UPA out to gag free opinion on Sonia, Rahul on the net: RSS - Hindustan Times
It maintained that according to Google, there has been a 49 % rise in the number of requests for removing the contents in India, the highest in the world.
"It may be recalled that HRD minister Kapil Sibal had growled in exaggerated fury over a cartoon regarding the Prime Minister. The UPA government is being lampooned, criticised and chided by angry citizens," the editorial said, adding that this is the role of the media but since it has failed to do so the people have chipped in.
Organiser alleged that as per newspaper reports the government investigative agencies are also engaged in finding the physical location and identity of several IP addresses from the US, which have posted material not "palatable to the Gandhi family", particularly Sonia Gandhi and son Rahul.
Citing Google, the editorial said most requests for removal are regarding political comments.
"Google received 2,207 requests for user data and 3,427 requests regarding users and accounts between July and December 2011. It complied with 66 per cent of the requests," the editorial said, adding that Pakistan has made only two such requests. Organiser has further alleged that India is asking other countries- even the ones with which it has Mutual Legal Assistance Treaty- to provide more than legal information about netizens who make such comments.
"It wants the postal address, even the billing and payment details, which could fix the person directly," it said.
Indicating that advertisements worth crores could be responsible for the media not being critical enough of the government, it said, "This (advertisements) it uses as a leverage for blocking anti-government news, information and opinion."
The article cited the way "Anna Team was stifled" over the debate on UPA's presidential nominee.
"The net is full of analysis and reports by experts and the intelligent common man who has assessed the qualities of Pranab Mukerjee, and the charges of his ommissions and commissions. Or, for that matter the dead silence on matters relating to Sonia Gandhi," the editorial said.
The RSS mouthpiece alleged that Gandhi made a request for privacy about her illness, the media "obeyed like a lap dog". It further states that in India the public and private have merged beyond demarcation with regard to the Gandhis.
Charging the Congress with being "proactive in press censorship" and "cultivating" journalists, the article said, "To those who oppose them, the Congress has shown its true face, repression and threats. The Google report is just an indicator of the deeper malaise of censorship in India."
Interestingly, Organiser refers to the rejection of its own accreditation to the Press Information Bureau as another case of gagging the "free and critical voice" by the government.
EU deal for Spain, Italy buoys markets but details sketchy - Reuters
BRUSSELS |
BRUSSELS (Reuters) - Under pressure to prevent a catastrophic breakup of their single currency, euro zone leaders agreed on Friday to let their rescue fund inject aid directly into stricken banks from next year and intervene on bond markets to support troubled member states.
They also pledged to create a single banking supervisor for euro zone banks based around the European Central Bank in a landmark first step towards a European banking union that could help shore up struggling member Spain.
"It is a first step to break the vicious circle between banks and sovereigns," European Council President Herman Van Rompuy told a final news conference after talks which stretched right through the night.
The deal was widely seen as a political victory for embattled Italian Prime Minister Mario Monti and his Spanish counterpart, Mariano Rajoy, over German Chancellor Angela Merkel, who had brushed aside any need for such emergency measures earlier this week.
ECB President Mario Draghi endorsed the "tangible results", which sent the euro nearly 2 percent higher and sharply cut Spanish and Italian bond yields. European shares rose, led by banking stocks buoyed by the prospect of moves to backstop the financial system.
"I am actually quite pleased with the outcome of the European Council. It showed the long-term commitment to the euro by all member states of the euro area," Draghi told reporters.
Market participants welcomed the outcome as a substantial step to restore confidence in the 17-nation euro zone, which was saluted by a more durable rally than previous summit outcomes.
"It's inching closer to a banking union, and the closer we get to a banking union would put (the EU) well on the road to a fiscal union," said Art Hogan, managing director of Lazard Capital Markets in New York.
Most economists polled by Reuters expect the ECB to cut borrowing costs at its July 5 meeting, which takes place against a darkening economic backdrop. But internal resistance to the central bank reviving its bond-buying program remains high.
After 14 hours of tense talks that ended at 4:30 a.m. (0230 GMT), the 17 leaders agreed on a series of short-term steps to shore up their monetary union and bring down the borrowing costs of Spain and Italy, seen as too big to bail out.
To that end the euro zone's temporary EFSF and permanent ESM rescue funds will be used "in a flexible and efficient manner in order to stabilize markets" to support countries that comply with EU budget policy recommendations, a joint statement said.
It gave few specifics, but euro zone officials said the funds could buy bonds on both the primary and secondary markets on the basis of a memorandum of understanding signed with the requesting state and up to a funding limit to be agreed.
Both Italy and Spain said they did not intend to call on that mechanism to stabilize markets for now, hoping the Brussels agreement will serve as a sufficient deterrent.
Washington said it was encouraged by the progress but White House press secretary Jay Carney told reporters travelling with President Barack Obama that "a lot of details" still needed to be worked out, and the euro zone was likely to need to take further steps in the future.
The International Monetary Fund said the summit had taken "the right steps toward completing monetary union" while ratings agency Fitch said the deal eased near-term pressure on euro zone sovereign ratings.
UNTHINKABLE DECISIONS
In a key concession by EU paymaster Germany, the leaders agreed to waive the ESM's preferred creditor status on lending for Spanish banks, removing a key deterrent to investors buying Spanish government bonds, who feared having to take the first losses in any debt restructuring.
"We have taken decisions that were unthinkable just some months ago," European Commission President Jose Manuel Barroso said.
Despite the concessions by Berlin allowing euro zone rescue funds to be used more flexibly, questions remained about the terms, size and supervision of any future aid for Spain and Italy.
There was also no commitment for now to back up a European bank supervisor with a joint deposit guarantee or a common resolution fund, to avert capital flight and taxpayer losses. However, one EU official said that letting the ESM lend directly to banks once the supervisory body is up and running was a backdoor route to closer fiscal union.
Monti, determined to avoid the political stigma of the bailout terms imposed on Greece, Ireland and Portugal, said countries that complied with EU budget recommendations would not face extra austerity conditions or be subject to intrusive inspections by a "troika" of international lenders.
Eager to avoid the impression that she had blinked first, Merkel said strict conditionality would still apply to the use of rescue funds and countries would face stringent monitoring by the EU Commission and the ECB.
Asked if she had yielded to pressure, she said: "There is clearly pressure from financial markets. Some countries are in a difficult situation. The high interest rates affect the debt but also the real economy. We had an interest in finding solutions."
Merkel reaffirmed her firm opposition to common euro zone bonds.
She later won resounding approval in the lower house of the parliament in Berlin for funding the ESM and for new EU budget rules. A similar vote in the upper house was expected later in the day, though Germany's constitutional court may still object.
The Spanish and Italian leaders had threatened to block a package of measures to promote growth to pressure Merkel to accept measures to ease their borrowing costs, delaying the talks. New French President Francois Hollande backed their calls for bold steps to help the bloc's third and fourth biggest economies, adding to the pressure on Merkel.
Hollande, who had demanded a renegotiation of the fiscal pact to switch Europe's focus from austerity to promoting growth, said he had achieved satisfaction at the summit and would now submit the treaty to parliament for ratification.
While Hollande could claim a step forward in "solidarity", Merkel achieved little immediate progress on her demands for EU authorities to be given the power to override national budgets and economic policies. The issue was kicked down the road to October, when top EU officials led by Van Rompuy will deliver a more detailed report.
CAUTIOUS OPTIMISM
Economists applauded both the short-term measures to steady markets and the longer-term direction, saying that for once, after 20 summits since the crisis began in early 2010, euro zone leaders had exceeded admittedly low expectations.
"I think the ECB being made the banking supervisor is actually the biggest long-term step because it points the way to banking union," said Megan Greene, analyst at Roubini Global Economics, which is often gloomy about the euro zone's future.
"The move to recapitalize banks directly is a big deal and will help to break the ‘vicious circle' between banks and sovereigns that has been at the very heart of this crisis," said ABN AMRO economist Nick Kounis, although he added that the euro zone remained "in a muddling-through scenario".
The ESM's ability to inject capital directly into banks will come too late to help Spain recapitalize its debt-laden lenders immediately this year, but it should allow Madrid to remove the cleanup from state books next year, euro zone officials said.
Merkel said finance ministers would have to work out whether the state or the banks would be legally responsible for repayment of the loans thereafter.
Some analysts were more skeptical about the benefits of the deal, given the level of detail left open.
Ireland, which had to take an EU/IMF bailout in 2010 after suffering a similar bank meltdown and property bust to Spain, hailed the decisions as a "game changer", saying it would seek similarly favorable conditions for its own taxpayers.
(Additional reporting by Jan Strupczewski, Julien Toyer, John O'Donnell, Catherine Bremer and Francesco Guarascio in Brussels. Writing by Noah Barkin and Paul Taylor, editing by Mike Peacock)
Mali Islamists destroy holy Timbuktu sites - Reuters
BAMAKO |
BAMAKO (Reuters) - Al Qaeda-linked Mali Islamists armed with Kalashnikovs and pick-axes began destroying prized mausoleums of saints in the UNESCO-listed northern city of Timbuktu on Saturday in front of shocked locals, witnesses said.
The Islamist Ansar Dine group backs strict sharia, Islamic law, and considers the shrines of the local Sufi version of Islam idolatrous. Sufi shrines have also been attacked by hard-line Salafists in Egypt and Libya in the past year.
The attack came just days after UNESCO placed Timbuktu on its list of heritage sites in danger and will recall the 2001 dynamiting by the Taliban of two 6th-century statues of Buddha carved into a cliff in Bamiyan in central Afghanistan.
"They have already completely destroyed the mausoleum of Sidi Mahmoud (Ben Amar) and two others. They said they would continue all day and destroy all 16," local Malian journalist Yeya Tandina said by telephone of the 16 most prized resting grounds of local saints in the town.
"They are armed and have surrounded the sites with pick-up trucks. The population is just looking on helplessly," he said, adding that the Islamists were currently taking pick-axes to the mausoleum of Sidi El Mokhtar, another cherished local saint.
Ansar Dine has gained the upper hand over less well-armed Tuareg-led separatists since the two joined forces to rout government troops and seize control in April of the northern two-thirds of the West African state.
"The mausoleum doesn't exist anymore and the cemetery is as bare as a soccer pitch," local teacher Abdoulaye Boulahi said of the Mahmoud burial place.
"There's about 30 of them breaking everything up with pick-axes and hoes. They've put their Kalashnikovs down by their side. These are shocking scenes for the people in Timbuktu."
UNESCO APPEAL
Local Timbuktu member of parliament Sandy Haidara also confirmed the attacks were taking place, adding: "It looks as if it is a direct reaction to the UNESCO decision."
Located on an old Saharan trading route that saw salt from the Arab north exchanged for gold and slaves from black Africa to the south, Timbuktu blossomed in a 16th-century Golden Age as an Islamic seat of learning, home to priests, scribes and jurists.
Mali had in recent years sought to create a desert tourism industry around Timbuktu but even before April's rebellion many tourists were being discouraged by a spate of kidnappings of Westerners in the region claimed by al Qaeda-linked groups.
UNESCO's World Heritage Committee said this week it had accepted the request of the Malian government to place Timbuktu on its list of endangered heritage sites.
"The Committee ... also asked Mali's neighbors to do all in their power to prevent the trafficking in cultural objects from these sites," it said of the risk of looting.
The rebel seizure of the north came as the remote southern capital, Bamako, was struggling with the aftermath of a March 22 coup.
Mali's neighbors are seeking U.N. backing for a military intervention to stabilize the country but Security Council members say they need more details on the mission being planned.
(Writing and additional reporting Mark John in Dakar; Editing by Alessandra Rizzo)
Federer glad shocks still possible - ESPN.co.uk
Roger Federer revealed he was glad Wimbledon retains the capacity to shock after making a narrow escape against Julien Benneteau in the third round.
World No. 3 Federer recovered from losing the opening two sets to record a nervy 4-6 6-7(3) 6-2 7-6(6) 6-1 triumph. His struggles came a day after Rafael Nadal was sent crashing out by Lukas Rosol in one of the biggest upsets in grand slam history.
"This is not against Rafa, but it was nice to see it's still possible," Federer said. "I think 15 years ago you had matches like this so much more often on the faster surfaces, [where] a guy could catch fire and just run through you.
"Today it's virtually impossible so it was just amazing to see that it was possible.
"Okay, he [Rosol] didn't play like that for five sets, but in the fifth it was just a joke. I was laughing because of his performance for ten minutes after that. I couldn't believe that he pulled it off the way he did. Of course I do feel bad for Rafa because it's a tough loss."
Speaking about how he was able to keep his composure and conquer Benneteau, Federer said he drew on the know-how he has accumulated down the years at SW19.
"I think I brought some experience," Federer said. "Having been 2-0 down before, especially here at Wimbledon and knowing how to handle the situation, when I broke at the start of the third set I knew the match was open.
"I knew I could not afford any more mistakes and I knew physically it would not be a problem. I started to play better and better as the match went on and I think that's what I said to myself as I sat down at two-love down. I had experience on my side.
"I had to hope that he would miss a few but you don't rely on that, you rely on your own strength. I missed a lot of opportunities but I also made some big plays when I had to and I tried to stay calm in the eye of the storm."

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