E.U.

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The European Union has drawn up secret plans to establish itself as a global power in its own right with the authority to sign international agreements on behalf of member states.

United States of Europa

United States of Europa

Confidential negotiations on how to implement the Lisbon Treaty have produced proposals to allow the EU to negotiate treaties and even open embassies across the world.

A letter conferring a full “legal personality” for the Union has been drafted in order for a new European diplomatic service to be recognised as fully fledged negotiators by international bodies and all non-EU countries.

According to one confidential paper, the first pilot “embassies” are planned in New York, Kabul and Addis Ababa.

The move is highly symbolic in Britain as it formally scraps the “European Community”, the organisation in which Britons originally voted to remain in the country’s only referendum on Europe 34 years ago.

Mark Francois, Conservative spokesman on Europe, said that the deal showed why the British should have been given a referendum on the Lisbon Treaty.

“As we have long warned, the Lisbon Treaty increases the EU’s power at the expense of the countries of Europe,” he said. “The new power a single legal personality would give the EU is a classic example.

“It illustrates why it is wrong for Labour to try to deny the British people any say on this Treaty at all.”

The decision, taken shortly before Ireland’s referendum last week, will mean a new European diplomatic service with over 160 “EU representations” and ambassadors across the world.

Lorraine Mullally, the director of Open Europe, described the move as “a huge transfer of power which makes the EU look more like a country than an international agreement”.

“Giving the EU legal personality means that the EU, rather than member states, will be able to sign all kinds of international agreements – on foreign policy, defence, crime and judicial issues – for the first time,” she said.

She pointed out that the 1975 referendum was on staying in the EC and that it was the European Communities Act that gave Brussels legislation primacy over British law.

“British voters agreed to join the European Communities, not a political union with legal personality with the power to sign all kinds of international agreements,” said Miss Mullally. “No one under the age of 52 has ever had a say on this important evolution and it’s about time we did.”

A restricted document circulated by the Netherlands, Belgium and Luxembourg, seen by The Daily Telegraph, spells out the need for legal changes to set up a European External Service (EEAS), an EU diplomatic and foreign service with “global geographical scope”.

EU diplomatic service

EU diplomatic service

The paper said: “The EEAS will need a legal status providing it with functional legal personality so that it has sufficient autonomy.

“This legal personality should also give it the capacity to act as necessary to carry out (its) tasks.”

A British diplomat defended the decision. “The EU has been able to sign treaties for over a decade. The innovation under the Lisbon Treaty is that the European Community will cease to have legal personality. This is about simplification,” she said.

Brussels ambassadors yesterday (TUES) began detailed work, in secret, to create new institutions, the EEAS, “foreign minister” and EU President, that are to be set up under the Lisbon Treaty.

Decisions “in principle” will be taken despite the fact that both Poland and the Czech Republic have not yet fully ratified the new EU Treaty.

The creation of the EEAS has sparked a bitter Brussels turf war. The European Commission could lose up to 1,424 senior staff from three departments.

Another 400 staff will be taken from the Council of the EU and an “equivalent” number will be seconded from national diplomatic services.

The EEAS will take over Commission representations – there are currently more than 160 offices around the world – and its senior diplomats will be given the same status as national ambassadors.

Source: http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/worldnews/europe/eu/6266147/EU-draws-up-plans-to-establish-itself-as-world-power.html

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Here’s yet another huge financial story that has been virtually blacked out by the E.U. financial media. Although on the surface, this story appears to be a non-event, if we consider some of the released facts about this case, you will understand why I consider it to be a huge story. On June 8th, the Asia News reported the following story:

“Italy’s financial police (Guardia italiana di Finanza) has seized US bonds worth US 134.5 billion from two Japanese nationals at Chiasso (40 km from Milan) on the border between Italy and Switzerland. They include 249 US Federal Reserve bonds worth US$ 500 million each, plus ten Kennedy bonds and other US government securities worth a billion dollars each. Italian authorities have not yet determined whether they are real or fake, but if they are real the attempt to take them into Switzerland would be the largest financial smuggling operation in history; if they are fake, the matter would be even more mind-boggling because the quality of the counterfeit work is such that the fake bonds are undistinguishable from the real ones.”

Picture of the seized "bonds", via E.U. site Adnkronos.

Picture of the seized "bonds", via E.U. site Adnkronos.

Here are just a few fascinating facts about this case (at least they are being reported as “facts” at this current time):

(1) Though the smugglers have been identified in the press as “Japanese nationals” there has yet to be any confirmation if the smugglers were indeed Japanese or of some other ethnicity. How difficult is it to confirm the ethnicity of the smugglers and why is this information being kept secret?

(2) According to a brief Bloomberg article regarding this story, the seized bearer bonds allegedly were dated as of 1934. Since bearer bonds in denominations of $500 million did not exist in 1934, the bonds were deduced as fake, though the Italian police are still waiting for a declaration regarding the bonds’ authenticity from the SEC. There is something truly “off” about this declaration. How can the quality of the forged bearer bonds be so meticulous that they “are indistinguishable from the real ones”, yet the people involved in the alleged forgery so ill-informed as to not date the bearer bonds with a more recent year that would not immediately identify them as fraudulent? How hard would it have been to date the bearer bonds with a more recent year? An equivalent analogy would be if an expert art forger meticulously re-created a Picasso oil canvas and then erroneously signed the work with the wrong artist’s name. This story just does not add up.

(3) The Bloomberg story also reported that there is no known existence of the alleged 10 Kennedy bonds that were discovered in the smuggler’s suitcases, each with a denomination of $1 billion. Again, this discovery defies any logical explanation. Why would expert counterfeiters make 249 bearer bonds with denominations of $500 million apiece, each indistinguishable from the real thing, and then instead of just making 20 more such bonds, decide to make 10 bonds in denominations of $1 billion a piece in a bearer bond design that has never existed? Were the alleged counterfeiters just too lazy to confirm if Kennedy bearer bonds were ever a legitimately issued security? Again, this story makes no sense.

(4) On March 30, 2009, the US Treasury Department announced that USD $134.5 billion remained in its Troubled Asset Relief Program [TARP]. The stated amount of seized bearer bonds was $134.5 billion. Coincidence?

(5) The two well-dressed Japanese men opted to travel to Chiasso on a local train normally full of Italian manual laborers commuting to Switzerland. If they were really intent on successfully smuggling these bonds, counterfeit or real, why would they not take more care to select a travel route in which it was literally impossible for them not to stick out like two sore thumbs? Again, this part of the story defies all logic.

(6) The bearer bonds were discovered in a hidden briefcase compartment after a customs inspection. Again, if the bonds were indeed authentic and owned by a nation state, they could have been transported in a diplomatic pouch exempt from customs searches that would have guaranteed transport without detection.
Thus, all of the above irreconcilable and illogical points, other than the coincidence of the amount of the bearer bonds exactly matching the remaining TARP fund amount declared on March 30th, seem to indicate that not only were the seized bearer bonds counterfeit, but also that the smugglers were intent on being caught.
Before I continue, let’s review the purpose of bearer bonds.

Here is the Wikipedia definition of bearer bonds:

“A bearer bond is a debt security issued by a business entity, such as a corporation, or by a government. It differs from the more common types of investment securities in that it is unregistered – no records are kept of the owner, or the transactions involving ownership. Whoever physically holds the paper on which the bond is issued owns the instrument. This is useful for investors who wish to retain anonymity. The downside is that in the event of loss or theft, bearer bonds are extremely difficult to recover.”

If you recall the Michael Mann movie “Heat”, starring Robert DeNiro and Al Pacino, during a daring daytime armored car robbery, the criminals specifically targeted millions of dollars of bearer bonds for theft precisely because of the above qualities of bearer bonds that make them very difficult to trace. Again, due to the properties of bearer bonds, it seems highly unlikely that $134.5 billion of bearer bonds would be transported, if they were real, by two men with no security, since theft almost guarantees that they would be lost forever.

Thus far, about the only piece of information that appears to be reliable as reported by various news sources regarding this huge mystery is the remarkable authenticity of the 249 seized bearer bonds in denominations of USD $500 million. If any of the other facts, as they are being reported, are remotely accurate, then the bearer bonds were likely counterfeit. Still, the interesting part of this story, at least to me, is that the smugglers seemed intent on being caught with the counterfeit bonds. This leads me back to my previous question. What possible reason would the smugglers have for wanting to be caught? One of the quickest ways to sabotage and usher in the death of a currency is to raise legitimate questions about its ability to withstand counterfeiting efforts. Prove that counterfeiting is not only possible but highly likely, and the world’s confidence in the sabotaged currency will undoubtedly plummet.

In fact, this very tactic was applied during World War II when the Nazis launched Operation Bernhard in an attempt to crash the British economy by producing, by 1945, 132 million expertly counterfeited British pounds, a figure that represented roughly 15% of all real British pounds in circulation at the time. The counterfeit pounds were produced by expert printers and engravers supervised by an SS officer named Bernhard Krueger. As well, historical evidence exists that the Allies considered launching a counter-counterfeit plan against the Nazis as well. During this time, it was also alleged that the Bank of Italy counterfeited their own money by issuing the same securities twice with identical registered numbers and codes in order. The purpose of this counterfeiting was to secretly expand monetary supply without public transparency or accountability. Perhaps then, this $134.5.billion bearer bond mystery was an attempt of a nation state to shake the world’s confidence in the position of the US dollar as the world’s reserve currency.

There should be little debate that the world’s emerging economies in Russia, Brazil, China and certain Gulf Nations are at economic war today with the world’s Western nations and their economic allies. The currency war being fought today is sure to get much uglier in the foreseeable future, in both open tactics as well as secretly executed tactics. Currently, if the currency war were the world series of poker, the US and the UK would be holding a pair of 2s and relying on nothing but bluffs to keep the rest of the world at bay. Conversely, the Chinese and other emerging nations with large surpluses would be holding straight or royal flushes, and likely quietly maneuvering to go “all in” at some point.

Given that the discovery of $134.5 billion of bearer bonds in the suitcases of two Japanese nationals in Chiasso, Italy on the border of Switzerland qualifies as one of the largest smuggling operations in history, and given the various implications of such an act and the possible players involved, the silence regarding this huge story is simply stunning. It is not a huge story, per se, because of the counterfeiting operation, because accusations and revelations of massive money counterfeiting operations have occured in the past. It is a huge story, rather, due to all the inconsistencies of the story and the potential explanations that could explain these inconsistencies. The larger story at hand is, who are the players (nations) involved, and what was the intention of this likely counterfeiting operation? Maybe the future will reveal the answers to these questions. But maybe not.

Source: http://seekingalpha.com/article/143462-strange-inconsistencies-in-the-134-5-billion-bearer-bond-mystery

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The way they vote…

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The way you vote…

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After that feeling of joy!

Source: http://www.europarl.europa.eu/elections2009/default.htm?language=EN

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There is a leadership crisis in the world and America and the European Union must take the lead in addressing it, US Secretary of State Hillary Clinton told an audience of young Europeans in Parliament today (6 March).

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In an invitation-only event entitled ‘The next generation takes the floor’, at which most participants appeared to be young employees or trainees of the EU institutions, Clinton complimented Europe on its integration, calling it an “extraordinary international effort”.

“Europe today is viewed by many as a miracle,” said Clinton, stressing that the EU is experiencing its “longest period of peace since the Roman Empire,” while the countries of the Union have never been more prosperous or more secure.

Speaking for her country, the head of the US diplomacy insisted that despite difficult problems ahead, the new administration is optimistic and “up to the task”.

Parliament President Hans-Gert Pöttering, who described Clinton as a “leader of vision” at a time that the world needs such leaders, also hinted that a new era is beginning in EU-US relations.

“Let us work as equal partners to build a better future,” Pöttering said.

In a carefully staged question-and-answer session, Clinton touched upon climate change, the fight against terrorism, the situation in the Middle East, relations with Russia, Darfur and gay rights.

The US secretary of state recognised that it will be difficult to get China, India, Indonesia and other countries to back an agreement at UN climate change talks in Copenhagen in December.

Moving on to a pet topics of the Bush administration, Clinton said her country’s ambition is to move towards a time when there is no fertile ground for terrorism, and clearly spoke in favour of establishing a viable Palestinian state. As for the situation in Africa, she stressed the need to build capacities within the continent that are capable of solving its many problems.

As for Russia, Clinton expressed satisfaction with yesterday’s decision by NATO to “re-energise” the NATO-Russia Council, which was frozen following the brief war in Georgia in August 2008.

She added that the US and Russia still strongly disagree on some areas, mentioning Georgia, the use by Moscow of energy “as a tool for intimidation” and the assumption by Russia that it has “spheres of influence” or veto rights over the NATO membership candidacies of Ukraine and Georgia.

Source: http://www.euractiv.com/en/opinion/clinton-sees-us-eu-leading-world/article-180031

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In an attempt to boost voter turnout at the upcoming European elections, Slovakia is launching a campaign to mobilise first-time electors and capitalise on the ripple effects of young people’s involvement. EurActiv Slovakia reports.

Turnout in Slovakia for the 2004 elections was the lowest in the EU at just 17%, with less than two in ten Slovaks casting their ballot. To address this, Slovakia is launching a European Parliament-funded project, which aims to use innovative means to inspire young people to take a stand in what is seen as a ’super electoral year’.

Indeed, in 2009, Slovaks will go to the polls to vote in presidential, regional and European elections within a short period of time.

Róbert Hajšel, director of the European Parliament’s information office in Bratislava, believes every effort must be made to avoid a repeat of 2004, when Slovakia had the ”saddest record in the history of the European Parliament elections in that only 17% of voters turned out”. The low turnout was even more disturbing given that 2004 was the first time Slovaks had been asked to choose their fourteen representatives in the EU assembly, Hajšel added.

As for this year’s elections, the prospects look anything but positive, with only 15% of citizens determined to go to the polls, according to the latest Eurobarometer figures. This is the second lowest number in the EU.

“6 June will probably be a nice summer Saturday, and many people will prefer to go to the water rather than the polls,” explained Slovak MEP Sergej Kozlík. Indeed, fears are rife in Slovakia that first-time voters may not bother to turn out.

The campaign, funded by the EU assembly and entitled ’Student European Parliament’ (SEP), aims to encourage young people to perform their civic duty by going to the polls. As a first step, a sociological survey was conducted to assess the seriousness of young people’s lack of motivation. According to the survey, just 21% of first-time voters are “sure” to vote, with another 13% ”almost sure” to do so. But the poll also revealed that young Slovaks are more eager to vote in the presidential and general elections.

The project will try to boost turnout by engaging youngsters via innovative intiatives. Primary among these is a project carried out by the Department of Political Sciences at the University of SS. Cyril and Methodius in Trnava, which is preparing a quiz competition on EU issues for high-school graduates. University students from around the country will take part in simulated meetings of European Parliament committees. A resolution produced as a result of this will be handed over to Slovak MEPs.

Young people are important multipliers as they are eager to discuss topics with families and friends, political scientists believe, arguing that each young voter could potentially have the capacity to influence three to four other people. Moreover, according to experts, those reluctant to vote cite lack of knowledge of the parties’ political programmes.

The sociological survey was carried out in January 2009, at which time most of the relevant Slovak parties had not yet finalised candidate lists or adopted their manifestos for the EU elections.

Source: http://www.euractiv.com/en/eu-elections/eu-elections-slovakia-strives-reverse-sad-turnout/article-179714

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Iceland will be put on a fast track to joining the European Union to rescue the small Arctic state from financial collapse amid rising expectations that it will apply for membership within months, senior policy-makers in Brussels and Reykjavik have told the Guardian.

Soundbyte» Ian Traynor on fast-tracking Iceland into the EU and the euro

The European commission is preparing itself for a membership bid, depending on the outcome of a snap general election expected in May. An application would be viewed very favourably in Brussels and the negotiations, which normally take many years, would be fast-forwarded to make Iceland the EU’s 29th member in record time, probably in 2011.

Olli Rehn, the European commissioner in charge of enlargement, said: “The EU prefers two countries joining at the same time rather than individually. If Iceland applies shortly and the negotiations are rapid, Croatia and Iceland could join the EU in parallel. On Iceland, I hope I will be busier. It is one of the oldest democracies in the world and its strategic and economic positions would be an asset to the EU.”

Rehn’s support for swift Icelandic membership was echoed by senior European diplomats in Brussels. “We would like to see Iceland join the EU,” said one. The current and next holders of the EU presidency, the Czechs and then the Swedes, are also strong supporters of EU enlargement and will deploy their agenda-setting powers to help Iceland.

The conservative government in Reykjavik, in power for 18 years, collapsed this week, the first government to fall as a result of the financial meltdown which has wrecked the Icelandic currency, the krona, wiped out savings and pensions, required a massive IMF bailout, sparked unprecedented riots in Reykjavik, and forced the formation of a caretaker centre-left government until new elections can be held, probably on 9 May.

EU membership will be a central theme of the election campaign, with the social democrats – the senior partner in the coalition interim government with the anti-EU Left Greens – pushing to join the EU and to swap the krona for the single European currency as soon as possible.

“The krona is dead. We need a new currency. The only serious option is the euro,” said a senior Icelandic official.

The financial disaster in Iceland has triggered extreme volatility among voters. While there is support for joining the euro as a currency safe haven to protect Iceland from a battering by the markets, there is less enthusiasm for full EU membership, particularly among those in the vital fishing sector. This factor has fuelled talk of “unilateral euroisation”, meaning that Iceland might join or use the single currency without being admitted to the EU. This is dismissed in Brussels as nonsense.

Though deeply indebted and in dire straits, the Icelandic economy is minuscule compared with the main EU member states and therefore unlikely to prove a destabilising force. Iceland has already secured a multibillion pound IMF loan and is unlikely to prove a drain on the EU budget.

But joining the euro is a different question. Despite growing sentiment in Iceland that Brussels and the single currency might be the remedy to the worst crisis the country has seen, the road to the euro is likely to be fraught with problems because of the strict rules governing the eurozone under the Maastrict treaty. Although the economic and financial crisis has seen a loosening of the single currency rulebook, current Icelandic interest rates of 18% would pose big problems for mainstream single currency members.

Already Christian Democrats in the Netherlands, the party of the prime minister, are coupling their hostility with Turkey’s membership of the EU to criticism of Iceland’s ambitions. Such hostility might increase but senior figures in the European commission believe that Reykjavik brings more assets than liabilities to the EU.

Source: http://www.guardian.co.uk/world/2009/jan/30/iceland-join-eu

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US President Barack Obama’s decision to step back from the previous administration’s plan to develop an anti-ballistic missile system in Eastern Europe is blocking ratification of the Lisbon Treaty by the Czech parliament, Czech analysts told EurActiv.

Czech Foreign Minister Karel Schwarzenberg said yesterday (29 January) that he expected the United States to consider delaying the Central European missile shield project, a day after Russia had reacted positively to a perceived shift in US policy (EurActiv 29/01/09).

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Obama is expected to delay missile plans

“They will hardly call it off, but I can imagine a delay,” Schwarzenberg reportedly said in Vienna, where he attended a meeting of the Organisation for Security and Cooperation in Europe (OSCE).

“This doesn’t help the situation at all,” Lukas Pachta, political analyst at Europeum, an EU policy think-tank in Prague, told EurActiv.

“There appears to have been a deal between the main [ruling] coalition party and the main opposition party that if the missile agreement is approved, the Lisbon Treaty will be as well. Since the Lisbon Treaty is on ice and the missile shield is too, everything is blocked,” he explained.

The ruling party ODS is itself divided, he further elaborated. “The government and the ministers would rather go for the ratification of the Lisbon Treaty, but [ODS] members of parliament, especially in the Senate, are reluctant to vote on it. It is not certain that the Lisbon Treaty will go through the Senate. That’s why there has not yet been a real trial. As the government doesn’t want a failure, they would rather postpone it,” Pachta added.

Commenting on reports that the Senate could vote on 15 February (EurActiv 28/01/09), Pachta said there appear to be complications in the lower chamber too. “I don’t think the Lisbon Treaty will be ratified before the end of the presidency. But of course, any government official will say that they are doing their best,” argued the Czech analyst.

Vera Rihackova, an analyst from the same think-tank, added that the Senate committee also considered the political situation “unfavourable” for Lisbon Treaty ratification. In a statement, the Senate committee called for additional time, proposing to postpone ratification until the end of the Czech Presidency.

Source: http://www.euractiv.com/en/future-eu/obama-missile-stance-blocks-czech-lisbon-ratification/article-178994


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The European Union spent €2.4bn last year on “biased information campaigns” to “promote itself and its central aim of ‘ever closer union’,” alleges a new study by Open Europe, a UK-based think tank. But the report’s findings were denied by the European Commission, which said it “makes no apologies” for supporting schemes such as the Erasmus student exchange programme.

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“By promoting its policies, actions and principles, the EU serves to justify its own existence and […] cement the European Commission’s view that continued European integration is the best, or even the only, future path for progress,” according to the report.

Presenting the study, entitled ‘The hard sell: EU communication policy and the campaign for hearts and minds’, at the Brussels offices of Libertas, a European political party, on 27 January, Open Europe Director Lorraine Mullally said “much of what the Commission does is laudable, but is very specifically aimed at promoting EU integration”.

Examples cited in the report include funding the production and distribution of literature throughout the continent via a “sophisticated network of information outlets,” and the “tens of millions” of Commission funding set aside for outside organisations, such as NGOs and think tanks, which promote EU objectives.

Commission questions report’s findings

Joe Hennon, spokesperson for EU Communications Commissioner Margot Wallström, questioned the amount cited in the study, saying that his department’s budget “is €100m a year”. “Half of the Open Europe figure is reserved for education and culture, so I presume that Open Europe doesn’t think the EU should be spending money on this,” Hennon opined.

The study indeed argues that Commission funding allocated under its education and culture programmes, including for initiatives such as the Erasmus student mobility scheme and town-twinning, aim to “buy loyalty” by “promoting European citizenship and a common European culture,” in an effort “to engender support for the EU”.

But the EU executive “makes no apologies” for spending money on such programmes, Hennon said, because national governments have been asking it to do so since the Treaty of Rome.

Funding outside organisations ’skews the debate’

“The EU’s propaganda – and in particular the outsourced propaganda that results from the EU funding outside think tanks and NGOs which share its vision – matters because it artificially skews the debate on the EU” in favour of Commission-funded, pro-EU bodies argues the report.

Hennon admitted that the EU funding tended to support organisations supportive of EU integration over others. But this is because “we fund NGOs through calls for tender, and it is usually the pro-EU ones that respond,” he said.

“I also want to get out of this cosy club,” the Commission spokesman insisted, encouraging more Eurosceptic bodies to apply for financial support. Refuting claims that organisations part-financed by the EU executive are biased, Hennon said “we’ve never stopped a Commission-funded NGO from criticising us”.

Commissioner Wallström’s spokesman was not the only one to reject Open Europe’s assessment. “Opposition is there if needed,” insisted Hendrik Kröner, secretary-general of the European Movement, citing EU consumers’ organisation BEUC, part-financed by the EU executive, as an example. “BEUC is not an organisation that always listens to the Commission. I know that from experience,” he said.

‘More controversy required’

The problem with the EU’s communication efforts so far is that there is not enough quality debate to generate interest in European affairs, according to Hans-Martin Tillack, a journalist at Germany’s Stern magazine. “If you want to teach people about Europe, you need controversy. Pure PR doesn’t fill knowledge gaps,” he argued.

The next elections to the European Parliament are set to take place in June, meaning debate around the EU’s role in European politics is likely to intensify in the coming months.

Source: http://www.euractiv.com/en/opinion/eu-communications-derided-biased-propaganda/article-178942

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Two people have been arrested in connection with a double shooting outside a community centre in Lower Clapton.

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The 18-year-olds are being quizzed by police over the incident outside the Shellness Community Centre in Shellness Road on the Pembury estate on Wednesday evening.

Shots were fired when a gang of youths descended on the community centre at about 9.25pm.

Two teenagers, both 18, were taken to hospital suffering from gunshot wounds. One remains in a serious condition.

Sandra Maitland, the mother of stabbed teenager Shaquille Smith, had earlier given a talk about the dangers of gun and knife crime at the community centre and teenagers as young as nine hosted a fashion show.

Shaquille was just 14 when he was stabbed to death outside his home in St Thomas’ Place, South Hackney, on August 30.

Anyone with information is asked to call the investigation team on 020 8217 7377 or, to remain anonymous, contact Crimestoppers on 0800 555 111.

Hackney Gazette

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This week, the new law on extreme porn went live throughout the UK (except Scotland). Hopes in some quarters that this law would prove a panacea to the nastier end of internet kinkiness were dashed last week when ACPO announced that they would not be actively policing it.

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All change, however, as an organisation calling itself extremeporn.org.uk mails The Register to announce that if the government won’t do it, they will. A slightly topsy-turvy argument on its homepage states:

We believe that the law should be enforced; not doing so breeds laziness and impreciseness in the legislature, lack of inspection of the law outside of the legislature, increased power of the executive due to selective enforcement and permits many people guilty – of a crime, if nothing else – to get away Scot-free … This is bad for everyone.

Some more explanation of what it plans to do is contained a little further into the site. They claim that they will primarily categorise and monitor torrents. Once a torrent has been added to their system, they will periodically poll the tracker for peer IPs and then use GeoIP technology to identify UK-based IPs. Where a match is found, the system will, in principle, email the abuse contact for that IP. (This is where extremeporn’s claims become a little vague: they seem to be agreeing, however, that there are practical issues with this stage of the process.)

They claim already to have filed more abuse reports than the Government planned to prosecute in an entire year.

…See Extreme porn vigilantes are after you from theregister.co.uk by John Ozimek

Original legislation: Criminal Justice and Immigration Act 2008

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