RSS Feed     Twitter     Facebook

Posts Tagged ‘sky news’

Ten-Year-Old Gypsy Gives Birth In Spain

Much of the world watched in awe (and not the good kind) on Friday as Sky News broke the scoop that a 10 year-old girl recently gave birth to a healthy baby girl, making the preteen one of history’s youngest moms. Her family insists that they’re delighted by the new addition, and don’t understand why [...]

“Islamists plot commando raids on European cities”

An Islamist plot to launch simultaneous armed raids in major cities in Britain, France and Germany has been uncovered, media reports said on Wednesday.
The attacks – planned from Pakistan and being tracked by anti-terrorism agencies – are said to have advanced to a planning stage, according to British broadcaster Sky News and the US-based newspaper the Wall Street Journal.

Now, watch Rooney”s sexual exploits in online animation spoof

If newspapers and tabloids were not enough to highlight Wayne Rooney’s off-field sexual exploits, there are animated stories of his philandering making rounds in internet circle. The England star”s private life has been laid bare in an animated retelling of the recent newspaper allegations that he slept with prostitutes. Dubbed ‘Randy Rooney Scores Own Goal’, [...]

Tom Cruise hits back at ‘Knight & Day’ critics

Actor Tom Cruise has hit back at the critics of his new film ‘Knight & Day’. Cruise, 48, was at the UK premiere of ‘Knight & Day’, which opened to mixed reviews and slightly disappointing box office figures in the States. “Listen we’ve gotten some spectacular reviews,” Sky News quoted Cruise as saying when asked [...]

Cheryl Cole fan evicted from Mansfield flat over loud music

A man, who is a fan of Girls Aloud member Cheryl Cole, was ordered to move out of his house for playing songs loudly on his stereo until the early hours of the morning.
Martin Bramwell, 22, who lived in Mansfield, was handed an eviction notice by a judge after he made neighbours’ lives a misery [...]

Mariah Carey Miley Cyrus Join Cowell’s Haiti Relief Single, “Everybody Hurts”

Mariah Carey and Miley Cyrus are the latest singers to sign up to perform on Simon Cowell’s track in aid of earthquake-ravaged Haiti. Proceeds from the project will be donated to a relief fund to help survivors and rebuild the island nation after it was rocked by a massive tremor earlier this month. The charity [...]

Van Morrison Suing Mail On Sunday Over Baby Hoax

Irish singer Van Morrison is taking legal action against a British tabloid over claims that he fathered a child with his tour manager Gigi Lee. For the second time in a week, the “Into The Mystic” musician has denied the paternity rumors and announced he’ll sue the Mail on Sunday for publishing the report despite [...]

Madonna snapped ‘waving’ hand sanitiser at Malawian orphans

Madonna made a rather ‘clean’ faux pas when she was pictured waving with a bottle of hand sanitiser at orphans in Malawi.
The ill-timed photograph was taken as the pop star left the Home of Hope orphanage in Mchinji, where her adopted son David, four, used to live.
The Pop Queen, 51, has adopted two children from [...]

Becks ”won”t react to abusive fans”

After scoring a spectacular free-kick in a recent friendly match against Barcelona, David Beckham has said that he would rather ignore abusive LA Galaxy fans in future.
Defending his recent attempts to confront angry supporters, the England midfielder has now conceded that it was a pointless exercise.
“He insulted my wife,” Sky News quoted Beckham as saying [...]

”Biohackers” cooking up mutant microbes at home using Ebay, YouTube

Amateur scientists have apparently been cooking up mutant microbes at home with help from popular websites Ebay and YouTube.
The “biohackers” were said to have assembled makeshift gene laboratories in their own homes and were creating genetically-engineered bugs.
Kay Aull, Boston, said she purchased all the material required from websites such as eBay to make genetically engineer [...]

Pregnant Briton ‘to leave Laos’

Samantha Orobator

A pregnant Briton jailed for smuggling heroin in Laos could be returned to the UK to serve her life sentence under an agreement signed by the two countries.

Samantha Orobator, 20, from south London, was caught with 1.5lb (680g) of the drug at Wattay airport in the capital, Vientiane, last August.

Foreign Office minister Chris Bryant, who signed the deal, said he hoped she would be back in the UK within 10 days.

Another Briton held in Laos, John Watson, could also be sent back.

Obstacle

The 47-year-old is also serving a life sentence in Laos for drug smuggling after being detained in December 2003.

"I’ve spoken to their ministers today and they’re saying that they’re going to deal with this as fast as they possibly can"

Chris Bryant
Foreign Office minister

After signing the memorandum of agreement, Mr Bryant said: "I very much hope that with any luck Samantha will be able to return in the next week or 10 days."

He said she could only fly "for another two weeks or so" because of her pregnancy.

Mr Bryant told Sky News: "I very much hope that now that we’ve signed this agreement, which was the last remaining obstacle which prevented her from being transferred to a British prison, that she’ll be able to do so.

"I’ve spoken to their ministers today and they’re saying that they’re going to deal with this as fast as they possibly can."

He said he was "worried about" Watson’s condition, and added: "I do want to make sure that he is able to transfer at the same time as Samantha because nobody should be sitting in a prison rotting away without support from the British government."

Once a prisoner is transferred to the UK, the High Court is asked to set a minimum period that they would have to serve before being considered for parole.

Transferred prisoners are not able to appeal through British courts.</p


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

Coco Chanel dubbed a liar by French actress Audrey Tautou

French actress Audrey Tautou has launched a vicious attack on the world’s greatest female fashion icon, Coco Chanel, dubbing her “a liar”.
Tautou plays Chanel in a new biopic, which tells the story of how the fashion designer rose from a country orphanage to become an international star by founding her eponymous fashion label.
Chanel, who died [...]

“A Paradise Without Poor People”: Moscow’s Most Exclusive Housing Complex (VIDEO)

One man’s idea of paradise is being brought to life in the form of the most exclusive housing complex in Russia, “if not the world,” as Sky News notes in the video below. The complex, which includes hotels and a golf course, among other amenit…

US president sets Afghan target

A US Marine helicopter delivers supplies in Helmand province, 11 July

The increasingly deadly conflict in Afghanistan is a "serious fight" but one essential for the future stability of the country, the US president says.

Insisting that US and allied troops have pushed back the Taliban, Barack Obama said the immediate target was to steer Afghanistan through elections.

The country is due to hold a presidential vote in August.

Mr Obama spoke to Sky News as concern grew in the UK at the rising British death toll in Afghanistan.

UK Prime Minister Gordon Brown was also forced on Saturday to justify British involvement in Afghanistan.

Mr Brown said the UK’s military deployment there was aimed at preventing terrorism in the UK.

Fifteen British troops have died in the past 10 days, pushing the country’s number of deaths in Afghanistan past the number killed in action in Iraq.

‘Extraordinary role’

Speaking during a day-long visit to Africa, Mr Obama also told Sky News that the battle in Afghanistan was a vital element in the battle against terrorism.

He said the continued involvement of British troops in the conflict was necessary, right and was a vital contribution to UK national security.

US President Barack Obama in Ghana, 11 July

"This is not an American mission," Mr Obama said.

"The mission in Afghanistan is one that the Europeans have as much if not more of a stake in than we do.

"The likelihood of a terrorist attack in London is at least as high, if not higher, than it is in the United States."

He praised the efforts of all troops currently fighting the Taleban in gruelling summer heat, singling out British forces for praise when asked if their role was still important.

"Great Britain has played an extraordinary role in this coalition, understanding that we can not allow either Afghanistan or Pakistan to be a safe haven for al-Qaeda, those who with impunity blow up train stations in London or buildings in New York.

"We knew that this summer was going to be tough fighting. They [the Taliban] have, I think, been pushed back but we still have a long way to go. We’ve got to get through elections."

‘Core mission’

Since taking office in Washington in January of this year, Mr Obama has announced a troop "surge" in Afghanistan.

British soldiers carry the coffin of a comrade, 10 July

The US has said it is sending up to 30,000 new troops to Afghanistan this year to take on a resurgent Taleban. They will join 33,000 US and 32,000 other Nato troops already in the country.

He also replaced the incumbent US commander in the country, ousting Gen David McKiernan less than a year into his command.

The new US chief in Afghanistan, Gen Stanley McChrystal, has a stellar reputation from his days commanding special forces operations in Iraq.

He has been tasked with the mission of outsmarting the Taliban, who continue to win support among ordinary Afghans often caught in the crossfire of the bitter fighting.

High numbers of Afghan civilian casualties have become an issue of major concern to the US. Afghan President Hamid Karzai has regularly called on the international forces to reduce the numbers of Afghans killed in its operations.

Speaking to Sky News, Mr Obama said although forces were currently engaged in heavy fighting, new strategies for building bridges with Afghan society would be considered once the country had held its presidential election.

A young girl in Afghanistan, 10 July

Afghanistan needed its own army, its own police and the ability to control its own security, Mr Obama said – a strategy currently being implemented in Iraq, where security is being handed over to Iraqi forces.

"All of us are going to have to do an evaluation after the Afghan election to see what more we can do," the president said.

"It may not be on the military side, it might be on the development side providing Afghan farmers alternatives to poppy crops, making sure that we are effectively training a judiciary system and a rule of law in Afghanistan that people trust."

"We’ve got a core mission that we have to accomplish."</p


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

Wade: we’ll refute phone-hack claims

• Guardian ‘substantially misled’ public, claims incoming NI chief executive in letter to Commons committee chairman
• Lib Dems refer Metropolitan police phone-hacking inquiry to Independent Police Complaints Commission

Rebekah Wade, the Sun editor and soon-to-be News International chief executive, said today that company executives would refute allegations of phone hacking being a widespread practice at the News of the World when they appear before a Commons inquiry.

Wade, who takes over on 1 September as chief executive of News International, publisher of the News of the World and the UK newspaper arm of Rupert Murdoch’s News Corporation, said the company would welcome the chance to appear before MPs on the Commons culture, media and sport select committee to answer questions on the Guardian’s allegations.

She said News International believed the Guardian “has substantially and likely deliberately misled the British public”.

Wade also accused the Guardian, BBC, Channel 4, ITN and Sky News of “either deliberately or recklessly” combining references to the Information Commissioner’s report about the use of private investigators by newspaper publishers, including Guardian Media Group, which also publishes MediaGuardian.co.uk, with “specific and very limited evidence” from the police investigation of illegal phone interceptions by Glen Mulcaire and former News of the World royal editor Clive Goodman.

She has written to the chairman of the Commons culture, media and sport committee, John Whittingdale, saying that the company would “refute allegations that illegal phone tapping was a widespread practice”. The News of the World editor, Colin Myler, and Tom Crone, NI’s legal counsel, will appear before the select committee at 10.30am on Tuesday 21 July.

Culture select committee representatives are understood to be locked in negotiations with former News International executive chairman Les Hinton in a bid to ensure he appears before an earlier emergency session about the News of the World phone hacking affair on Tuesday 14 July.

In her letter, Wade said: “It [the Guardian] is rushing out high volumes of coverage and repeating allegations by such sources as unnamed Met officers implying that ‘thousands’ of individuals were the object of illegal phone hacking, an assertion that is roundly contradicted by the Met Assistant Commissioner’s statement yesterday.”

On Wednesday the Guardian revealed that News Group Newspapers, the News International subsidiary that publishes the News of the World, paid out more than £1m to settle legal cases that threatened to reveal evidence of its journalists’ repeated involvement in the use of criminal methods to get stories.

The select committee said yesterday it would be calling senior managers from News International to give evidence as early as next week to clarify what they knew about malpractice by journalists at the News of the World.

The inquiry is expected to call the former News of the World editor, Andy Coulson, who is now the Conservative party’s director of communications. Coulson resigned after the News of the World royal editor Clive Goodman was jailed in 2007 for tapping the phone of members of the royal household.

Earlier today, the Liberal Democrats referred the Metropolitan Police inquiry into phone hacking by journalists at the paper to the Independent Police Complaints Commission.

Chris Huhne, the Lib Dem home office spokesman, has written to IPCC chairman Nick Hardwick asking for an inquiry into Scotland Yard’s 2006 investigation into widespread phone hacking by journalists and private investigators.

Huhne wrote to Hardwick saying that an independent inquiry was required because the Metropolitan Police “cannot act as judge and jury in its own trial”.

The Lib Dem MP added that given the “scale and scope” of the Guardian’s revelations, “the possibility that other journalists and investigators were involved must now be seriously considered”.

Yesterday Metropolitan Police assistant commissioner John Yates said no additional evidence has come to light and no further investigation was required. However, Keir Starmer QC, the director of public prosecutions, said he had ordered an “urgent examination” of material provided by the police in the News of the World case three years ago.

“The Metropolitan Police cannot act as judge and jury in its own trial. Only an independent inquiry can properly consider any possible neglect of duty by the Specialist Operations Department into the original investigation,” Huhne wrote.

“Given the scale and scope of the allegations, the possibility that other journalists and investigators were involved must now be seriously considered. The review by the director of public prosecutions is a tacit admission that the review by assistant commissioner Yates was rushed, and supports the case for a full, independent inquiry by the IPCC into the original police investigation,” he said.

“These allegations have serious implications for privacy laws and freedom of the press in this country, and as such must be investigated thoroughly. When the civil courts are recording large settlements to hush up potentially criminal activity, public authorities have a duty to investigate the matter fully.”

Former senior Scotland Yard officer Brian Paddick also called for an independent inquiry.

Paddick, the former deputy assistant commissioner at the Metropolitan Police, said there should be an independent, external review of the force’s investigation into phone-hacking.

The Met’s assistant commissioner, John Yates, said yesterday that Scotland Yard would not be reopening its files on Goodman because no new evidence had come to light and the original inquiry had concluded that phone hacking had occurred in only a minority of cases.

However, the Guardian’s allegations focus on the activities of many other journalists at the paper, drawing on separate evidence kept secret under a £1m series of deals agreed by its parent company, News International.

The former deputy prime minister, John Prescott, one of those whose phone was allegedly hacked, told the BBC’s Newsnight that Yates’s statement’s had not gone far enough.

“Frankly he has come out, he has defined in a very narrow way what he is going to look at, and then gives a report that everything is OK,” he said.

Paddick told the same programme that Yates should not be criticised for dealing with a brief referring just to the Goodman investigation. But he said Yates was not sufficiently distanced from the original investigation to launch a fresh review.

“John Yates said that he had a degree of independence because he was not involved in the initial investigation,” Paddick added.

“But he is now in charge of the department that did that initial investigtaion, so not only have we got the Metropolitan Police investigating themselves as far as this is concerned, but the department that investigated it investigating themselves.

“There must be some degree of independence here in this investigation, at least an outside force looking at it if not the Independent Police Complaints Commission.”

Mark Stephens, a lawyer at Finers Stephens Innocent, said Yates’s statement did not “address the possibility that there had been a criminal attempt or a potential criminal conspiracy”.

“I think Keir Starmer, the director of public prosecutions, will force the police to reopen this investigation,” he told Radio 4′s Today programme this morning.

Legal experts said the Yard’s decision would not affect the ability of alleged hacking victims to sue the News of the World for breach of privacy.

Stephens said several legal firms had been approached by people who thought they might have been the target of the News of the World’s activities.

“Aggrieved celebrities are contacting lawyers across London,” Stephens said. “I had two calls yesterday – one from somebody who has been identified by the Guardian as having been hacked and also the private office of somebody who believes they may have been.”

The Guardian also revealed today that the Manchester United manager, Sir Alex Ferguson, and the former Newcastle United manager Alan Shearer were among those whose private telephone messages were recorded by a private investigator working for the News of the World.

Both men are said to have left messages on the mobile phone of Gordon Taylor, the chief executive of the Professional Footballers’ Association, who sued the newspaper last year, according to sources familiar with the police investigation.

The prospect of legal action by victims comes after three fresh inquiries were launched yesterday into the conduct of News of the World journalists following the Guardian’s disclosures that Rupert Murdoch’s News Group company paid £1m to keep secret the use of apparently criminal methods to get stories.

The director of public prosecutions, Keir Starmer, ordered an urgent review of the evidence relating to phone hacking gathered in the investigation of the News of the World reporter Clive Goodman, who was jailed in January 2007 for obtaining information illegally.

A powerful Commons select committee said it would be calling senior managers from News International to give evidence as early as next week to clarify what they knew about malpractice by journalists at the News of the World.

The inquiry by the culture, media and sport select committee is expected to call the former News of the World editor, Andy Coulson, who resigned after Goodman was jailed and is now the Conservative party’s director of communications.

The Press Complaints Commission also announced it was conducting an inquiry.

David Cameron, the Conservative leader, has defended Coulson, saying he did “an excellent job in a proper, upright way”.

The parliamentary inquiry will focus on executives at News International, including Rebekah Wade, the outgoing Sun editor who has been promoted to News International chief executive; Stuart Kuttner, the News of the World’s outgoing managing editor; Colin Myler, the current News of the World editor; and Les Hinton, the former chairman of News International. Hinton left News International in December 2007 to become the New York-based chief executive of anther News Corporation subsidiary, Dow Jones, which publishes the Wall Street Journal.

John Whittingdale, the chairman of the culture select committee, said he was particularly keen to question Hinton, who told a previous hearing he was “absolutely convinced” that Goodman was the only person who knew about the phone hacking at the paper.

Whittingdale added that he was “completely shocked” that News Group had paid out more than £1m to settle cases involving illegal surveillance and said he would be asking Hinton whether he wished to amend the evidence he gave the committee then.

Another member of the committee, Labour MP Paul Farrelly, said Hinton would be asked “whether he wishes to correct, or amplify, his evidence”.

“That reopens our inquiry and, if we are not satisfied with the answers, parliament can potentially take the rare – but reputationally serious – step of finding witnesses in contempt,” he wrote on the Guardian’s Comment is Free website.

News International said last night it was “prevented by confidentiality obligations from discussing certain allegations made in the Guardian newspaper”.

The company added that its journalists had complied with relevant legislation and codes of conduct since February 2007, after the Goodman case and Coulson’s resignation.

• To contact the MediaGuardian news desk email editor@mediaguardian.co.uk or phone 020 3353 3857. For all other inquiries please call the main Guardian switchboard on 020 3353 2000.

• If you are writing a comment for publication, please mark clearly “for publication”.

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


Social media, Emma Watson and London today

At a session on digital media I chaired yesterday at the Communicate conference in London, the excellent Ruth Sunderland, business and media editor at The Observer, spoke passionately about the importance of, and threat to, good journalism both off and online. She reflected on the demise of many newspapers, grimly documented on www.newspaperdeathwatch.com. Today’s [...]