal.

    The findings of the year-long Leveson Inquiry criticized a “failure of systems of management and compliance” at Murdoch’s News of the World (NoTW) tabloid, which was closed down as the full extent of their illegal actions became clear.

    Lord Justice Leveson said if Murdoch and his son James did not know about the extent of phone-hacking at the paper, then there had been a "determined cover-up" by unidentified staff.


    And if they had known then the Murdochs should have done something about it, he said. However, the judge added there was no evidence from which he could "safely infer" that Rupert Murdoch was aware of a wider problem.

    The report is being watched by American lawmakers amid concerns that U.S. laws may have been broken.


    Follow @NBCNewsWorld

    Leveson did not recommend state regulation of the media – or censorship in the eyes of some – as some victims of press intrusion had demanded, but did propose a new self-regulatory body enshrined in law.

    The inquiry was set up after it emerged that people working for the News of the World had hacked into messages on a phone belonging to Milly Dowler, 13, while she was a missing person in 2002. She had been abducted and was murdered.

    A string of other examples of phone-hacking and other examples of press intrusion then emerged.

    In its report on Britain's phone-hacking scandal, the Leveson Inquiry described a failure of management systems at newspapers owned by Rupert Murdoch and others.

    Read the full Leveson Inquiry report

    Leveson said it was not just Murdoch’s newspapers that were at fault, adding that "outrageous" behavior by the press had "wreaked havoc with the lives of innocent people."

    “There has been a recklessness in prioritizing sensational stories almost irrespective of the harm that the stories may cause and the rights of those who would be affected (perhaps in a way that can never be remedied),” his report said.

    “Too many stories in too many newspapers are the subject of complaints from too many people,” it added.

    Related content:

    Key US lawmaker watching as Rupert Murdoch braces for phone-hacking report

    Judgment day looms for Rupert Murdoch, Piers Morgan and UK press

    Former UK PM accuses Murdoch of misleading inquiry into phone-hack scandal

    Rupert Murdoch not 'a fit person' to firm, UK lawmakers say 

    But Leveson was scathing about the Murdoch empire and the News of the World in particular. He said there was "a general lack of respect for individual privacy and dignity” at the paper.

    And the judge said there had been a “serious failure of governance” at the News of the World, News Corporation and its U.K. arm News International in dealing with the phone-hacking allegations.

    “There was a failure on the part of the management at the NoTW to take appropriate steps to investigate whether there was evidence of wrongdoing,” he said.

    Author J.K. Rowling and actress Sienna Miller testified at the Leveson inquiry, addressing the emotional pain they experience after having their privacy invaded by tabloid reporters. NBC's Michelle Kosinski reports.

    'Determined cover-up'
    Leveson said if Rupert Murdoch and his son James were kept in the dark then “one or more parts of the management at the NoTW was engaged in a determined cover-up to keep relevant information about potential criminal activity within the organisation from senior management within NI.”

    “… if James Murdoch had been the victim of a cover-up, or an attempt to minimise the gravity of the position, then the accountability and governance systems at NI would have to be considered to have broken down in an extremely serious respect,” he added.

    Leveson said there was “no evidence” from which he could “safely infer that Rupert Murdoch was aware of a wider problem.”

    But Leveson noted Rupert Murdoch did not appear to have followed up -- or arranged for his son James to follow up -- on the instructions Murdoch said he gave to Colin Myler, editor of the News of the World from 2007 to 2011, to “find out what the hell was going on.”

    Actor Hugh Grant took a starring role on Monday in a London courtroom, where he testified at a public hearing about alleged phone hacking by British tabloids. NBC's Stephanie Gosk reports.

    “If News Corporation management, and in particular Rupert Murdoch, were aware of the allegations, it is obvious that action should have been taken to investigate them,” Leveson said.

    The report noted evidence given to the inquiry that News International had been “obstructive” during an early police investigation into phone-hacking.

    “The approach taken by NI is far from what might be expected of a well-run corporation … An organisational culture that is founded on integrity and honesty would require not only full co-operation with law enforcement, but also a determination to expose behaviour that failed to comply with the law,” the report said.

    Leveson said that what was needed was a “genuinely independent and effective system of self-regulation.”

    The current Press Complaints Commission includes members of the media industry, but Leveson said his proposed new body should have no “serving editors or members of the House of Commons or government.” He also said that the new body should be recognized in law.

    He said he was “struck by the evidence of journalists who felt they might be put under pressure to do things that were unethical or against the [press standards] code.”

    To address this, he said there should be a new whistleblowing hotline and the new board should “encourage” media firms to include a “conscience clause” in their employment contracts.

    U.S. senator: 'Deplorable conduct'
    Senator Jay Rockefeller, chairman of the Senate commerce committee, earlier signaled he would be paying close attention to the findings of the report.

    In an emailed statement sent to NBC News before it was released, he called on investigators in the U.K. to hold media companies accountable for their “deplorable conduct.”

    The parents of murdered school girl Milly Dowler told the Leveson Inquiry how her phone had been hacked into when she went missing, giving them false hope that she may still be alive. ITV's Damon Green reports.

    Read more on this story from Britain's ITV News

    Rockefeller said that was "deeply concerned" that media companies "may have violated U.S. laws and injured U.S. citizens."

    He said he hoped Leveson’s report and other investigations would hold the media organizations involved “accountable for their deplorable conduct.”

    “While I understand that the main goal of this report is to make policy recommendations, the core of the inquiry remains the illegal and unethical practices of newspapers owned by the News Corporation,” Rockefeller said.

    Britain's former Prime Minister Tony Blair admitted he was very close to News International as Prime Minister - but he told the Leveson Inquiry it was a working relationship, not a close one. Testimony was briefly interrupted by a protestor who accused Blair of being a "war criminal." ITN's Tom Bradby reports. 

    Former top aide to UK PM David Cameron charged in perjury case

    Meanwhile, former News of the World editor Andy Coulson, who was later hired as U.K. Prime Minister David Cameron's chief media adviser, and Rebekah Brooks, the former CEO of News International, appeared in court Thursday to face charges related to allegations of corrupt payments made to public officials, ITV News reported. They were later released on bail.

    The Associated Press, Reuters and ITV News contributed to this report. ITV News is NBC News' U.K. partner.

    More world stories from NBC News:

    • Syrians risk lives in battle to protect nation's ancient sites
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    • Chinese paper falls for Onion 'sexiest man alive' spoof
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    • ANALYSIS: Israeli defense chief quits politics — but for how long?
    • Scientists rush to save manta rays, the 'pandas of the ocean'

    Follow World News from NBCNews.com on Twitter and Facebook

    102 comments

    Heck, anyone with average intelligence knows that news journalists have become truth terrorists. They are essentially the scum of human existence, lower than cockroaches.

    Show more
    Explore related topics: britain, rupert-murdoch, david-cameron, uk, featured, carol-grisanti, ian-johnston, keir-simmons, leveson-inquiry
  • 29
    Nov
    2012
    5:04am, EST

    Key US lawmaker watching as Rupert Murdoch, UK press brace for phone-hacking report

    Senior British judge Brian Leveson is set to release the findings of his yearlong inquiry into phone-hacking and media ethics by newspapers owned by Rupert Murdoch and others.

    By Keir Simmons and Ian Johnston, NBC News

    Updated at 8:15 a.m. ET: LONDON — The chairman of the Senate commerce committee signaled he will be paying close attention to the findings of a U.K. report into phone-hacking and media ethics by newspapers owned by Rupert Murdoch and others, amid concern U.S. laws may have been broken.

    Senator Jay Rockefeller called on investigators in the U.K. to hold media companies accountable for their "deplorable conduct," ahead of the release of a report by the year-long Leveson Inquiry into the culture, practice and ethics of the press Thursday.


    It is expected to be "excoriating" about the wrongdoing of journalists.

    Numerous celebrities — including actor Hugh Grant and Harry Potter author J.K. Rowling — told the inquiry how they had been harassed, bullied, and traumatized by the press.


    Follow @NBCNewsWorld

    But ordinary people, such as Milly Dowler, a 13-year-old girl who was abducted and murdered in 2002, were also subjected to invasion of privacy in the most shocking of circumstances.

    It emerged that while she was missing, employees of Rupert Murdoch's News of the World tabloid hacked into her telephone. Outrage over this case prompted Murdoch to shut down the tabloid and led U.K. Prime Minister David Cameron to commission the Leveson Inquiry.

    Peter Macdiarmid / Getty Images, file

    Rupert Murdoch is driven from The Royal Courts of Justice after giving evidence to The Leveson Inquiry on April 26.

    Former News of the World editor Andy Coulson, who was later hired as Cameron's chief media adviser, and Rebekah Brooks, the former CEO of News Corporation’s U.K. arm News International, appeared in court Thursday to face charges related to allegations of corrupt payments made to public officials, ITV News reported. They were later released on bail.

    This probe has raised the specter of possible charges in the U.S. under the 1977 Foreign Corrupt Practices Act, whose anti-bribery provisions could ensnare executives if it is proved that payoffs were made to people such as British police officers.

    'Deeply concerned'
    Rockefeller, chairman of the Senate Committee on Commerce, Science, and Transportation, said in an emailed statement sent to NBC News that he feared that illegal journalistic practices may have been used on U.S. citizens.

    He said he hoped Leveson’s report and other investigations would "continue to clear the air" and hold the media organizations involved “accountable for their deplorable conduct.”

    "While I understand that the main goal of this report is to make policy recommendations, the core of the inquiry remains the illegal and unethical practices of newspapers owned by the News Corporation," Rockefeller said.

    "I remain deeply concerned that these companies may have violated U.S. laws and injured U.S. citizens," he added.

    Judgment day looms for Rupert Murdoch, Piers Morgan and UK press

    The Leveson report could have implications for CNN’s Piers Morgan, who was previously editor of the News of the World and the Mirror newspapers.

    In a 2006 article in the Daily Mail tabloid, Morgan said he was played a message left by former Beatle Paul McCartney on the phone of his then wife Heather Mills. Mills has said there's no way Morgan could have obtained the message honestly.

    At the Leveson Inquiry, Morgan refused to reveal how he was able to listen to the message, saying this would compromise a source.

    Alberto E. Rodriguez / Getty Images, file

    CNN host Piers Morgan arrives at the 2012 Vanity Fair Oscar Party in West Hollywood, California, in February. He previously was editor of two tabloid newspapers in the U.K.

    There have been calls from several victims of press intrusion for the government to regulate the media, an idea some have likened to state censorship in countries like China.

    Fear for free speech
    After retired teacher Christopher Jefferies, 67, of Bristol, was wrongly arrested for the murder of a young woman renting an apartment he owned, his character was picked over and savaged in the press and he later won substantial damages for defamation from eight newspapers.

    He told ITV News that the government had to introduce some form of statutory regulation of the press.

    UK PM's ex-aide, Murdoch protege face charges in phone-hacking scandal

    "I'm sure that I and many other people will continue to feel extremely angry unless the sort of action which I have been suggesting needs to be taken, is taken," he said.

    However, more than 80 politicians from all three main parties in the U.K. signed a letter published in the Guardian and Telegraph newspapers warning Cameron against state control of the media.

    "We believe in free speech and are opposed to the imposition of any form of statutory control," they wrote.

    Former UK PM accuses Murdoch of misleading inquiry into phone-hack scandal

    Former News of the World journalist Tom Latham told ITV News that newspapers were already not running stories in the public interest in the wake of the Leveson Inquiry.

    "If you cede anything to the government it's a slippery slope and then you start to lose control of the freedom of the press,” he said.

    Prosecutors have filed criminal charges against former News of the World editor Andy Coulson and former News International executive Rebekah Brooks for their alleged involvement in Britain's phone-hacking scandal. NBC's Michelle Kosinski reports from London.

    But, given the paper’s history, Leveson may be more sympathetic to the complaints of people like Hugh Grant.

    He has revealed that details of hospital visits he made were leaked to the press, his garbage was rifled through, his ex-girlfriend and his infant daughter harassed.

    Grant said articles in The Sun and the Daily Express about his visit to a hospital emergency room was a gross intrusion of privacy.

    "I think no one would expect their medical records to be made public or to be appropriated by newspapers for commercial profit," the actor said. "That is fundamental to our British sense of decency."

    Reuters, The Associated Press and ITV News contributed to this report. ITV News is NBC's U.K. partner.

    More world stories from NBC News:

    • Tobacco industry uses trade pacts to try to snuff out anti-smoking laws
    • ANALYSIS: Judgment day looms for Rupert Murdoch
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    • An ocean away in UK, time is running out to claim $100 million lottery prize
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    • Scientists rush to save manta rays, the 'pandas of the ocean'

    Follow World News from NBCNews.com on Twitter and Facebook

    288 comments

    Makes you wonder how many criminal actions murdoch has done in the U.S.A.. Australia doesn't want him back,England has had their fill of him. When it comes to light of all the crimes he is responsible for in the U.S.,maybe some judge or official will grow a pair and prosecute the old ba$tard. Hell,h …

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    Explore related topics: britain, rupert-murdoch, david-cameron, uk, ian-johnston, keir-simmons, leveson-inquiry
  • 24
    Aug
    2012
    11:33am, EDT

    'Crushing political dissent'? Gambia to execute every prisoner on death row

    Simon Maina/AFP-Getty Images

    Gambian President Yahya Jammeh arrives at the African Union summit in Addis Ababa, Ethiopia, on July 15.

    By Ian Johnston, NBC News

    A plan by Gambia to execute every prisoner on death row next month has been condemned by the African Union and civil rights groups.

    According to the Civil Society Associations Gambia, there are currently 47 people awaiting death sentences in the West African nation, including 11 political prisoners and eight suspected of having severe mental health problems. One has been on death row for more than 25 years.


    “CSAG is strongly convinced that most of those who were convicted to death for treason went through unfair trials and considers their convictions politically related,” the group said in a statement.

    “Given that the Gambia Government uses the death penalty and other harsh sentences as a tool to silence political dissent and opposition, CSAG believes that any execution is a further indicator of the brutality with which President [Yahya] Jammeh’s regime is bent on crushing political dissent,” it added.

    Benin's President Thomas Boni Yayi, chairman of the African Union, urged Jammeh, who seized power in a 1994 coup, not to go ahead with the executions, according to BBC News.


    Follow @NBCNewsWorld

    "After having learned of the imminent execution of a number of prisoners sentenced to death, President Yayi, who is very concerned, wished that President Yahya Jammeh not carry out such a decision," Beninois Foreign Minister Nassirou Bako Arifari told BBC Afrique.

    Jammeh, in an address to the nation Monday, Jammeh said that the executions would be carried out within the next few weeks.

    "By the middle of next month, all the death sentences would have been carried out to the letter; there is no way my government will allow 99 percent of the population to be held to ransom by criminals," he said, according to news service AFP.

    President's 'repressive nature'
    AFP said that eight military top brass, including the ex-deputy head of the police force, were given death sentences for treason last year. The last execution in the country happened five years ago.

    CSAG said his remarks, which were made to mark the Muslim festival of Eid, a time when “Muslims the world over seek forgiveness, extend messages of peace and love, show solidarity with one another and those in distressing conditions.”

    “President Jammeh chose once again to show his brutality and repressive nature by informing Muslim leaders that he would execute prisoners,” the group said in the statement.

    It added that the death row inmates included 39 Gambians with three from neighboring Senegal, two from Mali, two from Nigeria and one from Guinea Bissau. There are 46 men and one woman.

    CSAG called for the international community to put pressure on Jammeh to stop the executions.

    Death sentences were "known to be used as a tool against the political opposition" in Gambia, international rights group Amnesty International said in a report. 

    "Furthermore, international standards on fair trials, including presumption of innocence, access to lawyers and exclusion of any evidence obtained as a result of torture, are often not respected,” it added.

    More world stories from NBC News:

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    127 comments

    Forgetting this episode....there has never been an African nation that could even govern itself. Every po-dunk European country was (easily) able to colonize this place, even though it is loaded with resources. Yeah, I know, holler racist or whatever, but thefacts remain.

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    Explore related topics: human-rights, africa, prisoners, death-row, execute, featured, gambia, ian-johnston
  • 19
    Jun
    2012
    3:59am, EDT

    Twenty years later, will world make good on Rio Earth Summit's 'broken promises'?

    Mario Tama / Getty Images

    Protesters demonstrate against the Forest Code and Belo Monte dam project at the Rio + 20 counter summit or "People's Summit" on Monday, June 18, in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil. The "People's Summit" is financed by the Brazilian government and involves 200 ecological groups and social organizations. Over 100 heads of state and tens of thousands of participants and protesters will descend on the city for the high-level portion of the Rio+20 United Nations Conference on Sustainable Development or "Earth Summit" this week.

    By Ian Johnston, msnbc.com

    In 1992, nearly every country in the world took part in what was hailed a “historic moment for humanity.” 

    The Rio Earth Summit in Brazil delivered a plan of action that would tackle greenhouse gases and climate change, stop species going extinct and save the forests. And if all that wasn’t enough, they committed to creating a “safe and just world” for all.

    Amid the optimism fostered by the fall of communism, global leaders embraced the "revolutionary" new idea of sustainable development – economic progress in harmony with the natural world.

    Two decades later, that spirit of enthusiasm has been replaced by talk of “broken promises” and “a very uncertain future” in the run-up to this week's unheralded Rio+20 summit, formally the United Nations Conference on Sustainable Development.


    In 1992, then President George H. W. Bush was at Rio, but his successor Barack Obama has no plans to go this time and other world leaders – like the U.K.’s David Cameron and Germany’s Angela Merkel – are also expected to stay away from the summit, which begins Wednesday.

    Indeed, such is the apparent lack of interest, the conference was rescheduled from early to late June partly to avoid a clash with the U.K. queen’s Diamond Jubilee celebrations, as it was feared some world leaders would rather celebrate the 60th anniversary of the start of an unelected head-of-state’s reign than reach a deal on the future of the planet.

    Andrew Jordan, professor of environmental politics at the U.K.’s University of East Anglia, a world-leading center for environmental research, told msnbc.com that the idea of sustainable development had “gone right down the agenda since Rio in 1992.”

    Follow Ian Johnston

    “I think there’s probably still enough support within the U.N. and environmental system to just about keep it on the policy agenda, but you can see a general lack of interest,” he said.

    “I would say the world wouldn’t be doing this [Rio+20] unless it was already in the diary,” he added. “Starting with a blank sheet of paper, they wouldn’t have been talking about sustainable development this year or possibly even at all.”

    Jordan said “green growth” – rather than sustainable development – was the new buzz word among industrialized countries, but “really it’s growth, old-fashioned growth” with “a bit of a nod towards the environment.”

    World warmer, with fewer species, trees
    The lack of progress since 1992 is plain to see in a U.N. report, Keeping Track of Our Changing Environment.

    The much-trumpeted drive to tackle greenhouse gases saw carbon dioxide emissions actually increase by a massive 36 percent between 1992 and 2008. And, between 1992 and 2010, global warming continued apace, with the mean temperature of the Earth rising by 0.4 degrees Celsius (0.72 degrees Fahrenheit); the last decade was also the hottest on record since 1880.

    J. DAVID AKE / AFP / Getty Images

    US President George H. W. Bush signs the United Nations Climate Change convention, 12 June 1992 in Rio de Janeiro, during the UN-sponsored Earth Summit.

    As for stopping species from dying out, biodiversity in the tropics has fallen by 30 percent since 1992. And saving the trees? Again, primary forest cover has fallen by 741 million acres – an area larger than Argentina – since 1990.

    Brazil Senate OKs easing of rules to limit Amazon deforestation

    In February this year, following a meeting of the world’s environment ministers, Achim Steiner, the executive director of the U.N. Environment Programme, called for “bold, transformative decisions ” at Rio+20.

    And he warned that incremental reforms were “leading seven billion down an unsustainable path and [toward] a very uncertain future."

    Arctic sea ice ‘megabloom’ tied to climate change 

    It was Maurice Strong, the conference secretary-general at Rio in 1992, who described that summit as a “historic moment for humanity” as it came to an end. 

    Since then, the Canadian entrepreneur has complained of “continued broken promises” and is now looking to Rio+20 for real action.

    Slideshow:

    Mario Tama / Getty Images

    The Amazon rainforest has meant prosperous times for many in Brazil, but environmental and cultural disaster for others.

    Launch slideshow

    “If you add up all the commitments they made, if they had implemented them, we’d be a long way down the road. They’ve not been implemented to any great extent,” he told msnbc.com.

    “If we stay on the same pathway, whatever the politicians say, we’ll not be sustainable,” he said. “The achievement of sustainability needs to be revitalized.”

    “The irony is the science has become more definitive … since ’92 things have got worse,” Strong added. “On the other hand at the political level … the will to act has been overshadowed by immediate concerns of a political and economic nature that are less important in the long run.”

    Revolution needed?
    But he said he was still hopeful “because pessimism is self-fulfilling.”

    “As long as there’s a chance, we can do something,” Strong said. “We need the equivalent of a revolution.”

    Earth nearing 'tipping point,' study warns

    And there is some hope in U.N. report for those convinced of the need to deal with climate change: Between 1992 and 2009, energy from solar power increased by 30,000 percent, from wind power by 6,000 percent and from biofuels by 3,500 percent.

    Kate Newman, of environmental campaign group WWF, said she was “optimistic” about what Rio+20 would achieve, so much so that she thought it would be a “positive turning-point for the world.”

    She said the Obama administration had showed “a lot of enthusiasm” about Rio+20 and dismissed the president’s decision not to go, saying “he doesn’t attend many of these events.”

    World's cities to expand by more than twice the size of Texas by 2030

    Newman said that many countries had been introducing policies to promote sustainable development.

    “No matter what happens in Rio, those policies will stand. Countries are already doing important things in anticipation of Rio,” she said.

    Newman said that China, for example, planned “to show the world what they’ve done in their own country to move to a green economy” at Rio.

    Fossil fuel subsidies in firing line?
    Nick Nuttall, spokesperson for the U.N. Environment Programme, told msnbc.com that he didn’t think Rio+20 was “intended to be a place of big agreements,” but pointed to several areas where there could be significant changes.

    The world, including the U.S. and many developing countries, spends about $600 billion a year on subsidizing fossil fuels, Nuttall said, compared to about $70 billion on renewable energy.

    Clinton highlights importance of oil-rich Arctic

    “There is a sense the issue of fossil fuel subsidies may be dealt with” at Rio, he said.

     “One of the myths about fossil fuel subsidies is that many developing countries do it to protect the poor from oil price shocks,” he said. “Many of the poor never benefit because they don’t use fossil fuels.”

    Rio closes its massive garbage dump


    Follow @msnbc_world

    “The fact is all the analysis shows what these fossil fuel subsidies do is create inefficiencies,” Nuttall added.

    He also said the Environment Programme could be upgraded to a more powerful body, like the World Trade Organization or World Health Organization.

    “At the moment if you are a health minister and you go to the annual assembly of the WHO and you decide you are going to phase out some terrible disease across the world in 10 years, that is so decided,” Nuttal said.

    “But if environment ministers of the world meet under the auspices of UNEP and they decide to have a 20-year program to get rid of cadmium, a heavy metal, [for instance] from the world, that decision then has to go to the General Assembly of the United Nations,” he added.

    Rio could also spell the beginning of the end for Gross Domestic Product, with progress on what Nuttall described as a “more sustainable, sophisticated measure of wealth that takes into account the human side, the environmental side.”

    Sustainable development pioneer: Vote Obama
    The idea of sustainable development – controversial to some – was given life by the 1987 report of the World Commission on Environment and Development, which was chaired by then Norwegian Prime Minister Gro Harlem Brundtland.

    The report defined sustainable development as “meeting the needs of the present without compromising the ability of future generations to meet their own needs.”

    Speaking to msnbc.com, Brundtland said the concept had been a “revolutionary breakthrough in thinking.”

    “Across the world there was a realization that something dramatic was ahead of us and we must change path,” she said. “It was all quite amazing what the world was willing to sign up to 20 years ago.”

    Jeff Moore/The Elders

    Former Norwegian Prime Minister Gro Harlem Brundtland, second right, talks to two of the "Youngers," Marvin Nala, left, and Esther Agbarakwe, right, during the Elders+Youngers dialogue in Oslo, Norway.

    Brundtland said progress since then had been slow, but added “we know as politicians that change takes time.”

    “Those statistics [on emissions, climate change etc.] would have been much worse today without Rio and without the whole awareness,” she said.

    Watch Elders+Youngers video: It's our future, it's our time

    She said it was “a pity” that Obama and other world leaders would not be at Rio+20, but said she was “quite certain that he is aware of the seriousness of the issues” and added that she hoped he would win the November election.

    “He is struggling with an American scene and a political system that is really difficult with polarization and climate deniers, a scene that is very different from the European scene,” Brundtland said.

    “I do believe in people, I do believe there are a number of progressive leaders who see further than one year ahead and they will feel a responsibility to deliver,” she added.

    But if world leaders fail to step up to the plate, Brundtland and other former world leaders in the “The Elders” group are hoping to inspire a grassroots movement of “Youngers.”

    Watch Elders video: What kind of world do we want to leave our great-great-grandchildren?

    “Elders and Youngers is our attempt to try and mobilize civil society, certainly on behalf of young people … who may be pessimistic about their future,” Brundtland said.

    “Every human being is responsible for the future. It’s not enough to point at politicians and expect them to do the right thing,” she added. “We all have to try to make a difference, we all have to mobilize. This Rio is absolutely dependent on public participation.

    “I think it will not be a failure,” Brundtland said, but added, “maybe it’s because I’m always keeping my optimism as a driving force.”

    United Nations Conference on Sustainable Development will be held in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil, June 20 to 22.

    More world news from msnbc.com and NBC News:

    • Germany's Merkel faces growing pressure at home, abroad
    • EU chief at G20 Summit: We're not here to 'receive lessons from nobody!'
    • Taliban bans Pakistan polio vaccinations over drone strikes
    • Luka Magnotta, suspected dismemberment killer, extradited to Canada
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    Follow us on Twitter: @msnbc_world


    184 comments

    Anyone who buys into this crap is nothing but a total idiot! It has nothing to do with sustainability, it has everything to do with crippling the United States economy, and calling for us to spend more of dollars to support this cronie organization. In essence, we will be taxed on our use of our ene …

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    Explore related topics: brazil, summit, environment, obama, featured, sustainable-development, brundtland, ian-johnston, rio-20
  • 31
    May
    2012
    5:39am, EDT

    'The country is on its knees': Ireland grapples with economic collapse

    Adam Patterson / Panos for msnbc.com

    Carpenter Tony Kenny, 27, believes that continuing economic troubles in Ireland will force him to move to Australia to find work.

    By Ian Johnston, msnbc.com

    Updated on June 1: Ireland's voters agreed to ratify the European Union's deficit-fighting treaty with a resounding 60.3 percent "yes" vote, The Associated Press reported. About half of Ireland's 3.13 million registered voters participated in the referendum.

    Originally published on May 31: KILDARE, Ireland -- Families ripped apart, pay cuts, hundreds of thousands without work, homes lying empty, teenagers with little hope for the future: Many in Ireland have been brought to the brink of despair by a dramatic economic collapse and the harsh remedy prescribed by the European Union.

    But unique among the EU's 27 members, Irish voters were Thursday giving their verdict on the policies of austerity as a backlash grows across the continent in countries like Greece, Spain and France. 


    Both sides in the debate are playing the politics of fear. Ireland's coalition government and much of the establishment implore voters to agree to tight controls on the national debt -- contained in the "Fiscal Stability Treaty" -- warning that failing to do so would result in the EU refusing to provide any further bailout cash.

    The "no" campaign counters this is just scaremongering -- saying Ireland would not be cut adrift in time of need -- but engage in some of their own. Austerity will only lead to countless more years of hardship, they say, calling for policies to grow the economy.

    Polls put the "yes" campaign ahead, but both sides agree it will be close.

    Outside control of Irish affairs is a sensitive subject. Some talk angrily of Ireland surrendering sovereignty hard-won in the War of Independence with the U.K. to new political masters in Europe.

    Student Nadine Lynch describes seeing her friends leave the country for better economic prospects.

    Joe Kenny, 59, a former sergeant in the Irish army, is among those planning to vote no. "The country is on its knees ... austerity is not working," he told msnbc.com, as he stood in front of the abandoned barracks where he was once based in Kildare, about 30 miles west of Dublin.

    He believes that the fiscal treaty will give too much control of Ireland's future to the EU's leading nations, particularly economic powerhouse Germany.


    Follow @msnbc_world

    "They own us now. We've no control, no sovereignty, nothing," he said. "Angela Merkel [Germany's top lawmaker] ... put a little moustache on her and she's Hitler."

    It is a comparison others have made, however unfairly, but Kenny has reason to be angry. "My son is going to have to emigrate ... All our best are going to Australia or America," he said.

    Greek tragedy: Economic crisis sparks brain drain

    His carpenter son Tony Kenny, 27, said business was "drying up," but was stoical about moving overseas, as generations of Irish have done before him.

    Follow Ian Johnston

    "I suppose it has to be done, doesn't it?" said Kenny, who is married with two young daughters. "A few mates of mine are over in Perth [Western Australia]. The work is savage over there, they are booming. It would get me on my feet anyway."

    Unemployment rate triples
    Ireland's economy was once growing so fast it was dubbed the "Celtic Tiger." But the property bubble burst, the banks were thrown into crisis, the government got deep into debt spending billions to bail them out. Ordinary Irish people are now paying the price.

    New taxes -- including a Universal Social Charge paid by all citizens -- have been brought in and more are on the way, such as a new charge on water.

    According to the latest figures, the standardized unemployment rate was 14.3 percent -- about 430,000 people -- compared to just 4.5 percent in April 2007. Henry Healy, a distant cousin of Barack Obama, recently joined their ranks, according to a report on Tuesday.

    Signs of the economic collapse are all around with boarded up buildings and half-finished neighborhoods, particularly in the Dublin commuter-belt, which includes County Kildare. 

    The brick pillars at the entrance to the Coneyboro Estate in Athy, south of Kildare town, have a certain air of grandeur. But deeper into the neighborhood, it becomes clear something went badly wrong. Near-completed houses are empty, windows open, fireplaces ripped out. Weeds grow in the street and foundations lie unfinished.

    Ghost towns tell the story of Ireland's faded dream

    "Who wants to buy here? … These houses are worth nothing," said Athy town councillor Michael Dunne, the only elected Sinn Fein representative in County Kildare. "There's empty houses all over the place like this."

    Adam Patterson / Panos for msnbc.com

    Sinn Fein's only elected representative in County Kildare, Athy town councillor Michael Dunne, is campaigning for a "no" vote in Thursday's referendum.

    'Giving away our sovereignty'
    It's a palpable sign, he said, that "we're all victims of the recession." The developer was bankrupt, the unemployed and those whose salaries had been cut could not afford a new house, and the taxpayer might have to step in to finish the estate.

    "We cannot write austerity into our budget, that's going to be permanent, forever," Dunne warned. "As a Nationalist-minded person, a democratic socialist, I'm totally opposed to what's happening in the country and giving away our sovereignty to the Germans."

    A "no" vote, he said, would "raise the flag for the rest of Europe to follow suit." 

    According to Article 46 of the Irish Constitution, any amendments to it must be passed by both houses of the Oireachtas, or parliament, and then approved by a referendum. Thursday's vote is latest in a series about Ireland's relationship with the EU.

    Greeks withdraw $894 million in one day

    Another sign of the country's plight is the number choosing to make a new life in another country. In the year to April 2011, 76,400 people left Ireland, the highest number for at least 25 years and more than double the figure in 2006.

    It is a hard decision. For Ruth Lalor, 18, the ties of home are strong.

    "I would like to stay in Ireland. Australia … I know they've got a better life over there, but I really would find it hard leaving my friends and family," she told msnbc.com on Monday night from the sidelines of a Gaelic football match, pitting Kildare club Round Towers' second team against one from Castledermot.

    She would like to study physiotherapy, but cannot afford it and is working in a clothes store, hoping she will be able to do take a course in five years' time.

    Rising college fees
    With Lalor was Nadine Lynch, 18, an English and history student who works as a waitress. Lynch plans to leave Ireland as soon as she's finished her degree or when rising college fees force her to drop out.

    The pair have been friends since they were six and can hardly bear the thought of being parted. "She's coming in my bag with me," Lynch said. "I'm just living here day by day. I think about getting a degree and getting out of here, but if it gets better, obviously I'd like to come home."

    Adam Patterson / Panos for msnbc.com

    English and history student Nadine Lynch (right), 18, sits with her friend Ruth Lalor. Lynch plans to leave Ireland when she finishes her education and wants to take Lalor with her.

    Lalor, a talented Gaelic footballer, said she would probably not "bother" voting in the referendum, questioning whether it would "make a difference." Lynch said she was still making up her mind, but added "we fought for independence and now we're handing everything back to the EU."

    There was no good news on the field to lift their spirits, with Round Towers losing. They were playing "a bit bad" Monday, Lalor said.

    So much for the 'Spanish Dream': Euro crisis turns suburbs into ghost towns

    Jim Waters, a former Round Towers player and owner of Southwell's Stores in Kildare's central square, is one person determined to stay exactly where he is.

    The grocery and convenience store was opened in 1841 by Patrick Southwell, Waters' great-great grandfather.

    'The 1980s were worse'
    On Monday morning, Waters, 60, and his friends were playing a game of Gaelic football with an imaginary ball in the store and he was relatively unconcerned by all the gloomy talk.

    Like most of the small business owners that msnbc.com spoke to in the town, he plans to vote "yes".

    "Nothing lasts forever, this is my third [recession]. The 1980s were worse … after every recession there's a high."

    While the recession would come to an end, the shop would not, he insisted. "I cannot foresee that happening. There's always going to be a need for a shop," Waters said. "The future is safe, oh God yes."

    Adam Patterson / Panos for msnbc.com

    Jim Waters, 60, stands in his shop -- opened by an ancestor in 1841 -- in Kildare's central town square Monday morning.

    But, one of his suppliers, fellow "yes" voter and father-of-six John Leamy, 50, of nearby Newbridge, had a different tale to tell. "A lot of the businesses I was supplying are no longer there. My customer base has practically dried up," he said.

    Once he delivered candy to up to 40 clients, now he has 10 to 15 and has taken a second job. He has a different view of the Germans than people like Joe Kenny."I have a liking for Germany and the work ethic. I can understand why they are trying to protect what they have," Leamy said. "The whole European project … wouldn't have worked without them."

    He may be keeping his head above water, but others are struggling.

    A different Ireland
    Grace Coyle, 24, who lives in Naas, just up the road from Kildare town, spent a year travelling in Australia and the U.S. and returned home a very different Ireland in 2009.

    She was without a job for about 18 months, and then joined a Tus work-training scheme; Tus is Gaelic for start. It pays only a little extra above welfare, but Coyle said it had helped her get a couple of days a week working as an administrator with a security firm. "You need work … There's only so many times you can clean the house," she said.

    Slideshow: Austerity in Ireland

    Adam Patterson / Panos for msnbc.com

    Meet Grace Coyle and other people in Ireland facing renewed austerity in the European Union's new fiscal treaty.

    Launch slideshow

    Others, Coyle added, are not so industrious. "My cousin is 19 and she's living out on her own. She doesn't have any get-up-and-go in her and I see that in her friends," she said. 

    From the Irish Times: The treaty explained

    But she doesn't want Europe to impose extra financial rigor on Ireland, and plans to vote "no" in the referendum. "We're abiding by everything they're asking for … I don't want it to be written into the constitution, into the law."

    Her Tus supervisor, Adrian Brown, 50, knows what its like to be jobless. He had expected to work as a crane operator -- he spent eight years in New York City where he helped build Trump Tower -- until retiring. But on a cold Tuesday morning in Dublin in January 2009, Brown was called down from his crane and told the company had gone bust.

    He was out of work for about 16 months -- "the time spent at home, it's not a healthy time" -- but then went back to college and then got his current job.

    "There's a great sense of achievement … it's great to see lots of [people] taking their first step to getting back to work," he said.

    Adrian Brown, a supervisor at a Tus training scheme for the long-term unemployed, describes the mental toll of losing his job in 2009.

    Brown said he'd be voting "yes", but reluctantly. "We cannot bite the hand that feeds us."

    'I'm just coping'
    Staff at the County Kildare Leader Partnership, which overseas the Tus scheme, have had their pay cut by between 5 and 7.5 percent, in common with many in Ireland.

    Geraldine Meaney, 48, secretary at Scoil Na Mainistreach, the school in Kildare town, said her pay had been reduced by 5 percent in January after a three-year pay freeze, while her husband's had been reduced by 10 percent. "I'm just coping, everybody pulls in the belt. You just cut your cloth to suit yourself."

    Athy town councillor Michael Dunne describes why this vote is important in the context of Irish history.

    Her 17-year-old son is in high school, but may decide to emigrate to the U.S.. Asked how she felt about that prospect, she replied, "Do you want to see a grown woman cry?"

    It is a sadness felt by thousands. Kenny senior said he would be "absolutely gutted" if his son left for Australia.

    "I know it's only a plane ride away, but it's the other side of the world. Why should he have to do that?"

    More world news from msnbc.com and NBC News:

    • Will crisis-hit Ireland rebel against harsh remedy for ailing Europe?
    • 'Very clear' signs of Iran sanitizing military site, Western diplomat says
    • Porn actor wanted for murder over body parts in Canada mail
    • Tribesmen release two 2 US tourists kidnapped in Egypt
    • Report: Hundreds detained in Tibet after self-immolations
    • Israel's Barak tells NBC: 'A nuclear Iran is unacceptable'
    • Was Flame virus written by cyberwarriors or gamers?
    • Report: Iran using passenger jets to smuggle weapons to Syria, Lebanon
    • Nelson Mandela makes rare appearance in home village

    Follow us on Twitter: @msnbc_world


     

    340 comments

    The people of Ireland, like the people of so many European countries, have been exploited and betrayed by the ruling elite, and now are being asked to pay for the theft and lies that have been perpetrated against them.

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    Explore related topics: ireland, europe, referendum, featured, kildare, austerity, ian-johnston, fiscal-stability-treaty
  • 24
    May
    2012
    6:31am, EDT

    So much for 'the Spanish dream': Euro crisis turns suburbs into ghost towns

    Pierre-philippe Marcou / AFP - Getty Images, file

    Empty buildings in Valdeluz, one of 12 near ghost towns scattered across Spain.

    By Ian Johnston, msnbc.com

    Just north of Spanish capital Madrid lies Cuidad Valdeluz. Built during the country's economic boom, it was promoted as a suburban family paradise for tens of thousands of people. 

    Today, it is one of 12 near ghost towns in Spain, a country that -- despite being the European Union's fifth-largest economy -- is teetering on the brink of a Greece-style meltdown. 


    Spain has the highest unemployment rate of all European Union countries at 21.7 percent, according to a report published this month by the Center for Economic and Social Rights. Among those aged under 25, nearly half -- 46.4 percent -- are without a job. More than half a million households had no one earning an income in 2011.

    NYT: One-fifth of Spain's GDP is now black market

    The report warned that "over half the population reports experiencing a heavy financial burden due to housing costs." The number of foreclosure proceedings rose from 25,953 in 2007 to 93,319 in 2009, an increase of nearly 260 percent.

    As she stood on the deserted streets of Valdeluz, journalist Lindsey Hilsum of the U.K.'s Channel 4 News said the suburb illustrated just how far and how fast Spain had fallen.

    On the streets of Madrid, they have a message for the leaders meeting in Brussels: stop cutting and start promoting growth. For them, the Spanish government decision to recapitalise Bankia, the country's fourth largest lender, while reducing education spending by 20 per cent, was the last straw.

    "This was the Spanish dream: new developments, luxury apartments, the good life. But it was all on borrowed money. Now the developers have lost their investments, the banks are in crisis, and increasing numbers of Spaniards are homeless," she said.

    Homeless and 'in debt forever'
    Maria Francisca Cano Munoz, Jesus Munoz Alcaza, their daughter and disabled son are among those about to lose their home.

    CNBC's Simon Hobbs discusses the euro's decline and whether Greece will leave the euro, with CNBC's Michelle Caruso-Cabrera and Bob Pisani.

    "We are going to end up with no home and in debt forever," Munoz Alcaza, an unemployed construction worker, told Hilsum through a translator. "We'll have to keep paying for this apartment, but we won't be able to live in it."

    Greece's debt woes put Europe on financial knife edge

    "At first they [bank officials] were nice and said 'Don't worry, you can pay at the end of the month to avoid interest,'" Cano Munoz added. "But when you cannot pay at all, suddenly you are a bad person and 'there's the door... go!'"

    As in Greece, politicians are looking to economic powerhouse Germany for help.

    Many residents fear that a slow economy is cutting into the number of foreign visitors. NBC's Stephanie Gosk reports.

    "Germany has got a lot of profit from the euro [currency]. Because Spain was rich, we bought many things that were made in Germany," an independent deputy in Spain's congress, Irene Lozano Domingo, told Hilsum.

    "We are all linked, so if we are going to hell, they are coming with us. This is what they have to see," she added.

    Greeks withdraw $894 million in a day: Is this beginning of a run on banks?

    Like other countries, Spain has bailed out its banks and slashed government spending. But the economy is now so bad that some are thinking of quitting the country altogether.

    "I don't know. Latin America somewhere? Brazil, Mexico ... somewhere where it's going up, you know?" a protester at a recent demonstration against education cuts told Hilsum.

    The euro is hitting its lowest level since July 2010. Discussing the impact the weak euro has on the global economy, with Larry McDonald, Newedge Group and John Spallanzani, GFI Group.

    European Union leaders concluded their latest summit early Thursday with few concrete steps to fix the continent's festering financial crisis, Reuters reported.

    One problem has been the need to get agreement between either the 17 EU countries that use the euro as their currency or all 27 member states.

    "I think about my one Congress, then I start thinking about 17 congresses and I start getting a little bit of a headache," Barack Obama said following the recent NATO summit in Chicago.

    The president's headache could get substantially worse, according to a report by the Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development. It warned Tuesday that while the U.S. and Japan were leading a fragile economic recovery among developed countries, they could be blown off course by the European debt crisis.

    'Vicious circle': Europe crisis threatens world economy, OECD says

    The biggest continuing fear is that if Greece cannot be saved, other larger economies — like Spain or Portugal — might face the same fate. 


    Follow @msnbc_world

    The leaders gathered in Brussels recognized that Greece had endured significant hardships and promised to release development funds aimed at spurring growth, Reuters reported. 

    But Luxembourg Prime Minister Jean-Claude Juncker told reporters that the euro countries "have to consider all kinds of events," the news service added.

    Europe told to prep for Greek exit scenario

    Juncker insisted early Thursday that he had not asked the euro nations to prepare national contingency plans for a possible chaotic departure of Greece from the currency, saying the "the working assumption" was that Greece would remain part of the euro.

    But his statement was also a frank admission that Greece could wind up abandoning the euro.

    A new election is scheduled for June 17, as debate continues over the country's place in the euro zone. NBC's Stephanie Gosk reports.

    Greece's fringe political parties, which are threatening to renege on commitments made to secure bailout loans, saw their popularity surge in recent elections. No party has been able to form a government, and the country will vote again June 17. 

    Germany's Pirate Party rides wave of popularity

    Many analysts have said that Greece, already in its fifth year of recession, has no hope of recovery if it sticks to the spending cuts and tax hikes it agreed to in order to secure bailout loans. 

    "We want Greece to remain in the euro area," German Chancellor Angela Merkel said after the meeting, but she also expected the deeply unpopular policies of austerity to continue. "We expect that they will stick to the commitments that they have entered into." 

    Ghost towns tell the story of Ireland's faded dream

    The perception that European leaders lack the political will to tackle the continent's financial and economic problems has left markets on edge for weeks. Recession is spreading. Banks are under pressure.

    Dariusz Kowalczyk, senior economist at Credit Agricole CIB in Hong Kong, said Thursday: "Europe is not doing enough, and the market may not wait for them." 

    Reuters contributed to this report.

    More world news from msnbc.com and NBC News:

    • Aid workers targeted amid new Pakistan crisis
    • 'Boiling point': On Lebanon’s Syria Street, a mini-civil war brews
    • Jubilee treat: Canadian Mounties guard UK's queen
    • Africa's Rainbow Nation troubled by racist time warp
    • 'Nearly empty': A rare glimpse inside Syria rebel stronghold
    • Terror suspect's eye color? UK's flying cameras know
    • Analysis: How Egypt's election can transform the Middle East

    Follow us on Twitter: @msnbc_world


    329 comments

    There are innumerable homeless in Spain. There are empty houses in Spain. The empty houses are owned by those who have no intention of living in them because they have so much money they already own other houses they actually live in.

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    Explore related topics: spain, europe, madrid, euro, featured, austerity, ghost-town, ian-johnston
  • 23
    Jan
    2012
    6:02am, EST

    Interpol faces legal threat for helping oppressive regimes hunt dissidents

    Interpol has issued a "red notice", above, for Benny Wenda, a tribal leader who campaigns for independence for the West Papua region from Indonesia. Wenda has been granted asylum in the U.K. on political grounds, according to Fair Trials International.

    By Ian Johnston, msnbc.com

    LONDON -- A landmark lawsuit alleging that dictatorships and other oppressive regimes are using Interpol's alert system to harass or detain political dissidents is being planned by rights activists and lawyers.

    Campaigners allege that rogue states have fabricated criminal charges against opposition activists who have been given refuge in other countries and then sought their arrest by obtaining "red notices" from the global police body.


    There are currently about 26,000 outstanding red notices. While they are only designed to alert other nations' police forces that an Interpol member state has issued an arrest warrant, some countries will take suspects into custody based on the red notice alone.

    In one case, Rasoul Mazrae, an Iranian political activist recognized by the United Nations as a refugee, was arrested in Syria in 2006 as he tried to flee to Norway after a red notice was issued.

    Mazrae was deported back to Iran, where he was tortured, according to a report by Libby Lewis, of the International Consortium of Investigative Journalists. He was later jailed for 15 years, Amnesty International says.

    'Torturers and murderers'
    In one of the latest cases, a red notice has been issued for Benny Wenda, a tribal leader who campaigns for independence for the West Papua region from Indonesia. He was granted asylum in the U.K. after claiming he had been tortured and prosecuted for inciting people to attack a police station. Wenda says he was in a different country at the time of the incident.

    • Wanted activist Benny Wenda tells of 'bow and arrows' revolt

    Mark Stephens, a leading British human rights lawyer, told msnbc.com that the red notice system can allow Interpol to unwittingly become "an aider and abettor of torturers and murderers in oppressive regimes."

    Amid mounting anger within the legal community, the U.K.-based rights campaign group Fair Trials International is now seeking people who allege their red notices are politically motivated to take part in a class action lawsuit against Interpol.

    If successful, the case would potentially make France-based Interpol subject to the rulings of a court for the first time.

    That would have implications not just for political dissidents, but could also create an extra legal hurdle for any country seeking to extradite alleged terrorists, murderers, international fraudsters, and other criminals based in another country.

    Jago Russell, the chief executive of Fair Trials International, highlighted that Interpol's 190 member states include "countries that routinely abuse their criminal justice systems to persecute individuals."

    Despite this, there is no independent court where someone can challenge a notice and "no remedy for the damage that notices can cause," he said.

    Iran, Syria, Myanmar, Sudan, Belarus and Zimbabwe — all widely condemned for human rights abuses by their governments — are members of Interpol and each country currently has red notices listed on its website.

    "Powerful international organizations with the ability to ruin lives have to be accountable for their actions," Russell wrote in an email.

    "Interpol's own credibility relies on proper accountability mechanisms to weed out cases of abuse, but if Interpol refuses to put its own house in order it could ultimately be up to the courts to step in and demand action," he added.

    There have been legal challenges to Interpol's decisions heard in some countries' courts in the past, but these have failed "to hold the organization to account," Russell wrote.

    Russell hopes that a court with jurisdiction over a number of countries, such as the European Court of Human Rights, will take a different view.

    "This would no doubt be a long, hard process but with thousands of people affected by red notices every year and, with the rule of law at stake, it would be worth the fight," he said.

    Political persecution
    Fair Trials International is currently highlighting Wenda's case in particular and trying to help get his red notice removed.

    He escaped from prison before being sentenced and fled Indonesia in 2002. Wenda traveled to the U.K., where he was granted asylum due to Indonesia's persecution of him on political grounds, according to Fair Trials International.

    Wenda then renewed his campaign, meeting politicians and others as he traveled the world. He also has a website highlighting the West Papuan cause.

    Leon Neal / AFP - Getty Images, file

    Benny Wenda, leader of the West Papuan Independence Movement, attends a protest in London on April 15, 2010.

    In 2011, he became aware that Interpol had issued a red notice. According to those details of the notice that have been made public by Interpol, Wenda is wanted for "crimes involving the use of weapons/explosives" by the Papua Regional Police.

    According to Wenda, he was charged with inciting an attack on a police station and burning buildings that resulted in the deaths of a number of people even though he says he was not in Indonesia at the time.

    Wenda says he was tortured, held in solitary confinement, and the judge and prosecutor requested bribes among other irregularities during the trial.

    Wenda believes the red notice was sought partly to try to prevent him from traveling outside the U.K. to highlight the plight of West Papuans.

    A report by the Allard K. Lowenstein International Human Rights Clinic at the Yale Law School in 2003 found that "the West Papuan people have suffered persistent and horrible abuses" at the hands of the Indonesian government since the area was annexed in 1969. It also accused Indonesian military and security forces of engaging in "widespread violence and extrajudicial killings."

    The research team concluded that historical and contemporary evidence "strongly suggests that the Indonesian government has committed proscribed acts with the intent to destroy the West Papuans ... in violation of the 1948 Convention on the Prevention and Punishment of the Crime of Genocide."

    'My people are crying'
    Wenda says that his people continue to be "killed, raped and tortured."

    "I think Indonesia is just trying to stop me and my campaign. I think that's the reason. I think this is just political motivation," Wenda told msnbc.com. "I'm not terrorist, I'm not criminal. Who's real terrorist or criminal? It's Indonesia itself. 

    "My people are crying ... That's why I am up and down the country, traveling the world, telling the truth."

    Human Rights Watch's World Report 2012 also highlights that the U.S. provides "extensive military assistance to Indonesia" and adds that "impunity for members of Indonesia’s security forces remains a serious concern, with no civilian jurisdiction over soldiers who commit serious human rights abuses."

    Jennifer Robinson, a London-based human rights lawyer and member of International Lawyers for West Papua, told msnbc.com in an email that "the charges that form the basis of the Interpol warrant are the very same politically motivated charges brought against Benny in 2002 -- and the very same charges that were the basis of the UK's decision to grant him political asylum."

    Joshua Roberts / Reuters

    London-based human rights lawyer Jennifer Robinson arrives at a hearing for U.S. Army Private First Class Bradley Manning's at Fort Meade, Md., on December 20.

    "I attended his trial in West Papua on these charges, heard the evidence and witnessed the flagrant breaches of due process at that trial. I am witness to the fact the charges are without evidential basis," she added. "This was recognised by the U.K. in granting Benny refugee status for the political persecution he suffered in Indonesia. Now Indonesia is seeking to abuse the Interpol system to extend its political persecution across borders, undermining the protection afforded to Benny under the U.N. Refugee Convention."

    In addition to the threat of arrest in the country of refuge, Fair Trials International says that a red notice makes international travel risky — partly because countries tend to deal with each one on a case-by-case basis.

    And even if a court in one country decides not to extradite the wanted person, the red notice remains and another country could take a different decision.

    The stigma of being wanted for an alleged crime can also make everyday life difficult -- by making it hard to get a bank account, for example, due to background checks.

    Michelle Estlund, a Coral Gables, Fla.-based lawyer who writes a blog focusing red notices, told msnbc.com that there should be some kind of quasi-judicial proceedings to level the "playing field" between an Interpol member state and an individual. Part of the issue, she said, is that Interpol initially assumes that red notice applications are properly submitted.

    "If you are I are playing basketball and I haven't followed the rules and I haven't told you where the hoop is, it's going to be very hard for you to win, especially if the referee is presuming everything I do to be right," Estlund said.

    Little transparency?
    It is possible to complain about red notices but critics say the procedure suffers from a lack of transparency.

    Complaints to Interpol that red notices are issued because of politically motivated charges are considered internally at first and then by a specially created body called the Commission for Control of Interpol's Files (CCF).

    However, the panel -- which consists of five unpaid commissioners and three members of staff -- holds its discussions in private and does not have to give any reasons for its decisions.

    There are few successful challenges. According to statistics published in the commission's latest annual report, 16 percent (or 32) of 201 requests that it received in 2010 raised questions about "the application of Article 3 of Interpol's constitution." Article 3 prohibits Interpol from activities of a "political, military, religious or racial character."

    The CCF dealt with 170 requests in 2010 and 26 percent (or 44) of those cases resulted in the deletion of an Interpol file. Assuming 16 percent of those were Article 3 complaints, then just seven people had red notices removed in 2010 after claiming they were being prosecuted for political or other such unjustified reasons.

    Billy Hawkes, the CCF's chairman, said the body examined complaints "very thoroughly."

    "We recognize the dangers of red notices being used inappropriately for political objectives," he told msnbc.com from Dublin, Ireland. "Obviously we must all be concerned about the rights of individuals and dangers of abuse of the red notice system."

    Hawkes warned, however, that adding judicial oversight of Interpol's red notices could hamper its ability to help catch criminals.

    "We must remember that the object of a red notice is to have fugitive criminals stopped as quickly as possible, so they can face trial in the country they have committed the crime," he added.

    One potential obstacle to taking legal action against Interpol is a deal it made with the French government that gives it immunity from some French laws. It is unclear how a European court would regard that deal.

    'Unfairness'
    Anand Doobay, a U.K.-based lawyer, confirmed to msnbc.com that he was "investigating the possibility of some kind of legal challenge on behalf of clients who are affected by politically motivated prosecutions which have resulted in Interpol red notices being issued."

    "The unfairness which is caused by having an unwarranted Interpol red notice is very difficult to address," he said.
    "What we are looking at is ways of trying to deal with the unfairness."

    Estlund, the Florida-based lawyer, said oppressive regimes should not be expelled from Interpol because they might become "safe havens for people who have committed real crimes."

    Instead she argued that red notice requests from countries with a record of corruption should be subject to greater scrutiny. "I do think Interpol is capable of doing that," she added. "I don't think it's too much to hope that that will happen."

    A statement emailed to msnbc.com by an Interpol spokeswoman on Jan. 11 said there were 26,051 valid red notices at that time, including 7,678 issued in 2011.

    It listed three ways people "can challenge a red notice and/or the national arrest warrant upon which the request was submitted":

    • argue their case before the national authorities of the requesting country;
    • contact the Commission for the Control of Interpol's Files; 
    • or request their country to take the case itself and protest against the red notice.

    The statement added that the "issuance of a red notice is not a judicial decision." "Each Interpol member country decides for itself what legal value to give red notice within their borders," it said.

    "Interpol's role is not to question allegations against an individual, nor to gather evidence, so a red notice is issued based on a presumption that the information provided by the police is accurate and relevant," the statement added.

    Follow msnbc.com's Ian Johnston on Twitter.

    127 comments

    Seems like the only way a system like that could truly function is if all states adopted the same laws. Since that is neither practical or enforceable, there shouldn't be an international registry to track people.

    Show more
    Explore related topics: human-rights, indonesia, iran, west-papua, featured, interpol, red-notice, ian-johnston, benny-wenda

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