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Trevor Phillips: a career in crisis

Outspoken, clever, brave and possessing great strategic nous – Trevor Phillips should have been a brilliant leader of the Equalities and Human Rights Commission. So what on earth went wrong?

The idea of celebrity may not always mean much to a celebrity but there is a hierarchy to these things, and so it is that one of Trevor Phillips’s prized possessions is a photograph of himself in the company of Nelson Mandela. But it isn’t often that Phillips finds himself obliged to defer to anybody. He has status, a huge public profile and, in Lord Mandelson as well as many of the titans of New Labour, some very important allies.

A year ago, this might have been enough to guarantee his place in the governing establishment, with the agreeable side-products of wealth and reputation. Instead, with the Equalities and Human Rights Commission (EHRC) that he runs hovering close to meltdown, his reputation is under the severest attack and his career is in crisis.

Phillips presumably has the support of government, which chose to extend his contract to run the organisation for another three years when a cross-section of his commissioners were calling for his head, but he cannot even be sure of that because, as the storm has raged, ministers have stayed silent.

Sir Ian Blair, the former Met commissioner, thought that he had the security of a five-year contract but now he sits at home, writing his memoirs. These contracts are not iron-clad. With headlines depicting only turmoil, nothing can be taken for granted.

The commissioners who say they have resigned (in fact, they have chosen not to re-apply; only Phillips and his deputy Margaret Prosser had their contracts renewed) are brutally specific about the problem they see at the EHRC. Nothing to do with the scale of the task. Nothing to do with teething. Phillips, they say, is the problem. His outspokenness in comments such as, “In truth, Obama may be helping to postpone the arrival of a post-racial America and I think he knows it”; his declaration that multiculturalism is dead, that it’s time to stop branding the police as institutionally racist – comments that many say they disagree with, pronouncements they never endorsed.

Kay Hampton, one of the first commissioners to bail out and a former chair of the Commission for Racial Equality, diagnosed it thus. “Phillips’s leadership style, which is better suited to a political party than a human rights organisation, led to deep discontentment and dissatisfaction. Not surprisingly, cracks soon appeared on the commission’s board, leading to a breakdown in trust and confidence in the chair.” Bert Massie, a disability rights campaigner, also said the problem stemmed from Phillips himself. “How do you manage to alienate that number of people? It’s quite a skill.”

Stepping down at the weekend, Ben Summerskill, head of the gay rights organisation Stonewall, went further. “Trevor is a brilliant communicator, he’s a fantastic maker of television programmes, but he has not been successful in running the commission and bringing it together. We should be crystal- clear: this isn’t an issue about policies, this isn’t an issue about whether the commission should be a modern, 21st-century commission, it’s an issue about old-fashioned management.”

So far, six members of the commission’s 16-strong ruling body say they have resigned, as well as the head of its disability committee, the director of stakeholder relations and, at the weekend, his director of communications. Greg Dyke, who knows Phillips well, having watched him rise from researcher to head of current affairs at London Weekend Television, said his friend is an able administrator. “He is clever and thoughtful and rational. He has always seemed very good with people. He was liked and popular. If people now are saying that he is autocratic, I have to say that is not something I ever noticed. But he does try to get things done. In some organisations, that doesn’t always make you very popular.”

A colleague who worked very closely with Phillips during his spell in 2000 as chairman of the Greater London Authority concurs. “He was very comfortable in the role, very courageous and he took the initiative. He was always wanting to move the thing forward. Others were hemmed in by the legislation, but he would say: we are a new organisation. Let’s try this. See where it goes.”

So if the problem is not a lack of ability, and Phillips hasn’t been daunted by the scale of his role as first chair of the Equalities Commission, what has gone wrong and how can it be fixed? One pertinent question is: was it the concept of the commission itself? Certainly Phillips was one of those who voiced strong opposition to the creation of the commission at the outset, arguing that the race agenda, for which he bore responsibility at the Commission for Racial Equality, would be lost or at least blanded out by the body’s absorption into the new super-quango, merging the separate government-funded bodies that dealt with race and gender and disabilities. Initially, he backed away from any suggestion that he might run it. Effectively his arm was twisted by ministers. His U-turn lost him considerable support among black activists who felt his involvement in the campaign against the EHRC might have helped them win the argument.

Dyke thinks there is a philosophical and structural problem. “When I saw they were putting all those organisations together, I thought, there is the recipe for a nightmare. Some jobs are beyond management.”

For all that, no one has suggested any lack of commitment on the part of Phillips towards the super-quango or the all-encompassing human rights agenda. Perhaps the problems go deeper.

Phillips travelled into the political arena on the path labelled New Labour. It was a particularly uncluttered path. He declined to be the Labour party’s candidate for London mayor, choosing instead to be Frank Dobson’s deputy. When Dobson lost to Ken Livingstone, Phillips entered the London Assembly by dint of his position at the top of the Labour list for elections run using proportional representation. It was a no-sweat entree to representative politics. It didn’t have to be that way. When it became clear that Bernie Grant, then MP for Tottenham, was ailing in the years before his death in 2000, many saw Phillips as a natural heir. But, not wanting the drudge of constituency meetings, backbenches and the loss of privacy, he chose not to subject himself to the hurly burly of a byelection.

He didn’t have to. From the chairmanship of the London Assembly to the chair of the Commission for Racial Equality, he attained high-profile jobs – all within his capabilities but, crucially, all with the blessing of the New Labour establishment. New Labour was never comfortable with a race agenda, but in time he became its most tangible symbol that black people could thrive within the Blairite project. But they had to be black people who understood the vocabulary. He understood the vocabulary.

One can’t help thinking that if the complaints from commissioners are even half true, Phillips seems to have run the EHRC in a very New Labour, Blairite way – with a certainty of conviction and strength of purpose, but with no great feeling that he had to take his lieutenants with him. Commissioners complain of key statements and policy pronouncements of which they had no advance warning, and felt uneasy about some of his public positions, such as the observation he made in 2005 that Britain was “sleepwalking its way to segregation”. They hit out at deals allegedly struck without their knowledge, of government by clique.

Hampton complained that Phillips’s approach was too political, but in fact it has not been at all political in any operational sense because politicians know only too well that they need to keep potentially troublesome elements “on-side” to prevent the sort of disunity and plotting that has brought Phillips’s career to the precipice. A good politician nurtures constituents, even when they are foolish or boring, and they know that while powerful friends are a boon, a personal constituency is crucial, especially when things go bad.

Rather than political, his approach thus far would appear to have been rooted in the skills that made him a formidable journalist. Single-mindness, strategic nous, a love of impact, the courage to take the debate into uncharted territory, a certain ruthlessness. “There are two schools of thought in government and public affairs,” says a colleague who has observed him closely. “The first way says you build alliances and go slowly. The second is that you need to push ahead and let anyone who lags behind catch up. He is much closer to the second.”

This approach has brought some success, but no one writes much about that. The commission has brought 330 enforcement and litigation actions in the last 18 months alone. But was it the right approach to fuse the disparate elements of the fledgling commission? The only thing that unites the rebel factions now is their criticism of him.

If he is to survive – and increasingly even friends question whether he will – the next week will be crucial. The resignations are losing their impact, but it must be worrying for him that few of the commissioners who have been so scathing about him are themselves being criticised. By attacking him, they seem to be doing the will of their own constituents. His allies, by contrast, appear to be keeping their heads down and so are ministers who hold his fate within their gift. One more push and he could topple over. Any fresh allegation of conflict between his work for the commission – a three-day-a-week contract – and his private race consultancy Equate would see an end to him. (Commissioners and ministers were aggrieved to learn that in 2007, as Channel 4 faced criticism over racist remarks directed towards the Indian actor Shilpa Shetty on Big Brother, the station was being advised by Equate, which is 70% owned by Phillips.) Any new worries about the EHRC’s finances, which triggered concern this year from the National Audit Office, could also see him finished. Sudden death.

But if he can soldier on through the next few days, the plan is for a fresh start. A new, coherent vision for the commission, drawn up with greenskin commissioners who will pull in the same direction. Perhaps a landmark speech. Maybe it will activate a legal challenge or two; get its hands dirty. But there will also have to be a new approach from Phillips. A more measured, consensual approach that includes his lieutenants, and might well appeal on some days to the Tories and the Daily Mail, but doesn’t leave everyone else with the impression that the pendulum is stuck in an illiberal direction.

Above all, he will need to start showing an increasingly sceptical public why the commission, with its £70m budget, exists and should continue to exist. Already there is the fear that the ongoing crisis will give an incoming Cameron government the perfect excuse to kill off the commission. It needs a reputation for effectiveness, not cabaret. It needs results. “So far, he can’t point to anything substantial that it has done for anybody,” says the MP Diane Abbott. “There has been a lot of damage done to Trevor and the commission. The sooner it starts delivering for people, the better.”

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Prejudice lives on in the USA

The arrest of an African-American professor and the vilification of a Latina woman judge show that prejudice lives on in the USA

During a major policy speech on healthcare, even President Obama found time to weigh in: “… I think it’s fair to say, number one, any of us would be pretty angry. Number two, that the Cambridge police acted stupidly in arresting somebody when there was already proof that they were in their own home. And number three – what I think we know separate and apart from this incident – is that there is a long history in this country of African-Americans and Latinos being stopped by law enforcement disproportionately…” Needless to say, the next morning’s papers talked about Obama calling Cambridge police “stupid”.

The arrest of Harvard professor Henry Louis Gates has been officially swallowed by the larger narrative of race in America. Now I love a good racial escapade as much as the next person, but this one strikes me as uniquely unfortunate both in its timing and its capacity for becoming a flashpoint for unrelated resentments.

The facts not in dispute are straightforward. Gates came home from a trip and found his front door jammed. With the help of his driver, he tried to push the door open, unsuccessfully. He then went to the back door, opened it with his key, turned off the alarm system and called Harvard’s property management company to report the sticky door. Meanwhile, a passerby called the police to report that “two black males” were breaking into a house. When the police arrived, they encountered Gates in his living room. Gates provided his driving licence and his Harvard ID.

Here the stories diverge. Gates says he asked the officer to identify himself and the officer refused. The officer says that Gates was unco-operative, called him a racist and began shouting so loudly – “Your momma!” and: “You don’t know who you’re messing with!” according to the police report – that the noise constituted “tumultuous behaviour” and “public disorder”. Gates was handcuffed and hauled off to jail for a few hours. A day later, a judge dismissed the charges, saying both sides had acted badly. Gates demanded that the arresting officer apologise; the officer demanded that Gates apologise. The Cambridge police department demanded that President Obama apologise, which he did, quite eloquently as usual. Gates took to national television to set the record straight. Al Sharpton announced his intention to march in protest. And Michael Jackson, pushed from the front pages for a hot minute, was finally able to rest in peace.

Most unfortunate, but as American crime blotters go, this one is no big deal. Yes, racial profiling is an endemic, massive problem, but in this instance the police were called because of at least minimally suspicious behaviour – two men trying to force open a door. And yes, (allegedly) shouting angry taunts at the police isn’t tea-time politesse, but it does seem that the officer might have responded to it in a more professional manner than elevating it to the level of public “tumult”.

What makes this case so interesting – and alarming – is the vitriolic public commentary that ensued. Early newspaper and on-line accounts helped seed confusion, varying wildly: some gave the impression that Gates was trying to break into a house not his own, some that he refused to identify himself or that he resisted arrest. None of that was true.

But the larger backlash has quickly moved from the individual incident itself to condemnations in the stereotyped plural, concentrating on a very tight set of recurring themes: Gates is “uppity”, arrogant, pseudo-educated. He should have been grateful that the police came to his house at all. Harvard was stupid for hiring him. African-American studies, the department Gates chairs, is a non-subject, only on the curriculum to keep black students from rioting. The Ivy League is run by politically correct “wusses” who don’t have the courage to get rid of “undeserving” “whiners”. Who could blame police officers for refusing to come to black homes or neighbourhoods if this is what they get? “Those people” have jobs a “more qualified” white person should be holding.

(Where, oh where, our fleeting “post-racial” moment of Kumbaya?)

I mentioned that timing was also a probable factor in this brouhaha. The entire week before Gates’s arrest was consumed with reports of the congressional hearings for Obama’s Supreme Court nominee, Judge Sonia Sotomayor. She would be the first Hispanic and only the third woman sitting in our highest court. Hence, racial resentment had already been simmering on the shock-jock media burners. Three ultra-conservative senators in particular grilled her, day after day, using some of the most prejudiced, stereotype-laden language we’ve heard publicly in many a year. Despite the fact that Sotomayor graduated at the top of her class from Princeton and Yale Law School, she has been attacked as not qualified, chosen not for merit but because she’s a woman or Latina. Pundits such as Pat Buchanan railed that “affirmative action is to increase diversity by discriminating against white males”. Furthermore, said Buchanan, there could be nothing wrong with a court of all white men, because, after all “white men were 100% of the people who wrote the constitution, 100% of the people who signed the Declaration of Independence, 100% of the people who died at Gettysburg and Vicksburg…”

Then, too, controversy erupted over a statement Sotomayor made years ago, in which she hoped her life experience as a Latina woman would lend her wisdom in ways that might allow her easier insights into situations that others might not have lived through. This, the so-called “wise Latina woman” statement, has got her relentlessly labelled a “reverse racist” by the shock-jocky press.

Finally, Judge Sotomayor was part of a panel of judges that ruled, based on established precedent, that a hiring test given by the New Haven fire department should be scrutinised for bias, after all the African-American applicants and all but one Hispanic failed the test. Coincidentally, barely a month ago, the conservative majority of the Supreme Court narrowly overruled that holding, saying that disparate impact was not alone sufficient to strike down the test – and that it was “racism” against the white firefighters who did pass the test. As a visual flourish, during Sotomayor’s hearing, row upon row of New Haven firefighters (in uniform, all white men but for that lonely Hispanic) sat in on the hearing, there to object to her nomination. The cameras loved it, panning their solemn faces relentlessly.

In short, the Sotomayor hearing and the New Haven firefighters case have reignited the general American debate about affirmative action. So when the extremely distinguished Harvard university professor Henry Louis Gates was carted off in handcuffs, allegedly calling out: “This is what happens to black men in America!”, there was a distinct shimmer of schadenfreude in some parts of the national psyche. The reactionary themes that had been percolating during the last few weeks came bursting to the fore: minorities are taking over! Obama is only appointing non-whites! White people are the truly oppressed! People of colour, particularly ones who went to Harvard, Yale or Princeton, are reverse racists.

The arrest itself is hardly the best example of either racial profiling or police-state oppression. But the discourse that has welled up in its wake reveals a public inclination that is marred by that and more.

Patricia Williams is professor of law at Columbia University

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Chinese hack site over Uighur film

Beijing unhappy at decision to screen film about exiled Uighur leader Rebiya Kadeer, accused of plotting Urumqi riots

Chinese hackers have attacked the website of Australia’s biggest film festival over its decision to screen a documentary about the exiled Uighur leader, Rebiya Kadeer.

Yesterday], two days after the Melbourne international festival opened, hackers replaced programme information with the Chinese flag and anti-Kadeer slogans and sent spam emails in an attempt to crash the site, according to reports in the Australian press.

“We like film but we hate Rebiya Kadeer,” one message said, demanding an apology to the Chinese people.

The festival director, Richard Moore, said staff had been bombarded with abusive emails after he rebuffed demands from the Chinese government to drop the film about Kadeer, The 10 Conditions of Love, and cancel her invitation to the festival.

“The language has been vile,” Moore told the Melbourne Age. “It is obviously a concerted campaign to get us because we’ve refused to comply with the Chinese government’s demands.”

He said the festival had reported the attacks, which appear to be coming from a Chinese internet protocol address, and was discussing security concerns with Victoria’s state police. Private security guards are being hired to protect Kadeer and other patrons at the film’s screening on August 8.

Kadeer denies Beijing’s claim that she masterminded this month’s riots in Xinjiang’s capital, Urumqi, in which almost 200 people died.The 10 Conditions of Love, directed by the Australian filmmaker Jeff Daniels, describes Kadeer’s relationship with her activist husband Sidik Rouzi and reveals the impact of her campaign for more autonomy for China’s 10 million mainly Muslim Uighurs on her 11 children, three of whom have received jail sentences.

Once one of the richest women in Xinjiang and held up as an exemplar of China’s purported multi-ethnic harmony, Rebiya Kadeer now heads two prominent Uighur exile groups, speaking out against Beijing’s oppression of the Turkic-speaking minority.

Kadeer’s persecution by the Chinese and her stature as a public face of the Uighur people have earned her comparisons to the Dalai Lama, the exiled Tibetan spiritual leader. Like him, she has been an unrelenting target for Chinese opprobrium.

Her appearance at the Melbourne film festival means the event has also come into Chinese sights. Last week, three Chinese directors withdrew films, with two denying they were forced to do so by Chinese authorities. Director Tang Xiaobai, who withdrew her film Perfect Life after being phoned by the Chinese foreign ministry and the state administration of radio, film and television, said it was her decision to boycott the festival.

“I do not want to see my film screened on the same platform as a film about Kadeer,” Tang told the official English-language newspaper China Daily.

The row over the Kadeer documentrary is not the only row to hit the festival. The British film director, Ken Loach, last week withdrew his film, Looking for Eric, in protest at its decision to accept sponsorship from Israel.

The slogan of the Melbourne film festival is “Everyone’s a critic”.

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Row over Tory link to Polish right grows

The credibility of David Cameron’s new alliance in the European parliament is cast into fresh doubt today as the Observer reveals damning new evidence about its Polish leader’s past.

The allegations, which threaten to do serious damage to the Tory leader, centre on Michal Kaminski, a rightwinger chosen this month to chair the new and supposedly mainstream European Conservatives and Reformists group, of which the 25 Tory MEPs are members.

Opponents of Kaminski, 37, claim he has shown homophobic and antisemitic tendencies at odds with Cameron’s vision of a new tolerant Tory party. In particular, they say Kaminski was active in efforts to block an apology by his countrymen in 2001 for the massacre of hundreds of Jews in Jedwabne in July 1941. He denies this.

Speaking to this paper Kaminski also insisted he had never given an interview to a far-right Polish journal, Nasza Polska, during which he allegedly said Poles should not apologise for the Jedwabne pogrom until the Jews said sorry for collaborating with the Soviets.

“I never did an interview,” Kaminski insisted, adding that he “never tried to stop” an apology. But investigations by the Observer call those denials into doubt. Residents of Jedwabne at the time – backed by Polish journalists who covered the story – say Kaminski is misrepresenting his past role.

Footage of a television news bulletin from 5 March 2001 shows Kaminski reacting to news that the then President Aleksander Kwasniewski was to issue an apology and saying: “I think that Mr President can apologise but for other things. He should withhold apologies for Jedwabne.” The editor in chief of Nasza Polska, Piotr Jakucki, confirmed that Kaminski gave the 2001 interview.

At that time Jedwabne was the focus of international press attention after an American professor, Jan T Gross, published a book, based on the accounts of local people, which concluded that Poles, with the help of some occupying Nazi troops, locked hundreds of Jews into a barn, and set it on fire. But many people in Jedwabne and other parts of Poland, including Kaminski, believed the whole of Poland was being unfairly blamed for an unproven crime.

Maria Kaczynska, then a journalist with Gazeta Wspolczesna, recalls Kaminski’s role. “I remember all of this very vividly. I had to be in Jedwabne to write about him. I saw him in Jedwabne. He had a big folder and he pulled out a file, a petition calling on locals not to participate in apologies to the Jews.”

Kaminski also flatly denies having been involved in attempts to set up a committee aimed at defending the people of Jedwabne. “I had no involvement with them,” he said. However, Stanislaw Michalowski, the town council head at the time, said: “He was trying to set up a committee of Jedwabne defence but he failed.” Rafal Pankowski, who edits Never Again, an anti-racist magazine, said it was “incredible and appalling that Kaminski can lead a group in the European parliament that pretends to be mainstream and tolerant”.

In a letter in today’s Observer Kaminski calls claims that he is antisemitic “distressing” and insists he has spent “a lifetime of work supporting Israel and the Jewish community in Poland”.

“I have made it clear that the actions of some Poles in the Jedwabne massacre were horrific and criminal. The Polish people were also shattered by the Nazis. While we should share in commemoration I do not believe we should make the whole Polish nation culpable for the criminal acts of a small minority.”

Glenys Kinnock, the Europe minister, said: “This is another example of David Cameron’s inexperience and his willingness to leave Britain isolated. In the global downturn, it is more vital than ever that Britain remains at the heart of Europe. He needs to learn that he will not serve Britain’s national interests by resorting to isolation and extremism.”

Tories in Europe

Why has Cameron formed a new EU group?

In 2005, when campaigning to become leader, he promised Eurosceptic MPs he would quit the federalist European People’s party (EPP).

What is the problem?

He struggled to make a new group and ended up with allies on Europe’s hard right.

Does it matter?

Yes. Angela Merkel and Nicolas Sarkozy are angry that Cameron has left the EPP. It strikes important deals before EU summits.

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Obama wins over race row academic

Harvard academic agrees to meet white officer who detained him as president seeks to defuse tension

Harvard professor Henry Louis Gates, who was arrested on suspicion of breaking into his own home, has accepted Barack Obama’s invitation to visit him at the White House to have a beer with the white police officer who detained him.

Gates told the Boston Globe last night that he had spoken to Obama and agreed to meet Cambridge police sergeant James Crowley. Gates, one of the country’s most prominent black academics, said he hoped his arrest would lead to greater sensitivity on racial profiling.

“My entire academic career has been based on improving race relations, not exacerbating them,” Gates said in an email, adding: “It is time for all of us to move on, and to assess what we can learn from this experience.”

Obama phoned the two men to invite them to the White House yesterday as he sought to calm the debate sparked when he said the police in Cambridge, Massachusetts, had “acted stupidly” in arresting Gates.

The president told the policeman he should have chosen his words more carefully, but stopped short of issuing an apology.

“Because this has been ratcheting up and I helped to contribute to ratcheting it up, I want to make it clear that in my choice of words I unfortunately gave the impression I was maligning the Cambridge police department and Sergeant Crowley and I could have calibrated those words differently,” he said. However, the president also said he felt both men could have handled the situation better.

He said he had invited both Crowley and Gates for “a beer here in the White House”. It is not yet clear whether Crowley has accepted the invitation.

A joint statement by three Massachusetts police unions said they appreciated the president’s “sincere interest” and added that Crowley had a friendly and meaningful conversation with Obama.

Crowley has not spoken to the media, but his brother, JP Crowley, a fellow officer on the Cambridge department, said: “I think he just wants to get back to a sense of normalcy, back to work. He didn’t ask for this.”

Earlier, Steve Killian, president of the Cambridge police patrol officers’ association, denied that race was a factor in the arrest and demanded an apology from Obama and the state governor, Deval Patrick, who is African-American and had described the arrest as “every black man’s nightmare”.

“Cambridge police are not stupid. It is a great department. I think everyone that knows us knows that,” said Killian.

Other police union officials said the charges against Gates should not have been dropped. Crowley arrested the professor for disorderly conduct after neighbours saw him and a taxi driver attempting to force the jammed front door of his home. Gates said he showed identification and asked Crowley for his name and badge number because he did not like the way he was spoken to. The professor accused the policeman of racial profiling and apparently raised his voice.

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Obama invites police officer for beer

President attempts to defuse growing controversy about sergeant’s arrest of black history professor

Barack Obama today phoned the white policeman he said “acted stupidly” in arresting a black Harvard professor in his own home and invited the officer to visit the White House as the president attempted to defuse a growing race row over the incident.

Obama revealed he made the five-minute phone call to Sergeant James Crowley shortly after police unions demanded an apology from the president for saying the police in Cambridge, Massachusetts “acted stupidly” in arresting Henry Louis Gates on charges of disorderly conduct after the officer responded to a report of a suspected burglary.

The president said he should have chosen his words more carefully but stopped short of an apology. “Because this has been ratcheting up and I helped to contribute to ratcheting it up, I want to make it clear that in my choice of words I unfortunately gave the impression I was maligning the Cambridge police department and Sergeant Crowley and I could have calibrated those words differently,” he said.

Seeking to lighten the situation further, he said at the daily White House briefing that he had invited both Crowley and Gates for “a beer here in the White House”.

However, the president also said he felt both men could have handled the situation better.

Earlier, Steve Killian, president of the Cambridge police patrol officers’ association, denied that race was a factor in the arrest and demanded an apology from Obama and the state governor, Deval Patrick, who is African-American and had described the arrest as “every black man’s nightmare”.

“Cambridge police are not stupid. It is a great department. I think everyone that knows us knows that,” said Killian.

Other police union officials said the charges against Gates should not have been dropped. Crowley arrested the professor for disorderly conduct after neighbours saw him and a black taxi driver attempting to force the jammed front door of his home. Gates said he showed identification and asked Crowley for his name and badge number because he did not like the way he was spoken to. The professor accused the policeman of racial profiling and apparently raised his voice.

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Obama wades into Harvard race row

President says officer ‘acted stupidly’ in arresting Henry Louis Gates and highlights history of police racism

President Barack Obama has waded deep into an increasingly bitter race row by saying that a white police officer “acted stupidly” in arresting a renowned black Harvard professor, Henry Louis Gates, after he forced the door of his own home.

The president’s additional comments about a long history of police racism amid accusations that one of the country’s most prominent African-American scholars was detained only because he is black has dampened enthusiasm for claims that Obama’s election takes America “post-racial”.

Gates was arrested for disorderly conduct after neighbours called the police when they saw him and a black taxi driver attempting to force the jammed front door of his home in Cambridge, Massachusetts.

What transpired is disputed but after producing identification to show that he was at his own house, a row ensued in which Gates demanded an officer’s name and badge number and accused him of racial profiling. The police sergeant then arrested him for disorderly conduct.

“This is what happens to black men in America!” Gates yelled to a crowd outside his house as he was handcuffed. Charges were later dropped.

The president, responding to a question at a press conference about the arrest, said Gates was a friend and that he was uncertain what role race played in the dispute. But Obama condemned the police and said the incident is “a sign of how race remains a factor in this society”.

“The Cambridge police acted stupidly in arresting somebody when there was already proof that they were in their own home,” he said. “What I think we know, separate and apart from this incident, is that there is a long history in this country of African-Americans and Latinos being stopped by law enforcement disproportionately. And that’s just a fact.”
Obama had earlier lightened the mood by wondering what would happen if he were trying to break in to his own home.

“Here, I’d get shot,” he said of the White House.

But Obama’s comment was also taken as an observation about the assumptions white police officers make about black men in responding to reports of criminal behaviour.

Gates said he was pleased with the president’s support.

“I think it was brilliant,” he said in an interview with the broadcaster Tavis Smiley. “It is a great speech about race, and race relations, particularly between black people and white people at the beginning of the 21st century.”

Gates said the arrest made him aware of how minorities are vulnerable “to capricious forces like a rogue policeman”.

But the police officer at the centre of the row, Sergeant James Crowley, told a Boston radio station that he won’t be apologising and that it is “disappointing that he [Obama] waded into what should be a local issue”.

“I know what I did was right,” he said.

Other officials were prepared to apologise to Gates, including the mayor of Cambridge, Denise Simmons, who called him to say that the arrest was “regrettable and unfortunate”. The state governor, Deval Patrick, said he was troubled and upset over the incident.

Gates has won considerable support from other academics, some of whom have said that there is a mistaken belief among some white Americans that the country is moving beyond racial issues after Obama’s election.
Gates agrees.

“I thought the whole idea that America was post-racial and post-black was laughable from the beginning. There is no more important event in the history of black people in America than the election of Barack Obama … but that does not change the percentage of black men in prison, the percentage of black men harassed by racial profiling,” he told the New America Foundation.

“There haven’t been fundamental structural changes in America. There’s been a very important symbolic change and that is the election of Barack Obama. But the only black people who truly live in a post-racial world in America all live in a very nice house on 1600 Pennsylvania Avenue [the White House].”

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Obama: Arrest of black scholar was stupid

The president criticises police over arrest of Harvard professor Henry Louis Gates and says racism still haunts the United States


Obama: Arrest of black scholar was stupid

US president says police acted ‘stupidly’ in detaining Harvard professor Henry Louis Gates after he broke into his own home

Barack Obama last night showed a deft touch, but also reached a trenchant conclusion when he was asked about the arrest of Henry Louis Gates, a black Harvard professor, at his own home over the weekend.

First Obama joked about what would happen if he was found breaking into the White House.

“Here, I’d get shot,” Obama quipped before calling the behaviour of the police stupid.

Obama said: “Now, I don’t know, not having been there and not seeing all the facts, what role race played in that, but I think it’s fair to say, number one, any of us would be pretty angry; number two, that the Cambridge police acted stupidly in arresting somebody when there was already proof that they were in their own home; and, number three, what I think we know, separate and apart from this incident, is that there is a long history in this country of African-Americans and Latinos being stopped by law enforcement disproportionately. And that’s just a fact.”

The police were called to Gates’s house after someone reported a robbery in progress. Gates told police that he had forced open the front door after locking himself out and presented police with his ID. But the police arrested him, nevertheless, for “loud and tumultuous behaviour in a public space”.

He was held in police custody for four hours, after which disorderly conduct charges against him were dropped. Gates, who said he was the victim of racial profiling, demanded an apology. But the white police officer involved has refused, saying he has nothing to apologise for.

As Obama said at his press conference, despite the progress the US has made – and he cited his election as president – “race remains a factor in society”.

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Harvard scholar outraged at ‘racist’ arrest

Henry Louis Gates Jr has devoted thousands of words over many years to the subject of racial injustice, as one of America’s foremost authorities of its black history. But he didn’t expect to become his own case study.

Last Thursday he was arrested on suspicion of breaking into his own home near Harvard, the university where he is an eminent professor. He was handcuffed, fingerprinted and locked in a cell for four hours for what the local police force said was “loud and tumultuous behaviour” amounting to disorderly conduct.

News that arguably the most respected scholar of African-American history had been subjected to the very treatment that he has chronicled over many years yesterday spread through the media, prompting accusations of blatant racial profiling.

Gates told the Washington Post: “There are one million black men in jail in this country and last Thursday I was one of them. This is outrageous and this is how poor black men across the country are treated every day in the criminal justice system. It’s one thing to write about it, but altogether another to experience it.”

Prolific writer, TV presenter, director of Harvard’s WEB Du Bois Institute for African and African-American Research, collaborator with Oprah Winfrey – the list of Gates’s connections and achievements is long. But when he returned last Thursday to his leafy Cambridge, Massachusetts home from a trip to China filming his latest TV documentary, none of that mattered.

It was early afternoon when Gates, 58, reached his house by taxi. The front door was stuck, so he entered through the back door, disabled the alarm and then again tried to push open the front door with the help of the north African taxi driver.

A white woman walking by saw a black man trying to force the door, called 911, and hapless Sgt James Crowley arrived.

He asked Gates to step outside as he was investigating a report of a break-in. “Why, because I’m a black man in America?” Gates asked, according to Crowley’s police report, refusing to leave his front room.

Asked to prove it was his own home, Gates showed his Harvard ID and local driving licence. In return, Gates asked Crowley for his name and badge number. “This guy had this whole narrative in his head: black guy breaking and entering,” Gates told the Washington Post.

In his report, Crowley said Gates accused him of being a racist and told him he had no idea who he was messing with. The officer wrote that when asked Gates to step outside again, he responded: “I’ll speak with your mama outside.”

“I was quite surprised and confused with the behaviour he exhibited toward me,” the sergeant said. Crowley called more officers from Cambridge and from Harvard’s own police, and Gates was arrested.

Last night Gates said he was “appalled that any American could be treated as capriciously by an individual police officer. He should look into his soul and he should apologise to me. If so, I will be prepared to forgive him.”

Facing a barrage of criticism, the force last night dropped all charges, adding the “regrettable and unfortunate” incident should not be seen as demeaning the character and reputation of Gates nor the character of the police.

Gates at least has one consolation prize: a new television project has landed in his lap. He said he intends to make a documentary about the treatment of black people by the criminal justice system, with his story as the focus.

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Police still failing black people, MPs report

The treatment of black people by the police on issues such as stop and search and the national DNA database has worsened since the official inquiry into the murder of Stephen Lawrence 10 years ago, according to MPs.

A report published by the Commons home affairs select committee tomorrow says the police have made some “tremendous strides” in the past decade in the way they investigate race crimes and other criticial incidents involving minority ethnic communities, but MPs say there remains a number of outstanding concerns.

“Black communities in particular are disproportionately represented in stop and search statistics and on the national DNA database; in fact, the gap has increased,” they conclude.

The cross-party group of MPs say that black people are now seven times more likely to be stopped by the police than white people. A decade ago, when the Macpherson report into the murder of black teenager Stephen Lawrence was published, black people were six times more likely to be stopped.

The MPs also heard evidence that more than 30% of all black men who have been arrested now have their DNA profiles logged on the national DNA database, compared with 10% of all white men and 10% of all Asian men. The committee also expresses its disappointment that the police still fails to meet its target of employing 7% of its officers from minority ethnic communities by 2009.

They are also concerned that black and minority ethnic officers continue to experience difficulties in achieving promotion, as well as being more likely to be subject to disciplinary procedures. Keith Vaz, chairman of the home affairs select committee, said such disproportionate representation of black people in the criminal justice system would continue to damage community relations.

The home secretary, Alan Johnson, said the majority of Macpherson’s recommendations had been implemented, bringing many positive changes in race equality.

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Harvard professor accuses police of racism

A black Harvard professor, who has been named by Time magazine as one of the top 25 most influential Americans, accused police of racism after he was arrested trying to get into his own home.

Henry Louis Gates was arrested for disorderly conduct after police said he “exhibited loud and tumultuous behaviour”. He was later released.

The head of Harvard’s WEB DuBois Institute for African and American Studies, shouted to a police officer “this is what happens to a black men in America” according to a police report.

The incident happen last Thursday after a call to police that “two black males” were breaking into Gates’s home near the university campus in Cambridge, Massachusetts.

Later Gates refused to discuss the incident. But his lawyer said he was arrested after he forced his way through his front door because it was jammed. The professor’s colleagues blamed the arrest on racial profiling.

Gates initially refused to show the officer his identification, but later showed his university pass. “Gates continued to yell at me, accusing me of racial bias and continued to tell me that I had not heard the last of him,” the police officer wrote.

His friend and fellow Harvard scholar Charles Ogletree, said: “He was shocked to find himself being questioned and shocked that the conversation continued after he showed his identification.”

Allen Counter, who has taught neuroscience at Harvard for 25 years, said he was stopped on campus by two police officers in 2004 after being mistaken for a robber. They threatened to arrest him when he could not produce identification.

“We do not believe that this arrest would have happened if Professor Gates was white,” Counter said. “It really has been very unsettling for African-Americans throughout Harvard and throughout Cambridge that this happened.”

Lawrence D Bobo, professor of Social Sciences at Harvard, said he met Gates at the police station and described his colleague as feeling humiliated and “emotionally devastated.”

“It’s just deeply disappointing but also a pointed reminder that there are serious problems that we have to wrestle with,” he said.

Bobo said he hoped Cambridge police would drop the charges.

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Obama speaks to black Americans

In speech to NAACP, US president emphasises education and raising expectations for new generation

President Obama has made a call for a new liberation struggle to free African-Americans trapped in a web of low expectations and fatalism by the destructive legacy of racism.

In a passionate speech to one of the organisations at the forefront of the civil rights movement, the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People (NAACP), on its hundredth anniversary, Obama acknowledged the continuing impact of past wrongs.

But he urged African-Americans to abandon a sense of helplessness and take the initiative as they did during the struggle against segregation.

“No one has written your destiny for you. Your destiny is in your hands, and don’t you forget that. That’s what we have to teach all of our children. No excuses. No excuses,” he said. “We need a new mindset, a new set of attitudes – because one of the most durable and destructive legacies of discrimination is the way that we have internalised a sense of limitation; how so many in our community have come to expect so little of ourselves.”

In a speech that offered a direct and forthright assessment of the state of parts of black America that no president before him could have delivered, Obama placed a particular emphasis on African-American parents taking responsibility for their children. That included, he said, ensuring they do better in school by “putting away the Xbox and putting our kids to bed at a reasonable hour”.

The president departed from his prepared speech to talk about what he believes would have happened if he had not had an attentive mother who helped keep him on the straight and narrow.

“When I drive through Harlem and I drive through the south side of Chicago and I see young men on the corners, I say there but for the grace of God go I,” he said.

Obama also urged African-American parents to raise their children’s expectations by looking beyond dreams of becoming basketball players or rappers.

“They might think they’ve got a pretty jump shot or a pretty good flow but our kids can’t all aspire to be LeBron or Lil Wayne. I want them aspiring to be scientists and engineers, doctors and teachers, not just ballers and rappers. I want them aspiring to be a supreme court justice. I want them aspiring to be president of the United States of America,” he said.

Obama did not shy away from addressing some of the modern ills that have contributed to keeping many African-Americans in poverty and making life a struggle for others, such as unemployment and the housing crisis. The president said that he was not attempting to suggest that racism and discrimination, and its consequences, no longer matter.

“I understand there may be a temptation among some to think that discrimination is no longer a problem in 2009. And I believe that overall, there’s probably never been less discrimination in America than there is today. But make no mistake: the pain of discrimination is still felt in America,” he said. “By African-American women paid less for doing the same work as colleagues of a different color and gender. By Latinos made to feel unwelcome in their own country. By Muslim Americans viewed with suspicion for simply kneeling down to pray. By our gay brothers and sisters, still taunted, still attacked, still denied their rights.”

But, Obama said, change in the past had come from people taking the initiative and standing up to injustice.

“We have to say to our children, yes, if you’re African-American, the odds of growing up amid crime and gangs are higher. Yes, if you live in a poor neighbourhood, you will face challenges that someone in a wealthy suburb does not. But that’s not a reason to get bad grades, that’s not a reason to cut class, that’s not a reason to give up on your education and drop out of school.”

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Picturing the plight of the Uighurs

Considering China’s demands to silence my film about Uighurs, it’s no wonder so little is heard of their struggle

Last week I was told by Richard Moore, director of the Melbourne International Film Festival, that the Chinese government had demanded my film, The 10 Conditions of Love, be barred from screening. I was not surprised. The film is about Rebiya Kadeer, the exiled Uighur leader regarded by the Chinese government as a threat, someone who incites terrorism in its country.

Ironically, the one country that wants to silence my film gave it press I could never afford. Thankfully Moore stood up for my film’s right to be screened by politely hanging up on the rather persistent Chinese consular official.

I first learned about the Uighurs about seven years ago while having a beer with a friend of mine in Beijing. He told me about a student in his English conversation class who appeared more Iranian than Chinese. My friend asked the student where he was from and was amazed to learn of a thriving Muslim population living in the far western deserts of China. When the Uighur student noticed another Han Chinese student intently listening in, he told my friend to do his own research on his people as there was only so much he could say in public.

Soon after, my friend and I took a four-day train journey to the desert oases and mountain valleys of Xinjiang province. We had done our research and knew how the Chinese had annexed what was once an independent East Turkestan in 1949. We also understood how China saw the Uighurs’ demands for autonomous rule as a threat to its unity, labelling protesters as separatists and terrorists. Some Uighur responses were violent, leading to harsh military crackdowns and human rights atrocities in the region. The Chinese government justified its actions to the world as a homegrown battle in the global war on terror.

Passing ourselves off as tourists we were able to collect footage of a colourful and resilient people. They were Muslim, but the women did not all wear burkas and the men were known to drink alcohol. We met some Uighurs who invited us to a wedding, where we learned how to toast by rubbing shot glasses and dance with other men to show off our moves to the women before they joined in. The Uighurs loved a celebration and after witnessing their second-class status in their own country, we understood why.

Over the next few years I met Uighur exiles in New York in libraries, coffee shops and Turkish restaurants. They suspected me of being a spy for the Chinese, as so many other supposed journalists and filmmakers turned out to be. Why else would anyone be so interested in their plight? Eventually they trusted me enough to introduce me to Rebiya Kadeer, recently released after six years in prison for mailing Uighur newspaper clippings to her exiled husband in Washington DC.

I called Chinese embassies in the US and Australia to get their side of the story. The Chinese have done much in Xinjiang in terms of infrastructural and economic development. While they were happy to discuss these issues, the interview was over once I asked about Kadeer. Suddenly I was being interviewed: “Have you had contact with Ms Kadeer, who’s involved with your film and where is it being screened?” I can’t understand why they refuse to debate these issues in a public forum; this was an opportunity for them to put their side of the story on record.

Kadeer told me how she had overcome a lack of Chinese government support for Uighurs in education and economic development to become a wealthy entrepreneur. I followed Kadeer for three years, watching her at work raising awareness of the Uighurs’ struggle in China. Her daughter Ray feared her mother’s work would endanger her siblings still living in China. An exiled leader makes impossible decisions for her people at the cost of her family.

As Kadeer’s awareness campaign grew, her family situation worsened. Hers is an astonishing story that embodies the living history of a forgotten people as they struggle to demand basic human rights in China.

Considering the Chinese government’s recent demands to silence my film in Australia I am not surprised so little is heard of the Uighurs’ plight. But I have the privilege of living in a society that finds strength in dissenting opinions.

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Neo-Nazi convicted of planning bombings

• Supremacist arrested by chance on train journey
• Man had turned parents’ home into bomb factory

A white supremacist was today convicted of planning a terrorist bombing campaign amid warnings against potential attacks by far-right extremists.

Neil Lewington, 44, turned his bedroom at his parents’ house in Reading into a bomb factory, having been inspired by propaganda from far-right groups.

He was on the verge of starting his terrorist campaign and was caught only by chance as he travelled to meet a woman on a date, while carrying two improvised bombs in a holdall.

His conviction comes as police strengthen teams countering extremist violence after intelligence assessments told officers the chances of a rightwing attack are increasing.

Lewington was found guilty by an Old Bailey jury of seven out of eight charges brought under the Terrorism Act and explosives laws. The judge warned him that he faced a lengthy jail sentence. He was remanded in custody and will return to court on 8 September.

Brian Altman QC, prosecuting, said: “This man, who had strong if not fanatical rightwing leanings and opinions, was on the cusp of embarking on a campaign of terrorism against those he considered non-British.

“The defendant had in his possession the component parts of two viable improvised incendiary devices.”

A fortnight ago a senior police officer warned of an increased threat of terrorist attacks from the extreme right.

Commander Shaun Sawyer of Scotland Yard’s counterterrorism command said: “I fear that they … will carry out an attack that will lead to a loss of life or injury to a community somewhere. They’re not choosy about which community.”

He said the aim would be to cause a “breakdown in community cohesion”.

Lewington, an unemployed electrician, was arrested in October last year at Lowerstoft train station, where he had travelled for a date with a woman he met online.

During the journey he drank alcohol and became abusive. At the train station he urinated on the platform, leading police to arrest him. There were two homemade bombs in his holdall, which experts judged to be viable.

A police raid of his parents’ home uncovered 35 boosters, 15 improvised igniters, weed killer and three tennis balls.

He also kept racist propaganda and videos of neo-Nazi terrorists including the London nail bomber David Copeland.

In 1999, David Copeland struck three targets in London. His attack on a gay pub in Soho killed three people and left scores injured. It followed attacks against Brick Lane, east London, and the bombing of a market in Brixton, south London.

The search also found the Waffen SS UK members’ handbook, containing his blueprint for a neo-Nazi terror group, and notebooks with details of electronics and chemical mixtures and a book called Counter Bomb. His mobile phone contained hate material from a violent neo-Nazi group called Combat 18 and other material from the Ku Klux Klan was also found.

Women Lewington had met on the internet said he had talked openly of his hatred of black and Asian Britons, even fantasising about attacking them with tennis balls filled with explosives. He had also bragged of carrying out racist attacks.

Deputy assistant commissioner John McDowall, head of the Metropolitan Police counterterrorism command, said: “Lewington clearly set out to make viable devices which could have seriously injured or possibly killed members of the public going about their daily lives.

“Whilst our inquiries did not uncover any details about intended targets, we do not underestimate the impact that Lewington’s actions and extremist beliefs may have had on communities nationwide.”

Metropolitan police commissioner, Sir Paul Stephenson, has ordered the counter-terrorism command, SO15, to examine what the economic downturn would mean for far-right violence. The assessment concluded that the recession would increase the possibility of it.

Sawyer said that more of his officers needed to be deployed to tackle neo-Nazi-inspired violence. He said the threat posed by al-Qaida remained the unit’s priority, but said of its far-right section: “It is a small desk … we need to grow that unit.”

“There is an increased possibility of violence from the far right. There is a trend,” said one senior source, adding that the ideology of the violent right was driven by “people who don’t like immigration, people who don’t like Islam. We’re seeing a resurgence of anti-semitism as well.”

Mark Gardner, of the Community Security Trust, which monitors violence against Jews, said there has been a surge in right-wing incidents. The CST says nine white men have been “convicted of offences involving explosives, terrorist plots, violent campaigns or threats to carry them out”.

Gardner said: “Ten years after the Nazi nail bombings in London, we are seeing increasing numbers of neo-Nazis being arrested in their attempts to start some kind of so-called race war.”

Last year neo-Nazi Martyn Gilleard was convicted of three terrorism offences and jailed for 16 years.

Officers found machetes, swords, bullets, gunpowder, racist literature and four homemade nail bombs stashed under his bed at his home in Goole, east Yorkshire.

Officers in West Yorkshire recently foiled an international plot to put guns and explosives in the hands of violent bigots in Britain.

At least 32 people were quizzed and 22 addresses searched across the north of England in April and May.

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Al-Qaida threatens China over Uighur deaths

Algeria-based group issues threat to Chinese workers and projects within north Africa in retaliation for Uighur deaths

Al-Qaida’s north African wing has threatened to target Chinese workers and projects in the region in retaliation for Muslim deaths in Urumqi last week.

It is the first time Osama bin Laden’s terrorist network has directly targeted Chinese interests, according to experts at a London-based risk analysis firm.

Stirling Assynt’s report says that al-Qaida in the Islamic Maghreb (AQIM) – based in Algeria – has issued a call for vengeance, basing its statement on information from people who have seen the instruction.

But the assessment does not suggest there is any direct link between Uighur Muslims in Xinjiang province and al-Qaida. It also suggests it is unlikely that al-Qaida’s central leadership has decided to stage attacks within China.

Justin Crump, head of terrorism and country risk at Stirling Assynt, said: “For al-Qaida central, it is really not in their interests or part of their plan at all. I think you will see action where it is easy by al-Qaida franchises, but it won’t be al-Qaida policy.

“Strategically it would be highly counter-productive for them if you look at the fact their main assets are in Afghanistan and Pakistan.”

He suggested that AQIM’s decision was partly “opportunistic”, reflecting the ease with which they could target Chinese nationals and anger in some Muslim communities worldwide. Indonesia saw anti-Chinese protests yesterday.

At least 184 people were killed and 1,680 injured in the inter-ethnic violence in Urumqi, which first broke out on 5 July, officials say. According to government figures 137 were Han Chinese, 46 Uighurs and one a Hui man. But Uighurs have alleged that far more of them died – either in a crackdown by security forces or at the hands of Han Chinese during revenge attacks for vicious assaults by Uighurs.

Muslim Uighurs make up almost half the 21-million population of China’s vast north-western region of Xinjiang. Many have long chafed at strict rules restricting their religion, which include banning under-18s from mosques, as well as Han migration and policies which they believe favour Han Chinese.

“Although AQIM appear to be the first arm of al-Qaida to officially state they will target Chinese interests, others are likely to follow,” adds the note.

“The general situation (and perceived plight) of China’s Muslims has resonated amongst the global jihadist community. There is an increasing amount of chatter … among jihadists who claim they want to see action against China. Some of these individuals have been actively seeking information on China’s interests in the Muslim world, which they could use for targeting purposes.”

Stirling Assynt estimates that hundreds of thousands of Chinese work in the Middle East and north Africa, including 50,000 in Algeria alone.

The firm’s report points out that AQIM attacked an Algerian security convoy protecting Chinese engineers on a motorway project three weeks ago, killing 24 paramilitary police. The workers themselves were not targeted or injured, but the note adds: “Future attacks of this kind are likely to target security forces and Chinese engineers alike.”

It also suggested that other al-Qaida groups in the Arabian peninsula “could well target Chinese projects in Yemen”.

Despite the huge security presence in Urumqi, violence broke out again yesterday. Officials said police shot dead two Uighur men armed with knives and sticks and injured a third as the trio attacked another Uighur man.

But a Han man in the area told the Associated Press that he saw three Uighurs with knives come out of a mosque and attack paramilitary police.

In a separate development, more than 100 Chinese writers and intellectuals have signed a letter calling for the release of an outspoken Uighur economist who disappeared from his Beijing home last week and is believed to be detained.

“Professor Ilham Tohti is an Uighur intellectual who devoted himself to friendship between ethnic groups and eradicating conflicts between them. He should not be taken as a criminal,” said the letter, posted online yesterday.

Xinjiang’s governor accused Tohti’s website of helping “to orchestrate the incitement” of last week’s riot – but the letter’s authors said it was an important site for dialogue between Han Chinese and Uighurs.

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Chinese police kill two Uighurs

Shootings follow inter-ethnic clashes in Urumqi in which government says 184 people died

Chinese police shot dead two men and injured a third as the trio attacked a fellow Uighur in the riot-hit capital of north-western Xinjiang province today, officials have announced.

The violence follows last week’s inter-ethnic clashes between Uighurs and Han Chinese in Urumqi, in which the government says that 184 people were killed and 1,680 wounded. It has warned that the death toll could rise.

Police fired warning shots today when they saw three Uighurs with long knives chasing an injured Uighur man, but the men then turned on the officers, officials said.

They shot dead two Uighurs with knives and injured another one, who is now in hospital receiving treatment.

Around 20,000 security personnel are stationed in the city, but officials said the officers involved were regular police rather than paramilitaries. They were on patrol in the Tianshan district, close to a Uighur area, when the incident happened shortly before 3pm.

It is rare for the authorities to publish details of this kind of case so quickly.

The Associated Press had earlier reported that gunfire had been heard as residents watched police in bulletproof vests carrying pistols, shotguns and batons chase down a man before kicking and beating him.

It said bystanders fled into their homes and shops, slamming their doors behind them, as an armoured personnel carrier arrived and police waved their guns and shouted for people to get off the streets.

Many witnesses reported hearing gunfire last night, and some said that police shot Uighurs. But officials, who say that rioters were armed, have yet to give any detail of how they attempted to disperse an initially peaceful protest and how they later dealt with rioting and brutal attacks on Han. Subsequent days saw revenge attacks by Han on Uighurs. The government says 137 Han Chinese, 46 Uighurs and one Hui Muslim were killed last week, but some Uighurs believe that many more of their community died.

Exile groups accuse the authorities of killing Uighurs in a crackdown on peaceful protesters, while the authorities claim that exiles deliberately orchestrated the violence.

The state news agency Xinhua said today that police were staffing checkpoints and searching buses for suspects. The Urumqi public security bureau said anyone without proper identification would be taken away for interrogation.

People are also banned from “shouting slogans, posting banners, distributing leaflets or gathering for lectures in city streets or public venues”, the bureau said.

“Police will immediately disperse gatherings and confiscate the propaganda materials and take away key members for interrogation according to law,” Xinhua added.

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Parisian gang leader gets life sentence

The leader of a gang who kidnapped a Jewish mobile phone salesman and tortured him to death in one of France’s most gruesome murder cases was tonight sentenced to life in prison.

Youssouf Fofana, 28, went on trial accused of leading 27 others in an elaborate plan to trap the young Jewish man, Ilan Halimi, by enticing him on a date with a woman before holding him hostage in a windowless cellar and torturing him because he believed Jews were “loaded” and would pay a ransom. The case sparked a wave of national soul-searching about anti-semitism in France.

Halimi, 23, was found naked with his head shaved, in handcuffs and covered with burn marks and stab wounds near rail tracks outside Paris in February 2006. In a state of shock and unable to speak, he died en route to hospital. He had been held, tortured and beaten for three weeks, his head wrapped in tape, eyes Sellotaped shut and fed through a straw, while a gang known as “the Barbarians” demanded a ransom from his family.

Police initially did not treat the case as a hate crime. But within days of Halimi’s death his family said he was targeted because he was Jewish. France, still coming to terms with its anti-semitic collaboration of the second world war, was shocked by the gruesome crime. Tens of thousands of people marched against anti-semitism.

Fofana, a charismatic gang leader on a housing estate outside western Paris, had already tried and failed to kidnap people for cash when he spotted Halimi as a target. As the verdict was read out last night, he mimicked applause.

The young woman who agreed to ensnare Halimi in a honey-trap by suggesting the meet and go for a coke, was sentenced to nine years in prison. Now aged 21, she was 17 at the time of the kidnapping and was said to have been persuaded to take part by someone she knew from her children’s home.

Two other men, aged 30 and 23, accused of playing the biggest role in the kidnapping and torture were sentenced to 15 and 18 years.

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Wrongly accused black family wins damages

Case against father for drug dealing collapses after performers and production members challenge official story as witnesses

A black family wrongly prosecuted for assault after the father was falsely accused of drug dealing by police outside a London theatre has won “substantial” damages and an apology from Scotland Yard, four years after the case collapsed.

The Met commissioner, Sir Paul Stephenson, has agreed a payout to O’Neil Crooks, 45, his son Divanio, 25, his wife Patricia and a family friend, Yasmin Adbi. The only independent police witness failed to show up during the case, and the Crown Prosecution Service identified one of the four officers involved as an “incredible” or unreliable witness.

The Met said one officer subsequently received “words of advice” about failing to tell a senior officer of complaints from Crooks. The department of professional standards investigated the CPS allegation that the other officer had been deemed an “unreliable” witness but “concluded that this claim was unfounded”.

The officer claimed she was assaulted by Adbi outside the Apollo theatre in the West End, but witnesses accused her of striking out with her baton. Mrs Crooks, who is partially disabled, was injured.

The encounter, which led to Crooks, his son and Abdi facing charges of threatening behaviour and assault, occurred in 2005 in front of performers and production members of the musical Big Life. Six witness accounts, including three from cast members, challenged the officer’s version of events.

Bill Kenwright, the musical’s backer, paid for the family’s legal fees. Today he hailed the Met’s decision to settle.

While the amount of compensation is not disclosed, the case is noteworthy because the Independent Police Complaints Commission investigation into the arrests initially found “no criminal or misconduct offences for officers to answer”.

All fingerprints, DNA evidence and photographs taken at the time will be destroyed. Crooks, a builder from south London, has been asked to speak about his experience to police recruits at Hendon.

“It has been a horrific experience,” he said. “It has devastated me, my family and Miss Abdi. I am not going to label every police officer, but the way we were dealt with was terrible.”

Louis Charalambous, the solicitor who represented the Crooks and Miss Abdi, added: “Despite an IPCC report into this incident that ruled overwhelmingly in favour of the police, the Crooks family and Miss Abdi have at last received vindication. After four years of seeking redress, they can finally move on with their lives.”The Big Life, about a group of West Indians who came to Britain on the SS Windrush, was nominated for an Olivier award and was the first black British musical to transfer to the West End.

Kenwright said: “I am pleased the Met has looked into it properly. The incident marred what should have been a joyous end to a joyous production.The West End is for everyone.”

In a statement, Scotland Yard said it has apologised to the Crooks family and Miss Abdi and “regrets the upset and distress that this must have caused to all concerned.”

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Obama chides Putin’s ‘cold war ways’

President chides Russia’s PM but says Dmitry Medvedev understands that cold war behaviour is outdated

On the eve of a trip to Moscow, Barack Obama chided Vladimir Putin, Russia’s prime minister, today for keeping “one foot in the old ways of doing business”. By contrast, he said Putin’s handpicked successor as president understands that cold war behaviour is outdated.

In a White House interview with The Associated Press, the president said he will meet with both Putin and Dmitry Medvedev, Russia’s president, on his trip, in hopes they can “move in concert in cooperating with us on some critical issues.”

On an important domestic issue, Obama said the US supreme court was “moving the ball” on affirmative action in this week’s decision favouring white firefighters in New Haven, Connecticut, but he added that the court had not ruled out the use of racial preferences. “I don’t think that hiring on the basis of race … alone is constitutionally plausible,” said Obama, a former teacher of constitutional law.

He spoke sympathetically at one point of the white firefighters, who said they had been discriminated against: “I’ve always believed that affirmative action was less of an issue or should be less of an issue than it has been made out to be in news reports.”

Nearing the end of his first six months in office, the president said he had made some progress in stabilising the economy, but he conceded too many jobs are still being lost.

He also expressed concern about his own policy on dealing with the prisoners now held at Guantánamo Bay, saying the idea of retaining at least some of the detainees indefinitely in different locations gives him pause. But he did not rule out issuing an executive order to that effect if Congress refuses to pass legislation.

Scheduled to depart next week on a trip to Russia, Italy and Ghana, Obama praised Moscow for its cooperation in attempting to persuade North Korea and Iran to abandon their nuclear development programs. The United Nations recently approved “the most robust sanction regime that we’ve ever seen with respect to North Korea,” he said.

The president said his agenda in Russia includes talks on a new treaty to curtail long-range nuclear missiles.

Asked why he intends to meet Putin, Obama said the former president “still has a lot of sway … and I think that it’s important that even as we move forward with President Medvedev that Putin understand that the old cold war approaches to US-Russian relations is outdated — that’s it’s time to move forward in a different direction”.

“I think Medvedev understands that. I think Putin has one foot in the old ways of doing business and one foot in the new, and to the extent that we can provide him and the Russian people a clear sense that the US is not seeking an antagonistic relationship but wants cooperation on nuclear non-proliferation, fighting terrorism, energy issues, that we’ll end up having a stronger partner overall in this process,” he said.

Obama expressed reservations about his recently announced policy that could lead to indefinite detention for some of the detainees currently at the Guantánamo Bay prison. “It gives me huge pause,” he said, to the point where he may not see it through.

“We’re going to proceed very carefully on this front, and it may turn out that after looking at all the dimensions of this that I don’t feel comfortable with (it),” Obama said. The president has pledged to close the prison in Cuba and hopes to send most of those currently held there to other countries.

With joblessness rising, the president said he was “deeply concerned” about unemployment and conceded that too many families are worried about “whether they will be next”. Still, he said that since he took office almost six months ago “we have successfully stabilised the financial markets,” and “started to see some stabilisation on housing”.

“But what we are still seeing is too many jobs lost,” said Obama, commenting after new government figures showed the unemployment rate had risen to 9.5% last month.

Since Obama signed the $780bn economic stimulus bill in February, the economy has shed more than 2 million jobs.

Asked if he was resigned to Iran’s possession of nuclear weapons, he said: “I’m not reconciled with that, and I don’t think the international community is reconciled with that.”

In his comments on the supreme court case, Obama said the 5-4 ruling was written narrowly, and “didn’t close the door to affirmative action” to help minorities.

Obama said of affirmative action: “It hasn’t been as potent a force for racial progress as advocates will claim and it hasn’t been as bad on white students seeking admissions or seeking a job as its critics say.”

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