Thursday, 16 February 2012

Falklands tension


Falklands tension: Argentina condemns UK MPs visit


Port Stanley, Falkland Islands capitalThis April marks the 30th anniversary of the start of the Falklands War
Argentina has condemned a planned visit to the Falkland Islands by UK MPs as another sign of Britain's "militarisation" of the South Atlantic.
The plans for a visit by members of the Commons defence select committee emerged on Tuesday.
Tension over the islands - which Argentina claims as the Malvinas - has been rising in the run-up to the 30th anniversary of the Falklands war.
The UK has rejected Argentina's calls for talks on the islands' sovereignty.
"The UK has transformed the Malvinas into the cornerstone of a system of military bases thousands of kilometres from London to control the South Atlantic, inter-oceanic routes, and the approaches to Antarctica," Argentina's foreign ministry said in a statement.
It also repeated its claim that Britain had sent a nuclear submarine to the region.
'Appropriate'
Members of the select committee have said their visit was not intended to exacerbate tensions with Argentina.
Labour member Thomas Docherty said the Falklands were "an appropriate place" for the committee to visit, given the presence of British troops there. The last such visit was in 1999.
The UK government has dismissed Argentine accusations of militarisation as "absurd" and says its defensive military posture has not changed.
Prime Minister David Cameron has insisted there can be no negotiations on sovereignty as long as the Falkland islanders wish to remain British.
The MPs' visit is expected to take place in March.
If so, it would coincide with Prince William's tour of duty in the Falklands as an air force helicopter rescue pilot.
HMS Dauntless, one of the UK's most modern warships, is also due to arrive in Falkands' waters next month in what the government says is a routine deployment.
On 2 April, both nations will mark the 30th anniversary of the Falklands War, which began with an Argentine invasion of the islands and ended in victory for a British task force sent to recover them.

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Monday, 13 February 2012

In December 2008, he hit back, announcing that he would, for the second time in his career, be bringing a case of racial discrimination


Profile: Ali Dizaei

Ali DizaeiAli Dizaei was born in Iran and joined Thames Valley Police in 1986

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Former Commander Ali Dizaei has been both a rising star and a thorn in the side of the Metropolitan Police.
Flamboyant and outspoken, he has climbed the ranks while having the suspicions of the force repeatedly directed towards him.
In turn, he has thrown the spotlight back on his own senior colleagues, consistently criticising them for presiding over - and even encouraging - racism within the Met.
Now he has been jailed for three years after being found guilty of misconduct in a public office and perverting the course of justice following a retrial.
The charges relate to an incident in July 2008 outside a west London restaurant when a row broke out after Waad Al-Baghdadi demanded money from Mr Dizaei for work done on his personal website.
He accused Dizaei of then assaulting and falsely arresting him.
During the first trial, Dizaei likened the allegations to something from "an episode of Life on Mars or the Sweeney".
The jury found him guilty of misconduct in a public office and perverting the course of justice and he was sentenced to four years imprisonment in February 2010.
But he secured a retrial after the Court of Appeal ruled in May the conviction could not "be regarded as safe" after fresh evidence cast doubt on Mr Al-Baghdadi's credibility as a witness.
Tipped for success
In September, the Police Appeals Tribunal ruled Dizaei, who was sacked from the Met after being jailed, should be reinstated.
But the Metropolitan Police Authority (MPA) suspended him on full pay until after the retrial, which began last month. Dizaei had then said he would appeal against the MPA's decision.

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What you are suggesting is that we should have a new offence in this country called 'travelling whilst Asian'”
Ali DizaeiSpeaking in 2006
Other charges of misusing a corporate credit card were dropped last November after an inquiry found no evidence of wrongdoing.
It is not the first time such controversy has come his way.
Born in Iran in 1962, Dizaei is the grandson of a police assistant commissioner.
His father wanted him to have a British education, so he sent him to boarding school in West Sussex and he then went on to study law at London's City University.
His police career began in genteel Henley-upon-Thames in 1986.
From the start, he was tipped for the top, and alongside his job, he managed to find time to study for an MA and then a doctorate.
Once a chief inspector, he was made an adviser to the home secretary on race issues, before being transferred to the Met - and promoted to superintendent - in 1999.
Fatefully, perhaps, it was the year in which the force was accused of institutional racism after the murder of Stephen Lawrence.
Once at the Met, Dizaei quickly showed his willingness to speak out, accusing the force of "ethnic cleansing" by using "culturally-biased" tests to pick white officers for senior ranks.
But he was also secretly suspected of wrongdoing himself.
Former Met Commissioner Sir Ian BlairDizaei repeatedly criticised former Met chief Sir Ian Blair
In 2000, he became the target of Operation Helios - which was to turn into the most expensive inquiry ever held into a single officer.
At an eventual cost of £2.2m, Dizaei's own colleagues investigated him over allegations of perverting the course of justice, misconduct in public office and making false expense claims.
He was suspended from duty for two years and in 2003 stood trial at the Old Bailey. He was eventually cleared of all charges.
Speaking afterwards, Dizaei said he believed there had been a campaign to "destroy my life and my career".
The then Met Commissioner Sir Ian Blair later apologised, saying the inquiry had caused "considerable damage" to the force.
'Hollywood gangster'
During the Helios court case, it emerged that Dizaei was intensely disliked by some of his colleagues.
They reportedly took issue with his "flash" clothes, open marriage, love of nightclubs and interest in bodybuilding.
In his last trial, he was likened to Hollywood movie gangster Tony Montana, Al Pacino's infamous character in Scarface.
In turn, Dizaei bared his chest in the dock to show the jury where he had allegedly been injured.
Other accusations levelled at him over the years - none of which were ever substantiated - included claims he used prostitutes and spied for Iran.
The father-of-three was eventually reinstated in October 2003. He planned to take the Met to court for discrimination, but after the force paid him a reported £80,000, he ended the action and returned to the role of unflinching critic.
Former Met Assistant Commissioner Tarique GhaffurMr Dizaei was a confidant of Tarique Ghaffur who accused the Met of racism
Soon after, he accused "very senior" officers of spreading a "cancer of racism".
His comments prompted a formal call for ethnic minorities to boycott the Met by the National Black Police Association - an organisation which Dizaei went on to lead.
In 2006, he was again the focus of criticism after he attacked the Forest Gate anti-terror raid on two Muslim brothers and questioned the need for ethnic profiling of airline passengers.
"What you are suggesting is that we should have a new offence in this country called 'travelling whilst Asian'," he said.
The following year he angered his superiors as he singled several out for blame for Operation Helios in his autobiography Not One Of Us.
He was also a close confidant of former Met Assistant Commissioner Tarique Ghaffur, who took legal action against the force over claims of racial discrimination. Mr Ghaffur later settled out of court.
Dizaei told his last trial he had refused to answer questions after being arrested because he thought he was being unfairly "targeted" over his support for Mr Ghaffur, but insisted: "I remain a loyal police officer."
'Deplorable corruption'
Despite these repeated run-ins with the Met's top brass, his career progressed and he was promoted to commander in March 2008.
But barely six months later news emerged he was being investigated once again over the row in west London.
In December 2008, he hit back, announcing that he would, for the second time in his career, be bringing a case of racial discrimination against the force.

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Dizaei abused that power and ignored that responsibility”
Gaon HartCrown Prosecution Service
He has also successfully sued a number of newspapers, most recently in December 2009, when the News of the World apologised and paid damages after wrongly claiming he had "employed an illegal immigrant as his right-hand man".
But the jail sentence which has followed his latest court case seems likely to bring his lengthy police career to an end.
Gaon Hart, of the Crown Prosecution Service, said: "Dizaei's corruption, which would be deplorable in any police officer, was all the more so given his position as a highly ranked commander.
"Dizaei abused that power and ignored that responsibility."
The former officer had already served 15 months of the four-year jail term after his first conviction in February 2010, before being walking free after the appeal was allowed.
Now as his latest court battle ends in failure he is once again heading back to the prison to serve a three-year sentence

Wednesday, 1 February 2012

Mashco-Piro tribe


Mashco-Piro 'uncontacted'


 Peruvian tribe picturedChance encounters near an isolated Amazon tribe have resulted in the most detailed pictures ever taken of them.

Campaign group Survival International has released images of the Mashco-Piro tribe, which lives near the Manu National Park in southeastern Peru.
The tribe has had little if any peaceful contact with the outside world, but sightings are on the rise.
Survival blames the change on gas and oil projects and illegal logging in the area, pushing the tribe into new lands.
The message that the Mashco-Piro tribe seems to be sending, however, is that they want to be left alone.
Uncontacted Mashco-Piro from south-east Peru (D.Cortijo/uncontactedtribes.org)"There's been increasing conflict and violence against outsiders that are on their ancestral land," Survival's Peru campaigner Rebecca Spooner told BBC News.
That violence has included arrows being fired at tourists in passing boats, and a warning arrow - with no tip - being recently fired at a Manu park ranger.
Most recently, members of the tribe fired a lethal arrow at Nicolas "Shaco" Flores - a member of a different tribe who had been attempting to make formal contact with the Mashco-Piro for some two decades.
An account of the attack by anthropologist Glenn Shepardunderlines the fact that the tribe is fearful of forming ties with the world around them.
So it was at a respectful distance of 120m that Spanish archaeologist Diego Cortijo snapped pictures of the tribe using a telescope mounted on a camera, capturing the most detailed images ever taken of such "uncontacted" tribes, many of whom are detailed at a site of the same name.
Ms Spooner suggested that the evident increase in violence could be abated by preserving the local tribes' traditional lands.
"We're asking the Peruvian government to do more to protect that land, which should be set aside for the uncontacted groups," she said.
Uncontacted Mashco-Piro tribe in south-east Peru (Gabriella Galli/uncontactedtribes.org)Gabriella Galli spotted the tribe on a riverbank in August 2011