Bin Laden Executed, Says Daughter; US in row with Pakistan over Bin Laden's Wife

The Al-Arabiya television station today reported, that Osama bin Laden’s 12 year old daughter claimed that he was captured and then shot by US forces. Senior Pakistani intelligence officials told the television station this is what the girl has told them.

The claims have been given more credence because of a number of embarrassing corrections by the US administration.

The White House now admits that bin Laden did not use his wife as a human shield as was previously suggested. They have also now said that bin Laden was unarmed when he died.

Commentators have speculated that the US may have wanted Bin Laden dead as opposed to alive. It is thought that during any trial embarrassing links may have emerged regarding bin Laden’s links with the US in the 1980s (when the CIA supported Afghan resistance fighters against the then Russian occupation) Believers in this theory are likely to jump upon this latest claim as proof.

The US has also admitted that bin Laden’s wife is not dead. She is currently in a military hospital being treated for a shot to the leg.

US forces had intended to take Ahmed al-Sadah , the youngest of bin Laden’s five wives, with them. However because one of their helicopters crashed during the operation they did not have space for her.

The US believes she could provide vital information about links to bin Laden. Information which could be used to break up terrorist cells and prevent any reprisal attacks. However in a surprising twist Pakistan has now indicated it will refuse to hand her over to the US, potentially escalating the row between the two countries. Pakistan has come in for significant criticism for being unable to identify bin Laden’s hiding place sooner, this despite the fact he was living a huge complex just yards away from the Pakistan military academy.

Pakistan has indicated that all those currently being held will eventually be sent back to their countries of origin.

{Spotted} Christian Bale

Batman actor Christian Bale returned to London last night, where he enjoyed a quiet evening with his family for a change. The movie star was spotted in iconic restaurant The Red Fort on Dean Street in Soho, dining on the venue’s trademark Indian Mughal Court cooking. This civilised occasion was in a stark contrast to Bale’s previous family engagements in the capital.

Stars Shine At Met Costume Ball.

GINNIFER GOODWIN, DIANE KRUGER, LIV TYLER, ASHLEY OLSEN, MARY-KATE OLSEN, GISELE B?NDCHEN, DU JUAN WEAR VAN CLEEF & ARPELS AT THE MET COSTUME BALL.

The fashion event of the season held on the May 2, 2011 in New York for the Costume Institute Gala at The Metropolitan Museum of Art included fabulous jewels provided by the famed French jewelry House Van Cleef & Arpels. Those wearing Van Cleef & Arpels included the following:

Ginnifer Goodwin was down to earth in TopShop wearing:

* “Art Deco Zip” necklace featuring turquoise, chrysoprase, chloromelanite and diamonds set in white gold
* 1964 “Estate” turquoise and pearl ring set in yellow gold

Diane Kruger in Jason Wu wearing:

* “A Cheval” diamond earrings set in yellow gold
* “Pont Neuf” mystery set ruby ring set in yellow gold

* 1957 Estate “Feuilles Croisses ruby and yellow gold ring.

Liv Tyler in Givenchy Couture wearing:

* “Organdi” large diamond bracelet set in white gold
* “Organdi” small diamond bracelet set in white gold

* Diamond earstuds set in white gold

Ashley Olsen in Vintage Dior Couture wearing:

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* “Conversation” ring featuring a pear shaped orange and white diamond set in white gold
* “Puces” diamond ear studs set in white gold
* Diamond solitaire ring totaling 7.83 carats set in platinum

Gisele Bundchen in Alexander McQueen wearing:

Gisele Bundchen at Met costume gala

* “Lotus” diamond earrings set in white gold

Ginnifer Goodwin – Van Cleef & Arpels ©Photo by Stephen Lovekin/Getty Images

Diane Kruger- Van Cleef & Arpels ©Photo by Kevin Mazur/Getty Images

Liv Tyler- Van Cleef & Arpels ©Photo by Kevin Mazur /Getty Images

Ashley Olsen – Van Cleef & Arpels ©Photo by Dimitrios Kambouris/Getty Images

Gisele Bundchen – Van Cleef & Arpels ©Photo by Dimitrios Kambouris/Getty Images

PSN Update 2: Sony Closes Another Online Service as 100 Million Now Affected

Sony’s and millions of users nightmare got even worse today as it emerged that not only had the play station network been hacked but also Sony’s Online Entertainment. Sony was forced to close the service which runs various online games.

Worse still the SOE breach was thought to have happened before the PSN network problems which raise numerous questions about Sony’s whole handling of the crisis. One expert said, ‘Inevitably people will be wondering if more is to come’. Names, addresses, emails, DOBs, numbers and this time Sony has also admitted some credit details card (Outside the US) were taken.

On Sunday Sony had said that it hoped to have some services up and running sometime this week, though nothing is certain. Users will need to use two methods to verify their account when PSN goes back online, because of the compromised security. The exact methods remain unclear.

Sony also hit back at reports that millions of credit card details had been taken, saying that too its knowledge this is untrue. They said, ‘there is no evidence our main credit card database was compromised’. We can only hope that everything gets back online as soon as possible.

First Update
Third Update
Original Article

Bin Laden Loved Coke and Pepsi: The Selfish Terrorist

Today Osama Bin Laden was exposed as a hypocrite as it emerged he used to order in bulk quantities of Coke and Pepsi. Two Pakistanis helped Osama buy in orders of Coca-Cola and Pepsi from a local shop.

The two brands are some of the strongest symbols of American power and influence. They are synonymous with Western Capitalism. It is simply incredible that bin Laden would buy and therefore fund the very thing he supposedly hated.

In a bizarre way you might suggest that bin laden helped fund his own death. By buying Coke and Pepsi whom then paid taxes to the US government.

In my mind it only goes to show the truth about terrorists. Many terrorists would have you believe they are fighting what they believe is a just cause. We sometimes think about them as being ‘brain washed’ or ‘misguided’.

The truth is that behind every terrorist’s actions is a selfish objective. Yes even suicide bombers are fundamentally selfish. How so? Terrorists become terrorists to give their own lives meaning. In our increasingly interconnected and vast world the individual has felt increasingly disempowered. Many ordinary unexceptional people are finding themselves without meaning. Terrorism and a perceived injustice gives them a cause and a meaning for their existence.

Religion or brain washing don’t create terrorists from nothing. They definitely encourage it and foster it but they do not create it. Individuals who are lost and looking for meaning find such causes. Once they find a cause they throw themselves into it completely, encouraging their own deception. (Interestingly this is not a dissimilar path to many conspiracy theorists)

Ultimately bin Laden didn’t even truly believe in his own terrible cause as the buying of coke shows. His actions were fundamentally selfish as he sought to give his own life meaning.

Londoners Life 12 By Phil Ryan

Londoners Life 12 – by Phil Ryan

Sunshine. At last. And another London phenomenon is with us. The lovely weather in London always brings out the open top sports cars. And I mean the crazy and ludicrous supercars of Top Gear fame. And to me many of the more overpriced models are slightly baffling given the actual legal and realistic speed of traffic in London. Take the Edgeware Road as a classic example. Seemingly endless rows of Ferraris and Lamborghinis have now instantly appeared driven by various 20 something’s who actually look about 12 (possibly family money or just a generous paper round?) But wait for it they are now out and driving about. At around 10 miles per hour. What’s the point? Why drive a 200 mile per hour supercar in London at 10 miles per hour? The other night my friends and I were sitting outside a restaurant in Camden in a small side street. Suddenly the building virtually shook. And there we saw a bright red open top Ferrari crawling along at the top of the road. It noisily scraped agonisingly over the road humps only to speed past us with a sonic boom of engine roar followed by a brake squeal as it reached the next road hump twenty feet up the road. Very London. It was both awful but fascinating to watch. One of my colleagues commented that it would be great fun when they finally reached the motorway and they could really drive. And I replied yes at a heady 70 miles per hour just like everyone else! Hm not sure about the point of them, but I suppose they are keeping our petrol stations open. I figured that the Camden Ferrari was achieving a respectable ten miles to the gallon – which meant they’d clearly figured out their route carefully based on where the next petrol station was presumably. Wild eh?

And talking of wildlife and pests. The urban foxes are now out in force in London I see but mainly hear sadly. All the local bins get ripped open regularly now and I’m hearing weird squealing noises in the middle of the night. Although I have got some newly married Italian neighbours so I guess it could be them? Recently I saw one on the roof of a Kebab shop in Holloway as I drove past! (not my Italian neighbours a fox) Clearly they really will eat anything. And they really are quite fearless now as I see them sitting next to cars waiting for them to drive off. And now the arguments begin. Are they pests or are they lovely wildlife? Tricky one this. I’m all for nature but I’m starting to come down on the pest side. I’ll admit they do look cute but they’re a bit nasty to cats and rabbits. Plus in my street they regularly rip open bins and drag rubbish everywhere (just like the bin men but without the hi vis vests) I think Walt Disney has a lot to answer for here. Foxes are not cute! They carry diseases and crap everywhere (again a bit like the local bin men but I digress) And talking of Disney it’s the holiday hordes arrival time. Disney Breaks, Legoland all the commercial days out are putting what I call Recession offers out there. But London seems resolutely overpriced for families. The ticket costs at Madame Tussauds, The London Eye and The Tower of London all seem more like attempts to buy them! Upwards of a hundred and thirty pounds per family for half a day out. Whoah. I thought the recession was bringing prices down. But the tourists seem to be coping. Visit London seem to be saying numbers are up this year. There’s lots to do for free now the sunshine is out I’ll freely admit though.

And currently one of my favourite but potentially free terrible London phenomena is now springing up everywhere. Of course I mean the roving street musicians. If you eat out in St Christopher’s place nowadays roving bands of accordionists are suddenly smilingly but subtly now regularly harassing the diners. They have the look of banditry about them – I don’t know why. I think it’s the slicked back hair and leather bomber jackets they all seem to wear plus that cartoon blue stubble. They travel in packs of four (like condoms but less welcome) and seem to target any couple crazy enough to hold hands in front of them. I saw one couple the other day get treated to a surreal version of Pyscho Killer! And to my amazement this was followed up with a jaunty but off key version of Elvis Presley’s Wooden Heart complete with incorrect lyrics screamed by a small sweaty fat man who looked constipated. But the couple cracked and I saw a few pounds tumble into the outstretched hat as they nervously smiled at the crooks. Don’t get me wrong I love outside music as it can really lift you up.

I pause however to point out the odd case of the elderly blind guy who plays the violin who has now taken up his usual spot outside Debenhams in Oxford Street. He’s been there for years. He’s like one of those traditional figures on those clocks. He appears as soon as the sunshine appears. But he’s terrible. You would have thought given the years he’s been at it he could at least knock out a recognisable tune but no he can’t. Instead he saws away at the violin making it sound like its being assaulted with a cat on crystal meth. Hm. I’m trying to work out the braille for get some lessons so I can stick a note in his hand but I suppose that’s just me being mean and uncharitable. I always drop some change in his hat honestly. And I’ve recently added the word DEAF to his sign saying he’s blind (well he can’t see it can he) I figure it will help his PR profile.

However my favourite player is this dread locked saxophone player in Leicester Square. He always plays late at night. And I always drop money into his case. He’s like a very cool personal soundtrack. Gorgeous notes soaring about you as you make your way home. It’s like being in a movie. And you are the main character!

So the sunshine is here to stay for the time being and London instantly adapts to it as always. We move outside to eat and drink. And despite the stupid cars, the foxes, the tourists, the burger guys and the summer drunks and now the X factor like invasion of our public spaces – do we mind it all (plus the awful versions of Oasis and The Killers we are now being hit with on a daily basis) Of course not. It’s a London thing.

Coeliac Disease: A Personal View

It is just over six months since I was diagnosed with coeliac disease. Since then I have not intentionally eaten any gluten, a protein found in wheat, barley and rye. This means no warm French bread, no buttered crumpets, no tea cakes, hot cross buns, scones or pancakes; no Hobnobs, crackers or Twixes; no spaghetti bolognese, sausage rolls, pizza or soy sauce; no muesli or porridge, flapjacks or hot fruit pies. No Yorkshire puddings, gravy or stock cubes; no French Fancies, Battenberg or lemon drizzle cake.

Do I miss it? Well yes, painfully so. But as I frequently remind myself, there are far worse treatments to a lifelong disease than having to change your diet.

Coeliac disease is a genetic autoimmune disease. This means that eating the trigger for the disease – gluten – causes the body to attack itself. It blunts the villi on the inside of the small intestine, stopping normal absorption of food. Over time this can lead to osteoporosis, anaemia, diabetes, infertility or frequent miscarriage, lymphoma and bowel cancer. It causes severe digestive symptoms, mouth ulcers and tiredness among a long list of other symptoms, and is often misdiagnosed for years. Sticking to a strict gluten-free diet for life is the only treatment, but it is an effective one.

The strictness of diet doesn’t just mean avoiding the obvious suspects such as bread or pasta. It means using a separate chopping board to avoid gluten contamination, using a separate toaster or toaster bags, and checking ingredient listings for obscure additions such as wheat protein in ice-cream or yoghurt, or barley malt flavouring in chocolate bars (goodbye Snickers, goodbye Mars bars). Oats can be eaten by some people but they have to be specially bought, non-contaminated ones, as cereals are frequently milled together. Beer is also ruled out. Oh and chips are usually coated in flour before frying.

On the plus side, because of the higher cost of gluten-free food and the necessity of strict adherence to the diet, several items are available on prescription. Having just received my first load of bread, spaghetti, pizza bases, flour and more, I have found it entertaining to eat a packet of biscuits with ‘Use as directed by the doctor’ on the side. Four a day with a cup of tea?

Although there are gluten-free replacements for most foods, usually made of corn, rice, potatoes or tapioca, I do feel the absence of much loved foods, as may be apparent from the food list above. However, one of the most difficult things about the disease is other people’s reactions. Coeliac disease affects approximately 1% of the population but it is hugely under-diagnosed. This means that of that 1% only a small proportion know they have it. As a result the disease isn’t well known to many people, including those who run cafes or restaurants, and the medical necessity of the diet is often misunderstood.

When I have been offered something to eat at a social occasion, for example a cake at a party, and have explained why I can’t eat it, people’s reactions fall in to a variety of camps. As well as kinder or more helpful responses I have been scoffed at and told not to be so fussy, accused of health paranoia and self-diagnosing an intolerance (diagnosis is via a blood test and endoscopy if you were wondering), and have been taunted about how lovely something I can’t eat tastes.

Now this isn’t the worst thing in the world to put up with, but I do wonder how many other illnesses are treated with such misunderstanding at best and dismissiveness at worst. The rise of gluten intolerance and gluten-free diets through choice has created an increase in products available, which is great for coeliacs, but also a perception of faddishness or health neuroticism. Those with coeliac disease seem to get lumped in with this perception.

The other main obstacle is eating at cafes or restaurants. Some well-known chains have one or two dishes available, usually with some modification, but often it is necessary to phone ahead to check the menu or make special arrangements. It can be necessary to ask for something to be cooked in a separate pan to avoid contamination, or to check individual ingredients such as stock cubes. Personally I find having to make such requests embarrassing; if the disease were better-known, eating out would be much more enjoyable. The training of catering staff hugely differs. I have been assured in a top end restaurant that something will be fine for me “because all our food is organic” (erm…) or told that something is gluten free when, after several days of pain and tiredness, I can assure them it is not.

The leading charity for the disease, Coeliac UK, is holding an awareness week from the 16th to the 22nd of May. They’re asking people to go gluten free for a short period, to provide gluten-free options at their workplace or school, or to hold gluten-free dinner parties. You could also try looking, as an experiment, at the nutrition labels of your usual lunch or dinner to see how many times it contains gluten. Maybe have a look at what your alternatives would be if you had to give it up or had to provide an alternative for someone else. And next time you meet someone who explains they have coeliac disease, please don’t taunt them with a Jammy Dodger…

For more information on coeliac disease including symptoms please visit www.coeliac.org.uk.

If you would like to take part in the Awareness Week please click here: http://www.coeliac.org.uk/node/146078

If you would like to donate to Coeliac UK you may consider sponsoring a 10 km run I will be doing for them in July:
http://www.justgiving.com/AlexaBrown

By Alexa Brown, donate to her run here

Osama Bin Laden Killed: News and Reactions

Al-Qaeda leader Osama Bin Laden has been killed after US forces raided his hiding place in Pakistan. President Barack Obama said it was, ‘the most significant achievement to date in our efforts to defeat Al-Qaeda’.

On Sunday a team of US forces undertook the operation in Abbottabad, a sleepy hollow 150 kilometres from Peshawar and home to the PMA – Pakistan Military Academy – their Sandhurst. Incredibly Bin Laden was living just 1000 yards away from the academy in a built up complex! Not in some mountain cave as most people thought.

After a fire fight Bin Laden was killed and his body recovered. No US soldiers were killed in the operation. Bin Laden’s body has been identified and has been buried at sea.

Despite being the most wanted man in the world, with a bounty of $25 million on his head, Bin Laden has successfully eluded capture for 10 years since 9/11 (and before then as well). Today thousands of Americans are celebrating news which they thought would never come.

Reaction to the News

A last Americans feel as if they have got some sort of justice, it is significant that it was the Americans who found him. America has struggled to recover from the events of 9/11. Perhaps Americans can now find some closure for that terrible event.

Bin Laden’s death is a vital symbolic victory for America and for US president Barack Obama. In the years since 9/11 the west and America has struggled. There has been a major recession, stock markets are lower. There has been a sense of the declining power of the West. Will today’s events help reverse this?

Terrorism Expert Michael Yardley said,

Bin Laden killed more Afghans than Americans. He used Islam as a screen for his own, evil, crusade. There are only a tiny number of Al Qaeda operating in Afghanistan now – maybe 100. We should not revel in his death too much though, the war isn’t over yet.

Experts and US officials have warned about the possibility of reprisal attacks. But a senior US official said, ‘the loss of Bin Laden puts the group on a path of decline that will be difficult to reverse’. Ayman al-Zawahiri, previously Al-Qaeda’s number 2 remains at large. He is much more heavily involved in Al-Qaeda’s day to day operations than Bin Laden ever was in recent years. He is not however thought to be as popular or as charismatic as Bin Laden.