Monday, April 30th, 2012

He [Obasanjo] is now consulting with the Africa leadership to be able to achieve that objective

September 4, 2010 by admin  
Filed under Entertainment

He [Obasanjo] is now consulting with the Africa leadership to be able to achieve that objective.”Mr Taylor plunged Liberia into years of civil war in 1989, when he led a small rebel band that invaded from Ivory Coast He was elected President in 1997 during a lull in fighting. He is accused of committing crimes against humanity while in office by aiding and directing rebels in Sierra Leone, and has been indicted by a UN tribunal.It was not clear who could take custody of Mr Taylor – Liberia or the Sierra Leone war crimes court. He has lived in exile in the southern Nigerian city of Calabar since 2003.AP. Hundreds of thousands of people will take to the streets in Britain and around the world today to protest over the presence of British and American troops in Iraq, amid increasing official recognition that the country is slipping into civil war. Organisers of the mass demonstration, timed to mark the third anniversary of the morning President George Bush declared war on Iraq on 20 March 2003, hope it will attract similar numbers to the million who protested in London in February that year.
In London this morning, protesters will gather in Parliament Square and march to Trafalgar Square for a rally to be addressed by MPs and other anti-war activists. Similar protests will take place in Basra and Baghdad, as well as in New York, Madrid, Rome, Sydney and many other major cities, calling for the removal of troops.The march will pass the offices of the Attorney General, Lord Goldsmith, to underline the allegation that the war was illegal and that Britain and the US are guilty of war crimes.

Both Lord Goldsmith’s office and the United Nations are already considering a letter, drafted by Tony Benn, the veteran peace campaigner, and co-signed by more than 1,000 leading figures, detailing 28 alleged breaches of the Nuremberg Charter and the Geneva and Hague Conventions.In Iraq, there were suggestions that the much-trumpeted assault on insurgents, code-named Operation Swarmer, around the city of Samarra, north of Baghdad, was little more than a show of strength designed to intimidate the insurgents. United States military officials claimed the operation, involving 50 helicopters, was the biggest “air assault” since a similar airlift across Iraq just after the war in late April 2003.Elsewhere in Iraq, the violence continued. Among several incidents, three bodies with bullet holes to the head and signs of torture were found in Baghdad – apparently part of a wave of sectarian violence that has left more than 100 corpses dumped in the city since Monday.Significantly, the US second-in-command in the country said yesterday that while the plan was for the Iraqi government security forces to control about 75 per cent of Iraqi territory by “the end of summer”, the country appeared closer to civil war than at any time since March 2003. “The possibility of civil war may be higher today than it has been in the last three years, yet I believe we are still far away from such an event,” said Lieutenant-General Peter Chiarelli.

He added that the Iraqi security forces currently controlled about 50 per cent of the country.Lindsey German, convener of the Stop the War Coalition, said the demonstrations were the first time there would be co-ordinated simultaneous protests in Britain, Iraq and the United States. She added: “We believe a peaceful solution to the chaos caused by the illegal war in Iraq will only be possible when the occupying foreign armies have all been removed, so that the Iraqi people will be free to decide on their own political future.”The letter from Mr Benn accusing Britain and the US of war crimes includes claims that both countries were involved in “planning and conducting an aggressive war using deceit, including deliberately falsifying reports to arouse passion in support of this war” – a reference to various dossiers presented to Parliament and to the United Nations, which have been largely discredited.The UN has told Mr Benn that the letter raises “matters of extremely serious concern”. The Attorney General’s office has promised a reply by early April.. Britons will be paying £5.6bn a year in inheritance tax (IHT) by 2020, figures released today will show – almost 250 per cent more than in 1997, when the Labour Government was elected.Halifax Bank accused the Government of cashing in on “the largest intergenerational transfer of housing wealth in history”.
The bank’s analysis shows that 1.5 million properties in the UK are already valued at above the IHT exemption threshold of £275,000. The figure is set to triple to 4.6 million by 2020, if the Government continues with its current policy of raising the value of estates on which IHT is due in line with inflation each year.The increase in the number of estates potentially subject to IHT is a result of house price inflation over the past 10 years.

The IHT threshold has risen broadly in line with inflation, by 22 per cent since Labour came to power. If it had been raised in line with house price inflation, the threshold would now stand at £425,000.In the current financial year, the Government expects to raise £3.3bn from IHT, twice as much as the £1.6bn taken in 1997-98. This is forecast to rise to £3.6bn in the 2006-07 financial year.Tim Crawford, Halifax’s group economist, said: “Indexing the threshold in line with the retail price index consistently underestimated the rise in house prices. The threshold has simply not kept up with house price inflation, so consequently more and more households are potentially being caught in the net.”The Government estimates only 35,000 estates will be subject to IHT this year, though this is significantly higher than the 15,000 estates that paid tax in 1996-97. Mr Crawford called on the Chancellor, Gordon Brown, to introduce a link between house prices and the IHT threshold in Wednesday’s Budget.

Comments are closed.