- Libyas Colonel Gaddafi struggles to remain in power and continues his crackdown on civilians
- Libyan-New Yorkers talk about the experiences of their families in Libya
- Ohio lawmakers consider a bill like Wisconsins that would strip workers rights
- Koch Industries and the Wisconsin bill that would restrict collective bargaining rights
- In Honduras, a new draft constitution calls for the official recognition of indigenous and Garifuna people
- The US budget impasse and the possibility of the government shutting down
- Obama Administration wont defend DOMA in court
- Rahm Emanuel elected new mayor of Chicago
- New Zealand quake deaths rise
- Pro-government gunmen open fire on Yemeni student protesters
- Philly fights to ban criminal history box on job applications
In Ohio, State lawmakers are considering a bill that would restrict state and local employees collective bargaining powers. The proposals are similar to bills in other states, including Wisconsin. Proponents of Ohio's Senate Bill 5 want to end collective bargaining for all state workers and restrict if for local employees including firefighters and police. Sehvilla Mann has more from Columbus.
From Columbus, Ohio to Madison, Wisconsin, where tens of thousands have been demonstrating against a bill to strip workers of their collective bargaining rights. Democrats in the State Assembly are in the process of introducing dozens of amendments in an attempt to slow the passage of Governor Scott Walkers controversial bill. Earlier this week, Democratic lawmakers fled the State to avoid voting on the bill. But during a debate that lasted into the early hours of this morning, Republicans voted to defeat one Democrat proposal that would have sent the Governors bill back to committee. Among the Governors supporters, IS the powerful business duo, the Koch brothers. For more on their role in this unfolding struggle over workers rights, we go to AlterNet's Washington bureau chief, Adele Stan. Shes written about the connections between Governor Walker and the Koch Brothers.
In Honduras, hundreds of Indigenous people and Garifuna - who are descendants of Carib, Arawak and West Africans - have been meeting in a constitutional assembly. Today, they're putting the finishing touches on proposals for a new Honduran Constitution which calls for recognition of Indigenous and Garifuna peoples. The assembly has emphasized issues fundamental to indigenous and Garifuna autonomy, education and health care for marginalized communities. Tim Russo brings us more from Honduras.
Enda Kenny is hot favourite to be elected taoiseach
New government's priority will be to lobby EU finance summit
Irish people are voting on Friday in what is arguably the most important general election in the republic's history.
The electorate of more than 2 million will be sending representatives of a new government back to Brussels early next month to renegotiate the terms of the international bailout package that gave Ireland more than 80bn (68bn).
Enda Kenny, leader of the main opposition party, Fine Gael, is almost certain to be elected taoiseach and is already planning to travel next week to Brussels to meet his counterparts in the European People's party bloc.
The meeting will pave the way for an EU finance summit later in March during which a number of debt-stricken countries, including Ireland, will attempt to persuade fellow Europeans to lower the interest payments on the loans.
Up until the final day of campaigning, Kenny and his party have been resisting all calls to reveal who they will share power with after the election. Kenny has also declined to give advice to Fine Gael voters as to where they should place their second, third, fourth and other preferences. Ireland elects its 166 members of the Irish parliament on the single transferable vote system in 43 multi-member constituencies.
Asked about the prospect of becoming prime minister, Kenny said: "I have been round this course before. This is a very anxious period for everyone standing in the election but the Irish people are suffering at the minute and they are looking for a way out."
Despite a surge in support, Fine Gael is unlikely to reach the magic figure of 83 seats that would allow the party to govern with an overall majority. Over recent days, relationships have been improving between Fine Gael and the Irish Labour party, Kenny's most likely coalition partners.
Labour has complained of last-minute dirty tricks directed at the party by the Catholic right. Anti-abortion pressure groups have covered lamp-posts along O'Connell Street, Dublin's major thoroughfare, with stickers claiming: "A vote for Labour is a vote for abortion." Labour is the only one of the major Dail parties to take a pro-choice stance on abortion, which is still illegal in Ireland.
Party leader Eamon Gilmore, the man tipped to serve as deputy prime minister in what is expected to be the next coalition government, said that his home in his Dun Laoghaire constituency had been picketed by busloads of anti-abortion protesters earlier in the campaign. He said the protest had upset his wife and five-year-old son.
"We are all human, we do feel things. I have a family who are entitled to privacy," said Gilmore.
Despite several unresolved disagreements between Fine Gael and Labour not least over the issue of abortion most commentators and bookmakers seem to think the two parties are most likely to form the next coalition with a 30-plus majority in the Dail.
According to a mobile advertising hoarding owned by Ladbrokes in O'Connell Street, the chances of a Fine Gael-Labour government being formed after the weekend were judged to be 7-2 on.
RTE, the state broadcaster, will be conducting exit polls at various voting centres across the republic on election day. However, under Irish broadcasting laws they cannot publish their results until 7am on Saturday, just a few hours before the real count begins. In the last general election, in 2007, RTE's exit poll was found to be 99% accurate.
The WikiLeaks founder should keep quiet about his private life and let his hugely important work speak for itself
Julian Assange, the beleaguered inventor of WikiLeaks, stood on the Belmarsh courtroom steps and delivered what has become a familiar harangue against those trying to extradite him to Sweden, where he is accused of sexual misconduct. The climax of almost a quarter of an hour of oration came when he complained of "this ridiculous time I have to spend on this nonsense!". Such was his dismissive reaction to a reasoned 28-page ruling by the district judge, Howard Riddle, who no doubt burned some midnight oil composing findings he knows will be scrutinised carefully by an appeal court.
It might have been more diplomatic of Assange to have kept quieter, following a devastating finding in the judgment that one of Assange's fleet of lawyers, the Swedish advocate Bjrn Hurtig, made "a deliberate attempt to mislead the court". It was a striking reminder of the dangers over-enthusiastic solicitors face when they cross the line and engage in media grandstanding.
The issue could not have been more crucial: the Assange team had attempted to give the impression that the Swedish prosecutor Marianne Ny had behaved in an "astonishing" and improper manner, by making no attempt to interview Assange while he was in Sweden, and then unscrupulously chasing after him in England to have him arrested. This false allegation was bolstered with unsubstantiated claims that Ny, the senior sex crimes specialist prosecutor, was a "malicious radical feminist".
Apparently undaunted by the wholesale rejection of his case, Assange shifted tack to mount a lengthy attack against the entire European arrest warrant system, which, as he said, was devised after the 2001 terrorist atrocities of 9/11 to make it easier to bring Islamist suspects to justice in European courts.
He may well have a point about the subsequent overuse and abuse of the warrants. State power frequently needs watching and curbing. But he is scarcely well placed to be a disinterested advocate of British legal reform, while he is himself frantically trying to avoid facing the music in Sweden. Nor do his pious remarks about "our system of justice" make much sense when they come from a peripatetic Australian citizen who has made a virtue out of a nomadic, virtually stateless, existence that circumvented traditional systems of justice.
Assange has now been mired in what he calls this "nonsense" for a considerable time since six months ago, when two Swedish women went to the Stockholm police complaining about Assange's sexual behaviour.
This might seem like "nonsense" in Assange's eyes. He has previously said the women got into a "tizzy" and were "bamboozled" by police. He has sought in this way to wage a high-profile information war about what ought to have remained his private life, through hearing after hearing, interview after interview, and has repeatedly tried to blur the boundary between the sex allegations and the attacks on him by US politicians because he masterminded the WikiLeaks free speech exposures . He was at it again yesterday, talking about "the pressure the US brings to bear on the UK, on Sweden and on the media".
Meanwhile, the night before the Belmarsh verdict, the editors of the five international publications involved in the leaks gathered in Madrid. The Guardian, the New York Times, El Pas, Der Spiegel and Le Monde debated before an audience, but with much less fanfare, the real issues thrown up by the pioneering work of WikiLeaks. Has the exposure of the US diplomatic cables made it harder for governments to lie in the age of the internet? How far did WikiLeaks contribute to the online dissent currently sweeping the Arab world? Can Bradley Manning, the US soldier accused of the actual leaking, expect civilised treatment in his military jail? These are the real issues that should be at the front of civil libertarians' minds, not Assange's legal problems. Secrecy
If Gaddafi goes, who will bankroll enormous gigs of the kind played by Lionel Richie and Beyonc?
Like everyone, Lost in Showbiz has spent this week looking aghast at events in Libya: the violence, the bloodshed and Gaddafi's insistence that everyone taking part in the demonstrations is on "hallucination pills", as if the whole thing is being orchestrated by Hawkwind. And, with every news report that arrives, the same unanswered question presents itself. Will these people not think at all of the careers of Lionel Richie, Beyonc and Mariah Carey? Standing up and courageously fighting for freedom, human rights and democracy in the face of almost unimaginable horror is all well and good, but what about the human right of the world's leading r'n'b stars to make vast sums by performing at the behest of a tyrannical dictator and his family?
If the Gaddafi regime falls, who will bankroll enormous gigs of the kind played by Richie in the grounds of the Bab al-Azizia barracks in 2006? Wouldn't it be a terrible pity if his son were too distracted by political events to arrange the annual New Year's Eve gig on St Barts that in 2009 paid Beyonc a reported $2m for five songs and the year before played host to Carey and Timbaland?
Let's have a little perspective here! Lost in Showbiz looks the Libyan protesters sternly in the eye and asks: Are you sure your struggle to free yourself from the yoke of tyranny is worth disrupting Beyonc's schedule for? Perhaps you should ruminate on the recently expressed opinion of noted political philosopher Jim Davidson and reconsider: "Once people start protesting in those kind of numbers the politicians have to listen. What I can't get my head around is everyone saying democracy is the way forward. I don't think it is. Look at us. I lived in Dubai. They have a ruling family and all's well. Giving the people a right to choose who governs them is a stupid thing to do." You see? You're screwing everything up for Carey in pursuit of something the greatest socio-political mind of our epoch thinks is stupid!
Lost in Showbiz is well aware of the carping voices that suggest Richie, Beyonc et al should have thought twice about associating themselves with the Gaddafi regime in the first place. To them, it can only say: the benefit of hindsight is a wonderful thing, isn't it? Perhaps it's worth reminding yourself that Richie's Tripoli gig a concert that ended with a group of children dressed as angels singing We Are The World took place five years ago, an era when there was no sign that the Brother Leader might be the kind of crazed despot who would bomb his own people, unless you count the website set up that year that listed 343 victims of murder and political assassination under Gaddafi, the ongoing imprisonment of the late democracy campaigner Fathi el-Jahmi and the Human Rights Watch report that detailed "the continued arrests and incarceration of political prisoners, some of them 'disappeared'; the absence of a free press; the ban on independent organisations; violations of the rights of women and foreigners; and the torture of detainees".
Come on! You think Richie's got time to read every human rights report in the world? He's got a busy touring schedule it's not just genocidal autocrats who are gagging for a fix of Dancin' On the Ceiling and those Walkers crisps don't advertise themselves! "The hospitality in Libya is unbelievable," he told a press conference, which is certainly one way of describing a country where the regime's methods of torture allegedly include "clubbing; applying electric shock; applying corkscrews to the back; pouring lemon juice in open wounds; breaking fingers and allowing the joints to heal without medical care; suffocating with plastic bags and hanging by the wrists". But why dwell on the whole corkscrews-to-the-back/lemon-juice-in-open-wounds aspect of Gaddafi? He liked Say You, Say Me, and that's the important thing!
And in the case of Beyonc and Carey, it wasn't even Gaddafi himself who organised the gig: it was his sons, most notably the delectable Hannibal Gaddafi, who has put some clear blue water between himself and his father by rigorously avoiding behaving like the violent, spoilt son of a dictator. In 2001, he was arrested for attacking three Italian policemen with a fire extinguisher, then demanded diplomatic immunity. In 2005, his then-girlfriend Aline Skaf filed an assault lawsuit against him for punching her: he then allegedly brandished a 9mm handgun and went on a furniture-smashing rampage in his hotel suite. In 2009, after screams were heard from their London hotel room, police discovered Skaf, now his wife, with facial injuries including a broken nose, which she claimed she had sustained in a fall: three of his security staff were arrested for obstruction. A year previously, the pair had been held for two days in Switzerland after allegedly beating their servants. In what you have to say is a fairly unique approach to the business of parenting, his father responded by shutting down local subsidiaries of Swiss companies, cancelling most commercial flights between the two countries, announcing that if he had nuclear weapons he would "wipe Switzerland off the map", then submitting a proposal to the UN that the country be dissolved and partitioned between Italy, France and Germany.
Lost in Showbiz has a positive message for the performers involved: nil desperandum! The Gaddafi family might not be organising any high-paying gigs for the foreseeable future, but there's plenty more music-loving murderous dictators in the sea! Robert Mugabe is famously a fan of Cliff Richard. And Mahmoud Ahmadinejad likes Chris de Burgh. Come on Beyonc! Sort out a cover of Congratulations and get yourself over to Harare!
Khalid Ali-M Aldawsari arrested by FBI over list of terror targets including George Bush's home, dams and nuclear plants
The homes of former US president George W Bush and American military personnel stationed at Iraq's Abu Ghraib prison were among potential targets scouted by a Saudi student arrested in Texas on charges of attempted use of weapons of mass destruction, the US department of justice said.
It said plans to attack dams, nuclear power facilities and nightclubs were discovered by US investigators, including a scheme to hide explosive devices in dolls and prams, along with extremist website postings. One read: "It is war until the infidels leave defeated."
The 20-year-old Saudi national, Khalid Ali-M Aldawsari, was arrested by the FBI on Wednesday following a tip-off earlier this month when he allegedly attempted to obtain the chemical phenol, a key ingredient in the explosive trinitrophenol or picric acid. After receiving the report, the FBI began an investigation that uncovered Aldawsari's other purchases of chemicals, including nitric and sulphuric acids, used in bomb-making, along with a journal found at his home that suggested he had long been planning a terrorist attack in the US.
One journal entry describes how Aldawsari sought a particular academic scholarship because it gave him financial help and entry into the US, which he said "will help tremendously in providing me with the support I need for Jihad".
The entry continues: "And now, after mastering the English language, learning how to build explosives and continuous planning to target the infidel Americans, it is time for Jihad."
The White House said Barack Obama was notified about the case before Aldawsari was arrested on Wednesday.
Unlike several recent high profile arrests for terrorism-related offences, the justice department was at pains to stress that this was not a sting operation.
Aldawsari travelled from Riyadh to the US on a student visa in October 2008, to study chemical engineering at Texas Tech University, and then transferred this year to South Plains College, also in Texas.
According to the affidavit, Aldawsari emailed himself a document with the subject line "Targets," said to contain the names and addresses of three former members of the US military who had been stationed at Abu Ghraib prison, notorious for the abuse suffered by Iraqi prisoners there at the hands of US soldiers.
In other documents Aldawsari allegedly recorded the names of dams in Colorado and California, and in one email to himself titled "NICE TARGETS" he listed hydroelectric dams and nuclear power plants. On 6 February, according to the affidavit, Aldawsari sent himself an email titled "Tyrant's House" containing the address of George Bush's home in Dallas.
Aldawsari will make his first appearance in court in Lubbock, Texas, on Friday. If convicted he faces a maximum sentence of life in prison.
Diplomatic and legal situation remains fraught, while the media are engaged in a frenzy of speculation about CIA agent
A storm of media speculation has enveloped the case of Raymond Davis, the CIA official charged with murder in Pakistan, as officials from both countries seek to shape public opinion in an increasingly fraught diplomatic and legal standoff.
Since it emerged this week that Davis, who shot two people on a busy street last month, was a working spy, Pakistan's media has been gripped by lurid stories portraying him as a dangerous provocateur.
One front-page story accused him of working with Taliban bombers to sow chaos across Pakistan; other accounts have variously suggested he is addicted to chewing tobacco, howls during prayers, enjoys jailhouse visits from women and spends hours playing Ludo to fend off depression. US officials continue to insist Davis is a bona-fide diplomat, so immune from prosecution. Conditions are so dangerous at the jail where Davis is being held, they say, that dogs test his food, his guards have been disarmed and he is at constant risk of assassination.
"This issue is mired in so many versions of the truth that it's hard to know who's telling the truth and who isn't," said Cyril Almeida, a columnist with Dawn.com. "My guess is that all sides are lying."
The outcome should be settled in court, although resolution seems distant.
Barack Obama insists Davis should be freed under the provisions of the Vienna convention. But Pakistan's former foreign minister Shah Mehmood Qureshi, who lost his job over the issue, says Davis is not covered as does Ron Mlotek, an experienced former US lawyer.
"The American case is very convoluted and appears to be based on smoke and mirrors," said Mlotek, who retired two years ago after 25 years of service in the state department examining such cases.
Even if the US can prove that Davis is a diplomat, he argues, Pakistan could challenge immunity on the basis that he was carrying an illegal weapon, worked from a spy agency safe house and was not living in Islamabad, where the embassy claims he was based.
"No matter what the US government says, this is not an open-and-shut case. The facts are far from clear," he said.
But fact is only one aspect of the issue, which has become enmeshed in a web of nationalist passions and spy agency rivalries. Prompted by selective leaks, newspapers have raised questions about cowboy Americans roaming the country "How many Davis-type agents are in Pakistan?" asked one headline yesterday while soap opera-style storylines supplement the publicity frenzy.
On Thursday newspapers reported that the father-in-law of one man killed by Davis had survived a mysterious poisoning attempt; other relatives are said to be under pressure from religious parties to refuse any American offer of compensation. Prison guards have reportedly been fired for trying to smuggle items into Davis's cell.
But the depth of public hostility is difficult to gauge the outcry is led by the usual suspects, minority Islamist parties and some coverage has had a playful tone, drawing parallels between Davis and Jason Bourne, James Bond or, because of his poor spycraft, Mr Bean. One comedian proposed a new television show entitled Everyone Hates Raymond.
A troubled spy agency relationship lies under the media frenzy. Complaining of American arrogance, the ISI says its links to the CIA have been badly damaged by the affair, warning in an unusual press statement this week that it was "hard to predict if the relationship will ever reach [its prior] level".
It is not just a case of wounded amour propre analysts say the army is using the controversy to its advantage. "Are they hoping that settling this matter amicably will lead to some concessions or a change in American attitude on other issues? Possibly," said Almeida.
Amid the noise there is little new light, however, on the 27 January shooting that triggered the crisis. US officials stress that Davis was working in a security role at the time and not in intelligence collection, probably to avoid him also being charged with espionage.
The Pakistani government says it needs until 14 March to decide whether Davis has immunity from prosecution. Given the public uproar, Pakistani analysts say it is hard to see how the government can politically afford to set him free.
"This has become a big mess, for the Americans as well as the Pakistanis," said Talat Masood, a retired general and analyst. "There's no easy solution, and both sides need to let things calm down for a while. Otherwise it will get out of hand."
WASHINGTON Following an intensive seven-month investigation, the Army on Wednesday filed 22 additional charges against Pfc. Bradley Manning, accused of illegally downloading tens of thousands of classified U.S. military and State Department documents that were then publicly released by WikiLeaks, military officials tell NBC News.
The most serious of the new charges is "aiding the enemy," a capital offense which carries a potential death sentence.
BRUSSELS As US warships entered the Mediterranean Wednesday, NATO allies were divided on whether to use military might in Libya while Moamer Kadhafi warned that any Western foray would leave thousands dead.
The United States and Britain have raised the possibility of creating a no-fly zone to prevent Kadhafi from launching air raids on his people, with London claiming that a UN mandate was not necessarily needed.
Newly disclosed figures show wastewater produced from the natural gas drilling practice of hydrofracking has contained radioactivity and other contaminants at levels far exceeding federal limits. According to the New York Times, internal government documents show at least 15 wells produced wastewater with more than 1,000 times the amount of radioactive elements considered acceptable. The wastewater is sometimes brought to sewage plants ill-equipped to properly treat it and then disposed into rivers supplying drinking water.
UNITED NATIONS - The U.N. resolution imposing tough sanctions against Libya marked the first time that the United States has given its support to the International Criminal Court and signified a remarkable turnaround, though it includes a key exemption demanded by the Obama administration.