Finally we have a government that will investigate a previous governments decision to permit torture.
The new British foreign secretary, William Hague, has announced a judicial inquiry into "claims that British intelligence agencies were complicit in the torture of terror suspects".
The Guardian reports as follows:
Mohamed claimed that he was tortured by US forces in Pakistan and Morocco, and that MI5 fed the CIA questions that were used by US forces.
Philippe Sands QC, professor of law at University College London, said tonight: "To restore trust in government, both here and abroad, and to get to the truth, the inquiry needs to be deep and broad and as open as possible. It should address, in particular, who authorised what and when and why, what the relevant legal advice said, and how it related to any change in US practice in 2002 and 2003."
I am heartened to learn this news, this means that the incoming UK government will not allow the previous government off the hook for what they allowed under their watch.
If this inquiry is credible - it will lead to real pressure for those responsible for the torture to be held accountable for their actions.
Let's hope that the US does the same.
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I thought I'd try a new theme for Saturday - a series of threads where I link to interesting science stories. Well interesting to me anyway. Artificial LifeThe big story of the week is of course how Craig Venter and team have created a "synthetic cell". On May 20th, J. Craig Venter and his team at J.C Venter Institute announced the creation of a cell controlled by a synthetic genome in a paper published in SCIENCE. As science historian George Dyson points out, "from the point of view of technology, a code generated within a digital computer is now self-replicating as the genome of a line of living cells. From the point of view of biology, a code generated by a living organism has been translated into a digital representation for replication, editing, and transmission to other cells." Ethics aside, this is a pretty amazing achievement. Foucault's PendulumThe pendulum that has swung a model of Foucault's has been permanently damaged. The cable holding a model of Foucault’s pendulum snapped last month at the Musée des Arts et Métiers in Paris, sending the 60-pound ball crashing to the ground. It was permanently dented in the fall. Sad news - I always love seeing the pendulum when I visit Paris. Nova SupernovaA new type of supernova has been discovered that could be the source of the calcium that we have in our bones (well, not me, my calcium levels are low because of my Hyperparathyroidism) . The exploding star or supernova – one of the biggest explosions in space – was first detected in 2005 in the nearby spiral galaxy of NGC1032, but more recent studies have revealed that it is different to any other known supernovae. Supernova SN 2005E, as it is called, is rich in calcium, said Professor Alex Filippenko, an astronomer that the University of California, Berkeley. So - I am a star after all. Last Updated (Saturday, 22 May 2010 12:38) Let us finish off the working week with an open thread where you can discuss what you like. Bring up stories that we have missed, post youtube clips that you want to share - but let's try to make it a happy thread. I will start off with what happened yesterday here at the office. I was waiting near the lifts when a mother, father and a young boy joined me. The boy says: "I reckon this lift will come first" - pointing to a lift. The mother picked one, I picked one and the father was left with the last one. The mother asks the boy what we get if we pick the right one. The boy responds immediately: "Your dignity". And the kid was nine! Going on sixty I reckon. For those with a techie/geeky bent, the article in The Atlantic on the Conflicker Worm is a fascinating - and scary - insight into the world of the virus-creator. When the Conficker computer “worm” was unleashed on the world in November 2008, cyber-security experts didn’t know what to make of it. It infiltrated millions of computers around the globe. It constantly checks in with its unknown creators. It uses an encryption code so sophisticated that only a very few people could have deployed it. For the first time ever, the cyber-security elites of the world have joined forces in a high-tech game of cops and robbers, trying to find Conficker’s creators and defeat them. The cops are failing. And now the worm lies there, waiting … Read the whole article, it shows how the good guys catch up with the bad guys, to only find that the bad guys have moved on. I found the section on encryption is the scariest part. So when the new version of Conficker appeared, and its new method of encrypting its communication employed MD-6, Rivest’s proposal for SHA-3, the cabal’s collective mind was blown. MD-6 is/was the proposed new "highest-level standard" for public-key encryption - the bad guys already were using it. If the worm is ever activated in a nefarious way the innnertubes could be in for some real trouble. Last Updated (Friday, 21 May 2010 10:58) A few weeks ago I wrote a thread that I never posted. It was called "Eve of Destruction" and it used a youtube clip of the Barry Mcguire song. The thread was on how the problems in Europe could have us on the eve of a second GFC. Well, it now looks like I should have gone ahead and posted that thread. Industrial and materials stocks led the decline. Other markets around the world, from the Australian dollar to metals, fell sharply as investors shed riskier assets in favour of safer bets such as US Treasuries. Jitters over Europe persisted as trade unions went on strike in Greece and investors fretted that trading regulations like those introduced this week in Germany could be adopted in other countries. And this new crisis is what is hurting the Aussie dollar: Some of the sharpest moves were in currency markets. Worry that the euro-zone crisis will stymie the global recovery sent the bloc of currencies closely linked to commodities sharply lower. The Australian dollar was down more than 2.5 per cent against the greenback -- though the currency had dropped 3.5 per cent earlier -- and the Canadian dollar slipped by more than 2.25 per cent It is not the new superduper mining tax that is causing the problems - that is just BS from the mining industry. The real problem is the stench coming from the Eurozone. Can you smell it from here? |


