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UN recruits African music awards in war against AIDS
Music stars at this weekend’s MTV Africa Music Awards (MAMAs) in Nairobi, Kenya, can have a significant impact in educating young people about HIV and changing their behaviour, a top United Nations AIDS official said today.
UN human rights raise concern over growing use of foreign mercenaries in Honduras
A group of independent United Nations experts voiced concern today over the influx of foreign mercenaries in Honduras since the Central American nation’s President was deposed in a military coup in June.
UN human rights experts raise concern over growing use of foreign mercenaries in Honduras
A group of independent United Nations experts voiced concern today over the influx of foreign mercenaries in Honduras since the Central American nation’s President was deposed in a military coup in June.
UN human rights office welcomes release of Iranian detainees in Iraq
United Nations human rights officials today welcomed the Iraqi Government’s decision to release 36 members of an Iranian dissident group who had been detained since July when security personnel used force to take control of the camp where they had been staying.
Wasting no time…
It’s hard to know exactly what the Stockholm Programme will look like for two reasons: First, it’s huge, with proposals ranging from a European surveillance and security system (including ID card register and Internet surveillance) to a common asylum policy. Secondly, in trade-mark EU fashion, it’s being negotiated behind closed doors, making it difficult for us common folk to know what in the world is going on. Quite apart from the merits or drawbacks of these proposals (the surveillance and datasharing parts no doubt sound awfully Orwellian - as we’ve argued before), it’s fair to say that this is contentious stuff.
And those in charge have wasted little time to take advantage of the Lisbon Treaty, which scraps national vetoes in a range of areas of justice and home affairs, and massively extends the EU’s competencies in this area. Even though the Treaty has not been ratified yet, the Swedish Presidency has made it no secret that they intend to raise the ambition of the Stockholm Programme under the Treaty.
Anders Hall, key-aid to Swedish Justice Minister Beatrice Ask has said that the Commission’s proposals in this area have been “too modest”, given that the EU will soon operate under Lisbon Treaty rules. He said: “Given that the Stockholm Programme will now be carried out in a Lisbon-context, the level of ambition will increase to a certain extent. But exactly how this will play out is unclear as talks and negotiations are currently taking place between the member states.”
These people are wasting absolutely no time to let the Lisbon Treaty go to work, even in areas that strike at the very heart of national democracy. Is anyone paying attention?
Hat tip: Swedish blogger HAX
UN experts sound the alarm for safety of human rights defenders in the Gambia
United Nations independent experts today voiced deep concern for the security of human rights defenders attending a meeting next month in the Gambia after the country’s President recently made reported threats to kill them.
Iran to execute Juveniles
Urgent Action: Juveniles to be executed in Iran within the next three days
Urgent letter from Mina Ahadi and Nazanin Afshin-Jam to save the lives of convicted juveniles who will be executed within the next three days
PLEASE WRITE IMMEDIATELY in your own language:
* Expressing concern that Behnood Shojaee and Safar Angoti are at risk of execution for a crime committed when they were under 18;
* calling on the Iranian authorities to commute his death sentence;
* reminding the authorities that Iran is a state party to the International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights (ICCPR) and the Convention on the Rights of the Child (CRC), both of which prohibit the use of the death penalty against people convicted of crimes committed when they were under 18.
Ayatollah Sayed ‘Ali Khamenei
The Office of the Supreme Leader
Islamic Republic Street â End of Shahid Keshvar Doust Street,
Tehran, Islamic Republic of Iran
Email: via website: http://www.leader.ir/langs/en/index.php?p=letter (English)
http://www.leader.ir/langs/fa/index.php?p=letter (Persian)
Ayatollah Sadeqh Larijani
Howzeh Riyasat-e Qoveh Qazaiyeh (Office of the Head of the Judiciary)
Pasteur St., Vali Asr Ave., south of Serah-e Jomhouri,
Tehran 1316814737,
Islamic Republic of Iran
Email: Via website: http://www.dadiran.ir/tabid/81/Default.aspx
First starred box: your given name; second starred box: your family name;
third: your email address
Howzeh Riassat-e Ghoveh Ghazaiyeh
Pasteur St, Vali Asr Ave., south of Serah-e Jomhuri,
Tehran 1316814737,
Islamic Republic of Iran
Fax 01198 21 3390 4986 (please keep trying)
Email: fsharafi@bia-judiciary.ir or int_aff@judiciary.ir ;
Nazanin Afshin-Jam , President and Co-Founder “Stop Child Executions” www.stopchildexecutions.com
A bit premature? President Obama Wins Nobel Peace Prize
Washington Post Staff Writers
Friday, October 9, 2009 6:23 AM
Without Kingsnorth, we have an energy opportunity
Ed Miliband may not be able to help fund a new coal-fired power station, but now he can focus on low-carbon solutions elsewhere
Catherine Mitchell
guardian.co.uk, Thursday 8 October 2009 15.35 BST
Far from being a disaster for Ed Miliband, climate change and energy secretary, the decision by E.ON to shelve its plans for a giant coal-fired power station at Kingsnorth in Kent, may in fact present a golden opportunity to put in place a truly effective coal policy.
Put bluntly, Miliband simply does not have the money to pay power companies to build the carbon capture and storage (CCS) equipment he has demanded to trap and bury some of the emissions from the new plant. The technology is unproven at this scale and would be very expensive. For its part, E.ON simply faces far too many uncertainties to plough billions into a new power station with any confidence.
Having tied himself in knots to fit around the huge new Kingsnorth plant as his coal policy centrepiece, Miliband now has a blank sheet upon which to set out the emission reductions, CCS trials and regulatory frameworks needed and what he does with his â not very much â money.
The report due on Monday from the Committee on Climate Change, which advises the government, is likely to push for even tougher controls on emissions, especially from the power sector. Having removed the millstone of Kingsnorth, he should set out plans that see no emissions at all from any new coal plants and a fixed date by which all existing plants are retrofitted with CCS.
So why did E.ON postpone its Kingsnorth plan? The company cites the global recession, and the consequent cut in energy demand, but says it still supports CCS. Clearly, risk and uncertainty for the plant has ballooned as the government has dithered over its policy and Greenpeace activists climbed an E.ON smokestack two years ago. The economic environment is uncertain; the global emissions environment is uncertain before the UN climate talks in Copenhagen; the costs of CCS are uncertain; in the UK, a new government may be elected, and the Tories have said they support limiting the emissions from power plants, although those limits are not yet known.
Yet I am still confused by the decision. E.ON has always been comfortable with grandstanding to get what they want. Why not sit it out until they got it? Perhaps it is brinkmanship: give us the funding for CCS and we will give you the big new plant you need to keep the lights on. Miliband may even try to give them what they want, but this would only intensify the protests over Kingsnorth and the Treasury is very unlikely to offer any more money. Another factor could be gas: prices have fallen and gas-fired stations are quicker and cheaper to build. They also provide much more flexible back up than coal for renewable energy supplies which wax and wane with the sun and wind â a safer bet for the future?
Another potential bonus for Miliband is that he has more opportunity to offer a CCS trial to Longannet power station in Fife. This would be a retrofit â adding CCS to an existing plant â not a new build like Kingsnorth, and as such it should be cheaper and would cut, not add to emissions.
The bluff of coal appears to have been blown away: E.ON because they didn’t know what costs were and the government because they didn’t have enough money to help. Coal power provides security of energy supply but a truly sustainable and secure system has to have another characteristic â minimal carbon. Miliband now has to take the chance that E.ON’s withdrawal offers.
Powering to the front in the carbon capture race
Published Date: 09 October 2009
THE green lobby is proclaiming victory in the battle with German energy giant E.ON over its plans to build a coal-fired power station in the south of England. But the decision to postpone the Kingsnorth project is also good news for ScottishPower.
The environmentalists were celebrating the delay after claiming Kingsnorth would pump six million tonnes of carbon into the atmosphere. It brings a truce to a two-year struggle that began with Greenpeace campaigners staging a highly publicised protest on the Kent site.E.ON says it has postponed the project because recession has dampened demand for electricity. That may be so, as the rise in company failures is bound to have reduced consumption.However, there was always more to it than E.ON facing a decline in demand, or trying to vary its mix of energy sources.The company was hoping to fit equipment to the new station that would enable it to capture dangerous greenhouse gas emissions which, ironically, should have helped the environmental cause. As such it has been in competition to secure £1 billion in government subsidy to build the UK’s first clean coal plant.E.ON is up against a consortium involving ScottishPower, Shell and National Grid, and another led by RWE npower. A shortlist is due to be announced soon with a decision on the winning bid expected next year. It is thought that a new industry could arise creating up to 50,000 jobs.Yesterday’s announcement should not come as too great a surprise. Scotland on Sunday revealed last month that E.ON’s chief executive, Paul Golby, had become frustrated at government planning delays and was hinting that he would not be able to meet the 2014 deadline for the carbon capture and storage (CCS) competition.But, before ScottishPower gets too carried away, E.ON has not withdrawn from the process. It is talking to the Germans and Dutch about a similar project, but says nothing has changed as regards the CCS competition.However, ScottishPower has already fitted a prototype emissions unit at the company’s coal-fired station at Longannet in Fife, and now that E.ON’s bid is officially wounded, the Glasgow firm looks to be in pole position
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