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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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Britain was just three hours away from going bust last year after a secret run on the banks, one of Gordon Brown’s Ministers has revealed.

City Minister Paul Myners disclosed that on Friday, October 10, the country was ‘very close’ to a complete banking collapse after ‘major depositors’ attempted to withdraw their money en masse.

The Mail on Sunday has been told that the Treasury was preparing for the banks to shut their doors to all customers, terminate electronic transfers and even block hole-in-the-wall cash withdrawals.

Only frantic behind-the-scenes efforts averted financial meltdown.

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If the moves had failed, Mr Brown would have been forced to announce that the Government was nationalising the entire financial system and guaranteeing all deposits.

But 60-year-old Lord Myners was accused last night of being ‘completely irresponsible’ for admitting the scale of the crisis while the recession was still deepening and major institutions such as Barclays remain under intense pressure.

The build-up to ‘Black Friday’ started on Monday, October 6, when the FTSE 100 dropped by nearly eight per cent as bad news on the economy started to multiply.

The following day, Chancellor Alistair Darling began all-night talks ahead of an announcement on the Wednesday that billions of pounds of taxpayers’ money would be used to pour liquidity into the system.

But shares continued to plummet, turning into a rout on the Friday when the FTSE crashed by ten per cent within minutes of opening.

Both Royal Bank of Scotland and HBOS were nearing complete collapse – but Lord Myners, who built up his fortune during a long career in the City, said the problems ran far wider.

‘There were two or three hours when things felt very bad, nervous and fragile,’ he said. ‘Major depositors were trying to withdraw – and willing to pay penalties for early withdrawal – from a number of large banks.’

The threat to the system was so severe that the Bank of England was forced to contact RBS’s creditors in New York and Tokyo to persuade them not to withdraw their funds, but it is not known which other banks faced a run on their reserves.

‘We faced the very real problem of how banks could stop depositors from withdrawing their money,’ a Treasury source said yesterday.

‘The banks themselves were selling their shareholdings, accelerating the stock-market falls, and preparing to shut up shop. Mortgages would have been sold on and savers would have been spooked, to put it mildly. It would have been chaos.’

After a weekend of crisis talks, which concluded at dawn on the Monday, it was announced that Lloyds TSB was taking over HBOS, supported by £17billion of taxpayers’ money, and RBS would receive an injection of £20billion – prompting the resignation of RBS’s infamous chief executive, Sir Fred ‘the shred’ Goodwin. Share prices at last started a small rally.

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Lord Myners: 'There were two or three hours when things felt very bad, nervous and fragile'

Ruth Lea, economic adviser to the Arbuthnot Banking Group, said last night that it was ‘highly irresponsible’ for Lord Myners to reveal the scale of the problems because it could serve to further wreck already fragile levels of confidence.
‘We are not out of the woods yet,’ she said. ‘I fear for Barclays, after the fall in its share price, and Lloyds has been damaged by the HBOS takeover.’

She added: ‘If it was panning out in that way, then the Government would have had no choice but to step in and nationalise the entire financial system.’

Angela Knight, chief executive of the British Bankers Association, said: ‘The issues related only to HBOS and RBS. To imply that all the banks would have gone under is wrong. It is complicated.’

Lord Myners also said that bank executives had been ‘grossly over-rewarded’ during the ‘golden days’ of big bonuses. ‘They are people who have no sense of the broader society around them,’ he said. ‘There is quite a lot of annoyance and much of that is justified.’

http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-1127278/Revealed-Day-banks-just-hours-collapse.html

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