Friday, December 16, 2011

Zynga IPO fails to generate stock market 'pop' on disappointing debut

Zynga raised about $1bn from the sale, far less than the $20bn that had been expected earlier this year. Photograph: Mark Lennihan/AP

After months of hype and speculation, Zynga, the 4-year-old games company behind FarmVille and Words with Friends, has had a disappointing debut on the Nasdaq stock exchange.

Many tech firms enjoy spectacular first-day "pops", with stratospheric rises in their share price in the early hours of trading. Zynga's shares, priced at $10, rose 11% initially, before closing out the day at $9.45. Wall Street, it seems, isn't playing Zynga's game. At least not yet.

The company, which claims 60 million people a day play its games, raised about $1bn from the share sale, and is worth a total of $7bn, far less than the $20bn that had been expected earlier this year.

Founder Mark Pincus, who named the company after his pet bulldog, now owns a stake worth over $1bn. He cashed in some of his shares ahead of the sale, selling a small portion of his holding for more than $109m back in March, according to regulatory filings.

Unlike many other young web companies, Zynga is profitable. The company makes money by selling virtual goods in its popular games such as CityVille, FarmVille and Mafia Wars. In the first nine months of the year, Zynga's revenue doubled to $829m from a year earlier, but its net income declined 35% to $31m.

Zynga is highly dependent on Facebook, whose users account for 94% of Zynga's revenue, according to analyst Arvind Bhatia of Sterne Agee Group. Bhatia issued a negative report on the company Tuesday claiming growth is slowing at the company and its margins are under pressure.

Facebook takes a third of the game firm's revenues, and analysts expect Zynga to use its new cash pile to expand into the rapidly growing mobile gaming market and away from its social networking.

John Wilson, partner at San Francisco law firm Sherman & Sterling, said Zynga was a major beneficiary of the Facebook effect. "It's in the social network space and it's affiliated with Facebook," he said. Facebook gives the company an "extraordinary reach. And they are able to leverage that relationships with the most remarkable company story since Google," he said. "The real test is where will it be six months from now."

Perhaps Zynga's lack of zing isn't such a bad thing. Many recent tech IPOs have enjoyed a first-day pop only to quickly lose steam. Groupon surged 31% on its debut as a public company, and business-focused social network LinkedIn jumped 84%. Both are now trading well below those prices.

According to Birinyi analyst Kevin Pleines, tech IPOs have popped an average of 31% from their IPO price after the opening bell on their first day of trading. But 18 of the 30 stocks he looked at are now below their IPO price, and 24 of the 30 are below their opening price on their first day of trading.

Wilson said the pops were part of the process and that the big winners in technology, such as Google, had similarly leapt up in price on their first day of trading but gone on to outperform.

"The issue now is that there is so much money on the sidelines," Wilson added. "Pension funds, hedge funds, private investors. And they are getting so little from fixed income investments that when something with potential comes along, there's a stampede."

Zynga's debut is the latest test for an IPO market that took a hit after a summer slump. Many other new tech firms were planning IPOs earlier this year before stock markets were thrashed by the crisis in Europe and the debt ceiling row in Washington.

Wilson said he expects many of those firms to go public next year, led by Facebook. Figures leaked this week suggest Facebook will aim for a valuation of $100bn when it goes public next year – about the same value as soft drinks and food giant Pepsi Co.

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Desmond Tutu urges Trinity Church to allow Occupy protester camp

Archbishop Emeritus Desmond Tutu called called the Occupy movement a 'voice for the world.' Photograph: Mohammed Salem/Reuters

Archbishop Desmond Tutu has waded into an ecclesiastical row over a New York church's refusal to allow protesters from Occupy Wall Street to camp on a vacant lot it owns.

The South African activist and retired church leader urged Trinity Church to heed the pleas of demonstrators to allow the camp and, failing that, at least to stop any violence or arrests at the site during a day of action this Saturday to mark its three month anniversary.

Tutu, the latest in a growing number of church leaders to align themselves with Occupy called the movement a "voice for the world."

A wave of evictions that has cleared encampments from cities and campuses across the United States has galvanised a clergy of different faiths to open their doors, and sometimes their homes, to protesters.

More than 1,400 church leaders, including the Rev Jesse Jackson have signed a pledge of support to OWS and on Wednesday, a coalition of prominent Afro-American pastors joined with the movement to launch a new series of actions that they consider part of the Rev Martin Luther King Jr's unfinished legacy.

But despite a cascade of support from these quarters, the protesters have failed to secure from their new allies the one thing they say they need to reignite the movement after having somewhat faded from the public radar – an outdoor space in which to gather, talk and plan.

Trinity Church Wall Street The church has been steadfast it its refusal to allow a winter encampment. Photograph: Mark Lennihan/AP

Trinity is among the churches that have offered protesters some form of sanctuary, in their meeting rooms and offices and at their neighbourhood centre. However, despite weeks of negotiations, pressure from other church leaders and a hunger strike by four protesters, the church has been steadfast it its refusal to allow a winter encampment at its site at Duarte Square, at the corner of Canal Street and Sixth. Protesters have also criticised Trinity for not protecting them when they were arrested on the vacant lot on November 15.

Trinity Real Estate, the landowning arm of the church, has proposed a re-zoning plan to pave the way for up to 3,500 new housing units there, although it has yet to be approved by the community board. The plan also calls for a primary school.

In a letter to OWS, Tutu describes Trinity Church, on Wall Street, as an "esteemed and valued old friend" but said it caused him pain to hear of the impasse in negotiations between OWS and the church over the site.

"Sisters and Brothers, I greet you in the Name of Our Lord and in the bonds of common friendship and struggle from my homeland of South Africa. I know of your own challenges and of this appeal to Trinity Church for the shelter of a new home and I am with you! May God bless this appeal of yours and may the good people of that noble parish heed your plea, if not for ease of access, then at least for a stay on any violence or arrests."

He said: "I appeal to them to find a way to help you. I appeal to them to embrace the higher calling of Our Lord Jesus Christ – which they live so well in all other ways – but now to do so in this instance...can we not rearrange our affairs for justice sake?"

The matter is expected to come to a head on Saturday, during a day of action after a call to re-occupy former locations or find alternative camps.

Bishop George Packard, former chaplain for the armed services and decorated Vietnam veteran who has acted as the liaison in negotiations between the church and protesters, wrote on his blog this week that Duarte Square could be the new home for OWS "or not." He went on: "Trinity might mobilize platoons of police in riot gear and ring this sad little place with multiple barricades. No room at this Inn!"

Amin Husain, for OWS, has accused Trinity of putting "profit before God".

However, in a fresh posting on its website on December 9, the Right Rev John Cooper said that he believed that to allow a winter encampment would be "wrong unsafe, unhealthy and potentially injurious."

The rector stated:

"We want to be responsive, while also being responsible, to our residential and business neighbors, partners, visitors and tenants — our entire community. There are no facilities at the Canal St lot. Demanding access and vandalizing the property by a determined few OWS protesters won't alter the fact that there are no basic elements to sustain an encampment. The health, safety and security problems posed by an encampment here, compounded by winter weather, would dwarf those experienced at Zuccotti Park.

"Calling this an issue of 'political sanctuary' is manipulative and blind to reality. Equating the desire to seize this property with uprisings against tyranny is misguided, at best. Hyperbolic distortion drives up petition signatures, but doesn't make it right. Those arrested [on November 15 at Duarte Square] were not seeking sanctuary; they were seeking to be arrested. Trinity will continue our responsible outreach and pastoral services for all."

Rev John Metz, of the Episcopalian Church of the Ascension, in Brooklyn, who is part of the Occupy In Faith NYC group, said collaboration between churches and the Occupy movement was gathering momentum. Supporters include Bhikkhu Bodhi, from the Buddhist Global Relief, and the Concord Baptist Church of Christ in Brooklyn, one of Amercia's largest protestant congregations.

"There's a natural relationship between the endeavours of the movement and of the church, both in terms of charity and looking at the source of societies ills," he said. "The dots are starting to be connected by the clergy and by lay people."

Metz, who has offered sanctuary to protesters in his own home as well as his church, said the Occupy movement was forcing church leaders to rethink their work.

"The Episcopalian diocese of Long Island, during its most recent convention, passed a resolution in support of Occupy Wall Street. What this means is that it becomes part of the Occupy Faith movement. Not only do you commit resources but you are re-occupying your own church by re-envisioning how it is we can live in ways that are committed to the Gospel mandate of social and economic justice. We are not asking people to 'like' this as on Facebook, but to work out the theology of occupation," he said.

He also called on the Archbishop of Canterbury to support the Occupy movement.

"It would be tremendously important if someone like the Archbishop of Canterbury were to step in with strong support of the Occupy movement. He understands the incarnated aspects of encampment. He understands that in terms of the Christmas story. We need his leadership here."

In a recent article in the Radio Times, a British magazine, Archbishop Rowan Williams posed the question "what would Jesus do" about the Occupy protesters at St Paul's. He suggested that Jesus would be there "sharing the risks, not just taking sides but steadily changing the entire atmosphere by the questions he asks of everybody involved, rich and poor, capitalist and protester and cleric" but he stopped short of coming out in support of the protesters.

The Rev Jackson also urged a stronger response from the Church of England to the Occupy movement on its doorstep. In front of St Paul's Cathedral in London on Wednesday, where he gave a speech hailing protesters as the direct descendants of the civil rights movement, Jackson said: "The church should be the headquarters for the Occupy movement. In a sense, the occupiers represent the conscience of the church."

While St Paul's reversed its initial decision to join action by the Corporation of London to evict protesters, relations between the camp and the church have been strained.

The Very Rev Jep Strait, from the Cathedral Church of St Paul in Boston, which has allowed demonstrators to hold general assemblies in the church since they were evicted, said: "This is very important to their central message about how society functions and who has access to power and resources and who doesn't which is also a part of the Gospel message."

 

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End of the note by quran education

 

The Killing helps boost UK travel to Denmark

Copenhagen city hall, which features in The Killing. Photograph: Alamy

The rain falls. The wind blows. The daylight has faded to a crepuscular gloom. Desolate woodlands give way to an array of unlit basements, disused factories and pitch-black alleyways. A murderer may or may not be lurking with a gun and a menacing stare.

Yet, despite its almost total absence of textbook tourist charm, the Copenhagen portrayed in BBC4's hit series The Killing appears to have a powerful allure for Britons. The number of nights spent by UK visitors in the Danish capital has risen by 50,000 this year – an increase of 16% – and industry experts believe it is at least in part down to the huge success of the television drama, which first aired here in January.

"The first two episodes nothing happened. And then suddenly everyone was saying 'what is that? It's something different, something new, something fresh'," said Henrik Kahn, director of VisitDenmark UK. "People watched it even though it was in Danish with subtitles. It became a mad thing; everyone wanted to know more."

He believes that the popularity of the thriller – the second series of which comes to a dramatic finale on Saturday night – is the latest and arguably biggest factor that has turned the UK on to the Danish aesthetic over the past two years. Britain is now the biggest non-Scandinavian market for visits to Copenhagen, and across the whole of Denmark tourists from the UK are expected to have booked 13% more overnight stays in 2011 than in the previous year.

"There are different things happening," said Kahn. "The fuss about Denmark, or Copenhagen especially, started [in the] spring of 2010, when Noma was named the world's best restaurant. That created a lot of buzz about Danish food suddenly – that it wasn't just herring."

The wave of Scandinavian crime fiction, which began with the Swedish detective series Wallander and continued with the Stieg Larsson novels, also played a part, he said. "And then suddenly The Killing comes on."

To make the most of the craze for the Bafta-winning drama, savvy Copenhagen inhabitants have laid on activities that would satisfy even the most obsessive fans of Sarah Lund, the main character in The Killing. Lise-Lotte Frederiksen, of Peter and Ping walking tours, organised her first "In the footsteps of Sarah Lund" event six weeks ago and has taken 25 people – all of them British – for a two-hour amble around some of the main locations of the show.

"My first tour was actually in rain, it was very cold, but I thought that's just the right weather. And I thought people would phone and cancel, but they didn't – they turned up and they were four young guys from London," she said.

The tour takes in Copenhagen's city hall, the police headquarters – which Frederiksen hopes one day to be allowed inside with a group – and Kødbyen, the meat-packing district where Lund is attacked in season two. She once even made it inside the school where much of season one was filmed. "I was so lucky … some pupils were there sleeping over from a party so I actually got into the basement," she said. "I think [the tourists] really liked that."

Visitors looking to immerse themselves in the show's gritty ambience may be disappointed, however: Kahn says Copenhagen is simply too nice. "It's not a spooky city. It's not a dangerous city. That's not what we're known for. We're known for relaxing," he said.

Even worse, the weather might be clement. "That's the worst thing about this series: it's raining all the time. It's irritating to see they haven't seen the sun yet," Kahn said. "You have rain in November. But less rain than [Britain], that's for sure."

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End of the note by quran education

Credit rating battle: how the UK and France measure up

Sarkozy versus Cameron: economic statistics show it's too close to call. Photograph: John Schults / Reuters/REUTERS

The entente is no longer so cordiale. As the big credit rating firms assess whether to strip France of its prized AAA status, Bank of France chief Christian Noyer this week produced a long list of reasons why he believes the agencies should turn their fire on Britain before his own country.

France's finance minister François Baroin put things even more bluntly: "We'd rather be French than British in economic terms."

But is the outlook across the Channel really better than in Britain? Taking Noyer's reasons to downgrade Britain – it "has more deficits, as much debt, more inflation, less growth than us" – he is certainly right on some counts.

Britain's deficit will stand at 7% of GDP next year, while France's will be 4.6%, according to International Monetary Fund forecasts. But Britain's net debt is put at 76.9% of GDP in 2012 and France's at 83.5%. UK inflation has been way above the government-set target of 2% this year and the IMF forecasts it will be 2.4% in 2012. In France the rate is expected to be 1.4%.

On growth, neither country can claim a stellar performance. France's economy grew 0.4% in the third quarter and Britain's 0.5%. Nor has either a particularly rosy outlook. In Britain the economy is expected to grow by 1.6% in 2012. But in the near term there is a 1-in-3 chance of a recession, according to the independent Office for Budget Responsibility. In France, the IMF predicts slightly slower 2012 growth of 1.4%. But in the near term France's national statistics office predicts a technical, albeit short, recession.

What Noyer and Baroin fail to mention, say economists, are the other key factors the credit ratings agencies take into account. What the agencies are charged with assessing is how likely a country is to be able to repay its debts. In making that call, whether a country is in the euro or not plays a big role, said Victoria Cadman, economist at Investec.

"If a country is in the euro it is seen as having more risks to its balance sheet," she says, noting France is a particularly big contributor to the eurozone bailout fund, the European financial stability facility. "Monetary autonomy is important as well. Britain can keep the printing presses going. France doesn't have that luxury," added Cadman.

The fact the Bank of England has embarked on quantitative easing (QE) is a reflection of a weak economic outlook. But it is already helping the UK's repayment prospects, because it involved the central bank buying government bonds, argued Alan Clarke, eurozone economist at Scotia Capital. The European Central Bank has shown no such willingness towards QE.

"The UK central bank is buying so many gilts and will probably announce more purchases in the new year. There is hardly enough debt to go around, so the risk of a default is low," says Clarke.

Ratings agencies will also be looking at repayment of maturing bonds and interest. France has to come up with £100bn next year, but the UK has to find only half that, £53bn.

There is also the question of how committed a government is to deficit reduction. In the UK the coalition has vowed not to stray from its austerity drive, and in France, there are elections next year, but still the government has remained committed to cuts. "Sarkozy has done two pre-election fiscal tightening measures, which is quite brave in the run-up to an election," says Clarke.

On the deficit, like so many other factors, the agencies are looking well beyond where things stand now. Longer-term France and the UK are level-pegging in deficit terms. The IMF puts the shortfall at 2.3% of GDP for both countries in 2015.

So where should that leave their ratings?

Investec's Cadman says she has sympathy with the ratings agencies' current stance: "They have got to take into account the credibility of deficit reduction programmes, whether a country is in the eurozone, whether it has monetary autonomy and on balance the fact they are looking at France is sensible. But that doesn't mean to say they won't have another look at the UK."

Following note from Learning Quran online Blog

 

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End of the note by holy Quran reciter                              

Clashes between police and sacked oil workers in Kazakhstan leave 10 dead

A protester runs from a burning police vehicle in Zhanaozen. Photograph: Reuters TV/REUTERS

At least 10 people have been killed in violent clashes between police and demonstrators in an oil town in western Kazakhstan, where workers have been protesting for higher wages, authorities said.

Prosecutor General Askhat Daulbayev said that the mayor's office, a hotel and vehicles were set on fire in Zhanaozen, a city of 90,000 in the southwestern corner of the energy-rich nation.

The clashes appear to be some of the worst unrest to hit the former Soviet republic since it gained independence in 1991.

Contradictory accounts have emerged as to what precipitated the confrontation.

Daulbayev said police officers were attacked as they sought to quell a disturbance in the city centre and were forced to fire their weapons on protesters. He said 10 people were killed.

Roza Teletayeva, who said she was a former oil worker dismissed in June for taking part in a long-standing strike, said that police had surrounded a peaceful meeting of several hundred demonstrators in the morning.

"We had no idea what was going to happen, we were just standing peacefully and doing nothing," she said.

Teletayeva said police opened fire on the crowd and that she had seen at least five people dead. She said groups of angry young men later marched on the mayor's office and set it ablaze.

Footage broadcast by satellite channel K+ showed men in worker's outfits charging a stage erected for festivities to mark the 20th anniversary of Kazakhstan's independence on Friday.

Daulbayev said the headquarters of OzenMunaiGaz oil company, where the demonstrators were formerly employed, was also set alight.

A team of Interior Ministry investigators had flown to the town to identify and punish the organisers of the unrest and restore order, Daulbayev said.

Hundreds of workers at an oil facility controlled by the state-owned energy company KazMunaiGas in Zhanaozen have been protesting for better salaries and working conditions for more than six months. Almost 1,000 workers were fired in the summer for striking, but demonstrations have continued.

President Nursultan Nazarbayev has kept a tight lid on any signs of public discontent during his 20 years of rule. The apparent scale of unrest in Zhanaozen will come as a shock to Nazarbayev's government, which has also been facing an unprecedented surge in radical Islamist-inspired violence in recent months.

In a sign that Kazakhstan's authoritarian government was attempting to contain information on developments in Zhanaozen, internet users reported being unable to open independent news websites or Twitter.

Virtually all domestic media failed to cover the events throughout Friday, as lavish celebrations took place in the capital, Astana, to mark the independence anniversary.

From learning Quran online Blog

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End from online Quran reciter blog

Nick Clegg: UK can still influence competitiveness agenda

Nick Clegg, criticised by Eurosceptics but insisting the country will not be pushed from one extreme to the other. Photograph: David Jones/PA

At the end of a momentous week in European and British politics, the charge sheet against Nick Clegg is long. He has been accused by the Eurosceptic press of treachery, a vanishing act and a euro sulk.

There are contrasting mutterings from some Liberal Democrats that he has displayed insufficient will to fight the pro-European corner inside government and was outmanoeuvred by David Cameron at last weekend's fateful summit.

He had revealed a naivety in failing to foresee how the prime minister might wield the veto in the late-night talks in Brussels. As a result, it is claimed, a gaping fissure has opened both within the coalition and between Europe and Britain.

But Clegg is more concerned with solutions than recriminations. He is now cast in the role of an accident damage inspector at a hideous car crash caused by some reckless late-night driving by his boss. He is gingerly sifting through the wreckage to see if there is anything reparable.

So far as the coalition is concerned, Clegg is certain everything remains in good working order. "I suspect by now everybody understands what I have been saying since the beginning. This government will last until 2015. Nothing has changed."

He is full of plans – on an elected second chamber, social mobility and focusing help on the under-fives. A draft of a big speech on the enemies of the Open Society at the Demos thinktank is purring in the computer at 8,000 words and growing.

One of the chief enemies of openness emerges to be appointed peers. "I hear a lot of people say the Lords is a great receptacle of expertise but expertise is increasingly becoming an alibi for nepotism and political patronage.

"I am absolutely clear there will be a bill in the second session. There is a very clear coalition agreement and commitment."

There is no sign that he is crawling away from political reform in the wake of the disastrous defeat in the AV referendum. Clegg is a resilient optimist.

On Europe, he admits a repair job is needed and that the row with his coalition partners needs de-escalation. His discussion is full of references to bridge-building with EU partners, healing and getting back in the saddle.

He says: "The challenge is to make sure the distinction between Britain's status and the rest that transpired at the summit does not become a permanent widened breach."

He also denies he flip flopped when he first responded to the summit outcome, before condemning Cameron's veto. "Honestly there is this wish for people to be wise with hindsight.

"There had been a momentous summit. Many of the details were not out by Friday morning – you are asked to provide an instant historical commentary on something still evolving.

"So I came out quite clearly and said I regretted it. I said I did not want a treaty change in the first place and that I had always said it would be a divisive process.

"And I said the Eurosceptics needed to be careful what they wish for. People get lost in the detail but what happened was a breakdown in negotiations. Actually what was up for negotiation was not unreasonable."

With his wide political contacts across Europe, linguistic skills and his knowledge of the commission, he is confident the breach is not permanent.

"There will be a lot of opportunities to get back into the saddle. The summit has raised as many question marks as it has provided answers, and there will be a whole lot of discussions about what happens next in which we will be involved.'

He says it is significant that the EU council has granted the UK observer status at the meetings of the new group. Equally, he is firm that Britain will not block or legally challenge the 26-strong group from using institutions such as the commission and the European court of justice. "We have made some very big steps in the last few days. If you get behind the headlines of the big domestic argy-bargy in Britain, we have signalled we are happy for them to use EU institutions.

"Britain will have observer status in the meetings that will put together this inter-governmental arrangement so we will have moved already very quickly in the course of this week, and that is something I have been very keen on."

So is there absolute clarity in the UK that community institutions can be used by this new inter-governmental body that oversees euro discipline?

Clegg's emphatic response is: "Yes, Yes."

But was Cameron as clear in his statement to the Commons?

Clegg replies: "He was very clear we will look at it with an open mind constructively . You need to work out some details. You need a piece of paper, a minute, saying how this will work because it is a novel thing."

But are not some Eurosceptics demanding Cameron block the use of community institutions? "I am sure there are people who will use every debate and crisis to promote their agenda which is nakedly isolationist.

"You have got to go back constantly to what is in the national interest – what is good for growth and jobs – and I just don't think it can be in any doubt that it is our interest to see the Europe succeed."

Whatever his criticisms of the prime minister's use of the veto, Clegg recognises the dilemma Cameron faced because of his backbenchers and the pressure to secure some concessions on the City of London in return for agreeing to a treaty change.

"David Cameron was proposing a menu of options – these were not asking for British exceptionalism. Many of the ideas were just trying to entrench what was already agreed or standard practice.

"The political reality is that there was no way David Cameron could have returned from that summit and gone to the parliament empty-handed.

"All he would have had was a deferred crisis in Britain. That is just a political fact and sometimes I am afraid politics is the art of the possible, not always the ideal," adding parenthetically under his breath: "Boy, do I know that after a year and a half in coalition government."

He seems to indicate Cameron felt he faced a genuine risk of a Commons defeat if he extracted no price for allowing the euro group to form a treaty.

He explains: "You have got a Labour party that is acting incredibly opportunistically on these big issue of the global response to the crisis.

" They voted against an increase in our subscriptions to the IMF a few months ago even though that was delivering on an undertaking by the previous Labour government.

"When you have that degree of opportunism on the opposition benches and very, very forceful Euroscepticism on the Conservative benches, he just could not come back empty handed."

And yet he understands why some euro-group countries, notably Germany, so badly wanted a treaty to strengthen the enforcement of the new fiscal rules. "Germany wanted clear reassurance that the fiscal rectitude it wants was going to be implemented."

That in turn might be a signal to the European Central Bank to act as a lender of the last resort, a step European politicians and economists outside Germany have been begging the ECB to take to ease the markets pressure on sovereign debt.

Clegg explains: "The ECB is independent and that is unbelievably important for the Germanpolitical elite for all the obvious historical reasons so you are never going to get a German politicians from any party to get up and say 'I hereby tell the ECB to do x y and z'.

"But it is obvious to me that the clearer the roadmap to greater fiscal rigour and integration is, the more permissive the environment would be for the monetary authorities to play an activist role. That was the most important thing about the summit. It was not about the position of Britain".

And then there is a sideswipe, if not at Cameron then at his Eurosceptic benches. "We were not being asked to give up anything, we were not being asked to sign over any powers to any European arrangement.

"We were simply being asked to provide passive consent such that the European institutions could do the kind of things ... necessary to create that fiscal integration."

But Clegg recognises the mortal danger facing the European economy. "There are very big question marks about how to stop contagion, how to create a proper ring-fenced mechanism so you don't get a knock-on effect from one country to the next.

"It is clear that markets have got very grave doubts, which in many ways are as bad if not worse after the summit.

"My view is we are still waiting for a very significant and tangible expression to implement labour market reforms, product reforms, pension system reforms which – given large scale fiscal stimulus is not available – is necessary to stimulate growth". He concedes that will "take months and years of painful reform".

"There is no single magic wand, but the focus at the summit from the eurozone countries was what particularly the German government could secure. But the other side of the equation - competitiveness and growth – was not dealt with that extensively and one is slightly meaningless without the other."

He says if the UK plays it smart it can influence this competitiveness agenda. He said: " The great genius of European integration economically is that it always held two different traditions in balance – the Anglo Saxon liberal tradition and the French dirigiste tradition.

"The goal was to ensure that neither the French or British tradition triumphed over the other. I don't think it is in their interest to see the British liberal tradition marginalised."

He chortles when I suggest his pro-Europeanism stems from his widely drawn family roots. " I am British, you know. I am hardly some alien from outer space It is ridiculous I love this country because we are such an open country.

"My mum's family had an upbringing in a Prison of war camp, my dad's family were ripped apart by the Russian revolution, so I understand the tyrannies and totalitarianism of other parts of Europe.

"I think it was great that I was brought up really valuing the tolerance and measured open minded character of this country.

"I think we are at our best when we are open. The danger at the moment is because society is under economic stress, xenophobia, chauvinism and polarisation increase. You can see it in British politics. This is the perfect environment if you are Nigel Farage or Alex Salmond.

"The people who are trying to exploit the politics of grievance and blame, they believe they have got the wind in their sails. The liberal open society is always under pressure when there is fear and anxiety in society. That does not mean you move off the centre ground. As a deputy prime minister, I will hold on to that centre ground of openness and reason.

"Far from being unBritish I think it is incredibly British – we are not going to be allowed to be pushed from one extreme or the other. We are going to keep a level head while others lose theirs."

 

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'Stakeknife' accused may appear at Dublin tribunal

Murdered RUC officer Superintendent Bob Buchanan. Photograph: Family Handout/PA

A man accused of being a British agent operating inside the IRA known as Stakeknife may give evidence to a public tribunal in Dublin investigating alleged collusion between the provisionals and members of the Garda Siochana.

During evidence on Friday at the Smithwick tribunal, counsel for Freddie Scappaticci – accused of being the former head of the IRA's spy-catching team and an agent for Britain – indicated his client might give evidence.

As his lawyer, Martin O'Rourke, applied for a second counsel for Scappaticci, the judge heading the tribunal asked about his client's willingness to co-operate with the inquiry.

When the tribunal chairman, Judge Peter Smithwick, asked if Scappaticci would make a statement to the inquiry or turn up to give evidence, O'Rourke replied: "That is being given active consideration by my client."

The presence of Scappaticci at the tribunal would enable lawyers for the families of two police officers the IRA murdered in 1989 to quiz him about his alleged role as the provisionals' spy hunter and claims he was at the same time one of the British state's most important agents inside the republican terror group.

The Belfast republican has always denied he was the agent known as Stakeknife, even though several former IRA members and former members of the army's force research unit have claimed he was working inside the provisionals for the British state.

His atttendance would also allow the families' legal team to question him over his role in the IRA at the time of the double murder and his dealings with other senior provisionals, some of whom were also and remain prominent members of Sinn Féin.

The Smithwick tribunal was established to investigate claims that a Garda "mole" set up Chief Superintendent Harry Breen and Superintendent Bob Buchanan after they left a police station in the Irish Republic.

The suggestion that Scappaticci might attend came on the third day of evidence to the tribunal from Newry man Kevin Fulton, a former British agent who admits he infiltrated the IRA.

He repeated claims that Scappaticci was a British agent in the IRA known by the code name Stakeknife. At the time of Breen and Buchanan's killing, Fulton claims Scappaticci was aware of the plot to ambush and kill the two senior Royal Ulster Constabulary officers on the border.

The tribunal was told of an IRA death threat sent to Fulton's address in Newry in February 2001.

"You have been sentenced by court martial in your absence. You are charged. General order no 5 part 5, general order no 11, on both charges you were found guilty. The penalty for both charges is death. Sentence to be carried out at our convenience."

The letter was signed "P O'Neill, Oglaigh na hEireann".

When asked why he had travelled from the UK to give evidence to the tribunal, Fulton said: "I started something and I had to finish it."

When asked what the IRA would think about what he was doing in giving evidence, Fulton said: "It's treachery. They would kill me."

He denied he was lying about the collusion allegations he made against a former Dundalk-based garda who has consistently denied any wrongdoing or links with the IRA.

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Cycling campaigners demand safety measures after rise in road deaths

A memorial for a female cyclist killed in an accident by King's Cross station in London. A vigil is to the be held at the busy junction next week. Photograph: Linda Nylind for the Guardian

Shortly after dusk one evening next week a small group of people will light candles amid the bustle and noise of one of London's busiest road junctions, by King's Cross station. Their quiet ceremony will mark the deaths of 16 cyclists in the capital so far during 2011 – up from 10 the previous year – and demand measures to make cycling safer, particularly on such chaotic, lorry-choked intersections.

Among their number will be Debbie Dorling, whose husband, Brian, died eight weeks ago riding around a similarly notorious junction, at Bow roundabout in east London, after a collision with a lorry. The 58-year-old was a hugely experienced cyclist who commuted up to 200 miles each week to his job at the Olympic park.

"He knew all about the perils of lorries, and the perils of roundabouts," Debbie said. "The solution should be to segregate cyclists from the rest of the traffic. Bicycles and HGVs don't mix. Something has to be done, quite clearly."

There are fears that London's experience is being reflected elsewhere around Britain. In the first half of this year the number of cyclists killed or seriously hurt on UK roads rose 12% year-on-year. Other government data shows road casualties declining consistently over recent decades for all types of transport – except one. For cyclists, these numbers hit a low in 2004 and have since started to creep up.

Campaigners stress that much of this is accounted for by cycling's increased popularity over recent years, and that overall the pursuit remains very safe and statistically far more likely to increase a rider's lifespan through better fitness. But some remain concerned, blaming a variety of factors including a lack of cohesive central government policy on cycling infrastructure, too many lorries in busy urban areas and even the government's rhetoric on ending the "war on the motorist".

"It is a very worrying trend," said Chris Peck, policy co-ordinator for national cycle campaign group the CTC. "What we'll be asking the government for is a proper cycle safety action plan. There's really been no movement on this at all.

"Ultimately we don't know what's caused the increase in casualties. But in part it could be because we're allowing quite a lot of bad driving to go unpunished, which has simply led to a lowering of standards. There's no pressure on police to rigorously enforce speed limits, particularly lower limits, and we know the government's view on speed cameras."

A significant cycle safety focus is lorries, particularly in central London. Heavy good vehicles make up 5% of the city's traffic but are estimated to be involved in half of all cycling fatalities. It is also a concern elsewhere – last month a medical student died in Wythenshawe, Manchester, after his bike was crushed by a lorry.

"There's two key problems: there's dangerous junctions and there's lorries," said Mike Cavenett of the London Cycling Campaign (LCC), which is organising next week's vigil. "Even with one or the other you can get fatalities, but when you combine them especially so. You only have to look at the locations where there have been fatalities this year – this is not a surprise to anyone, why this is happening."

While the LCC blames Transport for London and the city's mayor, Boris Johnson, for neglecting cyclist safety – a charge they vigorously deny – national groups say ministers in Westminster have similarly little appetite to tackle the issue.

"Very clearly, the government hasn't got a coherent and effective road safety strategy that safeguards cyclists," said Jason Torrance, policy director for Sustrans, which campaigns for cycling and other sustainable travel. "One of the things that we hear, time and time again, is that cyclists want safe or segregated routes and that the speed and volume of traffic is a real concern and a real threat."

One issue is the lack of a single voice for cycling issues in government after Cycling England was abolished in April in the "bonfire of the quangos".

"We were telling government all the ways they could improve cycling and make it safer," said Phillip Darnton, the organisation's former chairman. "The trouble is that some of them are politically sensitive and you have to have a very clear, bold strategy. We did try to tread that careful line of saying, this is a considered opinion of all of the voices of cycling. And now it's terribly piecemeal."

The Department for Transport says it does take the issue seriously, citing spending such as £11m on Bikeability cycle training. Mike Penning, the road safety minister, said: "We take the issue of cycle safety extremely seriously and are working to reduce the instances of deaths and serious injuries of cyclists on our roads. The year-on-year rise in the number of cycle casualties may be due to the increase in cycling we have seen in recent years, but we will continue to monitor these figures closely."

Female cyclists

As a road safety trend it was both mysterious and particularly grisly: why were so many young female cyclists being killed by lorries?

The alarm was raised in 2009 in London, when of 13 riders killed around the city over the year, 10 were women, with eight of these involved in collisions with good vehicles, mainly construction trucks.

The apparently counter-intuitive theory that emerged was that one factor could be a perceived tendency among female riders to be more cautious on the roads. By hugging the kerb and not pedalling furiously to keep up with traffic they placed themselves at greater risk of being overtaken by trucks turning left when the cyclist was in their blind spot.

A number of high-profile incidents this year have involved women, including the death of Min Joo Lee, a 24-year-old fashion student crushed by a lorry outside King's Cross station. But most cycle campaigners call 2009 a statistical quirk – so far this year, overall, six of 16 cyclists killed in the city were women.

Chris Peck, from cycle campaign group the CTC, says the perception that young women are at particular risk comes in part from the fact that there deaths simply tend to get more press coverage. He said: "It sound terrible to say so, but that is part of it – it makes a better story."

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Read quran and it will guided us to the true teaching of The Prophet Muhammad (Peace be upon him) he summarized the religion of Islam with this statement: “The Religion is naseehah (sincerity)!” So then Tameem ibn Aws, may Allah be pleased with him, then said, “We asked, ‘To whom?’” He said: “To Allah, HIS BOOK holy quran, His Messenger, the leaders of the people, and their common folk.” [Muslim] so to study the religion people should go to the source of and source of Islam is the quran so learning quran and reading quran with the meaning the quran tafsir and then explore the words of wisdom. And for the Muslims the sincerity that is due to the Book of Allah includes doing the quran recitation, listening to quran along with learning the tajweed rules and reciting it beautifully, letting our kids learn quran learning holy quran tafseer and the reasons for its revelation, affirming that it is the Truth, the perfect Speech of Allah and not part of the creation, honoring it and defending it, abiding by the orders and prohibitions found in it and teaching quran to spread the word or truth and calling to it. So by learning quran education online and reflecting over the Quran online, one fulfills an obligation and is rewarded for that. Upon fulfilling this obligation, the Quran then becomes a proof for him on the Day of Judgment! And that is our second benefit we will take by embracing this Noble Book...

UK returns refused asylum seekers to Sri Lanka

The Royal Courts of Justice. Photograph: Alamy

A group of refused asylum seekers and foreign criminal offenders have been returned to Sri Lanka after the failure of an 11th-hour high court attempt to halt the flight.

Lawyers for the activist group Tamils Against Genocide (Tag) argued that the government's removal policy was flawed and there was a real risk of returnees facing torture and ill treatment.

But at an emergency hearing on Thursday, Mr Justice Mitting rejected the general challenge and ruled that the courts could only consider challenges based on individual case histories.

The Home Office said 55 people, among them refused asylum seekers and foreign nationals who had committed criminal offences in the UK, had arrived in Sri Lanka.

Human rights lawyers said there had been protests and claimed that at least 20 people were taken off the plane before departure after launching legal challenges against their removal by the UK Border Agency.

A UKBA spokeswoman rejected the claims but could not say how many individuals, if any, might have avoided the flight.

The spokeswoman said: "The UK has a proud record of offering sanctuary to those who need it, but people who do not have a genuine need for our protection must return to their home country.

"We only undertake returns to Sri Lanka when we are satisfied that the individual has no international protection needs. The European court of human rights has ruled that not all Tamil asylum seekers require protection."

Tag's barrister, Shivani Jegarajah, argued at the high court that there was "a legitimate expectation" that removals by the UKBA to Sri Lanka would be halted while recent reports of returning asylum seekers facing torture and ill-treatment were investigated.

Jegarajah said serious concerns had been raised by a report from the UN committee against torture and by groups including Freedom From Torture and Amnesty International. She said a recent Swiss federal court ruling indicated that UK policy might be out of step with EU case law relating to asylum claims from Sri Lanka.

Mitting said he had been told that many of those on board were refused asylum seekers of Tamil extraction – although others were Sinhalese, the majority ethnic group in Sri Lanka, who had not claimed asylum.

He ruled: "This attempt to prevent the wholesale return of Sri Lankans, and in particular Tamils, to Sri Lanka must be rejected. If any of the individuals on this flight wish to seek to challenge their removal to Sri Lanka they must do so by the traditional means of challenging the individual risk factors, not by recourse to general factors."

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Reading quran and exploring it is the true duty of a Muslim because it contains Allah’s message to all people and the quran teaching tells the people that how to act correctly. By learning quran you will find that it guides us to a correct way of life in this world. We as a practicing Muslim should teach our kids quran and let the kids learn quran recitation and do quran memorization and we also do quran memorization by heart and there is an other importing thing that learn quran with tajweed because the tajweed rules are very important regarding the pronunciation and way or read the holy quran and further more enhancing the quranic studies by learning quran tafseer and reading quran the translation with it listening to quran online with the quran recitation don by some of the top reciter also. It is the Book of Allah also talks about life after death. It tells us that Allah has prepared Paradise for good people and Hell for bad people. Wile reading Quran we see that it encourages the worship of only one God Who creates and provides for them. The Book forbids people from evil and condemns those who do wrong. It contains stories of the past Prophets and the examples of bad and good people. Find online quran courses 

 

Sisters of detained Egyptian blogger held at sit-in outside cabinet building

Alaa Abd el Fatah was detained for insulting the army, and missed his son’s birth.

Two sisters of Alaa Abd el Fatah, the prominent Egyptian blogger detained for insulting the military, were arrested and briefly held by police as clashes erupted again in Cairo between protesters and the security forces.

Egyptian bloggers reacted with incredulity to the news that Mona and Sanaa Seif, aged 24 and 17, were among those arrested as the military moved to forcibly disperse a sit-in outside the Egyptian cabinet building.

"Mona and @sana2 – two sisters of @alaa – were both arrested in army charge. Almost whole family detained now. Who's next? Khaled?," asked one Twitter user upon hearing of the detentions. Fatah's baby son, Khaled, was born while his father was in jail.

The circumstances of the sisters' arrests were unclear but Mona Seif, who has campaigned vociferously against military trials for civilians, was released unharmed, soon followed by Sanaa.

Their aunt, the novelist and commentator Ahdaf Soueif, said the teenager, one of a group of young people who helped to produce an opposition newspaper during the revolution, had suffered a slight cut to the head and some bruising.

Some of the other young women had been "very badly beaten", said Soueif. Arrested alongside the Seif sisters was Samira Ibrahim, who is pursuing a sexual assault complaint against the military after she was forced to undergo a so-called virginity test this year. She was later freed.

In Bahrain, activists were outraged by the arrest of a 28-year-old blogger and activist who was staging a peaceful protest on the outskirts of the capital, Manama, on Thursday.

Zainab al-Khawaja, who tweets under the name AngryArabiya, was handcuffed and dragged along the ground to a police van, and a video apparently showed her being hit by a female officer before being detained. The authenticity of the video could not be confirmed.

The government said Khawaja had been arrested because of her "role in a larger illegal gathering in a busy roundabout on one of the main roads outside Manama", and had to be dragged because she resisted arrest.

Her sister, Marayam al-Khawaja, of the Bahrain Centre for Human Rights, said Zainab would be held for at least seven days, after which a judge would decide whether to extend the detention.

The Khawaja family is well-known for being a thorn in the side of the Khalifa royal family; Zainab's father, Abdulhadi, is Bahrain's most prominent dissident. He was jailed for life this year for taking part in protests in February and is serving the sentence at the same prison as Zainab's husband, who was jailed for four years.

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Bradley Manning's lawyer demands judge step down over Assange link

In this courtroom sketch, Bradley Manning, second from left, sits as his attorney speaks during a military hearing in Fort Meade. Photograph: William Hennessy/AP

Eighteen months after his arrest in Iraq for allegedly authoring the largest leak of state secrets in American history, Bradley Manning appeared in court and immediately started to turn the guns against his military accusers.

At the start of a preliminary hearing to establish whether the US soldier should be face a full court martial for allegedly passing more than 250,000 US embassy cables to WikiLeaks, his lawyer issued a dramatic challenge to the military presiding judge implying that the proceedings were biased and rigged.

David Coombs demanded that the judge, known as the investigating officer, Lt Colonel Paul Almanza, recuse himself from the case on the grounds that he works for the US department of justice, which is involved in the American criminal investigation into the founder of the whistleblowing WikiLeaks website, Julian Assange.

Coombs put it to the judge: "You have been at the department of justice since 2002; by your own admission you have prosecuted 20 cases. And the department has an ongoing investigation in this case."

He suggested that the department's intention was to force Manning into a plea bargain, so that he would give evidence against Assange. "If the department of justice got their way, they would get a plea in this case, and get my client to be named as one of the witnesses to go after Julian Assange and WikiLeaks."

Manning, aged 23, was appearing in public for the first time since 25 May 2010, when he was arrested at Forward Operating Base Hammer outside Baghdad. He was dressed in military fatigues, wore black-rimmed glasses and had closely cropped hair.

His only comments were to answer questions from the judge confirming that he was aware of the charges against him. The soldier faces a maximum sentence of life in military custody with no chance of parole - prosecutors have indicated they will not seek the death penalty, contrary to what was later suggested by Coombs to the hearing.

The full charge sheet was released for the first time: a total of 23 counts, the most serious of which is that Manning knowingly gave "intelligence to the enemy, though indirect means". The idea that WikiLeaks constitutes a conduit to an enemy of the US state will in itself be subject of much debate and legal argument.

A second charge accuses of Manning of causing information to be published "having knowledge that intelligence published on the internet is accessible to the enemy".

He is also charged with passing information from a secure database containing more than 250,000 records belonging to the US government – a reference to the US embassy cables published by WikiLeaks through an international group of newspapers including the Guardian in November 2010.

Another charge refers to the first act of publication by WikiLeaks in February 2010, a US embassy cable known as Reykjavik-13.

Coombs complained at the way his desired list of defence witnesses was whittled down by the judge. The prosecution, he said, had asked for 20 witnesses and was granted them all. By contrast, Coombs asked for 48 and had two approved. "Two out of 48!" he exclaimed. "In a case in which the government has charged [Manning] with aiding the enemy, which carries the maximum sentence right now of death!"

Manning's lawyer also protested that he was not allowed to call witnesses who would contest the true nature of the material leaked to WikiLeaks, and query the harm that it allegedly caused the US national interest. "Why are we here a year and a half later?" Coombs asked. "The government has asked for delay after delay after delay."

Aside from press and legal council, a few members of the public were allowed inside the courtroom on a first-come, first-served basis. Those who got in had queued at the military base since "predawn", an officer said. A vigil in support of Manning was held outside the main gates of Fort Meade, situated inthe state of Maryland.

The army has been criticised for taking so long to bring Manning to trial and faces further questions over how it is conducting the start of deliberations. The hearing is a preliminary stage, known as an Article 32, equivalent to a civilian pre-trial hearing, and is designed to assess whether the US soldier should be sent to a full court-martial.

Among the stranger aspects of the case is that it begins on a Friday and will run through the weekend. The military authorities have indicated that each day could extend late into the night.

Jeff Patterson, of the Bradley Manning support network, said: "To run the hearing through a weekend right before the Christmas vacation is clearly designed to minimise both media coverage and public protests."

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Barry Bonds gets two years probation for obstruction of justice

Barry Bonds has been sentenced to two years probation, 30 days home confinement, 250 hours community service and $4,000 fine Photograph: CJ Gunther/EPA

Barry Bonds has been sentenced to two years probation, with no prison time, for his conviction on a single criminal count related to an investigation over steroids use in sports.

Bonds was also sentenced to 30 days of home confinement, 250 hours of community service, and must pay a $4,000 fine.

U.S. District Judge Susan Illston handed down the sentence in a San Francisco federal court, and she immediately stayed it pending appeal. Prosecutors had sought a 15-month prison sentence, while Bonds asked for probation.

Bonds, 47, was convicted in April of obstructing a grand jury's doping investigation with an evasive answer during a court appearance in December 2003. The Northern California jury was deadlocked on three other counts of lying to a grand jury.

Bonds is the last of the defendants directly connected to the investigation of the Bay Area Laboratory Co-Operative to be sentenced.

The baseball star was accused of lying to a federal grand jury when he said under oath he had taken two substances identified as steroids but that he had been unaware they had been steroids. Bonds admitted getting flaxseed oil, vitamins, protein shakes and creams from his trainer, but he said he had no knowledge of human growth hormones or steroids. He said no one ever injected him other than medical doctors.

The steroids scandal has tarnished some of the biggest stars in baseball.
Bonds was named Most Valuable Player in the National League seven times, more than any other player ever. He made the league all star team 14 times, playing for the San Francisco Giants and Pittsburgh Pirates.

Bonds hit 762 home runs, more than any other player in the history of Major League Baseball.

Other stars tainted by the doping scandal include sluggers like Mark McGwire and Jason Giambi and pitcher Roger Clemens.

During the 12-day trial, the prosecution claimed Greg Anderson, Bond's personal trainer, had provided him with steroids. Anderson was jailed at the start of the trial for refusing to testify against him but was released after the prosecution and defence wound up. Bonds's personal shopper, Kathy Hoskins, testified she had seen Anderson inject Bonds in 2002. Bonds got caught up in an investigation into a company selling illegal drugs to athletes.

Prosecutors were asking for a prison sentence of 15 months, arguing that Bonds has never accepted responsibility for his actions. "Bonds' pervasive efforts to testify falsely, to mislead the grand jury, to dodge questions, and to simply refuse to answer questions in the grand jury makes his conduct worthy of a significant jail sentence," prosecutors wrote to the court last week.

The analysts, Bonds's lawyers and the probation department all cited the sentences given to other sports figures convicted of similar charges stemming from the investigation as more appropriate guidelines to follow. Juries convicted the cyclist Tammy Thomas of perjury for testifying she never used steroids and the former track coach Trevor Graham for lying to investigators about his involvement with a steroids dealer. Both were sentenced to periods of house arrest, which is considered a form of probation.

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