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Warlord’s son jailed for PC’s murder

Lawless state was paid to seize warlord’s son Mustaf Jama, convicted of murdering Sharon Beshenivsky in bungled robbery

The final member of a robbery gang who shot dead a policewoman in Bradford was jailed for life today as details emerged of a snatch operation in Somalia which brought him back to face a British court.

A judge allowed publication for the first time of a deal which saw the Foreign and Home Offices pay the African state, which has no diplomatic ties with London, to seize 29-year-old Mustaf Jama in the desert two years ago, close to his warlord father’s headquarters.

The ambush of Jama’s Land Rover by 15 militiamen nearly failed when a pilot, hired to fly the captured gangster to Dubai, tried to back out, thinking that he was caught up in an anti al-Qaida operation which could bring reprisals.

He was persuaded to proceed – and the course was set which ended in Jama’s conviction in a retrial at Newcastle crown court, with a minimum 35-year term for the murder of PC Sharon Beshenivsky, who was 38 and a mother of three with two stepchildren.

The brazen shooting took place in Bradford on 18 November 2005. Beshenivsky was killed and her colleague, PC Teresa Millburn, now 39, seriously injured when they answered an alarm call from a travel agency which specialised in sending cash overseas.

Mr Justice Openshaw said Jama was one of three “ruthless and dangerous men” who took part in the raid and who are now all serving life. It was not clear who fired at the officers, but Jama’s presence at the scene made him “as much guilty of murder” as the others, Muzzaker Shah and Jama’s younger brother Yusuf, according to the prosecution.

Three other men who acted as lookouts for the gang, which hoped to net £100,000, have also been jailed. Police and other agencies are now hunting the alleged mastermind behind the bungled robbery, Piran Ditta Khan, 60, from London, who is believed to be in Pakistan.

Successive trials heard how the gang, based in London, worked on detailed but inaccurate information from Bradford, and spent the night before the robbery drinking and taking drugs with prostitutes. Their trail was picked up by the ring of CCTV cameras surrounding the Yorkshire city, but Jama managed to flee abroad.

He denied reports at the time that he was disguised by a burka and this did not form part of the prosecution case. He was allocated Britain’s “most wanted” status and the go-ahead was given for the operation in Somalia.

Ironically, he had earlier avoided deportation to Somalia after convictions for robbery, affray and driving offences in Britain, because of the African country’s lawless state. His family came to London in 1992 when he was 12, claiming they had suffered persecution, and he was given permission to stay six years later.

Jama’s defence tried to stall the trial at a previous hearing by claiming that his seizure amounted to kidnap. His barrister, Owen Davies QC, told Mr Justice Simon at Woolwich crown court: “A very large sum of money was demanded by the requesting state in terms of costs and I still do not know what those costs represent.”

The deal was negotiated by a junior Home Office minister.

As Jama was taken from the dock, he directed a V-sign at police officers in the public gallery but otherwise showed no emotion. Beshenivsky’s widower Paul hugged Millburn as the guilty verdict was given.

His wife was the first woman police officer to be shot and killed on duty since PC Yvonne Fletcher was murdered outside the Libyan embassy in London in 1984.

guardian.co.uk © Guardian News & Media Limited 2009 | Use of this content is subject to our Terms & Conditions | More Feeds


UAE spyware Blackberry update

By Ben Thompson
Middle East business reporter, BBC News, Dubai

Blackberry Tour (AP)

An update for Blackberry users in the United Arab Emirates could allow unauthorised access to private information and e-mails.

The update was prompted by a text from UAE telecoms firm Etisalat, suggesting it would improve performance.

Instead, the update resulted in crashes or drastically reduced battery life.

Blackberry maker Research in Motion (RIM) said in a statement the update was not authorised, developed, or tested by RIM.

Etisalat is a major telecommunications firm based in the UAE, with 145,000 Blackberry users on its books.

In the statement, RIM told customers that "Etisalat appears to have distributed a telecommunications surveillance application… independent sources have concluded that it is possible that the installed software could then enable unauthorised access to private or confidential information stored on the user’s smartphone".

It adds that "independent sources have concluded that the Etisalat update is not designed to improve performance of your BlackBerry Handheld, but rather to send received messages back to a central server".

The concern over this unauthorised access only came to light when users started reporting problems with their handsets.

After downloading the update, users across the country noticed significantly reduced battery life, poor reception and in some cases, handsets stopped working altogether.

Users have complained that the firm’s customer service is unable to provide information on the problem. Initial advice led many users to simply buy new batteries.

‘Surveillance solutions’

The update has now been identified as an application developed by American firm SS8. The California-based company describes itself as a provider of "lawful electronic intercept and surveillance solutions".

It is not clear why Etisalat wanted to include the software in the download.

The firm issued a brief statement last week, calling the problem a "slight technical fault", saying that the "upgrades were required for service enhancements".

Etisalat told BBC News that it stands by last week’s statement and has not yet responded to further requests for comment.

"There may be a good reason they wanted to install the software," said one Blackberry user in Dubai who did not want to be named.

"But my biggest problem is that my phone won’t work. If you call customer service you either can’t get through, or they don’t know what to tell you. I don’t know what to do."

RIM has now issued its own update allowing users to remove the application. Customers of the country’s rival service, Du, have not been affected.</p


This article is from the BBC News website. © British Broadcasting Corporation, The BBC is not responsible for the content of external internet sites.

Killing dissent

The murder of Russian human rights activist Natalia Estemirova shows that life in Chechnya – although more peaceful than it was a decade ago – can still be brutal, says Rupert Wingfield-Hayes.

"Now Natalia herself has become a victim of the brutality she had worked so fearlessly to document"

A picture of Natalia Estemirova

I cannot pretend to have been a friend of Natalia Estemirova.

I met her only once, in April this year, in her little office in the Chechen capital Grozny.

We sat for an hour sipping tea as she told me about the latest horrors she and her team had uncovered in the dirty war that is still going on in southern Russia.

Outside, a group of rough-looking country folk were sitting in the hallway, their faces strained, their eyes haunted.

Natalia was the person they all came to, to tell of a missing son or husband, of a fresh abduction in the middle of the night, or a house burned in retribution for a rebel attack.

Most recently, Natalia had been investigating a killing by a government death squad in a small village in southern Chechnya.

Last words

Locals told her an old man had been accused of giving one of his sheep to the Islamic insurgents. On 7 July, government troops came to his home, dragged the old man to the village square, and then – as villagers looked on – they shot him in the head.

"This," they were told, "is what will happen to any of you who help the rebels."

Now Natalia herself has become a victim of the brutality she had worked so fearlessly to document.

Map Russia and Chechnya

At 0830 local time on Wednesday, four men dragged her from her apartment in the centre of Grozny.

Passersby saw her being forced into a white Lada. She managed to shout out: "I am being abducted."

They were the last words anybody would hear her say.

Nine hours later, her body was found 30 miles (50km) away, dumped in a forest. She had been shot in the head.

Sitting here in Moscow it is still very hard to comprehend how anybody could murder this softly spoken 50-year-old woman.

The finger of blame has immediately been pointed at Ramzan Kadyrov, the 32-year-old warlord who now runs Chechnya at Moscow’s behest.

He has emphatically denied it, and has promised that he will personally take control of the investigation.

That promise has been met with derision by friends and colleagues.

The truth is that Natalia was not short of enemies.

She was born to a Russian mother and Chechen father. When the first Chechen war broke out in the mid-1990s, most with Russian blood fled Grozny.

But she refused to leave.

Critics ‘end up dead’

When Moscow began its second onslaught on the city in 1999, she fled.

But a year later she returned and began documenting the abductions, torture and murders of thousands of young Chechen men by federal Russian troops.

Chechen President Ramzan Kadyrov

Later – as Moscow handed its war to its Chechen allies – she took on the local regime.

She was a thorn in the side of many, but particularly of President Kadyrov. And she is not the first of his critics to end up dead.

Three years ago a Chechen man called Umar Israilov turned up in Austria seeking political asylum. For several years he had worked as one of Mr Kadyrov’s bodyguards.

In testimony to Austrian authorities he said he had personally witnessed Mr Kadyrov taking part in torture sessions. He also said Mr Kadyrov kept a list of 300 enemies to be killed.

On 13 January this year, Umar Israilov was shot dead outside his Vienna apartment.

Sulim Yamadayev is another of Ramzan Kadyrov’s enemies to have met a sticky end.

He used to be one of the most powerful military commanders in Chechnya. But last year he fled to Dubai after falling out with the Chechen president.

On 30 March this year, Sulim Yamadayev was shot dead in the car park of his Dubai apartment. A week later the Dubai police issued an international arrest warrant for a man named Adam Delemkhanov.

It just happens that Mr Delemkhanov is Ramzan Kadyrov’s right-hand man. In April when I went to the Grand Mosque in Grozny for Friday prayers, there he was kneeling down right beside Chechnya’s president.

Culture of impunity

Anna Politkovskaya

My guess is that it will never be proved who ordered Natalia Estemirova’s killing. In Russia such murders are rarely solved.

Look at the case of journalist Anna Politkovskaya, shot dead outside her Moscow apartment three years ago.

Or of human rights lawyer Stanislav Markelov, gunned down in broad daylight in Moscow this January.

They were both close friends of Natalia Estemirova.

There is what Amnesty International this week called a culture of impunity in Russia.

One by one, the voices of those still willing to stand up and speak out are being silenced.

Without them the outside world will never know about the horrors still being committed in places like Chechnya.

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This article is from the BBC News website. © British Broadcasting Corporation, The BBC is not responsible for the content of external internet sites.

Prayers answered as Kenyan mosque blocks mobile signals

M-Pesa system

A device which blocks mobile phone signals has answered the prayers of some Kenyan Muslims.

Imams in Kenya have long complained that mobile phones constantly rang during prayers, disrupting services.

Imam Hassan Kithiye says he bought the machine in Dubai and it has been well received by his congregation.

A BBC correspondent in north-eastern Kenya says other mosques around Garissa town are now trying to raise enough funds to buy their own device.

One mosque has resorted to fining congregants $3 if their phones ring during a prayer service.

But this failed to solve the problem, imam Sheik Abbi-Azziz Mohamed told the BBC.

"We used to use that tyrant approach but it didn’t work. Some people are so poor that they cannot even afford to buy airtime. We couldn’t expect them to pay," he said. </p


This article is from the BBC News website. © British Broadcasting Corporation, The BBC is not responsible for the content of external internet sites.

Robert Amsterdam: After Obama Visit, Russia Resets to Default

What can be said about a kleptocratic country with no rule of law, where women are shot dead, young promising lawyers slain and the rest cowed into submission by fear?

Falcons ready for revenge

The EmiratesThe Emirates’ national rugby league representative team, the UAE Falcons, host English side Saddleworth Rangers tonight, but they will be without five try scorers who crossed the line during their last outings against Liban Espoir. Dubai Exiles’ Josh Sherrin and Luke Sinclair, along with Josh

David Abrutyn: How A Name Can Help Transit’s Game

New York’s Metropolitan Transit Authority presents an idea for helping beleaguered transit systems weather the storm: revenue through corporate naming rights for rail stations.

Butt vows to continue fighting for 2011 World Cup hosting rights

Pakistan Cricket Board (PCB) chief Ijaz Butt has said he will continue to fight for Pakistan’s right to host the 2011 World Cup.
Butt said he would meet International Cricket Council (ICC) president David Morgan in Dubai later this month and discuss the issue of Pakistan being denied hosting rights of the quadrennial event.
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Michael Strong: The Most Progressive Movement on the Planet

What if we could apply the power of creativity, innovation, and entrepreneurship to the problem of poverty reduction?

Diane Tucker: Iranians Worldwide Roll Out Green Scroll Against Ahmadinejad (PHOTOS)

AUSTIN, TX — When a reporter asked Vaclav Havel to comment on the election protests in Iran, the former Czech president said, “Expressions of solidarity…

Worldwide focus on Dubai’s revamped Turnberry

The last time Turnberry’s Ailsa course took centre stage during an Open Championship, Rory McIlroy hadn’t started school yet, Tiger Woods had just been granted suffrage and a Zimbabwean was world No1. It was 1994. Nick Price emerged victorious that year after battling the ferocious elements and

IRB sevens calendar revealed

The countdown to the 2009 Dubai Rugby Sevens can now officially get under way after the International Rugby Board released the dates for the eight events that comprise the 2009-10 IRB Sevens World Series.  The UAE has once more been charged with kicking off the new season when the sporting andThe countdown to the 2009 Dubai Rugby Sevens can now officially get under way after the International Rugby Board released the dates for the eight events that comprise the 2009-10 IRB Sevens World Series. The UAE has once more been charged with kicking off the new season when the sporting and