Sunday, 27 May 2012

"Calls for investigation into Warsi's £12,000 flat expenses"


AADHIKARMedia diagnosing the Media. By © Muhammad Haque. 


The item below was 
retrieved from  the DAILY TELEGRAPH Media group web site at 1355 GMT Sunday 27 May 2012
Calls for investigation into Warsi's £12,000 flat expenses


Baroness Warsi faces an investigation into her expenses claims after the Conservative Party chairman was alleged to have claimed more than £12,000 in overnight accommodation expenses while staying rent-free at a friend's house and admitted failing to declare thousands of pounds in rental income.












By
Jason Lewis, and Patrick Hennessy
1:41PM BST 27 May 2012

Baroness Warsi charged the taxpayer £165.50 a night for attending the House of Lords while staying at a house in Acton, west London.
The owner of the house said she had her own bedroom and front-door key and said he received no money in rent from Warsi or from Naweed Khan, the party official who was also staying there, it was reported.
She claimed £12,247 in over-night subsistence within six months of taking her seat in October 2007, records show. It was the equivalent of 74 nights' stay. The Lords sat for 84 days in the period. She was then the youngest peer at the age of 36.
The property was owned by Dr Wafik Moustafa, a GP. He said Warsi had stayed at the house over four months between Mondays and Thursdays and occasionally at the weekend.
He said: "Baroness Warsi paid no rent, nor did she pay any utilities bills or council tax. It was an informal arrangement, so no tenancy contract was drawn up.”


Moustafa, 63, added: “I’m not exactly sure how many days she stayed in total, but I believe my home was her main London residence [at the time].”
Warsi also said she did not tell House of Lords authorities that she was receiving income from a London property she had bought and rented out.
She apologised last night for the breach of parliamentary guidelines, blaming “an oversight, for which I take full responsibility”. However, she claimed she had paid tax on the rent.
Warsi last night said she had stayed in the flat on "occasional nights" as the guest of Khan at the house but during the period she had "predominantly" stayed in two hotels.
She said when she did stay with Khan she gave him "an appropriate financial payment equivalent to what I was paying at the time in hotel costs".
Mr Khan, who later became Warsi's special adviser, said: "I confirm she made a financial payment on each occasion, which compensated for the inconvenience caused and additional costs incurred by me as a result of her being there.”
But Mr Moustafa said: "Naweed Khan never paid me any money."
Labour MP John Mann said he would write to the Lords commissioner for standards asking him to investigate Warsi's expenses.
"If you are paying no rent where you are staying, you can't possibly be claiming subsistence for staying there," Mann told the Sunday Times.
"It all seems very murky. We need a full investigation into the matter."
Shadow business minister Chuka Umunna told BBC1's Sunday Politics: "To rebuild trust and demonstrate this is being dealt with in a proper way there has to be a proper, independent investigation.
"So long as these stories endure, we are going to struggle to rebuild the trust and confidence we need there to be between Westminster and the people it exists there to serve."
Conservative deputy chairman Michael Fallon said the controversy was "embarrassing" but said Lady Warsi believed she acted within the "spirit and letter" of the rules.
The failure to make a declaration about the rental income from her flat means that the public was unaware that she had another source of income, over and above her salary, which is paid by the Conservative Party, and the £300 a day allowance which she is eligible to claim when she attends the Lords.
The baroness updated the register of interests for members of the House of Lords last Monday. It now states under “land and property”: “Flat in London NW from which rental income is received.”
The Prime Minister and Baroness Warsi have spoken of the commitment to transparency by the Conservatives and the Coalition.
In November 2010 Mr Cameron said “it is our ambition to be one of the most transparent governments in the world”.
In July last year the peer said: “This Government is delivering unprecedented transparency.” The total amount that she failed to declare is not known because Baroness Warsi did not disclose it last night.
Peers are required to register any rental income worth more than £5,000 in a calendar year but do not have to say how much.
However, the amount is likely to run into five figures because it involves rental income from a home in London for at least 12 months.
As well as raising questions over her own financial affairs, it will further strain relations with grassroots members, among whom the 41-year-old baroness is not believed to enjoy widespread popularity.
The political career of her special adviser was also in question last night.
The revelations follow a dispute that emerged between Baroness Warsi and the Egyptian-born Conservative donor and fund-raiser, Dr Wafik Moustafa.
He was upset when the Conservative Arab Network, which he founded, was told earlier this year to sever its links with the party and was subsequently threatened with legal action by Baroness Warsi.
That prompted him to disclose that he had given her and her special adviser, Naweed Khan, accommodation in London.
In the course of inquiries made because of his public statement, the failure to make a disclosure about her rental income was discovered.
Baroness Warsi said last night that she bought a flat in Wembley, north-west London, in September 2007 to use after being ennobled.
However, she said that the property transaction was not “due for completion” until 2008 and so she had to find accommodation elsewhere, “predominantly” in two hotels.
“Not having made advance bookings for these hotels, there was a period of about six weeks when I spent occasional nights at a flat in Acton, which was occupied by Naweed Khan, at the time a member of Conservative Campaign HQ staff,” she said.
“For the nights that I stayed as a guest of Naweed Khan, I made an appropriate financial payment equivalent to what I was paying at the time in hotel costs.” However, Mr Naweed was actually staying rent-free at Dr Moustafa’s home in London, meaning that by extension Baroness Warsi was receiving his hospitality.
Baroness Warsi said she moved into the Wembley home in March 2008 and stayed there until June 2010, when “upon security advice, I moved to another address closer to the House of Lords”.
She said that some months later she began, “with the prior approval of the Cabinet Office and the Leader of the House of Lords, to let out the Wembley property”.
“Due to an oversight, for which I take full responsibility, the flat was not included on the Register of Lords’ Interests when its value and the rent received came to exceed the thresholds for disclosure,” she said.
“When the discrepancy became apparent this week, I immediately informed the Registrar of Lords’ Interests of its omission. I repeat: at all times my ownership of the flat and the fact that it was being let out was fully disclosed to Cabinet Office officials and HM Revenue and Customs, and was appropriately reported on the register of Ministers’ interests held by the Government.”
The disclosure means that she failed to declare rental for at least 12 months, and up to 18 months. An average rent for a one-bedroom flat in Wembley is currently £1,000 a month, meaning the amount undeclared could be as high as £18,000.
Conservative deputy chairman Michael Fallon said: "These sorts of thing are always embarrassing but the key thing here is that Lady Warsi has admitted she's made a mistake, she's apologised for it."
"She's corrected the record now and she's very happy to cooperate with any investigation back into her claims and I think it should be left at that until any investigation is reported."
Speaking to Sky News, Mr Fallon said Lady Warsi had paid the other tenant but not the owner of the Acton property.
"She stayed overnight in the other property before her own house was available and she believes she was fully entitled to claim the overnight allowance from that and to pay the other tenant for some of the costs involved," he said.
"She believes that was within the spirit and the letter of the rules as they were then and she's very happy to cooperate with any investigation."
Baroness Warsi has been criticised over her performance as Tory party chairman.
Some Conservative MPs want Mr Cameron to replace her with Grant Shapps, the housing minister. Earlier this month the Conservatives performed poorly in local elections, losing more than 400 council seats.
Baroness Warsi became the first Muslim woman to be selected as a parliamentary candidate by the Tories, contesting the Dewsbury seat in 2005, but failed to win.
She went on to be a special adviser to Lord Howard, the former Conservative leader, but saw her career take off under Mr Cameron, who made a special effort to promote ethnic minority candidates and party officials as part of his drive to modernise the Tories.
This month she said a small minority of Pakistani men saw white women as “third-class citizens” and “fair game” — following a case which saw nine Muslim men found guilty of grooming young white girls for sex.




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Baroness Warsi attacks 'lilberal elite' 15 Feb 2012

Sayeeda Warsi: Another Ethnic Surrogate is exhibited as aiding and abetting the cause of racists...


0900 GMT Sunday 27 May 2012 AADHIKAROnline ORIGINAL DAILY ETHICAL Diagnostics:
Editor © Muhammad Haque
Another Ethnic Surrogate is exhibited as aiding and abetting the cause of racists who ca parade her as a thief who is a disgrace t the public office she was elevated to.
Citing a “journalism” piece as  a reference:

 From the London DAILY MIRROR GROUP  [“SUNDAY MIRROR”] website London


Sunday 27 May 2012

Cabinet Minister Baroness Warsi last night admitted breaking Parliamentary guidelines by failing to declare rent from a flat.
The Tory co-chairwoman also revealed she used taxpayers’ cash to pay a friend “hotel rates” to stay in his flat while builders were finishing work at her home.
The disclosures will pile pressure on the Baroness, who has already faced calls from Tory backbenchers to quit over her lacklustre performance as party boss.
Last night she apologised, blaming an “oversight” for her failure to declare rent from her North London flat in the Register of Lords’ Interests for more than a year. She claimed she had paid tax on the income.
Baroness Warsi, who became the first  Muslim woman to serve in the Cabinet in 2010, could now face sanctions from Parliamentary authorities.
The total sum she failed to declare is not known.
Peers are required to register any income or benefits of more than £500 a year.
The Baroness said she stayed at the home of Naweed Khan, now her special   adviser, and gave him “an appropriate financial   payment” to match what she was   spending on two hotels. Tory sources said she stayed for “eight to 12 nights”.
The Baroness said she told the Cabinet   Office she had the flat when she became a minister. She had the approval of the Cabinet Office and House of Lords   Leader to let it out when she went to another   property.
But she added: “Due to an oversight, for which I take full responsibility, the flat was not included on the Register of Lords’ Interests when its value and the rent received came to exceed the thresholds for disclosure.”


Saturday, 26 May 2012

Sayeeda Warsi does it as well! She fails to tell the whole truth!


Baroness Warsi admits not declaring rental income

Tory party co-chairman says she takes 'full responsibility' for omitting to declare income on property in north London
Baroness Warsi
Baroness Warsi, the Tory party co-chairman, failed to declare the income on a property in the register of Lords' interests. Photograph: Linda Nylind for the Guardian
Baroness Warsi, the Conservative party co-chairman, has admitted not fully declaring income she received from the rental of a flat she owns in north-west London.
The Cabinet Office minister failed to declare the income on the property in Wembley in the register of interests for members of the House of Lords.
The Tory peer bought the property in 2007 but moved closer to parliament when she became a minister in 2010, after which she began letting the flat.
She said she took "full responsibility" for the omission, which she put down to an "oversight".
Baroness Warsi had reported the letting of her flat in the register of ministers' interests and it had also been declared to the Cabinet Office along with HM Revenue and Customs.
But she failed to include it on the register of lords' interests when the rent received exceeded the £500 threshold at which peers are required to declare sources of income.
"Due to an oversight, for which I take full responsibility, the flat was not included on the register of lords' interests when its value and the rent received came to exceed the thresholds for disclosure," she said. "When the discrepancy became apparent this week, I immediately informed the registrar of lords' interests of its omission."
The baroness said she contracted to buy the flat in September 2007, but it was not due to be ready until the following year. In the interim she stayed at hotels and an Acton property occupied by Tory adviser Naweed Khan.

Monday, 21 May 2012

How the "leaders" lie to the world! A chapter opens of new lies by "the world leaders"!!!!!


From REUTERS web site, retrieved at 0118 GMT 21 May 2012:


Lockerbie bomber Megrahi dies in Libya leaving unanswered questions

Mon May 21, 2012 12:04am GMT
 

[-Text [+]
Convicted Lockerbie bomber Abdel Basset al-Megrahi speaks during an exclusive interview with Reuters TV at his home in Tripoli in this October 3, 2011 file photo. REUTERS/Reuters TV/Files
1 of 1Full Size
By Hadeel Al Shalchi and Ali Shuaib
TRIPOLI (Reuters) - Abdel Basset al-Megrahi, the Libyan convicted of the 1988 bombing of a PanAm flight over Lockerbie, died of cancer on Sunday aged 60, leaving many questions on the attack and its aftermath unanswered.
Megrahi, who said he was not responsible for bringing the jumbo jet down on the Scottish town and killing 270 people, was found guilty in 2001 but was freed in 2009 and returned to Libya because he had terminal cancer and was not expected to live long.
The decision by officials in Scotland to return Megrahi to Libya angered relatives of many victims, 189 of whom were American, and was criticised by Washington as Megrahi returned to a hero's welcome from Muammar Gaddafi.
That he survived for nearly three more years, outliving Gaddafi, who was overthrown last year, caused discomfort in Britain. Prime Minister David Cameron, visiting the United States on Sunday, said Megrahi should never have been freed.
Megrahi's brother Mohammed told Reuters he had died at his home in the Libyan capital from complications from prostate cancer and the funeral would take place on Monday.
"He was too sick to utter anything on his deathbed," another brother, Abdulhakim, said. "Just because Abdul Basset is dead doesn't mean the past is now erased," he said. "We will always tell the world that my brother was innocent."
Scottish leader Alex Salmond said his death confirmed his medical condition had been serious. "Mr Megrahi's death ends one chapter of the Lockerbie case, but it does not close the book," he said, noting Scottish lawyers were seeking other suspects.
Megrahi, the only person convicted for the bombing, was found guilty under Scots law of secretly loading a suitcase bomb onto a plane at Malta's Luqa Airport, where he was head of operations for Libyan Arab Airlines in December 1988.   Continued...

Sunday, 20 May 2012

Same Tony Blair who had "advised" Libya's Gaddafi, too?

The web site of the METRO"

 http://www.metro.co.uk/news/899611-labour-leader-ed-miliband-taking-advice-from-tony-blair#ixzz1vR9XVkIB



Ed Miliband 'taking advice from Tony Blair'

Ed Miliband has revealed he receives advice from Tony Blair, even though the Labour leader and former prime minister have different ideologies.

Mr Miliband was a close ally of Gordon Brown and leaked memos published last year suggested he played a leading role in the plot to remove Mr Blair from Number 10.
Tony Blair has encouraged Ed Miliband to be his own man (PA) Tony Blair has encouraged Ed Miliband to be his own man (PA)
It seems they have put that episode behind them and the man trying to mastermind a Labour general election victory now feels able to consult someone who led the party to three of them.
Asked about his relationship with Mr Blair, the current Labour leader told the Sunday Telegraph: 'I go and see him every so often and he has been nothing but helpful, supportive, friendly, gives me good advice; and I've got nothing but positive words for the way, from the moment I won and he sent me a note of congratulations, he has behaved in a very supportive way.'
The party's longest-serving prime minister has not used the sessions to encourage the leader of the opposition to adopt more New Labour policies.
Mr Miliband added: 'He and I aren't exactly the same ideologically, partly because times have changed, partly for other reasons as well, but his advice to me is "never do it my way, because it's not going to work!"'
The former prime minister is rumoured to be keen to return to domestic politics after a five-year break, but it is not clear whether he will be offered a prominent role in the Labour party.
'He is obviously an employable statesman who has a portfolio of things he's doing, and a lot to say about important issues, and he will say them in his own way,' Mr Miliband said.
Meanwhile, a new ComRes poll for the Independent on Sunday and Sunday Mirror gives Labour a nine-point lead over the Conservatives.
Labour had the backing of 41 per cent of the voters quizzed, while the Tories were on 32 per cent and the Liberal Democrats trailed on 11 per cent. 

Newest Sylhet natural energy reservoir, saviour of the ailing Bangladesh economy.



1425 GMT
Sunday
20 May 2012
The Chinese news agency, ‘XINHUA’ ["New China News Agency") reports on the newest Sylhet natural energy reservoir, saviour of the ailing Bangladesh economy.

[To be continued]

Energy-starved Bangladesh announces discovery of 137 mln barrels of oil

Source:
XINHUA
  |  
2012-5-20  |  
  ONLINE EDITION



DHAKA, May 20 (Xinhua) -- Bangladesh Oil, Gas and Mineral Corporation, well known as Petrobangla, Sunday announced discovery of 137 million barrels of oil in two old gas fields in the country 's northeastern Sylhet district.

Petrobangla has estimated that there are 53 million barrels of proven extractable oil in Kailashtila and Haripur gas fields in Sylhet, some 241 km northeast of the capital Dhaka.

The reserves have been discovered by state-run Petrobangla.

Petrobangla chairman Dr Hossain Mansur told a press briefing in Dhaka Sunday evening the oil in the Kailashtila field is light in nature, which is easily extractable, while that in the Haripur field is heavier.

He said Kailashtila's reserve, spread in five to six layers, was almost three times of that in Haripur.

Oil was first discovered in Bangladesh's Haripur field in the late 1980s but it had been abandoned later as the relevant authorities considered the field commercially not viable.

The latest discovery of extractable oil elates Bangladesh as the south Asian nation of about 150 million people is in dire need of locating new sources of energy. The Bangladeshi government has forecast that current gas reserves of the nation will run out in the next five years at the present consumption rate.

The discovery also comes as a big bless for the impoverished economy when it has been bearing the burden of higher fuel consumption in the wake of insufficient and unreliable electricity in the country.

Mansur said though the amount of extractable oil from the fields is nothing compared with the country's annual demand of fuel oil but "we're so happy because we are going to join the oil producing nations."

He said they will soon float an international bid to select foreign firms to extract oil from the fields within one year to support the government's efforts to ease pressure on the economy due to soaring oil import bills.

Annual demand for fuel oil in Bangladesh rose sharply due mainly to the installation of many oil-fired power plants in recent years. The country's fuel oil consumption had been hovering around 3 million tones a year until it jumped to 4.8 million tones fiscal year 2011-12 (July 2011-June 2012).

The amount is likely to surge to 6.8 million tones in the current fiscal year, said an official of state-run Bangladesh Petroleum Corporation (BPC).

The official who preferred to be unnamed said BPC had also to buy more oil as farm equipments were also dependent more on diesel generators in the wake of frequent loadshedding.

The country's overall electricity generation is now reportedly hovering about 5,600 megawatts (mw) per day against a demand of around 7,000 mw.

The BPC official said the fuel import costs of Bangladesh will be a record of more than 5 billion U.S. dollars in the current fiscal year compared with 4 billion U.S. dollars last fiscal year.

Recently Bangladesh's two development partners -- the Asian Development Bank and the International Monetary Fund -- said one of the major reasons for macroeconomic pressures in the country is the rising oil import.

Friday, 18 May 2012

LBC radio web site: Tower Hamlets Tops UK For Rat, Mice & Cockroaches

Retrieved from the LBC London radio web site at appx,  1215 GMT Friday 18 May 2012:


Tower Hamlets Tops UK For Rat, Mice & Cockroaches

  • 2
Friday 18th May 2012
Tower Hamlets has come top of a table of a national survey of places infested with rats, mice, cockroaches, bed bugs and other pests.
ratThe borough came top of requests for pest control help, with 82 residents in every 1,000 requesting assistance, more than anywhere else in the UK.
Hackney and Southwark also feature in the top ten areas.
Simon Forrester, chief executive of the BPCA, said: "This is the most comprehensive study of the demand placed on local authorities for pest control ever carried out and it covers a period when the austerity measures were starting to bite.
"The BPCA is concerned that, on a national scale, pest control budgets are being hit.
"That makes it much harder for councils to respond as effectively as they would like, which could have implications for both quality of life and public health.
"Authorities are reducing manpower and looking at new ways of dealing with pests. We would urge councils thinking of outsourcing services to use BPCA members - potential public health problems need to be dealt with by professionals, and failing to tackle an infestation properly leads to additional expense and resident dissatisfaction."
Boroughs With Most Requests For Pest ControlLondon Borough of Tower Hamlets
Newport City Council
Richmondshire District Council
London Borough of Hackney
London Borough of Southwark
Birmingham City Council
Newcastle-upon-Tyne, City of
South Tyneside Metropolitan Borough Council
North Lanarkshire Council
The BPCA orignally named Wandsworth as the worst borough for pests, but had got their decimal point in the wrong place, claiming 86 complaints per thousand, but the actual figure is 8.6. 

Johnson [Alan] too has a stupid "sense" of timing. [1]


Retrieved at 0742 GMT Friday 18 May 2012  from www.bbc.co.uk:



Alan Johnson: 'I considered running for London mayor'

Alan Johnson at the Labour Party conference in 2010Alan Johnson said he would not rule out standing in 2016

Related Stories

Alan Johnson has said he considered running for London mayor and has hinted that he could seek the job in 2016.
The former home secretary was widely touted as Labour's candidate two years ago, before Ken Livingstone was selected.
He admitted he had doubted the wisdom of Mr Livingstone trying for a third term and "thought about" standing himself.
Ken Livingstone has said he will not stand for London mayor again.
'Age no problem'
In Parliament's weekly magazine, The House, he said: "In the end, my decision was a commitment to Hull, where I've had 15 really good years and a city which I love, rather than the city I was born in.
"There were lots of colleagues who quite liked the idea of Johnson versus Johnson.
"I left the question open at the time.
"I don't think Boris was sitting there petrified at the idea of Alan Johnson, but there were a lot of people thinking it shouldn't be a re-run of the last one."
Boris Johnson won a second term as London mayor, beating Labour rival Ken Livingstone by 3%.
Mr Johnson added: "I'm a great admirer of Ken and probably the Boris factor would have done for anyone.
"But it's very rare that you just re-run the same challenge in any sphere, that you just run the same candidate who lost some years before.
"So maybe we do need a bit of fresh blood next time that's for sure.
"I would not rule it out (for 2016)."
Mr Johnson dismissed the idea that he would be too old to make a mayoral bid in four years' time, when he will be 66.
"I don't think (the problem) was age with Ken," he said.
"If you look at some of the great mayors around the world, look at