The teenage Moroccan nightclub dancer whom Italy’s prime minister Silvio Berlusconi allegedly paid for sex, asked the premier for five million euros in exchange for her silence, according to tapped phonecalls. Karima El Mahgroug, now 18, and Berlusconi deny they had sex over several months in 2010 when she was 17. Berlusconi is being formally [...]
Posts Tagged ‘silence’
Teenaged dancer asked Berlusconi for 5 mn euros for her silence
Election silence begins in Kosovo
Election silence ahead of early parliamentary elections in Kosovo began at midnight.
29 electoral lists are taking part in the elections, among them eight from the Serbian community. The election campaign lasted ten days.
Silence is the Death of Liberty
First they tortured a U.S. citizen and gang member …I remained silent;I wasn’t a criminalThen they tortured a U.S. citizen, whistleblower and navy veteran …I remained silent;I wasn’t a whistleblowerThen they locked up an attorney for representing a…
Jesse James all set to break his silence on break up and rehab
Jesse James is ready to publicly discuss the allegation that he has cheated on his wife Sandra Bullock. There were allegations against the actor that he had relationships with many women and this made Sandra Bullock to file for a divorce petition.
The actor would be giving his first interview after Sandra filed for petition on [...]
Cheryl Cole to tell-all on Jonathan Ross chat show
cheryl Cole is reportedly set to break her silence about her split from cheating husband Ashley in an interview with Jonathan Ross.
The Girls Aloud singer will make an appearance on BBC One’’s Friday Night With Jonathan Ross on March 12.
She is expected to finally speak out against the footballer following infidelity claims, which were not [...]
Schumpeter: The silence of Mammon
Business people should stand up for themselves
HENRY HAZLITT, one of the great popularisers of free-market thinking, once said that good ideas have to be relearned in every generation. This is certainly true of good ideas about business. A generation ago Margaret Thatcher and Ronald Reagan did an excellent job of making the case in favour of business. Today it looks as though the case needs to be made all over again.
It is hardly surprising that business has fallen from grace in recent years. The credit crunch almost plunged the world into depression. The new century began with the implosion of Enron and other prominent firms. Some bosses pay themselves like princes while preaching austerity to their workers. Business titans who once graced the covers of magazines have been hauled before congressional committees or carted off to prison. …
Election silence begins in two municipalities
Pre-election silence began at midnight before the emergency elections in the Belgrade municipality of Voždovac and Požarevac municipality of Kostolac. During the silence, all advertisements and public remarks of participators in the election are prohibited until all polling stations are closed.
Election silence in Kosovo
Election silence has begun in Kosovo ahead of Sunday’s local elections, the first organized independently by the Kosovo Albanian institutions. Elections are being organized in 36 municipalities, including three “new ones”—GraÄanica, Klokot and Ranilug—in which Serbs make up a majority of the population.
Silence is golden
Bosses should keep their mouths shut, alas
“A-HOLE FOODS” reads the image adorning one of the more supportive articles to appear in the past week about John Mackey, the boss of Whole Foods Market, an organic retailer. In an op-ed article in the Wall Street Journal on August 11th, Mr Mackey set out some right-wing ideas for reforming health care strikingly at odds with those currently being pushed by the Obama administration. This provoked uproar in the online community that now rules the world—with an army of bloggers demanding a consumer boycott of the company, around 13,000 joining a “Boycott Whole Foods” group on Facebook and Twitter circulating countless pledges never again to darken the doors of its stores.
The company soon issued an apologetic clarification, noting that Mr Mackey had expressed his own views, not those of the company. He went even further on his personal blog on the firm’s website, pointing out that the title of the article in the Journal, “The Whole Foods Alternative to Obama Care”, had been added by an editor, and setting out the original, unedited version. This still contained enough dynamite to have ensured controversy by challenging the views of many Whole Foods customers—including opening with this observation by Margaret Thatcher: “The problem with socialism is that eventually you run out of other people’s money.” …
Jon Gosselin Girlfriend: “My Parents Love Him!â€
Jon Gosselin’s 22-year-old playdate Hailey Glassman is breaking her silence about her romance with the married star of TLC’s Jon and Kate Plus 8.
Hailey – who is the wildchild reformed lesbian daughter of the plastic surgeon who performed a tummy tuck on Kate Gosselin — told PEOPLE she began falling for Jon while he was [...]
Former Israeli Soldiers Report: Reactions (VIDEO)
On Wednesday July 15, a group of Israeli reservists called Breaking the Silence released a report including anonymous interviews by former Israeli soldiers who said that reckless force had been used during fighting in Gaza earlier this year.
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Broken silence

A human rights group founded by Israeli veterans has collected what it says are damning testimonies from soldiers who took part in the offensive in January against Hamas fighters in Gaza. BBC correspondent Paul Wood looks at the anonymous claims presented by Breaking the Silence.
Standing by the ruins of his home in Gaza, Majdi Abed Rabbo explained how Israeli troops had used him as a human shield.
"The Israeli soldiers handcuffed me and pointed the gun at my neck," he said. "They controlled every step."
In this manner, Mr Abed Rabbo said, he was forced to go in ahead of Israeli soldiers as they cleared houses containing Palestinian gunmen.
This same incident was described by one of the Israeli soldiers who spoke to Breaking the Silence.

"A Palestinian neighbour is brought in," he says. "It was procedure. The soldier places his gun barrel on the civilian’s shoulder."
If true, that was a clear breach of the international laws of war – which say soldiers have a duty of care to non-combatants – and of Israeli law.
The Israeli Supreme Court outlawed the so-called "neighbour policy", of using Palestinians to shield advancing troops, in 2005.
Until now, the Israeli army always had a ready answer to allegations that war crimes were committed during its offensive in Gaza.
Such claims were, they said, Palestinian propaganda.
Now, though, the accusations of abuse are being made by Israeli soldiers.
Testimonies collected
The common thread in the almost 30 testimonies collected by Breaking the Silence is that orders were given to prevent Israeli casualties, whatever the cost in Palestinian lives.
Writing the report’s introduction, the Israeli lawyer Michael Sfard says: "All the witnesses agreed that they received a particular order repeatedly, in a way that did not leave much room for doubt, to do everything, everything, so that they – the IDF (Israel Defence Forces) soldiers – would not be harmed.
"The soldiers tell in their testimonies how this unwritten message, which came from brigade, battalion, and company commanders in morale-building conversations before entering Gaza, translated into zero patience for the life of enemy civilians."

The lawyer adds: "Violations of the laws of war are liable to be war crimes."
Here are just a few quotes which give a flavour of the soldiers’ testimony. The accumulation of detail is convincing and, in the eyes of Israel’s critics, damning.
"Things are happening in his battalion of which he (the commander) has no idea. There are people who deserve to go to jail…
"When your company commander and battalion commander tell you, ‘Go on, fire!’ the soldiers will not hold back. They are waiting for this day, the fun of shooting and feeling all that power in your hands…
"Fire power was insane. We went in and the booms were just mad. The minute we got to our starting line, we simply began to fire at suspect places. You see a house, a window, shoot at the window. You don’t see a terrorist there Fire at the window. In urban warfare, anyone is your enemy. No innocents."
Israeli military spokeswoman Lt Col Avital Leibovich dismissed the testimonies as anonymous hearsay, designed to embarrass the army rather than lead to serious investigations.
She questioned why Breaking the Silence had not handed over its findings earlier, before the media were informed.
"We are investigating many of the requests from NGOs and other groups," she said. "But when you have a report that is based on hearsay, with no facts whatsoever, we can’t do anything with it."
In the past, says the Israeli military, some allegations of wrong-doing in Gaza have turned out to be second or third-hand accounts, the result of soldiers recycling rumours in the battalion rather than describing what they themselves witnessed.
Credible record
But Breaking the Silence has a long – and to many, credible – record of getting soldiers to talk about experiences which might not reflect well on the Army.
The group is funded by the British, Dutch and Spanish governments, as well as the EU.
It says the testimony is anonymous because of orders to Israeli soldiers not to speak out publicly.
Some of the collected testimony is highly specific.
In the case of Majdi Abed Rabbo, the Israeli military police have now opened an investigation, lending at least some credibility to the soldier who said the "neighbour policy" was in widespread use.
The military maintains it went to extraordinary lengths to ensure civilians were not harmed in Gaza.
The soldiers’ testimony does describe in detail how leaflets were distributed in areas they were about to enter – warning people to leave.
But it is what happened after that, says Breaking the Silence, which calls into question the morality of the Israeli army’s actions.</p
This article is from the BBC News website. © British Broadcasting Corporation, The BBC is not responsible for the content of external internet sites.



