Supporting the Supreme Court’s decision to summon former President General Pervez Musharraf, former Pakistan Prime Minister Nawaz Sharif has said the military ruler’s trial was the ‘need of the hour’.
Sharif said Musharraf must be tried and punished for “breaching the constitutionâ€.
“Such a man deserves to be tried and imprisoned instead of being given guard of [...]
Posts Tagged ‘hour’
Musharraf’s trial ‘need of the hour’: Sharif
Tallulah Morehead: Big Brother 11: May the Dork Be With You
Let’s start right off with the flying pink elephant in the Big Brother House: Voldedork’s imaginary wife. But first, I must redub him. Last week…
Bob Iger: Hulu Could Charge For Content, People Will Pay Online
PASADENA, Calif. — Walt Disney Co. Chief Executive Bob Iger said Wednesday the Hulu online video streaming site that it now co-owns could one day charge for its content instead of just offering free streams and selling advertising.
“The…
On the breadline
Comparing the minimum wage across America
ON FRIDAY July 24th the federal minimum wage in America rises by 70 cents to $7.25 an hour, the third rise since 2007. Some states, such as Alaska, have recently passed laws to match the new federal rate, and a majority either equal or exceed the government minimum. Washington and Oregon are the most generous states, with $8.55 and $8.40 an hour respectively. Kansas is the meanest state, offering just $2.65, though this will change to $7.25 in 2010. Many poor southern states have no minimum-wage law at all.
…
On the breadline
Comparing the minimum wage across America
ON FRIDAY July 24th the federal minimum wage in America rises by 70 cents to $7.25 an hour, the third rise since 2007. Some states, such as Alaska, have recently passed laws to match the new federal rate, and a majority either equal or exceed the government minimum. Washington and Oregon are the most generous states, with $8.55 and $8.40 an hour respectively. Kansas is the meanest state, offering just $2.65, though this will change to $7.25 in 2010. Many poor southern states have no minimum-wage law at all.
…
Low-Paid Workers To Get Raise On Friday
WASHINGTON — The final installment of a three-part increase in the federal minimum wage is proving to be the most controversial.
Two previous wage hikes, one in 2007, the other in 2008, pushed the federal wage to $5.85 and then to the curren…
My revolutionary hour on the plinth
On Bastille Day, I dressed as Marie Antoinette and stood in Trafalgar Square for Antony Gormley’s One and Other plinth project
Full coverage of the fourth plinth
It was Bastille Day. But I never really explained that. Nor did I exactly say that I was Marie Antoinette for the duration of my hour on the plinth. I hoped it would be clear. Or perhaps I hoped it would give people watching in Trafalgar Square or online something to wonder.
There was a vast range of cupcakes given out to the mob below me, donated kindly by Hummingbird Bakery. This was a key ploy. I bribed my crowd. This company are apparently at the crumb-caked serrated edge of baking fashion but some of those strangers on the square who were offered cake for free looked as if they could not trust their good fortune.
The ride across the square in the cherry-picker was my highlight. Or rather the ride back was, when I was at last relaxed enough to enjoy it. Before you pull away from the plinth the cherry-picker’s arm extends high above the rest of the square and that was the best bit.
The worst bit was dressing in haste in the cabin to one side of the square. I had plenty of time really, but was convinced I would lace myself up wrong. I had only tried the incredible outfit on once before, a week ago, in the dressing rooms at the costumier Angels, who I must really thank, and I could not remember which bits went on first. I had huge under-bustles.
Many have pointed out that Marie Antoinette did not really say “let them eat cake” and I know it is a disputed quote, but it seems a good enough premise for eating cake. She probably said brioche, which was the fine, eggy, cakey bread the royals ate at Versailles, if she said anything at all, but it has never been clear which “great princess” Rousseau was referring to when he attributed the quote.
I held up several strange revolutionary quotes during my hour – more than 20 in all. And had to speed up towards the end as the hour of my de-plinthing approached. One other quote I used is hotly disputed. “After me the deluge”, is thought by some to have been said by Mme de Pompadour, so I gave her a credit too.
The best responses from the crowd came for the straightforward revolutionary sentiments and for the feminist ones. Nancy Mitford’s comment that housework is much more frightening than hunting is my personal favourite, but I got a good response for the quote from the sitcom Porridge – “Born free, ’til somebody caught me” – which was, strictly speaking, a lyric.
I left the rabble wanting less of me, I fear, but at least they cheered to my last revolutionary slogan, the all-inclusive “Up the workers”.
Guardian Daily: Poll shows Afghan support
Richard Norton Taylor assesses the government’s latest position on Afghanistan, after a week in which eight soldiers died in a 24-hour period.
A leading Cambridge academic predicts that exams will cease to exist, as online assessment takes over. Polly Curtis takes a look into the future to find out how new systems will work, and what effect they’ll have.
Ashley Seager investigates allegations that delays to the introduction of feed-in tariffs, designed to boost green energy, are being caused by civil servants who favour nuclear power.
Illegal file-sharing among teenagers is on the wane, as they get their music from streaming sites. Alexandra Topping gets down with the kids to find out what it means for the industry.
And England defy expectations to draw with Australia in the first Ashes cricket Test.
Guardian Daily: Poll shows Afghan support
Richard Norton Taylor assesses the government’s latest position on Afghanistan, after a week in which eight soldiers died in a 24-hour period.
A leading Cambridge academic predicts that exams will cease to exist, as online assessment takes over. Polly Curtis takes a look into the future to find out how new systems will work, and what effect they’ll have.
Ashley Seager investigates allegations that delays to the introduction of feed-in tariffs, designed to boost green energy, are being caused by civil servants who favour nuclear power.
Illegal file-sharing among teenagers is on the wane, as they get their music from streaming sites. Alexandra Topping gets down with the kids to find out what it means for the industry.
And England defy expectations to draw with Australia in the first Ashes cricket Test.
Guardian Daily: Poll shows Afghan support
Richard Norton Taylor assesses the government’s latest position on Afghanistan, after a week in which eight soldiers died in a 24-hour period.
A leading Cambridge academic predicts that exams will cease to exist, as online assessment takes over. Polly Curtis takes a look into the future to find out how new systems will work, and what effect they’ll have.
Ashley Seager investigates allegations that delays to the introduction of feed-in tariffs, designed to boost green energy, are being caused by civil servants who favour nuclear power.
Illegal file-sharing among teenagers is on the wane, as they get their music from streaming sites. Alexandra Topping gets down with the kids to find out what it means for the industry.
And England defy expectations to draw with Australia in the first Ashes cricket Test.
Palin Report Overstates Costs Of Ethics Complaints: $30,000 An Hour Attorney?
There’s some double counting and other problems with a spreadsheet outlining $1.9 million in state costs for ethics complaints, public records requests and lawsuits directed at Alaska Gov. Sarah Palin.
Un Envoy Spends Hour In ‘hell-hole’
YANGON – United Nations human rights expert Paulo Sergio Pinheiro visited
Myanmar’s Insein prison yesterday to probe abuses and uncover how many
died during the junta’s suppression of September’s pro-democracy protests.
Mr Pinheiro, who was allowed back into Myanmar by the regime for the first
time in four years, visited the jail for about an hour. He was joined by
UN and government officials, and escorted by police, witnesses said.
Human rights groups have urged him to push for reform and press for the
release of all political prisoners. Amnesty International estimates 700
are still in detention.
Opposition leader Aung San Suu Kyi was secretly held at Insein in 2003.
Former political prisoner Ko Aung said the British-built prison was known
as the “darkest hell-hole in Burma”.
Earlier yesterday, Mr Pinheiro met home affairs officials in Yangon and
was scheduled to meet senior Buddhist monks.
Monks were at the forefront of the protests, which eventually swelled into
the biggest anti-government demonstrations in two decades.
Mr Pinheiro had been expected to travel yesterday to the Myanmar’s capital
Naypyidaw to meet government ministers, but that trip has been postponed,
the official said.
It was not immediately clear if Mr Pinheiro, who will leave Myanmar on
Thursday, would meet Ms Aung San Suu Kyi. – AFP



