ENGLAND

ENGLISH DEFENCE LEAGUE ANOTHER ARM OF THE VILE ROYAL MAFIA'S THUGS



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  • MISSILES ON MY APARTMENT? LONDON RESIDENT BALKS AT OLYMPIC SECURITY
    MISSILES ON LONDON ROOF Brian Whelan, a 28-year-old journalist living in London, was probably expecting traffic chaos, hordes of tourists and seriously beefed-up security ahead of this summer's Olympics.

    High velocity surface-to-air missiles perched atop his apartment building he did not foresee. "People are quite shocked. I don't think anybody expected that the price you pay for hosting the Olympics is militarizing residential communities," he told msnbc.com.

    Britain's military has told the 700-odd residents of Whelan's apartment development near the Olympic Park in east London that it is considering installing a missile battery on top of a tower within their housing complex to defend the 2012 Games this summer. On Friday, residents in the private, gated flats in Bow, east London, got a leaflet warning them that along with the missiles, a team of 10 soldiers and police could be stationed at the building.

    The rooftop missile battery would be one of a number of extraordinary measures Londoners can expect during the high-profile sporting festival, including restrictions on road lanes for Olympic use and a security bill of more than a billion pounds ($1.6 billion). It would be the first time such anti-aircraft weapons are deployed in London since the end of World War Two, shocking some in the Bow Quarter housing development, sited in a converted red-brick Victorian match factory. "There was no consultation, no one knocked on the door," Whelan said. "You just wake up one morning and there's a leaflet telling you they are going to put missiles on the roof."

    The defense ministry told Reuters in a statement it had chosen the former water tower because it offered "an excellent view of the surrounding area and the entire sky above the Olympic Park." The tower was in fact "the only suitable site in this area for the HVM (High Velocity Missile) system," it added.

    Al-Qaida to Occupy: UK preps Olympics security

    Defense secretary Philip Hammond first announced the plans in November, saying Britain would follow the precedent set by previous Olympics such as the Beijing games in 2008 where surface to air missiles were stationed about half-a-mile south of its showpiece stadiums. "As announced before Christmas, ground-based air defence systems could be deployed as part of a multi-layered air security plan for the Olympics, including fast jets and helicopters, which will protect the skies over London during the Games," a Ministry of Defence spokesman told Sky News.

    Whelan said the the government had yet to get back to him about his concerns, and no one was answering the Ministry of Defence telephone number provided on the leaflet dropped off at the building. "The (Ministry of Defence) is not answering the mobile number. The consultation meant to meet with us is coming three days after troops arrive," he said.

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  • UK'S SHAME? ONLY ESTONIA HAS HIGHER LEVEL OF UNEMPLOYED POVERTY
    Your leader on the work experience furore was excellent as far as it went (25 February), but why not expose how excessively punitive the British system is in comparative terms? Out of 27 EU countries, only Estonia has a higher level of poverty among unemployed people than this country. This is because the benefits paid here are among the lowest in Europe. Over the last 40 years unemployment benefit has been cut by 50% as a proportion of average earnings, to just 10%. (Over the same period the total remuneration of FTSE chief executives rose by more than 1,000%.)

    Rather than taking for granted public attitudes towards welfare, they should be seen as fluid and often based on little knowledge. If politicians started to make the case for decent welfare, good quality jobs and fair wages, and if pollsters asked if people really want their country to be vying for the bottom place in Europe, we might see apparently entrenched public attitudes begin to change. In the absence of such challenges the base elements in the tabloid press will always triumph. As in the 1930s and 1980s, when unemployment rises, it is always the unemployed that are in their firing line.

    Professor Alan Walker, University of Sheffield

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    ST. PAUL'S CATHEDRAL FUNDED BY 80 WEALTHY ASSET-STRIPPERS
    Disclosures will fuel concerns about the links between the cathedral and the City

    St Paul’s Cathedral has accepted hundreds of thousands of pounds from firms that have profited from the axeing of thousands of jobs. An investigation by The Mail on Sunday has found several controversial private-equity firms are among more than 80 wealthy individuals or companies to have given substantial sums to the cathedral. A partner in one of the donor firms has been quoted as saying that ‘of course’ they were out to ‘shaft’ the companies in which they invested.

    The disclosures will fuel concerns about the links between St Paul’s and the City, and come amid growing tensions at the top of the Church of England over the handling of the anti-capitalism protest outside the cathedral. The cathedral’s fundraising arm, the St Paul’s Foundation, whose chairman and members are drawn largely from the City, has raised more than £40 million over the past decade from corporate sponsors. They include Goldman Sachs, criticised for excessive bonuses, and UBS, which has been under pressure to name rich Americans allegedly using it to evade taxes.

    Among those listed as supporting the cathedral’s conservation and restoration programme between 2000 and 2008 is one of Britain’s largest private-equity firms, Charterhouse Capital Partners. The firm has been criticised for benefiting from a controversial takeover of the Automobile Association in 2004. The £1.7 billion buyout led to the loss of 3,500 jobs. Charterhouse was not one of the two firms involved in the original takeover, but it has made millions of pounds since joining them in 2007 to become the largest owner of Acromas, the £6 billion group that combines the AA and over-50s travel provider Saga.

    Acromas paid just £5.5 million in corporation tax last year, despite a turnover of about £1.6 billion. The GMB union, which represents staff at the AA, claimed last night that Charterhouse and its partners had ‘profited’ from asset-stripping. Cinven, another of Britain’s biggest private-equity firms, which also supports the cathedral, has invested large amounts in healthcare groups that are saddled with huge debts.

    In an article in Telecommunications Magazine in 2000, Cinven partner Roberto Italia, who was then working at private-equity firm Warburg Pincus, was quoted as saying: ‘Of course we’re out to shaft the companies we invest in, but it’s a bilateral process.’ Neither Charterhouse nor Cinven would comment.

    Another of St Paul’s supporters is the charity arm of the Man Group, one of the world’s largest hedge-fund managers, whose non-executive chairman Jon Aisbitt was said to have ‘profited handsomely’ from short selling – when traders bet that the value of shares will fall.

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  • While there is no suggestion that any of these companies or individuals has done anything improper, the disclosures will concern clergy who feel the Church should distance itself from big business. One senior cleric said: ‘It is understandable that a building like St Paul’s needs money, but a number of these donors will raise an eyebrow.’ Meanwhile, some at the cathedral fear donations will dry up now the Church has appeared to side with the protesters and against the City.

    Sir John Stuttard, the chairman of St Paul’s Foundation, said fundraising had almost ground to a halt in what was a very ‘difficult climate’. A cathedral spokesman said: ‘It costs £15 million a year to run St Paul’s and we do this without any Government funding or financial support from the Church authorities. ‘The cathedral has internal processes to ensure that the source of funds is appropriate.’

    And the cathedral’s rift with the City is likely to intensify tomorrow when its ‘think-tank’, the St Paul’s Institute, publishes a report criticising the moral behaviour of bankers. Yesterday, the Archbishop of York attacked the salaries of executives, saying excesses in the financial sector helped to demonstrate ‘how scandalously unfair our society is’.

    Dr John Sentamu suggested ‘Queen’s honours’ should not be given ‘to those who have already rewarded themselves handsomely’ and urged a crackdown on tax avoidance. His comments came as a group of activists who recreated the famous 1936 Jarrow March for Jobs finished the 330-mile trek from the North East to London yesterday.Youth Fight for Jobs, which organised the march, handed in a petition to No 10 calling for a job scheme, apprenticeships, the reinstatement of the Education Maintenance Allowance and action on tuition fees.

  • FULL ARTICLE HERE
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    'OCCUPY LONDON' COULD BE PROTECTED BY CHRISTIAN RING OF PRAYER
    occupy london Coalition of Christian groups plan to prevent forcible attempts to remove tents outside St Paul's Cathedral

    Christian groups have drawn up plans to protect protesters by forming a ring of prayer around the camp outside St Paul's Cathedral, should an attempt be made to forcibly remove them. As the storm of controversy over the handling of the Occupy London Stock Exchange demonstration deepened on Saturday, Christian activists said it was their duty to stand up for peaceful protest in the absence of support from St Paul's. One Christian protester, Tanya Paton, said: "We represent peace, unity and love. A ring of prayer is a wonderful symbol."

    With senior officials at St Paul's apparently intent on seeking an injunction to break up the protest, the director of the influential religious thinktank Ekklesia, Jonathan Bartley, said the cathedral's handling of the protest had been a "car crash" and predicted more high-profile resignations from the Church of England. The canon chancellor of St Paul's, Dr Giles Fraser, and the Rev Fraser Dyer, who works as a chaplain at the cathedral, have already stepped down over the decision to pursue legal action to break up the camp. Meanwhile, it has emerged that Shami Chakrabarti, director of the human rights group Liberty, is attempting to mediate in the dispute. She said she had contacted the corporation, cathedral and protesters to offer a "neutral space" to sort out the impasse. The corporation had not yet responded, she said, although St Paul's had acknowledged her offer. She said the protesters had been enthusiastic in their desire for dialogue and a peaceful resolution. "It would have been easy to opt for a line of action that would have led to images of police dragging away protesters, but they want to talk."

    It was claimed last night that a highly critical report into the moral standards of bankers has been suppressed by St Paul's amid fears it would inflame tensions over the protest. The report, based on a survey of 500 City workers who were asked if they thought they were worth their salaries and bonuses, was due to be published last Thursday. But publication of the report, by the St Paul's Institute, has been delayed in apparent acknowledgement that it would give the impression the cathedral was on the side of protesters. Christian groups that have publicly sided with the protesters include one of the oldest Christian charities, the Fellowship of Reconciliation, and the oldest national student organisation, the Student Christian Movement, Christianity Uncut, the Zacchaeus 2000 Trust and the Christian magazine Third Way. In addition, London Catholic Worker, the Society of Sacramental Socialists and Quaker groups have offered their support.

    A statement by the groups said: "As Christians, we stand alongside people of all religions who are resisting economic injustice with active nonviolence. The global economic system perpetuates the wealth of the few at the expense of the many. It is based on idolatrous subservience to markets. We cannot worship both God and money." Bartley said: "There are some very unhappy people within the Church of England. The protesters seem to articulate many of the issues that the church has paid lip-service to. Many people are disillusioned with the position St Paul's has adopted. To evict rather than offer sanctuary is contrary to what many people think the church is all about. The whole thing has been a car crash." On Saturday afternoon, more than 20 religious figures gathered on the steps of St Paul's to support the occupation, which began two weeks ago.

    The bishop of London, the Right Rev Richard Chartres, has promised to attend St Paul's in an attempt to persuade activists to leave. But protesters say they have no intention of packing up, many reiterating their intention to stay at the cathedral until Christmas and beyond. A spokesman for Occupy London urged the City of London Corporation to open a dialogue with protesters to avoid a lengthy legal battle that could prove expensive for the taxpayer.

  • FULL ARTICLE HERE
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    Pressure is mounting on anti-capitalist protesters camped outside St Paul's Cathedral as authorities consider legal action to move them on.

    The cathedral closed to visitors six days ago for the first time since the Second World War because of health and safety issues surrounding the protest camp. Cathedral authorities say they will reopen at lunchtime in time for the Eucharist at 12.30pm after activists adjusted the layout of their camp. St Paul's dome and galleries will remain closed "for the time being" but the cathedral itself will be open to worshippers and visitors.

    Today the City of London Corporation will meet to discuss whether to seek an injunction allowing the protesters to be evicted - by force if necessary. The authority fears the protests at St Paul's could evolve into something similar to those seen in Parliament Square which was embroiled in years of legal wrangling.

    On the Corporation's website Stuart Fraser, Policy and Resources Chairman, said: "Of course, we fully support the right of people to express their views through peaceful demonstration, but no city can be a campsite. "We hope common sense will prevail and those camping around the cathedral will recognise that they are damaging the integrity of their protest by their actions - and they decide to disperse in a peaceful manner.

    "But if not, we are looking at making sure we have the full range of options - including court action - ready to hand." Last night, at their daily General Assembly meeting on the steps of St Paul's, protesters agreed to ask human rights group Liberty to step in and mediate. Meanwhile a rift seems to have emerged within the cathedral over what to do with the encampment. Yesterday the Bishop of London, Dr Richard Chartres, said protesters should "pack up" as the original purpose of their occupation had been "extinguished" and offered to hold a debate on the issues within St Paul's.

  • St Paul's Cathedral and the City of London Corporation are to take legal action to evict protesters camped outside the London landmark
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    The martyr of St Paul's: Cathedral chancellor quits over violence fears as armed police storm tent

    The siege of St Paul’s claimed its first martyr yesterday as a senior cleric resigned rather than join efforts to evict the protesters camped outside the cathedral. Canon Giles Fraser, the cathedral chancellor who took the decision last week to let the demonstrators stay, said he could not lend his name to a policy that may end in violence. His resignation, a rebuke to cathedral authorities preparing to clear the protesters, ended a week of rows between St Paul’s officials over the presence of demonstrators and the closure of the cathedral.

    It opens the way for a legal order for the protesters to disperse, to be followed by police action to remove those reluctant to go, and came as armed police descended on the protest camp yesterday. The officers stormed a tent belonging to Kurdish protesters following a 999 call claiming there were guns inside. Three officers carrying machine guns descended on the tent and launched a search which did not appear to uncover anything.

    The action triggered an angry response from demonstrators, who surrounded the tent and had a stand-off with three regular officers guarding the entrance. Calm was restored when one of the protesters announced that a ‘meditation workshop’ was due to start at the other end of the camp. Metropolitan Police Commissioner Bernard Hogan-Howe indicated yesterday that legal grounds to clear the protest already existed.

    He told a Metropolitan Police Authority meeting: ‘They have got the legitimate right to protest, not the right to commit crime. That is the complexity we are trying to deal with.’ St Paul’s has lost an estimated £20,000 a day following its closure to paying visitors on health and safety grounds at the end of last week. Dr Fraser, 47, made the decision that allowed the camp to take root last week when protesters – calling themselves Occupy London Stock Exchange – arrived outside the cathedral after failing to get into the Stock Exchange.

    He said he did not welcome the protesters or invite them to stay, but he did ask City of London police officers who were preparing to move them on not to do so. Yesterday Dr Fraser told the Daily Mail: ‘I can’t put my name to a course of action that may result in violence.’ He said he had not been dismissed, adding that there had been no personal recriminations between himself and the Dean, the Right Reverend Graeme Knowles. Dr Fraser added: ‘Like many people, I am not entirely sure what this protest camp is for. My own view is not that capitalism is an inherently bad thing.

    'It has created jobs and prosperity, but it is clear prosperity has not been fairly distributed in our society. 'The Church should not put its name to any course of action that may lead to violence against the protesters.’ Dr Fraser’s left-wing sympathies – he is a liberal churchman committed to the cause of advancing gay rights in the CofE – have allowed the demonstrators to drive a wedge between senior cathedral officials.

    He added: ‘My colleagues who have travelled down a different path to me have also acted out of conscience. ‘The fact that I have unfortunately found myself unable to travel down this path does not mean we are all at odds with each other.’ Dean Knowles said: ‘Giles has brought a unique contribution to the life and ministry of St Paul’s and we will be very sorry to see him go.

    'We are obviously disappointed that he is not able to continue his work during these challenging days.’ The cathedral will reopen today with a lunchtime service. Protesters have agreed to allow clear pathways into the building. London Mayor Boris Johnson last night told protesters: ‘In the name of God and Mammon, go – for the good of the economy and the well-being of the Church.’

    He added: ‘We are in discussion with the authorities to stop these encampments erupting like boils across the city.’ But protester Spyro van Leemnen said the demonstrators would stay and invited Dr Fraser to join them. ‘Our movement and the Church stand for the same values,’ he said. ‘We are planning to stay outside St Paul’s as long as we can.’

  • FULL ARTICLE HERE
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    St Paul's Cathedral will be closed to thousands of Sunday worshippers as an anti-capitalist protest outside the historic building continues.

    The church is losing around £16,000 per day as a result of the decision to close its doors amid health and safety concerns. An even larger sum is expected to be lost on Sunday when the cathedral would usually raise vital revenue from collections. Protesters from the Occupy London campaign have insisted they will stand their ground despite being publicly asked to move on by Dean of St Paul's, the Rev Graeme Knowles. However, they have established a new site on Finsbury Square in Islington in order to minimise the numbers camped outside St Paul's.

    The ongoing stand-off at the cathedral did not prevent couple Natasha Ighodaro and Nick Cunningham from marrying in one of the building's chapels on Saturday. They entered through a side door for the ceremony, and Miss Ighodaro said: "There hasn't been any disruption at all - it's been wonderful, really amazing." Around 300 people have moved to the new Islington site, which is less than a mile from St Paul's. Supporter Ronan McNern, 36, said: "We want to let St Paul's know that we have an overflow camp so we won't be stressing them out so much. It was obvious that the camp at St Paul's was expanding and expanding, and this way we can limit the numbers there and ensure there is a site there which fits within the regulations."

    Hundreds of visitors have been turned away from the cathedral since it closed on Friday for the first time since the Second World War. The decision to shut the cathedral - which costs £20,000 per day to run and draws between 2,000 and 3,000 worshippers each Sunday - came after independent health and safety and fire officers said the protest camp raised public health issues and compromised fire exits.

    But activists questioned the motivation of those behind its closure. One protester, who gave her name only as Jenny, said: "I think the closure is political. I think there are people who really don't like the fact that protesters are here but we are making a legitimate statement." The Reverend Canon Dr Giles Fraser, Chancellor of St Paul's, defended the move to turn away visitors and dismissed rumours the monument had been shut for commercial reasons. "I remain firmly supportive of the right of people peacefully to protest," he said. "But given the strong advice that we have received that the camp is making the cathedral and its occupants unsafe then this right has to be balanced against other rights and responsibilities too."

  • FULL ARTICLE HERE
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