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  • Thu, 21 January 14:30
    800px-Marylebone_station_01 CALLS were made in the UK for a crackdown and closer inspections of applications for student visas. But a student occupying an upmarket Marylebone flat, as would-be suicide bomber Umar Farouk Abdulmutallab did while studying at UCL, will always invite less scrutiny than one living in a squalid squat.
  • Mon, 18 January 17:01
    COMMENTING on Tony Blair’s excuses for removing Saddam Hussein, his predecessor John Major commented that other bad men running countries were not toppled.  Zimbabwe and Uzbekistan are good examples but Major refrained from admitting that tyrants are tolerated if useful to the superpowers – i.e. the US –  capable of removing them.
  • Mon, 18 January 16:57
    LAST week’s calls for a secret ballot on Gordon Brown’s leadership from two disgruntled ex-ministers may assuage their hurt feelings and provide the temporary comfort of revenge.  Brown has proved a disastrous disappointment as prime minister but although he is likely to lose this year’s election, what other Labour politician is capable of winning it?
  • Mon, 18 January 16:44
    ETHNIC profiling for travellers is an accusatory step for a democratic society to take but is inevitable in a suspicious and hazardous world. This is no recent innovation, as Irish people without IRA links discovered decades ago and as Basques who do not share ETA’s goals still discover in other parts of Spain.
  • Thu, 14 January 12:07
    ETHNIC profiling for travellers is an accusatory step for a democratic society to take but is inevitable in a suspicious and hazardous world. This is no recent innovation, as Irish people without IRA links discovered decades ago and as Basques who do not share ETA’s goals still discover in other parts of Spain.
  • Thu, 07 January 14:27
    SPAIN contributes troops to the Nato forces in Aghanistan and recession-hit young people anxious for a steady job have found, as others in the US and the UK have already found, that the security of a weekly wage in the armed forces can cost lives.  (Edition 1228)
  • Thu, 07 January 12:10
    Merry austerity WITHOUT wanting to emulate Scrooge’s Christmas, the recession could be a wakeup call for personal as well as national finances.  The modest delights of Christmases past brought extravagant pleasure and with purses emptier and belts tighter, the time has come to consume a little less but enjoy it a little more.   A date to remember WHAT better occasion than Christmas to reflect that the winter solstice coincides with dates when all the great faiths and cultures celebrate and make merry?  There is no better time of the year to be grateful that more unites those of goodwill than divides those who lack it.   Glory in the highest TONY BLAIR admits he would have invaded Iraq with or without Saddam Hussein’s supposed weapons of mass destruction.  Even in this season of goodwill it is impossible to dismiss suspicions that Iraq’s wellbeing was secondary to Tony Blair’s future reputation, which is now assured but not for the reasons he envisaged.  
  • Tue, 22 December 16:55
    TONY BLAIR’S government allegedly went to war on intelligence gleaned from an Iraqi taxidriver while failing to plan for reconstructing Iraq after Saddam Hussein’s defeat.  It is tempting to suggest that this, too, would have been effected more efficiently by taxi drivers, instead of the unmotivated Coalition and its allies.
  • Tue, 15 December 19:04
    BRITAIN’S sorely stretched National Health Service is under examination as hospital trusts reach targets but fail patients.  Greater patient choice is suggested as one remedy with competition punishing bad hospitals, but unfortunately only experience – and bad experiences – will weed out the worst, at a greater cost to patients’ lives.
  • Fri, 04 December 19:53
    EVIDENCE was manipulated in order to invade Iraq in 2003 and experts are now accused of similarly exaggerating proofs that global warming exists.  Saddam’s WMDs did not exist, but we ignore at our peril incontrovertible proof that the Antarctic is melting for the first time in 15 million years.
  • Fri, 16 October 10:39
    Tony Blair’s police guard is more extensive and expensive than Gordon Brown’s, doubtless because the PM may be heartily disliked but his predecessor excites worldwide hostility.  Predictably it takes an annual £2 million to protect him from the attentions and threats of those who continue to detest him.
  • Fri, 16 October 10:39
    When the pro-Europe Conservative grandee Kenneth Clarke recently suggested that he might consider campaigning in favour of the Lisbon Treaty if a referendum were to be held, he sounded like a sane man in a mad wilderness. Sadly, his Europhilia means that Tories consider him a madman in a sane wilderness.
  • Fri, 16 October 10:38
    The Waitrose food chain withdrew its advertisements from Fox News after an attack on Barack Obama branded him ‘a racist with a deep-seated hate for white people’. The pen is mightier than the sword but revenue loss is a weapon of mass persuasion that even Murdoch’s empire has to heed.
  • Fri, 09 October 11:06
    Over and above Ireland’s referendum on the Lisbon Treaty, the Czech Republic is the real fly in the EU ointment. Seventeen senators last week lodged an appeal against the Treaty, ignoring the fact that Lisbon is necessary precisely because the EU expanded to admit them and their Eastern bloc neighbours.
  • Fri, 09 October 11:06
    Better Peter Mandelson as friend than foe but his support for Gordon Brown is professional.  Having coyly intimated that he might consider cooperating with a Tory government, Mandy has chosen to back a loser, knowing that magnanimity cannot hurt his own career – and will not help Gordon’s at all.
  • Fri, 09 October 11:05
    When conservatives won the German elections and socialists triumphed in Portugal not everyone in either country welcomed the results but everybody accepted them. What hastily democratised societies have yet to grasp is that elections do not validate political domination but instead demonstrate that validation comes from voters alone.
  • Thu, 01 October 13:28
    Solver_in_chief In his first UN address, US President Barack Obama promised a ‘new chapter of international co-operation’ but also warned that the US could not solve the world’s problems alone. Since Obama’s predecessor - helped by Washington neocons - produced most of them practically single-handed, perhaps it is time to start trying.
  • Thu, 24 September 11:15
    Calling_the_shots A US air attack in Somalia killed a top Al Qaeda commander but despite intelligence experts’ pronouncements that the organisation is losing its recruiting appeal, his supporters have already vowed revenge. The raid was a short-term achievement but long term it has simply provided another job vacancy for another terrorist leader.
  • Thu, 17 September 10:17
    Sweeping_changes Earlier this month Mexico’s president, Felipe Calderon, announced ‘profound changes’ for a country increasingly damaged by drugs trade violence.
  • Fri, 11 September 12:32
    Poland still resents Russia’s war role, said president Lech Kaczynski last week, and it would be callous to argue that Poland did not suffer during and after the war. But without Russia, the war would have been lost: would Kaczynski be happier today had Poland remained in Nazi hands?
  • Fri, 11 September 12:31
    Greenland’s ice sheet, frozen for three million years, is melting faster than climate experts predicted and seismologists recently traced back to Greenland a new type of earthquake caused by large-scale, rapid shifting of glaciers. The ice sheet has survived other periods of global warming, but humanity might not survive this one.
  • Fri, 11 September 12:31
    James Murdoch, son of media mogul Rupert, accused the BBC of being ‘patrician’ and threatening paid journalism, with particular harshness reserved for its superb website. This happens to be free, while the Murdoch empire will charge users for online access in 2010, a coincidence thatcould explain the vitriol.
  • Fri, 04 September 10:07
    Under Scottish law a prisoner like Abdelbaset Ali Mohmed al-Megrahi, who has less than three months to live, can be released. America clearly cannot accept that acting within the law while freeing the only person convicted for the Lockerbie air disaster, does not betray government weakness. Instead it portrays strength.
  • Fri, 04 September 10:06
    Nicolas Sarkozy urged governments to imitate France by limiting bonuses for bankers and traders who operate for personal, not national, gain. If the suggestion had come from anyone but Sarkozy perhaps London would listen but historic rivalries mean his message will be ignored where it most needs to be heeded.
  • Fri, 04 September 10:06
    Afghanistan’s elections were marred by enthusiastic converts to democracy who have barely grasped that voting is only a beginning. What follows is more demanding but until novice voters can accept a candidate not of their choice - in Afghanistan or elsewhere - democracy does not stand a chance.

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