Gaddafi son Saif al-Islam 'may be trying to flee Libya'

The International Criminal Court's chief prosecutor says Muammar Gaddafi's son Saif al-Islam may be trying to flee Libya with help from mercenaries.

In a statement to the UN Security Council, Luis Moreno-Ocampo called on other countries to disrupt such plans.

The court has been trying to negotiate the surrender of the 39-year-old, who is wanted for war crimes.

Mr Ocampo also said they were examining allegations against Nato and interim forces, as well as pro-Gaddafi troops.

He said they would examine alleged crimes by all sides "impartially and independently".

Saif al-Islam, who was once the presumed successor to the former Libyan leader, has been in hiding for months.

The ICC have been holding talks with intermediaries to secure his arrest, following the death of his father on 20 October.

'Heading for Niger'

Mr Ocampo said he was also investigating evidence about mass rapes committed by pro-Gaddafi forces, as well as allegations about war crimes committed by the former rebels and Nato forces.

"These allegations will be examined impartially and independently by the [prosecution]."

Allegations against National Transitional Council (NTC) troops include the arbitrary detention of alleged mercenaries and the killing of detained combatants, Mr Ocampo said.

He did not specify the claims against Nato, which carried out an air campaign under a UN mandate to protect civilians.

Reports from last month claimed Saif al-Islam was in a convoy heading toward Libya's desert border with Niger, where other Gaddafi allies have fled - but the reports were never confirmed.

An ICC arrest warrant issued for Saif al-Islam in June accuses him of murder and persecution.

The document claims that he played an essential part in systematic attacks on civilians in various Libyan cities carried out by Gaddafi's security forces in February.

Gaddafi's former intelligence chief Abdullah al-Senussi is also wanted by the court.

The National Transitional Council (NTC) has said it would like to try the two men in Libya.

NTC forces overthrew Gaddafi in late August, and are now overseeing a political transition intended to lead to national elections within eight months.


Three masked subjects entered and robbed an establishment

The Royal Turks and Caicos Islands Police, Criminal Investigation Department in Providenciales are presently investigating a Robbery which occurred at a business place in the Bight area of Providenciales at approximately 8:00 pm on Tuesday 1st November 2011.

 

Three masked subjects, one armed with a firearm entered the establishment and robbed it of a quantity of cash. A single gunshot was discharged during the incident by one of the robbers. No one was injured.

 

The Police are seeking the assistance of the general public who might have any information concerning this incident. Please contact the Police via 911, or by contacting Crime Stoppers at 1-800-TIPS(8477), or via a web tip at www.crimestoppers.tc or a friend of Crime Stoppers Turks and Caicos on Facebook.


Elections prep finally underway

DEFINITIVE preparations are finally underway to get the TCI ready for elections slated for next fall.

From drafting new corruption-busting laws to defining 10 constituencies in place of the present 15, the wheels are now in motion to facilitate the critical return to self-rule.

For many islanders, it spells an imminent end to a ceaseless waiting game for Britain to release its grip on the stricken territory.

Consultations between UK delegates and TCI business, political and community leaders on a new Elections Ordinance began this week.

The aim is to stifle capacity for vote-rigging and malfeasance said to have plagued previous ballots.

A four-strong team – from London’s Westminster Forum for Democracy (WFD) – has been tasked with identifying strengths and weaknesses in the current electoral system.

With input from local leaders, they will then help establish proper codes of conduct during campaigns.

This week the Governor’s office outlined four separate processes to be achieved before a voting date can be set.

In addition to the new ordinance defining standards expected from politicians, outdated procedures in the current Elections Ordinance will be brought in line with internationally recognised practices.

A new Boundary Commission will be put in place to prescribe the 10 constituencies and the Electoral Register will be updated too, following the completion of next year’s census.

Philip Rushbrook, director of the Governor’s office, said elections could take place within 30 days of the new constitution coming into force.

But he warned meticulous preparations were needed first, which are unlikely to be completed before next September.

“The census scheduled for February 2012 has a direct bearing on when the new election boundaries and Electoral Register of voters can be prepared,” he said.

“Both of these activities will benefit from access to the most up to date information on population distribution and it is now known the initial census data will be available in April 2012.”

Mr Rushbrook said setting up the Boundary Commission and finalising the list of eligible voters should take no more than a few weeks thereafter. The Commission will consist of three members appointed by the Governor.

The revised Electoral Register will also help oust past problems of some islanders voting in two separate districts.

Mr Rushbrook said clearer definitions of voting districts for each person – particularly where someone has family ties on one island but lives and works on another – would discontinue that practice.

A small group of government and Governor’s office officials, plus Attorney General chambers staff, has been enlisted to kickstart the work ahead.

Additional members from the community will be added to help out as things progress.

Consultations on the changes ahead will be sought from the public via town hall meetings and other methods similar to those used to revise the constitution.

This week’s trip by the WFD team will be followed by a further visit in November featuring confidential and public meetings with various individuals and groups.

WFD is an independent body, funded by the UK’s Foreign and Commonwealth Office (FCO), which strives for sustainable political change in emerging democracies.

The four delegates who jetted into the TCI this week included Shadow FCO Minister John Spellar, and Paul Speller, head of the Liberal Democrats’ international office and a former Deputy Governor of Gibraltar. They were joined by George Edward Cockram and David Thirlby.

The team’s work in the TCI is being fully funded by the UK.

-TC WEEKLY NEWS


PNP pledges independence referendum

TRAMPLING of democracy, refusal to stage imminent elections, imposition of taxes without consent and the erosion of human rights under the new constitution.

Just some of the claims levelled at London by the PNP which this week announced an active bid for independence from Britain.

The party has pledged to hold a prompt referendum on the issue if successful in next year’s elections, after members backed proposals at a meeting on Monday.

Leader Clayton Greene vowed in a statement that the “march to freedom” had begun.

“The question can no longer be whether there will be or whether there should be independence. The question must now be when.”

He said the PNP believed it was the destiny of all people worldwide to obtain independent status – and the responsibility of every government to make it happen.

“Our party is therefore committed to doing all that it can, whether in or out of government, to prepare the people of the Turks and Caicos Islands politically, socially and economically for that eventuality.”

Mr Greene said every party policy would strive to ensure “greater social, economic and political opportunities” for islanders.

The PNP has long called for liberty from UK shackles, but the resolution passed at its National General Council meeting represents a significant stride forward on the road to autonomy.

The party claims the TCI was abandoned by Britain for many years following the collapse of the once lucrative salt industry.

Members say native people achieved major prosperity for the islands without help from the mother country.

Among a list of 12 ‘failures’ by the UK, are the seizure of governance without permission, the suspension of the TCI’s “most basic laws”, the axing of the automatic right to a jury trial, wreckage of the economy, and the installation of a “mock” legislature.

Controversial civil service reforms, which have seen widespread job losses and wage cuts, invoked PNP wrath too.

The resolution also accuses Britain of failing in its duties – as outlined by the United Nations – to prepare the country for self-determination.

“At every stage of these oppressions, the people of the Turks and Caicos Islands have petitioned for redress in the most humble terms, and our repeated petitions have only been answered by repeated injury,” it goes on to state.

It continues that the current relationship is not in the islands’ “best interest”.

“The time has come that we as a people chart our own future towards progress and prosperity.”

The resolution ends by pledging to embark on a public education programme aimed at extolling the virtues of an independent nation.

And to secure “as soon as practicable” a referendum to gauge the views of the populace.

-TC WEEKLY NEWS


Darren Bravo bangs 195 as Windies go for win

West Indies’ bid for victory in the second Test against Bangladesh hit a snag yesterday, after Darren Bravo set things up, narrowly missing a double-hundred. Bravo was dismissed for 195 and fellow left-hander Shivnarine Chanderpaul was unbeaten on 59, allowing West Indies to declare on 383 for five in their second innings about an hour before tea on the third day at the Sher-e-Bangla Stadium, setting Bangladesh a highly improbable, if not impossible victory target of 508. Bravo finished his near 7 hour innings with 12 fours and five sixes from 297 balls. He added 143 for the fifth wicket either side of lunch with Chanderpaul, whose knock included six fours from 79 balls, after night-watchman Kemar Roach fell in the first hour.

The visitors however, ran into Tamim Iqbal in a rampant mood. The left-handed opener was unbeaten on 82 and his captain Mushfiqur Rahim was not out on 33, carrying the home team to 164 for three at the close. West Indies first innings bowling hero Fidel Edwards grabbed an early scalp, when Imrul Kayes was caught at slip for nine in the third over. Wickets, however, did not come thick and fast for West Indies like in the Bangladesh first innings, as Tamim anchored the batting, sharing defiant stands either side of tea with Shahriar Nafees, Raqibul Hasan, and Mushfiqur before stumps were drawn. Roach felt the weight of Tamim’s bat in his fifth over, when the left-hander inside-edged a drive to deep fine leg for four off the second ball, tucked a short ball into the same place two balls later for another boundary, and finished it off with an upper cut past gully for another four.

West Indies captain Darren Sammy made a breakthrough, when he held a return catch to dismiss Shahriar for 18 to leave Bangladesh 73 for two on the stroke of tea. After the break, the Windies ran into more resistance, when Raqibul joined Tamim and they put on 51 for the third wicket. A half-volley from Bishoo was greeted with a crisp extra cover drive for four in the first full over after the break, and the Bangladeshi opener moved on to reach his 50 from 58 balls with a single to mid-wicket off Sammy. West Indies seemed powerless at times to stop Tamim, as he lofted Marlon Samuels to long-off for four, and roughed up Bishoo, when he twice hit him straight for a four and a six off the last two deliveries of the next over. Samuels scalped Raqibul for 17 with a catch to slip, leaving Bangladesh 124 for three before Mushfiqur arrived to bat through the remainder of the day with Tamim, adding 40 unbroken for the fourth wicket before the close.

Earlier, Bravo continued merrily from where he left off the previous day and seemed almost unstoppable. His dismissal, caught behind, gave Suhrawadi Shuvo the last of his three wickets for 73 runs from 26.3 overs and prompted the declaration. After Roach charged down the pitch and was caught at long-off for 12 skying a well-flighted delivery from Suhrawadi, Chanderpaul joined Bravo and they continued batting West Indies into an impregnable position. Bravo reached 150 in the last over before lunch, when he crunched Suhrawadi through mid-wicket for his 10th four. After the interval, he got into stride with a six off Nasir Hossain over long-off before he gave Shakib Al Hasan a difficult chance running back at mid-on off Shahadat Hossain on 158. Batting with the declaration clearly in mind, Chanderpaul too, started to show greater enterprise, reaching his 50 from 70 balls in style with a pull through square leg off Shahadat for his fifth boundary. Five overs later, Bravo’s fun came to a screeching halt, when he tried to swipe Suhrawadi for another six to reach the 200-run mark, top-edged and gave a catch to Mushfiqur. The two-Test series is level 0-0, after the badly weather affected first Test ended in a draw at the Chowdhury Stadium in Chittagong. (CMC)

SCOREBOARD BANGLADESH VS WI

 

WEST INDIES 1st Innings 355

(K. Edwards 121; Shakib Al Hasan 5-63)

BANGLADESH 1st Innings 231

(Shakib Al Hasan 73; F. Edwards 5-63)

WEST INDIES 2nd Innings

K. Brathwaite run out (Naeem Islam) 0

K. Powell c Nasir Hossain b Shakib Al Hasan 12

K. Edwards b Suhrawadi Shuvo 86

D.M. Bravo c wkpr Mushfiqur Rahim

b Suhrawadi Shuvo 195

K. Roach c Naeem Islam b Suhrawadi Shuvo 12

S. Chanderpaul not out 59

Extras (b6, lb4, w5, nb4) 19

TOTAL (5 wkts decl’d, 111.3 overs) 383

Fall of wickets: 1-0, 2-33, 3-184, 4-240, 5-383

Bowling: Rubel Hossain 12-2-36-0 (nb2, w5); Nasir Hossain 25-5-78-0; Shakib Al Hasan 21-1-79-1; Naeem Islam 12-2-38-0; Suhrawadi Shuvo 26.3-3-73-3; Shahadat Hossain 11-0-57-0 (nb2); Raqibul Hasan 4-0-12-0

 

BANGLADESH 2nd Innings

Tamim Iqbal not out 82

Imrul Kayes c K. Edwards b F. Edwards 9

Shahriar Nafees c and b Sammy 18

Raqibul Hasan c Sammy b Samuels 17

Mushfiqur Rahim not out 33

Extras (b2, lb1, nb2) 5

TOTAL (3 wkts, 47 overs) 164

Fall of wickets: 1-26, 2-73, 3-124

Bowling: Edwards 9-0-38-1 (nb2); Roach 8-2-36-0; Sammy 7-2-11-1; Bishoo 11-3-35-0; Samuels 12-2-41-1

Position: Bangladesh need 344 more runs to win with seven second innings wickets standing.


Conrad Murray decides not to give evidence

Dr Conrad Murray has told a judge he will not testify in his own defence in the trial over Michael Jackson's death.

He denies involuntary manslaughter but could face a prison term and the loss of his medical licence if convicted.

Dr Murray told trial Judge Michael Pastor he had made his decision "freely and explicitly", reports said.

The decision comes after the defence called its last witness, propofol expert Dr Paul White. Closing statements will begin on Thursday.

"My decision is I will not testify in this matter," Dr Murray said after being asked if he understood the choice to testify or not was his alone.

Throughout the 22-day trial, both the prosecution and defence have called their own medical experts to take the stand.

On Tuesday, the prosecution called their own propofol expert, Dr Steven Shafer, as a rebuttal witness to counter arguments put forth by Dr White.

Duelling experts

During earlier testimony, Dr Shafer said the suggestion that Jackson could have drugged himself was "crazy".

The defence called former patients of Dr Murray as character witnesses, and tried to introduce doubt into the testimony of the prosecution's witnesses.

Defence lawyers have argued that Jackson, dealing with insomnia, drugged himself with an additional dose of propofol after Dr Murray left his bedroom.

They dropped their original contention that Jackson drank the propofol but maintained that he had intravenously administered the fatal dose himself.

Paramedics were called to Jackson's California home on 25 June 2009 after he stopped breathing. He was pronounced dead two hours later at the UCLA medical centre.

The prosecution alleges Jackson died from an overdose of the anaesthetic drug propofol and that Dr Murray was negligent by giving him the drug outside of a hospital setting.

BBC


Second Expendables stuntman in 'stable condition'

A stuntman seriously injured on the set of Expendables 2 is now in a stable condition, after a colleague died as a result of the same accident.

Nuo Sun, who was hurt while filming a stunt sequence in Lake Ognyanova, Bulgaria last week, has been taken to Germany for further treatment.

Fellow stuntman, Kun Lieu, was killed in the incident.

"Our deepest condolences go to the family of Kun Lieu," film company Nu Image told the Hollywood Reporter.

"His passing is tragic," the statement continued.

The accident happened during filming of an explosion on an inflatable boat on the Ognyanovo dam, 15 miles outside the capital Sofia.

It said that Nuo Sun's condition had "stabilised" and he was now receiving "top medical care from the best specialists" in Munich.

Nu Image denied reports in the Bulgarian press that the stunt doubles for stars Sylvester Stallone and Jet Li had been involved in the accident.

Nuo Sun and Kun Lieu were working in the second stunt unit.

"At the time of the accident, neither Li's or Stallone's stuntmen were on or near the second unit set, nor were any of the film's main actors, director Simon West or any of the main unit crew," Nu Image told the Hollywood Reporter.

"Only second unit filming has been temporarily suspended and will resume shortly. The filmmakers continue to work with authorities investigating this accident. Main unit production has not been interrupted and continues as scheduled."

The Expendables 2 features a star-studded action hero cast that, alongside Stallone and Jet Li, includes Arnold Schwarzenegger, Bruce Willis, Dolph Lundgren, Chuck Norris and Jean-Claude Van Damme.


Rihanna cancels gig in Malmo, Sweden, because of flu

Rihanna has been forced to pulled out of a concert in Sweden after receiving treatment for flu.

The 23-year-old singer apologised to fans and posted a picture on Twitter of her arm connected to an IV drip.

Organisers for the gig at the Malmo Arena said they hoped to reschedule the show, and fans who missed out would be offered refunds.

Rihanna's European tour is set to resume tonight (1 November) at the Ericsson Globe in Stockholm.

The singer has already completed a handful of UK dates on her Loud tour and is set to return to play gigs in London, Birmingham, Sheffield, Manchester, Nottingham, Glasgow and Newcastle later this year.

Rihanna is to release her sixth album Talk That Talk later this month.


China artist Ai Weiwei served with $2m tax demand

Chinese authorities have served Ai Weiwei with an official demand telling him to pay 15m yuan ($2.3m; £1.4m) within 15 days, the artist has said.

He said he had rejected the notice, and was not sure whether he would pay.

The artist, one of China's most famous people, was held for almost three months earlier this year before being accused of "economic crimes".

His supporters say the accusations are part of a plot to silence Mr Ai, who is an outspoken critic of the government.

Mr Ai said he would pay the money if it was proved to be a tax issue.

But he said he had not been able to review his company's account books because they had been taken by the authorities.

And he said he had not seen any evidence showing that the firm had evaded tax.

"I am only a designer of the company. I never signed any of the company's contracts, nor did I ever read any of the company's finance reports, so I have no idea," he told the BBC.

Mr Ai was picked up by police in April as authorities rounded-up activists, following calls on websites for a Middle Eastern-style Jasmine revolution in China.

The state news agency Xinhua said in June that Mr Ai had been released "because of his good attitude in confessing" to tax evasion and because he had agreed to pay back the money he owed.

But on Tuesday he said: "It was not true that I admitted to tax evasion charges. I was never formally arrested and never charged."

"If they really want to prove that I am a bad guy, why don't they behave themselves to make the process more transparent?" he later added.

Since his incarceration, he has won numerous art awards, and was recently named the world's most powerful artist in a poll carried out by an art magazine.

His case has also become a cause celebre for rights activists and critics of China's Communist Party.


Singer Beryl Davis dies aged 87

British singer Beryl Davis, who sang with Frank Sinatra and Benny Goodman, has died in Los Angeles aged 87.

Family spokesman Greg Purdy told the Los Angeles Times newspaper that she passed away on Friday from complications of Alzheimer's disease.

Born in Plymouth, she began performing with her father, band leader Harry Davis, at the age of three.

A popular singer during World War II, she later became a star in the US, after singing on Bob Hope's radio show.

Inspired by American singers, particularly Ella Fitzgerald, she toured around Europe before the war broke out, playing with Stephane Grappelli, big band leader Ted Heath and pianist George Shearing.

Her career blossomed throughout the war, thanks in part to a contract with the BBC, who broadcast up to 10 performances a week to the Armed Forces or the World Service.

She was spotted by Glenn Miller and sang with his Army Air Force Band towards the end of the war. After his death, she decided to travel to America because, she said, "I wanted to meet Nat King Cole, Frank Sinatra, Helen Forrest".

At least one of those wishes was granted when she appeared alongside Sinatra on the radio show Your Hit Parade.

Davis continued to sing into old age, her signature tune being the ballad I'll Be Seeing You, which had been popular with troops serving overseas during the war.

She was married once, to Hollywood radio and TV star Peter Potter in 1948, but they eventually divorced.

Her partner of 35 years, Buck Stapleton, died in 2003. She is survived by three children a sister and two grandchildren.